











































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































- - 

* 

, ** 

s ,., V'oho’ v 

<y ^s' c^ v 

■^v <x * fl ^v» av * 

■^> V “ /f ^j- ip ^ " t/> \v 

*v<*» A o X^wW * c> <& '- V ’'4 IV •' 

- 1 -' % ^vw,/ vV^' A 

A A ' ■ « '\ ‘ ° ' ‘ * / c ° N « « O ' * * ' 'a' , A ’ 
H^AuivZ/^ '>* v o ^ X x \\vii / 1 ' \/- V 

; voo. 


Vj ° 

-J 0 0 X * 'S 
: ^ *■ ‘ 


v^o a,*+ * ^m§: x°°- 

❖ o' C- ' X */ 0 

> * 3N °' v'V ‘^‘"’‘/v^'' 

^ ^ Vwpv ^ '<- jy * /'. * A'o % <& * , 

o >^ULU^ ^ </* * > <c Cv* >y > / y v^ *> 

* “ W 4 i I |^6»" ^%°Se 


* %£. wv ^ ■* A' •>>, v 

✓ V cf' o 

// ; » „ S S V ix '3*. y 0 * 

V x ’ 1 * * , 

• o v x ,v>o, *f O 

a * &<(r7fe> * 

a 


/ -}' 



o> V » 

-P. *• 

: ■W V 

» A ✓>* _ NS 


lO < * 

' o N (. i, " " .A’ 

/O' 

o v' ; 


x° V 


»T? ' * ' V' „ , . , VX* 3 N 0 ’ 1*0 ^ 

f > »0 V . s o c» \* <. 11 0 /• 

« -XO V s sfj T. a e. * 

S' 


-fc 


^ / 


✓f. ✓• 


\ r\* / 

V * * 1 cf o 

f ^X 3 

^ /y'::*?%'"" /o ,.: v' 

. v <^vOo)Sl, ' r*, aX 0 M'd'/jO? 2 ? * 

. rS ® ^ V 6 * 

^ ° ^wnfissL w 0 

r . ^r* S 


o 

v v. °,mv/ v v' ^ WgSfi/ 

> 

c 

° O' « ^ * 

^ ^ *3 ft * - A^' / ^ ■ f K' ^ * - ,-X' ' -- 

X \y * 

o ‘‘W 

,: ? 7> y 0 „ K 
/O 


v ,^ v *v VVvX- v^% V\ 

> s \'X ’~5< y o o i. ^ <V, y/ / s s < A O y ( 

/ ,V I I ^ • 0 /? o N c 'ifp '«* s A' ,'** 4 . 

A ^ "O ^ Cl * C 5 ^ 5 ^ ^ ^ __N yTT-^ V 

«nSi,h^W ~ ^ - 7 ^ >• > ‘ J ^ \S* ^ *, a ^1 

* * T 


jOo^ “ v 0 ^ 

. ^V:f’v/ ..>/*:":*>«v.*.X* *V . 

%/' m , %/ \ / : 


X I 



c> 




V 


^ . r t \ i * « 

•A*’'■?/» o ''. vV * 4 r 

-V ^ *. =fV A A* 

A vll V 0 * 

;> A <* A V * 0 '•• ' A © ^ A 

v" -• " O' .<v « ; A- , * V *9 

.v\ X A. © wWvtf ** 4 . V* "» EjL/3 * $ 


A 4, 


- ^ ^ ; 

•«ff : 1 

.A 'i'. A ¥ ? s '-SS? > ► 

^,.., v* • : >*''/-• <>c ’»'• -X- •.v * 7: --y 
* - % \\ x a / % v5R.' ** v %. •*. ■ 

p *N * £ ; "'-■ 11 


^ ^ - 
.*»' *•*. 


i n 






C* ^ 

* 0 s 




r- , cy > * 

^ > ? •■' ft o • c^V /- ^' pJ.> 

,* oX ^ ^xO' -o" ^ v4 „ **!»• - s .*, 

0> w„, "> V s V l*« . 

^ ^ '^r A 4 * <^’ ‘ ° ^ ^ ? 

C? A, - A, ' y * A * A 

%;x;a , 0 * v % ^ o»c,V'**^ ,«.>•« %'° *$*.</•’* 

QV t o* <*' v .^' ^ 0 0 / ... . ^ ^ ° C * A 

O x a# ** \S' *0' HI' v. . * * > r /i. 

, * 3 N ° V > ^ ‘ 0 , > A V K"LfJ/', <>p 

•Y * « <?v, \V ^ ,,, KB /,, 


1 h' * ' r ^f£U^ * *■> C 'y’'''^SJ- „ 

?- v V* 

* * 0 , ^ »0 «. s ’ */ ^ ' 

^ ^ A ^ ^ ^ ^ 

c! 1 ^ * .“~v*'- a Xr- .A’ 

tP <yx 

r o V ^ v ,f ir> o ({/ >%W * ^ 

, -V V ■J ' o>' 

7* o N '* * x> 

1 .X ' -f 

Y £ : 

r\ ^ 



- ' ! « A* -/»a ° £ &$ c * t V '^f. « . 

p V~V * - ^ X - \ 



X \ 

o 0 


OO' 

.0 C> * > '.. .■ ~ 4 -TV 

^ TSJJ $s > \^ 

If 0 s „,,\ '* •> H® O^ 0 

'V. 

-* v ; fj / c .\^ v ^ ° v ,,: ’ vX 1 ^ "* 

^ •» 0 « V A. / ^ d ft s 

t m, cvc o C * ^ 

i - - * ~ v . X - *j. <^ 


^ $ 


a -a V : ;i: H i; 

a ^ *■ * o V O' 

X V .-V A* * 


> f~> y ft a • 

■O, «j,o’ ,\v 

$ A** ’+'*& V s * v * 0 ' > A V 

%-A :f-A\i , 

A v ° 

v 5 At. * v — i./ ; « ^ 'A. v 

^.y^> , 0 , 0 ^ 

44 .A * 118 * 

v ^ + 

OQ> 


A 

A' > 



-t *'. ' 




















* 


s 














An Index to Poetry and 
Recitations 





















«■ ■ • 






✓- . r- e 
-*V 



f; '• f * t - « f 

.. ;. :: 































i 



















AN INDEX 


TO 


Poetry and Recitations 


BEING A PRACTICAL 

REFERENCE MANUAL FOR THE LIBRARIAN 
TEACHER, BOOKSELLER 
ELOCUTIONIST 
ETC. 


f 


INCLUDING OVER THIRTY THOUSAND TITLES 
FROM THREE HUNDRED AND SIXTY-NINE BOOKS 


EDITED BY 


EDITH GRANGER, A. B. 


ii 



CHICAGO 

A. C. McCLURG & COMPANY 
1909 





P N 4*11 

.G* ^ 



Copyright 

A. C. McCLURG & CO. 

1 904 

Published August 15, 1904 



ho i 



5 T!)f UakfgttJf $rt00 

R. R. DONNELLEY & SONS COMPANY 
CHICAGO 



PREFACE 


I N this book are indexed the contents of three hundred and sixty-nine volumes, 
comprising standard and popular collections of poetry, recitations (both 
prose and verse), orations, drills, dialogues, selections from dramas, etc., all 
in print at the time of compilation, and the majority to be found on the shelves of 
any good-sized public library. The list includes over thirty thousand titles. 

The Index does not claim to list all recitations extant, but few popular ones 
will be sought in vain; and beyond this, the collections indexed include many 
books and selections useful to study clubs, teachers, and students of all ages. Th e 
scope of the book has thus reached out far beyond its original intention, and it is 
hoped that its value has been correspondingly increased thereby. It has been the 
endeavor to trace selections to their sources where means were available, and to 
indicate the correct title among several when possible. 

An Appendix has been added, which will be of especial use to teachers and 
pupils. This Appendix gives lists of selections suitable for Arbor Day, Lincoln’s 
Birthday, and other special days; also lists of drills, tableaux, etc., titles pertaining 
to noted personages, and temperance selections. 

In spite of precautions, errors will doubtless be found, and exact information 
correcting them will be gratefully received, and will be utilized in future editions 
of the Index. 

Acknowledgment is hereby made to all who, directly or indirectly, have been 
of assistance to the editor in the long and arduous but interesting task; particu¬ 
larly to Mr. P. W. Coussens, who made a first draught of what w T as later to be 
developed into the detailed work. 

E. G. 

/ 

Chicago, July 1, 1904. 


5 





CONTENTS 


PAGE 

Explanatory Note ------- 8 

.Key to Symbols -------- 9 

Title Index -------- 17 

Author Index -------- 385 

First Line Index 587 

Appendix --------- 955 


EXPLANATORY NOTE 


The Title Index is the main index, and references in the First Link and 
Author Indexes apply to this. A Key to the Symbols will be found on page 9, so 
arranged that the library numbers of the books can be inserted after the symbols. 

In explanation of the arrangement of titles, it is only necessary to say that a 
title indented under the main title entry is either the same piece under a different 
title or an abridgment or selection from it, as indicated. The book is so cross- 
indexed that a piece can be found, if included at all, under any title known by the 
searcher, or by means of its first line or author. 

Such titles as “Lullaby,” “Song,” “Sonnet,” etc., are arranged by authors, 
the first line attached being merely to assist in identification, and not affecting the 
order of arrangement. 

The First Line Index includes the first lines not only of the complete poem 
or recitation, but of the abridgments and selections also. 


ABB RE VIA TIONS 


A: (Augustus). 

PROPER 

H: (Henry). 

NAMES 

S: (Samuel). 

Frd’k (Frederick). 

B: (Benjamin). 

I: (Isaac). 

T: (Thomas). 

Jas. (James). 

C: (Charles). 

J: (John). 

W: (William). 

Jos. (Joseph). 

D: (David). 

L: (Louis). 

Alex. (Alexander). 

Katha. (Katharine). 

E: (Edward). 

N: (Nicholas). 

Daml (Daniel). 

Kathe. (Katherine). 

F: (Frederic). 

P: (Peter). 

Eliz. (Elizabeth). 

Marg. (Margaret). 

G: (George). 

R: (Richard). 

Fs. (Francis). 

Rob’t (Robert). 

Anon, (anonymous). 

MISCELLANEOUS 

comp, (compiled). lang. (language). 

i 

seZ.(pl. seZs.)(selection). 

abr. (abridged). 

cond. (condensed). 

misc. (miscellaneous) 

sep. (separate). 

ad. (adapted). 

dial, (dialogue). 

mon. (monologue). 

si. (slightly). 

add. (additional). 

diff. (different). 

mus. (music) 

S. S. (Sunday School). 

arr. (arranged). 

dram, (dramatized). 

orig. (original). 

st. (stanza). 

at. (attributed). 

ent. (entertainment). 

pant, (pantomime). 

tab. (tableau). 

hr. (brief). 

ff. (and following). 

par. (paragraph). 

tr. (translated). 

C. (correct— applying 

fol. (following). 

prol. (prologue). 

v. (verse). 

to titles only). 

fr. (from). 

pt. (part). 

vers, (version). 

ch. (chapter). 

frag, (fragment). 

ptly. (partly). 

w. (with). 

char, (charade). 

incl. (included or in¬ 

rec. (recitation). 

wr. (wrong or 

chgd. (changed). 

cluding). 

sc. (scene). 

wrongly). 

com. (complete). 

introd. (introduction). 



8 


KEY TO SYMBOLS 

(Bindings cloth when not otherwise specified) 


AA.American Anthology. E. C. Stedman . 

AD.Arbor Day Manual. C. B. Skinner . 

AE.Analytical Elocution. J. E. Murdock .... 

AI.American Idea, The. R. TF. Gilder . 

AP.American Poems. H. E. Scudder . 

APr.American Prose. H. E. Scudder .. 

ASD.All Sorts of Dialogues. 

ASL.American Songs and Lyrics, Golden Treas¬ 
ury of. F. L. Knowles . 

AVP.Anthology of Victorian Poetry. Sir M. E. 

Grant Duff . . 

AWB.American War Ballads and Lyrics. G. C. 

Eggleston . 

AWH.American Wit and Humor, The Poetry of. 

R. L. Paget . 

BAB.Ballads of American Bravery. C. Scollard. 

BB.Ballad Book. Allingham . 

BC.Barton’s Comic Recitations. 

BDD.Burdett’s Dutch Dialect Recitations. 

BeR.Beecher’s Recitations. 

BFV.Book of Famous Verse. A. Repplier . 

BIL.Because I Love You. A. E. Mack . 

BJC.Book of Joyous Children. J. IF. Riley. ... 

BLF.Ballads for Little Folks. Alice and. 

Phcebe Cary . 

BLP.• Beacon Lights of Patriotism. H. B. Car 

rington . 

BNL.Bryant’s New Library of Poetry and Song. 

IF. C. Bryant . 

BPB.Blue Poetry Book. A. Lang . 

BR.Banks’ Recitations. E. D. Banks . 

BRR.Burbank’s Recitations and Readings. 

BS 1-26.Best Selections. (26 numbers.). 

.Best Things from Best Authors. ( Contain¬ 
ing BS 1-24) 8 vols. 

BSP.Best Short Poems of the 19th Century 

W.S. Lord. . . 

BVC.Book of Verse for Children. E. V. Lucas. . 

CCB.Cape Cod Ballads. Joe Lincoln . 

CD.Choice Dialect. 

CDD.Classic Dialogues and Dramas. 

9 


Houghton, Mifflin & Co. $3.00 


C. W. Bardeen. net 

American Book Co. net 

Dodd, Mead & Co. **net 

Houghton, Mifflin & Co., net 
Houghton, Mifflin & Co. .net 
T. S. Denison.Paper 


2.50 

1.00 

1.20 

1.00 

1.00 

.25 


L. C. Page & Co. 1.50 


E. P. Dutton & Co. net 2.50 


G. P. Putnam’s Sons. 1.50 


L. C. Page & Co. 1.25 

Silver, Burdett. & Co. net .50 

David McKay. 1.25 

Dick & Fitzgerald. ...Paper .30 
Excelsior Pub. Co. ...Paper .25 
Dick & Fitzgerald . . . .Paper .30 

Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1.25 

Lee & Shepard. 1.50 

Chas. Scribner’s Sons. ...net 1.20 

Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1.50 


Silver, Burdett & Co. net 


is 


Baker & Taylor Co. 5.00 

Longmans, Green & Co. 2.00 

E. S. Werner. 1.25 

Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 25 
Penn Pub. Co.,Each, paper.30,cl.,.50 


Penn Pub. Co. Per vol., 1.50 


F. H. Re veil Co. net . 35 

H. Holt & Co. 2.00 

Albert Brandt. net 1.25 

Penn Pub. Co. Paper, .30, cloth, .50 
Penn Pub. Co. . .Paper, .30, cl., .50 





















































































KEY TO SYMBOLS 


CDs.Choice Dialogues.Penn. Pub. Co.,Paper, .30, cl., $0.50 

CDV.Choice Dialect and Vaudeville Stage Jokes. A. J. Drake & Co.50 

CEL.Choice English Lyrics. J. Baldwin .Silver, Burdett & Co. net .72 

CG 1.Cap and Gown. J. La R. Harrison .L. C. Page & Co. 1.25 

CG 2.Cap and Gown. F. L. Knowles .L. C. Page & Co. 1.25 

CG 3.Cap and Gown. R. L. Paget .L. C. Page & Co. 1.25 

CGd.Children’s Garland from the Best Poets. 

C. Patmore .The Macmillan Co. 1.00 

CGV.Child’s Garden of Verse. R. L. Stevenson. . Chas.Scribner’s Sons, .35,1.00,1.50 

Also other editions. 

CH.Choice Humor.Penn Pub. Co. . .Paper, .30, cl., .50 

COS... Child’s Own Speaker.Penn Pub. Co.Paper . 15 

CP..Commencement Parts. H. C. Davis .Hinds & Noble. 1.50 

CPL.Choice Pieces for Little People.T. S. Denison.Paper . 25 

CR.Cumnock’s Choice Readings. R. M. Cum¬ 
nock .A. C. McClurg & Co. 1.50 

CRR.Comic Recitations and Readings. Charles 

Walter Brown .A. J. Drake & Co.50 

CS 1-37.Choice Selections, One Hundred (37 num¬ 
bers) ..Penn Pub. Co. Each, paper,.30,cl., .50 

CSS.Cumnock’s School Speaker. R. M. Cumnock. A. C. McClurg & Co.75 

CW.Child World, A. J. W. Riley .Bobbs-Merrill Co. 1.25 

DCD.Dick’s Comic Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

DCP.Dick’s Choice Pieces for Little Children... . Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 15 

DCR.Dick’s Comic and Dialect Recitations.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

DDD.Dick’s Diverting Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 30 

DDM.Dick’s Dialogues and Monologues.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 30 

DDR.Dick’s Dramatic Reciter.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .15 

DE.Dick’s Ethiopian Scenes, Variety Sketches 

and Stump Speeches.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 30 

DES.Diehl’s Elocution Studies.E. S. Werner .Paper .35 

DFR.Dick’s Festival Reciter ..Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper .30 

DFY.Dick’s Dutch, French, and Yankee Recita¬ 
tions .Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 30 

DI.Dick’s Irish Dialect.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

DJS.Dick’s Juvenile Speaker.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 15 

DLD.Dick’s Little Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .15 

DLF.Dick’s Little Folks’ Reciter...Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 15 

DLS.Dick’s Little Speeches for Little Speakers. . Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 15 

DM.Drills and Marches.Penn Pub. Co.Paper .25 

DR.Delsarte Recitation Book. E. M. Wilbor .E. S. Werner. 1.25 

DRR.Dutch Dialect Recitations, Readings and 

Jokes.A. J. Drake & Co.50 

DS.Delsarte Speaker. H. D. Northrop .National Pub. Co.75 

DSS.Dick’s Stump Speeches and Minstrel Jokes. Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

DST.Dick’s Speeches for Tiny Tots.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 15 

DT.Drawing Room Theatricals.Dick & Fitzgerald_Paper . 30 

EA.Elocution and Action. F. T. Southwick.. .E. S. Werner.75 

10 




























































































KEY TO SYMBOLS 


EAO. 
ED . 
EDY 

EE . 
EF-. 


EHT 
ELP 
EP . 


EPs 
ES , 
ESs, 


EuE .. . 
FAD. .. 
FAS .. 
FD 1-2 

FDY 
FEP ... 

FHE .. 

FHS... 
FLS\.. 
FMR .. 
FND .. 
FP 


FR . 
FS . 

FTA 

FTR 

FTT 
GG . 
GH . 
GMS 

GN . 

GP . 


Early American Orations. L. R. Heller . . .The Macmillan Co. _ net $0.25 

Excelsior Dialogues ....Penn Pub. Co..Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

.Every Day in the Year. James L. and 

Alary K. Ford ..Dodd, Mead & Co. **net 1.60 

Easy Entertainments.Penn Pub. Co.. .Paper .25 

. Eugene Field Book. M. E. Burt and M. B. 

Cable .Charles Scribner’s Sons ..net .50 

English History Told by English Poets. 

K. Bates and K. L. Coman .The Macmillan Co. net . 60 

English Lyric Poetry, 1500-1700. F. I. 

Carpenter (Warwick Library).Charles Scribner’s Sons .... 1.50 

English Pastorals. E. K. Chambers (War¬ 
wick Library).Charles Scribner’s Sons .... 1.50 

, Emerson’s Parnassus. R. W Emerson .... Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1.50 

Elizabethan Songs. E. //. Garrett .Little, Brown & Co. ... 2.00 

. English Satires. 0. Smeaton (Warwick Li¬ 
brary).Charles Scribner’s Sons .... 1.50 

Eureka Entertainments.Penn Pub. Co., Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

Friday Afternoon Dialogues.T. S. Denison.Paper .25 

Friday Afternoon Speaker.T. S. Denison.Paper .25 

Five Minute Declamations, 2 parts. W. K. 

Fobes .Lee & Shepard. Per vol., .50 

Frost’s Dialogues for Young Folks.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 30 

Fireside Encyclopedia of Poetry. Henry 

T. Coates .H. T. Coates & Co. 3.50 

Frost’s Humorous and Exhibition Dia¬ 
logues .Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 30 

For His Sake. A. E. Mack .Lee & Shepard. 1.00 

For Love’s Sweet Sake. G. H. Westley . .'.Lee & Shepard. 1.50 

Five Minute Readings. W. K. Fobes .Lee & Shepard.50 

Frost’s New Book of Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

Favorite Poems.T. Y. Crowell & Co. 1.00 

Astor ed. .60 

Gladstone ed .75 

Also other editions 

Five Minute Recitations. W. K. Fobes. . .Lee & Shepard.50 

Favourite Speaker, The. La Moille and 

Parsons .T. S. Denison.Paper .25 

For Thee Alone. G. Hartshorne .Dana Estes & Co. 1.50 

Fulton and Trueblood’s Choice Readings. 

R. /. Fulton and T. C. Trueblood .Ginn & Co. net 1.50 

From Tots to Teens. C. J. Denton .T. S. Denison.Paper . 25 

Golden Gleams of Thought. S. P. Linn .. A. C. McClurg & Co. 1.00 

Good Humor.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth,. 50 

Graded Memory Selections. S. D. Water¬ 
man .Educational Pub. Co.25 

Golden Numbers. K. D. Wiggin and N. A. 

Smith .McClure, Phillips & Co. **net 2.00 

Golden Poems. Francis F. Browne .A. C. McClurg & Co. 1.00 

11 





















































































KEY TO SYMBOLS 


GS. 

HB. 

HBP. 

HBR. 

HD. 

HDL. 

HE. 

HNS. 

HP. 

HPE. 

HR. 

HS. 

HSS 1-2-3 

HVD. 

ID. 

IR. 

KC. 

KER. 

KH. 

KJ. 

KNE. 

KNS. 

LBB. 

LC. 

LCS. 

LFL. 

LH. 

LL. 

LLC. 

LPC. 

LPD. 

LPS ...... 

LS. 

MAD. 

MAL. 

MBB. 

MBL. 

MC. 

MCD. 

MCS. 

MD. 


.Graham’s School Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald... .Paper $0.30 

. Heroic Ballads. D. H. Montgomery .Ginn & Co. net .50 

.Household Book of Poetry, The. Charles 

A. Dana .D. Appleton & Co. 5.00 

.Handbook of Best Readings. S. H. Clark .Charles Scribner’s Sons . .net 1.50 

. Humorous Dialogues.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

.Heaven’s Distant Lamps. A. E. Mack .. .Lee & Shepard. 1.50 

Holiday Entertainments.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

. Hamill’s New Science of Elocution. S. S. 

Hamill .Eaton & Mains. 1.00 

. Humbler Poets, The. S. Thompson .A. C. McClurg & Co. 1.50 

. Humorous Poetry of the English Language. 

J. Parton .Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1.50 

.Howard’s Recitations.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

. Holiday Selections.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

.Harper’s School Speaker, 3 volumes. 

J. Baldwin .American Book Co., Per vol., net. 60 

Holmes’s Very Little Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald_Paper .30 

Ideal Drills.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

Interpretative Reading. Cora Marsland ... Longmans, Green & Co... net 1.12 

.Kavanaugb’s Comic Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper 

. Kavanaugh’s Exhibition Reciter for Very 

Little Children..Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper 

.Kavanaugh’s Humorous Dramas.Dick & Fitzgerald .. ..Paper 

.Kavanaugh’s Juvenile Speaker. (Speeches 

and Dialogues.).Dick & Fitzgerald. .Paper.. 

.Kidd’s New Elocution. R. Kidd .American Book Co. net 

.Kavanaugh’s New Speeches and Dialogues. Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper 

.Lang’s Ballads of Books. A. Lang .Longmans, Green & Co. 2.00 

.Listening Child. L. W. Thatcher .The Macmillan Co. . .net, .50 1.25 

.Childhood Songs. Lucy Larcom .Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1.00 

.Little Folks’ Lyrics. F. D. Sherman .Houghton, Mifflin & Co. ... 

.Lyra Heroica. W. E. Henley .Charles Scribner’s Sons_ 

.Little Lines for Little Speakers.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper 

.Lincoln Literary Collection J. P. McCas- 

key .American Book Co. net 

. Lamb’s Poetry for Children. C. and M.Lamb. The Macmillan Co. 1.00 

.Little People’s Dialogues.Penn Pub. Co.Paper .25 

.Little People’s Speaker.Penn Pub. Co.Paper 

.Love Songs of Childhood. E. Field .Charles Scribner’s Sons_ 

.McBride’s All Kinds of Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper 

.Masterpieces of American Literature.Houghton, Mifflin & Co. .net 

. Matthews’s Ballads of Books. B. Matthews. Dodd, Mead & Co. 1.25 

.Masterpieces of British Literature.Houghton, Mifflin & Co. .net 1.00 

.McBride’s Choice Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald_Paper 

. McBride’s Comic Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald_Paper 

. McBride’s Comic Speeches.Dick & Fitzgerald_Paper 


.30 

.30 

.30 

.30 

1.00 

.30 


1.50 

1.25 

.15 

1.00 


.15 

1.00 

.30 

1.00 


.30 

.30 

.30 


.Model Dialogues.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30,cloth,.50 


12 



























































































KEY TO SYMBOLS 


MDD.Martine’s Droll Dialogues and Laughable 

Recitations.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper $0.30 

MFD.McBride’s Funny Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

MHD.McBride’s Humorous Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper . 30 

MHR.Monroe’s Humorous Readings L B.Monroe. Lee & Shepard. 1.00 

MMR.Monroe’s Miscellaneous Readings. L. B. 

Monroe .Lee & Shepard. 1.00 

MN.Monologues and Novelties.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth,. 50 

MND.McBride’s New Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

MPD.Monroe’s Public and Parlor Readings, Dial¬ 
ogues and Dramas. L. B. Monroe .Lee & Shepard. 1.00 

MR.My Recitations. C. U. Potter .J. B. Lippincott Co. 1.00 

MRS.Modem Reader and Speaker. G. Riddle . . Herbert S. Stone & Co. 1.50 

MTD.McBride’s Temperance Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald .... Paper .30 

MYF.Monroe’s Young Folks’ Readings. L. B. 

Monroe .Lee & Shepard. 1.00 

NA.Nonsense Anthology. C. Wells .Charles Scribner’s Sons.**nef 1.25 

NC.New Century Speaker. H. A. Frink .Ginn & Co. net 1.00 

NDP.New Dialogues and Plays. B. Gunnison . .Hinds & Noble. 1.50 

NE.National Epics. K. M. Rabb .A. C. McClurg & Co. 1.50 

NP.New Pieces that will Take Prizes. H. Black- 

stone .Hinds & Noble. 1.25 

NPS.New Popular Speaker. II. D. Northrop. . .National Pub. Co. 1.00 

NV.Nature in Verse for Children. M.I.Lovejoy. Silver, Burdett & Co. net .60 

OB.Oxford Book of English Verse. A. T. Quil- 

ler-Couch .Oxford Univ. Press. net 1.90 

OEB.Old English Ballads. H. W. Mabie .The Macmillan Co. net 1.25 

OEL.Old English Love Songs. H. W. Mabie. . .The Macmillan Co. 2.00 

OES.Old English Songs. A. Dobson .The Macmillan Co. net 1.25 

OH.Out of the Heart. J. W. and A. II. Chad¬ 
wick .L. C. Page & Co. 1.25 

OM.Orators’ Manual. G. L. Raymond .Silver, Burdett & Co. net 1.12 

OS 1-2-3,.Open Sesame, 3 parts. B. IF. Bellamy and 

M. W. Goodwin .Ginn & Co. Per vol., net .75 

PAP.Poems of American Patriotism. Brander 

Matthews .Charles Scribner’s Sons . .net .50 

PAPm.Poems of American Patriotism. R. L. Paget. L. C. Page & Co. 1.25 

PC.Poetry for Children. S. Eliot .Houghton, Mifflin & Co...net .80 

PD.Popular Dialogues.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30,cloth,.50 

PEB 1-2-3-4.... Popular English Ballads. (4 vols.) R.B. 

Johnson .J. B. Lippincott Co. set 3.00 

PEO.Pieces for Every Occasion. C. B. Le Row. .Hinds & Noble. 1.25 

PFP.Pieces for Prize Speaking Contests. A. H. 

Craig and B. Gunnison .Hinds & Noble. 1.25 

PGT 1-2.Palgrave’s Golden Treasury of Songs and 

Lyrical Poems. (2 vols.) F. T. Palgrave.. The Macmillan Co. . Per vol., 1.00 

PHS...Poetry for Home and School. A. C. Brackett 

and I. M. Eliot .G. P. Putnam’s Sons. 1.25 

PLD.Point Lace and Diamonds. G. A. Baker, Jr. F. A. Stokes Co. 1.25 

13 























































































KEY TO SYMBOLS 


PoR.Posy Ring, The. K. D. Wiggin and N. A. . 

Smith .McClure, Phillips & Co.. .net $1.25 

POS .Poetry of the Seasons. M. I. Lovejoy . . . .Silver, Burdett & Co- .net .60 

PP ..Prose and Poetry for Young People.Penn Pub. Co. 1.00 

PPh.Pipe and Pouch. I. Knight .*.L. C. Page & Co.1.25 

PPS.Practical Public Speaking. S. II. Clark and 

F. M. Blanchard .Charles Scribner’s Sons...ne< 1.00 

PPSr . ..Prize Poetical Speaker. . .. .H. A. Dickerman & Son.75 

PR... .Peerless Reciter. H. D. Northrop .National Pub. Co. 1.00 

PRR.Patriotic Recitations and Readings. Jo¬ 
sephine Stafford ..A. J. Drake & Co.50 

PS.Progressive Speaker.\^-.National Pub. Co. 1.25 

PSR.Poetry for School Readings. M. White. . .The Macmillan Co. ...net .40 

PTS.Pieces to Speak. Harlan H. Ballard .C. W. Bardeen. 1.00 

PY'O.Poems Y r ou Ought to Know. E. W. Peattie. Fleming H. Revell Co_ net 1.50 

RCR. ..Riley Child Rhymes. J. W. Riley .Bowen-Merrill Co. 1.25 

SA.'...Science and Art of Elocution. F. II. Fenno. Hinds & Noble 1.25 

SAE ........... Shoemaker’s Advanced Elocution. Mrs. 

J. TF. Shoemaker .Penn Pub. Co. 1.25 

SAP.Stories and Poems for Children. C. Thaxter. Houghton. Mifflin & Co.1.50 

SC...School and College Speaker. W. B. Mitchell .Holt & Co. net 1.00 

SCS ........... Spencer’s Comic Speeches ..Dick & Fitzgerald ... Paper . 30 

SD.. Standard Dialogues ..Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth,. 50 

SDD.School Day Dialogues.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

SDR.Soper’s Dialect Readings.T. S. Denison.. Paper . 25 

SE..Swett’s School Elocution. J. Swett .American Book Co. net 1.00 

SED.Steele’s Exhibition Dialogues ....Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

SL.Smiles. A. L. Richards .Caldwell Co. i;...... .75 

SM.Selections for Memorizing. L. C. Foster and 

S. Williams .Ginn & Co. net . 40 

SN.. .Songs of Nature. J. Burroughs. ..McClure, Phillips & Co. 1.50 

SO.Steps to Oratory. F. T. Southwick .American Book Co. .... .net 1.00 

SOC.Songs of Childhood. Walter Ramal .Longmans, Green & Co.**ne< 1.20 

SPC.School and Parlor Comedies.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

SPE.Shoemaker’s Practical Elocution. J. W. 

Shoemaker .Penn Pub. Co. 1.25 

SR 1-13.Soper’s Scrap Book Recitations. (13 nos.) .T. S. Denison .. .Each, paper .25 

SS.Sargent’s Standard Speaker. Epes Sargent .. David MacKay. net 1.60 

SSD.Select Speeches for Declamation.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth,. 50 

•.....Speaker’s Garland, The. (Containing CS 1- 

36) 9 vols.Penn Pub. Co. Per vol., 2.00 

SSE.Sunday School Entertainments.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

SSS............ Sunday School Selections.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth,. 50 

StD.Sterling Dialogues.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth,. 50 

SYS.Smiles Y'oked with Sighs. R. J. Burdette. .Bobbs-Merrill Co. 1.25 

TAS.Treasury of American Sacred Song. W. G. 

II order ...Oxford Univ. Press. 3.00 

TAV.Treasury of American Verse. Walter Learned. F. A. Stokes Co.. 1.00 

14 


































































































KEY TO SYMBOLS 


TCP.Tableaux, Charades, and Pantomimes.Penn Pub.Co.Paper, .30,cloth,$0.50 

TCV.Treasury of Canadian Verse. Theodore H. 

Rand .Wm. Briggs & Co. net 1.25 

TDT.Tony Denier’s Book of Tableaux.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .25 

TFS.Tommy’s First Speaker.M. A. Donohue & Co.30 

TFY.This is forY r ou. IF. S. Lord .Fleming H. Revell Co. ,**net 1.00 


THP. 


F. L. 




Knowles . 


**net 

1.20 

TIP. 


Brooke 




and T. IF. Rolleston . 



1.75 

TK. 



Paper 

.25 

TL. 




.75 

TMD. 


College 




Men. H. C. Davis and J. C. Bridgman. . Hinds & Noble. 1.00 

TMR.Three Minute Readings for College Girls. 

H. C. Davis .Hinds & Noble. 1.00 

TS.Temperance Selections.Penn Pub. Co. .Paper, .30, cloth, .50 

TT.Tiny Tots’ Speaker.Penn Pub. Co.Paper .15 

VA.Victorian Anthology. E. C. Stedman .Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 2.50 

VS.Victorian Songs. E. H. Garrett .Little, Brown & Co. 4.00 

VSG.Voice, Speech, and Gesture. Campbell, 

Brewer, and Neville .G. P. Putnam’s Sons. 3.00 

WCL.Whittier’s Child Life in Poetry. J. G. 

Whittier .Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 2.00 

WCLG 1.Williams’s Choice Literature, Grammar. 

Book 1. *S. Williams .American Bk. Co. net .40 

WCLG 2.Williams’s Choice Literature, Grammar. 

Book 2. S. Williams .American Bk. Co. net .50 

WCLI 1 .Williams’s Choice Literature, Intermediate. 

Book 1. S. Williams .American Bk. Co. net .28 

WCLI 2 ....!. .Williams’s Choice Literature, Intermediate. 

Book 2. S. Williams .American Bk. Co. net .35 

WDM.Wilson’s Drills and Marches.Dick & Fitzgerald ... .Paper .30 

WEP 1-2-3-4... Ward’s English Poets. (4 vols.). T. H. TFard.The Macmillan Co. Per vol., net 1.00 

WGS.World’s Greatest Short Stories. S. Cody. . A. C. McClurg & Co. net 1.00 

WLO.When the Lessons are Over. C. J. Denton. T. S. Denison.Paper .25 

WN.Winks. A. L. Richards .Caldwell Co.75 

WR 1-26.Werner’s Readings and Recitations. 

(26 numbers).E. S. Werner .. .Each, paper .35 

WRD.Wilson’s Recitations and Dialogues.Dick & Fitzgerald-Paper .30 

WTD.With Trumpet and Drum E. Field .Charles Scribner’s Sons- 1.00 

YA.Young American’s Speaker. H.D. Northrop. National Pub. Co.Paper .60 

YBF.Year Book of Famous Lyrics. F. L. Knowles. Dana Estes & Co. 1.50 

YBT. Year of Beautiful Thoughts for Boys and 

Girls J. A. B. Greenough .George W. Jacobs & Co.**net 1 20 

YFD.Young Folks’ Dialogues. r. .Penn Pub. Co.Paper .25 

YFE.Young Folks’ Entertainments.Penn Pub. Co.Paper .25 

YFR.Young Folks’ Recitations.Penn Pub. Co.Paper .15 

YP.Young People’s Speaker. H. D. Northrop. . National Pub. Co. 1.00 

YPS.Young People’s Speaker.Penn Pub. Co.Paper .15 


15 




































































































. 






































































































. 












































TITLE INDEX 






TITLE INDEX 


A 


A, B, C.—Anon.—PC 

A. B. C. of Literature.—Carolyn Wells.—TL 
A’ aboot it.—W: Lyle.—DR 
A la Mode.—Clara M. Greene.—WR 2 
A ma Future.—Edwin Arnold.—FTA 
Aaron.—G: Herbert.—WEP 2 

Abandoned Troop Horse, The.—Mary A. Rocke.— 
WR 4 


Abbess’s Story, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Chris- 
tus; A Mystery. 

Abbot Joachim, Br. sel. fr. (Finished.) — H: W. 
Longfellow.—BS 11 

Abbot M’Kinnon,The.—Jas. Hogg.—SeeQueen’s Wake, 
The. 

Abbot of Inisfalen, The. (SI. abr.) —W: Allingham.— 
GN 

(For another vers, see Legend of Innisfallen, The.— 
M. D. Bateham.) 

Abbot of Waltham, The.—Anon.—WRD 

Abbot’s Blessing on the Bruce, The.—Walter Scott.— 
See Lord of the Isles, The. 

Abbotsford, Sel. fr. (Sir Walter Scott and his Dogs.)— 
Washington Irving.—FTR 

Abdelazar, Song from.—Aphra Behn.—WEP 2 

(Song: “Love in Fantastic Triumph Sate.”)—OB 

Abdel-Hassan.—Anon.—CS 10 

Abdication of Napoleon.—W: M. Thackeray. See 
Chronicle of the Drum, The. 

Abhrain an Bhuideil.—Jos. S. Le Fanu.—TIP 

Abide in me, and I in you. The Soul’s Answer. (C.) 
—Harriet B. Stowe. 

(Soul’s Answer, The.)—TAS 

Abide with Me.— H: F. Lyte.— FEP — GP — VA 
(Sel.) HDD—LLC 

(Abide with Me; Fast Falls the Eventide— sel .)— 
GG—SAE 


“Abide with Me.”—S. H. Thayer.—CS 33 
(Sel.—w. music.) NPS—YP 
Abide with Me; Fast Falls the Eventide.—H: F. Lyte. 

— See Abide with Me. 

Abide with Us.—Horatius Bonar.—VA 
Abigail Becker.—AmandaT. Jones.—BS2—CS26 (sel.) 
Abigail Fisher.—Delia A. Heywood.—BS 18 
Abnegation.—Christina G. Rossetti. See Monna In- 
nominata. 

Abner and the Widow Jones.—Rob’t Bloomfield.— 
CS 25 

Abner’s Second Wife.—P. C. Fossett.—CS 29—-NPS— 
YP 

Aboard the “Sea-swallow.”—E: Dowden.—TIP 
Abolition of African Slavery.—A. G. llaygood.—FD 2 
Abolitionism.—W: L. Garrison.—OS 2 
Aboriginal Chant, An.—Anon.—GH 
Aboriginal Mother’s Lament, An.—C: Harpur.—VA 
Abou Ben Adhem [and the Angel].—Jas. H: Leigh 
Hunt.—BNL — BR—BSP—CGd—CR—CS 3 
—EPs—FEP—FP—GMS — GP—HBP—HNS 
—KNE—LC —LLC—MR—OS 1—GN—PC— 
PHS—PPSr—PSR—P YO—SM—SS—WCLG1 
—YBF tixtt 

(“Angel wrote and vanished, The”— br. sel.) —BNL 
Abou El Mahr and His Horse.—Anon. (tr. by Rounse- 
velle Alger).—MMR 

About a Brakeman.—Morris Waite.—SR 6 
About Barbers.—Anon.—WR 7 
About Contributions.—Anon.—WR 12 
About Daniel.—Anon.—DSS 
About Dish-washing.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
About Fire-crackers.—Clara J. Denton.—DFR—LL 
About Freddie.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
About Katharine.—Anon.—MCS 
About Our Folks.—H: F. Wood.—GH 
About the Billikinses.—Anon.—MCS 
About the Fairies.—Anon.—CSS—-NV—PPSr 
About theSizeofit. (Dial.) —LizzieM. Hadley.—DLD 
(Bug-a-boo, The— si. abr.) —DCP—WR 17 (dial.) 
Above St. Ininde.—Duncan C. Scott.—TCV VA (si. 
abr.) 

Above Two Feet.—Anon.—DSS 

Abraham and Ephraim.—Sam W. Foss. AWH 


Abraham Cowley.—Sir J. Denham. See Elegy on 
Cowley. 

Abraham Davenport. (In The Tent on the Beach.)— 
J. G. Whittier.—BFV 
Abraham Lincoln.—Anon.—CP 
Abraham Lincoln, Sets. fr. —H : W. Beecher. 

Abraham Lincoln [, the Martyr].—BS 1—PEO 
(Death of Lincoln, The— abr.) —OS 3 
(Sermon on the Death of Abraham Lincoln.)— 
CS3 

Martyr and the President, The. (Ptly. same its 
PPS)—LLC 

Martyr President, The. (Ptly. same as BS 1, 
etc.)—PPS 

Abraham Lincoln.—Joel Benton.—EDY 
Abraham Lincoln, Sel. fr. (Lincoln the Shepherd of the 
People.)—Phillips Brooks.-—SR 8 
(Shepherd of the People, The.)—CS 5 
Abraham Lincoln. (Sel.) —H: H. Brownell.—GN 
Abraham Lincoln.—W: Cullen Bryant.—HB 
Abraham Lincoln.—Emilio Castelar.—MRS—TMD 
(Tribute to Lincoln.)—FD—SO 
Abraham Lincoln, Sel. fr. (Death of Lincoln.)— 
Ralph W. Emerson.—FD 2 
Abraham Lincoln.—C: H. Fowler.—CS 20 
Abraham Lincoln.—Jas. A. Garfield. See Memory of 
Abraham Lincoln, The. 

Abraham Lincoln.—J. M. Langston—SR 8 
Abraham Lincoln.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Ode Recited 
at the Harvard Commemoration. 

Abraham Lincoln. (Prose essay.) —Jas. R. Lowell.— 
APr—MAL 

Abraham Lincoln.—J. P. Newman.—BLP—PFP 
(Abraham Lincoln’s Place in History.)—PEO 
(Majestic in his Individuality.)—LLC 
Abraham Lincoln.—Goldwin Smith.—LLC 
Abraham Lincoln. (Sonnet.) —R: H: Stoddard.—GN 
Abraham Lincoln.—M. W. Stryker.—TMR 
Abraham Lincoln.—Tom Taylor.—BNL—EPs—FEP 
—HB—LLC—VA 
(SI. abr.)— SO—WIt 4 
(On the Assassination of Lincoln— sel.) —GG 
(Patriot President, The— sel.) —BLP 
Abraham Lincoln. ( Sel.) —H: Watterson.—SR 11 
(Secret of Lincoln’s Power, The— ptly. same.) —SC 
Abraham Lincoln [. A Horatian Ode], (C .)—R : H 
Stoddard.—AA—EDY (abr). 

(Burial of Lincoln— sel.) —MRS 
Abraham Lincoln, the Martyr.—H: W. Beecher. See 
Abraham Lincoln. 

Abraham Lincoln’s Place in History.—J: P. Newman. 
See Abraham Lincoln. 

Abram and Zimri.—Clarence Cook.—CS 8—FMR 
Absalom. (C .)—Nathaniel P. Willis.^-CS 1—-NPS — 
YP 

(David’s Lament for Absalom— si. abr.)— BS 15— 
OM—PS—SAE (sel.) 

(David’s Lament over Absalom— br. sel.) —KNE 
(Lament for Absalom— si. abr.) —LLC 
(Patriot King in Mourning, The— abr.) —BLP 
Absalom and Achitophel, Sets. fr. —J: Dry den. 
Achitophel.—WEP 2 

Character of the Duke of Monmouth.—EDY 
Character of the Earl of Shaftesbury.—BNL 
Doeg and Og.—WEP 2 
Malcontents. The. Zimri.—WEP 2 

(Character of Zimri, The— br. sel.) —EDY 
(Zimri— sel.) —BNL 

Absalom’s Vision.—Jas. Abraham Hillhouse.—TMD 
Absence.—Anon. (at. to Rob't Burns).—FTA—GP— 
PGT 1—YBF 

(“When I think on the happy days.”)—BNL 
Absence.—Matthew Arnold.—FLS 
Absence.—J. A. Blaikie.—VA 
Absence.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB 
Absence.—Rob’t Burns. See Absence.—Anon. 
Absence.—J: Donne(?).—YBF (abr.) 

(“Absence: hear thou my protestation.”)—EI.P 
(Presence in Absence— abr.) —PGT 1 
(That Time and Absence Proves rather Helps, etc.) 
—OB 

Absence.—R: Jago.—OB 
(To Mabel— ad.) —FLS 


17 



Absence 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Absence.—Frances A. Kemble.—BIL—BNL—CS 5— 
FEP—FLS—FTA—H BP—M RS—TF Y 
Absence. (Poems and Epigrams, LII.—C.)—Walter S. 
Landor.—OB 

Absence. (Sonnet LVII.— C.) — W: Shakespeare.— 
PGT 1 

(Sonnet VII.)—OB 
Absence.—W: Shakespeare.—GP 
(Garden of Love, The.)—OH 
(Sonnet.)— EPs—HBP—OB (XIII.) 

(Sonnet XCVIII.— C.)— WEP 1 
Absence.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Absence.—( Tr. by) E. Taylor.—FTA 
“Absence, Hear Thou my Protestation.”—J: Donne. 
See Absence. 

Absence of Little Wesley, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—ASL 
Absence Strengthens Love. (/‘rays. fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Absent, yet Present. (Abr.) —E: Bulwer-Lytton.—FLS 
Absent-mindedness.—Anon.—DE 
Absolution.—E. Nesbit.—BS 18—DR (diff. vers.) 
Absolution.—E. W T . Watson.—AA 
Abstemia.—Gelett Burgess.—NA 
Abstract of a Grand Army Speech.—Anon.—CP 
Abstract of a Response to a Toast: “Noblesse 
Oblige.”—Anon.—CP 

Abstract of an Address at the Dedication of a Hall of 
Science and Art.—Anon.—CP 
Abstrosophy.—Gelett Burgess.—NA 
Abt Vogler.—Rob’t Browning.—HDL (sel.) —VA 
Abuse of Authority.—W: Shakespeare. See Meas¬ 
ure for Measure. 

Abused Boy, An. (C.—in They All Do it.)—Jas. M. 
Bailey. 

(She Cut his Hair.)—BS 12 

Abuses Stript and Whipt, Sel. fr. (Weakness.)—G: 
Wither.—WEP 2 

Academy Episode, An.—R. Neish.—WR 20 
Acadian Exiles, The.—G: Bancroft. - See History of the 
United States. 

Acadie.—Arthur J. Lockhart.—TCV 
"Accept, my love, as true a heart.”—Matthew Prior.— 
FTA 

Accepted and will Appear.—Parmenas Mix.—AWH 
Access to God.—Jas. Hamilton.—KNE 
Accommodating Office Boy, The.—Anon.—WR 20 
Account of a Negro Sermon.—J: B. Gough.—WR 21 
Accounts of W. Canynge’s Feast, The.—T: Chatterton. 
—WEP 3 

Accursed. ( Sacramento Union.) —HP 
Achilles Tatius.—Sappho. See Song of the Rose. 
Achitophel.—J: Dryden. See Absalom and Achitophel. 
Acis and Galatea, Sel. fr. (Song— fr. Pt. II.)—J: Gay.— 
OB 

Acorn and Chestnut.—Anon.—AD * 

Acorn and the Pumpkin, The.—Anon.—AD 
Acorn Lesson, An.—Clara Doty Bates.—YBT 
Acquiescence of Pure Love, The.—W: Cowper.—WEP 3 
Acquittal of the Bishops, The.—T: B. Macaulay.—VSG 
Acquittal of the Bishops.—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
“Across a chasm of eighteen hundred years Jesus 
Christ makes a demand.”—Napoleon Bona¬ 
parte.—GG 

Across the Dykes.—J: F. Herbin.—TCV 

Across the Fields.—Walter Crane.—VA 

Across the Fields to Anne.—R: Burton.—TAV 

“Across the Lot.”—CS—HP 

Across the River.—Lucy Larcom.—CS 8—TAS 

Across the Sea.—W: Allingham.—VS 

Across the Wheat.—Marg. E. Sangster.—HSS 3 

Acrostic, An. (Electricity.)—F. A.—FP 

Acrostic. (Tobacco.)—J. H.—PPh 

Acrostic Plaint, An.—R. S. P.—TL 

Actaeon, Sel. fr. —W: Wilkins.—TIP 

Actea.—Rennell Rodd.—VA 

Acting Drunk.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 

Acting Proverbs.—Anon.—EuE 

Action.—J: (?) Webster.—KNE . 

Actions Speak Louder than Words.—Anon.—YFD. 
Actor, An.—J: Wolcott.—THP 
(On an Artist.)—HPE 
Actor’s Story, The.—G: R. Sims.-—PR 

(Old Actor’s Story, The.)—CS 23—PFP—WR 26 
(si. abr.) 

Acts of the Apostles, Sets. fr. Bible. 

Paul at Athens. (Ch. XVII., 22-31.)—BS 9 
Paul before King Agrippa. (XXVI.)—BS 7—SPE 
(Paul’s Defense before Agrippa.)—SO 
(Paul’s Defense before Festus and Agrippa— 
2-23.)—SS 

Ad Bellonam.—Frank L. Pollock.—PAPm—TCV 
Ad Impudentissimam.—Anon.—CG 1 


Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam.—F. G. Scott.—VA 
Ad Nicotina.—E. H. S.—PPh 

Adalina’s Arrival; or, There’s no Place like Old Con¬ 
necticut.—H. E. McBride.—CS 29 
Adam and Eve.—J: Milton.— See Paradise Lost. 

Adam Bede, Sel. fr. (Mrs. Poyser“Has her Say out.”— 
Ch. XXVI.)—George Eliot—VSG 
Adam Bel, Clym of the Clough, and William of Cloud- 
esle. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
Adam Describing [the Creation of] Eve.-—J: Milton. 
See Paradise Lost. 

Adam Never Was a Boy.—T. C. Harbaugh.—CRR— 
CS 34—DLF 

Adam O’Fintry. (Fr. The Wise Women of Inverness.) 
W: Black.—VSG 

Adam o’ Gordon. (Abr. — in Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—BFV 

(Captain Car— diff. vers.) —PEB 1 
(Edom o’ Gordon.)—OB 
(SI. abr.) —BB—WEP 1 
Adam to Eve.—J: Milton.— See Paradise Lost. 

Adam’s Account of His Creation.—J: Milton. See 
Paradise Lost. 

Adams and Jefferson.—E: Everett. See Eulogy on 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Adams and Jefferson, Sels. fr.— Dan’l Webster. 
Adams and Jefferson.—CS 3—EA (abr.) 

Duty to our Country.—SSD 

(America s Greatness— sel.) —SR 8 

(Our Duties to our Country— abr.) —SE—SPE 
(Future of America, The.)—SE 
Eloquence of John Adams.—PPS 

(Character of True Eloquence— sel.) —SE 
(Eloquence.)—FD 1 

(Eloquence of Action.)—OS 2 (abr.) —PS—SS 
(Nature of Eloquence, The.)—KNE 
(Nature of True Eloquence.)—LLC 
(,46r.)—AE—BS 2—SPE—TMR 
(“War must go on. The ”— hr. sel.) —SE 
Supposed Speech against the Declaration of Inde¬ 
pendence.—FD 1 

Supposed Speech of John Adams on the Declaration 
of Independence.—BS 11—OS 3—SPE 
Declaration of Independence, The— cond.) —OM 
Supposed Speech of John Adams.) — FTR 
—LLC—SM ( cond. )—WCLG 1 
(Abr.)—KNE—SS 

(Supposed Speech of John Adams for the Dec¬ 
laration of Independence—cond.)—FD 1 
(Supposed Speech of John Adams in Support of 
the Declaration of Independence—cond.)—SE 
(Independence— br. sel.)— SE 
(True Eloquence.)—BLP—BS 23 (at. to Lovell) 
—FAS—HSS 2 (abr. )—IR 

Adam’s Morning Hymn in Paradise.—J: Milton.— See 
Paradise Lost. 

Adam’s Warning and Persuasion of His Young Master 
Orlando.—W: Shakespeare.— See As You Like 
It. 

Add Ryman’s Celebrated Fourth of July Oration.— 
Anon.—DE 

Addison.—Eliz. J. Eames.—EDY 
Addison.—Alex. Pope. See Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot. 
Addition to the Capitol. The, Sels. fr. —Dan’l Webster. 
Apostrophe to Washington.—SS 
(Washington.)—CS 29—PRR (abr.) 

Fourth of July, The.—BLP—SE (abr.) —SS 
Additional Verses ( C .).—Oliver W. Holmes. 

(New Hail Columbia.)—LLC 
Address at Bunker Hill.—Dan’l Webster. See Bunker 
Hill Monument, The. 

Address at Cooper Institute, New York, Feb. 27, 1860. 
(C.) —Abraham Lincoln. 

(Cooper Institute Address.)—AI 
Address at Gettysburg.—Abraham Lincoln. See Ad¬ 
dress at the Dedication, etc. 

Address at the Dedication of a Memorial Tablet, An.— 
Anon.—CP 

Address at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettys¬ 
burg.—Abraham Lincoln.—CR—CS 2—LLC— 
OS 2—PEO—PRR—TMR—WRD 
(Address at Gettysburg.)—BLP 
(“Brave men, living and dead, who struggled here. 
The”— sel.)— HSS 1 

(Dedication of Gettysburg Cemetery.)—BS 5—EA 
—FD 1—GG—SC—SO—SR 2—TMD 
(Gettysburg Address.)—SM—WCLG 1 
(Gettysburg Speech.)—AI 

(Remarks at the Dedication of the National Ceme¬ 
tery, etc.) —TR 

(Speech at the Dedication of the National Cemetery 
at Gettysburg.) GMS—MAL—PPS 


18 




TITLE INDEX 


Adonais 


Address at the Harvard Alumni Dinner.—Booker T. 
W ashington.—MRS 

(On Receiving the Master’s Degree from Harvard.) 
—SC 

Address at the Peace Congress, 1849, Sel. fr. (United 
States of Europe, The.)—Victor Hugo.—SS— 
SSD 

Address at the Raising of the Union Flag over Fort 
Sumter, Sel. fr. (Raising the Flag at Sumpter.) 
—FI: W. Beecher.—SR 2 

Address at the Unveiling of the Statue of Rufus Choate. 
—Jos. H. Choate.—MRS 

Address at Unveiling Hale Statue, Sel. jr. (Martyr-spy, 
The.)—C: D. Warner.—TMR 
Address before the Congress of the United States in 
1851, Br. sel. fr. (Roman Senate and the 
American Congress, The.) — L: Kossuth.— 
BLP 

Address before the New York Historical Society. 
(C. — sel.) —Dan’l Webster.—MRS—SR 13 
(Anniversary Address —longer sel .)—LLC 
Address before the Order of Elks, An: A Memory.— 
Anon.—CP 

Address before the Springfield Washingtonian Temper¬ 
ance Society, 1842, Sel. fr. (Two Revolutions.) 
—Abraham Lincoln.—TS 

Address before the : 8th Graduating Class of the Pierce 
School of Business and Shorthand, Philadelphia, 
1893, Sel. fr. (Critical Conditions of Labor, The.) 
—B: Harrison.—BLP 

Address Delivered at the Independence Day Celebra¬ 
tion, Woodstock, Conn., 1888, Se(. fr. (New 
Declaration of Independence, A [or The].)— 
Clinton B. Fisk. — CS 28—TS (si. diff. and 
abr.) 

Address Delivered at the Prohibition Party Conven¬ 
tion, Sel. fr. (Blue and the Gray, The).— 
Frances E. Willard.—TMR 
Address Delivered before the New England Society, in 
New York City, Dec. 22, 1892, Sel. fr. (Teach¬ 
ing of the Colleges, The.)—Seth Low.—TMR 
Address Delivered in South Danvers, at the Dedica¬ 
tion of the Peabody Institute, Sept. 29, 1854, 
Sel. fr. (Consolations of Literature, The.)— 
Rufus Choate.—MRS 

Address, in the Character of “Hope.”—Anon.—MDD 
Address of Black Hawk to Gen. Street.—Black Hawk. 
See Speech of Black Hawk. 

Address of Caradoc the Bard.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. 
—BLP 

(Caradoc, the Bard of the Cymrians.)—SS 
Address of Death to Tomas de Roiste, The.—Douglas 
Hyde.—TIP 

Address of General Wolfe before Quebec.—Jas. Wolfe. 
—BLP 

(To the Army before Quebec, 1759.)—PS—SS 
Address of Leonidas.—Richard Glover. See Leonidas. 
Address of Nicias to His Troops.—Thucydides.—PS 
Address of Serjeant Buzfuz.—C: Dickens. See Pick¬ 
wick Papers. 

Address of Spott.vcus.—Anon.—CS 12 
Address of Welcome, An.—M. G. Kennedy.—SD 
Address of Welcome at an Alumni Dinner, An.—Anon. 
—CP 

Address on Closing a Performance.—Anon.—BC 
Address on Receiving the Degree of Doctor of Laws, 
An.—Anon.—CP 

Address on Temperance. Sel. fr. (Intemperance.)—W: 
E. Channing.—FAS 

Address on the Landing of the Pilgrims, Sel. Ir. (Glori¬ 
ous New England.)—S. S. Pr ntiss.—CS 1 
(New England.)—FD 1 

Address on the Occasion of a New Pastor.—Anon. 
—PS 

Address Spoken at the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre, 
Saturday, Oct. 10, 1812. (C.)—Lord Byron. 
(Reopening of the Drury Lane Theatre.)—EDY 
Address to a College Graduating Class, An.—Anon.— 
CP 

Address to a Graduate Class of Nurses.—Anon.—CP 
Address to a Graduating Class by a Teacher.—Anon 
—CP 

Address to a Lady.—Rob’t Bums.—HBP 

(O [t or. Oh], Wert thou in the Cauld Blast— C .)— 
BPB—MBL—WEP 3—YBF 
Address to a Robin.—Louisa M. Alcott.—A. D. 

Address to a School Graduating Class by a Clergyman. 
Anon.—CP 

Address to a Skeleton.—Anon.—WRD 
(Lines on a Skeleton.)—HBP—PPSr 
(To a Skeleton.)—BNL—CS 4—FEP—PR—PS— 
TMR 


Address to Certain Gold-fishes.—Hartley Coleridge.— 
FEP 

Address to his Troops.—G: Washington.—BS 2 .—OS 2 
(To the American Troops before the Battle of Long 
Island.)—SS—SSD 
(Washington to his Soldiers.)—PS 
Address to Lafayette.—Henry Clay.—EAO 
Address to Northern and Southern Veterans, An.— 
Anon.—CP 

Address to Schoolboys, An.—Anon.—MCS 
Address to the Assembly of Noblesse.—Honore de 
Mirabeau.—MRS 

Address to the Chamber of Peers.—-Trelat.—SS 
Address to the Class of 1877.—Rachel H. Shoemaker. 
—SR 3 

Address to the Comet.—Anon.—FP 
Address to the Deil.—Rob't Burns.—HPE—WEP 3 
(si. abr.) 

(To the Devil— hr. sel.) —EPs 
Address to the Graduating Class of Knox College, 1877. 

—Newton Bateman.—SR 2 
Address to the Indolent.—Jas. Thomson. See Castle 
of Indolence, The. 

Address to the Jury.-—Norman Leslie.—DDR 
Address to the Mummy at [or in] Belzoni’s Exhibition. 
—Horace Smith.—BNL—CS 6—FEP—HBP 
(Mummy, The— abr.) —PPSr 
(To a Mummy.)—OS 3—SO (abr.) 

Address to the New Year.—Dinah M. Craik.—PEO 
Address to the New Year.—Dinah M. Craik. See 
also Psalm for New Year’s Eve, A. 

Address to the Nightingale.—Richard Bamfield. See 
Cynthia. 

Address to the Ocean. — Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Address to the Ocean.—Bryan Waller Procter.—See 
Ocean, The. 

Address to the People of England.—R:H:Lee.—EAO 
Address to the Soldiers.—Jacob M. Manning.—CS 1 
Address to the Sun. (Sel. fr. Carthon.—Jas. McPher¬ 
son.—CS 22 

(Ossian’s Address to the Sun.)—HSS 2—PTS 
Address to the Swiss.—Friedrich Schiller. See Wil¬ 
liam Tell. 

Address to the Toothache.—Rob’t Burns.—BNL— 
BS 19—FEP—HPE—THP 

Address to the Unco Guid; or, the Rigidly Righteous. 
(C.) —Rob’t Burns.—ESs 

(“Then gently scan your brother man— alrr.) —GG 
(To the Unco Guid; or, the Rigidly Righteous.)— 
BNL—EPs 

Address to the Woodlark. (O, Stay, Sweet Warbling 
Woodlark— C.) —Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
Address to the Young Men of Italy.—Jos. Mazzini.— 
PS—SS—SSD 

Addressed to Haydon. (Addressed to Benjamin Rob¬ 
ert Haydon— C.) —J: Keats.—WEP 4 
Adela Cathcart, Sel. fr. (Sir Lark and King Sun: A 
Parable— verses fr. Ch. XVI.)—G: Macdonald. 
—GN 

Adelaide Anne Procter.—Edwin Arnold.—AVP 
Adelaide Neilson. (C.) —W: Winter.—AA 
(Fidele.)—FEP 

Adelgitha.—T: Campbell.—CGd—FEP 
Adhesive Poem, An.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Adieu.—Edmund J. Armstrong.—TIP 
Adieu.—T: Carlyle.—GP—VA 
Adieu.—Minnie Gilmore.—TAS 

Adieu! Adieu! My Native Shore.—Lord Byron. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Adieu to France.—J: Hunter-Duvar. See De Roberval. 
Adieux h Mary Stuart. (Br. sel.) —Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—EDY 

Adirondack Adventures, Sel. fr. (Crossing the Carry 
—abr. fr. Ch. VI.)—W: H. H. Murray.—CS 5 
—MHR 

(Abr.) —BS 1—NPS—YP 
Adirondacs, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AP 
Admiral Dewey.—F. A. Marshall.—PAPm 
Admire Not, Sheph“rd’s Boy.—G: Wither.— See Fair- 
Virtue, the Mistress of Philarete. 

Admonition to a Traveller. (Admonition— C.) —W 
Wordsworth.—PGT 1—YBF 
Admonition to Coming Generations.—Rob’t C. Win- 
throp See Centennial Oration. 

Adolphus, Duke of Guelders.—Rob’t, Lord Lytton.— 
WR 1 

Adonais.—Percy B. Shelley.—FEP—WEP 4 
(Adonais— br. sel.) —OS 3 
(Eternal, The.)—GP 

(Elegy on the Death of Keats, An— br. sel.) — 
EDY 


19 





Adonais 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Adonais.—W. W. Harney.—AA 
Adoon the Lane.—C: Sibley.—BS 3 
(Plaidie, The.)—BNL—GP—THP 
Adopted Child, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—HBP 
Adoration of the Wise Men, The.—C. F. Alexander.— 
PoR 

Adown the Years.—Ada Simpson Sherwood.—CS 34 
Adsum.—R: H: Stoddard.—A A—EDY—TAS 
Adulteress, The. ( C .)—Edwin Arnold. 

(Clemency of Salah-ud-Deen, The.)—WR 24 
“Advance.”—Frank H. Gassaway.—WR 5 
(Grand Advance, The.)—-BS 25—TMD 
Advance of Science; The.—W. Sapte, Jr.—-CS 27 
Advancement of Learning, The, Sel. fr. (Worth of 
Knowledge— sel. fr. Bk. 1.)—Fs. Bacon.—LLC 
Advantage of Knowing French, The.—Anon.—DSS 
Advantages of Adversity to the Pilgrim Fathers.—E: 
Everett. See First Settlement of New Eng¬ 
land, The. 

Advantages of Truth and Sincerity. (C.) —J: Tillotson. 

(Truth and Integrity— in 2 pis.) —KNE 
Advent Carol, An, Sel. fr. —Anon.—GG 
Advent of the Ballot Reform, The.—Grover Cleveland. 
—FD 2 

(Ballot Reform— ptly. same.) —BS 18 
Adventure, An.—Amelia B. Edwards.—WR 1 
Adventure of Baron Munchausen with his Horse. 
—Rudolph E. Raspe. See Travels of Baron 
Munchausen. 

Adventure of Baron Munchausen in a Fight with the 
Turks.—Rudolph E. Raspe. See Travels of 
Baron Munchausen. 

Adventures in the Wrong House.—Mrs. E. W. Brown. 
—HD 

Adventures of Jimmy Brown, Sels. fr. —W: L. Alden. 
Ghost Scene, The. (Our New Walk— C.) —SR 10 
Jimmy Brown’s Attempt to Produce Freckles. 

(Freckles— C. — abr.) —BS 23 
Jimmy Brown’s Prompt Obedience (Prompt Obe- 
'dience— C.) —BS 17 

Jimmy Brown’s Sister’s Wedding (Sue’s Wedding 
—C.).—BS 14—PR—YA 

Jimmy Brown’s Steam Chair (A Steam Chair— C. 
— si. abr.). —BS 12 

Adventures of Telemachus, Sel. fr. (Telemachus to 
the Allied Chiefs— sel. fr. Bk. XV.)—Francois 
de S. de la M. F^nelon.—SS 
Adventurous Daring. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Adversity.—W: Shakespeare. See As You Like It. 
Advertisement Answered, The.—Frank M. Thorn.— 
CS 17—MYF 

Advertisement of a Lost Day.—Lydia H. Sigourney.— 
FP 

Advertising for a Companion.—Anon.—MC 
Advertising for a Husband.—H. Elliott McBride.— 
MCD 

Advertising for a Servant.—Anon.—HVD 
Advice.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Advice.—Anon.—PHS 

Advice. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Advice. L. L. H.—TL 

Advice. (Poems and Epigrams, CXXVI.—C.)—Wal¬ 
ter S. Landor.—VA 

Advice to a Fire Company.—Anon.—CS 1—DS 
(Fuss at Fires.)—SS 

Advice to a Girl.—T: Campion.—PGT 1—YBF 
Advice to a Lover.—Anon.—PGT 1—YBF 
Advice to a Reckless Youth.—Ben Jonson.—FP 
Advice to a Young Lawyer.—Jos. Story.—KNE 
(Advice to Young Lawyers.)—FTR 
Advice to a Young Man.—Anon.—FAS 
Advice to a Young Man.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—NPS— 
PP—PS—SR 4—YP—YPS 
Advice to Amateurs.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Advice to an Advocate.—Jos. Story.—KNE 
(Eloquence or Oratory.)—SR 2 
Advice to Boys.—H: Downton.—KNS 

(Brave and True.)—DS—PP—YA—YFR 
(To the Boys.)—FAS 

Advice to Marry Betimes.—Jos. Hall.—WEP 1 
Advice to My Country.—Jas. Madison.—HS 
Advice to the Young.—Anon.—CS 15 
Advice to Young Lawyers.—Jos. Story. See Advice 
to a Young Lawyer. 

Advice to Young Men.—Noah Porter.—PS 

(“Young men, you are the architects of your own 
fortunes”— si. abr.) —GG 
Advice to Young Women.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Ae Fond Kiss. (C.)—Rob’t Burns.—OB—YBF 
(Ae Fond Kiss before We Part.')—BNL—GP 
(Farewell to Nancy.)—FEP—HBP—WEP 3 


/Eglamour’s Lament.—Ben Jonson. See Sad Shep¬ 
herd, The. 

.Ella, Sels. fr. —T: Chatterton. 

Minstrel’s Marriage Song.—WEP 3 

Minstrel’s Roundelay.—WEP 3 (si. abr.) 

(Minstrel’s Song [in Ella].)—BNL—CGd (abr.) 

—FEP—HBP 
(My Love is Dead.)—GP 
(Song from .Ella— si. abr.) —OB 
Eneid, The, Sels. fr. —Yirgil (tr. by Gawain Douglas). 

Destiny of Rome, The. (Sel. fr. Bk.VI., Pt. XV.)— 
WEP 1 

Destruction of Troy, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.— diff.tr.) 
—PR—WR 11 

Dido’s Hunting. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV., Pt. IV.)—WEP 1 

Ghost of Creusa, The. (Bk. II., Pt. XII., abr.) — 
WEP 1 

Nisus and Euryalus. (Sel. fr. Bk. IX.—Coning- 
ton’s tr.) —NE 

Sleep. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV., Pt. II.)—WEP 1 

Tribes of the Dead, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. VI., Ch. XI.) 
—WEP 1 

Eneid, The, Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Eolian Harp.—W: Allingham.—TIP 
.•Eolian Harp. (Br. sel. fr. diff. poem..) —W: Allingham. 
—EPs 

Eolian Harp, An.—Michael Field.—VA 
Esop.—Andrew Lang.—VA 
Esthetic Craze, The.—Virginia McGill.—BS 16 
Esthetic Drill.—Marguerite W. Morton.—ID 
.Esthetic Housekeeper, An.—Anon.—DCR 
Estivation.—Oliver W. Holmes.—NA 
.Etate XIX.—-Herman C: Merivale.—VA 
Afar in the Desert.—T: Pringle.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
—LLC 

Afeared of a Gal.—Anon.—AWH—HP—TAV—WR 4 
Affaire d’Amour.—Marg. Deland.—BNL 
Affairs in Cuba.—J: M. Thurston.—PPS 
Cuba— sel.) —FAS 
Plea for Cuba, A— si. cond.) —SC 
Affectation in the Pulpit.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Affection of the Heart, An.—Paschal H. Coggins.— 
CS 37 

Affectionate Letter, An. — Anon. — HR ( cond. and si. 

diff.) 

(Bridget O’Hooligoin’s Letter.)—DI 

(Irish Letter, An.)—CS 5—PTS 
Affinity.—Anon.—TL 
Affliction.—G: Herbert.—EPs 

Affliction of Margaret, The. (C.) —W: Wordsworth.— 
PGT 1 

(Mother’s Lament, A.)—SAE 
Affray in King Street, Boston, 1770, The.—Nathaniel 
Hawthorne. See Grandfather’s Chair. 

Afoot.—C: G. D. Roberts.—VA 
Afore yo’ Daddy Comes.—Lalia Mitchell.—WR 24 
Afraid of the Dark.—Anon.—HVD 
“Afraid? of whom am I afraid?” (C .)—Emily Dick¬ 
inson. 

(Needless Fear.)—TAS 
African Mother, The.—Anon.—WR 16 
African Slave Trade, The, Sel. fr. (Barbarism of our 
British Ancestors.)—W: Pitt, the younger. —SS 
After.—Theodora Bates.—CG 3 
After a Dance.—J: Moran.—WR 12 
After a Fashion.—Mrs. E. B. Duffy.—StD 
After a Lecture on Keats.—Oliver W, Holmes.—AA 
After a Match.—Anon.—BS 20 
After All!—G. Butt.—FLS 

After All.—W: Winter.—ASL—AWB—LLC—PAP— 
PAPm 

After a Summer Shower.—Andrews Norton.—FEP— 
POS 

After an Interval.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
After Aughrim.—Arthur G. Geoghegan.—TIP 
After Awhile.—Anon.—KNE 

After Blenheim.—Rob’t Southey.—CGd—EHT—LC— 
PGT 1—PHS—PSR 

(Battle of Blenheim, The.— C.) —BNL—CS 8— 
EDY — FEP — GN — HBP — HSS 1 — LLC— 
OS I—PC—WCL—WEP 4 
After Construing.—Arthur C. Benson.—VA 
After Corunna.—C: Wolfe.—LH 

(Burial of Sir John Moore [,The].)—BLP—BNL— 
BPB—BSP—CS 8 — EDY—EHT—FEP—FP 
—GN—GP—HB—HBP—LC— LLC — MR — 
OS 2—PC—SAE (abr.) —SE— SS — TIP — 
WCLG 1 

(Burial of Sir John Moore after Corunna, The.)—OB 

(Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna, The.)— 
BFV—CEL—EPs — PGT 1 — PHS — PSR— 
WEP 4—YBF 


20 




TITLE INDEX 


Against 


After Death. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
After Death.—Edwin Arnold. See After Death in 
Arabia. 

After Death.—Frances I. Parnell.—VA 
(Post Mortem.)—TIP 
After Death.—C: F. Richardson.—AA 
After Death.—Christina G. Rossetti.-—VA 
After Death in Arabia. (C.)—Edwin Arnold.—CS 31 
—FEP—VA 

(After Death.)—BS 8—OS 3 
(He who Died at Azan.)—HBP—HDL 
(Resurrection of Abdullah.)—LLC 
After Frost.—Anon.—WR 7 
After Grace.—Anon.—WR 22 
After Love.—Arthur Symons.—FLS 
After Many Days.—Philip B. Marston.—FLS 
After Many Tears.—H. C. Kendall.—PGT 2 
After Music.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
After Rain.—Archibald Lampman.—TCV 
After Rain.—W: Wordsworth.—CEL 
(In March.)—PC 

(March.)—BFV—HBP—OS 1—PHS—PoR 
(Written in March.— C .)—AE—CGd—LC 
After Reading Austin Dobson.-—E.—CG 1 
After School, What? (Dial.) —Anon.-—DS—MPD—YA 
After so Long.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
“After Sorrow’s Night.”—R: W. Gilder.—MR 
After Summer.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
After the Accident.—F. Bret Harte.—BS 1 
After the Ball.—Nora Perry.—CS 15—FEP—GP 
After the Battle—Anon—CS 2—PPSr—PRR 
After the Battle.—Anon.—CS 9—DS—PRR 
(Dying Captain, The.)—SR 7 
After the Battle.—Anon.—HSS 1 

(Searching for the Slain.)—CS 3—FTR—NPS— 
PS—YP 

After the Battle.—Mary E. Braddon.—OS 2 
After the Battle.—Robert J. Burdette.—SYS 
After the Battle.—Annie R. Christie.—TCV 
After the Battle.—Jas.Dawson.-—PFP 
(By the Alma.)—BS 22 
After the Battle.—T: Moore.—TIP 
After the Battle.—V. Stuart Mosby.—CS 29—NPS— 
YP 

(War’s Sacrifice.)—WR 3 
After the Battle.—R: C. Trench.—VA 
After the Burial.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AA 
After the Charge at La Quasina.—E: Marshall.—SO 
After the Circus.—Clara J. Denton.—ASD 
After the Cows.—J: Vance Cheney.—TAV 
After the Darkness—Light.—Anon.—SSS 
After the Explosion. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

After the Fourth of July.—M. Phelps Dawson.—BS 26 
After the Game.— (Columbia Spectator.) —CG 2 
After the German.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
After the Lecture on Spion Kop.—Jos. I. C. Clarke.— 
EDY 

After the Opera.—Ben W. Davis.—CS 35 
After the Play.—Burton E. Stevenson.—CG 1 
After the Rain.—T: B. Aldrich.—BNL—GP 
After the Skirmish.—Sir Alfred Lyall.—A VP 
After the Soiree.—F. R. D. B.—CG 2 
After the Storm.—Harriet M. Kimball.—HDL 
After the Storm.—W: M. Thackeray. See White 
Squall, The. 

After the Summer Storm.—Sarah H. Whitman.—POS 
After the Theater.—Anon.—CS 22 
After the Waltz.—Ben W. Davis.—CS 36 
After the Wedding.—Anon.—WR 25 
After the Wedding.—W: L. Keese.—BS 18 
After Twenty Years.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
(Noble Revenge, The.)—CS 6—PS 
After Twenty Years.—Helen Booth.—CS 14 
After Vacation.—Anon.—PEO 
After Wings.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA 
After-comers, The.—Rob’t T. S. Lowell.—AA. 
After-dinner Speech.—Sir H: Lytton Bulwer, Lord 
Dalling.—MRS 

After-dinner Speech before the Harvard Club of New 
York.—H. E. Howland—MRS 
After-dinner Speech by a Frenchman. — Litchfield 
Moseley. See Charity Dinner, The. 
After-dinner Story, An.—Anon.—CP 
Afterglow.—C: G. Blanden.—TFY 
Aftermath.—Mrs. M. E. Banta.—WR 14 
Aftermath, The.—Jas. Hendry.—HP 
Aftermath.—R. W. Walker.—CG 3 

Afternoon. (Fr. Post-meridian.)—W. P. Garrison.— 
AA 

Afternoon Call, An.-—W: Cowper.—See Conversation. 
Afternoon in a Hotel Room, An.—J: K. Bangs. NP 


Afternoon in February.—H: W. Longfellow.—GMS— 
HBP 

Afternoon Nap, The.—C: G. Eastman.—WCL 

(Farmer Sat in his Easy Chair, The.)—GP—TAV 
(Midsummer Day Scene, A.—CS 7 
(Picture, A.)—BNL—FEP 
Afternoon Tea, An.—B. L. C. Griffith.—MN 
Afternote of the Hour, The.—C. Tennyson-Turner.— 
PGT 2 

After-song. (In The New Day.)—R: W. Gilder.—AA— 
BIL—TAS 

Afterthought, An.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
After-thought. (C.)—W: Wordsworth.—WEP 4 
(Valedictory Sonnet to the River Duddon.)—OB 
Afterward.—Mary Montgomerie, Lady Currie.—AVP 
( Aft erwards.)—V A 

Afterwards. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Afterwards.—Burton E. Stevenson.—CG 1 
Afterwhiles, Proem in.—Jas. W. Riley.—SAE 
Afton Water. (Sweet Afton— C.) —Rob’t Burns.— 
BNL—GP—SN—YBF 

(Flow Gently, Sweet Afton.)—FEP—IR—LLC— 
MBL—SO—WCLG 1 

Again Brethren and Equals.—Jas. W. Patterson.— 
BLP 

"Again Rejoicing Nature Sees.” (Composed in Spring. 
— C.) —Rob’t Burns.—SN 

"Again to Thy dear Name” (Grant us Thy Peace).—J. 
Ellerton.—LLC 

"Again we lift the veil amid our tears.” — Thorpe 
Greenleaf.—DFR 

Against a Compromise of Principle, Sel. fr. (Com¬ 
promise of Principle.)—H: W. Beecher.—NC— 
PEO 

Against Bribery.—Demosthenes. See Philippics, The. 
Against Caius Verres.—Cicero. See Verres Denounced. 
Against Catiline.—Cicero. See First Oration against 
Catiline. 

Against Centralization.—H: W. Grady.—PPS (cond.) 
(Centralizat ion in the United States— more cond.) — 
NC—PFP 

(Love of Home, The— sel.) —TMR 
(Opportunities of the Scholar— sel.) —BS 18—PFP 
—PS 

(University the Training Camp of, the Future, 
The— si. cond.) —NC—PEO 

Against Curtailing the Right of Suffrage.—Victor Hugo. 
—OM—PPS 

Against Duelling.—Anon. See In Favor of a State 
Law Against Duelling. 

Against Employing Indians in War.—W: Pitt, Earl of 
Chatham. See American War, The. 

Against Expansion.—H: U. Johnson.—SC 

Against Flogging in the Navy.—Rob’t F. Stockton.— 

SC—ss 

(Against Whipping in the Navy— abr. and si. diff.) 
EA—FD 1 

(“Shall an American citizen,” etc.— br. sel.) —SO 
(American Sailor, The— si. abr.) —OM 
Against Foreign Conquest.—De Witt Clinton.—SS 
Against Foreign Entanglements.—G: Washington.—SS 
Against Imperialism.—G: F. Hoar.—SC 
Against Indifference.—C: Webbe.—OB 
Against License.—G: G. Annable.—CS 36 
Against Lord John Russell’s Motion.—G: Canning.—SS 
Against Love.—Sir J: Denham.—WEP 2 
Against Mr. Pitt, 1741.—Sir Rob’t Walpole.—PS—SS 
(Against William Pitt.)—SSD 
(Sir Robert Walpole against Mr. Pitt.)—KNE 
(Walpole’s Attack on Pitt.)—BS 17—FTR 
Against Philip.—Demosthenes. See Philippics, The. 
Against Political Jobbing.—R: B. Sheridan.—PS 
Against Quarreling and Fight ing, Sel. fr. —Isaac Watts. 
—BNL 


Against Religious Distinctions.—J. P. Curran.—SS 
Against Search-warrants for Seamen.—W: Pitt, Lord 
Chatham.—PPS 

Against Secession.—Dan’1 Webster. See Constitution 
and the Union, The. 

Against the Embargo, 1808.—Josiah Quincy.—OM— 
SS 


(Embargo, The— si. abr .)—SO 
Against the Force Bill, 1833.—J: C. Calhoun.—PS (si. 
abr.) —SS (si. abr.) 

(Force Bill, The.)—MRS 

Against the Fugitive-slave Law.—Theodore Parker.— 
SC 


Against the Nobility and Clergy of Provence, February 
3, 1789.—Honore de Mirabeau.—PS—SS 
Against the Spoils System.—H : Van Dyke.—SC 
Against the Stamp Act.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham.— 


FTR 


21 





Against 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Against the Succession of Richard Cromwell to the 
Protectorate.—Sir H: Vane.—SS 
Against the Terrorism of the Jacobins.—Pierre V. 
Vergniaud.—PS—SS—SSD 

Against them who Lay Unchastity to the Sex of 
Women.—W: Habington. See Castara. 
Against War, January 13, 1792.—Maximilien M. I. 
Robespierre.—PS—SS 

Against Whipping in the Navy.—Rob’t F. Stockton. 

See Against Flogging in the Navy. 

Against William Pitt.—Sir Rob’t Walpole. See 
Against Mr. Pitt, 1741. 

"Agar,” The.—( Boston Gazette.) —BS 5 
Agassiz.—Jas. T. Fields.—EDY 
Agassiz.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AP 
Agatha.—Alfred Austin.—VA 
Agatha.—Will H. Kernan.—WR 2 
Agathon, Sel. fr. (Song of Eros— fr. Sc. I.)—G: E. 
Woodberry.—AA 

Age, The.—Herbert E. Clarke.—VA 
Age.—R: Garnett.—VA 

Age.—H: W. Longfellow. See Morituri Salutamus. 

Age and Song. (C.) —Algernon C: Swinburne.—FEP 
(New Year’s Eve.)—OS 3 

“Age is tempestuous with speculation, The.”—Anon. 
—GG 

Age of a Dream, The.—Lionel Johnson.—TIP 
Age of Children Happiest, The.—H: Howard, Earl of 
Surrey. See No Age Content with his Own 
Estate. 

Age of Improvement, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Bun¬ 
ker Hill Monument, The. 

Age of Miles Standish, The.—F. T. Greenhalge.—FD 2 
Age of Progress, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Age of Progress.—C: Sumner. See Incentives to Duty. 
Age of Queen Anne, The.—Alex. Pope. See Rape of 
the Lock, The. 

Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History, 
The, Sels. fr. —Rufus Choate. 

Heroic Age, The. ( Br. sel.) —OS 2 
Heroism of the Pilgrims, The.—NPS—YP 
(Pilgrim Fathers, The— br. sel.) —SE 
(Spartans and the Pilgrims, The.)—TMD 
Pilgrims of New England, The.—BLP 
Age of Trees.—Anon.—AD 

Age of Wisdom, The.—-W: M. Thackeray.—BNL— 
FEP—GP—HBP—VA—YBF 
Age of Work, The.—J :P. Kennedy.—BLP 
(Mechanical Epoch, The.)—SS 
Age We Live in. The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Aged Cities.—Frd’k W. Faber.—AVP 
"Aged man who loved to doze away, An."—Walter S. 
Landor.—WEP 4 

Aged Man-at-arms, The.—G: Peele.—FEP 
(Farewell to Arms, A.)—ELP—OB—YBF 
Aged Prisoner, The.—Anon.—CS 18—DS—NPS— 
YP 

Aged Stranger, The. (C.) —Fs. Bret Harte.—AA— 

gg g_pTg 

(I Was with Grant.)—CS 7 

Agencies in our National Progress.—Alex. K. McClure. 
—SC 

Ages, The, Sel. fr. (America).—W: C. Bryant.— 
CS 17—WR 10 

Aghadoe.—J: Todhunter.—OB 

Agincourt.—Michael Drayton.—HB—LH (w. Shakes¬ 
peare.)—OB 

(Ballad of Agincourt [The].)—BNL—BPB—EDY 
—FEP—HB—HBP—HSS 1—PSR 
(Battle of Agincourt, The — C.) — BFV — CEL — 
EHT—GN—OS 3 

(To the Cambro-Britains and their Harps, etc.) — 
ELP—WEP 1 

Agincourt.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 
Aglaura. Sel.fr. (Encouragements to a Lover.)—Sir J: 
Suckling.—PGT 1 

(Orsames’ Song [in “Aglaura”].)—ELP—ES— 
WEP 2 

Song—C.)—HBP 
To a Lover.)—YBF 

Why so Pale [and Wan, Fond Lover]?)—BNL— 
FEP—GP—OB—OEL—PYO 
Agnes.—H. F. Lyte.—PGT 1 
Agnes and the Years.—Celia M. Burr.—WRD 
Agnes Hotot.—Walter K. Fohes.—FMR 
Agnes, I Love Thee.—Anon.—CH—CRR—SR 5 
(Lofty Faith.)—CS 8 

Agnes the Martyr.—Ellen Murray.—CS 26 
Agnostic, The. ( Abr.) —C. M. Snyder (at. also to A. T. 
Worden).—SR 13 
(Mullins the Agnostic.)—CS 35 
Agony Bells.—Allie Wellington.—CS 7 


Agricultural Editor’s Poem, The. ( C .)—Sam W. Foss. 
(City Man’s Dream of the Country.)—BS 24 
(Country Summer Pastoral, A.)—WR 14 
Agriculture and Love of Country.—Jos. Holt.—FD 1 
(Love of Country.)—CS 20 

Agriculture as Affected by the War, Sel. fr. (Nature.) 

—E: Everett.—TMR 
Agra-dolce.—Jas. R. Lowell.—FTA—OH 
“Ah, be not false.”—R: W. Gilder.—AA 
Ah, Bring It Not.—Dollie Radford.—VA 
“Ah, dear papa, did you but know.” (Petition— C. 

— abr.) —Jane Taylor.—BVC 
Ah, how Sweet it is to Love. (Fr. Tyrannic Love.)— 
J: Dryden.—BNL—OB 
Ah, Lassie Fair!—S. G. Tenney.—CG 1 
"Ah, Love! let us be true!”—Matthew Arnold. See 
Dover Beach. 

Ah, Me.—Anon.—HP 

“Ah me! for aught that ever I could read.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 
"Ah, me! How dark the discipline of pain.” (Br. sel. 
fr. President Garfield.)—H: W. Longfellow.— 
HDL 

Ah, Sunflower. (C. — in Songs of Experience.)—W: 

Blake.—WEP 3 
(Sunflower, The.)—EPs 

"Ah, there be souls none understand.”—Joaquin|Miller. 

See Ship in the Desert, The. 

“Ah, what avails the sceptered race!” (Poems and 
Epigrams, LXXX.— C.) —Walter S. Landor.— 
WEP 4 

( Rose Aylmer—C.)—BFV—BPB—FEP—OB— 
VA—VS—YBF 

"Ah! when shall all men’s good.”—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Golden Year, The. 

“Ah! when the infinite burden of life descendeth upon 
us.”—H: W. Longfellow. See Children of the 
Lord’s Supper, The. 

"Ah I When will all be ended.”—W: Morris. See Life 
and Death of Jason, The. 

Ah! Yet Consider it Again.—Arthur H. Clough.—VA 
Ah Yet’s Christmas.—Paul P. Davis.—BS 22 
Ahab Mohammed.—J. M. Legare.—AA 
“Ah-goo!”—C: F. Adams.—CS 4—SR 12 
Ahkoond of Swat, The.—G: T: Lanigan.—AWH— 
THP 

(Threnody, A.)—AA—EDY—NA 
Ahmed.—Jas. Berry Bensel.—AA 

“A-hunting we will go.” (Fr. Don Quixote in Eng¬ 
land.)—H: Fielding.—BNL—FEP 
(Diff. vers.) —OES 

(Hunting Song— sel.) —BVC 
Aideen’s Grave, Sel. fr. —Sir S: Ferguson.—TIP 
Aidenn.—Katrina Trask.—A A 

Aim at Perfection.—Philip D. Stanhope, Lord Chester¬ 
field—BLP 

Aim High.—B: Harrison.—BLP 

Aim of Life, The.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 

Ain’t he Cute.—Anon.—CS 21—DS—NPS—YA— 
YP 

Air and Sea. The.—M. F. Maury.—LLC 
Air Castles.—Clara H. Bradner.—CS 27 
Aired Her Knowledge.— (Detroit Free Press.)— CS 37 
Airly Beacon.—C: Kingslev.—OB—VS—WEP 4— 
YBF 

Airs of Spring, The. (Fr. Upon Master W. Montague, 
his Return from Travel.)—T: Carew.—FEP— 
HBP 

("Sweetly breathing, vernal air.”)—BNL 
Airy Nothings.—W: Shakespeare. See Tempest, The. 
Ajax.—Phcebe Cary.—BLF 

Akbar’s Dream, Sel. fr. (Hymn.)—Alfred Tennyson.— 
WEP 4 

Akinetos.—R: Hengist Horne. See Orion: An Epic 
Poem. 

Akond of Swat, The.—E: Lear.—EDY—NA 
A1 Fresco.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD 
Alabama, The.—Maurice Bell.—EDY 
Aladdin.—Jas. R. Lowell.—ASL—BFV 
Aladdin; or. The Wonderful Lamp. (Fr. The Arabian 
Nights’ Entertainments.)—Anon.—WCI.G 1 
(Diff. vers.) —WGS 

Alaham, Sel. fr. (Chorus of Good and Evil Spirits.)— 
Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.—WEP 1 
Alamance.—Seymour W. Whiting.—BLP 
Alameda.—Mary Stewart.—CS 36 
Alarmed Skipper, The. (C.)—Jas. T. Fields.—MHR 
(Nantucket Skipper, The.)—BNL—CS 5—CSS— 
FEP—GP 

Alarming Prospect.— (Punch.) —HPE 
"Alas! how bitter are the wrongs of love.”—Anon — 
GG 


22 






TITLE INDEX 


All 


“Alas! how few of nature’s faces are left to gladden us 
with their beauty.”—C: Dickens.—GG 
Alas! How Light a Cause May Move.—T: Moore. 
See Lalla Rookh. 

Alas the Songs!—J: W. De Lys.—FLS 
Alasco to his Countrymen. ( Fr. Alasco.)—Sir Martin 
A. Shee.—PS 

Alastor; or, the Spirit of Solitude, Sel. fr. —Percy B 
Shelley.—WEP 4 

(Invocation to Nature— briefer sel.) —GP 
Albatross.—C: Warren Stoddard.—AA—SN 
Albatross, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Albert Drecker.—T: J. Hyatt.—SR 2 
Albert Graeme’s Song.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel. 

Albert Sidney Johnston.—Kate Brownlee Sherwood.— 
EDY 

Albert the Good.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the 
King. 

Albert’s Rehearsal.—Anon.—MFD 
Albino.—Ambrose Philips.—EP 

Albion’s England, Sel. fr. (Before the Battle of Hast¬ 
ings.)—W: Warner.—WEP 1 
Alborak. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Album Quilt, An.—Anon.—EuE 
Album Verses. (C.)—Oliver W. Holmes. 

(Why They Twinkle.)—DCP—SAE 
Album Verses.—Washington Irving.—GP 
Alciphron and Leucippe.—Walter S. Landor.—OB 
Alcoholic and Tobacco Habit, The.—Neal Dow.— 
BLP 

Alcyone.—Frances L. Mace.—AA 
Alec Dunham’s Boat.—C: H : Webb.—TAV 
Alec Yeaton’s Son.—Thos. B. Aldrich.—BFV 
Alex tells a Bear Story.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 

(Bear Story, The.)—RCR 
Alexander.—Alexander Geddes.—CS 37 
Alexander, Br. sel. fr. —Nath. (?) Lee.—AE 
Alexander and Campaspe (or Campaspe), Sels. fr. — 

J: Lyly. 

Animate Nature (Song— C. — fr. Act III., Sc. 5.).— 
BNL 

(Songs of Birds, The.)—FEP 
(Spring, The.)—YBF 

(Spring’s Welcome.)—ELP—EP—ES—OB 
(Song: ‘‘What bird so sings, yet does so wail?”) 
—OEL 

Apelles’ Song (Song by Apelles— C). —ELP— 
WEP 1 

(Cards and Kisses.)—OB 

(Cupid and Campaspe.)—BNL—CEL—ES— 
FEP—GP—PGT 1—YBF 
(Cupid and my Campaspe Played.)—OEL 
Alexander and the Robber.—J: Gower. See Confessio 
Amantis, The. 

Alexander Breaking Bucephalus.—G: L. Taylor.— 
WR 5 

Alexander Mackenzie.—Elizabeth S. Macleod.—TCV 
Alexander II. (Sonnet: Czar Alexander the Second 
— C.) —Dante G. Rossetti.—EDY 
Alexander Selkirk.—W: Cowper.—OS 2 

(Solitude of Alexander Selkirk, The.)—BPB 
(Sel.) —PGT 1—PSR 

(Verses Supposed to be Written by Alexander 
Selkirk— C.)— BNL — CGd — FEP — HBP — 
MBL—WCLG 2 

Alexander Taming Bucephalus.—Park Benjamin.— 

CS 15 

Alexander the Great to his Men.—Quintus Curtius.— PS 
Alexander Ypsilanti.—Anon.—EA 
Alexander’s Feast; or. The Power of Music.—J: 
Drvden.—BFV — BNL — BPB — BS 17— 
EDY— ELP — EPs — FEP — HBP — LH— 
PGT 1—WCLG 2—WEP 2 

(Sel.) —GN—OS 3—SE 

Alexander’s Store.—Marietta Holley. See My Opin¬ 
ions and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Alexandra.—Alfred Tennyson.—SE (sel.) 

(Welcome to Alexandra, A.—C.)—EDY-—SO 
“Alexis, here she stay’d; among these pines.”—W; 

Drummond. Sec Spring Bereaved, III. 

Alfred, Sel. fr. —Jas. Thomson. See Rule Britannia. 
Alfred.— W- Wordsworth. See below. 

Alfred and his Descendants. (Ecclesiastical Sonnets, 

Pt. I., Sons. XXVI. and XXVTI.)—W Words¬ 
worth.—EHT 

(Alfred—XXVI.)—EDY 

Alfred the Great; or, The Patriot King, Sel. fr. (Alfred 
the Great to his Men— br. sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 3; 
sel. fr. V., 2.)—Jas. S. Knowles.—PS—SS— 
TMD' 1 

23 


Alfred the Great to His Men.—Jas. S. Knowles.— See 
foregoing. 

Alfred the Harper.—J: Sterling.—BNL—EPs—HBP 
Alhama.—Anon. ( Ir. by Lord Byron).—LH 
(Siege and Conquest of Alhama— sel .)—EPs 
(Very Mournful Ballad on the Siege and Conquest 
of Alhama, A.—C.).—FEP—HBP 
Alhambra, The, Sels. fr .—Washington Irving. 
Governor and the Notary, The.—WCLG 1 
Governor Manco and the Soldier.—WCLI 2 
Legend of the Enchanted Soldier, The.—WCLG 1 
Legend of the Moor’s Legacy.—WCLG 1 
Moonlight on the Alhambra. (Fr. The Author’s 
Chamber).—IR 

Alice Ayres.—Emelia A. Blake.-—DES 
Alice Brand.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake 
The. 

Alice Du Clos. (Sel .)—Samuel T. Coleridge.—WR 9 
Alice Fell; or, Poverty.—W: Wordsworth.—CGd 
Alice Maude.—Anon.—WR 7 

Alice of Monmouth, Sels. fr— Edmund C. Stedman. 
Alice of Monmouth, Sel. fr .—BIL 
Cavalry Song.— AWB — BNL — MRS — PAPm— 
PEO 

Alice of Old Vincennes, Sel. fr. (Alice’s Flag.)— 
Maurice Thompson.—NP 
Aljce Ray.—Sarah Josepha Hale.—AA 
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Sel. fr. —Lewis Car- 
roll. 

Lobster Quadrille, A. (Whiting and the Snail, The 
—C.—fr. Ch. X )—PoR 
Aljce’s Choice.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Alice’s Flag.—Maurice Thompson. Sec Alice of Old 
Vincennes. 

Alice’s Party.—Eliza Doolittle.—StD 

Alicia’s Bonnet.—Elisabeth J. (C.) Pullen.—AA 

Aline’s Love Song.—Emma Dunning Banks.—BR 

Alison.—Anon.—OB 

Alison Gross.—Anon.—BB 

All.—Fs. A. Durivage.—PYO 

All about the Weather.—Anon.—CS 26 

All about Two Dolls.—Anon.—HVD 

All at Sea.—H. G. Fiske, G: Vandenhoff and C. L. 

Burnham.—DDM 
All Before.—Anon.—GP 

(Grief for the Dead.)—BNL 

All Earthly Jov Returns in Pain.—W: Dunbar.— 
HBP 

All Ending in “O.”—A. F. Caldwell.—WR 17 
All for a Man.—Helen M. Winslow.—WR 22 
All for Love.—Lord Byron.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Stanzas: “O talk not,” etc.)—FEP—HBP 
(Stanzas Written on the Road Between Florence 
and Pisa— C.). —BPB—WEP 4 
All for You.—S: M. Peck.—FT A 
All Good-night.—Anon.—YBT 

“All great ages have been ages of belief.” (Fr. 

Worship.)—Ralph W. Emerson.—FHS 
All Happy in Spring.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
All Hollow.—Anon.—BS 16 

All in der Family.—McDermott and Trumble.—DSS 
All in the Wind.—R. E. Gibbs.—CG 3 
All is Vanity, Saith the Preacher. (In Hebrew Melo¬ 
dies.)—Lord Byron.-—FP 

All is Well.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 

All Mankind are Trees.—Anon.—WR 4 

All Mother.—Eliza S. Turner.—OH 

All on One Side.—Harry Romaine.—TL 

“All Other Joys.”—G : Meredith. Sec Modern Love. 

All Quiet along the Potomac. Ethel L. Beers.—AA— 
FEP 

(Picket Guard, The.)—AWB—BNL—CR—CS 2 
(at. to L. Fontaine) — HSS 1—MR — PAP — 
PAPm—WRD 

All Right at Last.—E. H.Trafton.—MD 
All said, still say the same.—Sir Philip Sidney. See 
Astrophel and Stella. 

All Saints. See All-Saints. 

All Saints’ Day. (In The Christian Year.)—J Keble. 
—WEP 4 

All Sorts.—Anon.—GH 

All Souls’ Day.—Rosamond M. Watson.—EDY 
All Souls’ Night.—Dora Sigerson.—TIP—VA 
All that Glitters is not Gold.—S. A. Frost. See Pro¬ 
verb, A. 

All the Children.—Anon.—CS 26 

“All the Comforts of a Home.” (Dial.) —F. Crosby.— 
PD 

All the Good We Can.—G: Cooper.—HSS 2 
“All the rich treasures of the past are appropriated by 
Christianity.”—Prof. — Cocker.—GG 
All the Same.—F. E. Weatherly.-—CS 36 




All 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


All the Same in the End.—Isaac Ross.—HP 

(Song on King William III., A.—Anon.— diff. 
vers .)—NA 

All the World’s a Fraud.—Anon.—FAS 
All the World’s a Stage.—W: Shakespeare. See As 
You Like It. 

All the Year Round.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—BIL— 
FTA 

All Things.—Cecil F. Alexander. See All Things 
Bright and Beautiful. 

All Things Beautiful.—Cecil F. Alexander. See All 
Things Bright and Beautiful. 

All Things Bright and Beautiful.—Cecil F. Alexander. 
—PoR 

(All Things— -sel.) —DST 

(All Things Beautiful— sel.)— AD—HSS 2—WCL 
All Things Bright and Beautiful.—J: Keble.—YBT 
"All things have something more than barren use.”— 
Alexander Smith.—GG 

All Things Love Me.—“A.”. See Little Girls’ Fancies, A. 
All Things Shall Pass Away.—Theodore Tilton.— 
BS 20—TMR 

(Even This shall Pass Away.)—DR—HBR 
(King’s Ring, The.)—OS 2 
All Things to All Men.—Robert J. Burdette.—SYS 
All Things Wait upon Thee.—Christina G. Rossetti.— 
GN 

All Together—Alice M. Eddy.—YBT 
All Upset —Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
“All we Ask is to be Let alone.”—H: H. Brownell.— 
CS 1 

(Let us Alone.— C.) —AWH 
(Old Cove, The.)—EPs 
All Well.—Horatius Bonar. See All’s Well. 

All Yellow.—Anon.—AD 
Allah’s House.—Frank D. Sherman.—TAS 
Allan Percy.—Caroline Norton.—HBP 
All-around Intellectual Man, An.—Tom Masson. See 
All-round Intellectual Man, An 
Allen-a-Dale.—Walter Scott. See Rokeby. 

"Allow for the Crawl.” A Homily.—J: G. Saxe.— 
SR 1 

All-round Intellectual Man, An.—Tom Masson.—PR— 
YA 

(All-around Intellectual Man, An.)—CS 31 
All’s for the Best.—Martin F. Tupper.—CS 6 
All’s Well. (C.)—Horatius Bonar. 

(All Well.)—HBP 
All’s Well!—W: A. Butler.—HBP 
All’s Well. ( Fr. The British Fleet).—T: Dibdin.— 
BNL 

All’s Welh—Harriet M. Kimball.—AA—CS 8— FEP— 

tas 

All’s Well. (C.)—Celia Thaxter. 

(Shadow of Doom, The.)—BS 11 
All’s Well.—Davis A. Wasson.—TAS 
All’s Well that Ends Well, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Mother’s Blessing. ( Br. sel. fr. Act I., Sc. 1.)—EPs 
True Love (Sel. fr. I., 1.).—EPs 
(Love’s Memory— abr.) —BNL 
All-Saints. (C.) —Jas. R. Lowell.—TAS 
(All-Saints Day.)—EDY 
All-Saints’ Day. See also All Saints. 

Alma.—Sir Franklin Lushington.—AVP 
Alma.—R: C. Trench.—EDY 
Alma Mater.—Anon.—CP 
Alma Mater’s Roll.—E. E. Hale.—AA 
Almighty Love, The.—Theodore Parker.—TAS 
AlmiryAnn.—Anon.—WR 12 
Almon Keeper.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Almond Blossom. (April— C .)—Edwin Arnold.—BNL 
—CEL—FEP—GN 

Almost a Man.—E. C. and L. .T. Rook.—COS—PP—PS 
Almost a Mormon. (Dial.) —C: S. Wayne.—CDs 
Almost a Runaway.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Almost a Tragedy. (Dial.)—' “Bob o’Link.”—DDD 
Almost a Tragedy.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Almost Time.—Anon.—NV 
Alms, An.—Ivan TourgeniefF.—WR 9 
Alnwick Castle. — Fitz - Greene Halleck. — AA — 
BNL (abr.)— FEP 
A1 one.—Anon.—N A 
Alone. ( C .)—-Edgar A. Poe. 

(“From childhood’s hour I have not been as 
others are.”)—FP 

Alone by the Bay.—Louise Chandler Moulton.—GP 
Alone by the Hearth.—G: Arnold.—GP 
Alone with God.—Anon.—SSS 
Along Shore.—Herbert Bashford.—AA 
"Along the Line.”—Irwin Russell.—WR 21 
Alonzo the Brave and the Fair Imogine.—Matthew G. 
Lewis.—BNL—CS 7—FEP—PEB 3—SA 


Aloof.—Christina G. Rossetti.—OB 
(Thread of Life, The— C .)—VA 
Alphabet of Summer, The.—Mrs. J. M. Dana.—CPL 
Alphabet Practice.—Anon.—DLD 
Alphabetical Sermon.—G. Kyle.—WR 3 
Alpheus and Arethusa.—Eugene H. Daly.—AA 
Alpine Heights.—Friederich W. Krummacher (Ir. by 
C. T. Brooks).—BNL 

Alpine Minstrelsy.—Friedrich Schiller. See William 
Tell. 

Alpine Sheep, The.—Maria W. Lowell.—FEP—TAS 
Alps, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. Montgomery. 

Alps, The. (Pt. I.—Day.— abr.) —POS 
Evening in the Alps. (Pt. II.—Night.)—HBP 
Alps, The, Sel. fr. (Italy.)—S: Rogers.—BNL 
Alp’s Decision.—Lord Byron. See Siege of Corinth, 
The. 

Alter Ego.—J: B. Tabb—TAS 

Alton Locke, Sel. fr. —C: Kingsley. See Sands of Dee 
The. 

Altruism.—Robertson Trowbridge.—BS 2 
Alulvan.—Walter Rsmal.—SOC 
Always in a Hurry.—Priscilla Leonard.—PS 
Always Learning.—Anon.—SSS 
Always Some One Below.—Ella Higginson.—HSS 3 
(Helping Hand, A.)—WR 15 
Always too Late.—Anon.—FAD 

“Am Life Wuf de Libin.” (Detroit Free Press.) — 
SR 3 

Amala’s Bridal Song.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s 
Jest Book. 

Amantium Irae.—S: Butler.— See Hudibras. 
Amantium Irae. (Fr. The Paradyse of Dainty 
Devises.)—R. Edwards.—OB—WEP 1 (abr.) 
Amariah and his Boys.—Anon.—MC 
Amaryllis.—Anon.—CS 34 

Amaryllis [or Amarillis].—T: Campion.—EP—OEL 
Amateur Farming.—Anon.—FHE 

Amateur Flute-player, The. (Parody on Poe’s The 
Bells.)—Anon.—CH 
(That Amateur Flute.)—HP 
Amateur Orlando, The.—G: T: Lanigan.—THP 
Amateur Photography.—Nathan H. Dole.— BS 19— 
WR 2 

Amateur Rehearsals; or, the Detectives’ Dilemma.— 
Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KH 
Amatory Sonnets of Abel Shufflebottom, The.—Rob’t 
Southey. 

Delia at Play. (Sonnet I.)—HPE 
Poet Expresses his Feelings Respecting a Portrait, 
etc. (Sonnet III.)—HPE 
Poet Proves the Existence of a Soul, etc. (Sonnet 
IV.)—HPE 

Amaturus.—W. Johnson-Cory.—PGT 2 
A-Maying.—Anon.—ELP 

Amazing, Beauteous Change!—Philip Doddridge.— 
BNL 

(Wilderness Transformed, The.)—HBP 
Ambition.—Anon.—DLS 
Ambition. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Ambition.—Anon.—TT 

Ambition. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Ambition.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Ambition.-—Horace Greeley.—OS 2 
(Self-sacrificing Ambition.)—BLP 
Ambition. (Br. sel. fr. Tamburlaine the Great, Pt. I., 
Act II., Sc. 7.)—Christopher Marlowe.—KNE 
Ambition of a Statesman. (Sel. fr. Speech at the Bar¬ 
becue at Lexington in Honor of Mr. Clay.)—H- 
Clay.—FTR—OM—WR 26 
(My Ambition.)—SO 
Ambitious.—Silvia Manning.—DJS 
(Concert Recitation.)—DLS 
Ambitious Marguerite, The.—Agnes Carr Sage.— 
WR 7 

Ambitious Sophy.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Ambitious Youth, The. (SI. diff. versions.) — Elihu 
Burritt.—WR D 

(One Niche the Highest.)—CS 7—PFP—SC 
(Scene at the Natural Bridge.)—CR 
Amboyna; or, The Cruelties of the Dutch to the Eng¬ 
lish Merchants, Prologue and Epilogue to.—J: 
Dryden. 

(Satire on the Dutch— abr.) —ESs 
Amelia.—Coventry Patmore.—PGT 2 
Amen. F. G. Browning.—SSS 

(“I do not see why God should e’en permit some 
things to be”— br. sel.) —HDL 
Amen of the Rocks, The.—Chr. Gellert (Ir. by Rosegar- 
ten).—CS 2—PEO (diff. ir.) 

Amende Honorable, The. (Punch.)— HPE 


24 




TITLE INDEX 


American 


Amendment to the Address of Thanks on the King’s 
Speech at the Opening of the Session, Nov. 
27, 1781, Sel. jr. (Results of the American 
War.)—C: J. Fox.—SS 

Amendment to the Address on the King’s Speech at 
the Opening of the Session, Nov. 26, 1778, Sel. 
lr. (On War with France or America, 1778.) 
—C: J. Fox.—PS 

America. (.Frags, fr. various authors.) —-BNL 
America. (Fr. The Torch Bearers.)—Arlo Bates.— 

AA 

America.—G: Berkeley.—SS 
(American Destiny.)—BLP 
(Old World and the New, The.)—FP 
(On the Prospect of Planting Art and Learning in 
America.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—YBF 
(Verse: Westward the Star of Empire— hr. sel.) — 
EPs 

(Westward the Course of Empire— abr.) —GP 
America.—W : C. Bryant.—AA—BNL 

(O Mother of a Mighty Race— C.)- —HBP 
America. (Fr. The Ages.)—W: C. Bryant.—CS 17— 
WR 10 

America.—S: S. Cox.—FS 

America. (2 sonnets.)—Sydney Dobell.—WEP 4 
(2nd son. only .)—VA 
America.—Timothy Dwight.—LLC 
America.—Sidney Lanier. See Centennial Meditation 
of Columbia, The. 

America.—J: E. McCann.—BS 15 
America.—C: Phillips.—CS 6—PRR 
(American Republic, The.)—LLC 
(Destiny of America.)—BS 14—OM (abr.) 
(Panegyric on America— sel.) —-FD 1 
America.—Jeremiah E. Rankin.-—BLP 
America.—S: F. Smith.—PAPm 

( Sel. )—A A—CP—FEP—SM—TA V—W CLI 2 
(My Country ’tis of Thee— sel.) —BS 6—LLC— 
SAE—SPE 

(National Hymn— sel.) —OS 1 
America, Sel. jr. (Taxes [the Price of Glory].)—Syd¬ 
ney Smith.—SS—SSD 
America.—Barry Straton.—TCV 
America.—Bayard Taylor. See National Ode, The. 
America an Aggregate of Nations.—Martin F. Tupper. 
—BLP 

America and England.—Washington Irving.—SO 
America and England in Danger of War.—G: E: 

Woodberry. See America to England. 
America in Pinafore.—Julia A. Walcott.—SR 11 
America the Child of Destiny.—Cassius M. Clay.— 
BLP 

America to England. (America and England in Dan¬ 
ger of War— -C. —Pt. II.)—G: E: Woodberry. 
—AA 

America to Great Britain.—Washington Allston.— 
AA—BNL—SS—WR 10 

America Unconquerable.—W: Pitt, Lord Chatham. 
See American War, The. 

American Absent-minded Beggars, The.—Anon.— 
BS 26 

American Age, The.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. See Centen¬ 
nial Oration. 

American and the Corsican, The. (Sel. jr. John Quincy 
Adams.)—W: H. Seward.—NC 
(Corsican not Content, The— abr. )—WCLG 1 
American Battle-flags.—Carl Schurz. See Eulogy on 
Charles Sumner. 

American Boy, The.—Caroline Gilman.—PS 
American Citizenship, its Privileges, Rights and Duties. 
—E. I. Galvin.—SR 8 

American Constitution, The.—Alex. Hamilton. See 
Speech on the Compromises of the Constitution. 
American Constitution no Experiment, The.—Hugh 
3. Legare.—BLP 

(Constitution of the United States not an Experi¬ 
ment, The.)—SS 

American Constitution Tested, The.—J: Adams.— 

BLP 

American Courage.—Sherman Hoar.—MRS 
American Destiny.—-G: Berkeley. See America. 
American Eagle, The.—Anon.—PTS 
American Eagle, The. (Abr.?) —C: W. Thompson. 
CS 28 

(Br.sel. — notin foregoing.) —DFR . 

American Education. (Sel. jr. Free Schools and Free 
Governments.)—Rob’t C: Winthrop.—BLP 
American Example.—Rob’t C: Winthrop. See Hun- 
dreth Anniversary of the Surrender of Lord 

Cornwallis, The. __ 

American Exile, An.—I. H. Brown.—BS 19 CS 22 
—PRR 


American Experiment of Self-government, The. (Sel. 
jr. The Circumstances Favorable to the Pro¬ 
gress of Literature in America.)—E: Everett.— 
SS—SSD—TMD 
(Our Republic.)—SO 

(Prospects of the Republic, The— longer.) —BS 11— 
SR 4 

American Flag, The. (Concert rec.) —Anon.—LPS— 
PP 

American Flag, The.—H: W. Beecher. See National 
Flag, The. 

American Flag, The. (C.) —Jos. R. Drake.—AA— 
BNL—BS 3 —CS 1 —DFR —EDY —FEP — 
FTR—GMS—GN (seZ.)-GP—HBP —BLO¬ 
OM—PAP—PPSr-SE—SM—SS-WCLG 1 — 
WRD 

(Br. sel.)— OS 1—SAE 
(Flag of the Free— br. sel.)—PRR 
(Ode to the American Flag.)—PEO—SR 8 
American Flag, The.—Lena E. Faulds.—WR 17 
American Flag, The.—A. P. Putnam.—PP—YFR 
American Flag,The.—C: Sumner. See AreweaNation? 
American Forest Girl, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.— 
CS 37 

American Freedom.—Jeremiah W. Cummings. See 
Song of the Union. 

American Girl, An.—Brander Matthews.—AA 
American Girl, The.—S. F. P.—CG 2 
American Government, The.—J: Bright. See Strength 
of the American Government, The. 

American History.—Gulian C. Verplanck.—SR 8 
(Our History— abr.) —BLP 
American Home, The.—G: W. Bain.—WR 18 
American Hymn.—Matthias Keller.—BLP 
American Ideals.—Anon.—CP 
American Independence.—S: Adams.—EAO 
(Necessity of Independence, The— sel.) —TMD 
American Indian, The.—C: Sprague. See North Amer¬ 
ican Indians. 

American Indians, The.—Jos. Story. See Indians,The. 
American Innovations.—Jas. Madison.—SS 
American Laborers.—C. C. Naylor.—SS 
(Northern Laborers— abr.) —OM 
American Liberty.—S: Adams.—OS 2 
American Merchant Vessels.—R: Cobden.—SS 
American Nationality, Sels. jr. —Rufus Choate. 

American Nationality. (2 diff. sels .)—BLP—TMR 
Love of Country.—FD 2 
National Life.—TMR 
(Nationality.)—PRR 

American Notes, Sel. fr. (Impressions of Niagara— jr. 
Ch. XIV.)—C: Dickens.—CS 20 
(Niagara Falls— abr.) —BS 15 
American Partridge, The. (Southern Collegian.) —CG 2 
American Patriotism.—Horace Porter.—TMR 
American Patriot’s Song, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
American Republic, The.—C: Phillips. See America. 
American Republic: its Dangers and Responsibilities, 
The, Sel. fr. (Liberty.)—H: George.—SSD— 
TMD (ytly. same.) 

American Rights.—Jos. Warren.—TMD 
American Sailor, The.—Rob’t F. Stockton. See Against 
Flogging in the Navy. 

American Sam Weller, An.—Anon.—SR 3 
American Scholar, The, Sel. jr. —Ralph W. Emerson. 
—MRS 

American Shipbuilding. (Sel. fr. Encouragement to 
American Ship-building and the Revival of 
American Commerce on the Ocean.)—Jas. G. 
Blaine.—NC 

American Specimen, An.—S: L. Clemens. See Tramp 
Abroad, A. 

American Taxation. (Fr. Speech on American Taxa¬ 
tion.)—Edmund Burke.—PPS 
(On American Taxation— sel.) —SS 
American to His Mother, An. (Boston Journal.) — 
PAPm 

American Tract Society, The, Sel. jr. (Slavery.)—Jas. 
R. Lowell.—OS 3 

American Traveler, The.—Rob’t H. Newell.—AWH 
—CS 16—THP 

American War, The.—-W: Pitt, Lord Chatham.—BS 7 
—SR 8 

(Speech on the American War.)—IR—SO 
(On the American War— si. abr.) —SSD 
(Against Employing Indians in War— sel.) —SS 
(American War, The—sel.)—SE—SPE 
(Employment of Indians in the American War— 
sel.) —OM 

(Horrors of Savage Warfare— abr.) —FTR 
(America Unconquerable— sel.) —LLC—SS 

(Consequences of the American War— sel.) —OM 


25 




American 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


American War, The ( continued). 

(Lord Chatham against the American War— sel.) 
—KNE—TMD 

(On Conquering America—hr. sel.) —PP—YFR 

(On the American Revolution— sel.) —OS 3 
On the American War— sel.) —FD 1 
War with America, The— sel.) —SC 
American War.—C: J. Fox. See Results of the Amer¬ 
ican War. 

American War Denounced, The, 1781.—W: Pitt, the 
younger. —PS—SS 

Americanism.—H: C. Lodge.—NC—PEO—PFP 
Americanism. ( Fr. True Americanism.)—Theodore 
Roosevelt.—TMR 

American’s Farewell, The.—G: M. Vickers.—PS 
America’s Contributions to the World.—Gulian C. 
Verplanck.—SS 
(Land of Benedictions.)—LLC 
America’s Duty to Greece.—H: Clay. See On the 
Greek Revolution. 

America’s Gifts to Europe. — Dan’l Webster. See 
Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument. 
America’s Greatness. — Dan’l Webster. See Adams 
and Jefferson. 

America’s Mission.—Albert J. Beveridge.—SC 
America’s Obligations to England.—Colonel Barrd.— 
SS 

(Sel.) —PP—YFR 

America’s True Greatness. (Sel. fr. The True Great¬ 
ness of our Country.)—W: H. Seward.-—SR 8 
(Home and School the Bulwark of our Country.)— 
FD 2 

Amico Suo.—Herbert P. Horne.—VA 
Amnesty of Jefferson Davis, The. (Sel. fr. Shall Jef¬ 
ferson Davis be Restored to Full Citizenship?) 
—Jas. G. Blaine.—NC 

Among Green, Pleasant Meadows.—Johann G. von 
Herder (tr. by Howitt).—WCL 
(Ballad.)—PHS 

Among my Books.—Mark Houston.—CG 3 
Among my Books.—S: M. Peck.—LBB—MBB 
Among my Books.—Fs. St. Clair Erskine, Earl of 
Rosslyn.—LBB—MBB 
Among my Books.—Alexander Smith.—LLC 
Among the Animals.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS— 
PP—PS 

Among the Beautiful Piet ures.—Alice Cary.—FP— 
HBP 

(Little Brother, The.)—WCL 
(Pictures of Memory—C.)—BNL—CR—CS 4— 
FTR—GP—HNS—SAE (br. sel.)— SM—SPE 
(Sweetest Picture, The.)—BS 14 
Among the Heather.—G: Arnold.—BIL—FT A—TFY 
Among the Hills.—J: G. Whittier.—AP—SN (sel.) 
(Sketches— Prel ude.) —LLC 
(Wife, The— sil .)—CS 2 

Among the Millet.—Archibald Lampman.—TCV 
Among the Mountains.—W: Wordsworth. See Ex¬ 
cursion, The. 

Among the Redwoods.—K: R. Sill.—BNL 
Among the Sand-hills.—W: Alexander.—TIP 
Among the Trees. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Among the Trees. (SI. abr.)- —W • C. Bryant.—AD 
Amor Omnia Vincit.—W: Shakespeare.—FTA—OH 
(Consolation, A.)—PGT 1—PHS 
(Sonnet.)—FFP—HBP—OB (11.) 

Sonnet XXIX.—C.)—F.LP—W EP 1 
When in Disgrace.)—BS 25—PYO—Wll 23 
Amoret. (Ode VIII. C .— abr.) —Mark Akenside.— OB 
Amoret. (C.)—W: Congreve.—FEP—WEP 3 
(Hue and Cry after Fair Amoret, A.)—OB 
Amoretti and Epithalamion, Sels. fr. —Edmund Spen- 
ser. 

Easter.—OB 

Easter Morning.)—CEL—EDY 
Sonnet LXVIII.— C.) —ELP 
Her Eyes. (Sonnet IX.)—CEL 
Herself all Treasure. (XV.)—CEL 
“Like as the culver on the bared bough.” 

(LXXXVIII.)—FEP 
Our Love shall Live. (LXXV.)—HBP 
Sonnet: “Fayre is my love,” etc. (LXXXI.)— 
PHS 

Sonnet: "Fresh Spring, the herald,” etc. (LXX.) 
■“ELP 

(Whilst it is Prime.)—OB 
Sonnet: “Joy of my life,” etc. (LXXXII.)— 
WEP 1 

Sonnet: “Lackyng my love,” etc. (LXXVIII.)— 
PHS 

Sonnet: “Like [or Lyke] as a ship,” etc. (XXXIV.) 
—ELP—WEP 1 


Amoretti and Epithalamion (continued). 

Sonnet: “Men call you fair,” etc. (LXXIX.)— 
ELP 

Sonnet: “More than most fair,” etc. (VIII.)— 
ELP 

Sonnet: “Sweet Smile! the daughter,” etc. 
(XXXIX.)—WEP 1 

Sonnet: “The doubt which ye misdeem,” etc. 
(LXV.)—HBP 

(“Doubt which ye misdeem, fair love, The.”) 
—FEP 

Sonnet: “Thrise happie she,” etc. (LIX.)—PHS 
Sonnet: “What guyle is this,” etc. (XXXVII.) 
—WEP 1 

Sweet and Bitter. (XXVI.)—CEL 

(“Sweet is the rose[, but grows upon a brere].”) 
—FEP—OS 3 

To his Book. Of his Lady. (I.)—LBB 
Amos Cottle. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Amoure Laments the Absence of La Belle Pucel.— 
Stephen Hawes. See Pastime of Pleasure, The. 
Amours de Voyage, Sels. fr. —Arthur H. Clough. 
Claude to Eustace. (Sel. fr. Can. I., 5.)—A VP 
Epilogue.—AVP 
Juxtaposition. (III., 6.)—VA 
Amphibian.—llob’t Browning. See Fifine at the Fair. 
Amphion.—Alfred Tennyson.—AD (br. sel.) —WCLI 2 
—WR 25 

Amulet, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—OH 
Amusement Circle,-The.—Anon.—FAD 
Amy.—Jas. M. Legar£.—AA 

Amy Rob^art and Richard Varney.—Walter Scott. 
See Kenilworth. 

Amy Wentworth. (Sel.) —J: G. Whittier.—EPs—OH 
Amynta.—Sir Gilbert Elliot.—FEP 
Amyntas: or, The Impossible Dowry, Sel. fr. (Song of 
Fairies Robbing an Orchard— C.) —T: Ran¬ 
dolph (tr. by Leigh Hunt).—BVC 
(Fairies’ Song.)—BNL 
(Song of Fairies.)—FEP—HPB 
An’ thou Were my Ain Thing. (In Tea Table Miscel¬ 
lany.)—Allan Ramsay.—WEP 3 (abr.) 
Anacreontic. (Anacreontike— C.) —Rob’t Herrick.— 
ELP 

Anacreontics (Anacreontiques — C.), Sels. fr. —Anac¬ 
reon (tr. by Abraham Cowley). 

Drinking.—FEP—HBP—OB—WEP 2 

(“Thirsty earth soaks up the rain. The”— si. abr.) 
—LC 

Epicure, The.—OB 
Gold. .See Change, The. 

Grasshopper, The.- BNL—CGd—HBP—LC—PHS 
Swallow, The.—OB (sel.) —WEP 2 
Anacreontique. (Anacreontic— C.) —T: Moore.—HPE 
Analysis of the Character of Bonaparte.—C: Phillips. 

See Napoleon Bonaparte. 

Anastasis.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—PGT 2 
Anathemata.—Franklin B. Sanborn.—EPs 
Anatomical Tragedian, The—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
Anatomy of the World. Second Anniversary: Of the 
Progress of the Soul, Br. sel. fr. (Elegy on Mis¬ 
tress Elizabeth Drury.)—J: Donne.—EPs 
Ancestral Ideals.—H. J. Van Dyke.—TMD 
Ancestress, The, Br. sel. fr .—Letitia E. Landon.— BIL 
Ancestry. (The Black Riders, Poem XXII.)—Stephen 
Crane AA. 

Anchorsmiths, The.—C' Dibdin.—HBP 
Ancient and Modern Muses, The.—Fs. T. Palgrave.— 
VA 

Ancient and Modern Oratory.—Benson N. Wyman,— 
NPS—YP 

Ancient Greek Chant of Victory. (C.)—Felicia D. 
Hemans.—SAE 

(Greek’s Return from Battle, The.)—SS 
(Return from Battle, The.)—PP—YFR 
Ancient Mariner, The.—S: T. Coleridge. See Rime of 
the Ancient Mariner, The. 

Ancient Miner’s Story, The.—Will Carleton.—BS 13 
Ancient of Days.—W : C. Doane.—AA 
Ancient Prophecy, An.—Philip Freneau.—AWB 
Ancient Race, The.—Michael Tormey.—TIP 
Ancient Spanish Lyric.—Anon.—WR 7 
"And as, in sparkling majesty, a star.” (Fr. To 
Hope.)—J: Keats.—HP 

And Doth not a Meeting T ike This.—T: Moore.— 
HBP 

“And every village graveyard will have its green 
mounds.”—Putnam.—HSS 1 
“And I made a rural pen.”—W: Blake. See Intro¬ 
duction to “Songs of Innocence.” 

"And in that twilight hush, God drew their hearts.” 
Lucy Larcom.—BIL 


26 




TITLE IXDEX 


Angler’s 


And Joe Went. ( Denver Post .)—PAPm 
And Makes Nursery Rhymes.—Jas. W. Riley. See 
Session with Uncle Sidney, A. 

“And now we only ask to serve.”—M. E. Townsend.— 
FHS 

“And perched the glittering, icy boughs among.”— 
G. H. D.—FHS 

"And present gratitude insures the future’s good.” 

{Fr. My Triumph.)—J: G. Whittier.—FHS 
“And said I that my limbs were old.”—Walter Scott. 

See Lay of the Last Minstrel, The. 

And She was His.—Anon.—WR 20 
“And shall the mortal sons of God.” — Ebenezer 
Elliott.—AE 

And the Band Played.—Maurice E. McLaughlin.— 
CS 32 

"And the frost, too, has a melodious ministry." — 
Nathaniel P. Willis.—AE 

And the Hammock Swung On.—Hamilton Grey.— 
CG 2 

“And the newspaper is also the great agency of 
progress.”—C. C. Bonney.—GG 
"And this is life: to live, to love, to lose!”—Anon.— 
GG 

"And this man is now become a god. ”—W: Shakespeare. 
See Julius Caesar. 

“And this, O Spain! is thy return.”—Marie J. Jews- 
bury. See Columbus in Chains. 

"And this thought will be our comfort.”—Charlotte 
Murray.—FHS 

And Thou art Dead, as Young and Fair. (C.) —Lord 
Byron.—FEP—WEP 4 
(Elegy on Thyrza.)—PGT 1 
(Stanzas.)—FEP 

“And we, poor waifs, whose life-term seems.”—Paul 
Hamilton Hayne.—GG 

“And while, some books, like steps, are left behind 
us.”—H:W. Beecher.—GG 
And Yet—and Yet!—Omar Khayyam (E: Fitzgerald). 
See Rubaiy&t, The. 

Andalusian Sereno, The.—Fs. S. Saltus.—AA 
Andr£ and Hale.—Chauncey M. Depew.—CS 36— 
NC (si. abr.) —PR 

(Captain Hale and Major Andr£.)—FD 2 
(Two Spies, Andre and Hale, The.)—SR 12— 
TMD 

Andre’s Last Request.—Nathaniel P. Willis. See fol¬ 
lowing. 

Andre’s Request to Washington. (C.) —Nathaniel P. 
Willis. 

(Andre’s Last Request.)—OS 2 
Andrew.—T: W. Parsons.—AA 
Andrew Hofer.—Julius Mosen.—EDY—OS 1 

(Death of Hofer, The— tr. by Mangan.)—CS 14 
(Hofer the Tyrolese— si. abr.) —PS 
Andrew’Jackson.—-G: Lippard.—BS 2—SR 8 
Andrew Rykman’s Prayer, Br. sels. fr. —J: G. Whittier. 
“Scarcely Hope had shaped for me.”—HDL 
“Yet with hands by evil stained.”—FHS 
Andromeda.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Andromeda, Sels. fr. —C: Kingsley. 

Andromeda and the Sea-nymphs.—VA 
Pallas in Olympus.—WEP 4 
Andromeda.—Jas. J. Roche.—AA 

Andronike, Sel. fr. (Last Night of Missolonghi, The.) 
—Anon. ( tr. by Edwin A. Grosvenor).— NC—- 
PFP 

Ane Satyre of the Threi Estaitis, Sels. fr. — Sir D: 
Lyndesay. 

Pardoner.—WEP 1 
Pauper.—WEP 1 
Veritie.—WEP 1 

Anemone.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Angel, The.—Anon.—CS 27 

Angel, The. (7n Songs of Experience.)—W: Blake.— 
WEP 3 

Angel, The. {Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Angel, The.—Jeannette B. Gillespy.—CG 3 
Angel and the Shepherds, The.—Lew Wallace. See 
Ben-Hur. 

Angel at the Ford, The.—W: J. Dawson.—VA 
Angel Court.—F: E. Weatherly.—TFS 
Angel Death, The.—W: Winter Nee Angel of Death, 
The. 

‘‘Angel face:—its sunny w r ealth of hair, An.” (Br sel. 
fr. Woman’s Trust.) — Frances S. Osgood.— 
BNL 

Angel Faces.—Dinah M. Mulock.—LLC 

Angel Ferry, The.—H. S. Cornwell.—CS 4 

Angel in a Saloon, An. {Western Temperance Herald.) 

Angel in the House, An.—Leigh Hunt.—FEP HBP 
—OH—YBF 


Angel in the House, The, Sels. fr .—Coventry Patmore. 
Angel in the House, The. {Sel. fr. Bk. I., Can. 4— 
The Morning Call.)—BIL 
Dean’s Consent, The. (I., 6—The Dean.)—VA 
Going to Church. {Sel. fr. 1., 10.)—BIL—FTA 
Honoria. {Br. sel. fr. I., 3, and sel. fr. I., 2—The 
Dance.)—EPs 

Honoria’s Surrender. (I., 12—The Abdication.) 
—VA 

(Sweet Meeting of Desires— sel .)—BNL 
Joy. (II., 7, Prelude I., abr .)—YBF 
Love Ceremonious. (11., 3, Prel. I.)—OH 
Married Lover, The. (II., 12, Prels. I. and II.)— 
OB {abr .)—VA 

Night Thoughts. {Sel. fr. II., 5 — The Queen’s 
Room.)—FTA—OH 

Nunc Amet qui nunquam Amavit. (II., 7, Prel. 
I., abr .)—PGT 2 

Paradox, The. (II., 6, Prel. I.)—OH 
Queen, The. (Br. sels. fr. I., 3—Honoria, and II., 
4—Love in Idleness.)—EPs—OH 
Rose of the World, The. (I., 4, Prel. I.)—BNL— 
EPs 

Sentences. (Br. sels. fr. I., 11, Prel. II., and I., V., 
Prel. III.)—EPs 

“She was Mine.” (I., 7, Prel. II.)—BIL! 

Sly Thoughts. (I., 8, Prel. III.— si. diff .)—BNL 
_Qg 20 

Tribute, The. (I., 4, Prel. II., si. abr.)— BNL— 
EPs 

Wisdom. (I., 10, Prel. I., abr .)—EPs 
Angel of Dawn, The.—J. S. Cutler.—PEO -J 
Angel of Death, The. (C. —or Death’s Angel— C .)—W, 
Winter. 

(Angel Death, The.)—TAS 
Angel of Pain, The.—Rush Ellis.—TAS 
Angel of Patience, The.—Anon.—SSS 
Angel of Patience, The.—J: G. Whittier.-—BNL 
Angel of the Rain.—Harriet McE. Kimball.—FP 
‘‘Angel with great joyfreceived his guests, The.”— 
H: W. Longfellow. See King Robert of Sicily. 
‘‘Angel wrote and vanished, The.”—Leigh Hunt. See 
Abou Ben Adhem. 

Angelic Song, The.—Ivy English.—PP—YPS 
Angelic Songs are Swelling. — (SI. abr.) Frd’k W. 
Faber.—LLC 

(Pilgrims of the Night— C .— si. abr.) —HDL 
Angelina.—Anon.—CS 37 
Angelo. (Sel.) —Stuart Sterne.—WR 5 
Angels, The.—W: Drummond.—EPs—GN 
Angels.—Gertrude Hall.—AA 
Angels.-—Gerald Massey.—SSS 

‘‘Angels Can Do no More.”—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KJ 

Angels in the House, The.—Anon.—FP 
Angels of Buena Vista, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BS 4— 
CS 3—FEP—FMR—FTR—MRS—SO (abr.)— 
TMR 

Angels of Grief, The. (Br. sel. fr. To my Friend on 
the Death of her Sister.)—J: G. Whittier.— 
HDL 

Angels’ Song, The.—Edmund H. Sears.—AA 
(Glorious Song of Old, The.)—OS 2 
(it Came upon the Midnight Clear.) — FEP — 
LLC (abr.) 

(Peace on Earth.)—'TAS 

Angel’s Sophistrie.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

Angel’s Storv, The. (Abr .)—Adelaide Procter.— 
MYF 

Angel’s Whisper, The.—S: Lover.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP — I.C —OS 1—PC—PoR—TCP (w. tab.) 
—VS 

Angelus, The.—Fs. Bret Harte.—TAS 
Angelus, The.—Frances L. Mace.—PEO 
Angelus, The.—Freeman E. Miller.—HDL 
Angelus Song.—Austin Dobson. See ‘‘Good-night, 
Babette. ” 

Anger and Enumeration. (Jn Life in Danbury.) — 
Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 9—KNE—MYF 
Angler, The. (In Izaak Walton’s Compleat Angler.) 

—J: Chalkhill —BNL—FEP—HBP 
Angler, The. (Br. sel. fr. A Summer Story, Pt. I.) 
—T: B. Read.—BNL 

Angler’s Invitation, The.—T: T. Stoddart.—GN 
Angler’s Reveille, The.—H: van Dyke.—GN 
Angler’s Song, The. (In Izaak Walton’s Compleat 
Angler.)—W: Basse.—OES 

Angler’s Trvsting-tree, The.—T: T. Stoddart.—BNL— 
FEP-HBP 

Angler’s Wish, An [ter. The], — H: Van Dyke. — AA 
—SN 


27 




Angler’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Angler’s Wish, The. (/n The Compleat Angler.)—Izaak 
Walton—BNL—FEP—HBP—YBF 
Angling. ( Frags. fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Angling. ( Br. set. fr. Windsor Forest.)—Alex. Pope.— 
BNL 

Angling.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Anglo-French Alliance, The.—Anon.—MRS 
Anglo-Norman Days.—Walter Scott. See Ivanhoe. 
Angry Words.—Anon.—CS 25 

(Don’t Speak when Angry— sel.) —PS 
Animate Nature. {Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Animate Nature.—J: Lyly. See Alexander and Cam- 
paspe. 

Anita.—Frd’k S. Camp.—CG 1 

Ann Hathaway.—W: Shakespeare— C. — See Anne 
Hathaway. 

Ann Jane’s Mother at a Classical Concert.—Anon.— 
WR 15 

Ann Rafferty’s Evidence.—Annie S. Shields.—WR 12 
Anna Karenina, Sel. fr. (Race, The— sel. fr. Chs. XXIV. 

and XXV.)—Lyof Tolstoi.—PR—WR 11 
Annabel Lee.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—-ASL—BFV— 
BNL — BPB — CR — CS 5 — FEP — FTA — 
GP — HBP — HBR — MMR (abr.) — MR — 
OB—PYO—TAV—WCLG 1 
Annabel’s First Party.—Josephine Pollard.—KJ 
(First Party, The.)—BS 9—CS 14—DS 
Annals, Sel. fr. (Germanicus to his Mutinous Troops 
— fr. Ch. I.)—Tacitus.—PS 

Annan Water. {In Border Minstrelsy— abr.) —Anon.— 
BB—OEB 
(A6r.)—BFV—BPB 

Annapolis Royal.—E: Blackadder.—TCV 
Anne.—Lizette W. Reese.—-TAV 

Anne Boleyn’s Rejection of Henry VIII.’s First Gift. 

{Tab.)— Anon.—BS 15—TCP 
Anne Bullen.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Anne Clough.—Edmund Gosse.—EDY 
Anne Hathaway.—Anon. (.4<. to C: Dibdin and to 
W: Shakespeare.)—BNL—BS 23—FEP 
(Ann Hathaway.)—OH 
Anne Hathaway.—Anon.—DR 
Anne Hathaway.—Edmund Falconer.—CS 29 
Anne—Sudbury Meeting-house, 1653.—Lizette W. 
Reese.—A A 

Annetta Jones—her Book.—Frank L. Stanton.— 
BS 21 

Annie and Willie’s Prayer.—Mrs. Sophia P. Snow. 
— BS 1— CS 5 — CSS — FTR — HR — PPSr 
—SA 

(Santa Claus and the Motherless Children.)—MYF 
Annie in the Graveyard.—Caroline Gilman.—HBP 
Annie Laurie. {Orig. vers.) —W: Douglas.—BNL—GP 
{Later and longer vers.) —BFV—BIL—FEP—GN 
—HBP — LC — LLC — WCLG 1 — YBF 
{Sometimes at. to Lady J: Scott. 

Annie O’Brien.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 21 
Annie Pickens.—Eugene J. Hall.—CS 2S 
Annie Protheroe.—W: S. Gilbert.—CS 15 
Annie’s Party.—L. A. B. C.—SDD 
Annie’s Ticket.—Anon.—CD—CS 14 
Annihilation.—G: Chinn.—SR 12—WR 4 
Anniversary, An.—W: K. Johnson.—TIP 
Anniversary Address. {Sel.). —Dan’l Webster.—LLC 
(Address before the New York Historical Society— 
C.—briefer sel.) —MRS—SR 13 
Anniversary Meeting, The.—Anon.—FAD 
Annoyer, The.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—HBP 
Annuity, The.—G: Outram.—BS 4—CS 12—SA 
Annunciata.—Mary A. Fanton.—WR 22 
Annunciation, The. {SI. abr.) —Adelaide A Procter.— 
WR 6 

Annunciation, The.—J: B. Tabb.—EDY 
Annus Mirabilis, the Year of Wonders, Sel. fr. —J: 
Dry den. 

Attempt at Bergen, The.—WEP 2 
Fire of London, The.—WEP 2 
Anonymous.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 
Another Arrangement.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Another Complaint against Cupid.—F: L. Knowles — 
CG 2 

Another Day.—Alice Arnold.—BS 24 
Another Enigma.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Another Match.— {Cope's Tobacco Plant.) —PPh 
Another Plum-cake.—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BVC 
Another Way.—Ambrose Bierce.—AA 
Another Year.—T: O’Hagan.—BS 16—PEO 
Anselmo, the Priest.—Constante F. L. R. Runcie — 
WR 9 

Anster Fair, Sel. fr. (Rab the Ranter’s Bag-pipe 
Playing.)—W: Tennant.—WEP 4 


Answer. {Motto fr. Old Mortality, Ch. XXXIV.)— 
Walter Scott.—OB 
(Sound, Sound the Clarion.)—YBF 
Answer, An.—Fs. H. Williams.—TAS 
Answer of “Belzoni’s” Mummy.—Anon.—CS 6 
Answer of Pitt to Walpole, The.—W: Pitt, Earl of 
Chatham.—OS 3 

(Pitt’s Reply to Walpole—FTR—HNS 
(Reply of Mr. Pitt.)—KNE 

(Reply of Mr. Pitt to Sir Robert W’alpole— cond .)— 
TMD 

(Reply of Pitt to Walpole.)—CS 4 

(Reply to Sir Robert Walpole, 1741.)—PS—SS 

(Reply to Walpole.)—LLC 

Answer of the Gardener, The.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.— 
TAS 

Answer to a Child’s Question.—S: T. Colei idge.—LC 
{Abr.) —BIL — BNL — BVC — CGD — FEP — 
OS 1—PHS—PoR 

Answer to a Puzzle, An.—Susan Coolidge.—YBT 
Answer to ‘‘Cui Bono,” An.—Jane W. Carlyle.—OS 2 
Answer to ‘‘Five O’Clock in the Morning.”—Anon.— 
CS 7 

Answer to “I Am Dying.”—W: Laurie.—CS 6 
Answer to “Leona.”—Anon.—CS 7 
Answer to “The Hour of Death.”—Mrs. C. B. Wilson. 
CS 2 

Answered.—Phoebe Cary.—TAS 
Answered Prayers.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 23 
Answering to Roll-call.—Frank L. Stanton.—PAPm 
Ant, The.—(Ant or Emmet, The— C.) —I: Watts.—PC 
Ant an Engineer, The.—Anon.—NV 
Ant and the Cricket, The.—Anon.—CSS—OS 1— 
PoR—PPSr 

Ant and the Grasshopper, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Anthology. {Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Anticipation and Retrospection. (C.)—J: Keble. 

CRainbow, The— abr.) —CGd 
Antigone.—Sophocles.—IR 

Antinous Praises Dancing before Queen Penelope. 
(Fr. Orchestra; or, A Poerrie of Dauncing.)— 
Sir J: Davies.—WEP 1 
(Dancing of the Air, The.— sel.) —BNL 
Antipater, the Sidonian, to Anacreon. (C.) Antipa¬ 
ter of Sidon (paraphrase of T: Moore). 

(On Anacreon.)—HBP 

Antiphony.—W r Morris. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Antiquary. The, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott. 

Elspeth’s Ballad. (Fr. Vol. II., Ch. XIX.)—PEB 3 
(Red Harlaw, The.)—LH 
Omnipotent, The. (Fr. Vol. I., Ch. X.)—LH 
(Time.)—FEP 

Antique at Paris. (.46r.)—Friedrich Schiller.—OS 3 
Antiquity of Freedom, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AA— 
LLC 

(Antiquity of Freedom, The— br. sel.) —AD 
(Freedom.)—SE 

Antiquity of the Roman Catholic Church, The.—T: B. 
Macaulay.—VSG 

Anti-railroad Meeting, An.—Anon.—MAD 
Anti-slang Society, The.—Anon.—PTS 
Anti-union Speeches, Sel. fr. (Union with Great Brit¬ 
ain.)—H: Grattan.—OM—SS 
Anton Seidl.—J: H. Ingham.—EDY 
Antonina.—H. A. Boyne.—CG 1 
Antonio Oriboni.—Marg. J. Preston.—CS 18 
Antony and Cleopatra.—W: H. Lvtle.—AE (sel.) — 
BNL—CS 9—FEP—HP—HR—MR—PYO 
(Antony to Cleopatra.)—A A 
(“I am Dying, Egypt.”)—SR 4 
Antony and Cleopatra, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Antony and Cleopatra. (Br. sel. fr. Act III., Sc. 
13.)—EPs 

Antony and the Soothsayer. (Sel. fr. II.. 3.)— 
EPs 

Cleopatra and the Messenger. (II., 5.)—NDP 
Cleopatra’s Barge. (Sel. fr. ll„ 2.)—CS 9 (sel.) — 
MRS 

(Cleopatra.)—BNL (abr.) —EPs (sel.) 

Cleopatra’s Resolution. (Br. sels. fr. IV., 15 and 
V., 2.)—EPs 

“Come, thou monarch of the vine.” (Song— C — 
fr. II., 7.)—YBF 

Courage. (Br. sel. fr. III., 13.)—EPs 
“I see men’s judgments.” (Br. sel. fr. III., 13.)— 
EPs 

Oracle: “Mine honesty and I,” etc. (Br. sel.fr. 
r III., 13.)—EPs 

“When we in our viciousness,” etc. (Br. sel. fr 
III., 13.)—EPs 

Antony and the Soothsayer.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Antony and Cleopatra. 


2S 




TITLE INDEX 


April 


Antony on the Death of Caesar.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Julius Caesar. 

Antony over the Dead Body of Caesar.—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See Julius Caesar. 

Antony to Cleopatra.—W: H. Lytle. See Antony and 
Cleopatra. 

Antony’s Address to the Romans [on the Death of 
Caesar].-—W: Shakespeare. See Julius Caesar. 
Antony’s Lament over Caesar.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Julius Caesar. 

Antony’s Oration over [the Body of] Caesar.—W. 

Shakespeare. See Julius Caesar. 

Anxiety (The Early Bird—C.).—G: Macdonald.—NV 
Anxious Inquirer, An.—Anon.—DLD 
Anxious Leaf, The.—H: W. Beecher. See Norwood. 
Any One Will Do.—Anon.—AWH—HP—THP 

(For another vers, ol same story, see Old Maid’s 
Prayer, The.) 

Ape and the Thinker, The.—Owen Wister.—BS 25 
Apelles’ Song.—J: Lyly. See Alexander and Cam- 
paspe. 

Aphrodite.—Lewis Morris. See Epic of Hades, The. 
Apocalypse.—R: Realf.—EDY 
(SI. abr.)— GP—PAP 

Apollo.—Matthew Arnold. See Empedocles on Etna. 
Apollo Belvidere, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Apollo’s Edict.—Jonathan Swift.—WEP 3 
Apology, An.—W: Morris. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Apology for Having Loved Before.—Edmund Waller. 
—EPs 

Apology for Kings. (Two stories.)—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Apology for Plagiaries, An. ( Br. sel. fr. Satire upon 
Plagiaries.)—S: Butler.—WEP 2 
Apology for Socrates, Sels. fr. —Plato.—OS 3 
Apostrophe to Cold Water.—Paul Denton. See Apos¬ 
trophe to Water. 

Apostrophe to Light.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
Apostrophe to Niagara, Sel. /r.—Lydia H. Sigourney. 
—GG 


Appeal in Behalf of Ireland.—S. S. Prentiss. See Re¬ 
lief for Starving Ireland. 

Appeal of the Missagans.—Anon.—CS 9 
Appeal to Arms, An.—Patrick Henry. See Speech in 
the Virginia Convention, 1775. 

Appeal to Harold, The.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 
Appeal to Ireland.—T: F. Meagher.—SR 6 
Appeal to Lord Avonmore.—J. P. Curran.—SS 
Appeal to the Georgia Convention of 1860 against 
Secession.—Alex. H. Stephens.—SR 8 
Appeal to the Goddess, An.—T: Ybarra.—CG 3 
Appeal to the Hungarians, 1849.—L: Kossuth.—PS— 
SS—SSD 

Appeal to the Jury.—C: Phillips.—PS 
Appeal to the Kind Symmetrie of Our Nature.—Anon. 
—MHR 

(Bombastic Appeal to the Jury.)—CS 4—SR 10 
Appeal to the Patriotism of South Carolina, An.— 
Andrew Jackson.—SR 8 

Appeal to the People, An.—J: Bright.—OM—SC— 
TMD 

Appeal to the Romans.—-E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Rienzi. 
Appeal to the “Sextant” for Air, An.—Arabella M. 
Willson.—BS 4 (at. to ‘‘A. Gasper.”)—CS 4 
(To the “Sextant.”)—BNL—MHR 
(To the Sexton.)—PTS 

Appeal to Young Men.—Lyman Beecher.—CS 15 
Appeal to Young Men, An. (Sel. ir. The Democratic 
Party and Public Opinion.)—Jas. A. Garfield. 
—NC 

Appearances Deceptive.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Apple Blossom, The.—Anon.-—HSS 1 
Apple Blossom, An.—Anon.—TT 
Apple Blossoms.—Anon.—NV 
Apple Blossoms.—Anon.—TT 
Apple Blossoms.—Susan Coolidge.—YBT 
Apple Blossoms.—Amanda T. Jones.—SA 
Apple Blossoms.—W: W. Martin.—HBR—HSS 1 
(Apple Orchard in the Spring, An— abr.) —GN— 
POS 


Apostrophe to the Mississippi.—Mrs. A. M. Wilcox.— 
CS 31 

Apostrophe to the Ocean.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Apostrophe to the Oyster, An.—J. W. Gesnard.—CS 25 
Apostrophe to the Queen of France. (Br. sel. Ir. Reflec¬ 
tions on the French Revolution.)—Edmund 
Burke.—PS 

(Marie Antoinette.)—OS 3 (abr .)—SS 
(Marie Antoinette, Queen of France.)—VSG 
(Queen of France and the Spirit of Chivalry, The.) 
—TMD 


Apostrophe to the Volunteers, The.—Rob’t Hall.—CR 
(Farewell to Departing Volunteers, A— ptly. same.) 
—KNE 

Apostrophe to Washington.—Dan’l Webster. See Ad¬ 
dition to the Capitol, The. 

Apostrophe to Water.—A. W. Arrington (at. also to 
J: B. Gough and to Paul Denton).—LLC—SSD 
(Apostrophe to Cold Water.)—SA 
(Glass of Cold Water, A.)—CS 2—HSS 3—SR 2— 
WRD 

(Tribute to Water, A.)—PP—YFR 
(Water— sel.)— BE 

(“Water! look at it, ye thirsty ones”— sel.) —GG 


(SI. diff. versions.) 

Apothecary Man, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Apparent.—Albert E. Thomas.—CG 2 
Apparition, An.—Anon.—WR 24 
Apparition, The.—Lord Byron. See Manfred. 
Apparition on the Lake.—W: Wordsworth. See Pre¬ 
lude, The. 

Appeal, An.—Anon.—WR 7 
Appeal, An.—Florence Henniker.—FLS 
Appeal, The. (Poems and Epigrams, L.— C.) —M alter 
S. Landor.—VA 
(Remain!)—OB 
Appeal, An.—T: Wyatt.—CEL 
(Forget Not Yet.)—ELP—OB 

(Lover Beseecheth his Mistress not to Forget, The. 
— C .)—WEP 1 

(Supplication, A.)—PGT 1—PHS 
Appeal, The.—T: Wyatt.—OB 

(Earnest *Suit to his Unkind Mistress not to lor- 
sake Him, An.)—BNL—ELP 
(Lover’s Appeal, The.)—CEL—PGT I 
Appeal for Ireland.—H: Grattan.—BLP 
Appeal for Liberty, An.—Jos. Story.—BS 16—PPS 
Appeal for Prohibition, An.—J: B. Gough.—CS 16 
Appeal for Temperance.—H: W. Grady.—BS 18 PS 
Appeal for the Cause of Liberty, An.—J: Harrington. 


—FD 1 


Apple Blossoms. (SI. abr.) —Eliz. S. Phelps.—GP 
Apple of Discord, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Apple Orchard in the Spring, An.—W: W. Martin. 
See Apple Blossoms. 

Apple Pie. (The Poetical Cookery-book.— Punch .)— 
HPE 

Apple Seed, The.—C. A. M. Webb.—-PP—YPS 
Appledore.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Pictures from Apple- 
dore. 

Appledore in a Storm.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Pictures 
from Appledore. 

Apple-dumplings and a King, The.—J: Wolcott. See 
below. 

Apple-dumplings and George the Third, The.—J: 
Wolcott.—TMD 

(Apple-dumplings and a King, The— diff. vers .)— 
FEP 

Apple-howling Songs, Two.—Anon.—BVC 
Apples.—Anon.—CD 

(Brudder Brown on “Apples.”)—CS 26 
Apples, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—WR 17 
Applied Astronomy.—Esther R. Tiffany.—AWH 
Applied Mathematics. (Lehigh Burr.) —AWH—CG 2 
Appointment, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Appreciation.—T: B. Aldrich.—A A 
Apprenticed. (Introd. to Songs of the Night Watches.) 
—-Jean Ingelow.—CEL 

Approach of Age, The.—G: Crabbe. See Tales of the 
Hall. 

Approach of Age, The.—-Walter S. Landor.—-YBF 
Approach of Age, The. (Sonnet XII.)—W: Shakes¬ 
peare.—BNL 

Approach of Night, The.—W: H. Powell.—CS 35 
Approach of the Fairies, The.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Approach of the Presidency, The. (Fr. A Letter to 
Col. Henry Lee.)—G: Washington.—HS 
Approach of the Storm, The. (Vassar Miscellany .)— 
CG 3 

Appropriate Keepsake, An.—H. M. Stone.—CG 1 
Apres.—Arthur J. Munby.—-BNL 
April. (C.) —Edwin Arnold. 

(Almond Blossom.)—BNL—CEL—FEP—GN 
April.—O. C. Auringer.—AA 
April.—Ralph W. Emerson. See April and May. 
April.—W: P. Foster.—HDL 
April.—Mary Howitt.—POS 
April.—J: Keble.—HBP 

(First Sunday after Epiphany— C.- — sel .)—AVP 
April.—H: W. Longfellow. See April Day, An. 

April.—S: Longfellow. See November and April. 


29 





April 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


April.—Rob’t Loveman.—AA 

April.—Jessie McDermott.—AD 

April. (The Fields of Dawn, I.)—Lloyd Mifflin.—SN 

April.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 

April.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 

April.—Edmund Spenser. See Shepheard’s Calender. 
The. 

April.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 

April.—J: G. Whittier.—AD—-POS {eel.) 

April.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—POS 
April—and Dying.—Anne R. Aldrich —A A 
April and May. ( Fr . May-day.)—Ralph W. Emerson. 
—GN 

(April.)—POS 

April and May.—Celia Thaxter.—AD—SAP 
April Day, An.— {Arr. by) Helen E. Brown.—WR 0 
{Includes Shelley’s Cloud, The; Brown’s Showers, 
The; Rainbow, The; Sunbeam, The.) 

April Day, An. (C.)—H: W. Longfellow.—AD 
(April.)—HSS 1 

April Day, An.—Caroline B. Southey.—HSS 1—l’EO 
April Days.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
April, ever Frail and Fair. {Fr. Spring )—Oliver W. 
Holmes.—POS 

April Fantasie.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 
April Flower song.—Harold Kellock.—CG 3 
April Fool, An.—Anon.—DST 
April Fool, An. {Dial.) —Anon.—FAD 
April Fools.—Kate Masterson.—WR 15 
April Fools.—Emily H. Miller.—NV 
April Fools. (Br. sel .)—Winthrop M. Praed.—OS 1 
April in England.—Rob’t Browning.—GN—OS 1 {sel.) 
(“Hark, where ray blossomed pear-lree in the hedge” 

__AD 

(Home Thoughts from Abroad— C.) —AVP—BFV 
CGd—LC—OB — PGT 2 — POS — SN — VA 
—WEP 4—YBF 

“April sun shines bright above, The.”—R. L. Eaton. 

—CG 2 

April Time.—Anon.—LLC 
April Pastoral, An.—H: A. Dobson.—LC 
April Shower.—Anon.—NV 
April Showers.—Mary E. Wilkins.—COS—PP 
April’s Fools.—Mrs. A. G. Park.—TMR 
Aquarius.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Arab, The.—C: S. Calverley.—BNL—THP 
Arab Song.—R: H: Stoddard.—AA 
Arab to his Favorite Steed, The.—Caroline E. S. Nor¬ 
ton.—BNL 

(Arab’s Farewell to his Horse, The.)—FEP 
(Arab’s Farewell to his Steed, The.)—BVC 
Arab to the Palm, The.—Bayard Taylor.—BNL— 
HBP 

Arab Welcome, An.—T: B. Aldrich.—OS 2 
Arabella and Sally Ann.—Paul Carson.—CS 25—DS 
—YA 

Arabella’s Poor Relations.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Arabian Nights’ Entertainments, The, Sel. fr. (Alad¬ 
din ; or, The Wonderful Lamp.)—Anon.— 
WCLG 1—WGS {diff. vers.) 

Arabian Tale, An.—Anon.—NPS—YP 

Arab’s Farewell to his Horse, The.—Caroline E. S. 

Norton. See Arab to his Favorite Steed, The. 
Arab’s Farewell to his Steed, The.—Caroline E. S. 

Norton. See Arab to his Favorite Steed, The. 
Araby’s Daughter.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
Arachne.—Rose T. Cooke.—AA 
Arathusa’s Torment .—Anon.—CH 
Arbitration and Civilization.—Sir C: Russell.—TMR 
Arbor Day. (3 sels.) —Anon.—AD 
Arbor Day.—G: W: Curtis.—HSS 1 
(New Holiday, A.)—AD 
Arbor Day.—Lewis Halsey.—AD 
Arbor Day.—Warren Higley.—AD 

(What Arbor Dav has Already Done.)—DFR 
Arbor Day. Its Educating Influence.—B. G. North¬ 
rop.—AD—DFR {br. sel.). 

Arbor Day.—J: B. Peaslee.—AD 
Arbor Day.—Seymour S. Short.—AD 
Arbor Day. (IF. music.) —E. F. Stearns.—AD 
Arbor Day. {The Student .)—AD 
Arbor Day. ( Vick's Magazine .)—AD 
Arbor Day Acrostic.—(Arr. by) E: C. Delano—AD 
Arbor Day and the Children. — E. E. Higbee.—AD 
{abr.) 

(Nature and the Children.)—LLC 
Arbor Day Greeting.—Park Harlow.—AD 
Arbor Day History.—K. G. Wells.—PEO 
Arbor Day Invocation.—Emma S. Thomas.—AD 
Arbor Day March.—Ellen Beauchamp.—AD—DFR 
Arbor Day Ode.—Parr Harlow.—AD 
Arbor Day Poem.—Lillian E. Knapp.—AD 

30 


Arbor Day Poem.—Anna R. Pride.—AD 
Arbor Day Tribute. (W. mus .)—Jared Barhite.—AD 
(Nature’s Tribute Suggests Ours— sel.) —AD 
Arbor of Amorous Devices, The, Sel. fr. (Cradle Song, 
A.)—Anon.—OB 
(Sweet Lullaby, A.)—WEP 1 
Arbutus.—Anon.—AD 
Arbutus, The.—Anon.—NV 
Arbutus.—Elaine Goodale.—AD 
Arbutus.—Anne Hall.—AD 

Arbutus, The.—Helen H. Jackson.-—DCP—HSS 1 

(Maiden Spring, The, also Arbor Day Acrostic, in¬ 
clude this poem.)— AD 
Arcades, Sels. fr. —J: Milton. 

Arcades, Sel. fr. (2d song.)—OB 
Song: “Nymphs and Shepherds.” (3d song.)— 
ELP 

Two Songs. (2d and 3d songs.)—EP 
Arcadia, The, Sels. fr. —Philip Sidney. 

Bargain, The. (XLIX.— abr.) —OB 

(Ditty f,A]—a6r.)—FEP—FT A—OH — PGT 1 
—PYO—YBF 

(My True Love [or True-love] Hath My Heart 
[and I Have his]— abr.)— BNL—GP—OEL— 
OS 3—TFY 

(Sonnet: Heart-exchange— mod.) —ELP 
Country Song, A. (LXVIII.)—EP 
Doras to Pamela. (XIV.)—EP—WEP 1 
Nico and Doras. (XXIX.)—EP 
Night. (LXXIII.)—WEP 1 

Song from the Arcadia. (LXXVII.—Musidorus 
Song— C. )—LLC 

Arcadian Club; or, Theory versus Practice, The.—A. 
F. Bradley.—PD 

Arcadian Flirtation, An.—Anon.—TL 
Arcady.—Mary L. Newton.-—CG 3 
Arcana Sylvarum.—C: de Kay.—A A 
Archeological Congress, An.—Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
SYS 

Archbishop and Gil Bias, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.— 
CS 20 

Archbishop’s Christmas Gift, The. {Abr.)— Rob’t 
Barr.—NP 

Archer, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Archery Contest, The.—Walter Scott. See Ivanhoe. 
Archfiend of Nations, The.—Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage. 
—WR 18 

Archie Dean.—Gail Hamilton—BS 5—CS 14—SA— 
SR 11 (si. abr.) 

Archie’s Mother.—Rose H. Thorpe.-*-WR 4 
Arctic Aurora, An.—Anon.—BS 11 
Are the Children at Home?—Marg. E. Sangster.— 
BNL—CS 6 

‘‘Are there not lofty moments when the soul.”— 
Josiah G. Holland. See Kathrina. 

Are These God’s Children?—Sara M. Chatfield.—BS 14 
Are They not All Ministering Spirits?—Rob’t S. 
Hawker.—OB 

Are we a Nation?, Sel. fr. (Our Nation and Flag.)—C: 
Sumner.—FD 2 

(National Flag, The— sel.) —HS—OS 2—PTS 
(American Flag, The— arr. as dial.) —WR 17 
(See also Flag of the Nation, The—by Rob’t C. 
Winthrop). 

“Are You a Mason?”—Rev. Mr. Magill.—CS 8 
Are You Glad?—D. C. Dandridge.—TAS 
Are You Ready?—L: Eisenbeis.—CS 35 
Aren’t You Ashamed of Yourself? (Tab.) —Anon — 
TCP 

Arethusa, The.—Prince Hoare.—LH 
Arethusa.—Percy B. Shelley.—BPB—CEL—FEP— 
GN—HBP—PHS 

Aretina’s Song.—Sir H: Taylor.—VA 
Argonauts, The, Sel. fr. —Anon.—GG 
Argument.—Anon.—KNE 

Argument. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Argument of his Book. (C.)—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs 
(Argument of the Hesperides, The.)—ELP— 
WEP 2 

Argument of the Hesperides, The.—Rob’t Herrick. 
See foregoing. 

Argumentative Theology.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 
Ariadne.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Legende of Goode 
Women. 

Ariadne's Farewell.—Helen H. Jackson.—EPs 
Ariana.—Franklin B. Sanborn.—AA 
Arid Lands, The.—Herbert Bashford.—AA 
Ariel in the Cloven Pine.—Bayard Taylor.—AA 
Ariel’s Song[s].—W: Shakespeare. See Tempest, The. 

Aristarchus Studies Elocution.—Susan A Bisbee_ 

BS 13 (ad.)— WR 24 

Aristocracy. (Frags, fr. various atithors.) —BNL 





TITLE INDEX 


Artist 


Aristocracy.—T: Carlyle. See Past and Present. 
Aristocracy.—Rob’t R. Livingston.—SS 
Aristocracy of France, The, Sel. fr. —G. Smythe, Vis¬ 
count Strangford.—AVP 
Arithmetic. (St. Nicholas.)— PS—TT 

(Harry’s Arithmetic.)—DLS—LPS—PP 
Arithmetic in Life.—M. T. Cooper.—CS 34 
Arithmetic Lesson, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Arizona Jim.—C: F. Lummis.—WR 2 
(Jim, Arizona, 1885.)—BS 19 
Arkansas Farmer, The.—Anon.—WR 25 
Arkansas Traveller, The. (Arkansaw Traveller .) — 
CRR 

Arkansaw Pete’s Adventure.—T. Sheppard.—PS 
Arlington.— Jas. A. Garfield. See Strewing Flowers 
on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 

Arlington Heights Oration. — Jas. A. Garfield. See 
Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union 
Soldiers. 

‘‘Arm of aid to the weak, An.”—R: M. Milnes, Lord 
Houghton.—FHS 
(Finis.)—LLC 

Arma Virumque.—Harold Kellock.—CG 3 
Armada, The. (C.) —T: B. Macaulay.—AVP—BPB 
— CEL — EDY— EHT — GN— HB — LH — 
WR 1 (si. abr.) 

(Spanish Armada, The.)—BS 2—CGd 
Armada, The, Sel. fr. (England— br. sel. fr. Pt. II., 
Can. VII.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—LH 
Armado and Moth.—W: Shakespeare.— See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost. 

Armageddon.—-Edwin Arnold.—BS 10 
Armenian Lullaby.—Eugene Field.—TD—WTD 
Armenian Mother, The.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Armgart. (SI. abr.) —George Eliot.—HBR 
Armies in the Fire.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Arming of Pigwiggen, The.—Michael Drayton. See 
Nymphidia. 

Arminius to his Soldiers.—Arthur (?) Murphy.—PS 
Armistice.—Sophie Jewett.—AA 
Armorer’s Errand, The.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—WR 5 
Armorer’s Song, The.—Harry B. Smith.—AA 
Armory, The.—-H: W. Longfellow. See Arsenal at 
Springfield, The. 

Arms and the Muse.—J: Milton.—LH 

(When the Assault was Intended to the City— C.) — 
EDY—EPs—FEP—HBP—PGT 1 
Armstrong’s Good-Night. (In Border Minstrelsy.)— 
Anon.—FEP 

Army and Navy, The.—Anon.—FND 
Army Bean, The.—Anon.—EuE 

Army Correspondent’s Last Ride.—G. A. Townsend.— 
AA 

Army of Applicants, An.—Anon.—DCD 
Army on the Potomac, The.—Chauncey M. Depew.— 
NC 

(Sel.)— BS 17—TMD 

Army of the Potomac. — Joaquin Miller. — BS 17— 
PEO (abr.) 

Army Overcoat, The.—Mrs. G: Archibald.—WR 2 
Arnold at Stillwater. — T: D. English. — BAB 
(Abr.)— FR—WR 6 

Arnold the Traitor.—G: Lippard. See Benedict Ar¬ 
nold. 

Arnold Winkelried.—Jas. Montgomery. See Patriot’s 
Pass-word, The 

Arraignment.—Helen G. Cone.—AA 
Arraignment of a Lover, The.—G: Gasgoigne.— 
WEP 1 

Arraignment of Ministers.—Edmund Burke.—FTR 
Arraignment of Paris, The, Sels. fr. —G: Peele 
Handiwork of Flora, The.—EP 
Song of Paris and (Enone, The.—ELP—EP 
(Fair and Fair.)—OB 

Arraignment of Rum, The.—R. S. Foster.—CS 26 
Arraignment of the Rum Traffic, An.—R. S. Foster.— 
TS 

Arranmore. (Oh! Arranmore, loved Arranmore— C .)— 
T: Moore.—HBP 

Arrest Alcohol and Liberate Man.—Anon.—TS 
Arresting the March of Intemperance.—H. E. Mc¬ 
Bride.—MTD 

Arrival, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Day-dream, 
The. 

Arrow and the Song, The. (C.) —H: W. Longfellow. 
AA—BS 8—GMS—TAV 
(Arrow and Song.)—LLC 

Arrow and Song.—H: W. Longfellow. See foregoing. 
Arrows for Love.—J: Lyly. See Sapho and Phaos 
Ars Victrix.—rAustin Dobson.—VA 
Arsenal, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See following. 


Arsenal at Springfield, The. (C.) —H: W. Longfellow. 
—FEP—GP—HBP—PYO—SO 
(Armory, The— sel.) —SE 

(“Were half the power that fills the world,” etc.) 
—GG 

(Arsenal, The—2 sels.) —SE 
Art. (Sel.) —R. W. Emerson.—PEO 
Art. (2 sons. — fr. A Lover’s Diary.)—Gilbert Parker. 
—VA 

Art.—Lilia C. Perry.—AA 
Art.—C: Sprague.—SS 

(Ode on Art— abr.) —FP 

Art above Nature.—Rob t Herrick.—ES—WEP 2 
Art and Artifice.—Anon.—CS 1 
(Painter’s Studio.)—SED 
Art and Nature.—Anon.—CH 

Art and Nature.—W: Shakespeare. See Winter’s 
Tale A 

Art Artistic.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 

Art Critic, The. (Dial.) —L. J. and E. C. Rook.—CDs 

Art Critic. See also Art-critic. 

Art Master, An.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AA 
Art of Book-keeping, The.—Laman Blanchard.—LBB 
—MBB 

(Diff. and shorter vers. — at. to T: Hood.)—BNL— 
BS 24—FEP—OS 3—SS 
Art of Conversation, The. (Punch.) —MYF 
Art of Kissing, The.—Anon.—CDV 
Art of Preserving Health, The, Sels. fr. —J: Arm¬ 
strong. 

Art of Preserving Health, The, Bk. III., Sel. fr. — 
WEP 3 

Art of Preserving Health, The, Bk. IV., Sel. fr. — 
WEP 3 

Building a Home.—BNL 
Art of Reading Well, The.—Mrs. Ellis.—FMR 
Art of Thinking, The.—Anon.—KNE 
Art thou Already Weary.— Frances Anne Kemble.— 
AVP 

Art thou Living Yet?—J: G. Clark.—CS 13—LLC— 
SR 1 

Art thou the Same.—Frances D. (S.) Tatnall.—AA 
Art thou Weary?— St. Stephen (tr. by J: Mason Neale). 

—BNL—FEP—HDL—LLC 
‘‘Art tired?” (Br. sel. fr. Dominion.)—Jean Ingelow. 
—HDL 

Art-critic, An.—S: W. Foss.—WR 24 
Artemus Ward.—Josh Billings—-SR 4 
Artemus Ward at the Tomb of Shakespeare.—C: F. 
Browne.—CS 3—PS 

Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie's Line. (Thrilling 
Scenes in Dixie— C. — abr.) —C: F. Browne.— 
CS 2 

(Mr. Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s Line.)—SCS 
Artemus Ward on Woman’s Rights.—C: F. Browne.— 
CS 6 

Artemus Ward Visits thd Shakers.—C: F. Browne.— 
CS 5—PS (sel.) 

Artemus Ward’s Advice to Husbands.—C: F. Browne. 
—DE 

Artemus Ward’s Fourth of July Oration.—C: F. 
Browne.—MHR 

(Fourth of July Oration.)—FAS 
Artemus Ward’s London Lecture.—C: F. Browne.— 
BS 6—SR 10 

(Artemus Ward’s Mormon Lecture.)—CS 17 
Artemus Ward’s Mormon Lecture.—C: F. Browne. 
See foregoing. 

Artemus Ward’s Panorama—‘‘Among the Mormons.” 

—C: F. Browne.—BeR—DE , 

Artemus Ward’s Trip to Richmond.—C: F. Browne— 
BS—CS 1 

Artevelde.—Sir H: Taylor. See Philip van Artevelde- 
Artevelde’s Vision.—Sir H: Taylor. See Philip van 
rt» g 1 d g 

Artful Ant, The.—Oliver Herford.—DCP 
Arthur.—W: Winter.—AA 

Arthur Bonnicastle, Sels. fr. —Josiah G. Holland. 

Brought to Trial for “Blowin’.” (Sel. ad. fr. Ch. V. 

by Hattie Herbert.)—HD—NPS—YP 
Death of the First Born. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXVII.)— 
CS 24 

Arthur Henry Hallam.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Arthur in “King John.”—W: Shakespeare. See King 
John. 

Arthur’s Farewell.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of 
the King. 

Articles of Confederation, The.—Anon.—AI 
Artie’s “Amen.”—Paul H. Hayne.—CS 21—PP—PS 
—SR 7—YPS 

Artist, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 


31 




Artist 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Artist, The.—Arthur Grissom.—AA 

Artist’s Dream, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 14—TCP 

Artist’s Prayer, The.—W. D. Lighthall.—TCV 

Arts and Letters.—A. H. Everett.—FD 2 

Arts Lough.—G. A. Greene.—TIP 

Arts of Love. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

“As a beam o’er the face of the water may glow,” Sel. 

fr. (Grief.)—T: Moore.—KNE 
As a Bell in a Chime.—Rob’t U. Johnson.—AA 
As by the Shore at Break of Day.—T: Moore.—BNL 
FEP—HBP 

As Dies the Year.—Alfred Austin.—-BS 26 
As for Me, I Have a Friend.—Ernest McGaffey.— 
TFY 

As I Came down from Lebanon.—-Clinton Scollard.— 
AA 

As I Came down Mount Tamalpais.—Clarence Urmy.— 
AA 


“As I have Loved You.”—G. Y. Holliday.—SR 9 
As I Lay a-Thynkynge.— R: H. Barham.—A VP— 
CEL 

As I Stood by yon Roofless Tree. ( C.) —Rob’t Burns. 

(Vision, The— si. abr.) —EPs 
As in a Looking-glass.—Grace Dinkelspiel.—CS 35 
“As It is in Heaven.”—I. E. Jones.—CS 30 
As Jacob Served for Rachel.—-Anon.—CS 29 
As Johnny Walked Out.—Anon.—PEB 2 
As Lucy Went a-Walking.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
As “Old Giles” Saw It.—D. S. Cohen—CS 7 
“As other men have creed, so have I mine."—Theo¬ 
dore Tilton.—GG 

As Pebbles in the Sea.—Anon.—HP 

(How a Man should be Judged.)—CS 2 
(Souls, not Stations.)—BLP 
As Seen in Later Years.—Delia A. Heywood.—-CS 35 
As she Says.—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 34 
As Slow Our Ship. (C.) —T: Moore.—BNL—BPB— 
TIP 

(Journey Onwards, The.)—HBP—PGT 1—YBF 
As some Mysterious Wonderer of the Skies.—H: J. 
Stockard.—A A 


As the Day Breaks.—Ernest McGaffey.—AA 
“As the highly colored birds do not fly around in the 
dull.”—David Swing.—GG * 

As the Pigeon Flies.—C. B. Lewis.—CS 23—DS— 
PFP—WR 19 

As the Sun Went Down.—Waldron W. Anderson.—SO 
As the Twig is Bent.—Kate H. Cleveland.—SR 13 
As thro’ the Land.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, 
The. 

“As thro’ the land at eve we went.”—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Princess, The. 

As thy Days thy Strength shall Be.—H. B. C.—BLP 
—PEO 

As Toll—J: Barker.—CG 2 
As Usual. (Harvard Lampoon.) —CG 2 
As ye Came from the Holy Land. (In Percy’s Reliques.) 
—Anon.—OB 


“As ye Sow.”—J. J. Mack, Jr.—CG 2 
As ye Would.—Edith Virginia Bradt.—CS 36 
As yonder Lamp.—C: Whitehead.—VA 
As you Came to the Holy Land. (C.) —Sir Walter 
Raleigh. 

(Pilgrim to Pilgrim.)—ELP 
As You Like It, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Adam’s Warning to Orlando. (Sel. fr. Act II., 
Sc. 3.)—SAE 

(As You Like It— br. sel.) —WR 18 
(Old Age of Temperance— br. sel.) —BNL 
Adversity. (Sel. fr. II., 1.)—KNE 

(“Sweet are the uses of adversity.”)—HDL 
All the World’s a Stage. (Sel. fr. II., 7.)—HSS 3 
(Seven Ages, The.)—EPs—OS 2 
(Seven Ages of Man, The.)—BNL—BS 3—CS 5 
—KNE—SE—SO—WCLG 2 
As You Like It. (Br. sels. fr. II., 1 and II., 7.)— 
AE—BNL 


Blow, Blow, thou Winter Wind. (Song fr. II , 7 ) 
—BNL—ELP — EPs — FEP — HBP — OB 
—OEL—PC—PGT 1—PHS—POS—YBF 
(Man’s Ingratitude.)—BS 5 
(Song of the Holly.)—OS 2 
Forest of Arden, The. (Sel. fr. II., 2.)—SR 12 
Greenwood Tree, The. (Song fr. II., 5.)—OS 1 
(In the Greenwood.)—WEP 1 
(Song.)—BFV—CGd—FEP—HBP—OB 
(Song: The Greenwood Tree.)—LC 
(Under the Greenwood Tree.)—AD—CEL— 
ELP — EP — EPs — GN — NV — OEL — 
PC—PGT 1—PHS—YBF 
It was a Lover and his Lass. (Song fr. V 3 1— 
EP—ES—OB—PGT 1 (abr.) 


As You Like It (continued). 

Love Dissembled. (Sel. fr. III., 5.)—BNL 
Meeting of Orlando and Rosalind. (Sel. fr. III., 2.) 
—SAE 

Orlando’s Wooing. (IV., 1— abr .)—BS 14 
Tongues in Trees. (Sel. fr. II., 1.)—AD—LLC 
(As You Like It, Sel. fr. — si. abr .)—SAE 
Wedlock Hymn, A. (Song— C.—fr. V., 4.)—ES 
Ascent of Japan’s Sacred Mountain, Fusi-Yama. 

—Dora Schoonmaker Soper.—SR 2 
Ascent of Snowdon.—-W: Wordsworth. See Prelude, 
The. 

Ascription.—C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Ascutney. (Fr. Ascutney Charades .)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Ascutney Charades, The.—-Julia A. Sabine.—TCP 
Ash Pool, The.—Anon.—HP 
“Ashamed of Me.”—Jos. Grigg.—FEP 
Ashamed to Toil?—Orville Dewey. See Nobility of 
Labor. 

Ashby.—J. R. Thompson.—-AA 

Ashcake.—T: N. Page.—AA 

Ashes.—De Witt Sterry.—BS 21—PPh 

Ashes of Roses.—Elaine Goodale Eastman.—AA—GP 

Asian Birds.—Rob’t Bridges.—VA 

Ask Mamma.—A. M. Bell.—-CS 18 

Ask me No More.—Alfred Tennvson. See Princess. The. 
“Ask me no more where Jove bestows.”—T: Carew.— 
FEP—OEL 

(Song— C.) — ELP — ES — HBP — OB — WEP 2 
—YBF 

“Ask thyself at evening: What that is immortal 
have I done to-day?”—Johann C. Lavater.— 
GG 

“Ask you where the place of religious might is?”— 
Frd’k W. Robertson.—GG 
Asking.—Anon.—HP 
Asking a Blessing. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Asking Mother.—H: Davenport.—PR—SR 12—YA 
Asking the Gov’ner.—Anon.—GS 13 
Asleep.—Stockton Bates.—CS 2 
Asleep.—W: Winter.—AA 

Asleep at the Switch. (Abr.) —G: Hoey.—CS 16— 
FR—PR 

Asleep in Jesus.—Marg. Mackay.—FEP 
A-soakin “Wum Barrels.”—Delia A. Heywood.— 
CS 35 

Asolando, Sel. fr. (Epilogue to Asolando.)—Rob't 
Browning.—PGT 2—WEP 4—YBF 
(Epilogue.)—VA 

Aspatia’s Song.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See Maid’s 
Tragedy, The. 

Aspect of Death, The.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, The. 
Aspecta Medusa.—Dante G. Rossetti.—SO 
Aspects of the Pines.—Paul H. Hayne.—AA 
Aspen.—Anon.—AD 

Aspirant for Fame, An.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Aspiration.—W: H. Birckhead.—TAS 
Aspiration, The.—J: Norris.—YBF 
Aspiration.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 
Aspirations.—Anon.—CS 11 

Aspirations for America.—Cassius M. Clay.—SSD 
Aspirations of the American People.—R. M. T. Hunter 
—PFP 

Aspire to Higher Things.—Sir Philip Sidney. See 
Astrophel and Stella. 

Ass and his Master, The.—Tomas de Yriarte (tr. by 
G. H. Devereux).—HPE 

Assault on Fort Wagner, The.—Anna E. Dickinson.— 
SC 

(Fort Wagner.)—NC—PFP 
Assisting a Poetess.—Anon.—CS 21 
Assisting Hezekiah.-—H. E. McBride.—MND 
Assumption. The.—J: B. Tabb.—EDY 
Astonished Tippler, The.—Anon.—CS 4 
Astonishing the Natives.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Astrsea.—J: G. Whittier.-*—AA 
Astral Romance, An.—Gustav V. Drake.—TL 
Astrological Tower, The. — Friedrich Schiller. See 
Wallenstein. 

Astrologie.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Astronomer’s Vision, The. (Tr. by) Ormsbv M (?) 

Mitchel.—SAE—SE ' 

Astronomical. (Daily Graphic .)—HP 
Astrophel and Stella, Sels. fr .—Philip Sidney. 

Songs: 

Seventh Song.—WEP 1 

Tenth Song. (SI. abr .)—WEP 1 
(Absence.)—ES 

Eleventh Song. (Voices at the Window— sel .)— 





TITLE INDEX 


At 


Astrophel and Stella ( continued ). 

Sonnets: 

I. (Looke in thy Heart, and Write— C .)— 
WEP 1 ' 

V. (True Beautie Vertue is— C .)—WEP 1 
XVIII. (Bankrout— C .)—WEP 1 
XXIII. (Pensiveness—C.)—WEP 1 
XXVI. (Astrologie—C.)—WEP 1 
XXVII. (Most Alone in Greatest Company— C. ) 
(“Because I oft in dark abstracted guise.”)— 
FEP 

XXX. (Questions— C .)—WEP 1 

XXXI. (Moone, The—C.)—WEP 1 
(His Lady’s Cruelty.)—OB 

(Sonnet.)—BNL—HBP 
(Sonnet: To the Moon.)—ELP 
(To the Moon.)—CEL—FEP—YBF 
(“With how sad steps,” etc.)—PGT 1 
XXXII. (Morpheus— C.) —WEP I 
XXXIII. (I Might— C.)— WEP 1 
XXXVIII. (Unkinde Guest, The— C .)—-WEP 1 
XXXIX. (Sleepe— C.)~ WEP 1 
(Come, Sleep.)—LLC 
(On Sleep.)—FEP 

(Sleep.)—BNL—BPB—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 
(To Sleep.)—OS 3 
XLI. (Stella Lookt on— C.) 

(“Having this day my horse, my hand, my 
lance.”)—FEP 

XLVIII. (Sweete Cruell Shot—C.)—WEP 1 
LIII. (What Now, Sir Foole!— C.) 

(Overcome by Love.)—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 

LIV. (They Love indeed who Quake to Say 
they Love—C.) 

(Love’s Silence.)—BNL 
LXI. (Angel’s Sophistrie— C .)—WEP 1 
LXIV. (Do not Will Me from my Love to Flie 
—C.)—WEP 1 

(Sonnet: Love is Enough.)—ELP 
LXVI. (Hope to Feede—C.)—WEP 1 
LXVIII. (Planet of my Light—C.) 

(“Stella, the only,” etc.)—OEL 
LXIX. (Covenant— C.)— WEP 1 
LXXIV. (I am no Pickpurse of Another’s Wit 
—C.)—WEP 1 
(Sonnet: Inspiration.)—ELP 
LXXXI. (Still, Still Kiss—C.) 

(Nobler Exercise, A.)—OH 
LXXXIV. (My Muse—C.)—WEP 1 
(Highway, The.)—OB 
(Via Amoris.)—PGT 1—YBF 
LXXXVII. (Dutie to Depart—C.)—WEP 1 
XC. (Fame—C.)—WEP I 
(To Stella.)—YBF 

XCII. (All Said, Still Say the Same—C.)— 
WEP 1 

XCIII. (Tho’ Worlds ’quite Me, shall I Myself 
Forgive?— C .)—WEP 1 
CIII. (Golden Haire—C.) 

(“O happy Thames, that did my Stella bear.”) 
—FEP 


(Sonnet.)—HBP 

CVII. (See What it is to Love— -C .)—WEP 1 
CX. (Aspire to Higher Things— C.) 

(Splendidis Longum Valedico Nugis.)—OB 
(Sonnet: Eternal Love.)—ELP 
At a Birthday Festival. (C.)—Oliver W. Holmes. 
(James Russell Lowell’s Birthday Festival— abr.) 
—PEO 


At a Dinner Party.—Anon.—WR 7 
At a Funeral.— (C.) —Reginald Heber. 

(Stanzas on the Death of a Friend.)—FEP 
(Thou art Gone to the Grave.)—HBP 
At a Rural Gate.—Anon.—CDV 

At a Solemn Music[k].—J: Milton.—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
At a Women’s Club.—Lawrence K. Russell.—CS 37 
At Altenahr.—T: Ashe.—VS 

(Meet we no Angels, Pansie?)—OB 
At Aunty’s House.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
At Bedtime. ( Youth’s Companion.) —WR 17 
(Two Little Girls I Know.)—DJS—HSS 2 
At Best.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AA—GP 
At Bethlehem.—Edwin Arnold. See Light of the 
World, The. 

At Bethlehem.—R: Crashaw. See Hymn of the 
Nativity. 

At Bethlehem.—N. W. Rand.—CS 34 
At Bethlehem.—J: B. Tabb. See Child, The. 

At Boarding-school.—Mary Chahoon.-—WR 17 
At Chappaqua.—Joel Benton.—AA—EDY 


At Christmas Time.—Anon.—HS 

(When will you Come Home Again?)—CS 19 
At Christmas Time. (Dial.) —Clara Denton.-—LPD 
At Church.—S. T. Livingston.—CG 1 
At Coruna.—Rob’t Southey.—EHT 
At Court. (Sel. fr. Prosopopoia: or, Mother Hubberd’s 
Tale.)—Edmund Spenser.—OS 3 
(Spenser at Court.)—EPs 
At Cross Purposes.—Anon.—DDM 
At Dame Nature’s Feet. (Arr. by) Clara J. Denton.— 
ASD 

At Easter Time.—E. E. Hewitt.—YBT 

At Eastertide.—S. H. Adams.—CG 1 

At Edgewater.—Helen M. Merrill.—TCV 

At End.—Louise C. Moulton.—BIL—TAS 

At Evening.—Anon.—POS 

At Eventide.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 

At Florence. Michelangelo ( tr. by W: Wordsworth). 

See To the Supreme Being. 

At Fontainebleau.—Arthur Symons.—VA 
At Four-score.—R: W. Gilder.—OH 
At Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862.—J: B. O’Reilly.— 
CS-21 

At Gettysburg.—Anon.—AWB 

At Gibraltar.—G: E: Woodberry.—AA—ASL—BNL— 
GN 

At Graduating Time.—Anon.—PEO 
At her Grave.—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—VA 
At her Window. (Mabel, Pt. I.) — Frd’k Locker- 
Lampson.—OB—YBF 

At his Grave.—Alfred Austin.—EDY—VA (si. abr.) 
At Home.—Bernard Barton.—HP (sel.) 

(Home.)—BLP 

At Home. (C.) —Christina G. Rossetti.—VA 
(Unseen World—at Home, The.)—FEP 
At Home in Heaven. (Pt. I.)—Jas. Montgomery.—VA 
(Forever with the Lord.)—BNL (also sel. fr. Pt. 
II.)—FEP 

At Husking Time.—E. Pauline Johnson.—TCV—VA 
At Last.—Anon.—HP 
At Last.—Stopford Brooke.—OH 
At Last.—Clarkson Clothier.—CS 7 
At Last.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
At Last.—Tom Masson.—TL 
At Last.—Sir Lewis Morris.—VA 
At Last.—R: H: Stoddard.—ASL 
At Last.—Katrina Trask.—AA 
At Last.—J: G. Whittier.—BS 13—FEP—TAS 
“At least to pray is left, is left ” (C.) —Emily Dickin¬ 

son. 

(Prayer.)—TAS 

At Les Eboulements.—Duncan C. Scott.—VA 
At Life’s Best.—Alfred Tennyson (?)—OH 
At Lincoln.—Oscar F. Adams.—AA 
At Little Virgil’s Window.—Edwin Markham.—GMS 
At Luther’s Grave, Wittenberg.—R: W. Gilder.— 
EDY 

At Magnolia Cemetery.—H: Timrod.—AA 
(Decoration Day at Charleston.)—GP 
(Ode on Decorating the Graves of [the] Confederate 
Dead [or Soldiers].)—HSS 1—OS 3 
(Ode Sung on the Occasion of Decorating the Graves 
of the Confederate Dead.)—EPs 
(“Sleep sweetly in your humble graves.”)—BNL 
At Marshfield. (Fr. Webster, an Ode.)—W. C. Wil¬ 
kinson.—AA 

At Midnight.—Frank Dempster Sherman.—AA 
At Mother’s Knee.—Anon.—SSS 
At my Father’s Grave.—W: H. Hayiie.—HDL 
At my Mother’s Grave.—G: D. Prentice.—SR 1 
At Night.—G. E. Montgomery.—A A 
At Nightfall.—Lucy Larcom.—DCS 
At Noey’s House.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
At Noon and Midnight.—Jas. W. Riley.—BIL—FTA 
At One Again, Sel. jr. (VI. Lovers.)—Jean Ingelow.— 
BIL 

At Play.—Eugene Field.—-LS 
At Port Royal.—J: G. Whittier.—EPs—PAP 
(Song of the Negro Boatman— sel.) —GN 
At Quebec.—Jean Blewett.—TCV 
At Queen Maude’s Banquet.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
At Rugby.—T: Hughes. See Tom Brown's School 
Days. 

At St. Peter’s at Rome.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

At School.-—-Bessie Chandler.—HSS 3 
At Sea.—Fs. W. Bourdillon.—HP 
At Sea.—Allan Cunningham.—BFV—PSR 
(Sea Song, A.)—GN—LH—PYO 
(Abr.) —EPs—LLC 

(Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea, A.)—BNL—BVC— 
FEP—HBP—LC—OS 2—PC— PGT 1 — YBF 


33 




At 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


At Sea.—J: T. Trowbridge.—EPs—FEP—GP—HBP 
—MYF—TAS 

At Set of Sun. ( Mail and Express.) —CS 14 
(Our Daily Reckoning.)—HSS 2 
At Set of Sun.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA 
“At setting day and rising morn.”—Allan Ramsay. See 
Gentle Shepherd, The. 

At Shakespeare’s Grave. (Ignatius Donnelly Loq.)— 
—Irving Browne.—-AA 
At Spencer Grange.—W: Kirby.—TCV 
At Stratford-on-Avon.—Mackenzie Bell.—VA 
At Sunset.—Mattie A. W. Clark.—NV 
At Sunsetting.—G: Wither.—FEP 
At the Altar.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
At the Atlantic Dinner. ( Br. sel.) —Oliver W. Holmes. 
—SE 

At the Back of the North Wind, Sets. fr. —G: Macdon¬ 
ald. 

Baby[, The], (C.—verses fr. Ch. XXIII.)—BNL— 
CS 16 —CSS—DLS—GMS—OS 1—PPSr—VA 
—WCL 

(Where Did You Come from [, Baby]?)—FEP— 
PP—YFR 

Little Diamond and the Drunken Cabman. (Ch. 
XVIII.)—MYF 

What Would you See? (Up in the Tree— C. — verses 
fr. Ch. XXV.— si. diff. fr. poems.) —PoR 
At the Ball.—H. G. Dunham.—CG 1 
At the Barricade.—Victor Hugo.—TMR 
At the Book Counter.—Anon.—WR 7 

(Girl at the Book Counter, The.)—CS 33 
At the Boston Banquet, Sels. fr. —H: W. Grady. 

Negro Problem, The.—FD 2 
Regard for the Negro Race.—PS 

(Love and Loyalty of the Negro— si. abr.) —FD 2 
(Southern Negro, The— si. diff.)—- NC—SC 
At the Camp-fire.—Sarah Meader.—CS 36 
At the Cedars.—Duncan C. Scott.—VA—WR 13 
At the Church Gate. (Fr. Pendennis.)—W: M. 
Thackeray — AVP — BNL — FEP — FT A — 
HBP—OH—PGT 2—PYO (.si. abr.) —VA— 
VS—YBF 

At the Club.—R: Hovey.—CG 2 

At the Concert.—Jas. L. Gordon.—WR 15^ 

At the Council.—Lord De Tabley.—AVP 

At the Court-house Door.—Anon.—HP 

At the Dance.—-Augusta de Gruchy.—FLS 

“At the devil’s booth all things are sold.”—Jas. R. 

Lowell. See Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 

At the Door.—Eugene Field.—EF—WTD 
“At the end of life a man finds himself rich.”—Theo¬ 
dore Tilton.—GG 

At the Farragut Statue.—-Rob’t Bridges.—EDY 
At the Funeral. (C .)—Reginald Heber. 

(Stanzas on the Death of a Friend.)—FEP 
(“Thou are gone to the grave.”)—HBP 
At the Garden Gate.—Anon.—CS 18 
At the Grave of Burns.—W: Wordsworth.—EDY— 
WEP 4 

At the Grave of Dante Gabriel Rossetti.—Mackenzie 
Bell.—VA 

At the Grave of Keats.—Oi-car Wilde.—GG 
(Grave of Keats, The.)—EDY 
At the Grave of Walker. (Fr. With Walker in Nica¬ 
ragua.)—Joaquin Miller.—AA—EDY 
At the Grindstone; or, A Home View of the Battle¬ 
field.—Rob’t Buchanan.—MMR 
At the Hacienda.—Fs. Bret Harte.—AA 
At the Hearthside'.—J: Vance Cheney.—TAV 
At the Hospital Window.—Carl Smith.—CS 37 
At the Junior Promenade. — Carey Culbertson. — 
CG 2 

At the Last.—Jas. B. Bensee.—LLC 
At the Last.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
At the Last.—Mrs. .J. M. Winton.—CS 20—HSS 3 
At the Loom. (Public Opinion.) —HP 
At the Masquerade.—-Anon.—CH 
At the Mermaid Inn.—C. L. Hildreth.—AA 
At the Mid Hour of Night. (C.) —T: Moore.—OB— 
TIP—WEP 4 

(At the Mid Hour of Night, when Stars are Weeping, 
I Fly.)—PGT 1 

At the Mid Hour of Night, when Stars are Weeping, 
I Fly. See foregoing. 

At the Mt. Holly Camp-meeting.—Anon.—WR 14 
At the Ninth Hour.—J: L. Spalding. See God and 
the Soul. 

At the North Avenue Fire.—A. M. White, Jr.—CG 2 
At the Old Home Again. (Lines on Revisiting the 
Country— C.) —W: C. Bryant.—BLP 
At the Opera.—Anon.—TL 
At the Opera.—G: H. Jessop.—CS 22 


At the Opera.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. See Aux Ita- 
liens. 

At the Opera.—E. De Lancey Pierson.—TL 

At the Oratorio.—Anon.—CS 23 

At the Party.—E. S. Phelps.—SR 2 

At the Piano.—Anon.—HP 

At the President’s Grave.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 

At the Race. (Yale Record.) —CG 2 

At the “Red Lion.”—Helen Booth.—CS 19 

At the Restaurant.—Anon.—WR 7 

(’Twas at Manhattan Beach.)—DCR. 

At the Rock.—W: S. Pettit.—CG 3 
At the Rug Auction.—H: Baldwin.-—DCR—WR 3 
At the Sea-side.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
At the Shrine.—R: K. Munkittrick.—AA 
At the Skating Rink.—Anon.—KNS 
At the Stage Door.—Jas. C. Harvey.—BS 18—CS 30 
At the Stake (Steak). (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
At the Stamp-window.—Anon.—CS 21 
At the Tavern.—-Alice Cary.—BLF 
At the Tomb of Napoleon. (Fr. The Liberty of Man, 
Woman, and Child.)—Rob’t J. Ingersoll.— 
CS 30—SC 

“At the top of his mind, the devout man has a holy 
of holies.”—Alger.—GG 
At the Tunnel’s Mouth.—Ered Lyster.—DR 
At the Unveiling of the Gray Memorial.—Jas. R. 
Lowell.—MRS 

At the Window.—Anon.—DLF 
At the Window.—H: R: Foster.—CG 1 
At the Window.—Alfred Tennyson. See Enoch 
Arden. 

At the Window.—Agnes E. Wetherald.—-TCV 
At Tiber Mouth.—Rennell Rodd.—HBP 
At Twilight.—Peyton Van Rensselaer.—AA 
At Uncle Dock’s.—Elsie Malone McCollum.—WR 26 
At Vespers.—Jared Van Wagenen, Jr.—CG 1 
At your Gate.—Barton Gray.—FLS 
Atalanta Conquered.—W: Morris. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 

Atalanta in Calydon, Sels. fr. —Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne. 

Choms [from ‘Atalanta’].—OB—VA 

(“When the hounds of Spring.”)—BNL—FEP— 
HBP 

Chorus: “We have seen thee, O Love!” (Sel.) —VA 
(We have Seen thee, O Love!)—YBF 
Making of Man, The.—AVP 

(“Before the beginning of years.”)—FEP 
(Soul and Body.)—HBP 

Atalanta Victorious.—W: Morris. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 0 

Atalanta’s Defeat.—W: Morris. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 

Atalanta’s Race.—W: Morris. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 

Atalanta’s Victory.—W: Morris. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 

Athanasia.—C. G. Ames.—TAS 

Atheism. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Atheism.—Arthur H. Clough. See Dipsychus. 

Atheist, The.—W: Knox.—CS 5 
Atheist and Acorn, The.—Anon.—HR 
Atheistical Government Impossible, An.—R: B. Sheri¬ 
dan.—SS 

Athenian Patriotism.—Demosthenes. See Oration on 
the Crown, The. 

Athens. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Athens: Its Rise and Fall. Sels. fr. —E: Bulwer- 
Lytton. 

Marathon.—TMD 
Olympic Crown, The.—TMD 
Athulf and Ethilda.—H: Taylor.—BNL—EPs 
Athulf’s Death Song.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death's 
Jest Book. 

Athulf’s Song.—T- L. Beddoes. See Death’s Jest 
Book. 

Atkinson’s Mill.—Andrew Ramsay.—TCV 
Atlantic Cable, The.—Jas. T: Fields.—TMR 
Attack of the Cumberland.—G: H. Boker.—SA 

(On Board the “Cumberland”— C.) —AWB—CS 1 
—WR 10 

Attainment.—Algernon Tassin.—AA 
Attempt at Berghen, The.—J: Dryden. See Annus 
Mirabilis, the Year of Wonders. 

“Attempted Suicide.”—T: Frost.—CS 34 
Attempts to Bias Judgment in Case of Wilkes.—Lord 
Mansfield.—SS 

Attendance. (Char.) —Anon.—TCP 
Attitudes Illustrated in Verge.— (Arr. by) Martha E. 
Barbour.—WR 26 

‘ ‘ An Revoir.”—Austin Dobson.—DR 


34 





TITLE INDEX 


Autograph 


Aubade.—Sir W: Davenant.—OB 
(Dawn- song.)—CEL 
(Morning.)—YBF 
(Song—C'.)—FEP—WEP 2 
Aubade.—-W: Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

Auction Extraordinary, The.—Lucretia M. Davidson. 
PPSr 

(“Auctioneer then, in his labor began. The ”—br 
sel.) —CS 1 

(Bachelor Sale, The.)—CS 17 
Auctioneer and the Lawyer, The.—Smith.—BC 
‘Auctioneer then in his labor began, The.”—Lucretia 
M. Davidson. See Auction Extraordinary, 
The. 

Auctioneer’s Gift, The.—Sam W. Foss.—BS 18—CS 30 
—HSS 3—PIt 

Auctioning Off the Baby.—Anon.—DR 
Auf Wiedersehen.—S. Abbott.—CG 1 
Auf Wiedersehen.—Harry Safford Candee.—CG 1 
Auf Wiedereshen! (Summer and Autumn.)—Jas. R. 
Lowell.—AA—FEP 

(Auf Wiedersehen—Summer.)—BNL—FTA 
Augury.—Edith M. Thomas.—BNL 
August.—W: D. Gallagher.—SN 
August.—-Alice L. Richards.—WN 
August.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
August.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
August.—Celia Thaxter.—SN 
August.—Helen M. Winslow.—POS 
August Afternoon, An.—J. P. Irvine.—SN 
August Weather.—Katha. Tynan-Hinkson.—TIP 
Auld Daddy Darkness.—Jas. Ferguson.—PoR—WR 24 
Auld Laird’s Secret, Thae.—Mrs. Findley Braden.— 
WR 21 

Auld Lang Syne.—Rob’t Bums.—BNL—BS 7—CEL 
—EPs—FEP —GP —HBP —LLC (si. abr.)— 
MBL—OB—WEP 3—YBF 
(Goal of Life, The.)—LH 
Auld Lang Syne.—J : W. Chadwick.—TAS 
Auld Licht Idylls, Sel. fr. (Courting of T’nowhead’s 
Bell, The— fr. Ch. VIIL)—Jas. M. Barrie.— 
BS 24 

Auld Robin Gray.—Lady Anne (Lindsay) Barnard.— 
CS 15 

(1st. pt.)—BFV — BNL — BPB — CEL — CR — 
EPs — FEP — GP — HBP — HSS 2 — OB — 
PGT 1 

Auld Wife, The.—C: S. Calverley.—NA 
(Ballad—C.)—THP—VA 
Aunt Bethiah’s Journey.—Anon.—FHE 
Aunt Betsey and Little Davy. (Plan ad. fr. David 
Copperfield, Ch. XIII.)—C: Dickens (dram, by 
Mrs. J. W. Shoemaker).—BS 13—CDD 
Aunt Betsey on Marriage.—Mary K. Dallas.—-WR 3 
Aunt Debby’s Speculation.—Mrs. J. E. McConaughy. 
—StD 

Aunt Deborah Hears “The Messiah.”—Anon.—WR 25 

Aunt Eliza.—Col. D. Streamer.—NA 

Aunt Ellen’s Hatchet. (Dial.).— Anon.—NDP 

Aunt Hannah’s Letter.—Elsie M. McCollum.—WR 21 

Aunt Hetty on Matrimony.—Anon.—DFY 

Aunt Hitty Tarbox. (Sel. fr. Timothy’s Quest. Sc. X.) 

—Kate D. Wiggin.—MRS 
Aunt Jemima’s Courtship.—Anon.—CS 17 
Aunt Jemima’s Money.—J. D. Bellows.—MD 
Aunt Jerusha’s Mistake.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KH 

Aunt Kindly.—Theodore Parker.—BS 4—CS 18—SR 1 
Aunt Kitty’s Shopping. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—YFE 

“Aunt ’Mandy.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Aunt Maria at the Eden Musee.—S. Jennie Smith.— 
CS 31 

Aunt Melissa’s Money.—Anon.—MC 
Aunt Melissy on Boys.-—J: T. Trowbridge.—BS 17 (abr.) 
—CS 30 

Aunt Parsons’s Story. (Presbyterian Journal .)—CD 
Aunt Patience’s Doughnuts. (Springfield Republican.) 
—CRR—CS 21 

Aunt Peggy and High Art.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 2 
Aunt Phillis’s Guest.—W: C. Gannett.—BS 20 
Aunt Phoebe’s Remonstrance.—R. F. Williams, Jr.— 
CG 1 

Aunt Polly Green.—G: Vickers.—PS 
Aunt, Polly’s “George Washington.” (Youth’s Com¬ 
panion.) —BS 13 

Aunt Pullet’s Bonnet.—George Eliot. See Mill on 
the Floss, The. 

Aunt Rhody’s Dream.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Aunt Shaw’s Pet Jug.—Holman F. Day.—THP 
Aunt Sophronia Tabor at the Opera.—Anon.—CD 
CS 36—DCR—SR 7 


Aunt Susan Jones.—Anon.—CS 20 
Aunt Susan’s Quilt.—Eugene Wood.—WR 26 
Aunt Sylvia’s First Lesson in Geography.—Anon.- 
BS 17—SR 4 

Aunt Tabitha.—Oliver W. Holmes.—CS 10—FTR 
PR—TMR—YA 

Aunt Virginia’s Ear Trumpet.—Anon.—MC 
Auntie Dimple.—Anon.—YFD 
Auntie’s Courtship.—Anon.—SR 10 
Auntie’s Education.—May R. McNabb.—PS 
Auntie’s Parlor.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Auntie’s Skirts.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Aunty Doleful’s Visit.—Mary K. Dallas.—BS 12— 
CS 13—NPS—SA—SO—SR 7—WR 3—YP 
Aunty’s Lesson.—Anon.—WR 17 

Aurelian, Sel. fr. (Christian Martyr The— sel. fr. Letter 
XI.)—W: Ware—WR 5 

Aurelian and Zenobia.—W: Ware. See Zenobia. 
Aurelia’s Unfortunate Young Man.—S: L. Clemens.— 
B-R—CS 16—SR 4 

Aurelia’s V'alentine.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Aureng-Zebe; or. The Great Mogul, Sets. fr. —J: Dryden. 
Aureng-Zebe. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
Prologue to Aureng-Zebe.—WEP 2 
Aurora, Sets. fr. —W: Alexander, Earl of Stirling. 
Aurora—OB 

Sonnets fr. Aurora.—WEP 2 
Aurora, Sel. fr. (Banquet, The.)—Mary A. Tincker.— 
WR 24 

Aurora Borealis, The.—Jos. K. Foran.—TCV 
Aurora Borealis, The.—H. F. Gould.—FP 
Aurora Leigh, Sels. fr. —Eliz. B. Browning. 

Aurora’s Home. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—WEP 4 
Beauty of England, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—WEP 4 
(“But then the thrushes sang”— Irr. sel .)—HDL 
(England— abr.) —VA 
Books. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I.)—VA 
(Reading— sel.) —GN 

“By Solitary Fires.” (Sel. fr. Bk. V.)—VA 
Ferment of New Wine, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—VA 
“Get leave to work.” (Br. sel. fr. Bk. III.) GG 
Journey South, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. VII.)—WEP 4 
Marian’s Child. (Sel. fr. Bk. VI.)—WEP 4 
Motherless. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—VA 
Poets, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—VA 
Romney and Aurora. (Sel. fr. Bk. IX.)—VA 
Simile, A. (Sel. fr. Bk. V.)—WEP 4 
Aurora’s Home.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora 
Leigh. 

Auspex.—Jas. R. Lowell.—ASL—YBF 
Austerity of Poetry.—Matthew Arnold.—WEP 4 
Austerlitz.—Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 
Australian Girl, An.—Ethel Castilla.—VA 
Author and the Statesman, The.—Fielding.—HPE 
Author of the “Pobble,” The.—E: Lear.—BVC 
(Lines to a Young Lady.)—NA 
Authority.—S: Butler.—KNE 
Authority.—W: R. Huntington.—AA 
Authors. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Authors. (Literary Recreations.)—Eliz. Llovd — 

BS 13 

Author’s Chamber, The.—Washington Irving. See 
Alhambra, The. 

Author’s Resolution in a Sonnet, The. (Fr. Fidelia.) 
—G: Wither.—CEL—ELP—WEP 2 
(Lover’s Resolution, The.)—OB 
(Manly Heart, The.)—EPs—FTA—OEL—PGT 1 
(Shall I, wasting in despair [e].)—ES—YBF (abr.) 
(Shepherd’s Resolution, The— C.) —BNL—FEP— 
HBP—PYO (abr.) 

Autobiographical.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Autobiographical Fragment, An, Sel. fr. (My Books.)— 
Bryan W. Procter.—LBB—MBB 
Autobiography, An.—Phillips Brooks.—TMD 
Autobiography, An.—Ernest Rhys.—VA 
Autobiography of Leigh Hunt, The, Sel. fr. (Lesson 
in Reading— sel. fr. Ch. 1II.1—Leigh Hunt.— 
MHR 

Autochthon.—C: G. D. Roberts.—SN—VA 
Autocrat of the Breakfast-table The, Sels. fr. Oliver 
W. Holmes. 

Cubes and Spheres. (Sel. fr. Ch. V.)—LLC 
Hats. (Sel. fr. Ch VIII.)—MMR 
Human Voice, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. IX.) 

Letting in Light. (Sel. fr. Ch. V.)—OS 3 
Rudolph the Headsman. (Sel. fr. Prologue.)— 
BNL—EPs 

Talks on Trees. (Sels. fr. Chs. X. and XII.)—AD 
(Old Hemlock, An— sel.) —LLC 
Auto-da-fti.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Autograph, An.—Jas. R. Lowell (?).—AA 
Autograph, An.—J • G. Whittier.—AA 


35 








Autograph 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Autograph Book of Blue, The.—H. W. Jakeway.— 
WR 22 

Automatic Cradle, The.—Anon.—CS 20 

Automatic Woman, The.—Saidee V. Milne.—WR 15 

Autumn.—Anon.—CP 

Autumn.—Anon.—PTS 

Autumn.—Anon.—-YBT 

Autumn. ( Blackwood ).—HP 

Autumn. (Sel.) —Alice Cary.—POS 

Autumn.—Emily Dickinson.—AA—-LC 

Autumn, The.—W: D. Gallagher. See Autumn in the 

W 6St 

Autumn.—T: Hood.—BNL—HBP—OB 
(Ode: Autumn— C.) —VA 
(Ode to Autumn.)—CEL 
Autumn.—J: Keats.—POS 

(Ode to Autumn.)—PGT 1—SN 
(To Autumn— C.) —CEL—FEP—HBP—OB— 
WEP 4—YBF 

Autumn.—Albert Laighton.—NV 

Autumn. (Poems and Epigrams, LXII.— C.) —Walter 
S. Landor.—OB 

Autumn. fThe Fields of Down, XXIX.)—Lloyd 
Mifflin.—SN 

Autumn.—Percy B. Shelley. See Autumn: A Dirge. 
Autumn.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Autumn.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
Autumn.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Autumn: A Dirge. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley.—CGd— 
HBP—LC 

Autumn.—CEL—FEP—FP 
Autumn Breeze, An.— W: H. Hayne.—AA 
Autumn Cry, The. ( Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Autumn Day, An.—Marg. E. Sangster.—PEO 
Autumn Evening, The.—W: B. O. Peabody.—TAS 
Autumn Fires.—-Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Autumn Flitting, An.—G: Cotterell.—VA 
Autumn Flowers.—Caroline B. Southey.—HBP 
Autumn Haze.—R: K. Munkittrick.—-POS 
Autumn in the West.—W: D. Gallagher.—AA 
(Autumn, The— sel.) —AA 
Autumn is Ended.—J. Hazard Hartzell.—POS 
Autumn Leaf, An.—Harry E. Fosdick.—CG 3 
Autumn Leaves, The.—Anon.—AD 
Autumn Leaves, The.—Anon.—NA 
Autumn Leaves.—G: Cooper.—GMS ( abr .)—NV 
(Leaves and the Wind, The.)—TAV 
(Wind and the Leaves, The.)—SM 
Autumn Leaves.—T: W. Higginson.—AD 
Autumn Memories.—G: F. Savage-Armstrong.—VA 
Autumn: or, Hylas and jEgon.—Alexander Pope.— 
EP 

Autumn Song.—M. E. C.—HSS 2 

Autumn Song (C .)—Edmund Clarence Stedman.— 
NV 

(Going a-Nutting.)—GN 
Autumn Song of a Little Girl.—H. C. B.—PHS 
Autumn Sunset, An.—Anon.—POS 
Autumn Thoughts.—Bill Nye.—SR 4 
Autumn Tourists.—Anon.—MRS 
Autumn Voices.—F. W. B.—AD—LLC 
Autumn Wedding-song, An.—Algernon Tassin.—CG 1 
Autumn’s Mirth.—S: Minturn Peck.—GN—POS 
Autumn’s Processional.—Dinah M. Craik. See October. 
Autumn’s Sighing.—T: B. Read.—HBP 
Aux Italiens. (C.)—Rob’t Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP (si. 
abr.)—BNL — BRR — BS 12 — CR — CS 20 
— FEP — HBP — LLC — MR — SR 5 — VA 
(At the Opera.)—VSG 

(One isn’t Loved every Day— br. sel.) —FLS 
Avalanche, The.—Anon.—CS 15 

Avalanche of Drugs, An.—C: H. Clark. See Out of the 
Hurly Burly. 

Avalanches of Jungfrau Alp.—G. B. Cheever.—OM 
(Avalanches of the Jungfrau.)—PPS 
Avalanches of the Jungfrau.—G. B. Cheever. See 
foregoing. 

Avaro (Epigram— C.). —G. Lessing (tr. by S. T. Cole¬ 
ridge).—HPE 

Ave.—Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Ave atque Vale.—Algernon C: Swinburne.—EDY (sel.) 
—OB 

Ave atque Vale.—Rosamund M. Watson.—VA 
Ave Imperatrix.—Oscar Wilde.—HBP—VA 
Ave Maria.—Alfred Austin.—BS 6 
(SI. abr. — arr. si. diff.) —FMR—SO 
Ave! Nero Imperator.—Duffield Osborne.—AA 
Avenged!—Alfred Verlyn.—WR 13 
Avenging Childe, The.—Anon. (tr. by J: G. Locki 
hart.)—MMR—WR 8 

Average Boy, The. (Detroit Free Press.) —CS 37 


Average Boy, The.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 21 

Average Modern Traveler, The.—Anon.—SR 1 

Avis.—Oliver W. Holmes.—WCL 

A-visitin’ the School.—Anon.—CS 35 

Await the Issue.—T: Carlyle. See Past and Present. 

Awake.—Toru Dutt.—FLS 

Awake, my Heart!—Rob’t Bridges.—VA—YBF 
“Awake, my soul, stretch every nerve.” (The Chris¬ 
tian Race— C. — si. abr.) —Philip Doddridge.— 
SAE 

Awakened, The.—Eliz. Hazard.—FLS 
Awakening.—Marg. E. Sangster.—AA 
Awakening of Endymion, The.—Laetitia E. (Landon 
Maclean.—FEP—HBP 

Awakening of Uncle Sam, The.—Sam W. Foss.—PAPm 
Awakening Song.—J: Ford. See Lover’s Melancholy, 
The. 

Awakening Year, The.—T: B. Read.—-AD 
Awaking, Sel. fr. (Morning.)—W: Allingham.—EPs 
Awaking a Boy. (C. — in Life in Danbury.)—Jas. M. 
Bailey.—MYF 

(Calling a Boy in the Morning.)—CS 10—KNE— 
SO 

Away.—Jas. W. Riley.—HDL 

Away, Delights! (Fr. The Captain—Song of Love 
Despairing and Prepared to Die— C.). —J: 
Fletcher.—OB 

Away from the Wine-cup, Away. (New York Weekly.) 
—CS 9 

Away to School.—T: Hughes. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days. 

Awful Boots.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 

Awful Boy, An.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 

Awful Fly, An.—W. T—KNS 

Awful Responsibility, An.—Anon.—DSS 

Awful Squirt, An. (Rockland Courier.) —CS 20 

Awful State, An.-—Anon.—DSS 

Awful Story, An.—Anon.—-DCP 

Awfully Lovely Philosophy.—Anon.—BS 9 — CS 20— 
DCR—FTR—PR—SR 7—YA 
Awkward.—J. C. Goodwin.—CS 26 
Axe, The.—Isabella V. Crawford.—VA 
(Axe of the Pioneer, The—sel.)—TCV 
Axe of the Pioneer, The.—Isabella V. Crawford. See 
foregoing. 

Axe to Grind, An.—Anon.—PS 
Aylmer’s Field. (Sel.) —Alfred Tennyson.—WR 1 
(Leolin and Edith— sel.) —GN 
Aztec City, The.—Eugene F. Ware.—AA 


B 


B. B. Romance, The.—Edgar Fawcett.—DR 
Babe, The.—Calidasa (tr. by Sir W• Jones).—EPs 
—FEP—C,P 

(Baby, The.)—BNL 

Babe Christabel, Sel. fr. —Gerald Massey.—FP 
Babes in the Wood, The. (Dial. — burlesque on follow¬ 
ing. ) —Anon.—MDD 

Babes in the Wood, The. (In Percy’s Reliques.)— 
Anon—BVC 

(Babes in the Woodfs], The—Mother Goose vers — 
hr.)— BVC—SM 

(Children in the Wood— C. — ballad vers .)— 

AD (sel.) —BB — CGd — EPs — FEP —HBP— 
PC—PEB 1—WCLI 1 

Babie, The.—Jeremiah E. Rankin (ur. at. to Hugh Mil¬ 
ler).—A A—BNL—FEP—LC (abr.) 

(NaeSnoon.)—OS 1 

Babie Bell.—T: B. Aldrich.— See Baby Bell. 

Babies, The. (Speech on the Babies— C. — si. abr.) — 
S: L. Clemens.—CS 18—SR 1 
Babies. (Abr.) —Jerome K. Jerome.—BS 21 

(On Babies— C.) —HBR 

Babies all are Grown, The.—Ethel M. Colson.—BS 22 
Babies’ Reception. The.—Anon.—EuE 
Babyf, The], —Anon.—FP J —TFS 
Baby, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Baby, The.—Calidasa (tr. by Sir W: Jones). See 
Babe, The. 

Baby.—Elaine Goodale Eastman.—AA—OH 
Baby[, The], G: Macdonald. See At the Back of the 
North Wind. 

Baby, The.—Eliz. W. Townsend.—WR !7 

Baby and Mary.—Anon.—-NA 

Baby Bell. (C.) —T: Bailey Aldrich.—BNL—FEP 

(Babie Bell.)—FMR—MYF (abr.)— SE (br. sels.) 

(Ballad of Babie Bell, The.)—BRR—CS 13—CSS_ 

FP—WCL 

(“O babie, dainty babie Bell”— br. sel.) —SE 


36 




TITLE INDEX 


Baker’s 


Baby Bye.—Theodore Tilton.—OS 1 
(Fly, The.)—AWH 
Baby Com.—Anon.—PoR 

Baby Dear. (Cradle Song of the Buccaneer’s Wife.)— 
(At. to) S: Lover.—LC 
Baby Faith. (Christian Observer .)—MYF 
Baby in Church.—Minnie [or Winnie] M. Gow.—BS 16 
—CS 24—HP—NPS—PFP—PR—YP 
Baby in the Library, The.—E: D. Anderson.—MBB 
Baby is a Sailor.—Anon.—TFS 
(Cradle Song.)—PR 

Baby is Dead, The.—Emma A. Browne.—CS 17 
Baby Logic.—Eliz. W. Bellamy.—COS—DCP—PP— 
WR 12 

(Baby’s Logic.)—NPS—YP 
Baby Logic.—Helen M. Winslow.—WR 9 
Baby Louise.—Marg. Eytinge.—BNL—TFS 
Baby May—W: C. Bennett.—BNL—FEP—HBP— 
VA 

Baby Mine.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Baby Mine.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—OH 
Baby Nell.—Anon.—CPI. ( sel.) 

(How Did It Happen?)—COS—PP 
Baby of the Future, The. (Outlook .)—BS 23 
Baby Over the Way, The.—Washington Gladden.— 
HP 

(My Neighbor’s Baby.)—CS 13—SSS 
Baby Seed Song.—E. Nesbit.—BYC—PoR 
Baby Sister.—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
Baby Sleeps.—Anon.—CS 20—DLS 
(Little Tyrant.)—TFS 
Baby Sleeps, The.—Anon.—TFS 

(Don’t Wake the Baby.)—PS—TT 
Baby Sleeps.—S: Hinds.—BNL 
(Sleeping Baby, The.)—FEP 
Baby Zulma’s Christmas Carol.—A: J. Requier.—BNL 
Babyhood.—Josiah G. Holland. See Bitter-sweet. 
Baby-land.—G: Cooper—CPL—HP—PS 
Babylonia, Sel. fr. (Tempora Acta.)—Robert, Earl of 
Lytton.—VA 

Baby’s Correspondence.—Alice P. Carter.—WR 4 
Baby’s Cradle is Green.—Anon.—TFS (sel.) 

(Lullaby.)—CS 23—TFS (sel.) 

Baby’s Day.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Baby’s Dead.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Baby’s DAut, The.—Jas. Smith.—EDY—FEP—HPE 
—THP 

Baby’s Drawer.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Baby’s Dreams.—Edgar Fawcett.—-TAV 
Baby’s Eyes.—Algernon C. Swinburne. See Etude 
Rdalistb. 

Baby’s Feet [,A],—Algernon C. Swinburne. See Etude 
Rtialistl. 

Baby’s Feet,and Hands, A.—Algernon C. Swinburne. 

See Etude Realists. 

Baby’s First Tooth.—Anon.—DLS 
Baby’s First Tooth, The. (Harhisons’ Baby, The— 
C.—in They All Do it.)—Jas. M. Bailey.—BS 3 
—CS 10—DR (si. longer.) 

Baby’s IJands [, A].—Algernon C. Swinburne. See 
Etude R£alist£. 

Baby’s Kiss, The.—G. R. Emerson.—BS 9—CS 19 
Baby’s Letter.—Anon.—DCP (sel .)—HP 
Baby’s Logic.—Eliz. W. Bellamy. See Baby Logic. 
Baby’s Lullaby.—Anon.—PS , 

Baby’s Name, The.—Anon.—WR 24 
Baby’s Offering.—Anna Burnham.—CS 37 
Baby’s Rattle, A.—Anon.—-HP 

Baby’s Reflections, A. (London Figaro.) —DLS—DS 
—YA 

Baby’s Remarks.—Anon.—DCP 
Baby’s Reply.—Anon.—HP 
Baby’s Ring.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Baby’s Shoes.—W: C. Bennett.—BNL—HBP—OS 1 
Baby’s Skies.—Mary C. Bartlett.—OH—TFS 
Baby’s Soliloquy [, A],—Anon.—CS 18—DST—NPS— 
PP—YFR—YP 

Baby’s Thoughts, The.—Anon.—WR 7 
Baby’s Thoughts, The.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Baby’s Visitor. (Atlanta Constitution .)—BS 9 
Baca.—S: D. Robbins.—TAS 

Bacchanalia; or, The New Age.—Matthew Arnold.— 
HBP 

( Evening— sel .)—LC 

Bacchanalian Song, A.—Bryan W. Procter.—VS— 
WEP 4 

Bacchic Lyric, A.—H. L. Doggett.—CG 1 
Bacchus.—Ralph W. Emerson.—HBP—OB 
Bacchus.—J: Keats. See Endymion. 

Bacchus.—Frank D. Sherman.—TAV 
Bacchylides.—G: M. Whicher.—AA 
Bachelor and the Bride, The.—Anon.—BC 


Bachelor Coat, The.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—CS 37 

(“Le Dernier Jour d’un Condamnfi”— C.) —PLD— 
TAV 

Bachelor Sale, The.—Lucretia M. Davidson—CS 17 
(Auction Extraordinary, The.)—PPSr 
(Auctioneer, then, in his labor .began, The”— br. 
sel .)—CS 1 

Bachelors, The. (Abr.) —Anon.—BS 16—CS 9 
Bachelor’s Cane-bottomed Chair, The.—W: M. Thack¬ 
eray.—HPE 

(Cane-bottomed Chair, The— C.) —BS 6—CS 17— 
DDR—TMR 

Bachelor’s Dream, The —T: Hood.—CS 35—FEP— 
HPE—THP—WR 12 

Bachelor’s Growl, A.—Anon.—CS 23—FAS 
Bachelor’s Hall.—J: Fmley.—BNL—CS 24—FEP— 
MYF (sel.) 

Bachelor’s Hope, The.—Malcom M. Luzader.—CS 32 
Bachelor’s Invocation, A. (Pall Mall Gazette .)— 
PPh 

Bachelor’s Love Song, A.—J. H. Ryan.—WR 7 
Bachelor’s Pipe, A. (Cigar and Tobacco World .)— 
BS 21 (si. abr.) 

(Bachelor's Soliloquy, A.)—PPh 
Bachelor’s Reasons for Taking a Wife, The.—Anon.— 
BC 

Bachelor’s Reverie, A.—Anon.—CS 31 
Bachelor’s Soliloquy, The.—Anon.—CRR—CS 1 
(Parody on Hamlet’s Soliloquy.) 

Bachelor’s Soliloquy, The.—Anon.—OM—SR 13 
(Another parody on Hamlet’s Soliloquy.) 

Bachelor’s Soliloquy, A. (Cigar and Tobacco World.) 

See Bachelor’s Pipe, A. 

Bachelor's Views, A.—T.om Hall.—PPh 
Bachelor’s Wedding Trip, A, Sel. fr. (The Spirits of 
Fire.)—C: P. Sherman.—BS 18 
Back Again.—Celia Thaxter.—HS 
Back from the War.—T. DeWitt Talmage.—BS 16— 
PS 

Back in War Days.—Pauline Phelps.—BS 25 
Back Where They Used to Be. (Griggsby’s Station— 
C.)—Jas. W. Riley.—CH 

Back-log, The; or, Uncle Ned’s Little Game.—Innes 
Randolph.—CS 18 

Backlog Studies. (Sels. fr. Studies I., III., and VII.) 

—C: D. Warner—WCLG 2 
Backward. (Char.) —Anon.—TCP 
Backward Glance, A.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Back-work Club, The.—H. S. Chamberlain, Jr.—CG 3 
Bacon’s Philosophy.—T: B. Macaulay.—SE 
Bad Boy and the Limburger Cheese, The. (Peck's 
Sun .)—DCR 

Bad Boy’s Diary, A. (New York Weekly .)—BS 18 
Bad Child’s Book of Beasts, The,‘<Se!. fr. (Introduction.) 

Hilaire Belloc.—BVC 
Bad Cold, A.—H. Elliott McBride.—CS 26 
Bad Habit Cured, A.—Anon.—DDM 
Bad I Can’t.—Anon.—SM 

Bad News. (Frags, fr.-various aidhors .)—BNL 
Bad Orator, The.—-Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
Bad Poets.—S: T. Coleridge.—HPE 
Bad Prayers.-—Bronson Alcott.—BS 16 
Bad Squire, The.—C: Kingsley. See Rough Rhyme 
on a Rough Matter, A. 

Bad Wife, The.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
Bad Writers.—S: Butler.—HPE 
Bad Year, The.—E: W. Thomson.—TCV 
Badger’s Debut as Hamlet.—Litchfield Moseley.—BeR 
Baffled Knight, The; or, Lady’s Policy. (In Percy’s 
Reliques.)—Anon.—HPE 

Bag of the Bee, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—LC—WEP 2— 
YBF 

Baggage, Sel. fr. (Bell, The—Ch. V., si. abr.) —B; F 
Taylor.—TMR 

Baggage Fiend, The.—Anon.—CS 8 
Bagged the Wrong Bird.—J: P. Lyons.—TL 
Bagman’s Dog, The.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 
Bailiff’s Daughter of Islington, The. (In Percy’s Rel¬ 
iques.)—Anon.—GN—HBP—OEB—PEB 2— 
WEP 1 

(Mod. vers.) —BB—LC 
“Bairnies, Cuddle Doon.”—GP 

(Cuddle Doon.)— BRR—BS 7—CR —CS 13 —CSS 
—FTR—GN—HBP—OS1—PPSr—SDR—VA 
(Vers, vary si. in dialect.) 

Bait, The.—J: Donne.—EP 

Bait of the Average Fisherman.—H. C. Dodge.—AWH 
—THP 

Baitsy and I are Oudt.—G: M. Warren.—CS 24 
(Fritz and his Betsy Fall Out.)—SR 4 
Baker’s Reply to the Needle-pedler, The.—Anon.— 
MHR 


37 




Baker’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Baker’s Tale, The.—Lewis Carroll. See Hunting of 
Snark, The. 

Balaam’s Parables. Bible. See Numbers. 

Balaam’s Prophecy in Behalf of Israel. Bible. See 
Numbers. 

Balade: “Hyd, Absolon, thy gilte tresses clere.” (Bal¬ 
lad Sung to Alceste.)—Geoffrey Chaucer.—OB 
Balaklava.—Alex. Smith [or Alex. B. Meek],—BNL— 
BS 10 

Balance Due.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Balance of Power, The.—G: Canning.—SS 
Balance Wheel, The.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 5 
Balcony Scene from Cyrano de Bergerac, The.— 
Edmond Rostand. See Cyrano de Bergerac. 
Balcony Scene from Romeo and Juliet. W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Balder.—Anon.—H B P 
Balder, Sels. fr. —Sydney Dobell. 

Dante, Shakespeare, Milton.—VA 
(England— sel.) —WEP 4 
Sea Ballad.—VA 

Balder Dead, Sel. fr. (Incremation.) — Matthew 
Arnold.—VA 

Balder’s Wife.—Alice Cary.—AA 

Bald-headed Man, The. ( Little Rock Gazette.) —BS 8— 
CS 19—FTR—HNS (abr.) 

Bald-headed Tyrant, The.—May E. Vandyne.—HP 
Balky Horse, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Ball at Brussels, the Night Before the Battle of 
Waterloo, The. — Lord Byron. See Childe 
* Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Ballad (C.): “The auld wife sat at her ivied door.”— 
C: S. Calverley.—THP—VA 
(Auld Wife, The.)—NA 

Ballad: “Good Christmas bells, I pray you.”—A. B. 
De Mille.—TCV 

Ballad, A (C.): “’Twas when the seas,” etc. (Fr. 
“ The What d’ye Call It,” Act II., Sc. 8.) —J: 
Gay. 

(Ballad from " The What d’ye Call It.”) — WEP 3 
(’Twas when the Seas were Roaring.)—FEP 
Ballad, A: “Turn, gentle hermit,” etc.—Oliver Gold¬ 
smith. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 

Ballad, A: “Among green, pleasant meadows.”— 
Johann G. von Herder (tr. by Mary Howitt).— 
PHS 

(Among Green, Pleasant Meadows.)—WCL 
Ballad (C.): “It was not in the winter.”—T: Hood 
—VA 

(Abr.) —HBP—VS 

(“It was not in the winter”— abr.) —YBF 
(Time of Roses— abr )—OB 

Ballad: “She’s up and gone, the graceless girl.”— 
T: Hood.—BFV—VS 

Ballad: “Sigh on, sad heart, for love’s eclipse.”—T: 
Hood—HBP 

Ballad (C.): “Spring, it is cheery.”—T: Hood—VA 
("What can an old man do but die?”)—BNL 
Ballad ( C.): “Der noble ritter Hugo.”—C: G. 
Leland.—HBP 

(Ballad of the Mermaid.)—AWH—THP 
(Ritter Hugo.)—BNL 

Ballad: “In the summer even.”—Harriet P. Spof- 
ford.—ASL 

(Night Sea, The.)—EPs 
Ballad: A. D. 1400.—C: Kingsley.—GN 

(Ballad of Earl Haldan’s Daughter— C .)—PEB 3 
Ballad for a Boy, A.—W: Cory.—PEB 3 
(Two Captains.)—LC 

Ballad from Rokeby.—Walter Scott. See Rokeby. 
Ballad from “The What d’ye Call It,” A. — J: Gay. 

See Ballad, A: “ ’Twas when the seas,” etc. 
Ballad: Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree. (C.) —C: Kingsley. 
(Lorraine.)—CR—CS 20—OS 1—SR 5—VA 
(Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree.)—PEB 3—VSG 
(Lorraine, Lorree.)—MR 

Ballad Made in the Hot Weather. (C.)—W: E. Hen¬ 
ley. 

(Made in the Hot Weather.)—GN 
Ballad: Noting the Difference of Rich and Poor, A.— 
C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Ballad of a Bridal.—Edith N. Bland.—VA 
Ballad of a Butcher and the Dear Little Children, The. 
—Anon.—CS 17 

Ballad of a Little Fun, The.—Maurice Thompson.— 
BAB 

Ballad of Admiral Hosier’s Ghost. — R: Glover.— 
WEP 1 

Ballad of Agincourt [, The],—Michael Drayton. See 
Battle of Agincourt, The. 

Ballad of Alice Brand, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady 
of the Lake, The. 


Ballad of Athlone, A; or, How They Broke Down the 
Bridge.—Aubrey De Vere.—PEB 4 
Ballad of Babie Bell, The.—T: B. Aldrich. See Baby 
Bell. 

Ballad of “Beau Brocade,” The.—Austin Dobson.— 
AVP—BS 24 (abr.) 

Ballad of Bedlam [, A], (Punch.) —HPE—NA 
Ballad of “Bonny Portmore”; or. The Wicked Revenge 
The.—Aubrey De Vere.—PEB 4 
Ballad of Bouillabaisse, The.—W: Thackeray.-—FEC 
—HBP—VA 

Ballad of Brave Women, A.—Philip B. Marston.—PR 
Ballad of Calnan’s Christmas, The.—Helen G. Cone.— 
BAB 

Ballad of Capri, A. (Harper’s Weekly.) —CS 22 
Ballad of Carmilhan, The. (Tales of a Wayside Inn: 
The Musician’s Tale.)—H: W. Longfellow. 
(Musician’s Tale, The—abrj—SR 2 
Ballad of Cassandra Brown, The.—Coroebus Green.— 
BS 12—CS 24 

Ballad of Charity, The.—C: G. Leland.—AWH—THP 
Ballad of Chevy-Chase, The.—R: Sheale(?).—FEP 
(Chevy-Chase [Chace].)—BNL — GN — HB — 
HBP—LH—MR—OEB—PHS 
(Hunting of the Cheviot, The— diff. and older 
vers.) —BB—PEB 1 

Ballad of College Days, A. (Swarthmore Pha-niz .)— 
CG 3 

Ballad of Dead Ladies, The (C .).—Francois Villon 
(tr. by Dante G. Rossetti).—VA 
(Ballad of Old Time Ladies.)—PYO 
Ballad of Dead Men’s Bay, The.—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—PEB 4 

Ballad of Dorothy, A.—Arthur Ketchum.—CG 2 
Ballad of Earl Haldan’s Daughter. (C.)—C: Kingsley. 
—PEB 3 

(Ballad, A. D. 1400.)—GN 

Ballad of East and West, The.—Rudyard Kipling.— 
PEB 4—VA 

(SI. o6r.)—LH—TMR—WR 7 
Ballad of Eliza Davis, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—HPE 
Ballad of Fisher’s Boarding-house, The.—Rudyard 
Kipling.—PEB 4 

Ballad of Heaven, A.—J: Davidson.—VA 
Ballad of Hell, A.—J: Davidson.—PEB 4 
Ballad of Heroes, A.—Austin Dobson.—HSS 1—PE0 
Ballad of High Endeavor, A.—Anon.—NA 
Ballad of Hiram Hover, The.—Bayard Taylor. See 
Echo Club, The. 

Ballad of Human Life.—T: L. Beddoes.—VA 
Ballad of Ishmael Day, The.—Anon.—CS 1 
Ballad of Jenny, the Mare, The. (Fr. Euphranor.)— 
E: Fitzgerald.—BVC 

Ballad of Judas Iscariot, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.— 
HBR—PEB 4—VA 

Ballad of Keith of Ravelston, The.—Sydney Dobell.—■ 
AVP—OB—PGT 2 
(Keith of Ravelston.)—FEP—PEB 3 
Ballad of McCarty’s Trombone, The.—Joe Lincoln.— 
CCB 

Ballad of Manila Bay, A.—C: G. D. Roberts.—BAB 
Ballad of Marjorie, A.—Dora Sigerson.—TIP 
Ballad of Nathan Hale, The. T: Moore.—AWB 
Ballad of Old Time Ladies.—Francois Villon. See 
Ballad of Dead Ladies, The. 

Ballad of Oriana, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—BFV 
Ballad of Oriskany, The.—O. C. Auringer.—AA 
Ballad of Orleans A.—A. Mary F. R. Darmesteter.— 
VA 

Ballad of Paco Town [,The],—Clinton Scollard.—BAB 
—EDY 

Ballad of Roncesvalles, A.—Felicia D. Hemans. See 
Siege of Valencia, The. 

Ballad of St. Swithun’s Day, A.—E. H. Hickey.—OS 1 
Ballad of Sarsfield; or, The Bursting of the Gun, A.— 
Aubrey De Vere.—PEB 4 

Ballad of Sir John Franklin, A.—G: H. Boker.—AA— 
EDY 

(Sir John Franklin.)—CS 1 > 

Ballad of Splendid Silence, The.—E. Nesbit.—VSG— 
WR 2 

Ballad of Sweet P, The.—Virginia W. Cloud.—WR 22 
Ballad of the Afternoon Tea.—H. P. Huntress.—CG 3 
Ballad of the Armada, A.—Austin Dobson. See Ballad 
to Queen Elizabeth of the Spanish Armada, A. 
Ballad of the Bier that Conquered, The.—Aubrev De 
Vere—PEB 4 

Ballad of the Bird-bride.—Graham R. Tomson.—BS 19 
Ballad of the Boat, The.—R: Garnett.—AVP—CGd— 
PYO—VA 

Ballad of the Brides of Quair, The.—Isa C. Knox — 
PEB 4 


38 




TITLE INDEX 


Banner 


Ballad of the Brook, The.—C: G. D. Roberts.—CR 
Ballad of the Colors, The.—T: D. English.—BS 21 
Ballad of the Conemaugh Flood, A.—H. D. Rawnslev 
—EDY 

Ballad of the Faded Field.—Rob’t B. Wilson.—AA 
Ballad of the Fleet, A.—Alfred Tennyson.—LH 

(“Revenge, The”: A Ballad of the Fleet—C.)— 
BS 21 — CR — EDY— EHT — GP— HB — 
MRS—OS 3—PGT2—PSIl—WEP 4 
Ballad of the French Fleet, A.—H W. Longfellow.— 
AA—EDY 

Ballad of the Green Old Man, The.—C: G. Leland.— 
AWH 

Ballad of the “Laughing Sally,” The.—C 4 G. D. 
Roberts.—SO 

Ballad of the Mad Ladye.—Kate S. Maclean.—TCV 
Ballad of the Mermaid.—C: G. Leland See Ballad: 
“TW nnKlp nttpr ** of o 

Ballad of the Midnight Sun, The.—H. E Hamilton- 
King —PEB 4 

Ballad of the Overconfident Polliwog, The.—F. R. Du 
Bois.—CG 3 

Ballad of the Oysterman, The. (C.)—Oliver W. Holmes. 

—CR—CSS—PPSr—SO—THP 
(Oysterman, The.)—SR 10 
Ballad of the Past Meridian. (C.)—G: Meredith. 

Past Meridian.—WRD 

Ballad of the Pipe, The.—Hermann Rave. — l’Ph 
Ballad of the Shamrock, The.—Fitz James O’Brien.— 
CS 22—FMR (abr.) 

Ballad of the Spanish Armada.—Austin Dobson. See 
Ballad to Queen Elizabeth of the Spanish Ar¬ 
mada, A. 

Ballad of the Tempest [.The], (C.)—las. T. Fields.— 

CS 19—FEP—HBP—LC 

(Captain’s Daughter, The.)—CSS—DJS (si. abr.) — 
PPSr—WCL 

(Isn’t God upon the Ocean, etc.— abr.) —TFS 
(On the Ocean— si. abr.) —YBT 
(Tempest, The.)— BNL — FP — GP — TAV — 
WCLG 1 

Ballad of the Thrush, The.—Austin Dobson.—OS 1 
Ballad of the Unattainable.—Andrew Lang.—FEP 
Ballad of the Wayfarer, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.— 
BS 19 

Ballad of the Were-wolf, A.—Graham R Tomson.— 
WR 2 

Ballad of the Wicked Nephew.—Jas. T. Fields — 
BS 14 

Ballad of Titus Labienu*. The.—Laura E Richards.— 
TMR 

tallad [tar Ballade] of Trees and the Master, A. (C.)— 
Sidney Lanier.—AA—TAS—TAV 
(Trees and the Master, The.)—LLC 
Bllad of Virginia.—T: B. Macaulay. See Virginia 
(Fate of Virginia, The). 

Balad of War, A.—Menella B. Smedley —CS 25 
Baiad Stanzas. (C.)—T: Moore. 

Home of Eeace, The.)—CS 20 

(’I knew by the smoke that so gracefully curled.”) 

—BNL—TFY 

Balia Sung to Alceste. — Geoffrey Chaucer. See 
Balade: “Hyd, Absalon,” etc. 

BallaaA: The Lake of the Dismal Swamp. (C.) 

—T: Moore. 

Lak 0 f the Dismal Swamp, The.—EPs 
Ballad t Queen Elizabeth [of the Spanish Armada. A 
'-C.l.—Austin Dobson.—EDY 
(Balls} of the Armada, A.)—I.H 
(Balia of the Spanish Armada.)—SO 
Ballad uv n a Wedding, A.—Sir J. Suckling.— 
LCafir.)—OEL—PYO (sel.)— WEP 2 
(Bride, "he— sel.) —BNL—EPs 
Ballad within Ancient Refrain.—Anon.—NA 
Ballade.—“iylites.”—CG 3 

Ballade in Cmmendation of Honour, A. (Fr. The 
PaliCpf Honour.)—Gawain Douglas.—WEP 1 
Ballade of Ba\fi]} e —Edmund Gosse.—EDY 
Ballade of BiRiclasts.—Graham R. Tomson.—LBB 
Ballade of BluC'hina. (C.) —-Andrew Lang.—OS 2 
(Of BlueCh a ) _vA 

Ballade of Co,gr R Girls, A.—F. R. Batchelder.— 
CG 2 , 

Ballade of Dead fiends.—E. A. Robinson.—AA 
Ballade of Forgot n Loves.—Arthur Grissom.—TL 
Ballade of Islandsy—-Lucy C. B. Robinson.—AA 
Ballade of Justifica on , a.—G uy W. Carryh—CG 2 
Ballade of Laura’s , n ( Harvard Lampoon.) —CG 2 
Ballade of Nicolete. v Q ra h am Tomson.—PYO 

Ballade of Playing Cu s . a.—G leeson White.—VA 
Ballade of the Alumr.—Edith Child.—CG 2 

* BaseOp Cambridge ed. of Burns’ Poems 

\ 39 


Ballade of the Book-hunter. (C.)—Andrew Lang.— 
LBB—MBB 

(Of the Book-hunter.)—VA 

Ballade of the Bookman’s Paradise.—Andrew Lang.— 
LBB—MBB 

Ballade of the Bookworm.—Andrew Lang.—MBB 
Ballade of the Dream-ship, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Ballade of the Nurserie, A.-—J - Twig.—NA 
Ballade of Tobacco, The.—Brander Matthews.—PPh 
Ballade of Trees and the Master, A.—Sidney Lanier. 

See Ballad of Trees and the Master, A. 

Ballade of True Wisdom.—Andrew Lang.—LBB— 
MBB 

Ballade to Theocritus in Winter. (C.)—Andrew Lang. 

(To Theocritus in Winter.)—VA 
Ballet-girl, The. (Lippincott’s Magazine .)—BS 11 
Ballot, The. (Abr.) —E. H. Chapin.—SE 
(Ballot-box, The.)—CS 3—FD 1 
Ballot, The.—J: Pierpont. See Word from a Petitioner, 
A. 

Ballot Reform.—Grover Cleveland.—BS 18 

(Advent of the Ballot Reform, The— ptly. same .)— 
FD 2 

Ballot-box, The. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Ballot-box, The.—Edwin H. Chapin.—CS 3—FD 1 
(Ballot, The— abr .)—SE 

Ballot-box, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Eve of Elec¬ 
tion, The. 

Ballotville Female Convention, The.—Anon.—CS 14 
Ball-room Madrigal, A.—W. C. Nichols.—CG 1 
Balow. (In Percy’s Reliques.) — Anon.—OB (mod. 
vers.) 

(Lady Ann Bothwell’s Lament.)—BNL—HBP 
(Lady Anne Bothwell’s Lament— C.) —FEP 
Balow, my Bonnie.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Balthazar and the Quack.—J: Tobin.—SS 
Bamberg.—F. W. Faber.—A VP 
Bambino.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Bamboozling Grandma.—Anon.—WR 17 
(Flattering Grandma.)—PEO 
Banana.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Band in the Pines, The.—J: E. Cooke.—AA—EDY 
Bandage. (Pantomime char.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Bandit’s Fate, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Banford’s Burglar-alarm.—Anon.—BS 13 
Banging a Sensational Novelist.-—Anon.—CS 27 
Bangs Family Tells a Story, The.—Sam W. Foss.— 
CS 34 

Banish the Snakes.—H. E. P.—WR 18 
Banished Bejant, The.—R. F. Murray.—THP 
Banishing the Bitters.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Banjo Fiend, The.—Willard G. Bleyer.—CG 2 
Banjo Mine.—Anon.—CG 1 
Banjo of the Past, The.—Howard Weeden.—AA 
Bank-notes and Coin.—G: Canning.—SS 
Bankrout.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Bankrupt’s Visitor. The.—T: D. English.—CS 18 
Banks’ Babies.—Anon.—SR 10 

Banks o’[wr. of] Doon, The—(1st vers.) (2nd vers. — 
Sweet are the Banks; 3rd vers .—Ye Flowery 
Banks.)—Rob’t Burns.—(1st vers.) —CR—EPs 
FEP—PYO—WCLG 1—WEP 3 
(3rd vers.) —BPB—CEL—GP 
(1st and 3rd vers, comb.) —BNL 
(2nd and 3rd vers, comb.) —OB 
( Bonnie Doon—1st vers.) —LLC—SN 
( 3rd vers.)— MBL— YBF 

(Ye Banks and Braes o’ Bonnie Doon— 3rd vers .)— 
PGT 1 

Banks o’ Yarrow, The. (In Border minstrelsy.)—Anon. 
—BB—OEB 

(Dowie Dens of Yarrow, The.)—FEP—HBP— 
PEB 2 (si. abr.) 

(Dowie Houms of Yarrow, The— si.abr .)—OB 
(Versions vary slightly in wording.) 

Bank-swallows, The.—Anon.—NV 
Bannatyne Chib, The. (C.) —Walter Scott. 

(One Volume More.)—-LBB 
Banner Betsey Made, The.—T. C. Harbaugh,—PRR 
Banner of Freedom, The.—Jeremiah W. Cummings. 
See Song of the Union. 

Banner of the Covenanters, The. (Abr .)—Caroline E. 
Norton.—MMR 

Banner of the Cross, The.—G: W. Doane.—TAS 
Banner of the Jew, The.—Emma Lazarus.—AA 
Banner of the Stars, The.—R. W. Raymond.—AWB 
—PAPm 

Banner that Welcomes the World, The.—Hezekiah 
Butterworth.—CS 34 

Slight variations in wording not noted. 




Bannockburn 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Bannockburn. (C.)—Rob’t Burns.—BS5—EDY—EP s 
—FEP—GN—HB—HBP—LC — OS 1 — PHS 
—WEP 3—YBF 
(Later vers .)—BPB 

(With 2 add. st.) —BLP—BNL—GP—HSS 1 
(Battle of Bannockburn —later vers.) —CEL—EHT 
(Bruce’s Address to his Army].)—LC 
(Later vers.) —CSS—PPSr 
(Scots, Wha Hae —also C.) —PYO 
Bannockburn.—Walter Scott. See Lord of the Isles, 
The. 

Banquet, The.—Landon.—FP 

Banquet, The. ( Fr. Aurora.)—Mary A. Tincker.— 
WR 24 

Banquet of Sense, The. ( Song fr. The Poetaster, Sc. V.) 
—Ben Jonson.—ES 

Banquet Song, A.—Edwin O. Grover.—CG 2 
Ban-shee, The.—W: Allingham.—-TIP 
Banshee, The.—J: Todhunter.—VA 
Banty Tim.—J: Hay.—BNL—HR—SC—SDR 
Baptism Defended.—Anon.—CS 18 
Baptismal Hymn.—H: Alford.—FEP 
Barbara.—Alex. Smith.—MMR—OB 
(Somewhat diff vers.) 

Barbara Allen’s Cruelty. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—CEL 

(Abr.)— BB—FEP—OB—OEB 
(Bonny Barbara Allan— diff. vers.) —-PEB 2 
Barbara Blue.—-Alice Cary.—BLF—WR 16 
Barbara Frietchie. (Parody.) —Anon.—DRR 
(Latest Barbara Frietchie, The.)—DCR—SR 4 
(Parody on “Barbara Frietchie”— si. diff. vers.) — 
BDD—GH 

Barbara Frietchie.—J: G. Whittier.—AWB—BAB— 
BNL — CS 1 — FEP — GN — HB — HBP — 
LH (abr.) —MR—PAP—PPSr—PRR—WRD 
Barbara S—. (Fr. Essays of Elia.)—C: Lamb.—MBL 
Barbarism of our British Ancestors. (Sel. fr. The Afri¬ 
can Slave Trade.)—W: Pitt, the younger. —SS 
Barbarity of National Hatreds.—-Rufus Choate.—-SS— 
SSD 

(Enmity towards Great. Britain.)—OM 
(Old Grudge against England, The— abr .)—MRS 
Barbarous Chief, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—PEO 
Barberry-bush, The,—Jones Very.—EPs 
Barber’s Shop, The.—Anon.—SC'S 

(Jones at the Barberf’s] Shop.)—BNL—LIPE—THP 
Barcarole.—E. G. B.—CG 1 
Barcarolle.—Ben W. Davis.—CS 35 
Barclay of Ury.—J: G. Whittier.—AP—BNL—HBP 
—SO 

Bard, The.—T: Gray.—BNL (br. sels.) —BPB—EPs 
—FEP—HBP—LH—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 3 
(Curse upon Edward, The— sel .)—OB 
Bard and the Cricket, The.—Rob’t Browning. See Two 
Poets of Croisic, The. 

Bard Ethell, The. (Abr.) —Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
Bard Speaks, The. (Fr. the Epistle to my Brother 
George.)—J: Keats.—WEP 4 
Bardell and Pickwick.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers 

Bards, The.—T: B. Read.—CR 

Bards’ Epitaph, A.—Rob’t Burns.—BNL—MBL— 
WEP 3—YBF 

Bards of Passion and of Mirth.—J: Keats.—OB 
(Ode—C.)—HBP—WEP 4 
(Ode on the Poets.)—PGT 1—PHS 
(To the Poets.)—FEP 

Bard’s Summons to War, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.— 
SS 

Bare Boughs and Buds.—-Celia Thaxter.—YBT 
Bare-bosom’d Night. — Walt Whitman. See Song of 
Myself. 

Barefoot Bov. The.—J: G. Whittier.—AA—BFV—BNL 
—GN—SN—TAV—WCL—WCLI 1 
(A6r.)—GMS—LC 

Bargain, The.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Arcadia, The. 

Bargains in Hearts.—Maud Horsford.—TL 

Bark “ True Love” [wr. Bark of True Love], The, Br. 

sel. fr .— B: F. Taylor.—HDL 
Barking up the Wrong Tree.—Anon.—DCD 
Barley Broth. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book— Punch.) 
—HPE 

Barley Water. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book— Punch.) 
—HPE 

Barmecide’s Feast, The.—Dalton.—SCS 
Barn Window, The.—Lucy Larcom.—BS 2—LCS 
Barnaby Rudge, Sel. fr. (Cheerful Locksmith, The— 
sel. fr. Ch. XLI.)—C: Dickens.—IR 
Barney O’Hea.—S: Lover.—TIP 

Barney O’Linn and the Leeches.—Anon.—CS 27—PR 
Barney’s Resolution.—H. Elliott McBride.—MTD 
Barnyard Melodies.— Fred E. Brooks.—CS 28—DES 


Baron and the Jew, The.—Walter Scott. See Ivanhoe 
Baron Grimalkim’s Death.—Will M. Carleton.—SR 1 
Baron of Brackley, The.—Anon.—BB—PEB 2 (si. abr.) 
Barons Bold, The.—W: J. Fox.—EHT—VA 
Baron’s Last. Banquet, The.—Albert G. Greene.—AA 
—BNL—BS 3—CS 3—FEP—HNS—HSS 2— 
NPS—OM—SS—YP 

Barren Moors, The.—W: E. Channing.—AA 

Barry Lyndon, Sel. fr. (Princess’s Tragedy— sel. fr. Ch. 

XII.)—W: M. Thackeray—WGS 
Barry’s Attack upon Sir Joshua Reynolds.—J: Wolcott. 
—HPE 

Bar-tender’s Story, The.—D: L. Proudfit.—CS 13—HP 
Bartholdi Statue, The.—Julian Hawthorne.—BS 15 
Barthram’s Dirge. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—R. Sur¬ 
tees.—BFV—BPB 
Bartol.—AmosB. Alcott.—AA 
Bas Bleu. (Punch.) —HPE 
Bascomb’s Baby.—Anon.—-CS 11—DS 
Base Ball.—Anon.*—MHR 
Bashful Boy’s Piece, The.—Anon.—DCP 
Bashful Earthquake, The, Br. sel. fr. —Oliver Herford. 
Earth.—THP 
(Proem.)—A A 

Bashful Johnny.—G: H. Gillette.—CG 2 
Bashful Man, The.—Jas. Smith.—DDR (at. to Math¬ 
ews)—WR 16 

Basia.—T: Campion.—PGT 1 

Basket of Flowers, A. (A6r.)—Sarah B. Stebbins.— 
BRR—CS 22 (longer.) 

Basking.—Sydney Dobell.—GP (sel.) 

(Home, Wounded.)—BNL 

Bastille and the Starling, The.—Laurence Sterne.—OS 3 
Basting Thread, A.—Anon.—BR 
(Harry’s Mistake.)—LPS—PP 
(Rogue, A.)—DS—YA 

“Bathed in unfallen sunlight.” (Sel. fr. The New 
Jerusalem.)—Horatius Bonar.—GG 
Bathers, The.—Arthur H. Clough. See Bothie of 
Tober-na-Vuolich. 

Bathing.—Arthur H. Clough. See Bothie of Tober- 
na-Vuolich. 

Bathing.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Battery in Hot Action, A. (Detroit Free Press.) — 
Anon.—PFP—PR 

(Supporting the Guns.)—CS 25—EA (abr.) 

Battle. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Battle.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage 

Battle.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Battle, The.—T: Moore.—CEL 

Battle, The.—Friedrich Schiller (tr. by Bulwer-Lytton. 
—CS 4—HSS 1—KNE—MMR—SE (sel.)— fS 
—TMD 

Battle, A.—C: Sumner.—HSS 1—PEO 
Battle above the Clouds, The. — Theron Brown — 
WR 10 

Battle Autumn of 1862, The.—J: G. Whittier.—HJP 
Battle Bunny—Malvern Hill.—Fs. Bret Harte.-PP 
—YFR 


Battle Cry.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Battle Flag at Shenandoah, The. (C.) —Jaquin 
Miller—BS 12 

(Flag at Shenandoah, The.)—BS 21 
Battle Hymn. (Gustavus Adolphus.)—Micha* Alten- 
burg.—HDL 

(Battle Song of Gustavus Adolphus, The.) _ BNL 
(Swedish Battle-song.)—OS 2 
Battle Hymn [. The],—Karl T. Komer.—16—SS 
(Korner’s Battle Hymn— diff. tr.)— HDI 
Battle Hymn of the Republic.—Julia W. ‘owe.—AA 
— ASL — AWB — BNL — BS BSP — 
CR — CSS — EPs — FEP — Glri — GN — 
GP — HB — HDL — HSS 1 — O 3 — PAP— 
SM — SO — SR 8 — TAS — T/ — WCLI 2 
—YBF 


(With chorus.) —LLC—PAPm 
Battle in the Clouds, The.—W: D. Howls. —EDY 
Battle of Agincourt, The. (C .)—Miciel Drayton.— 
BFV—CEL—EHT—GN—085 




lAguicourt,)—n o—on (tr. 

(Ballad of Agincourt [.The].)— bL— BPB 
—FEP—HB—HBP—HSS ~PSR 
(To the Cambro-Britains and ' e i r Harps, etc.) 


EDY 


ELP—WEP 1 

Battle of Albuera.—Lord Byron. > ee Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Battle of Alexandria, The.— Jas tjont gomery.—EDY 
Battle of Ardnocher, The.—A. rGeoghegan.—PEB 4 
Battle of Bannockburn, The. f r ■ The Days of 
Bruce, Chs. XXXVI. d XXXVII.)—Grace 
Aguilar.—BS 24 

Battle of Bannockburn.—Rb rt Burns. See Ban¬ 
nockburn. 


40 




TITLE INDEX 


Battle-field 


Battle of Barnet.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VI., Pt. III. 

Battle of Beal’ an Duine.—Sir Walter Scott. See 
Lady of the Lake, The. 

Battle of Bennington, The.—W C. Bryant.—EDY 
Battle of Bennington, The.—E: J. Phelps.—TMR 
Battle of Blenheim, The. (C.) —Rob’t Southey.— 
BNL — CS 8 — EDY — FEP — GN — HBP— 
HSS 1—LLC—OS 1—PC—WCL—WEP 4 
(After Blenheim.)— CGd — EHT — I.C — PGT 1 
—PHS—PSR 

Battle of Bloody Brook, The, Sel. fr. (Indian, The.)— 
E: Everett.—OS 3 

(Indian Chief to the White Settler, The.)—BS 3— 
CS 4 

Indian Chieftain, The— abr .)—LLC 
Plea of the Pocomtuc Chief— abr .)—BLP 
(Supposed Speech of a Chief of the Pocomtuc Ind¬ 
ians— abr.) —PS—SS 

Battle of Bothwell Bridge; a Lav of the Covenanters, 
The—Allan Curr.—FR 

Battle of Brandywine, The, Sel. fr. —G: Lippard. See 
Battle of Germantown, The. 

Battle of Bunker Hill, The. (Fr. Battles of the 
American Revolution.)—Anon.—SR 8 
Battle of Bunker Hill, Sels. fr. —E: Everett. 

Dizzy Activities of the Times, The.—SS 
Peace Congress of the Union, The.—SS 
Battle of Bunker[’s] Hill [,The],—F. S. Cozzens.—BS 4 
(sel. ad. )—CS 10—NPS—YP 
Battle of Canna;, The.—Eben II. Wells.—SR 3 
Battle of Charleston Harbor, The.—Paul H. Hayne.— 
AWB (w. 2 add. sis.) —BAB—EDY 
Battle of Dundee, The.—Anon.—BS 26 
Battle of Eylau, The.—Isaac McLellan.—EDY 
Battle of Fontenoy.—T: O. Davis.—CR—CS 4— 
FR (si. abr.) 

(Fontenoy.)—EDY—FEP— HBP—MMR—PEB 4 
Battle of Fontenoy.—Bartholomew Dowling.—FEP 
(“Irish Brigade’’ at Fontenoy, The.)—CS 4 
Battle of Fredericksburg, The.—Kinahan Cornwallis.— 
EDY 

Battle of Germantown, The, Sels. fr. (In Washington 
and his Generals.)—G: Lippard. 

Battle of Germantown, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. V.)—TMR 
Heroes of the Land of Penn. (Pt. V., Ch. I., w. add. 
fr. The Battle of Brandywine, Ch. I.) —BS 5— 
CS 19—PR 

Battle of Gettysburg, The.—Howard Glyndon.—CS 1 
Battle of Gettysburg.—C: F. Ward.—SR 2 
Battle of Harlaw.—Walter Scott.—EPs 
Battle of Hohenlinden [,The].—T: Campbell. See 
Hohenlinden. 

Battle of Inkerman, The.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 25 
Battle of Inkerman, The, Br. sel. fr .—Gerald Massey. 
—SAE 

Battle of Ivry, The.—T: B. Macaulay.—OM (br. sel.)— 
OS 2—SA—SE (sel. ad.) 

(Abr.) — BS 6 — CEL — CRR — CS 5 — FR — 
GP—HSS 1—SO—SS—TMD 
(Ivry: A Song of the Huguenots—C.)—BPB— 
EDY—FEP — GN — HB — IIBP—LC (abr.)— 
PPSr—VA 

Battle of Kossovo, The, Sels. fr. —Anon. (Ir. by 
Rob’t, Earl of Lytton).—OS 2 
Battle of La Prairie, The.—W. Schuvler-Lighthall.— 
VA 

Battle of Lake Champlain, The.—Philip Freneau.— 
EDY 

Battle of Lake Regillus, The. Sel. fr. (The Death 
of Herminius.)—T: B. Macaulay.—SO 
Battle of Lepanto, The.—Anon.—WR 6 
Battle of Lexington, The.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 11 
Battle of Lexington, The, Br. sel. fr. (Flag, The.)—E: 
Everett.—SO 

(National Banner, The.)—CS 6—KNE 
(Our National Banner.)—LLC 
(Stars and Stripes, The.)—CP 
Battle of Lexington, The.— (Fr. Psalm of the West.)— 
Sidney Lanier.—GP—PAP 
Battle of Lexington, The.—Mason L. Weems—BLP 
Battle of Life, The.—Anon.—FAS 
Battle of Life, The.—W: C. Bryant. See Battle-field, 
The. 

Battle of Life, The.—S. Olin.—CS 7 
Battle of Limerick, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—EDY— 
HBP 

Battle of Linden, The.—T: Campbell. See Hohen¬ 
linden. 

Battle of Lookout Mountain. (SI. abr.) —G: H 
Boker.—BS 4—CS 2—WR 10 
Battle of Lookout Mountain, The.—Kinahan Cornwal¬ 
lis—EDY 


Battle of Maciejowice, The.—T: Campbell. See Pleas¬ 
ures of Hope, The. 

Battle of Manila, The.—Amelia Burr.—WR 24 
Battle of Manila.—Sarah B. Kennedy.—BS 26 
Battle of Mission Ridge, The.—B: F. Taylor. See 
Storming of Mission Ridge, The. 

Battle of Moncontour, The.—T: B. Macaulay.—EDY 
Battle of Morat, The.—W: W. Story—EDY 
Battle of Morgarten.—Felicia Hemans.—BS 14—NPS 
—YP 

(Song of the Battle of Morgarten— C.) —EDY 
Battle of Murfreesboro, The.—Kinahan Cornwallis.— 
EDY 

Battle of Nasebv, The. (C.) —T: B. Macaulay.—BPB— 
CEL—EHT—VA—WEP 4 
(Abr. )—CSS—EA—PSR 

(Naseby.)— A VP — BNL — EDY — FEP — HB 
—HBP 

Battle of New Orleans, The.—T; Dunn English.—EDY 
—PAP 

Battle of New Orleans, The.—Wallace Rice.—EDY 
Battle of Otterburn [or Otterburne or Otterbourne], 
The. (In Border Minstrelsy and Percy’s Re- 
liques.)—.Anon.—OEB 

(Shorter and diff. vers.) —BPB—EHT (si. abr. and si. 
diff.) —PEB 1 

“Battle of our life is won, The.” (Fr. Praying 
Always.)—Lucy Larcom.—HDL 
Battle of Pultowa, The.—Rob’t Southey.—EDY 
Battle of St. Albans.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VI., Part II. 

Battle of St. Crispian’s Day.—W; Shakespeare. See 
King Henry V. 

Battle of Salamis, The.—ASschylus (tr. by J. S. 

Blackie).—CS 15—SO (si. abr.) 

Battle of Santiago.—Winfield S. Schley.—PRR 
Battle of Shrewsbury, The. (Sel. fr. Harry of Mon¬ 
mouth, in Historic Boys.)—Elbridge S. Brooks. 
—WR 22 

Battle of Shrewsbury.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry IV., Pt, I. 

Battle of Tewksbury.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VI., Part III. 

Battle of the Angels.—J; Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
Battle of the Balt ic, [The],—T: Campbell.—BPB—CEL 
—EDY — EHT — EPs — FEP — GN — GP— 
HB—HBP—OS 2—PEB 3—PGT 1 — PSR— 
WEP 4 

(Abr.) —LH—OB 

Battle of the Boulevard, The. (In Lays of the Scot¬ 
tish Cavaliers.)—W; Aytoun.—HPE 
Battle of the Boyne, The.—Anon. See Boyne Water, 
The. 

Battle of the Cowpens, The.—T: Dunn English.—PAP 
—SR 5—WR 10 (si. abr.) 

Battle of the Frogs and Mice.—Anon.—WR 11 
Battle of the Kegs, The.—Fs. Hopkinson. — AWB — 
CS 12 

Battle of the Plains of Abraham, The. (Sel. fr. Mont¬ 
calm and Wolfe, Ch. XXVII.)—Fs. Parkman. 
—WCLG 1 

Battle of the Strong, The, Sel. fr. (The Scaling of 
Perc(5 Rock— sel. fr. Bk. V., Ch. XI.)—Gilbert 
Parker.—PFP 

Battle of the Summer’s Islands, The, Sel. fr. — 
Edmund Waller.—WEP 2 
Battle of Tippecanoe, The.—Anon.—WR 10 
Battle of Towton.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VI., Pt, III. 

Battle of Trenton.—Anon.—AWB—EDY—PAP 
Battle of Waterloo [.The],—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold's Pilgrimage. 

Battle of Waterloo, The.—Victor Hugo. See Les Mis<5- 
rables. 

Battle of Zaraila.—Louise de la Ram^e. See Under 
Two Flags. 

Battle Poem, A—B' F. Taylor.—W'R 10 

Battle Song.—Ebenezer Elliott.—CEL—^OB—WEP 4 

Battle Song for Freedom, A.—Gail Hamilton.—CSS 

(Battle Song of Freedom, A.)—PS 
Battle Song of Gustavus Adolphus, The.—Michael 
Altenburg. Nee Battle Hymn. 

Battle with the Tramp, The.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Battle-call of Anti-Christ, The.—Fs. B. Crofton.—TCV 
Battle-cry of Freedom, The.—Anon.—AWB—PAPm 
Battle-eve of the Brigade, The.—T: Davis.—AVP 
Battle-field, The. (C.) —W: C. Bryant.—AA—ASL— 
BLP (sel.)— BNL—BS 25—FEP—HB—HBP 
—PRR (sl.abr.) —SE—SS 

(Battle of Life, The— sel.) —PPSr—PS 

(Be Truthful— br. sel.) —PS 

(“Yet nerve thy spirit to the proof”— br. sel.) —GG 
Battle-field, The.—Emily Dickinson.—AA—TAS 


41 





Battle-flags 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Battle-flags, The.—Carl Schurz. See Eulogy on 
Charles Sumner. 

Battle-hvmn of the Republic.—Julia VV. Howe. See 
Battle Hymn of the Republic. 

Battles of the American Revolution, Sel. fr. (Battle of 
Bunker Hill, The.)—Anon.—SR S 
Battle-ship and Torpedo-boat.—J. W. M. —PAPm 
Battle-song of the Oregon.—Wallace Rice.—EDY 
Baucis and Philemon.—Jonathan Swift.—FEP—HPE 
(Sels.) —CGd—GN—OS 1-WR 11 
Bay, The.—Eliza Cook.—HSS 1 
Bay Billy.—Frank H. Gassaway.—MR 

(Abr.) —BRR—BS 8—CS 20—FR—SPE—SR 2 
Bay Fight, The.—H: H. Brownell.—AWB—EPs— 
PAP (abr. )—WR 10 (sel.) 

Bay of Biscay, The.—Andrew Cherry.—BNL—PC 
Bayadere, The.—Fs. S. Saltus.—AA 
Bayard Taylor.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 
Bayard Taylor.—J: G. Whittier.—GP 
"Bayard Taylor and the school he represents.”— 
Anon.—GG 

Bayonet. Charge, The.—Nathan D. Urner.—CS 4— 
HSS 1—KNE 

Bazaar Girl, The.—Sir Edwin Arnold.—WR S 
Be a Helper.—Anon.—YBT 
Be a “Try” Boy.—Anon.—WR 17 
Be a Woman.—E: Brooks.—BS 14 
Be as Thorough as you Can.—C: (?) Mackay.—BS 10 
(Bit of a Sermon, A— abr.) —YBT 
(Vicar’s Sermon, The— abr.) —SM 
Be Brave.—May Cooper.—PR—Y r A 
“Be careful that you do not commend yourself.”—Sir 
Matthew Hale.—GG 

Be Careful what you Say.—Anon.—CS 36 
Be Comprehensive.—Anon.—KNE 
Be Considerate.—Anon.—TT 
Be Content.—Anon.—CD 
Be Content.—Anon.—CSS (abr.) —PPSr 
(■Carriage and Couple, The.—)MYF 
(True Source of Contentment.)—CS 9 
Be Content.—Anon.—YBT 
(I would I were a Note.)—PC 
Be Good.—Anon.—YBT 

“Be good, sweet maid.” (Abr.) —C: Kingslev.— 
HSS 2 

(Farewell, A—C.)—VS 

(Abr.)— AVP—BNL—CS 13—FEP—GN—GP— 
LC—PHS—VA—WEP 4—WR 2—Y’BF 
(Farewell Advice— air.) —OS 1 
Be in Earnest.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—DS—PP—PS— 
YA—YFR 

Be in Time.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Be Just, and Fear Not.—H: Alford.—CS 11 
(Be True— abr. — at. to Collyer.)—TMR 
Be Just, and Fear Not.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VIII. 

Be Kind—A Quartet (rec.) for Four Kittle Children.— 
Anon—TFS 

Be Lovely Within.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Be Mine, and I will Give thy Name.—W: C. Bennett. 
—VA 

“Be near when I am dying.”—H. W. Baker.—HLD 
Be not Deceived. (Galatians, Ch. VI., 7-9.) Bible. 
—LLC 

Be Patient.—Anon.—TFS 

Be Patient.—R: C. Trench. See Patience—W: J. Linton. 
Be Polite.—Anon.—TT 
Be Polite.—E. C. and J. L. Rook.—YFE 
Be Prompt in What You Do.—Mrs. Russell Kava- 
naugh.—KC 

“Be quiet; fear not.”—Frances R. Havergal.—HLD 
Be Strong.—Cora M. Eager.—SSS 
Be thou a Bird, my Soul.—A. G. C.—CG 2 
Be True.—Anon.—CS 26 
Be True.—Anon.—HSS 2 
(Bird’s Song. The.)—TT 

Be True.—H: Alford (at. to Collyer).—See Be Just and 
Fear not. 

Be True. (C.) —Horatius Bonar.—CSS—DLF—GN— 
SSS 

(True Teaching.)—CS 19 

Be Truthful.—W C. Bryant. See Battle-field, The. 

Be Useful.—G: Herbert.—GN 

Be ye in Love with April Tide?—Clinton Scollard.—AA 
Be ye Ready.—J. B. Walter.—CS 31 
Beacon, The, Sels. fr. —Joanna Baillie. 

Fisherman’s Song. ( Song fr. Act II., Sc. 1.)— 

WEP 4 

Morning Song. (Song fr. I., 1.)—FEP 
(“Up, quit thy bower.”)—BNL 
Beacon Light, The.—Julia Pardoe.—SS 
Beal’ an Dhuine.—Sir Walter Scott. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 


Beam of Light, A.—J. J. Rooney.—AA 
Bean Socials.—Anon.—EuE 
Bean-blossoms. (St. James Gazette.) —HP 
Bear at Appledore, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Bear Butte Mountain.—D: Wilson.—CS 21 
Bear Family, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Bear Story.—Joaquin Miller.—WR 2 
Bear Story, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
(Alex Tells a Bear Story.)—CW 
Beard and Baby.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Beasts’ Confession, The.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE— 
WEP 3 

Beasts in the Tower, The.—Charles and Mary Lamb.— 
LPC 

Beat! Beat! Drums!—Walt Whitman.—LH 
Beata Beatrix.—S: Waddington.—AVP 
Beating a Conductor. (Detroit Free Press.) —CH— 
CS 35 

Beatitudes, The.— Bible. See St. Matthew. 

Beatitudes in Broad Scotch, The.—Anon.—SR 13 
Beatrice.—Anon.—CP 

Beatrice.—Dante Alighieri. See Divine Comedy, The. 
Beatrice De cending from Heaven.—Dante Alighieri. 
See Divine Comedy, The. 

Beau Tibbs, his Character and Family.—Oliver Gold¬ 
smith.—ESs 

Beau’s Reply.—W: Cowper.—PoR 

Beauteous Flower, The.—Johann W. von Goethe. See 
Fairest Flower, The. 

Beauties of Nature, The.—Anon.—CP 
Beauties of Nature, The.—Rob’t Burns.—FP 
Beauties of Nature.—Moodie.—LLC 
Beauties of the Law.—Anon.—PS 
Beautiful, The.—Burrington.—FP 
Beautiful, The.—J. A. Dorgan.—AA 
Beautiful, The, Sel. fr. (“Handsome is that hand¬ 
some does.”)—J: G. Whittier.—TMR 
(True Beauty— sel.) —SO 

Beautiful are the Mountains. ( W. music.) —W. D. 
Gallagher.—AD 

Beautiful Artist, The.—Pamelia V. Tule.—TCV 
Beautiful Belles.—Mrs. R. Kavanaugh.—KNS 
Beautiful City, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—TAS 
Beautiful Dreams.—Anon.—CS 8 
Beautiful Dudes.—Mrs. R. Kavanaugh.—KNS 
Beautiful Feet.—Anon.—WR 17 
Beautiful Gate, The.—Anon.—CS 25 
Beautiful Grandmamma. (Standard of the Cross.) — 
HP—MY r F—PHS—SSS 

Beautiful Hands.—Ellen M. H. Gates.—BS 15— 
HSS 3 (abr.) 

(My Mother’s Hands.)—HP 
Beautiful Hands.—David Swing.—HSS 2 
Beautiful in Creation, The.—Timothy Dwight.— 

BS 17—PEO 

Beautiful Island of Cevlon, The.—Phillips Brooks.— 
NV 

Beautiful Lady of the May, The. (C.) —J: Dryden. 
(Lady’s Song, The.)—EP 

Beautiful Land of Nod, The. (C.)—Ella W. Wilcox.— 
TAV 

(Land of Nod, The.)—BS 22 
Beautiful Legend, A.—Anon.—KNE 
Beautiful May. (W. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Beautiful Mind, The.—Anon.—BS 19 
Beautiful Old Story, The.—Louisa M. Alcott.—YBT 
Beautiful Snow, The.—Carolina Griswold.—CS 3 
Beautiful Snow.—Major Sigourney.—HP 
Beautiful Snow \, The].—J: [wr. Jas.] W. Watson.— 
FEP — FTR — HP — LLC (abr.) — MMR — 
PPSr—WRD 
(Sel.)— POS—YBT 
(Wording varies si. in diff. entries.) 

Beautiful Sprig.—J. P. Welsh.—CG 2 
Beautiful Spring, Haste, oh, Haste!—Max (?) Muller. 
—YBT 

Beautiful Spring Time. (W. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Beautiful Things.—Anon.—-AD 

Beautiful Things—Ellen P. Allerton.—SSS—TFS(a6r ) 
—YBT 

Beautiful Trees.—A. I,. R.—AD 

Beautiful World. (SI. abr.)—3 : S. Blackie.—HSS 3 

Beauty, Sel fr .—Ralph W. Emerson.—IR 

Beauty.—Theodore A. Haultain.—TCV 

Beauty.—J: Keats. See Endymion. 

Beauty.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Beauty.—Alex. Smith.—VA 

Beauty.—Edmund Spenser. See Hymn in Honor of 
Beauty. 

Beauty.—E: Hovel, Lord Thurlow.—BNL—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 
Beauty.—W: Winter.—BNL 
Beauty and Time.—J. C.—ELP 


12 




TITLE INDEX 


Behind 


Beauty, Arise!—T: Dekker. See Pleasant Comedy of 
Patient Grissell, The. 

Beauty at the Plough.—Arthur J. Munby. See 
Dorothy: A Country Story. 

Beauty Bathing.—Anthony Munday.—OB 
(Colin.)—PGT 1 
(To Colin Clout.)—EP—WEP 1 
Beauty Clear and Fair. (Fr. The Elder Brother.)— 
J: Fletcher.—ELP—HBP—OB—OEL 
(To Angelina.)—ES 

Beauty Everywhere.—W. L. Smith.—TFS 
Beauty Fades.—W: Drummond.—FEP 

(“Trust not, sweet soul, those curled waves of gold.”) 
—OEL 

Beauty of England, The.—Eliz. B. Browning. See 
Aurora Leigh. 

Beauty of Face and Beauty of Soul.—Abbie J. Thorn¬ 
ton.—SDD 

Beauty of Nature.—Hugh Miller.—LLC 
Beauty of Piety, The.—S. C. Edgarton—CS 16 
“Beauty of St. Giles, A.”—W. A. Bradley.—CG 3 
Beauty of Terror, The. (In Songs of Experience.)— 
W ■ Blake_LH 

(Tiger, The— C. )—BFV—BNL—BVC—EPs—FEP 
— GN — HBP — HSS 2 — OB — PYO — SN 
—WEP 3—YBF 
(SI. abr .)—CEL—PSR 
(A br. )—CGd—OS 1 

Beauty of the Clouds.—J: Ruskin. See Modern Paint- 

6TS. 

Beauty of the Sea, The.—Anon.—CS 32—DS 
“Beauty, sweet love! is like the morning dew.”—S: 

Daniel. See Sonnets To Delia. 

Beauty, Time and Love.—S: Daniel. —See Sonnets to 
Delia. 

Beauty, Wit and Gold.—T: Moore.—PPSr—PS 
Beaver, The.—Mary Howitt.—POS 
Becalmed.—S: K. Cowan.—BS 15—CS 25 
(Becalmed at Sea— abr.) —WR 26 
Becalmed.—J. B. Tabb.—AA 
Becalmed at Sea.—S: K. Cowan. See Becalmed. 
Because.—Anon.—BS 21—WR 20 
Because.—Edward Fitzgerald.—THP 
Because.—Adelaide Anne Procter.—BIL 
Because.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 

“Because T oft, in dark abstracted guise.”—Philip Sid¬ 
ney. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Because you Love me, Dear.—"Viola.”—FLS 
Becket. Sets. fr .—Alfred Tennyson. 

Becket, Selected Scenes. (Sels. fr. Act I., Scs. 1 
and 3, and fr. Act II., Sc. 2.)—EHT 
Bower Scene from Becket. (Ad. fr. Act IV., Sc. 2.) 
—CR 

(Becket Saves Rosamond.)—NDP 
Murder of Thomas h Becket, The. (Ad. fr. Act V., 
Sc. 3.)—BS 13—CDD 
Becky Miller.—Anon.—DRR 
Beclouded.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
Bed during Exams.—Clara W. Vail.—CG 2 
Bed in Summer.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV—DLS— 
GMS—HSS 2—LC 

Bedlam Town.—Ella W. Wilcox.—TFS 
Bedouin Love Song.—Bayard Taylor. See following. 
Bedouin Song. (C .)—Bayard Taylor — AA — ASL — 
FEP—FTA—TAV 
(Bedouin Love Song.)—BNL—PYO) 

Bedouins of the Skies, The.—-Jas. B. Kenyon.—AA 
Bedroom.—( Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Beds of Fleur-de-lys, The.—Charlotte P. Stetson 
Gilman.—AA 
Bed-time.—Anon.—DLF 
Bedtime.—Anon.—HSS 3 

Bed-time.—Fs. Rob’t St. Clair-Frskine, Earl of Rosslyn. 
—PoR—VA 

Bedtime. (Youth’s Companion .)—TT 
Bedtime Fancies.—Anon.—DST 
Bee, The.—Emily Dickinson.—GN 
Bee and the Butterfly, The.—TFS 
(Work and Play.)—COS—PP 
Bee and the Fly, The.—Phil. Robinson.—HSS 2 
Bee and the Rose, The.—Anon.—TFS—HSS 2 
Beech Tree’s Petition, The.—T: Campbell.—AD— 
PGT 1—SN 

Beecher on Eggs.—H: W. Beecher.—BS 8 
Bee-hunt in the Far West, A.—Washington Irving.— 
FTR 

Beelzebub and Job. (Job’s Luck— C.) —S: T. Cole¬ 
ridge.—HPE 

(Epigram: “Sly Beelzebub,” etc.)—BNL 
(Epigram on Job and the Devil.)—FEP 
(Job.)—THP 


Beer. (C.) —G: Arnold.—AA 
(Cigars and Beer.)—PPh 

Beer Drinker’s Courtship, A.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Bees.—Anon.—DST 

Bees, The.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 
Bees.;—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Bees in the Meadow.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Bees of Myddelton Manor, The.—May Probyn.—VA 
Bee’s Sermon, The.—Anon.—WR 6 
Bee’s Wisdom, The—Anon.—PPSr—TT—YBT 
Beethoven.—R: W. Gilder—EDY 
Beethoven.—J: H. Ingham.—EDY 
Beethoven.—Arthur J. Stringer.—TCV 
Beethoven.—J: Todhunter.—TIP 
Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata.—Anon.—CS 33 
Beethoven’s Third Symphony.—R: Hovey.—BNL— 
TAS 

Before a Collection Made for the Society for the 
Propagation of the Gospel. (C.)—Reginald 
Heber. 

(Missionary Hymn.)—FEP—LLC 
Before and After.—Anon.-—WR 20 
Before and After.—Oliver M. Brown.—VA 
Before and after School.—Anon.—WR 7 
(School—Before and After.)—LLC 
(School Children.)—HSS 2 
Before and Behind.—Abbott Lawrence.—WR 18 
Before Parting (Silver Tassie, The— C.). —Rob’t Burns. 
—LH 

(Bonnie Mary.)—GP 
(Farewell, A.')—PGT 1—YBF 
(My Bonnie Mary —also C .)—OB 
Before Sailing. (All the Year Round .)—HP 
Before Sedan.—Austin Dobson—AVP—BNL—CS 16 
—EDY—GP—OS 1 

Before she Thought.—Moses Gage Shirley.—WR 7 
Before Sleep.—Sir T: Browne.—EPs 

(Evening Hymn.)—CEL—FEP—YBF 
Before Sunrise in Winter.—Ek R. Sill.—AA 
Before the Battle of Hastings. (Fr. Albion’s Eng¬ 
land.)—W: Warner.—WEP 1 
Before the Bav State Club, Sel. fr. (Homes of the Peo¬ 
ple, The.)—H: W. Grady— FD 2—PPS 
(Home, The— si. abr .)—TMD 

(Home in the Government, The— sl.diff. vers. — fr. 
The Farmer and the Cities.)—BS 18—PFP 
“Before the beginning of years.”—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne. See Atalanta in Calydon. 

Before the Convent of Yuste, 1556.—August, Count 
Platen-Hallermiinde.—EDY 
Before the Curfew.—-Oliver W. Holmes.—TAV 
Before the Explosion. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Before the Gate.—W: D. Howells.—GP—OH—WR 2 
Before the Mirror.—Anon.—WR 2 
Before the Rain.—T: B. Aldrich.—BNL—GN—GP— 
LC—POS 

Before the Rain.—Amelie Troubetzkoy.—AA 
Before the Toy Shop Window.—J: K. Bangs.-—WR 25 
Before Vicksburg.—G: H. Boker.—EDY—PEO 
Beggar, The.—Jas. R. Lowell—PC—PHS 
Beggar, The.—T: Moss.—BNL 

(Beggar’s Petition, The.)—CS 12—FEP 
Beggar and the King, The.—J. C. Goodwin.—SSS 
Beggar Baby, The.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Beggar Maid, The. (C.) —Alfred Tennyson.—CGd— 
YBF 

(Beggar Maid and King Cophetua, The— w. tab.) 
—TCP 

Beggar Man, The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Beggars.—Ella Higginson.—AA 

Beggar’s Daughter of Bednall-Greene, The.—Anon. 
See Blind Beggar’s Daughter of Bednall Green, 
The. 

Beggar’s Gift, The.—S. D. Smith, Jr.—BS 26 
Beggar’s Opera, The, Sel. fr. (“How happy could I 
be with either”— br. sel. fr. Act II., Sc. II.)— 
J: Gay.—OES 

Beggar’s Petition, The.—T: Moss. See Beggar, The. 
Beginners.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
Beginning Again.—Anon.—CS 10 
Beginning Right.—E. H. Trafton.—MD 
Begum Speech.—R: B. Sheridan. See Impeachment 
of Warren Hastings, The. 

Begun at Last.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Behave Yoursel’ before Folk.—Alexander Rodger.— 
BNL (si. abr .)—THP 

Behavior.—Ralph W. Emerson.—APr—MAL 
Behind the Mask.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—TAS 
Behind the Scenes.—Mrs. M. L. Rayne.—SD 
Behind the Times. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Behind the Veil, Sel. fr. —.Tas. De Mille.—TCV 


43 






Behind 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Behind Time.—Freeman Hunt.—CS 22—FR ( abr .)— 
WCLG 1 

“Behold a woman!” ( Fr . Faces.)—Walt Whitman. 
—HBP 

Behold, I Stand at the Door and Knock.—W: Wal- 
sham How.—FEP 

Behold the Deeds! H: C. Bunner.—THP 
Beignet de Pomme. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book.) 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Being a Boy. ( Sels.) —C. D. Warner.—PP—YFR 
Being Thankful.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Belagcholly Days.—Anon.—BNL—THP (abr.) 
Belated.—J: G. Whittier.—AD 
Belated Violet, A.—Oliver Herford.—AA 
Beleaguered City, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—BPB— 
CGd (abr.)— WCLG 2 

Belfry of Bruges, The, Sel. fr. (Carillon.)—H: W. 
Longfellow.—BNL 

Belfry of Ghent, The.—Rob’t Maguire.—CS 12—SA 
Belfry Pigeon, The.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—BNL— 
HBP 

Belial’s Address, Opposing War.—J: Milton. See Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Belief and Doubt. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Belief in Astrology, The.—Friedrich Schiller. See 
Wallenstein. 

Believe and Take Heart.—J: L. Spalding. See God 
and the Soul. 

Believe Me, if All Those Endearing Young Charms. 
—T: Moore — BNL — FEP — FT A — P YO — 
WEP 4 

“Believe me still, as 1 have ever been.”—J: G. 
Whittier.—BNL 

Belinda.—Alex. Pope. See Rape of the Lock, The. 
Belinda’s Recovery from Sickness.—W: Broome.—OB 
Bell, A.—Clinton Scollard.—AA 
Bell, The.—B: F. Taylor. See Baggage. 

Bell and the Gong, The.—Jos. (?) Barber.—MDD 
Bell of Atri, The. (Talfs of a Wayside Inn: The 
Sicilian’s Tale.)—H: W. Longfellow.—CS 14 
Bell of Innisfare, The.—Anon.—DR 
Bell of Liberty, The.—Joel T. Headley.—WR 10 
(Abr.) —FD 1—SR 7 

Bell of St. John’s, The. (Youth’s Companion.) —CS 37 
Bell of the Angels, The.—Rose Osborne.—CS 29— 
YBT (abr.) 

(Legend, A.)—FHS 

Bell of the “Atlantic,” The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.— 
CS 2 

Bell of Zanora, The.—W. R. Rose.—BS 12 
Bella’s Visit to Camp.—Anon.—FHE 
Belle of the Ball, The. (Every-day Characters, III.: 
The Belle of the Ball-room— C.) —Winthrop M. 
Praed—BNL—DDR—FEP—HPE—THP 
(End of the Romance, The— sel.) —FLS 
Bell-flower Tree, The.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Bell-founder, Tne, Sel. fr. (Labor Song.)—Denis F. 
MacCarthy.—BNL 

Belligerent Non-combatants. — W: T. Sherman.— 
BLP 

Bellman’s Song, The. (Fr. Melismata.)—Anon.—ELP 
Bell-ringer of ’76, The.—Anon.—SC 
Bells, The (C.)—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—BNL—BS 12— 
CS 1— FEP — FP — GN — HBP — KNE — 
MMR—PPSr—PS—PSR—SA—SR 3—VSG 
(Abr.) —FTR—HNS 

(Bells, The—First Stanza— br. sel.) —HNS 
(Bells, The—Third Stanza— br. sel.) —HNS 
(Brazen Bells, The— br. sel.) —SE 
(Iron Bells, The— br. sel.) —SE 
(Silver Bells, The— br. sel.) —SE 
(Wedding Bells, The— br. sel.) —SE 
Bells, The, Sel. fr. (Burgomaster’s Death, The.)— 
(Ad. by) T: F. Wilford.—DES 
Bells, The.—W: Young. See Wishmakers’ Town. 

Bells across the Snow.—Frances R. Havergal.—BS 12 
—FEP 

Bells at Midnight, The.—T: B. Aldrich—EDY 
Bells of Brookline, The.—Andrew Downing.—-BS 23 
Bells of Lynn, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA 
Bells of Lynn, The.—F: E. Weatherly.—CSS 
Bells of Notre Dame, The.—Anon.—CS 35 
Bells of San Bias, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—-EDY 
Bells of Shandon, The.—Fs. S. Mahony.—BNL—BS 2 
— CR — CS 3 — EA — FEP — GP — HBP — 
HR — HSS 3 — LC — MMR — OB — OS 2 — 
PSR — PYO — SA — SR 2 — TIP — VS 
(Shandon Bells, The.)—A VP—VA—VSG 
Bells of Yule.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
Beloved, it is Morn.—Emily H. Hickey.—VA 
Beloved Syracuse. (Syracuse University Herald.) — 


Below the Heights.—Walter H. Pollock.—VA 
Below the Old House.—W. B. Scott.—A VP 
Belshazzar.—G: Croly.—CS 4 
Belshazzar.-—Bryan W. Procter.—PHS 
Belshazzar Smith’s Cure for Somnambulism.—Anon.— 
CS 16 

Belshazzar’s Downfall.—Heinrich Heine.—CS 23 
Belshazzar’s Feast.—T. S. Hughes.—SS 
Belshazzar’s Feast.—Minnie L. Sellers.—CS 37 
Ben Bluff—T: Hood.—THP 
Ben Bolt.—W: H. Edwards.—WCLG 1 
(Diff. vers. fr. the following.) 

Ben Bolt.—T: D. English.—AA—TAV 
(W. music.)— NPS—YP 
Ben Fisher.—Frances D. Gage.—CS 8 
Ben Hafed.—W: Whitehead.—CS 21 
Ben Hafiz, the Muezzin.—R: H. Savage.—BS 26 
Ben Hassan’s Dream.—Waldo Messaros.—CS 36 
Ben Hazard’s Guests.—Anna P. Marshall.—CS 16 
Ben Isaac’s Vision.—Annie M. Lawrence.—CS 18 
Ben Jonson. (Fr. Letter to Ben Jonson.)—Fs. Beau¬ 
mont.—BNL 

Ben Jonson’s Commonplace Book.—Lucius Cary, Lord 
Falkland.—BNL 

Ben Karshook’s Wisdom, II. (“Quoth a young Sad- 
ducee.”) Rob’t Browning.—SO 
Ben, the Orphan Boy; or, “Honesty is the Best 
Policy.”—H. E. McBride.—SD 
Bench-legged Fyce, The.—Eugene Field.-—LS 
Bended Bow, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—BLP 
Bender Buys a Delephone.—Anon.—DRR 
Bending of the Bow.—Homer. See Odyssey, The. 
Beneath her Window.—Anon.—CH 
Beneath the Beam.—W. E. Manning.—WR 13 
Beneath the Flag. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) — 
PAPm 

Beneath the Surface.—W. F. Fox.—CS 9 
Beneath the Violets.—T: W. Higginson.—TAS 
Beneath the Wattle Boughs.—Frances T. Gill.—VA 
“Beneath this starry arch.”—Harriet Martineau. Set 
On, On Forever. 

Benedicite.—Anna C. Brackett.—AA 
Benedicite.—J: G. Whittier.—BIL—BNL—FTA— 
TFY 

Benedick’s Soliloquy.—W: Shakespeare. See Much 
Ado about Nothing. 

Benedict Arnold, Sels. fr. (In Washington and his 
Generals.)—G: Lippard. 

Arnold the Traitor. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXIV.)—CS 17 
Benedict Arnold’s Death-bed. (Ch. XXVI.— abr.) 
—SR 3 

(Death-bed of Benedict Arnold.) — CS 2 — 
TMD (abr.) 

(Patriot and Traitor— si. diff.) —FR 
(Traitor’s Deathbed, The— abr.) —NC—PFP 
Black Horse and his Rider, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. VIII.) 
—BS 4 (at. to C: Sheppard.)—CS 12 (at. to C: 
Sheppard.) 

(Abr.) —PR—PTS (at. to C: Sheppard.)—TMD 
(Rider of the Black Horse, The— si. abr.) —SC 
(Unknown Ride 1- , The— si. abr.) —NC—PFP 
Benedict Arnold’s Death-bed.—G: Lippard. See Ben¬ 
edict Arnold. 

Benediction, The.—Francois Coppee.—CS 18 
(Abr.) —BS 21—PFP—SC—SO—WR 26 
Benediction, The.—Clifford Harrison.—VSG 
"Benefits of college training are five-fold, The.”— 
J. H. Vincent.—GG 
Benefits of Laughter.—Anon.—KNE 
Benefits of the Civil War.—C: M. Busbee.—BLP 
Benefits of the Constitution.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Public Dinner at New York. 

Benevolence. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Benevolence.—Beattie.—CS 10 
Benevolence and Charity.—R: (?) Steele.—AE 
Ben-Hur, Sels. fr. —Lew Wallace. 

Angel and the Shepherds, The.— (Ad. fr. Bk. I., 
Ch. 11.)—BS 16—NP 

(First Christmas, The— ad. fr. Chs. 10 and 11.)— 
SR 3 

Ben-Hur and Iras. (Dial. ad. fr. Bk. VIII., Ch. 6.) 
—NDP 

Chariot Race, The. (Bk. V., Ch. 14.)—BS 16— 
PFP (ad.) 

(Ad. fr. Chs. 13 and 14.)—SC—SR 5 
(Race, The.— (ad. fr. Chs. 13 and 14.)—NC 
Crucifixion, The. (Ad. fr. Bk. VIII., Ch. 10.)— 
WR 12 

Song from Ben-Hur. (Bk. II., Ch. 6.)—AA 
Ben-Hur and Iras.—Lew Wallace. See Ben-Hur. 
Benjamin Harrison.—C. E. Russell.—EDY 
Bennie’s Penny.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 


44 




TITLE INDEX 


Beyond 


Benny.—Annie C. Ketchum.—WCL 
(Little Bennie.)—CS 3 
(Little Benny.)—FMR—MYF 
Benny’s Questions. (Dial.) —Anon.—WR 17 
Beowulf, Sel. fr. (Grendel’s Mother, jr. Pts. 21 and 24.) 

—(TV. by) J. L. Hall—NE 
Beowulf, The Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Beppo, Sel. fr. (Matrons and Maids.)—Lord Byron.— 
THP 

Bequest of His Heart, A.—Alex. Scott.—OB 
Bereaved.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA—ASL—HDL 
Bereaved Editor’s Speech, The.—Anon.—PS 
(Widower’s Speech, The.)—DE 
Bereavement.—W : L. Bowles.—WEP 4 
Bergamo.—S: Rogers. See Italy. 

Bergetta’s Misfortunes.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Berlin—the Sixteenth of March.—Matthew Arnold.— 
AVP 

Bermudas [, The]. — Andrew Marvell. — GN — OB — 
WEP 2 

(Emigrants in [the] Bermudas, The.)—FEP—HBP 
(In Exile.)—LH 

(Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda, The.)—BNL 
—BPB—EPs—PGT 1 
Bernardine du Born.—Sigourney.—PPSr 
Bernardo and King Alphonso.—J: G. Lockhart.— 
■ CS 2—PPSr 

Bernardo del Carpio.—Felicia D. Hemans.—CS 2— 
FR (abr.)— FTR— HNS— KNE — NPS—OS 2 
—SS—VSG—YP 

Bernardo’s Revenge.—Anon.—CS 13—-KNE 
Berrying Song.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Bertha in the Lane.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BS 9 (abr.) 
—HBP 

(Br. sels. )—SAE—SE 

Bertie’s Philosophy.—Eva M. Tappan.—HP 
Beruria.—Anon. (ad. by Elsie M. Wilbor).—WR 24 
Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush, Sels. fr. —J: Watson. 
Death of the Country Doctor, The .—(Sel fr. A 
Doctor of the Old School, Ch. IV.)—SR 12 
His Mother’s Sermon.—HBR 

Through the Flood. (Sel. fr. A Doctor of the Old 
School, Ch. II.)—NP (abr.) —WR 21 
(Doctor of the Old School, A— sel .)—TMR 
Beside the Martyr’s Memorial.—Arthur J. Stringer.— 
TCV 


Beside the Railway Track.—Anon.—PEO 
Beside the Sea.—Ella Higginson.—LC 
Besieged Castle, The.—Walter Scott. See Ivanhoe. 
Bess.—Alfred T. Chandler.—WR 13 
Bessie.—W. Wetherbee.—CG 1 
Bessie Bell and Mary Gray.—-Anon.—BB 
Bessie Bo Peep of Engle Steepe.—T. W. Handford.— 
TFS 

Bessie Brown, M. D.—-S: M. Peck.—AWH 
Bessie Kendrick’s Journey.—Anne A. Preston.— 
BS 8—CS 20 

Bessie’s Christmas Dream.—Anon.—CS 35 
Bessie’s Dilemma.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Bessie’s First Party.—Belle M. Locke.—CS 35 
Bessie’s Letter.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS—PP— 
SS 

Bessie’s Secret.—Anon.—PS 
Bessie’s Text.—Anon.—DLF 
Bessie’s Troubles.—Anon.—-TT 
Best.—Rose T. Cooke.—BIL 
Best.—Helen H. Jackson.—TAV 

Best Beauty, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS—PP 
Best Cow in Peril, The.—Anon.—CS 10—PPSr 
Best of All. The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Best of the Dollies.—Kate Allyn.—COS—PP 
Best Policy, The. (Dial.) —C: S. Wayne.—CDs 
Best Policy in Regard to Naturalization.—Lewis C. 
Levin.—BS 21—PFP 

“Best Room,” The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—TMR 
Best Season, The.—Anon.—DLF 

Best Sewing-machine, The.—Anon.—CS 21—NPS— 
YP 

Best Spare Room, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Best that I can, The. (SI. abr.) —Margaret Sangster 
CPL (sel.) —SSS 
(Do all that you Can.)—SM 

Best Thing in the World, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.— 


CS 15—TFS 

“Best thoughts of the day ought to be in the daily 
papers, The.”—E. C. Babb.—GG 
Best Times, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Best Tribute, The.—Anon.—DJS 

Beth G$lert; or, the Grave of the Greyhound.—W: R. 
Spencer.—BNL (abr .)—CS 12—FEP—FR (si. 
abr.)— HBP—LLC—MR—VSG 
(Llewellyn and his Dog— at. to Southey— abr.) PC 


Bethel.—A. J. H. Duganne.—AWB—BAB—EDY— 
WR 10 (sel.) 

Bethlehem-town.—Eugene Field.—TAS 
Betrayal. (Fr. The Jaquerie.)—Sidney Lanier.—AA 
Betrayal of the Rose, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Betrothed, The.—Rudyard Kipling.—BS 21—PPh— 
WR 22 

Betrothed Anew.—Edmund C. Stedman.—BNL (si. 
abr.)— OH 

Betsey and I are Out.—W: Carleton.—CS 4—MMR 
(SI. abr.)— BS 1—CR—FTR—HR—SA 
Betsey and I are out Once More.—Anon.—MCS 
Betsey Destroys the Paper.—D. R. Locke.—CS 4—HR 
Betsey and I are Out.-—Will M. Carleton. See Betsey 
and I are Out. 

Betsey Hawkins Goes to the City.-—Anon.—WR 14 
Betsey und I Hafe Bust Ub.—J. S. Burdett.—BDD— 
DFY 

Betsey’s Battle Flag.—Minna Irving.—EDY 
Better Answer, A.—Matthew Prior.—WEP 3 
Better Country, The.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Trav¬ 
eller, The. 

Better in the Morning.—Leander S. Coan.—BS 8— 
CS 15—FTR—SR 2 
Better Land, The.—Anon.—CS 12 
Better Land, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—PC 
Better Part, The.—Matthew Arnold.—YBF 
Better Part, The.—Booker T. Washington.—IR— 
MRS 

Better Resurrection, A.—Christina G. Rossetti.—YBF 
Better than a Doctor.—Mary A. Leach.—MD 
Better than Diamonds.—Anon.—FMR 
Better than Gold.—Alexander Smart.—BLP—HSS 2 
_LLC 

Better than Gold.—Mrs. J. M. Winton.—CS 11—DS 
(Somewhat diff. and si. longer vers, of the foregoing.) 
Better than the Miser’s Gold.—Virgil A. Pinkley.— 
BS 16 

Better Things.—Leigh Hunt.—BIL—TFY 
Better Things.—G: MacDonald.—BS 13—CS 14—CSS 
—HSS 3 (si. abr.)— PPSr 
(Somewhat diff. vers, of the foregoing.) 

Better to Climb and Fall.—Anon.—HP 
“Better to mourn a blossom snatched away.”—Ella 
W. Wilcox.—GG 

“Better trust all and be deceived.”—Frances A. 
Kemble.—GG 

(Faith.)—BNL— EPs—FEP—VA 
(Trust.)—CS 19 

Better Way, The.—Anon.—LLC 
Better Way, A.—Anon.—YBT 

Better Way, The. (Fr. Honors.)—Jean Ingelow.—GP 
Better Whistle than Whine. — Anon. — PR — 

WR 17 (dial.)— YA 

Betties. Sel. fr. (In his Way a Hero.)—Edwin Pugh. 
—WR 19 

Betty and the Bear.—Anon.—CS 3—PS 
Betty Lee.—E. N. Gunnison.—CS 5—DS—YA 
Betty Zane. (Abr.) —T: D. English.—FMR 
Between the Acts.—B. L. C. Griffith.—SPC 
Between the Battles.—Fs. Sherman.—TCV 
Between the Galop and the Lanciers.—F. K. Curtis.— 
CG 1 

Between the Graves.—H. S. Spofford.—PEO 
Between the Lights.—Anon.—FEP—HDL 
Between the Lines.—Susan K. Phillips.—HDL 
Between the Rapids.—Archibald Lampman.—VA 
Between the Showers.—Amy Levy.—VA 
Between the Sunken Sun and the New Moon.—Paul 
Hamilton Hayne.—AA 

Between Two Stools.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KH 
Between Winter and Spring.—Lucy Larcom.—YBT 
“Bevare of the Vidders.”—Anon.—CD 
(Shacob’s Lament.)—CS 25—-PR—YA 
(Widow, The.)—CDV 
Beware!—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

Beware! (Fr. the German.)—H: W. Longfellow.— 
BS 19 

Beware!—Walter Scott. See Bride of Lammermoor, 
The. 

Beware of the Flatterer.—Anon.—DJS 
Bewildered Conductor, A.—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
Bewildering Emotions.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Bewitched Clock, The.—Anon. — CS 15—DFY—MHR 
—SDR 

Beyond. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) —CS 34—SSS 
Beyond.—Rose T. Cooke.—CS 25 
Beyond.—Hannah P. Kimball.—AA 
Beyond.—J: T. Trowbridge.—TAS 
Beyond Recall.—Mary E. Bradley.—AA 
“Beyond the farthest glimmering star.”—G: D. Pren¬ 
tice.—GG 


45 




Beyond 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Beyond the Gate.—Anon.—DCP..$ ' }M 

Beyond the Haze. (Cornhill Magazine.) —HPJ 
Beyond the Mississippi.-—Richardson.-—BS 121 ' _ * 

Beyond the Smiling and the Weeping.—Horatius 
Bonar.—BNL—GP 

(Little While, A—C.)—FEP—HBP—VA 
Beyond the Veil.—H: Vaughan.—ELP—WEP 2 
(Friends Departed.)—OB 

(Friends in Paradise— abr. )—HDL—PGT 2—YBF 
(They are All Gone.)—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Biah Cathcart’s Proposal.—H: W. Beecher. See Nor¬ 
wood. 

Bible, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Bible, The.—Newell D. Hillis.—SC 

Bible, The.—T. De Witt Talmage.—CS 29 

Bible and the Iliad, The.—Fs. Wayland.—LLC 

Bible and the Liquor Traffic, The.—J: P. St. John— 

sss 

Bible in Harmony with Temperance, The.—Anon—CS 4 
Bible Legend of the Wissahickon, The.—Anon. (ad. by 
Cora Lee Ragsdale).—WR 19 
Bible Reading.—J. W. Shoemaker.—BS 2 
Bible Reading on “Rock of Ages,” A.—C: A. Jones. 
_sss 

Bibliolatres.—Jas. R. Lowell.—TAS 
Bibliomania, The.—J: Ferriar.—LBB—MBB 
Bibliomaniac’s Prayer, The.—Eugene Field.—AA 
Bibo and Charon.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Bicycle and the Pup, The.—Anon.—CRR—DS—NPS 
—YP 

Bicycle Girl, The.—Alfred Ellison.—SR 10 
Bicycle Ride, The.—Jas. C. Harvey.—CS 30 
Bicycling in the Sky.—Arthur L. Tubbs.—BS 25 
Bicycling Song.—H: C. Beeching.—GN 
(Going down Hill on a Bicycle.)—OB 
Biddy McGinnis at the Photographer’s.—Anon.—CD 
Biddy O’Brien has the Toothache.—Louise H. Savage. 
—CS 25 

Biddy’s Trials among the Yankees. (Harper’s Bazar.) 
—CD—CDV—SDR 

Biddy’s Troubles—Anon.—CRR—DI—GH—PS 
‘ 1 Bide a Wee, and Dinna Fret.”—S. E. G.—HP—WR 21 
Bienseance.—-J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Biftek aux Champignons.—H: A. Beers.—AA 
Big Ben Bolton.—Eugene J. Hall.-—CS 22 
Big Bob Simpson.—Zenas Dane.—CS 32 
Big Enough Family, A. (Columbus Sun. Morn. News.) 
—BS 22—DCP 

Big Mistake A.—Anon.—CS 33 
Big Oyster, The—G: Arnold.—MHR 
Big Shoe, The.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—CS 22— 
PP—PS—YPS 

Big Trees and the Yosemite, The, Sel. fr. (Fallen 
Monarch, The.)—Isaac H. Bromley.—AD 
Biglow Papers, The. Sets, fr — Jas. Russell Lowell. 
1st Series, Introduction, Sels. fr. 

Courtin’, The. (Earli/ briefer vers.) —HPE (sel.) — 
SO 

(Zekle.)—BS ‘I 

(Later vers.) —AA—AWH—BNL—CR—CS4— 
DFY (si. abr.)— FEP—HBP—MHR— 1 THP 
(Abr.) —EPs—PTS 

Revolutionary Hero, A. ( Verses.) —HPE 
School-house, The. (Sel. fr. verses.) —HPE—SCS 
1st Series, No. 1—Letter from Mr. Ezekiel Biglow, 
A—AWH—BNL (6r. sel.) 

“ 2—Tetter from Mr. Hosea Biglow to 
the Hon. J. T. Buckingham. 
(Abr.)— HPE 

“ 3—What Mr. Robinson Thinks.— 
A A — AWH — BNL — FEP — 
HBP—THP 

“ 6—Candidate’s Creed, The. (The 
Pious Editor’s Creed — C.)- 
HPE 

(Newspaper, The— sel.) —LLC 
“ 7— Letter from a Candidate, A. (C.)— 
BNL (br. sel.) —HPE 

(Candidate’s Letter, The.)— 
AA 

2nd “ Introduction. See Courtin’, The. 

No. 2—Mason and Slidell. (Sel.) —EPs 
6—Biglow Papers, No 6 (Sunthin’ 
in the Pastoral Line— C.). 
—EPs (si. abr.) —SN (sel.) 
(Spring— br. sel.)— SE 
10—Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Editor 
of the Atlantic Monthly (C.). 
—AA (sel.) —BNL (br. sel.) . 
Hosea Biglow’s Lament— 
(not dialect vers. — sel.) 
—EPs 


Bijah.—C: M. Lewis.—WR 16 
(Bijah’s Story.)—CS 23 
Bill.—Anon.—WR 25 
Bill.—Max Adeler.—GH 
Bill an’ Me.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Bill and Bell.—Arden S. Fitch.—WR 15 
Bill and I.—G. H. Miles.—CS 10 

Bill and Joe.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA—BNL—BS 14 
—CS 5 

Bill Arp on the Rack.—C: H. Smith.—CS 8 
Bill Jepson’s Wife. (Dial.) —Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 
CS 6 

Bill Mason’s Bride. — Anon. (at. to Bret Harte). — 
CS 6—HR—KNE—SR 4 
(Bill Mason’s Ride.)—MR 

Bill Nye on Hornets.—Edgar W. Nye.—CS 28— 
PS 

Bill Nye’s Hired Girl.—Edgar W. Nye.—SR 6 
Bill of Items, A.—Anon.—CS 18 
Bill Smith.—Max Adeler.—BS 21—SR 12 
Bill the Engineer.—Bettersworth.—PR 
Bill Wainwright’s Adventure. (Dial.) —Anon.— 
MPD 

Billet-doux, A.—Anon.—CS 26 
(Billet Doux, The.)—DCD 
(William Did.)—WR 14 
Billie.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 

Billings on “The District Schoolmaster.”—H: G. Shaw. 
—CS 3 

Billington’s Valentine, Sel. fr. (Valentine Verses.)— 
T: N. Page.—EDY 

Billows and Shadows.—Victor Hugo. See Les Mis«i- 
rables. 

Bill’s in Trouble.—Anon. See Billy, he’s in Trouble. 
Billy.—FitzHugh Ludlow.—BS 20 
Billy and his Drum.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Billy Grimes, the Drover.—Anon.—CS 16—KJ 
Billy, he’s in Trouble.—Anon.—BS 26 
(Bill’s in Trouble— si. abr.) —CRR 
Billy K. Simes.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 27 
Billy the Bilk; or, The Bandits of the Bowery.—Anon. 
—GH 

Billy’s First and Last Drink of Lager. (Fr. A Strange 
Sea Story.)—Anon.—CS 16—PTS 
Billy’s Pets.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
Billy’s Rose.—G: R. Sims.—CS 31—HP 
Billy’s Santa Claus Experience.—Cornelia Redmond. 
—GH 

Bimi.—Rudyard Kipling.—WR 21 
Bind-weed.—Susan Coolidge.—GN 
Bingen on the Rhine.—Caroline E. S. Norton.—BNL 
— CS 1 — DDR — FEP — FP — LLC — MR 
— OS 2 — PPSr — WRD 
(Soldier from Bingen, The.)—SS 
Binley and “46.”—Anon.—CS 9 
Binnorie.—Anon.—OB (cond.) 

(Cruel Sister, The.)—FEP—HBP 
(Twa Sisters, The.)—CEL—PEB 1 
(Twa Sisters o’ Binnorie, The— sel.) —BB—WR 9 
Biologic Face, The.—L. B.—CG 3 
Birch Stream, The.—Anna B. Averill.—BNL—SN 
Birch Tree, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD—HBP 
Birch Tree, The.—Addie V. McMullen.—AD 
Birched Schoolboy, The, Sels. fr. —Anon.—BVC 
Birch-tree, The.—E. A. H.—CG 2 
Bird, The.—W: Allingham.—EPs—OS 1 
Bird, The.—T: Moore. See Bird Let Loose in Eastern 
Skies, The. 

Bird among the Blooms.—Marion Short.—DR 
Bird and the Baby, The. (Fr. Sea Dreams.)—Alfred 
Tennyson.—PP—PPSr—YFR 
(Birdie and Babv.)—DCP 
(Cradle Song.)—LC—PS—PGT 2 
(Little Birdie.)—OS 1—PC—WCL 
(Morning Song.)—GMS 

(What Does Little Birdie Say?)—BNL—PHS— 
PoR—TFS (sel.) 

(What the Birdie and the Baby Say.)—HSS 2 
Bird Dialogue, The.—Abby M. Diaz.-—ASD 
Bird in the Hand, A.—F: E. Weatherly.—VA 
(Maids of Lee, The— si. abr.) —FEP 
“Bird in the Hand is Worth Two in the Bush, A.”— 
Anon.—WCL 

Bird, Let Loose, The. (C.) —T- Moore. 

(Bird, The.)—YBT 

(Bird, Let Loose in Eastern Skies, The.)—GP 
Bird of Passage.—Edgar Fawcett.—GP 
Bird on the Telegraph Wire, The.—Anon.—HP 
Bird Song.—Kate S. Maclean.—TCV 
Bird Songs.—Kathie Moore.—AD 
Bird Talk.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 


46 




TITLE INDEX 


Black 


Bird Talk, Sel. fr. (Busy and Happy.)—AdelinejD. T. 
Whitney.—YBT 

Bird that Sings, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS— 
PP 

Bird Trades.—Anon.—AD—LLC—NV 
Bird with Bosom Red.—Anon.—NY 
Birdcatcher’s Song.—W: J. Courthope. See, Paradise 
of Birds, The. 

Birdie and Baby.—Alfred Tennyson. See Bird and 
the Baby, The. 

Birdie’s Secret.—Anon.—DJS 
(Secret, The.)—COS—PP 

Birdies with Broken Wings. (C.) —Mary M. Dodge.— 
PoR 

(It’s Good to Have a Mother.)—TFS 
Birds, The. (Sel.) —Aristophanes.—WR 11 
Birds.—Jas. Montgomery. See Pelican Island, The. 
Birds.—-W: Shakespeare. See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream. 

Birds. (C.)—R: H: Stoddard.—AA—ASL—FEP 
(Birds are Singing round my Window.)—OS 2 
Birds and the Children, The.—E. T. Sullivan.—AD 
Birds are Singing Round my Window.—R: H: Stod¬ 
dard. See Birds. 

Birds, Beasts and Fishes.—Ann and Jane Taylor.— 
BVC 

Birds Choose the Maple, The.—Susan F. Cooper.—nD 
Birds’ Convention, The.—Miller Hageman.—WR 15 
Bird’s Cradle-song, A.—Evelyn M. Worthley.—CG 2 
Birds’ Departure, The.—Anon.—WR 4 
Bird’s Experience, A.—Anon.—FAS 
Bird’s Funeral, The.-—Anon.—YFD 
Birds’ Good-night, The.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Birds in Spring, The.—T: Nashe.—PoR 

(Spring.)—BPB — CEL — CGd — FEP — LC - 
OB—OEL—PGT 1—YBF 
(Spring, the Sweet Spring.)—BNL—ELP—EP 
Birds in Summer.—Mary Howitt.—LLC (sel.) —PoR 
(Abr.) —AD (at. to Hemans.)—POS 
‘‘Birds in the high hall-garden.”—Alfred Tennyson.— 
PGT 2 

Birds’ Lawn Party, The. (Child Garden.) —NV 
Birds’ Music.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Bird’s Nest, A.—Eliz. A. Allen.—NV—YBT 
Bird’s Nest, The.—Anon.—HVD 
Bird’s Nest, The.—H. J. Westcott.—YBT 
Birds’ Nests.—Anon.—AD—LLC 
Birds’ Nests.—Lydia M. Child.—TFS 
(I Love the Birds.)—PS 
(If Ever I See.)—AD (w. mus .)—NV 
Birds of Bethlehem, The.—R: W. Gilder.—AA 
Birds of Killingworth, The. (Tales of a Wayside Inn: 
The Poet’s Tale.)—H: W. Longfellow.—EPs— 
HBP—YBT (sel.) 

(Song of Birds— br. sel.) —BS 5 

(Birds of Killingworth, The— sel.) —HDL 
Birds of Passage.—Anon.—PTS 
Birds of Scotland, The.—Hugh Macdonald.—SN 
Birds’ Orchestra, The.—Celia Thaxter.-—SAP 
Birds’ Party, The.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Bird’s Song, The.—Anon. See Be True. 

Bird’s Song at Morning.—W: J. Dawson.—VA 
Bird’s Song in April.—Clinton Scollard.-—PEO 
Bird’s Song in Spring.—E. Nesbit. See Child’s Song 
in Spring. 

Bird’s Song, the Sun, and the Wind, The.—C: G. D. 
Roberts.—VA 

Bird’s-eye View, A.—Anon.—MYF—WCL 
Birds’-nesting Time.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
‘‘Birkenhead,” The.—Hattie T. Griswold.—BS 20— 
WR 19 

Birkenhead, The.—Sir Henry Yule.—LH 
Birks of Aberfeldy, The.—Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
Biron’s Canzonet.—W: Shakespeare. See Love’s La¬ 
bour’s Lost. 

Birth.—Annie R. Stillman.—AA 
Birth and Death.—T: Wade.—VA 
Birth of Australia, The.—Percy Russell.-—VA 
Birth of Christ, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Birth of Dombey, The.—C: Dickens. See Dombey 
and Son. 

Birth of Galahad, The, Sel. fr. (Ylen’s Song.)—R : 
Hovey.-—AA 

Birth of Ireland, The. (National Teacher's Monthly.) 
—BRR—CSS—PPSr 
(Origin of Ireland, The.)—HBP—THP 
Birth of Little Paul, The.—C: Dickens. See Dombey 
and Son. 

Birth of Paris, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Birth of Robin Hood, The.—Anon.—BB—PEB 2 (si. 
diff. vers.) —PEB 2 


Birth of St. Patrick, The.—S: Lover.— BNL — CR — 
CS 19—CSS—DI—FEP—THP 
Birth of Speech, The. (Sonnet V.)—Hartley Coleridge. 
—VA 

(First Man, The.)—FEP 

Birth of the Harp, The. (Tr. by) J: M. Crawford. 
See Kalevala, The. 

Birth of the Rainbow, The.—T. S. Denison.—SR 5 
Birth-bond, The. (The House of Life, Sonnet XV.)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2—WEP 4 
Birthday, A.—Christina G. Rossetti.—OB—TFY 
Birthday, The, Sel. fr. (Cuckoo Clock, The.)—Caroline 
B. Southey.—BNL 
Birthday Box, The.—Anon.-—MD 
Birthday Doll, The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Birthday Gift, A.—Christina G. Rossetti. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Birthday Gifts.—Anon.—SR 1 
Birthday Greeting, A.—H: Edlin.—FLS 
Birthday Greeting, A.—M. E. F.—HP 
Birthday Ode. (Fr. The Progress of Curiosity.)— 
J: Wolcott.—HPE 

Birthday of Daniel Webster. (C .)—Oliver W. Holmes. 

(Daniel Webster.)—BNL (sel.)— SE 
Birthday of the Republic, The.-—T: Paine.-—WR 10 
Birthday of the Stars and Stripes.—Anon.—DFR 
Birthday of Washington, The.—Rufus Choate.—CSjl 
—FD 2—HS—PEO—PS—SE—SR 8—SS 
(Washington’s Birthday.)-—DFR—PS (sel.) 
Birthday of Washington ever Honored, The.—G- 
Howland.—DFR—SR 8 
Birthday Week, The.—Anon.—OS 1 
(Days of Birth— si. diff. vers.)- —BVC 
Birthday Wish, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Birthdays. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 

Births.—Mrs. Meek, of a Son. (SI. abr.) —C: Dickens. 
—BS 9 

Bisclaveret, Sel. fr. (Epic of Women.)—Arthur 
O’Shaughnessy.—WEP 4 

Bishop Benno and the Frogs.—Sabine Baring-Gould.— 
VSG 

Bishop Hatto.—Rob’t Southey.—BVC—CGd 

(God’s Judgment on a Wicked Bishop— C.) —BNL 
—FEP (abr.) 

Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed’s Church, The 
(C.) —Rob’t Browning.—AVP—-VA—WEP 4 
(Bishop Orders His Tomb, The— si. abr.) —WR 15 
Bishop Patteson.—Menella Smedley.—AVP—EDY 
Bishop’s Silver Candlesticks, The.—Victor Hugo. 
See Les Miserables. 

Bishop’s Visit, The.—Emily H. Nason.—BS 12 
Bismillah.—David L. Proudfit.—OS 2 
Bison, The.—Hilaire Belloc.—NA 

Bit of a Sermon, A.—C: (?) Mackay. See Be as thor¬ 
ough as you Can. 

Bit of Human Nature, A—C: W. Coleman.—CG 2 
Bit of Lace, A. (Red and Blue.) —CG 2 
Bit of Pottery, A.—Anon.-—TFS 
Bit of Shopping for the Country, A.—Anon.—CS 29— 
NPS—YP 

Bite, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS—PP 
Bite Bigger.—Anon.—GP 

Biter Bit, The —W: Aytoun.—HPE—SCS—THP 
Bits of Things.—Anon.—AD 
(Growing.)—CPL 
(Oak, The.)—YBT 

Bitter Cry of the Outcast Choir Boy, The. (London 
Punch.) —GH 

Bitter Disappointment.—G: Croly. See Catiline. 
Bitter-sweet, Sels. fr.— Josiah G. Holland. 

Babyhood.—AA—PYO 
(Cradle Song.)—BNL—GP 
Bitter-sweet, Fr. (Fr. 1st movement- ‘‘I ask 
what He would have this evil,” etc.)—HDL 
Bluebeard.—CS 20—TCP (w. tab.) 

Thanksgiving Ode, A. (The Hymn— C.) —TFS 
(si. abr.) 

(‘‘Here on this blessed Thanksgiving night”— 
br. sel.) —BNL 

Bivouac by the Rappahannock.—Grace D. Roe.— 
WR 7 

Bivouac of the Dead, The.-—Theodore O’Hara.—AA 
—AWB—CS 13—GP—PAP 
(Abr. )—LLC—PAPm—PPSr 
(Sel.) —BLP—HBP—HSS 1—OS 1 (br. sel.) 
(Muffled Drum’s Sad Roll, The— br. sel.) —LC 
Bivouac on a Mountain Side.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
Black and Blue Eyes.—T: Moore.—BNL 
Black and White. (Punch.)— HPE 
Black Cock, The. (C.)—Joanna Baillie.—HBP 
(Heath-cock, The.)—BNL 

Black Death of Bergen, The.—Frd’k W: Blackwood, 
Lord Dufferin.—BS 26 


47 





Black 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Black Horse and his Rider, The.—G: Lippard. See 
Benedict Arnold. 

Black Killer, The.—Alfred Ollivant. See Bob, Son of 
Battle. 

Black Prince, The.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry V. 

Black Ranald.—Phoebe Cary.—BS 2 
Black Regiment, The.—G: H. Boker.—ASL—AWB— 
BAB — BNL — CS 1 — EDY — GN — HBP 
—PAP—PAPrn 
(Prose vers .)—FR 

Black Riders, The.—Stephen Crane.—AA 

Black Rock, Sel.fr. (Winners by their Own Lengths.) 

—Ralph Connor.—NP 
Black Sheep.—R: Burton.—AA 
Black Veil, The.—C: Dickens.—WR 8 
Black Wall-flower, The.—Frances A. Kemble.—VA 
Black Zeph’s Pard.—Anon.—BS 24 
Blackberry-bush, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Blackbird. ( Fr. Ascutney Charades.) — Julia A. Sa¬ 
bine—TCP 

Blackbird, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—POS—SN 
Blackbird, The.—Frd’k Tennyson.—BNL—VA 
“Blackbird Snow,” A.—Fanny B. Bates.—YBT 
Blackbird’s Song, The.—H: Kingsley.—PEB 3 
Blackbird’s Song, The.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Blackeyed Susan.—J: Gay.—BNL—PGT 1—WEP 3 
(SI. abr.) —CEL—PC 

(Sweet William’s Farewell to Black-eyed Susan— 
C.y- FEP—HBP 

Blackmwore Maidens.—W: Barnes.—PGT 2—VA 
Blacksmith of Bottledell, The.—Jas. M. Thompson— 
MYF—SR 3 

Blacksmith of Limerick, The.—Rob’t D. Joyce.—TIP 
Blacksmith of Ragenbach, The.—Anon.—CS 5—CSS 
Blacksmith of Ragenbach, The. (Poet. vers, of fore¬ 
going .)—Frank Murray.—CS 12 
Blacksmith’s Story, The.—Frank Olive.—BS 2—CS 5 
—FTR—HNS—MYF 
Blaine of Maine.—Eugene F. Ware.—EDY 
Blame not my Lute.—Sir T: Wyatt.—FEP 
Blanche of Devan.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Blanche of Devan’s Last Words.—Walter Scott. See 
Lady of the Lake, The. 

Blancheflour and Jellyflorice.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Blank Verse in Rhyme.—HBR—HR 

(Nocturnal Sketch, A— C.) —BNL—CS 17—OS 2 
—SR 7 

Blasted Hopes.—Anon.—CRR 

Blazing Heart, The.—Alice W. Brotherton.—AA 

Bleak House, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens 

Death of Little Jo. (Sel fr. Ch. XLVII.)—BRR— 
BS 1—CS 3—DS—FR (si. abr.)— NPS—YP 
(Death of Poor Jo.)—MMR 
Tulkingham, the Lawyer, and Mademoiselle Hor- 
tense. (Fr. Ch. XLI1.)—CR 
Visit to Belle Yard, A. (Ad. fr. Ch. XV.)—SAE 
Bleak House. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Juba A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Bless the Dear Old Verdant Land.—Denis Florence 
MacCarthy.—V A 

Blessed are de Peacemakers.—T. S. Denison.—SDR 
Blessed are the Dead.—C. F. Smarius.—CS 10 
Blessed are they that Mourn.—W: C. Bryant.—GP— 
HDL 

Blessed are They that Mourn.—W: H. Burleigh.— 
TAS 

Blessed Damozel, The.—Dante G. Rossetti.—AVP— 
FEP—PGT 2—VA—VSG 
(Diff. vers. w. 1 add. st .)—OB 
(SI. diff. vers. )—WEP 4 
(Sel.) —BNL—GP 

Blessed Name, The.—G: W. Bethune.—YBT 
Blessed Ones, The.—Anon.—PS 

Blessing for the Blessed, A.—Laurence Alma-Tadema. 
—PoR 

Blessing of Song, The.—Anon.—CS 35 
Blessings in Disguise.—Anon.—SSS. 

Blessings of Liberty, The. (Fr. The Letter from 
ItalyJ—Joseph Addison.—WEP 3 
Blessings of To-day, The.—May Riley Smith.—SSS 
(If we Knew—C.)—CS 3—HP—LLC—SM 
Blest as the Immortal Gods.—Sappho (tr. by Ambrose 
Phillips).—BNL—HBP 
(Fragment from Sappho.)—FEP 
Blest be the Tie.—J: Fawcett.—LLC 
Blest be Thy Love, Dear Lord.—J: Austin.—FEP 
Blest Spring Time. (W. music.) —Anon. (tr. by E. R. 
L.)—AD 

Blifkins, the Bacchanal.—B. P. Shillaber.—CS 10 
Blifkins the Ruralist.—B. P. Shillaber.—CS 11 


Blighted Love.—Luis de Camoens (tr. by Lord Strang- 
ford).—BNL 

Blind Archer, The.—A. Conan Doyle.—HBR 
Blind Beggar, The.—M. E. M. Davis.—TL 
Blind Beggar’s Daughter of Bednall Green, The. 
(In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
(Beggar’s Daughter of Bednall-Greene, The— C. — 
cond. and si. diff. vers .)—WR 1 
Blind Bird’s Nest, The.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—TAS 
Blind Boy, The.—Colley Cibber.—BNL—BFV—CGd 
—FEP—OS 1—PGT 1—PoR 
(Contented Blind Boy, The.)—PS 
Blind Boy’s Pranks, The.—W: Thom.—OB 
Blind Communicant, The.—Mary E. Lee.—HS 
Blind Fiddler, The. (Power of Music— C.) —W: 
Wordsworth.—FTR—LLC 

Blind Flower Girl of Pompeii, The.—Ella L. Matchett. 

_Qg 

Blind Girl of Castel Cuille, The.—(C.)—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow. 

(Rustic Bridal, The— abr.) —BS 17 
Blind Highland Boy, The.—W: Wordsworth.—FTR 
Blind Lamb, The.—Celia Thaxter.—BS 10—SAP 
Blind Louise.—G: W. Dewey.—AA 
Blind Lo.ve. (Sonnet CXLVIII.)—W: Shakespeare. 
—PGT 1 

Blind Man, The.—Anon.—IIVD 
Blind Man and His Candle, The.—J: G. Saxe.—SR 3 
Blind Man’s Testimony, The.—J: Hay.—BS 18 
(Religion and Doctrine— C.) —CS 13 
Blind Mary of the Mountain.—Anon.—CS 31 
Blind Men and the Elephant, The.—J: G. Saxe.— 
CS 4—CSS—MHR 

Blind Poet’s Wife, The. (Abr.) —Edwin Coller.— 
BS 12—NPS—YP 

Blind Preacher, The.—W. Wirt.—CS 14 (si. abr.) —SR 5 
Blind Psalmist, The.—Eliz. C. Kinney.—AA 
Blind Spinner, The.—Helen H. Jackson.—HSS 3 
(Spinning— C. )—FP—HBP—HDL—TAS 
Blind Student, The.—E. J. Armstrong.—TIP 
Blind Weaver, The.—Beth Day.—YBT 
Blindman’s Buff.—Horace Smith.—MYF—SS (si. abr.) 
Blind-man’s-buff.—Gertrude Hall.—WR 4 
Blindness.—H: W. Beecher.—BS 3—PS 
Blindness.—J: Milton.—GP 

(On his Blindness— C.) —BNL—CEL—EDY— 
FEP—GN—HBP— HDL— LH —LLC—OB— 
OS 3—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 2—WR 1—YBF 
(Sonnet: On his Blindness.)—ELP—EPs 
Blissful Day, The. (Day Returns, The— C.) —Rob’t 
Bums.—HBP 

(Day Returns, my Bosom Bums, The.)—BNL— 
YBF 

Bloated Biggaboon, The.—H. Cholmondeley-Pen- 
nell.—NA 

Block City.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Blondel.—Clarence Urmy.—AA 

Blondel’s Song under the Prison Window of Richard 
Coeur-de-Lion. (Fr. Richard Coeur-de-Lion.)— 
Michel J. Sedaine.—OS 2 

Blood Horse, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—BNL—FEP 
—GN—HBP—VA 

Blood is Thicker than Water.—Wallace Rice.—BAB 
Blood Will Tell.—Anon.—KNS 

Blood-red Ring Hung Round the Moon, A.—J: E. 
Logan.—VA 

(Indian Maid’s Lament, The.)—TCV 
Blood-root.—E. S. F.—SN 
Bloody Brother, The, Sels. fr. —J: Fletcher. 

Drink To-day. (Song— C.—fr. Act II., Sc. 2.)—ELP 
“Take, O take those lips away.” (Song fr. V., 2.)— 
BNL—GP—HBP 

(See also Measure for Measure.—W: Shakespeare.) 
Bloom hath Fled thy Cheek, Marv, The.—W: Mother- 
well—HBP 

Blossom, The.—J: Donne.—ELP 

Blossom, The. See Love’s Labour’s Lost.—W: 
Shakespeare. 

Blossom of the Soul, The.—Rob’t U. Johnson.—AA 
Blossom Time.—Mary M. Dodge. See There’s a Wed¬ 
ding in the Orchard. 

Blossom Time.—Wilbur Larremore.—AA 
Blossoms.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Blot in the ’Scutcheon, A, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Browning. 
Death of Mildred, The.—WR 19 
Earl Mertoun’s Song.—FEP—OB 
(Her Perfect Praise.)—OH 
(There’s a Woman like a Dewdrop.)—TFY 
“Blow, blow, thou winter wind.”—W: Shakespeare. 
See As You Like It. 

Blow, Bugle[, Blow'.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, 
The. 


48 




TITLE INDEX 


Bondage 


Blow, Northern Wind.—Anon.—OB 
Blowing Bubbles.—W: Allingham. See Bubble, The. 
Blowing Bubbles.—Eugene H. Munday.—CS 25 
Blowing Bubbles.—O. F. Starkey.—PP—YFR 
Blucher on the Rhine.—August Kopisch.—EDY 
Bludy Serk, The.—Rob’t Henryson.—OB 
Blue.—A. B. Rutledge.—SD 
Blue Alsacian Mountains.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Blue and Gray. (New York Sun.)— CS 37 
Blue and Gray. (Springfield Republican.) —CPL 
(Two Colors.)—TMR 
(United at Last.)—CS 20 
Blue and the Gray, The.—Anon.—DJS 
Blue and the Gray, The.—-Anon.—HP 
(One in Blue and One in Gray.)—CS 12 
Blue and the Gray, The. (Dial, on Finch’s The Blue 
and the Gray.)—Anon.—NDP 
Blue and the Gray, The.—-Fs. M. Finch.—AA—AWB 
— BNL — BS 1—CR—CS 5 —EDY —FS— 
GP — HB — HBP — HP — HSS 1 — MMR — 
PAP — PAPm — SM — SO — WCLG 1 
(SI. abr. )—LLC—SR 8 
(Decoration Day.)—OS 2 

Blue and the Gray, The.—Ellen H. Flagg.—LLC (abr.) 
—PFP 

(Death the Peacemaker.)—BLP—HSS 1 (abr.) 
Blue and the Gray, The. (Fr. Speech to Rob’t E. 
Lee Camp Confed. Vets.)—H: C. Lodge.—NC 
—SC (abr.) 

Blue and the Gray, The. (Fr. Address Delivered at 
the Prohibition Party Convention.)—Frances 
E. Willard.—TMR 
Blue Bird. See Bluebird. 

Blue Closet, The.—W: Morris.—VA 

Blue Eyes and Brown Eyes.—Clara Denton.—LPD 

Blue Flower, The.—Helen M. Merrill.—TCV 

Blue Hills beneath the Haze.—C. G. Whiting.—AA 

Blue Jay. See Blue-jay. 

Blue Moonshine.—Fs. G. Stokes.—EA 
Blue Sky Somewhere.—Vara.—BS 8 (abr.) —SR 2 
Bluebeard.—-Josiah G. Holland. See Bitter-sweet. 
Bluebeard’s Closet.—Rose T. Cooke.—AA 
Bluebell, The.—Julia A. Eastman.—AD—YBT 
Blue-bells. (Fr. Flower Songs.)—Mary G. Crocker.— 
CPL 

Bluebells.—Walter Ramal.—-SOC 
Bluebells of New England, The.—T: B. Aldrich.— 
HSS 1 

Bluebird, The. (Fr. Spring in New England.)—T: B. 
Aldrich.—SN 

Blue-bird. (W. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Blue-bird, The. (Fr. Wake Robin, Ch. VII.)—J 
Burroughs.—AD 

Bluebird, The.—C. F. Gerry.—AD 
Bluebird, The.—-Emily H. Miller.—PoR—WCL 

(Bluebird’s Song, The.)—AD—GMS (br. sel .)—LLC 
Bluebird, The.—Eben E. Rexford.—POS 
Blue-bird, The.—Alex. Wilson.—AA—FEP—POS (si. 
abr.) 

Bluebirds in Autumn.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Bluebird’s Message, The.—L. F. Armitage.—TT 
Bluebird’s Song, The.—Emily H. Miller. See Blue¬ 
bird, The. 

Blue-bottle Fly, The.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Blue-jay, The.—Susan H. Swett.—AD—CPL—PoR 
—POS 

Bluntness.—W: Shakespeare. See King Lear. 

“Blush, happy maiden, when you feel.”—Eliz. A. 
Allen.—FTA 

Blushing Maple Tree, The.—Anon.—AD 
“Blyther than the Bumie.”—-Marion Hubbard.—CG 1 
Bo.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 34 
Boa and the Blanket, The. (Punch.)— HPE 
Boadicea. An Ode.—W: Cowper.—BLP —- BNL — 
BPB — CGd — EHT — EPs — FEP — HB — 
HBP — LH — LLC — OS 2 — PR — WEP 3 
— WR 11 

Board School Pastoral, A.—May Kendall.—VA 
“Boarding ’Round.”—Phila H. Case.—StD 
Boarding-school Curriculum.—T: Hood.—SE 
Boast Not. (The Morals of Marcus Aurelius, V.— C.) — 
R: H. Stoddard—YBT 
Boaster Rebuked, The.—Anon.—FAD 
Boastful Boy, The.—Anon.—FAD 
Boasting Pair, A.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Boat, The.—Anon.—HVD 
Boat o’ Dreams.—Loren Palmer.—CG 3 
Boat of Grass, The.—Annie L. F. Wister. — MMR — 
PPC (si. abr.) 

Boat of Kinsale, The.—T: O. Davis.—VA 
Boat of my Lover, The.—Dinah M. M. Craik.—RIL— 
FTA 


Boat Race, The.—Anon.—BS 17 

Boat Race, The [or A], (Sel. fr. Jack Hall; or, The 
School Days of an American Boy, Ch. IX.) 
—Rob’t Grant.—MRS—SC (si. abr.) 

(Jack Hall’s Boat-race— ad. by E. M. Wilbor.)—DR 
Boat Race, The. (Fr. Tom Brown at Oxford.)—T. 

Hughes.—NC—PFP 
Boat Race. See also Boat-race. 

Boat Song.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake. 
The. 

Boat Song. See also Boat-song. 

Boat-building in Spain.—Ray Ledyard.—CG 1 
Boat-horn, The.—Anon.—HP 
Boatie Rows, The.—J: Ewen.—FEP 
(Abr. and si. diff .)—EPs 
Boating-song.—Albert M. Freeman.—CG 1 
Boat-race, The. (Fr. Queen Hynde.)—Jas. Hogg.— 
SAE 

Boat-race. See also Boat Race. 

Boat-song, A.—C: Kingsley. See Hypatia. 
Boat-song. See also Boat Song. 

Bob.—H:W. Grady. See “Bob.” How an Old Man 
“Came Home.” 

Bob and his Sister.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Bob and the Bible.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Bob Cratchit’s Dinner.—C: Dickens. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

“Bob.” How an Old Man “Came Home.” (C.) —H: 
W. Grady. 

(Bob— cond.) —NP—WR 22 
Bob Johnston’s Visit to the Circus.—Andrew Stewart. 
—CS 28—GH 

Bob, Son of Battle, Sels. fr .—Alfred Ollivant. 

Black Killer, The. (A6r. fr. Chs. XXVIII. and 
XXIX.)—NP 

Shepherd’s Trophy, The. (Ch. XXV.— abr.) —NP 
“Bob White.”—G: Cooper.—POS 
Bob White.—Marion F. Ham.—SR 12 
“Bob White.”—Eleanor Kirk.—LPS—PP 
Bob White.—Fs. C. McDonald.—CG 2—WR 22 
Bobby.—Rob’t Chambers.—MYF 
Bobby Shaftoe.—Homer Greene.—CS 33 
Bobolink, The.—Anon.—LLC 
Bobolink, The. (Aldine .)—BS 11—HNS 
(Abr.)— AD—CSS—PPSr 
(Little Telltale, The.)—FTR 
(Telltale, The.)—BNL—PR—TMR—YA 
(Versions vary slightly.) » 

Bobolink, The.—T: Hill.—BNL—FMR (si. abr .)— 
HBP—POS (abr .)—SN 
Bobolink.—Alex. M’Lachlan.—TCV 
Bobolink and Chick-a-dee, The. (St. Nicholas .)—AD 
Bobolinks, The. — Christopher P. Cranch. — AA — 
BS 20 (si. diff. vers .)—GN (abr.) 

Bobolink’s Song, The.—Stanley Waterloo.—WR 7 
Body, The.—Anon.—NV 
Boggs’s Dogs.—Anon.—BC 

Bohemians of Boston, The.—Gelett Burgess.—THP 
Boil It Down.—Anon.—FAS 

Boiled Chicken. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book.)— 
(Punch .)—HPE 

Bois Ton Sang, Beaumanoir.—Fs. S. Osgood.—EDY 
Boke of the Duchesse, The, Sel. fr .—Geoffrey Chaucer 
—WEP 1 

Bold Dragoon, The.—Anon.—CS 25 
(Gasper Schapp’s Exploit.)—SCS 
Bold for the Right. (Dial.) —C: S. Wayne.—CDs 
Bold Predictions.—J: Wilkes.—SS 
Bolehill Trees.—Jas. Montgomery.—AD 
Bolingbroke’s Entrance into London. — W: Shake¬ 
speare. See King Richard II. 

Bolivar (Build a Column to Bolivar— C.). — Bryan 
W. Procter.—EDY 
Bombast.—Anon.—KNE 
Bombastes Furioso.—W: B. Rhodes.—MDD 
Bombastic Appeal to a Jury.—Anon.—CS 4—SR 10 
(Appeal to the Kind Symmetric of our Nature.)— 
MHR 

Bombastic Description of a Midnight Murder.—Anon. 
—CS 1 

(Vivid Description of a Midnight Murder.)—SR 10 
Bon Jour, Bon Soir.—Anon.—WR 1 
Bonaparte to his Army in Italy.—Napoleon. — BLP 
(Proclamation to the Army of Italy— diff. tr. — abr.) 
—OS 3 

(To the Army of Italy— si. same.) —PS—SS—SSD 
Bonaventure, Sel. fr. (Spelling-match at Grande 
Pointe, The— fr. Chs. X. and XI.)—G: W. 
Cable.—WR 25 

Bond of Blood, The.—Will H: Thompson.—BAB 
Bondage.—Lucy W. Jennison.—AA 
Bondage of Drink, The.—Anon.—CS 12 


49 




Bondman 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Bondman, The, Sels. fr. —Hall Caine.—NDP 

Homeless Old Man, The. (Dial. ad. fr. Ch. II.) 
NDP 

Mount of Laws, The. (Br. sel. fr. Ch. XXVIII.)— 
NP 

Bonds of Affection.—Landon.—FP 
Bonduca.—Beaumont and Fletcher.—EPs 
Bones and His Baby.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones and the Doctor.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones and the Ladies.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones as a Doctor.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones as a Geologist.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones as a Traveller.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones as ap Artist.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones at a Free-and-easy.—Anon.—DE 
Bones at a Pic-nic.—Anon.—DE 
Bones at a Raffle.—Clipper.—DE 
Bones at a Soiree.—Anon.—DE 
Bones at School.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones’ Discovery.—Anon.—DE 
Bones’ Discovery.—Anon.—DSS 
( Diff. dials.) 

Bones’ Dream.—Anon.—DE 
Bones’ Examination.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones’ Experience at Sea.—Anon.— DSS 
Bones Goes a-Hunting.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones his Own Grandfather.—Anon.-—DSS 
Bones in Luck.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones Keeping a Hotel.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones Not to be Caught.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Adam and Eve.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Astronomy.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Bad Weather.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Courting.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Early Closing.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Education.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Family Discipline.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Kissing.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Mensuration.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Money.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on Polygamy.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones on the Theatre.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones’ Opinion of Matrimony.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones Serenades his Sweetheart.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones’ Wife.—Anon.—DSS 
Bones Working on a Farm.—Anon.—DSS 
Bonie Lesley.—Rob’t Burns. See Bormie Lesley. 
Bonivard.—Alexander Dumas.—OS 3 
Bonnet for my Wife, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—GS 28 
Bonnets of Bonnie Dundee, The.—Walter Scott. See 
Bonny Dundee. 

Bonnie Bessie Lee.—Rob’t Nicoll.—VA 
Bonnie Blue Flag, The.—Annie C. Ketchum.—AWB 
Bonnie Doon.—Rob’t Burns. See Banks o’ Doon, 
The. 

Bonnie Dundee.—Walter Scott. See Bonny Dundee. 
Bonnie George Campbell.—Anon.—BB—CEL—HBP 
(Bonny James Campbell— si. diff. vers .)—PEB 2 
Bonnie House o’ Airlie, The.—Anon.—OB 

(Bonny House o’ Airly. The— diff. vers .)—PEB 2 
Bonnie Lasses.—Anon.—TFS 

Bonnie Lesley for Lesliel.—Rob’t Bums.—FEP— 
HBP—OB—PGT 1 

(O, Saw ye Bonnie Lesley)—BNL—GP 
Bonnie Mary.—Rob’t Burns. See Before Parting. 
Bonnie Prince Charlie.—Jas. Hogg.—FEP 
Bonnie Sweet Jessie.—Anon.—CD 
Bonnie Wee EricT—Frances R. Havergal.—BS 17 
Bonnie Wee Thing.—Rob’t Burns.—YBF 
Bonniest Bairn in a’ the Warl’, The.—Rob’t Ford.— 
GN 

Bonny Annie.—Anon.—PEB 2 

Bonny Barbara Allan. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—PEB 2 

(Barbara Allen’s Cruelty— diff. vers .)—CEL 
(Afer.)—BB—FEP—OB—OEB 
Bonny Dundee.—Walter Scott. See Doom of Devor- 
goil, The. 

Bonny Earl of Murray, The. (In Percy’s Reliques.)— 
Anon.—OB—PEB 1 

Bonny Hind, The. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.— 
PEB 2 

Bonny House o’ Airly, The.—Anon. See Bonnie House 
o’ Airlie, The. 

Bonny James Campbell.—Anon. See Bonnie George 
Campbell. 

Bonny Lass of Anglesey, The.—Anon.—PEB 1 
Bonny Wee Hoose, The.—W: Lyle.—DES 
‘' Booh!”—Eugene Field.—EF—LS—PR—YA 
Book, A.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
Book, The.—Louise Hensel.—YBT 


Book and the Building, The.—R: Salter Storrs.— 
TMD 

Book Battalion, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—LBB—MBB 
Book Canvasser, The.—C: H. Clark.—BS 12—CR— 

Cg 25 

“Book in a Bustle, A.” (Punch.) —HPE 
“Book is good company, A.”—H: W. Beecher.—GG 
“Book Lamin’”.—M. H. Turk—CD 
Book of Day-dreams, Sels. fr. —C • L. Moore 
Disenchantment.—AA 
Or Ever the Earth was.—AA 
Soul unto Soul Glooms Darkling.—'AA 
Then shall We See.—AA 
Thou Livest, O Soul!—A A 
Book of Gold, A—J: J. Piatt.—TFY 
Book of Joyous Children, The.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
BJC 

Book of Life, The.—R: Thomson.—LBB—MBB 
Book of Love, The, Sel. fr. —Edwin Arnold. See With 
Sa’di in the Garden. 

Book of Orm, The, Sel. fr. (Dream of the World with¬ 
out Death, The.—Pt. III.)—Rob’t Buchanan. 
—VA 

Book of Snobs, The, Sels. fr. —W: M. Thackeray. 

Music at Mrs. Ponto’s. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXV.)— 
MHR 

Snobs. (Sel. fr. Ch. XLIV.)—OS 3 
Book of Thanks, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Book of the New Year, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Book-hunter, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LBB— 
MBB 

Book-peddler, The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Book-plate’s Petition, The.—Austin Dobson.—LBB— 
MBB 

Bookra.—C: Dudley Warner.—AA 
Books. (Br. sel. fr. The Kaleder of Sheperdes, 1528.) 
—Anon.—BNL 

Books. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Books. (Essay L.)—Fs. Bacon.—C’R (abr.) 

(Of Studies— C.) —LLC (si. abr.) —MBL 
(Studies— abr.) —OS 3 
Books.—H: W. Beecher.—BS 7 
Books.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora Leigh. 

Books.—Ralph W. Emerson.—APr 1 

(“ There are books which take rank in our life with 
parents and lovers”— -br. sel.) —GG 
Books.—E. J. Goodfellow.—COS—PP 
Books.—Mrs. Hale.—KNE 
Books.—J: Higgins.—BNL 

Books. (Occasional Pieces, XVIII. — C.) — Rob’t 
Southey.—BNL 
(His Books.)—OB 
(Library, The.)—LBB—MBB 
(My Days among the Dead.)—HBP—YBF 
(My Days among the Dead are Passed.)—FEP 
(Scholar, The.)—PGT 1 
(Stanzas Written in his Library.)—WEP 4 
Books and Libraries.—Jas. R. Lowell.—APr—MAL 
Books and Reading.—Rob’t Southey.—LLC 
Books and Reading. (Br. sels. fr. many authors.) — 
WCLG 1 

Books I Ought to Read, The.—Abbie F. Brown.— 
TL 

Book-stall, The.—Clinton Scollard.—BNL 
Bookworm, The.—Theodore Beza (tr. by T: Parnell).— 
LBB—MBB 

Bookworms, The.—Rob’t Burns.—LBB—MBB 
Boot and Saddle. (Fr. Cavalier Tunes.)—Rob't 
Browning—EHT—LC—MRS—VA 
Bootblack, The.—Anon.—CS 10 
Bootblack Drill,—Anon.—WDM 
“Boots.”—Anon—NP 

Bo-Peep. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Bo-Peep’s Party. (IT. pantomime.) —Anon.—TCP 
Border Ballad. (Fr. The Monastery, Ch. XXV.)— 
Walter Scott.—FEP—GN—HBP—LC —OS 2 
—PYO 

(Border Song.)—GP—LLC (si. abr.) 

Border Land, The.—Anon.—SSS 

Border Land, The.—Marie L. Moffatt.—CS 25 

Border Minstrelsy, Ballads fr. — Edited h>/ Walter Scott. 

See Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. 

Border Song.—Sir Walter Scott. See Border Ballad. 
Borderers, The, Sel. fr. (Skeptic, The— br. sel. fr. Act. 

IV., Sc. 2.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Bore, The.—J: G. Saxe.—KNE 

(My Familiar—C.)—AWH—THP 
Bores, The.—Anon.—CS 28 
Bora Dumb.—Norman Gale.—-PR 
Born Inventor, A.—Harry S. Edwards.—WR 21 
Born to the Purple.—Jas. W. Riley. 


50 




TITLE INDEX 


Boy's 


Borough, The, Sets. /r.—G- Crabbe. 

Convict’s Dream, The. ( Fr. Letter XXIII.)— 

WEP 3 

Evening Sail, The. (Fr. IX.) 

Founder of the Almshouse, The. (Fr. XIII.)— 
WEP 3 

Practical Charity. (Sr. sel. fr. XVII.) 

Quack Medicines. (Letter VII., cond.) —BNL 
Storm on the East Coast, A. (Fr. I.)—WEP 3 
Strolling Players. (Fr. XII.)—WEP 3 
Borrioboola Gha.—Orrin Goodrich.—CS 7—MMR 
Borrowed Baby, The.—Edson W. B. Tatlow.—CS 27 
Borrowed Child, The.—Howard Weeden.—AA— 
WR 25 

Bos’n Hill.—J Albee.—AA 

Bo’s’n Jack of the “Albatross.”—E. S. Jackson.—CS31 
Bosom Sin.—G: Herbert.—LLC 
(Life’s Lessons.)—CEL 
(Sin—C'.)—EPs—YBF 

Bossuet and the Duchess of Fontanges.—Walter S. 

Landor. See Imaginary Conversations. 
Boston.—Ralph W. Emerson.—PAP 
Boston {lecture). Dr. sel. fr. (“It is the property 
of the religious spirit.”)—Ralph W. Emerson. 
—GG 

Boston.—J: B. O’Reilly.—EDY 

Boston Grasshopper, The.—Lucinda J. Gregg.—POS 
Boston Hvmn.—Ralph W. Emerson.—BNL—EDY— 
MAL 

Boston Lullaby, A.—Anon.—TL 
Boston Lullaby, A.—Jas. J. Roche.—AWH 
Boston, Mass., and Charleston, S. C.—W: A. Court¬ 
enay.—FD 2 

Boston Massacre, The.—J: Hancock.—BLP {sel.) — 
EAO 

Boston Massacre, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne. See 
Grandfather’s Chair. 

Boston Massacre, The. (Fr. Crispus Attucks.)—J: B. 
O’Reilly.—EDY 

Botanic Garden, The, Sel. fr. (Loves of the Plants.)— 
Erasmus Darwin.—GP 
Both Sides.—Gail Hamilton.—MYF 
Both Sides of the Story.—G: A. Baker.—SR 7 

(Idyl of the Period, An—C.)—CH—HNS—PLD 
Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, The, Sels. fr. —Arthur H. 
Clough. 

Bathers, The. {Sel. fr. III.)—VA 
(Bathing.)—EPs 

(Highland Stream, The.)—WEP 4 
Elspie and Philip. (Sel. fr. VII.)—WEP4 
Philip to Adam. (Sel. fr. IX.)—WEP 4 
Bothwell, Sel. fr. (The Murder of Darnley.)—W: E. 
Aytoun.—EDY 

Bothwell, Sel. fr. (John Knox’s Indictment of the 
Queen, fr. Act. IV., Sc. 7.)—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—VA 

Bottle—Beggary, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bottle—Brutality, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bottle—in Debt, The. (Tab.)— Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bottle—its Effects, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bottle—Madness, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bottle—Murder, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bottle—Poverty, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bottle—the First Glass, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier. 
—TDT 

Bottle Tree, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Bottom Drawer, The.—Mary A. Barr.—HP 
“Bottoms Up” ad Finem.—P. A. Hutchinson.—CG 3 
Botts Twins, The.—P. R. Stansbury.—WR 14 
Boum-boum.—Jules Claretie.-—WR 4 
Bound for Detroit. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Bound Girl, The.—Anon.—FDY 

Bound upon th’ Accursed Tree.-—H: H. Milman.— 
FEP 

Bounding the United States. (Toast.) —J: Fiske.— 
CR—OS 3 

Bouquet, A. (Concert rec.)— Anon.—KNS 
Bouquet, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bouquet of Flowers, A.—Anon, (comp .)—AD (si. abr.) 
—DFR 

Bourne, The.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT2 
Bower of Bliss, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Bower Scene from “Becket,” The.—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Becket. 

Bowge of Courte, The, Sel. fr. (Picture of Riot.)— 
J: Skelton.—WEP 1 

Bowl, The.—J Wilmot, Earl of Rochester.—WEP 2 
Box and Cox. (Force.) —T: Morton (?).—DSS 
(Rival Lodgers, The— abr. diff. vers.) —SCS 
Box of Cigarettes, A. (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Boy, The. (In Night Songs.)—W: Allingham.—PoR 


Boy, The.—Eugene Field.—NA 
Boy, A.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—CS 11—LLC 
(Torn Hat, The C.)—AA 
Boy and Bee.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Boy and Girl.—Mary E. Bradley.—WR 15 
Boy and his Conscience, The.—Anon.—YBT 
(Over the Fence— longer and si. diff.) —PS 
Boy and his Mother, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh 
—KER 

Boy and Snake, The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
(Child and the Snake, The— si. longer.) —BPB 
Boy and the Angel, The.—Rob’t Browning.—HBR— 
OS 2—SO 

Boy and the Bird, The.—Anon.—SM 
Boy and the Bird, The.—Eben E. Rexford.—YBT 
Boy and the Boot, The. ( Hearth and Home.) — 
TFS (si. abr.) 

(Stubborn Boot, The.)—MYF 
Boy and the Brook, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—POS 
Boy and the Frog, The.—Anon.—CH—PP—YFR 
Boy and the Pedant, The.—Anon.—PS 
Boy and the Ring, The.—Anon.—CSS—PPSr 
Boy and the Sheep, The.—Ann Taylor.—PoR 
Boy and the Skylark, The.—C: and Marv Lamb.— 
LPC 

Boy and Wolf.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Boy Brittan,—Forceythe Willson.-—AWB 
(Boy Britton— si. diff. vers.) —SA—WR 10 
Boy Captives, The.—J : G. Whittier.—APr 
Boy Decides, The.—Rickman Mark.—BVC 
Boy Hero, A.—Anon.—CS 24-—NPS—YP 
Boy I Love, The.—Anon.—TFS 

Boy in a [or the] Dime Museum, A [or The], (Arkan- 
saw Traveler.) —DCR (si. abr.) —WR 20 (si. abr.) 
(In the Dime Museum— si. abr.) —CS 30 
(Little Johnny Visits the Dime Museum.)-—SR 7 
(Versions vary slightly.) 

Boy in Blue, The.—J: D. Long.—PFP 
Boy Kept Step, The.—Opie P. Read.—WR 26 
Boy Life on the Prairie, Sel. fr. (Sport.)—Hamlin 
Garland.—SO 

Boy Lives on our Farm, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Boy Lost.—Anon.-—MMR 

Boy of Egremond, The.—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
(Force of Prayer, The— C.) —PEB 3 
Boy of Ratisbon, The.—Rob’t Browning. See Inci¬ 
dent of the French Camp, An. 

Boy of the House, The.—Jean Blewett.—TMR 
Boy Orator of Zepata City, The.—R: H. Davis.—CR 
Boy Patriot, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Boy that Laughs, The.—G: Cooper.—TT 
Boy to the Schoolmaster, The.—E. J. Wheeler.— 
CS 23—TAV 

Boy Wanted.—Anon.—WR 24 

Boy Who Went from Home, The.—Emma M. John¬ 
ston.—CS.7 

Boyhood.—Washington Allston.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Boyish Ambition. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Boyne Water, The.—Anon. (Abr.) —EDY—TIP 

(Battle of the Boyne, The.—BNL (br. sel.) —PEB 4 
(ad. and nrr. by A. P. Graves.) 

Boy-poet, The.—W: Wordsworth.—EPs (abr.) 

(There was a Boy— C.) —SN—WEP 4 
Boys, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—BNL — BS 1 — 
CS 4 — FEP — FTR — LLC — SO — SPE — 
TMD (si. abr.) —WRD 
Boys, The.—Ethel Lynn.—CS 9—MYF 
Boy’s Address to Young Ladies, A.—Anon.—MCS 
Boys and Girls. (Dial.) —E. C. and V. J. Rook.— 
COS—PP 

Boys and the Apple Tree, The.—Ann and Jane Tay¬ 
lor.—BVC 

Boys—and the Bottle.-—Theodore L. Cuyler.—TS 

Boy’s Apology, A.—Anon.—DST 

Boy’s Belief, A.—Anon.—DCP 

Boys’ Candidate, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 

Boy’s Complaint, The.—Anon. -KNS 

Boy’s Complaint, A—Anon.—LPS—PP 

Boy s Complaint, A.—Anon.—PP—YFR 

Boy’s Composition on Breathing, A.—Anon.—WR 6 

Boy’s Composition on .Physiology, A.—Anon.—WR 4 

Boy’s Composition on Washington, A.—Anon.—WR 7 

Boy’s Conclusion, A.—Anon.—DR 

Boy’s Debate, A.—Anon.—MC 

Boy’s Dream, A. (Dream of a Boy who Lived at 
Nine-elms. The— C. — abr.) — W: B. Rands.— 
TFS 

Boy’s Essay on Girls, A.—Anon.—CS 23—PR 
Boy’s Hymn, A.—Marianne Farningham.—YBT 
Boy’s Idea of Girls, A.—G. L. Durke.—WR 17 
Boy’s Journal, A.—Anon.—MYF 
Boy’s King, A.—S: E. Kiser.—WR 24 


51 




Boy’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Boy’s Last Request, The.—Anon.—CS 11 
Boys’ Meeting, A.—H. E. McBride.—MAD 
Boy’s Meeting, A.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Boy’s Mercy, A.—Bessie G. Hart.—WR 2 
Boy’s Mother, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—DST—TAV 
Boys of the Bible.—Eliz. Lloyd.—SSE 
Boys’ Play and Girls’ Play.—Mrs. Hawtrey.—PC— 
WCL 

Boy’s Pocket, A.—Anon.—I.PS—PP 
Boy’s Poem on Washington, A.—H- Davenport.— 
PR—YA 

Boy’s Prayer, A. {Sel.)— H: C: Beeching.—GN 
(Prayers.)—LH—OB—VA 
Boy’s Promise, A.—G: Cooper.—YBT 
Boys’ Rights. {Prose.) —Anon.—LPS—PP 
Boys’Rights. {Verse.) —Carrie May.—CPL—DLS— 
FS—HP {si. abr.) 

Boy’s Sermon, The.—Anon.—DST 
Boy’s Song [, A]. — Jas. Hogg. — BFV — BPB — 
BVC (o6r.)—CEL— LC— NV — OB— PoR — 
WEP4 

(Way for Billy and Me, The.)—OS 1 
Boy’s Story, The.—Eben E. Rexford.—CH 
Boy’s Temperance Speech, A.—Anon.—PS 
Boys Wanted.—Anon.—DS—HSS 2—NPS—PP—SM 
—YA—YFR—YP 

Boys Wanted. {Chicago Post.) —BS 20—TFS—WR 17 
Boys we Need, The.—Anon.—KNS 
Boys we Want, The.—A. Sargent.—TS 
Boys will be Boys.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Brace Up.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Bracelet, The: To Julia.—Rob’t Herrick.—OB 
Braes of Balquhither, The.—Rob’t Tannahill.—FEP 
Braes of Yarrow, The.—W: Hamilton.—EPs—FEP— 
GP—HBP 

Braes of Yarrow, The. (Song—The Braes of Yarrow— 
C.)—J: Logan.—EPs (abr.)—FEP—PGT 1 
(Song— si.abr.) —HBP 
(Thy Braes were Bonny— si. abr.) —BNL 
Brag.—“Bob o’Link.”—DLD 

Brahma.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—BNL—HBP— 
OB 


Brahman’s Son, The. (C.)—R: H: Stoddard. 

(Brahmin’s Son, The— cond.) —WR 5 
Brahma’s Answer.—R: H: Stoddard.—BNL 
Brahmin and the Tiger, The.—Anon.—MYF 
Brahmin’s Son, The.—R: H: Stoddard.— See Brahman’s 
Son, The. 

Braid Claith.—Rob’t Fergusson.—WEP 3 
Brakeman at Church, The.—-Rob’t J. Burdette.—CR 
—CS 19—FTR 

(Brakeman Goes to Church, The.)—SR 2 
Brakeman’s Sweetheart, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
SYS 

Bramble.—Ebenezer Elliott. See Bramble Flower, 
The. 

Bramble Flower, The.—Ebenezer Elliott.—HBP— 
WCL 


(Bramble— sel.) —AD 
Brandy and Soda.—Hugh Howard.—HP 
Branksome Hall.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel, The. 

Brave and True.—H: Downton.—DS—PP—YA—YFR 
(Advice to Boys.)—KNS 
(To the Boys.)—FAS 

Brave at Home, The. T: B. Read. See Wagoner of 
the Alleghanies, The 

Brave Aunt Katy.—Nellie Eyster.—BS 15 
Brave Boston Boys. (Dial.)—Morris Harrison.— 
CDs 

Brave Boy, A.—Anon.—CS 24—NPS—SR 6—YP 
Brave Earl Brand, The. {In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—PEB l 


(Child of Elle, The— diff. vers .)—FEP 
(Douglas Tragedy, The— diff. vers.) —BB—CEL- 
HBP—OEB—WEP 1 


Brave Kate Shelley.—Mrs. M. L. Rayne.—-DS—NPS 
—YP 


{For another version of the story see Kate Shelly, by 
E. J. Hall.) 

Brave Little Boy, A.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Brave Little Flower, The.—Miss Warner.—PPSr 
(Dafif y-down-dilly.)—PoR 
(Ready for Duty.)—AD—PHS 
Brave Little Girl, A.—Anon.—TMR 
Brave Little Maid, The.—Anon.—PR—YA 
Brave Little Mary.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Brave Little Sister, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Brave Lord Willoughby. {In Percy’s Reliques.) — 
Anon.—LH 

Brave Love. (C.)—Mary K. Dallas.—WR4 
(He’d Nothing but his Violin— abr.) —A A 


Brave Man, The.—Joanna Baillie.— KNE 
“Brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, 
The.”—Abraham Lincoln. See Address at the 
Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettysburg. 
Brave Old Oak, The.—H: F. Chorley.—AD {w. mus.) — 
BNL 

(Song to the Oak, A— sel .)—HSS 1 
Brave Old Ship, the Orient, The.—Rob’t T. S. Lowell. 
—AA 

Brave Peasant, The.—Anon.—CSS 
Brave Woman, A. {Dial.) —Anon.—MFD 
Brave Woman, A.—J: F.’Nicholls.—CS 30 
Bravest Battle, The.—Joaquin Miller.—HSS 3 {abr.) 

(Bravest Battle that Ever was Fought , The.)—BS 17 
Bravest Battle that Ever was Fought, The.—Joaquin 
Miller. See Bravest Battle, The. 

Bravest of the Brave.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
{SI. abr.)— CD—SDR 

Bravest Sailor of All, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CRR 
Bravest Thing, The.—Anon.—DLS {sel.) 

(“No.”)—TFS 

Brawn of England’s Lay.—J: Hunter-Duvar.—VA 
Brazen Bells, The.—Edgar A. Poe. See Bells, The. 
Bread.—Elsie M. Wilbor.—DR 
Bread and Wine.—Eliz. R. Cutter.—CG 2 
Bread Crusts.—Anon.—DLF 
Bread of Life The.—Mary A. Lathbury.—TAS 
Bread on the Waters.—Anon.—MND 
Break, Break, Break.—Alfred Tennyson.— BFV — 
BNL — BS 1 — BSP — CEL — CR — FEP — 
FP — FTR — GMS — GP — HBP — HDL — 
HNS — HP — HSS 3 — LC — LLC — OS 2 — 
PGT 2 — PHS — POS — PYO — SN — SO — 
SR 6 — VA — VS — WCLG 1 — WEP 4 — 
YBF 

(Sea, The.)—SE 

Break of Day, Sel. fr. (Daybreak.)—J: Donne.—OB 
Break the Bottle.—J: G. Woolley.—WR 18 
Breakfast.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Breakfast. {Acting char.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Breaking Home Ties.—A. O. Frazier.—SR 12 
Breaking the Colt.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Breaking up the Exhibition. {Dial.)- —Anon.—MND 
“Breaking waves dashed high. The.”—Felicia He- 
mans. See Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers in 
New England, The. 

Breath, A.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
Breath of Avon, The.—Theodore Watts.—VA 
Breath of Hampstead Heath.—Edith M. Thomas.— 
AA 

Breath of the Spirit, The.—Anon.—CP 
Breathe Balmy Airs.—S. F. Smith.—HSS 1 
(Patriot Dead, The.)—BLP 
(Precious Lives.)—WR 17 

Breathes there the Man.—Walter Scott. See Lay of 
the Last Minstrel, The. 

"Breathes there the man with soul so dead.”—Walter 
Scott. See Lay of the Last Minstrel, The. 
Breathings of Spring.—Felicia D. Hemans.—AD 
Brechva’s Harp Song.—Ernest Rhys.—VA 
Breeding Lark.—Arthur Boar.—EPs 
Breeze in the Church, The.—Miss — Hinxham.—FP 
Breezes, The.—-Lucy Larcom.—TFS 
Breitmann in Maryland.—C: G. Leland.—BRR 
Brer Rabbit and the Little Girl. (Nights with Uncle 
Remus, Ch. III. abr.) —Joel C. Harris.—WR 7 
Bresca.—Lucy B. Ewing.—CS 34 

Brewing of Soma, The, Sel. fr. (Voice of Calm, The.)— 
J: G. Whittier.—TAS 
Briar-bloom.—Eliz. A. Allen.—AD 
Bric-a-brac.—Ed. H. Cahill.—DCR 
Bricklayers, The.—G. H. Barnes.—CS 16—DS (fu>. 

77XU8 .) 

Bridal Dirge, A.—Bryan W. Procter.—HBP 
Bridal Feast, The.—F. C. Long.—CS 4 {abr.) —SA 
(Bridal Wine-eup, The— prose vers.) —WRD 
{Dram, by A. F. Bradley.)—CS 14—ED 
{Dram, by Sidney Herbert.)—BS 4—CDD 
(Pledge with Wine — prose vers.) — CS 2 — 
FMR {abr.) —PS 

Bridal Hour, The, Sel. fr. (“Love! blessed love,” etc.) 
—Alice Cary.—BIL 

Bridal in Eden, The.—F. J. Otterson.—CS 24 
Bridal of Andalla, The.—Anon. {tr. by J: G. Lock¬ 
hart).—EPs {si. abr.) —FEP—HBP 
Bridal of Malahide, The.—Gerald Griffin.—PEB 4 
(Abr .)—BS 21—FMR 

Bridal Pair, The.—W: Young. See Wishmakers’ 
Town. 

Bridal Song.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See Little 
French Lawyer, The. 


52 




TITLE INDEX 


British 


Bridal Song.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See also Maid’s 
Tragedy, The. 

Bridal Song. (Sel. Jr. song in Hero and Leander, 5th 
Sestyad.)—G: Chapman.—OB 
Bridal Song. (Fr. The Fall of Jerusalem.)—H: H. 
Milman.—FEP (.sel.) 

(Hebrew Wedding [. The].)—BNL—HBP 
Bridal Song [,A].— Shakespeare and Fletcher. See 
Two Noble Kinsmen, The. 

Bridal Song and Dirge.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s 
Jest Book. 

Bridal Wine-cup, The [or A],—Anon. See Bridal 
Feast, The. 

Bride, The.—H: Alford—OB 

(“‘Rise.’said the Master,‘come unto the feast.’”) 
—BNL 

Bride, The.—Ambrose Bierce.—AA 
Bride, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—FP 
Bride, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Epithalamion, 
The. 

Bride, The.—Sir J: Suckling. See Ballad upon a 
Wedding, A. 

Bride Cake, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—WEP 2 
Bride o’ the Sun, The.—Blanche Bishop.—TCV 
Bride of Abydos, The, Sel. Jr. —Lord Byron.—BNL 
(hr. sels.) —WEP 4 
(Orient, The.)—BNL 

Bride of Lammermoor, The, Sels. Jr. —Walter Scott. 
Beware. (Song Jr. Ch. III.)—EPs 
(Lucy Ashton’s Song.)—BPB—OB 
Ravenswood and Lucy Ashton. (Sels. Jr. Chs. 
XXXII. and XXXIII.)—MMR 
Bride of the Greek Isle, The.—Felicia Hemans.—BS 5 
—SA—SR 11 (abr.) 

(Bride’s Farewell, The— sel.) —FP 
Bride Song. (Fr. The Prince’s Progress.)—Christina 
G. Rossetti.—OB 
(Too Late.)—AVP 

Bride’s Farewell, The.—Felicia D. Hemans. See 
Bride of the Greek Isle, The. 

Brides of Enderby; or, the High Tide, The.—Jean 
Ingelow.—CS 2 

(High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, The— 

C.) —BNL —EPs—FEP—FR (abr.) —GN— 

OS 2—PEB 4—VA—WCLG 1 
(SI. abr.) —AVP—CR 

(High Tide [; or The Brides of Enderby], The.)— 

BS 2—LLC—MMR (abr.) —SA (si. abr.) —WRD 
Bride’s Toilette, The.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 
Bride’s Tragedy, The, Songs fr. —T: L. Beddoes. 

Hesperus Sings.—VA 

(Hesperus’ Song.)—WEP 4 
Love Goes a-Hawking.—VA 
Song, by Two Voices.—VS—YBF 
(Song.)—BFV 

Bride’s Tragedy, The.—A. C. Swinburne.—PEB 4 
Bridge, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—BS 1—FS—FTR— 
LLC — PS (abr.)— PYO — SA — SN — SR 1 
—WCLI 2 

Bridge Keeper’s Story, The.—W. A. Eaton.—CS 29 
Bridge of Glen Aray, The.—C: Mackay.—CS 32—DS 
Bridge of Life, The.—Anon.'—HP 
Bridge of Sighs, The (1st part).—T: Hood.—BNL— 

BS 6 — CS 1 — FEP — FP — HBP — MMR — 
MR — OB — OM — PGT 1 — PPSr— SO (abr.) 

—VA—VSG—WEP 4 
Bridge of Truth, The.—Anon.—CS 8 
Bridget and the Matinee.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 2 
Bridget as a School-teacher.—C: H. Clark.—SA 
Bridget O’Flannagan on Christian Science and Cock¬ 
roaches.—M. Bourchier.—BS 19—CRR 
Bridget O’ Hoolegoin’s Letter.—Anon.—DI 

(Affectionate Letter, An— cond. and si. diff.) —HR 
(Irish Letter, An.)—CS 5—PTS 
Bridget’s Investment. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—CDs 

Bridget’s Mission Jug.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Bridget's Soliloquy.—Mary K. Dallas.—BS 20 
Brief Burlesque. A. ( Munsey’s Magazine.) —WR 22 
Brief Description, A.—Harry Romaine.—TL 
Brief Puff of Smoke, A.—Selim.—PPh 
Brief Remarks to a Class of Young Ladies on Gradu¬ 
ation Day by a Visitor.—Anon.—CP 
Brief Tragedy, A.—Anon.—SR 10 
Briefless Barrister, The.—J: G. Saxe.—FEP—HPE 
Briefness of Joys. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —-BNL 
Brier.—E. Pauline Johnson.—TCV 
Brier, The.—Walter S. Landor.—HBP 
Brier-Rose.—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.—BS 9—CS 20— 
CSS—PR 

(Abr.) —FR (ad.) —SC—TMR 
Brier-wood Pipe, The.—C: |D. Shanly.—BNL—EDY 

53 


Brigands, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Brigand’s Death, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Bright Days in Winter.—J G. Whittier.—POS 
(Dream of Summer, A— C .)—AD 
. (Hope on— br. sel.) —PS 
Bright Hours.—Marg. Husted.—-CS‘29 
Bright Little Dandelion.—Anon.—TFS 
(Dandelion, The.)—GMS 

Bright Side, The.—M. A. Kidder.—CS 4—HSS 3—LLC 
Bright Sparkles in de Churchyard.—Anon.—AA 
“Bright star! Would I were steadfast as thou art."— 
J: Keats.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Last Sonnet— C.) —CEL—OB—WEP 4 
Brjghtest and Best.—Reginald Heber. See following. 
Brightest and Best of the Sons of the Morning.—Regi¬ 
nald Heber.—GN 
(Brightest and Best.)—LLC 
(Epiphany—C.)—EDY—FEP—HBP—OS 1 
Brightest Gift, The. (Presbyterian Journal.) —CS 34 
Brignall Banks.—Walter Scott. See Rokeby. 

Bring Back my Flowers.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Bring Flowers.—Felicia D. Hemans.—AD (si.abr.) — 
FP 

“Bring out your Dead.”—Marg. H. Lawless.—-WR 24 
Bring them not Back.—Jas. B. Kenyon.—AA 
Bringing our Sheaves.—Eliz. A. Allen.—GP 
(Bringing our Sheaves with us.)—FP 
Bringing our Sheaves with Us.—Eliz. A. Allen. See 
foregoing. 

Bristol Figure, A.—Cosmo Monkhouse.—WR 9 
Bristowe Tragedy.—T: Chatterton.-—EPs 
Britannia, Sels. fr .—Jas. Thomson. 

Peace.—HSS 1 

(Britannia— br. sel.) —BNL 
War for the Sake of Peace.—BNL 

(“Oh, first of human blessings,” etc.— br. sel.)— 
HSS 1 

Britannia to Columbia.—Alfred Austin.—PAPm 
To America.)—GN 
Voice, A.)—WCLG 1 
Britannia’s Pastorals, Sels. fr. —W: Browne. 

Carpe Diem. (Song fr. Bk. I., Song 3.)—ELP 
Comparison, A. (Fr. Bk. III., Song 2.)—WEP 2 
Complaint of Pan, The. (Fr. Bk. II., Song 4.)— 
WEP 2 

Country Danger, A. (Fr. Bk. II., Song 2.)—EP 
Description of a Musical Consort of Birds, A. 

(Fr. Bk. L, Song 3.)—EP 
Description of Walla. The. (Fr. Bk. II., Song 3.)— 
WEP 2 

Dirge, A. (Fr. Bk. II., Song 1.)—EP 
(Lament for his Friend, A.)—WEP 2 
Landscape, A. (Fr. Bk. I., Song 2.)—EP 
Marina and the River-god. (Fr. Bk. I., Song 1.) 
—WEP 2 

Metamorphosis, A. (Fr. Bk. I., Song 5.)—WEP 2 
Music Lesson, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I., Song 5.)— 
WEP 2 

My Choice. (Song fr. Bk. II., Song 2.)—BNL 
(Shall I Tell?)—HBP 

(“Shall I tell you whom I love?”)—FEP—FTA 
Poet’s Ambition, The. (Fr. Bk. I., Song 5.1— 
WEP 2 

Praise of Sydney, The. (Fr. Bk II., Song 2.)— 
WEP 2 

(Sir Philip Sidney— br. sel.) —BNL 
Praise of Spenser, The. (Fr. Bk II., Song 1.)— 
WEP 2 

(Edmund Spenser—br. sel.) —BNL 
Riot’s Climbing of a Hill. (Fr. Bk. I., Song 5.)— 
EP 

Hunted Squirrel, The— sel.) —LC—WEP 2 
Scented Grove, The. (Fr. Bk. I., Song 2.)—WEP 2 
Shepherdesses’ Garlands, The. (Fr. Bk. II., Song 
3.)—EP 

(Colour Passage, A— sel.) —WEP 2 
Song of Celadyne, The. (Fr. Bk. III., Song 1.)— 
OEL—WEP 2 

Song of Tavy, The. (Fr. Bk. II., Song 3.)—WEP 2 
Brita’s Wedding.—W. W. Marsh.—DR 
British Aggressions.—Josiah Quincy, Jr.—SS 
British Fleet, The, Sel. fr. (All’s Well.)—T: Dibdin.— 
BNL 

British Grenadiers, The.—BVC 

British Influence, 1811.—J: Randolph.—OM—PS—SS 
British Lion and American Hoosier, The.—Anon.— 
FND 

British Oak. The.—Bernard Barton.—LLC 
British Soldier in China, The.—F. H. Doyle.—PGT 2 
(Private of the Buffs, The— C.)— BNL—HB—HBP 
—LH—VA 

British Treaty, The.—Fisher Ames.—SS 




Broad-minded 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Broad-minded selection of noble passages. A.”—J: 
p Pcaslec_ GtCj 

Broadswords of Scotland, The.—J: G. Lockhart.—HBP 
Broadway Pageant, A , Sel. fr. (Expansion.)—Walt 
Whitman.—SR 13 

Broken Banjo, The.—Warren F. Gregory.—CG 1 
Broken Chains.—Eugene A. Cox.—CG 2 
Broken Doll, The.—C and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Broken Dreams.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Broken Heart, The.—W. Barnes.—PGT 2 
Broken Heart, The, Sels. fr. —J: Ford. 

Calantha’s Dirge.—ELP—WEP 2 
(Love and Death.)—FEP 

Penthea’s Dying Song. (Fr. IV., 3.)—CEL—ELP 

—WEP 2 

Broken Hearts.—Washington Irving.—PS 
Broken Home, A.—Anon.—SR 1 

Broken Music. (The House of Life, Sonnet XLVII.) 
—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 

Broken Pitcher, The.—C: D. Shanly (or E- Lysaght.)— 
CS 14 

(Kitty of Coleraine.)—BNL—CR—FEP—HBR— 


THP—TIP 

Broken Promises.—Anon.—MFD 
Broken Sonnet, A.—Clo Graves.—FLS 
Broken Token, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Broken Wing, The.—Anon.—LLC 
Brook, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Brook, The.—Sophia V. G. Lee.—TCV 
Brook, The.—W: W. Lord.—A A 

Brook, The. ( Song fr. The Brook: An Idyl.)—Alfred 
Tennyson.—AE (sel.)- —BFV—BS 5—CGd— 
CS 12—GMS—GN (si. abr.) —LC—OS 1— 
PGT 2—PHS—POS (abr.) —PSR—SC (si. abr.) 


—SM—SN—WCL—WCLI 1—WEP 4 
(Song of the Brook.)—BNL—CR—FEP—FTR— 
HBP—LLC—SAE (br. sels.) 

Brook, The, Sel. fr .—W • B. Wright.—AA 
Brook in Winter, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Vision of 
Sir Launfal, The. 

Brook of Lappington, The.—H - Gillman.—CSS 
Brook Rhine, The.—Augusta Webster.—A VP 
Brook Song, A.—Eugene Field.—HP 
Brook Song.—Jas. H. Morse.—AA 

Brook that Ran into the Sea, The.—Lucy Larcom.— 


LCS 


Brooklet, The.—W: G. Simms.—POS 
Brooklyn at Santiago, The.—Wallace Rice.—EDY 
Brooklyn Bridge, The.—A. S. Hewitt.—TMD 
Brooklyn Bridge, The.—Seth Low.—SSD 
Brooklyn Bridge, The.—Edna D. Proctor.—BNL 
(Brooklyn) Bridge, The.—H: F. Wood.—GH 
Brook’s Song, The -—Mrs. M. F. Butts.—CPL 
Brookside, The.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.— 
BNL—CR—FEP—FTA—GP—H B P—OH— 
PGT 2—TFY—VA—VS—YBF 
(I Wandered by the Brookside— w. music.) —NPS— 
YP 

(Song.)—CGd—FP 
Broom Drill, The.—Anon.—DS 
Broom Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Broom Flower, The.—Mary Howitt.—HBP—OS 1 
Broomfield Hill, The. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon. 
—PEB 1 

Brother and Sister. (Sel.) —G: Eliot.—GN 
(Diff. sel.)— OH 
(Br. sel. — ad.) —OS 2 

Rrother Anderson.—T: K Beecher. See following. 
Brother Anderson’s Sermon.—T. K. Beecher.—BS 6— 
CS 13—CSS 

(Brother Anderson.)—BRR 
Brother Antonio.—Eliz. A. Allen.—SR 7 
Brother Ben.—-Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 25 
Brother Gardner on de Human Race. (Detroit Free 
Press.)— W : B. Dick.—DSS 
Brother Jim.—May R. McNabb.—PS 
Brother Jonathan’s Birthday.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Brother Jonathan’s Lament for Sister Caroline.— 
Oliver W. Holmes.—AWB—PAPm 
(Union, The—sel.)—-SAE 

Brother of Mercy, The. (In The Tent on the Beach.) 

—J: G. Whittier.—AP 
Brother Robin.—Mrs. Anderson.-—NV 
Brother Toper.—R. B. Kirk.—CG 3 
Brother Watkins.—J: B. Gough.—CS 7 — HR — OM 
—SO 

(Brother Watkins—Ah!)—FS 
Brotherhood.—Josiah G. Holland.—CS 11 
Brothers, The.—Johann W. von Goethe.—BNL 
Brothers, The.—Marietta Holley.—DES 
Brothers, The.—C: Sprague.—AA 
Brothers, The.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—PEB 4 


Brothers and a Sermon, Sels. fr. —Jean Ingelow. 
Brothers and a Sermon, Sel. fr. —HDL 
Goldilocks.—EPs 
Old Fisherman, The.—KNE 

(Old Fisherman’s Prayer, The.)—HSS 3 
(Old Man’s Prayer, The.)—MMR 
Wreck of “ The Grace of Sunderland.”—EPs 
Brothers; Henry and John Shears, The.—Lady Wilde. 
—PEB 4 

Brothers Once More.—W. J. C. Train.—DFR 
Brother’s Reply, The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Brother’s Tribute, A.—Anon.—BS 12—NPS—YP 
Brought Back.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 31—PR 
Brought Back by the Butcher’s Boy. (Washington 
News.)— SR 11 

Brought to his Senses.—Anon.—MC 
Brought to Trial for “Blowin’.”—Josiah G. Holland. 
See Arthur Bonnicast.le. 

Brown Adam. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—BB 
(SI. diff. vers.—si. abr.) —PEB 2 
Brown Girl, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Brown of Ossawatomie.—J G. Whittier.—BNL 
FEP 

Brown Robin.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Brown Robyn’s Confession.—Anon.-—BB 
Brown Sociable, A.—Anon.—EVE 
Brown Stout.—Anon.—CS 34 , 

Brown Thrush, The.—Lucy Larcom.— AD — GMS — 
LCS—SM—WCL—YBT 
Brownies’ Drill, The.—A. E. Hurst.—ID 
Browning.—Irene E. Morton.—TCV 
Browning at Asolo.—Rob’t 11. Johnson.—A A 
Browning’s First Manuscript. (Fr. Robert Browning 
Personalia.)—Edmund Gosse.—MRS 
Browns, The.—T: D. English.—CS 12 
Bruce, The, Br. sel. fr. (Freedom.)—J: Barbour.— 
FP (si. abr.)— OB 

Bruce and the Abbot.—Walter Scott. See Lord of the 
Isles. The. 

Bruce and the Spider.—Bernard Barton.—BNL (abr.) 

(Robert Bruce and the Spider.)—CS 24 
Bruce’s Address to His Army.—Rob’t Burns. See 
Bannockburn. 

Brudder Bones as a Log-roller.—Anon.—DE 
Bruddcr Bones’ Duel.—Anon.—DE 
Brudder Bones in Clover.—Anon.—DE 
Brudder Bones in Hard Luck.—Anon.—DE 
Brudder Bones in Love.—Anon.—DE 
Brudder Bones on de Raging Canawl.—Anon.—DE 
Brudder Bones’ Sweetheart.—-Anon.—DE 
Brudder Brown on “Apples.”—Anon.— CS 26 
(Apples.)—CD 

Brudder Gardiner on Music.—Anon.—CH 
Brudder Johnson on “ ’Lectricity.”—Anon.—DCR 

(Brudder Johnson’s Lecture on ’Lectricity.)—DSS 
Brudder Johnson’s Lecture on ’Lectricity.—Anon. 
See foregoing. 

Brudder Jones as a Carpet-bagger.—Anon.—DE 
Brudder Jones’s Heterodoxy.—Anon.—WR 21 
Brudder Yerkes’s Sermon.—Jas. M. Ludlow.—BS 14 
Brushwood.—T: B. Read.—CR 
(Br. sels.) —AE—HDL 
Brute Neighbors.—H: D. Thoreau.—APr 
Brutus. (Fr. Pindarique Odes.)—Abraham Cowley. 
—WEP 2 

Brutus and Cassius. — W: Shakespeare. See Julius 
Csesar (Speech of Cassius Instigating Brutus, 
etc.). 

Brutus and Titus. (Fr. Lucius Junius Brutus— play.) 
—Nathaniel Lee.—SS 

Brutus’ Harangue on the Death of Csesar.—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. <See Julius Csesar. 

Brutus Justifying the Assassination of Csesar.—W: 

Shakespeare. See Julius Caesar. 

Brutus on the Death of Csesar.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Julius Csesar. 

Brutus on the Death of Lucretia.—J: H. Payne. See 
Brutus; or, The Fall of Tarquin. 

Brutus; or, The Fall of Tarquin, Sels. fr. —J: II. Payne. 
Brutus on the Death of Lucretia (Act III., Sc. 4).— 
FR 

(Brutus over the Body of Lucretia.)—PS 
(Brutus over the Dead Lucretia— si. abr.) —CS 3 
(Brutus’s Oration over the Body of Lucretia— 
si. abr.)— BNL 

(Lucius Junius Brutus’s Oration over the Body of 
Lucretia.— si. abr.) —WRD 
Roman Father, The.—WR 5 
Brutus over the Body of Lucretia.—J: H. Payne. See 
Brutus: or. The Fall of Tarquin. 

Brutus over the Dead Lucretia. (Prose comp.) — 
Anon—PS—SS 


54 






TITLE INDEX 


Burgoyne’s 


Brutus Over the Dead Lucretia.—J: H. Payne. See 
Brutus; or. The Fall of Tarquin. 

Brutus to Cassius.—W Shakespeare. See Julius 
Caesar. 

Brutus’s Oration Over the Body of Lucretia.—J: H. 

Payne. See Brutus; or, The Fall of Tarquin. 
Bryant Alphabet, A. (Comp. fr. Bryant.)—PEO 
Bryant Dead!—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 
Bryant, Extract concerning.—H: W Bellows.—PEO 
Bryant, Extract concerning.—J: Bigelow.—PEO 
Bryant, Extract concerning.—G: W Curtis.—PEO 
Bryant, Extract concerning.—Edwin P. Whipple.— 
PEO 

Bubble, The. (C. )—W; Allingham. 

(Blowing Bubbles.)—GN 
Bubble, The.—W: Drummond.—YBF 
(Madrigal.)—ELP 

(“ This Life which seems so fair.”)—PGT 1 
Bubble, The.—J: B. Tabb.—A A 

Buccaneer, The, Sel. fr. (Island, The.)—R: II. Dana.— 
BNL 

Buccaneer, The.—Sir Walter Scott. Sec Rokeby. 
Buck Fanshaw’s Funeral.—S: L. Clemens. See Rough¬ 
ing It. 

Bucket, The.—S: Woodworth.— AA — ASL — HBP 
(Old Oaken Bucket, The.) — BLP — BNL —CS 25 
FEP — GP — LLC — OS 1 — PPSr — PYO — 
SE—TAV—WCLG 1 

Buckingham’s Address on his Way to Execution.—W: 

Shakespeare. See King Henry VIIT. 

Buckle, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
“Bucks.”—Frank H. Spearman.—SR 13 
Bucolick betwixt Two, A. (C.)—Rob't Herrick. 

(Lacon and Thyrsis.)—EP 
Bud, The.—Edmund Waller.—WEP 2 
“Bud of Promise” Racket, The.—Anon.—CS 34 
t’Bud will soon become a flower, The.”—Jones Very 
—HSS 3 (sel.) 

(Now is the Time.)—AD 

Budd Wilkins at the Show.—S: E. Kiser.—WR 24 
Budding-time too Brief.—-Evaleen Stein.—AA 
Budge’s Version of the Flood.—J' Habberton. See 
Helen’s Babies. 

Budget of Blunders, A.—Anon.—DCD 
Budget of Paradoxes, A.—J- Martley.—TIP 
“Bud’s Charge.”—L: E. Van Norman.—WR 22 
Bud’s Fairy-tale.—Jas. W T . Riley.—CW r 
Buena Vista.—Albert Pike.—AWB—PAPm 
Buffalo Herds, The.—C: Mair. See Tecumseh. 
Bug-a-boo, The.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—DCP (si. abr.) 
(Dial.)— WR 17 

(About the Size of It— dial.) —DLD 
Bugle, The.—M. Trving.—PAPm 
Bugle, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess. The. 
Bugle Song [.The]. Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, 
The. 

Build a Column to Bolivar! (C.) —Bryan W. Procter. 
(Bolivar.)—EDY 

“Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul.”— 
Oliver W. Holmes. See Chambered Nautilus, 
The. 

Builder, The.—Fs. Sherman.—TCV 
Builders, The.—Ebenezer Elliott.—VA 
Builders, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— GMS — PHS — 
SE—WCLT 2—YBT 
(Abr.) —BS 7 

Builder’s Lesson, A, Sel. fr. (How?)—J: B. O’Reilly.— 
YBT 

Building.—Susan Coo'idge.—CS 33 
Building.—I. E. Diekenga.—FHS—YBT 
Building a Home.—J: Armstrong. See Art of Preserv¬ 
ing Health, The. 

Building of S. Sophia, The.—S. Baring-Gould.—VSG 
Building of the Barn, The.—C: L. Bingham.—WR 25 
Building of the House, The.—C: Mackay.—WR 1 
Building of the Ship, The.—H : W. Longfellow.—AP— 
LH 

Building of the Ship, The. (Sel.) — AD — BNL 
(br. sel.) 

(Launch of the Ship, The— sel.) —BS 1—SA— 
SR 1 

(Launching of the Ship, The— sel.)- —CR—CS 4 
—FR—FTR — GMS — HNS — OM — SAE 
(bv sel-8 ) 

Republic. The. (Br. sel.) —A A—ASL 
(Lines.)—SS 

(Ship of State, The— br. sel.) —PAP—SM 
Building the Chimney—Anon.—CS 11 
(Worsted Stocking, The.)—MYF 
Building the Ladder.—Eliz. Lloyd.—SSE 
Building upon the Sand.—Eliza Cook.—FP 
Bulb, A.—R Iv. Munkittriek.—AA 


Bulbul, The.—Owen Seaman.—NA 
Bulgarian Horrors.—W- E. Gladstone.—MRS 
Bull, The.—Marg. Johnson.—WR 24 
Bull Fight, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Bull of Bashan, A.—Adeline Knapp.—BS 20 
Bull Run.—Alice B. Haven.—WR 10 
Bull-fight, The.—Anon. (Ir. by J: G. Lockhart). See 
following. 

Bull-fight of Gazul.The.—Anon. (Ir. by J: G. Lockhart ). 
—FEP—HBP 

(Bull-fight, The. Sel.) —OS 2 
Bullfrog Serenade, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Bull-head, The.—Josh Billings.—FAS 
Bullum versus Boatum.—G.A. Stevens.—BS 1 
Bumble Bee, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Bumble Bee, The.—Mrs. E. J. II Goodfellow.—TT 
Bumblebee, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Bumboat Woman’s Story, The.—W: S. Gilbert.— 
BS 9 (si. abr.) —THP 

Bumpkin’s Courtship, The.—Anon.—CS 10 
Bumps.—Anon.—-FHE 
Bunch of Cowslips, A.—Anon.—PEO 
Bunch of Flowers, A. Anon. (Concert piece.) —YFD 
Bunch of Flowers, A. (Concert piece.) —E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—COS—PP 

Bunch of Primroses, A.—G: It. Sims.—CS 36 
Bunch of Roses, A.-—J: B. Tabb.—PoR 
Bunches of Grapes.—W’alter Itamal.—SOC 
Buncombe Speech.—Anon.—DE 
Bundle of Loves, A.—Mary L. Gaddess.— WR 4 
Bungtown Lvceum, The.—Anon.—MAD 
Bunker Hill.—G: H. Calvert.—WR 10 
Bunker Hill.—Oliver W. Holmes.— See Grandmother’s 
Story of Bunker Hill Battle. 

Bunker Hill.—G. Mellen.—EPs 
Bunker Hill—J: Pierpont.—BLP 

Bunker Hill Monument, The, Sel. fr. (What Good 
will the Monument Do?)—E: Everett.—SS 
Bunker Hill Monument, The.—I.ouis Kossuth.—TMR 
Bunker Hill Monument, The. (C.) —Dan’l Webster.— 
MAL 

(Age of Improvement, The— br. sel.) —TMR 
(Bunker Hill Speech.)—AI 

(First Bunker Hill Monument Oration.)—IR (br. 
sel.)— WCLC, 2 (si. abr.) 

(Foundation of Bunker Hill Monument— br. sel.) — 
FD 1 

(Oration at the Laying of the Corner-stone of the 
Bunker Hill Monument— sel.) —PPS 
("That motionless shaft will be the most powerful 
of speakers”— br. sel.) —GG 
(To the Revolutionary Veterans— sel.) SS 
(To the Survivors of the Battle of Bunker Hill— 
sel.) —BS 10 

Bunker Hill Monument.—Dan’l Webster. See ilso 
Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, 
The. 

Bunker Hill Monument Completed, The.—Dan’l Web¬ 
ster. See Completion of the Bunker Hill 
Monument, The. 

Bunker Hill Speech.—Dan’l Webster. See Bunker 
Hill Monument, The. 

Bunker’s Hill.— J: Neal —WR 10 
Bunny Did It.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Buonconte di Montefeltro.—Dante. See Divine Com¬ 
edy, The. 

Buoy-bell, The.—C: T. Turner.—VA 
Burd Ellen.—Anon.—BB 

Burd Helen. (Fair Helen of Kirconnell, Pt. II.— 
in Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—CEL 
(Fair Helen.)—EPs (si. abr.) —FEP—HBP— 
PEB 1—PGT 1—VSG—WR 21 
(Helen of Kirkconnel [1].)—BB—BPB—LH—OB— 
OEB 

(John Mayne’s vers.) —FEP 
Burd Statue. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Burden of Love, The.—Lucy W. Jennison.—A A 
Burden of Night, The.—S. R. El'iot.—TAV 
Burdock’s Goat.—Anon.—CS 16 
Burdock’s Music-box.—Anon.— CH—CS 27—SR 5 
Burgher’s Battle. The.—W: Morris.—VA 
Burghers of Calais, The.—Emily A. Braddock.—BS 20 
—TMD 

Burglar Alarm, The.—Birch Arnold.—CH 

(Mrs. Fillisy’s Burglar Alarm— si. abr.) —WR 20 
Burglar Alarm, The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Burglar Bill.—F. Anstey.—CD—HBR 
Burglar's Grievances, The.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
Burgomaster Gull, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Burgomaster’s Death, The.—T: F. Wilford.—DES 
Burgoyne’s Surrender.—G: W. Curtis.—NC—PFP 


55 





Burial 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Burial Hymn.—H: H. Milman.—FEP—VA 

(Hymn.)—HBP 

Burial March of Dundee, The. (In Lays of the Scot¬ 
tish Cavaliers.)—W: E. Aytoun.—CR {si. abr.) 
—FEP 

{Sel.)— EDY—OM 

(Killiecrankie— si. abr.) —CEL—EHT {abr.) 

Burial of an Infant, The.—H: Vaughan.—WEP 2 
Burial of Arnold, The.—-N. P. Willis. See Burial of 
the Champion of his Class at Yale College. 

Burial of Beranger, The.—Alfred Watts.—EDY 
Burial of John Brown, The.—Wendell Phillips.—OS 2 
Burial of King Cormac, The.— Sir S: Ferguson.—TIP 
Burial of Latam 4 , The.—J: R. Thompson.—AWB 
Burial of Lincoln.—R: H: Stoddard. See Abraham 
Lincoln [. A Horatian Ode]. 

Burial of Little Nell.—C - Dickens. See Old Curiosity 
Shop, The. 

Burial of Love, The.—W: C. Bryant.—HBP 
Burial of Moses [, The].—Cecil F. (Humphrey) Alex¬ 
ander.— BNL —CR — CS 3—EPs—FEP—FR 
—GN—HP—LLC—SA—SO {abr.)— WCJ.I 2 
{SI. abr.) —BS 1—OM 

(Burial of the Deliverer, The— sel.) —BLP 
Burial of Robert Browning, The.—Michael Field.—VA 
Burial of Sir John Moore [, The].— C: Wolfe.— BLP — 
BNL—BPB—BSP—CS 8—EDY—EHT—FEP 
—FP—GN—GP—HB—HBP— LC — LLC — 
MR—OS 2—PC—SAF, (abr.)—SE—SS—TIP 
—WCLG 1 

(After Corunna.)—LH 

(Burial of Sir John Moore after Corunna, The.)— 
OB 

(Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna, The.)—BFV 
—CEI/—EPs—PGT 1- PHS—PSR—WEP 4 
—YBF 

(“Slowly and sadly we laid him down”— br. sel.) 
—CS 1 

Burial of Sir John Moore after [or at] Corrunna, The.— 
C: Wolfe. See foregoing. 

Burial of the Cat, The.—R. K. Hutchinson.—LPS— 
PP 

Burial of the Champion of his Class, at Yale College.— 
Nathaniel P. Willis.—WRD 

(Burial of Arnold, The.)—HNS 
Burial of the Dane, The.—H: H. Brownell.—AA—CS 8 
—FEP 

Burial of the Dead.—J: Keble.—OB 
Burial of the Deliverer, The.—Cecil F. (Humphrey) 
Alexander. See Burial of Moses, The. 

Burial of the Duke of Wellington—Alfred Tennyson.— 
See Ode on the Death of the Duke of Welling¬ 
ton. 

Burial of the Linnet, The.—Juliana H. Ewing.—BVC 
—PoR 

Burial of the Minnisink.—H: W. Longfellow.—PC— 
PHS 

Burial of the Old Flag, The.—Mary A. Barr.—BS 15 
Burial of the Poet, The.—H • W. Longfellow.—HBP 
Burial Place, The, Sel. fr. (The Yew.)—W: C. Bryant. 
—AD 

Burial-march. See Burial March. 

Buried Gold.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Buried Life, The.—Matthew Arnold.—VA 
Buried To-day.—Dinah M. Craik.—BNL- IIDL 
Burlesque Challenge to America, A.—Mark Lemon.— 
BLP 

Burlesque Lecture on “Sound.”—Anon.—DSS 
Burlesque of the Following Lines of Lopez deVega. 
(C.) —S_: Johnson. 

(On some Lines of Lopez de Vega.)—HPE 
Burlesque on Fan Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Burlesque Oration on Matrimony.—Anon.—DE 
Burlesque Temperance Speech. — Gus Williams. — 
DSS {si. abr.) 

(Temperance Speech.)—BDD 
"Burn and destroy the idols of party you have wor¬ 
shiped - .”—Dan’l Dougherty.—GG 
Burning Babe, The.—Rob’t Southwell.—ELP—EPs— 
OB—WEP 1—YBF 

Burning of Chicago, The.—Will M. Carleton.—SA 
Burning of Chicago, The. {Sel. fr. Fort Dearborn.)— 
B:F. Taylor—PR 

Burning of Moscow, The.—Joel T. Headley. See Napo¬ 
leon and his Marshals. 

Burning of the Lexington.—J: Loffland.—CS 14—NPS 
—YP 

Burning Prairie, The.—Alice Cary.—BS 4—CS 3— 
NPS—YP 

Burning Ship, The.—Anon.—BS 3—NPS—SA—YP 
Burning Ship, The. {Fr. Onnalinda.)—J. H. McNaugh- 
ton.—DF.S 


Burns.—Ebenezer Elliott.—BNL 

(Poet’s Eoitaph, A.)—EDY—FEP—HBP—VA— 
WEP 4 {si. abr.) 

Burns. (To a Rose Brought from near Alloway Kirk, 
in Ayrshire.)—Fitz-Greene Halleck.—AA— 
BNL—FEP 

Burns. (On Receiving a Sprig of Heather in Blossom.) 

J: G. Whittier.—BNL—HBP 
Burnt Corkers.—Harry S. Sargent.—DE 
Burnt Lands.—C: G. D. Roberts.—VA 
Burnt Out.—Anon.—FLS 
Burnt Ships.—Helen H. Jackson.—-BIL 
Burr and Blennerhassett.—W: Wirt.—CS 16—LLC— 

PS—ss 

Burst of Indignation, A.—Anon.—MCS 

Burton. {Br. sel. fr. On the Death of Richard Burton.) 

—Algernon C. Swinburne.—EDY 
Burton’s Curtains.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 33 
Bush aboon Traquair, The.—J. C. Shairp.—A VP 
Bush Study, k la Watteau.—Arthur P. Martin.—WR 9 
“Business” in Mississippi.—Irwin Russell.—SDR 
Business Man’s Political Obligations, A.—Anon.—CP 
Business Side of Prohibition, The.—H: W. Grady. See 
Prohibition in Atlanta. 

Bust of Dante.—T: W. Parsons.—FP 

(On a Bust of Dante.)—AA—ASL—BNL—FEP— 
HBP— PYO {abr .)—TAV 
Buster, The.—Sam W. Foss.—CS 34 
Busy.—Edmund J. Burk.—BS 23—CS 34 
Busy and Happy. (Fr. Bird Talk.)—Adeline D. T. 

Whitney—YBT 
Busy Bee, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Busy Bee.—Anon.—TT 

Busy Bee, The. (Song XX.)—Isaac Watts.—NV—PC 
—PS 

Busy Children at the Farm. (Concert rec.) —Anon. 
—HSS 2 (abr.) 

(Little Helpers.)—COS—PP 
(Diff. vers. — mon. — abr .)—DST 
"Busy, curious, thirsty fly.”—W: Oldys.—FEP 
(Fly, The.)—CEL—HBP 
(On a Fly Drinking out of his Cup.)—OB 
(To a Fly.)—LC 

Busy Little Housekeeper, The.—Alice L. Richards.— 
SL 

Busy Lives.—Anon.—LLC 
Busy Mule, The.—Anon.—TFS 
But—.—Belle Hunt.—WR 7 

“But ahl ’twas hard to have him go.”—Celia E. Gardi¬ 
ner—BIL—FT A 

“But all through life I see a cross.”—Olrig Grange.— 
GG 

"But in his eyes a mist unwonted rises.”—Fs. Bret 
Harte.—HP 

But Little Folks.—Marie E. Kunkler.—TT (sel.) 

(We are but Little Folks, you see.)—KC 
"But man is higher than his dwelling-place.”—Jean 
Paul.—AE 

But Once.—Theodore Winthrop.—AA 
But Once a Year.—Clara J. Denton.-—WLO 
But One Flag for our Country.—C. L. Holstein.— 
FD 2 

“But, sirrah, henceforth,” etc.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I. 

"But the higher departments of moral and religious 
thought.”—H: C. Minton.—GG 
But the Villain Still Pursued Her.—Anon.—DE 
“But then the thrushes sang.”—Eliz. B. Browning. 
See Aurora Leigh. 

“But there is a limit, both to the necessity and to the 
capacity of this power of invention.”—H: C. 
Minton.—GG 

"But three feet good of that old wood.”—Martin F. 
Tupper.—HP 

“But time would fail to attempt to catalogue the 
grand women.”—Mary A. Livermore.—GG 
Butcher-bird, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Butcher’s Boy and the Baker’s Girl, The.—Anon.— 
GH 

Buttercup, A.—K. C.—AD 

Buttercup, Poppy, Forget-me-not.—Eugene Field.— 
EF—WR 17—WTD 

Buttercups. (In Flower Songs.)—Mary G. Crocker.— 
CPL 

Buttercups and Daisies.—Mary Howitt.—HSS 1— 
WCL (abr.) 

Butterflies, The.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Butterflv The.—Anon.—CPI, 

Butterfly, The.—Anon.—NV 
Butterfly, The.—Alice A. (S.) James.—A A 
Butterfly, The.—Jos. Skipsey.—VA 
Butterfly and the Bee, The.—Anon.—WR 17 


56 




TITLE INDEX 


California 


Butterfly and the Snail, The.—J: Gay.—CGd 
Butterfly Drill.—Marguerite W. Morton.—ID 
Butterfly on Baby’s Grave, A.—Anon.—TFS 
Butterfly’s Ball, The.—T: Roseoe (or Mrs. H: Roscoe). 
—BVC—FTR—WR 16 
(Vers. si. diff.) 

Butterfly’s Lesson, The.—Anon.—NV 
Butterfly’s Revenge, The.—W: R. Alger.—POS 
Butter wick’s Weakness.—Anon.—DCR 
Button Off, A. (C. — in Life in Danbury.)—Jas. M. 
Bailey. 

(How a Married Man Sews on a Button.)—BS 4— 
CRR 

(Sewing on a Button.)—CS 14—PS 
Buy a Broom.—Anon.—KNS 
Buy my Dolls.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
“Buy your Cherries.”—M. F. Rowe.—WR 14 
Buying a Cow.—Anon.—CS 19 

Buying a Feller. (Sel. fr. Sweet Cicely, Ch. XIII.)— 
Marietta Holley.—WR 15 
(For a’ that; or. Selling a Feller— abr.) —BS 20 
Buying a Sewing Machine.—Anon.—FND 
Buying and Shopping.—Anon.—WR 12 
Buying Gape-seed.—G. W. Bungay (or J: B. Gough).— 
PS 

(Gape-seed.)—CS 5—-MHR 

Buz [or Buzz], Quoth the Blue Fly. (Br. sel. fr. The 
Masque of Oberon.) — BenJonson.— ELP — 
NA 

Buzby’s Coat.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 35 
Buzfuz versus Pickwick.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers T'he 

"Buzz!” Quoth the Blue Fly.—Ben Jonson. See 
Buz, Quothe the Blue Fly. 

Buzzard, The.—J: Dryden. See Hind and the Panther, 
The. 

Buzzard Point.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 28—PS 
By and By. (Concert rec.) —Anon.—DLF 
By and By.—Anon.—HP 
By and By.—Grace D. Boylan.—BS 25 
By and By. See also By-and-by. 

By Cool Siloam. (First Sunday after Ephipany— C.) 
—Reginald Heber.—LLC 
(By Cool Siloam’s Shady Rill— sel.) —PoR 
(Hymn for First Sunday after Epiphany.)—FEP 
(Siloam’s Shady Rill—a6r.)—TFS 
By Memory Inspired.—-Anon.—TIP 
By Ned!—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
By Order of the King, Sel. fr. (King and People— sel. 

fr. Bk. I., Pt. I., Ch. V.)—Victor Hugo.—OS 2 
By Solitary Fires.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora 
Leigh. 

By Special Request.—Frank Castles.—CS 27—DCR 
By Summer Woods. (Hours at Home.) —AD 
By Telephone.—Anon.—CR 

By that Lake, whose Gloomy Shore.—T: Moore.— 
PEB 4—WEP 4 

By the Alma.—Jas. Dawson.—BS 22 
(After the Battle.)—PFP 

By the Alma River.—Dinah M. M. Craik.—BNL— 
CS 10 

By the Autumn Sea.—Paul H. Hayne.—FEP 
By the Cross of Monterey.—R: Edward White.—CS 29 
By the Firelight.—Isidore G. Ascher.—TCV 
By the Fireside.—Rob’t Browning.—SN 
By the Fireside.—Lucy Larcom.—BNL 
By the Gaspereau.—Burton W. Lockhart.—TCV 
By the Margin of the Great Deep.—A. E.—OB 
By the Pacific.—Herbert Bashford.—AA 
By the Pacific Ocean.—Joaquin Miller.—AA 
By the Roadside—Louise L. Loomis.—CG 2 
By the St. John.—Marg. G. Currie.—TCV 
By the SalpOri6re.—T: Ashe.—VA 
By the Sea.—Anon.—HP 
By the Sea.—Mary Clemmer.—BNL 
By the Sea—Philip H. Welsh.—CS 23—CS 34 
By the Sea. (Miscellaneous Sonnets, Pt. I., 30.)—W: 
Wordsworth.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Evening on Calais Beach.)—OB 
(It is a Beauteous Evening, Calm and Free.)—FEP 
—MBL 

(On the Beach at Calais.)—WEP 4 
By the Shore.—Anon.—SR 9 

By the Shore of the River.—Christopher P. Cranch.— 
CS 7 

By the Swinging Seas. (Echoes, XXVII.)—W: E. 

Henley.—OH 
By-and-by.—Anon.—SM 
By-and-by.—Anon.—SSS 
By-and-by. See also By and By. 

ByloLand. (New York Dispatch.) —BS 19 
Byron.—Craven I/. Betts.—EDY 


Byron.— Rob’t Pollok. See Course of Time, The. 
Byron.—W: Watson. See following. 

Byron the Voluptuary.—W: Watson.—VA 
(Byron.)—YBF 

Byron’s Grave.—Roden Noel.—AVP 
Byron’s Last Poem.—Lord Byron.—CEL 
(Hail and Farewell.)—LH 
(On my Thirty-seventh Birthday.)—EDY 
(On this Day I Complete my Thirty-sixth Year— C.) 
FEP—WEP 4 


c 


Ca’ the Yowes.—-Isabel Pagan. See following. 

Ca’ the Yowes to the Knowes.—Rob’t Burns.—BNL— 
—HBP—YBF 
(Hark! the Mavis.)—OB 

(Ca’ the Yowes, etc.— diff. vers. — claimed also by 
Isabel [or Isobel] Pagan.)—OB 
(Ca’ the Yowes.)—WEP 3 
Cabin Love-song.—J. A. Macon.—CD 
Cabin Philosophy.—Anon.—WR 21 
Cabman’s Story, The.—Re. Henry.—CS 29 
Cacoethes Scribendi.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA 
Cadences.—J: Payne.—VA 

Cadenus and Vanessa, Sel. fr. —Jonathan Swift.— 
WEP 3 

Cadet Grey, Sel. fr. (“Not yet, O friend, not yet”— 
song fr. Can. II.,St. 13.)—Fs. Bret Harte.—GG 
Cadmus and Harmonia.—Matthew Arnold. See 
Empedocles on Etna. 

Cadwalader Fry and his Theory.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers. 
—CS32 

Caelica, Sels. fr. —-Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. 

Cseiica and Philocell.—EP 

Elizabetha Regina. (Sonnet LXXXII.)—WEP 1 
Seed-time and Harvest.—WEP 1 
Sonnet: “Sion lies waste, and Thy Jerusalem. ’ 
(Sonnet CX.)—WEP 1 

Cselica and Philocell.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. 
See Caelica. 

Caesar. Sel. fr. —T: C. Irwin.—TIP 
Caesar.—Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 

Caesar Passing the Rubicon.—Jas. S. Knowles.—CS 4 
—OM 

(Caesar’s Passage of the Rubicon.)—SS 
(Crossing of the Rubicon, The.—)OS 2 
(Crossing the Rubicon.)—LLC 
(Passing of the Rubicon, The.)—KNE—PS (si. diff. 
vers.) —SE 

Caesar Rodney’s Ride.—Elbridge S. Brooks.—TMD 
(Rodney’s Ride.)— CS 29 — NPS — PRR — WR 6 
YP 

Caesar’s Death Justified.—Caius Cassius.—BLP 
Caesar’s Message to Cato.—-Jos. Addison. See Cato. 
Caesar’s Passage of the Rubicon.—Jas. S. Knowles. 

See Caesar Passing the Rubicon. 

Caged.—Caroline A. Mason.—TAS 
Caged Bird, A.—Sarah Orne Jewett.—SN 
Cailleach Bein-y-Vreich.—J: C. Shairp.—VA 
Cain, Ancient and Modern.—Ellen Murray.—CS 4 
Caius Gracchus, Sel. fr. —Jas. S. Knowles. See below. 
Caius Gracchus, Cited before the Censors, Appeals 
to the People. (Sel. fr. Caius Gracchus, Act 
II., Sc. 3.)—Jas. S. Knowles.—-SS 
Caius Marius to the Romans on the Objections to 
Making him General. — Sallust. See Jugur- 
thine War, The. 

Cake Walk, The.—Anon.—GH 
Cakes and Pies.—Emeroy Hayward.—WR 17 
Calais Sands.—Matthew Arnold.—BIL 
Calantha’s Dirge.—J: W. Ford. See Broken Heart, The. 
Caldwell of Springfield. — Fs. Bret Harte. — BeR — 
KNE (si. abr.) —MYF—-PRR 
Caleb Krinkle, Sel. fr. (How Randa Went over the 
River.)—C: C. Coffin.—CS 23—DS 
Caleb West, Master Diver, Sel. fr. (Equinoctial 
Storm, The—Ch. XIX., abr.) — Fs. Hopkinson 
Smith.—NP 

Calendar, The.—Anon.—OS 1 

(Days of the Month.— diff. vers.) —BVC 
Calf Path, The.—Anon.—BS 25 

Calf’s Heart. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery-book.)— 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Calgacus [or Galgacus] to the Caledonians. (Fr. Life of 
Cnseus Julius Agricola— scl. fr. Calgacus’ Ad¬ 
dress to the Britons.)—Tacitus.—PS—SS 
Caliber Fifty-four.—Will Carleton.—SR 4 
California.—T: L. Harris.—A A 


57 




California 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


California Flea, The.—Fred E. Brooks.—CS 30 
California’s Giant Trees.—Anon.—AD 
Caliph and Satan, The. ( Versified fr. Tholuck’s Trans¬ 
lation out of the Persian.)—Jas. F. Clarke. 
—BNL 

Caliph’s Draught, The.—Sir Edwin Arnold.—VA 
Caliph’s Encampment, The.—T ■ Moore. See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Call, The.—Anon.—OB 

Call, The.—G: Darley .—See Sylvia; or. The May 
Queen. 

Call, The.—G: Herbert.—HBP 
Call of Duty, The.—R. C. Robbins.—CG 2 
“Call me not dead, when I, indeed, have gone.” 
(.Scribner’s.) —GG 

Call of the Bugles, The.—R: Hovey.—AA 
Call on Sir Walter Raleigh, A.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—-AA 
Call to Arms, The —Patrick Henry. See Speech in the 
Virginia Convention 

Call to the Colors, The.—A. Guiterman.—PAPm 
Called Back.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
Caller Herrin’. (Sel.) —Carolina, Lady Nairn.—WR 21 
Caller Water, Sel. fr. —Rob’t Fergusson.—WEP 3 
Callicles beneath Etna.—Matthew Arnold. See Em¬ 
pedocles on Etna. 

Callicles’ Song.—Matthew Arnold. See Empedocles on 
Etna. 

Callicles’ Song of Apollo.—Matthew Arnold. See 
Empedocles on Etna. 

Callimachus, Sel. fr .—W: Cory-Juhnson.—A VP 
(Heracleitus.)—OB—VA 
Calling, The.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 

Calling a Bov in the Morning. (In Life in Danbury.) 
—Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 10—KNE—SO 
(Awaking a Boy— C.) —M YF 
Calling the Angels In.—Anon.—BS 20—SR 4 
Calling the Roll.—Nathaniel G. Shepherd.—HSS 1 
(Roll-call.) — AA — AWB — CS 4 — CSS — HR — 
HBP —HP —KNE — LI.C —PAPm —PPSr 
— PRR 

Calling the Violet.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Calling them Up.—G: Cooper.—AD 
"Calls.”—Anon.—BS 16—CS 35 
Calm.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh 
Calm and Storm on Lake Leman.—Lord Byron. Nee 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Calm on the Ear of Night.—E. R. Sears.—LLC (abr.) 
(Christmas Hymn.— abr.) —BS 3 
(Christmas Song.)—HS—OS 3 
Calmest of her Sex, The.—Rob’t H. Newell.—WR 5 
Calpurnia.—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.—WR 5 
Calumny.—Frances S. Osgood.—AA—HP (abr.) 
Calvary.—W: D. Howells.—TAS 

Cambyses and the Macrobian Bow.—Paul H. Hayne. 
CS 18 

Camel’s Nose, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—OS 1— 
PoR 

Cameronian’s Dream, The.—Jas. Hyslop.—HBP 

Camilla.—C; A. Keeler.—A A 

Camp, The.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 

Camp at Night, The.-—Homer. See Iliad. The. 
Campaign, The. Sels. fr. —Jos. Addison. 

Campaign, The. (Hr. gel .)—BNL 
Marlborough at Blenheim.—WEP 3 
Campaspe. —J: Lyly. See Alexander and Campaspe 
Camp-bell. (Charades and Enigmas, XXX. — C.) 
Winthrop M. Praed.—BNI. 

(Charade.)—FEP—C.N—H BP—PC 
(Charade on the Name of Campbell, the Poet.)—SS 
Camp-fire, The.-—W. H. Clemons—CG 3 
Camping and Campers.—W; H. H. Murray. See 
Cones for the Camp Fire. 

Can the Country Sustain the Expense of the War and 
Pay the Debt which it will Involve, Sel. fr. 
(Elements of National Wealth, The.)—Jas. G. 
Blaine.— NC—PFP 
Can this be True?—Anon.—DCR 
Can you Count the Stars?—Anon.—NV 
Cana.—Jas. F. Clarke.—BNL—TAS 
Canada.—Anon.—BS 13 
Canada.—C: G. D. Roberts.—-VA 
Canada not Last.—W: D. Lighthall.—BNL 
Canada to Columbia.—Lvman C. Smith.—TCV 
Canada to England.—Arthur J. Stringer.—TCV 
Canadian Boat Song, A.—T: Moore.—BFV—BNL— 
CGd—EPs—FEP—FP—HBP—LC—OS 2 
Canadian Folk-song. A.—V/. W. Campbell.—VA 
Canadian Hunter’s Song.—Susanna S. Moodie.—VA 
Canadian Streams.—C: G. Roberts.—TCV 
Canadians on the Nile, The.—W W. Smith.—TCV 
Canal-boat, The. (SI. nbr.) —Harriet B. Stowe.—MMR 
Canary-. The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 


Canary at the Farm, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—WR 2 
Canary’s Story-, The.—E. V. S.—NV 
Candida.—B. A. Gould, Jr.—CG l 
Candidate, The.—Anon.—CS 36 

Candidate’s Creed, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow 
Papers Ths. 

Candidate’s Letter, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Big¬ 
low Papers, The. 

Candle-light’s Lament, The. (Punch Bowl .)—CG 3 
Candlemas. (In Two Promises.)—Anon.—BVC 
Candlemas.—Alice Brown.—AA 

Candlemas.— Rob’t' Herrick. See Ceremonies for 
Candlemasse Eve. 

Candlemas Eve.—Rob’t Herrick. See Ceremonies for 
Candlemasse Eve. 

Candor—H C. Bunner.—AWH—CH—CS 35—DR— 
HBR—TAV—THP 
Candor.—T: Otway.—KNE 

Cane-bottomed Chair, The. (C.) —W: M. Thackeray.— 
BS 6 —CS 17—DDR—TMR 
(Bachelor’s Cane-bottomed Chair, The.)—HPE 
Cannibal and the Skeleton, The.—Hector Fezandi^.— 
MN 

Cannon Song.—Harry T. Peck.—PPh 

Canoe, The.—Isabella V. Crawford.—VA 

Canoe Song.—E. Frere Champney.—CG 2 

Canst Thou Count the Stars?—Anon.—YBT 

‘‘Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased.”—W; 

Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 

Canteen, The.—Miles O’Reilly.—CS 19 
Canterbury- Pilgrims, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See 
following. 

Canterbury Tales, The, Sels. fr. —Geoffrey Chaucer. 
Prologue; 

Canterbury Pilgrims, The. (Cond.) —BNL 
Knight, The. (Sel.) —OS 3 

Portraits from the Canterbury Tales: The Monk 
and the Friar. (Sel.) —ESs 
Prologue [to the Canterbury Tales], The. — 
BNL (br. sels.)— PHS (sel.) —WEP 1 (abr.) 
Clerkes Tale, The. 

( Griselda— abr.) —EPs 

(Clerkes Tale, The— sel.) —WEP 1 
Frankeleynes Tale, The. (Abr.) —WEP 1 
Knightes Tale, The. 

(Destiny— br. sel.) —EPs 
(Knightes Tale, The— sel.) —WEP 1 
(Morning in May— br. sel.) —BNL 
(Palamon and Arcite — tr. by Dryden.) — 
WEP 2 (sel. fr. Bk. III.) —WR 11 (sel. fr. 
Bk. I.) 

Nunnes Preestes Tale, The. 

(Fox and Cock— br. sel.) —EPs 
Phisiciens Tale, The. 

(Virginia— br. sel.) —EPs 
Tale of the Man of Lawe, The.—WEP 1 (sel.) 
(Emperor’s Daughter Stands Alone, An— sel.) — 
PYO 

Wife’s Tale, The. 

(Gentility— br. sel.) —EPs 

Canuleius against Patrician Arrogance. — Livy. See 
History of Rome. 

Canute the Dane.—Michael Field. See following. 
Canute the Great, Sel. fr. —Michael Field.—VA 
(Canute the Dane— sel. fr. above.) —EHT 
Canvassing under Disadvantages.—C: B. Lewis.—CS 14 
Caoch, the Piper.—J. Keegan.—CS 4—PEB 4 
Cape Cod, Sel. fr (Highland Light, The.)—H: D. 
Thoreau.—APr 

Cape Cod Folks, Sel. fr. (Grandma Keeler Gets 
Grandpa Keeler Ready for Sunday School.)— 
Sarah P. McL. Greene.—NP 
Cape-cottage at Sunset.—W: B. Glazier.—BNL (abr.) 
—HBP 

Capers et Caper.—Eugene F. Ware.—THP 
Capital Punishment.—Myra Townsend.—CS 1 
Cap’n Peleg Bunker Describes a Game of Base Ball.— 
E: F. Underhill.—CS 32 

Capping Quotations. (Literary Recreations.)—Eliz 
Lloyd.—BS 13 
Caprice.—Anon.—CPL 
Caprice.—W: D. Howells.—OH 
Capriciousness.—F. T. Cooper.—CG 1 
Captain, The.—J: G. C. Brainard.—TAV 
Captain, The, Sel. fr. (Away, Delights.)—J: Fletcher 
—OB 

Captain, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—SO 
Captain Car; or, Edom o’ Gordon. (In Percy’s Re- 
liques.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
(Adam o’ Gordon— diff. vers. — abr.) —BFV 
(Edom o’ Gordon— C. — diff. vers.) —OB 
(SI. abr.)— BB—WEP 1 


58 




TITLE INDEX 


Cassamen 


Captain General, The.—Anon. - PS 
Captain Gold and French Janet.—A. M. F. (Robinson) 
Darmesteter.—PEB 4 

Captain Hale and Major Andr£.—Chauncey M. Depew. 
See Andre and Hale. 

Capt. Hurricane Jones on the Miracles.—S: L. Clemens. 
—DFY 

Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, Sel. fr. (Di’s Mit¬ 
ten.)—W: Clyde Fitch—CG 1 
Captain Joe.—F. Hopkinson Smith.—CS 37 
Captain Kempthorn. (Play — ad. fr. John Endicott.)— 
H: W. Longfellow— NDP 
Captain Lean.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Captain Molly at Monmouth.—W: Collins.—PRR— 
WR 10 

(Irish Molly.)—SR 9 

(Molly Maguire at Monmouth.)—PAP 
Captain (of Militia) Sir Dilberry Diddle.—Anon.— 
OES 

Captain Reece. (C.) —W: S. Gilbert.—BNL—FEP— 
GN—THP 

(Captain Reece of the Mantlepiece.)—C'S 19 
Captain Reece of the Mantlepiece.—W: S. Gilbert. See 
foregoing. 

Captain Stood on the Carronade, The.—Frd’k Mar- 
rvat—BVC 

(Old Navy, The.)—I.H 
Captain Sword.—Leigh Hunt.—AVP—GN 
Captain W^rd and the Rainbow.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Captain’s Daughter. The.—Jas. T. Fields.—CSS— 
DJS (si. abr.) —PPSr—WCL 

(Ballad of the Tempest— C.) —CS 19—FEP—HBP 
—LC 

(Isn’t God upon the Ocean, etc.— abr.) —TFS 

(Tempest, The.)—BNL—FP—GP—T A V—WCLG 1 

(On the Ocean— si. abr.) —YBT 
Captain’s Feather, The.—S: M. Peck.—AA 
Captain’s Ladv, The.—Rob’t Burns.—LC 
Captain’s Well, The.—J : G. Whittier—BS 18 
Captive, The.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 
Captive Bird, The.—Anon.—LI.C 
Captive Humming-bird. The.—Joel T. Hart.—HP 
Captivity, The, Sets. fr. —Oliver Goldsmith. 

“Good man suffers but to gain, A.” (Air fr. Act 
I., Sc. 1.)—HDL 

Wretch Condemned with Life to Part, The.— (Br. 
sel. fr. Act II.)—FEP 

Capture of Andr* 5 , The.—Chauncey M. Depew. See 
Capture of Major Andrt*, The. 

Capture of Lookout Mountain, The. (Sel.) —B: F. 
Taylor.—NC 

Capture of Major Andrri, The.—Chauncey M. Depew.— 
WR 22 

(Capture of Andre. The— abr.) —NC 
Capture of Quebec, The.—Jas. D. McCabe.—PRR 
Capture of Quebec, The.—W: Warburton.—WR 10 
Capture of the Guerriere by the Constitution, The.— 
Philip Freneau.—EDY 

Capture of the Whale.—Jas. F. Cooper. See Pilot, 
The. 

Capture of Ticonderoga, The.—Ethan Allen.—WR 10 
Captured Bumble-bee, The.—Nellie Wood.—WR 17 
Caractacus.—'Bernard Barton.—BNL 
Caractacus.—A. J. H. Duganne.—CS 32 
Caradoc. the Bard of the Cymrians.—Sir E Bulwer- 
Lytton.— SS 

(Address of Caradoc the Bard.)—BLP 
Caravans.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
Cardamon.—H: A. Beers.—FEP 

Carcasonne.—Gustave Nadaud ( tr. by Fs. F. Browne). 
HBR 

(Tr. by. M. E. W. Sherwood.)—CR—MR—-MRS 

(Tr. by J. R. Thompson.)—BFV—BS 17—OS 3— 
SM 

Card Houses. (New York Graphic.) —HP 
Cardinal Bird, The.—W: D. Gallagher.—A A SN 
Cardinal Manning.—Aubrey T: DcVere.—\A 
Cardinal Manning. (London Punch.) —EDY 
Cardinal Wolsey.—W - Shakesoeare. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Cardinal Wolsey, on Being Cast OR by King Henry 
VIII.—W Shakespeare. See King Henry 

VIII. 

Cardinal Wolsey's Soliloquy.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry VIII. 

Cardinal’s Godson, The—Mrs Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KH 

Cardinal’s Soliloquy.—E- Bulwer-Lytton. See Riche¬ 
lieu; or The Conspiracy. 

Cards and Kisses.—J: Lyly. See Alexander and Cam- 
paspe. 

Care.—Virginia W. Cloud.—A A 


Care of God, The.—Anon.—BS 7—CS 18 
Care-charmer Sleep.—S; Daniel. See Sonnets to Delia. 
“Care-charmer Sleep, son of the sable Night.”—S. 

Daniel. See Sonnets to Delia. 

Care-charming Sleep.—J: Fletcher. See Valentinian. 
Career of Gordon, The.—Frd’k J. Swift.—NC 
Careless Childhood. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Careless Content.—J: Byrom.—FEP—WEP 3 
Careless Doll, A.—Anon.—DCP 

“Carest Thou not? O Thou that giveth life.”—Anon. 
—GG 

Carey, of Carson.—C: G. Leland.—THP 
Carillon. (Fr. The Belfry of Bruges.)—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—BNL 
Carl.—Anon.—BS 8 
(For Love.)—CS 12 

Carl Pretzel’s Lecture on Mari.—Anon.—DRR 
Carl Pretzel’s Ride.—Carl Pretzel.—FAS 
Carl Springel.—Anon.—FR 

Carlo and the Freezer.—T. DeWitt Talmage.—WR 5 
Carl’s Menagerie. (The Nursery.) —HSS 2 
Carlyle.—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 
Carlyle and Emerson.—Montgomery Schuyler.—AA 
Carman’s Account of a Lawsuit, A.—Sir David Lynd- 
say.—GP 

Carmelita.—Julia M. Dunn.—WR 15 
Carmen Bellicosum.—Guy H. McMaster.—AA—AWB 
— BNL — FEP — GN — GP — HB — HBP— 
LC—OS 2 

(Old Continentals, The.)—BS 13—PAP—PAPm— 
SE 

(Song of the War.)—KNE 

Carnival of Sports, A . (Ent.) —Verend Minster.—EE 
Carol: "I Sing of a Maiden.”—Anon.—OB 
Carol: “We bring the holly,” etc. (W. music.) — 
Anon.—HE 

Carol, A: Standard of the Cross.—Harriet Brewer.— 
CG 1 

Carolan and Bridget Cruise.—S: Lover.—PEB 4 
Carolina.—R. W. Page.—CG 3 
Carolina.—H: Timrod.—ASL 

Carolina and Mecklenburg.—Jas. A. Delke.—BLP 
Caroline, Sel. fr. (Pt. II.—To the Evening Star.)—T: 
Campbell.—PGT 1 

Carpe Diem.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Carpe Diem.—Theophile Marzials.—VA 
Carpe Diem.—W: Shakespeare. See Twelfth Night. 
Carpe Diem. (In The House of a Hundred Lights.) 
—F: R. Torrence .—AA 

Carpenter and his Apprentice, The.—Anon.—SED 
Carriage and Couple, The.—Anon.—MYF 
(Be Content.)—CSS (abr.) —PPSr 
(True Source of Contentment.)—CS 9 
Carrie’s Birthday Cake.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Carronade, The.—Victor Hugo. See Ninety-three. 
Carrying the Clothes to the Wash. (Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

Carthage in Peril.—Livy. See History of Rome. 
Carthon, Sel. fr. (Address to the Sun.)—Jas. McPher¬ 
son.—CS 22 

(Ossian’s Address to the Sun.)—HSS 2—PTS 
Cartwheels.—Madge Elliot.—CS 34 
Carven Shores, The.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Carving a Name.—Horatio Alger.-—CSS—PPSr 
Casa Guidi Windows, Sels. fr. —Eliz. B. Browning. 

Casa Guidi Windows, Sels. fr. —W’EP 4 
Death of Savonarola.—EDY 
Juliet of Nations.—VA 
Sursum Corda.—VA 

Casa Wappy.—D: M. Moir.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Casabianca.—Felicia D. Hemans.—BNL—CGd (abr.) — 
EDY — FEP — HB — HBP — LH — OS 1 — 
PC—SS—WEP 4 
Casa’s Dirge.—D: M. Moir.—VA 
Case Altered, The.—Anon.—SCS 
Case of Go Hang.—Anon.—TMR 
Case of Indigestion, A.—Anon.—PS 
Case of Pedigree, A.—Anon.—CS 28 
Case of Spoons and Brother Tom, A.—Anon.—WR 24 
Case of Young Bangs, The.—C: H. Clark.—BeR 
Casey at the Bat.—Phineas Thayer [at. also to Jos. Q. 
Murphv].—THP—WR 14 
(Sel.) —CDV—CS 35—DSS—GH—PS 
(Versions vary si.) 

Casey’s Little Boy.—Nixon Waterman.—WR 21 
“Cash.”—Anon.—GH—PS 
Cashel of Munster.—Sir S: Ferguson.—OB 
Casket Scene, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant 
of Venice, The. 

Casquettes, The, Sel. fr. —Algernon C. Swinburne.— 
AVP 

Cassamen and Dowsabel.—Michael Drayton.—EP 




Cassandra 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Cassandra Brown.—Anon.—SR 5 

Cassio’s Lost Reputation.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Othello, the Moor of Venice. 

Cassius.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius Caesar. 

Cassius against Caesar.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius 
Caesar. 

Cassius’ Complaint of Caesar.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Julius Caesar. 

Cassius Instigating Brutus against Caesar.—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Julius Caesar. 

Cassius to Brutus.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius 
C86S8>r 

Cassius’ Whistle.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.-—CS 9 
Cassy.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 
Cast thy Bread upon the Waters.—Bernard Barton. 
—HDL 

Castara, Sels. fr. —W: Habington. 

Against them who Lay Unchastity to the Sex of 
Women. (Fr. Pt. II.)—WEP 2 
Cogitabo pro Peccato Meo. (Fr. Pt. III.)—ELP 
Description of Castara, The. (C.— fr. Pt. II.)— 
OEL—WEP 2 
(Castara.)—FEP—HBP 

Nox Nocti Indicat Scientiam. (Fr. Pt. III.)— 
ELP—OB—PGT 1 —WEP 2 
To Castara in a Trance. (Fr. Pt. II.)—WEP 2 
To Castara. Of True Delight. (Fr. Pt. II.)— 
WEP 2 

To Castara. The Reward of Innocent Love. (C.— 
fr. Pt. II.)—ELP 

(Reward of Innocent Love, The— si. abr.) —ES 
(“ We saw and woo’d each other’s eyes”— si. abr.) 
—YBF 

To Castara, upon the Death of a Lady. ( Sel. fr. 
Pt. II.)—WEP 2 

To Cupid, upon a Dimple in Castara’s Cheek. (Fr. 
Pt. I.)—ES—WEP 2 

To Roses in the Bosom of Castara. (Fr. Pt. I.)— 
ES—OB—WEP 2 

To the Moment Last Past. (Fr. Pt. IT.)—ELP 
Castaway, The.—W: Cowper.—PGT 2—WEP 3 
Castell Gloom.—Carolina, Lady Nairn.—FEP 
Casting Bread upon the Waters.—Mrs. E. J. Good- 
fellow.—SSE 

Castle by the Sea, The.—Ludwig Uhland (tr. by H- W. 

Longfellow).—HBP—PHS 
Castle in the Air, The—-T: Paine.—BNL 
Castle in the Air, The, Br. sel. fr. — R: H. Stoddard.— 
BIL 

Castle of Indolence, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. Thomson. 

Address to the Indolent.— (Sel. fr. Canto II.)—KNE 
Castle of Indolence, Canto I. (Sel.) —BNL 
(SI. diff. arr.)— WEP 3 

Castle of Indolence, Canto I. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
Freedom of Nature. (Br. sel. fr. Canto III.)— 
GP 

Stanza for Thomson’s Castle of Indolence (in 
Can. I.—by Lord Lyttelton).—BNL 
Castle Ruins, The.—W: Barnes.—VA 
Castle-builder, The.—La Fontaine.—BVC 
Castles in the Air.—Jas. Ballantyne.—FEP—FP— 
WCL (Ang. vers.) 

Cast-off Garments.—W: A. Butler. See Nothing to 

w ear 

Casualty, A.—Anon.—BS 20—WR 6 
Cat and Canary.—Mrs. Clara D. Bates.—TT 
Catacombs, The.—Emilio Castelar.—OS 3 
Catacombs, The. (Golden Hours.) —FS 
Catalectic Monody, A. (Cruikshank’s Omnibus.) — 
HPE 

Catalogue. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Catalogue of Dickens’ Works.—Anon.—CS 16 
Cataracket, A.—Rob’t .T. Burdette.—SYS 
Cataract of Lodore, The.—Rob’t Southey .—BNL— 
FEP—GN—IR—KNE—MRS—SO 
(Abr. )—PEO—SA—SPE 
Catastrophe, A.—Anon.—CS 6—OM 
Catastrophe, A.—David L. Proudfit.—CS 15—DLS 
Catawba Wine.—H: W. Longfellow.—AE 
Catch, A.—R: H. Stoddard.—AA 
Catch the Sunshine.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Catching a Whale.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Catching the Cat.—Marg. Vandegrift.—WP 3 
Catching the Colt.—Annie D. G. Robinson.—BS 11 
Catching the Morning Train.—Max Adeler. See Out 
of the Hurly Burly. 

Cat-eater, The.—Anon.—CS 15—MDD (diff. vers.) 
Categorical Courtship.—Anon.—SCS 
Cathedral.—W: Congreve.—EPs 
Catherine de Medicis.—W: M. Punshon.—NC 
Catholic Love.—C• Wesley.—WEP 3 


Catholic Psalm, The.—Eliz. I. Hubbard.—CS 18 fc 
Catholic Question, The, Feb. 22, 1793, Sel. fr. (Dis¬ 
qualification of Roman Catholics.)—H: Grat¬ 
tan.—SS 

Catholic Question, The, May 13, 1805, Sel. fr' —H: 
Grattan.—SS 

Catholic Question, The, May 31, 1811, Sel. fr. (Relig¬ 
ion Independent of Government.)—H: Grattan. 

_gg 

Catholic Question, The, April 23, 1812, Sel. fr. (Sec¬ 
tarian Tyranny, 1812.) H: Grattan.—PS—SS 
Catholicity.—Anon.—CP 

Catholics of Ireland, The, Sel. fr. (On Charges against 
Roman Catholics.)—R: L. Sheil.—SS 
Catiline, Sels. fr. —G: Croly. 

Catiline’s Defiance. (Act III., Sc. 2— abr.) —BS 5 
— CR —CS 3 — FR — FTR — HNS — KNE— 
OM(a 6 r.)—PPSr—SO—SPE—SS 

(Sel.) —PS—SC (shorter sel .)—WRD 

(Catiline on Hearing his Sentence of Banish¬ 
ment— sel .)—OS 3 

Catiline to his Friends, after Failing in his Election 
to the Consulship. (Sel. fr. I., 2.)—SS 

(Bitter Disappointment — sel. — ptly. same.) — 
KNE 

Catiline to the Gallic Conspirators. (Sel. fr. II., 
2.)—OM—PS—SS 

Catiline to the Roman Army. (Sel. fr. V.. 2.)— 
BNL 

(Catiline’s Last Harangue to his Army— abr .)— 
CS 5—KNE—PS—SS 

Catiline Denounced.—Cicero. See First Oration 
against Catiline. 

Catiline Expelled. (Fr. Second Oration against Cati¬ 
line.)—Marcus T. Cicero.—CS 5—OS 3—PS— 
SS 

Catiline, on Hearing his Sentence of Banishment.—G: 
Croly. See Catiline. 

Catiline to his Army near Fsesule [or Fsesulae]—Ben 
Jonson.—PS—SS 

Catiline to his Friends, after Falling in his Election to 
the Consulship.—G: Croly. See Catiline. 
Catiline to the Gallic Conspirators.—G: Croly. See 
Catiline. 

Catiline to the Roman Army.—G: Croly. See Cati¬ 
line. 

Catiline’s Defiance.—G: Croly. See Catiline. 

Catiline’s Last Harangue to his Army.—G- Croly. 
See Catiline. 

Cato, Sels. fr. —Jos. Addison.—SS 

Csesar’s Message to Cato. (Act IV., Sc. 2.)—PS 

Cato on Immortality. (V., 1.)—SO 

(Cato on the Immortality of the Soul.)—VSG— 
WCLG 2 

(Cato’s" Soliloquy.) — DDR — HNS — LLC — 
SAE (sel.) 

(Cato’s Soliloquy on Immortality.)—CS 1—FR— 
KNE—OS 3—PPSr—SS 

(Cato’s Soliloquy on the Immortality of the Soul.) 
—FTR 

(Immortal Part, The— sel .)—GP 
(Soul, The.)—FP 

(“It must be so; Plato, thou reasonest well”— 
sel .)—GG 

(Soliloquy on Immortality.)—BNL 

Cato over the Dead Body of his Son. (Sel. fr. IV., 4.) 
—PS 

Death of Cato. (Br. sel. fr. V., 4.)—EDY 

Sempronius’s Speech for War. (Sel. fr. II., 1.)— 
BNL 

(Speech of Sempronius [for War].)—LLC—PPSr 
Cato on [the] Immortality [of the Soul].—Jos. Addison 
See Cato. 

Cato over the Dead Body of his Son.—Jos. Addison. 
See Cato. 

Cato’s Soliloquy [on the Immortality of the Soul].— 
Jos. Addison. See Cato. 

Cat-questions.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Cats.—Anon.—FND 
Cats, The.—Anon.—WR 14 
Cat’s Bath, The.—Anon.—DS—NPS—YA—YP 
Cat’s Serenade, The.—Anon.—DLS 
Cat’s Tea-party, The.—F: E. Weatherly.—BVC 
Cat’s-cradle.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Cat-tails.—Anon.—WR 17 
Cat-tails.—Annie W. Whitney.—BS 1 
Cattle of his Hand, The.—Wiibur Underwood.—AA 
Catullus to his Book. Caius Valerius Catullus 
(tr. by A. Lang).—LBB—MBB 
Caudle has been Made a Mason. (C. — abr.) —Douglas 
Jerrold.—CS 3—OM 

(Mr. Caudle has been Made a Mason.)—MDD 


60 




TITLE INDEX 


Ceptin 


Caudle, whilst Walking with his Wife, has been Bowed 
to by a Younger and even Prettier Woman 
than Mrs. Caudle. (C.)—Douglas Jerrold. 
(Trouble about Miss Prettvman— arr. as dial.) — 
MPD 

Caudle’s Wedding Day. (Mrs. Caudle Thinks '"it 
would Look well to Keep their Wedding-day ” 
— C.) —Douglas Jerrold.—CS 9 
Caught.—K. E. Barry.—CS 31—WR 3 
Caught in the Maelstrom.—C: A. Wiley.—CS 16 
Caught in the Quicksand.—Victor Hugo.—BS 10— 
CS 15—CSS—PS—SA—SO 
Caught in their Own Trap.—“ Bob o’Link.”—DDD 
Cauldron of Ceridwen, The.—T: L. Peacock.—PEB 3 
Cause, The. {Punch.) —HPE 
Cause and Effect.—Anon.—PR—YA 
Cause for Complaint.—Anon.—WR 12 
Cause of Bunker Hill, The. ( Sel. fr. The Good Fight.) 
—G: W: Curtis.—NC 

Cause of Temperance, The.—J: B. Gough.—BS 4— 
CS 9—OM {si. abr.) —PS 

Cause of the South, The.—Abram J. Ryan. See Senti¬ 
nel Songs. 

Cause of the Union, The.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. See Flag 
of the Union, The. 

Caution.—W: Shakespeare. See King Richard III. 
Cautious Wooer, A.—Miller Vinton.—WR 7 
Cavalier, The.—Walter Scott. See Rokeby. 

Cavalier Tunes.—Rob’t Browning. 

Boot and Saddle.—EHT—LC—MRS—VA 
Give a Rouse.—EHT {abr.)— HBP—MRS—VA 
Marching Along.—EHT—FEP—MRS—VA 
Cavalier’s Choice, The.—Johann W. von Goethe.—WR 8 
Cavalier’s Escape, The.—Walter Thornbury.-—GN— 
HB—OS 2 

Cavalier’s Song, The.—W: Motherwell.—BNL {sel.) — 
GN—HBP—OS 3—YBF 

Cavalry Charge, The.—Fs. A. Durivage.—AWB—BS 2 
Cavalry Charge, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—WR 5 
Cavalry Charge, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—OS 2 
Cavalry Charge, The.—B: F. Taylor.—AWB—BS 26— 
LLC—PAPm 

Cavalry Crossing a Ford.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
Cavalry Scout, The.—Edmundus Scotus.—WR 10 
Cavalry Song.—W: H. Hayne.—BS 26 
Cavalry Song.—Rossiter W. Raymond.—AWB 
Cavalry Song.—Edmund C. Stedman. See Alice of 
Monmouth. 

Cave of Mammon, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Fae¬ 
rie Queene, The. 

Cave of Sleep, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Cave of Staffa [ (after the crowd had departed)—C.J. 

(Sonnet XXIX.)—W: Wordsworth—EPs 
Caw! Caw! Caw!—E: Carswell.—DLS—LPS—PP—PS 
Caxtons, The, Sel. fr. (London House-tops— cond. fr. 

Pt. XIV., Ch. II.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—TMR 
Caxtoniana, Sel. fr. (“Truth, as humanity knows it,” 
etc.— hr. sel. fr. Essay XXII., Motive Power.) 
—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—GG 

Cdad, Mile F&ilte, Elim! {Fr. The Invasion.)—Gerald 
Griffin—TIP 

Cean Dubb Deelish.—Sir S: Ferguson.-—OB 
Cean Duv Deelish.—Dora Sigerson (Mrs. Clement 
Shorter).—TIP 

“Cease to Do Evil.”—Denis F. McCarthy.—TIP 
Ceaseless Aspirations.—Rob’t C. Waterston.—TAS 
Cecil.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Cecil Rhodes.—Rudyard Kipling.—EDY 
Cedar Mountain.—Annie Fields.—EDY 
Cedars of Lebanon, The.—Letitia E. Landon.—PEO 
Celebrated Jumping Frog, The.—S: L. Clemens. See 
Jumping Frog, The. 

Celebration of Charis, A, Sels. fr. —Ben Jonson. 

Celebration of Charis, A. (Her Triumph— C.) —ELP 
—GP 

(Charis’ Triumph.)—ELP—LC—WEP 2 
(Devil is an Ass, The, Sel. fr.) —SS 

{2nd and 3rd. sts. only are fr. “Devil, The,” 
etc.—Act II., Sc. 2.) 

(So Sweet is She— sel.) —GN 
(Of his Love’s Beauty.)—YBF 
(Song.)—EPs 
(Triumph, The.)—OB 

(Triumph of Charis.)—ES—FEP—HBP—PHS 
Discourse with Cupid. (His Discourse with Cupid 
— C .)—HBP 

Celestial Army, The.—T: B. Read.—KNE 
Celestial Country, The.—Bernard de Morlaix {tr. by J' 
M. Neale.)—BNL (abr.) —FEP 
(Jerusalem the Golden— abr.) —LLC 
(Sel.)— HDL—PYO 


Celestial Love, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—TAS 
Celestial Passion, The, Sels. fr. —R: W. Gilder. 

Celestial Passion, The. (Prelude.)—AA 
Holy Land. (Part II., 6.) 

Morning and Night. (Pt. III., 5.)—TAS 
Song of a Heathen, The. (Pt II., 5.)—AA—TAS 
Voice of the Pine, The. (Pt. III., 4.)—SN 
Celia Singing. (C.)— T: Carew—ES—WEP 2 
(To Celia Singing.)—OEL 
Celia Singing.—T: Stanley.—WEP 2 
Celia’s Home-coming.—A. M. F. (Robinson) Darme- 
steter.—"V A 

Celinda.—E:, Lord Herbert.—EPs 
Cello, The.—R: W. Gilder—AA 
Celtic Cross, The.—T: D’A. McGee.—VA 
Celts and Saxons.—T: Davis.—TIP 
Cenci, The, Sels. fr. —Percy B. Shelley. 

Fear. (Br.sel.fr. Act IV., Sc. 4.)—KNE 
Italian Ravine, An. (Br. sel. fr. III., 1.)—BNL 
Cenotaph, A.—P. Dana.—TL 
Census Enumerator, The.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Census Taker, The.—Millie M. Olcott.—StD 
Census-taker’s Experience, A.—Anon.—CS 6 
Centennial Address delivered at Valley Forge, 1878, 
Sels. fr. —H: A. Brown. 

Valley Forge.—BLP (cond.) —BS 6—CS 16 
(SI. cond.) —DS—SR 8 
Valley Forge.—SR 10 

Centennial Cantata.—Sidney Lanier. See Centennial 
Meditation of Columbia, The. 

Centennial Celebration of Concord Eight, Sels. fr. —G: 
W. Curtis. 

Changes of a Hundred Years.—FD 2 
Father of the Revolution, The.—FD 2 

(Samuel Adams and the New England Town 
M eeting— abr. )—N C 
Heroes of ’76.—PRR 
(Minute Men of ’75. The.)—BS 2 
(Abr.) —FD 1—TMD 
(Minute Men of ’76, The— br. sel.) —SC 
Our Worst Foes.—FD 2 

(“Wherever party spirit shall strain the guaran¬ 
tees of freedom”— sel.) —GG 
Paul Revere’s Ride.—NC 
(SI. diff.) —FD 2—PPS 
Who Was the Minute-man?—FD 1—WCLG 2 
“Centennial” Echoes. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Centennial Hymn.—J: G. Whittier.—AA—BNL (sel.) 

—BS 5—CS 13—SM—SR 8 
Centennial Meditation of Columbia, The (A Cantata), 
Br. sel. fr. —Sidney Lanier. 

America.—OS 2 

(Centennial Meditation of Columbia, The, Sel. 
fr. — abr.) —BNL 

(Dear Lana of All my Love— abr.) —GN 
Centennial Ode, Sels. fr. —C: Sprague. 

Fathers of New England, The.—WR 10 
Indians, The. (Br. sel.) —EPs—GN 
Our Fathers.—MYF 

Centennial of 1876, The.—W: M. Evarts.—TMD— 
WR 10 

Centennial Oration. (Peroration fr. Oration delivered 
on Centennial Anniversary.)—H:A. Brown.— 
BS 4—CS 12—PRR 

("My countrymen! The moments are quickly pass¬ 
ing”— sel.) —GG 

(“My countrymen! This anniversary has gone by 
forever”— sel.) —GG 

Centennial Oration, S'els. fr. —Rob’t C. Winthrop. 
Admonition to Coming Generations.—FD 2 
American Age, The.—FD 1 
Effect of American Example.—FD 2 
Glorious Destiny of England, The.—FD 1 
John Hancock.—FD 2 
Thomas Jefferson and John Adams.—FD 2 
Who and What are Great Men?—FD 1 
Centennial Speech.—C: C Albertson.—SR 8 
Centennial Speech.—J: H. Barrows.—SR 8 
Centennial Speech.—Nelson Blake.—SR 8 
Centennial Speech. (Abr.) —Chauncey Depew.—SR 8 
(Washington’s Inauguration— diff. abr.) —MRS 
Centennial Speech.—Frank W. Gunsaulus.—SR 8 
Centennial Speech.—Emil G. Hirsch.—SR 8 
Centennial Speech.—Rob’t McIntyre.—SR 8 
Centennial Speech.—W: E. Mason.—SR 8 
Centennial Speech.—J: M. Thurston.—SR 8 
Central American Treaty, The.—W: H. Seward.—MRS 
Centralization in the United States.—H: W. Grady. 
See Against Centralization. 

Century from Washington, A.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Character of Washington, The. 

’Ceptin’ Ike.—W- Devere.—WR 24 


61 





’Ceptin’ 


AN INDEX TO 1’OETKY AND RECITATIONS 


“’Ceptin - Jim.”—Lewis R. Clement.—WR 21 
Ceremonies for Candlemasse Eve. (C.)—Rob't Herrick. 
(Candlemas.)—EDY 
(Candlemasse Eve.)—WEP 2 
Ceremonies for Christmas. (Ceremonies for Christ- 
masse— C.) —Rob’t Herrick.—GN 
Certainties. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Certainty.—Emily Dickinson. See Chartless. 
Cervantes.—W: C. Bryant.—EDY 
Chain, A.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FTA 
Chalcedony.—Emma P. Greenough.—HP 
Challenge, A.—Jas. C. Harvey.—BS 23—CS 30 
Challenge, A.—Jas. B. Kenyon.—AA 
Challenge, The.—Fitz-James O’Brien ( wr. at. to R. A. 
Pryor).—FEP—WR 6 

Challenge, The.—R: B. Sheridan. See Rivals, The. 
Challenge, A.—Willard Snowden.—CG 1 
Challenge and Defiance. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Challenging the Foreman.—Anon.—HR 
Chamber over the Gate, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
—TAS—TAV 

Chamber Scene, Br. sel. /r. (‘‘She rose from her un 
troubled sleep.”)—Nathaniel P. Willis.—BNL 
Chambered Nautilus, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA 
— ASL — BFV — BNL — BSP — EA — 
FEP —FP — GMS — GN — HBP — LLC — 
MAL — MRS — PHS — PYO — SE — SR 2 
—TAS—TAV—TMR—WCLG 2 
(‘‘Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul”— 
br. sel.) —FHS—GG 

Chameleon, The. (A Fable— fr. M. de La Motte.)— 
Jas. Merrick.—CS 12—FEP—WRD 
Chameleon, The.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Chamouni.—Sydney Dobell.—WEP 4 
Chamouny.—S: T. Coleridge.—OM—SS 
(God in Nature— br. sel.) —SE 

(Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni— 
C.)— BNL— BS 25 — FEP — GP — HBP — 
IR—OS 3—PHS 

(Hymn to Mont Blanc.)—AE (br. sel.) —CR—FTR 
—SE 

(Mont Blanc before Sunrise.)—BS 7 — EA — 
SAE ( abr.) 

Champagne Rose.—J: Kenyon.—HBP—-VA 
Champion Liar, The.—C: B. Lewis.—DCR 
Champion Snorer, The. (Burlington Hawkeye.) —CS 16 
—DS—FTR—KNE—SR 11 
Chance, A.—Anon.—NV 

Chancellor’s Garden, The.—J. W. Courthope.—A VP 
Change, The, Sel. fr. —(Fragment. A.)—Abraham Cow¬ 
ley.—FEP 

(Love in her Sunny Eyes.)—ES 
(Pain of Love, The.— w. add. fr. Anacreontiques, 
VII., Gold.)—FLS 
(Without and Within.)—YBF 
Change. (Urania, I.— C.) —W: Drummond.—LLC 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 
Change.—W: D. Howells.—AA 
Change.—W: O. Partridge.—TAS 
Change of Base, A.—Albion W. Tourg6e.—WR 10 
Change of Heart, A.—Anon.—BS 24 
Change of Heart, A.—Henrietta L. Stadtmuller.—CG 2 
Change of Local Coloring, A.—Anon.—BS 24 
Change of System, A. (Comedy.) —Howard Paul. —BC 
Change of Toys.—S. J. Smith.—DLD 
Change should Breed Change.—W: Drummond.—OB 
Changed Cross, The.—Hon. Mrs. C: Hobart.—BNL— 
CS 3—FEP 

Changed her Mind.—Anon.—WR 15 
Changed Housewife, A. (Dial.) —Mrs. S. L. Ober- 
holtzer.—CDs 

Changeless, The.—Arthur H. Clough.—YBF 

(With Whom is no Variablenessf, neither Shadow 
of Turning]—C.)—HDL—WEP 4 
Changeless.—Alice Meynell.—VA 

Changeless World, The, Sel. fr. —Sarah S. Jacobs.—AD 
Changeling, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—TAS—WCL 
Changeling Grateful, A.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
Changelings.—M. F. B.—NV 
Changelings.—Mary T. Higginson.—AA 
Changes.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—FLS—HBP 
Changes.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Changes of a Hundred Years.—G: W: Curtis. See Cen¬ 
tennial Celebration of Concord Fight. 

Changing Color.—Hattie G. Canfield.—WR 4 
Changing her Mind.—Alfred P. Graves.—WR 26 
Changing Servants.—Milotus J. Wine.—SD 
Changing the Hundred Dollar Note; or, False Preten¬ 
sions Rebuked.—A. F. Bradley.—ED 
Channing.—Amos B. Alcott.—AA 

Chanson de Roland.—Anon. See Song of Roland, The. 


Chansonette.—Will L. Graves.—CG 2 
Chant of the Cross-bearing Child, The.—Jas. W. Riley. 
—DES 

Chanted Calendar, A.—Sydney Dobell.—OB 
(Procession of the Flowers, The.)—GN 
Chanticleer.—Celia Thaxter.—PoR—SAP 
Chanting Cherubs—a Group by Greenough, The.— 
R: H: Dana.—.AA 

Chapelet of Laurell, The.—J: Skelton. See Garlande 
of Laurell, The. 

Chaperon, The.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 
Chappie’s Lament.—-Ferris Greenslet.—CG 2 
Character, A.—Charlotte F. Bates.—AA 
Character.—S: T. Coleridge.—EPs 

(Good, Great Man, The— C .)—BLP (si. abr.) — 
BNL— FEP—HBP—LLC—YBF 
Character.—-Ralph W. Emerson.—AA 
Character, A.—T: C. Irwin.—TIP 
Character and a Question, A. (The Spectator.) —HP 
Character and Service.—Phillips Brooks.—FD 2 
Character of a Happy Life, The. (C .)—Sir H: Wotton. 
—BNL — CEL — ELP — FEP — OB —OS 2 
—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 2—YBF 
(Happy Life, The [or A].)—EPs—GP—HBP 
(Lord of Himself.)—LH 

Character of a Small Poet, The,—S: Butler.—ESs 
Character of a True Knight, The.—Stephen Hawes. 

See Pastime of Pleasure, The. 

Character of Henry Clay. (Sel. fr. Henry Clay.)—W: 
H. Seward.—CS 7 

Character of lludibras. The.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 
Character of Justice.—R; B. B. Sheridan. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 

Character of Lucile.—Rob’t Buiwer-Lytton. SeeLucile. 
Character of Mr. Pitt. (C.) —H: Grattan.—LLC (abr. 
— at. to W: Robertson.) 

(First Earl of Chatham. The.)—VSG (si. abr.) 
Character of Napoleon, The.—Alphonse de Lamartine. 
—WCLG I 

Character of Napoleon Bonaparte.—C: Phillips. See 
Napoleon Bonaparte. 

Character of our Savior, The.—Anon.—AE 
Character of the Bore, The.—J: Donne.—ESs 
Character of the Declaration of Independence.—G: 

Bancroft. See History of the United States. 
Character of the Duke of Monmouth.—J; Dryden. See 
Absalom and Achitophel. 

Character of the Earl of Shaftesbury.—J: Dryden. 

See Absalom and Achitophel. 

Character of the Happy Warrior, The. (C.)— W; 
Wordsworth. 

(Happy Warrior, The.)—EPs—HB (sel.) 

(Character of the Happy Warrior, The— br. sel.) 
—BNL 

Character of True Eloquence.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Character of War, The.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Character of Washington, The, Sels. fr. —E: Everett. 
Character of Washington, The.—IR (sel.) —MAL 
Character of Washington.—CR 

(Memory of Washington. The.— si. same.) —BS 1 
—FD 1—PEO 

Character of Washington, The.—II: C. Lodge.—PEO 
Character of Washington.—C: Phillips. See Washington. 
Character of Washington, The, Sels. fr. —Dan’l Webster. 
Century from Washington, A.—FD 1—-SR 7 
Constitution the Safeguard of Liberty, The.—SSD 
(Evil of Disunion.)—FD 1 
(Union of the States. The.)—PRR 
Name of Washington, The.—FD 1 

(Washington— pts. of “Century,” etc., and 
"Name,” etc.) —PEO 
Spirit of Human Liberty.—FD 1 
Washington and the Union.—-FD 1 
Character of Washington, The.—Edwin P. Whipple.— 
SO 

Character of Washington. The.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. 

See Completion of the National Monument to 
Washington. 

Character of Washington, The.—Zebulon B. Vance.— 
BS 8 

Character of Webster.—T: F. Bayard.—FD 1 
Character of Will Wimble.—Jos. Addison. See Spec¬ 
tator, The. 

Character of Zimri.—J: Dryden. See Absalom and 
Achitophel. 

Character Sketch, A.—Anon.—WR 22 
Character Stories.—Anon.—CDV 
Character the Basis of Credit.—Anon.—CP 
Characteristic Address.—W. T. Moncrieff.—MDD 
Characterization, A. (Fr. Lines on the Hon. E: Villers.) 
Sir H: Taylor—VA 


62 




TITLE INDEX 


Chatterbox 


Chmaeters and Sketches.—W: Cowper. See Conver¬ 
sation. 

Characters of Actors. ( Sels. fr. The Rosciad.)—C: 

Churchill.—WEP 3 
Charade.—Anon.—CPL 
Charade.—M. C. D.—CPL 
Charade, (Soapstone.)—A. W. Holmes.—CPL 
Charade.—Winthrop M. Praed. See Charade on the 
Name of Campbell, the Poet. 

Charade. (Robin Hood.)—Anna M. Pratt.—CPL 
Charade for Little Folks.—Cleveland.—CPL 
Charade on the Name of Campbell, the Poet.—Win¬ 
throp M. Praed.—SS 
(Campbell.)—BNL 
(Charade.)—FEP—GN—HBP—PC 
Char-co-o-al.—-Anon.—BS 2—CS 5 
Charcoal Man, The.—J: T. Trowbridge—BS 1—CR— 
CS 6—FTR—HNS—MHR—PR—SA—SE 
Charcoal-burner, The.—Edmund Gosse.—A VP 
Charge at Santiago, The.—W: H. Hayne.—BAB— 
EDY 

Charge at Waterloo, The.—Sir Walter Scott. See 
Field of Waterloo, The. 

Charge by the Ford, The.—T: D. English.—AWB— 
BAB—CS 17 

Charge of a Dutch Magistrate.—Anon.—WRD 
Charge of “De [or the] Dutch Brigade,” The.—C: M. 
Connolly.—BDD—CRR 

Charge of the Heavy Brigade ['at Balaclava—C.], The. 
—Alfred Tennyson.—FR 
(Heavy Brigade, The.)—LH 
Charge of the Light Brigade lat Balaclava—C.], The. 
Alfred Tennyson.— BNL — BS 1 — CEL — 
CGd — CR — CS 2— EA — EDY - FEP — 
FR — FTR — GN — HB — HBP — HNS — 
LC — LLC — MBL — MR — OM (si. abr.) 
— OS 1 — PGT 2 — PPSr — PS (si. ciln-.) — 
PSR — SA — SM — SO — SPE — TMD — 
VA—WCLG 2—WEP 4 


‘‘Charge of the Lightning Judge, The.”—Ray Porter.— 
SR 3 

Charge on ‘‘Old Hundred,” The.—Anon.—CS 31— 
PR 

Charge to the Jury.—Anon.—KNE 
Chariot, The.—Emily Dickinson.—ASL—TAS 
Chariot Race, The. (Fr. Electra—• prose tr.) —Sopho- 
• cles.—MRS 

( Verse tr. by E: Bulwer-Lytton.)—TMD 
Chariot Race, The.—Lew Wallace. See Ben-Hur. 
Chariot Race in Alexandria. (Serapis, Ch. XXV., 
abr.) —Georg Ebers.—PFP 
(Hippodrome Race, The— arr. by Wilbor— abr.) — 
WR 4 


Chariot-race in the Time of Christ, A.—Edgar Saltus.— 
WR 16 

Charis’ Triumph.—Ben Jonson. See Celebration of 
Charis, A. 

Charity.—Anon.—FP 
Charity.—Anon.—PS 

Charity. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Charity. Bible. See First Corinthians. 

Charity.—R. W. Lanigan.—WR 6 
Charity.—T: (?) Middleton.—KNE 
Charity.—Jas. Montgomery.—HBP 
Charity.—Mary Morgan.—TCV 
Charity.—Barry Stratton.—TCV 
Charity.—T: N. Talfourd.—CS 9—SS 
Charity.—Eliz. Whittier.—HDL 
Charity.—Mrs. J. M. Winton.—CS 19 
Charity Children at St. Paul’s. (In Songs of Inno¬ 
cence.)—W: Blake.—FEP 
(Holy Thursday— C.) —BVC—YBF 
Charity Collector, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 27 
Charity Dinner, The.—Litchfield Mosely.—BeR— 
CS 16 

(Frenchman Proposes the Ladies, A— sel.) — 
VSG 

(After-dinner Speech by a Frenchman— shorter 
sel.) —BS 13—HSS 3—SE 
(Speech of M. Hector de Longuebeau.)—OM 
Charity Grinder and the Postmaster General.—Mary 
K. Dallas—BS 18 
Charity’s Meal.—Anon.—NPS—-YP 
Charles Dickens and the Reader. (Fr. Pen Photo¬ 
graphs of Dickens’ Readings.)—Kate Field.— 


MRS . , 

Charles Edward at Versailles. (In Lays of the 
Scottish Cavaliers— sel.) —W: E. Aytoun. 
EDY 

Charles H. Spurgeon. (London Punch .)—EDY 
Charles Lamb.—Pakenham Beatty.—EDY (abr.)— 
VA 


Charles O’Malley, the Irish Dragoon, Sels. fr. —C: 
Lever. 

Mickey Free and the Priest. (Sel. fr. Vol. I., Ch. 
XII.)—DI 

Mickey Free’s Letter to Mrs. O’Gra. ( Sel. fr. 

Voh II., Ch. XXVII.)—DR 
Miss Judith Macan. (Vol. I., Ch. XIX.— abr. and 
ad. as dial.) —NDP 

Charles II., Sel. fr. (Refrain.)—Douglas B. W. Sladen. 
—VA 

Charles II. of Spain to Approaching Death.—Eugene 
Lee-H amilton.—V A 
Charles Sumner.—G: W: Curtis.—SC 
Charles Sumner. (Abr.) —H: W. Longfellow.—PEO 
Charles Sumner.—Carl Schurz. See Eulogy on 
Charles Sumner 

Charles Sumner Attacked in the Senate.—Anson Bur¬ 
lingame.—OS 3 

Charles the First. (Fr. Gotham.)—C: Churchill.— 
WEP 3 

Charles the First.—T: B. Macaulay. See Milton 
Charles the First, Sel. fr. (Widow Bird, A [or The]— 
song fr. Sc. V.— abr.) —Percy B. Shelley—CGd 
—LC—YBF 

Charles the First, Sel. fr. (Cromwell and Henrietta 
Maria.)—W : G. Wells—VA 
Charles the Second.—W: Wordsworth.—EDY—EHT 
Charles XII. [of Sweden]—S: Johnson. See Vanity of 
Human Wishes. 

Charleston.—H: Timrod.—AA 

Charley Machree.—W: J. Hoppin. See Charlie Machree. 
Charley, the Story-teller.—Anon.—WCL 
Charley’s Butterfly.—Anon.—CPL 
Charley’s Opinion of the Baby.—Anon.—PR—PS 
(Vaviation on Nose out of Joint—Adams.) 

Charlie.—Fanny F. Clark.—-DES 

Charlie and the Possum.—Harry S. Edwards.—WR 14 
Charlie Boy.—Anon.—WR 17 
Charlie, he’s my Darling.—Rob’t Burns.—YBF 
(Charlie is my Darling.)—HBP 
(Jas. Hogg’s vers.) —FEP—LC 
Charlie is my Darling.—Jas. Hogg. See foregoing. 
Charlie Machree.—W: J. Hoppin.—BNL—-BS 3— 
CS 11—FTR—HNS—MMR—SA 
(Charley Machree.)—CSS 
Charlie’s Speech.—Anon.—MAD 
Charlie’s Speech.—Eliza Doolittle—FAS—SD 
Charlotte Bronte.—Charlotte Becker.—EDY 
Charlotte Corday.—Anon.—EDY 

Charlotte Corday.—T: Carlyle. See French Revolu¬ 
tion, The. 

Charm, The.—[Beaumont and] Fletcher. See Little 
French Lawyer, The. 

Charm, The.—W: Browne. See Inner Temple Masque, 
The. 

Charm, The.—T: Campion.—ELP 
Charm, The.—Alice^E. Egbert.— CG 3 
Charm of Voice.—-Anon.—LLC 
Charm to Call Sleep, A.—H: Johnstone.—PoR 
Charmer, The.—Harriet B. Stowe.—-LLC 
Charming Month of May, The. Rob’t Bums. See 
Chloe. 

Charming Woman, A.—Jerome K. Jerome.—VSG 
Charming Woman, A.—J: G. Saxe.—CS 11 
Charms of Rural Life, The. (Fr. Rural Life in Eng¬ 
land.)—-Washington Irving.—IR 
(English Scenery— sel..) —SE 
Charnel Ship, The.—Lucretia M. Davidson.—FP 
Charter Oak, The.—G: D. Prentice.—WR 10 
Chartist Song.—T: Cooper.—-EDY—EHT—VA 
Chartless.—-Emily Dickinson.—AA—GN 
(Certainty.)—TAS 
(Poems.—XVII.)—BNL (2nd poem.) 

Charybdis.—C: K. Bolton.—SR 2 
Chase, The.—G. A. Burger (tr. by Walter Scott.)—BS 13 
(Wild Huntsman,The—C.)—CGd (abr.) —EPs 
Chase, The.—-Theodore Roberts.—TCV 
Chase, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Chase, The. (Sels. fr. Bks I. and II.).—W: Somerville. 
—WEP 3 

Chase after Love.—Edmund Spenser. See Shep- 
heardes Calender, The. 

Chase of the Laurel Wreath, The.—Jessie M. Wood.— 
TL 

Chastelard, Sel. fr. (Chastelard and Mary Stuart— 
Act V , Sc. 2.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—VA 
Chastity, Sel. fr. —W. Chamberlayne.—BNL 
Chftteau Papineau. — Mrs. S. Frances Harrison. — 
TCV (sel.) —VA 
Chatterbox.—Anon.—DLS 
Chatterbox, The.—Anon.—FHE 
Chatterbox, The.—Jane Taylor.—OS 1 


63 




Chatterton 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Chatterton. (In Seven Sonnets to Julia Marlowe.)— 
C: E. Russell—EDY 

Chatterton at Bristol.—C: E. Russell.—EDY 
Chaucer. (Frags, fr. various authors. )—BNL 
Chaucer.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY—TCV . 

Chaucer.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA 
Cheap Jack, The.—C: Dickens. See Doctor Marigold' 
Cheap Physician. The. (In Praise of Lessius, his Rule 
of Health— C.) —R: Crashaw.—BNL 
(Temperance; or. The Cheap Physician.)—HBP 
Cheat of Cupid; or, The Ungentle Guest, The. (Ode 
III.)—Anacreon (tr. by Rob’t Herrick).—HBP 
(Ungrateful Cupid, The— tr. by J: Hughes.)—CGd 
Chediock Ticheborne. (Verses Written in the Tower.) 
—Chediock Ticheborne [or Tychborn],—EDY 
(Lines Written by One in the Tower.)—BNL—FEP 
Cheeg.—Anon—DRR 
Cheer Up.—Anon.—CS 7 
Cheerful.Heart, The.—Anon.—HP 
Cheerful Locksmith, The. (Sel. fr. Barnaby Rudge, 
Ch. XLI.)—C: Dickens.—IR 
Cheerful Song, A. (Wrinkle.) —CG 3 
Cheerful Voice, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Cheerfulness.—Anon.—HNS—KNE (si. abr.) 
Cheerfulness.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Cheerfulness 
Taught by Reason. 

Cheerfulness.—Marian Douglas.—YBT (abr.) 

(W'ho is She?)—CSS 

Cheerfulness Taught by Reason. (C.) —Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing 

(Cheerfulness.)—HDL 
Cheiron, the Centaur.—Anon.—LLC 
Chemist and his Love, The. (Punch.) —SCS 
(Chemist to his Love.)—IIPE—THP 
Chemist to his Love, The. (Punch.) See foregoing. 
Cherish Kindly Feelings.—M. A. Kidder.—KNS 
Cherished Letters.—Mrs. Alex. McV. Miller.—CS 30 
Cherished Names.—S: F. Smith.-—WR 17 
Cherokee Roses.—Anon.—BS 25 
Cherries.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Cherries.—F: E. Weatherly.—BVC 
Cherry Cheeks.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Cherry Pie. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery-book.) 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Cherry Ripe.—Kate L. Brown.—AD 
Cherry Ripe. (Fourth Book of Airs, VII.)—T: Cam¬ 
pion.—BPB—ES—GP (at. to R: Alison.)— 
OB—OEL—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 
(There is a Garden in her Face— at. to R: Ali¬ 
son. )—B NL—FEP—TF Y 
Cherry Time.—Sydney Dayre.—COS—PP 
Cherry-ripe.—Rob’t Herrick. — BNL (abr .)— ELP — 
ES—FEP—OB—WEP 2 
Chess and Whist.—Anon.—DSS 

Chess-board, The.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—BNL— 
FEP—TFY—VA—YBF 

Chestnut. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.) — Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Chestnut Burr, The.—Anon.—NV 
Chestnut-tree, The.—Jane Campbell.—HS 
Chevy-chase [or chace],—R: Sheale (?).—BNL—GN— 
HB—HBP—LH—MR—OEB—PHS 
(Ballad of Chevy-chase, The.)—FEP 
(Hunting of the Cheviot, The —diff and older vers.) 
—BB—PEB 1' 

Chez Brabant.—Fs. A. Durivage.—A A 
Chibouque.—-Fs. S. Saltus.—PPh 
Chicago.—Fs. Bret Harte (?).—EPs 
Chicago—J: B. O’Reilly.—EDY 
Chicago.—Dwight Williams.—CS 5 
(Chicago in Flames— abr.) —DS 
Chicago in Flames.—Dwight Williams. See foregoing. 
Chicago Lawsuit, A.—Anon.—KNE 
Chicago’s Greeting to Atlanta and the South Land.— 
Alexander H. Revell.—SR 12 
Chick-a-de-dee.—Fs. C. Woodworth.—PS 
(Snow-birds’ Song, The.)—LLC—NV 
Chickadee.—Anon.—DLS 

Chickadee, The.—Sydney Dayre.—BS 23—POS 
Chickadee, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Chickamauga.—Anon.—BS 10 
Chickamauga.—G. F. Ferris.—PAPm 
Chickamauga—1898. (Baltimore News .)—PAPm 
Chicken on the Brain.—Anon.—MHR—SDR 
Chickens, The.—Anon.—DS—NPS—TFS—YA—YP 
(Five Little Chickens.)—DES 
(We Must all Scratch.)—PP—YFR 
Chickens.—Gail Hamilton.—WCLG 2 
Chickens Come Home to Roost.—Anon.—CS 27 
Chicken’s Mistake, The.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF—LPS— 
NV—PHS—PP—PS 

Chide Mildly the Erring.—B. W. Bradbury.—LLC 


"Chief agency in the progress and development of the 
law, The.”—C. C. Bonney.—GG 
Chief Bread-baker to the King, The.—Valentine Adams 
—DCP 

Chief Justice Marshall.—E: J: Phelps.—TMD 
Chief Mourner, The.—Fs. S. Smith.—CS 34 
Child, The.—Sara Coleridge.—OB 
Child, A.—R: W. Gilder—AA 
Child, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Child, A.—Mary Lamb.—OB 
(In Memoriam.)—PGT 1 
(Parental Recollections.)—WEP 4 
Child, The—J: B. Tabb.—AA 
(Pt. I. At Bethlehem.)—PoR 
Chjld, The.— G: E. Woodberry.—AA 
Child and Maiden. (Fr. The Mulberry Garden.)—Sir 
C: Sedley— PGT 1 (abr.) 

(Song from “The Mulberry Garden.”)—WEP 2 
(Song to Chloris.)—CEL 
(To a Very Young Lady.)—BNL—FEP 
(To Chloris— abr.) —OB 

Child and Mother.—Eugene Field.—BS 21—EF— 
WR 15—WTD 

Child and Mother.—T: Hood.—OS 1—WCL 
(Love thy Mother, Little One!— abr.) —TFS 
(To a Child Embracing his Mother—C.)—FEP— 
HBP 

Child and Sea-shell.—Anon.—LLC 
Child and the Angels, The.—C: Swain.—PC—YBT 
Child and the Fairies, The.—"A.”—PoR 
Child and the Flowers, The.—Anon.—FMR 
Child and the Lily, The. (Innocent Child and Snow- 
white Flower— C.) —W: C. Bryant.—HSS 1 
Child and the Piper, The.—W: Blake.—CGd—LC 
(“And I made a rural pen”— br. sel.) —PoR 
(Introduction [to Songs of Innocence]— C.) —FEP 
—HBP—WEP 3 

(Piper, The.)—BNL—CEL—WCL 
(Piping down the Valleys Wild.)—PoR 
(Reeds of Innocence.)—OB 
Child and the Snake, The.—Mary Lamb.—BPB 
(Boy and Snake, The— abr.) —LPC 
Child and the Sunshine, The.—-Alfred Tennyson (?).— 
—HSS 3 

Child and the Watcher, The.—Eliz. Barrett Browning. 
—FEP—HBP 

Child and the World, The.—Kate D. W T iggin.—NV-— 
YBT 

Child and the Year, The.—Celia Thaxter.—CPL— 
PEO—YBT 

Child and Tree.—E. A. Holbrook.—AD 

Child Angel, The.—Hannah M. Kohaus.—HS 

Child Asleep, The.—Clotilde de Surville. (Tr. by. 

H: W. Longfellow.)—HBP 
Child Dyring.—Anon. (at. to Walter Scott).—EPs . 
Child in [or on] the Judgment Seat, The.—Eliz R. 
Charles.—BS 9—LLC—PEO (abr.) 
(Child-judge, The.)—WCL 

Child in the Story Awakes, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Child in the Story Goes to Bed, The.—Walter Ramal— 
SOC 

Child in the Street, The.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
Child in the Wilderness, The. (Fr. Prefatory Note to 
The Wanderings of Cain.)—S: T. Coleridge.— 


Child is Father to the Man, The.—Louisa Bigg.—BS 14 
Child Lost.—Anon.—CS 18 
Child Martyr, The.—May M. Anderson.—BS 11 
Child Musician, The.—Austin Dobson.—BS 8 —FEP 
—GN—OS 1 

(Child Violinist, The.)—CPL—DCP 
Child of a Day. (Poems and Epigrams, LXXXI.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—VA—YBF 
Child of Bethlehem, The.—Phillips Brooks.—TAS 
(O Little Town of Bethlehem.)—AA—FEP—GN 
Child of Earth, The.—Caroline E. S. Norton.—CS 11 
Child of Elle, The. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.— 
FEP 


(Brave Earl Brand, The— diff. vers .)—PEB 1 
(Douglas Tragedy, The— diff. vers.) —BB—CEL— 
HBP—OEB—WEP 1 


Child of Promise, The.—Evan MacColl.—TCV 
Child of To-day, A.—Jas. Buckham.—AA 
Child of Twelve, A. (Fr. The Revolt of Islam, Canto 
II.) Percy B. Shelley.—GN 
Child on the Judgment-seat, The.—Eliz. R. Charles 
See Child in the Judgment Seat, The. 

Child Once More, A.—Anon.—PR 
Child Praying, A.—Rob’t A. Willmott.—HBP 
Child Samuel, The.—J. D. Burns.—YBT 
Child Tired of Play.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—WCLI 2 
(Tired of Play.)—OS 1 


64 




TITLE INDEX 


Child’s 


Child to a Rose, A.—Anon.—AD—NV (sel.) —PC 
(Diff. and longer vers.)— OS 1 
Child Violinist, The.—Austin Dobson. See Child 
Musician, The. 

Child Vyet.—Anon. See Childe Vyet. 

Child Waters, (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
Childe Harold’s Farewell to England.—Lord Byron. 

See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, Sels fr. —Lord Byron. 
“Adieu, adieu, my native shore.” ( Song fol. Can. I., 
st. 13—hr. sel.) —BNL—YBF 
(Childe Harold’s Farewell to England— sel.) —LC 
Apostrophe to the Ocean. ( Fr. Canto IV.)—BS 11 
(St. 179, 181-184)—CR (178, 179, 181-184)— 
FTR (178, 179, 181-184)—HNS (179, 183)— 
HSS 2 (178, 179, 181-184)—IR (179)—LLC 
(179-184)—POS (179, 181-184)—PSR (178, 
179, 181-184)—SE (178, 179, 181-184)—SM 
(179, 181, 182)—SO (178, 179, 181-184)— 
WCLG 2 (178, 179, 181-184) 

(Address to the Ocean.)—PPSr (179-183)—PS 
(179, 183, 184) 

(Ocean[, The].)—GP (179, 182-184)—OS 3 (178, 
179, 181, 182)—SE (179)—SE (181)—VSG 
(177-184)—WEP 4 (178-184) 

('* Roll on, thou deep and dark blue ocean, roll.”) 

—CS 1 (179, 183)—SC (179) 

(Sea, The.)—BNL (178-184) 

(Solitude.)—EPs (178, 179)—FP (178)—SN (178, 
179) 

(To the Ocean.)—GN (179-183) 

Battle of Albuera. (I., 43.)—EDY 
Bull Fight, The. (I., 73-79.)—CS 8 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. {Dr. sels.) —BNL 
Coliseum, The.—BNL (IV., 128, 129, 139-145.)— 
W’ll 14 (145, 140-144, 128). 

Death of Gen. Marceau. (III., 56, 57.)—EDY 
Death of the Princess Charlotte. (IV., 167-172.) 
—EDY 

Dying Gladiator, The. (IV., 138-141.)—LLC 
(IV., 140, 141)—CS1-OS2—SS 
(Gladiator, The—IV.. 140, 141.)—EPs 
Fall of Terni, The. (IV., 119— si. abr.)— BNL 
Filial Love. (IV., 148-151.)—BNL 
Girl of Cadiz, The. ( Song fol. I., 84, in 1st. 

draught of poem.) —HBP 
Greece. (II., 73-76.)—BNL 

(“Fair Greece, sad relic of departed worth”— 
II., 73, 76.)—GP 

“Hark, heard ye not those hoofs of dreadful note.” 
(I., 38.)—HSS 1 

Harold the Wanderer. (III., 1-15.)—WEP 4 
(Outward Bound—III., 1, 2.)—EPs 
"I do believe though I have found them not.” (III., 
114— si. abr.) —GG 

Longing. ( Song fol. III., 55.)—W T EP 4 
(Rhine, The.)—BNL 

Love of England. (IV., 8 , 9, pt. of 10.)—EPs 
Marathon. (II., 88-91.)—EDY 
Napoleon. (III., 36-45.)—BNL 
(Ambition—III., 45.)—KNE—SO 
(Defeat of Napoleon—III., 36-41.)—EDY 
Night. (II., 23-26.)—BNL—SN 
Night and Tempest. (III., 85-97.)—WEP 4 

(Calm and Storm on Lake Leman—III., 85-87, 92, 
93.)—BNL 

(Imaginative Sympathy with Nature—III., 96.) 
—GP 

(Night—III., 89, 93.)—GP 

(Poet’s Impulse, The—III., 96, 97.)—BNL 

(Solitude—III., 89.)—BNL 

(Stars—III., 88 .)—GP 

(Storm, The—III., 92.)—EPs 

(Thunder-storm in the Alps, A.)—GP 
Pantheon, The. (IV., 146, 147.)—BNL 
Petrarch’s Tomb. (IV., 30-32.)—EDY 
Ruins of Rome, The. (IV., 78, 79, 80, 82.)—PS 
(Rome—78, 79.)—OS 3—SO 
St. Peter’s Church at Rome. (IV., 153-158.)— 
FTR 

(At St. Peter’s at Rome—153, 154.)—AE 
(Childe Harold, Br. sel. —156, 157— abr .)— 
BNL 

Skull, The [or A]. (II., pt. of 5, 6 . 8 .)—EPs— 

KNE (sel.) 

Sunset. (IV., 27-29.)—EPs 
Tasso. (IV.. 39.)—EDY 

Temple of Clitumnus. (IV., 66 , 67— abr.) —BNL 
Venice. (IV., 1-3.)—OS 3 

Waterloo.—BNL (HI.. 21-33.)—EPs (21-25.)—GP 
(21, 22, 24-26.)—OS 3 (21, 22, 24, 25, pt. of 28.) 
—SO ( 21 , 22 , 24-28.) 


Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage ( continued). 

(Ball at Brussels, the Night before the Battle of 
Waterloo, The—21-26, 28.)—SS 

(Battle of Waterloo, [The].)—AE (27.)—BLP 
(21, 22, 24, 25, 28.)—LLC (21, 22, 24, 25, 28.)— 
—PPSr (21, 22, 24-28.)—PSR (21-28.)—SE 
(21-25, 28.)—WCLG 2 (21-32.) 

Eve of Quatre Bras—21-28.)—EDY 
Eve of Waterloo, The.)—EHT (21, 22, 24, 25.) 
—HB (21-25)—MR (21, 22, 24, 25, 27, 28.)— 
TMD (21, 22, 24, 25, 27, 28.) 

(Field of Waterloo, The.)—CS 1 (17, 21-25, 28.) 
—KNE (17, 21-28.) 

(Night before Waterloo, The.) — GN (21, 22, 
24-28.)—LC (21-24.) 

(Unreturning Brave, The—27-30.)—GP 
Childe Maurice. (Gil Morrice — C. — in Percy’s Re¬ 
liques.)—Anon.—BB {diff. vers.) 

"Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came.”—Rob’t 
Browning—VA 

Child[e] Vyet; or, The Brothers.—Anon.—BB 
{SI. diff. and longer vers .)—PEP 2 
Childhood.—C: Lamb.—BNL 
Childhood.—J: B. Tabb.—ASL 
Childhood Fancies.—Anon.—NV 
Childhood’s Country.-—Louise C. Moulton.—FAS 
Childhood’s Scenes.—Anon.—BS 15 
Childish Days. {Frags, fr. various authors.)— BNL 
Childish Fancy, A.—Anon.—WR 6 
Child-judge, The.—Eliz. R. Charles. See Child in the 
Judgment Seat, The. 

Childless.—Ben W. Davis.—CS 24—NPS—YP 
Childless Father, The. (C.) —W: Wordsworth.—YBF 
(Timothy.)—CGd 

Child-philosophy.—H. A. Duncan.—SDD 
Children, The.—C: M. Dickinson <wr. at. to C: Dickens). 
—AA—BNL—BS 15—CS 4—FEP—FTR— 
HSS 2—MYF—PPSr—SM—TFS {br. sel.) 
Children.—Walter S. Landor.—FEP—HBP 
Children, [The], {Abr.) —H: W. Longfellow.—AD 
Children Band, The.—Sir Aubrey De Vere.—OB 
Children Gathering Palms.—Eliz. B. Browning. See 
Vision of Poets, A. 

Children in the Moon, The.—Anon.—PC (abr.) —WCL 
Children in the Wood, The.—Anon. See Babes in the 
Wood, The. 

Children in the Wood, The; or, The Brave Carpenter. 
(Play.) —Anon.—SED 

“Children must be Paid for.” (Punch.) —HPE 
Children of the Bible, The. ( Ent .)—Anon.—EuE 
Children of the Bonnet Rouge.—Victor Hugo. See 
Ninety-three. 

Children of the Heavenly King.—J: Cennick.—FEP 
Children of the Lord’s Supper, The, 2 diff. sels. fr. — 
H: W. Longfellow.—BIL—-WR 12 
“Ah! when the infinite burden of life descendeth 
upon us.” (Diff sel.) —HDL 
"Love and believe: for works will follow spontane¬ 
ous.” (Diff. Sel.) —FHS 

Children of the Poor, The.—Theodore Parker.—SSD 
Children on the Shore.—Anon.—OS 1 
Children Playing in a Churchyard.—Walter S. Landor. 
—WEP 4 

Children Should be Seen and not Heard.—Mrs. E. J. H. 
Goodfellow.—TT 

Children, Thank God.—Anon.—PC—YBT 
Children we Keep, The.—Anon.—CS 22 
Children’s Appeal. The.—Mary Howitt.—PC 
Children’s Arbor Day March.—E. A. Holbrook.—AD 
(March for the Children— si. abr. — w. music .)— 
AD 

“Children’s Day” Service, A.—Clara J. Denton.— 
HE 

Children’s Friend, The.—Mary J. Jacques.—YBT 
Children’s Hour, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA— 
BNL—BS 6 —EPs—FEP—FP—GP—HBP— 
OH—WCL 

Children’s Music, The.-—-F. M. Owen.—HP 
Children’s Offering, The.—Louisa M. Alcott.—HSS 2 
Children’s Offering, The.—Nellie G. Gerome [or 
Jerome].—PS—TT 

Children’s Praise Song.—W. B. Downer.—AD—DFR 
Children’s Rights.—Kate D. W T . Riggs.—TMR 
Children’s Voices.—An Easter Ode.—Sara M. Chat- 
field.—SSE 

Children’s Vow, The.—Ella W. Wilcox (7).—WR 17 
Children’s Wishes, The.—Sara M. Chatfield.—SSE 
“Children’s world is full of sweet surprises. The.”— 
Sarah Doudney.—GG 

Child’s Desire, The.—Jemima T. Luke.—PC (sel.) 

(“ I think when I read that sweet story of old ”— 
si. abr .)—OS 1 

(“Of Such is the Kingdom of Heaven.”)—FEP 


65 




Child’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Child’s Dream of a Star, A.—C: Dickens—BS 13— 
CS 5—CSS—FTR—PR—WGS 
Child’s Easter, A.—Annie T. Slosson.—TAS 
Child’s Evening Hvmn. ( Abr .)—Sabine Baring- 
Gould.—VA—YBF (si. diff. abr.) 

(Day is Over.)—YBT (same as VA). 

(Now the Day is Over— sel.) —NV 
Child's Evening Hymn, A.—G: H. Clarke.—TCV 
Child’s Evening Prayer, A.—Mary L. Duncan.—COS— 
DLS—PP—SSS 
(Evening Hymn.)—YBT 
(Tender Shepherd, The.)—TFS 
Child’s Fancies, A.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—TFS 
Child’s Fancy. A. “A.”—PoR (si. abr.) 

(All Things Love Me— br. sel.) —TFS 
(Little Girl’s Fancies, A.)—HSS 2—WCL 
(Little Things— br. srl.) —AD 
Child’s First Grief, The.—Eelicia D. Hernans.—SSS— 
YBT 

Child’s Good-bye to the Old Year, A.—-Anon.—WR 17 
Child’s Good-night, The.—Sidney E Holmes.—-YBT 
Child’s Grace, A. (The Selkirk Grace— C.) —Rob’t 
Burns.—PoR 

Child’s Grace, A.—Rob’t Herrick.—OB 

(Grace for a Child.)—BVC—ELP—OH—WEP 2 
—YBF -* 

Child’s History of England, Sel. lr. (Death of Harold 
— fr. Ch. VII.)—C: Dickens.—OS 2—WR 22 
Child’s Hymn, The. (Poor Child’s Hymn, The— C.) 

—Mary Howitt.—PC 

Child’s Laughter, A.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—PoR 
—WR 15 

Child’s Love, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Child’s Mirror, The.—Abbie Kinne.—CS 32 
(True Story, A.)—BS 24 
Child’s Plea, The.—Sarah H. Palfrey.—TAS 
Child’s Portrait, A.—W: J. Dawson.—VA 
Child’s Prayer, The.—Anon.—DCP 
Child’s Praver, A.—Matilda B. Edwards.—PoR (abr.) 
(Hymn.)—YBT 

Child’s Prayer. (New England Primer .)—BNL 
Child’s Prayer, The.—Hodges Reed.—CS 35 
Child’s Question, A.—Emma H. Nason.—AA 
Child’s Song.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—OS 1 
Child’s Song in Spring. (Bird’s Song in Spring.)— 

E. Nesbit.—BVC—PoR 

Child’s Talk in April.—Christina C. Rossetti.—GN 
Child’s Tear, A.—Teignmouth Shore.—CS 34 
Child’s Thought of God, A.—-Eliz. B. Browning—- 
BS 14—GMS—OS 1—PoR—WCL—YBT 
Child’s Thoughts about God, A.—Kate Lawrence.— 
YBT 

Child’s Time Table.—E. Elton.—CPL 
Child’s Troubles, A.—Anon.—DLS 
Child’s Wisdom, A.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Child's Wisdom, A.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Child’s Wish, A.—Abram J. Ryan.—AA 
Child’s Wish Granted. The.—G: P. I.athrop.—-AA 
Child’s Wish in June.—Caroline H. (?) Gilman.—WCL 
Child’s Wonder. The.—Marg. Johnson.—LPS — PP 
Child's World. The. (Great Wide, Beautiful, Won¬ 
derful World— C .)—W: B. Rands (wr. at. to M. 
Browne).—SM—WCL—YBT 
(SI. diff. vers.) —POS 
(Wonderful World, The.)—GMS—PoR 
(World, The.)—OS 1 

Child-song, A.—Caroline A. Mason.—YBT 
Child-wife. The.—C: Dickens. See David Copperfield. 
Child-world, The.—.las. W. Riley.—CW 
Chill, A.—Christina G. Rossetti.—OS 1—PoR 
Chillon.—Lord Byron. See Prisoner of Chillon, The. 
Chimes of Amsterdam, The.—Mrs. G: W. Pauli.— 

CS 36 

Chimes of Old England, The.—Arthur C. Coxe.—HP 
Chimney Nest. The.—Mary B. Dodge.—HP—NV 
Chimney Swallows.—Horatio N. Powers.—GP 
Chimney's Melody, The. (What the Chimney Sang 
— C.) —Fs. Bret Harte.—BS 10 
Chimney-sweep, The.—E. S Hooper.—EPs 
Chimney-sweeper, The. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: 

Blake.—BPB—BVC 
Chimney-tops.—-Marion Douglas.—CPL 
Chimpanzee, The.—Oliver Herford.—NA 
Chimpanzor and the Chimpanzee, The.—Edwin Ham¬ 
ilton.—THP 

Chin Wee.—L. Warner.—CG 3 
Chinaman’s Prodigal. The.—Anon.—CS 31 
Chinese Dinner, The.—Anon.—CS 12 
Chinese Excelsior, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
(Excelsior— abr. — si. diff.) —CDV 
Chinese Immigration [to the Pacific Slope—(7.1, Sel. 

fr. —Jas. G. Blaine.—NC 
Chinese Lanterns.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 

66 


Chinese Lilies.—Myra E. Pollard.—SR 6 
Chinese Proverbs.—Anon.—CDV 
Chinese Story, A.—Christopher P. Cranch—CS 11 
Chinese Version of Jonah and the Whale. A.—W: H. 
Head.—SR 11 

Chinese Version of “Maud Muller,” A.—Jos. B. 
Smiley.—CS 30 

Chinese Wedding, A. ( Pantomiine .)—Bertha M. Wil¬ 
son.—MN 

Chinook.—Ezra H. Stafford.—TCV 
Chip Supper.—Anon.—EuE 

Chiquita.—Fs. Bret Harte.—AA—CSS—EPs—HBP 
HBR 

Chivalrie.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Chivalry. (Br. sel. fr. The Speeches at Prince Henry’s 
Barriers.)—Ben Jonson.—EPs 
Chloe. (It was the Charming Month [of May], or 
Charming Month of May, The— C.) —Rob’t 
Burns.—GN—LC 
Chloe Divine.—T: D’Urfey.—OB 

Chloris in the Snow.—Anon. (at. to T: Carew and to 
R. Herrick.)—OB—OEL 
(On Chloris Walking in the Snow.)—ES 
Cho-che-bang and Chil-chil-bloo. (Graham’s Maga¬ 
zine .)—CS 11—DS 
Chocolataire. (Ent.)- —Anon.—EuE 
Choice.—-Emily Dickinson.—AA 
Choice, The—G: Wither.—OB 

Choice Friends. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Choice of Arms, The.—Marquis De Leuville.—WR 13 
Choice of Occupation. (For four boys.) —Anon.— 
DLF 

Choice of Occupation. (For six girls.) —Anon.—DLF 
Choice of Trades.—Mrs. M. B. C. Slade.—DLS— 
HSS 3 

(SI. diff. vers .)—LPS —PP 

Choicest Goods, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Choir Invisible, The.—George Eliot.—HDL (abr.) — 
LLC—OS 3 

(“O may I join the choir invisible”— C.) —BNL— 
EDY—FEP—GG—GP—HBP—HBR—VA 
Choir Practice.—Ernest Crosby.—AA 
Choir’s Wav of Telling It, The. (Good Housekeeping.) 
—CS 30 

Choose Your Words.—Barbara Broome.—SDD 
Choosing a Building Spot.—Emily A. Braddock.— 
—HS 

Choosing a Declamation.—Anon.—PTS 
Choosing a Name.—Mary Lamb.—BFV—BNL—GP 
—HBP—OS 1 (si. abr .)—WCL 
Choosing a Profession.—Mary Lamb.—BVC 
Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Ash.—Jennie Pierson 
—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Black Walnut.—J: W. 
Ripley.—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Elm.—F. C. Stewart. 
—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Hemlock.—May I. 
Bachelder.—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Hickory.—Florence 
Painter.—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Maple.—Everett L. 
Tindall.—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Oak.—Jos. Brobeck. 
—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Pine Tree.—Louise 
Youngs.—AD 

Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Tulip Tree.—Madge 
Vail.—AD 

Choosing a Trade.—Anon.—FDY 
Choosing a Trade or Profession.—G : D. Hunt.—SDD 
Choosing Occupations.—Anon.—WR 17 
Choosing Vocations.—Anon.—YFD 
Choosing a Tree.—W. H. Benedict.—DFR 
Choosing a Wife by a Pipe of Tobacco.— (Gentleman’s 
Magazine .)—PPh 

Chopper’s Child. The.—Alice Cary.—BS 13 
Choral Song of Illyrian Peasants.—S: T. Coleridge. See 
Zapolya. 

Choric Song.—Alfred Tennvson .—See Lotos-eaters. 
The. 

Chorus: “Spring all the graces,” etc .—Ben Jonson. 

See Fortunate Isles and their Union. 

Chorus: “ King of kings! and Lord of lords!”—H:H 
Milman.—HBP 

Chorus: “We have seen thee, O Love!”—Algernon 
C: Swinburne. See Atalanta in Calydon. 
Chorus: “When the hounds of Spring.”—Algernon C: 

Swinburne. See Atalanta in Calydon. 

Chorus from ‘ Atalanta’—Algernon C • Swinburne. See 
Atalanta in Calydon. 

Chorus of Anglomaniacs.—Edgar Fawcett'.—AWH 




TITLE INDEX 


Christmas 


Chorus of Flowers.—Leigh Hunt. See Songs and 
Chorus of the Flowers. 

Chorus of Good and Evil Spirits. (Fr. Alaham.)— 
Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.—WEP 1 
Chorus of Islanders. (Chorus fr. Look Seaward, Sen¬ 
tinel. Pt. IV.)—Alfred Austin.—TMR 
Chorus of Priests.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. See 
Mu«tapha. 

Chorus of Spirits.—George Darley. See Sylvia; or, 
the May Queen. 

Chorus of Tartars.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. See 
Mustapha. 

Chorus of the Flowers.—Leigh Hunt. See Songs and 
Chorus of the Flowers. 

Chorus of the Flowers. — Lucy Wheelock.—AD— 
NV (si. abr.) 

Chorus of Women. (Fr. The Thesmophoriazusse.) 

—Aristophanes.—WR 20 
Chosen Lessons.—Frances R. Havergal.—HDL 
Chosen Path, The.—H: Vaughan.—ELP 
Chosen Princess, The.—Marion Douglas.—ASD 
Chosen Tree. The.—“ Estelle.”—HSS 1 
Chough and the Crow, The. (Song fr. Orra, Act III., 
Sc. 1.)—Joanna Baillie.—CEL—WEP 4 
(Outlaw’s Song, The.)—OB 

Christ and the Little Ones.—Julia Gill.—CS 24—WCL 
(Hannah, the Mother.)—LLC 
Christ and the Mourners.—Kathe. E. Conway.—TAS 
Christ Calming the Tempest.—H. B. Durant.—CS 30 
Christ Child, The.—Elsie M. Wilbor.—WR 6 
Christ Child. See also Christ-child. 

Christ Crucified.—R: Crashaw.—OB 
Christ Crucified.—H: H. Milman.—FEP 
(Ride on in Majesty— si. abr.) —VA 
Christ our Example.—C: Wesley.—CEL—WEP 3 
Christ our Example in Suffering. (C.)—Jas. Montgom¬ 
ery. 

(Gethsemane.)—FEP—HBP 
Christ Risen. (Hymn III., For Easter Sunday— C .)— 
Anna L. Barbauld.—FEP 

Christ, the Refuge of the Soul.—C Wesley.—WEP 3 
(Jesu[s], Lover of my Soul— abr.) —FEP—LLC 
(SI. a hr. )—H B P—S PE—YB F 
Christabel.—S: T. Coleridge.—BNL (2 br. sels.) —-FEP 
—PEB 3 

(1st pt.)—BPB—SAE (sel.) —WEP 4 
(Lady’s Chamber, A— -sel.) —BNL 
(Quarrel of Friends, The— sel.) —BNL 
Christ-child Alone, The.—Hannah P. Kimball.—TAS 
Christening, The.—E. T. Corbett.—BS 16 
Christening, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Christening. The.—C: Lamb.—HBP 
Christening, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Christening, The.—Mary A. Townsend.—HDL 
Christening Dolly.—E. <3. and L. J. Rook.—HE 
Christian Charity.—Reynell Coates.—FEP 
Christian Citizenship.—C: H. Parkhurst.—NC 
Christian Citizenship.—Wendell Phillips.—TMR 
Christian Exaltation.—Paul H. Hayne.—TAS 
Christian Forgiveness. (Play.) —Anon.—NDP 
Christian Inheritance, The.—J: Keble. See Third 
Sunday in Lent. 

Christian Life, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Christian Life, The. (In Dr. Doddridge’s Character.) 
—CS 18-SS 

(Epigram: “Dum Vivimus Vivamus.”)—FEP 
(Epigram on his Family Arms.)—BNL 
Christian Maiden and the Lion, The.—Fs. A. Duri- 
vage.—CS 19 

Christian Martyr, The. (Sel. fr. Aurelian, Letter XL) 
—W: Ware.—WR 5 

Christian Militant [, The—C.].—Roh’t Herrick.—EPs 
Christian Orator, The. — Abel F. Villemain. — 
BLP (si. abr.)— SS 

Christianity as a Political Force.-—J: A. Dix.—BLP 
“Christianity is strong in its unity, strong in its sim¬ 
plicity.”—Anon.—GG 

“Christianity now stirs men’s thoughts more than 
ever.”—Anon.—GG 

Christian’s Mistake, Sel. fr. (Winning and Losing— ver¬ 
ses heading Ch. XIII.)—Dinah M. Craik (?)— 
OS 1 

Christie’s Portrait.—Gerald Massey.—VA 
Christine.—J: Hay.—AA 
Christine.—T: B. Read.—SR 5 
Christkindlein.—Friedrich Ruckert.—HS 
Christmas.—Anon.—OS 1 
Christmas.—Anon.—YBT 
Christmas. (C.) —Mary M. Dodge. 

(Christmas Morning.)—LPS—PP 
Christmas.—Harriet M. Lothrop.—SR 9 


Christmas.—J: Milton. See On the Morning of Christ’s 
Nativity. 

Christmas. (The Nursery.) —PP—PS—YPS 
Christmas.—Marg. E. Sangster (?).—WR 26 
Christmas.—W : Sawyer.—CS 35 
Christmas.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 

Christmas.—Nahum Tate.—FEP 

(While Shepherds Watched.)—LLC 
(While Shepherds Watched their Flocks bv 
Night.)—GN—OS 1 

Christmas.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
Christmas.—G : Wither.—BNL (br. sel.) —HBP 
(Christmas Carol, A.)—LC (sel.) —WEP 2 (abr.) 
Christmas a Hundred Years to Come.—Louis Eisen- 
beis.—CS 30 

Christmas Acrostic.—Anon.—PP—PS—YPS 
Christmas Again.—Anon.—DFR 

Christmas Angel, The.—Rossiter W. Raymond.— 
CS 33 

Christmas Angel’s Message, The.—Clare B. Coffey.— 
CS 37 

Christmas at Bob Cratchit’s, A.—C: Dickens. See 
Christmas Carol, A. 

Christmas at Fezziwig’s Warehouse.—C: Dickens.— 
See Christmas Carol, A. 

Christmas Baby, The,—Will Carleton.—CS 22 
Christmas Ballad. A.—Mary A. Dennison.—BS 9 
Christmas Bells.—Anon.—DJS 
Christmas Bells.—Anon.—HP 
Christmas Bells.—Mary D. Brine.—HSS 3 
Christmas Bells. (Sel.) —J: Keble.—OS 1 
Christmas Bells. — H: W. Longfellow. — PEO — 
WR 26 (abr.) 

(Sel.) —DLS—LPS—PP 
Christmas Bells.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Christmas Bells.—G: L. Taylor.—HS 
Christmas Bells.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memo¬ 
riam. 

Christmas Blessing, A.—Anon.—CS 25—SR 3 
Christmas Bounded.—Anon.—WR 26 
Christmas Camp on the San Gabr’el, A.—Amelia E. 
Barr—HP—TMR—WR 2 

Christmas Carmen, A.—J: G. Whittier.—AE (sel.) — 
SR 4 

Christmas Carol, A.—Anon.—FEP 

(God Rest You, Merry Gentlemen.)—BVC 
Christmas Carol. (Br. sel.) —Anon.—GG 
Christmas Carol.—Anon.—GN—OS 1—PSR (si. abr.) 
Christmas Carol.—Anon.—OS 1 
Christmas Caro).—Anon.—OS 2 
Christmas Carol, A.—Phillips Brooks.—WR 26 
Christmas Carol.—J: Byrom.—FEP 
Christmas Carol.—Millie W. Carpenter.—SSS 
Christmas Carol, A.—S: T. Coleridge.—HS 
Christmas Carol.—Arthur C. Coxe.—FEP 
Christmas Carol.—Dinah M. Craik.—FEP—OS 1 
(God Rest ye, Merry Gentlemen.)—GN 
Christmas Carol, A, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Bob Cratchit’s Dinner.—MMR—SAE—SE—VSG 
—WCLG 1—WGS 

(Christmas at Bob Cratchit’s, A— si. longer and 
ad.) —IR 

(Christmas Goose [at the Cratchits’], The.)— 
OS 2 (abr.) 

(Sel.)— PP—YPS 
Christmas Carol, Sels. fr. (2)—SE 
Christmas Party at Scrooge’s Nephew’s, The.— 
EA 

(Christmas Carol— hr. sel. fr.) —SE 
Old Fezziwig’s Ball—SO 

(Christmas at Fezziwig’s Warehouse— si. abr.) — 
OS 3 

Scrooge and Marley.—BS 1 (sel.) —SE 
(Christmas Invitation, A— sel.) —IR 
(Miser. The— sel.) —WCLG 1 
(Two Views of Christmas— sel.) —EA—SR 3 
Scrooge Fulfils his Vow. (SI. abr. fr. original.) — 
VSG 

(Scrooge’s Reformation— abr.) —SR 6 
Christmas Carol. (C .)—Felicia Hemans.—OS 1 
(Hymn for Christmas— abr.) —GN 
Christmas Carol, [A],—Josiah G. Holland.—AA—BS 2 
—GN—LLC—TAS (abr.) 

Christmas Carol, A. (C. — si. diff.fr. poems .)—Jas. R. 
Lowell.—TAS 

(Peace on Earth— si. abr.) —LLC 
Christmas Carol.—W: Morris. See Earthly Paradise 
The. 

Christmas Carol.—May Probyn.—AVP 
Christmas Carol, A.—Christina C. Rossetti.—OS 1— 
YBT (abr.) 

(Birthday Gift, A— br. sel.) —PoR 


67 





Christmas 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Christmas Carol, A. (Abr.) —Abram J. Ryan.—BS 8— 
SR 6 {si.) 

Christmas Carol, A.—H. Sells.—PS 
Christmas Carol, A.—Annie T. Slosson.—TAS 
Christmas Carol, The. (To the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth 
— C. — abr.) —W: Wordsworth.—EPs—OS 3 
Christmas Cat, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Christmas Chant, A.—Alfred Domett. See Christmas 
Hymn, A. 

Christmas Chimes.—Anon. See Christmas Chimes in 
Boston, etc. 

Christmas Chimes, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Christmas Chimes, The.-—Susan Coolidge—HS 
Christmas Chimes in Boston, Philadelphia, New York, 
and Chicago.—Anon.—CS 37 
(Christmas Chimes.)—WR 20 
Christmas Cornin’.—Anon.—TFS 
Christmas Day.—Alice W. Brotherton.—HS 
Christmas Day.—J: Keble.—A VP 
Christmas Day.—C: Kingsley.—HS 
Christmas Day.—S: Richards.—FTR 
Christmas Day. (Abr.) —C: Wesley.—OS 2 
(Hark! the Herald Angels.)—LLC 
Christmas Dialogue.—Anon.—SR 3 
Christmas Dialogue, A.—Anon.—YFD 
Christmas Dream, A.—H. A. Foster.—SR 3 
(Christmas Eve.)—CS 9 

Christmas Eve. ( Sel. fr. Some were Empty.)—Anon. 
—GMS 

Christmas Eve.—Hamilton Ai'dA—VSG 

(Christmas-eve Redemption, A.)—WR 16 
Christmas Eve.—A. W. Bellaw [or Belaw].—SR 10 
(Christmas-tide— dial. — ad. by J. W. Shoemaker.)— 
CDD 

Christmas Eve.—Eugene Field.—TAS 
Christmas Eve.—H. A. Foster. See Christmas Dream, A. 
Christmas Eve.—Violet Fuller.-—HS 
Christmas Eve. ( Pantomime .)—Jennie [or Jenny] 
Joy—DS—NPS—TCP (anon.)—YA—YP 
Christmas Eve. ( London Public Opinion.) —EDY 
Christmas Eve Adventure, A. (Dial.) — Ella H. 
Clement.—CDs 

Christmas Eve Adventure, A.—M.M.—DS—PP—YA 
—YFR 

Christmas Eve in the Olden Time.—Walter Scott. 
See Marmion. 

Christmas Eve Redemption, A.—Hamilton A'l'dA See 
Christmas Eve. 

Christmas Exercise, A.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—SSE 
Christmas Exercises.—Anon.—WR 26 
Christmas Flowers.—Adelaide A. Procter.—WR 6 
Christmas Folk and Children.—Lizzie M. Hadley.— 
HE 

Christmas Gathering.—H: Ware, Jr.—TAS 
Christmas Gift, A.—Ella M. Powers.—WR 26 
Christmas Gift, A.—David L. Proudfit.—DES 
Christmas Gift that Came to Rupert, The. (C.) —Fs. 
Bret Harte. 

(Doctor’s Story, The— cond.) —BS 20 
Christmas Gifts.-—Anon.—WR 26 
Christmas Good-night, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Christmas Goose [at the Cratchits’], The.—C: Dickens. 

See Christmas Carol, A. 

Christmas Green.—Lucy Larcom—LCS 
Christmas Greens.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Christmas Guest, The.-—Helen A. Goodwin.—BS 15 
Christmas Guest, A.—Ruth McE. Stuart.—HBR 
Christmas Guests [,The],—Lindsay Duncan.—CS 32— 
WR 8 

Christmas Holly, The. — Eliza Cook.—OS 1 (abr.) — 
PoR (sel.) 

(Holly, The.)—POS 
Christmas Hymn, A.—Anon.—CS 17 
Christmas Hymn, A. (C.) —Alfred Domett (tor. 
Dommet oi- Dommett).—EDY—FEP—GN— 
HBP—OS 2—PGT 2 
(Old style .)—VA 

(Christmas Chant, A.)—CS 16—PTS (abr.) 

(Nativity, The.)—A VP 
Christmas Hymn, A.—R W. Gilder.—HS 
Christmas Hymn.—J: Milton. See On the Morning of 
Christ’s Nativity. 

Christmas Hymn.—Edmund H. Sears.—BS 3 (abr.) 
(Calm on the Ear of Night— abr.) —LLC 
(Christmas Song.)—HS—OS 3 
Christmas Hymn.—C: Wesley.—WEP 3 

(Hark! How all the Welkin Rings.)—FEP 
Christmas in Chicago.—A. M. White, Jr.—CG 2 
Christmas in England.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 
Christmas in Sweden —Anon.—YBT 
Christmas in the Olden Time.—Walter Scott. See 
Marmion. 


Christmas in the Snow.—Anon. See Under the Snow. 
Christmas Invitation, A.—C: Dickens. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Christmas Joy.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Christmas Legend, A.—Anon.—CS 34 
Christmas Letter, A.—Jas. C. Challiss.—WR 24 
Christmas Letter from Australia, A.—Douglas B. W. 
Sladen.—VA 

Christmas Lullaby, A.—J: A. Symonds.—PoR 
Christmas Lullaby, A.—Arthur Weir.—TCV 
Christmas Memory, A.—Jas. W. Riley.-—BJC—TL 
Christmas Mom.—Blanche Bishop.—TCV 
Christmas Morning.—Dora Greenwell.—HS 
Christmas Morning.-—Mary M. Dodge. See Christmas. 
Christmas Night.—Clifton Johnson.—ASD 
Christmas Night in the Quarters.—Irwin Russell.— 
BRR (si. abr.) —CS 16 (sel.) —FTR (abr.)— SA 
(De Fust Banjo— sel.) —AA 

(Christmas-night in the Quarters, sel. fr.) —AWH 
(First Banjo, The)—FTR 
(SI. abr.)— DR—PTS 
(Origin of the Banjo, The.)—THP 
Christmas Night of ’62.—W: G. McCabe.—AA—EDY 
Christmas Outcasts. (New York Sun.) —HP 
Christmas Pantomime. (Popular Educator.) —DCP— 
DFR 

Christmas Party at Scrooge’s Nephew’s, The.—C: 

Dickens. See Christmas Carol, A. 

Christmas Pastime. A.; or the Crying Family.—Mrs. 
L. A. Bradbury.—HE 

Christmas Peal, The.—Harriet P. Spofford (7).—PEO 
Christmas Pictures.—D. B. Williamson.-—HS 
Christmas Pudding, The. (Fr. Poetical Cookerv-book.) 
(Punch.)— HPE 

Christmas Question, A.-—Minot J. Savage.—PEO 
Christmas Repentance, A.—Sarah Bernhardt.—WR 7 
(Repentir de Noel— French vers.) —WR 7 
Christmas Rose, The.—Sue S. Morton.—HE 
Christmas Roses.—May R. Smith.—PEO 
Christmas Shadows.—Anon.—HP 
Christmas Sheaf, The.—Phoebe Cary.—BS 4—FMR 
Christmas Sheaf, The.—Mrs. A. M. Tomlinson.—WR[6 
Christmas Silence, The.—Marg. Deland.—NV—PoR 
Christmas Song, A.—Tudor Jenks.—EDY—TAS 
Christmas Song, A.—Mrs. Hattie S. Russell.—HP 
Christmas Song, A.—Abram J. Ryan.—SR 4 
Christmas Song.—Edmund H. Sears. See Christmas 
Hymn. 

Christmas Star, The.—Bertha M. Wilson.—MN 
Christmas Story, A.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Christmas Story, A.—Jane Kavanaugh.—CS 31 
Christmas Thought, A.—Lucy Larcom.—PEO 
Christmas Thought about Dickens, A.—Bertha S. 
Scranton.—PEO 

Christmas Thoughts.—T. De Witt Talmage.—SR 3 
Christmas Tide.—Eliza Cook.—HS 
Christmas Tide. See also Christmas-tide. 

Christmas Time.—Kate N. Festellis.—HS 
Christmas Time,—Mrs. F. Spangenberg.—LPS—PP 
Christmas Times.—Clement C. Moore. See Visit from 
St. Nicholas, A. 

Christmas Treasures.— Eugene Field. — EF — HP — 
WR 2—WTD 

Christmas Tree, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—DFR—KJ 
Christmas Tree, A. (C. — in Reprinted Pieces.)—C: 
Dickens. 

(Recollections of mv Christmas Tree.)—CS 8— 
LLC—SAE 

Christmas Tree, The.—Marg. E. Sangster (?).—CS 16 
Christmas Tree, The.—Lucy Wheelock.—HS 
Christmas Trees, The.—Mary F. Butts.—PoR 
Christmas Week.—Emma S. Stillwell.—BS 18 
Christmas Welcome, The.—Anon.—WR 26 
Christmas-day. See Christmas Day. 

Christmas-eve Redemption, A.—Hamilton Ai'dA See 
Christmas Eve. 

Christmastide.—Anon.—BS 24 

Christmas-tide.—A. W. Bellaw. See Christmas Eve. 
Christmas-tide Shadow, A.—Norman Howard.—CS 33 
Christopher C—.-—Anon.—CS 31—WR 10 
Christopher Columbus.- 1 -Anon.—GH—PS 
Christopher Columbus.—Anon.—MYF 
Christopher Marlowe. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Christ’s Birthday.—Anon.—YBT 

Christ’s Coming to Jerusalem in Triumph. (Second 
Hymn for Advent, The— C .)—Jeremv Taylor. 
—CEL 

Christ’s Giving.—Anna E. Hamilton.—FHS 
Christ’s Love.—Philip Doddridge.—YBT 
Christ’s Triumph on Earth, Sel. fr. (Lady of Vain 
Delight, The.)—Giles Fletcher.—WR 11 


68 





TITLE INDEX 


Class 


Christ’s Victory in Heaven. (Sel .)—Giles Fletcher.— 
WEP 2 

Christus: A Mystery, Sels. fr. —H: W. Longfellow. 

Abbess’s Story, The.— (Sel. fr. Pt. II.—The Golden 
Legend, IV.)—BS 13 

“Poor sad humanity.” (Br. sel. fr. Finale.)— 
HDL 

Story of the Monk Felix, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. II.—The 
Golden Legend, II.)—VSG 
“There are two angels, that attend unseen.’ (Br. 
sel. fr. Pt. II.—The Golden Legend, VI.)—FHS 
Chronicle, A.—Anon.—NA 

Chronicle, The. A Ballad. — Abraham Cowley. — 
BNL (abr.) —FEP—HBP—WEP 2 
Chronicle of the Cid. (Tr. by) Robt. Southey. See Cid, 
The. 

Chronicle of the Drum, The.—W: M. Thackeray.— 
FEP 

(Abr .)—A VP—PSR 

Abdication of Napoleon. (Sel .)—EDY 
Execution of Louis XVI. (Sel .)—EDY 
Execution of Marie Antoinette. (Br. sel .)—EDY 
Execution of the Princess de Lamballe. (Sel .)— 
EDY 

Chrysalis, A.—Mary E. Bradley.—AA—SN 
Chrysalis of a Bookworm, The.—Maurice F. Egan.— 
MBB 

Chrysanthemum, The.—Frank S. Pixley—BS 25 
Chrysanthemums.—Mrs. Mary E. Dodge.-—-PEO 
Chrysanthemums.—Roberta K. Elliot.—BS 21 
Church, The.-—Nathaniel L. Frothingham.—TAS 
Church and State.—T: Moore.—HPE 
Church Dedication. (Hymn—for the Opening of 
Plymouth Church, St. Paul, Minnesota— C.) — 
J: G. Whittier.—TAS 
Church Fair, The.—L: Eisenbeis.—CS 27 
“Church in debt feels that prudence demands, The.”— 
Sylvanus Stall.—GG 

Church in Lucre Hollow, The.—Louis Eisenbeis— 
CS 33 

Church Kitchen, The.—-Louis Eisenbeis.—CS 32 
Church of a Dream, The.—Lionel Johnson.—TIP 
Church Militant, The.—H. S. Cutler.—LLC 
Church of Brou, The.—Matthew Arnold.—WR 1 (abr.) 
Hunters, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. I.)—CSS—PPSr 
Tomb in the Church of Brou, The. (Pt. III.: The 
Tomb.)—AVP 

“Church of Christ, if called to pass again through the 
age of martyrdom, The.”—J: F. Hurst.—GG 
Church of Ireland, The, Sel. fr. (Established Church 
of Ireland, The.)—T: B. Macaulay.—SS 
Church of Ireland, The, Sel. fr. (Established Church 
of Ireland, The.)—R: L. Sheil.—SS 
“Church of the living God! in vain thy foes.” W: L. 
Garrison.—GG 

Church Porch, The. (Abr.) —G: Herbert.—BNL—EPs 
Church Reveries of a School-girl.—Mrs. Enoch Taylor. 
—CS 20 

Church Scene, A.—Anon.—DS 
Church Spider, The.—Anon.—CS 13—DST 
Church Spider, The.—Anon.—CSS 
Church Steps, The.—G: T. Foster.—HP 
Church Universal, The.—S: Longfellow.—TAS 
Churches and Saloons.—J: F. Hurst.—WR 18 
Churchill’s Grave.—Lord Byron.—EDY 
Church-raffles.—Anon.—PTS 
Churchyard, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.—VA 
Churning, The.—B: F. Taylor.—PPSr 
Churning Song, The.—Silas Dinsmore—HP 
Cicely and the Bears. (Shock-headed Cicely and the 
Two Bears— C.) —W: B. Rands.—MYF 
Cicely Croak.—Emma C. Dowd.—BS 16 
Cicero against Verres.—Cicero. See Verres Denounced. 
Cicero and Demosthenes Compared.—F. de S. de la 
M. F^nelon.—PS 
Cid, The, Sels. fr. 

Cid and Bavieca, The. (Fr. Bk. IX., Lockhart’s 
verse tr .)—CS 7 

Cid and the Leper, The. (Fr. Bk. I., do.) —WR 8 
Count Raymond and my Cid. (Fr. Bk. IV., 
Ormsby’s Poem of the Cid).—NE 
My Cid’s Triumph. (Fr. Bk. X., do.) —NE 
Poem of the Cid, Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Siege of Zamora, The. (Fr. Bk. II., Southey’s 
Chronicle of the Cid.)—WR 11 
Cid and Bavieca, The.—Anon .—See Cid, The. 

Cid and the Leper, The.—Anon. See Cid, The. 

Cigar, The.. (SI. abr.) —T: Hood.—PPh 
Cigarette and Pipe, A. (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Cigarette Rings.—J. Ashby-Sterry.—PPb 
Cigars and Beer.—G: Arnold.—PPh 
(Beer—C.)—A A 


Cinderella; or, the Glass Slipper. (Dial.) —Mrs. G: 
McDonald.—MPD 

Cinderella’s Slipper. (Tab.). —Anon.—PR—TCP 
Cinkante Balades, Sel. fr. (Opening of the thirteenth.) 
—J: Gower.—WEP 1 

Cipher Dispatch, The, Sel. ad. fr. (Love Conquers 
Revenge.)—Rob’t Byr.—NDP 
Circe. (Columbia Spectator.) —CG 2 
Circe.—J: B. L. Warren, Lord De Tabley.—VA 
Circle Day.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Circulating Library Social.—Anon.—EuE 
Circumstance.—T- B. Aldrich.—AA 
Circumstance.—Alfred Tennyson.—AVP 
Circumstances Alter Cases.—Anon .—FHE 
Circumstances Favorable to the Progress of Literature 
in America, The, Sel. fr. (Prospects of the Re¬ 
public, The.)—E: Everett.—BS 11—SR 4 
(American Experiment of Self-government, The— 
abr.) —SS—SSD—TM D 
(Our Republic— abr.) —SO 
Circumstantial Evidence.—Anon.—KNE 
Circus Boy, The.—A. A. V. Thomson.—CS 33—NPS 
—YP 

Circus Clown, The.—Nathan D. Urner.—CS 15 
Circus-day Parade, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Cities of the Bible.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—SSE 
Citizen and the Saloon System, The.—S: Dickie.— 
WR 18 

Citizen and the Thieves, The.—Anon.—BC 
Citizen’s Responsibility, A. (Fr. a Speech delivered 
at Canton,Ohio, May 30, 1894.)—W: McKinley. 

_gQ 

City, The.—R: Burton.—TAV 

City and the Country, The .—By “A Member of the 
Baltimore Bar.”—ED 

City and the Sea, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—PEO 
City Bells. (Fr. The Lay of St. Aloy’s.)—R: H. Bar¬ 
ham.—BNL 

City Child, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—HSS 2—PoR 
City Contrasts.—Anon.—HP 
City in the Sea, The.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—ASL 
City Man’s Dream of the Country. (Agricultural 
Editor’s Poem, The— C .)—Sam W. Foss.— 
BS 24 

(Country Summer Pastoral, A.)—WR 14 
City Men in the Country. (Lines Recited at the Berk¬ 
shire Jubilee, Pittsfield, Mass., Aug. 23, 1844 
— C .)—Oliver W. Holmes.—SS 
City Mystery, A.—Amy Randolph.—WR 7 
City of Dreadful Night, The, Sel. fr. (Sts. I., XVII., 
XXI.)—Jas. Thomson.—WEP 4 
(Melencolia—XXI.)—VA 
City of God, The.—S: Johnson.—AA—TAS 
City of Is, The.—M. J. Savage.—BS 15 
City of New York, The.—F: Ren£ Coudert.—SC 
City of the End of Things, The.—Archibald Lamp- 
man.—VA 

City of the Living, The.—Anon.—KNE—LLC (abr.) 
City or Country.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
City Sportsman, The—W: H. Hills.—PP—YPS 
City Tale, A.—Alfred H. Miles.—CS 35 
Civil War.—C: D. Shanly.—AWB—BNL—CS 4—GP 
MMR—PS—SR 4 
(Fancy Shot, The.)—PAPm 
Civil War. An Episode of the Commune.—Victor 
Hugo (tr. by Lucy H. Hooper).—CS 32—DR 
(si. abr.) 

(Relenting Mob, A.)—BS 18—PFP 
Civil War in America, The.—J: Bright.—OS 2 
Civil War the Greatest National Evil.—J: H: Temple, 
Viscount Palmerston.—OM—SS 
Civility Never Lost.—Anon.—FDY 
Civilization of Africa.—E: Everett.—SS 
Claim was Met, The.—Anon.—CS 37 
Claims of Mutability Pleaded before Nature.— 
Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Clam-soup.—W: A. Croffut.—HBP—THP 
Clan Alpine.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

Clansman to his Chief, The.—C: Mackay. See Mac¬ 
laine’s Child. 

Clarabel’s Valentine.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Clara’s Gifts.—Anon.—HVD 

Clarence’s Dream.—W: Shakespeare. See King Rich¬ 
ard III. 

Clari, the Maid of Milan, Sel.fr. —J: H. Payne. See 
Home, Sweet Home. 

Claribel.—Alfred Tennyson.—WEP 4 
Claribel’s Prayer.—M. L. Parmelee.—CSS—GP—PPSr 
Clarissa Laughs.—Ruth P. Milne.—CG 2 
Class Meeting, 1875. (For Class Meeting, 1875— C.) 
—Oliver W. Holmes.—SE (sel.) 


69 





Class 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Class Song.—Anon.—CP 

Class Tree, The.—Emma S. Thomas.—AD 

Class Will.—Anon.—CP 

Class-day Hamlet, A,—H. P. Huntress.—CG 3 
Classic Ode, A.—C: B. Loomis.—NA 
Classical Criticism.—G: L. Richardson.—AA 
Classical Music.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
Claude Melnotte to Pauline.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See 
Lady of Lyons, The. 

Claude Melnotte’s Apology [and Defence].—E: Bul¬ 
wer-Lytton. See Lady of Lyons, The. 

Claude to Eustace.—Arthur H. Clough. See Amours 
de Voyage. 

Claudian, Sel. fr. (Curse, The.)—Herman and Wills.— 
WR 13 

Claudius and Cynthia.—Maurice Thompson. See 
Doom of Claudius and Cynthia, The. 
Cleanliness.—Anon.—TFS 
Cleanliness.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC—PoR 
Cleansing Fires.—Adelaide A. Procter.—HDL—SSS 
Clear and Cool.—C: Kingsley. See Water Babies,' ; The. 
Clear Case, A.—Wade Whipple.—CS 29 
Clear the Way.—C: Mackay.—CS 16—FP—HSS 3— 
SM—TMD 

Clearing up Technicalities.—Anon.—WR 4 
Clematis.—Dora Read Goodale.—AD 
Clemency of Salah-ud-Deen, The. (Adulteress, The 
— C. — si. abr.) —Edwin Arnold.—WR 24 
Clemont’s Day Dream.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Cleon and I.—C: Mackay.—BNL—CSS—GP—HSS 2 
PPSr—SS 

Cleone to Aspasia.—Walter S. Landor. See Pericles 
and Aspasia. 

Cleopatra.—W: Shakespeare. See Antony and Cleopatra. 
Cleopatra.—W: W. Story.—AA—MR—SR 7 
Cleopatra and the Messenger.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Antony and Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra at Actium.—T: K. Hervey.—OS 3 
Cleopatra to Antony.—Sarah Doudney.—HP 
“Cleopatra, who thought they maligned her.” {Lim¬ 
erick.) —Newton Mackintosh.—NA 
Cleopatra’s Barge.—W: Shakespeare. See Antony 
and Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra’s Dream.—J. J. Owens.—HP 
Cleopatra’s Protest.—E: L. Keyes.—WR 3 
Cleopatra’s Resolution.—W: Shakespeare. See An¬ 
tony and Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra’s Soliloquy.—Mary B. Clark.—HP 
Clergy and the Pulpit, The.— (Frags, fr. various 
authors .)—BNL 

Clergyman had to Explain, The.—Anon.—SR 10 
“Clergyman while speaking in the pulpit.”—David 
Swing.—GG 

Clerical Wit.—Anon.—CS 4—SCS 
(Wonderful Mosquitoes.)—KNE 
Clerk Colvill; or, the Mermaid.—Anon.—PEB 1 
Clerk Saunders. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.— 
WEP 1 

(SI. abr .)—BB—OB 
(Diff. and shorter vers.) —PEB 2 
Clerkes Tale, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales. 

Clerks, The.—E. A. Robinson.—AA 
Clever Idiot, The.—Anon.—BC 
Clever Trick, A.—Anon.—MYF 
Clifford’s Way.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Cliffs of Dover, The. (C.) —Felicia D. Hemans. 

(Rocks of my Country.)—BLP—SS 
Climatic Sorcery.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Climax, The. (Boston Courier.) —DSS 
Climbing.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Climbing up the Hill.—Anon.—DCP 
Cling to those who Cling to you.—Anon.—SSS 
Clippings from the Press.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Clito.—Anon. See following. 

Clito’s Address to the Men of Athens. (Fr. Clito.)— 
Anon.—WR 13 

Clive. (Abr.) —Rob’t Browning.—BS 21 
(Lord Clive.)—DR 

“Clock at Berne, The.”—Sidney Grundy.—WR 13 
Clocking Hen, The.—“Aunt Effie.”—WCL 
Clock’s Song, The.—Rose H. Lathrop.—AA 
Clock-tinker, The.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Cloister, The.—Lydia M. Child—TAS 
Cloistered.—Alice Brown.—AA 
Clorinda and Damon.—Andrew Marvell.—EP 
Clorus’ Song.—W: Basse.—EP 
Close at Hand.—Susan Coolidge.—HDL 
Close of a Rainy Day, The.—Nathan H. Dole.—POS 
Close of Defense of Dartmouth College. (Fr. The 
Dartmouth College Case.)—Dan’l Webster.— 
FD 1 


Close of Impeachment of Hastings.—Edmund. Burke. 

See Impeachment of Warren Hastings. 

Close of School.—Anna Morgan.—SD 
Close of the Battle of Waterloo.—Victor Hugo See 
Les Miserables. 

Close Shave, A.—“Bob o’Link.”—DDD 
Close to Ninety.—J. H. Bryant.—TMR 
Closet Scene from Hamlet.—W: Shakespeare See 
Hamlet. 

Closing Address.—Anon.—DCP—SSS 
Closing Address.—Anon.—PS 
Closing Address.—M. E. Cornell. —HE 
Closing Day.—Anon.—KC 

Closing of the “Eagle,” The.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Closing Scene, The.—Anon.—CS 31—TS 
Closing Scene, The.—T: B. Read.—AA—BNL—CS 2 
FEP—GP—SE (br. sel.)— SN 
Closing Song for School Exhibition.—Mrs. Russell Kav- 
anaugh.—DLD 

Closing Speech.—Anon.—DLF 
(Good-bye.)—DLS 

Closing Year, The.—G: D. Prentice.—BNL—BS 3— 
CS 1 — FEP — FTR — HNS — LLC — SA — 
SAE (br. sel.)— WRD 
Cloud, The.—Anon.—HP 
Cloud, The.—Anon.—SM 

Cloud, The.—Percy B. Shelley.—AE (br. sel.) —BNL 
BS 13 — EPs (sel.) — FEP — GN — HBP — 
HSS 3—LLC—SN—SO—VSG—WEP 4 
(Abr.) —LC—POS 

(Incl. in “An April Day”— si. abr.) —WR 9 
Cloud Beauty.—J: Ruskin. See Modern Painters. - 
Cloud Castles.—W: H: Withrow.—TCV 
Cloudland.— (Columbia Literary Monthly.) —CG 2 
Clouds, The.—Anon.—NV 
Clouds, The.—W: Croswell.—AA 
Clouds, The.—J: Ruskin. See Modem Painters. 
Clouds.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL—PoR 
Cloud-visions.—W:Wordsworth. See Excursion, The 
Cloudy Day, A.—B. L. C. Griffith.—SPC 
Clover, The.—Marg. Deland.—AA 
Clover. Dora R. Goodale.—AD 
Clover, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—HP 
Clover.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 

Clover Blossoms, The.—Oscar Laighton.—BIL— 
FTA 

Clown’s Baby, The.—Marg. T. Janv er—BS 11—CS 23 
FEP—FR—PPSr—SPE 

Clowns’ First Rehearsal, The.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Clowns’ Horn Drill.—Anon.—WDM 

Clown’s Lament, The.—Clement Scott.—WR 13 

Clowns’ Second Rehearsal, The.—W: Shakespeare. 

See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Clown’s Story, The.—Vandyke Browne.—CS 8—SA 
Club, The.—Jos. Addison. See Spectator, The. 

Clue, The.—Charlotte F. Bates.—AA 
Coaching the Rising Star.—Stella De Lorez.—BS 20 
—WR 20 

Coal Digger, The.—Jessie F. O’Donnell.—DES 
Coasters, The.—T: F. Day.—AA 
Coast-guard, The.—Emily H. Miller.—PEO 
Coasting New Year’s Eve.—Anon.—HS 
Coast-wise Lights, The. (Fr. A Song of the English.)— 
Rudyard Kipling.—BNL 

Cob House [s], The.—Kate P. Osgood—HP—WR 17 
Cobbe’s Prophecies.—Cobbe.—NA 
Cobbler. The.—Anon.—DCP—DS—PP—YA—YFR 
Cobbler and [the] Stork [The].—Eugene Field.—EF— 
—WTI) 

Cobbler Keezar’s Vision.—J: G. Whittier.—AP 
Cobbler of Lynn, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 26 
Cobbler’s Secret, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

Cobra, The.—Miller Hageman.—DR 
Cobweb Party, The.—Anon.—EuE 
Cock and Hen Story, A. (Legend, The— C. — fr. The 
Pilgrim to Compostella.)—Rob’t Southey.— 
HPE 

Cock and the Bull, The.—C: S. Calverley.—BNL— 
NA 

Cock up your Beaver.—Rob’t Burns.—LC 
Cock-a-doodle-doo.—Anon.—PC 
Cockatoos, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Cockayne Country.—A. M. F. (Robinson) Darmesteter 
—VA 

Cockle vs. Cackle.—T: Hood.—ESs 
Cockney Wail, A.—Anon.—CS 11 (si. abr.) 1 — HP 
Cockscomb. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.) — Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Cocoa-tree, The.—C. W. Stoddard.—AA 
Codfish, The.—H: M. Shaw.—SR 5 




TITLE INDEX 


Come 


Cod-fisher, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 

Coelus to Hyperion.—J: Keats. See Hyperion. 

Cceur de Lion at the Bier of his Father.—Felicia 
D. Hemans.—CS 4—EDY—PS 
Cceur de Lion to Berengaria.—Theodore Tilton.—AA 
Coffee my Mother Used to Make, The.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
CD—SR 17 

(Like his Mother Used to Make— C.) —HP 
Coffee Slips, The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Cogitabo pro Peccato Meo.—W: Habington. See 
Castara. 

Cohen at the Seashore.—J. W. Ransome.—CDV 
Coin of Pity, The.—G: Meredith. See Modern Love. 
Coincidence, A.—F. T. Cooper.—CG 1 
Cold.—Theodore Roberts.—TCV 
Cold, Hard Cash. (.Chicago Herald.) —BS 19 
Cold in the Head, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
DDD 

Cold in the Head, A. (Letter to Bernard Barton, 
Jan. 9th, 1824— C.— abr.)— C: Lamb.—OS 3 
Cold Water.—H: H. Holloway.—SSS 
Cold Water.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—PPSr—TS 
Cold Water Boys.—Anon.—COS—POS 
Cold-water Cross. (Dial.) —Anon.— CS 8 
Cold-water Man, The.—J: G. Saxe.—CSS—THP 
Coleridge.—G. S. Heilman.-—AA 
Coleridge.—Theodore Watts.—YA 
Colin.—Anthony Munday.—PGT 1 
(Beauty Bathing.)—OB 
(To Colin Clout.)—EP—WEP 1 
Colin and Lucy.—T: Tickell.—CGd (si. abr.) —FEP 
Colin’s Complaint.—Nicholas Rowe.—FEP 
Colin’s Lay of Elisa.—Edmund Spenser. See Shep- 
heardes Calendar, The. 

Coliseum, The.—Lord Byron. See C'hilde Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Coliseum, The. (Fr. Rome in Summer.)—H: W. 
Longfellow.—OS 3 

Coliseum [by Moonlight], The.—Lord Byron. See 
Manfred. 

Collar, The.—G: Herbert—ELP—WEP 2 
College and the Nation, The.—Grover Cleveland. See 
Political Duties and Responsibilities of Univer¬ 
sity Men. 

College Colonel, The.—Herman Melville.—AA 
College Days.—Carleton Hunneman.—CG 1 
College “Oil Cans.”—Will Victor McGuire.—CS 27 
College Rowing-song, A.—W. J. H.—CG 1 
College Training, A.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
College Verse. (Williams Argo.) —CG 1 
College Widow, A.—Anon.—CG 1 

Collegian and the Porter, The.—J. R. Planche.—CS 3 
Collegian to his Bride, The. (Punch.) —BNL 
“Collegiate education has this distinction and privi¬ 
lege, A.”—Theodore Woolsey.—GG 
Collision of Vices [,A],—G: Canning—PS—SS 
Colloquial Powers of Dr. Franklin.—W: Wirt.—BS 17 
Colloquy between Portia and Nerissa regarding the 
Suitors.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of 
Venice, The. 

Colloquy on a Cab-stand. (Punch.) —HPE 
Colloquy with Myself, A.—Bernard Barton.—WRD 
Collusion between a Alegaitor and a Water-Snaik.— 
J. W. Morris.—BNL—EPs—NA 
Cologne. (C.) —S: T Coleridge.—FEP—HBP—THP 
(Epigram: Cologne.)—BNL 
(Expectoration the Second.)—HPE 
Colonel Burnaby.—-Andrew Lang.—EDY 
Colonel Carter of Cartersville, Sel. jr. (One-legged 
Goose, The— sel. fr. Ch. III.)—F. Hopkinson 
Smith—BS 24—CS 31—HBR—WR 4 
(One-legged Duck, The— arr. by W: H. Head.)— 
SRH 

Colonel Ingersoll’s Remarkable Vision. (Fr. Speech 
at Indianapolis. Ind., Sept. 21, 1876.)— 

Rob’t G. Tngersoll.—FS 
(Vision of War, The.)—SC 

Colonel’s Experiment, The.—Will Lisenbee.—CS 37 
—WR 26 

Colonel’s Orders, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 29 
Colonel’s Story, The.—Rob’t C. Rogers.—TMR 
Colonization of America, The.—W: H. Prescott.— 
WR 10 

Colonna to the King.—R: L. Shiel.—SS 
Colonos.—H: Alford.—VA 

Colorado. (Acting char.) —Millie M. Olcott.—StD 
Colorado Hotel Rules.—T. Sheppard.—PS 
Colored Man’s Disco’se on Different Subjects, A.— 
Anon.—MCS 

Colored Philosophy.—W. E. Cochran.—BS 24 
Colors of the Regiment, The. (Sels.) —F. W. Robert¬ 
son.—OS 2 


Colour Passage, A.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Colubriad, The.—W: Cowper.—BFV—CGd 
Columbia.—E: Chapman.—TMR 
Columbia.—Timothy Dwight.—AWB—BNL—BS 4— 
CS 12—PAPm—PRR (si. abr .)—SR 8 
Columbia.—P. S. Gilmore.—CS 18—PRR 
Columbia.—F. L. Knowles.—PAPm 
Columbia and Liberty.—Rob’t Treat Paine.—WR 10 
Columbia and Mr. “They Say.”—Clara J. Denton— 
WLO 

Columbia and the Boys —Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean.—David T. Shaw 
(also at. to Timothy Dwight).—CP (si. abr .)— 
LLC—PAPm (si. diff. vers.) 

(Columbia, the Land of the Brave.)—BLP 
(Red, White and Blue, The.)—WCLI 2 
Columbia, the Land of the Brave.—David T. Shaw. 

See Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean. 
Columbian Exposition Opened, The.—Grover Cleve¬ 
land.—BLP 

Columbian Legend, A.—Walt Mason.—WR 12 
Columbian Oration.—Chauncey M. Depew.—SC 
Columbus.)—SO 

Columbus the Discoverer of America.)—BLP 
(Dedication Exercises.)—BLP 

Sels. in SC and SO partly same as those in BLP. 
Columbian Oration.—H: Watterson. See Our Ex¬ 
panding Republic. 

Columbia’s Banner.—Edna D. Proctor.—TMR 
Columbia’s Centennial Party. (Play.) —Mrs. M. B. C. 
Slade.—BS 4 

Columbia’s Emblem.—Edna D. Proctor.—GN—POS 
—WR 10 

Columbia’s Jubilee.—Granville B. Putnam.—CS 33 
Columbine.—H: H. Rusby.—AD 
Columbus.—T: C. Adams.—WR 10 
Columbus. (C.) —Arthur H. Clough. 

(Columbus Crossing the Atlantic.)—OS 3 
Columbus.—Olive E. Dana.—CS 31 
Columbus.—Ben W. Davis.—CS 33 
Columbus.—Chauncey M. Depew. See Columbian 
Oration. 

Columbus.—Aubrey Devere.—WR 10 
Columbus. (Abr.) —Jas. R. Lowell.—WR 10 
Columbus. (C.) —Joaquin Miller.— AA — CR — EDY 
—GN—WR 10 

(Columbus—Westward.)—GMS 
(Port of Ships, The— si. abr.) —ASL—YBF 
(Tribute to Columbus, A.)—DS 
Columbus.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—AA—EDY—WR 10 
Columbus at the Court of Spain.—Mrs. L. E. Boyd.— 
SD 

Columbus Before Ferdinand and Isabella. (Tab.) — 
Anon.—BS 14—TCP 

Columbus Crossing the Atlantic.—Arthur H. Clough. 
See Columbus. 

Columbus in Chains.—Marie J. Jewsbury.—PS 

(“And this, O Spain! is thy return”— hr. sel.) — 
CS 1 

Columbus Landing in the New World. (Life and 
Voyages of Christopher Columbus, The— sel. 
fr. Vol. I., Bk. TV.. Ch. I.)—Washington Irving. 
—WR 5 

(Discovery of America The—tc. introductory mat¬ 
ter.)—WR 10 

Columbus the Discoverer of America.—Chauncey M. 

Depew. See Columbian Oration. 

Columbus the World-giver.—Maurice F. Egan.— 
TAS 

Columbus to Ferdinand.—Jonathan Mason.—WR 10 
Columbus—Westward.—Joaquin Miller. See Columbus. 
Column of July, The.—G: G. McCrae.—EDY 
Colyn Cloute, Sel. fr. —J: Skelton.—WEP 1 
Comal and Galbina. (Sel. fr. Fingal, Bk. IT.)—Jas. 

McPherson (Ossian).—CS 36 
Comanche.—Joaquin Miller.—WR 14 
Combat, The.—Matthew Arnold. See Sohrab and 
Rustum. 

Combat between Fitz-James and Roderick Dhu.— 
Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Combat between Paris and Menelaus.—Homer. See 
Iliad, The. 

Combat of Fitz-James and Roderick.—Walter Scott. 

See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Combat with the Octopus, The. (The Toilers of the 
Sen, Bk. IV., Chs. I.—III.— cond .)—Victor 
Hugo.—WCLG 2 
Combine, A.—Anon.—WR 2 

“Come and Be Shone.” ( Detroit Free Press.)— BS 18 

Come and Go.—Sharpe.—BC 

Come and Hug Me!—J. C. McDonough.—DE 


71 






Come 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Come, and Welcome, to Jesus Christ.—Jos. Hart.— 
FEP 

Come Away!—T: Campion.—ELP 
Come Away, Come Away, Death.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Twelfth Night. 

Come Away! Come, Sweet Love!—-Anon.—ELP 
Come Away, Death.—W: Shakespeare. See Tempest, 
The. 

Come Back.—Arthur H. Clough. See Songs in Ab- 
sence. 

Come Back.—T: D. English.—CS 15 
Come Back.—H: W: Herbert.—AA 
“Come, dance, elfins, dance! for my harp is in tune.” 
—Anon.—AE 

Come down, O Maid.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, 
The. 

Come for Arbutus.—Sara L. Oberholtzer.—SN 
“Come, for thy day, thy wasted day, is closing.” 
Anon.—GG 

Come here, Little Robin.—Anon.—NV 
Come, Holy Spirit, Heavenly Dove. (Hymn XXXIV.) 
—Isaac Watts—FEP 
(Come, Holy Spirit— si. abr.) —LLC 
“Come, Howard, from the gloom of the prison, and 
the taint of the lazar-house.”—Chapin.— 
GG 

Come into the Garden, Maud.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Maud. 

Come, Let us Kisse and Parte. (Ideas, LXI.—C.)— 
Michael Drayton.—BNL 
(Let us Kiss and Part.)—HBP 
(Love’s Farewell.)—FTA—PGT 1—YBF 
(Parting, The [or A].)—CEL—GP—OB 
(Since there’s no Help.)—OH 
(Sonnet.)—ELP—FEP—WEP 1 
Come Love or Death.—Will H: Thompson.—AA 
Come Morir.—S. G. W.—EPs 

Come not, when I am Dead.—Alfred Tennyson.— 
YBF 

Come o’er the Sea.—T: Moore.—CEL 
“Come out from among them.”—Mary T. Lathrap. 
—WR 18 

Come out, Love.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—HPE 
Come, Poet, Come!—Arthur H. Clough.—A VP 
Come, Rest in this Bosom—T: Moore.—BNL—FEP 
—YBF 

Come, Send round the Wine.—T: Moore.—HBP 
Come, Sign the Pledge.—W. M. Frazer.—CS 31 
Come, Sleep.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Come Slowly, Paradise.—J. B. Kenyon.—AA 
Come Strike Me the Harp with its Soul-stirring Twang. 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Come, Sweet Lass.—Tom D’Urfey.—OES 
Come, Thou Fount of every Blessing.—Rob’t Robin¬ 
son.—FEP 

Come, Thou Monarch of the Vine.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Antony and Cleopatra. 

Come to Jesus, Rr. sel. fr. (“There’s a wideness in 
God’s mercy.”)—Frd’k W. Faber—GG 
Come to me, Dearest.—Jos. Brennan [or Brenan],— 
BNL—FTA—TFY 

(Exile to his Wife, The.)—CS 8—FEP 
Come to the Forest.—Anon.—AD 

Come to these Scenes of Peace.—W: L. Bowles.— 
BNL—HBP 

Come unto Me. (Hymn VII.—C.)—Anna L. Bar- 
bauld—HBP 

“Come unto Me.”—L. L. Benson.—CS 35 
“Come unto Me.”—Horatius Bonar.—FEP 
(Voice from Galilee, The— C.) —VA 
Come unto Me.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
“Come unto these yellow sands.”—W: Shakespeare. 
See Tempest, The. 

Come up from the Fields, Father!—Walt Whitman.— 
MMR 

Come with the Ring.—T: Hood (tor. at. to S: Lover).— 
CS 21 

(Maiden’s Request, The.)—MHR 
(Please to Ring the Belle— C.) —BS 24 
Come, ye Disconsolate.—T: Moore.—HDL—LLC 
(Varies si. fr. Poems.) 

Come, ye Lofty.—Archer Gurney.—FEP 
Comedian’s Last Night, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.— 
EDY 

Comedy.—T: B. Aldrich.—FLS 

(Contains 1 more st. than in Poems.) 

Comedv of Errors, Sels. fr. — W: Shakespeare.— 
BNL (hr. sel. fr. Act V., Sc. 1.)—WR 11 (II., 
2— si. abr.) 

Comet, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Comet, The.—T: Hood.—CS 3 


Comet, The.—C: Sangster.—BNL 

Comfort.—Anon.—CS 19 

Comfort. ( All the Year Round.) —FTA 

(“If there should come a time, as well there may.”) 
—GG 

Comfort.—Eliz. B. Browning.—HDL 
Comfort.—Mortimer Collins.—BNL 
Comfort.—C: E. Merrill, Jr—CG 2 
Comfort in Affliction.—W: Aytoun.—HPE 
Comfort of the Trees, The.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
Comfort One Another.—M. A. Sangster.—SSS 
Comfort to a Youth That had Lost his Love.—Rob’t 
Herrick.—OB 

Comforter, The.—R. R. Kirk.—CG 3 
Comforter, A. (Abr.) —Adelaide A. Procter.—WCL 
Comforting Reflections of a Nonentity.—S. M. Will¬ 
iams.—CG 2 

Comic Lovers, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage 
Land. 

Comic Man, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage 
Land. 

Comic Miseries.—J: G. Saxe.—HPE 
Comical Dun, A.—J: McKeever.—CS 5 
Cornin’ through the Rye.—Anon. See Coming 
through the Rye. 

Cornin’ through the Rye. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 5— 
DS—TCP—YA 
Coming.—Anon.—HDL 

Coming and Going.—H: W. Beecher.— See Norwood, 
Coming from the Picnic. ( Brandon Banner.) —GH 
Coming Home.—Anon.—CS 37 
“Coming Man, The.”—Anon.—CS 37 (abr.) —HP 
Coming of Arthur, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Idylls of the King. 

Coming of Charlemagne. (Paraphrase of a Passage 
in the Chronicle of the Monk of St. Gall—C.)— 
T: B. Macaulay.—CEL 

Coming of his Feet, The.—Lyman W. Allen.—HDL— 
SSS 

Coming of Santa Claus, The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Coming of Spring, The.—Anon.—CEL 
(Cuckoo Song— si. diff. wording.) —OB 
Coming of Spring, The.—Anon.—NV 
Coming of Spring, The.—Wilhelm Muller.—PEO 
Coming of Spring, The.—Nora Perry.—PoR—POS 
Coming of the Mom, The.—C: Heavysege.—TCV 
Coming of the Rain, The.—Jas. Thomson. See Sea¬ 
sons, The. 

Coming out of Church.—Anon.—WR 24 
Coming Round.—Phoebe Cary.—CS 19 
Coming [or Cornin’] through the Rye.—Anon.—BNL 
FEP—HBP—LC—YBF 
(Ad. fr. Burns’ poem of same name.) 

Coming to an Understanding.—Anon.—MFD 
“Coming to Jesus is the desire of the heart after Him.” 
—Newman Hall.—GG 

Coming Woman, The. (Christian Union.) —MYF 
Coming Woman, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

Commemoration Ode.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Ode Re¬ 
cited at the Harvard Commemoration. 
Commemoration Ode, World’s Columbian Exposition 
Sels. fr. —Harriet Monroe. 

Democracy.—AA 
Lincoln.—AA 
Washington.—AA 

Commencement.—Sarah W. Kellogg.—PFP 
(Second Trial, A.)—BS 14—HBR 
Commencement Day.—W. D. Porter.—PEO 
Commencing to Work.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Commerce.—E: Everett.—BS 15 
Commit to Memory.—E: Brooks.—LLC 
Common Bond, The.—H. C. Hunt.—SD 
Common Citizen-soldier, The. Sel. fr. (Republic of 
New England, The.)—J: B. O’Reilly.—FD 2 
Common Duties.—Anna R. Brown.—CS 37 
Common Grave, The.—Sydney Dobell—CEL—WEP 4 
Common Inference, A.—Charlotte P. (Stetson) Gil* 
man.—A A 

Common Lot, The.—Jas. Montgomery.—BNL—CEL 
FEP (abr.) —SS (si. abr.) 

Common Offering, The.—Harriet M. Kimball.—FHS 
Common Question, The.—J: G. Whittier—OS 1 
Common Sense.—Jas. T. Fields.—AA—SR 1 
Common Sense. (Sonnet CXXX.)—W: Shakespeare. 
—EPs 

Common Thought, A.—H: Timrod.—HDL 
Commonplace Woman, The.—Anon.—DS 
Commonwealth of Lunatics, The. (Tatler, No. 125.) 
—Sir R: Steele.—ESs 

Commonwealth of Massachusetts, The.—W. E. Russell. 
—SC 


72 




TITLE INDEX 


Concerning 


Commonwealth of the Bees, The.—W: Shakespeare. 
See King Henry V. 

Communion Hymn.—Nathaniel L. Frothingham.— 

TAS 

Communion of Saints, The.—S. G. Bulfinch.—TAS 
Como.—Joaquin Miller.—SR 9 
Companions.—C: S. Calverley.—NA—THP—VA 
Companions.—R: H: Stoddard.—LBB—MBB 
“Company Manners.”—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Comparison, A.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Comparison, A. Addressed to a Young Lady. (C.)— 
W: Cowper.—WEP 3 
(Sweet Stream, that Winds.)—BNL 
(To a Young Lady.)—PGT 1 
Comparison of George Washington with George the 
Fourth, Called the First Gentleman of Europe. 
(Fr. The Four Georges—George the Fourth.) 
—W: M. Thackeray.—OS 3 
Comparison of Washington and NapQleon.—Francois 
R. A., Vicomte de Chateaubriand.—OS 3 
Compass, The.—S: D. Robbins.—TAS 
Compassion.—Marion P. Riche.—CS 33 
Compensation.—Anon.—CS 5 

(Railroad Car Scene, A.— prose vers.) —CS 5—SR 4 
Compensation.—Anon.—CS 15 
Compensation.—Anon.—HP 
Compensation, Sel. fr. —Phcebe Cary.—HDL 
Compensation.—T: S. Collier.—AA 
Compensation.—Christopher P. Cranch.—TAS 
Compensation, (2 diff.) br. sels. fr. —Ralph W: Emer¬ 
son.—PEO—SE 

“ Great man is always willing to be little. A.” (Br. 
sel.) —GG 

“ Wise man always shows himself on the side of his 
assailants, The.” (Br. sel.) —GG 
Compensation. Sel. fr. (“Then hush! oh, hush! for the 
Father knows what thou knowest not.”)— 
Frances R. Havergal.—FHS 
Compensation.—F: R. Torrence. See House of a Hun¬ 
dred Lights, The. 

Compensation.—Eliza S. Turner.—OH 
Compensations of the Imagination.—Mark Akenside. 
—SS 

Competing Railroads, The. (.Dial.) —Anon.—BS 5—PR 
Complaining March.—Susan H. Swett.—YBT 
Complaint, The.—Mark Akenside.—OB 
Complaint, A.—Tudor Jenks [or B. A. Pennypacker]. 

—DST—PR—WR 24—YA 
Complaint, The.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 
Complaint by Night of the Lover not Beloved, A.— 
H: Howard, Earl of Surrey.—WEP 1 
Complaint of a Forsaken Indian Woman, The.—W: 
Wordsworth.—MRS 

Complaint of a Lover Rebuked.—H: Howard, Earl of 
Surrey.—ELP 

Complaint of Age, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Shep- 
heardes Calendar, The. 

Complaint of Pan, The.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Complaint of Rosamond, The, Sel. fr. (Sorrow.)—S: 
Daniel.—KNE 

Complaint of Thalia. (Fr. The Teares of the Muses.) 

—Edmund Spenser.—WEP 1 
Complaint of the Absence of her Lover Being upon 
the Sea.—H: Howard, Earl of Surrey.—OB 
Complaint of the Bird in a Dark Room.—J. P. 
Richter.—OS 2 

Complaint of the Duke of Buckingham.—T: Sackville, 
Lord Buckhurst.—WEP 1 

Complaints of the Poor, The.—Rob’t Southey.—FEP 
Compleat Angler, The, Sels. fr. —Izaak Walton. 

Angler. The. (By J: Chalkhill.) — BNL — FEP — 
IIBP 

Angler’s Song. The. (By W: Basse.)—OES 
Angler’s Wish, The. (By I. Walton.)—BNL—FEP 
—HBP—YBF 

Coridon’s Song. (By J: Chalkhill.)—OES 
On a Bank as I Sat a-Fishing. (C. —f>y.{H: Wot- 
ton.)—EP 

(Spring Idyll, A.)—CEL 
Completely Sold.—Anon.—DCD 
Completeness.—Irene E. Morton.—TCY 
Completing de Spell.—Anon.—DSS 
Completion. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, The.^(C.), 
Br. sels. fr.. —Dan’l Webster 
America’s Gifts to Europe.—PS 
Bunker Hill Monument.—SE 
Bunker Hill Monument Completed.—SR 8 
Dedication of Bunker Hill Monument.—FD 1 
Duties of American Citizens.—SE 


Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument (continued). 
Elements of the American Government.—SE 
Second Bunker Hill Monument Oration.—IR 
“That motionless shaft will be the most powerful 
of speakers.”—GG 

Completion of the National Monument to Washington, 
Sels. fr. —Rob’t C. Winthrop. 

Character of Washington, The.—FD 2 

(Washington Monument Completed, The— ptly. 
same.) —SR 8 

Washington Needle, The.—FD 2 
Compleynte of Chaucer to his Purse, The.—Geoffrey 
Chaucer.—BNL 

(To my Empty Purse.)—HPE—OS 3 
Complication, A. (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Compliment, The. (C. — sel.) —T: Carew.—BNL 
(“I do not love thee for that fair.”)—YBF 
Compliment to Queen Elizabeth.-—W: Shakespeare. 

See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Compliments. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Compliments from Nature. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Composed at Cora Linn.—W: Wordsworth.—FTR 
Composed at Neidpath Castle, the Property of Lord 
Queensberry.—W: Wordsworth.—PGT 1 
Composed in Spring. (C.) —Rob’t Bums. 

(Again Rejoicing Nature Sees.)—SN 
Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 1802. 
(C.)—W: Wordsworth.—WEP 4 
(“Earth has not anything to show more fair.”)— 
HBR 

(Morning in London.)—HBP—OS 3 
(Sonnet Composed upon Westminster Bridge.)— 
BNL—FEP—MBL 

(Upon Westminster Bridge[, Sept. 3, 1802].)—OB 
—PGT 1—YBF 

(Westminster Bridge.)—LLC—WR 1 
Composite Maiden, A.—Anon.—CS 28 
Composition, The.—Lulu C. Hillyer.—CS 26 
Composition Day.—L. H. Bruce.—SR 13 
Composition on Animals.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Compromise Bill of 1850, The.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Compromise Measures. 

Compromise Measures, The, Sels. fr. —Dan’l Web- 
ster. 

Compromise Bill of 1850, The.—FD 1 

(Constitution and the Union, The— sel.) —SE 
(Justice to the Whole Country— abr.) —KNE—SS 
Massachusetts and the Union.—FD 1 
Compromise of Principle. (Sel. fr. Against a Compro¬ 
mise of Principle.)—H: W. Beecher.—NC—PEO 
Comradery.—Madison Cawein.—AA 
Comrades.—H: A. Blood.—AA 
Comrades! Join the Flag of Glory.—Anon.—AWB 
Comus. (A Masque.)—J: Milton.—EPs—FEP—HBP 
Comus. (Sel.) —WEP 2 

Comus. (Sel.) —BNL (br.) —OB 
Echo. (Sel.) —OB 
(Song.)—ELP—EPs 
(To Echo.)—-CEL 

Hunt of the Sorcerer, The. (Sel.) —BNL 
(Spirit-shepherd, The.)—EP 
Lady in Comus, The. (Sel. ptly. like WEP 2.)— 
WR 1 

(Lady Lost in the Wood, The— sel.) —BNL 
Land of Eternal Summer, The. (Sel.) —ELP 
(“To the ocean now I fly.”)—OB 
Light. (Br. sel.) —OS 2 
(Comus, Br. sel. fr.) —BNL 
Nymph of the Severn, The. (Sel.) —BNL 
(Sabrina.)—EP 

(Spirit’s Song to Sabrina.)—LC 
Sabrina. (Sel.) —OB 

(Comus, Br. sel. fr. — sel.) —BNL 
(Incantation— abr. )—ELP 
(Sabrina Fair.)—GN 

Conceipt of Diabolical Possession, A. (C .—Fragments 
of Burton, Extract III.)—C: Lamb. 
(Hypochondriacus.)—HBP 
Conceit, A.—Mortimer Collins.—HP 
Conceited Grasshopper, The.—Anon.—DLS 
Concensus of the Competent, A.—Dorothea Lummis. 

See Consensus of the Competent, A. 

Conception and Execution. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Concerning Chambermaids. (C.) —S: L. Clemens. 

(Mark Twain’s Opinion of Chamber-maids.)—CS 2 
Concerning Kisses.—Anon.—WR 2 

(If you Want a Kiss, why. Take It.)—HP 
Concerning Sisters-in-law. (Punch.) —HPE 
Concerning Tabitha’s Dancing the Minuet.—Arthur 
W. Colton.—CG 1 


73 





Concerning 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Concerning the Hono[u]r of Books.—S: Daniel.—LBB 
MBB 

Concert Given by Mr. Spring, A.—Anon. See Con¬ 
cert in the Wood, The. 

Concert in the Wood, The.—Anon.-—KER—WR 4 
(Concert Given by Mr. Spring, A— abr.) —TFS 
(Mr. Spring’s Concert— abr.) —AD 
Concert Recitation.—Silvia Manning.—DLS 
(Ambitious.)—DJS 

Concert Rehearsal, The.—Wolstan Dixey.—PEO 
Conciliation Preferable to War.—W: Pitt, Lord Chat¬ 
ham—SSD 

Conciliation the Best Policy.—W: Pitt, Lord Chatham. 
—SR 8 

Conclusion, The.—Sir Walter Raleigh.—OB 
(Death of Sir Walter Raleigh.)—EDY 
(Even Such is Time.)—EHT—ELP 
(Last Lines.)—CEL 
(Lines Found in his Bible.)—BNL 
(Lines Written the Night before his Execution.)— 
FEP—YBF 

(Verses Found in his Bible in the Gate-house at 
Westminster— C .)—WEP 1 

Conclusion of the Whole Matter, The.—F: R. Torrence. 

See House of a Hundred Lights, The. 

Concord.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Concord. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Concord Fight.—Ralph W. Emerson. See Concord 
Hymn. 

Concord Hymn. (C.) —Ralph W. Emerson.—AA— 
ASL— EDY — FEP — GN — GP — PAP — 
SM—YBF 

(“By the rude bridge that arched the flood”— br. 
sel.) —SE 

(Concord Fight.)—BSP—HB—PEO (abr.) 

(Concord Monument Hymn.)—BNL 
(Hymn on the Fight at Concord.)—GMS 
(Hvmn Sung at the Completion of Concord Monu¬ 
ment.)—HBP—TAV 

Concord Love Song, A.—Jas. Jeffrey Roche.—BS 15— 
SR 6 

Concord Monument Hymn.—Ralph W. Emerson. See 
Concord Hymn. 

Concord River.—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—SE 
Condemned, The.—E: Howland.—AA 
Condemned King, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Condensed Novel, A.—Anon.—SR 3 
Condensed Telegram, The. (Burlington Hawkeye.) — 
BS 20 

Condition of Ireland, The.—T. F. Meagher.—OM 
Conditionally.—W: F. Collins.—CG 1 
Conditioned.— (Brunonian.) —CG 2 
Conditions of Life. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Conductor Bradley.—-J: G. Whittier..—CS 11 
Conductor’s Story, The.—Maurice E. M’Loughlin.— 
WR 7 

Conemaugh.—Eliz. P. Ward—HSS 2 
Cones for the Camp Fire, Sel.fr. (Camping and Camp¬ 
ers— sels. fr. Camping and Dedication.)—W: H. 
H. Murray.—BS 19 

Coney Island down der Pay.—H: F. Wood.—BS 8— 
CS 20 

Confederate Sergeant, The.—Anon.—NC 

(Pathetic Incident of the Rebellion, A— si. diff. 
vers.) —PFP 

Confederate Soldier, The.—H: W. Grady. See New 
South, The. 

Confessio Amantis, Sels. fr. —J: Gower. 

Alexander and the Robber.—WEP 1 
Nebuchadnezzar.—EPs 
Opening of the Original Prologue.—WEP I 
Story of Constance, The.—WEP 1 
Confessio Amantis.—R: Le Gallienne.—BNL 
Confession.—Anon.—WR 24 

Confession, The.—R: II. Barham.—CS 1—DS—HPE 
—THP 

Confession. (Br. sel. fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)— 
S: Butler—HPE 

Confession. (.46r.)—G: Herbert.—EPs 
Confession and Avoidance.—J: A. Hamilton.—CG 2 
Confession of a Cigar Smoker.—Anon.—PPh 
Confession of a Drunkard.—Anon.—CS 13—SR 2 
Confession of Love, A.—J: Tobin. See Honeymoon, The. 
Confessional, The, Br. sel. fr. (“I’ve thought of thee,— 
I’ve thought of thee.”)—Nathaniel P. Willis. 
—FTA 

Confessions.—Rob’t Browning.—-WEP 4 
Confessions of a Drunkard, Sel. fr. —C: Lamb. 

Cry from the Depths, A.—TS 
(Warning, A.)—CPL 
(Warning to the Intemperate.)—CS 11 


Confided.—J: B. Tabb.—ASL—TAS—YBF 
Confidence versus Merit.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Confirmation Hymn. (Entering into Covenant— C.) — 
- Philip Doddridge.—FEP 
Conflict, The.—Mary E. Topping.—SD 
Conflict of Trains, A.—Anon.—CS 15 
(Woman’s Love.)—CS 37 
Conflicting Claims.—E. L. Beers.—SR 12 
Confused Dawn, The.—W. D. Schuyler-Lighthall.—\ A 
“Confusion Worse Confounded.”—Anon.—KNS 
Congal, Sets. fr. —Sir S: Ferguson.—TIP 
Congress of Nations, The. (Chicago Inter-Ocean.) — 
BLP 

Coningsby, Sel. fr. (Hebrew Race, The— fr. Ch. XV.)— 
B: Disraeli, Lord Beaconsfield.—VSG 
Conjecture, A.—C: F. Richardson.—AA 
Conjugal Conjugations.—Americus W. Bellaw.—AWH 
Conjugal Conundrum, A. (Punch.) —HPE 
Conjugal Lament.—S: N. Pond.—TL 
Conjugal Love.—R. S. Sharpe.—MHR 
(Love’s Strategy— si. abr.) —CS 32 
Conjugating Dutchman, The.—T: Holmes.—CS 33 
(Conjugating German, The— arr. as dial, by Vale 
Chester.)—StD 

Conjugating German, The.—Vale Chester. See fore¬ 
going. 

Conjunction of Jupiter and Venus, The. (C.) —W: C. 
Bryant. 

(Those Glorious Stars.)—LLC 
Conjure Woman, The.—Anon.—WR 25 
Connla’s Well.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Connor.—Anon.—BS 9—CS 19—DI—SR 7 
(SI. abr.) —CR—FTR 

Conn’s Description of the Fox Hunt.—-Dion Boucicault. 
See Shaugraun, The. 

Connubial Eclogue, A.—J: G. Saxe.—SCS—SR 2 
Connubial Life.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Conundrum Social, The.—Anon.—EuE 
Conquered at Last.—Maria I,. Eve.—HP 
Conquered Banner, The. (C.)—Abram J. Ryan.—AA— 
AWB—EDY—FEP—WRD 
(Trailed Banner, Thfe.)—HSS 1 
Conquerer Conquered, The.—G: S. Burleigh.—CS 8 
Conqueror Worm, The.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA 
Conqueror’s Grave, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AA 
Conquest.— (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Conquest, A.—Walter H. Pollock.—VA 
Conquest of Mexico, The, Sel. fr. (Launching of 
Cortez’ Ships, The.)—Kinahan Cornwallis.— 
EDY 

Conquest of the Americans Impracticable.—J: Wilkes. 
—PS (si. abr.)— SS 

Conscience. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Conscience.—W: Shakespeare. See King Richard III. 
Conscience and Future Judgment.—Anon.—CS 6— 
KNE 

Conscience and Remorse.—Paul L. Dunbar.—TAS 
Conscience in Politics.—I. K. Funk.—WR 18 
Conscience-keeper, The.—W: Young. See Wishmakers’ 
Town. 

Consecration Hymn.—Frances R. Havergal.—HDL 
Consensus fur. Concensus] of the Competent, A. (Play.) 

—Dorothea Lummis.—PR—WR 12 
Consequences.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Consequences of the American War.—W: Pitt, Earl of 
Chatham.—SS 

Consequences of the American War.—W: Pitt, Lord 
Chatham. See also American War, The. 
Consequences of the Reformation. (Fr. St. Stephen’s.) 

—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—A VP 
Conservative, A.—Charlotte P. (Stetson) Gilman.—AA 
Conservative Innovator, The.—W: Huskisson.—SS 
Consider.—Christina G. Rossetti.—GN—OS 1—TMR 
Consider the Lilies.—Marianne Famingham.—CS 24 
Consider the Lilies.—Charlotte Murray.—FHS 
Consider the Lilies, how They Grow.—W: C. Gannett 
—TAS 

Considering the Lilies.—Anon.—WR 20 
Consolation.—Matthew Arnold.—PGT 2 
(Lovers— br. sel.) —BIL 
Consolation.—Eliz. B. Browning.—HDL—OB 
Consolation.—W: Larminie.—TIP 
Consolat ion.—Walter Learned.—TAV—YBT 
Consolation, A.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1—PHS 
(Amor Omnia Vincit.)—FTA—OH 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—HBP—OB (II.) 

(Sonnet XXIX.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
(When in Disgrace.)—BS 25—PYO—WR 23 
Consolation.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 
Consolation even on a Mixed Train. (Traveler’s 
M agazine. )—CH 


74 




TITLE INDEX 


Conundrum 


Consolation in Adversity. (Frags, jr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Consolations in Bereavement.—J ; H. Newman.— 
PGT 2—SSS 

Consolations of Literature, The. (Fr. Address De¬ 
livered in South Danvers, at the Dedication 
of the Peabody Institute, Sept, 29, 1854.)— 
Rufus Choate.—MRS 

Consolatory Stanza, A.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Consolers, The.—S. G. W.—EPs 

Conspiracy of Charles, Duke of Byron, The, Sel. jr. 

(Master Spirit, The— hr. sel. jr. Act. III., Sc. 1.) 
—G: Chapman.—EPs 

Constance de Beverley.—Walter Scott. See Mar- 
mion. 

Constance’s Denunciation of King Philip of France and 
Lymoges of Austria.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King John. 

Constancy.—Anon.—BNL 

Constancy. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Constancy.—C: Dibdin.—LH 
Constancy.—G: Herbert.—EPs 
Constancy—J: B. O’Reilly.—AWH—THP 
Constancy.—J: Wilmot, Earl of Rochester.—OB— 
PGT 1—WEP 2 

Constancy.—SirC: Sedley.—YBF 

(“Not, Celia, that I juster am.”)—FEP—FTA— 
PGT 1 

(To Celia.)—ELP—OB 

Constancy (Sir J. S.— C .).—Sir J: Suckling.—BNL— 
CEL—ELP—ES—OEL—WEP 2—YBF 
(Constant Lover, The.)—FEP—OB 
(Moods.)—EPs 

Constancy.—Edith M. Thomas.—TAV 
Constancy in Absence.—Anon.—FLS 
Constant.—Emily Dickinson.—AA—TFY 
Constant Dove, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Constant Friend, The.—Eugene F. Ware. See Wash¬ 
erwoman’s Song, The. 

Constant Heart, A.—F. Clay.—CG 1 
Constant Lover, The.—Sir J: Suckling.— See Con¬ 
stancy. 

Constant Lovers, The. (Fr. Wit Restored, 1658.)— 
Anon—YBF 

Constant Reader, A.—Parmenas Mix.—CS 12 
Constantius and the Lion. (Sel. fr. Tarry Thou till I 
Come; or, Salathiel the Wandering Jew, Bk. I., 
Ch. XXI.)—G: Croly.—BS 24—PFP 
(Thrilling Sketch.)—CS 8 

“Constellation” and the ‘Tnsurgente,” The.—AWB 
Consternation.—Anon.—WR 6 
Constitution.—W: W. Henry.—TMR 
Constitution, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Constitution 
and the Union, The. 

Constitution and By-laws for Lyceum.—Anon.—DS 
“Constitution” and “Guerri^re.”—Anon.—AWB 
Constitution and the People, The.—Abraham Lincoln. 

See First Inaugural Address. 

Constitution and the Union, The, Sels. fr. —Dan’l 
Webster. 

Against Secession. (Ptly. fr. Remarks on the Po¬ 
litical Course of Mr. Calhoun in 1838.)—SSD 
(On Mr. Clay’s Resolution— sel.) —SS 
(Constitution, The— shorter sel.) —SE 
Peacable Secession. (Pthj.diff.fr. SSD.)—FD 1— 
SR 5—SS (ptlu. diff.) 

Constitution and the Union, The. (Diff. fr. foregoing.) 
—Dan’l Webster. See Compromise Measures, 
The. 

Constitution not Unalterable, The.—Dan’l Webster.— 
FD 1 

Constitution of the United States, The.—AI 
Constitution of the United States.—Alex. Hamilton. 

See Speech on the Compromises of the Consti¬ 
tution. 

Constitution of the United States not an Experiment, 
The.—Hugh S. Legare.—SS 
(American Constitution no Experiment, The.)— 
BLP 

Constitution the Safeguard of Liberty.—Dan’l Web¬ 
ster. See Character of Washington, The. 
Constitutional Convention of 1787, The.—Chauncey 
M. Depew.—TMD 

Constitutional Liberty and Arbitrary Power.—Jos. 
Warren.—EAO 

(Scorn to be Slaves— sel.) —BLP—OS 2 (longer.) 
Constitutional Prohibition.—J: B. Finch. See following. 
Constitutional Prohibition the Great Remedy.—J: B. 
Finch—TS 

(Constitutional Prohibition.)—WR 18 
Constitution’s Last Fight, The.—Jas. J. Roche.— 
EDY—PAPm 


Contemplate all this Work.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
In Memoriam. 

Contemplation upon Flowers, A.—H: King.—OB— 
YBF 

Contemplations, Br. sel. fr .—Anne Bradstreet.—BNL 
Contempt.— Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake The. 
Content.—Anon.—AE 
Content.—Anon.—HP 
Content.—Anon.—TT 

Content.—Sophie M. Almon-Hensley.—TCV 
Content.—Stephen Crane.—AA 

Content.—T: Dekker. See Pleasant Comedy of Patient 
Grissell, The. • 

Content.—Norman Gale.—VA 

Content. (Sel. fr. Farewell to Follie.)—Rob’t Greene 
—BNL—EP—FEP 
(Contentment.)—YBF 

(Song (C.): “Sweet are the thoughts,” etc.) — 
WEP 1 

(Sweet Content.)—OEL 
Content.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on Man. 

Content. A Pastoral.—J: Cunningham.—-FEP 
Content and Discontent.—R: C. Trench.—OS 1 (sel .) 
(Different Minds.)—BNL—FEP 
(“Some murmur, when their sky is clear.”)—GG 
Contentation. (Abr.) —C: Cotton.—BNL 
Contented.—Carmen Sylva.—HSS 1 
Contented Blind Boy, The.—Colley Cibber.—-PS 

(Blind Boy, The.) — BFV —BNL — CGd—FEP— 
OS 1—PGT 1—PoR 

Contented John.—Jane [or Emily] Taylor.— PC— 
PPSr 

Contented Mind, A [or The],—Joshua Sylvester.—CEL 
—FEP—HPE 

(Contentment.)—BNL—YBF 
Contention of Ajax and Ulysses, The, Sel. fr. —Jas. 
Shirley. See Dirge, A, “The glories of our 
blood.” etc. 

Contentious Community, A.—“Eureka.”—SDD 
Contentment.—H: Alford.—BS 4 

(“I know not of the dark or bright.”)—GG 
(Life’s Answer.)—HDL 
(Trust.)—HSS 3—SPE 
Contentment.—M. B.—YBT 
Contentment. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Contentment.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Contentment.—Rob’t Greene. See Content. 
Contentment.—Will S. Hayes.—HP 
Contentment.—Oliver W. Holmes.—BNL—EPs— 
SE (br. sel.) 

(Abr.)— PP—YPS 

Contentment. (Br. sel .)—Horace (tr. by W: Cowper). 
Contentment.—Eva W. McGlasson.—BS 21 
Contentment.—S. C. Peabody.—DJS—PS—TT 
Contentment.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queen, 
The. 

Contentment.—Joshua Sylvester. See Contented 
Mind, A. 

Contentment of Europe, The. (Sel. fr. Speech at Man¬ 
chester, Nov. 11, 185i.)—Louis Kossuth.— 
SR 

Contest. A.—Michael Drayton. See Muses’ Elysium, 
The. 

Contest in the Arena, The. (Fr. Quo Vadis, Ch. LXV., 
abr.) —H: K. Sienkiewicz.—TMD 
(Fight with the Aurochs, The.)—BS 25—PFP 
(Rescue of Lygia, The— shorter .)—SC 
(Ursus and the Aurochs.)—WR 19 
Contesting for a Prize. (Dial .)—Adeline B. Avery.— 
CDs 

Continuity and Differentiation. (University Herald.) 
—CG 2 

Contradiction. Conversation.—W: Cowper. See Con¬ 
versation. . 

Contrast, The.—Helen G. Cone.—A A 
Contrast. A.—Eleanor C. Donnelly.—BS 14—CS 24— 
DS—YA 

Contrast.—Hannah P. Kimball.—TAS 
Contrast. The.—Horace Smith.—FEP (abr.) 

(On the Death of George the Third— C. — si. abr.) 
EDY—HBP 

Contrast of Tact and Talent. (London Atlas .)—SE 
(Tact and Talent.)—PPS (si. abr .)—SE (br. sel .)— 
SPE—WCLG 2 

Contrasted Soliloquies.—Jane Taylor.—LLC 
Contrivances, The, Sel. fr. —H: Carey. 

Maiden’s Choice, The.—FEP—HBP 

(Maiden’s Ideal of a Husband, A.)—BNL—TFY 
Conundrum, A. (The Hands of a Clock.)—Eliz. P. 
Allen.—CPL 

Conundrum. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.) — Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 


75 






Conundrum 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Conundrum of the Workshops, The.—Rudyard Kip¬ 
ling.—VA 

Convalescence.—Edgar A. Poe.—GP ( sel.) 

(For Annie— C.)—BNL—OB 
Convalescent.—Anon.—DLS 

Convent Scene from Marmion.—Walter Scott. See 
Marmion. 

Convention of Cintra. (Sonnet Composed while the 
Author was Engaged in Writing a Tract, 
Occasioned by the Convention of Cintra— 
C.) —W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
Convention of Michigan Trees.— Arr. by. A. W. J. Beal. 
—AD 

Convention of Realistic Readers. (Play.) —Mrs. Find¬ 
ley Braden.—BS 12—HD 

Convention of 1787, The.—Chauncey M. Depew.— 
FD 2 

Conversation.—Anon.—KNE 

Conversation. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Conversation, Sels. fr. —W: Cowper. 

Afternoon Call, An. (Br. sel.) —WEP 3 
Characters and Sketches. (Sel.) —WEP 3 
(Contradiction— shorter sel.) —BNL 
(Conversation— br. sel.) —BNL 
(Duelling— br. sel.) —BNL 
Conversation. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
Excessive Modesty. (Br. sel.) —KNE 
Pernicious weed. (Br. sel.) —PPh 
Conversation under Difficulties.—Anon.—SE 
Conversational.—Anon.—CRR—DR—HP 
Conversion, The.—R. W. Bergengren.—CG 2 
Conversion of Colonel Quagg.—G: A. Sala—DCR 
Convert, The.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 
Convict and Soldier.—Anon.—WR 7 
Convict Joe.—Alexander G. Murdock.—CS 28 
Convict of Clonmel, The.—Jeremiah J. Callanan.— 
TIP 

Convict’s Complaint, The.—Adair Welcker.—BS 24 
Convict’s Death, The.—C: Dickens. See Sketches by 
Boz. 

Convict’s Dream, The.—G: Crabbe. See Borough, 
The. 

Convict’s Soliloquy [the Night before Execution], 
The.—E. H. Trafton—BS 11—CS 26—SD— 
SR 4 

Coogee.—H: C. Kendall.—VA 
Cook of the Period, A.—Anon.—CS 10 
Cooking and Courting.—Anon.—BNL 
Coon’s Lullaby, The.—Anon.—WR 22 
Cool Reason.—R: B. Sheridan. See Rivals, The. 
Cooper Institute Address. (Address at Cooper Insti¬ 
tute, New York, Feb. 27, 1860— C.) —Abraham 
Lincoln.—AI 

Coopers, The.—C. White.—DE 
“Cooper’s Hill,” Sels. fr. —Sir J: Denham. 

Praise of the Thames—WEP 2 
(Cooper’s Hill— br. sel.) —BNL 
(River Thames, The— sel.) —BNL 
View of London from Cooper’s Hill.—WEP 2 
Coplas de Manrique, Sels. fr.— Don Jorge Manrique. 
Relentless Time. (Longfellow’s tr.) —BS 6 

(Footprints of Decay—anon. tr. — shorter sel.) — 
CS 11 

(Life— abr.)— HP 

Copyright. (Abr.) —T: B. Macaulay.—MRS 
Coquette Punished, A.—Anon.—CS 8 
Coral Grove, The.—Jas. G. Percival.—AA—BNL—EPs 
— FEP — GN — HBP — HSS 3 — LLC — PHS 
—POS 

Coral Insect, The.—Anon.—POS 
Coral Insect, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—BNL 
Coral Reef, The.—Jas. Montgomery. See Pelican 
Island, The. 

Corda Concordia, Sel. fr. (Quest.)—Edmund C. Sted- 
man.—AA 

Cordelie.—Brother Paul.—WR 6 
Cordial Relations.— Anthony Hope. See Dolly Dia¬ 
logues, The. 

Corianna’s Wedding.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Coridon’s Song. (Z# Izaak Walton’s The Compleat 
Angler.)—J: Chalkhill.—OES 
Corinna, from Athens, to Tanagra.—Walter S. Landor. 
See Pericles and Aspasia. 

Corinna’s Going a-Maying. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick.— 
EP—EPs—FEP—OB—WEP 2 
(Corinna’s Maying.)—OEL—PGT 1 
(Going a-Maying.)—GN—LH 
(May-day.)—CEL 

Corinne at the Capitol, Br. sel. fr. (To Corinne.)—Feli¬ 
cia D..Hemans.—EPs 
Coriolanus.—Will V. McGuire.—CS 34 


Coriolanus, Sels fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Anger. (Br. sel. fr. Act III., Sc. 3.)—SE 
Coriolanus. (Br. sel. fr. I., 1.)—BNL 
Coriolanus. (Sel. fr. II., 2.)—EPs 
Coriolanus and Aufidius. (Sel. fr. V., 6.)—MPD 
(Coriolanus— br. sel.) —SE 
(Coriolanus— sel. )—EPs 
Martial Friendship. (Sel. fr. TV., 5.) —BNL 
Coriolanus and Aufidius.—W: Shakespeare. See Corio¬ 
lanus. 

Coriolanus at Antium.—W: Shakespeare. See Corio¬ 
lanus. 

Corn.—Anon.—COS—NV—PP 

Com. (Sel.) —Sidney Lanier.—BNL—WR 5 (longer.) 
Corn and the Lilies, The.—Anon.—HDL—SSS 
Corn Banquet, A. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Corn Law. See also Corn-law. 

Com Laws. (Abr.) —T: B. Macaulay.—MRS 
Cornelian, The.—Lord Byron.—FP 
Cornfields.—Mary Howitt.—HBP—HSS 3—PoR—SN 
—VA—WCL 

Cornisken Sonnets, Sels. fr .—Rob’t Buchanan. 

We are Children. (III.)—VA 
When we are all Asleep. (IV.)—VA 
Corn-law Hymn.—Ebenezer Elliott.—BNL 
Com-laws. See also Com Laws. 

Com-song, A.—Paul L. Dunbar.—AA 
Corn-song, The. (Sl.diff. fr. Poems.)—J: G. Whittier.— 
GN 

Coronach.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Coronation. Helen (Hunt) Jackson.—AA—ASL— 
EPs—FEP—GN—TAV 

Coronation, The.—Eliz. W. Mainwaring.—SR 13 
Coronation.—E: Perronet.—FEP 

Coronation of Anne Boleyn, The.—Jas. A. Froude. 
See History of England. 

Coronation of Inez de Castro, The.—Felicia D. Hemans. 
—CS 36 

Coronation Pageant of Anne Boleyn, The.—Jas. A. 

Froude. See History of England. 

Coronemus nos Rosis antequam Marcescant.—T: 
Jordan.—OB 

Coronet for his Mistress’ Philosophy, A, Sel. fr. 
‘‘Muses that sing love’s sensual empirie.”—I.) 
—G: Chapman.—BNL 

Corporal Dick’s Promotion.—A. Conan Doyle.—BS 26 
Corporal of Chancellorsville, The.—J: R. Paxton—PFP 
Corporal Punishment. (Dial.) — (Young Folks’ Rural.) 
—PR 

Corpse’s Husband, The.—Anon.—DES 
Correct Habits.—W. C. Munson.—SD 
Corregio.—“Kruna.”—WR 12 

Corruption of Municipal Government, The.—C: H. 
Parkhurst.—NC 

Corrymeela.—Moira O’Neill.—TIP 
Corsair, The, Sels. fr. —Lord Byron. 

Corsair, The, Can. I., Br. sel. fr.— EPs 
Song of the Rover. (Fr. Can. I.)—BNL 
(Sea, The— br. sel.) —EPs 

Corsican not Content, The. (Sel. fr. J: Quincy 
Adams.)—W: H. Seward.—WCLG 1 
(American and the Corsican, The— longer.) —NC 
Corsican Vendetta; or, Love’s Triumph, The.—Anon— 
WR 7 

Corydon, a Pastoral.—J. Cunningham.-—EDY 
Corydon and Amaryllis, Sel. fr. —Phillips Stewart.—TCV 
Cosmic Egg, The.—Anon.—BNL—EPs 
Cosmopolitan Woman, A.—Sam W. Foss.—WR 15 
Cospatrick. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
Cossimbazar.—H: S. Leigh.—NA 
Cost of Liberty, The.—H: Giles.—BLP 
Cost of Writing Well.—Anon.—KNE 
“Cotswold Eclogue,” The, Sel. fr. —T: Randolph. 
—WEP 2 

Cottager to her Infant, The.—Dorothy Wordsworth. 
—LC—PoR 

Cotter’s Saturday Night, The. — Rob’t Bums. — 
BIL (si. abr.) — BNL — EPs — FEP— FP — 
HBP—MBL—MR—WCLG 1—WEP 3 (abr.) 
(Abr. and arr. w. tab.) —BS 7—TCP 
Cotton. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine.— 
—TCP 

Cotton Boll, The.—H: Timrod.—AA 
Cotton Plant, The.—Anon.—NV 
Could I have Borne It?—May E. Dustin.—TS 
“Could I obtain a hearing of the young men and young 
women who thus seek the city.”—H: W. 
Beecher.—GG 

Could it Be?—Harry Romaine.—TL 
“Could love forever run like a river.”—Lord Byron.— 
BPB 

(Stanzas— C .)—WEP 4 


76 






TITLE INDEX 


Courting 


Couldn’t Keep a Secret. ( All the Year Round.) —HP 
Council of Horses, The.—J: Gay.—CGd—GN 
Council of the Hats, The.—Jean de la Fontaine.— 
WR 11 

Counsel.—Mary E. M. Davis.—TAV 
Counsel to Girls.—Rob’t Herrick.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Counsel to Virgins.)—PYO—YBF 
(Gather ye Rose-buds as ye May.)—HBP 
(To [the] Virgins, to Make Much of Time—C.) 
—BNL—ELP—ES—FEP—WEP 2 
Count Albert and the Fair Rosalie. (Fire-king, The— 
C. — abr.) —Walter Scott.—WR 1 
Count Candespina’s Standard.—G: H. Boker.—CR— 
CS 10—FTR—HNS—KNE—MYF 
Count Gaultier’s Ride.—E: Renaud.—CS 19 
Count Gismond.—Rob’t Browning.—BS23—DR (abr.) 
PEB 3 

Count Ludwig and the Wood-spirit.—Dinah M. Craik. 
—WR 8 

Count Me.—E. Murray.—SSE 

Count Raymond and my Cid. (TV. by) Ormsby. See 
Cid, The. 

Count Ugolino.—Dante ( tr. by Wilstach). See Divine 
Comedy, The. 

Counterfeit Money. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook— 
YFE 

Countermarch, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Countersign, The.—Anon.—AWB—CS 17 (abr.) 
Countersign was Mary, The.—Marg. Eytinge.—HP 
Countess Amy and her Husband, The.—Walter Scott. 
See Kenilworth. 

Countess Laura.—G: H: Boker.—BNL—WR 5 (abr.) 
Countess of Anglesey Lead Captive by the Rebells, at 
the Disforresting of Pewsam—Song. (C.) — 
Sir W: Davenant. 

(On the Captivity of the Countess of Anglesey.)— 
WEP 2 

Countess of Manchester, The. (On the Lady Man¬ 
chester— C.) —Jos. Addison.—HPE 
Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia, The.—Sir Philip 
Sidney. See Arcadia, The. 

Counting.—Harriot Brewer.—TT 
Counting Eggs. (Texas Siftings.) —GH—PS—SR 6 
(How Mose Counted the Eggs.)—CS 29 
Counting the Chickens before they were Hatched.— 
Anon.—YFD 

Counting the Seeds.—Anon.—CS 35 
Countless. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Country and Patriotism.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 
Country Child, The.—Marian Douglas.—WCL 
Country Children.—Anon.—TFS 

Country Clergyman’s Trip to Cambridge, The.—T: B. 
Macaulay.—ESs 

Country Cousin, The; or, the Rough Diamond.—J: B. 
Buckstone.—SED 
(Rough Diamond, The.)—CS 15 
Country Cousins.—Anon.—FDY 
Country Cousins. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Country Cousins, The. (Dial.) —H. M. Garrett.— 
CS 21—ED 

Country Courtship.—W. D. Kelly.—WR 15 
Country Courtship, A.—Fs. O’Connor.—CS 17 
Country Dance, The.—Joe Jot, Jr.—CS 13 
(Country Dancing.)—BR 
Country Dancing.—Joe Jot, Jr. See foregoing. 
Country Danger, A.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Country Faith, The.—Norman Gale.—VA 
Country Fellow and the Ass, The. (C.) —J: Byrom. 

(Countrymen and the Ass, The.)—BC 
Country Girl, The, Scenes fr.- —Anon.—WR 20 
Country Girl, A.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Country Glee.—T: Dekker. See Sun’s Darling, The. 
Country Justice, The.—H: Reeves.—WRD 

(Green Mountain Justice, The.)—BS 6—CS 6— 
HNS—MHR 

Country Kisses.—Arthur J. Munby. See Dorothy: a 
Country Story. 

Country Lasses, The.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 

Country Lassie, The.—Anon.—FP 

Country Life. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Country Life.—Johann W. von Goethe.—-HSS 1 

Country Life, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs 

Country Life.—Rob’t G. Ingersoll.—TMR 

Country Maid and her Milk Can, The.—HDsop.—OS 1 

Country Meeting Talk.—Anon.—KNS 

Country or City.—Anon.—FND 

Country Pedagogue, The. — E: A. U. (7) Valentine. 
—SCS 

Country Post-office, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.— 
TDT 


Country Quiet.—Anon.—FHE 

Country Scenes in Old Days.—J: Fletcher. See Faith¬ 
ful Shepherdess, The. 

Country School, The.—Anon.—BS 12 
Country Schoolmaster, The.—Anon.—HR 
Country Sleighing.—Edmund C. Stedman.—CS 16 
Country Song, A.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Arcadia. 
Country Squire, The.—Anon.—MHR (abr.) 

(Unsuccessful Plan, The— diff. vers.) —WR 15 
Country Squire, The.—T: Yriarte.—LBB—MBB 
Country Summer Pastoral, A. (The Agricultural 
Editor’s Poem, The— C.)~ S: W. Foss.— 
WR 14 

(City Man’s Dream of the Country.)—BS 24 
Country Thanksgiving, A.— Anon. — PP—PS—YPS 
Countrymen and the Ass, The. (Country Fellows and 
the Ass, The— C.) —J: Byrom.—BC 
Country’s Greatest Evil, The.—H: Wilson.—CS 12 
Countrywoman of Mine, A.—Elaine G. Eastman.— 
AA 

County Guy. (Song fr. Quentin Durward, Ch. IV.)— 
Walter Scott. — BFV — BNL — BPB — EPs 
—FEP—LC—WEP 4 
(Serenade, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
County of Mayo, The.—G: Fox.—OB—TIP 
Coup de Grace, The.—E: R. Sill.—AA 
Coupon Bonds. (Abr. and ad.) —J: T. Trowbridge.— 
—DES 

Courage.—Anon.—FS 

Courage.—W: E. Channing.—WR 5 

(True Courage in Life— si. abr.) —BS 21 
Courage.—Arthur H. Clough.—OS 3 
(Despondency Rebuked.)—HBP 
(Say not, the Struggle Naught Availeth— C.) — 
A VP — GP — HDL — OB — PGT 2 — SO — 
WEP 4—YBF 

Courage.—G: (?) Farquhar.—HSS 3 
Courage.—Horace Porter.—TMD 

Courage.—Bryan W. Procter.—BLP (abr.) —KNE— 
SS 

Courage.—W: Shakespeare. See Antony and Cleo¬ 
patra. 

Courage.—W: Shakespeare. See also King Richard 
III. 

Courage.—Celia Thaxter.—HDL 

Courage and Fear. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Courageous Boy, The.—Anon.—TFS 
(Fellow who is Game, The.)—KER 
Coureur-de-Bois, The.—S: M. Baylis.—TCV 
Course of Love, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice. 

“Course of Love” too “Smooth,” The.—Anon.—BS 5 
—CS 14 

Course of Time, The, Sets. fr. —Rob’t Pollok. 

Byron. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV.)—BNL 

(Lord Byron— longer sel.) —WCLG 2 
Happiness. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. V.)—FP 
Hypocrite, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. VIII.)—KNE 
“It was an eve of Autumn’s holiest mood.” (Sel. 
fr. Bk. V.)—AE 

Miser, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. III.)—KNE 
Ocean. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. VII.)—BNL—EPs 
Course of True Love, The.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Midsummer Night’s Dream, A. 

Course of True Love never did Run Smooth, The, Sel. 

fr. (Disillusionizing of Alexander Oldworthy, 
The— sel. fr. Pt. III.)—C: Reade—WR 25 
Court Ladv, A.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BNL—BSP— 
FEP—TMR—VA 

Court of Berlin, The. (Frankfort Yeoman.) —CS 28 
—HP 

Court of Boyville, The, Sel. fr. (King of Boyville, 
The— ad. fr. Ch. III.)—W: A. White—NP 
Court of Love, The, Sel. fr. — (At. to) Geoffrey 
Chaucer.—WEP 1 

Court of the King, The.—Florence M. Alt.—CS 31 
Court of the Year, The. (Ent.) —Mrs. E. C. Whitney. 
—EE 

Court Scene.—W: Shakespeare. See Winter’s Tale. 
Courteous Mother, A.—Helen Hunt.—CS 14 
Courtesies of War, The.—T: B. Macaulay. See On 
Mitford’s History of Greece. 

Courtiers.—S: Butler.—HPE 

Courtin’, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow Papers, 
The. 

Courtin’ Call, A.—J. E. V. Cooke.—SR 12—WR 24 
Courtin’ in the Country.—H. E. McBride.—CS 1 
Courting. (On Courting— C. — longer than rev. vers, in 
Works.)—H: W. Shaw—KNE 
(Josh Billings on Courting.)—CS 1 
Courting and Science.—Anon.—BS 17 
(Girl of Culture, A— si. abr.) —DCR 


77 





Courting 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Courting in French Hollow.—Robb.—SCS 
Courting in Kentucky.—Florence E. Pratt [or Pyatt].— 
AWH-BS 19—THP 
(Kerrected.)—SR 7 

(School-ma’am’s Courting, The.)—CRR—DR 
Courting of Mother Goose, The. ( Ent. ) —H. D. Castle. 
—EE 

Courting of T’nowhead’s Bell, The. (Fr. Auld Licht 
Idylls, Ch. VIII.— sel.) —Jas. M. Barrie.— 
BS 24 

Courtship. {Punch.) See following. 

Courtship and Matrimony. {Punch.) —HPE—SCS 
(Courtship.)—CS 19 

Courtship Fair and Square.—Anon.—SR 4 
Courtship, Marriage, Separation and Re-union.— 
Anon.—MCS 

Courtship of Larry O’Dee.—W. W. Fink.—PPSr 

(Larrie O’Dee.)—AWH—BS 10—CRR—CS26— 
—CSS—DS—SDR 

Courtship of Miles Standish, The.—H: W. Longfellow. 
—AP 

(Miles Standish’s Encounter with the Indians.— 
Pt. VII., abr. )—CR 

(“So these lives that had run thus far in separate 
channels’’— hr. sel. fr. Pt. VIII.)—BIL 
Courtship of Mr. Bumble and Mrs. Corney, The.—C: 

Dickens. See Oliver Twist. 

Courtship under Difficulties. {Dial.) —Anon.—CS 11 
—DS—FTR—HD—MPD—NPS—YA—YP 
Courtships of Adolphus McDuff, The.—Anon.—DES 
Cousin Bell’s Visit.—Anon.—YFD 
Cousin Floy.—David L. Proudfit.—TAV 
Cousin from the City, The.—Anon.—HVD 
Cousin Rufus’ Story.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Cousin Sally Dilliard.—H. C. Jones.—CS 5 
Covenant, The.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Covenanters and Charles Stuart, The. (Fr. Ringan 
Gilhaize.)—J: Galt.—FD 1 

Covenanters’ Battle-chant, The.—W: Motherwell.— 
FEP—HBP 

Cover Them Over. {Sel.) —Will Carleton.—FAS 
Coverly Hall.—Jos.Addison. See Spectator, The. 
Coverly Household, The.—R: Steele. See Spectator, 
The. 

Coves of Crail, The.—W: Sharp.—VA 
Coville Convalesces. (C.— in They All Do It.)—Jas. 
M. Bailey. 

(Mr. Coville on Danbury.)—BS 2 
(Mr. Coville’s Easy Chair.)—CS 9—DDR 
Cow, The.—Anon.—WR 2 
Cow, The.—Oliver Herford.—NA 
Cow, The.—Rob’t Louis Stevenson.—CGV—DST— 
HSS 2 

Cow and the Bishop, The.—G: A. Townsend.—BS 4— 
NPS—YP 

Cow in the Garden, The.—Anon —HVD 
Coward, A. (Inlander.) —CG 3 
Coward, The.—J. N. Matthews.—W T R 4 
Coward, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 35 
Cowboy, The—J: Antrobus.—AA 
Cowboy’s Sermon, The.—Emma G. Curtis.—BS 18 
Cow-boy’s Song, The.—Anna M. Wells.—PoR—WCL 
Cowboy’s Tale, The.—“Wyoming Kit.”—AWH 
Cowpens. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Cowper’s Grave.—Eliz. B. Browning.—EDY—FEP— 
HBP—LLC (sel.) 

Cows—A Composition.—Anon.—CS 17 
Cowslips. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—-Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Cowslips.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 

Coxcomb, A.—Jos. Hall.—WEP 1 

Coyote, The.—S: L. Clemens. See Roughing It. 

Crab Village Lyceum.—Anon.-—DS—MPD—YA 
Crabbed Age and Youth. (Paraphrase of Shake¬ 
speare’s. )—Anon.—AE 

Crabbed Age and Youth. (Fr. The Passionate Pil¬ 
grim.)—W: Shakespeare.—FEP—HBP—OB 
(Madrigal, A.)—LC—PGT 1—PHS 
(Youth and Age.)—EP 

Crack-mouthed Family, The.—Anon.—WR 16 
(Facial Family, The.)—SR 10 
Cradle, The.—Austin Dobson.—GP—VA 
Cradle, The.—Celia Thaxt.er.—SAP 
Cradle Hymn.—Martin Luther.—PoR 
Cradle Hymn, A.—Isaac Watts.—FEP—OB (si. abr.) 
—OS 1 (sel.) 

(Abr.) —BNL—PoR 
(Cradle Song, A— abr.) —BFV—HBP 
Cradle Song.—Anon.—BNL—POS 
Cradle Song.-—Anon.—CS 20 


Cradle Song.—Anon.—OB 
Cradle Song, The. (IF. music.) —Anon.—PR 
(Baby is a Sailor.)—TFS 
Cradle Song. (2.)—W: C. Bennett.—VS 
Cradle Song [,A], — (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: 

Blake.—LC—OB—PGT 1 —YBF 
Cradle Song, A. (Fr. Arbour of Amorous Devices.)— 
Nicholas Breton (?).—OB 
(Sweet Lullaby, A.)—ELP—PGT 1—WEP 1 
Cradle Song.—Caris Brooke.—NV 
Cradle Song.—Pauline F. Camp.—POS 
Cradle Song.—R: W. Gilder.—OS 1 
Cradle Song.—Josiah G. Holland. See Bitter-sweet. 
Cradle Song. (Anon.— tr. by) Eliz. Prentiss. See Lul¬ 
laby Song. 

Cradle Song.—Rowan Stephens.—TAV 
Cradle Song. (Fr. Sea Dreams.)—Alfred Tennyson.— 
LC—PGT 2—PS 

(Bird and the Baby, The.)—PP—PPSr—YFR 
(Birdie and Baby.)—DCP 
(Little Birdie.)—OS 1—PC—WCL 
(Morning Song.)—GMS 

(“What does little birdie say?”)—BNL—PHS— 
PoR—TFS (sel.) 

(What the Birdie and the Baby Say.)—HSS 2 
Cradle Song.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Cradle Song, A.—Isaac Watts. See Cradle Hymn, A. 
Cradle Song.—Merle St. C. Wright.—OH 
Cradle Song of the Buccaneer’s Wife. (Baby Dear.)— 
S: Lover (?).—LC 

Cradle Song of the Fisherman’s Wife.—Ella Higgin- 
son.—LC 

Cradle Tomb in Westminster Abbey, The. — Susan 
Coolidge.—EDY 

Craft. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Cranes of Ibycus, The.—Emma Lazarus.—AA 
Cranes of Ibycus, The. (Abr.) —Friedrich Schiller.— 
FR 

Cranmer.—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
Crape on the Door.—Anon.—CS 5 
Craven.—H: Newbolt.—BAB 
Craven Knight, The.—Anon.—SR 11 
Crazy Kate. The Gipsies.—W: Cowper. See Task, 
The. 

Crazy Nell.—Jos. Whitton.—BS 14 
Cream Puff Story, The.—Anon.—CDV 
Creation.—Ambrose Bierce.—AA 
Creation of Man, The.—J: H. Hewitt.—CS 27 
Creator, The.—Anon.—KNS 

Creator and Creatures, The.—Isaac Watts.—HBP 

Credo. (Abr.) —R: W. Gilder.—HDL 

Credo, Sel. fr. (Love’s Belief.)—Mary A. Townsend.— 

HP 

Creeds.—Anon.—SSS 

Creeds of the Bells, The.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 4— 
PPSr (sel.) —SA (si. abr.) 

(Abr.) —BS 1—FTR—HNS 
Creek-road, The.—Madison Cawein.—AA 
Creeping up the Stairs.—W. S. McFetridge.—BS 21— 
HP 

Creole Slave-song, A.—Maurice Thompson.—AA 
Crescent and the Cross, The.—T: B. Aldrich.—BS 7 
Crescentius.—Laetitia E. L. Maclean.—FEP 
Cressid.—Nora Perry.—AA 

Crew of the Long Serpent, The. (Fr. The Saga of 
King Olaf—Tales of a Wayside Inn.)—H : W. 
Longfellow.—BVC 

Crew Poem, A.—E: A. Blount, Jr.—AA 
Cricket, The.—Vincent Bourne (tr. by W: Cowper).— 
BNL—HBP—LC (abr.) —NV (sel.)— SN 
Cricket, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Cricket, The.—H: B. Watterson.—WR 25 
Cricket Bat Sings, The. (Fr. Songs of the Bat.)— 
Anon.—BVC 

Cricket on the Hearth, The.—Anon.—OS 2 
Cricket on the Hearth, The, Sel. fr. (Tea-kettle and 
the Cricket, The — sel. fr. Chirp the first.)— 
C: Dickens.—PR 
Cricket Songs.—E. Whitney.—TT 
Crickets, The.—Harriet M. Kimball.—SN—TAV 
Crime.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius Caesar. 

Crime against Kansas, Sel. fr. (Kansas.)—C: Sumner. 
—OS 3 

Crime its Own Detector.— Dan’l Webster. See Mur¬ 
der of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Crime Revealed by Conscience.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Murder of Captain Joseph White, The. 
Crimean Incident, A.—Bayard Taylor.—HSS 1 

(Song of the Camp, The— C.) —AA—ASL—BIL— 
BNL — BS 9 — FEP — GN — GP — HE¬ 
LLO — OM — OS 2 — PYO — TAV — TMR 
—WCLG 1 


78 





TITLE INDEX 


Cuba 


Criminality of Duelling. — Eliphalet Nott. See Dis¬ 
course Delivered in the North Dutch Church, 
A. 

Criminality of War. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Crimson and the Blue, The.—F. W. Loring.—MR 
Crimson House, The.—-Bliss Carman.—TCV 
Crimson Shroud of Olaf Guldmar, The. (Sel. fr. Thel¬ 
ma, Ch. XXXII.)—Marie Corelli.—PFP 
(Passing of Olaf, The — shorter and si. diff. sel.) — 
WR 19 

Crimson Throne, The. (C.)—G: Macdonald. 

(Waif .)—Bo 1 

Cripple Ben.—G: L. Catlin.-—CS 20 
Cripple Tim.—Frank Hastings.—WR 23 
Crippled for Life.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 27 
Crippled Joe.—Rose H. Thorpe.—WR 16 
Crispian’s Day.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 
Crispus Attucks, Sel fr. (Boston Massacre, The.)— 
J: B. O’Reilly.—EDY 
Cristina.—Rob’t Browning.—ESs 
Critic, The.—S. F. Batchelder.—CG 2 
Critic, A.—Harry Romaine.—TL 
Critic, The (TV. by) J: O. (?) Sargent.—BC 
(Great Musical Critic, The.)—SS 
“Critic is now aware that his personal taste has no 
value, A.”—H. A. (?)Taine.—GG 
Critic, The; or, A Tragedy Rehearsed, Sel. fr. (Mr. 

Puff’s Account of Himself — ad. fr. Act I., 
Sc. 2.)—R: B. Sheridan.—SS 
Critical Conditions of Labor, The. (Fr. Address be¬ 
fore 28th Graduating Class of the Pierce 
School of Business and Shorthand,Philadelphia 
Dec. 20, 1893.)—B: Harrison.— BLP 
Critical Moment, The.—Theron Brown.—CS 34 
Critical Situation, A.—S: L. Clemens. See Tramp 
Abroad, A. 

Criticism and Satire. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Critics. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler. 
HPE 

Critics, The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
■Croaker, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Croakers of Society and Literature, Sel. fr. (Sniveler, 
The.)—Edwin P. Whipple.—KNE 
Crocus.—Anon.—DLF 

Crocus, The.—Harriet E. H. King.—SN—VA 
Crocus.—Longfellow (?).—AD 
Crocus.—-Celia Thaxter.—SAP 

Crocus’s Soliloquy, The.—Hannah F. Gould.—NV— 
YBT 

Cromwell.—Sir H: Vane. See Against the Succession 
of Richard Cromwell to the Protectorate. 
Cromwell and Henrietta Maria. (Fr. Charles the 
First.)—W: G. Mills. —VA 

Cromwell and King Charles. — Andrew Marvell. See 
Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from 
Ireland, A. 

Cromwell on the Death of Charles the First.—E: Bul- 
wer-Lytton.—PS—SS—TMD 
Croodlin’ Doo.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Croppy Boy, The.—W: B. McBurney.—TIP 
Croquet;—Anon.—WR 7 
Cross at Santa.—Mae R. McNabb.—PS 
Cross Betsy.—Sarah M. Chatfield.—LPS—PP 
Cross Firing. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Cross of Gold, The.-—David Gray.—AA 
Cross of War, The.—Anon.—CP 
Cross Purposes. (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Cross Purposes. See also Cross-purposes. 

Crossed Swords, The.—Nathaniel L. Frothingham.— 
AA 

Cross-eyed Lovers, The.—J: H. Johnston.-—CS 20 
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry. Sel. fr. —Walt Whitman.— 
AA 

Crossing of the Rubicon, The.—Jas. S. Knowles. See 
Crossing the Rubicon. 

Crossing the Bar.—Alfred Tennyson.—BS 21—BSP— 
— CEL — CS 32 — DS — EDY — FEP — 
HDL — HSS 3 — LLC — MBL — OS 2 — 
PGT 2—PYO—VA—WEP 4—YBF 
Crossing the Blackwater.—Rob’t D. Joyce.—VA 
Crossing the Carry. (Abr. fr. Adirondack Adventures, 
Ch. VI.)—W. H. H. Murray.—CS 5—MHR 
(Abr .)—BS 1—NPS—YP 
Crossing the Plains.—Joaquin Miller.—AA—GN 
Crossing the Rubicon.—Jas. S. Knowdes.—LLC 
(Caesar Passing the Rubicon.)—CS 4—OM 
(Caesar’s Passage of the Rubicon.)—SS 
(Crossing of the Rubicon, The.)—OS 2 
(Passing of the Rubicon, The.)—KNE — PS 
SE (si. diff. vers.) 


Crossing the Tropics.—Herman Melville.—AA 
Cross-purposes.—F. T. Cooper.—CG 1 
Cross-purposes. See also Cross Purposes. 

Crotalus.—Fs. Bret Harte.—AA 

Crotchet Castle, Sel. fr. (Llyn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd; or. 
The Pool, etc.—Ch. XVI.)—T: L. Peacock.— 
PEB 3 

Crow, The.—Anon.—SDR 

Crowded Street, The.—W: C. Bryant—ASL—FEP 
—HBP—LLC—SE—SM—WCLG 2 
Crowing of the Red Cock, The.—Emma Lazarus.—AA 
Crown, The.—Ray Palmer.—HS 

Crown of Wild Olive, The, Sel. fr. (Princes — sel. fr. 

Lecture III., War.)—J; Ruskin—OS 3 
Crown our Washington.—Hezekiah Butterworth. 

BLP—PEO 

(Washington— abr.) —CS 35 
Crowne of Lawrell, The.—J: Skelton. See Garlande 
of Laurell, The. 

Crowned and Buried, Sel. fr. (Napoleon’s Final Re¬ 
turn.)—Eliz. B. Browning.—OS 3 
Crowned and Discrowned.—W: Bright.—A VP 
Crowned and Wedded.—Eliz. B. Browning.—EHT 
Crowned Poet, A.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
Crowning of Arthur, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Idylls of the King. 

Crowning of the King, The. (Sel. fr. Joan'of Arc, Bk. 

X.)—Rob’t Southey.—CS 35 
Crowning the May Queen. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Crowning the May Queen. (Dial.) —Clara Denton.— 
LPD 

Crowns for Children.—Anon.—OS 1 
Crow’s Children, The.-—Phcebe Cary.—BLF—PHS— 
SM—WCL 

Crucifixion, The.—G: Oroly.—SS 
Crucifixion, The.—F: H. Hedge.—TAS 
Crucifixion, The. (Sonnet: The Crucifixion— C .)— 
Jas. Montgomery.—PS 

Crucifixion, The.—Lew Wallace. See Ben-Hur. 

Cruel Boy, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Cruel Brother, The.-—Anon.—BB 
(Diff. vers.) —PEB 1 
Cruel Deception, A.—Anon.—WR 12 
Cruel Maid, The.—A. Bradley.-—CG 2 
Cruel Mistress, The [A— C.]. —T: Carew.—WEP 2 
Cruel Sister, The.—Anon.—FEP—HBP 
(Binnorie— si. abr.) —OB 
(Twa Sisters, The.)—CEL—PEB 1 
(Twa Sisters o’ Binnorie, The-— sel.) —BB—WR 9 
Cruelty of Legree, The.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Uncle 
Tom’s Cabin. 

Cruise ot tne “Monitor,” The.—G: M. Baker.—WR 10 
Cruise of the Mystery, The. (C.) —Celia Thaxter. 

(Phantom Ship, The.)—BS 10 
Cruise of the “P. C.” The.—Anon.—NA 
Cruiskeen Lawn, The.—Anon.-—TIP 
Crusader Chorus.—C: Kingsley. See Saint’s Tragedy, 
The. 

Crusaders, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 13 
Cruse that Faileth Not, The.—Eliz. Charles.—SSS 
(“Is thy cruise of comfort failing?”— sel.) —GG 
(Unfailing Cruise, The.)—HDL 
“Crush the dead leaves under thy feet.”—Anon.—GG 
Crushed Hero, A.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Crushed Tragedian, The.—E: L. McDowell.—GH 
Crusoe’s Fight with Wolves.—Dan’l Defoe. See Robin¬ 
son Crusoe. 

Cry, A.—Herbert E. Clarke.—VA 
Cry for Life, A.—W. W. Harding.—PTS 
Cry from the Depths, A. (Fr. Confessions of a Drunk¬ 
ard— sel.)— C: Lamb.—TS 
(Warning, A.)—C’PL 
(Warning to the Intemperate.)—CS 11 
Cry from the Shore, A.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA— 
HBP 

Cry in the Darkness—the Sentinel’s Alarm. (Detroit 
Free Press.) —BS 21 

Cry of Personal Liberty, The.—J• Ireland.—PEO 
Cry of the Children, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—EHT 
—FEP—PYO (sel.)-V A 
(Abr. )—BeR—PGT 2 

Cry of the Dreamer, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—BS 21 

Cry to Arms, A.—H: Timrod.—AWB 

Crystal, The.—Titus M. Coan.—AA 

Crystal Palace, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—HPE 

Cuba.—W. P. Frye.—SC 

Cuba.—J. Gardner.—PAPm 

Cuba.—J. B. Hope.—PAPm 

Cuba.—J: M. Thurston. Sec Affairs in Cuba, 

Cuba and Armenia.—H: C. Lodge.—NC 
Cuba—1897.—H. Bashford.—PAPm 
Cuba—1898.—H. R. Vynne.—PAPm 


79 







Cuba 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Cuba in War Time, Sel. fr. (Death of Rodriguez, The.) 

' —R: H. Davis.—MRS—SC 

Cuba Libre.—Joaquin Miller.—BS 25—PAPm 
Cuba Libre. (Red and Blue.) —CG 3 
Cuban Refugee, The.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Cuba’s Appeal.—C. S. Rice.—PAPm 
Cuba’s Banner.—Heber De Long.—SR 12 
Cuba’s Maiden Martyr.—Eugene B. Harding.—WR 19 
Cubes and Spheres.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Auto¬ 
crat of the Breakfast-table, The. 

Cuckoo, The.—Anon.—OS 1 

(Cuckoo’s Habits, The.)—BVC 
Cuckoo, The.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—HBP—VS 
Cuckoo, The.—J: Logan.—WCL 

(Messenger of Spring, The.)—POS 
(Ode to the Cuckoo— at. to Bruce.)—CEL—CGd 
(To the Cuckoo—C.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—OB— 
PYO (abr.) —SN 

Cuckoo, The. (W. music.) —E: R. Sill (?).—AD 
Cuckoo, The.—G: W. Thornbury.—VS 
Cuckoo (Cuckow — C.) and the Nightingale, The. 
(Abr.) —Geoffrey Chaucer.—HBP 
(Cuckow and Nightingale— -sel.)-- EPs 
Cuckoo Clock, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Cuckoo Clock, The. (Fr. The Birthday.)—Caroline 
B. Southey.—BNL 
Cuckoo Song.—Anon.—OB 

(Coming of Spring, The— si. diff. wording.) —CEL 
Cuckoo’s Character, The.—Anon.—BVC 
Cuckoo’s Habits, The.—Anon. See Cuckoo, The.— 
Anon. 

Cuckoo’s Voice, The.—J: Heywood.—BVC 
Cuckoo’s Wit, The.—R. S. Hawker.—BVC 
Cuckow and Nightingale.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See 
Cuckoo and the Nightingale, The. 

Cuddle Doon. Alexander Anderson.—BRR—BS 7— 
CR — CS 13 — CSS — FTR — GN — HBP — 
OS 1—PPSr—SDR—VA 
(“Bairnies, cuddle doon.”)—GP 
( Vers, vary si. in dialect.) 

Cudgeled Husband, The. (Epigram— C.) —Jonathan 
Swift.—HPE 

Cudjo’s Cave, Sel fr. (Pomp’s Story— ad. fr. Ch. XIV.) 

—J: T. Trowbridge.—NP 
“Cui Bono?”—T: Carlyle.—OS 2 
Culdee. (Fr. Ascutnev Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine.— 
TCP 

Culprit, A.—Marg. Vandegrift.—BS 14—SR 5 
(They will never Do so Again.)—CS 36—WR 14 
Culprit and the Judge, The.—Horace Smith.—SS 
Culprit Fay, The.—Jos. Rodman Drake.—BNL— 
FEP—GN (sels. — -sts.. 3, 4, 6-10.)—HBP—IR 
3, 4. 25, 26)—WR 5 (cond.) 

Elfin Song. (Song fol. 36.)—AA 
Fay’s Sentence, The. (Pt. of 6, 7-9.)—AA 
First Quest, The. (10-15.)—AA 
Gathering of the Fairies, The. (1-4.)—POS 
Second Quest, The. (Pt. of 24. 25-29.) 

(Fairy in Armor, A—25.)—PoR 
Culture and Service.—Anon.—CP 
Culture in Emergencies.—Anon. (Ad.)-— NC 
Culture of the Imagination, The.—Anon.—CP 
Culture of the Moral Virtues.—Jos. Baldwin.—BLP 
Culture the Result of Labor.—W: Wirt.—CS 11—DS 
(No Excellence without Labor.)—BLP—PEO 
Cultured Daughter of a Plain Grocer, The.—Anon. 
—CD 

Cumberbunce, The.—Paul West.—NA 
Cumberland, The.—Anon.—-FEP 
Cumberland, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA—AWB— 
—BAB — CS 2 — EPs — HB — LH — PAP 
—PAPm 

Cumberland Road, The.—T: Corwin.—MRS 
Cumnor Hall.—W: J. Mickle—FEP 
(Abr.) —BPB—BS 17—MR—VSG 
Cunnin’ Little Thing. The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Cunning Jew, The.—Anon.—CDV 
Cunning of Old Crow, The. See following. 

Cunning Old Crow, The.—Anon.—LLC 
(Cunning of Old Crow, The.)—AD 
(Jolly Old Crow, The— diff. vers.) —CSS—PPSr 
Cup, The.—J: T. Trowbridge.—SN 
Cup and Saucer Episode, A.—Bert Ross.—CG 2 
Cup of Tea, A.—Anon.—DST 
Cup of Water, A.—Julia M. Bennett.—WR 18 
Cup of Youth, The, Sel. fr. —S. Weir Mitchell.—BIL 
Cup-bearer, The.—Anon.—TS 

(Little Cup-bearer, The— si. abr.) —CS 18 
“Cupid abroad was lated in the night.”—Rob’t Greene. 
See Cupid’s Ingratitude. 

“Cupid among the Strawberries.” (W. Tab.) — 
Helen Mowat.—SR 7 


Cupid and Campaspe.—J: Lyly. See Alexander and 
Campaspe. 

Cupid and Death, Sel. fr. (Might of Death, The.)— 
Jas. Shirley.—WEP 2 

(Last Conqueror, The.)—FEP—PGT 1—YBF 
(Victorious Men of Earth.)—HBP 
Cupid and Mercury, or the Bargain.—Gotthold E. 
Lessing.—HPE 

“Cupid and my Campaspe play’d.”—J: Lyly. See 
Alexander and Campaspe. 

Cupid and the Bee. (Epigram— C .)—Edmund Spen¬ 
ser.—LC 

Cupid Arraigned. (Sel. fr. Gallathea, Act IV., Sc. 2.) 
—J: Lyly.—ES 

Cupid at Court.—S: M. Peck.—WR 20 
Cupid Mistaken.—Matthew Prior.—WEP 3 
Cupid Peeped in through the Blinds.—R: C. Dillmore. 
—CS 35 

Cupid Swallowed.—Leigh Hunt.—BNL—BS 21—CR 
—YBF 

Cupid’s Alley.—Austin Dobson.—WR 22 
Cupid’s Arrows. (Fr. Plain Tales from the Hills.)— 
Rudyard Kipling.—-WR 16 
Cupid’s Blunder.—Gertrude Jones.—CG 2 
Cupid’s Easter Composition.—Anon.-—TL 
Cupid’s Garden.—Anon.—PEB 2 

Cupid’s Ingratitude. (Sonnet— C.) —Rob't Greene.— 
ES 

(“Cupid abroad was lated in the night.”)—OEL 
Cupid’s Metamorphosis.—M. S. W.—CG 3 
Curate’s Story, The.—Jerome K. Jerome.—CS 31 
Cure for Homesickness.—-Holman F. Day.—THP 
Cure for Obstinacy; or, How Charlie Won a Wife, A.— 
Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KH 
Cured.—Anon.—MAD 
Cured in a Minute.—Anon.—DJS 

Cure’s Progress, The.—Austin Dobson.—LC—OS 2— 
VA 

Curfew.—H: W. Longfellow.—A A—WR 26 (abr.) 
Curfew Chimes, The.—V. L. Collins.-—CG 1 
Curfew Must Not Ring To-night.—Rose A. H. Thorpe. 
BNL—CS 9—FTR—HB—HNS—MR 
(Abr.)—BS 4—FEP—FR—MYF—SA 
Curing a Cold.—Anon.—CS 10—KNE 
Curing a Pedant.—Anon.—FND 
Curing an Invalid.—Anon.—StD 

Curing the Borrowers. (Dial.) —H. E. McBride.— 
MHD 

Curiosities for a Museum.—Anon.—DE 
Curiosity, The.—Anon.—Y r FD 
Curiosity, Sels. fr. —C: Sprague. 

Fiction.—A A 
News, The.—AA 

Curious Life Poem, A.— (Comp, bo) Mrs. H. A. Deming. 
—CS 15 

(Life.)—FEP—HP—SR 2 
Curious Want, A.—Marc Cook.—AWH 
Curlew’s Call, A.—Jane Barlow.—VA 
Curly Locks.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Curly-head.—B. S. Brooks.—SR 5 
Current of Life, The.—Anon.—CS 31—SR 9 
Curry. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book.) (Punch.)— 
HPE 

Curse for a Nation, A.—Eliz. B. Browning.—MRS 
Curse from “Claudian,” The.—Herman and Wills.— 
WR 13 

Curse of Cain, The.—J: (?) Knox.—SS 

Curse of Drink, The.—T. D. Talmage.—WR 18 

Curse of Hungary, The.—J: Hay.—SO 

Curse of Kehama, The. Sels. fr. —Rob’t Southey. 

Curse of Kehama, The. (Can. II., St. 14.)—AE 
Immortality of Love. (X., 8-10.)—FTR 
(Curse of Kahama, The—X., 11.)—-BNL 
(Love’s Immortality—X., 10.)—FTA 
(“They sin who tell us love can die”— X., 10, 
11.)—GG 

Kehama, (XIII., 9-13.)—WEP 4 
Curse of Marino Faliero, The.—Lord Byron. See 
Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Curse of Regulus, The —Elijah Kellogg.—CS 2—KNE 
(Regulus to the Carthaginians— diff. vers.) —CS 11 
—DS—OM—PPS 

(Abr.— but speech comp.) —BS 13—PS 
(Return of Reguus, The— speech abr.) —TMD 
(Supposed Speech of Regulus.)—NPS—YP 
Curse on the Traitor, A.-—T; Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
Curse to Labor, The.- T. V. Powderlv.—BS 16 
(Greatest Curse to Labor, The.)—FD 2 
Curse upon Edward, he.—T: Gray. See Bard, The. 
Curtain, The.—Anon.—SR 9 
Curtain Falls, The.—Jos. Verey.—HP 
Curtain Fixture, The.—.!««. M. Bailey.—CS 23—SR 5 


80 




TITLE INDEX 


Dame 


Curtain Lecture of Mrs. Caudle, A. (Mr. Caudle has 
Lent an Acquaintance the Family Umbrella 
—C.)—Douglas Jerrold.—SO (si. abr.) 

(Mrs. Caudle’s Umbrella Lecture.)—CS 1—DDR 
Curtsy, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 31 
Cushions.—Anon.—GH 

Cushla Gal Mo Chree, A.—Michael Doheny.—TIP 
Custer’s Last Charge.—Frd’k Whittaker. — CS 13— 
PS 

Cut Behind.—T. De W. Talmage.—CS 12 
“Cut, Cut Behind.”—C: F. Adam's.—DCR 
Cut off from the People.—Hall Caine. See Deemster, 
The. 

“Cut the Cables.”—R. B. Wilson.—PAPm 
Cutting off the Forests.—Warren Higley.—AD 
Cyclamen, The.—Arlo Bates.—AA 
Cycle, A.—C. Brooke.—FLS 
Cyclone at Sea, A.—W: H. Hayne.—AA 
Cyclopeedy, The.—-Eugene Field.—HBR 
Cymbeline. Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Cymbeline, Act III., Sc. 1. (Abr.) —EHT 
Dirge of Imogen, The. (Song — C. — fr. IV., 2.) 
—HBP 

(Cymbeline, Act IV., Sc. 2, Sel. fr.)— ELP 
(Dirge— abr. )—FEP—YBF 

(Fear no more the Heat o’ the Sun— abr.) —BNL 
—EPs 

(Fidele.)—OB 

(Abr.) — BPB—OEL—PGT 1—PHS 
Inborn Royalty. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 2.)—EPs 
Slander. (Br. sel. fr. III., 4.)—KNE 
Song. (C.—fr. II., 3.)—BFV—PYO 
(Aubade.)—OB 

(Cymbeline, Act II., Sc. 3, Sel. fr.) —ELP 
(Hark.)—OS 1 

(Hark, Hark! the Lark.)—BNL—EPs—YBF 
(“Hark, hark! the lark at heaven’s gate sings.”) 
—GP—OEL 

(Morning.)—FEP—HBP—LC 
(Morning Song [for Imogen], A.)—CEL—GN— 
WEP 1 

(To Imogen.)—ES 

Cymon and Iphigenia, Br. sel. fr. —.1: Dryden.—BNL 
Cynic, The.—H: W. Beecher. See Portrait Gallery. 
Cynic of the Woods, The.—Arthur P. Martin.—VA 
Cynthia, Sels. fr. —R: Barnfield. 

Address to the Nightingale.—BNL—HBP 
(Ode, An.)—EP—WEP 1 

(Nightingale, The— sel.) —BPB—CEL—CGd— 
EPs—FEP—LC—PGT 1—YBF 
(Philomel— sel. )—OB 
Sonnet from Cynthia.—WEP 1 
Cynthia.—-Sir E: Dyer.—EP 

Cynthia’s Bridal Evening.—J: Keats. See “I stood 
tiptoe upon a little hill.” 

Cynthia’s Revels; or, The Fountain of Self-love, Sels. 
fr. —Ben Jonson. 

Echo’s Lament of [or for] Narcissus. (Fr. Act I., 
Sc. 1.— mod.) —ELP—WEP 2—YBF 
(Echo’s Song.)—OEL 
(Song of Echo.)—EPs 
Hesperus’ Song. (Fr. V., 3.)—GN 
(Hymn to Cynthia.)—SN 

(Hymn to Diana.)—BFV—BPB—ELP—LC— 
OB—PGT 1—PHS—YBF 
(To Cynthia.)—FEP—OS 3 
Kiss, The. (Fr. IV., 1.)—ES 
To a Glove. (Fr. IV., 1.)—ES 
Cvrano de Bergerac, Sels. fr. —Edmund Rostand. 
Balcony Scene. (Fr. Act III., Sc. 6.)—WR 22 
(Scene from Cyrano de Bergerac— si. diff. sel.) — 
CS 37 

Scene from Cyrano de Bergerac. (Fr. I., 4.)— 
MRS 

Czar, The. (Punch .)—HPE 

Czar Alexander the Second. (Sonnet: Czar Alexan¬ 
der the Second— C .)—Dante G. Rossetti. 
(Alexander II.)—EDY 


D 


Dad Says so, Anyhow. (Dial.). —H. E. McBride.— 
—CS 36 

Daddy Benson and the Fairies. (Detroit Free Press.) 
—BS 19 


Daddy Dumm.—Alice A. Coale.—MD 

Daddy Flick’s Spree.—David L. Proudfit.—BLR 

Daddy Worthless.—Eliz. W. Champney.—CS 13 

Daddy’s Boy.—Anon.—CS 14 

Dad’s Little Fiddle.—Fred W. Sibley.—WR 12 


Dsedalus.—J: Sterling.—EPs (sel.)—HBP 
Daemon Lover, The.—Anon. See Demon Lover, The. 
Daffodil. (Fr. Pastorals, Eclogue IX.)—Michael 
Drayton.—EP 

Daffodil.—Marv E. Sharpe. See Dainty Lady Daffo¬ 
dil. 

Daffodil.—Katha. Tynan-Hinkson.—TIP 
Daffodils.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL—PEO (sel.) 

(To Daffodils.)—BPB — CEL — CGd — ELP — 
EPs — FEP — FP — GN — HBP—LC—OB— 
OEL — PGT 1 — PHS — POS — WEP 2 — 
YBF 

Daffodils.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
Daffodils [,The],—W: Wordsworth—BNL—BSP— 
CR — EPs — FEP — FP — FTR — GMS — 
GN — GP — HBP — HSS 1 — LLC — MBL — 
OB — PGT 1 — POS — PYO — SN — YBF 
(I Wandered Lonely.)—BPB—WEP 4 
(I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud—C.)—LC—OS 3 
Daffy-down-Dilly.—Anon.—AD 
Daffy-down-Dilly.—Anna B. Warner.—PoR 
(Brave Little Flower, The.)—PPSr 
(Ready for Duty.)—AD—PHS 
Daft Days, The.—Rob’t Fergusson.—WEP 3 
Daft Jean.—Sydney Dobell.—PEB 3 
Dagger of the Mind, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Mac¬ 
beth. 

Dagger Scene, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 
Dagger Soliloquy.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 
Dagmar.—Elna Harwood.—WR 24 
Dagmar Cross, The.—Anon.—CS 10 
Daguerreotype, The.—Eva W. McGlasson.—BS 21 
Daily Counsellor, The. Sel. fr. (“Give words, kind 
words, to those who err”— sel. for Dec. 24.)— 
Lydia H. Sigourney.—GG 
Daily Dying.—Anon.—CS 16 
Daily Governess, The.—Anon.—FND 
Daily Strength.—Frances R. Havergal.—HDL 
Daily Task, The.—Marianne Famingham.—PEO 
Daily Work.—C: Mackay— SM—WCLI 2 
Dainty Lady Daffodil.—Mary E. Sharpe.—DCP— 
HSS 1 

(Daffodil— in Maiden Spring, The, and Arbor 
Day Acrostic.)—AD 
‘Dairy” Maid, A.—Anon.—GH 
Dairymaid, The. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Dairy-maids’ Drill, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Daisies.—Anon.—PP—YPS 

Daisies. (In Flower Songs.)—Mary G. Crocker.— 
CPL 

Daisies.—Frank D. Sherman.—DLF—LFL—TT 
Daisy, The.—Anon.—AD 
Daisy, The.—Anon.—NV 
Daisy, The.—Anon.—TT 

Daisy, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Legend of Good 
Women, The. 

Daisy, The.—J: M. Good—HSS 1—PEO—YBT 
Daisy, The.—J: Leyden.—BNL 

Daisy, The.—Jas. Montgomery. — BNL — NV (sel.) — 
SN 

(Field Flower, A— C .)—POS 
Daisy, The.—J: Henry Newman.—YBT 
Daisy, The.—Rennell Rodd.—VA 
Daisy, The.—Mrs. B. C. Rude.—AD 
Daisy, The.—Alfred Tennyson.:—VA 
Daisy.—Fs. Thompson.—VA 
Daisy.—Emily Warren.—TMR 
(Our Littie Queen.)—WCL 
Daisy and Snow-drop. (Dial.) —Anon.—AD 
(What the Daisy Said— sel.) —TFS 
Daisy Drill.—Jean Halifax.—WR 17 
Daisy Fair. (Motion song.) —Annie Chase.—AD 
Daisy Follows Soft the Sun, The.—Emily Dickinson. 

' —OH 

Daisy in India, The.—Jas. Montgomery.—POS 
Daisy Nurses.—Anon.-—DJS—GMS (sel.) 

Daisy Time.—Fleta Forrester.—COS—PP 
Daisy’s Dimples.—J. A. Sterry.—VS 
Daisy’s Faith.—Joanna H. Mathews.—BS 7—CS 18— 
CSS—SR 10 

Daisy’s Song, The.—J: Keats.—PoR 
Daisy’s Story.—Anon.—SR 7 
Daisy’s Thanksgiving.—Anon.—HS 
Dakin’ a Shweat.—H. M. Seymour.—DRR 
Dalliance of the Eagles, The.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
Damsetas’ Jig in Praise of His Love.—Sir J: Wotton (?). 
—ELP 

Damaris Brown. (Youth’s Companion.) —COS—PP 
Damascus.—S: L. Clemens. See Innocents Abroad. 
Dame Duck’s First Lecture on Education.—“Aunt 
Effie.”—BVC—PC—WCL 


81 




Dame 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dame Fredegonde.—W: E. Aytoun.—CS 22—HPE— 
MHR—SCS 

Dame Hickory.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Dame Nature Crowns the Scottish Lion King of 
Beasts.—W: Dunbar. See Thistle and the 
Rose, The. 

Dame Partington and the Atlantic Ocean.—Sydney 
Smith.—PS 

Damelus’ Song to his Diaphenia.—H: Constable.—EP 
( Diaphenia.)—F EP—LC 

Damelus’ Song to his Flock.—H: Constable.—LC 
Damiel versus Dishcloth.—G. A. Stevens.—CS 21 
Damon and Pythias, Sels. jr. {Play.) —J: Banim. 
Damon to the Syracusans.—CS 7—SS 
Scene from Damon and Pythias.—BS 10—CDD 
Damon and Pythias. ( Abr .)—Friedrich Schiller.—SS 
(Hostage, The— abr.) —WR 16 
Damon and Pythias; or, True Friendship.—W: Peter. 
—CS 1 

Damon the Mower.—Andrew Marvell.—EP 
Damon’s Lament.—W: Drummond.—EP 
Damsel of Peru, The.—W: C. Bryant.—CS 19 
Dana.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 

Danae, Sel. jr. (Lullaby.)—T: Davidson.—TMR 
Danae.—Simonides (tr. by W: Peter).—HBP 
Dance, The.—Anon.—AWB 

Dance, The. (Song— C .)—Sir J: Suckling.—WEP 2 
Dance Light.—J: F. Waller.—BNL 
(Irish Melody, An.)—HBP 
(Kitty Neil.)—CS 22—TIP—VA 
Dance of Death, The.—Walter Scott.—BS 23 
Dance of the Daisies, The.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AD 
Dance of the Months.—Anon.—NV 
Dance of the Seven Deadly Sins [or, Sevin Deidly 
Synnis], The.—W: Dunbar.—ESs—WEP 1 
Dance Song.—F. W. L. Adams.—FLS 
Dancer, The.—Ednah P. (C.) Hayes.—AA 
Dancers, The.—Michael Field.—VA 
Dancing Faun, The.—Rob’t C. Rogers.—AA 
Dancing Girl, A.—Frances S. Osgood.—AA 
Dancing Girl. See also Dancing-girl. 

Dancing in the Flat Creek Quarters.—J: A. Macon.— 
WR 7 

(Terpsichore in the Flat Creek Quarters.)—BS 9 
Dancing of the Air, The.—Sir J: Davies. See Anti- 
nous Praises Dancing before Queen Penelope. 
Dancing the Minuet.—F. E. E. Hamilton.—CG 1 
Dancing-girl, The.—Sir Edwin Arnold.—WR 8 
Dancing-girl. See also Dancing Girl. 

Dandelion.—Anon.—CPL 
Dandelion [,'The].—Anon.—DJS—TT 
(Dandelion’s Hair.)—CPL 
Dandelion, The.—Anon.—GMS 
Dandelion, The.—Anon.—GMS 

(Bright Little Dandelion— sel.) —TFS 
Dandelion.—Kate L. Brown.—NV 
Dandelion. — Nellie M. Garabrant. — AD — COS — 
NV (abr.)—PP 

Dandelion and Clover-top. (Dial.) —May R. Smith.— 
DES 

Dandelions.—Anon.—GMS 
Dandelions.—J: Albee.-—-AA 

Dandelions [,The], — Helen G. Cone. — PoR — SN — 
TAV—WR 6 

Dandelion’s Hair.—Anon. See Dandelion, The. 
Dandy and the Boor, The.—Anon.—FND 
Dandy Fifth, The.-—Frank H. Gassaway.—CS 21— 
FR 

Danger of Exclusive Devotion to Business.—G. S. 
Hilliard.—FAS 

Danger of the Spirit of Conquest.—T: Corwin. See 
Spirit of Conquest , The. 

Danger Signal, The.—S. B. McBeath.—WR 4 
Dangerous Legislation.—Jas. McDowell.—OM—SC 
Dangers of our Prosperity.—Timothy Walker.—PS 
Dangers of Peace. (Frags, jr. various authors.)— 
BNL 

Dangers to our Republic.—Horace Mann.—SAE— 
WR 10 

Daniel Gray.—Josiah G. Holland.—AA—BS 14—GP 
Daniel in the Lion’s Den.—E. E. Ten Eyck.—CH 
Daniel O’Connell. (A Nation’s Test—Pt. VI., abr.) —J: 
B. O’Reilly.—EDY 

Daniel O’Connell, Sels. jr. —-Wendell Phillips. 

Daniel O’Connell the Orator.—NC 
(Daniel O’Connell— ptly. difj.)- —CR 
(Eloquence of Daniel O’Connell — abr.) — 

CS 30 (ptly. difj.) —FD 1—PPS—WCLG 2 
Daniel O’Connell’s Power over the Irish People. 
—NC 

Necessity of Outside Agitation, The.—MRS 


Daniel O’Connell, Sels. fr.—W: H. Seward. 

Daniel O’Connell’s Epitaph.—NC 
Eulogy on O’Connell.—FD 1—SPE (ptly. difj.) — 
SR 5 

Daniel O’Connell the Orator.—Wendell Phillips. See 
Daniel O’Connell. 

Daniel O’Connell’s Epitaph. — W: H. Seward. See 
Daniel O’Connell. 

Daniel O’Connell’s Humor.—Anon.—WR 7 
Daniel O.’.Connell’s, Power over the Irish People.— 
Wendell Phillips. See Daniel O’Connell. 
Daniel Periton’s Ride.—Albion W. Tourgee.—BS 18— 
CS 29—NPS—YP 

Daniel versus Dishclout.—G. A. Stevens.—CS 21—SCS 
Daniel Webster. (Two difj. sels.) —G: F. Hoar.—SC— 
TMR 

Daniel Webster. (Birthday of Daniel Webster— C.) — 
Oliver W. Holmes.—BNL (sel.)— SE 
Daniel Webster.—J: G. Whittier. See Ichabod. 
Daniel Webster’s Eloquence.—Rufus Choate.—FD 1 
Daniel Webster’s First Plea.—Anon.—KNE 
Danish Barrow, A.—Fs. T. Palgrave.—VA 
Danny Deever. (C.) —Rudyard Kipling.—VA 
(Files-on-Parade.)—WR 16 
“Danny Deever” up to Date.—Anon.—GH 
Dans l’Alcove Sombre (The Watching Angel).— 
Victor Hugo. 

(L’Ange qui Veille.)—WR 25 
Dan’s Wife.—Kate T. Woods.—CS 26—HP 
Dante.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA 
Dante Alighieri.—Dante G: Rossetti. See following. 
Dante at Verona, Sel. jr. (Dante Alighieri.)—Dante 
G. Rossetti.—OS 3 

Dante Gabriel Rossetti.—Edmund Gosse.—EDY 
Dante, Shakespeare, Milton.—Sydney Dobell. See 
Balder. 

Danube River, The.—Hamilton Aide.—VA 
Daphnaida, Sels. jr. (An Elegy.)—Edmund Spenser.— 
ELP—013 (ptly. same.) 

Daphne.—J: Lyly. See Midas. 

Dappledun.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Darby and Joan.—St. John Honeywood.—AA 
Darby and Joan.—F: E. Weatherly.—LC—VA 
Dare.—Anon.—HSS 2 
“Dare to be Right.”—Anon.—HSS 2 
Dare to Do Right.—Anon.—YBT 
Dare to Stand Alone.—Anon.—TS 
Darest thou now, O Soul.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
Daring Prince, A.—Jas. W. Riley. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A. 

Darius, Sel. jr— Sir W : Alexander.—WEP 2 
Darius Green and his Flying-machine.—J: T Trow¬ 
bridge.—BS 2—CS 3—FTR—HNS—MHR 
(Sel.)— SAE—SE 

Darius Green Parodied.—Anon.—PTS 
Darius to his Army.—Quintius Curtius.—PS 
Dark, The.—George Eliot. See Spanish Gypsy, The. 
Dark Angel, The.—Lionel Johnson.—TIP 
Dark Forest of Sorrow, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See 
Three Men in a Boat. 

“Dark Girl” by the “Holy Well,” The.—J: Keegan.— 
TIP 

Dark Glass, The. (The House of Life, Sonnet XXXIV.) 

—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 
Dark Man, The.—Nora Hopper.—TIP 
“Dark Noight’s Business. A.”—McDermott and 
Trumble.—DSS 

Dark Rosaleen.—Jas. C. Mangan.—OB—TIP—VA 
Dark the Day but Bright the Heart.—Dora R. Goodale 
—YBT 

Darkey Debating Society, The.—White.—MDD 
Darkey Photographer, The.—Anon.—SCS 
Darkey Preacher, The. ( Congregationalist.) — CDV 
—SDR 

(Learned Negro, The.)—AWH—CS 11—THP 
Darkey’s Counsel to the Newly Married.—Edmund 
Kirke.—CS 5 

(Uncle Pete’s Counsel to the Newly Married.)— 
BS 1 

Darkness.—Lord Byron.—FP—HNS—PPSr 
(Br. sels.)— AE— SE 
(Dream of Darkness— br. sel.) —SE 
Darkness.—Jas. N. Rosenberg.—AA 
Darkness is Thinning.—St. Gregory the Great (tr. by 
J: M. Neale).—BNL—HBP 
Darktown Lullaby, A.—Anon.—BS 26 
Darktown Nine, The.—E. B. Mason.—CG 3 
Darky Bootblack, The.—Anon.—CS 13—DS 
Darky’s Ideal Wife, A.—Belle R. Harrison.—SR 11 
Darling Jennie.—B. L. C. Griffith.—MN 
Darling Little Girl, The.—Anon.—YBT 


82 




TITLE INDEX 


Daybreak 


Darling of the Year, The.—Anon.—DFR 
D’Artagnan’s Ride.—Gouverneur Morris.—AA 
Dartmouth College Case, The, Sel. fr. (Close of De¬ 
fense of Dartmouth College.)—Dan’l Webster. 
—FD 1 

Dartmouth Winter-song.—R: Hovey.—AA 
Darwin.—Mortimer Collins.—BNL 
Darwinism.—A. M. F. R. Darmesteter.—SN—VA 
Darwinism in the Kitchen.—Anon.—HP 
Darwinity.—Herman Merivale.—NA 
Das Krist Kindel. (C.— sel.) —Jas. W. Riley.—HDL 
(Kingly Presence, The.)—TAS 
Das Licht des Auges.—Friedrich Schiller. See William 
Tell. 

Dash for the Colors, The.—Frd’k G. Webb.—WR 2 
Dat Gawgy Watahmillon. — Edmund V. Cooke. — 
WR 22 

Dat Yaller Gown.—C: H. Turner.—CD—SR 7 
Datur Hora Quieti. (The Sun upon the Lake— C. — 
fr. The Doom of Devorgoil.)—Walter Scott.— 
PGT 1 

(Evening.)—BPB 
(Leonard Tarries Long.)—YBF 
Daughter of Herodias, The.—Anon.—SR 10 (sel .)— 
WR 16 

Daughter of Mendoza, The.—M. B. Lamar.—AA 
Daughter of the Desert, The.—Jas. C. Harvey.— 
WR 22 

Daughter’s Love and Heroism, A.—Walter K. Fobes. 
—FMR 

Daughters of Philistia. (Fr. Olrig Grange.)—Walter 
C. Smith.—VA 

Daughters of the King.—Anon.—SSS 
Daughters of the Regiment Drill.—Mrs. A. G. Lewis.— 
WR 17 

Dauntless.—Arthur Weir.—WR 13 
Dave Flint’s Temptation.—Anon.—BS 26 
David and Goliath. (First Samuel, Ch. XVII.,1-51.) 
— Bible .—WR 25 

David and Saul. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.—TDT 
David Copperfield, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Aunt Betsey and Little Davy. (Fr. Ch. XIII.— 
dram, by Mrs. J. W. Shoemaker.)—BS 13— 
CDD 

Child-wife, The. (Fr. Ch. XXXIII.)—BS 1 — 
CR (abr.) 

(David Copperfield and his Child-wife.)—CS 6 
Death of Dora. (Fr. Ch. LIII.)—CS 12 
Death of Steerforth. (Fr. Ch. LV.)—BS 14 (abr.) 
—CS 34 

(David Copperfield, Fr. — br. sel .)—SAE 
(Tempest, The.)—SR 12 
(Wreck, The— abr.) —CSS—NPS—-YP 
Disastrous Announcement, A. (Dial. ad. fr. Ch. 
XXXVII.)—NDP 

Housekeeping. (Fr. Ch. XLIV.)—WCLG 1 
Rosa Dartle’s Revenge. (Fr. Ch. L.)—WR 19 
“Whatever I have tried to do in my life, I have 
tried with all my heart,” etc. (Br. sel. fr. Ch. 
XLII.)—GG 

David Copperfield and his Child-wife.— C: Dickens. 
See David Copperfield. 

David Exorcising Malzah, the Evil Spirit from the 
Lord.—C: Heavysege. See Saul. 

David in <he Cave of Adullam.—C: and Mary Lamb.— 
LPC 

David, King of Israel.—E: Trving.—CS 8 
David Playing before Saul.—Rob’t Browning. See 
Saul. 

David Shaw, Hero.—Jas. Buckham.—TMR 
David Singing before Saul. (Fr. Saul.)—Rob’t 
Browning. See Saul. 

David, the Patriotic King.—Cunningham Geikie.—BI.P 
Davideis, The, Sel. fr. (Invocation.)—Abraham Cow¬ 
ley.—BNL 

(Lover to his Lyre, The.)—CEL 
(Supplication, A.)—EPs—FEP—PGT 1 
David’s Lament for [or over] Absalom.—Nathaniel P. 
Willis. See Absalom. 

David’s Soliloquy.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Davie Gellatley’s Song.—Walter Scott. See Waverley. 

See also Fause Lover, The. 

Davy and Goliar.—W: E. Penney.—CS 30 

Davy, the Teamster.—Estelle Thomson.—CS 10 

Dawn.—Jas. M. Carroll.—TCV 

Dawn.—J: Ford. See Lover’s Melancholy, The. 

Dawn. (Prelude— C. — fr. The New Day.) R: W. 

Gilder.—BNL—GP—SN 
Dawn.—Frd’k G. Scott.—TCV 

Dawn.—W: Shakespeare. See Romeo and Juliet. 
Dawn and Dark.—Norman Gale.—VA 
Dawn of Peace, The.—J: Ruskin.—SR 13 


Dawn of Redemption, The.—Jas. G. Clark.—SA 
Dawn of the Centennial, The.—Sara L. Oberholtzer.— 
CS 12 

Dawn of the Century.—Anna H. Thorne.—PEO 
Dawn on the Irish Coast.—J: Locke.—WR 3 
Dawn-angels.—A. M. F. R. Darmesteter.—VA 
Dawning Future, The.—W: P. Johnson.—BLP 
Dawning o’ the Year, The.—Mary E. Blake.—AA 
Dawning of the Day, The.—Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 
Dawning of the Day, The.—E: Walsh.—TIP 
Dawn-song.—W : Davenant.—CEL 
(Aubade.)—OB 
(Morning.)—YBF 
(Song—C.)—FEP—WEP 2 
Day, A.—Emily Dickinson.—LC-—PoR 
Day.—Jas. Montgomery. See Alps, The. 

Day After, The. (Harper’s Young People.) — 1 TT 
Day after the Fourth, The.—Ella W. Ricker.—CPL 
Day and Night! (Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
Day and Night.— T: Campion.—ELP 
(Sic Transit.)—PGT 1 

“Day and night my thoughts incline.” (C.) —R: H 
Stoddard. 

(Jar, The.)—AA 

Day and Night Songs. (Dedication.)—W: Allingham. 
—VA 

Day at Niagara, A. (Visit to Niagara, A. — C.) 
—S: L. Clemens.—BS 6—SA 
(Mark Twain Visits Niagara.)—CS 16 
Day before Christmas, The.—Alice P. Carter.—SR 3 
Day before Thanksgiving, The.—Frank S. Pixley.— 
WR 7 

Day before the Wedding, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 

CS 3 

Day Conceals what Night Reveals.—J. P. Nichol.—SS 
Day in June, A.—H: S. Washburn.—POS 
“Day, in melting purple dying.”—Maria G. Brooks.— 
BNL—FEP 
(Song.)—HBP 
(Song of Egla.)—AA 

Day in the Lord’s Courts, A. (C.) —Jas. Montgomery. 

(“ To Thy temple I repair.”)—FEP 
Day in the Pamfili Doria, A.—Harriet B Stowe.— 
BNL 

Day in the Woods, A.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—BS 20 
Day is Coming, The. (Sel.) —W: Morris.—EHT 
Day is Dead. (Fr. Songs from Dramas.)—Augusta 
W ebster.—VA 

Day is Done, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—ASL—BPB— 
BS 14 — FEP — FP — GMS — LLC — NV — 
P YO—SE—SO—TA V 

Day is Dying. — George Eliot. See [Spanish Gypsy, 
The. 

Day is Over. (.4br.)—Sabine Baring-Gould.—YBT 
(Child’s Evening Hymn— abr.) —VA—YBF (sl.diff. 

abr.) 

(Now the Day is Over— sel.) —NV 
Day of Atonement, The, Sel. fr: (Kol Nidra.)—Jos. 
Leiser.—AA 

Day of Days, The.—Anon.—PEO 

“Day of Judgment, The.” (Trottv’s Wedding Tour, 
Ch. XIII., cond.)— Eliz. S. Phelps.—BS 16 
Day of Judgment, The.— (C.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
—WEP 3 

(Jove and the Souls— abr.) —EPs 
Day of Judgment, The.—I: Watts.—OB 
Day of Misfortunes, The.—Anon.—FDY 
Day of our Country, A.—J: D. Long.—FD 1 
Day of Rest, The.—Anon.—DSS 

Day of Thanksgiving, The.—H: W. Beecher. See 
Family as an American Institution, The. 

Day of the Indian Summer, A.—Sarah H. Whitman.— 
POS 

Day of the Lord, The.—C: Kingsley.—HBP 
Day Old Bet was Sold, The.—Frank H. Gassaway.— 
MR 

Day Returns, my Bosom Burns, The. (Day Returns, 
The— C.) —Rob’t Burns.-—BNL—YBF 
(Blissful Day, The.)—HBP 
Day too Late, A.—Magdalen Rock.—WR 6 
Dav we Do not Celebrate, The. — Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
SYS 

Day with Homer, A, Sel. fr. —Lyman C. Smith.— 
TCV 

Day wdthout a Sermon, A.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Daybreak. (Sel. fr. Break of Day.)—J: Donne.—OB 
Daybreak.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The. 

Daybreak.—H: W. Longfellow.—BFV—BNL—PC— 
SN—SR 1 

Daybreak.—Percy B. Shelley.—GN—POS 
Daybreak in the Camp.—Anon.—CS 33 




Day-dream 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Day-dream, The, Sels. fr. —-Alfred Tennyson. 

I. Sleeping Palace, The.—HBP 

II. Sleeping Beauty, The.—BNL—-HBP—WR 8 
(Sleeping Beauty, The, I. The Magic Sleep.)— 

CGd 

III. Arrival, The.—HBP—WR 8 

(Sleeping Beauty, The, II. The Fairy Prince’s 
Arrival.)—CGd 

IV. Revival, The.—BNL—HBP—WR 8 

V. Departure, The.—BNL—GP—HBP—OH— 

WR 8 

Moral.—PYO 

Day-dream, A.—E: W. Thomson.—TCV 
Day-dreams, Sel. fr. —Jos. A. Allen.—TCV 
Dayrise and Sunset.—G: W. Thombury.—VS 
Days.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—-ASL—YBF 
Days and the Year, The.—Harriet F. Blodgett.—YBT 
Day’s Eye, The.—Anon.—GMS 

Days Gone By [,The],—-Jas. W. Riley.—POS—RCR— 
TAV 

"Days Keep Coming, The.”—Anon.—CPL 
Days of Absence. (W. music.) — Jean-Jacques Rous¬ 
seau.—NPS—YP 
Days of Birth.—Anon.—BVC 

(Birthday Week, The— si. diff. vers.) —OS 1 
Days of Bruce, The, Sel. fr. (Battle of Bannockburn, 
The— ad. fr. Chs. 36 and 37.)—Grace Aguilar. 
—BS 24—PFP 

Days of my Youth.—-St. George Tucker.—AA 
Days of Rest.—Harriet P. Spofford.—TAS 
Days of the Month.—Anon.—BVC 
(Calendar, The— diff. vers.) —OS 1 
Days of the Week.—Mary E. Page.—PS—TT 
Days of Yore, The.—Douglas Thompson.—FP 
Day’s Oration is in Flowers, The.—E. L. Hall.—DFR 
Days that are Gone, The.—C: Mackay.—SS 
Days that are No More, The.—Anon.—HP 
Days that are No More, The. — Alfred Tennyson. See 
Prinpp^s Thp 

De Candy Pull.—A. B. Luce.—BS 21 
De Fust Banjo.—Irwin Russell. See Christmas Night 
in the Quarters. 

De Goneness ob de Past.—Anon.—GH 
“De Gustibus.”—Rob’t Browning.—A VP—PGT 2— 
VA 

De Gustibus.—J: Erskine.—CG 3 
De Lay ub de Last Minstrel.—Anon.—DSS 
De Libris.—-Cosmo Monkhouse.—LBB—-MBB 
“De Lord am Coming.”—Ellen Murray.—CS 34 
De Lunatico.—O: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
De Massa ob de Sheepfol’.—Sarah P. M. Greene.—SR 6 
—TAV 

(De Sheepfol’.)—AA—ASL—YBF 
(Lost Sheep, The.)—HP 
De Necessary Consequences.—Anon.—DSS 
De Nice Leetle Canadienne.—W: H. Drummond.— 
HBR-WR 26 

De Ole Elder’s Mistake.—Ellen Murray.—CS 35 
De Ole Plantation Mule.—Anon.—CRR (si. abr.) 

(Solium Fac’, A.)—PP—YFR 
De Oratore, Sel.fr. (Study of Eloquence, The—Bk. 

L, Sec. VIII.— si. abr.)— Cicero.—CS 21 
“De Pen and de Swoard.” (Harper’s Magazine.) — 
CS 18—SR 1 

“De Pervisions, Josiar.”—Anon.—SR 2 
De Pint wid Ole Pete.—Anon.—BeR—CS 12—DE— 
PS 

De Preacher an’ de Hants.—W: H. Hayne.—CD 
De Profundis.—Anon.—FLS 
De Profundis.—Eliz. B. Browning.—GP—HDL 
De Profundis.—Kathe. T. Hinkson.—VA 
De Profundis, Sel. fr. —Phillips Stewart.—TCV 
De Regimine Principum, 2 sels. fr. — T: Occleve.— 
WEP 1 

De Rev. Plato Johnson on Free Cirkelatin’ Liberies. 

( Independent. )—CRR 
De Rosis Hibernis.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
De Sheepfol’.—Sarah P. M. Greene. See De Massa ob 
de Sheepfol’. 

De ’Sperience ob de Reb’rend Quacko Strong.—Anon. 
_Qg 22 

(SI. abr.)— DCR—SR 2 

De Tired Pickaninny’s Star Song.—Mary Baillie.— 
WR 26 

De Trop.—LW—TT. 

De Valley an’ de Shadder, Sel. fr. (Trial of Ben 
Thomas, The—Ch. IV.)—Harry S. Edwards. 
(General’s Client, The— abr. and ad.) —NC 
(Not Guilty— ad.) —PFP—SC 
De Yaller Chinee.—Anon.—CD—PS 
Deacon Adams to His Son.—Anon.—WR 26 


Deacon Brodie. (Play — sel. ad. fr. Deacon Brodie; or, 
The Double Life.)—W: E. Henley and Rob’t 
L. Stevenson.—NDP 

Deacon Giles’s Distillery.—G: B. Cheever.—WR 18 
Deacon Hezekiah.—Anon.—CS 6—HR 
Deacon Kent in Politics.—A. L. Frisbie.—SR 3 
Deacon, me and him, The.—L: Eisenbeis.—CS 30 
Deacon Munroe’s Story; or. Church Discipline.—N. S. 
Emerson.—BS 4—CS 6 
(Deacon’s Confession, The.)—WR 16 
(Deacon’s Story, The.)—KNE 
Deacon Stokes.—T: Quilp.—CS 2—HR 
Deacon Thrush in Meeting. ( Harper’s Bazar.) — 
DFY 

Deacon’s Call, The.—Orella L. Kimball.—SR 1 
Deacon’s Confession, The.—N. S. Emerson. See 
Deacon Munroe’s Story. 

Deacon’s Courtship, The. — Mrs. L. D. A. Stuttle [or 
Suttle],—CS 22 

(Wife-hunting Deacon, The.)—NPS—YP 
Deacon’s Downfall, The.—Lansing.—BS 21 
Deacon’s Masterpiece, The; or. The Wonderful One- 
hoss Shay. (C.) —Oliver W. Holmes.— AWH 
—EPs—FEP—THP 

(One-hoss Shav; or, The Deacon’s Masterpiece.)— 
BNL—CR—MHR—SE (sel.) 

(Wonderful “One-hoss Shay,” Tne.)—AD (sel.) — 
CS 2 

Deacon’s Prayer, The.—W; O. Stoddard.—CS 19 
Deacon’s Story, The.—N. S. Emerson. See Deacon 
Munroe’s Story. 

Deacon’s Sunday-school Sermon, The.—Jas. C. 
Ambrose.—TS 

Deacon’s Week, The.—Rose T. Cooke.—BS 22 
Dead, The.—Mathilde Blind.—VA 
Dead, The.—Jones Very.—AA 

Dead Antiquary O’Donovan, The.—T: D. McGee.— 
TIP 

Dead Astronomer, The.—C: W. E. Chapin, Jr.— 
CG 1 

Dead at Clonmacnois, The.—T. W T . Rolleston.—OB— 
TIP 

Dead Babe, The.—Eugene Field.—LS—TAS 
Dead Bird, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
Dead Bird, The. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS 
—PP 

Dead Calm at Sea.—S: T. Coleridge. See Rime of the 
Ancient Mariner. 

Dead Cannoneer, The.—Jas. R. Randall.—EDY 
(John Pelham.)—AA—AWB 
Dead Child, The.—G: Barlow.—VA 
Dead Christ, The.—Julia Ward Howe.—HBP 
Dead Church, The.—C: Kingsley.—BS 4—VA 
Dead Coach, The.—Kathe. T. Hinkson.—VA 
Dead Comrade, The.—R: W. Gilder.—HS—OS 2 
Dead Czar. The. (C .)—Dinah M. Craik.—EDY 
(Dead Czar Nicholas, The.)—BNL 
Dead Czar Nicholas, The.—Dinah M. Craik. See fore¬ 
going. 

Dead Doll, The.—Marg. Vandegrift.—CS 22—CSS- 
OS—FTR—HBP—HNS—HSS 2—YA 
Dead Drummer-boy, The. (Harper’s Weekly.) —WRD 
Dead Friend, A.—Edgar Fawcett.—TAV 
Dead Friend, A.—Norman Gale.—VA 
Dead Friend, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memo- 
riam. 

Dead Grenadier, The.—B: F. Taylor.—BS 17 
Dead Heroes.—Lord Byron. See Siege of Corinth, 
The. 

Dead, in a Foreign Land.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Dead in his Bed.—-A. L. Ballou.—HP 
Dead in the Sierras.—Joaquin Miller.—AA—OS 2 
Dead in the Street.—Anon.—CS 3 
Dead Leader, The.—I. E. Jones.—CS 32 
Dead Letter, A.—-Austin Dobson.—VA—WR 8 (abr ) 
Dead Light-house Keeper, The.—J. R. Ware.—CS 9 
Dead Love.—Anon.—WR 7 
Dead Love.—Mary M. Adams.—AA 
Dead Man’s Gulch.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 35—PS 
Dead March, The.—Mary T. Lathrop.—BS 17 
Dead March, A.—Cosmo Monkhouse.—FS—VA 
Dead Men’s Holiday.—Eouise C. Moulton.—EDY 
Dead Millionaire, The.—Joaquin Miller.—FAS 
Dead Miser, The.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
Dead Moon, The.—Danske Dandridge.—AA 
“Dead! Name Unknown.”—Horace B. Durant.— 
CS 28 

Dead on the Field of Honor.—J. L. Chamberlain.— 
BLP 

Dead on the Field of Honor.—E. H. Chapin.—BS 17 


84 




TITLE INDEX 


Death 


Dead Past, A.—Adelaide A. Procter. See Old and 
the New Year, The. 

Dead Player, The.—Jas. J. Meehan.—EDY 
Dead Player, The.—Rob’t B. Wilson.—AA 
Dead Pussy Cat, The.—J: Bennett.—BS 23—WR 25 
Dead Rose, A. (SI. abr.) —Eliz. B. Browning.—PGT 2 
Dead Singer, A.—J: E. Logan.—VA 
Dead Singer. The.—J: Boyle O’Reilly.—EDY 
Dead Singer, The.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA 
Dead Soldier, A.—G. E. Montgomery.—AA 
Dead Soldier-boy, The.—W: Mason Turner.—CS 22 
Dead Solomon, The.—J. A. Dorgan.—AA 
Dead Student, The. (Vers. diff. fr. Poems.)—Will 
Carleton.—CS 19 

Dead Trumpeter, The.—T. K. Ilervey.-—HS 
Dead Volunteer, The.—J. W. Barker.—HS 
Dead Wife, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—TAS 
Deadly Cup, The—Anon.—WR 17 (hr. sel.) —WR 18 
Deadly Weapon, A.—G: R. Sims.—CS 28 
Deaf.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 
Deaf and Dumb.—“A.”—PoR 
Deaf as a Post.—Anon.—CS 6 
Deaf as a Post.—Anon.—FND 
Deaf Uncle Zed.—Anon.—SD 
Deakin Brown’s Way.—G: Horton.—C'S 30 
“Deal gently with us, ye who read.’’ (Sel. fr. To my 
Readers.)—Oliver W. Holmes.—GG 
Dean Stanley.—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 
Dean’s Consent, The.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel 
in the House, The. 

Dear Country mine!—R: W. Gilder.—LLC 
Dear Dandelion.—Laura D. Nichols.—AD 
Dear Elm, it is of Thee.—Anon.—AD 
“Dear Grandma.” (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Dear Harp of my Country.—T: Moore.—WEP 4 
Dear Lads and Lasses.—Anon.—TFS 
Dear Land of all my Love.—Sydney Lanier. See 
Centennial Meditation of Columbia, The. 

Dear Little Violets.—J: Moultrie.—PoR 
(Violets.)—CGd—LC—OS 1 
“Dear Love, I sometimes think ho-w it would be.”— 
Hopestill Goodwin.—FTA 
Dear Old Ireland.—Timothy D. Sullivan.—TIP 
Dear Old Toiling One, The.—D: Gray.—VA 
Dearest Love! Believe Me.—T: Pringle.—FTA 
Dearest Spot, The.—W. T. Wrighton.—LLC 
Death.—Anon.—KNE 

Death. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Death.—Madison Cawein.—AA 

Death. (Holy Sonnets, X.)—J: Donne.—OB—YBF 
(Sonnet: “Death, be not proud.”)—ELP 
Death.— T: Hood.—OB 

Death. (The Last Fruit off an Old Tree, XIX.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—YBF 
(Death Undreaded.)—VA 
Death.—G: Pellew.—AA 
Death, Sel. fr.— B. Porteus.—BNL 
Death.—Amelie Rives.—TAS 
Death. (Abr.) —Percy B. Shelley.—AE 
Death.—Percy B. Shelley.—CEL 
(Diff. poem fr. foregoing.) 

Death.—Horace Smith.—SS 

Death.—C: Wesley —HBP 

Death.—Edward Young. See Night Thoughts. 

Death and Dying Words of Poor Mailie, The.—Rob’t 
Burns.—WEP 3 
Death and Life.—Anon.—SSS 
Death and Night..—J. B. Kenyon.—AA 
Death and Sleep. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Death apd the Drunkard.—Anon.—CS 15 
Death and the Grave.—Anon.—CS 23 
Death and the Youth.—Letitia E. Landom—BNL 
Death as the Fool.—Frank T. Marzials.—VA 
Death as the Teacher of Love-lore.—Frank T. Marzials. 
—VA 

Death at Daybreak.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
Death Bed. See Death-bed. 

Death Carol.—Walt Whitman.—HBP 
Death—Conventional and Natural. (Frags, fr. various 
authors.) —BNL 

“Death has Crowned him as a Martyr.” (Death has 
Crowned him a Martyr— C .)—Ella W. Wilcox. 
—WR 26 

Death in Life’s Prime.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Death is Compensation.—Jean-Jacques Rousseau.—SS 
Death Makes all Men Brothers.—Louise S. Upham.— 
CS 13 

Death of a Firstborn.—Christina G. Rossetti.—EDY 
Death of a Mad Dog.—Oliver Goldsmit h. See Vicar of 
Wakefield, The. 


Death of Ajax, The. (Fr. Metamorphoses.)—Ovid 
(tr. by Winthrop M. Praed).—OS 2 
Death of Alexander Hamilton.—Eliphalet Nott. See 
Discourse Delivered in the North Dutch 
Church, A. 

Death of an Inebriate.—Anon.—CS 5 
Death of an Infant.—Dirk Smits.—WCL 
(On the Death of an Infant.)—HBP 
Death of Arnkel, The.—Edmund Gosse.—VSG— 
WR 16 

Death of Artemidoi a. The.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
(SI. diff. and si. abr. vers.) —WEP 4 
Death of Azron, The.—Alice W. Rollins.—AA 
Death of Bertram, The.—W’alter Scott. See Rokeby. 
Death of Bill Sikes, The.—C: Dickens. See Oliver 
Twist. 

Death of Burnaby, The.—Hereward K. Cockin.—TCV 
Death of Cardinal Beaufort.—W: Shakespeare. See 
- King Henry VI., Pt. II. 

Death of Cardinal Mazarin, The.—Lydia H. Sigour¬ 
ney.—EDY 

Death of Carver Doone.—R: D. Blackmore. See Loraa 
Doone. 

Death of Cato.—Jos. Addison. See Cato. 

Death of Charles I.,The.—Andrew Marvell. See Hora- 
tian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from 
Ireland, A. 

Death of Charles the Ninth, The.—Maude Moore.— 

SC 

Death of Cleopatra, The.—Anon.—WR 24 
Death of Cleopatra, The. (Bk. I., Ode XXXVII.) 
—Horace (tr. by Sir S. E. De Vere).—EDY 
(Diff. tr. — wr. called Ode I.)—WR 8 
Death of Cock Robin and Jenny Wren, The.—Gerda 
Fay.—PC 

Death of Coleridge, The. (On the Death of Coleridge— 
C.)—C: Lamb.—LLC 

Death of Copernicus, The.—E: Everett.—CS 2—OM 
Death of Daniel Webster, The, Sel. fr. (Last Hours of 
Webster.)—E: Everett.—CS 3 
Death of Dr. Morrison, The. (Bentley’s Miscellany.) — 
I1PE 

Death of Dora.—C: Dickens. See David Copperfield. 
Death of Elizabeth, The.—J: R. Green.—WR 9 
Death of Friends, The.—E: Young. See Night 
Thoughts. 

Death of Garcia, The.— (Fr. Running the Cuban 
Blockade.)—W: O. Stoddard.—SR 13 
Death of Garfield [,The].—Jas. G. Blaine. See Memo¬ 
rial Address on the Life and Character of 
James A. Garfield. 

Death of Gaudentis.—“Harriet Annie.”—CS 6—WRD 
Death of General Marceau.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Death of Goethe.—Matthew Arnold. See Memorial 
Verses. 

Death of Grant, The.—Ambrose Bierce/—AA 
Death of Guinevere, The.—H. L. Koopman.—WR 15 
Death of Hamilton, The.—Eliphalet Nott. See Dis¬ 
course Delivered in the North Dutch Church, A. 
Death of Hampden, The.—Pakenham Beatty.—EDY 
—VA 

Death of Harold. (Sel. fr. A Child’s History of Eng¬ 
land, Ch. VII.1—C: Dickens.—WR 22 
Death of Harrison T.The—C.].—Nathaniel P. Willis.— 
WR 10 

Death of Henry Clay.—Rev. Dr. Butler.—CS 11 
Death of Herminius, The. (Fr. The Battle of Lake 
Regillus.)—T: B. Macaulay.—SO 
Death of Hofer, The.—Julius Mosen (tr. by Mangan.) 
—CS 14 

(Andrew Hofer.— diff. tr.) —EDY—OS 1 
(Hofer the Tyrolese—Mangan’s tr., si. abr.) —PS 
Death of Hope.—Mary Evered.—PR 
Death of Huss, The.—Alfred Austin.—VSG 
Death of Jack Cade.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VI., Pt. II. 

Death of Jefferson, The.—Anon.—BS 17 
Death of Jezebel, The.—Anon.—BS 15 
Death of John Quincy Adams.—I. E. Holmes.—CS 1— 
KNE—LLC—OM 

Death of Julius Cresar, The.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Julius Cffisar 

Death of King Bomba, The. (Punch.) —EDY 
(Death-bed of Bomba, King of Naples.)—BNL 
Death of King Conor Macnessa.—T. D. Sullivan.— 
CS 23 

Death of King Edmund, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.— 
WR 18 

Death of King Philip. (Sel. fr. Philip of Pokanoket— 
in Sketch Book.)—WR 10 


85 




Death 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Death of Leonidas [,Thel.— G: Croly.— BNL — 
CSS (abr.) —MMR—SS 

Death of Lincoln, The.—H: W. Beecher. See Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Death of Lincoln. (Sel. fr. Abraham Lincoln —in 
Miscellanies.)—Ralph W. Emerson.—FD 2 
Death of Lincoln, The.—Parke Godwin.—PRR 

(Speech on the Death of President Lincoln, Sel. fr.) 
—CSX x ^ 0 

Death of Little Hacket.— (Fr. An Iron Crown.)—T. S. 
Denison.—SR 4 

Death of Little Jim, The.—Anon.—HNS 
(Little Jim.)—CS 2—SA 
(Poor Little Jim.)—BS 3 

Death of Little Jo.—C: Dickens. See Bleak House. 
Death of Little Nell.—C: Dickens. See Old Curiosity 
Shop, The. 

Death of Little Paul [Dombey].—C: Dickens. See 
Dombey and Son. 

Death of Livingstone, The. (Sel.) —Roden Noel.— 
EDY 

Death of Louis Napoleon. (Fr. Louis Napoleon.)— 
Christopher P. Cranch.—EDY 
Death of Lyon, The.—Anon.—EDY 
(Lyon.)—AWB—PAPm 

Death of Mme. Defarge, The. — C: Dickens. See Tale 
of Two Cities. A. 

Death of Marlborough, The.—G: Walter Thombury.— 
EDY—VA 

Death of Marmion.—Walter Scott.-—See Marmion. 
Death of Mary Stuart.—Jas. A. Froude. See History 
of England. 

Death of Master Tommy Rook, The.—Eliza Cook.— 
PC 

Death of Mildred, The.—Rob’t Browning.—See Blot 
in the 'Scutcheon, A. 

Death of Minnehaha. ( Tab. — based on sel. fr. Longfel¬ 
low’s Song of Hiawatha.)—Anon.—BS 9— 
TCP 

Death of Minnehaha, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Song of Hiawatha, The. 

Death of Mr. Bertram, The.—Walter Scott. See Guy 
Mannering. 

Death of Morris.—Walter Scott. See Rob Roy. 

Death of Moses, The.—George Eliot.—HBR 
Death of Moses, The.—Jessie G. M’Cartee.—CS 9 
Death of Moses, The.—J: Ruskin. See Modern 
Painters. 

Death of Napoleon.—I: MacLellan.—BS 16 (si. abr.) — 
EDY 

Death of Nelson, The.—(?) Arnold.—PC 
Death of Nelson, The.—Rob't Southey.—BS 7 
Death of Oberon.—Walter Thombury.—OS 1 
Death of Osceola, The.—Alfred B. Street.—BLP 
Death of our Almanac, The. (Experiences of Nature, 
XVII.)—H: W. Beecher.—PEO (abr.) 

Death of Parcy Reed. The.—Anon.—BB 
Death of Paul Dombey.—C: Dickens. See Dombey 
and Son. 

Death of Philarete, The.—W: Browne. See Shepherd’s 
Pipe, The. 

Death of Poe’s Wife, The.—J. Mount Bleyer.—WR 19 
Death of Poor Jo.—C: Dickens. See Bleak House. 
Death of Prince Arthur.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
John. 

Death of Queen Carolina, The.—T: N. Talfourd.— 
EDY 

Death of Queen Jane, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Death of Queen Mary, The.—Anon.—EDY 
Death of Robespierre. The. (Place de la Revolution— 
C.y —H: H. Brownell.—EDY 
Death of Robespierre, The.—GrLippard. See Fourth 
of July, 1776, The. 

Death of Rodriguez, The. (Fr. Cuba in War Time.) 
—R: H. Davis.—MRS—SC 

Death of Roland, The. (Tr. by) J: O’Hagan. See 
Song of Roland, The. 

Death of Roland, The. (Cond.) —Rob’t Buchanan.— 
WR 1 

Death of Samson, The.—J: Milton. See Samson Ago- 
nistes. 

Death of Savonarola. See Casa Guidi Windows.— 
Eliz. B. Browning—EDY 
Death of Schiller, The.—W: C. Bryant.—EDY 
Death of Sir Roger de Coverley.—Jos. Addison. See 
Spectator. The. 

Death of Sir Walter Raleigh.—Walter Raleigh.— 
EDY 

(Conclusion, The.)—OB 

(Even Such is Time.)—EHT—ELP 

(Last Lines.py-CEL 

(Lines Found in his Bible.)—BNL 


Death of Sir Walter Raleigh ( continued). 

(Lines Written the Night before his Execution.) 
FEP—YBF 

(Verses Found in his Bible in the Gate House at 
Westminster—C.V—WEP 1 
Death of Slavery, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AA—CS 2 
Death of Sohrab, The.—Matthew Arnold. See Sohrab 
and Rustum. 

Death of Steerforth, The.—C: Dickens. See David 
Copperfield. 

Death of Stonewall Jackson.—Harry L. Flash.—AWB 
—EDY 

(Stonewall Jackson.)—AA 

Death of Talbot, The. (Fr. History of the Civil War, 
Bk. VI.— sel.) —S: Daniel.—WEP 1 
Death of the Country Doctor, The.—Ian Maclaren. 

See Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush. 

Death of the Duke d’Enghien, The.—H: Kirke White. 
—EDY 

Death of the Duke of Buckingham, The.—Alex. Pope. 
See Moral Essays. 

Death of the First-bom.—Josiah G. Holland. See 
Arthur Bonnicastle. 

Death of the Flowers, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AA— 
BNL — CR — EPs — FEP — FMR — FP 
— GN (si. abr.)— GP — HBP — LLC — PHS 
—POS—SM—TAV—WCLG 1 
Death of the Old Clock, The.—C: C. Marsh.—CG 1 
Death of the Old Squire, The.—Anon.—BRR—CS 14 
—DS—FR—NPS—YP 

(Death of the Owd Squire, The.)—BS 7—CR 
Death of the Old Year [.The],—Alfred Tennyson.— 
BNL — BS 7 — CS 3 — EPs — FEP — MBL 
-—SE (sel.) —WCLG 2 

Death of the Owd Squire, The.—Anon. See Death of 
the Old Squire, The. 

Death of the Ptincess Charlotte.—Lord Byron. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Death of the Reveller, The.—W. A. Eaton.—CS 19—TS 
Death of the Savage, The. (Sel. fr. The Deerslayer, 
Ch. VII:)—Jas. F. Cooper.—WCLI 2 
Death of the Virtuous, The.—Anna L. Barbauld.— 
FEP—HBP 

Death of Uncle Tom, The.—Harriet B. Stowe. See 
Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Death of Wallace, The.—Rob’t Southey.—EDY— 
EHT (abr.) 

Death of Wallenstein, The.—Friedrich Schiller. See 
Wallenstein. 

Death of the White Fawn.—Andrew Marvell.—BNL 

(Girl Describes her Fawn, The — sel.) — BPB — 
PGT 1—YBF 

(Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn. 
The—C.)— FEP—HBP 

(Nymph Mourning her Fawn. The— sel.) —EPs 
Death of Wolfe, The.—Duncan Anderson.—TCV 
Death of Yajnadatta. See Ramayana, The. 

Death of Zerbino, The. (Sets. fr. Orlando Furioso. 
Can. XXIV., sts. 49-91.) — Ariosto (fr. by 
Rose). —NE 

Death or Liberty.—Theodore D. Weld.—BLP 
Death Penalty, The. (Sel. fr. a speech at the trial of 
his son.)—-Victor Hugo.—SC—SS 

(Diff. sel. )—CS 4 

Death Penalty for New Offences, The.—Lord Byron. 
—SS 

Death Song, A.—Paul L. Dunbar.—AA 
Death Song, A. (SI. abr.) —W: Morris.—VA 
Death Struggle, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Death the Leveller.—Jas. Shirley. See Dirge, A. 

Death the Peacemaker.—Ellen H. Flagg.—BLP — 
HSS 1 (abr.) 

(Blue and the Gray, The.)—LLC (abr.) —PFP 
Death the Revealer.—Albert E. S. Smythe.—TCV 
Death Typified by Winter.—Jas. Thomson. See Sea¬ 
sons, The. 

Death Undreaded.—Walter S. Landor. See Death. 
Death-bed, A.—Jas. Aldrich.—AA — ASL — CS 11 — 
FEP—HBP—TAV—YBF 

Death-bed, The.—T: Hood.— AVP — CS 3 — FEP — 
FP — GP — HBP — HNS — OB — PGT 1 — 
PYO — SE (sel.)— VA — WCLG 2 — WEP 4 
—YBF 

Death-bed of Benedict Arnold.—G: Lippard. See Ben¬ 
edict Arnold. 

Death-bed of Bomba, King of Naples. (Punch.) See 
Death of King Bomba, The. 

Death-beds. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Death-bridge of the Tav r The. (Abr.) —Will Carleton. 

—BS 18—CS 25—SC 
Death-child, The.—W: Sharp.—VA 


86 






TITLE INDEX 


Dedication 


Death-fire, The.—Ann S. Stephens.—PPSr 
Deathless, The.—Ednah P. (C.) Hayes.—AA 
Death-ride, The.—Westland Marston.—CS 8 
Death-ride, The.—Gerald Massey.—OS 2 
Death’s Alchemy.—W: S. Walker.—VA 
(Thou Wert Lovely on thy Bier.)—HBP 
Death’s Angel.—W: Winter. See Angel of Death, The. 
Death’s Blunder.—Helen A. Goodwin.—CS 22 
Death’s Choice. ( Frags. fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Death’s Choice.—G: Halse.—CS 17 
Death’s Epitaph. (Fr. The House of Night.)—Philip 
Freneau.—AA 

Death’s Final Conquest.—Jas. Shirley. See Dirge, A. 
Death’s Head, The.—W. H. Freeman.—HR 
Death’s Jest Book, Sets. fr. —T: L. Beddoes. 

Amala’s Bridal Song. (Fr. Act. IV.)—WEP 4 
Athulf’s Song.—WEP 4 

(Athulf’s Death Song.)—VA 
(Bridal Song and Dirge.)—HBP 
Dirge. (Fr. Act. II.)—FEP—HBP—VA 
(Dirge for Wolfram.)—WEP 4 
(If thou wilt Ease thine Heart.)—BNL 
(Wolfram’s Dirge.)—OB 
Sailors’ Song. (Fr. Act. I.)—BFV—WEP 4 
(Sea, The.)—CGd—LC—PHS 
(Song from the Ship.)—VS 
(To Sea.)—BNL 
(To Sea, to Sea!)—VA 
Second Dirge.—VA 

Wolfram’s Song. (Fr. Act. V.)—WEP 4 
Deaths of Myron and Klydone, The. (Fr. In a Day.) 

—August a Webster.—VA 
Death’s Ramble.—T: Hood.—HPE 
Death’s Summons.—T: Nash.—ELP 
(In Time of Pestilence.)—FEP—OB 
Death’s Triumph.—Anon.—CS 30 
Death’s Triumph.—Jas. Shirley. See Dirge, A. 
Death-scene, A.—Emily Bronte.—WEP 4 
Debate, A.—Anon.—PS 

Debatin’ S’ciety, The.—E. F. Andrews.—CS 30 
Debating Society, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FAD 
Debating Society, The.—Eugene J. Hall.—CS 28 
Debating Society, The.—Dr. Valentine.—HR 
Debil, Mighty Debil.—Anon.-—WR 14 
Deborah Doolittle’s Speech on Women’s Rights.— 
Anon.—MCS 

Deborah Lee—A Parody [on Poe’s Annabel Leel.— 
W. H. Burleigh.—BNL—CS 5 
Debt in two Costumes.—Wood L. Wilson.—TL 
Debtor, The.—Anon.—SE 

Debtor and the Dun, The.—Jean B. Moliere.—PS 
Debutante.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23- 
Debutante’s Bouquets, A.—M. D. Hatch.—TL 
Decameron, Sel. fr. (Patient Griselda.)—Boccaccio.— 
WGS 

Decanter of Madeira, aged 86, to George Bancroft, 
aged 86, Greeting. A.—S. Weir Mitchell.—AA 
Decay of a People. The.—W: G. Simms.—AA 
Deceit.—Joanna Baillie. See De Monfort. 

Deceitful Mistress, The.—T: Lodge.—ES 
Deceitfulness of Love.—Anon.—HBP 
December.—Anon.—DST 
December.—Joel Benton.—SN 
December.—-H. S. Cornwell.—TAV 
December.—W. C. Doane.-—WR 6 
December.—Lquisa P. Hopkins.—PEO 
December.—J: Keats.—GN 

(Happy Insensibility.)—OH—PGT 1 
(Stanzas— C.) —OB 
(Winter.)—BPB 

December.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
December.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL—YBT 
December.—Edmund' Spenser. See Shepheardes Cal¬ 
ender, The. 

December Prayer, A.—G. C. Wing, Jr.—CG 3 
Deception. (Yale Record.) —CG 2 
Decidedly Cool.—(Douglas?) Jerrold.—SCS 
Decision, A.—Arthur L. Eno.—CG 2 
Decisive Battle of the Rebellion, The.—Anon.—CP 
Decisive Integrity.—W: Wirt.—TMD 
Declamation by a Little Tot.—Emily H. Miller.—SD 
Declaration, The.— Nathaniel P. Willis.— CS 4— 
HPE—SCS 

Declaration of Independence, The.—J: Q. Adams.— 
PEO—PS—SS 

(Nation Born in a Day, A.)—DFR—WR 10 
Declaration of Independence, The, Sel. fr. (Liberty or 
Death.)—Rob’t G. Ingersoll.—FS 
Declaration of Independence, The.—T: Jefferson.— 
AI ( ahr .)— BS 4 — OS 2 ( sel. )—SR 8—WR 10 
(Original Draft of the Declaration of Independence, 
The.)—MRS 


Declaration of Independence, The.—J : D. Long.—FD 2 
Declaration of Independence, The.—Carl Schurz.— 
SSD—TMD—WR 10 

Declaration of Independence, The.—Dan’l Webster. 
See Adams and Jefferson. 

Declaration of Irish Rights, Sels. fr. —H : Grattan. 
Declaration of Irish Rights.—PS—SS—TMR (some¬ 
what diff. sel.) 

National Gratitude. (Br. sel.) —SS 
Wrongs of Ireland. (Br. sel.) —PR 
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, The, Sel. fr. 
(Description of the Amphitheatre of Titus.)— 
E: Gibbon.—AE 

Decoramenta.—H: S. Ely.—CG 3 
Decorated Donkey, The.—Anon.—KNS 
Decoration.—T - W. Higginson.—AA—HB 
Decoration Day.—Susie M. Best.—TMR—TT 
Decoration Day.—Wallace Bruce.—BS 16—PEO 
Decoration Day.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—TMR 
Decoration Day.—Jane Campbell.—HS 
Decoration Day. (Abr.) —W. Bourke Cochran.—SO 
Decoration Day.—Fs. M. Finch. See Blue and the 
Gray. The. 

Decoration Day. (Sel. fr. Oration in New York City, 
1882.)—Rob’t G. Ingersoll.—-PS—SR 3 
Decoration Day. (C.) —H: W. Longfellow.—BLP— 
BS 11 

(Sleep, Comrades, Sleep.)—PEO 
Decoration Day.—S. F. Smith.—HSS 1 
(Our Honored Heroes.)—PEO 
Decoration Day.—Dr. E. P. Thwing.—DES 
Decoration Day.-—-Eugene F. Ware.—EDY 
Decoration Day. (Memorial Day, 1892— C .)—Ella W. 
Wilcox.—WR 4 

Decoration Day Address.—Anon.—CP 
Decoration Day Address.—Jas. A. Garfield. See 
Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union Sol¬ 
diers. 

Decoration Day Address, A.—H. Stohe Richardson.— 
SR 4 

Decoration Day at Charleston.—H: Timrod.—GP 
(At Magnolia Cemetery.)—AA 

(Ode on Decorating the Graves of [the] Confed¬ 
erate Dead [or Soldiers].)—HSS 1—OS 3 
(Ode Sung on the Occasion of Decorating the Graves 
of the Confederate Dead.)—EPs 
(“ Sleep sweetly in your humble graves.”)—BNL 
Decoration Day Oration.—E. G. Cheverton.—SR 6 
Decoration Hymn.—W. H. Randall.—PEO 
Decoration Ode.—Ben W. Davis.—CS 35 
Decorative Mania, The. (Chicago Rambler.) —FS 
Dedication, A.—Rudyard Kipling.—OB 
Dedication.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Dedication Exercises.—Chauncey M. Depew.—BLP 
(Columbian Oration.)—SC 
(Columbus.)—SO 

(Columbus, the Discoverer of America.)—BLP 
(Sels. in SC and SO partly like those in BLP.) 
Dedication Hymn.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—TAS 
“Dedication” in Don Juan, The.—Lord Byron. See 
Don Juan. 

Dedication of a Church, The.—Andrews Norton.— 
TAS 

(Hymn for the Dedication of a Church.)—AA 
Dedication of a Public Library.—Anon.-—CP 
Dedication of a School Building.—Anon.—CP 
Dedication of a School House.—Louisa Simes.—FP 
Dedication of Bunker Hill Monument.—Dan’l Webster. 
See Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, 
The. 

Dedication of Columbian Exposition.—H: Watterson. 

See Our Expanding Republic. 

Dedication of Gettysburg Cemeterv.—Abraham Lin¬ 
coln.— BS 5 — EA — FD 1 — GG — SC—SO— 
SR 2—TMD 

Address at Gettysburg.)—BI.P 
Address at the Dedication of the National Ceme¬ 
tery at Gettysburg— C.) —CR—CS 2—LLC— 
OS 2—PEO—PRR—TMR—WRD 
(“Brave men, living and dead, who struggled here. 
The”—sel.)—HSS 1 
(Gettysburg Address.)—SM—WCLG 1 
(Gettysburg Speech.p—AI 

(Remarks at the Dedication of the National Ceme¬ 
tery, etc.)—IR 

(Speech at the Dedication of the National Ceme¬ 
tery at Gettysburg.)—GMS—MAL—PPS 
Dedication to Dante’s Divine Comedy. (Sonnet: 

Vita Nuova.)—E: H. Plumptre.—FEP 
Dedication to Harriett. (C. — in Miscellaneous Poems 
and Ballads.)—Rob’t Buchanan. 

(To Harriett.)—BIL 


87 






Dedication 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dedication to the Idylls of the King.-—Alfred Tenny¬ 
son. See Idylls of the King. 

Dedication to “The Ring and the Book.”—Roh’t 
Browning. See Ring and the Book, The. 
Dedicatory Exercises [for Arbor Day], (2 sets .)— 
Arr. by W. H. Benedict.—DFR 
Dedicatory Ode for the Gettysburg National Ceme¬ 
tery (Gettysburg Ode—C.), Set. fr .—Bayard 
Taylor.—CS 2 

Dedicatory Poem to the Princess Alice. (C.) —Al¬ 
fred Tennyson. 

(To the Princess Alice.)—EDY 
Deed and a Word, A.—C: Mackay. See Little and 
Great. 

Deed of Grace, A.—Harriet L. Childe-Pemberton.— 
VSG 

Deeds, not Words.—Anon.—KNE 
Deeds of Kindness.—Anon.—DLS—KNS 
Deeds of Kindness.—Epes Sargent.—BLP 
(Lines for a Little Lassie— si. abr .)—YBT 
(Little Cowslip, The—se/.)—TFS 
(Little Things— sel .)—DLF 
(Suppose.)—GMS—NV—SM—'TFS ( sel.) 

Deeds of Valor at Santiago.—Clinton Scollard.—PRR 
Deeds versus Creeds.—Annie I. Muzzey.—CS 5 
Deemster, The, Sels. fr .—Hall Caine. 

Cut off from the People. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXVI.) 

—NP 

Father and Son. (Ad. fr. Ch. XXXI.)—W T R 19 
Deep, The.—J: G. C. Brainard.—AA 
Deep Waters.—W. G. Van T. Sutphen.—AA 
Deepening the Channel.—Arthur W. H. Eaton.—TCV 
Deerslayer, The, Sel. fr. (Death of the Savage, The— 
fr. Ch. VII.)—Jas. F. Cooper.—WCLI 2 
Defalcation and Retrenchment.—S. S. Prentiss.— 

BS 25—SS 

Defeat. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Defeat of Burgoyne, The.—W. Case.—EDY 
Defeat of Generali Braddock, The.—Jas. D. McCabe.— 
PRR 

Defeat of Hector and Ajax, The.—Homer. See Iliad, 
The. 

Defeat of Napoleon.—Lord Byron. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

Defence against the Charge of Corruption.—Honorede 
Mirabeau.—PS 

Defence from the Charge of Tyranny.—Maximilien M. 

I. Robesnierre.—NPS—YP 

Defence of Abel F. Fitch and Others, Sel. fr. (De¬ 
fence of Alleged Conspirators against the Mich¬ 
igan Central Railroad Company.)—W:H. 
Seward.—NC 

Defence of Alleged Conspirators against the Michigan 
Central Railroad Company.—W: H. Seward. 
See foregoing. 

Defence of Hofer, the Tvrolese Patriot, The.—Anon.— 
FD 1—MYF—SR 5 

Defence of Jefferson. 1813.—H : Clay.—PS—SS 
Defence of Lawrence, The. (Abr.) —R: Realf.—BAB 
Defence of Lucknow, The.—Alfred Tennyson.— BS 8 
—CS 19—EDY—C.P—SR 2 
Defence of Mr. Rowan, 1794.—J: P. Curran.—SSD 
(Description of Mr. Rowan.)—SS 
Defence of M. Peltier for a Libel on Napoleon.-—Sir J. 
Mackintosh.—SS 

Defence of Pitt. (Sel.fr. Regency Resolutions, Dec. 

31,1810.)—G: Canning.—SS 
Defence of Poetry. (Sel. fr. Remarks on the Character 
and Writings of John Milton.)—W: E. Chan- 
ning.—SE 

Defence of Poetry, A.—C: Wolfe.—SS 

Defence of the Alamo, The.—Joaquin Miller.—EDY— 

PA Pm 

Defence of the -Bridge, The. (Sel. fr. The Sword of 
Damocles.)—Anna K. (Green) Rohlfs.—BS 18 
-—WR 4 

Defence of the Irish Party, A.—C. Russell.—TMD 
Defence of the Kennistons.—Dan'l Webster.—PPS 
Defence of William Freeman, Sel. fr. (Plea for William 
Freeman, A.)—NC 

Defence of Xantippe, A.—Anon.—CS 25 
Defenders, The. (C.) —T: B. Read. 

(Our Defenders.)—CS 1 
Defiance.—Rob’t Burns.—LH 

(MacPherson’s Farewell— C.) —HBP 
Defiance.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel, The. 

Defiance of Hector and Ajax.—Homer. Sec Iliad, The. 
Defiance to Love.—Michael Drayton (?).—ES 
Defiant Seminole Chief, The.—G. W: Patten.—BLP 
(Seminole’s Defiance, The.)—HNS—LLC (sel .)— 
OM—OS 1 

(Seminole’s Reply, The.)—CS 1—FTR—PPSr—SA 

88 


Defile of Gondo.—W: Wordsworth. See Prelude, The. 
Defiled.-—Medora Clarke.—CS 27 
Definite Training.—J: Ruskin.—LLC 
Deformed Transformed, The, Sel. fr. (Invocation to 
the Spirit of Achilles— fr. Pt. I., Sc. I.)—Lord 
Byron.—CEL—WEP 4 

Degeneracy of Athens. — Demosthenes. See Philip¬ 
pics, The. 

Degeneracy of Greece.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 
Deid Folks’ Ferry.—Rosamund M. Watson.—VA 
Deitsche Advertisement.—C. T. Wolfe.—BDD—DFY 
Deity. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Dejection: An Ode.—S: T. Coleridge.—FEP—HBP— 
WEP 4 

Dejection and Retirement. The Retired Statesman.— 
W Cowper. Nee Retirement. 

Delancev Stuyvasant and the Horse-car.—G: Kyle.— 
WR 3 

(Swell [in a Horse-car], The.)—BRR—CS 29—FTR 
Delay.—Charlotte F. Bates.—AA 

Delayed in Transmission.—Mabel Quiller-Couch.— 
BS 25 

Delectable Ballad of the Waller Lot, The.—Eueene 
Field.—LS 

Delectable Day, The, Br. sel fr. (Home Comfort.)— 
C: Kingsley—OH 

Delia at Play.—Rob’t Southey. See Amatory Sonnets 
of Abel Shufflebottom, The. 

Delicious Interruption, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Delight in Disorder. (C.)—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL— 
ELP — ES — FEP — HBP — OB — OEI. — 
PYO — WEP 2 

(Poetry of Dress, The.)—EPs—PGT 1 (I.)—YBF 
Delight in God.—Fs. Quarles. See following. 

Delight in God Only.—Fs. Quarles.—FEP—HBP— 
YBF (sel.) 

(Delight in God.)—BNL 
Delightful Custom. A.—Anon.—TT 
Delights of Camp Life.—Anon.—HP 
Delights of Fancy.—Mark Akenside. See Pleasures of 
Imagination, The. 

De Long.—Andrew E. Watrous.—EDY 
Delsarte Entertainment, A.—Anon.—W T R 17 
Delsartean Plea, A. (Boston Courier.) —GH—PS— 
SR 10 

Delsartian Physical Drill.—Lizzie W T hite.—WR 17 
Dem Ole Dimes Habbiness and dem New.—Nick 
Slaeter.—BDD—G H 
Dem Shickens.—T: S. Denison.—SR 13 
Demagogue, The. (Sel. fr. Portrait Gallery.)—H: W. 
Beecher.—BS 2—KNE 

(Dishonest Politician, The— ptly. same.) —CS 8 
Demeanor of Books. The.—J: Milton.—OS 3 
Demerits of High License, The.—President—Seelye. 
—TS 

Demetrius.—Constance F. Le Roy Runcie.—WR 2 
Demmy Jake.—D: L. Proudfit.—CS 23—GH 
Democracy.—C: A. Dana.—FD 2 
Democracy. (Sel.) —Jas. R. Lowell.—AI—OS 3 

(longer.) 

Democracy.—Harriet Monroe. Nee Commemoration 
Ode. 

Democracy, Sel. fr. —J: G. Whittier.—BNL 
Democracy Adverse to Socialism.—Alexis de Tocque- 
ville.—PS—SS—SSD 

Democracy Hateful to Philip, A [or The],—Demos¬ 
thenes. See Philippics, The. 

Democratic Governments.—C: J. Fox. See Vigor of 
Democratic Governments. 

Democratic Party and Public Opinion, The, Sel. fr. 
(Appeal to Young Men, An.)—Jas. A. Garfield. 
—NC 

Demon Kittens, The.—Anon.—WR 15 

Demon Lover. The.—Anon.—BPB—WR 21 (si. abr.) 

(Daemon Lover, The— si. abr.) —CGd—PEB 2 

(Ship o’ the Fiend, The— diff. vers., si. abr.) —BB 
Demon Lover, The. ( Fr. Hadad— drama. )—Jas. A. 
H illhouse.—AA 

Demon of the Gibbet, The.—Fitz-James O’Brien.— 
PEB 4 

Demon of the Mirror, The.—Bayard Tavlor (?).— 
WR 2 

Demon of the Study, The, Sel. fr. (Voice of the 
Reader, The.)—J: G. Whittier.—LLC 
Demon on the Roof, The.—Josephine Pollard.—PEO 
Demon Ship, The.—T: Hood.—CS 11-—SA 
Demon Ship, The.—Lloyd Mifflin.—CS 16 
De Monfort, Sels. fr. —Joanna Baillie. 

Deceit. (Br. sel. fr. Act I., Sc. 2.)—KNE 

Jane de Monfort. (Sel. fr. II., 1.)—VSG 
Demons of the Glass, The. (Dial.) — W : T. Adams.— 
CS 8—SDD 

Demosthenes.—E. S. Creasy.-—PS 




TITLE INDEX 


Despoiler 


Demosthenes Denounced.—-Eschines.—PS—SS 
Demosthenes not Vanquished by Philip.—Demos¬ 
thenes. See Oration on the Crown, The. 
Dentist and Patient.—G: Kvle.—WR 3 
Denunciation, Sel. fr. —T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
Departed, The.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 
Departed. (Poems of the Imagination—-XI.—C.)— 
W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
(Lucy.)—OB (V.)—WEP 4 (III.) 

(“Slumber did my spirit seal. A.”)—PGT 1—YBF 
Departure.—Coventry Patmore.—OB—PGT 2 
Departure.—May R. Smith.—AA 

Departure, The.—Alfred Tennvson. See Day-dream, 
The. 

Departure from Paradise, The.—J: Milton. See Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Departure of the Cuckoo, The,—Matthew Arnold. 
See Thyrsis. 

Departure of the Pilgrims for Holland.—Daniel Web¬ 
ster. See First Settlement of New England. 
Departure of the Swallow, The.—W: Howitt.—BNL— 
VA 

Departure of the Swallows.—Theophile Gautier.— 
MRS—POS 

Dependence. (Hymn LXIII.)—W: Cowper.—EPs 
Deposed.—Anon.—DLS 

(Lulu’s Complaint— diff. vers.) —PR—YA 
(New Baby, The.)—HP 
Deposition from Love, A.—T: Carew.—WEP 2 
Depot Incident, A.—Gertrude Garrison.—CS 24—NPS 
—YP 

De Quincey’s Deed.—Homer Greene.—BS 20—CS 30 
—SO (si. abr.) 

Der Baby.—Anon.—BDD—CS 8—MYF 
Der Coming Man.—C: Follen Adams.—BS 1—CS 28— 
SDR 

Der Deutscher's Maxim.—C: F. Adams.—CD—CS 30 
“Der Dog und der Lobster.”—Saul Sertrew.—BDD—- 
CH—DFY—DRR—SR 2 

Der Drummer.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—CRR—DFY— 
PS 

Der Good Lookin’ Shnow.—Anon.—BDD—BeR— 
DFY 

Der Letzte Gast.—Theodor Drebisch.—WR 20 
Der Loddery Dicket.—Carl Pretzel.—DRR 
Der Moon.—"Wade Whipple.—BDD 
Der Mule.—J. S. Burdette. See following. 

Der Mule Shtood on der Steamboad Deck.—J. S. 
Burdette.—BDD—DFY—SR 10 
(Der Mule.)—DRR 

Der Nighd behind Grisdmas (or Christmas],—Sidney 
W. Wetmore.—BDD—CRR—DFY 
Der Oak und der Vine.—C: F. Adams.—AWH—BS 15 
—CRR—CS 27—DCR 
Der Schleighride.—Wade Whipple.—BDD 
Der Schwartz Egsberience mit a Bogsing Lesson.— 
Anon.—DRR 

Der Shoemaker’s Poy.—Anon.—DRR 
Der Shpider und der Fly.—C: F. Adams.—CRR—CS 32 
—SR 5 

Der Vater-mill.—C: F. Adams.—CS 27—DCR—SR 9 
"Der Wreck of der Hezberus,”—Esse Phoster.—BDD 
—DFY 

Derby Day.—Fanny F. Clark.—DES 
Derelict, The.—L. H. Foote.—AA 
Derelict.—Eliz. J. (C.) Pullen.—AA 
Dermot O’Dowd.—S: Lover.—DI 
Dermot’s Parting.—Anon.—CS 6 
De Roberval, Sets. fr. (Drama.) —J: Hunter-Duvar. 
Adieu to France.—VA 
Gallant Fleet, The.—VA 
Ohnawa.—VA 
Twilight Song.—VA 

Derwent water’s Farewell.—Anon.—EDY. 

Descend, y" Nine.-—Alex. Pope. See Ode on St. 
Cecilia’s Day. 

Descent, The.—S: Rogers.—BNL 

Descent of the Ganges. The. See Ramayana, The. 
Description and Praise of his Love Geraldine.—H: 
Howard, Earl of Surrey.—CEL 
(Sonnet: Geraldine.)—ELP 
Description of a City Shower, A.—Jonathan Swift.— 
HPE 

Description of a Musical Consort of Birds, A.—M : 

Browne. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Description of a Religious House [and Condition of 
Life—C.].—R : Crashaw.—WEP 2 
Description of a Summer’s Eve. (C.) —H: Kirke White. 

(Summer Evening, A— -si. abr.) —BVC 
Description of Castara [.The].—W: Habington. See 

Description of Dulness, The.—Alex. Pope. See Dun- 
ciad. The. 


Description of Elizium, The.—Michael Drayton. See 
Muses’ Elysium, The. 

Description of his Muse.— (Br. sel. fr The Prophecy of 
Famine.)—C: Churchill.—WEP 3 
Description of Holland. (C.)—S. Butler. 

(Holland.) HPE 

Description of Johnson. (Sel. fr. The Ghost, Bk. II.)— 
. C: Churchill.—WEP 3 

Description of La Belle Pucel.—Stephen Hawes. See 
Pastime of Pleasure, The. 

Description of Maying.—Edmund Spenser. See Shep- 
heardes Calender, The.—WEP 1 
Description of Mr. Rowan.—J. P. Curran. See De¬ 
fense of Mr. Rowan. 

Description of Spring.—H : Howard. Earl of Surrey 
—FEP—HBP—LC—OB—PHS—WEP 1 
(Sonnet: Description of Spring.)—ELP 
Description of the Amphitheatre of Titus. (Sel. fr. 

Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Vol. I.. 
Ch. XII.)—E: Gibbon—AE 
Description of the Chase.—Jas. S. Knowles. See Love 
Chase, The. 

Description of the Country’s Recreations, A.—H: Wot- 
ton.—EP 

(In Praise of Angling.)—BNL 
(Verses in Praise of Angling.)—FEP—HBP 
Description of the Golden Age. (Fr. Falls of Princes, 
Bk. VII.)—Boccaccio (tr. by J: Lydgate).— 
WEP 1 

Description of the Morning, A. — Jonathan Swift.— 
WEP 3 ( si. abr.) 

(Morning in London.)—OES 
Description of the Shepherd and his Wife, The. — 
Rob’t Greene. See Mourning Garment, The. 
Description of the Venus of Milo. (Sel. fr. The New- 
comes, Ch. XX.)—W: M. Thackeray—OS 3 
Description of Walla, The.—W: Browne. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals. 

Description of Webster’s Speech in Reply to Hayne.— 
C: W. March.—CR 

Desert Terrible, A.—Gawain Douglas. See Palice of 
Honour, The. 

Deserted.—Anon.—HP 
Deserted.—Ethel de Fonblanque.—FLS 
Deserted City, The.—C: G. D. Roberts.—VA 
Deserted Garden, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—OB—- 
PGT 2 

Deserted House, The.—Alfred Tennyson.-—BS 6—EPs 
PHS—VA—YBF 

Deserted Mansion, A.—Jos. Hall.—WEP 1 
Deserted Mill, The.—August Schnezler.—CS 10—CSS 
Deserted Nest, The.—Jos. Howe.—TCV 
Deserted Village, The.—Oliver Goldsmith.—BNL— 
FEP—HBP—MBL—PSR (abr .)—WCLG 1 
(Sel.) —FP—WEP 3 (longer.) 

(Br. sets.) —SAE—SE 
(National Decay— br. sel.) —GP 
(Schoolmaster, The— sel.) —LC 

(Village Schoolmaster, The.)—PPSr—SO 
(Village Preacher, The.)—CS 15—FP—LLC—SO 
Deserter, A.—Mary A. Barr.—SR 7 
Deserter, The.—J: P. Curran. See Deserter’s Medita¬ 
tion, The. 

Deserter from the Cause, The.—Gerald Massey.—VA 
Deserter’s Meditation, The.—J: P. Curran.—TIP 
(Deserter, The.)—LH 

Desideria. (Poems of the Imagination, Miscellaneous 
Sonnets, XXVII.)— -W: Wordsworth.— OB 
—PGT 1 

(Shock of Bereavement, The.)—WEP 4 
Desirable Objects of Attainment.—J: Stoughton.— 
BLP 

Desire.—Matthew Arnold.—-BNL 

Desire, A. (Fr. Sonnets to George Sand:)—Eliz. B. 
Browning.—BNL 

Desire, A. (Br. sel.) —Adelaide A. Procter.—OS 1 
Desire of all Nations, The.—Arthur C. Coxe.—TAS 
Desiring to Love.—C: Wesley.-—HBP 
Desolate City, The.—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—OB 
Desolation.—Tom Masson.—DR 
Despair. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Despair.—Victor Hugo. See Les Misdrables. 

Despair. (In Give me not Tears.)—Rose II. Lathrop. 

—AA 

Despair. (SI. abr.)-— Alfred Tennyson.—BS 10 
Despair and Hope.-—Israel Zangwill.—VSG 
Despair is never quite Despair.—Felicia Hemans.— 
BS 3 

(I.ights and Shades— C.) —CS 10 
Despairing Lover, The.—W: Walsh.—WEP 3 
Desperate Encounter, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 
CS 20 

Despoiler Doomed, The.— Bible. See Isaiah. 






Despondency 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Despondency Rebuked.—Arthur II. Clough.—HBP 
(Courage.)—OS 3 

(Say not, the Struggle naught Availeth— C.) — 
AVP — GP — HDL — OB — PGT 2 — SO — 
WEP 4—YBF 

Despondent Inventor, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See 
Last of the Barons, The. 

Desponding Soul’s Wish, The. (C.) —J: Byrom. 

(My Spirit Longeth for Thee.)—HBP 
Despotism Incompatible with Right.—Edmund Burke. 

See Impeachment of Warren Hastings. 

Destiny. (C.)—T: B. Aldrich.—ASL 
(Three Roses.)—GP 
Destiny.—Edwin Arnold.-—FTA 

Destiny.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury Tales, 
' The. 

Destiny. (2 sonnets.)—Emma Lazarus.—EDY 
Destiny. (Poems dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty, Pt. I., 16.)—W: Wordsworth.— 
LH 

(Faith and Freedom— br. sel. )—GN 
(Sonnet.)—EPs 

Destiny—A. D. 1899.—Harrison S. Morris.—AA 
Destiny of America.—C: Phillips.—BS 14—OM (abr.) 
(America.)—CS 6—PRR 
(American Republic, The.)—LLC 
(Panegyric on America— sel .)—FD 1 
Destiny of our Country.—Jos. Story.—OS 3 

(Our Duties to the Republic.)—FTR—KNS—SS 
(Our Duty to the Republic.)—LLC 
(Our Future.)—BLP 

(Responsibilities of our Republic.)—HNS 
(Responsibility of American Citizens.)—WRD 
(Shall America Betray Herself?)—FD 1—SR 5 
(Sels. vary somewhat.) 

Destiny of Rome, The.—Gawain Douglas. See ASneid, 
The. 

Destiny of the Empress Josephine, The.—Fs. F. Bar- 
ritt—NPS—YP 

Destroyer, The.—H. M. Scudder.-—CS 17—TS 
(What Intemperance Does— si. diff .)—WR 18 
Destruction of Jerusalem, The.—Frank D. Budlong.— 
NC 

Destruction of Pompeii.—E■ Bulwer-Lytton. See 
Last Days of Pompeii, The. 

Destruction of Sennacherib.The. (/n Hebrew Melodies.) 

-—Lord Byron.—AE — BFV-—BNL— BPB — 
CEL—CGd—CS 14—EPs— FEP—GN—HB— 
HBP — LLC — MBL — MR — OS 2 — PHS— 
PPSr —PSR—PYO—SS—YBF 
( Sennacherib.)—LH 

Destruction of the Forests.—Anon.—AD 
Destruction of the Philistines.-—J: Milton. See Sam¬ 
son Agonistes. 

Destruction of Troy, The.—Virgil. See iEneid, The. 
“Desultory Reading.”—F. M. P.—MBB 
Detective, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Determination.—W: C. Fitch.—CG 1 
Dethe of Blaunche, The, Sel. jr. (Duohesse Blanche- 
mod.)—Geoffrey Chaucer.—EPs 
Deuteromelia, Sel. fr. (Martin to his Man.)—Anon.—NA 
Deuteronomy, Sels. fr. Bible. 

First Civil Code, The. (Sel. verses .)—BLP 
Great Commandment, The. (Ch. VI., 5-7.)—LLC 
Devil, The. (Frags, jr. various authors .)—BNL 
Devil, The.—Alfred .). Hough.—CS 23 
Devil and the Lawyers, The.—Anon.—KNE 
Devil at Home, The. (Fr. The Devil’s Progress.)—T: 
K. Hervev—BNL 

Devil in Search of a Wife, The.—Annie Porter.-—MR 
Devil is an Ass, The, Sel. fr .—Ben Jonson. See Celebra¬ 
tion of Charis, A. 

Deviled Biscuit. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book.) 
(Punch.) —H PE 

Devil’s Law-case, The, Sels. fr. (Vanitas Vanita- 
tum.)—J: Webster.—ELP—OB—YBF 
Devil’s Progress, The, Sel. fr. (The Devi) at Home.) 
—T: K. Hervey—BNL 

Devil’s Thoughts, The.—S: T. Coleridge. See Devil’s 
Walk, The. 

Devil’s Walk, The.—S: T. Coleridge and Rob’t 
Southey.—ESs (Coleridge’s later vers.) 
(Southey’s later vers. — abr .)—BNL 
(Devil’s Walk on Earth, The—Southey’s later vers.) 
—HPE 

(Devil’s Thoughts, The—Coleridge’s earlier vers .)— 
FEP—HBP 

Devil’s Walk on Earth, The.—Rob’t Southey. See 
Devil’s Walk, The. 

Devotion. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 13—TCP 
Devotion.—Anon.—OB 

(In Laudem Amoris.)—ELP 
(Omnia Vincit.)—PGT 1 


his Royal 
(Epigram 


Mary 


Devotion.—Rob’t Burns.—LH 

(Mary Mori son—C.)—BNL—-CEL—FEP—GP— 
MBL—OB—PGT 1—WEP 3—YBF 
Devotion.—T: Campion.—OB (2d poem.) —TBF 
(Follow your Saint.)—ELP 

Devotion. (A Book of Airs, 4th Song.)—-T: Campion. 
—OB (ls< poem.) 

(In Imagine Pertransit Homo.)—PGT 1 
(Shadow, The.)—ELP 

Devotion to Duty.—D. N. Shelley.—CS 28—PS 
Devotional Incitements. (SI. abr.) —W: Wordsworth. 
—FTR 

Devout Lover, A.—T: Randolph.—OB 
(His Mistress.)—YBF 
Dew, The.—Anon.—NV 

Dew-drop, The (Paraphrase fr.). —H. F. Amiel.— 
OS 2 

Dewdrop, A.-—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Dewdrop, The.—Jos. Skipsey.—VA 
Dew-drop, The.—R: C. Trench.—OS 1 
(Dewdrop Falling, A.)—PHS 
Dewdrop Falling, A.—R: C. Trench. See foregoing. 
Dew-drop Inn, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 28 
Dewdrops.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Dewdrops.—Mary F. Butts.—AD 

(Million Little Diamonds, A— C.) —AA—GMS— 
HSS 2 

(Winter Jewels.)—COS—CPL—DLS—PP 
Dewey at Manila.—Rob’t U. Johnson.—BAB—-PAPm 
Dewey in Manila Bay.—R. V. Risley.—EDY—PAPm 
Dhoulkarnain. (Sel. fr. the Koran, Ch. XVIII.— 
The Cave.)—Anon.—WR 11 
Dhree Shkaders.—Anon.—BDD—BeR—DFY 
Dial, The. (C.) —Jas. Montgomery. 

(Sun-dial— abr.) —EPs 

Dial of Time, The.—Clarence Hawkes.—BS 24 
Dialect Medley.—G. A. Baker.—SDR 
(Pyrotechnic Polyglot.)—PLD 
Dialogue, A.—Emily Dickinson.—TAS 
Dialogue, A.—G: Herbert.—OB 
Dialogue between a Catholic Delegate and 
Highness, the Duke of Cumberland. 

— C.)—' T: Moore—HPE 
Dialogue between a Mother and Child.—C: and 
Lamb.—LPC 

Dialogue between Graunde Amoure and La Pucel. 
See Pastime of Pleasure, The.—Stephen 
Hawes. 

Dialogue between King John and Hubert.— W: 

Shakespeare. See King John. 

Dialogue between the Soul and the Body, A.—A. W.— 
ELP 

Dialogue between Thyrsis and Dorinda, A.—Andrew 
Marvell.—EP 

Dialogue for a Boy and Girl.—Mrs. Russell Kavan- 
augh.—KJ 

Dialogue for a Little Boy and Girl.—Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.—KJ 

Dialogue for Bands of Hope.—Mary G. Crocker.— 
CPL 

Dialogue for Five Boys.—C. A. Keife.—KC 
Dialogue from Plato, A.—Austin Dobson.—THP 
Diamond, A.—Rob’t Loveman.—AA 
Diamond, The.—J. J. G. Wilkinson.-—EPs 
Diamond Cut Diamond. (W. music.) —Emma D. Banks. 
—BR 

Diamond Wedding, The.—Anon.—CS 15—NPS—SR 3 
—YP 

Diana. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 13—TCP 
Diana.—Ernest Rhys.-—VA 
Diana’s Valentine.-—Rob’t Bridges.—HS 
Diaphenia.—H: Constable.—FEP—LC 
(Damelus’ Song to his Diaphenia.)—EP 
Diary of a Sea-voyage.—Anon.-—CS 13 
Dibdin’s Ghost.—Eugene Field.—AA—THP 
Die.—Jonathan Swift (?).-—HPE 
Dick Johnson’s Picture.—Anon.—BS 10 
Dick Swiveller and the Marchioness.—C: Dickens. 

See Old Curiosity Shop, The. 

Dick, the Apothecary’s Apprentice.—Anon.—SCS 
Dickens Gallery, The.—M. J. Farrah.—CS 31 
Dickens in Camp.—Fs. Bret Harte.—BNL—CS 7— 
EDY—FEP—GP—LLC—TAV 
Dickey-bird, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS—PP 
—PS 

Dickey’s Christmas.—Anon.—SSS 
Dickie-bird! Dickie-bird!—Anon.—TFS 
Did not Pass.—Mary E. Burnett.—TFS 
Did you Ever See a Ghost?—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 
CS 10 

Did you Think to Pray?-—Anon.—DLS 

Did you—Will you?—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 

Didactic Poem, The.—R: Garnett.—VA 


90 





TITLE INDEX 


Dirge 


Didn’t Think.—Phoebe Cary.—CPL ( sel.) 

(They Didn’t Think.)—BLF—HSS 2 (si. abr.)— 
NV 

"Didn’t Think o’ Losin’ Him.”—Frank L. Stanton.— 
WR 21 

Didn’t we, Jim? (C.)—Ben King 
(Two orphans, The.)—WR 14 
Dido’s Hunting.—Virgil (Gawain Douglas). See ASneid, 
The. 

Die Down, O Dismal Day.—David Gray.—BNL 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 

Die Fischerin, Sel. fr. —Johann W. von Goethe. See 
Erlking,, The. 

Die Herz Blume.—T: Hood (?).—POS 
"Died Poor.”—Anon.—KNE 
Dies Irae.—Anon.—PAPm 

Dies Irae. ( Orig. Latin.) —T: de Celano.—BNL— 
FEP 

(Tr. of Abraham Coles.)—A A 
(Tr. of John A. Dix.)—BNL—FEP 
(Tr. of W: J. Irons.)—FEP 

(Paraphrase of Walter Scott— in Lay of the Last 
Minstrel.)—FEP 
(Hymn for the Dead.)—BPB 
Dietary, The, or, Rules for Health, Sel. fr. —J: Lyd¬ 
gate.—WEP 1 

Difference, A.—Anon.—WR 4 

Difference between Taste and Genius, Sel. fr. (Taste 
and Genius.)—Hugh Blair.—AE 
Difference, The.—Anon.—WR 17 

Difference, The. (It is the Season now to Go— C.) 
—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—OH 
(In the Season.)—VA 
Difference, The.—H. K. Webster.—CG 2 
Difference of Opinion.—Anon.—PS 
Differences.—C: Mackay.—FEP 

Different Kind er Bov, The.—Alice L. Richards.— 
WN 

Different Minds.—R : C. Trench.—BNL—FEP 
(Content and Discontent— sel.) —OS 1 
("Some murmur when their sky is clear.”)—GG 
Different Tastes.-—Anon.—CS 1 
Different Ways of Saying Yes.—Anon.—WR 3 
Differing Tastes. (Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Difficult Love-making.—Anon.—CS 20 
Difficult Love-making.—Will Carleton.—WR 3 
Difficult Problem, A.—Charlotte W. Thurston.— 
TMR 

Difficulties.—Clara J. Denton.—I.L 
Difficulty, The.—Heinrich Heine (tr. by Jas. F. Clarke). 
—FTA—OH 

Difficulty about that Dog, The.—Anon.—CS 6— 
MHR 

Difficulty of Rhyming, The.—Joe Jot, Jr.—BS 1— 
CS 13 * 

Diffidence.—Wade Whipple. — CD — CS 16 — DS — 
FAS (sel.) —SR 6 
("Don’t be Tazin’ Me.”)—SDR 
Digger’s Grave. The.—Sarah Welch.—VA 
Digging for Hidden Treasure.-—C: Reade. See It is 
never too Late to Mend. 

Dignified Courtship.—Anon.—CS 29 
Dignity in Labor.—Newman Hall.—PP—YFR 
Dignity of Labor, The.—Anon.—PFO 
Dignity of Labor, The.—Newman Flail.—CS 8 
Di (Abr.)— FD 1— HSS 3—PFP 

gnitv of Man, The. (C.)—Sir J: Davies. 

(“ Oh! what is man, great maker of mankind ”)— 

HBP 

Dignity of our Nation’s Founders.—W: M. Evarts.— 

' FD 2 

Dikkon’s Dog.—Dorothy Lundt.—WR 26 
Dilemma, A.—Anon.—PGT 1 
(Madrigal.)—ELP 

Dilemma, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—WR 16 
Diligent Bessie.—I.izzie J. Rook.—PS—TT 
Dilly and the D’s, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Dime Supper, A.—Oscar F. Hewitt.—CS 34 
Dimes and Dollars.—H: Mills.—CS 12—WRD 
Dimes for Turnips’ Blood.—Howell L. Piner.— 
WR 23 

Dimes! Oh, Dimes! Give me Dimes!—Anon.—KNS 
Dimple and Dumpling.—Acton Davies.—BS 20 
Diners in the Kitchen, The.—Jas. W. Riley. See 
Session with Uncle Sidney, A. 

Dinkey-bird, The.—Eugene Field.—AA—LS—NA 
Dinna Ask Me.—J. Dunlop.—BNL—FTA—YBF 
"Dinna Chide.”—Marg. E. Sangster. See following. 
Dinna Chide the Mither ("Dinna Chide”— C.) —Marg. 
E. Sangster.—CS 22 

Dinner at the House of Dugal Stewart, A. (SI. abr.) 
—Rob’t Burns.—EDY 


Dinner Discussion, A.—Anon.—BS 19 
Dinner-hour, The.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. See 
Lucile. 

Dion. (Sel.) —W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Dipsychus, Sels. fr .—Arthur H. Clough. 

Atheism. (Sel. fr. Pt. I., Sc. 5: The Lid.) — 
EPs (si. abr .)—THP 

In Venice; Dipsychus Sneaks. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., Sc. 

5: The Piazza at Night.)—WEP 4 
Isolation. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. II., Sc. 2: InaGondola.) 
—WEP 4 

Spectator ab Extra. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., Sc. 2.)—ESs 
Dirce.—Walter S. Landor.— OB —VA 
Director’s Visit, The; or, A Warning to School-masters. 
—Anon.—KNE 

Dirge: “Lay a garland on my hearse.”—Beaumont 
and Fletcher. See Maid’s Tragedy, The. 
Dirge: "If thou wilt ease thine heart.”—T: L. Bed- 
does. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Dirge, A: "Glide soft, ye silver floods.”—W: Browne. 
See Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Dirge: "What shall her silence keep.”—Madison 

Cawein.—AA 

Dirge, A: "Earth to earth and dust to dust.”—G: 
Croly.—CS S 

(Dust to Dust— br. sel.) —SE 
Dirge: "Softly! she is lying.”—C: G. Eastman.—AA 
—CS 6—FEP—HBP—TAS 
Dirge: "Knows he who tills the lonely field” ["I 
reached the middle of the mount ”—C.l. (SI. 
abr.) —Ralph W. Emerson.—-TAS 
Dirge: "Oh, thy stream, Amalete, who reaches the 
shore.”—Howard W. Gilbert.—LLC 
Dirge, A: "Calm on the spirit [bosom—C.] of thy 
God.”—-Felicia D. Hemans. See Siege of Va¬ 
lencia, The. 

Dirge: "Where shall we make her grave.”—Felicia D. 
Hemans.—HBP 

Dirge, A: "Naiad, hid beneath the bank.”—W: 
Johnson-Cory.—PGT 2 

Dirge: "Oh, dig a grave, and dig it deep.”—W: S. 
Roseoe.—HBP 

Dirge: “He is gone—is dust.”—Friedrich Schiller. 
See Wallenstein. 

Dirge: "Come away, come away, Death.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See Twelfth Night. 

Dirge: "Fear no more the heat o’ the sun.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

Dirge, A: "Rough wind, that moanest loud.”—Percy 
B. Shelley.—PGT 1 

Dirge, A: "The glories of our blood and state.” (Fr. 
The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses.)—Jas. 
Shirley.—ELP—WEP 2 

(Death the Leveller.)—BNL — BPB — OB — 
PGT 1—YBF— 

(Death’s Final Conquest.)—EPs (br. sel.) —FEP— 
HBP—OS 2—SS 
(Death’s Triumph.)—CEL 
(King of Kings, The.)—LH 
Dirge, A: "Ring out your bells,” etc.—Sir Philip Sid¬ 
ney. See Sidera. 

Dirge, A: "Now is done thy long day’s work.”— 
Alfred Tennyson.—HBP—WEP 4 
Dirge, A: "Call for the robin redbreast and the wren.” 
(Fr. The White Devil.)—J: Webster.—ELP— 
FEP—OB 

(Land Dirge, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Dirge Concerning the Late Lamented King of the 
Cannibal Islands, A.—W: A. Croffut. —THP 
Dirge for a Soldier.—G: H. Boker.-—A A—ASL—BNL 
— EDY — FEP — GP — HBP — HSS 1 — 
PAP — PAPm — PYO — YBF 
(Dirge for the Soldier.)—BLP—LLC 
Dirge for a Young Girl.—Jas. T. Fields.—HBP—TAS 
Dirge for Dorcas. (Abr. —The Widdowes Teares, or 
Dirge of Dorcas— C.) —EPs 

Dirge for One who fell in Battle.—T: W. Parsons.— 
AA—GN—LLC 

Dirge for Summer, A.—Sebastian Evans.—VA 
Dirge for the Soldier.—G: H. Boker. See Dirge for a 
Soldier. 

Dirge for the Year. — Percy B. Shelley—CEL — 
GN (sel.)— HBP—HS—YBF 
Dirge for Two Veterans. (C.) —Walt Whitman. 

(Two Veterans.)—GN—LH 
Dirge for Wolfram.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s 
Jest Book. 

Dirge from Cymbeline.—W: Shakespeare. Nee Cymbe¬ 
line. 

Dirge from "The White Devil.”—J: Webster. See 
Dirge, A: “Call for the robin,” etc. 

Dirge from Wallenstein.—Friedrich Schiller. See 
Wallenstein. 


91 







Dirge 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dirge in Cymbeline [,The],—W: Collins.—EPs—FEP 
—HBP—PHS—WEP 3 
(Fidele.)—OB 

Dirge in Woods.—G: Meredith.—A VP 
Dirge of Alaric the Visigoth.—E: Everett.—BNL— 
FEP 

Dirge of Gael, The.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Dirge of Imogen, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Cym¬ 
beline. 

Dirge of Jephthah’s Daughter, The.—Rob’t Herrick.— 
HBP—WEP 2 

Dirge of Love.—W: Shakespeare. See Twelfth Night. 
Dirge of O’Sullivan Bear.—Jeremiah J. Callanan.— 
TIP 

Dirge of Rory O’More.—Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
Dirge of the Drinker, The.—W: Aytoun.—-HPE 
Dirge of the Householder, The.—R: S. Powell.—TL 
Dirge of the Moolla of Kotal.—G: T. Lanigan.—NA 
Dirge of the Three Queens.-—W: Shakespeare or J: 

Fletcher. See Two Noble Kinsmen, The. 

Dirty Old Man, The.—W: Allingham.—BNL—CS 35 
—MRS 

’Dis Den I’ll Dink of Dou.—Oofty Gooft.—DRR 
Di’s Mitten. ( Fr. Captain Jinks of the Horse Ma¬ 
rines.)—W: C. Fitch.—CG 1 
Disagreeable Meddler, The.—J: Poole.—PS 
Disappointed Ambition. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Disappointed Heart, The. (Frags, fr. various 
authors .)—BNL 

Disappointed Lover, The. (Sel. fr. The Triumph of 
Time. - )—Algernon C. Swinburne.—BNL 
Disappointed Snowflakes, The.—Anon.—NV 
Disappointment. (Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Disappointment.—Maria G. Brooks. See Zophiel; or, 
The Bride of Seven. 

Disappointment.—T. S. Collier.—AA 
Disappointment.—Kate Kellogg.—DCP 
Disappointment.—Jas. R. Lowell (?).—LLC 
Disarmed.—Laura R. Searing.—AA 
Disaster.—C: S. Calverley.—BNL 

Disasters.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The. 

Disastrous Announcement, A.—C: Dickens. See 
David Copperfield. 

Disciples, The, Sel. fr. (Palermo.)—Harriet E. H. 
King.—VA 

Discipline.-—Anon.—CS 23 
(Soul Sculpture.)—LLC 
Discipline.—G: Herbert.—OB—YBF 
Discipline of Life and Character. The.—Anon.—CP 
Discontent. — Sarah O. Jewett. — AD — CPL — 
GMS (abr.) — NV (at. to Coolidge) — PoR — 
TMR—WR 15 (sel.) 

(Discontented Buttercup, The.)—MYF 
Discontented Girls, The.—Mrs. J. E. McConaughv.— 
StD 

Discontented Leader, The.—“Kathrina.”—SR 10 
Discontented Pendulum, The.—Jane Taylor.—EA 
Discontentment. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 12—TCP 
Discord.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Disco’se by a Colored Man.—Anon.—MCS 
Discouraging.—D. C. Brewer.—CG 1 
Discourse by the Rev. Mr. Bosan. (Sel. fr. The Hoosier 
Schoolmaster, Ch. XII.)—E- Eggleston.— 
BeR 

Discourse Commemorative of Daniel Webster, A, Br. 
sel. fr. (Eulogy on Webster.)—Rufus Choate. 
—SE 

Discourse Delivered in the North Dutch Church, 1804, 
A, Sels. fr .—Eliphalet Nott. 

Criminality of Duelling.—LLC 
Death of [Alexander] Hamilton[, The].—CS 4 — 
HNS 

Discourse on Trees, A. (Walk amonj? Trees. A— C. — 
Experiences of Nature, XXIV.) — H: W. 
Beecher.—AD (abr.) 

(“First in our regard as it is first in the nobility of 
trees”— sel.) —HSS 1 
(Love of Trees— sel. )—HSS 1 
(Motion of the Leaves, The— sel.) —HSS 1 
Discourse with Cupid.—Ben Jonson. See Celebration 
of Charis, A. 

Discourses by Way of Essays, The, Sel. fr. (On 
Solitude.)—Abraham Cowley.—WEP 2 
Discovered.—Paul L. Dunbar.—AWH 
Discoverer, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA—ASL— 
GP—TAS 

Discoverer of the North Cape, The.—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow— BFV—LH 

Discoveries of Galileo.—E: Everett. See Uses of 
Astronomy, The. 


Discovering a Leak. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 15—TCP 
Discovery Day.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—BLP 
Discovery in Biology, A.—Mary E. Leverett.—C'G 2 
Discovery of San Francisco Bay.—R: E. White.— 
CS 28 

• Discovery of the Hudson River, ThA—Washington 
Irving. See Knickerbocker History of New 
York. 

Discovery of the Mississippi, The.—G: Bancroft. See 
History of the United States. 

Discovery of Tobacco, The. (Cigar and Tobacco 
World.)— PPh 

Discriminating Love. (Frags, jr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Discussion, The.—Anon.—DR 

Discussion at the “Rainbow,” A.—G: Eliot. See Silas 
Marner. 

Disdain Returned— C. —T: Carew.—FEP—HBP 
(SI. abr.)— ELP—ES—WEP 2 
(Abr.)— EPs—OEL 

(“He that loves a rosy cheek”— abr.) —BNL 
(Proper Woman, A— abr.) —CEL 
(True Beauty [,The]— abr.) —BFV—FTA—PGT 1 
—YBF 

(Unfading Beauty, The-*-abr.)—OB 
Disenchantment. (Fr. Book of Day-dreams.)—C: L. 
Moore.—AA 


Disenthralled, The.—J: G. Whittier.—TS 
Disgusted Dutchman, The. (Abr. fr. The White 
Horse of the Peppers, Act II., Sc. 3.)—S: 
Lover.—SCS 

Dishonest Politician, The.—H: W. Beecher. See Dem¬ 
agogue, The. 

Disillusion.—W: Wilkins.-—TIP 

Disillusionizing of Alexander Oldworthy, The. (Sel. fr. 
The Course of True Love never did Run 


Smooth, Pt. III.)—C: Reade.—WR 25 
Disobedience of Magistrates. The.—Honord G. Ri- 
quetti, Comte de Mirabeau.—PS 
Disobedience to the Assembly.—Honore G. Riquetti, 
Comte de Mirabeau. See On the Refusal of the 
Chamber of Vacations of Rennes to Obey the 
Decrees of the National Assembly. 

Dispensary, The, Sel. fr .—Sir S: Garth.—WEP 3 
Dispute. A.—A. L. Mitchell.—PS—TT 
Disqualification of Roman Catholics. (Sel. fr. The 
Catholic Question, Feb. 22, 1793.)—H: Grat¬ 


tan.—SS 

Dissertation upon Roast Pig. A. (C.—in Essays of 
Elia,)—C: Lamb.—MBL 
(Origin of Roast Pig. The.)—WCLG 1 (abr.) 

(Sel.) —EA—MHR—WR 1 
(Roast Pig— sel.) —OS 2 
Dissibation.—Mark Quencher.—DRR 
Dissolution of the Union.—H: Clay.—SSD 
Distance. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Distichs and Saws. (Fr. Hudibras and Miscellanies.) 

—S: Butler.—WEP 2 
Distinction.—Mark A. D. Howe.—AA 
Distraught for MeropA—R: H. Horne. See Orion: An 
Epic Poem. 

“District No. 9.”—Frank M. Imbrie.—WR 13 
District School, The.-—Edwin H. Chapin.—FD 1— 


PFP 


District Schoolmaster, The, Billings on.—H: G. Shaw 

_Qg Q 

District Telegraph Boy, The.—L: J. Magee.—CG 2 
Distrust of Liberty.—T: B. Macaulay. See Milton. 
Distrust of the People.—Wendell Phillips. See Scholar 
in a Republic, The. 

Disturbance in Church, A.—Anon.—CS 22 
Disturbed Reverie, .A. —Anon.—CS 2—DS—NPS— 
YA—YP 


Ditty[, Ah—Sir Philip Sidney. See Arcadia, The. 
Ditty, in Praise of Eliza, Queen of the Shepherds, A.— 
Edmund Spenser. See Shepheardes Calendar, 
The. 

Diva, The.—S. F. Batchelder.—CG 2 
Divan, The.—R: H: Stoddard.—AA 
Dive, The.—Corn'elin B. Gould.—CG 2 
Diver, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.-—FP 
Diver, The.—J: F. Herbin—TCV 
Diver, The.—Friedrich Schiller.—CS 10—FR (abr.) — 
HSS 3—MMR—MR—SPE (sel.) —SR 7 
Diversities of Judgment.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on 
Criticism. 

Diverted Tragedy, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Diverting History of John Gilpin, The. (C .)—W: 
Cowper.—BNL — BVC — FEP — GN — 
HBP—MBL—PEB 3—TUP 
(Facetious Storv of John Gilpin, The.)—MHR 
(John Gilpin.)—BPB — CGd—CS 7— PC—PHS— 
PSR—WCL 




92 




TITLE INDEX 


Dolly’s 


Divided.—David Gray.— AA 

Divided.—Jean Ingelow.—BIL (br. sel.) —BS 19 (si 
abr. )—EPs—H B P—LLC 

Divina Commedia.—H: W. Longfellow.— BNL — 
YBF (br. sel.) 

Divination by a Daffodil [Daffodill—C.l. Rob’t Her¬ 
rick.—ELP 

Divine Awe.—G: E. Woodberry.—AA 

Divine Comedy, The, Sels. fr.— Dante Alighieri. 

Beatrice Descending from Heaven. (Wilstach’s tr.) 
—NE 

(Beatrice— tr. unknown.) —WR 11 
Buonconte di Montefeltro. (Wilstach’s tr.) —NE 
Count Ugolino. (Wilstach’s tr.) —NE 
Exquisite Beauty of Beatrice. (Wilstach’s tr.) — 
NE 

Divine Comedy, Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Divine Ejaculation.—.1: Quarles.—HBP 
Divine Love.—Gerhard Tersteegen (tr. bv. J: Wesley). 
EPs—HBPfsef.) 

(Love of God Supreme, The—sel.)—BNL 
Divine Providence in Nature.—Saint John Chrysostom. 
—FTR 

Divine. Rapture, A.-—Fs. Quarles.—OB 
(Mystical Ecstasy, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Divinity.—Anon.—BS 22 
Dixie.—-Albert Pike.—AA—AWB 
Dizzy Activities of the Times, The.—E: Everett. See 
Battle of Bunker Hill, The. 

Dizzy Girl, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BYC 
Djinns, The, Hr. sel. fr. —Victor Hugo (tr. by J : L. O’Sul¬ 
livan).—BNL 

Do All that you Can.—Marg. E. Sangster.—SM 
Do Good.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Do Good.—Anon.—TFS 
Do I Love Thee?—J: G. Saxe.—FLS—FT A 
Do me Right, and Do me Reason. (Fr. A Looking- 
glass for London and England.)—T: Lodge.— 
ES 

Do not Sing that Song Again.—H. F. McDermott.— 
CS 17 

Do not Tattle.—Annie R. White.—C’PL 
‘Do not will me from my love to flie ”—Philip Sidney. 

See Astrophel and Stella. 

Do Right.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Do Right.—Anon.—YBT 

Do Something. (Three Old Saws— C.) —Lucy Lar- 
com.—HP(a6<\)—PP—YFR 
(“If the world seems cold to you”— sel.) —HSS 2 
Do the Duty that Lieth nearest thv Hand.—-Anon.— 
HSS 3 

Do You.—Anon.—FLS 

Do you Fear the Wind?—Hamlin Garland.—AA 
Do you Know how many Stars?—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Do your Best.—Anon.—KNS 

(A 6r.)—DS—LPS—NPS—PP—PS—YA—YP 
Do your Best.—Anon.—TFS 
Do your Best.—Phoebe Cary. See Obedience. 

Doctor and his Apples, The.—Anon.—CS 6 
Doctor and the Lampreys, The.—-Horace Smith.— 
CS 26 

Dr. Arnold’s Prescription. (Dial.) —Anon. (Ad.) — 
MPD 

Dr. Birch and his Young Friends, Sel. fr. (End of the 
Play, The.l—BNL—EDY—FEP—GN(a6r.) — 
GP—HBP—OS 3—VA 

Dr. Brown. (Dial.)— Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—PS 
—TT 

Doctor by Proxy, A.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Doctor Cure-all. (Play.) —-S. J. Smith.—EE 
Doctor Faustus. (Faustus’s Last Speech on Earth— 
sel. fr. Sc. XVI.) — Christopher Marlowe.— 
WR 19 

(Last Soliloquy of Faustus, The.)—MRS 
Dr. Hale on Emerson.—E: E. Hale.—MRS 
Doctor in Love, The.—A. McFarland.—GP 
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Sel, fr. —Rob’t L. Steven¬ 
son. See Dr. Lanyon’s Narrative. 

Dr. Johnny’s Visit.—Anon.—ASD 
Dr. Jotham Tindale’s Cue a Cure.—W: W. Turnbull.— 
CS 23 

Dr. Lanyon’s Narrative. (Sel. cond fr. The Strange 
Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.)—Rob’t L. 
Stevenson.—BS 25 

(Dr. Lanyon’s Story— si. diff. cond.) —WR 10 
Dr. Lanyon’s Story.—Robt’ L. Stevenson. See fore¬ 
going. 

Dr. Marigold, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens.—BS 6 
(Cheap .Tack, The— sel. fr.) —BS 6—SDR 
(Dr. Marigold and his Dumb Girl— sel. fr.) — BS 6 
—FMB 

Dr. Marigold and his Dumb Girl.—C: Dickens. See 
foregoing. 


Doctor of the Old School, A.—J : Watson. See Beside 
the Bonnie Brier Bush. 

Dr. Sevier, Sels. fr— G• W. Cable. 

Fall in! I860.—BS 15 
Mary’s Night Ride.—BS 13—SR 4 
Doctor’s Choice, The:—Alice M. Ball.—StD 
Doctor’s Diploma in Court, A.—Anon.—BS 19 
Doctor’s Story, The. (Cond. fr. The Christmas Gift 
that Came to Rupert.)—Fs. Bret Harte.— 
BS 20 

Doctor’s Story, The [or A], (Medical World.) —BS 19 
—DC It 

Doctor’s Story, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—VSG 
(Surgeon’s Tale, The.)—CS 13—DS 
Doctor’s Visit. (Dial.) —Anon.—PS—TT 
Dodge Club, The, Sel. fr. —Jas. de Mille. See Senator 
Entangled, A. 

Doeg and Og.—J • Dryden. See Absalom and Achit- 
ophel. 

Does a Two-year-old Baby Pay?—Anon.-—WR 4 
Does it Pay to Smoke?—Anon.—PTS 
Does Jesus Know?—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Does the Pearl Know?—Helen Hay.—AA 
Dog and his Shadow, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KER 

Dog and the Tramp, The.—Eva Best.—-CS 30 
Dog and the Water-lily, The. (C.) —W: Cowper.— 
BPB—CGd 

(Dog (Beau) and the Water-lily, The.)—YBT 
Dog (Beau) and the Water-lily, The.—W: Cowper. 
See foregoing. 

Dog Days. ( Fr. Ascutnev Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Dog in the Manger, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KER 

Dog Kindergarten, The.—Anon.—CS 36 
Dog of Flanders, A.—Louise de la Rame.—WR 8 
Dog Partnership Case, A.—Anon.—WR 12 
Dog Star. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Doge of Venice.—Lord Byron. See Marino Faliero, 
Doge of Venice. 

Doge’s Sentence, The.—Lord Byron. See Marino 
Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Dogmatic Philosophy.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Dog’s Cold Nose, The.—Marg. Eytinge.—SR 13 
Dog’s Confession, The.—F: E. Weatherly.—WR 17 
Doing and Giving. ( Harper’s Mag.) —HSS 2 (sel.) 
(Gentle Hints— si. abr.) —DLS 
(Resolution.)—PTS 
Doing for Others.—E. Schaeffer.—LLC 
Doing Nothing.—Anon.—KNE 
Doing Nothing.—-Anon.—TFS 
Doketor’s Drubbles, A.—G' M. Warren.—CS 1? 

Dolce far Niente.—C: G. Halpine.—HP 
Dolcino to Margaret.—C- Kingslev.—BNL—FEP— 
TFY—WEP 4 

Doll Babies.—Anon.—TT • 

Doll Drill—A. E. Hurst.—ID 
Doll Drill, The.—Adelaide Norris.—DR 
Doll Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook—DM 
Doll Poems.—W: B. Rands. 

Dolladine. (I. The Picture— C.) —PoR 
Dressing the Doll. (III. Dressing Her— C.) — 
PoR—VA 

Doll Rosy’s Bath.—Anon.—LPS—PP—PS 
Doll Show, The.—Anon.—YFD 
Dolladine. W: B Rands. See Doll Poems. 

Dollar, The.—Walter S. Logan.—WR 22 
Dollar. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Doll-babv Show, The.—G- Cooper.—COS—PP 
Dollie.—-S: M. Peck.—AWH 

Dollie Harris at Greencastle, Pa.—J. H. West.—SII 8 
Dolls’ Hospital, The. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
COS—PP 

Doll’s Lullaby, The.—-Anon.—WR 17 
Doll’s Sash, The.—Anon.—HVD 
Doll’s Tea-party, The.—Anon.—DJS 
Doll’s Wedding, The.—Kate Allyn.—COS—PP 
Doll’s Wooing, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Dolly and Me.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Dolly Days.—Alice I,. Richards.—SL 
Dolly Dialogues, Sels. fr. —Anthony Hope Hawkins. 
Cordial Relations. (Ch. II.)—WR 20 
Matter of Duty, A. (Ad. fr. Ch. V. l—NDP 
My Last Chance. (Ch. VI.)—MRS 
Retribution. (Ch. III.)—WR 20 
Slight Mistake, A. (Ch. XVIII.)—WR 22 
That Little Wretch. (Ch. XVII.)—WR 19 
Dolly’s Bat h.—An on.—PS—TT 
Dolly’s Bedtime—Anon.—PS—TT 
Dolly’s Broken Arm.—Anon.—DST 


93 








Dolly’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dolly’s Doctor. (Tab.) —Anon.—COS—NPS—PP—YP 
Dolly’s Lesson. (Youth’s Co?npanion .)—TT 
(Teaching Dolly.)—PS 
Dolly’s Lessons.—Anon.—DCP—DJS 
Dolly’s Mother, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Dolly’s Pocket.—Anon.—DJS 
Dolly’s Toilet.—Anon.—TT 

Dolly’s Vaccination.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 

Dolly’s Wedding.—Anon.—WR 17 

Dolly-town.—Anon.—IiSS 2 

Dombey and Son, Sets. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Birth of Dombey, The. (Fr. Ch. I.)—CR 
(Birth of Little Paul, The.)—CS 37 
Death of Little Paul Dombey. (Fr. Ch. XVI.)— 
BS 11 

(Death of Little Paul— abr .)—CS 4 
(Death of Paul Dombey.)—CR—CSS 
(Last Hours of Little Paul Dombey, The.)—PR 
Scene at Doctor Blimber’s. (Fr. Ch. XI.)—CR 
Dome of the Republic, The.—Andrew D. White.—TMD 
Domestic Asides; or, Truth in Parentheses. (C.)— 
T: Hood. 

(Truth in Parenthesis [or Parentheses]).—CS 4— 
HSS 3—MHR—OM 

Domestic Birds.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Domestic Chaplain, The. (Set. fr. A Satire Addressed 
to a Friend that is about to Leave the Univer¬ 
sity, etc.)—J: Oldham.—WEP 2 
Domestic Economy.— Jas, M. Bailey.— BS 14 — CS 23 
—DS—SR 5 

Domestic Economy. (Punch .)—HPE 
Domestic Episode, A.—Anon.—WR 12 
Domestic Event, A.—F. Fertiault.—LBB 
Domestic Love. (Woman Contemplating a Household 
God. A— C.)— G: Croly.—FP 
Domestic Mutual Improvement.—Andrew Stewart.— 
CS 29 

Domestic Poems.—T: Hood. 

Good-night. (No. II.: “The sun was slumbering. ”) 
—HPE 

Parental Ode to my Son, Aged Three Years and 
Five Months. (No. III.—C.)—HPE—THP— 
WEP 4 

(Ode to an Infant Son.)—WRD 
(Ode to my Little Son.)—CS 1—FEP 
(To my Infant Son.)—BNL 
Serenade, A. (No. IV.)—CS 26—HPE 
(“Lullaby, oh, lullaby.”)—FEP 
Domestic Scene, A.—Anon.—MYF 
Domestic Tempest, A.—Anon.—CS 18—SR 1 
Domestic Tutor’s Position, The.—Jos. Hall.—ESs 
Domestic Wanted, A.—Anon.—FAD 
Domicile Erected by John, The.—Anon.—MHR 
(House that Jack Built, The.)—PTS (abr.) —SO 
(Modern House that Jack Built, The.)—BNL— 
CS 3 

^Old, but Good.)—SR 2 

Domine, qui Sunt Pleiades Cur®.—C: G. D. Roberts.— 

VA 


Domine, quo Vadis?-—W: Watson.—HBR 
Dominion, Br. sel. fr. (“Art Tired?”)—Jean Ingelow. 
—HDL 

Dominion Day.—J: Reade.—TCV 
Dominion of Australia, The.—Jas. B. Stephens.—VA 
Dominus Illuminatio Mea.—Anon.—OB 
Don Carlos. (SI. abr. fr. Act III., Scs. 9, 10.)—Fried¬ 
rich Schiller (tr. by Boylan).—FTR 
Don Crambo.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 28 
Don Garcia. (In Italy— the book.) —S: Rogers.—WRD 
Don Juan, Sels. fr. —Lord Byron. 

Daniel Boone. (Can. VIII., sts. 61-66.)—BNL 
Dedication.—ESs 

Donna Julia’s Letter.—WEP 4 (I., 192-197.) 

(Don Juan, Sel. fr. Canto I.)—BNL (I., 194.) 
(Man’s Love.)—FLS 

Evening. (III., pt. of 101, 102-108.)—BNL 
First Love. — BNL (I., 122-124, 126, 127.) — 
GP (same)—WEP 4 (I., 122-127.) 

Haid^e and Juan. (IV., 1-16.)—WEP 4 
Isles of Greece, The. (Song fol. III., 186.)—CEL 
—OB—PHS—PYO (sel.)— WEP 4 
(Degeneracy of Greece, The— sel.) —SS 
(Glory that was Greece, The.)—LH 
(Song of the Greek Bard.)—AE 
(Song of the Greek Poet.)—BNL—FEP—HBP 
—OS 2 

Matrons and Maids. (III., 8.)—THP 
No More. (I.,'214, 215.)—GP 
(Nevermore—214.)—EPs 
Rainbow, The.—(II., 91, 92.)—EPs 
Shipwreck, The.—(II., 49.)—VSG (II., 49, 51-53.) 
Twilight—(III., 102, 108.)—POS 


Don Juan.—L. H. Foote.—AA 

Don Pedro and Fair Inez.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 
CS 30 

Don Quixote.—Craven L. Betts.—AA 
Don Quixote, Sels. fr. —Miguel de Cervantes-Saavedra. 
Don Quixote and the Huntress. (Abr. fr. Pt. II., 
Ch. XXX.)—WR 11 

Don Quixote and the Windmills. (Sel. fr. Pt. I. 
Ch. VIII.)—OS 2 

Sleep. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. II., Ch. LXVIII.)—OS 3 
Don Quixote and the Huntress.—Miguel de Cervantes- 
Saavedra. See Don Quixote. 

Don Quixote and the Windmills.—Miguel de Cervantes- 
Saavedra. See Don Quixote. 

Don Quixote in England, Song fr.— H: Fielding. 
A-Hunting We will Go. (C.) —OES 
(Diff. vers. )—BNL—FEP 

(Hunting Song, A— sel.) —BVC 
Donald.—H: Abbey.—AA 
Donald.—Rob’t Browning. 

(Donald and the Stag— cond.) —WR 1 
Donald and the Stag.—Rob’t Browning. See foregoing. 
Donation Party, The.—Anon.—FAS 
(Parson’s Sociable, The.)—CS 17 
Doncaster St. Leger, The.—Fs. H. Doyle.—FEP 
“Don’d Feel too Big!”—C: F. Adams. See Don’t 
Feel too Big!” 

Done For.—Rose T. Cooke.—AA 
Donkey and his Panniers, The.—T: Moore.—HPE 
Donkey’s Dream, The.—Anon.—SR 5 
Donna Diana, Sel. ad. fr. (Pride Against Pride— 
dial.) —Westland Marston.—NDP 
Donna Julia’s Letter.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 
Donne.—Hartley Coleridge.—EDY 
Donovans, The.—Fs. A. Fahy.—TIP 
Don’t.—E. C. Rook.—LPS—NPS—PP—YP 
Don’t.—Nixon Waterman.—DLF—TT—WR 21 
Don’t be Afraid.—Dinah M. Craik.—YBT 
Don’t be in a Hurry.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Don’t Be Mean, Boys.—Rob’t J. (?) Burdette.—BS 14 
Don’t be Sorrowful, Darling.—Rembrandt Peale.—GP 
(Faith and Hope.)—BNL 
Don’t Be Sorry.—Anon.—BS 24 

“Don’t be Tazin’Me.” — Wade Whipple. See Diffi¬ 
dence. 

Don’t Call a Man a Liar.—Anon.—DE 
“Don’t for Don’d] Feel too Big!”—C: F. Adams.— 
BDD—CS 22 

Don’t Fret.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Don’t Give too Much for the Whistle. (Sel. fr. The 
Whistler— a fetter, Nov. 10, 1779.)—B- Frank¬ 
lin.—BLP (si. abr. and si. diff. fr. others.) 

(Too Dear for the Whistle.)—LLC 
(Whistle, The.)—WCLI 2 

Don’t Give Up.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF—GMS—TMR 

“Don’t Give up the Ship.”—Hester Hunt.— DS—YA 

Don’t Hesitate.—Anon.—-SR 13 

Don’t Kill the Birds.—J. Colesworthy.—NV 

Don’t Look Sad.—Anon.—SSS 

Don’t Marry a Drunkard to Reform Him.—H. E. 

McBride.—MTD 
Don’t Say It.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Don’t Speak when Angry.—Anon.—PS (set.) 

(Angry Words.)—CS 25 

Don’t Stop at the Station Despair.—Joaquin Miller.— 
FAS 

Don’t Talk of September. (C.) —T: H. Bayly. 

(Hunting Season, The.)—THP 
Don’t Tell.—Eva Best.—COS—PP 
Don’t Use Big Words.—Anon.—CS 25 
Don’t Wake the Baby.—Anon.—PS—TT 
(Baby Sleeps, The.)—TFS 
Don’t Worry.—Anon.—BS 26 

Don’t you Think So, Bill?—Fred E. Brooks.—BS 25 
Don’t you Wish You Knew?—A. H. B.—CG 2 
Doom of Claudius and Cynthia, The. (C.) —Maurice 
Thompson.—CS 22 (abr.) —SR 1 
(Set.)—FR—NC 

(Claudius and Cynthia— abr.) —BS 3—FTR—SC 
(diff. abr.) 

Doom of Devorgoil, The, Sets fr. —Walter Scott. 

Bonny for Bonnie] Dundee. (C.) —LH—OS 2 (si. 
abr). 

(Set.)—EPs—PYO 

(Bonnets of Bonnie Dundee.)—FEP—HB— 
HBP—SO 

Datur Hora Quieti. (Sun upon the Lake, The— 
C.)— PGT 1 
(Evening.)—BPB 
(Leonard Tarries Long.)—YBF 
Doom of King Alcohol, The. (Tab.) —Clara J. Den¬ 
ton.—SSE 


94 





TITLE INDEX 


Drake’s 


Doom-bar, The.—Alice E. Gillington.—VA 
Doom-well of St. Madron, The.—R. S. Hawker — 
PEB 3 

Door must be either Open or Shut, A, Dial. ad. fr. 

(Open or Shut.)—Alfred de Musset.—NDP 
Door of Heaven, The.—Anon.—CS 18 
Door to Memory’s Hall, The.—Mrs. J. M. Winton.— 
CS 19 

Doors, The.—Lloyd Mifflin.—AA 

Doorstep, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AWH—CS 9 
—FP—FTA—OH—TAV 
(On the Doorstep.)—FEP 
Doorway of Sleep, The.—Ethel L. Beers.—POS 
Dora.—T: E; Brown.—OB 

Dora.—Alfred Tennyson.—AE (br. sel.) —BS 4—CGd 
—CS 5—HBR 
(Sobbing— br. sel.) —SE 
Dora versus Rose.—Austin Dobson.—THP 
Dorcas and Gregory. (The Physician in Spite of Him¬ 
self, Act I., Scs. 1-4.)—Jean B. P. de Moliere. 
—WR 11 

“Dorinda’s sparkling wit and eyes.”—C: Sackville, 
Earl of Dorset.—FEP 
(Song.)—WEP 2 

Doris.—Clarence S. Harper.—CG 3 
Doris: a Pastoral.—Arthur J. Munby.—FEP—GP— 
HBP—VA 

Dormouse. ( Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 

_ —TCP 

Doron’s Description of Samela.—Rob’t Greene. See 
Menaphon. 

Doron’s Eclogue Joined with Carmela’s.—Rob’t 
Greene. See Menaphon. 

Doron’s Jig.—Rob’t Greene. See Menaphon. 

Dorothy.—Rose H. Lathrop.—AA 
Dorothy.—Arthur J. Munby. See Dorothy: A Coun¬ 
try Story. 

Dorothy: A Country Story, Sels. fr. —Arthur J. Munby. 
Beauty at the Plow.—VA 
Country Kisses.—VA 
Dorothy.—VA 
Dorothy’s Room.—VA 

Dorothy in the Garret.—J: T. Trowbridge.—BNL— 
MMR 

Dorothy Q.—-Oliver W. Holmes.—AA—BFV—EPs 
Dorothy’s Auction.—A. G. Plympton.—WR 9 
Dorothy’s Mustn’ts.—Ella W. Wilcox.—TMR 
Dorothy’s Room.—Arthur J. Munby. See Dorothy: 
A Country Story. 

Dorry Learns to Sew.—Sydney Dayre.—CPL 
Dorus to Pamela.—Philip Sidney. See Arcadia. 

Dost thou Look Back? — Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Dost thou not Care? — Christina G. Rossetti.—HDL 
Dost thou Remember?—T: Moore.—FTA 
Dot and Dollv.—Minnie W. Patterson.—CS 32—DS— 
YA 

Dot Baby <’ff Mine.— C: F. Adams.—AWH—BS 10 — 
CDV—CS 15—DRR—PTS—SDR 
Dot Dutchman in der Moon.—E. C. Thorpe.—BS 22 
“Dot Funny beetle Baby.”—C: F. Adams.—BDD— 
DFY 

(Fred Englehardt’s Baby— si. abr. and si. diff.) 
—HP 

Dot Lambs vot [or what] Mary haf Got.—C: F. Adams. 
—BDD—BS 4—CDV (si. abr.) —DFY—DJS 
—DRR—PS 

“Dot Leedle Loweeza.”—C: F. Adams.—BDD—-CH— 
CS 20 

Dot Leetle Tog under de Vagon.—Anon.—CDV 
Dot Loaf of Bread.—“Carl Pretzel.”—BDD 
Dot Long-handled Dipper.—C: F. Adams.—AWH— 
GH—SR 12 

Dot New Song.—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
“Dot Quied Lotgings.”—McDermott and Trumble.— 
DSS 

Dot Shly Leedle Raskel.—Anon.—BDD 
Dot Sunflower.—“Oofty Gooft.”—DRR 
Dot Surprise Party.—Anon.—BDD—DFY 
Dot Vinder Dime.—Anon.—WR 14 
Dot Young Viddow Clara.—“Carl Pretzel.”—BDD— 
DRR 

“Doth then the world go thus, doth all thus move?”— 
W: Drummond.—PGT 1 

Dot’s Christmas; or, the Sober Hat.—Emma D. Banks. 
—BR 

Dot’s New Leaf.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 

Dot’s Version of the Text.—Anita M. Kellogg.—WR 2 

Double Bed, The.—Anon.—CS 7 

Double Meaning.—Anon.—KNE 

Double Play. (Dial.) —C: S. Wayne.—CDs 

Double Sacrifice, The.—Arthur W. Austin.—CS 10 


Double Sunflower, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 

Double-faced.—Anon.—MD 

Doubt.—Mary B. Chapman.—FLS 

Doubt.—Marg. W. Deland.—TAS 

Doubt—Helen H. Jackson.—TAS 

Doubt.—Rob’t C. Rogers.— 

Doubt of Martyrdom, A.—Sir J: Suckling.—OB 
Doubt Resolved, The.—Anon.—FLS 
“Doubt which ye misdeem, fair love, The.”—Edmund 
Spenser. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 
Doubtful Bank Note, The. (Tab.)— Anon.—BS 15— 
TCP 

Doubting.—Gertrude M. Downey.—LLC 
Doubting Heart, A.—Adelaide A. Procter.—BNL— 
BS 14—FEP—HBP—HDL—VA 
Douglas, Sels. fr. (Trag.) —J: Home. 

Norval. (Sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 1.)—BNL 
, (Douglas' Account of Himself— shorter sel.) — 
LLC 

Scene from Douglas. (Sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 1.)— 
CS 11 

Soliloquy of Douglas—Solemnity.—AD 
Douglas.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Douglas, Douglas, Tender and True.—Dinah M. GTaik. 
—BNL—FP—PYO 
(Douglas, Tender and True.)—LLC 
(Too Late— C.) — FEP — FTA—HBP—VA—VS— 
YBF 

Douglas Gordon.—F: E: Weatherly.—VA 
Douglas, Tender and True.—Dinah M. Craik. See 
Douglas, Douglas, Tender and True. 

Douglas to the Populace of Stirling.—Walter Scott. 
See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Douglas Tragedy, The. (In Border Minstrelsy and 
Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—BB—CEL—HBP 
—OEB—WEP 1 

(Brave Earl Brand, The— diff. vers.) —PEB 1 
(Child of Elle, The— diff. vers.) —FEP 
Douglas’s Account of Himself.—J: Home. See 
Douglas. 

Dove, The.—J: Keats.—OS 1 
(Song— C. )—CGd—LC—PoR 
Dove of Dacca, The.—Rudyard Kipl.S g.—GN 
Dover Beach.—Matthew Arnold.—AVP—SN—VA— 
WEP 4 

(“Ah, Love! let us be true!”— sel.) —BIL 
(Dover Beach, Sel. fr.) —BNL—POS 
Dover Cliff.—F. Wyville Home.—VA 
Dover Cliff[s],—W: Shakespeare. See King Lear.* 
Doves at Mendon, The.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—FMR 
Doves of Venice, The.—Laurence Hutton.—AA 
Dowie Dens of for o’] Yarrow, The. (In Border 
Minstrelry.)—Anon.—FEP—HBP—PEB 2 (si. 
abr.) 

(Banks o’ Yarrow, The.)—BB—OEB 
(Dowie Houms of Yarrow, The— si. abr.)— OB 
(Versions vary si. in wording.) 

Dowie Houms of Yarrow, The.—Anon. See fore¬ 
going. 

Down a Woodland Way.—Mildred Howells.—AA 
Down around the River.—-Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Down by the Salley Gardens. (C.) —W: B. Yeats. 

(Old Song Resung, An.)—VA 
Down Grade, The.—T: R. Thompson.—TS 
Down in the Strawberry Bed.—Clinton Scollard.— 
TMR—WR 6 

Down on the Farm.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Down the Bayou.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA 
“Down the dimpled greensward dancing.”-—G: Dar- 
ley.—AE 

(Gambols of Children, The.)—BNL—HBP 
Down the Little Big Horn.—Fs. Brooks.—BAB 
Down the Road to Sally’s.—C: C. Marsh.—CG 1 
Down the Stream.—Ellen W. Carey.—SR 6 
Down the Track.—Rose H. Thorpe.—FMR 
“Down to Sleep.”—Helen H. Jackson.—GN—POS— 
YBT (sel.) 

Down with the Traffic.—Dwight Williams.—CS 17 
Down-adown-Derry.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Downfall of Poland, The.—T: Campbell. See Pleas¬ 
ures of Hope, The. 

Dow’s Flat—1856.—Fs. Bret Harte.—BNL—BS 2— 
CS 3 

Drafted.—Mrs. H. L. Bostwick.—CS 5 
Dragon, The.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Dragon Drink, The.—E. Murray.—WR 18 
Dragon of Wantley, The.—Coventry Patmore.—CGd 
—HBP 

Dragonfly, The.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Dragon-fly, The. (Sel. fr. The Two Voices.)—Alfred 
Tennyson.—SN 

Drake’s Drum.—H: Newbolt.—EDY—EHT 


95 





Drama 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Drama for Every-day Life. {Punch.) —HPE 
Drama of Exile, A, Sels. fr. —Eliz. B. Browning. 

“Live and love.”—CS 1 
Tribute to Women, A.—SAE 
Drama of Three, A.—Anon.—CS 21 
Dramatic Styles. {BlaSkwood’s Mag.) —SS 
Dramshop or the Republic, The.—Mary T. Lathrop.— 
WR 18 

“Draper in his last book tries to prove.” {New York 
Sun. )—GG 

Draw-bridge Keeper, The.—H: Abbey.—CS 3—PEO 
Drawing a Long Bow.—Ellen Pickering.—MDD 
Dread of Death, The.—(?) Belford.—SR 9 
Dream, A.—W: Allingham.—VA 
Dream, The.—Aphra Behn.—WEP 2 
Dream, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—VSG 
Dream, The.—Lord Bvron.—BNL—FEP—HBP— 
WEP 4 

Dream, A.—Mary K. Dallas.—-WR 3 
Dream, The.—J: Donne.—OB 
Dream, A.—Ellen S. Hooper.—HSS 3 
(Duty.)—TAS 

Dream, A.—Eliz. C. Kinney.—AA 
Dream, A.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FEP 
Dream Children: a Reverie. {Fr. Essays of Elia.)— 
C: Lamb.—MBL 

Dream Life, Sel. fr. (Rain in the Garret — hr. sel. fr. 
Dreams of Bovhood, I.)—Donald G. Mitchell.— 
OS 2 

Dream of a Blessed Spirit, A.—W: B. Yeats.—-TIP 
Dream of a Boy who Lived at Nine-elms, The. (C.) 
—W: B. Rands. 

(Boy’s Dream, A.)—TFS 
Dream of a Smart Boy, The.—Anon.—CS 33 
Dream of Autumn, A.—Frd’k Tennyson.—PGT 2 
Dream of Clarence.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Richard III. 

Dream of Darkness.—Lord Byron. See Darkness. 
Dream of Death—Helena, A.—Lucy W. Jennison.— 
A A 

Dream of Easter, A.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Dream of Eugene Aram, The.— T: Hood.—BNL— 
CGd — CR — EDY — FEP — HBP — PEB 3 
SR 1—VA—VSG 
(Eugene Aram— br. sel.) —SE 
(Eugene Aram’s Dream.)—CS 3 
Dream of Fair Women, A. {Abr.) —Alfred Tennyson. 
—BS 19 

Dream of Flowers. A.—Titus M. Coan.—-AA 
Dream of Gerontius, The. {Sel. fr. Pt. II.)—J: H. 
N ewman.—A VP 

Dream of Home, A.—Alice Cary.—TAS 

(“I hear a dear, familiar tone”— sel.) —BIL 
Dream of Sister Agnes, The.—Anon.—DES 
Dream of Summer, A. (C.)—J: G. Whittier.—AD 
(Bright Days in Winter.)—POS 
(Hope On—hr. sel.) —PS 

Dream of the Boats, The.—Helen I. Walbridge.—CG3 
Dream of the “Fat Contributor.”—A. M. Griswold.— 
CS 6 

Dream of the Prehistoric. A.—Frd’k G. Scott.—TCV 
Dream of the Reveler, The.—C: Mackay.—SR 2—TS 
(Reveler’s Dream, The.)—WR 18 
Dream of the Spanish Admiral, The.—S. Dorman.— 
PA Pm 

Dream of the Universe, A.—Jean P. Richter.—CS 21 
Dream of the Unknown, A.—Percv B. Shelley.—PGT 1 
(Question, The—C.)—FEP—HBP—OB ' 

Dream of the World without Death, The. (The Book 
of Orm, Pt. III.)—Rob’t Buchanan.—VA 
Dream Peddler, The.—Lucy M. Blinn.—CPU—SM 
Dream Power, The.—Anon.—LLC 
Dream Rambles.—I. E. Jones.—CS 35 
Dream that Came True, The. {Sel. fr. The Dreams 
that Came True.)—Jean Ingelow.—HS 
Dream Tryst.—Fs. Thompson.—VA 
Dreamer, The. {Fr. Poems by a Seamstress.)—Anon. 
—BNL 

Dreamer, The.—Anon.—DST 
Dreamer, The.—Alice Furlong.—TIP 
Dreamer and Reaper, The.—Jas. H. Ecob.—AD 
Dreamers, The. {Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
Dreamers.—Joaquin Miller. See Ship in the Desert, 
The. 

Dreamer’s Pipe, The. ( New Orleans Times-Democrat.) 
—PPh 

Dreamin’ o’ Home. (Dreaming of Home— C.) — 
Frank L. Stanton.—BS 21 
{SI. diff. wording fr. Poems.) 

Dreaming.—Anon.—GG 1 

Dreaming in the Trenches.—W: G. McCabe.—AA 
Dreaming of Home.—Frank L. Stanton. See Dream- 
in’ o’ Home. 


Dreaming, Sweetly Dreaming.—Alice L. Richards.— 
SL 

Dream-land.—Christina G. Rossetti.—HBP 
Dream-love.—Sr M. Peck.—FT A 
Dream-march.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Dream-pedlary.—T: L. Beddoes.—OB—VA—VS 
{Sel.) —WEP 4—YBF 
Dreams.—Anon.—HP 
Dreams.—Cecil F. Alexander.—TIP 
Dreams.—Alice Cary—TAS 
Dreams.—S. W. Norris. See Dreams for Sale. 

Dreams.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Dreams.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Dreams and Realities.—Phcebe Cary.—BNL—CS 6 
Dream’s Awakening, A.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—TAS 
Dreams for Sale.—S. W. Norris.—WR 2 
(Dreams.)—CS 37 

Dreams: On the Hunting Ground.—D. C. Brewer.— 
CG 1 

Dreams that Came True, The.—Jean Ingelow. See 
Dream that Came True, The. 

Dream-ship. The.—Miriam R. Edmondson.—CG 3 
Dream-ship, The. — Eugene Field. — BS 25 — EF — 
WR 26 

Dreme, The, Sel. fr. (Prologue.) — Sir David Lynde- 
say.—WEP 1 

Dresden Shepherdess, A.—A. B. Houghton.—CG 1 
Dressed for the Party. {Tab.) —Anon.—COS—DS— 
NPS—PP—YA—YP 

Dressed Turkey, The.—Anon.—PP—PS—YPS 
Dressing the Doll.—W T : B. Rands. See Doll Poems. 
Dreyfus.—J: H. Ingham.—EDY 
Dried-up Fountain, The.—Rob’t Leighton.—VA 
Drifted Out to Sea.—Rosa H. Thorpe.—HP 
Drifting.—H. H. Chamberlin, Jr.—CG 2 
Drifting.—H: W. Longfellow. See Seaweed. 

Drifting.—T: B. Read.—AA—AE {br. sel.) —BNL— 
BS 10 — CR — CS 1 — FEP — FTR — GN — 
GP—HBP—PYO—SA—SF-—TAV 
Drifting Away.—Barton Gray.—FLS 
Drifting Petal, A.—Mary McN. Fenollosa.—AA 
Drill of the Little Patriots.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
DM 

Drimin Donn Dilis.—J: Walsh.—TIP 
Drink! Drink! Drink!—Louise S. Upham.—CS 9 
Drink to me only with thine Eyes. (The Forest, IX.) 
—Philostratus (tr. by Ben Jonson).—BNL 
(Song:—To Celia— C.) —ELP—WEP 2 
(To Celia.)—EPs—ES—FEP—FTA—HBP—OB— 
OEL—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 
Drink To-day.—J: Fletcher. See Bloody Brother, The. 
Drinking. (C.—Anacreontiques, II.)—Anacreon (tr. 
by Abraham Cowley).— FEP — HBP—OB — 
WEP 2 

(‘‘Thirstv earth drinks up the rain, The”— si. abr.) 
—LC 

Drinking a Farm.—H. L. Hastings.—PP—PS—SR 4 
—YPS 

Drinking a Tear.—Anon.—SR 4 
Drinking Song.—Anon.—CG 1 
Drinking Song, A.—H: Carey.—OB 
Drinking Song.—B. A. Gould, Jr.—CG 2 
Drinking Song, A.—Bryan W. Procter.—VS 
Drinking-house over the Way, The.—M. L. Nutting. 
—CS 33 

Drink’s Doings.—Anon.—TS 
Drive On! Drive On!—W: M. Thayer.—CS 28 
Drive the Nail Aright.—Anon.-—SM 
(Persevere.)—DLF 

Driving a Hen. ( Mobile Register.) —SR 4 
Driving Home the Cows.—Kate P. Osgood.—AA— 
AWB — ASL — BNL — CS 1 — FEP — HP— 
LLC—PAPm—TAV—TMD 
Driving the Cow. {Burlington Hawk eye.) —SR 3 
Drones of the Community, The.—Percy B. Shelley. 
See Queer) Mab. 

Drooping-willow, The.—Letitia E. Landon.—HSS 1 
Drop, Drop, Slow Tears.—Phineas Fletcher.—BNL— 
FEP—YBF 
(Hymn, A.)—HBP 
(Hymn, An—C.)—ELP 
(Litany, A.)—OB 

Drop of Dew, A.—Andrew Marvell.—BNL—EPs— 
HBP—POS {sel.) —WEP 2 
Drop of Ink, A.—Jos. E. Whitney.—AA 
Drop of Water, The.—Harrv Stackpoole.—BS 19— 
TMR 

Drops.—Peter Robertson.—DR 
Drops of Honey.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Drowned Lovers, The.—Anon.—EPs {si. abr.) — 
PEB 2 {abr.) 

(Willie and May Margaret.)—BB 
{Three diff. vers, of same ballad.) 


96 




TITLE INDEX 


Dutchman’s 


Drowned Mariner, The.—Eliz. O. Smith.—AA 
Drowne’s Wooden Image. (Sel. fr. Mosses from an 
Old Manse.)—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—APr 
Drowning Singer, The. ( W. music.) —Marianne Farn- 
ingham.—PR 
(Abr.)—NPS—YP 

(Last Hymn, The — no music.) —BS 5—CS 14— 
FTR—SR 5 

Drug Clerk’s Trials, A.—Anon.—-WR 7 
Druid, The.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 
Druid Song of Cathvah, The.—J: Todhunter.—TIP 
Drum, The.—Anon.—HVD 
Drum, The.—Anon.—SE 
Drum, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Drum, A.—Stanley Waterloo.—CS 30 
Drum-call in 1861, The. — Elbridge J. Cutler. — 
MMR ( cond.) 

(Rising of the People.)—WR 10 
Drumhead Court-martial, The.—Anon.—CS 32 
Drummer Boy, The.—Anon.—CS 4—HSS 1—LLC— 
PR—PS—TMD 

Drummer Boy, The.—Anon.-—CS 32 
Drummer Boy, A.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Drummer Boy of Kent, The.—Anon.—WR 6 
Drummer Boy of Mission Ridge, The.—Kate B. Sher¬ 
wood.—BS 14—WR 4 

Drummer Boy’s burial. The. ( Harper's Magazine.) — 
BNL—DDR—tVRD 

Drummer of Company C, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 
CS 33 

Drummer’s Bride, The.—Anon.—CS 8 
Drunkard, The. ( Real Life.) —SR 1 
Drunkard, The.—J. O. Rockwell.—LLC 
Drunkard, The.—Jerome Taylor.—SO 
Drunkard and His “Wife, The.—Jean de la Fontaine. 
—BC 

Drunkard’s Daughter, The.—Eugene J. Hall.—BS 18 
Drunkard’s Death, The.—C: Dickens. See Sketches 
by Boz. 

Drunkard’s Death, The.—I. E. Jones.—CS 17 
Drunkard’s Dream, The.—Anon.—WR 18 
Drunkard’s Dream, The.—C: W. Denison.—CS 11 
Drunkard’s Dream, The.—Fs. S. Smith.—CS 10 
Drunkard’s Home, The. (Tab.)—Anon.—BS 12— 
TCP 

Drunkard’s Home, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.— 
TDT 

Drunkards not all Brutes.—J: B. Gough.—CS 4—KNE 
Drunkard’s Repentance, A. (Arr. fr. Timothy S. 
Arthur’s Ten Nights in a Bar-room, Night 
the Third: Morgan’s Child.)—W: W. Pratt. 
—WR 18 

Drunkard’s “Ten Commandments,” The.—Anon.— 
CS 15 


Drunkard’s Thirst, The.—Anon.—CS 25 
Drunkard’s Wife, The.—Elihu Burritt.—CS 15 
Drunkard’s Wife, The.—Ruth Cooper.—CS 25 
Drunken Engineer, The. (Occident.) —CS 36 
Drunken Soliloquy in a Coal Cellar, A.—Alf Burnett. 
—CS 2 

Drunkenness.—T: (?) Randolph.—KNE 
Drury’s Dirge.—Horace Smith.—HPE 
Dry be that Tear.—R: B. Sheridan.—TIP 
Dry Experiment, A.—J: Neal.—MHR 
Dryad Song.—Marg. Fuller.—AA 
Dryads, The.—Leigh Hunt.-—PHS 
Dryburgh Abbey.—C: Swain.—FEP 

(Tribute to Sir Walter Scott, A— sel.) —BS 11 
Dryden.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 

Du Bist wie Eine Blume. (Fr. Pictures of Travel, 49 
— tr.) —Heinrich Heine.—FT A 
Duality.—Arthur S. Hardy.—AA 
Dubious “Old Kriss,” A.—Jas. W. Riley.—B.IC 
Duchess May.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Rhyme of the 
Duchess May. 

Duchess of Malfi.The, Sel. fr. (“ Hark, now everything 
is still”—br. sel. fr. Act IV., Sc. 2.)—J: W ebster. 


_ 

(Shrouding of the Duchess of Malfi, The.)—OB 
Duchesse Blanche. (Sel. fr. The Dethe of Blaunche— 
mod.) —Geoffrey Chaucer.—EPs 
Ducks, The.—Anon.—CPL 

Dude, The. (Acting tab.) —Anon.—BS 12—TCP 

Dude, A.—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 32 

Duel, The.—Eugene Field.—D.TS—EF—LS 

Duel, The—T: Hood—EA—WRD 

Duel, The.—R: B. Sheridan. See Rivals, The. 

Duel between Mr. Shott and Mr. Nott, The. ( Har¬ 
per’s Weekly .)—CH 
(Mysterious Duel, A.)—CS 20—SR 5 
(Wonderful Duel, A — si. abr.) —FS 
Duel on a High Tower, A.—Anon.—CS 32 DS 


Dueling.—W: Cowper. See Conversation. 

Duelist’s Honor, The.—J: England.—CS 5—SS 
Duelist’s Victory, The.—G: T. Lanergan.—BS 12 
Duenna, The, Sel. fr. (Song: “Had I a heart for 
sorrow framed”—Air (C.) fr. Act II., Sc. I.)— 
R: B. Sheridan.—TIP 
Duet, A.—T. S. Moore.—OB 
Duet, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—PPh 
Duke of Gloster, The.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Richard III. 

Duke of Gordon’s Daughter, The.—Anon.—BB 
Duke of Wellington, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. 
Dukite Snake; an Australian Bushman’s Storv, The.— 
J: B. O’Reilly.—BS 6—CS 16—FR—SA 
Dule’s i’ this Bonnet o’ Mine, The.-—Edwin Waugh.— 
BNL—FEP—HBP—VA 
Duluth.—Proctor Knott.—CS 34 
Dum Vivimus Yigilamus.—C: H. Webb.—AA 
Dumb Child, The.—Anon.—CS 13—FEP 
Dumb Savior, The.—Mary E. Bryan.—BS 19 
Dumb Soldier, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—BFY— 
CGV—HSS 2 

Dumb Wife, The.-—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Dumb-bell Drill.—A. E. Hurst.—ID 
Dumb-bell Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Dumb-waiter, The.—F: S. Cozzens.—CS 7—MHR 
Dumpsy-Frumpsy.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Dumpy Ducky.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Duncan Grav.—Rob’t Bums.—FEP—PGT 1—WEP 3 
—YBF 

(Duncan Gray Cam’ here to Woo.)—BNL 
Duncan Gray Cam’ here to Woo.—Rob’t Bums. See 
foregoing. 

Dunciad, The, Sels. fr. —Alex. Pope. 

(Description of Dulness, The— sel. fr. Bk. I.)—* 
ESs 

(Dunciad, The— sels. fr. Bk. IV.)—BNL (br. sel.) 
—WEP 3 (2) 

Dunderburg Jenkins’s “Forty-graf ” Album.—G: Kyle. 
—WR 3 

Dundreary in the Country.—Anon.—CS 15—SE (sel.) 

(Lord Dundreary in the Country— sel.) —BS 13 
Duomo, The.—Anon.—OS 2 
During Music.—Arthur Symons.—VA 
During the Quarrel.—Anon.—CG 1 
Dusky Philosophy, Sel. fr. (I. A Story of Seven 
Devils— C.) —Frank R. Stockton. 

(Uncle Peter’s Masterly Argument — cond.) — 
WR 15 

Dust, The.—Gertrude Hall.—AA 

Dust.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 

Dust to Dust.—G: Croly. See Dirge, A. 

Dusty Miller, The. (C.) —Robt. Bums. 

(Hey, the Dusty Miller— also C.) —LC 
Dutch Advertisement.-—Anon.-—DCR—DRR 
Dutch Flirtation: Handkerchief Drill.—Anon.—WDM 
Dutch Governor, The.—Washington Irving. See 

Knickerbocker History of New York, The. 
Dutch Lullabv [,A],—Eugene Field.—ASL—BNL— 
BVC—DCP—DR—NV 

(Wynken, Blynken and Nod— C.) —AA—EF— 
GMS—HBR—PoR—WTD 
Dutch Lullaby.—Howard A. Plummer.—CG 3 
Dutch Oration on Women, A.—Gus Williams—DSS 
Dutch Picture, A.—H: W. Longfellow.—BVC—LH 
Dutch Recruiting Officer, A.—Anon—BDD 
Dutch Security.—Anon.—CDV—DCR—SDR 
Dutch Sermon, A.—Anon.—BDD—DRR 
Dutchman and the Raven, The.—Anon.—BDD— 
DCR 

Dutchman and the Yankee, The.—Anon—BDD— 
DFY 

Dutchman in England, A.—Alex. M. Bell.—MHR 
Dutchman in the Police Court. The.—Anon.—DRR 

(Yacob’s Losing Deal.)—BDD 
Dutchman who Gave Mrs. Scudder the Small-pox, 
The.—Anon.—BeR—DFY 

(Dutchman’s Shmall Pox, The.)—DDR 
Dutchman’s Answer, A.—Anon.—DFY—SDR 
Dutchman’s Cheese, The.—Anon.—DS 
Dutchman’s Dog Story. A.—.T: T. Brown.—AWH 
Dutchman’s Dollv Varden, The [or A].—Anon.—BDD 
—BeR 

Dutchman’s Equal Rights, The.—Julia B. Nelson.— 
SR 13 

Dutchman’s Experience, The.—Anon.—BDD—DE 
Dutchman’s Family, The.—C: F. Adams.—DRR 

(Mine Vamily— si. diff. wording.) —BS 9—CS 21 
Dutchman’s Serenade, The.—Anon.—BDD—CD\ — 
CS 19—SDR 

(Abr. )—BS 3—CRR 


97 




Dutchman’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dutchman’s Shmall Pox, The.—Anon. See Dutch¬ 
man who Gave Mrs. Scudder the Small-pox, 
The. 

Dutchman’s Snake, The.—Anon.—BDD—CS 11—CRR 
—DFY 

Dutchman’s Speech at an Institute, A.—Anon.—BS 2 
Dutchman’s Telephone, The. ( Detroit Free Press .)— 
BDD—CS 19 

Dutchman’s Testimony in a Steamboat Case, A.— 
Anon.—BDD—CD—CDV—DFY—SDR 
Dutie to Depart.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

Duties of American Citizens.—Daniel Webster. See 
Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, The. 
Duties of Christianity, The.—Louis Kossuth.—MRS 
Duties of Massachusetts at the Present Crisis: Foun¬ 
dation of the Republican Party, Sel. fr. 
(Judicial Tribunals.)—C: Sumner.—CS 3 
Duties of the Scholar. (Sel. fr. Sweetness and Light.) 

—Matthew Arnold.—OS 3 
Dutifuls, The.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Duty. (Sel. fr. Voluntaries, III.)—Ralph W. Emer¬ 
son—GN—OS 1 

(“So nigh is grandeur to our dust.”)—HSS 3 
Duty—Ellen S. Hooper.—BNL—TAS 
(Dream, A.)—HSS 3 

Duty. (Abr. )—Friedrich Schiller.—CS 27 
(Fame— diff. abr. )—GP 
Duty.—C. M. Sheldon.—SSS 
Duty.—W: Wordsworth. See Ode to Duty. 

Duty and Fame.—Alex. Smith.—HDL 
Duty and Inclination.—Anon.—YBT 
Duty of America to Greece.—H: Clay. See On the . 
Greek Revolution. 

Duty of Labor, The.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Duty of Literary Men to America.—T- S. Grimke.— 
PFP 

(Duty of Literary Men to their Country.)—HNS 
(Our Country— sel.) —CP—FAS—OS 2 
Duty of Literary Men to their Country.—T: S. Grimke. 
See foregoing. 

Duty of the American Scholar.—G: W. Curtis.—CS 6 
(Abr.)— KNE—SO 

Duty of the Enlightened Classes.—J: D. Long.—FD 1 
Duty of the Hour, The. (Sel. fr. a speech delivered 
before the National Association of Manufac¬ 
turers, New York, Jan. 27, 1898.)—W: McKin¬ 
ley—SSD 

Duty to One’s Country. (Sel. fr. The Inflexible Cap¬ 
tive.)—Hannah More.—SS 
(Patriotism.)—TMR 

Duty to our Country.—Dan’l Webster. See Adams 
and Jefferson. 

Duty’s Reward.—Anon.—HP 
Dux’s Speech. (The Phoenix.) —CP 
Dwainie. (Song fr. The Flying Islands of the Night, 
Act I.)—Jas. W. Riley.—A A 
Dwarf. The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Dvin’ Vords of Isaac.—Anon.—BDD—BeR-—DFY— 
DRR 

Dying.—Roden Noel.—VA 
(Old, The.)—OB 

Dying Actor, The.—Edgar Fawcett.—CS15 
Dying Alchemist, The. (C.) —Nathaniel P. Willis.— 
CS 6—FP 
(Abr.) —FR—PS 

(Soliloquy of the Dying Alchemist— si. abr.) — 
WRD 

Dying Bard, The.—Walter Scott.—EPs 
Dying Boy, The.—Anon.—CS 5 
Dying Boy, The.—J: B. Gough.—DS—NPS—YP 
(Poor Little Boy’s Hymn, The.)—CS 19 
Dying Brigand, The.—Anon.—CS 5 
Dying Captain. The.—Anon.—SR 7 

(After the Battle.)—CS 9—DS—PRR 
Dying Chief, The.— W: Sawyer.—CS 35 
Dying Child, The.—Dora Greenwell.—PC 
Dying Child, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 24 
Dying Christian, The.—Alex. Pope. See following. 
Dying Christian to his Soul. The. (C.) —Alex. Pope.— 
BNL — CEL — CR — FEP — GP — HBP — 
OB — OM — SAE (seh)— SO — SS — WR 26 
—YBF 

(Dying Christian, The.)—BS 1—CS 14 
Dying Day, The:—Mary A. Lathbury.—TAS 
Dying Fireman, The.—Walt Whitman. See Song of 
Myself. 

Dying Girl. The.—R: D. Williams.—TIP 
Dying Girl to her Lover, The. (Last Words — C.) — 
Winthrop M. Praed.—A VP 

Dying Gladiator, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 


Dying Hymn. (C .)—Alice Cary.— BNL — CS 8 — 
GP—HDL—TAS 
(Her Last Verses.)—FEP 
Dying in Harness.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AE—TAV 
Dying Kid, The.—W: Shenstone.—WEP 3 
Dying King, The. (Sel.) —Alex. Smith.—OS 2 
Dying Lover, The.—R. H. Stoddard.—ASL 
Dying Man in his Garden, The.—G: Sewell.—FEP 
Dying Patriot’s Request, The.—C. M. Brosnan.— 
SR 8 

Dying Saviour, The.—Paul Gerhardt.—BNL 
Dying Soldier, The.—R: Cox.—HR 
Dying Speech of Marino Faliero.—Lord Byron. See 
Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Dying Street Arab, The.—Matthias Barr.—CS 8 
Dying Trumpeter, The.—Julius Mosen.—BLP 
Dying Words of Stonewall Jackson, The.—Sidney 
Lanier.—EDY 

Dynamite Plot, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 32 
Dynamiter’s Daughter, The.-—E. S. Jackson.—CS 29 
NPS—YP 

Dynmouth Fisherman, The.—Anon.—MYF 


E 


E. B. B. (C .)—James Thomson.—AVP 
(To E. B. B.)—EDY 

E Pluribus Unum.—G: W. Cutter.—CS 3—KNE— 
PPSr 

(Sel.) —BLP—DFR—LLC 

Each and All.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—BNL— 
FEP—FP—GMS—HBP—LLC—OS 3—PHS 
—SO 

Each and All.—Minot J. (?) Savage.—LLC 
Each and All. W: Shakespeare. See Measure for 
Measure. 

‘‘Each Day and Everv Day.”—Anon.—HSS 2 
‘‘Each Moment Holy Is.”—R: W. Gilder—TAS 
Each Sorrowful Mourner.—Aurelius Prudentius (tr. 

by J: M. Neale).—HBP 
Eagle, The.—G: W. Doane.—TFS (sel.) 

(What is that. Mother?)-—WRD 
Eagle, The. A Fragment.—Alfred Tennvson.-—BNL 
—CS 14—EPs—GN—OS 1—SN—SO 
Eagle and the Spider, The.—Ivan A. Kriloff.—MYF 
Eagle of Corinth, The. (Cond .)—H : H. Brownell.—BAB 
Eagle of the Blue, The.—Herman Melville.—A A 
Eagle Screams, The.—Anon.—CS 31 
Eagles. (Sel. fr. Songs of the Voices of Birds— Intro- 
dvction .)—Jean Ingelow.—BVC 
Eagle’s Fall, The.—C. G. Whiting.—AA 
Eagle’s Flight, An.—H. Bedinger.—BS 21 
Eagle’s Nest, The, Sel. fr. (Nests—Lecture VIII., Sec. 

205, si. abr.) —J.'Ruskin.—OS 1 
Eagle’s Rock, The.—Anon.—BS 3—CS 8—FMR (abr.) 
Eagle’s Song, The.—R: Mansfield.—MRS (si. abr.) — 
PA Pm 

Ear of Corn. The. (Tr. by) Blanche W. Bellamy and 
Maud W. Goodwin.—OS 1 
Earine.—Ben Jonson. See Sad Shepherd, The. 

Earl March Look’d on his Dying Child. (Song — C.) — 
T: Campbell.—PGT 1—YBF 
Earl Mar’s Daughter.—Anon. See Earl of Mar’s 
Daughter, The. 

Earl Mertoun’s Song.—Rob’t Browning. See Blot in 
the ’Scutcheon, A. 

Earl Norman and John Truman.—C: Mackay.—VA 
Earl o’ Quarterdeck, The. (C.) —G: Macdonald.— 

BNL—EPs—HBP—HSS 2 
(Yerl o’ Waterydeck, The— diff. vers.) —PEB 3 
Earl of Marlborough. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Earl of Mar’s Daughter, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
(Earl Mar’s Daughter— si. abr.) —BB—GN 
(Lang, varies somewhat in diff. versions.) 

Earl of Richmond to his Army, The.—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See King Richard III. 

Earl of Strafford’s Defence, The, Sel. fr. —T: Went¬ 
worth, Earl of Strafford.—SS 
(Strafford’s Defence against the Charge of High 
Treason— vtly. same.) —OS 3 
Earl of Warwick, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Earl Richard.—Anon.—PEB 1 

Earl Richard. (Diff. ballad.) — Anon.— See Young 
Redin. ' 

Earl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve.—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.— 
BS 23 (si. abr.) 

(Jarl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve.)—WR 8 


98 




TITLE INDEX 


Ecclesiastical 


Earliest Recollection. (Terrible Iniant, A — C.) — 
Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—DCP 
Earliest Spring.—W: D. Howells.—OB 
(In Earliest Spring—C.)—AA 
Early Autumn.—Dart Fairthorne.—PEO 
Early Bird, The.—Anon.—DCR 
Early Bird, The. (C.) —G: Macdonald. 

(Anxiety.)—NV 

Early Bluebird, An.—Maurice Thompson.—AA 
Early Christmas Morning.—Mary B. Peck.—BS 7—HS 
Early Death. (I-rags. fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Early Death. ( Sel. fr. Reply.)—Hartley Coleridge.—OB 
Early Fly, The.—Anon.—DSS 

Early Friendship.—Aubrey De Vere.—BNL—HBP 
Early Goldenrod.—Abbie F. Judd.—POS 
Early Love.—S: Daniel. See Hymen’s Triumph. 
Early Love of the Country and of Poetry.—W: Cow- 
per. See Task, The. 

Early Miss Crocus.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—PS— 
TT 

Early News.—Anna M. Pratt.—AA 
Early Primrose. The.—H: Kirke White.—BNL 
(To an Early Primrose.)—FEP 
Early Rising.—J: G. Saxe—AWH—CS 4—HBR— 
KNE—SO—SR 13—THP 
Early Spring.—Alfred Tennyson.—SN 
Early Spring.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Early Start, An.—Helen Chaffee.—BS 20 
Early Work.—Sarah K. Bolton.—TAS 
Earnest Cry. An.—Mrs. F. D. Gage.—TS 
Earnest Suit to his Unkind Mistress not to Forsake 
Him, An. (C.)—Sir T: Wyatt.—BNL—ELP 
(Appeal, The.)—OB 
(Lover’s Appeal, The.)—CEL—PGT 1 
Earnest Views of Life. (Ad.) —Austin Phelps.—BS 12 
Earning a Dinner.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Earth, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA 
Earth. (Br. sel. fr. The Bashful Earthquake.)— 
Oliver Herford—THP 
(Proem.)—AA 
Earth.—W: C. Roscoe.—VA 
Earth and Man, The.—Stopford A. Brooke.—TIP 
“Earth has not anything to show more fair.”—W: 
Wordsworth.—HBR 

(Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 
1802—C.)—WEP 4 
(Morning in London.)—HBP—OS 3 
(Sonnet Composed upon Westminster Bridge.)— 
BNL—FEP—MBL 

(Upon Westminster Bridge [.Sept. 3,1802].)—OB— 
PGT 1—YBF 

(Westminster Bridge.)—LLC—WR 1 
Earth Spirit, The.—W: E. Channing.—EPs 
Earth to Earth.—Michael Field.—VA 
“Earth with its bright and glorious things, The.” 

—H: N. Oxenham.—A VP 
Earthly Paradise, The, Sels. fr. —W: Morris 

Antiphony. (Song fr. August: Ogier the Dane.)— 
VA 

Atalanta’s Race. (March: title C .)—HBP 
(Atalanta Conquered—sel.)—BNL 
(Atalanta’s Defeat.)—VA 
(Atalanta’s Victory— sel.) —VA 

(Atalanta Victorious— shorter sel.) —BNL 
Christmas Carol. (Song fr. September: Land East 
of the Sun and West of the Moon.)—CEL 
(Minstrels and Maids.)—GN 
Earthly Paradise, The. (Apology, An— C.) —A VP 
(Singer’s Prelude, The.)—VA 
King’s Visit, The. (Br. sel. fr. March: The Man 
Bom to be King.)—VA 

Land across the Sea, A. (Br. sel. fr. July: The 
Watching of the Falcon.)—VA 
March. (Br. sel. fr. March.)—BNL 
Song: To Psyche. (Song fr. May: Story of 
Cupid and Psyche.)—VA 

Writing on the Image, The. (May— title C. — cond.) 
WR 6 

Earthquake in Egypt, The.—Anon.—CD 
Earthquake Prayer, The. (C.) —Will Carleton. 

(Prayer. The.)—CD 
Earth’s Angels.—Anon.—CS 24 
Earth’s Axis, The.—AnOn.—DSS 
Earth’s Burdens.—Ernest C: Jones.—VA 
Earth’s First Mercy, The. J: Ruskin. See Modern 
Painters. 

Earth’s Noblemen.—G: S. Bungay.—CS 20 
(Noblest Men, The— si. diff. vers.) —HSS 3 
Earth’s Tribute.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 
East.—Anon.—CP 

East and the West One, The.—Lyman Beecher.—BS 2 
East Wind, The.—H: S. Washburn.—POS 


Easter.—G: Herbert.—EPs (sel.) —HBP 
(Sel.—si. diff.)— OB 
Easter.—Frank D. Sherman.—TAS 
Easter.—Edmund Spenser. See Amoretti and Epitha- 
lamion. 

Easter.—David Swing.—FS 

Easter.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 

Easter Altar-cloth, The.—Julia H. Thayer.—HS 

Easter Angels.—Phillips Brooks.—FHS 

Easter Bells.—Ninette M. Lowater.—DFR 

Easter Buds.—Wood L. Wilson.—TL 

Easter Dawn.—Lucy Larcom.—TAS 

Easter Day. (2 poems.)—Arthur H. Clough.—AVP 

Easter Drill.—Alice C. Fuller.—ID 

Easter Eve at Kerak-Moab.—Clinton Scollard.—BS 23 

Easter Even.—Christina G. Rossetti.—EDY 

Easter Exercises.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—SSE 

Easter Flowers.—Anon.—FHS 

Easter Flowers.—Clara J. Denton—DFR—LL 

Easter Greeting.—Anon.—TFS 

(‘ ‘May the glad dawn”— abr .)—FHS 
Easter Hymn, An.—T: Blackburn.—HBP—OS 3 
Easter Hymn. — C: Wesley. — CEL — FHS (sel.) — 
WEP 3 

(Lord is Risen, The.)—FEP 
Easter in a Hospital Bed.—Nym Crinkle.—DES 
Easter Island.—Frd’k G. Scott.—TCV 
Easter Joy.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Easter Lilies.—G: W. Crofts.—FHS 
Easter Lilies.—Emily H. Miller.—TFS 
Easter Lily,An.—A. W. Hawks.—CS 34 
Easter Memory, An.—W: C. Roberts.—TCV 
Easter Morn.—R. W. Wright.—TCV 
Easter Morning. (C.)—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
(Reverie in Church.)—BS 3—CS 10—NPS—YP 
Easter Morning.—H: W. Beecher.—BS 17 
Easter Morning.—Fs. L. Mace.—BS 6 
Easter Morning.—Louise C. Moulton.—DFR 
(For Easter Morning.)—TAS 
Easter Morning.—Edmund Spenser. See Amoretti 
and Epithalamion. 

Easter Music.—Marg. W. Deland.—TAS 
Easter Phantasy, An.—W. T. McIntyre.—CG 3 
Easter Poem, An.—Marion Riche.—CS 28 
“Easter praise may falter, The.”—Mary L. Dickinson. 
—FHS 

Easter Service, An.—Clara J. Denton.—SSE 
Easter Song, An.—Susan Coolidge.—SR 7 
Easter Song, An.—T. W. Handford.—TFS 
Easter Song, The.—Alice C. Steele.—YBT 
Easter with Parepa, An.—Myra S. Delano.—BS 22 
Easter Wreath, The.—Clara J. Denton.—SSE 
Eastern Apologue, An.—Anon.—WCLG 2 
Eastern Legend, An.—Grace D. Goodwin.—WR 17— 
YBT 

Eastertide. (Splendor of Lilies, The— C.) —Marg. E. 
Sangster.—SR 13 

Easter-tide Deliverance, An. A.D. 430.—Maria H. 

Bulfinch.—BS 12—SR 4 
Easy Charade.—Anon.—EuE 
Easy lessons.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Easy Life, The. (Parameticall, or Advisive Verse, 
to his Friend, Mr. John A. Wicks— C.) —Robt. 
Herrick.—CEL 

“Easy thing, O Power Divine, An.”—T: W. Higgin- 
son. See Things I Miss, The. 

Easy Wife, The.—Anon.—CS 23 

Eating Song. (Punch.) —HPE 

Eavesdropner, The.—Bliss Carman.—ASL 

Ebb and Flow.—G: W. Curtis.—AA—ASL 

Ebenezer on a Bust.—Anon.—DFY 

Ebo.—A. C. Gordon.—WR 7 

Ecce in Deserto.—H: A. Beers.—AA 

Ecclesiastes, Sel fr. (Remember now thv Creator—Ch. 

XII.)— Bible. —BS 4—LLC (1-7.) 

Ecclesiastes.—G: H. Clarke.—TCV 
Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Sels. fr. —W: Wordsworth. 
Alfred and his Descendants. (Pt. I., Sons. XXVI. 
and XXVII.)—EHT 
(Alfred—XXVI.)—EDY 
Laud. (Pt. II., Son. XLV.)—EDY 
Pilgrim Fathers. The. (Pt. III., Son. XIII. — 
Aspects of Christianity in America, I.)—EDY 
—EHT 

Walton’s Book of Lives. (Pt. III.. Son. V.)—BNL 
Wicliffe. (C—Pt. II., Son. XVII.)—EDY 
(John Wickliffe— sel.) —BNL 
William the Third. (Pt. III., S >n. IX.)—EDY 
Within King’s College Chapel. Cambridge. (Pt. II., 
Son. XLIII.—Inside of King’s College Chapel 
—C.)—PGT 1 

(Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Sel. fr.) — BNL (br. sel.) 


99 




Ecclesi asticism 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Ecclesiasticism. {Frags, jr. various authors.) —BNL 
Echo, The.—Anon.—CPL 
Echo.—L. V. Hall.—AD 
Echo.—-J: Milton. See Comus. 

Echo. (C.)—T: Moore.—TIP—WEP4 
(Echoes.)—PGT 1 

Echo.—-Christina G. Rossetti.—FTA—PGT 2 
Echo.—-J: G. Saxe. See Ego et Echo. 

Echo, An. {Riddle .)—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
Echo and Narcissus. {SI. abr.) —T: Bulfinch.—SPE 
Echo and Silence.—Sir S: E. Brydges.—BNL—FEP— 
GP 

Echo and the Ferry. — Jean Ingelow. — BS 11 — 
CR {si. abr .)—-EA {abr. and arr.) —PR—WR 1 
Echo and the Lover.—Anon.—BNL 
Echo Club, The, Sels. fr .—Bayard Taylor. 

Ballad of Hiram Hover, The.—AWH 
Ode on a Jar of Pickles.)—AWH 
Palabras Grandiosas.—AWH—THP 
Echo Dell.—Mrs. H. M. Miller.—PR 
Echo from the 17th, An.—Frank T. Easton.—AWH— 
CG 2 

Echo from Willowwood, An.—Christina G. Rossetti.— 
VA 

Echoes.—T: Moore. See Echo. 

Echoes from Bethlehem.—Anon.—HS 
Echoes from the Sabine Farm, Sels. jr .—Eugene 
Field.—AA 

To Leuconoe (2 poems).—AA 
To the Fountain of Bandusia.—AA 
Echoing Green, The. {In Songs of Innocence.)—W: 
Blake.—LC 

Echo’s Lament for [or of) Narcissus.—Ben Jonson. 

See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Echo’s Secret. (Trinity Tablet .)—CG 1 
Eclipse, The.—J. S. Cutler.—CG 1 
Eclipse of Faith, The.—Theodore D. Woolsey.—AA 
Eclipse of the Sun, The. {Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Eclogue, December 26, 1613, Sels. fr. —J: Donne. 

Love. {Br. sel. fr. St. 9.)—EPs 
Recluse Hermit, The. {Br. sel. fr. Introd .)—EPs 
Eclogue the First. {Fr. Rowley Poems.)—T: Chat- 
terton.—WEP 3 

Eclogue the Third. {Fr. Rowley Poems.)—T: Chat- 
terton.—WEP 3 

Eclogues.—G: Wither. See Shepherd’s Hunting, The. 
Economical Boomerang, An.—W. H. Neall.—CS 32 
Economy.—J: Wolcott.—HPE—SCS {si. abr.) 

(Overdone Economy.)—CS 34 {abr.) 

Economy is Wealth.—Anon.—FND 
Ecstasy, The.—J: Donne.—EPs—OB {sel.) 

Ecstacy.—Eric Mackay.—VA 

Eddie Visits the Barber.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
COS—PP 

Edelweiss.—Mary L. Dickinson.—BS 23—PFP 
Eden. {Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Edgar W. Nye.—Marion F. Ham.—EDY 
Edgeworth. {Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Edifying Reflections of a Tobacco-smoker.—Anon.— 
PPh 

Edinburgh after Flodden. {In Lays of the Scottish 
Cavaliers.)—W: E. Aytoun.—FEP— HB— 
MR 

{Abr .)—CS 12—CSS—EHT 
( Sel .)—EDY—FR {shorter.) 

(James IV. at Flodden— sel .)—A VP 
Edith.—W: E. Channing.—AA 

Edith, Br. sel. fr. (“ O love and death.”) — Felicia D. 
Hemans.—BIL 

Edith’s Complaints.—Anon.—WR 17 
Edith’s Secret.—J. K. Ludlum.—LPS—PP 
Editor’s G-iests, The, Sel. fr. (Makin’ an Editor outen 
o’ him.)—Will Carleton.—CS 13 
Editor’s Trials, An.-—Anon.—DCD 
Editor’s Wooing, The.—Rob’t H. Newell.—THP 
Edmund Burke.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Retaliation. 
Edmund Burke.—Emma M. Prindle.—SR 7 
Edmund Burke and his Son’s Horse.—Anon.—KNE 
Edmund Burke’s Attack on Warren Hastings.—J • 
Wolcott,—HPE 

Edmund Spenser. {Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Edmund Spenser.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Edmund’s Song.—W T alter Scott. See Rokeby. 

Edna’s Birthday.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.'—COS— 
PP 

Edom o’ Gordon. (C.— in Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—OB 

{SI. abr.) —BB—WEP 1 
(Adam o’ Gordon— abr .)—BFV 
(Captain Car— diff. vers.) —PEB 1 


Educate the Masses.— Wendell Phillips. See Scholar 
in a Republic, The. 

Educating to a Purpose.—T: P. Montfort.—GH 
Education.—Schuyler Colfax.—CS 7 
Education.—T: Huxley. See Liberal Education and 
where to Find It, A. 

Education. (2 diff. sels.) —Horace Mann.—SAE— 
SSD 

Education.-—J: Ruskin. See Stones of Venice, The. 
Education, Sel. fr. (Poetry of Science, The — fr. What 
Knowledge is of most Worth?) — Herbert 
Spencer.—CS 26 

Education as Related to Civic Prosperity.—Anon.— 
CP 

Education of Nature, The.—W- Wordsworth.—PGT 1 
(Lucv.) — BFV — GN — HBP (II.) — IR (II.) — 
OB (IV.)—PHS—WEP 4 (II.) 

{Sel.) —EPs—OS 3 

(Three Years She Grew.)—BNL—FEP—GP— 
MBL 

(“ Three vears she grew in sun and shower.”)— 
SN 

Educational Courtship. ( Somerville Journal.) —CS 25 
—DS 

(What he Called it.)—GH 
Educational Power.-—Anon.—SE 

Edward, Edward. {In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.— 
BB—OB—PEB 1 
( Antique style.)- —FEP—HBP 
(Edward of the Bloody Brand— si. diff. vers, by Sir 
David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes.)—CEL 
{Sometimes regarded as part of The Twa Brothers.) 
Edward Gray.—Alfred Tennyson.—CR—CSS 
Edward of the Bloody Brand.—Sir David Dalrymple, 
Lord Hailes. See Edward, Edward. 

Edward Rowland Sill.—Anon.—CP 
Edward the Second, Sels. fr. —Christopher Marlowe. 
Edward II. {Sel. fr. Act I., Sc. 2; Sc. 4— 
cond.) —W T R 11 

King Edward the Second. (I., 1— abr.-, V., 1— 
3, abr. )—EHT 

Edward VI.-—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
Edwin and Angelina. — Oliver Goldsmith. See Vicar 
of Wakefield, The. 

Edwin and Paulinus.—Anon.—BNL 
Edwin Booth.—Parke Godwin.—MRS 
Edwin the Fair, Sels. fr. —Sir H: Taylor. 

Scholar, The. {Br. sel.) —BNL 
Voice of the Wind. {Br. sel.)— POS 
(Wind in the Pines, The.)—VA 
Effect at a Distance.—Johann W. von Goethe. (Page 
and the Maid of Honour, The.)—WR 8 
Effect of American Example.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. 

See Centennial Oration, 

Effect of Example. (C.)—J: Keble. 

(Example.)—BNL—CS 7—SM—SSS {abr.) 

Effect of Intemperance, The.—Anon.—WR 25 
Effect of Oratory on a Multitude. (?) Croly.—FP 
Effective Narration, An.—Anon.—CS 37 
Effects of Crime and Grief. {Frags, fr. various 
authors.) —BNL 

Effects of Spring. J: (?) Wilsoni—AD 
Effects of War, The.—"Ceria.”—SDD 
Effie’s Reasons.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Effigy, The.—P. P. S.—CC. 2 

Effort of Memory, An. {Fr. The Jest Book.)—Anon 
—MRS 

Effusion by a Cigar Smoker.—Horace Smith.—PPh 
Egeria.—W: Winter.—TAS 

Egg a Chicken, An. {Youth’s Companion.) —LPS— 
PP—PS 

(Miracle of the Egg, The.)—CS 34 
Egg Hunting.—T. Hughes. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days. 

Eggs, The.—Tomas de Yriarte (tr. by G. H. Devereux). 
—HPE 

Eggs and Birds.—W: B. Rands.—HSS 2—PC—TFS 
Eggs and the Horses, The.—Anon.—BNL 
(Who Rules the Household?)—CS 26 
Eggs that never Hatch, The.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Ego and Echo.—J: G. Saxe. See following. 

Ego et Echo. (C.)—J: G. Saxe.—BS 13—TMR 
(Echo.)—BNL—CS 20—PTS 
(Ego and Echo.)—SA {si. abr.) —SR 1 
Egotism.—E. S. Martin.—AA 

Egyptian Debate. {Dial.) —Alf. Burnett.—HD—SD 
Egyptian Lotus, The.—Arthur W. H. Eaton.—AA — 
TCV 

Egyptian Serenade.—G: W: Curtis.—GP—HBP 
Egyptian Slippers.—Edwin Arnold.—WR 16 
Eh! What is It? {Dial.) —Anon.—KH—MPD 
Eheu Fugaces.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 


100 





TITLE INDEX 


Elizabeth 


Eidola.—S: Daniel.—ES—OEL 
(Song.)—ELP 

Eight Hours.-—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon, Sel. fr. (Joan 
Docasta— sel. ir. Ch. XVII.) — Jules Verne.— 
NP 

Eight Volunteers.—Lansing C. Bailey.—EDY—PAPm 
1898— and 1562.—Sam W. Foss.—PAPm 
Eighteenth-century Fan, An.—Raymond W. Walker. 
—CG 3 

Eileen Aroon.—-Gerald Griffin.—OB—TIP 
Eileen aRoon.—Carol O’Daly.—FEP 
Ein Deutsches Lied. {Parody on Excelsior.)—Anon— 
BDD—DFY—DllR 

Ein Traumbild.—C. W. Yeomans.—CG 1 

Ej Blot Til Lyst.—W: M. Payne.—AA 

El Camilo.—Minna Irving.—WR 2 

El Canalo.—Bayard Taylor.—WR 2 

El Capitan-General.—C: G. Leland.—AA 

El Dorado.—Grant Showerman.—CG 2 

El Vaquero.—L. H. Foote.—AA 

Elaine.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the King. 

Elam Chase’s Fiddle.—R. C. Tongue.—CS 32 

Elder Brother, The, Sel fr. (Toby Tosspot.)—G: 

Colman, the younger. —BNL—CS 15—SCS 
Elder Brother, The, Sel. fr. (Beauty Clear and Fair.)— 
J: Fletcher.—ELP—HBP—OB—OEL 
(To Angelina.)—ES 

Elder Lamb’s Donation.—Will Carleton.—AWH— 
WR 4 

Elder Mr. Weller Delivers Some Critical Sentiments 
Respecting Literary Composition, The.—C: 
Dickens. See Pickwick Papers. 

Elder Scripture, The. (Septuagesima Sunday— C.) — 
J: Keble.—HBP (sel.) 

(Who Runs May Read.)—VA 
Elder Sniffle’s Courtship.—Frances M. Whitcher.—SR 6 
Elderly Gentleman, The.—G: Canning.—NA 
Eldorado.—Edgar A. Poe.—HBR—OS 2 
Eleanor.—J. H. Boynton.—CG 1 
Eleanor of Castile.—Anon.—EDY 
Eleanore.—Alfred Tennyson.—WEP 4 
Elective Course, An.—T: B. Aldrich.—HBR 
Electra, Sel. fr. (Chariot Race, The— poet. tr. by E: Bul- 
wer-Lytton.)—Sophocles.—TMD 
( Prose (r.)-MRS 
Electra.—F. H. Williams.—AA 

Election of the Future, The. ( Detroit Free Press.) — 
BS 20 

Election Stump Speech.—Sam Sharpley.—MDD 
Electric Episode, An. (Dramatic.)— Helen Booth.— 
CS 6 

Elegiac. (C.) —Jas. G. Percival.—AA 

(It is Great for our Country to Die.)—FEP— 
HBP 

Elegiac Stanzas [Suggested by a Picture of Peele Cas¬ 
tle in a Storm—C.T—W: Wordsworth.—FEP 
(si. abr.) 

(Nature and the Poet.)—PGT 1 
(On a Picture of Peel Castle in a Storm— si. abr.) — 
HBP 

Elegy: “I have lov’d flowers that fade.” — Rob’t 
Bridges.—VA 

Elegy: “Oh, snatched away in beauty’s bloom.” (In 
Hebrew Melodies.)—Lord Byron.—PGT 1 
(Oh [wr. 0], Snatched away in Beauty’s Bloom— C.) 
—BNL—FEP—HBP—WEP 4—YBF 
Elegy', An: “Though baauty be the mark of praise.” 
—Ben Jonson.—OB 

Elegy in a Country Churchyard.—T: Gray. See 
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. 

Elegy on a Friend’s Passion for his Astrophill, An. 

( C .)—Matthew Royden. 

(Lament for Sir Philip Sidney.)—EDY 
(On Sir Philip Sidney— sel.) —EPs 
(Sir Philip Sidney— abr.) —BNL 
Elegy on Captain Matthew Henderson. (‘‘O Death 
thou tyrant fell and bloody!”— C.) —Rob’t 
Burns.—BNL (abr.) —FEP—HBP (si. abr.) 
(He’s Gane— sel.) —EPs 

Elegy on Cowley (Mr. Abraham Cowley’s Death and 
Burial amongst the Ancient Poets— C.), Sel. 
fr. —Sir J: Denham.—WEP 2 
(Abraham Cowley— br. sel.) —BNL 
Elegy on De Marsay.—Jas. K. Stephen.—A VP 
Elegy on Madam[e] Blaize.—Oliver Goldsmith. See 
Elegy on the Glory of her Sex, etc. 

Elegy on Mistress Elizabeth Drury. (Br. sel. fr. Anat¬ 
omy of the World—Second Anniversary: Of 
the Progress of the Soul.)—J: Donne.—EPs 
Elegy on Mrs. Mary Blaize.—Oliver Goldsmith. See 
Elegy on the Glory of her Sex, etc. 


Elegy on my Muse, Sel. fr. (Pleasures of Heaven, The 
—Eupheme, IX.)—Ben Jonson.—FP 
Elegy on Partridge. (A Grub Street Elegy on the 
Supposed Death of Partridge the Almanack 
Maker, 1708— C.) —Jonathan Swift.—ESs 
Elegy on Sir Philip Sidney, An.—Fulke Greville, Lord 
Brooke.—WEP 1 (abr.) 

(On Sir Philip Sidney.)—EPs 
Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog [An],—Oliver Gold¬ 
smith. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 

Elegy on the Death of Dr. Channing.—Jas. R. Lowell. 
—TAS 

Elegy on the Death of John Keats, An.—Percy B. 
Shelley. See Adonais. 

Elegy on the Death of Lady iPenelope Clifton, An, Sel. 
fr. (Lady Penelope Clifton.)—Fs. Beaumont. 
—EDY 

Elegy on the [ter. that] Glory of her Sex, Mrs. Mary 
Blaize [ wr. BlazeJ, An. (C.) —Oliver Gold¬ 

smith .—NA—PPSr—THP 
(Elegy on Madam[e] Blaize, An.)—BNL—LLC 
(Elegy on Mrs. Mary Blaize, An.)—FEP—HBP 
Elegy on Thyrza.—Lord Byron.—PGT 1 

(“And thou art dead, as young and fair”— C.) — 
WEP 4 

( Stanzas.)—FEP 

Elegy on William Cobbett.—Ebenezer Elliott.—EDY— 
VA 

Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady.—Alex. 

Pope.—FEP—OB—WEP 3 
Elegy Written in a Countrv Churchyard. (C.)—T: 
Gray.— BFV — BNL — BPB — CS 8 — EPs 
—FP — FTR (w. 1 add. st.) — GMS — GN — 
GP — HBP — LLC — MBL — OB — OS 3 — 
PGT 1—PHS—PSR—SE—WCLG 2—WEP 3 
(Elegy in a Country Churchyard.)—FEP—MRS 
Elegy, Written in a Railway Station. (Punch.) — 
HPE 

Elegy—Written in Spring. (Sel .)—Michael Bruce.— 
FP 

(Spring Pointing to God— -ptly. same sel .)—AD 
Element of Justice, The.—G: W. Curtis.—LLC 
(Ideas the Life of a People.)—CS 3 
Elements, The.—J: H: Newman.—VA 
Elements of National Wealth, The. (Sel. fr. Can the 
Country Sustain the Expense of the War and 
Pay the Debt which it Will Involve?)—Jas. G. 
Blaine— NC—PFP 

Elements of Success. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Elements of the American Government.—Dan’l Web¬ 
ster. See Completion of the Bunker Hill 
Monument. 

Elena’s Song.—-Sir H: Taylor. See Philip van Arte- 
velde. 

Elephant, The.—Hilaire Belloc.—BVC 
Eleventh Hour, The.—Anna L. Ruth.—CS 6 
Eleventh Song.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Elf and the Dormouse, The.—Oliver Herford.—AA— 
PoR 

Elf-child, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—AWH—BR—BS 16 
SR 6—THP 

(Little Orphant. Annie— C.) —AA—CS 33—OS 1— 
RCR—TMR 

Elf-child and the Minister, The. (Arr. fr. The Scarlet 
Letter, Ch. 8.)—WR 2 
(Sel. fr. Ch. 7, 8.)—CR 
Elfin Cruise, An.—J.—CG 1 
Elfin Lamps.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Elfin Song.—Jos. R. Drake. See Culprit Fay, The. 
Elia.—E. J. McPheiim.—PYO 
Eliab Eliezer.—Jas. Roann Reed.—CS 32—HP 
Eligible Situation, An.—T: Archer and J. C. Brough.— 
DT 

Elijah, Br. sel. fr. (“What is ministerial success?”)— 
Frd’k W. Robertson.—GG 

Elijah and the Prophets of Baal. (First Kings, Ch. 

I.. 17-40.)— Bible .—BS 13 
Elijah and the Rain.—E. Murray.—SSE 
Elijah Brown.—Anon.—WR 22 
Eliot’s Oak.—H: W. Longfellow.—AD 
Elisha Kent Kane.—G: H. Boker.—EDY 
Elixir, The.—G: Herbert.—EPs—FEP 
(Abr.) —GN—HDL 

Elixir of Life, The.—W: McGill.—WR 6 
Elizabeth.—Lizette Woodworth Reese.—TAV 
“Elizabeth, Aged Nine.” (C 1 .)—Marg. E. Sangster.— 
OS 1 

(Old Sampler, The— si. abr .)—CS 13 
Elizabeth at Tilbury.—Fs. T. Palgrave.—OS 3 


101 






Elizabeth 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Elizabeth of Bohemia.—Sir H: Wotton.—BPB—EPs 
—OB—PGT 1—YBF 

(On his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia—C.)— 
ELP—WEP 2 

(To his Mistress, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia.) 
—BNL 

(To his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia.)—FEP 

(You Meaner Beauties.)—HBP 
Elizabetha Regina.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. 
See Caelica. 

Elizabethan Poets. ( Ft. Essays on the English Poets.) 

—E. B. Browning.—MRS 
Ella.—T: Chatterton. SeeJElla. 

Ella Wheeler Wilcox. ( Lecture recital, with recita¬ 
tions.) —Grace B. Faxon.—WR 26 
Ellen Brine of Allenburn.—W: Barnes.—PGT 2 
Ellen Irwin; or, the Braes of Kirtle.—W: Wordsworth. 
—PEB 3 

Ellen McJones Aberdeen.—W: S. Gilbert.—CS 24— 
THP 

Elm, The.—H. H. B—AD 
Elm, The.—N. S. Dodge.—HSS 1 

(In Convention of Michigan Trees.)—AD 
Elm Blossom. ( Hours at Home.) —AD 
Elm versus Apple.—May R. Smith.—AD 
Elmer Brown.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Elocution.—N. H. Gillespie.—CS 9 
Elocution Class, The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Elocution Lesson, The.—Fs. Nash.—BS 23 
Elopement in Seventy-five.—Anon.—BS 20 
Eloquence.—Lewis Cass.—KNE—SC 6 
Eloquence.—Dan’l Webster. See Adams and Jeffer¬ 
son. 

Eloquence. (Br. sel.) —Amelia B. Welby.—KNE 
Eloquence and Logic.—W: C. Preston.—CS 7—KNE 
—SS 

(On Eloquence— si. abr.) —BS 15 . 

Eloquence of Action, The.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Eloquence of John Adams, The.—Dan'l Webster. See 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Eloquence of Nature, The.—S: F. Smith.—POS 
Eloquence of O’Connell.—Wendell Phillips. See Dan’l 
O’Connell. 

Eloquence of Revolutionary Periods, The, Br. sel. fr. — 
Rufus Choate.—WR 10 
Eloquence or Oratory.—Jos. Story.—SR 2 

(Advice to an Advocate.)—KNE 
Eloquence that Persuades.—Johann W. von Goethe.— 
CS 22 

Elsie’s Burglar. (Dial.) —NDP 
Elsie’s Child.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—CS 26 
Elsie’s Soliloquy.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—COS—PP— 
PS 

Elsinore.—B. A. Gould, Jr.—CG 1 

Elspeth’s Ballad.—Walter Scott. See Antiquary, The. 
Elspie and Philip.—Arthur H. Clough. See Bothie 
of Tober-na-Yuolich, The. 

Elswitha.—Mary Barry.—HP 
Elusive Dollar Bill, The.—H. L. Wilson.—GH 
Elusive Nature.—H: Timrod.—SN 
Elves’ Dance, The.—Anon.—ELP 
Elvira, Sel. fr. (Song: “See, O seel”)—G: Dighy, Earl 
of Bristol.—ELP 

Elwood’s Decision.—H. E. McBride.—DDD 
Emancipation from British Dependence.—Philip Fre¬ 
neau.—AWB 

Emancipation of Man, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
CRR—CS 24—NPS—SR 5—YP 
Emancipation Proclamation, The (Proclamation of 
Emancipation).—Abraham Lincoln.—AI 
Emancipation Proclamation, The. ( Sels .)—Carl 

Schurz.—OS 2 

Embargo, The.—Josiah Quincy.—SO (si. abr.) 

(Against the Embargo.)—OM—SS 
Embarkation, The.—Lizzie Doten.—FMR 
Ember Picture, An.—Jas. R. Lowell.—WR 25 
Emblem of Peace, An.—J: Wilson.—CS 21 

(Evening Cloud, The.)—BNL—FEP—POS (abr.) 
Emblem Service, An.'—Anon.—EuE 
Emblems.—R: Coe.—CS 6 
Embryo.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA 
Emergency, An.—Marie M. Marsh.—BS 21 
Emerson.—Amos B. Alcott.—AA 
Emerson.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 
Emerson.—Mary M. Dodge.—AA 
Emerson.—E- E. Hale.—MRS 

Emerson Alphabet. An. (Comp. fr. Emerson.)—PEO 
Emerson, Extract Concerning.—A. C. Bartol.—PEO 
Emerson, Extract Concerning.—G: W. Cooke.—PEO 
Emerson. Extract Concerning. (Br. sel. fr. Ralph 
Waldo Emerson, Ch. 16.)—Oliver W. Holmes. 
—PEO 


Emerson, Extract Concerning.—Protap Chunder Mo- 
soomdar.—PEO 

Emerson, Extract Concerning.—Horace E. Scudder.— 
PEO 

Emigrant Lassie, The.—J: S. Blackie j—VA 
Emigrants in [the] Bermudas, The.—Andrew Marvell. 
—FEP—HBP 

(Bermudas [, The].)—GN—OB—WEP 2 
(In Exile.)—LH 

(Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda.)—BNL— 
BPB—EPs—PGT 1 
Emigrant’s Return, The.—Anon.—GH 
Emigrant’s Story, The.—J : T. Trowbridge.—BS 8 
Emigravit.—Helen M. F. (Hunt) Jackson.—AA 
Emir’s Game of Chess, The. (London Speaker.) — 
BS 26—HBR 

Emma and Eginhard. (Tales of a Wayside Inn: 
The Student’s Tale.)—H: W. Longfellow.— 
HBR 

Emma Lazarus.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
Emma’s Ideal.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Emmeline.—C: P. Mulvany.—TIP 

Emmet’s Epitaph. (Written immediately after Read¬ 
ing the Speech of Robert Emmet— C.) — 
Rob’t Southey.—BNL 

Emotions on Returning to the United States.—Hugh 
S. LegarA—SS 

Empedocles on Etna, Sels. fr. —Matthew Arnold. 
Apollo. (Song fr. Act II.)—LH 
(Callicles Beneath Etna.)—PGT 2 
(Callicles’ Song.)—WEP 4 
(Callicles’ Song of Apollo— abr.) —LC 
(Song of Callicles. The.)—OB—PYO 
Cadmus and Harmonia. (Song fr. Act I., Sc. 2.)— 
A VP 

(Song of Callicles in Sicily.)—PGT 2 
Empedocles on Etna. (Sel. fr. Act II.)—VA 
(Song of Empedocles, The— sel.) —PGT 2 
Hymn of Empedocles. (Fr. Act I., Sc. 2.) 

Emperor and the Deserter, The. (Dial.) —NDP 
“Emperor Evermore.” — Emily M. P. Hickey.— 
A VP 

Emperor of China. (Fr. The Jest Book.)—Anon.— 
MRS 

Emperor’s Bird’s-nest, The. (SI. abr.) —Hr W. Long¬ 
fellow.—PC 

Emperor’s Daughter Stands Alone, An.—Geoffrey 
Chaucer. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Emperor’s Return, The. (Sel. fr. Les Burgraves, Pt. 

II., Sc. 6.)—Victor Hugo.—SO 
Empire and Liberty.—W: E. Gladstone.—SO 
Empire State, The.—Grover Cleveland.—SSD 
Employ your Own Intellect.—Anon.—PEO 
Employment. (Abr.) —G: Herbert.—WEP 2 
Employment of Indiansin the American War.—W: Pitt, 
Earl of Chatham. See American War, The. 
Empty Bottle, The.—W: Aytoun.—HPE 
Empty House. The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Empty Nest, The.—Eliz. Y. Case.—BS 1 
Empty Nest, The.—Emily H. Miller.—CR—SR 5 
(sel.) 

Empty Pocket, The.—C: F. Lummis.—WR 2 
Empty Prayer, An.—Katha. C. Penfield.—BS 24 
En Garde.—W. T. McIntyre.—CG 3 
En Garde, Messieurs.—W: Lindsey.—AA 
“En Voyage.”—Caroline A. Mason.—HP—TAS 
“Enamoured architect of ditty rhyme.”—T: B. Al¬ 
drich.—AA 

Enchainment. (“I went to her who loveth me no 
more’’— C. )—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—YBF 
(Song.)—HBP 

Enchanted Island, The.—Luke A. Conolly.—TIP 
Enchanted Oak, The.—Oliver Herford.—HS—WR 9 
Enchanted Shirt, The.—J: Hay.—CS 23 (si. abr.) — 
GN 

Enchantment, The. (C.) —T: Otway.—FLS—OB 
(I Did but Look.)—YBF 
Enconium on Tobacco, An.—Anon.—PPh 
Encore.—Anon.—HP 
Encore.—Anon.—WR 6 
Encore; Encore!—Anon.—CS 32 
(Encore!)—BS 21 

Encounter with a Panther. An.—J. F. Cowper.—NP 
Encounter with an Interviewer, An. (C.) —S: L. Clem¬ 
ens.—CR 

(Mark Twain and a [or the] Reporter— si. abr.) — 
PTS—SE 

(Mark Twain and the Interviewer.)—BS 2—CS 12 
—KNE—SR 1 

Encouragement to American Ship-building and the 
Revival of American Commerce on the Ocean, 
Sel. fr. (American Shipbuilding.)—Jas. G. 
Blaine.—NC 


102 




TITLE INDEX 


Ensign 


Encouragements to a Lover. ( Fr. Aglaura.)—Sir J: 
Suckling.—PGT 1 

(Orsames’ Song [in “Aglaura”].) — ELP — ES — 
WEP 2 

(Song—C.)—HBP 
(To a Lover.)—YBF 

(Why so Pale [and Wan. Fond Lover]?)—BNL— 
FEP—GP—OB— OEL—PYO 
Encouraging Self-murder.—Anon.—GH 
(Obliging Druggist, The.)—PS 
End, The.—Wallace Rice.—AA 
End Gag, An.—Anon.—DSS 
End Gags (3).—Anon.—DE 

End of Elfintown, The, Sel. fr. (Flitting of the Fairies, 
The.)—Jane Barlow.—TIP 
End of Government, The.—J: Pym.—SS 
End of King David, The.—Anon.—CS 26 
End of the Day, The.—Duncan C. Scott.—TCV—VA 
End of the Play, The. (Fr. Dr. Birch and his Young 
Friends.)—W: M. Thackeray.—BNL—EDY— 
FEP—GN (sel.) —GP—HBP—OS 3—VA 
End of the Romance, The.—Winthrop M. Praed.— See 
Belle of the Ball, The. 

End of the Siege, The.—Eliz. B. Browning. See 
Rhyme of the Duchess May. 

End of the Way, The.—Anon.—CS 24 

Endeavours of Mankind to Get Rid of Their Burdens. 

—Jos. Addison. See Spectator, The. 

Endicott and the Red Cross, Sel. /r.—Nathaniel Haw¬ 
thorne.—BS 26 

Endimion, Sel. fr. (Fairy Revels— third song by fairies 
fr. Act IV., Sc. 3.)—J: Lyly—ELP 
Endless Procession, The.—Anon.—C'S 23 
Endurance—Eliz. A. Allen.—CS 8—FEP—GP— 
WR 14 

Endurance.—G: Macdonald.—HDL 
Enduring Influence.—Anon.—LLC 
Endymion, Sels. fr. —J: Keats. 

Beauty. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I.)—SO (longest) —WEP 4 
(“Thing of beauty is a joy forever, A.”)—BNL— 
GG (shortest.) 

Hymn to Pan. (Fr. Bk. I.)—HBP (sel.) —WEP 4 
(br. sel.) 

Song of the Indian Maid. (Sel. fr Bk. III.)—OB 
(Bacchus— sel.) —WEP 4 

Endymion.—J: Keats. See I Stood Tiptoe upon a 
Little Hill. 

(Diff. fr. foregoing.) 

Endymion.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA—CR 
(How Love Comes— sel.) —FLS 
Enemies Meet at Death’s Door.—Willa L. Jackson.— 
CS 30 

Energy.—Alexander H. Stephens.—HSS 2 
Energy and Industry.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KC 

Enforcement of the Liquor Law, The. (Sel. arr. fr. 
The Maine Liquor Law.)—Wendell Phillips.— 
MRS 

(Temperance.)—CS 20—TS 

(Temperance Question, The.)—BS 8—PS (shorter.) 
Engaged.—F. H. Curtiss.—WR 15 
Engaged.—J. L. Pennypacker.—CH—CS 20 
Engaging Manners.—Anon.—KNE 
Engine, The.—Anon.—SA 

(Locomotive, The— arr. as dial.) —FS 
Engine Driver’s Story, The.—W. Wilkins.—CS 29— 
NPS—YP 

Engineer Connor’s Son.—Will A. Dromgoole.—NP 
Engineer’s Last Run, The.—Anon.—PFP 
Engineers’ Making Love [.The].—Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
BS 12—CS 23 (si. abr.) 

Engineer’s Murder, The.—H: Morford.—CS 19 
Engineer’s Signal. The.—Fs. Bret Harte.—TAV 
(Guild’s Signal—C.)—NPS—OS 2—YP 
Engineer’s Story, The.—Eugene J. Hall.—CD 
Engineer’s Storv. The.—Rosa H. Thorpe.—CS 6 
(SI abr.) —FR—MR—PR 
England. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
England.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora Leigh. 
England.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

England.—R: E. Day.—AA 
England.—Sydney Dobell. See Balder. 

England.—Ebenezer Elliott.—SS 
(Old England— si. abr.) —BI.P 
England.—Jas. Lincoln.—EHT 
England.—G: E. Montgomery.—AA 
England.—J - H: Newman.—VA 
England.—Grace E. C. Stetson.—AA 
England.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—LH 
England. (Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty. Pt. I., XIV.)—W: Wordsworth. 
—GP 


England (continued). 

(Ideal.)—LH 

(London, 1802—C.)—PGT I (II.)—YBF (II.) 
(Milton.)—LLC—WEP 4 

(“Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour.”) 
—GG (abr.) 

(Sonnet: London, 1802.)—HBP 
(To Milton.)—BNL—CEL—EPs—FEP 
England against War.—H: W. Beecher.—SSD 
England and America.—Sir Jas. Mackintosh.—SS 
(England’s Relations to America.)—BLP 
England and America.—C: Sangster.—TCV 
England and America [in 1782—C.]—Alfred Tenny¬ 
son.—EDY 

England and her Colonies.—Edmund Burke. See 
Speech on Conciliation with America. 

England and her Colonies.—W: Watson.—VA 
England and Switzerland. 1802.—W: Wordsworth.— 
PGT 1—SC—YBF 


(Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switz¬ 
erland—C.)—EPs—WEP 4 

England and the United States.—Chauncey M. Depew. 
—FD 2 


England, 1802. (Written in London, September, 
1802— C.) —W: Wordsworth.—OB 
(London, 1802.)—PGT 1 (I.)—YBF (I.) 

England, my England. (Rhymes and Rhythms, 
XXV.—C.)—W: E. Henley.—OB 
England, with all thy Faults, I Love Thee Still.—W: 
Cowper. See Task, The. 

England’s Misrule of Ireland. (Sels. fr. Tithes and 
fr. The Irish Church.)—R: L. Sheil.—SS 
England's Parnassus: Descriptions of Beauty and Per¬ 
sonage, Sel. fr. (Her Coming.)—45: Chapman. 
—ELP 


England’s Relations to America.—Jas. Mackintosh. 
See England and America. 

England’s True Greatness. (Sel. fr. Foreign Policy.) 
—J: Bright.—SO 

(Greatness Based on Morality— abr.) —OS 3 
(National Greatness— sel.) —SAE—SE 
English Ballad on the Taking of Namur by the King of 
Great Britain, An .Sel. fr. (On the Taking of 
Namur, etc.)—Matthew Prior.—EDY 
English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, Sels. fr. —Lord 
Byron. 

(Br. sels.) —BNL 
Robert Southey.—EDY 
Sir Walter Scott.—EDY 
Wordsworth.—EDY 
English Buccaneer, The.—Anon.—NP 
English Channel. (September, 1802. Near Dover— 
C.) —W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
English Girl, An.—F. W. Home.—VA 
English History in Rhyme.-—Anon.—TFS 
English Language, The.-—Anon.—SR 13 
(Our Glorious Language.)—WR 26 
English Language, The. (Sels.) —W: W. Story.—GN 
English Robin, The.—Harrison Weir.—BNL-—POS 
English Scenery'.—Washington Irving. See Charms 
of Rural Life. The. 

English Shell, An.—Arthur C. Benson.-—VA 
English Sparrow, The.—Mary I. Forsyth.—SN 
Englishman, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Englishman’s Sea-dirge, An.—Anon.—CS 26 
Enid.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the King. 
Enid's Song.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the King. 
Enigmas, Two.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Enjoyment of the Present.—R: C. Trench.—CS 16 
Enj’yin’ Poor Health.—G: Horton.—WR 7 
Enlisted.—Eugene C. Hall.—PAPm 
Enlisting as Army Nurse.—Louisa M. Alcott.— 
MMR 


Enmity toward Great Britian.—Rufus Choate.—OM 
(Barbarity of National Hatreds.)—SS—SSD 
(Old Grudge against England, The— abr.) —MRS 
Enoch Arden.—Alfred Tennyson.—BS 8 (cond .)— 
MBI.—WCLG 1—WR'll (cond.) 

At the Window. (Sel.) —CS 5 
(Enoch Arden— br. sel.) —SE 
(Enoch Arden at the Window.)—PS 
Farewell of Enoch Arden, The. (Sel.) —IR 
(Enoch Arden.)—BIL (br. sel.)— CR 
“Too hard to bear! Whv did thev take me hence?” 
(Br. sel .)—AE 

Tropical Scene, A. (Br. sel.) —SE 
Enoch Arden at the Window.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Enoch Arden. 


Enough.—Anon.—DLF 
Enough.—Frances R. Havergal.—SSS 
Ensign Bearer, The. (Commercial Weekly Times .)— 
CS 9—SR 7 


103 




Entanglement 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Entanglement, An.—G: Crabbe. See Tales £.of the 
Hall. 

Entering into Covenant. ( C .)—Philip Doddridge. 

(Confirmation Hymn.)—FEP 
Enterprise of American Colonists, 1775.—Edmund 
Burke. See Speech on Conciliation with 
mcrics 

Enthusiasm.— (?) Hall.—LLC 

Enthusiast. The. An Ode.—W: Whitehead.—WEP 3 
“Entombed within a nation’s reverent love.”—E: 
Crapsey.—GG 

Entrance of Columbus into Barcelona.—G. Mellen.— 
EPs 

Entre Nous.—Sophie Jewett.—TFY 
Entreat Me not to Leave Thee. (.Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

Enviable Isles, The.—Herman Melville.—AA 
Envious Wren, The.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Envoy.—Bliss Carman.—VA 

Envoy. (In A Lover’s Diary.)—Gilbert Parker.— 
VA 

(Reunited.)—OB 
Envoy.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA 
Envoy.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Envoy.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 

Envoy to an American Lady, An.—R: M. Milnes, Lord 
Houghton.—VA 
(Our Mother Tongue.)—GN 
Envoy—to “More Songs from Vagabondia.”—R: 

Hovey.—AA 
Envy.—Anon.—DLS 
Envy.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Envy.—Adelaide A. Procter.—WR 19 
Envy and Avarice.—Victor Hugo.—SO 
Eolian Harp, The—S: T. Coleridge—FEP—WEP 4 
Eos, Sel. fr. —Nicholas F. Davin.—TCV 
Eos.—R: H. Horne. See Orion: An Epic Poem. 
Eothen, Sel. fr. (Sphynx, The—Ch. XX.)—Alex. W. 
Kinglake.—VSG 

Ephibol on mv Dear Love Isabella.—Marjorie Fleming. 
—BVC 

Ephraim’s Storm Lullaby.—C. H. Collester.—CG 3 
Epic of Hades, Sels. fr. —-Lewis Morris. 

Aphrodite. (Sel. fr. Bk. III.)—A VP 
Marsyas. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.)—VSG 
Epic of Women. (Fr. Bisclaveret.)—Arthur O’Shaugh- 
• nessy.—WEP 4 

Epicede.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—EDY 
Epicedium.—Horace L. Traubel.—AA 
Epicharis.—Arthur Palmer.—TIP 

Epiccene [or Epictene]; or, The Silent Woman, Sel. fr. 
(Freedom in Dress— sony fr. Act I., Sc. 1.)— 
Ben Jonson.—BNL—EPs—YBF 
(Simplex Munditiis.)—OB 
(Song.)—FEP—HBP—WEP 2 
(Sweet Neglect, The.)—ES—OEL 
Epicure, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Epicure, The. (In Anacreontiques.)—Anacreon (tr.by 
Abraham Cowley).—OB 
Epicurean.—W: Jas. Linton.—VA 
Epicurean Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist. (C .)— 
T: Hood.—FEP 

(Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist.)—HPE 
Epicurean’s Epitaph, An.—Aubrey T: DeVere.—VA 
Epigram. “Hoarse Maevius reads,” etc. (On a 
Reader of his Own Verse— C.) —S: T. Coleridge. 
—BNL 

Epigram: “Sly Beelzebub on all occasions.”—S: T. 
Coleridge. See Epigram on Job and the 
Devil. 

Epigram: “Swans sing before they die.”—S: T. 

Coleridge. See Epigram on a Bad Singer. 
Epigram: “Pest of the muses,” etc.—Evenus (tr. by 
Andrew Lang).—MBB 

Epigram: ‘‘Uvedale, thou piece of the first times.”— 
Ben Jonson. See Epigram to Sir William Uve¬ 
dale. 

Epigram. (C.) “There comes from old Avaro’s 
grave.”—Gotthold Lessing (tr. by S: T. Cole¬ 
ridge). 

(Avaro.)—HPE 

Epigram: “When first my true love crowned me,” 
etc.—Gerald Massey.—FLS 
Epigram (C.): “Said his Highness to Ned,” etc.— 
T: Moore. 

(Dial.) —HPE 

Epigram: “As late the Trades’ Unions,” etc.—Jas. 
Smith.—FEP 

Epigram (C.): “Upon a day, as Love,” etc.—Ed¬ 
mund Spenser. 

(Cupid and the Bee.)—LC 
Epigram: “All Saints.”—Edmund Yates.—FEP 


Epigram: Cologne.—S: T. Coleridge.—BNL 
( Cologne— C .)— FEP— H B P—TH P 
(Expectoration the Second.)—HPE 
Epigram: Dum Vivimus Vivamus.—Philip Doddridge. 

See Epigram on his Family Arms. 

Epigram on a Bad Singer.. (On a Bad Singer— C .)— 
S: T. Coleridge.—FEP 

(Epigram: “Swans sing before they die.”)—BNL 
Epigram on a Club of Sots. (C.) —S: Butler. 

(On a Club of Sots.)—HPE 
Epigram on- a Painted Lady with Ill Teeth, An. 
(C.) —Edmund Waller. 

(On a Painted Lady with Ill Teeth.)—HPE 
Epigram on Bishop Atteritmry. (C.) —Matthew Prior. 

(On Bishop Atterbury.)—HPE 
Epigram on Francis Drake.—Abraham Cowley (tr. by 
Ben Jonson).—EDY—OS 2 
(Epigram on Sir Francis Drake.)—EPs—FEP 
Epigram on his Family Arms. (In Dr. Doddridge’s 
Character.)—Philip Doddridge.—BNL 
(Christian Life, The.)—CS 18—SS 
(Epigram: Dum Vivimus Vivamus.)—FEP 
Epigram on Job and the Devil. (Job’s Luck— C .)— 
S: T. Coleridge—FEP 
(Beelzebub and Job.)—HPE 
(Epigram: “Sly Beelzebub,” etc.)—BNL 
(Job.)—THP 

Epigram on Sir Francis Drake.-—Abraham Cowley 
(tr. by Ben Jonson). See Epigram on Francis 
Drake. 

Epigram on the Death of Edward Forbes.—Sydney 
Dobell.—VA 

Epigram on Two Monopolists. (On Two Lean Millers— 
C .— si. diff. fr. Poems.)—J: Byrom.—FEP 
Epigram on Waller.—T: Middleton.—EDY 
Epigram to a Young Lady who Asked for his Name 
in her Album.—C: G. Halpine.—AWH 
Epigram to Sir William Uvedale. (C.) —Ben Jonson. 
(Epigram.)—EPs 

Epigram: Treason,—Sir J: Harrington.—FEP 
Epigram: Vox et Praeterea Nihil. (Punch.) —FEP 
(Voice and Nothing Else, A.)—BNL—HPE 
Epigram. Written in the Last Reign. (C.) —C: Lamb. 
(On the Disappointment of the Whig Associates of 
the Prince Regent at not Obtaining Office.)— 
HPE 

Epigram Written on the Bed-chamber Door of Charles 
III.—J: Wilmot, Earl of Rochester. See 
Epitaph on Charles II. 

Epigram written to the Duke de Noalles, An. (C.) — 
Matthew Prior. 

(To the Duke de Noalles.)—HPE 
Epigrams, Sels. fr. —Sir J: Harrington. 

(Br. sels .)—BNL 

Of the Warres in Ireland. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV.. Ep. 6.) 
—BNL 

Epigrams against Carthy, Sel. fr. (On One Dela- 
court’s Complimenting Carthy on his Poetry.) 
—Jonathan Swift—HPE 

Epilogue: “And now, dear friends,” etc. Anon.— 
DLS 

Epilogue: “Dear friends, before you go away.”— 
Anon.—DJS 

Epilogue: “Dear papas and mammas.”—Anon.— 
DLS 

Epilogue: “The best of things,” etc.—Anon.—DST 
Epilogue. (3.)—“Bob o’Link.”—DCP 
Epilogue.—Rob’t Browning. See Epilogue to Aso- 
lando. 

Epilogue: A Closing Address.—Anon.—DCP 
Epilogue at Wallack’s, An.—J: E. Wayland.—AA 
Epilogue for a Boy and a Girl.—Anon.—DLF 
Epilogue for a School Performance.—Anon.—BC 
Epilogue for a Tot.—Anon.—DJS 
Epilogue for a Tot. (Prose.)-. —DST 
Epilogue: Suitable for the Conclusion of an Entertain¬ 
ment.—J. B.—SCS 

Epilogue to Amours de Voyage.—Arthur H. Clough. 
See Amours de Voyage. 

Epilogue to Asolando.—Rob’t Browning.—PGT 2— 
WEP 4—YBF 
(Epilogue.)—VA 

Epilogue to Fand.-—W: Larminie. See Fand. 

Epilogue to Hannah More’s Play, The Fatal Falsehood, 
Sel. fr. (Literary Lady, The.)—R: B. Sheri¬ 
dan.—HPE—THP 

Epilogue to the Breakfast-table Series.—Oliver W. 
Holmes.—AA 

Epilogue to the Satires, Sel. fr. (Dialogue I.— abr.) 

—Alex. Pope.—ESs—WEP 3 (abr.) 

Epilogus.—G: Gascoigne. See Steel Glass, The. 
Epimetheus.—H: W. Longfellow.—WCLI 2 


104 




TITLE INDEX 


Epitaph 


Epiphany.—W: C. Dix.—FEP 

Epiphany.—-Reginald Heber.—EDY—FEP—HBP— 
OS 1 

(Brightest and Best [of the Sons of the Morningl).— 
GN—LLC 

Epipsychidion, Sel. fr. —Percy B. Shelley.—WEP 4 
Episode, An.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 
Episode in the Life of Miss Tebitha Trenoodle. ( Bel¬ 
gravia. )—MHR 

Epistle Dedicatory to his Royal Highness Prince Pos¬ 
terity, The.—Jonathan Swift.—ESs 
Epistle from .Lord Borington to Lord Granville.—G: 
Canning.—ESs 

Epistle to a Friend to Persuade him to the Wars, Br. 
sel. fr. —Ben Jonson.—EPs 

Epistle to a Young Friend [Anl. — Rob’t Burns. — 
BNL (br. sets.) —MR—WCLG 2—WEP 3 
Epistle to Augusta. (C.)—Lord Byron.—WEP 4 
(To Augusta.)—BNL 

Epistle to Davie, Br. sel. fr. (Good Heart.)—Rob’t 
Burns.—EPs 

Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot (Prologue to the Satires). 
—Alex. Pope.—WEP 3 
Addison. (Sel.)— BNL 

(Portrait of Addison.)—EPs 
Scandal. (Sel.) —BNL 
Sporus,—Lord Hervey. (Sel.) —BNL 
Epistle. To Elizabeth, Countess of Rutland, Sel. fr. 
(To the Countess of Rutland.)—Ben Jonson. 
—EPs 

Epistle to James Smith, Sets. fr. —Rob't Burns. 
Epistle to James Smith, Br. sel. fr. —BNL ' 

Writing Verses.—EPs 

Epistle to John Lapraik, An. (Sel. fr. Third Epistle.) 
—Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 

Epistle to Joseph Hill, An.—W: Cowper.— MR — 
WEP 3 

Epistle to Mrs. Scott of Wauchope. (To the Guid- 
wife of Wauchope House— C.) Sel. fr. — 
Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
(Scotland— br. sel.) —EPs 

Epistle to my Brother George. The. Sel. fr. (Bard 
Speaks, The.)—J: Keats.—WEP 4 
Epistle to the Right Hon. the Earl of Burlington. 
1C.)—J: Gay. 

(Journey to Exeter, A— si. abr .)—OES 
Epistle to the Whigs. (The Medal—C.)—J: Drvden. 
—ESs 

Epitaph: “Beneath this stone two David Hallidays.” 
Anon.—EDY 

Epitaph, An: “Like thee I once have stemmed,” 
etc. (Epitaph Intended for Himself—C.)— 
Jas. Beattie.—OB 

Epitaph: “May! be thou never graced,” etc.—W: 
Browne.—ELP 

(In Obitum M. S. X° Maij. 1614.)—OB 
Epitaph (C.): “Stop, Christian Passer-by.”—S: T. 

Coleridge. See Epitaph on Himself. 

Epitaph: “Here—for they could not help but die.” 

(Fr. The Fading Rose.)—Philip Freneau.—AD 
Epitaph: “Underneath this sable hearse.”—Ben 
Jonson. See Epitaph on the Countess of Pem¬ 
broke 

Epitaph: “Underneath this stone doth lye.”—Ben 
Jonson. See Epitaph on Elizabeth L. H. 
Epitaph, An: “Enough; and leave the rest to fame!” 

—Andrew Marvell.—OB 
Epitaph, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—GS 31 
Epitaph, An: “Interr’d beneath this marble stone.” 
(C .)—Matthew Prior. 

(Jack and Joan.)—HPE 

Epitaph: “Where is Timarchus gone?”—Simonides. 
—EPs 

Epitaph Extempore.—Matthew- Prior.—FEP 
Epitaph for a Husbandman, An.—C: D. G. Roberts.— 
TCV 

Epitaph for a Sailor Buried Ashore.—C: G. D. Roberts. 
_TCV—VA 

Epitaph for [on— C. 1 Levi Lincoln Thaxter.—Rob’t 
Browning.—VA 

Epitaph for [or on) the Tombstone Erected over the 
Marquis of Anglesea’s Leg, Lost at the Battle 
of Waterloo.)—G: Canning.—BNL—FEP 
Epitaph for William Pitt.—Lord Byron.—EAY 
Epitaph in Fahan Churchyard.—W: Alexander.— 
AVP 

Epitaph in the Cathedral of Derry.—W: Alexander.— 
AVP 

Epitaph Intended for Himself. (C.) —Jas. Beattie 
(Epitaph. An.)—OB 
Epitaph of Dionysia.—Anon.—VA 
Epitaph on a Candle. (Punch.) —HPE 


Epitaph on a Celebrated Ruling Elder. (C.) —Rob’t 
Burns. 

(On a Celebrated Ruling Elder.)—HPE 
Epitaph on a Child.—T: W. Parsons.—TAS 
Epitaph on a Hare.—W: Cowper.—BFV—BPB— 
BVC—CGd—MBL—WEP 3 
Epitaph on a Jacobite. (C.) —T: B. Macaulay.— 
AVP—VA—WEP 4 
(Jacobites’ Epitaph, A )—LH—OB 
Epitaph on a Locomotive. (Punch.) —HPE 
Epitaph on a Robin Redbreast, An.—S: Rogers.— 
CGd—LC—OS 1—PoR 
Epitaph on a Tuft-hunter. (C.) —T: Moore. 

(On a Tuft-hunter.)—HPE 
Epitaph on a Wag in Mauchline. ( C.) —Rob’t Burns. 

(On a Wag in Mauchline.)—HPE 
Epitaph on a Well-known Poet. (Rob’t Southey.)— 
T: Moore.—HPE 

Epitaph on a Young Lady Who Desired that Tobacco 
might be Planted on her Grave.—Anon.— 
PPh 

Epitaph on Algernon Sidney.—Rob’t Southey.—EDY 
Epitaph on an Infant.—S: T. Coleridge.—FEP 
Epitaph on Charles II.—J: Wilmot, Earl of Rochester. 
—EHT—WEP 2 

(Epigram Written on the Bed-chamber Door of 
Charles II.)—OS 2 

Epitaph on Clere', Surrey’s Faithful Friend and Fol- 
low-er. An. (Epitaph on Sir Thomas Clere— 
C.) —II: Howard, Earl of Surrey.—WEP 1 
Epitaph on Demar the Usurer. (C.) — Jonathan 
Swift. 

(On a Usurer.)—HPE 

Epitaph on Elizabeth L. H. ( C .)—Ben Jonson.— 
WEP 2 

(Epitaph: “Underneath this stone doth lye”— 
si. abr.) —EPs 
(On Elizabeth L. H.)—OB 

Epitaph on General Gordon.—Alfred Tennyson.— 
EDY 

Epitaph on Himself. (Epitaph— C.) —S: Coleridge.— 
EDY 

Epitaph on Holy Willie. (C. —On Holy Willie— also 
C.)— Rob’t Burns—ESs—HPE 
Epitaph on John Adams, of Southwell, a Carrier who 
Died of Drunkenness. (C.) —Lord Byron 
(On a Carrier w-ho Died of Drunkenness.)—HPE 
Epitaph on Master Philip Gray, An.'—Ben Jonson.— 
WEP 2 

Epitaph on Peter Staggs.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Epitaph on Prince Frederick.—Anon.—EDY 
Epitaph on Salathiel Pavy, An.—Ben Jonson. See 
following. 

Epitaph on Salathiel Pavy, a Child of Queen Eliza¬ 
beth’s Chapel, An. ( C .)—Ben Jonson.— 
FEP—WEP 2—YBF 
(On Salathiel Pavy.)—OB 

Epitaph on Shakespeare.—J: Milton. See Epitaph 
on the Admirable Dramatic Poet, W. Shake¬ 
speare, An. 

Epitaph on Sir Thomas Clere.—T: Howard, Earl of 
Surrey. See Epitaph on Clere. 

Epitaph on Sir Thomas Fairfax.-—G: Villiers, Duke of 
Buckingham.—EDY 

Epitaph on the Admirable Dramatic Poet, W. Shakes¬ 
peare, An.—J: Milton.—BNL—EDY—HBP 
—WEP 2—YBF 

(Epitaph on Shakespeare.)—EPs—FEP 
Epitaph on the Countess of Pembroke.—W: Browne 
[or Ben Jonson).—BFV—BNL (w. add. si.) — 
EDY—ELP—FEP—WEP 2—YBF 
(Epitaph: "Underneath this sable hearse.”)—EPs 
(On the Countess Dow-ager of Pembroke.)—OB 
Epitaph on the Earl of Leicester.—Sir Walter 
Raleigh—EDY 

Epitaph on the Lady Mary Villiers. ( C .) (First 
Epitaph.)—T: Carew.—FEP—OB 
(Epitaph on [the] Lady Marv Villers.)—ELP— 
WEP 2 

Epitaph on the Lady Mary Villiers. (Third Epitaph.) 
—T: Carew.—OB 

Epitaph on the Tombstone Erected over the Marquis 
of Anglesea’s Leg.—G: Canning. See Epitaph 
for the Tombstone. 

Epitaph on W * * * (On William Graham of Moss- 
knowe— C.) —Rob’t Bums.—HPE 
Epitaph on Washington, An.—Anon.—SR 10 
Epitaph upon a Child that Died.-—Rob’t Herrick.—OB 
(Upon a Child that Died— C.) —ELP 
Epitaph upon a Child that Died.-—Rob’t Herrick.— 
OB—YBF 

(Upon a Child—C.)—ELP 


105 




Epitaph 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Epitaph upon a Virgin, An.—Rob’t Herrick.—YBF 
Epitaph upon Colonel Chartres.—J: Arbuthnot.—ESs 
Epitaph upon Husband and Wife [,An],—R: Crashaw. 
—FEP—OB 

Epitaph upon the Right Honourable Sir Philip Sidney, 
An.—Sir Walter Raleigh.—FEP 
Epithalamion.—Edmund Spenser.—ELP—HBP—OB 
—WEP 1 (abr.) 

Bride, The. (Br. sel.)— BNL—EPs—LC ( sel.) 
Wake now—my Love. (Br. sel .)—GP 
(Song.)—LC 

Epithaiamium.—J: G. C. Brainard.—AA—FEP— 
HBF 

(“I saw two clouds at morning.”)—BNL—GP 
(To a Friend.)—BS 6 
Epithaiamium.—S: Sheppard (?).—ELP 
Epode, Sel. fr. (The Forest, XI.)—Ben Jonson.— 
WEP 2 

Eppie Morrie.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Equality at Home.—Anon.—OS 2 
Equestrian Courtship.—T: Hood.—TMD 
Equinoctial, The.—Mary Eliz. Blake.—POS 
Equinoctial.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—GP 
Equinoctial Storm, The. (Fr. Caleb West, Master 
Diver—Ch. XIX— abr.) —F. Hopkinson Smith. 
—NP 

Equivocal.—Ben Jonson.—CG 2 

Ere the Sun Went Down.—G: Weatherly. 

Erin.—W: Drennan.—TIP 
Erin and the Days of Old.—T: Moore.—BLP 
Erinna.—Andrew Lang (paraphrase fr. Antipater of 
Sidon).—VA 

Erin’s Flag.—Abram J. Ryan.—-CS 7 
Erl-king. The. (Ger. — fr. Die Fischerin.)—Johann 
W. von Goethe.—DES 
(Tr. by Walter Scott.)—BS 26—MRS 
(Diff. tr.)— DES—PHS 

Erl-konig, The. (In German and in English, with his¬ 
tory of Schubert’s composition and its first irresen- 
lalion .)—Mabelle B. Biggart.—DES 
Erminie, Sel. fr. (Lullaby— w. music.) Arranged by 
O. E. McFadon.—DR 

Ernest Maltravers, Sel. fr. (Night and Love— C .— 
song fr. Bk. III., Ch. I.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton. 
(Song.)—CR—FLS (br. sel.) 

(‘AVhen stars are in the quiet skies.”)—FEP— 
FTA—VA 

Eros.—Ralph W. Emerson.—BIL—OH 
Esau and Jacob.—Ellen Murray.—CS 16 
Escape. The.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Uncle Tom’s 
Cabin. 

Escape at Bedtime.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Escaping a Shower.—Anon.—DST 
Escurial, The.—Theophile Gautier.—OS 3 
Eskimelodrama: or. the Eskapade of an Eskamaid. 
(Cornell Widow .)—-CG 3 

Essay on Criticism, An, Sets. fr. —Alex. Pope.— 
BNL(5r. sets .)—WEP 3 (sel. fr. Pt, II.) 
Diversities of Judgment. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I.)—CS 10 
Horace. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. III.)—EDY 
Essay on Man, An, Sets. fr. —Alex. Pope. 

Content. (Sel. fr. Epis. I., Pt. 6.)—KNE 
Essay on Man. — BNL (br. sel. fr. IV., 2.) — 
WEP 3 (Epis. I., abr.; Epis. IV., abr.) 

Fame. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 6.)—BNL 
Greatness. (Sel. fr. IV., 6.)—BNL 
Happiness. (Sel. fr. IV.)—BNL (Prel. and Pt. 1.) 
—LLC (Prel., Pts. 1 and 2.) 

(Road to Happiness Open, The—Prel., Pts. 1 and 
2.)—BLP 

Happiness. (Sel. fr. IV., 7.)—KNE 
Nature’s Chain. (Sel. fr. III., 1.)—BNL 
Order of Nature, The. (I., 9, abr., 10.) 

Poet’s Friend, The [Lord Bolingbrokel. (Sel. fr. 
IV., 7.)—BNL 

Reason and Instinct. (III., 2.)—BNL 
Essay on Necks.—Laura M. Bronson.—DES (abr.) 

(Necks—a Boy’s Composition.)—GH—SR 10 
Essay on the Understanding, An.—Anon.—HPE 
Essay on the Wheelbarrow.—Anon.—DE 
Essay on Translated Verse, The, Sel. fr. —Wentworth 
Dillon, Earl of Roscommon.—WEP 2 
Essence of Opera, The.—Anon.—HBP 
Established Church of Ireland, The. (Sel. fr. The 
Church of Ireland.)—T: B. Macaulay.—SS 
Established Church of Ireland, The. (Sel. fr. —The 
Church of Ireland.)—R: L. Sheik—SS 
Establishment of the Republic, The. — Alphonse 
de Lamartine.—SS 
(Republic Defined, A.)—BLP 
“Estrangement.”—C. N. Coggswell.—GH 
Estray, The.—B. F. Willson.—ASL 


Et Mori Lucrum.—J. L. Spalding. See God and the 
Soul. 

Eternal, The.—Percy B. Shelley. See Adonais. 
Eternal Burden, The.—Anon.—MYF 
Eternal Clockwork of the Skies.—E- Everett. See 
Uses of Astronomy, The. 

Eternal Goodness, The.—J: G. Whittier.—AA—TAS 
(Sel.)— HDL— SSS (longer.) 

Eternal Justice, The.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA—TAS 
Eternal Justice.—C: Mackay.—CS 12 
Eternal Light:—W: H. Furness.—HDL 
(Evening Hymn— si. diff. vers.) —AA 
(Nightfall— like AA..) —TAS 
Eternal London. (Rhymes on the Road, IX.)—T: 
Moore—HPE 

Eternal Poem, An. (To Mr. Pye— C.- — si. diff. fr. 

Poems.)—S: T. Coleridge.—HPE 
“Eternal spirit of the chainless mind.”—Lord Byron. 

See Prisoner of Chillon, The. 

Eternal Spring, The.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
Eternity.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
Eternity, Sel. fr. —T: Gibbons.—AE 
Eternity of Music, The.—Patrick J. (?) Ryan.—CS 31 
Ethan Allen. (Abr. and ad.) —G. L. Raymond.—DES 
Ethelinda’s Recitations.—-Anon.—WR 25 
Ethel’s Birthday Party.—Lizzie J. Rook.—TT 
Ethics of the Dust, The, Sel. fr. (Faults and Virtues 
— br. sel. fr. Lecture V.)—John Ruskin.—OS 1 
Ethiopiomania.—H : Tyrrell.—CH 
Etin the Forester.—Anon.—BB 
Etiquette.—W: S. Gilbert.—CS 19—FEP 
Eton College.—T: Gray. See Ode on a Distant Pros¬ 
pect of Eton College. 

Etruscan Ring, An.—J: W: Mackail.—VA 
ptsi Omnes, Ego Non.—Ernest Meyers.—VA 
Etude Realists. (Baby’s Feet; Baby’s Hands; Baby’s 
Eyes.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—GN—LC— 
VA 

(Baby’s Feet, A; Baby’s Hands, A— abr.) —OS 1 
(Baby’s Feet and Hands, A.)—TFS 
Eucharist of Affliction.—Julia W. Howe.—HDL 
Eugene Aram.—T: Hood. See Dream of Eugene 
Aram, The. 

Eugene Aram’s Dream.—T: Hood. See Dream of 
Eugene Aram, The. 

Eugene Field.—Marion F. Ham.—EDY 
Eugene Field to his Children.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Eulalie.—Edgar A. Poe.—HBR 

Eulogium on Franklin.—Honor<5 G. R. Mirabeau.— 
PS—SSD 

Eulogium [Eulogy—C.] on Henry Clay.—Abraham 
Lincoln.—PTS 

Eulogium upon St. Paul.—Jaques B. Bossuet.—FTR 
Eulogy of Walt Whitman.—Rob’t G. Ingersoll.— 
WR 13 

Eulogy of Wendell Phillips.—G: W; Curtis. See Wen¬ 
dell Phillips. A Eulogy, etc. 

Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson, Sels. fr. —Edw. 
Everett. 

Adams and Jefferson.—OM 

(Fathers of the Republic, The— sel.) —PP—PS 
—YFR 

(Great Lives Imperishable— abr.) —PTS 
(immortals, The— si. abr.) —OS 2 
(Imperishability of Great Examples— abr.) —SS 
(Men who Never Die.)—PR 
Eulogy on Charles Sumner, Sels. fr. —Carl Schurz. 
American Battle-flags.—FD 1—SC—TMD 
(Battle-flags, The.)—PRR 

(Eulogy on Charles Sumner— longest sel.) —CR 
Charles Sumner.—CS 16—FD 1 (si. diff. sel.) 

Eulogy on Emmet.—J: P. (?) Jones.—FS 
Eulogy on Garfield. (Memorial Address on the Life 
and Character of James A. Garfield— C.) —Jas. 
G. Blaine.—BS 10 (abr,) 

Death of Garfield [.The], (Sel.) —FD 1—NC— 
PPS—SC—SSD (si. abr. )—TMD—WCLG 1 
(Eulogy on President Garfield.)—LLC 
(Oration on James A. Garfield. Sel. fr.) —CS 21 
Garfield’s Early Life. (Sel.) —FD 2 
Eulogy on General Grant, Sel. fr. —H; W. Beecher.— 
BS 14—PS 

Eulogy on General Grant, Sel. fr. —J. P. Newman.— 
SPE 

Eulogy on Henry Clay.—Abraham Lincoln. See 
Eulogium on Henry Clay. 

Eulogy on Henry Ward Beecher.' Jos. Parker.—NC 
Eulogy on John Bright, A.—W: E. Gladstone.—SSD— 
TMD 

Eulogy on Lafayette, Sel. arr. fr. —E: Everett.— 
FTR—OM (abr.) 

(Oration on Lafayette.)—CR 


106 




TITLE INDEX 


Evening 


Eulogy on Lafayette.—C: Sprague.—CS 6 
Eulogy on Laughing.—(?) Sewall.—DDR—MDD 
Eulogy on O’Connell.—W: H. Seward. See Daniel 
O’Connell. 

Eulogy on President Garfield.—Jas. G. Blaine. See 
Eulogy on Garfield. 

Eulogy on the Death of Congressman James N. Burnes 
of Missouri. (C.)—J: J. Ingalls. 

(Senator Ingalls’ Great Speech on Death of Burnes, 
of Missouri— abr.) —SR 7 
Eulogy on U. S. Grant.—E. B. Sherman.—SR 6 
Eulogy on Washington.—Rob’t T. Payne, Jr.—HS 
Eulogy on Webster. (Discourse Commemorative of 
Daniel Webster, A—C.— br. sel.) —Rufus 
Choate.—SE 

Eulogy on Wendell Phillips.—G: W. Curtis. See 
Wendell Phillips. A Eulogy, etc. 

Eunice.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 28 
Eupheme, IX.: Elegy on my Muse, Sel. fr. (Pleas¬ 
ures of Heaven, The.)—Ben Jonson.—FP 
Euphranor, Sel. fr. (Ballad of Jenny the Mare, The.) 

—E: Fitzgerald.—BVC 
Euphrosyne. (C.)—Matthew Arnold. 

(Indifference.)—HBP 

Euphues, Br. sel. fr. (Tongue, The— fr. Of the Edu¬ 
cation of Youth— paraphrased fr. Plutarch.)— 

J. Lyly.—OS 1 

Eureka.—Stockton Bates.—CS 29 
Eureka.—Jo«iah G. Holland.—BIL—FTA 
Europa.—Stephen H. Thayer.—A A 
European Struggles for Freedom.—Reverdy Johnson. 

—SS 

Eurydice.—Fs. W. Bourdillon.—VA 
Eutaw Springs.—Philip Freneau.—AA—AWB—EDY 
(To the Memory of the Americans who Fell at 
Eutaw.)—PAP 

Euterpe’s Visit.—E. E. Cook.—SR 12 
Euthanasia.—G • McKnight.—TAS 
Euthanasia.—H : More.—EPs 
Euthanasia.—Marg. J. Pre«ton.—TMR 
Evanescence.—Harriet P. Spofford.—AA 
Evangeline. — H: W. Longfellow. — AP — MAL — 
WR 5 ( cond.) 

Evangeline, Sels. fr.- —BIL (br. sel. fr. Pt. I., 5; 

sel. fr. II., 1.)—WCLG 2 (opening and close.) 
Evangeline in Acadie. (Sel. fr. I., 1.)—AA 
Evangeline on the Prairie. (Sel. fr. II., 3.)—CR 
(Moonlight on the Prairie— si. abr.) —BNL 
Exile of the Acadians. (Sel. fr. I., 4.)—SO (arr.) 

(Evangeline, Sel. fr.) —SC 
Finding of Gabriel, The. (II., 5— abr.) —AA 
(Lost Found. The— si. cond.) —BS 10 
(Meeting of Evangeline and Gabriel, The— sel.) — 

BS 22 

On the Atchafala.va. (Sel. fr. II., 2.)—AA 
Primeval Forest. The. (Sel. fr. Introd.) —BNL 
(Evangeline, Sel. fr.) —AD 

Evangeline in Acadie.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Evangeline. 

Evangeline on the Prairie.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Evangeline. 

Eva’s Death.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Uncle Tom’s 
Cabin. 

Eve and the Serpent.—Anon.—BS 6—SDR 
Eve of Crecy, The.—W: Morris.—A VP 
Eve of Decoration Day, The.—S: F. Smith.—BLP 
Eve of Election, The. (C.) —J: G. Whittier.— 
FEP—SE (br. sel.) 

Ballot-box, The. (Sel.) —BNL 
Indian Summer. (Br. sel.) — BNL'(lst.) — PEO — 
PYO 

(Eve of Election.)—SE 
Eve of Mary, The.—Nora Hopper.—EDY 
Eve of Quatre Bras.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold. * 

Eve of St. Agnes, The.—J: Keats.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Flight, The. (Sel.) —WEP 4 
Music. (Br. sel.) —EPs 
Penitent, The. (Br. sel.) —GP 
Eve of St. Agnes.—Alfred Tennvson.—A VP 

(St. Agnes’ Eve— C.)— EDY—FEP—OB—OS 3— 
PGT 2—WEP 4—WR 25—YBF 
Eve of St. Bartholomew, The.—Walter Thombury.— 

OS 2 

Eve of St. John, The. (In Border Minstrelsy.)— 
Walter Scott,—BPB—PEB 3—WEP 4 
Eve of Waterloo, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Eve to Adam.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Evelyn.—Rossiter Johnson.—AA 

Evelyn Hope.—Rob’t Browning.—AVP—BNL—FEP 
—FP—GP—HBP—MR—VA 

107 


“Even from this brief review^ it is manifest that the 
nation is resolutely facing to the front.”— 
Jas. A. Garfield. See Inaugural Address. 

Even in a Palace. (Worldly Place— C .)—Matthew 
Arnold.—OS 2 

Even in a Palace.—Marcus Aurelius Antoninus. See 
Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius. 

Even in Death.—Helen C. Bergen.—WR 19 
Even Such is Time.—Walter Raleigh.—EHT—ELP 
(Conclusion, The.)—OB 
(Death of Sir Walter Raleigh.)—EDY 
(Last Lines.)—CEL 
(Lines Found in his Bible.)—BNL 
(Lines Written the Night before his Execution.)— 
FEP—YBF 

(Verses Found in his Bible in the Gate-house at 
Westminster— C .)—WEP 1 

Even this shall Pass Away.—Theodore Tilton.—DR 
—HBR 

(All Things shall Pass Away.)—BS 20—TMR 
(King’s Ring, The.)—OS 2 
“Evenin’ Hymn, The.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Evening.—Anon.—HBP 

Evening. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Evening.—Matthew Arnold.—LC (sel.) 

(Bacchanalia: or, The IJew Age.)—HBP 
Evening.—Rob’t Bulwer-Lytton.—C'EL 
Evening.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Evening.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 

Evening. (Chambers' Journal .)—POS 
Evening.—W: Collins.—CEL—EPs—FEP 

(Ode to Evening—C.)—EPs—FEP—HBP—OB— 
PGT 1—WEP 3 
(To Evening.)—BPB 
Evening.—(?) Croly.—LLC 
Evening.—G: W. Doane.—AA 

(Evening Contemplation.)—FEP 
(“Softly now the light of day.”)—LLC—SAE 
Evening.—Jos. R. Drake.—POS 

Evening.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The. 

Evening. (Fr. Post-meridia^i.)—W. P. Garrison.—AA 
Evening. (C.)—J: Keble.—FEP 

(Sun of my Soul.)—LLC (abr .)—YBT (sel.) 
Evening.—Frances A. Kemble.—AVP 
Evening.—Archibald Lampman.—BNL 
Evening.—J; Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Evening. (Sun upon the Lake, The— C. — fr. The 
Doom of Devorgoil.)—Walter Scot*.—BPB 
(Datur Hora Quieti.)—PGT 1 
(Leonard Tarries Long.)—YBF 
Evening.—Percy B. Shelley.—POS 
Evening.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
Evening at Home, An.—Anon.—MAD 
Evening at the Farm.—J: T. Trowbridge.—BS 1— 
FTR—GN—HNS—SA—SR 1 
(Farm-yard Song.)—BeR—CS 4—WCL 
Evening Brings us Home.—Anon.—CS 17—LLC 
Evening. By a Tailor.—Oliver W. Holmes.—HPE 
Evening Cloud, The.—J: Wilson.—BNL—FEP— 
POS (abr.) 

(Emblem of Peace, An.)—CS 21 
Evening Company, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Evening Contemplation.—G: W. Doane. See Evening. 
Evening Doze, An.—Albert E. Hunt.—CS 31 
Evening Hymn, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Evening Hymn.—Sir T: Browne.—-CEL—FEP—YBF 
(Before Sleep.)—EPs 

Evening Hymn.—Mary L. Duncan.—YBT 

(Child’s Evening Praver [,A].)—COS—DLS—PP 

_gSS 

(Tender Shepherd. The.)—TFS 
Evening Hymn.—Frd’k W: Faber.—FEP—SSS (sel.) 
Evening Hymn.—W: H: Furness. See Eternal Light, 
Evening Hymn.—T: Ken.-—FEP 
Evening Hymn.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FEP 
Evening Hymn.—Chandler Robbins.—TAS 
Evening Hymn for a Child.—J: Pierpont.—TAS 
Evening Hvmn of the Alpine Shepherds.—W: Beattie. 
—FEP 

Evening Idyl, An.—Anon.—CS 20 

Evening in Paradise.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
Evening in the Alps.—Jas. Montgomery. See Alps, 
The. 

Evening in Tyringham Valley.—R: W. Gilder.—A A 
Evening Melody.—Aubrey De Vere.—PGT 2 
Evening on Calais Beach. (Misc. Sonnets, Pt. I, 30.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—OB 
(By the Sea.)—PGT 1—YBF 

(“It is a beauteous evening, calm and free.”)— 
FEP—MBL 

(On the Beach at Calais.)—WEP 4 


/ 




Evening 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Evening on the Campus.—C: K. Field.—CG 2 
Evening Prayer, An.—Bernard Barton.—WCL 
Evening Prayer. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Evening Rest, The. (University of Virginia Maga¬ 
zine.) —CG 3 

Evening Reverie, An, Sel. fr. —W: C. Bryant.—AA 
Evening Sail, The.—G: Crabbe. See Borough, The. 
Evening Scene, An. (Br. sel. fr. The River— si. diff. 

vers.) —Coventry Patmore.—PGT 2 
Evening Song.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful Shep¬ 
herdess, The. 

Evening Song.—Sidney Lanier.—ASL—BIL—GP— 
PYO 

(On the Shore.)—TAY 

Evening Song, An.—Rob’t L. Munger.—CG 2 
Evening Song on the Plantation.—J. A. Macon.—CD 
Evening Songs.—J: V. Cheney.—-AA 
Evening Star, The.—T: Campbell.—BNL 

(Song to the Evening Star.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(To the Evening Star.)—FEP—HBP 
Evening Star, The. W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Evening Voluntary. (IX.)—W: Wordsworth.— 
WEP 4 

Evening Wind, The. (C.) —W: C. Bryant.—AA— 
BNL—GP—HBP—LLC (si. abr.) 

(To the Evening Wind— si. abr.) —PHS 
(Abr. vers, is like Poems.) 

Evening with Art, An. (Ent.) —-Anon.—EuE 
Evening with Helen’s Babies, An.—J: Habberton. 

See Helen’s Babies. 

Evensong.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Eventide.—T: Burbidge.—VA 
Eventide.—C. A. Mason.—TAS 
Even-time.—J: S. Thomson.—TCY 
“Events, with trumpet-call, summon us to our post.” 
—J. A. James.—GG 

Ever a Song Somewhere.—Jas. W. Riley.—YBT 
(Song, A—C.)—GMS 
Ever so Far Away.—A. Von Boyle.—DR 
Ever so Long Ago.—Anon.—WR 14 
“Ever so Long Ago.”—T. P. Sanborn.—CG 1 
Everett.—T: W. Parsons. 5 —EDY 

Everlasting Memorial, The.—Horatius Bonar.—BS 8— 
Qg gj_LLC 

Everlasting No, The. (Sartor Resartus, Ch. VIII.— 
abr.)— T: Carlyle.—BS 19 
Everlasting Talker, The.—Anon.—FDY 
“Every calling is constantly making a silent, invisible 
draft.” ( Nation , The.) —GG 
"Every Flower is Sweet to Me.”—Caroline May.—AD 
Every Little Helps.—Anon.—TFS 
Every One to his Own Way.—J: V. Cheney.—AA 
Every Year.—Albert Pike [or Jas. W. Covert].— 
CS 17 (si. diff. vers.) —SM—SR 4 
Every-day Botany.—Kathe. H. Perry.—PEO 
Every-day Case, An. (Fr. Mr., Miss, and Mrs.)—C: 
Bloomingdale, Jr.—BS 26 

Every-day Characters, Sets. fr. — Winthrop M. Praed. 
Belle of the Ball, The. (Ill;—Belle of the Ball¬ 
room, The— C.)— BNL—DDR—FEP—HPE— 
THP 

(End of the Romance, The— sel.) —FLS 
My Partner. (IV.)—HPE—THP 
Quince. (II.)—FEP 

Vicar, The. (I.)—FEP—HBP—HPE—THP—VA 
—WEP 4 

Everv-day Occurrence, An.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Eve’s Daughter.—E: R. Sill.—ASL—AWH—OH— 
THP 

Eve’s Lament.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Eve’s Lamentation.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
Eve’s Mirror.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Eviction.—W: J. Linton.—VA 
Evidence.—-B. O. H.—CG 2 

Evil of Disunion.—Dan’l Webster. See Character of 
Washington, The. 

Evil Thought.—Charlotte F. B. Roge.—TAS 
Evil Times. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Evils of Gossip.—Anon.—KNE 
Evils of Ignorance, The.—Horace Mann.—BS 3 
Evils of Tight Lacing, The.—“Charlotte Elizabeth.”— 
FMR 

Evils of War, The.—Dan’l S. Dickinson.—HSS 1 
Evolution.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 

Evolution of Dodd. The, Sel. fr. (Other Fellow, The— 
sel. fr. Ch. XIII.) W H. Smith—SC 
Ex Libris.—Arthur J. Munby.—LBB—MBB 
“Ex Ore Infantium.”—Fs. Thompson.—HBR 
Examination Day.—Eliza Doolittle.—SD 
Examination Day.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Examination in History, An.—Anon.—CD—CDV— 
SDR 


Examination in Natural History. (Dial.) —Anon.— 
DE 

Examination of a Candidate for Position as Teacher.— 
Anon.—PTS 

Examination of Shakespeare, Sel. fr. (Maid’s Lament. 
The.)—Walter S. Landor.—BNL—FEP—FP 
HBP—OB—PGT 2—VA—WEP 4—YBF 
Examining de Bumps.— (?) White.—MDD 
Example.—Annie D. Hanks.—TAV 
Example. (Effect of Example— C.) —J: Keble.— 
BNL—CS 7—SM—SSS (abr.) 

Example of America, The.—Fs. Jeffrey.—SS 
Example of Christ, The. (Hymn CXXXIX.)—Isaac 
Watts.—HBP 

Example of Washington, The.—C: F. Adams.—FD 1 
Examples for Ireland.—T. F. Meagher.—CS 6— 

OM (si. abr.) 

Excel. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine.— 
TCP 

Excellent Ballad of Charity, An.—T: Chatterton.— 
WEP 3 

Excellent Man, The.—Heinrich Heine.—PS 
Excelsior.—Anon.—CDV (abr.) 

(Chinese Excelsior— si. diff .vers.)— CS 20 
(For other varodies see Ein Deutsches Lied and 
Proclivior.) 

Excelsior—H: W. Longfellow—BNL—BS 2—CS 1— 
FEP—HBP—LLC—SS—WCLI 2 
Excessive Modesty.—W: Cowper. See Conversa¬ 
tion. 

Exchange, The.—S: T. Coleridge.—BNL 
Exchange, The.—Sarah H. Palfrey.—TAS 
Excitement at [or in] Kettleville, The. (Dial.) — 
Epes Sargent.—ASD—PR 
Exclamatory.—Anon.—MHR 
Exclusive’s Broken Idol, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Excursion, The, Sels. fr.- —W: Wordsworth. 

Among the Mountains. (Fr. Bk. IV.)—WEP 4 
Excursion, The. (Br. sels.) —BNL 
God in Nature. (Fr. Bk. III.)—FTR 

"I cannot doubt that they whom ye deplore.” 
(Br. sel. fr. Bk. IV.)—HDL 
Mind’s Eye, The. (Br. sel. fr. Prelude.)—BNL 
Mist Opening in the Hills. (Fr. Bk. II.)—WEP 4 
(Cloud-visions— br. sel.) —BNL 
(Vision of Mist splendours, A— si. abr.) —FTR 
Moon among Trees, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. IV.) — 
WEP 4 

(Imagination— shorter sel.) —BNL 
Mountain Ash, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. VII.)—HSS 1 
Sea Shell, The. (Fr. Bk. IV.)—WEP 4 
(Sea-shore, The— br. sel.) —BNL 
Sunrise. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—IR 
Sunset. (Sel. fr. Bk. IX.)—IR 
Twin Peaks of the Valley. (Fr. Bk. II.)—WEP 4 
Unknown Poets. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I.)—BNL 
Excursion to the Mountains, An. (Fr. The Village 
Patriarch.)—Ebenezer Elliott.—WEP 4 
Excuse. (Urania— C .)—Matthew Arnold.—HBP— 

OH 

Execution, The. ( C. —Hon. Mr. Sucklethumbkin’s 
Story.)—R: H. Barham.-—BS 25—FEP 
(My Lord Tomnoddy.)—CS 1 
Execution, The.—Lord Byron. See Parisina. 
Execution of Andre, The. (Fr. Pemberton, Pt. III., 
Ch. XIII.)—H: Peterson—BS 3—PFP 
Execution of Charles I.—Andrew Marvell. See Hora- 
tian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ire¬ 
land, A. 

Execution of Joan of Arc.—T: DeQuincey. See Joan 
of Arc. 

Execution of Lady De Winter, The. (Three Musket¬ 
eers, The, Ch. XXXVI.)—Alexandre Dumas. 
—BS24 

Execution of Louis XVI., The. (Fr. Marie Antoinette 
— play. )—Anon.—DES 

Execution of Louis XVI.—W: M. Thackeray. See 
Chronicle of the Drum, The. 

Execution of Madame Roland. (Sel. fr. The Giron¬ 
dists, Vol. III., Bk. LI.)—CS 13 
Execution of Marie Antoinette. — T: Carlyle. See 
French Revolution, The. 

Execution of Marie Antoinette.—W: M. Thackeray. 

See Chronicle of the Drum, The. 

Execution of Montrose, The. (In Lays of the Scottish 
Cavaliers.)—W: E. Aytoun.—BNL-—EDY (sel.) 
—EHT—FEP—HB—MR—VA 
(SI. abr.)— CS 11—DS 
(Abr.) —FR—HSS 2—OS 2—SS 
Execution of Queen Mary. (Sel. fr. Mary Stuart, Ch. 

XXXIV.)—Alphonse de Lamartine.—BS 11 
Execution of Sir Thomas More, The.-—Jas. A. Froude. 
See History of England. 


108 




TITLE INDEX 


Face 


Execution of Sydney Carton, The.—C: Dickens. See 
Tale of Two Cities, A. 

Execution of the Princess de Lamballe.—W: M. 

Thackeray. See Chronicle of the Drum, The. 
Execution of Ugo Bassi.—H. E. H. King.—EDY 
Executive Power to be Dreaded.—Dan’1 Webster. See 
Presidential Protest, The 
Exequy, The. (Abr.)— H: King— HBP 
(Exequy on his Wife— si. diff. abr.) —OB 
Exequy on his Wife.—H: King. See Exequy, The. 
Exercise around the Christmas Tree.—Anon.—CP 
Exercise for Washington’s Birthday.—Anon.—DFR 
Exercise of the Fan.—Jos. Addison. See Spectator, 
The. 

Exercise Recitation, An.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
COS—PP 

Exhibition Day.—Eliza Doolittle.-—SD 
Exhortation.—T: Hastings.—A A 

Exhortation to Courage.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
John. 

Exhortation to 'Praise God. (Psalm CXLVIII.)—SS 
Exhortation to Prayer.—Marg. Mercer.—AA—HBP— 
LLC 

Exhortation to the Greeks.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, 
The. 

Exile at Rest, The.—J: Pierpont.—AA (abr.) 

(Napoleon at Rest.)—SR 3 
Exile of Erin [.The].—T: Campbell.—BNL—FEP 
(Abr. — w. music.) —NPS—YP 
Exile of the Acadians, The.-—H: W T . Longfellow. See 
Evangeline. 

Exile to his Wife, The.—Jos. Brennan [or Brenan],— 
CS 8—FEP 

(Come to me. Dearest.)—BNL—FTA—TFY 
Exiled.—Mary McGuire.—CS 34 
Exiles, The. ( Chambers’ Journal.) —HP 
Exiles.—W: H. Hayne.—A A 
Exile’s Devotion, The. T: D’A. McGee.—VA 
Exile’s Hope, The.-—Victor Hugo.—OS 3 
Exiles in Egypt, The.—H: B. Carrington.—BLP 
Exile’s Song, The.—Rob’t Gilfillan.—FEP—FP—VA 
Existence of a God, The.—Anon.—CS 5—-KNE—SA 
Exit.— W: Watson.—VA 

Exmoor Harvest Song.—R: D. Blackmore. SeeLorna 
Doone. 

Exodus, Sels. jr. Bible. 

Song of Israel. (Ch. XV., 1-18.)—AE 
(Song of Moses—1-19.)—BS 3 
First Constitution, The. (Ch. XX., 2-17.)—BLP 
(Ten Commandments, The—3-17.)—LLC 
Exordium.—Demosthenes. See Oration on the Crown, 
The. 

Expansion. (Sel. fr. A Broadway Pageant.)—Walt 
Whitman.—SR 13 

Expectation.—Theodore Wratislaw.—VA 
Expected Visitors, The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Expecting to Get Even. ( Boston Post.) —SR 4 
Expectoration, An. (On my Joyful Departure from 
the Same City [Cologne]— C.) —S: T. Coleridge. 
—HPE 

Expectoration the Second.—S: T. Coleridge.—HPE 
(Cologne—C.)—FEP—HBP—THP 
(Epigram: Cologne.)—BNL 
Expensive Chicken, An.—Anon.—SR 1 
Experience.—Edith Wharton.—AA 
Experience. (Williams Weekly .)—CG 1 
Experience and a Moral. An.—Frd’k S. Cozzens.—BNL 
Experience of the McWilliamses with Membranous 
Croup. (C.) —S: L. Clemens._ 

(Membranous Croup and the McWilliamses.)—BS 5 
—SR 10 

Experience with a Refractory Cow.—Anon.—CH— 
NPS—YP 

Experience with European Guides.—S: L. Clemens. 
See Innocents Abroad. 

Experiences of Nature.—H : W. Beecher. See: 

Death of our Almanac, The. 

Walk among Trees, A. 

Explanation, An.—Walter Learned.—HP 
(In Explanation.)—A A 
(What Else Could he Do.)—BS 21 
Exploit of Hector, The.—Homer. See Iliad, The. 
Expostulation. (C.)—J: G. W'hittier. 

(Our Countrymen in Chains— si. abr.) —TMD 
Expostulation and Reply.—W: Wordsworth.—FTR— 
LLC—WEP 4 

Expulsion of Catiline from the Senate.—G: Croly. See 
Catiline. 

Expunging Resolution, The. (Abr.) —H: Clay.—OM 
—SS 

(On the Expunging Resolution— C .)—PS 
Exquisite Beauty of Beatrice, The.—Dante Alighieri. 
See Divine Comedy, The. 


Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg. 
(C .)— W: Wordsworth.—MBL 
(On the Death of James Hogg.)—EDY 
(Passing of the Elder Bards, The— sel.) —VA 
Extending Credit.—Anon.—BS 25 

Extension of the Term of Copyright.—T: N. Talfourd. 
—SS 

Extent of Country no Bar to Union.—Edmund Ran¬ 
dolph.—SS 

(Union of the States, The— ptly. same.) —SIt 8 
Extracting a Secret. (Dial.) —Fs. Marion Crawford.— 
NDP 

Extracts from a Poem Delivered at Brown University 
in 1830, Sel. jr. (What is Ambition?)—Na¬ 
thaniel P. Willis.—BLP—SR 3 (lonyer.) 
Extraordinary Phenomenon, An.—Anon.—BeR 
“Extras.”—R: Burton.-—AA 
Extravaganza, An.—Victor Hugo.—BIL 
Extreme Unction.—Jas. R. Lowell.—SR 1—TAV 
Extremes.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Extremes Meet.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Eyeless at Gaza.—J: Milton. See Samson Agonistes. 
Eyes and no Eyes. (Sel. ad. fr. preface to Madam How 
and Lady Why.)—C: Kingsley.—WCLI 2 
Eyes, Hide my Love.—S: Daniel. See Hymen’s 
Triumph. 

Ezra and Me and the Boards.—Mary H. Field.—BS 24 


F 

Fabius to iEmilius.—Livy. See History of Rome. 
Fable. (C.) — Ralph W. Emerson. — AWH — HBP — 
LC—PoR—THP 

(Mountain and the Squirrel, The.)—AD—BVC— 
CGd — CS 29 — GMS — OS 1 — PC — PHS — 
POS — PS — PTS — WCL 
Fable. A. (Popular Educator.) —NV 
Fable for Critics, A, Sels. fr. —Jas. R. Lowell. 

On Himself.—AA 
To his Countrymen.—AA 

Fable of the Boy that Stole Apples. (IT ebster’s Spell¬ 
ing Book .)—AD 

Fable of the Oak and the Briar.—Edmund Spenser 
See Shepheardes Calender, The. 

Fables.—iEsop. 

Fables from JEsop (25).—LLC 
Ass in the Lion’s Skin, The. 

Bald Knight, The. 

Boy and the Filberts, The. 

Boys and the Frogs, The. 

Bull and the Goat, The. 

Charcoal-burner and the Fuller, The. 

Dog in the Manger, The. 

Eagle and the Arrow, The. 

Fisherman, The. 

Fox and the Grapes, The. 

Fox and the Lion, The. 

Gnat and the Bull, The. 

Hare and the Tortoise, The. 

Hen and the Golden Egg, The. 

Hercules and the Waggoner. 

Mischievous Dog, The. 

Old Man and Death, The. 

Rivers and Sea. 

Shepherd’s Boy and the Wolf, The. 

Three Tradesmen, The. 

Trumpeter Taken Prisoner, The. 

Viper and the File, The. 

Widow and her Little Maids, The. 

Wild Ass and the Lion, The. 

Wolf and the Goat, The. 

Farthing Rushlight, The CLamp, The).-—OS 1 
Goose with the Golden Eggs, The.—OS 1 
Jupiter and the Bee.—OS 1 
Wind and the Sun, The.—OS 1 
Fabricius Refuses Bribes.-—Pliny.—BLP 
Face, A.—Rob’t Browning.—VA 
Face, The.—Ebenezer Jones.—VA 
Face, A.—W: T. Washburn.—BIT. 

Face against the Pane, The.—T: B. Aldrich.—CS 19— 
FR—MMR 

(Mabel; or. The Face against the Pane.)—SA 
Face in the Cathedral, The.—Mary J. K. Lawson.— 
TCV 

Face in the Tongs, A.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Face of a Demon, The.—C: B. Lewis.—WR 19 
Face on [or upon] the Floor, The.—H. A. D’Arcy.— 
CS 33—DS—NPS—YP 

Face upon the Floor, The.—H. A. D’Arcy. See Face 
on the Floor, The. 


109 





Faces 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Faces, SeZ. fr. (“Behold a Woman!”)—Walt Whit¬ 
man.—HBP 

Faces in the Fire.—Anon.—SR 1 
Faces we Meet, The.—Allie Wellington.—CS 13 
Facetious Story of John Gilpin, The.—W: Cowper.— 
MHR 

(Diverting History of John Gilpin, The— C.) — 
BNL — BVC — FEP — GN — HBP — MBL 
— PEB 3 — THP 

(John Gilpin.)— BPB — CGd — CS 7 — PC — 
PHS — PSR — WCL 
Facial Family, The.—Anon.—SR 10 

(Crack-mouthed Family, The.)—WR 16 
Facilis Descensus. ( Congregationalist .)—EA 
Factory Girls’ Last Day, The.—Rob’t D. Owen (?).— 
CS 7 

Facts Concerning "Jay Gould.”—Anon.—CS 27 
Facts in the Case of the Great. Beef Contract. (C.) — 
S: L. Clemens. 

(“Great Beef Contract,” The.)—BS 4 (si. abr .)— 
MHR 

(Mark Twain’s “Great Beef-contract”— si. abr .)— 
CS 4 

Fad Obsolete, The.—Maude Andrews.—TL 
Faded Flowers.—Ida M. Buxton.—CS 25 
Faded Leaves.—Alice Cary.—PEO—POS 
Fading.—G: Howland.—SR 4 

Fading Leaf, The.—Gail Hamilton.—BS 15—CS 22— 
NPS—YP 

Fading Rose, The, Sel. jr. (Epitaph.)—Philip Fre¬ 
neau.—AA 

Fading Summer.—T: Nash.—ELP 

Faerie Queene, The, Sels. fr .—Edmund Spenser. 

Bower of Bliss, The.—BNL (Bk. II., Can. XII., 
St. 58-62, 70, 71.)—WEP 1 (42-44, 70-72, 
74-76.) 

Faerie Queene, The. (St. 70.)—SE 
Cave of Mammon, The. (II., Can. VII., 1-30.)— 
WEP 1 

Cave of Sleep, The. (I., Can. I., 39, 41.)—BNL 
Claims of Mutability Pleaded before Nature. 
(VII., Can. VII., 17-19, 44-47, 56-59; VII., 
Can. VIII.)—WEP 1 
Mutability. (VII., Can. VIII.)—GP 
Contentment. (VI., Can.' IX., 29, 30— abr .)— 
BLP 

Gardens of Venus. (IV., Can. X., 21-30.)— 
WEP 1 

Gloriana. (V., Can. IX., 27-40.)—EHT 
House of Busyrane. (III., Can. XI., 46-54.)— 
EPs 

House of Pride, The. (I., Can. IV., 8-14, 16, 17.) 
—WEP 1 

Ministry of Angels, The. (II., Can. VIII., 1, 2.)— 
BNL—GP 

Months and Seasons. (VII., Can. VII., 28-43.) 
—GP 

August. (St. 37— abr.) —GN—POS 
Autumn. (30.)—GN—POS 

Faerie Queene, The, Sels. fr. (28, 30, 31.)— 
BNL 

May. (34.)—GN—POS 

Seasons, The. (28.)—GN (sel .)—POS 

Summer. (29.)—GN (abr .)—POS (sel.) 

Winter. (31.)—GN—POS 
Phaedria and the Idle Lake. (II., Can. VI., 1-18.) 
—WEP 1 

Faerie Queene, The, Sel. fr. (St. 12— sel .)— 
BNL 

Quelling of the Blatant Beast, The. (VI., Can. 

XII., 23-28, 31-38, 40, 41.)—WEP 1 
Song of Enchantment, The. (I., Can. IX., 39, 40, 
43, 44.)—ELP 

Sunrise. (I., Can. V., 2— sel .)—GP 
Trees. (I., Can. I., 7-9 —si abr .)—EPs 
(In Praise of Trees— abr.) —AD—LLC 
(Kinds of Trees to Plant— abr .)—HSS 1 
Una and the Lion. (I., Can. III., 4-9.)—BNL— 
EPs 

Una and the Red Cross Knight.—BNL (I., Can. I., 
1-7.)—WR 11 (1-13, 28.) 

(Red Cross Knight and Una, The. 1-10.)— 
WEP 1 

Una’s Marriage. (I., Can. XII., 21-23, 37-42.)— 
WEP 1 

Wooing of Amoret. (I., Can. X., 37-39, 42, 43, 
47-58.)—WEP 1 

Faery Foster-mother, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.—VA 
Faery Song. (C.)—J: Keats.—LC 

(Fairy Song.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—OS 1—YBF 
Faesulan Idyl. (Poems and Epigrams, LXVII.— si. 
abr.) —Walter S. Landor.—WEP 4 
(Fiesolan Idyl.)—VA 


“Fail—yet rejoice; because no less.” (Br. sel. fr. 

Light and Shade.)—Adelaide Procter.—CS 1 
Faded.—Phillips Thompson.—PEO 
Failure.—Anon.—HP 
Failure.—Charles Quiet.—TS 
Fain I Would.—Alfonso Ferrabosco.—ELP 
“Eain would I Climb. ’—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
Faint Heart.—Harlan C. Pearson.—CG 2 
Faint Heart ne’er Won Eair Lady.—C: P. Hine.—CG 2 
Fair and Fair.—G: Peele. See Arraignment of Paris, 
The. 

Fair Annie. (Lord Thomas and Fair Annie— in Bor¬ 
der Minstrelsy.) — Anon. — BB —OB — 
PEB 2 (si. diff. vers. — abr.) 

(Walter Scott’s vers. — si. diff.) —EPs 
Fair Annie of Lochroyan.—Anon.—BB (abr.) —FEP 
(Lass of Lochroyan— abr.) —BFV—OB 
(All si. diff. versions.) 

“Fair are the flowers and the children, but their subtle 
suggestion is fairer.”—R: Realf.—GG 
(Indirection— C.) —AA—BS 18 (si. abr.) —CS 18 
—GP 

Fair Circassian, The.—R: Garnett.—VA 
Fair Copy-holder, The.—C: H. Crandall.—TFY 
Fair Easter Lilies.—Ellen K. Vincent.—SR 12 
Fair Eleanor.—W: Blake.—PEB 3 
Fair England.—Helen G. Cone.—AA 
Fair Enthusiast, A.—Anon.—CS 33 
Fair Exchange, A.—G: Birdseye.—AWH 
Fair Exchange no Robbery. (Frags, fr. various 
authors.) —BNL 

Fair Fight; or, the Wife’s Allowance, A.—Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.—KH 

“Fair Greece! sad relic of departed. worth.”—Lord 
Byron. See Childe Harold s Pilgrimage. 

Fair Helen. (Fair Helen of Kirconnell, Pt. II.)—Anon. 
—EPs (si. abr.) —FEP—HBP—PEB 1—PGT 1 
—VSG—WR 21 
(Burd Helen.)—CEL 

(Helen of Kirkconnelfl].)—BB—BPB—LH—OB— 
OEB 

(John Mayne’s vers.) —FEP 
Fair Helen of Kirconnell.—Anon. See foregoing. 

Fair Hills of Ireland, The.—Sir S: Ferguson.—OB—- 
TIP 

Fair Ines.—T- Hood.—FP—HBP—OB—VA 
Fair Janet.-—Anon.—PEB 1 

Fair Maid and the Sun, The.— Arthur O’Shaughnessy. 
—VA 

Fair Maid of the Exchange, The, Sel. fr. (Go, Pretty 
Birds.)—T: Heywood.—FEP 
(Message, The.)—OB 
(Phillis.)—EP 
(To Phyllis.)—ES—OEL 
(“Ye little birds that sit and sing.”)—ELP 
Fair Margaret and Sveet William. (In Percy's Re- 
liques.)—Anon.—OEB—PEB 1 
(Fair Margaret’s Misfortunes— si. diff. vers.)—BB 
Fair Margaret’s Misfortunes.—Anon. See foregoing. 
Fair Play for Women. (Sel.) —G: W: Curtis.—BS 7 
(Woman’s Rights— sel.) —TMR 
Fair Rosamund.—T. Delone.—CGd—OEB (abr.) 

“Fair ship, that from the Italian shore.”—Alfred Ten¬ 
nyson. See In Memoriam. 

Fair Sufferers.—Anon.—MMR 

Fair Tree!—Lady Winchelsea.—AD (sel.) 

(Tree, The.)—WEP 3 

Fairest Flower, The. (Diff. tr. of The Beauteous 
Flower.)—Johann W. von Goethe.—WR 9 
Fairest Thing in Mortal Eyes, The.—Charles, Duke of 
Orleans (tr. by H: F. Cary).-—BNL (si. abr.) 
—HBP 

Fairie Queene, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Fairies. (Frags fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Fairies, The. (C. )—W: Allingham—BFV—BNL—BVC 
—CGd—CSS — FEP— HBP — HBR — LC — 
OB—PHS—PPSr—TIP—VA—WR 16 (abr.) 
(Fairy Folk, The.)—GN—OS 1—WCL 
Fairies. (Sel. fr. Little Garden of Roses.)—T: War- 
ton.—EPs 

Fairies’ Dance, The.—Anon.—ELP 
Fairies’ Dance, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Fairies Dancing, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Fairies’ Farewell, The.—R: Corbet.—HBP 

(Farewell to the Fairies.)—BNL (abr.) —FEP 
Fairies’ Lullaby, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream. 

Fairies of the Caldon-Low, The.—Mary Howitt.— 
BFV — FEP — FMR — HBP — OS 1 — PC 
— PHS — PoR — WCL 

Fairies’ Shopping, The.—Margaret Deland.—PoR 
Fairies’ Song, The.—Anon.—HBP 





TITLE INDEX 


Fallen 


Fairies’ Song. ( Fr . Amyntas; or, The Impossible 
Dowry.)—T: Randolph (tr. by Leigh Hunt).— 
BNI. 

(Song of Fairies.)—FEP—HBP 
(Song of Fairies Robbing an Orchard— C.) —BVC 
Fair-Virtue, the Mistress of Philarete, Sets. fr. —G: 
Wither. 

Admire not, Shepherd’s Boy.—EP 
Love-poems (3).—WEP 2 

Song to her Beauty, A. (Love-poem, I.)—ES 
Shepherd’s Swain, A.—EP 
Fairy.—Anon.—CP 

Fairy and Child.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Fairy Barcarolle, A.—W: H. Eddy.—CG 2 
“Fairy beam upon you, The.” — Ben Jonson. See 
Masque of the Metamorphosed Gipsies, A. 
Fairy Bell.—Marion Short.—WR 7 
Fairy Bread.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Fairy Child, The.—J: Anster — BNL—HBP 
Fairy Dance, The.—Anon. See Fairy Queen, The. 
Fairy Faces.—Anon.—HB 
Fairy Fiddler, The.—Nora Hopper.—TIP 
Fairy Folk, The.—W: Allingham. See Fairies, The. 
Fairy Folk, The.—Rob’t Bird.—PoR 
Fairy Folk.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Fairy Gold.—J: Todhunter.—TIP 

Fairy in Armour, A.—Jos. R. Drake. See Culprit 
Fay, The. 

Fairy Jewels.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Fairy Jokes, A. (Play.) —Anon.—EuE 
Fairy Land.—W: Shakespeare. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream and Tempest, The. 

Fairy Life, The. W: Shakespeare. See Tempest, 
The. 

Fairy of the Dell, The.—Alice Cary (?).—WR 5 
FairyQueen, The. (C. — in Percy’sReliques.)—Anon. 
—CEL (abr.)— FEP—HBP—PTS (sel.) 

(Fairy Dance, The— sel. — ad .)—ASD 
(Fairy Song, A.)—BVC 

Fairy Queen.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Fairy Queen’s Decision, The.—Louise E. V. Boyd.— 
StD 

Fairy Revels. (Fr. Endimion, Act IV., Sc. 3.)—J: 
Lyly.—ELP 

Fairy Shipwreck.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Fairy Song, A.—Anon. See Fairy Queen, The.— 
Anon. 

Fairy Song.—J: Keats. See Fairy Song. 

Fairy Song. (Sel. fr. The Legend of the Haunted 
Tree.)—Winthrop M. Praed.—OB 
Fairy Songs. — W: Shakespeare. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream and Tempest, The. 

Fairy Story. A.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Fairy Tale, A.—E: F. Turner.—CS 29—NPS—YP 
Fairy Thorn, The.—S: Ferguson.—PEB 4—TIP—VA 
Fairy Thrall, The.—Mary C. G. Byron.—VA 
Fairy to Puck, The.-—W: Shakespeare. See Midsum¬ 
mer Night’s Dream. 

Fairy-land.—Eliz. Y. Case.—BS 5 
Fairy’s Love Song, A.—Ella Higginson.—LC 
Fairy’s Revenge, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Fairy’s Song, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream. 

Faith.—Anne C. L. Botta.—TAS 
Faith.—Frances A. (Kemble) Butler.—BNL—EPs— 
FEP—VA 

(“Better trust all and be deceived.”)—GG 
(Trust.)—CS 19 
Faith.—T: Chatterton.—PYO 

(Resignation [, The—C.].)—FEP—HBP 
Faith.—J: V. Cheney—TAS 
Faith.—Ray Palmer.—AA—TAS 

(My Faith Looks up to Thee.)—-FEP—SAE— 
TAV 

Faith.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—TAS 
Faith.—G: Santayana.—BNL 

Faith and a Heart.—J: L. Spalding. See God and the 
Soul. 

Faith and Freedom.-—W: Wordsworth .—See Destiny. 
Faith and Hope.—Rembrandt Peale.—BNL 
(Don’t be Sorrowful, Darling.)—GP 
Faith and Reason.—Eliz. Y. Case.—BS 4 (abr .)— 
CS 13 

Faith and Works.—Anon.—CS 15 
Faith and Works.—Alice Cary.—CS 8 
Faith and Works.—W: H. Montgomery.—DR 
Faith, Hope and Charity. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.— 
TDT 

Faith in God.—Fs. L. (7) Hawks.—PC 
Faith of Washington, The.—F: R. Coudert.—PEO— 
TMR 


Faith Trembling.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
Faithful Angel, The.—J : Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
Faithful Bird, The. (Abr.) —W: C'owper.—CGd—LC 
PHS 

Faithful Dog, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—-FP 
Faithful Friends. (Frays, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Faithful Little Wife, A.—Oliver W. Holmes. See 
Professor at the Breakfast Table, The. 

Faithful Lovers, The.—Anon.—BNL—C’S 6—SR 10 
Faithful Promises. (C.) —Frances R. Havergal. 

(New Year’s Hymn.)—BS 18 
Faithful Shepherdess, The, Sels. fr. —J: Fletcher [or 
Beaumont and Fletcher], 

Country Scenes in Old Days (includes Daybreak— 
fr. Act IV., Sc. 4; Unfolding the Flocks— fr. 
V., 1— abr - Evening— fr. II., 2.)—PHS 
Evening.—CGd 

(Evening Song.)—CEL—GN—POS 
(Folding [of] the Flocks.)—-BNL—FEP—HBP 
—LC—OS 3—YBF 
(Priest’s Evening Song. The.)—EP 
Hymn to Pan. (Fr. I., 2.)—OB—OEL 
Hymn to Pan. (Fr. V., 5.)—EP 
(To Pan.)—FEP—HBP—LC—PHS 
Morning. (Inc. Daybreak and Unfolding the 
Flocks— sel.) —POS 

Priest’s Morning Song. (Unfolding the Flocks.) 
—EP 

River God to Amoret, The. (Fr. III., 1.) 
—WEP 2 

Satyr, The. (Fr. I., 1.)—WEP 2 
Satyr, The. (Fr. V., 5.)—WEP 2 
(Satyr’s Service, The.)—EP 
Song, The. (Fr. III., 1.)—WEP 2 
Faithful unto Death.—Clifford Harrison.—VSG— 
WR 16 

Faithful unto Death.—R. N. Titherington.—EDY 
Faithless Knight, The.-—W: Allingham.—PEB 4 
Faithless Nelly [ter. Nellie] Gray.—T: Hood.—BNL— 
FEP—HBP—HPE—NA—PEB 3—THP 
Faithless Sally Brown.—T: Hood.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP—PEB 3—THP 
Faithless Shepherdess, The.—Anon.—OB 
(Unfaithful Shepherdess, The.)—PGT 1 
Faith’s Vista.—H: Abbey.—AA 
Fakenham Ghost, The.—Rob’t Bloomfield.—BVC 
Falcon, The. (“I am a white falcon, hurrah!”— C.) — 
R: H. Stoddard.—AA 

Falcon, The. (SI. abr.) —Alfred Tennyson.—HBR 
Fall Fashions.—Edith M. Thomas.—AD—LLC—PP— 
YPS 

Fall In!—F. N. Scott.—PAPm 
Fall In.,-—Kate B. Sherwood.—BS 22 
Fall in! I860.—G: W. Cable. See Dr. Sevier. 

Fall of a Soul. The.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 
Fall of Antwerp, The. (Sel. fr. The Rise of the Dutch 
llenublic, Bk. II.. Ch. V.)—J: L. Motley.—IR 
Fall of Corydon. The.—W. B. A.—TL 
Fall of D’Assas, The. (SI. abr.) —Felicia Hemans.— 
SO 

Fall of Greece, The.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, The. 
Fall of J. W. Beane, The.—Oliver Herford.—TL 
Fall of Jericho, The. (Sel. fr. The Spell of Ashtaroth.) 

—Duffield Osborne.—CS 28 
Fall of Jerusalem, The, Sel. fr. (Hebrew Wedding 
[, The].)—II: H. Milman.—BNL— HBP 
(Bridal Song— sel.) —FEP 

Fall of Jock Gillespie, The.—Rudyard Kipling.— 
PEB 4 

Fall of Niagara, The.—.T: G. C. Brainard.—BNL—TAV 
(Niagara.)—BS 6—FEP 

Fall of Pemberton Mill, The.—Eliz. S. Phelps. See 
Fall of the Pemberton Mill, The. 

Fall of Terni, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Fall of the Indian, The, Rr. sel. fr. (Conclusion.)— 
Isaac McLellan.—FP 

Fall of the Oak, Sel. fr. (Oak, The.)—G: Hill—AD— 
HSS 1 

Fall of [the] Pemberton Mill, The. (Sel. fr. The Tenth 
of January.)—Eliz. S. Phelps.—BRR—BS 12 
(shorter) —CS 15 

Fall of Warsaw. 1794.—T: Campbell. See Pleasures 
of Hope, The. 

Fall of Wolsey.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Fall Song.—Anon.—AD 

Fallacy of High License, The.—Frances E. Willard.— 
WR 18 

Fall-Crick View of the Earthquake, A.—Jas. W. 
Riley (?).—GH 

Fallen, The.—J: V. Cheney.—HS 
Fallen.—G: E. Montgomery.—HP 
Fallen Asleep.—Frank L. Stanton.—HDL 

111 




Fallen 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Fallen Monarch, The. (Sel. fr. The Big Trees and the 
Yosemite.)—-Isaac H. Bromley.—AD 
Fallen Star, The.—G: Darley.—OB—TIP 
Fallen Star, A.—Arthur W. Pinero.—VSG 
Falling in and Falling out.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 28 
Falling Leaves, The.—C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Falling Snow, The.—Anon.—DLS—PP—YPS 
Falling Stars.—Bayard Dominick, Jr.—CG 1 
Falling to Sleep.—Anon.—WCL 

Fallow Field, The.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—AA—CS 22— 
WR 5 

Falls of Princes, Sel. fr. (Description of the Golden 
Age— fr. Bk. VII.)—Boccaccio (tr. by J: Lyd¬ 
gate).—WEP 1 

False Accusation, The.—Mrs. R. M. Swander.—ED 

False Alarms.—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BYC 

False and True.—Anon.—HP 

False Coloring Lent to War.—T: Chalmers.—SS 

False Faces.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 24 

False, Fickle Man!—Anon.—WR 2 

False Friends-like.—W: Barnes.—CGd 

False Hope. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

False Kiss, The.—Anon.—WR 20 

False Love and True Logic.—Laman Blanchard.— 
HBR—THP 

False Notions.—Anon.—MC 

False Notions of Government Vigor.—Sidney Smith.— 
SS 

False One, The, Sel. fr. (Look out, Bright Eyes—Song 
— C. — fr. Act I., Sc. 2.)—Beaumont and 
Fletcher.—FEP 

False Step, A.—Eliz. B. Browning.—FLS 
False though she Be.—W: Congreve.—OB 

(“False though she be to me and love.”)—FTA 
(Song.)—WEP 3 

False Witness Detected.—Jas. S. Knowles.—CS 15 
Falsehood. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Falsehood.—W: Cartwright.—OB 
Falsehood “Corrected.”—Eliz. Turner.—BYC 
Falstaff.—H: Giles.—SE 

Falstaff and Prince Hal.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Falstaff’s Boasting.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Falstaff’s Honor.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
IV., Pt. I. 

Falstaff’s Instinct.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
IV., Pt. I. 

Falstaff’s Song.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 
Fame. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Fame. (Br. sel.) —Ben Jonson.—BNL—EPs 
Fame.—J: Milton. See Lycidas. 

Fame.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on Man, An. 

Fame.—Friedrich Schiller.—GP (si. abr.) 

(Duty— abr.)— CS 27 

Fame.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Fame.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 
Fame. (Wrinkle.) —CG 3 

Fame, Wealth, Life, Death.—W. W. Skeat.—BS 18 
Familiar Epistle, A.—Austin Dobson.—VA 
Family as an American Institution, The, Sel. Jr. 
(Thanksgiving Day.) — H: W. Beecher.—OS 3 
(Day of Thanksgiving, The— sel.) —PEO 
Family Drum Corps, A.—Malcolm Douglas.—WR 4 
Family Financiering.—Anon.—CS 37 
Family Flurry, A.—Anon.—DCD 
Family Government. (Sel. fr. Plain and Pleasant 
Truths about Fruit, Flowers, and Farming.)— 
H: W. Beecher.—SR 4 
Family Jar, A.—Anon.—CS 20 

Family Jar, A.—Louisa M. Alcott. See Little Women. 
Family Meeting, The.—C: Sprague.—FEP—GP— 
HSS 2 

Family Poetry.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 
Family Quarrel, The.—Anon.—HR 
Family Quarrels.—J: G. Saxe.—HPE 
Famine, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of 
Hiawatha, The. 

Famine Year, The.—Jane F. Elgee, Lady Wilde.—TIP 
Famished Heart, A. (Advance.) —BS 18 

(Women’s Complaint, A.)—FLS (si. abr.) —HP 
Famous and Curious Trees.—Anon.—AD 
Famous Ballad of the Jubilee Cup, The.—Arthur T. 
Quiller-Couch.—NA 

Famous History of Sir Thomas Wyatt, The, Sel. fr. 

(Lady Jane Grey— dial.) —J: Webster.—EHT 
Fan, A. (On a Fan— C. — riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.— 
HPE 

Fan Brigade, The.—Ella S. Cummins.—WR 7 
Fan Drill, The.—Jos. Addison. See Spectator, The. 
Fan Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Fan Fitzgerl.—Alfred P. Graves.—TIP 


Fan Painted by Watteau, A.—B. B. W.—CG 1 
Fancies.—J: Ford (?).—GP 

Fancy. (C.)—J: Keats —BNL—FEP—HBP—OB 
(Realm of Fancy, The.)—PGT 1 
Fancy.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Fancy and Desire.—E: Vere, Earl of Oxford.—EP 
Fancy Concert, The.—Leigh Hunt.—MRS 
Fancy Costume Drill.—Alice C. Fuller.—ID 
Fancy from Fontenelle, A. (C.) —Austin Dobson.— 
AVP—BNL 

(Rose and the Gardener, The.)—OS 2 
Fancy in Nubibus.—S: T. Coleridge.—BNL—CEL— 
FEP 

Fancy Shot, The.—C: D. Shanly.—PAPm 

(Civil War.) — AWB — BNL — CS 4 — MMR — 
PS — SR 4 

Fancy Work Maiden, The.—Sam W. Foss.—NPS—YP 
Fancy-dress Ball, The.—J. P. Denison.—CG 1 
Fand, Sels. fr. —W: Larminie. 

Epilogue.—TIP 
Speech of Coner, The.—TIP 
Fanny, Sels. fr. —Fitz-Greene Halleck. 

Fortune.—BNL 

Weehawken and the New York Bay.—BNL 
Fanny Gray.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Fanny’s Mud Pies.—Eliz. Sill.—TFS 
Fanny’s Secret.—Anon.—YFD 
Fantasy, A. (Detroit Free Press.) —BS 21 
Fantasy.—Ben Jonson. See Vision of Delight, The. 
Far, and yet Near.—Eliz. B. Browning.—OH 
(“Go from me, yet I feel,” etc.)—PGT 2 
(Sonnet.)—FTA 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese—BNL—OB (III.)— 
YBF 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese, VI.— C.) —VA— 
WEP 4 

Far awa’ Lan’, The.—Anon.—CS 18 
Far Away.—M. Lindsay.—LLC 
Far Away.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Far Away the Camp Fires Burn.—Anon.—LLC 
Far Cry to Heaven, A.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Far—far—away.—Alfred Tennyson.—PGT 2 
Far from Home and Country.—M. E. Townsend.—HDL 
Far from the Madding Crowd, Sel. fr. (Sword Exercise, 
The—Ch. XXVIII.)—T: Hardy.—WR 13 
Far in the Woods in May.—Edith M. Thomas.—YBT 
Fare thee Well. (C.) —Lord Byron.—EPs—FEP— 
MBL—WEP 4 

(Farewell to his Wife.)—BNL 
Fare Thee Well, Thou Lovely One!—T: Moore.—FTA 
Farewell, A.—Anon.—FLS 
Farewell, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—WR 14 
Farewell, The.—Anon.—WR 12 
Farewell. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Farewell, A.—G: Arnold.—BIL 

Farewell, A. (Silver Tassie, The — C.) — Rob’t Burns. 
—PGT 1—YBF 
(Before Parting.)—LH 
(Bonnie Mary.)—GP 
(My Bonnie Mary— also C.) —OB 
Farewell, The. (“It was a’ for our rightfu’ king”— 
C.)—Rob’t Burns.—BFV—BPB—OB 
(True until Death.)—LH 
Farewell, A.—Mary A. DeVere.—AA 
Farewell. (Harper’s Young People.) —CPL 
Farewell, The.—C: F. Hoffman.—FTA 
Farewell, A.—C: Kingslev.—-VS 

(Abr.) — AVP —BNL —CS 13 —FEP —GN — 
GP —LC—LLC—PHS—VA—WEP 4—WR 2 
—YBF 

(“Be good, sweet maid.”)—HSS 2 
(Farewell Advice— abr.) —OS 1 
Farewell, A.—Harriet Monroe.—AA 
Farewell, A. (In The Unknown Eros.)—Coventry Pat¬ 
more.—OB—PGT 2 

Farewell, Sel. fr. (In Italy, the book.) —S: Rogers. 

(“Nature denied him much.”)—GG 
Farewell. (Song fr. The Pirate.)—Walter Scott.—LH 
Farewell, A.—-Duchess of Sutherland.—VSG 
Farewell.—-Algernon C. Swinburne.—GP 
Farewell.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 

Farewell, A.—Alfred Tennyson. — PGT 2 — PHS — 
SN—YBF 

Farewell.—Maurice Thompson.—TAV 

Farewell.—G: M. Vickers.—PS 

Farewell, The.—J: G. Whittier.—AA 

Farewell Address.—G: Washington.—AI—IR (sel.) 

(Sel. — shorter.) —SO—WR 5 
(Maxims of George Washington — br. sels. fr. this 
and fr. First Inaugural Address.)—DFR 
(Our Relations with England— sel.) —SO 


112 





TITLE INDEX 


Fate 


Farewell! but Whenever [You Welcome the Hour—Cl 
—T: Moore.—BNL—FEP—HBP—OS 3 
(Sweet Remembrances— sel.) —FP 
Farewell! if ever Fondest Prayer.—Lord Bvron — 
BNL—YBF 

Farewell, Life.— T: Hood.—BNL 
(Stanzas—C.)—FEP—VA 

Farewell of Enoch Arden, The.—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Enoch Arden. 

Farewell of the Birds.—H.' K. P.—PP—YFR 
Farewell! Thou art too Dear.—W: Shakespeare. See 
following. 

“Farewell! thou art too dear for my possessing.” (Son¬ 
net LXXXVII. — C.) — W: Shakespeare. — 
PGT 1 

(Farewell! Thou art too Dear.)—BNL 
(Sonnet.)—HBP—OB (IX.) 

Farewell to America, A.—R: H. Wilde.—AA 
Farewell to Arms [, A],—G: Peele.—ELP—OB—YBF 
(Aged Man-at-Arms, The.)—FEP 
Farewell to Cuba.—Maria G. Brooks.—AA 
Farewell to Departing Volunteers, A.—Rob’t Hall.— 
KNE 

(Apostrophe to the Volunteers, The— ptly. same.) — 
CR 

Farewell to England, Sel. fr. —E: J: Phelps.—TMD 
Farewell to Follie [u>r. Folly], Sel. fr. —Rob’t Greene. 
(Content.)—BNL—EP—FEP 
(Contentment.)—YBF 

(Song (C.): “ Sweet are the thought-,” etc.)—HBP 
—WEP 1 

(Sweet < ontent.)—OEL 

Farewell to France.—Mary Queen of Scots.—EDY 
Farewell to his Wife.— Lord Byron. See Fare thee 
Well! 

Farewell to Italy.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
Farewell to Nancy.—Rob’t Burns.—HBP 
(Ae Fond Kiss—C.)—OB—YBF 
(“Ae fond kiss before we part.”)—BNL—GP 
Farewell to Salvini.—H: C. Bunner.—EDY 
Farewell to Sir John Norris and Sir Francis Drake, A. 

—G: Peele.—WEP 1 
Farewell to Summer.—G: Arnold.—AA 
Farewell to the Army at Fontainebleau.—Napoleon 
Bonaparte.—PS 

Farewell to the Fairies.—R: Corbet.—BNL (abr.) — 
FEP 

(Fairies’ Farewell, The.)—HBP 
Farewell to the Farm.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV— 
DJS 

Farewell to the Old Year.—Sarah Doudney.—POS 
Farewell to the Vanities of the World, A, Br. sel. fr. 
(Thoughts on the Forest.)—SirH: Wotton (?). 
—AD 

Farewell to the World, A. (To the World— C. —The 
Forest, IV.— abr.) —-Ben Jon’son.—OB 
Farewell to thee, Araby’s Daughter. — T: Moore. See 
Lalla Rookh. 

Farewell to Tobacco, A.—C: Lamb.—BNL—ESs— 
FEP—HBP—HPE—PPh—THP 
Farm Boys’ Song, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Farm on the Links, The.—Rosamund M. Watson.—VA 
Farm Walk, A. (C.)—Christina G. Rossetti. 

(Milking Maid, The.)—BNL 
Farmer, The. ( Motion rec.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
COS—DS—NPS—PP—YA—YP 
Farmer and the Cities, The, Sel. fr. — H: W. Grady. 
Home in the Government, The.—BS 18—PFP 
(Homes of the People, The— si. abr. and si. diff. 
vers. — fr. Before the Bay State Club)—FD 2 
—PPS 

(Home, The— si. abr.) —TMD 
Farmer and the Counsellor, The.—Horace Smith.— 
BC—CS 2—SS—THP 


Farmer Stebbins’ First and Last Appearance on Roll¬ 
ers.—Will Carleton. -SR 4 See following 
Farmer Stebbins on Rollers.—Will Carleton.—CH— 
CS 26 


(Farmer Stebbins’ First and Last Appearance on 
Rollers.)—SR 4 

Farmer’s Blunder, The.—Anon.—CS 1 
Farmer’s Boy.—Anon.—PEB 2 

Farmer’s Boy, The, Sel. fr. (Fr. Spring.)—Rob’t Bloom¬ 
field.—BNL 

Farmer’s Conclusion, The. (Omaha World.) —SDR 
Farmer’s Kitchen before Thanksgiving. (Tab .)— 
Anon.—TCP 

Farmer’s Life, The.—G: P. Beard.—BS 7 
Farmers’ Meeting, A.— H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Farmer’s Pipe, The.—G: Cooper.—PPh 
Farmer’s Round, The.—Anon.—BVC 
Farmer’s Song-bird, The.— G: Horton.—CS 35— 
WR 12 


farmer s Well, Ihe.—Anon.—CS 37 
Farmer’s Wife, The.—Anon.—CS 16 
Farm-yard Song.—J. T. Trowbridge. — BeR—CS 4— 
WCL 


(.evening at tne 1-arm.)—BS 1— Fill—GN—HNS 
—SA—SIt 1 

Far-off Rose, A.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
Farragut.—W: T. Meredith.—AA—ASL—BAB—EDY 
OS 2—PAPm 

Farther.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
Farther On.—Lucy Larcom.—-LCS 
Farthing Rushlight, The. (Lamp, The.)—_Eson — 
OS 1 

Fashionable. (Merchant Traveler.) —BS 18 
Fashionable Call, A. (Dial. — ad. fr.) Harper's Bazar 
—MPD (abr.) 

(Female Gossip.)—BS 3 

Fashionable Hospitality.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Fashionable Piano Music.—Oliver W. Holmes. See 
Poet at the Breakfast-table, The. 

Fashionable School Girl, The. (Albany Chronicle .)— 
CSS 


(Intensely Utter.)—CRR—SR 4 
(Too Utterly Utter.)—-CS 21 
Fashionable Singing. (Baltimore Elocutionist .)—BS 5 


Fashionable Vacation, A.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Fashions at the Court of Queen Flora.—Lydia H. Far¬ 
mer.—NV 

Fashion’s Folly.—S. W. Chamberlain.—CG 2 
Fast Asleep.—Anon.—TT 

Fast Mail and the Stage, The.—J: H. Yates.—CS 12 
Fastidious.—Harriet B. Sterling.—COS—PP 
“Fat Contributor” on Insurance Agents, The.—A. M. 
Griswold.—CS 9 

Fatal Arrow, The.—Anon.—WR 12 
Fatal Bait, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KNS 
Fatal Falsehood, The.—Amelia Opie.—CS 13 
Fatal Glass, The.—Laura U. Case.—CS 12—SR 2 
Fatal Sisters, The, Br. sel. fr. —T: Gray.—BNL 
Fate.—Anon.—HP 

Fate. (Frags, fr. vai~ious authors.) —BNL 
Fate.—L: J. Block.—A A 
Fate.—J: W. Chadwick.—OH 
Fate.—Leslie Harrison.—CG 3 
Fate.—Fs. Bret Harte.—CS 22—FEP—OS 2 
Fate.—Susan M. Spalding.—AA—CS 31—FLS—HBP 
—HBR (si. diff. vers.) —PYO—TAV—WR 13 
Fate.—W.—CG 2 
Fate.—Merle St.C. Wright.—OH 
Fate of a Fast Young Man, The.—Anon.—SR 2 
Fate of Charles the Twelfth.—S: Johnson. See Vanity 
of Human Wishes, The. 

Fate of Charlotte Russe, The.—Eleanor C. Donnellv — 
CS 25 


Farmer and Wheel; or, the New Lochinvar. (SI. abr.) 

—Will Carleton.—CS 25 
Farmer Ben’s Theory.—Anon.—CS 22 
Farmer Boffin’s Equivalent.—Anon.—CS 32 
Farmer Boy and the City Dude, The.—Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.—KNS 

Farmer Feedeth all. The.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Farmer Gray.—Anon.—KNE 
Farmer John.—Anon.—PR 

Farmer Nick’s Scarecrow.—Nora E. Crosby.—LPS— 
PP 

Farmer Sat in his Easy Chair, The.—C: G. Eastman.— 
GP—TAV 

(Afternoon Nap, The.)—WCL 
(Midsummer Day Scene, A.)—CS 7 
(Picture, A.)—BNL—FEP 
Farmer Stebbins at Football.—Will Carleton.—CS 34 
Farmer Stebbins at Ocean Grove. (SI. abr.) —Will 
Carleton.—CS 21 


Fate of European Kings, The.—T. F. Meagher.—FD 1 
Fate of John Burgoyne, The.—Anon.—AWB 
Fate of Macgregor, The. — Jas. Hogg. See Queen’s 
Wake, The. 

Fate of Mackay, The.—Noah Little.—DES 
Fate of Sin Foo; or, The Origin of the Tea Plant, The 
S: M. Peck.—PP—YPS 

Fate of Sir John Franklin. The.—Eliz. Doten.—BS 22 
(Song of the North, A.)—FEP 
Fate of the Butterfly, The (Muiopotmos; or, The 
Fate of the Butterflie— C.), Br.sel. fr. —Edmund 
Spenser.—BNL 

“Fate of the man-child. The.” (Br. sel. fr. The 
Sphinx.)—Ralph W. Emerson.—HBP 
Fate of the Reformer, The.—H:, Lord Brougham.—SS 
Fate of the Sons of Usna, The. (Fr. The First Duan: 
The Coming of Deirdre.)—J: Todhunter.— 
TIP 

Fate of Virginia, Th»>.—T: B. Macaulay. See Virginia. 


113 






Fate’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Fate’s Frustrated Joke. (C.)—Sam W. Foss. 

(Jest of Fate, The.)—WR 22 
“Father, The.”—G: F. Savage-Armstrong.—VA 
Father and Child.—R: W. Gilder.—TAS 
Father and Son.—Hall Caine. See Deemster, The. 
Father Blake’s Collection.—S: Lover. See Father 
Phil’s Collection. 

Father Christmas.—Norman Gale.—BS 25 
Father Damien.—J: B. Tabb.—EDY 
Father Francis.—Walter H. Pollock.—VA 
Father Gilligan.—W. B. Yeats.—PEB 4 
Father in Heaven.—W: Ashbury.—BS 2 
Father is Coming.—Mary Howitt.—WCL 
Father John.—David L. Proudfit.—CS 19—HP (abr.) 
Father Land and Mother Tongue.—S: Lover. See 
t Father-land and Mother-tongue. 

Father, Lead On.—Anon.—CS 12 

Father Molloy [; or. The Confession—C.].—S: Lover. 
—CS 16—DI—THP 

Father of All! in Death’s Relentless Claim.—Oliver W. 
Holmes.—HDL 

Father of his Country, The.—H: Lee. See Funeral 
Oration on the Death of General Washington. 
Father of his Country.—Marion West.—SR 1 
Father of the Revolution, The.—G:W: Curtis.— See 
Centennial Celebration of Concord Fight. 
Father O’Flynn.—A. P. Graves.—TIP 
Father Paul.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Father Phil’s Collection —S: Lover (?).—BS 6—CS 10 
—MHR 

(Si. abr.) —BRR—DI 
(Abr.) —CDV—SDR 
(Father Blake’s Collection.)—HR 
(Subscription List, The— abr.) —CR 
Father Roach.—S: Lover.—CS 14—DI 
“Father, Take my Hand.”—H: N. Cobb.—CS 10— 
SSS (abr.) 

(Incl. in Gracious Answer, The.)—SA 
Father, Thy Will be Done.—Sarah F. Adams.—FEP 
(Hymn.)—VA 

Father Time’s Granddaughters.—Nathaniel Haw¬ 
thorne (?).—NDP 

“Father, whate’er of earthly bliss.”—Anne Steele.— 
LLC 

Father William.—Anon.—NA 
Father William.—Lewis Carroll.—THP 
Father William.—Rob’t Southey.—PC—PPSr 
(Old Man’s Comforts, The.)—BNL—FP 
(Old Man’s Comforts and how he Gained Them, 
The— C.)— CGd 

Fatherland.—Ernst M. Arndt.—BLP 
Fatherland, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—BLP—GN 
Father-land and Mother-tongue.—S: Lover.—BLP— 
BNL—CSS—HSS 2 

Father’s Blessing, A.—R: R. Corbet.—YBF 
(To Vincent Corbet, my Son.)—FEP 
Father’s Choice, The.—S. B. Parsons.—CS 31 
Father’s Counsel, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 27 
Father’s Curse, The. (Sel. fr. The King’s Diversion 
[Le Roi s’Amuse], Act I., Sc. 4.)—Victor 
Hugo.—SO 

Father’s Hymn for the Mother to Sing, The. (C.) —G: 
Macdonald. 

(Like a Little Child— si. abr.) —OH 
Father’s Letter.—-Eugene Field.—WTD 
Fathers of New England, The.—C: Sprague.— See Cen¬ 
tennial Ode. 

Fathers of the Republic, The.—E: Everett. See 
Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson. 

Father’s Voice.—Anon.—TMR 
Father’s Way.—Eugene Field.—-HBR—WR 4 
Fathoming Brains.—-Stockton Bates.—CS .30 
Fatima and Raduan.— (Tr. by) W: C. Bryant.— 
BNL 

Fault is not Mine, The. (Last Fruit off an Old Tree, 
XXVII.)—Walter S. Landor.—VS 
“Faultless.”—Mrs. Herrick Johnson.—CS 33 
F aults.—Anon.—DLF 

Faults and Virtues. (Br. sel. fr. The Ethics of the 
Dust, Lect. V., Crystal Virtues.)—J: Ruskin.— 
OS 1 

Paun of Praxiteles, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne. See 
Marble Faun, The. 

Fauntleroy.—Benjamin F. Butler, Jr.—CS 31 
Fauntleroy and the Earl. (Dial. — ad. fr. Little Lord 
Fauntleroy, Chs. IV. and V.)—Frances H. Bur¬ 
nett.—NDP 

Fauntleroy’s Wail.—Julia T. Riordan.—WR 20 
Fause Lover, The.—Anon.—OEB—PEB 2 

(Davie Gellatley’s Song— fr. Scott’sWaverley—1st 
st. rev. fr. this.) —-PEB 3 

(Young John and his True Sweetheart— si. shorter 
arid si. diff. vers.) —BB 


Faust, Sels. fr. —Johann W. von Goethe. 

King of Thule, The. (Margaret’s Song fr. Pt. I. 

Sc. 8—B. Taylor’s tr.) —BNL 
Speech of the Erdgeist. (Sel. fr. Pt. I., Sc. 1—T. 
Carlyle’s tr.) —AVP 

Faustus’s Last Speech on Earth. (Sel. fr. Doctor 
Faustus, Sc. XVI.)—Christopher Marlowe.— 
WR 19 

(Last Soliloquy of Faustus, The.)—MRS 
Fawcett’s Fame.—Campbell Rae-Brown.—WR 13 
Fawnia. (Praise of Fawnia, The— C. — fr. Pandosto.) 

Rob’t Greene.—ELP—OB—WEP 1—YBF 
Fay’s Sentence, The.—Jos. R. Drake. See Culprit 
Fay, The. 

Fear. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler.— 
HPE 

Fear.—Langdon E. Mitchell.—AA 
Fear.—Percy B. Shelley. See Cenci, The. 

Fear and Doubt. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
“Fear no more the heat o’ th’ Sun,”—W: Shakespeare. 

See Cymbeline. 

Fear Not.—Anon.—YBT 

Fear of Death. (Frags fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Fear of Death, The.—(Sonnet: “When I have fears,” 
etc.— C.) —J: Keats.—YBF 
(Sonnet—Written in January, 1818.)—WEP 4 
(Terror of Death, The.)—PGT 1 
(“When I have fears that I have ceased to be.”)— 
OB 

Fearful Fright, A.—Anon.-—WR 4 

Fears in Solitude, Br. sel. fr.— S: T. Coleridge.— 
BNL 

Feast, The.—H: Vaughan.—HBP 
Feast of Roses, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
Feast of Vegetables, and the Flow of Water, The. 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Feast-time of the Year, The.—Harriet M. Kimball.— 
TAS 

Feathered Name-speakers. (Young Idea, The.) —POS 
Feathers.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 

Feathers. (Last Fruit off an Old Tree, II.)—Walter 
S. Landor—YBF 

(“There falls with every wedding chime.”)—VA 
Feather’s Message, A.—Frd’k A. Dixon.—TCv 
Featherstone’s Doom.—Rob’t S. Hawker.—VA 
February.—Anon.—CPL 
February.—Jas. B. Bensel.—POS 
February.—H. S. Cornwell.—TAV 
February.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
February.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
February.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—HDL 
February Rain.—C: T. Dazey.—POS 
February Twenty-second.—Joy Allison.—PP—YFR 
Federal Constitution, The. (Speech in the Convention 
at the Conclusion of its Deliberations, 1787— 
C. — abr.) —B: Franklin.—SS 
Federal Constitution.—Alexander Hamilton. See Con¬ 
stitution of the United States. 

Feed my Sheep.—Anon.—CS 17 
Feeding the Black Fillies.—Anon.—BeR 

(Peter Mulrooney and the Black Filly.)—CS 32— 
DI—SR 11 

Feeling the Way.—Eliz. S. Phelps.—TAS 
Feigned Courage.—Mary Lamb.—BVC—GN—LPC 
Felicia Hemans.—L. E. Maclean.—AVP 
Felicia Hemans. To L. E. L. (C.) —Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing. 

(To L. E. L., on the Death of Felicia Hemans )— 
AVP 

Felinaphone, The.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
Feline. (Fr. Ascutnev Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine — 
TCP 

Felise, Sel. fr. (Song.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—VS 
Fell from Aloft.—Brandon Thomas.—VSG 
Fellow in Greasy Jeans. The.—C: F. Lummis.—WR 19 
Fellow who is Game, A.—Anon.—KER 
(Courageous Boy, The.)—TFS 
Fellow with the Grippe, The.—Howell L. Piner — 
WR 23 

Fellow’s Mother, A.—Anon.—WR 24 
Felon’s Cell, A.—Anon.—BS 12 
Female Convict, The.—Letitia E. Landon.—BNL 
Female Frailty, Sel. fr. (Song of Thyrsis.)—Philip 
Freneau.—A A 

Female Gossip. (Harper’s Bazar.) —BS 3 
(Fashionable Call, A— abr.) —MPD 
Female Tenderness.—Douglas Jerrold.—MHR 
Feminine.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 

Feminine Arithmetic.—C: G. Halpine.—AWH—HPE 
THP 

Fence o’ Scripture Faith, The.—-Mrs. Findlev Braden 
—CS 27—SR 6 

Fenelon’s Prayer.—Virginia B. Harrison.—BS 23 


114 




TITLE INDEX 


Finding 


Ferdinand and Miranda. ( Sel. fr. The Ordeal of 
Richard Feverel, The, Chs. 14 and 15.)—G: 
Meredith.—-MRS 

Ferdinando and Elvira; or, The Gentle Pieman.—W: 

S. Gilbert—NA (sel .)—THP 
Ferment of New Wine, The.—Eliz. B. Browning. See 
Aurora Leigh. 

Fern and the Moss, The.—Eliza Cook.—CS 35—HSS 1 

Fern Song.—J: B. Tabb.—PoR—TMR 

Ferns.—Anon.—PEO 

Fern-seed.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 

Ferry, The.—G: H. Boker.—AA • 

Ferry for Shadowtown, The.—Lilian D. Rice.—CS 37 
—GMS—NV 

(Shadow-town Ferry, The— abr .)—OS 1 
Ferry of Galloway, The. (SI. diff. vers. fr. Poems.)— 
Alice Cary.—-SR 9 

Ferryman The. (The Atheneum .)—SO 
Ferryman, Venus, and Cupid, The.—Michael Drayton. 
See Muses’ Elysium, The. 

Fertility. (Prelude, A— C.) —Maurice Thompson.— 
ASL 

Festal Day has Come, The.—Hezekiah Butterworth.— 
BS 20 

Festina Lente.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Festival of Days, A. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Festival of Mars, The. (Sel. fr. Marcus of Rome, in 
Historic Boys.)—Elbridge S. Brooks.—WR 22 
Festival of the Supreme Being, The.—Ivan Tourge- 
nieff.—WR 8 

Festival of the Year, The.—Edith L. W. Linn.—HE 
Festus, Sels. fr .—Philip J. Bailey. 

Aim of Life, The. (Br. sel.) —BNL—GP 
(How to Live— abr.) —PS 
(True Measure of Life, The— abr.) —FP 
Country and Patriotism. (Br. sel.) —FP 
Forecast. (Br. sel.) —EPs 
Helen’s Song.—-VA 
Lucifer and Elissa. (Sel.) —VA 
Poet, The. (Sel.) —VA 
Poet of Nature, The. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
Sabbath Morning in the Country. (Br. sel.) —FP 
Thoughts. (Br. sel.) —FP 
Time and its Changes. (Br. sel.) —FP 
Waning Spirit. (Br. sel.) —FP 
Woman’s Four Seasons. (Br. sel.) —FP 
Worldly Treasures. (Br. sel.) —FP 
Youth, Love, and Death. (Sel.) —VA 
Fetching Water from the Well.—Anon.—BNL—CS 20 
—MMR 

Fete Champetre, The. See Palice of Honour, The.— 
Gawain Douglas.—WEP 1 
Fever Dream, A.—J: M. Harney.—PPSr 
Few Old Proverbs, A.——Anon.—AD 
Few Remarks on Pants, A.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Few Rules for Tree Planters, A.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Fiat Lux.—Lloyd Mifflin.—-AA 
Fickle Heart, A.—Guy W. Carry).—CG 2 
Fickle Hope.—Harrison S. Morris.—AA 
Fiction.—C: Sprague. See Curiosity. 

Fiction, A; How Cupid made a Nymph wound her¬ 
self with his Arrows.—Anon. (at. to A. W.).— 
EP—WEP 1 

Fiddle Told, The.—Nora C. Franklin.—BS 25—NP 
“Fiddle-dee-dee.”—Eugene Field.—EF—LS 
Fidele.—W: Collins.—OB 

(Dirge in Cymbeline— C.) —EPs—HBP—PHS— 
WEP 3 

Fidele.—W: Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

Fidele.—W- Winter.—FEP 
(Adelaide Neilson— C.) —AA 
“Fidele’s” Grassy Tomb.—H: Newbolt.—HBR 
Fidelia.—G: Wither. See Shepherd’s Resolution, 
The. 

Fidelis.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FTA 
Fidelity.—M. F. B.—YBT 

Fidelity.—W: Wordsworth.—CGd—EPs—HBP 
Fidelity to God is Fidelity to Man.—Adoniram J. 
Gordon.—FD 2 

Field Battery, A.—W: R. Hamilton.—SR 7 
Field Flower, A. (C.) —Jas. Montgomery.—POS 
(Daisy, The.)—BNL—NV (sel .)—SN 
Field Flowers.—Anon.—NV 
Field Lilies.—Anon.—LLC—YBT 

Field of Culloden, The. (Sel. fr. Old Shrines and Ivy.) 
—W: Winter.—TMR 

Field of the Grounded Arms, The, Sel. fr. —Fitz- 
Greene Halleck.—EDY 

Field of the World, The. (C.) —Jas. Montgomery.— 
HBP 

(Sower, The— si. abr .)—FHS 
Field of Wagram, The. (Sel. fr. L’Aiglon, Act V.)— 
Edmond Rostand (tr. by L. N. Parker).—EDY 


Field of Waterloo, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Field of Waterloo, The. (C.) (Sts. IX.-XII., XXII.) 
—Walter Scott.—EHT 
(Charge at Waterloo, The—XI., XII.)—PEO 
Field Preaching.—Phcebe Cary.—TAS 
Field Sweet-brier, The, Br. sel. fr. —Alice Cary.—HSS 1 
Field-lily, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Field-mouse, The.—Anon.—PTS 
Fields in May, The. (Sel.) —W: Allingham.—AD 
Fields of Com, The.—J. H. Hartzell.—POS 
Fields of Dawn, The, Sonnets fr. —-Lloyd Mifflin. 

April. (I.)—SN 
Autumn. (XXIX.)—SN 
Summer. (XV.)—SN 

Fields of War, The.—Isaac M’Lellan, Jr.—WR 10 
Fiery Ordeal, The.—Anon.—WR 16 
Fiesolan Idyl.—Walter S. Landor. See Ftesulan Idyl. 
Fife, The.—Gilbert F. Eberhart.—CS 32 
Fife and Drum.—J; Dryden. See Song for St. Cecilia’s 
Day, A. 

Fifer and Drummer of Scituate, The.—S. H. Palfrey.— 
WR 10 

Fifine at the Fair, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Browning. 
Amphibian. (Prologue.)—PGT 2 
Householder, The. (Epilogue.)—WEP 4 
“Fift’ Ward J’int Debate, The.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Fifteenth of April, The.—Duncan C. Scott.—TCV 
Fifteenth of February, The.—C; E. Russell.—EDY 
Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity. (C.) —Reginald Heber. 
(God Provideth for the morrow— abr.) —AD 
(Providence.)—GN 

Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity: The Lilies [Flowers— 
C.] of the Field. (Fr. The Christian Year.)— 
J: Keble.—WEP 4 
(Flowers. 1—FEP 

(Lilies of the Field, The— el. abr.) —CEL 
Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz, The. (C.) —H: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—BNL—GMS—PHS 
(On the Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz.)—EPs 
Fifty and Fifteen.—Anon.—OS 2 
Fifty Years Apart. (Parlor Magazine.) —HP 
Fifty-dollar Milliner's Bill. A.—Helen Booth.—CS 12 
Fight, The.—T: D. English. See following. 

Fight at Lexington, The. (C.) —T: D. English. 

(Fight, The— abr .)—HS 

Fight at [the] San Jacinto The.—Jas. W. Palmer.— 
AA—BAB—EDY 

Fight of Faith. The. — Anne Askewe. — BNL — 
EDY (sel.) 

Fight of Hell-Kettle, The.-—Tyrone Power.—DI 
Fight of Lookout, The.-—R: L. Cary, Jr.—WR 10 
Fight of Paso Del Mar, The.—Bayard Taylor—HSS 3 
—TMR—WR 2 

Fight of the “Armstrong” Privatee*. The.—Jas. J. 
Roche.—BAB—SO 

Fight of the Forlorn, The, Sel. fr. —G: Darley.—TIP 
Fight off Santiago, The. (Sel. fr. The War with 
Spain, Ch. VII.)—H: C. Lodge.—SC 
Fight over the Body of Keitt, The.— (Punch.) —EPs 
Fight with the Aurochs, The.— (Abr. fr. Quo Vadis, 
Ch. LXV.)—H: Sienkiewicz.—BS 25—PFP 
(Contest in the Arena, The.)—TMD 
(Rescue of Lygia, The— shorter.) —SC 
(Ursus and the Aurochs.)—WR 19 
Fighting.—T: Hughes. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days. 

Fighting Fire.—Marg. H. Lawless.—CS 32 
Fighting Parson. The.—H: A. Blood.—HS 
Fighting Race. The.—Jos. I. C. Clarke.—AA—EDY 
Fighting Tem^raire. The.—H: Newbolt.—A VP 
Fighting the Rum-fiend.—Julia M. Thayer.—CS 11 
Figures Sometimes Lie.—Anon.—DSS 
Files-on-Parade.—Rudyard Kipling.—WR 16 
(Danny Deever— C.) —VA—WR 16 
Filial Love.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Filiolse Dulcissimse.—H: Alford.—A VP 
Fill thd Bumper Fair.—T: Moore.—HBP 
Fin de Siecle.—Newton Mackintosh.—NA 
Fin de Si&cle Angel, The.—Anon.—TL 
Fin de Siecle Girl, A. (Concordiensis.) —CG 2 
Final Day Dialogue, A.—-W. J. Lampton.—TL 
Final Word, A.—Austin Dobson.—LBB 
Finale.—Anon.—BC 

Find the Favorite.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Find your Level.—I. E. Jones.—CS 28 
Finding of Gabriel, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Evangeline ^ 

Finding of the Book, The, and other Poems, Preface 
to.—W: Alexander.—A VP 

Finding of the Cross, The.—Jessie H. Brown.—BS 14 
—SR 7 

115 




Finding 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Finding of the Lyre. The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—TMD 

Finding the Sunset.—Anon.—CS 21 

Fine Arts, The. (Tab.)— Tony Denier.—TDT 

Fine Battle Picture.—Anon.—SR 11 

Fine Day, A.—Michael Drayton.—CGd—GN 

Fine Feathers.—Anon.—PTS 

Fine Flowers in the Valley. — Anon. — BB — 
PEB 2 (si. abr.) 

Fine Old Dutch Gentleman, The.—Anon.—BDD 
Fine Old English Gentleman, The.—Anon.—BNL 
Fineen the Rover.—Rob’t D. Joyce.—TIP 
Fingal, Sel. fr. (Comal and Gambina— sel. fr. Bk. II.) 

—Jas. McPherson (Ossianj.—CS 36 
Finger Exercise, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LI. 

Finis.—Anon.—FLS 
Finis.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Finis.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—LLC 
(‘‘Arm of aid to the weak, An.”)—FHS 
Finis. (Fr. Last Fruit off an Old Tree.)—Walter S. 
Landor.—OB 

(On himself.)—VA—WEP 4—-YBF 
(On his Seventy-fifth Birthday.)—A VP 
Finished. (Br. sel. fr. The Abbot Joachim.)—H: W. 

Longfellow.—BS 11 
Finished Education.—Anon.—WR 14 
Finished Education, A. (Journal of Education.) — 
CS 31 

Finished Nest, A.—Anon.—YBT 
Finland I.ove-song.—Anon.—CG 1 
Finland Love-song.— (Tr. by) T: Moore.—MR 
Finnigin to Flannigan.—S. W. Gillilan.—BS 25—TL— 
TMD 

Fionnuala, Sel. fr. —Edmund J: Armstrong.—TIP 
Fionula.—J. S. Le Fanu.—TIP 
Fir Tree. See Fir-tree. 

Fire, The. (Sel. fr. John Ward, Preacher, Ch. XI.)— 
Marg. Deland.—WR 5 
Fire.—Sydney Flowers.—CS 37 
Fire, The.—Hugh F. McDermott.—BS 4—PR 
Fire by the Sea, The.—Alice Cary.—SAE 
Fire! Fire!—W. A. Eaton.—CS 25 

“Fire in nature is not a substance.”—M. W. Jacobus.— 
GG 

Fire of Drift-wood, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—BPB— 
HBP 

Fire of Frendraught, The.—Anon.—PEB 1 
Fire of London, The.—J: Dryden. See Annus Mira- 
bilis, the Year of Wonders. 

Fire of Love, The.—C: Sackville, Earl of Dorset.— 
BNL 

Fire Worshippers, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
Fire-bells.—M. R. Johnson.—WR 12 
Fire-bell’s Story, The.— G: L. Catlin.—BS 8—CS 17 
Fire-fiend, The.—C. D. Gardette.—CS 2 
Fire-fiend. The.—Jessie Glenn.—CS 18—NPS—YP 
Fireflies.—A. Mary F. R. Darmesteter.—POS 
Fireflies.—Horatio N. Powers.—TAS 
Fireflies.—A. C. S.—TFS 

Fire-hangbird’s Nest, The.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Fire-king, The.' ( C .)—Walter Scott. 

(Count Albert and the Fair Rosalie— abr .)—WR 1 
Firelight.—R. H.—CO 3 

Firelight.—J: G Whittier. See Snow-bound. 

Fireman, The.—G: M. Baker.—SA 

(Red Jacket, The.)—BS 2—CS 11—DS—FR (si. 
abr.)— NPS—YP 

Fireman. The.—Rob’t T. Conrad.—CS 3—HR—NPS 
—WR 3—YP 

Fireman O’Rafferty.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Fireman’s Prayer. The.—Russell H. Conwell.—CS 19 
—PS 

(True Hero, A— si. abr.) —FR 
Fireman’s Prize, The. (Golden Days.) —CS 31 — 
WR 7 (si. abr.) 

Fireman’s Wedding, The.—W. A. Eaton.—CS 29 
Fireside, The.—Nathaniel Cotton.—BNL — FEP — 
HBP—TFY 

Fireside Colloquy.—Jos. W. Leatherman.—SDD 
Fireside Saints, The.—Douglas .Terrold.—CS 17 
Firetown’s New Schoolhouse.—-Pauline Phelps.—WR 2 
Fire-worshippers, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
First Adventures in England.—-Anon.—CH 
First American Congress, The.—Jonathan Maxcy.— 
BLP 

First and Last.—Anon.—HBP 
First and Last.—Harriet P. Spofford.—TAS 
First and Last Dinner. The.—Anon.—CS 9 
First Appearance in Tvpe.—Anon.—BS 2 
(SI. abr.) —CS 6—KNE 

First Banjo, The.—Irwin Russell. See Christmas- 
night in the Quarters. 

First Battle of the Revolution, The.—Anon.—TMD 


First Battles of the Revolutionary War, The, Sel. fr. 
(On National Character.)—E: Everett.—SSD 
(Our National Character.)—FD 1 
First, Best Country, The.—Oliver Goldsmith. See 
Traveller, The. 

First Blue-bird, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BNL 
First Boston Thanksgiving, The.—July 1630.—Heze- 
kiah Butterworth.—PEO (abr.) 

(Thanksgiving in Boston Harbor, The.)—AA— 
BS 16 


First Bunker Hill Monument Oration.—Dan’l Web¬ 
ster. SPe Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

First Christmas, The.—Anon.—DCP 
First Christmas, The.—Lew Wallace. See Ben-Hur. 
First Christmas in New England, The.—Hezekiah But¬ 
terworth.—HS 

First Christmas Night, The.—Clara J. Denton.— 
FTT 


First Christmas Tree, The.—Myra A. Goodwin.—CS 35 
First Christmas-tree in New England. (St. Nicholas.) 


—PP—YPS 

First Civil Code The. (Sel. verses, fr. Deuteronomy.) 
Bible. —BLP 

First Client, The.—Irwin Russell—CS 15—NPS—YP 

First Cloud, The.—Anon.—CS 24 

First Constitution, The. Bible. See Exodus. 

First Corinthians, Sels.fr. Bible. 

First Corinthians, XIII.—Charity.—BS 2 

(Thirteenth Chapter of First Corinthians.)—LLC 
First Corinthians, XV.—BS 5 
First Crocus, The.—Kate Brownlee Sherwood.—POS 
First Day of School, The.—Clara J. Denton.—LI. 

First Dog, The. (C. — in Life in Danbury.)—Jas. M. 
Bailey. 

(Mr. Perkins Buys a Dog.)—CS 8 
First Duan, The: The Coming of Deirdre, Sel. fr. 
( Fate of the Sons of Usna, The.)—J Todhunter. 
—TIP 

First Earl of Chatham, The.—H: Grattan.—VSG 
(si. abr.) 

(Character of Mr. Pitt— C. — abr .)—LLC (at. to W: 
Robertson.) 

First English Thanksgiving in New York, The.—Anon 


—PEO 


First Epistle of the Second Book of Horace. (C .)— 
Alex. Pope.—WEP 3 
(Horace Imitated— abr.) —WEP 3 
First Flowers, The.—J: G. Whittier.—AD 
First Footsteps.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—OS 1 
“First in our regard, as it is first in the whole nobility 
of trees.”—H: W. Beecher. See Discourse on 
Trees, A. 

First Inaugural Address.—T: Jefferson. See Inaugu¬ 
ration Address. 

First Inaugural Address.—Abraham Lincoln.—AI 
(Constitution and the People, The— sel.) —PRR 
(Inaugural Address, Sel. fr.—shorter sel.) —LI J' 
(War or Peace?— br. sel.) —OS 2 
First Inaugural Address.—G: Washington.—EAO 
(Maxims of George Washington— includes br. sel. fr. 
this.) —DFR 

(Washington’s Inaugural Address— sel.) —OS 3 
(Washington’s Inaugurals, Apr. 30, 1789.)—AI 
First Interview with Artemus Ward, Mark Twain's.— 
S: L. Clemens.—CS 4—DDR 
(My First Interview with Artemus Ward.)—MHR 
First Kings, Sel. fr. (Elijah and the Prophets of Baal 
—Ch. XVIII , 17-40.) Bible. —BS 13 
First Kiss, The—T: Campbell.—BNL—FTA 
(Song—C.)—HBP (si. abr.)— YBF 
First Kiss, The.—Norman Gale.—VA 
First Kiss, The.—Rob’t, Earl of I.ytton (?).—FLS 
First Kiss, The.—Theodore Watts-Dunton.—VA— 


YBF 


First Lesson, The.—Emily Dickinson.—OH 

First Letter, The. (Youth's Companion.) —LPS—PP 

First Love.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 

First Love.—C: S. Calverley.—PEB 4—THP 
First Man, The. (Sonnet V.)—Hartley Coleridge.— 
FEP 


(Birth of Speech, The.)—VA 
First Meeting, The.—Christina Rossetti. See Monna 
Innominata. 

First Meeting of the Cucumber Hill Debating Club, The. 
—Anon.—MND 


First National Thanksgiving, The.—Anon.—PEO 
First News from Villafranca.—Eliz. B. Browning.— 
EDY 

First Nowell, The.—Anon.—BVC 

First of April.—Anon.—YFD 

First of April, The.—Mortimer Collins.—EDY 

First of April, The, Sel. fr. —T: Warton.—WEP 3 

First of May, The.—Anon.—BVC 


116 




TITLE INDEX 


Five 


First of May. (Ode:—Composed on May Morning— C. 

— si. abr.) —W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
First or Last?—Marg. Veley.—VA 
First Oration Against Catiline, Sets. fr. —Marcus T. 
Cicero. 

Against Catiline.—PS 
Catiline Denounced.—PS—SS 

(Oration against Catiline.)—CS 3—LLC—SO 
Separation from Traitors.—BLP 
First Parting, The.—Marian Douglass.—CS 8 
First Party, The.—Josephine Pollard.—BS 9—CS 14— 
DS 

(Annabel’s First Party.)—KJ 
First Piano in the Mining Camp, The.—Anon.—SR 7 
First Predicted Eclipse, The.—Ormsby M. Mitchel.— 
FR—TMD (si. diff. vers.) 

First Problem, The.—Anon.—SR 10 

(Rationalistic Chicken, The.)—BS 34—CR 
First Pussy Willows, The.—L. F. Armitage.—TT 
First Quarrel, The. (SI. abr.) —Alfred Tennyson.— 
BS 8—WR 9 

First Quest, The.—Jos. R. Drake. See Culprit Fay, 
The.—AA 

First Revolution of the Heavens [Witnessed by Man], 
The.—Ormsby M. Mitchel.—CS 22 
(Abr.) —BS 16—OM—PPS—TMD 
First Robin, The.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
First Samuel, Sel. fr. (David and Goliath—Ch. XVII., 
1-51.) Bible. —WR 25 

First, Second, Third.—Eliz. B. Browning.—OH 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese.) — BNL — FEP— 
BHP 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese, XXXVIII.— C.) — 
VA 

(Three Kisses.)—BIL—FTA—GP 
First Sensible Valentine, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
First Settlement of New England, The, Sels. fr. —E: 
Everett. 

Advantages of Adversity to the Pilgrim Fathers. 
—WR 26 

(Mayflower, The— sel.) —LLC 
(Sufferings and Destiny of the Pilgrims— abr.) 
—CS 1—OM 

(Sufferings of the Pilgrims— abr.) —FD 1 
Land of our Forefathers, The.—PS 

(Our Relations to [or with] England— ptly. same.) 
—BLP (si. abr.)— BS 13—OM—SS 
First Settlement of New England, Sels. fr. —Dan’l 
Webster. 

Departure of the Pilgrims from Holland.—FD 1 
Future of America, The.—TMD 

(Peroration of Webster’s Plymouth Rock Oration 
— sel.) —SE 

Influence of Great Actions, The.—BS 23 
Plymouth Rock.—FD 1—PPS 
First Settlers’ Story, The.—Will Carleton.—SR 3 
(SI. abr. )—CS 20—FTR—SC 
First Sight of Green Fields, The.—C: and Mary Lamb. 
_LPC 

First Skylark of Spring, The.-—W: Watson.—FEP— 
VA—WCLG 2 

First Snow, The.—Anon.—NV 
First Snow, The.—J. B. Benton.—CG 1 
First Snow, The.—Madeline S. Bridges.—POS 
First Snow, The.—Ella Dietz.—DES 
First Snowdrop, The.—Julia M. Dana.—NV 
First Snow-fall, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AA—BNL— 
CS 14 — FEP — PEO — SAE (sel.) — TAV — 
WCL—WCLl 2 

First Song, The.—R: Burton.—AA 
First Speech, A.—Anon.—TT 
(Speech for a Small Girl.)—KJ 
First Speech in Public.—Anon.—SD 
First Spring Day, The.—J: Todhunter.—FEP 
First Spring Flowers.—Mary W. Howland.—BNL 
First Step, The.—Andrew B. Saxton.—AA 
First Step to Reconciliation with America, The.— 
W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham.—SS 
First Sunday after Epiphany. (C.) —Reginald Heber. 
(By Cool Siloam.)—LLC 
(By Cool Siloam’s Shady Rill— sel.) —PoR 
(Hymn for First Sunday after Epiphany, or Early 
Piety.)—FEP 

(Siloam’s Shady Rill— abr.)- —TFS 
First Sunday after Epiphany[:The Nightingale—C.].— 
J: Keble.—A VP (sel.) 

(April.)—HBP 

First Sunday after Trinity [: Israel among the Ruins 
of Canaan],—J: Keble.—AVP 
First Swallow, The.—Charlotte Smith. — CGd — LC 
(si. abr.) 

(Swallow, The.)—BNL 

First Swallow, The.—W: Wordsworth (?).—POS 


First Tangle, The.—Anna F. Burnham.—YBT 
First Te Deum, The.—Marg. J. Preston.—BS 1—CS 20 
(diff. vers.) 

First Thanksgiving, The.—Hezekiah Butterworth.— 
BS 17 

First Thanksgiving Proclamation Issued by George 
Washington, The. (For a National Thanks¬ 
giving— C .)—PEO 

First Thing that Turn’d Up, The.—Anon.—DSS 
First Timothy, Sel. fr. (Godliness with Contentment 
—Ch. VI., 6-13.) Bible. —LLC 
First Tooth, The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
First Tragedy, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

First Trowsers, The.-—W: B. Rose.—SR 5 
First Valentine, The.—Anon.—WR 26 
First Violet, The.—Marie B. Williams.—GP 
First Voyage of John Cabot, The.—Anon.—EHT 
First Week of School. The.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Fir-tree, The.—Luella Clark.—AD—YBT 
Fish Family, The. (Motion rec.)— M. S. H. Putnam.— 
TT 

Fish Story, A.— (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Fish Story, A.—J: Brownjohn.—SR 3 
Fish, the Man, and the Spirit, The.—Leigh Hunt.— 
WEP 4 

Fisher, The.—Johann W. von Goethe (tr. by C: T. 
Brooks).—BNL 

Fisher Song.—J: G.Whittier. See Fishermen, The. 
Fisherman, The.—Esop. See Fables. 

Fisherman, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—CGd 
Fisherman, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Fishermen, The. 
Fisherman Jim’s Kids.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Fisherman Job.—Jas. R. Reed.—HP 
Fisherman’s Hut, The.—Chas. T. Brooks.—TMR 
Fisherman’s Hymn, The.—Alex. Wilson.—AA 
Fisherman’s Light, The.—Susanna S. Moodie,—TCV 
Fisherman’s Song. — Joanna Baillie .—See Beacon, 
The. 

Fisherman’s Song, The.— Fs. Davis.— FEP — PPSr 
(si. diff.) 

Fisherman’s Summons, The.—Anon.—BeR—CS 11 
Fisherman’s Wife, The.—Anon.—WR 3 
Fisherman’s Wife, The. (SI. abr .)—Alice Cary.— 
BS 9 

Fishermen, The.-—C: Kingsley-—CSS—HBP—PPSr— 
YBF 

(Three Fishers, The.)—BNL—BS 3—BSP—CGd— 
CS 10 — FEP — GP — HSS 3 — LC — LLC — 
OS 2—PYO—VA—WCLI 2—WR 26 
(Three Fishers Went Sailing.)—VS 
(For tableau see Three Fishers, The.) 

Fishermen, The. (C. — abr.) —J: G. Whittier. 

(Fisher Song.)—OS 3 
(Fisherman, The.)—CSS 

Fishermen of Wexford, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—-EDY 
Fisher’s Boy, The. (C.) —H: D. Thoreau.—AA 
(Upon the Beach.)—GP 

Fisher’s Cottage, The. (Pictures of Travel: The Re¬ 
turn Home—VII.)—Heinrich Heine. (Tr. by 
C: G. Leland.)—BNL—HBP 
Fishin’.—David L. Proudfit.—CS 19 
Fishing.—Anon.—FAS—PTS 
(They Went a-Fishin’.)-—CS 23 
(They Went Fishing.)—HBR 
(Two Fishers.)—AWH—THP 
Fishing.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Fishing.-—Ella W. Wilcox.—DES 
Fishing Party, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—WR 4 
Fishing Song [, The],—Rose T. Cooke.—GP—HBP 
Fish-women at Calais.—Anon.—FTR 
Fishy Joke, A.—Anon.—DSS 

Fitz^Greene Halleck. (Read at the Unveiling of his 
Statue in Central Park.)—J: G. Whittier.— 
BNL 

Fitz James and Roderick Dhu.—Walter Scott. See 
Lady of the Lake, The. 

Fitz-James O’Brien.—Andrew E. Watrous.—EDY 
Fitz-Traver’s Song.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel. 

Five Chapters of Real Life.—Anon.—PS 
(Tale of a Dog.)—GH 
Five Things to Observe.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Five Little Brothers.—Ella W. Wilcox.—PS—TT— 
WR 24 

Five Little Chickens.—Anon.—DES 

(Chickens, The.)—DS—NPS—TFS—YA 
(We Must all Scratch.)—YFR 
Five Little Tadpoles.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Five Little White Heads.—Walter Learned.—TAV 
Five Lives.—E: R. Sill.—AWH—THP 
Five Minutes with a Mad Dog.—W. Pocklington.— 
TMR 


117 




Five 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Five Senses, The.—Anon.—DE 

Five vrrsus Twenty-five.—Anon.—KNS 

Five Wishes, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 

Fix.—Anon.—FND 

Flag, The.—Anon.—CP 

Flag, The. ( Br. sel. fr. The Battle of Lexington.)—E: 
Everett.—SO 

(National Banner, The.)—CS 6—KNE 
(Our National Banner.)—LLC 
(Stars and Stripes, The.)—CP 
Flag, The.—H. L. Flash—PAPm—PEO 
Flag, The.—Julia W. Howe.—EPs 
Flag, The. (Life.) —FAS 
Flag, The.—M. W. S.—PAPm 
Flag at Half-mast, The.—Helen M. Cooke.—DES 
Flag at Shenandoah, The.—Joaquin Miller.—BS 21 
(Battle Flag at Shenandoah. The— C.) —BS 12 
Flag Dav.—Martha B. Banks.—Wl! 17 
Flag Drill.—A. E. Hurst.— ID 

Flag Goes Bv. The.—H: H. Bennett.—AA—BS 25— 
GN—PAPm (si. abr.) —PRR 
Flag in Nature, The.—S. F. Smith.—POS 
Flag of England, The.—Rudvard Kipling.—-LH 
Flag o* Old England, The.—Jos. Howe.—TCV 
Flag of our Country, The. — Rob’t C. Winthrop. See 
Flag of the Union, The. 

Flag of our Union, The.—G- P. Morris.—DFR— 
PRR (abr.) 

Flag of the Constellation, The.—T: B. Read.—AWB 
Flag of the Free.—Jos. R. Drake. See American Flag, 
The. 

Flag of the Rainbow. (SI. abr.) —T: D. English.— 
BS 15—CS 32 

Flag of the Union, The, Sels. fr. —Rob’t C. Winthrop. 
Cause of the Union, The.—SR 8 
Flag of our Country, The. (Includes sel. fr. Sum¬ 
ner’s Are We a Nation?)—PEO 
National Ensign, The.—BLP 
Flag of Washington, The.—F. W. Gillett.—DFR— 
WRD 

Flag that has never Known Defeat, The.—C. L. 

Benjamin and G. D. Sutton.—PAPm 
“Flag the Train.”—W: B. Chisholm.—CS 30—NPS— 
YP 

Flaming Heart, The. — R. Crashaw. — ELP — 
WEP 2 (si. abr. ) 

(Upon the Book and Picture of the Seraphical 
Saint Teresa— si. abr.) —OB 
Flamingo, The.—L. G. Clark.—NA 
Flash.—The Fireman’s Story.—Will Carleton.—BS 11 
—SR 3 

“Flat” Contradiction, A.—S. Jennie Smith.—CS 35 
Flat Story, A.—Anon.—WR 7 
Flattering Grandma.—Anon.—PEO 
(Bamboozling Grandma.)—WR 17 
Flattery. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Flattery.—Sir C: H. Williams.—HPE 
Flax Fiower, The.—Mary Howitt.—NV—PoR 
Fledglings.—T: L. Harris.—A A 
Flee as a Bird.—Mrs. S. B. Dana.—LLC 
Flee fro’ the Press.—Matthew Arnold. See Scholar- 
Gipsy, The. 

Fleece, The, Sel. fr. —J: Dyer.—WEP 3 
Fleet at Santiago, The.—C: E. Russell.—EDY 
Fleet under Sail. The.—Sir Franklin Lushington.— 
A VP 

Fleeting Good. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Fleeting Show of Hen, A.—Anon.—WR 20 
Fleurange, Scene fr. — Mme. Augustus Craven.— 
WR 8 

Flibbertygibbet and Me.—May R. Mackenzie.—BR 
Flicker on the Fence, The.—S: B. McManus.—CS 37 
Flies. The.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Flight.—Madison Cawein.—AA 

Flight, The.—J: Keats. See Eve of St. Agnes, The. 
Flight, The.—Lloyd Mifflin.—AA—ASL—YBF 
Flight.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Flight for Life, The.—W- Sawver.—CS 17 (si abr.) — 
NPS—YP 

Flight from Glory. A.—Eugene L. Hamilton.—VA 
Flight from the Convent. The.—Theodore Tilton.—AA 
Flight into Egypt, The.—Fs. Mahony.—BNL 
Flight of Love, The.—Percv B. Shellev.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Lines— C.) —OB—WEP 4 
(“When the lamp is shattered.”)—BNL 
Flight of Malzah. The.—C: Heavysege. See Saul. 
Flight of the Arrow, The.—R: H: Stoddard.—AA 
Flight of the Birds, The.—Harriet M. Kimball.—HDL 
—POS 

(Trusting.)—YBT 

Flight of the Birds, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—GN 
—POS 

Flight of the Duchess, The.—Rob’t Browning.—HBP 


Flight of the Geese. The.—C G. D. Roberts.—SN— 
VA 

Flight of the Gods, The.—Adelaide Biddles.—CS 18 
Flight of the Heart, The.—Dora R. Goodale.—AA 
Flight of the War-eagle, The.—O. C. Auringer.—AA 
Flight of the Wild Geese.—W: E. Channing.—EPs 
Flight of the Wild Swans, The. (Prince Amadis, Sts. 

33-37.)—Frd’k W. Faber.—A VP 
Flight of Time, The.— (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Flight of Time, The.—J. K. Blake.—CG 1 
Flight of Xerxes, The.—Marie J. Jewsbury.—CS 15— 
PTS 

Flight of Youth, The. (C.)—R: H- Stoddard—AA— 
ASL—YBF 

(It Never Comes Again.)—BNL—LLC—MRS 
(Lost.)—FP 

(Never Again.)—FEP—-TAV 
(There are Gains for All our Losses.)—HBP 
Flight Shot, A.—Maurice Thompson.—AA 
Flirtation.—Anon.—CS 25 
Flirtation.—Frd’k S. Camp.—CG 1 
Flirtation on the Cars, A. (University of Chicago 
Weekly.)— CG 2 

Flitch of Dunmow, The.—.las. Carnegie, Earl of 
Southesk.—VA 

Flitting of the Fairies, The. (Fr. The End of Elfin- 
town.)—Jane Barlow.—TIP 
Flock of Birds, A.—Annie Chase.—AD 
Flock of Doves, The.—Celia Thaxter.-—SAP 
Flock of Sheep, A.—Duncan C. Scott.—TCV 
Flodden.—Walter Scott.— See Marmion. 

Flodden Field. (7n Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—OEB 
Flodden Field.—Walter Scott.— See Marmion. 

Flood and the Ark, The.—Anon.—CH—CS 19—SR 2 
Flood of Years, The.—W: C. Brvant.—AA—BNL— 
BS 5— CS 13 — LLC — SAE (br. sel.) — SR 6 
Flood on the Floss, The.—G: Eliot. See Mill on the 
Floss, The. 

Flood-time on the Marshes.—Evaleen Stein.—AA 
Floral Birthday Greeting, A.—E. Maude Jackson.— 
VSG 

Floral Drill.—Marg. W. Morton.—ID 
Floral Guide, The. (Tab.) —Millie M. Olcott.—StD 
Floral Offerings.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Floral Rainbow, The.—Anon.—DFR 
Florence (in Italy), Sel. fr. (Night and Day, The.)—S: 
Rogers.—A VP 

Florence Vane.—Philip P. Cooke.—AA—FEP—HBP 
Florentin.—Louis I. Guiney.—TAS 
Florentine Juliet, A.—Susan Coolidge.—BS 3 
Floretty’s Musical Contribution.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Flos Florum.—Arthur J. Munby.—VA 
Flo’s Letter.—Eben E. Rexford.—DST 
(Little Flo’s Letter.)—COS—PP 
(Oversight of Make-up, An.)-—WR 2 
Flossie.—L. R. Hamberlin.—WR 12 
Flossie Lane’s Marriage.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Flossy (with her own Portrait) to her Mistress.— 
Goldwin Smith.—TCV 

Flotsam and Jetsam. (All the Year Round.) —BNL— 
HP 

Flow Gently, Sweet Afton. (Sweet Afton— C .)—FEP 
IR—LLC—MBL—SO—WCLG 1 
(Afton Water.)—BNL—GP—SN—YBF 
Flower, The.—G: Herbert—BNL—CEL—EPs—FEP 
—HBP 

Flower. The.—Alfred Tennyson.—AD—VA 
Flower and Leaf, The, Sels. fr. —Geoffrey Chaucer (?). 
—WEP 1 

Flower and the Song, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Flower Bed. The.—-Anon.—NV 
Flower Dances. (7V. by) Mrs. Anderson.—NV 
Flower Dreams.—Anon.—PEO 
Flower Drill, A.—Marg. W. Morton.—ID 
Flower Faces. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
“ ‘Flower fadeth,’ but the seed and the fruit come. 
The.”—C: Wadsworth.—GG 
Flower from the Catskills, A.—E. W.—HP 
Flower (Flour) Girl, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Flower Girl, The.—Edith Wordsworth.—US 33 
Flower Girls.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS—PHS 
Flower in the Crannied Wall.—Alfred Tennyson.—OS 1 
—PHS—VA—YBF 
Flower Mission, The.—Anon.—AD 
Flower o’ Dumblane, The.—Rob’t Tannahill.—BNL 
(Jessie, the Flower o’ Dumblane, The.)—FEP 
Flower of Beauty, The.—G- Darley.—VA 
(Love Song.)—HBP 
(Song.)—OB 

Flower of Liberty, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AD— 
BLP—CS 14—PEO—PRR—PS 
(“Thy sacred leaves, fair freedom’s flower”— br. 
sel.)— BNL 


118 




TITLE INDEX 


For 


Flower of Love, The.—Ruth W. Kahn—SR 0 
Flower of Love, The. (Fr. Melincourt.)—T: L. Peacock 
—WEP 4 

Flower of the Desert, The.—Felicia D. Hemans(?).— 
AD 

Flower of Virtue, The.—G: Wither.—ELP 
Flower Service, A.—Clara J. Denton.—HE 
Flower Social.—Anon.—EuE 

Flower Songs. (Daisies — Buttercups — Blue-bells — 
Wild Roses.)—Mary G. Crocker.—CPL 
“Flower that’s bright with the sun’s own light. The.” 
Anon.—HSS 1 

Unci, in Maiden Spring, The.)—AD 
Flower-girls. See Flower Girls. 

Flowers. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Flowers, The.—H: Bacon.—FP 
Flowers.—Frances R. Havergal.—YBT 
Flowers.—T: Hood.—BNL—VA 

Flowers.—Leigh Hunt. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers. 

Flowers.—J: Keble. See Fifteenth Sunday after 
Trinity. 

Flowers. (Literary Recreations.)—Eliz. Lloyd. — 
BS 13 

Flowers. (C.)—H: W. Longfellow. — AD — BS 22— 
HBP—HSS 1—SE 
(Stars and the Flowers, The.)—GMS 
Flowers.—.1: Milton. See Lvcidas. 

Flowers.—T: P. Moses.—FP 
Flowers.—Bryan W. Procter.—POS 
Flowers.—W: Shakespeare. See Winter’s Tale. 
Flowers, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Flowers, The.—E: Youl.—HSS 1 

(Song of Spring.)—HBP—TFS (sel.) 

Flowers and Foliage.—Anon.—AD 
Flower 0 and Weeds.—G: Cooper.—YBT 
Flowers at the Cave of Staffa.—W- Wordsworth.— 
EPs 

Flowers’ Convention, The.—A. L. Jack.—DFR— 
DLD 

Flower’s Easter Message, The.—Emilie Poulsson.— 
HS 

Flowers for the Brave.—E. W. Chapman.—HSS 1 — 
LI.C • 

(Flowers for the Fallen Heroes.)—PEO 
Flowers for the Brave.—-Celia Thaxter.—FS—PEO 
Flowers for the Fallen Heroes.—E. W. Chapman. See 
Flowers for the Brave. 

Flowers 1 Would Bring.—Aubrey T: DeVere.—VA 
Flowers in Winter.—S: F. Smith.—POS 
Flowers Know their Time to Go, The.—Susan Coolidge 
—YBT 

(Time to Go.)—GN 

Flower’s Name, The. (Garden Fancies, Pt. I.)—Rob’t 
Browning.—BNL—WR 9 
(Garden Fancies—PtI.)—OH 
Flowers of [or o’] the Forest. The. (Pt. I.— in Border 
Minstrelsy.) — Jane Elliot. — BPB — FEP— 
WEP 3 

(Lament for Flodden [Field, A].)—CEL—EHT—OB 
—PGT 1 

Flowers of the May.—Anon.—AD 
“Flowers Open, Smile.”—Anon—HSS 1 
Flowers’ Sleep, The.—Annie Moore.—WR 17 
Flowers without Fruit.—J: H: Newman.—BNL— 
HBP 

Flower-seller, The. — W: Young. See Wishmakers’ 
Town. 

Flower-spider, The.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Flown Soul, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—AA—-TAV 
Flute, The.—Jos. R. Taylor.—AA 
Fluttered Wings.—Christina G. Rossetti.—VA 
Fly, The.—Anon.—WR 4 
Fly, The.—W: Oldys.—CEL—HBP 

(“ Busy, curious, thirsty fly.”)—FEP 
(On a Fly Drinking out of his Cup.)—OB 
(To a Fly.)—LC 

Fly, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Flv, The.—Theodore Tilton.—AWH 
(Baby Bye.)—OS 1 

Fly and the Lamb, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KC 

Flv Leaf. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Fly, Little Letter.—W. C. C.—CG 1 
Fly pot Yet.—T: Moore.—HBP 

Fly to the Desert [.Fly with me]—T Moore. See 
Lalla Roohk. 

Fly-away Horse, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Flying Dutchman. The. (SI. abr.) —J: Boyle O’Reilly. 
SR r, 

Flying Fish.—Mary M. Fenollosa.—AA 
Flying Fish, The.—Florian.—OS 1 


Flying Islands of the Night, The, Sel. fr. (Dwainie— fr. 

Act I.)—Jas. W. Riley.—AA 
Flying Jim’s Last Leap.—Emma D. Banks.—BR— 
C’S 19 

Flying Kite.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Flying Mist, The.—Edwin Markham.—SN 
Flynn of Virginia.—Fs. Bret Harte.—PY() 

(In the Tunnel— C.) —BAB 
Fly's Cogitations, A.—Anon.— BS 12—PH — YA 
Foes United in Death.—Anon.—C’S 3—KNE—SR 12 
(United in Death.)—SO 
Fog. The. (Mother Truth’s Melodies.) —NV 
Fold, The.—Emily Dickinson.—TAS 
Folded Hands, The.—Anon.—CS 33 
Folding the Flocks.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See 
Faithful Shepherdess, The. 

Folk of the Air, The.—W B. Y r eat°.—VA 
“Follow Me.’ (Sel. fr. A Thought.)—Abram J. Ryan. 
—GP 

Follow the Golden Rule.—Anon.—PS 
Follow your Saint!—T: Campion.—ELP 
(Devotion.)—OB (2d poem) —YBF 
Following the Advice of a Physician.—“ Dakota Bell.” 
—BS 20 

Folly and Wisdom. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Folly of Pride, The.—Sydney Smith.—PS 
Follv of Religious Persecution, The.—Anon.—SS 
Fontenov.—T: O. Davis— EDY r — FEP—HBP—MMR 
—PEB 4 

(Battle of Fontenoy.)—CR—CS 4—FR (si. abr.) 
Food of Love.—Harry Romaine.—TL 
Fool and the Poet. The.—Alex. Pope ( ?).—HPE 
Fool Youngens.—Ja°. W. Rilev.-—BTC 
Foolish Flowers. The.—Alice L. Richards.—SI. 

Fooli'h Harebe!', The.—G: Macdonald —PP—YFR 
Fooli°h Little Maiden. A.—M T. Morrison.—CS 26 
fWhat the Choir Sane about the New Bonnet.)— 
CH 

Foolish Little Robin.—Anon.—AD 
Foolish Maid, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LI. 

Foolish Virgins, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls 
of the King, The. 

Fool’s Errand. A, Sel. fr. (Lilv Servosse’s Ride— nrr. 
fr. Ch°. XXXVI and XXXVII.)—Albion W. 
Tourg^e.—BS 16 

Fool - Praver. The.—E: R. Sill.—AA—ASL—BS 23 
(el. abr.) — CS 19 — CSS — FEP — HDL — 
HP—MRS—PYO—SC—TAS—TMD 
Fool’s Revenge, The., Sel. fr. (Jester and his Daughter, 
The.)—Tom Taylor.—VA 
Foot-ball Game, The.—Rob’t Copland.—PR 
Football Girl, The.—Raymond W. Walker.—CG 3 
Football Maiden, The. (Lake Forest Student.) —CG 3 
Foot-ball Player, A.—E: C. Lefroy.—VA 
Football Tragedy, A.— (University of Chicago Weekly.) 
—C’G 2 

Footman Wanted, A.— (Dial.) —G: (?) Colman.— 
MPD 

Footnote to a Famous Lyric, A.—Louise I. Guiney.— 
A A 

Footprints in the Snow.—Frank D. Sherman.—-SN 
Footprints of Decay.—Anon. See Coplas de Man- 
rique. 

Footsteps of Angels. —II- W. Longfellow.—BNL— 
FEP—HBP—LLC—SSS—TAS 
(“When the hours of dav are numbered” — sel.) — 

HP 

Foot>teos on the Other Side.—Anon.—US 3 
Fop. The.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry IV. 
Pt. I. 

For a Birthday Celebration.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
For a College:—Anon.—CP 
For a f’ollege Commencement.—Anon.—CP 
For a Copy of Theocritus.—Austin Dobson.—BNL— 
VA 

For a Dental College.—Anon.—CP 
For a Girl Ten Years Old.—W. T.—KNS 
For a Grotto.—Mark Akenside.—WEP 3 
Fora National Thanksgiving. (C.) —G: Washing 
ton. 

(First' Thanksgiving Proclamation Issued by George 
Washington.)—PEO 

For a Portrait of Felice Orsini.—Anon.—EDY 
For a School.—Anon.—CP 

For a’ That and a’ That-.—Rob’t Burns.—BNL—CR— 
FP—HSS 3—MBL—WCLG 2—YBF (abr.) 
(Honest Poverty.)—EPs—HBP 
(Is there for Honest Poverty— C.) —PITS 
(Man’s a Man for a’ That, A.)—BS 4—FEP— OS 2 
—SM—SPE—W T EP 3 

For a’ That; or. Selling a Feller.—Marietta Holley. 

See Sweet Cicely. 

For a Tiny Girl.—Anon.—SD 


119 




For 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


For a Venetian Pastoral, by’Giorgione. (C.) — Dante 
G. Rossetti. 

(Venetian Pastoral, A.)—VA 
For a Very Little Girl.—Annie Chase.—KC 
For a Warning.—Caroline B. Le Row.—-PEO 
For a Wedding Anniversary.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
For a Widower or Widow.—G: Wither.—HBP 
(Widow’s Hymn, A— sel.) —OB 
For all These.—Juliet W. Tompkins.—PYO 
For all who Die.—Anon.—BS 18 
For an Autumn Festival, Sel. fr. —J: G. Whittier. 
Harvest Hymn. (Sel.) —PEO 
Thanksgiving Ode. ( Abr .)—PEO 
For an Epitaph at Fiesole.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
—WEP 4 

For an Old Poet. (To Richard Henry Stoddard.)— 
H: C. Bunner.—BNL 
For Annie.—Edgar A. Poe.—BNL—OB 
(Convalescence— sel. )—G P 
For Another’s Sake.—Clara J. Denton.—HE 
For Arbor Day.—O: Adams.—AD 
For Believers.—C: Wesley.—HBP 
"For Better, for Worse.”—Ellen T. Fowler.—TFY 
For Charlie’s Sake.—J: W. Palmer.—BNL—HBP 
For Christmas Day.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—WR 5 
For Christmas’ Sake.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—HE 
For Christmas Time. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
For Class Meeting, 1875, Sel. fr. (Class Meeting, 1875.) 

—Oliver W. Holmes.—SE 
For Cuba.—Rob’t M. Bell.—PAPm • 

For Decoration Day.—Rupert Hughes.—AA 
For Decoration Day.—S. M. Kniel.—DFR—DLS— 
LPS—PP 

(Let Little Hands.)—D.TS 
For Decoration Day.—C. Phillips.—WR 17 
For Divine Strength.—S: Johnson (?).-—HDL 
For Easter Morning.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
(Easter Morning.)—DFR 
For ever. .See also Forever. 

"For ever. Fortune, wilt thou prove.” (To Fortune 
— C. — abr.) —Jas. Thomson.—PGT 1 
For ever with the Lord.—Jas. Montgomery. See At 
Home in Heaven. 

"For every sunny hour.”—Anon.—HSS 2 
For Expansion.—Jos. C. Sibley.—SC 
For Freedom.—Edna D. Proctor.—WR 10 
For Grandpa's Sake.—Anon.-—DLF 
For her Sake.—B. L. C. Griffith.—CS 37 
"For I trust, if an enemy’s fleet came yonder round by 
the hill.”-—Alfred Tennyson. See Maud. 

For Independence, 1776.—R: H: Lee.—PS (si. abr.) — 
SS 

For Lack of Gold.—Adam Austin.—WEP 3 
For Life and Death.—Anon.—HP 
For Love.—Anon.—CS 12 
(Carl.)—BS8 

For Love’s Sake.—Marg. J. Preston.—CS 21 
For Love’s Sweet Sake.—E. Matheson.—FLS 
For Memory’s Sake.—Floyd W. Jefferson.—CG 3 
For my Own Monument .—Matthew Prior.—OB 
For Music.—Lord Byron.—OB 
(Nature’s Daughter.)—MR 

(Stanzas for Music.)—CEL—FEP—HBP—WEP 4 
—YBF 

("There be none of Beauty’s daughters.”)—PGT 1 
For Music.—Bryan W. Procter.—WEP 4 
For New-Year’s Day.-—Philip Doddridge.—HBP 
"For not in quiet English fields.”—Oscar Wilde.—GG 
For One Retired into the Country.—C: Wesley.—SN 
For our Dead.—Clinton Scollard.—PEO 
"For Sale.”—Pitts Duffield.—TI. 

For Sale, a Horse.—C: E: Taylor.—A A . 

For Summer Time.—G : Wither. See Hallelujah. 

For the Avery “Knickerbocker.” (C.) —Austin Dob¬ 
son. 

(Knickerbocker.)—PPh 

For the Baptist. (Fr. Flowers of Sion.)—W: Drum¬ 
mond.—FEP—WEP 2 

(Saint John [the] Baptist.)—EDY—OB—PGT 1— 
YBF 

(Sonnet: Repent, Repent!)—ELP 
For the Chief’s Daughter.—Anon.—SR 5 
For the Fourth. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
For the Giver.—G: Cooper.—YBT 
For the Moore Centennial Celebration.—Oliver W. 
Holmes.—GP 

For the Picture.—Jos. M. W. Turner.-—EDY 
For the Picture, "The Last of England.”—Ford M. 
Brown.—VA 

For the Sewing Circle. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
For the Slumber Islands, Ho!—Eben E. Rexford.— 
BR—BS 24 

("Ho, for Slumberland!”)-—NV 


For the War of 1813.—H: Clay. See Mr. Clay and the 
War of 1812. 

For Thee Alone.—Anon.—FTA 

"For there are two heavens, sweet.” (Sel. fr. A 
Heaven upon Earth.)—Leigh Hunt.—BlL 
(Two Heavens.)—GN 

‘ ‘ For they alone have need of sorrow.”—Mary Clemmer. 
—BIL—FTA 

"For Thoughts.”—Celia Thaxter.—BIL 
For Vacation.—Anon.—FAS 

"For who would bear the whips and scorns of time.”— 
W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 

For You.—G : W. Bungay.—FTT 
Foraging or Stealing.—Anon.—SR 13 
Foray of Con O’Donnell, The, Sel. fr. (Irish Wolf¬ 
hound, The.)—Denis F. Mac Carthy.—SN— 
VA 

Forbearance.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—GN 

Forbearance.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 

Forbidden.—Anon.—FLS 

Forby Sutherland.—G: G. M’Crae.—VA 

Force.—E: R. Sill.—AA 

Force Bill, The.—J: C. Calhoun—MRS 

(Against the Force Bill, 1833— si. abr.) —PS—SS 
Force of Habit, The.—Anon.—CS 15 
Force of Imagination, The.—Anon.—FND 
Force of Prayer; or, The Founding of Bolton Priory.— 
W: Wordsworth.—PEB 3 
Force of Satire, The.—Anon.—MRS 
Forced Recruit, The. (C.) —Eliz. B. Browning.— 
EDY—HSS 1—WEP 4 
(Forced Recruit at Solferino, A.)—FEP 
Forced Recruit at Solferino, A.—Eliz. B. Browning. 
See foregoing. 

Forcing a Way.—Anon.—NA 
Fore i’ the Flint, The.—Lucy Robinson.—AA 
Foreboding, A.—Mary M. Lamb, Lady Currie.—VA 
Foreboding, A.—Jas. R. Lowell.—FTA—OH 
Forecast.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 

Forecast.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See House of Fame, 
The. 

Forecast, A.—Archibald Lampman.—VA 
Foreclosure of the Mortgage, The.—Mrs. E. T. Corbett. 
—CS 17 

Forefather, The.—R: Burton.—AA 
Forefathers’ Day.—J. D. Long.—SC 
Foreign Children. (C.) —Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
(Other Children.)—HSS 2 

Foreign Influence. — G: Washington. See Against 
Foreign Entanglements. 

Foreign Influence upon American University Life.— 
Anon.—CP 

Foreign Lands.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—AD—CGV— 
D.TS—VA 

Foreign Policy, Sel. fr. (England’s True Greatness.) 
—J: Bright.—SO 

(Greatness Based on Morality— abr .)—OS 3 
(National Greatness— sel.) —SAE—SE 
Foreign Policy of Washington, The.—C: J. Fox.—SS 
Foreign Tongue, A.—Anna H. Branch.—CG 2 
Foreign Views of the Statue.—Fred E. Brooks.—CS 27 
—SR 11 

(SI. abr .)—BS 24—WR 21 
Foreigners at the Fair.—Fred E. Brooks.—WR 25 
Forelookings. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Forepledged.—J: L. Spalding.—AA 
Forerunners.—Ralph W. Emerson.-—AA 
Forerunners.—Alex. Smith. See Life-drama, A. 
Foreshadowings.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—BS 23 
Foresight .—W: Shakespeare. See Troilus and Cressida. 
Forest, The.—R: M, Milnes, Lord Houghton.—POS 
Forest, The.—W: J. Pabodie.—HSS 1 
(Thoughts on the Forest.)—AD 
Forest Flowers.—Gustavus Frankenstein.—AD 
Forest Glade, The.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—VA 
Forest Hymn [, A.]. (C.) —W: C. Brvant. AA— 

AD (si. abr.) —BNL—CS 8—FP (sel .)—HSS 1 
—LLC (abr .)—WR 5 

(God’s First Temples. 1—FTR—HNS—SPE 
(Groves, The— br. sel.) —TFS 

(“My heart is awed within me when I stand— 
br. sel.) —GG 

Forest King’s Race.—Louise de la Rarnde. See Under 
Two Flags. 

Forest of Arden, The.—W: Shakespeare. See As You 
Like It. 

Forest Scene, A.—Edith May.—AD 
Forest Silence. (Harper's Maqazine .)—AD 
Forest Song.—W. H. Venable.—AD—DCP—HSS 1 
Forest Trees. (Fr. Mother Truth’s Melodies.)—Anon. 
—NV 

Forest Trees, The.—Eliza Cook.—AD—PEO 


120 




TITLE INDEX 


Four 


Forest Trees. (C. — in Bracebridge Hall.)—Washing¬ 
ton Irving.—AD ( br. sel.) 

(True Nobleman, A— partly same.) —HSS 1 
Foresters, The, Sels. /r.—Alfred Tennyson. 

King Richard in Sherwood Forest. {Sets. fr. Act, 
II., Sc. 1, and Act IV., Sc. 1.)— EHT 
(Song in “The Foresters”—National Song — C. 
fr. II., 1.)—VA 

Forethought of Murder. (Frags, fr. W: Shakespeare.) 
—BNL 

Forever.—Anon.—HP 
Forever.—Anon.—LLC 
Forever.—Eliz. Berrv.—FLS 
Forever—J: B. O’Reilly.—CS 27—GP—SR -1 
Forever and Forever.—C. C. Converse.—LLC 
Forever with the Lord.—Jas. Montgomery. See At 
Home in Heaven. 

Forget Me Not.—Amelia Opie.—FEP 
Forget not the Field.—T: Moore.—HSS 1 
Forget not Yet.—Sir T: Wyatt.—OB 
(Appeal, An.)—CEL 

(Lover Beseecheth his Mistress not to Forget, The. 
— C .)—WEP 1 

(Supplication, A.)—PGT 1—PHS 
Forget Thee?—J: Moultrie.—BNL—FLS—TFY 
Forget Thee, No, Never’—Alaric A. Watts.—FTA 
Forgetful Tommie.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Forgetfulness.—Anon.—D.IS 

Forget-me-not.—Anon.— AD — DLS — GMS— NV— 
YBT 

Forget-me-not, The.—Anon.—MYF 
Forget-me-nots.—B. L. C. Griffith.—SPC 
Forging of the Anchor, The.—S: Ferguson.—BNL— 
BS24 (sel.)— CR—CS 21—EPs—FEP—HBP— 
PGT 2—WIID 

Forgive. (Twenty-second Sunday after Trinity— C.) 

—Reginald Heber.—SS 
Forgjve me Now.—Anon.—FLS 
Forgjven?—Jeannette B. Gillespy.—AA—CG 3 
Forgiven.—Helen H. Jackson.—BIL 
Forgiveness. (2 poems.)—Anon.—YBT 
Forgjveness.—J. Edmundston.—AD—SS 
Forgiveness.—Jane Taylor.—YBT 
Forgiveness. (C.)—J: G. Whittier. (“My heart was 
heavy, for its trust had been.”)—GG 
Forgiveness and Resentment. (Frags, fr. various 
authors.) —BNL 

Forgiveness Lane.—Martha G. Dickinson.—AA 
Forgiveness of Sins a Joy Unknown.—Augustus L. 
Hillhouse.—AA 

Forgiving.—Cecil F. Alexander.—YBT 
Forgotten Books, The.—T S. Collier—LBB—MBB 
Forgotten Grave, The.—Austin Dobson.—VA 
Forgotten Poet, The.—Albert E. S. Smyth.—TCV 
Forma Bnnum Fragile.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Formal Call, The.—C: G. Halpine. See Quakerdom. 
Formosre Puellae.—-Herbert P. Horne.—VA 
Fors Clavigera, Sel. fr. (Saint Ursula— si. abr. fr. The 
Story of St. Ursula, in Letter LXXI.)—J: 
Ruskin.—WR 6 

Forsaken. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—PGT 1 
(Waly, Walv.)—BB—ELP—OB—WEP 1 
(Waly, Waly, [but] Love be Bonnv— C.) —BNL— 
EPs — FEP — GP (sel.) — HBP — OEB — 
PEB 1 

Forsaken, The.—Hamilton Aide.—VA 
Forsaken.—Walter S. I.aridor.—VS 
(Margaret.)—VA—YBF 
(“Mother, I cannot mind my wheel.”)—OB 
Forsaken Garden, A [ wr. The],—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne—HBP—SAE (si. abr.)— VA 
Forsaken Merman, The.—Matthew Arnold.—A VP— 
BNL—CGd—FEP—GN—HBP—OB—OS 1 — 
PGT 2—VA—WEP 4 

“Forsaken of all comforts but these two.”—Sir Rob’t 
Ayton.—PPh 

Fort Dearborn, Sel. fr. (Burning of Chicago, The.)— 
B: F. Taylor.—PR 

Fort Wagner.—Anna E. Dickinson.—NC—PFP 
(Assault on Fort Wagner, The.)—SC 
Forthfaring.—Winifred Howells.—AA 
Fortitude.—Marcus Aurelius Antoninus. See Thoughts 
of Marcus Aurelius. 

Fortitude amid Trials.—Anon.—SS 
Fortunate Isles and their Union, Sel. fr. (Song before 
the Entrance of the Masquers—Chorus— C.) — 
Ben Jonson.—WEP 2 

Fortunate One, The.—Harriet Monroe.—AA 
Fortunati Nimium.—T: Campion.—PGT 1 
(Jack and Joan.)—F,P 
(Rustic Joys.)—YBF 

Fortune.—Fitz-Greene Halleck. See Fanny. 


Fortune Hunter, The. (Dial.) —(?) Pickering.—MDD 
Fortune Hunter, The. (Dram, proverb.) —Ellen Pick¬ 
ering.—DDD 

Fortune my Foe.—Alfred P. Graves.—HP 
Fortune of .Eschines,—Demosthenes. See Oration on 
the Crown, The. 

Fortune Teller, The. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.—TDT 
Fortune Teller, The. (Dial.) —M. D. S.—ASD 
Fortune-teller and Maiden.—Mrs. Marv L. Gaddess.— 
WR 3 

Fortunes of War, The. (Abr. and ad.) —Leigh 
Younge.—BS 20 

Fortune’s Wheel.—J: B. L. Warren, Lord De Tabley.— 
\ A 

Forty Little Ducklings, The.—Anon.—DCP 
Forty to Twenty.—Kate Field.—CS 14 

(Heads not Hearts are Trumps— si. abr.) —WR 15 
Forty Years After.—H. H. Porter.—TL 
Forty Years Ago.—Anon.—BS 1—FTR---KNE(sL 
abr.) 

(Twenty Years Ago.)—CS 3 — FEP — HSS 3 (si. 
abr.) —LLC 

Forty Years On.—E: Bowen.—A VP 
Forty-acre Farm, The.—Anon.—SSS 
Forum Scene, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius 
Caesar. 

Forward.—Susan Coolidge.—CS 24—PEO 
Forward, March!—Anon.—AD 
Fought and Won.—M. A. Maitland.—WR 18 
(True Victory.)—TS 
Found.—Frd’k L. Hosmer.—TAS 
Found Dead.— Albert Laighton.—CS 2—FP 
Foundation of Bunker Hill Mouument.—Dan’l Web¬ 
ster. See Bunker Hill Monument, The. 
Foundations.—Martha M. Schultze.—CS 29 
Founder of the Almshouse, The.—G: Crabbe. See 
Borough, The. 

Foundering of the Dolphin.—C. E. Reed.—CS 24— 
NPS—YP 

Fount of Castaly, The.—Jos. O’Connor.—PYO 
Fountain, The.—W: C. Bryant.—WR 5 
Fountain, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—CGd—FP—I.C— 
OS 1—PHS—PoR—WR 26—YBT 
Fountain, The [.A Conversation],—W: Wordsworth.— 
HBP—PGT 1—WEP 4 

Fountain of Crime, The.—Albert IJ. Horton—WR 18 
Fountain of Mercy! God of Love!—Alice Flowerdew.— 
FEP 

Fountain of Tears, The.—Arthur W: O’Shaughnessy. 
—OB—PGT 2 

“Fountains mingle with the river, The.”—Percy B. 
Shellev.—HP 

(Love’s Philosophy—C.)—BIL— BNL—FEP—GP 
—HBP—PGT 1—YBF 

Four Ages of Man, The.—Anne Bradstreet.—WR 5 
Four Brothers, The.—David Macrae.—CS 27 
Four Celebrated Characters. (Dial.) —Clara J. Den¬ 
ton.—LPD—NPS—YP 

Four Flies, The.—A Boarding House Episode.—E. D. 
Pierson.—GH—SR 6 

Four Judges, The. (Dial.) —Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Four Kisses, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 35—PS 
Four Knights, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 25 
Four Little Rose-buds.—Anon.—KNS 
Four laves.—Garnet B. Freeman.—CS 12 
Four Misfortunes, The.—J G. Saxe.—CSS 
Four Slottoes. —Alice F. Palmer.—CS 34 
Four Musicians, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Four Outlines.—Anon.—LLC 

Four Photographs, The. (Dial.) —Clara J. Denton.— 
FTT 

Four Pictures.-—Harriett E. Durfee.—CS 34 
Four Queens, The. (Speaking tab.) —Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.-—KER 

Four Scenes.—Millie C. Pomeroy.—CS 18 
Four Seasons. The. (Dial.) —Anon.—ASD 
Four Seasons, The.—Anon.—D.IS—DST 
Four Seasons, The. (Dial.) —Louise E. V. Boyd.— 
SDD 

Four Sisters, The.—Anon.—AD 

Four Sunbeams, The.—M. K. B. [or M. R. B.]—CS 34 
—NV—YBT 

Four Things.—H: Van Dyke.—AA 

Four Valentines,—C: K. Field.—CG 2 

Four W’s.—Anon.—TT 

Four Winds, The.—Anon.—BVC 

Four Winds, The. (Dial.) —Clara Denton.—LPD 

Four Winds, The.—C: H. Ltiders.—AA—ASL 

Four Winds, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL—NV 

Four Words.—Eliz. A. Allen.—BIL—FTA—TFY 

Four Year Old.—Eliza Doolittle.—SD 

Four Year Old. See also Four-year-old. 


121 





Four 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Four Years.—Dinah M. C'raik.—AVP 
Four Years.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Four-leaf Clover.—Ella Higginson.—A A—LC 
Four-leaf Clover.—G: Houghton.—BIL—FTA 
Four-leaved Clover.—Anon.—OS 2 
Four-o’clocks.—Lillian B. Quimby.—CG 2 
Four-year-old, A.—Anon.—WR 17 
Four-year-old. See also Four Year Old. 

Fourth Act of “The Merchant of Venice.’’—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Fourth of July, The. ( Detroit Free Press.) —PRR 
Fourth of July.—G: W. Bethune.—CS 22—PRR— 
WR 10 

“Fourth of July.”—J: Pierpont.—PEO 
Fourth of July, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Addition 
to the Capitol, The. 

Fourth of July at Ripton.—Eugene J. Hall.—CS 35 
Fourth of July, 1776, The, Sels. fr. (7n Washington 
and his Generals.—G: Lippard. 

Death of Robespierre, The. (Ch. XIV.— cond.) — 
BS 25 

Signing of the Declaration, The. (Ch. I.— cond.) — 
NC—PEO 

Unknown Speaker, The. (Br. sel. fr. Ch. I., sel. fr. 
Ch. II.)—CS 35—SC (si. abr.) —SR 5—TMR— 
WR 5 

Fourth of July, 1876.—W. F. Fox.—CS 13 
Fourth of July in Jonesville.—Marietta Holley. See 
My Opinions and Betsey Bobbett’s. 

Fourth of July Oration.—Anon.—CS 2 

Fourth of July Oration, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FND 

Fourth of July Oration.—C: F. Browne.—FAS 

(Artemus Ward’s Fourth of Julv Oration.)— 
MHIl 

Fourth of Julv Record, A.—Lilian D. Rice.—PP—PS 
—YPS 

Fourth Sunday after Epiphany, I. (C.)—Reginald 
Heber. 

(“Help, Lord, or we perish.”)—FEP 
Fowl Proceedings, A.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Fox.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP 

Fox and Cock.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury 
Talcs, The. 

Fox and Geese.— (Dial.) —Anna M. Ford.—DS— 
PR—YA 

Fox and the Cat, The.—J. Cunningham.—CGd 
Fox and the Crow, The.—Jane Taylor.—OS 1 
Fox and the Goat, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Fox and the Grapes.—ASsop. See Fables. 

Fox and the Lion, The.—/Esop. See Fables. 

Fox and the Ranger, The. (Dial.) —S: (7) Lover.— 
SCS 

Fox at the Point of Death, The.—J: Gay.—CGd — 
EA (si. abr.) 

Fox in the Well, The.—J: T. Trowbridge.—CSS— 
MYF 

Fox who Lost his Tail, The. — Mrs. Russell Kava¬ 
naugh.—KER 

Foxes’Tails; or, Sandy Macdonald’s Signal, The.— 
Leo Ross.—BS 11—CDV 
(Partly arr. as dial.) —SDR 
(Sandy Macdonald’s Signal— si. abr.) —CS 22 
Fra Angelico.—Maurice F. Egan.—TAS 
Fra Fonti.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 26 
Fra Giacomo. (Longer than in Poems. — Rob’t Bu¬ 
chanan.—BNL—CS 24 
Fra Luigi’s Marriage.—H. H.—W T R 8 
Fra Moreale.—S. B. R.—CG 1 
Fractious Man, The.—D: A. Brueys.—SS 
Fragility of Love. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Fragment, A.—Anon.—CPL 
Fragment, A.—Anon.—KNE 

(Night’s Adventure, A— si. diff. vers.) —SCS 
Fragment, A. (Sel. fr. The Change.)—Abraham Cow¬ 
ley.—FEP 

(Love in her Sunny Eyes.)—ES 
(Without and Within.)—YBF 
Fragment. (In England’s Parnassus.)—Christopher 
Marlowe.—WEP 1 
Fragment, A. (Punch.) —HPE 

(Hiseye was stern and wild.)—CS 3—SCS—SR 6 
(Madman, The.)—KNE 

Fragment from Sappho, A.—Sappho (tr. bv Ambrose 
Philips).—FEP 

(Blest as the Immortal Gods.)—BNL—HBP 
Fragment of a Character. (C.)—T: Moore. 

(On Factotum Ned.)—HPE 
Fragment of a Sleep-song.—Sydney Dobell.—VA 
Fragment of an Ode to Maia.—J: Keats.—OB 
Fragments (by a Free-lover). (Blackwood's Maga¬ 
zine.)—WE 


Fragments of Burton, Extract III.—A Conceipt of 
Diabolical Possession. (C.) —C: Lamb. 
(Hypochondriacus.)—HBP 

Fragments on Nature and Life. Sel. fr. (Waves.)— 
Ralph W. Emerson.—AA 
Fragrant Air. (IF. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Fragrant Timber of her Fan, The.—H: H. Hay.— 
TMR 

France. (Fr. The Wayside Vir : )—Langdon E. 

Mitchell.—A A 

France: An Ode.—S: T. Coleridge.—FEP 
France and the United States. (Fr. Reply to Address 
Presenting Colors of France to United States.) 
—G: Washington.—SS 

Frances Anne Kemble. (Fr. Essays in London and 
Elsewhere.)—H : James.—MRS 
Frances E. Willard.—May P. Slosson.—WR 18 
Frances E. Willard Exercise.—W. O. Phillips.-—WR 18 
Frances Edwena.—Frank E. Dunn.—BS 20 
Frances Keeps her Promise.—Ann and Jane Taylor.— 
BVC 

Francesca.—H. S. Clark.—WR 13 
Francesca da Rimini.—W: Aytoun.—HPE 
Francesca da Rimini, Sel. fr. (Act I., Sc. 2— si. abr.) 

—G: H. Boker (arr. by Elsie M. Wilbor).—WR 2 
Francesco’s Angel.—Florence M. Alt.—WR 13 
Francis Parkman.—Oliver W. Holmes.—EDY 
Frangipanni.—Anon.—NA 
Frank Hayman.— (?) Taylor.—CS 32 
Frank, the Fireman.—T: Frost.—WR 15 
Frankeleynes Tale, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Can¬ 
terbury Tales. 

Franklin and the' Gout.—Benjamin Franklin (?).— 
WR 20 

Franklin as a Christian.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. See 
Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin. 
Franklin as a Philanthropist.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. 

See Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin. 
Franklin as a Philosopher.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. 

See Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin. 
Franklin as a Printer.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. See 
Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin. 
Franklin’s Toast.—Anon.—OS 2 
Franz.-—Wells T. Hawks.—WR 22 
Frater Ave atque Vale.—Alfred Tennyson.—PGT 2 
Fraternity.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
Fratricide, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.— 1 TDT 
Fraudulent Party Outcries.—Dan’l Webster. See Nat¬ 
ural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, The. 

Fray o’ Suport, The. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon. 
—BB 


Freckled-faced Girl, The. (Boston Globe.) —BS 11— 
CRR 

(Startling Revelations.)—SR 5 
(What the T ittle Girl Said.)—CS 24—DS—NPS— 
YP 

Freckles.—W: L. Alden. See Adventures of Jimmy 
Brown, The. 

Fred Englehardt’s Baby.—C: F. Adams.—HP (si. 
abr.) 

(“Dot Funny Beetle Baby”— si. diff. vers.) —BDD 
—DFY 

Freddie and the Cherry-tree.—“Aunt Effie."—PC 
Frederick III.—Ina D. Coolbrith.—EDY 
Fredericksburg.—T: B. Aldrich.—HBP—PAP—YBF 
Fredericksburg.—W J. Bryan.—TMD 
Fredericksburg.—W. F. W. —AWB 
Fred's Experiment.—Anon.—WR 17 
Fred’s First Speech.—Eliza Doolittle.—SD 
Free America.—Jos. Warren (7).—AWB—HS 
Free Mind, The.—W T : L. Garrison.—TAV 
(Freedom for the Mind.)—AA 
(Liberty.)—-OS 2 

(Sonnet Written in Prison.)—BNL 
Free Navigation of the Mississippi.—Gouverneur Mor¬ 
ris.—SS 

Free Press, A.—E: D. Baker.—SSD 

(Liberty of the Press — sel.) — BLP — SE (si. abr.) 
“Free Puff, A.”—Arthur I. Gray.—PPh 
Free Schools.—Horace Mann.—SE 
Free Schools and Free Governments, Sel. fr. (Ameri¬ 
can Education^—Rob’t C. Winthrop.—BLP 
Free Silver Coinage.—W: J. Bryan.—SSD 
Free Smoke, A .—(Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 


Free Speech.—Gerrit Smith.—OS 3 
Free Speech and Constitutional Liberty.—G. F. Hoar. 
—AT 

Freedom. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Freedom. (Br. sel. fr. The Bruce.)—J: Barbour.— 
FP (si. abr .)—OB 
Freedom.—E. D. Baker.—SE 


Freedom.—J - Barbour.—FP (si. abr .)—OB 


122 




TITLE INDEX 


Frightened 


Freedom.—W; C. Bryant. See Antiquity of Freedom, 
The. 

Freedom. Jas. R. Lowell. See Stanzas on Freedom. 
Freedom and Patriotism.—Orville Dewev.—CS 8— 
PFP (br. sel.) 

Freedom for the Mind.—W: L. Garrison. See Free 
Mind. The. 

Freedom in Dress. {Song fr. [Epicoene; or,] The Silent 
Woman, Act I., Sc. I.)—Ben Jonson.—BNL— 
EPs—YBF 

(Simplex Munditiis.)—OB 
(Song.)—FEP—HBP—WEP 2 
(Sweet Neglect, The.)—ES—OEL 
Freedom must Triumph. ( Fr. The Rebels of Boston 
before the Revolution.)—Lydia M. Child.— 
SR 8 (at. to Otis.) 

(Speech against the Stamp Act— abr .)—BS 15 (at. 
to Otis.) 

(Supposed Speech of Jas. Otis )—OS 2 (abr.)— SC 
—SS 

Freedom of Nature.—Jas. Thomson. See Castle of 
Indolence, The. 

Freedom of the Press, The.—Thomas, Lord Erskine.— 
—CR 

Freedom of Thought.—Emilio Castelar.—OS 2 
Freedom or Slavery.—Patrick Henry.—SSD—TMD 
(Appeal to Arms, An— sel .)—SO 
(Liberty or Death.)—SO (set.)—WCLG 1 
(Resistance to British Aggression— sel.) —OM—PS 
—SS 

(Speech before the Virginia Convention.)—KNE 
(Speech in the Virginia Convention, 1775.)—FTR 
(Speech of Patrick Henry.)—CS 25—SR 5 
(War Inevitable, The.)—LLC. 

(Sel.)— OM—OS 2—PP—PS—PTS— SE — SS — 
YFR 

Freedom’s Ahead.—Rob’t Buchanan.—SAE 
(Old Politician, The.l—HBP 
(Tom Dunstan : or, The Politician—C.l—FEP 
Freedom’s Flower.—Marion Douglas.—AD 
Freedom’s Natal Day.—Eliz. M. Griswold.—PEG 
Freedom’s Standard.—-Anon.—PRR 
Freeman. The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Freeman’s Defence, The.—Harriet B. Stowe. See 
Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

French Account of Adam’s Fall.-—Anon.—CS 29 

(Frenchman’s Account of the Fall. A.)—DFY— 
HR 

(Mme. Eef— diff. vers .)—DES 
French and English.—Thomas, Lord Erskine.—HPE 
French Armv in Russia, The.—W Wordsworth.— 
ED Y 

(Snow— sel .)—EPs 

French Duel, The.—Mark Twain. See Tramp Abroad, 
A 

French Ensign, The. — Alphonse Daudet.—DES 
French by Lightning.—C: Barnard.—CS 26 
French lesson, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
French Market, The.—W. P. J.—WR 8 
French National Hymn.—Roget de L’ Isle.—GP 
(Marseillaise, The,)—OS 2 

(Abr.) —BNL—BS 24 
(Marseilles Hymn.)—SR S 
•French Revolution, The, Sels. fr. —T: Carlyle 

Charlotte Corday. (Sel.ad.fr. Vol. III., Bk. IV., 
Ch. I.)—MRS—WR 1 (longer.) 

Marie Antoinette. (Vol. III., Bk. IV., Ch. VII., 
abr .)—WR 1 

(Execution of Marie Antoinette— br. sel .)—SAE 
French with a Master.—Theodore Tilton.—HP—WR 2 
Frenchman and the Flea Powder, The.—Anon.—CS 3 
—DFY—FTR 

Frenchman and the Landlord, The.—Anon.—DFY— 
HR 

Frenchman and the Mosquitoes, The.—Anon.—DF\ — 
SCS 

Frenchman and the Rats. The.—Anon.—CS 6—DDR 
—DFY—MHR—SCS 

Frenchman and the Sheep’s Trotters, The.—(?) Prest. 
—DFY—MDD 

(Frenchman's Dinner, A— si. abr .)—CS 2 
Frenchman on Macbeth, A.—Anon.—BS 10—CDA — 
CR—FTR—HR—MHR—SDR 
Frenchman Proposes the Ladies. A.—Litchfield Mosely. 
See Charity Dinner. The. 

Frenchman’s Account of the Fall, A.—Anon. See 
French Account of Adam’s Fall. 

Frenchman’s Dilemma, The.— (Ad. by) J: A. Mc¬ 
Nulty.—DFY 

Frenchman’s Dinner, A.— (?) Prest. 

and the Sheep’s Trotters, The. 


Frenchman’s Malady, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Frenchman’s Mistake. The.—Anon.—DFY 
(Slight Misunderstanding, The.)—CSS 
Frenchman’s Patent Screw, The.—Anon.—DFY 
Frenchman’s Revenge, The.—Anon.—DFY 
Fresh Set of Teeth, A.—Anon.—DSS 
Freshman’s Vacation, The. (University Herald.) — 
CG 2 

Fretting Jennie.—Anon.—LLC 

Friar of Orders Gray, The. (In Percy’s Reliques.)— 
Anon.—BNL—FEP—HBP—PC—PEB 3 
Friar of Orders Gray.—Walter Scott.— See Rokcbv. 
Friar Philip.—Anon.—CS 7 
Friar Servetus.—Clifford Lanier.—WR 6 
Friar Tuck.—Sidford F. Hamp.—CS 34 
Friar’s Christmas, The.—H. G. Blake.—SR 5 
Friday Evening Meetings.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Friday’s Frolic with a Bear.—Dan’l Defoe. See Rob¬ 
inson Crusoe. 

Friend, The, Sel. fr. (Lord Helpeth Man and Beast, 
The— sel. fr. The Second Landing-place, Essay 
IV.)—S: T. Coleridge—LLC 
Friend, A.—Lucy Larcom.—BIL 

Friend after Friend Departs.—Jas. Montgomery. See 
Friends. 

Friend and Lover.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
Friend at Court, A.—Anoh.—DDM 
Friend at Court, A.—Marg. W. Morton.—HE 
Friend Death.—Stockton Bates.—CS 36 
Friend of All.—C: Wesley.—HBP 
Friend of Humanity and the Knife-grinder, The.—G 
Canning—BNL — ESs — FEP — HBP—HPE 
—THP 

(Knife-grinder, The.)— EPs—MHR 
Friend of my Heart, The.—Anon.—HSS 2—PEO 
Friend of the Fly. A.—Anon.—CS 25 
Friend or Foe?—F: E. Weatherly.—HP 
"Friend who holds a mirror to my face. The.” (Scrib- 
7ier’s Monthly .)—GG 
Friends.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 
Friends.—Walter S. Landor.—WEP 4 
Friends. (C.) —Jas. Montgomery. 

(Friend after Friend Departs.)—FEP 
(Parted Friends.)—BNL—GP 
Friends.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—SDR 
Friends.—L. G. Warner.—PHS 
Friends.—S: Wood.—FI.S 
Friends and Enemies.—Anon.—DLS 
Friend’s Burial. The.—J G. Whittier.—TAS 
Friends Departed.—H Vaughan.—OB 
(Beyond the Veil.)—ELP—WEP 2 
(Friends in Paradise— abr.) —HDL—POT 2 — YBF 
(They are All Gone—C.)—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Friend’s Greeting, A.—Bayard Taylor —GP 
Friends in Paradise.—H Vaughan. See Friends De¬ 
parted. 

“Friends, in this world o( liurrv.”—C King-lev — 
FHS 

Friends Old and New.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Friends to be Shunned. (Frags, fr. various authors. ) 
—BNL 

Friendship.—Anon.—HP 

Friendship. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Friendship.—Lord Byron.—LH 

(“My boat is on the shore.”)—PYO 
(To Thomas Moore— C.) —BNI.—GP—HBP—YBF 
Friendship. (Sonnet I.—To a Friend— C .)—Hartley 
Coleridge.—OB 

Friendship, Br. sel. fr. (On Friendship.)—W: Cowper. 
—BNL 

Friendship.—Ralph W. Emerson.—BIL—BNL—OH 
Friendship, A.—Soohie Jewett.—BIL 
Friendship.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Friendship.—W: Shakespeare.—TF'l 
(Memory.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—F EP—HBP 
(Sonnet III.)—OB 
(Sonnet XXX.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
(“When to the sessions of sweet silent thought.”)— 
BNL 

Friendship.—Socrates.—OS 2 

Friendship (To-— C.). — Alfred Tennyson.— 

WR 1 

Friendship.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BIL 
Friendship and Love. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Friendship. Love and Truth.—Anon.—HP 
Frightened at Nothing.—Anon.—StD 
Frightened Birds.—Anon.—WR 17 
Frightened Lodger, A.—Anon.—StD 
Frightened Traveler. The.—Anon.—SCS 

used for reference. 


See Frenchman 
* Centenary edition 

123 





Frightened 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Frightened Woman, A.—Mary K. Dallas.—Wii 3 
Fringed Gentian.—Emily Dickinson,—AA 
Fringed Gentian.—Horatio Ford.—CG 3 
Fringilla Melodia, The.—H: B. Hirst.—AA 
Fritz.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
Fritz.—Anna Randall-Diehl.—DES 
Fritz and his Betsy Fall Out.—G: M. Warren.— 
SR 4 

(Baitsy and I are Oudt.)—CS 24 
Fritz and I.—C F. Adams. See Fritz und I. 

Fritz’ Courtship.—Eugene J. Hall.—CRR 
Fritz’ Troubles.—Anon.—SR 1 

Fritz und [or and] I.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—CD— 
DFY 

Fritz Valdher is Made a Mason.—Fritz Hoofnagle.— 
DRR 

Frivolous Girl. The. (Steubenville Herald .)—HP 
“ ‘Froebelism:’ or The Kindergarten System of Edu¬ 
cation.”— I. B. Bittinger.—GG 
Frog, The.— Hilaire Belloc.—BVC—NA 
Frog Hollow Lyceum. The. (Plan.) —11. E McBride. 
—HD—PR 

Frog in the Throat, A.—Mrs. E. .1 II. Goo tLllow.— 
TT 

Frog Story, A.—Anon.—WR 15 

Froggies’ Fate.—Anon.—CPL 

Frogie on the Log.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 

Frogs at School.—Anon. — WR 17 (abr.) 

(Queer Scholars. The.)—COS—PP 
Frogs at School.—Anon.—CSS—FAS—PPSr 

(Twenty Frogs at School.)—TFS 
Frog’s Good-bye, The.—“Aunt Clara.”—NV 
Frolic at the Old Homestead, A. (Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

Frolic of the Carnivale. A.—Nathaniel Hawthorne. 
See Marble Faun, The. 

Frolick«ome Duke, The; or, The Tinker's Good For¬ 
tune. ( ln Percy's ReliqueO—Anon.—BB 
From a Future Novel.—Anon.—Wlt 17 
From a Greek Epigram. (C.) —Leonidas of Alexandria 
(Ir. by S: Rogers). 

(On a Picture of an Infant [Playing near a Preci¬ 
pice].)—BNL—HBP 

From a Railway Carriage.—ltob’t L. Stevenson.— 
CGV 

From Afar.—Anon.—FLS 
From an Italian Sonnet.— (?) Rogers.—FP 
From Captivity to Power. (Play .)—Clara J. Denton. 
—SSE' 

“From childhood’s hour I have not been as others 
were.” (Alone— C.) —Edgar A. Poe.—GG 
From Down East. (Play.) —H. E. McBride.—HD 
From Exile.—Anon.—BS 3 

From Generation to Generation.—W: D. Howells.— 
AA 

“From Greenland’s icy mountains.”—Reginald Heber. 

See Missionary Hymn. 

From Hand to Mouth.—Anon.—CS 24 
From India.—W. C. Bennett.—CS 9 
From June to June.—Norman S. Dike.—CG 2 
From Love and Nature.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Hough¬ 
ton.—VS 

From my Arm-chair.—H: W. Longfellow.—GMS 
“From my lips in their defilement.”—St. Joannes 
Damascenus (tr. by Eliz. B. Browning).— 
HBP 

From my Window.—Edith T. Ames.—CG 2 
From One to Six.—Esther Fleming.—PS—TT 

(Six Years Old.)—KC 

From One who Went Away in Haste.—-Sophie W. 
Weitzel.—TAS 

From Prison.—R: T,ovelace.—LH 

(To Althea.)—EPs 

(To Althea from Prison— C.) —BNL—BPB—CEL 
— EHT — ELP — ES — FEP — GP — HBP 
— OB — OEL — PGT 1 — PHS — PYO — 
WEP 2—YBF 

From Punkin Ridge.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
“From Shadow-sun.”—Agnes L. Pratt.—CS 33 
“From that time until the period of arrival.” (Br. 
sel. fr. A Voyage, in Sketch Book.)—Washing¬ 
ton Irving.—SO 

From the Arabic. An Imitation.—Percy B. Shelley. 
—OB 

From the Depths.—Anon.—FLS 
From the Eton Magazine, 1848.—Anon.—A VP 
From the Fly-leaf of the Rowfant Montaigne (Florio, 
1603).—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—LBB—MBB 
From the French.—T: Moore (?).—HPE 
From the Iron Gate.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 32 
From the Old World to the New. (Dial .)—Lizzie M. 
Hadley.—WR 10 

From the Persian.—J. B. B. Nichols.—FLS 


From the Recesses [of a Lowly Spirit].—J: Bowring.— 
BNL (sel.) —VA 

From the Spanish of Villejas. (C.) —W: C. Bryant. 

(“ ’Tis sweet in the green spring”— si. abr.) —AD 
From the Valley o’ the Shadder.—Carrie B. Morgan.— 
BS 25 

From the Window.—Marie M. Marsh.-—BS 21 
From the Wreck.—Adam L. Gordon.—CS 24—NPS— 
YP 

Front Gate, The.—Anon.—BS 11 

Frontier Bridal'—almost a Tragedy, A —Michael 
Lynch.—SR 5 

Frost, The. — Hannah F. Gould. — BNL — NV — 
TFS (si. abr.) 

(Jack Frost.)—PoR—WCL 
Frost.—-Edith M. Thomas.—AA—ASL 
Frost at Midnight.—S: T. Coleridge.—WEP 4 
Frost Pictures.—Anon.—NV—YBT 
Frost Work.—Mary E. Bradley.—PEO 
Frost Work. See also Frostwork. 

Frost-bitten.—G A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Frosted Pane. The—C; G. D. Roberts.—SN 
Frost-elves, The.—Mary L. Wolverton.—CG 1 
Frost-work.—'T: B. Aldrich.—POS 
Frost-work See also Frost Work. 

Froward Du»ter, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—BS11— 
CS 21 —SR 4 

Frowns and Sneers.—Anon.—TFS 
Frowns or Smiles.—Sydney Dayre.—COS—PP 
Fruit of the Spirit. A. Lesson from. (.4rr. by)— P. Gar¬ 
rett.—CS 16 

Fruitionless.—Ina Coolbrith.—AA 
Fruits of Labor, The.—S: P. Bates.—BS 6 
Fruits of Liberty, The.—T: B. Macaulay. See Milton. 
Fruits of the War with France.—G' Canning.—SS 
Frustra.—W: Shakespeare [and J: Fletcher]. See 
Measure for Measure. 

Fudge Family in Pa-is, The, Set. fr. (Letters from 

Miss Biddy Fudge to Miss Dorothy-in 

Ireland—Letters V., X., XII.)—T: Moore.— 
HPE 

fMiss Biddy’s Epistle— sel. fr. V.)—THP 
Fugitive Slave’s Apostrophe to the North Star, The.— 
J: Pierpont.—AA 

Fugitives, The.—Percy B. Shelley.—MRS—PEB 3 
Fulfilment.—Anon.—WR 21 
Full Edition. A.—Jos. Lilienthal.—CG 3 
(Large Edition, A.)—BS 25 
Full Fathom Five thy Father Lies.—W; Shakespeare. 
See Tempest, The. 

Full Suite, The.— (?) Metcalfe—TL 
Fulness [or Fullness] of Love.—Eliz. B. Browning.— 
FT A—OH 

(“If I leave all for thee,” etc.)—GG—PGT 2 
(Sonnets from the Portuguese.) — FEP — HBP — 
Y A (XXXV.— C.) 

Fulton’s Invention.—Ogden Hoffman. See Merits of 
Fulton’s Invention. 

Fun that Adam Missed, The.—Anon.—CS 37 
Funeral, The. (Negro Funeral, The— C .)—Will Carle- 
ton.—TD 

Funeral, The.—J: Donne.—ELP—OB 
Funeral, A,—F: I.. Knowles.—CG 1 
Funeral Custom in Egypt.—Anon.—CS 19 
Funeral Hymn, A.—Davit Mallett.—HBP 
Funeral Hymn.—Jas. Montgomery (?).—CR 
Funeral Ode on the Death of the Princess Charlotte.— 
Rob’t Southey (?).—WEP 4 
Funeral of the Mountains, The.—Fred E. Brooks.— 
WR 6 

Funeral of Time, The.—H: B. Hirst.—AA 
Funeral Oration by the Dead Body of Hamilton. (C.) 
—Gouverneur Morris.—MRS (abr.) 

(Oration on Hamilton.)—EAO 
Funeral Oration on Abraham Lincoln.—H: W. Beecher. 
See Abraham Lincoln. 

Funeral Oration on the Death of General Washington. 
—H: Lee.—-EAO 

(Father of his Country, The— br. sel .)—HS 
(Washington’s Birthday— sel .)—OS 2 
Funeral [Funerall—C.] Rites of the Rose, The.—Rob’t 
Herrick.—OB 

Funeral Sermon on the Death of a Good Man.—Anon. 
—FS 

Funeral Tree of the Sokokis, The, Sel. fr. —J: G. Whit- 
. tier.—AD 

Funny Fellow, A.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFT. 

Funny isn’t it?—Anon.—TFS 
Funny Little Fellow, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Funny Man, A.—-C: D. Stewart.—PS 
(Her Grandpa.)—TMR 

Funny Old Clown, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Funny Old Man, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

124 





TITLE INDEX 


Gastibelza 


Funny Old Woman, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Funny Story, The.—Josephine Pollard.—BR (abr.) — 
GH—PS 

Fuss at Fires.—Anon.—SS 

(Advice to a Fire Company.)—CS 1—DS 
Future, The. (.Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Future, The.-—Mattnew Arnold.—PGT 2 
Future, The.—E: K. Sill—ASL—TAS—YBF 
Future Empire of our Language, The.—G: W. Bethune. 

See Future of our Language, The. 

“Future hides in it. The.” (Symbol, A— C. — abr.) — 
Johann W. von Goethe.—GG 
Future in Front of Him, A. (Jim’s Future— C .)—Sam 
W. Foss.—SR 9 

Future Life, The.—W: C. Bryant.—BNL—GP 

(“How shall I know thee,” etc.— set .)—GG 
Future of America, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Adams 
and Jefferson. 

Future of America, The.—Dan’l Webster. See First 
Settlement of New England. 

Future of our Language, The.—G: W. Bethune.— 
BLP (si. abr.) 

(Future Empire of our Language, The.)—SS 
Future of the Nation. The.—Anon.—CP 
Future of the Philippines. (Fr. an address before the 
Home Market Club, Boston, Feb. 16, 1899.)— 
W McKinley.—PFP 

(Our Duty to the Philippines— partly diff. tr. PFP.) 
IR—SC 

(Our New Relations— abr.) —CS 37 
Future of the South. The.—H: W. Grady. See South 
and her Problems, The. 

Future of the United States, The.—C: (?) King.—SS 
Future of the United States, The. — Jos. Story. See 
Our Future. 

Future Peace and Glory of the Church, The.—W: 
Cowper.—HBP 

Futurity.—Eliz. B. Browning.—HDL 
“ Fuzzy-Wuzzy.”—Rudyard Kipling.—THP—VA 


G 


Gabe and the Irish Lady.—Mary E. C. Wyeth.—CD 
Gabe’s Christmas Eve.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 26 
Gabrielle.—W: P. McKenzie.—TCV 
Gaetano Donizetti.— (Tr. by) Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 
Gaffer Gray.—T: Holeroft.—FEP 
Gage, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Gage d’Amour, A.—Austin Dobson.—VA 
Gain of Loss, The.—Horatius Bonar.—LC 
Gaining Ground.—Ella W. Wilcox(?).—TS 
Gains of Restraint, The. (Miscellaneous Sonnets, Pt. 
L, 1.)—W: Wordsworth.—WEP 4 
(Sonnet, The, I.)—OB 

Galatea (Gallathea—C.), Sel. jr. (Cupid Arraigned— 
fr. Act IV., Sc. 2.)—J: Lyly.—ES 
Galatians, Sel. fr. (Be not Deceived—Ch. VI., 7-9.) 
Bible .—LLC 

Galesburg Fire Department.—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 33 
Galgacus (or Calgacus) to the Caledonians. (Fr. Life 
of Cnaeus Julius Agricola sel. fr. Calgacus’ 
Address to the Britons.)—Tacitus.—PS—SS 
Galileo.—E: Everett. See Uses of Astronomy, The. 
Galileo Galilei.—E: Everett. See Uses of Astronomy, 
The. 

Gallant Fleet, The.—J: Hunter-Duvar. See De Rober- 
val. 

Gallant Grahams. The. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon. 
—HBP (sel.) 

Gallant W T escue, A.—W. Sapte, Jr.—CS 27 
Gallathea.—J: Lyly. See Galatea. 

Galley Slave, The. (SI. diff. fr. Poems.)—H: Abbey.— 
CS 7—MMR 

Gallop of Three, The.—Theodore Winthrop.—WR 5 
Gambler’s Last Deal, The.—Elliott Preston.—CS 23 
Gambler’s Son. The.—Anon.—PS 
Gambler’s Tale, The.—W: V. McGuire.—CS 30 
Gambler’s Wife, The.—Reynell Coates.—BS 4—CS 17 
—FMR—FTR—PS—SR 2 


Gambols of Children. The.—G: Darley.—BNL—HBP 
(“Down the dimpled greensward dancing.”)—AE 
Gambrel-roofed House and its Outlook, The.—Oliver 
W. Holmes. See Poet at the Breakfast Table, 
The. 

Game Knut Played, The.—T: D. English.—CS 16 
Game of Chess. A.—Mortimer Collins.—VS 
Game of Chess, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 29 
Game of Chess, A.—Rob’t P. St. John.—CG 2 
Game of Choice —J. H. Clark.—FAS 
Game of Life, The. (C.) —J: G. Saxe.—MDD—PPSr 
(Go it Alone.)—BS 2 


Game of Marbles, A.—R. W. Mitchell.—BS 21 
Game of Tag, A.—Anon.—DJS—WR 17 
Gamin, The.—Victor Hugo. See I.es Mistirables. 

Gamut of Merry Momus, The.—Howell L. Piner.— 
WR 23 ' 

Ganderfeather’s Gift .—Eugene Field.—EF—WTD 
Gane were but the Winter Cauld.—Allan Cunningham. 

—FEP—HBP—YBF 
Ganges, The.—Mary McGuire.—CS 27 
Gape-seed.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 5—MHR 

(Buying Gape-seed.)—PS (a 1 ., to J: B. Gough ) 

Garci Perez de Vargas.—J : G. Lockhart.—EPs 
(Lord of Butrago, The.)—BNL—HB—OS 2 
Garden, The.—Abraham Cowley.—HBP 
Garden, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Garden, A.—Andrew Marvel!(?).—OB 
Garden, The. (C.) — (Tr. by) Andrew Marvell.—EP— 
EPs—HBP—WEP 2 
(Garden Scene, A —sel.) —HS 

(Poet’s Retirement. The.)—BNL 
(What Wondrous I.ife is this I I.ead?)—I.C 
(Partin same sels.) 

(Thoughts in a Garden.)—-FEP—OB—PGT 1 — 
SN 

Garden, The.—Jas. Shirley(?).—WEP 2 
Garden and Cradle. Eugene Field.—AA—LS 
Garden and Summer House, A. (Fr. The Story of 
Rimini.)—Leigh Hunt.—WEP 4 
Garden Fairies.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
Garden Fancies. (Pt. I., The Flower’s Name.)—Rob’t 
Browning.—OH 

(Flower’s Name. The )—BNL—WR 9 
Garden Idyll, A. (C.) —Frd’k Locker-Lampson. 
(Garden Lyric, A.)—VS 
(Geraldine and I— diff. vers.) —VSG 
Garden Lyric. A.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson. See fore¬ 
going. 

Garden of Love. The. (Abr.)— W: Blake.—HBP 
Garden of Love. The.—W’: Shakespeare.—OH 
(Absence.)—GP 

(Sonnet.)—EPs—HBP—OB (XIII.) 

(Sonnet XOVIII.— C.)—WEP 1 
Garden of Proserpine. The.—Algernon C. Swinburne.— 
AVP—CEL 

Garden on the Sands, The.—Anon.—AD 
Garden Path, The.—J. B. Smiley.—CS 36 
Garden Scene, A.—Andrew Marvell. See Garden, The 
Garden Song, A.—Austin Dobson.—OB 
Garden Song f. The].—Alfred Tennyson. See Maud. 
Garden where there is no Winter, The.—L: J. Block.— 
AA 

Gardener, The.—Anon.—BB—LC (si. abr.) —PEB 2 
Gardener. The.—Rob’t I,. Stevenson.—CGV 
Gardener’s Burial, The.—(?) Johnstone.—AVP—LLC 
(Our Gardener’s Burial.)—BLP 
Gardener’s Daughter, The, Hr. sel. fr.— Alfred Tenny¬ 
son.—BIL 

Gardener’s Song, The. (C. — in Sylvie and Bruno.)— 
Lewis Carroll. 

(Some Hallucinations— sel.) —THP 
(Strange Wild Song, A.)—BVC 
Gardens of Venus.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene. The. 

Gareth.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the King 
Gareth and Lynette.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of 
the King. 

Garfield.—Frank Fuller.—WR 22 

Garfield at Chattanooga. (Boston Transcript.) —LPS 
—PP 

Garfield at the Wheel.—Anon.—BS 11 
Garfield Memorial at Cleveland, Ohio, The.—Jacob D. 
Cox.—FD 2 

Garfield Statue, The.—Grover Cleveland.—BS 17— 
FD 2 

Garfield’s Early Life.—Jas. G. Blaine. See Memorial 
Address on the Life and Character of James A. 
Garfield. 

Garland I Send Thee. The.—T: Moore.—FTA 
Garlande of Laurell. The [or, Chapelet of Laurell, 
or, Crowne of Lawrell], Sels. fr. —J: Skelton. 

To Maystress Margaret Hussey.—WEP 1 

(To Mistress Margaret Hussey.)—BNL—FEP— 
GN—LC—OB—OS 2 
(Versions vary.) 

To Mistress Isabel Pennell. (SI. abr.) —ELP 
To Mistress Margery Wentworth.—ELP—OB 
Garmond of Fair Ladies. The.—Rob’t Henryson.— 
WEP 1 

Garret, The.—-W: M. Thackeray.—PYO 
Garrison.—Amos B. Alcott.—AA 
Caspar Schnapp’s Exploit.—Anon.—SCS 
(Bold Dragoon, The.)—CS 25 
Gastibelza (Guitare).—Victor Hugo.—WR 9 


125 




Gate 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Gate of Camelot, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls 
of the King. 

Gates Ajar. Anna L. Ruth.—CS 4 
Gather this Up.—Anon.—DSS 

"Gather ye rose-buds as ye may.”—Rob’t Herrick.— 
HBP 

(Counsel to Girls.)— PGT 1—YBF 
(Counsel to Virgins.) —PYO 

(To [the] Virgins, to Make much of Time—C.)— 
BNL—ELP—ES—FEP—WEP 2 
Gathering, The.—H. B. Swett.—PAPm 
Gathering Flowers.—Anon.—TFS 
Gathering Grasses.—Anon.—WR 17 
Gathering of the Church, The. (Fr. Lyra Apostolica.) 
—J: Keble.—AVP 

Gathering of the Clans, The.—Jas. W. Riley. See 
Session with Uncle Sidney, A. 

Gathering of the Fairies, The.—Jos. R. Drake. See 
Culprit Fay, The. 

Gathering Song of Donald Dhu [or the Black],—Walter 
Scott. See following. 

Gathering Song of Donuil [or Donald] Dhu.—Walter 
Scott.—BPB—CEL—GN 
(Gathering Song of Donald the Black.)—PGT 1 
(Highland War-song.)—PS 
(Pi broch.)—LH 

(Pibroch of Donuil Dhu—C.) — BNL — BS 25— 
EPs—FEP— HBP— LC—OS 2—PHS 
(Summons, The— br. sel.) —SE 
Gay Christmas Ball, A.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Gay Gos [or Goss]-hawk. The. (In Border Minstrelsy.) 
—Anon.—GN—PEB 2 (si. diff. vers.) 

(Walter Scott’s vers. — diff. and longer.) —EPs 
(Jolly Goshawk, The— si. diff. fr. GN, etc.)—BB 
Gay Lady that Went to Church, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Gay Little Dandelion (w. music). —Anon.—AD 
Gay Old Man am I, A. (Musical monologue .)—(Arr. by) 
Alfred B. Sedgwick.—DSS 
Gay Provence.—G. F. Savage-Armstrong.—TIP 
Gazelle, A.— II: H. Stoddard.—AA 
Gazelle and Swan.—Howell I.. Piner.—WR 2d 
Gebir, Sets. fr .—Walter S. Landor. 

Pravers. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. V .)—WEP 4 
Shell, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. /.)—WEP 4 
(Inscription on a Sea Shell— br. sel.) —EPs 
Tamar and the Nymph. (Sel. fr. Bk. I .)—VA 
Tamar and the Nymph. (Sel. fr. Bk. VI.) —WEP 4 
Geist’s Grave.—Matthew Arnold.—VA 
Gemini and Virgo. ( C .)—C: S. Calverley. 

(Tommy’s First Love.)—CS 24 
General Albert Sidney Johnston.—Mary Jervev.— 
EDY 

General Amnesty.—Carl Schurz.—MRS 
General George H. Thomas: His Life and Character, 
Sels. fr. —Jas. A. Garfield. 

General Thomas at Chickamauga.—NC 
Memorial Address on Gen. George H. Thomas, Br. 
sel. fr. —GG 

General Government and the States, The.—Alex. Ham¬ 
ilton. See Speech on the Compromises of the 
Constitution. 

General Grant.—Anon.—DLS 
General Grant.—Chauncey M. Depew.—WR 23 
General Grant, the Silent Captain.—G: W. Curtis. See 
Major-General John Sedgwick. 

General Grant to the Army—1865.—Ulvsses S. Grant. 
—CS 2 

General Grant’s English.—S: L. Clemens.—BS 16— 
DES—PFP 

General John.—W: S. Gilbert .—NA 
General Joseph Reed; or, The Incorruptible Patriot.— 
E. C. Jones.—CS 1 

General Joseph Warren’s Address.—J: Pierpont. See 
General Warren to his Troops, etc. 

General Thomas at Chickamauga.—Jas. A. Garfield. 
See General George H. Thomas: His Life and 
Character. 

General Warren to his Troops at the Battle of Bunker 
Hill.—J: Pierpont.—HSS 1 
(General Joseph Warren’s Address.)—SR 8 
(Stand 1 The Ground’s your Own.)—WR 5 
(Warren’s Address [at I he Battle of Bunker Hill].)— 
AWB — BNL — CR— CS 8 — CSS —EDY — 
— FEP — GN — GP — OS 1 — PAP — PAPm 
—PS—PSR—SM—TMD—WCI.G 2 
(Warren’s Address before the Battle of Bunker's 
Hill.)—PPSr 

(Warren’s Address to the American Soldiers.)—AA 
(Warren’s Supposed Address at Bunker Hill.)— 
BLP 

General Warren’s Death. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.—TDT 
General Washington's Resignation.—G: Washington.— 
BLP 


General Wheeler at Santiago. Jas. Lindsay Gordon.— 
PRIl 

General’s Client. The.—Harry S. Edwards. See De 
Valley an’ de Shadder. 

General’s Death, The.—-Jos. O’Connor.—AA 

Generosity. (Dial.)— Anon.—FDY 

Generosity. (Dial ) —Anon.—WR 26 

Generous Frenchman, The.—Anon.—DFY—SCS 

Generous Little One.—Anon.—PS 

Genesis, Sel. fr. (Tree of Life, The—Ch. II., 8-25;Ch. 

III.) Bible. —WR 11 
Genesis.—J:H. Ingham.—AA 

Genesis of Science, Sel. fr. (Mathematics and Physics 
— ad.) —Herbert Spencer.—SE 
Genevieve.—S: T. Coleridge.—EPs 

(Love—C.)—BNL —FEP —HBP —OB—PGT 1 
—WEP 4—WR 8 
(Love’s Flame— br. sel.) —FLS 
Genevieve.—S: T. Coleridge.—FEP—FTR 
(Diff. poem fr. foregoing.) 

Genevra.—Emma S. Stilwell. See Mistletoe Bough, 
The.—T: H. Bayly. 

Genius.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 27 
Genius.—R: II. Horne.—VA 
Genius, A.—Jas. N. Johnson.—WR 7 
Genius.—E. L. White.—AA 
Genius and Application.—Anon.—KNS 
Genius and Common Sense. (Fr. Table Talk.) —W: 
Hazlift.—MRS 

Genius for the Stage, A. (Dial.). —Carey.—MPD 
Genius Loci.—Marg. L. Woods.—OB 
Genius of Christianity, The, Sels. fr. —Francois R. A. 
de Chftteaubriand. 

Mysteries of Life, The. (Pt. I., Bk. I., Ch. III.— 
abr.)— BS 21 

Nature Proclaims a Deity. (Sel. fr. Pt. I., Bk. V., 
Ch. II.)—CS 11—SS 

Genius of Death, The.—G: Croly.—BNL 
Genius to her Poet.—Maude B. Dutton.—CG 3 
Genoa. (SI. abr.) —Frd’k W. Faber.—AVP 
Genteel and Polite.—Mrs. J. E. McConaughy.—MD 
Gentian.—Kate L. Brown.—NV 
Gentian.—Eliz. G. Crane.—AA 
Gentility.—Anon.—SR 1 

Gentilitv.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury Tales, 
The. 

Gentle Alice Brown.—W: S. Gilbert.—NA—THP 
Gentle Child, The.—Anon.—DLS—WR 17 
Gentle Echo on Woman, A.—Jonathan Swift (7).— 
HPE 

Gentle Hints. (Harper’s Magazine.) —DLS (si. abr.) 
(Doing and Giving— sel.) —HSS 2 
(Resolution.)—PTS 
Gentle Mule, The.—Anon.—DCR 
Gentle Shepherd, The, Sels. fr. —Allan Ramsay. 

‘‘At setting dav ami rising morn.”—BNL—FEP 
(Song )—GP (at. lo J: Gay.) 

Jenny and Peggy.—WEP 3 
Patie and Peggy.—WEP 3 
Patie and Roger.—EP 

(My Peggy— sel.) —GN ( shorter )—LC 
(Peggy— same as LC.)—OB 
Gentle Words.—C. D. Stuart.—YBT 
Gentle Words.—M. J. Taylor.—DCP 
Gentle-breath.—Annie C. Huestis.—TCV 
Gentleman, A.—Anon.—CS 20 
Gentleman, The.—G: W. (or W: C.) Doane.—LLC 
Gentleman, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Gentleman, The.—R: Steele.—OS 2 
Gentleman, A.—G: M. Vickers.—PS 
Gentleman Jim.—Dan’l O’Connell.—CS 36—HP 
“Gentlemen, the King!”—Rob’t Barr.—NDP (play 
ad. fr. story) —NP (Ch. I.— abr.) 

Geoffrey Barron.—Kathe. (Tynan) Hinkson.— PEB 4 
Geography Demon, The.—Anon.—CS 33 
Geology.—J. D. Dana.—TMD 

Geordie to his Tobacco-pipe.—G: S. Phillips. See Gyp¬ 
sies of the Dane’* Dike. 

Georga Washingdone.—Anon.—GH 
George and the Chimney-sweep.—Ann and Jane Tay¬ 
lor.—BVC 

George Birthington's Washday.—Florence E. Homer. 
—CG 2 

George Du Maurier.—Arthur Ketchum.—CG 2 
George Eliot.—Jas. A. Noble.—EDY 
George Leo. (C. — si. abr.) —Hamilton Ai’d£.—CS 26 
(Story of George Lee.)—DS 
George Nidiver.—E. H.—BAB—EPs—HB—HBP— 
PC 

George the Third (fr. The Four Georges). ( Cond.) 
—W: M. Thackeray.—CR 

George III. (November, 1813.— C.) —W: Words¬ 
worth.—EHT 


126 




TITLE INDEX 


Gil 


George the Fourth (in The Four Georges). (Compari¬ 
son of George Washington with George the 
Fourth, called the First Gentleman of Europe.) 
—W: M. Thackeray.—OS 3 
George Washington.—Anon.—BNL—EPs 
George Washington. ( Concert rec.) —Anon.—DLF 
George Washingt on.—Anon.—PEO 
George Washington. (Concert rec.) —M. A. Bryant.— 
DLS—PP—PS—YPS 
(Washington’s Life.)—DFR 
George Washington. (Harper’s Young People.) —SR 12 
—WR 24 

George Washington.—J: Id Ingham.—AA (si. abr.) — 
EDY 

“George Washington was once a Boy.” — Anon.— 
DLS 

George Washington’s “Bufday” (Youth’s Compan¬ 
ion.) —SR 13 

George Washington’s Little Hatchet. (W . panto¬ 
mime.) —Anon.—TCP 

George’s Example.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
George's Letter.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Georgia Volunteer, A.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA— 
AWB;—CS 18 

Gerald and his Mother. (Fr. A Woman of no Impor¬ 
tance.)—Oscar Wilde.—VSG 
Geraldine.—H: Howard, Earl of Surrey. See Sonnet: 
Geraldine. 

Geraldine and I.—Frd’k I.ocker-Lampson. See Gar¬ 
den Idyll, A. 

German Anniversary Speech of Herr Hans Yager. 

(Kentucky State Journal.) —BDD 
German Favors.—F. C. Clarke.—CG 1 
German Fire-eater, A.—Theodore S. Fay.—WR 19 
German Professor on Hypnotism, The.—A. T. Worden. 
—GH 

German Trust Song.—Lampertus.—SSS 
Germanicus to his Mutinous Troops. (Sel. fr. Annals, 
Ch. I.)—Tacitus.—PS 
German’s Fatherland, The.—Anon.—GP 
Germs of Greatness.—Eliza Cook.—CS 30 
Geronimo.—Ernest McGaffey.—AA—EDY 
Gertrude.—J. H. Scranton.—CG 2 

Gertrude of Wyoming, Sel. fr. (Oneyda’s Death-song, 
The— fr. Pt. III.)—T: Campbell.—WEP 4 
Gertrude’s Necklace.—Fred’k Locker-Lampson.—VS 
Get Acquainted with Yourself.—Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
CS 28 

“Get at the root of things.”—Anon.—GG 
“Get into some good library and read.”—J: A. Mur¬ 
phy.—GG 

“Get leave to work.”—Eliz. B. Browning. See 
Aurora Leigh. 

“Get out of my Shop!”—Jennie E. Munson.— 
WR 18 

Get Up.—Anon.—PPSr 

Gethsemane (Christ our Example in Suffering— C.). — 
Jas. Montgomery.—FEP—HBP 
Gethsemane.—Ella W. Wilcox.—GP 
Gets Dhere.—C: F. Adams.—BS 18 
(He Gets There.)—SR 7 
Gettin’ On.—Anon.—BS 19 
Getting Acquainted.—Sydney Davre.—BS 20 
Getting at the Point.—Anon.—DLF 
Getting Even.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Getting in the Wrong Room.—C: Dickens. See Pick¬ 
wick Papers. 

Getting Letters.—-Anon.—CH 

Getting Rid of her Daughter’s Beau. — Anon. — 
WR 26 

Getting Supplies from the Wreck.—Dan’l Defoe. See 
Robinson Crusoe. 

Getting the Right Start. (Fr. Timothy Titcomb’s 
Letters, I.)—Josiah G. Holland. BS 24 (cond.) 

(Abr.) —B L P—PEO 

Getting o be a Man.—S: E Kiser.—WR 21 
Getting under Way.—S: L. Clemens. See Innocents 
Abroad, The. 

Getting Up.—H: S. Leigh.—CS 27 
Getting up a Picnic.—Anon.—FAD 
Gettysburg.—Anon.—DLF 

Gettysburg. (Br. sel. fr. National Cemetery at Gettys¬ 
burg.)—E: Everett.—OS 2 
Gettysburg.—Ernest W. Shurtleff.—BS 14 
Gettysburg.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AWB 
Gettysburg: A Mecca for the Blue and Gray. (Sel. fr. 

Address. July 3, 1888.)—J: B. Gordon.—BLP 
Gettysburg Address. — Abraham Lincoln.— SM — 

WCLG 1 

(Address at Gettysburg.)—BLP 
(Address at the Dedication of the Cemetery, etc.). 
— CR — CS 2 — LLC — OS 2 — PEO — PRR 
—TMR—WRD 


Gettysburg Address (continued). 

(“Brave men, living and dead, The.”— sel .)— 
HSS 1 

(Dedication of Gettysburg Cemetery.)—BS 5—EA 
—FD 1—GG—SC—SO—SR 2—TMD 
(Gettysburg Speech.)—A1 

(Remarks at the Dedication of the National Ceme¬ 
tery at Gettysburg.)—IR 

(Speech at the Dedication of the National Ceme¬ 
tery, etc.)—GMS—MAL—PPS 
Gettysburg Ode, Sel. fr. (Dedicatory Ode for the 
Gettysburg National Cemetery.)—Bayard Tay¬ 
lor.—CS 2 

Gettysburg Speech.—Abraham Lincoln. See Gettys¬ 
burg Address. 

Gheber to his Followers, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Gheber’s Bloody Glen, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Ghost. The.—Anon.—BS 4—CS 1—KNE 
(Ghost of Abel Law, The.)—SR 1 
Ghost, The.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 
Ghost', The, Sel. fr. (Description of Johnson— jr. 

Bk. II.)—C: Churchill.—WEP 3 
Ghost Fairies.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Ghost Flower, The.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Ghost in Hamlet, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Ghost in the Closet, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Ghost in the Kitchen. The.—Anon.—FAD 
Ghost of Abel Law, The.—Anon.— See Ghost, The. 
Ghost of an Old Continental, The.—Fred E. Brooks.— 
CS 27 

Ghost of Creusa, The.—Virgil (tr. by Gawain Douglas). 
See AJneid, The. 

Ghost of Crooked Lane, The. (Dial.) —G: M. Vickers. 
—CDs 

Ghost of Goshen, The.—Anon.—CS 11—DS 
Ghost of Lone Rock, The.—Clara M. Howard.—WR 7 
Ghost of Sensation, The.—S. Weir Mitchell.—KNE 
Ghost Scene, The.—W: L. Alden. See Adventures of 
Jimmy Brown, The. 

Ghost Scene from Hamlet.— W: Shakespeare. See 
Hamlet. 

Ghost Story, A.—S: L. Clemens. See Golden Arm, The. 
Ghost Story, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Ghost-flowers.—Mary T. Higginson.—AA 
Ghosts.-—Anon.—-CG 1 

Ghosts, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The. 

Ghosts.—R: K. Munkittrick.—AA 
Ghosts in the Library.—Andrew Lang.—MBB 
Ghosts of the Dead. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Giannone, Sel. fr. (Government Spy, The— arr.) —W: 
W. Story.—DR 

Giaour, The, Sets. fr. —Lord Byron. 

Giaour, The. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
Greece.—BNL—LLC 

(Fall of Greece, The— abr.) —GP 
Idleness. (Br. sel.) —-KNE 
(Giaour, The, Sel. fr.) —BNL 
Love.—BIL—FTA 
Picture of Death, A.—BNL 
(Aspect of Death— abr.) —AE 
(Greece— abr.) —OS 3 

"Such is my name, and such my tale.”—HP 
Transient Beauty.—BNL 

Gibraltar. (In Love Sonnets of Proteus.)—Wilfrid S. 
Blunt.—OB—VA 

Giddy Girl, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Gift, A.—Eliz. R. Cutter.—CS 2 
Gift of Tears, The.—Sarah M. Piatt.—TAS 
Gift of Tritemius, The.—J: G. Whittier.—AP—CS 16 
Gift of Water, The.—Hamlin Garland.—A A 
Gift that None could See, The.—Mary E. (Wilkins) 
Freeman.-—TJBR—WR 4 
Gifted for Giving.—W: H. Burleigh.—TAS 
Gifts.—Juliana H. Ewing.—FLS 
Gifts.—Emma Lazarus.—BNL—OS 3—TAS 
Gifts.—Jas. Thomson See Sunday up the River: 

Gifts for All—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Gifts of Age, The.—Anon.—BS 22 
Gifts of Fortune and Cupid, The - T: Dekker.—ELP 
Gifts of God. The.—G: Herbert.—BNL—FP—OS 2— 
PGT 1 

(Pulley, The—C.)—CEL (u\ 3 sts. fr. Misery)—EPs 
—FEP—OB—WEP 2—YBF 
Gifts of God, The.—Jones Very.—AA 
Gifts Returned.—Walter S. T.andor.—TTIP 
Gigglety Girl, The.— (Judge.) —GH—PS 
Gil Morrice. (C .— in Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.— 
(Childe Maurice— diff. vers.) —BB 
Gil, the Toreador.—C: H. Webb.—AA 


127 




Gilded 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Gilded Age, The, Sets. fr .—S: L. Clemens and C:D. 
W arner. 

Steamboat Race, The. (Ch. IV.) — BRR — 
SR 2 (arr. and cond.) 

Uncle Daniel’s [or Dan’l’s] Apparition [and Prayer], 
(Ch. III.)—CS 10—FTR—SA 
( Uncle Daniel’s Introduction to a Mississippi 
Steamer. )—BS 5 
(Uncle Dan’l’s Prayer.)—SDR 
Washington Hawkins Dines with Colonel Sellers. 
(.Sets. fr. Chs. VII., VIII., and XI.)—BS 10 
Gile Machree.—Gerald Griffin.—TIT 
Giles and Abraham.—-Elmer R. Coates.—CS 6 
Gillyflower of Gold, The.—W: Morris.—VA 
Gimlet vs. Corkscrew.—Anon.—SR 13 

(Matrimonial Controversy, A.)—WR 16 
Ginevra.—Susan Coolidge.—BS 16—SR 11 
Ginevra. (Fr. Italy.)—S: Rogers.—BNL—FEP 
(SI. abr .)—NPS—TM R—WEP 4—YP 
(SI. diff. vers .)—CS 3 

(Lost Bride, The.)—WR 26 
(Far another vers, of the same story, see Mistleote 
Bough, The.—T: H. Bayly.) 

Ginger and the Preacher.—Anon.—WR 14 
Gingerbread Land.—Anon.—DLF 
Gingerbread Tree, The.—Harriet P. Spofford.—AD 
Gipsie Laddie, The.—Anon.—PEB 1 
Gipsies Metamorphosed, The (Masque of the Meta¬ 
morphosed Gipsies, A—C’.), Sets. fr .— Ben 
Jonson. 

“Faery [or Fairy] beam upon you. The.”—ELP 
(Song from "Gypsies’ Metamorphoses”— 2d 
song ?)—EPs 
(Wish, A.)—LC—OS 1 
Song (“The owl is abroad.”)—EPs 
Gipsy Bride, The.—Emma D. Banks.—WR 19 
Gipsy Camp. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Gipsy Children’s Song.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Gipsy Fortune-teller, The. (Tab. and dial.) —Anon. 
—BS 9—TCP 

Gipsy Song. (Williams Literary Monthly .)—CG 3 
Gipsy. See also Gypsy. 

Gipsy’s Malison, The.—C: Lamb—HBP 
Gipsy’s Warning, The. (Fr. Martha— w. music.) — 
Flotow and St. Georges.—KER 
Girdle, A.—Edmund Waller.—GP 

(On a Girdle—C.)—BNL—ELP—EPs (abr .)—ES 
—FEP — FTA — OB — OEL — PGT 1 — 
PYO—WEP 2—YBF 

Girdle of Friendship, The.—Oliver W r . Holmes.—BIL 
Girl at the Book Counter, The.—Anon.—CS 33 
(At the Book Counter.)—WR 7 
Girl Describes her Fawn, The.—Andrew Marvell. See 
Nymph Complaining for the Death of her 
Fawn, The. 

Girl in Gray, The.—W: Merritt.—SR 4 
Girl of all Periods, The.—Coventry Patmore.—VA 
Girl of Cadiz, The. (Song included in first draft of 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, Can. I.)—Lord 
Byron.—HBP 

Girl of Culture, A.—Anon.—DCR (si. abr.) 

(Courting and Science.)—BS 17 
Girl of Dunbwy, The.—T: Davis.—TIP 
Girl of our Town, The.—R. R. Kirk.—CG 3 
Girl of Pompeii, A.—E. S. Martin.—AA 
Girl of the Period, A.—Anon.—CH—CS 25 
Girl of the Period, The. (Dial.) —G: C. Graham.—GS 
Girl of the Red Mouth.—Martin MacDermott.—TIP 
Girl that I Didn’t Get, The.—Anon.—WR 7 
Girl who is Always Good, The.—Anon.—DLS 
Girl with the Cows, The, Sel. fr. —A. P. Graves.—TIP 
Girl with Thirtv-nine Lovers, The. (London Graphic.) 
—WR 8 

(Thirty-nine Lovers, The.)—TMR 
Girlhood.—Anon.—BNL 
Girl’s a Girl for a’ That, A.—Anon.—HP 
Girl’s Address to Boys, A.—Anon.—MCS 
Girl’s Bucksaw Exercise.—Anon.—EuE 
Girls, Don’t Marry a Drunkard.—Anon.—WR 18 
Girl’s Essay on Boys, A.—Anon.—DST—WR 7 
Girls of the Period, The. (End gag.) —Anon.—DSS 
Girls that are Wanted, The.—Anon. See following. 
Girls who are in Demand.—Anon.—HSS 3 
(Girls that are Wanted, The— abr.) —YBT 
Girondists, The, Sel. fr. (Execution of Madame Ro¬ 
land— fr. Vol. III., Bk. LI.)—Alphonse de 
Lamartine.—CS 13 

Girt Woak Tree that’s in the Dell, The.—W: Barnes.— 
PGT 2 

Girt Wold House o’ Mossy Stwone, The.—W: Barnes. 
—PGT 2 

Give a Rouse. (Fr. Cavalier Tunes.)—Rob’t Brown¬ 
ing.—EHT (abr .)—HBP—MRS—VA 


Give All to Love.—Ralph W. Emerson.—BIL (br.sel.) 
—OB 

Give and Take.—“Bob O’Link.”—DLD 
Give Beauty all her Right (C.) —T: Campion. 

(Measure of Beauty, The.—ELP 
Give me a Wish.—Rose (Terry) Cooke.—PC 
(Wish. A.)—WCL 

Give me Back my Boy.—Jasper Garnet.—DES 
Give me Back my Husband.—Anon.—CS 5 
Give me Back my Youth Again.—Johann W. von 
Goethe.—GP 

Give me More Love [or More Disdain], (Song: Medi¬ 
ocrity in Love Rejected— C.) —T: Carew.— 
BNL—FLS—FTA—YBF 
Give me not Tears.—Rose H. Lathrop. 

Despair.—AA 
Joy.—AA 

Give me Rest.—Anon.—HP 
Give me Rest.—G: E. Grisham.—WR 15 
Give me the Hand.—Goodman Barnaby.—CS 11—PS 
(Hand for me. The.)—PTS 
Give me the Old.—Rob’t H. Messenger.—BNL—EPs 
—FEP—TAV 

(Winter Wish, A.)—AA—HBP 
Give me the Splendid Silent Sun.—W’alt Whitman.— 
AA 

“Give me the Town.”—Mary H. Ritchie.—CG 2 
Give me Three Grains of Corn, Mother.—Amelia B. 
Edwards.—BNL—CS 2 

Give Place, ye Lovers.— H: Howard, Earl of Surrey.— 
BNL 

(Praise of his love. A.)—FEP—WEP 1 
Give Thanks.—Anon.—PEO 
Give Thanks, All ye People.—Anon.—-SSS 
Give Thanks fer [or for] What?—W. F. Croffut.—CS 21 
—DFR—HP—NPS—YP 
“Give the Children Holidays.”—Anon.—HSS 1 
Give the Little Boys a Chance.—Anon.—TFS 
“Give the Youngsters a Chance.”—Anon.—DS—YA 
Give to the Wind thy Fears.—Paul Gerhardt.—HDL 
Give up the Union? — Dan’l S. Dickinson. See Shall 
we Give up the Union? 

Give us a Call.—Anon.—CS 22—SSS 
Give us Men. (Wanted— C.) —JosiahG. Holland.—CS 26 
(True Men.)—SR 7 

“Give us, O give us, the man who sings at his work.” 
—T: Carlyle.—SO 

“Give words, kind words, to those who err.” (The 
Daily Counsellor, Dec. 24.)—Lydia Sigourney. 

Given Over.—T: Woolner.—VA 
Giver’s Reward, The.—Anon.—CS 18 
Giving.—Anon.—HSS 3 

Giving in Marriage.—Jean Ingelow. * See Songs of 
Seven. 

Giving Thanks.—Anon.—DFR 
Giving to God.—Christopher Wordsworth.—VA 
Glacier-bed, The.—E. A. Blake.—BS 19—CS 33—DS 
—NPS—YP 

Glad Autumn Days.—Anon.—YBT 
Glad Surprise, A.—Jennie Joy.—MD 
Glad Tidings.—W 7 : Wordsworth.—EHT 
Gladiator, The.—Anon.—CS 15—NPS—SA—TMR— 
YP 

Gladiator, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Gladiator, The.—J. A. Jones.—BS 3—CS 7 (si. abr.) 
Gladiators, The.—Emilio Castelar.—OS 3—WR 19 
Gladness of Nature, The. (C.) —W: C. Brvant.—AD— 
POS—SM—SN—WCL—WCLG 1 
(Spring— abr.)— HNS 
(Summer— br. sel.) —SE 

Glance Backward, A.—Mary E. Blanchard.—CS 22— 
WR 19 (si. abr.) 

Glasgerion. (In Percy’s Reliques.) — Anon.— BB — 
PEB 1—WEP 1 
(SI. diff. versions.) 

Glass of Cold Water, A.—J: B. Gough (at. also to A. W. 
Arrington and to Paul Denton).—CS 2—HSS 3 
—SR 2—WRD 

- (Apostrophe to Cold Water.)—SA 
(Apostrophe to Water.)—LLC—SSD 
(Tribute to Water, A.)—PP—YFR 
(W T at er— sel. )—S E 

(“Water! look at it, ye thirsty ones”— sel.) —GG 
(SI. diff. versions.) 

Glass Railroad, The.—G: Lippard.—CS 14—SPE— 
SR 2 

Glaucus and the Lion.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Last 
Days of Pompeii. 

Gleaner, The.—Jane Taylor.—PC 

Gleaners, The.—G: Weatherly.—HSS 3 

Glee for Winter, A.—Alfred Domett.—SN—VA—VS 


128 




TITLE INDEX 


God 


Glen, The.—Charlotte Whitcomb.—SO 
Glen Allen’s Daughter.—Anon.—WR 15 
Glen Ellis Falls.—S: Longfellow.—HDL 
Glen-Almain, the Narrow Glen.—W: Wordsworth. 
—PGT 1 

Glenara. —T: Campbell —BFV— EPs—LC—PHS—SS 
Glenkindie.—W: B. Scott.—VA 

Glenlogie.— Anon.— BB— EPs— FEP—-GN (si. diff. 
vers.) —LC 

Glenorchy.—Evan MacColl.—TCV 
Glimpse, The.—W: Watson.—YBF 
Glimpse of Youth, A, Br. sel. fr. (‘‘So every little 
child I see.”)—Josiah G. Holland.—HP 
Glimpses.— Helen H. Jackson.—TAS 
Glimpses into Cloudland.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Hyperion. 

Gloria Bell.—W: J. Benners, Jr.—CS 30 
Gloriana.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Glorious Constitution. The.—Dan’l W’ebster. See Pub¬ 
lic Dinner at New York. 

Glorious Destiny of England, The.— Rob’t C. Win- 
throp. See Centennial Oration. 

Glorious Fourth, The.—Anon.—PR—YA 
Glorious New England. {Sel. fr. Address on the Land¬ 
ing of the Pilgrims.)—S. S. Prentiss.—CS 1 
(New England.)—FD 1 

Glorious Song of Old, The.-—Edmund H. Sears.—OS 2 
(Angels’ Song, The.)—AA 

(It Came upon the Midnight Clear.)—FEP — 
LLC (abr.) 

(Peace on Earth.)—TAS 
Glory.—Fs. Wavland.—LLC—SSD 
Glory Hallelujah! or, John Brown’s Body.—Anon.— 
AWB 

Glory in the Northwest.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Glory mit ter Stars und Sthripes.—Yawcob von Splut- 
termann.—DRR 

Glory of Athens.—Thucydides. See History of the 
Peloponnesian War. 

Glory of God in Creation, The.—T: Moore.—POS 
(Thou Art, O God—C.)—FEP 
Glory of Motion, The.—R: St. J. Tyrwhitt.—HBP—VA 
Glory of Nature, The.—Timothy Dwight.—BS 23 
Glory of Nature, The.—Frd’k Tennyson.—PGT 2 
Glory of Washington, The.—H:, Lord Brougham.—DFR 
Glory that was Greece, The.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 
Glorying in the Cross. (Hymn VII.)—Isaac Watts.— 
FEP 

Glory-roses.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Gloucester Harbor.—Eliz. S. (Phelps) Ward.—AA 
Glove, The.—Rob’t Browning.—BP 
Glove, The.—Leigh Hunt. See Glove and the Lions, 
The. 

Glove, The.—Friedrich Schiller ( Ir. by E: Bulwer-Lyt- 
ton).—HSS 3. 

(Diff. Ir.)— SS 

(For diff. vers., see Glove and the Lions, The, below. 
Glove and the Lions. The.—Leigh Hunt.—BeR—BNL 
— BS 7 — BVC — CR — CS 8 — CSS — FEP 
—C.N—MR—OS 2—PPSr 
(Glove, The.)—HSS 3 

Gloverson, the Mormon. (Mormon Romance, A: 

Reginald Gloverson— C.) —C: F. Browne.— 
BeR—CS 16 

Gloves were never Made to Sell.—Anon.—DSS 

Glow-worm and Star.—J: J. Piatt.—TAS 

Gluggity Glug. (Fr. The Myrtle and the Vine.)—G: 

Colman (the younger). —BNL—GP 
Glycine’s Song.—S: T. Coleridge. See Zapolya. 
Gnomies, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Gnosis.—Christopher P. Cranch.—TAS 
(Knowing.)—LLC 

(Stanzas.)—ASL—FEP—HBP—TAV 
(Thought.)—BNL—GP 

(“Thought is deeper than all speech”— br. sel.) — 
CS 1 

Go.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 33 
Go Feel what I have Felt.—Anon.—BNL—PS—SM 
(Hate of the Bowl.)—CS 2—HS 
(Woman’s Answer on being Accused of being a 
Maniac, etc.)—PPSr 

Go Forth in Life not Seeking Love.—Anne C. (Lynch) 
Botta.—BIL 

Go Forward.—Ellen Murray.—CS 33 
Go Forward to Victory.—I. K. Funk.—WR 18 
“Go from me. Yet I feel that I shall stand.”—Eliz. 
B. Browning.—PGT 2 
("Far and yet Near.)—OH 
(Sonnet.)—FT A 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese.)—BNL—OB(TII.) 
—YBF 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese, VI.— C.) —VA— 
WEP 4 


Go, Happy Rose!—Rob’t Herrick.—CEL 

(To the Rose—C.)—ELP—ES—OEL—WEP 2— 
YBF 

Go, Heart.—Jas. Wedderburn.—ELP 

Go it Alone.—J: G. Saxe. See Game of Life, The. 

Go, Lovelv Rose.—Edmund Waller.—BFV—BNL (w. 
add. st. by K. White)—EPs—FEP—OB—OEL 
—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 
(Rose, The.)—HBP 
(Rose’s Message, The.)—CEL 
(Song—C.)—ELP—ES—WEP 2 
Go, Pretty Birds. (Fr. Fair Maid of the Exchange.)— 
T: Heywood.—FEP 
(Message, The.)—OB 
(Phillis.)—EP 
(To Phyllis.)—ES—OEL 
(“Ye little birds that sit and sing.”)—ELP 
Go Sleep, ma Honey.—E: D. Barker.—AA 
Go Slow.—Madge Elliot.—FAS 
Go to thy Rest.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—BNL 
“Go to work! Nothing is more salutary to the human 
soul.”—H: W T . Beecher.—GG 
Go vay, Beckv Miller, Go vay!—Anon.—BDD—CS 24 
—DFV 

Go where Glory Waits Thee!—T: Moore.—BNL—FEP 
—HBP 

Goal of Life, The.—Rob’t Burns. See Auld Lang Syne. 
Goal of Life, The. (Sel. fr. The Longest Life.)— 
Archibald Lampman.—TCV 
Goat and the Swing, The.—J: T. Trowbridge.—CSS— 
PR—YA 

Goblet, The.—Bayard Taylor (?).—FP 
Goblet of Life, 'fhe.—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL ( br. 
sel.)— OS 3 

Goblin Market, Br. sel. fr. (Good Sister, The.)— 
Christina G. Rossetti.—OH 
Goblins, The.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick Papers. 

God.—Gabriel R. Derzhavin (tr. by J: Bowring).— 
AE (br. sel.)— CS 4 — FTR — GP — HBP — 
HNS (abr.) 

(Ode to the Deity.)—BS 4 
God after All, A.—Anon.—WR 14 

(Little Outcast’s Plea, The.)—BS 25—PFP 
God and Nature. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
God and the Soul, SeZs. fr .—J: I.. Spalding. 

At the Ninth Hour. (Fr. Bk. IV.)—AA 
Believe and Take Heart. (Faith and a Heart— C .— 
fr. Bk. I.)—AA 

Et Mori Lucrum. (Fr. Bk. I.)—AA 
God and the Soul. ( Sel. fr. Sursum Corda— fr. Bk. I.) 
—SR 9 

Nature and the Child. (Visions of Childhood— C. — 
fr. Bk. II.)—AA 
Silence. (Fr. Bk. IV.)-—AA 
Starry Host, The. (Fr. Bk. I.)—AA 
Void Between, The. (Fr. Bk. II.)—AA 
God and the Universe.—Alfred Tennyson.—WEP 4 
God Bless our Father Land.—Oliver W. Holmes.— 
FP 

(International Ode— C.) —PEO 
God Bless our Native Land.—Timothy Dwight.— 
LLC 

God Bless our School.—Anon.—CS 13 
“God bless the cheerful people—man, woman or 
child.”—A. A. Willits.—GG 
God Bless You.—Anon.—SSS 
God Bless you, Dear, To-day 1;—J: Bennett.—A A 
“God can and does render sinners happy in spite of 
their sins.”—C: Hodge.—GG 
God Cares.—Anon.—HDL 
God Careth.—Anon.—SSS 

God Everywhere in Nature.—Carlos Wilcox.—BNL 
God Governs. (Motion: For Prayers in Convention— 
C.) —B: Franklin.—SS 

“God has made this world very fair.”—Anon.—GG 
God in Everything.—Eliza Cook.—YBT 
God in Government.—Mary T. Lathrop.—WR 18 
God in History.—G: Bancroft.—BS 2 
God in History.—J: Lanahan.—SR 6 
God in Nature.—S: T. Coleridge. See Hymn before 
Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni. 

God in Nature.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, 
The. 

God is Everywhere.—Anna A. Ballam.—YBT 
God is Good.—Anon.—YBT 
God is Good.—Eliza L. Follen.—YBT 
God is Love.—Anon.—HBP 
God is Love.—Anon.—HDL 
God is Love—Eliz. A. (?) Allen.—CPL 
God is Love.—J: Bowring.—FEP 
God is Near.—Anon.—YBT 
“God is Nowhere.”—Olive Leaf.—CS 12 
(Little Reader, The.)—MYF 


129 




God 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


God is There.—Anon.—YBT 
God Keep You.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
God Knoweth.—Mary G. Brainard.—LLC (at. to 
Mary A. Bridgman). 

(Not Knowing—C.)—AA—HDL—SSS —TAV 
God Knoweth Best. See Sometime.—May R. Smith. 
God Knows.—Anon.—CS 24 
God Knows.— Anon.—SSS 
God Loves Me.—Anon.—YBT 
God Lyaeus.—J: Fletcher. See Valentinian. 

God made all Things.—Jane Taylor.—TFS 
(Works of God.)—NV 

God made them for me.—Mary P. Hale.—YBT. 

God Moves in a Mysterious Way.—W: Cowper.—LLC 
—YBF 

(Light Shining out of Darkness—C.)—FEP—HBP 
(Providence.)—EPs—HDL 
“God never meant that we should call this home.”— 
M. E. K.—GG 

God of Abraham Praise, The.—T: Olivers.—FEP 
God of mv Childhood, The (abr.) —Frd’k W. Faber.— 
WCL 

God Provideth for the Morrow. (Fifteenth Sunday 
after Trinity— C .)—Reginald Heber.—AD (abr 
(Providence.)—GN 

God Rest ye, Merry Gentlemen.—Dinah M. Craik.— 
GN 

(Christmas Carol, A.)—FEP—OS 1 
God Rest you. Merry Gentlemen.—Anon.—BVC 
(Christmas Carol.)—FEP 

God Save our Native Land.—Julius H. Seelye.—BS 23 
God Save our President.—Fs. De H. Janvier.—CS 13 
(tod Save the Flag.—Oliver W 7 . Holmes.—GMS 
God Save the King.—H: Carey.—BNL (abr.) —FEP— 
GP—HBP 

God Save the King!—Theodosia Garrison.—EDY 
God Save the Nation.—Theodore Tilton.—AA 
God Save the State.—C: T. Brooks.—BLP—DFR 
God Sees.—Mary M. Dodge.—TFS 
(Night and Day—C.)—POS 
God Sees me.—Anon.—DLF 
God Sees me.—Anon.—DLS 

God the Everlasting Light of the Saints above. (In 
Doddridge’s Character.)—Philip Doddridge.— 
HBP 

(Ye Golden Lamps of Heaven, Farewell—C.)—FEP 
God the Father.—H: W. Beecher.—OS 1 
God the True Source of Consolation. (Oh Thou who 
Dry’st the Mourner’s Tear—C.)—T: Moore.— 
HNS 

(Resignation.)—KNE 

God Watcheth. (My Child woke Crving from her 
Sleep—C.)—G: Macdonald.—HDL 
God Wills it so.—A Plea.—Anon.—SR 3 
God with Us.—Anon. —YBT 

Goddess of Liberty, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.— 
TDT 

Goddess of Slang, The.—Anon.—DDR—SCS 
Godiva. (SI. abr.) —Alfred Tennyson.—BNL—CS 13 
Godliness with Contentment. (I. Timothy VI., 6-13.) 
(Bible.) —LLC 

Godly, The. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: But¬ 
ler.—HPE 

God’s Acre.—C: K. Field.—CG 2 

God's Acre.—H: W 7 . Longfellow.—BNL—BS 19—CS11 
—LLC 

God’s Anvil.—Julius Sturm (tr. by G: W. Doane).— 
BS 14—CS 11 
(I Hold Still.)—GP—MMR 
God’s Beverage.—Jas. S. Watkins.—CS 17 
God's Clock Strikes.—G: F. Pentecost.—WR 18 
God’s Country.—O. C. Auringer.—CS 27 
God’s Father-care.—(Hey, tr. by) C. M. Harris.—NV 
— YBT 

God’s First Temples.—W: C. Bryant.—FTR 
(SI. abr. )—HNS <arr.)— SPE 
(Forest Hymn, A.)—AA—AD (si. abr.) —BNL— 
Cm 8—FP (br. sel. )—IISS 1— LLC (abr. )—WR 5 
(Groves, The— br. sel.) —TFS 

(“My heart is awed within me when I stand”— br. 
sel .)—GG 

God’s Garden.—R: Burton.—TYV 
God’s Hand. Horatius Bonar. See Master’s Touch, 
The. 

God’s House.—Frd’k G. Scott.—YBT 
Gods in Council, The. (Dial. — arr. by) Emily Radcliff. 
—CDs 

God’s Judgment on a Wicked Bishop. (C.) —Rob’t 
Southey.—BNI.—FEP (abr.) 

(Bishop Hatto.)—BVC—CGd 
God’s Love.—Gerald Griffin.-—AD—YBT 

(“There’s not a flower that decks the vale.”)— 
HSS 3 


God’s Love.—-Jas. R. Lowell. See Incident in a Rail¬ 
road Car, An. 

God’s Love to Man.—H: W. Beecher.—BS 12 
God’s Mark on all Things.—Amelia Opie.—TFS (abr.) 
(Hymn.)—YBT 

God’s Miracle of May.—Frank D. Sherman.—YBT 
God’s Music.—F: E. Weatherly.—CS 31 
God’s Ownership of the Sea.—Leonard Swain.—FD 1 
God’s Ragamuffin Army.—G. L. Taylor.—WR 19 
God’s Rest.—Anon.—SSS 
God’s Support and Guidance.—Anon.—KNE 
God’s Time.—Jean Ingelow. See Scholar and Carpen¬ 
ter. 

God’s Will.—Rob’t L. Munger.—AA 
God’s Wisdom and Power.—Anon.—AD 
God’s Wonders.—Eliza L. Marlyn.—CS 33 
God’s Work.—Percy Brooke.—YBT 
God’s Work.—Ella W. Wilcox.—TS 
‘‘Goe, Little Booke!”—Jas. R. Lowell.—LLC 
Coin’ Home To-day.—Will Carleton.—CS 10 
Goin’ Somewhere.—C: B. Lewis.—CS 13—DCR 
(Rural Infelicity.)—BS 22 
Goin’ to der Races.—Honnas.—DRR 
Going after the Cows.—Anon.-—PR 
Going a-Maying.—Rob’t Herrick.—GN—LH 

(Corinna’s Going a-Maying— C.) —EP—EPs—FEP 
—OB—WEP 2 

(Corinna’s Maying.)—OEL—PGT 1 
(May-day.)—CEL 

Going and Coming.—E: A. Jenks.—BNL 
Going a-Nutting.—Edmund C. Stedman.—GN 
(Autumn Song— C.) —NV 
Going Away.—T: Frost.—WR 2 

Going Down Hill on a Bicycle.—H: C: Beeching.—OB 
(Bicycling Song.)—GN 
Going Down to Mary’s.—Anon.—WR 4 
Going for the Cows.—Eugene Hall.—BS 14 
Going! Going! Gone!—G:C. Graham.—GS 
Going Home.—B: F. Taylor.—TAV 
Going Home.—C: Tennyson-Tumer.—PGT 2 
Going Home.—Nathaniel P. Willis. See Lines on 
Leaving Europe. 

Going Home in the Morning.—Wayne Douglas.—HP 
—WR 2 (si. abr.) 

Going into Breeches.—Mary Lamb.— BVC— LPC— 
PoR 

Going on an Errand.—Anon.—CS 30—PR—YA 
Going Out and Coming in.—Mollie E. Moore.—CS 3 
Going Softly.—Anon.—HP 
Going to a New Home.—H. E. McBride.—HD 
Going to Aunt Ruth’s to Tea.—Anon.—TFS 
Going to be an Orator.—Kate E. Forbes.—SD 
Going to Church.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in 
the House, The. 

Going to School. (Prose .)—Anon.—CS 22 
Going to School. (Concert rec .)—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Going to see the Actors.—Anon.—MC 
Going to the Corner.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Going to the Dentist’s. (Dial .)—Mrs. S. L. Over¬ 
holt zer.—CDs 

Going to the Train. (Tab .)—E. C. and I,. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Going to the Wars. (Song: To Lucasta, going to the 
Warres— C.) —R: Lovelace. — ELP — ES — 
LH—WEP 2 
To Lucasta.)—FT A—OH 
To Lucasta Going to the Wars.)—OB 
(To Lucasta, on Going to the Wars.)—BFV—BNL 
— BPB — CEL— EPs— FEP—HBP— OEL — 
OS 3—PGT 1—PHS—PYO—YBF 
Going to Washington.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Gold.—Anon.—KNS 

Gold. — Anacreon (tr. by Abraham Cowley). See 
Change, The. 

Gold. (Epilogue to Overheard in a Garden.)—Oliver 
Herford—THP 

Gold.—T: Hood. See Miss Kilmansegg and her Pre¬ 
cious Leg. 

Gold and Love for Dearie.—Eugene Field.—EF—WTD 
Gold Locks and Silver Locks.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Gold Louis, The.—Anon.—NP 
Gold of Hope, The.—H: Burton.—SSS 
Gold Spinner, The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Gold-bug, The.—Edgar A. Poe.—WGS 
Golden Age, The.—Ernest F. Fenollosa.—AA 
Golden Age, The.—Jos. Hall.—WEP 1 
Golden Arm, The. (C.) —S: L. Clemens. 

(Ghost Story, A.— diff. vers.) —WR 5 
Golden Bridge, The.—G: T. Lanigan.—BS 115 
Golden City, The, Sel. fr .—C:(?) Mackay.—SPE 
Golden City, The.—Frd’k Tennyson.—WR 1 
Golden Crown Sparrow of Alaska.—J: Burroughs.—SN 
Golden Fish, The.—G: Arnold.—BNL—TFY 


130 




TITLE INDEX 


Good 


Golden Flower, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—PEO 
Golden Girl, A. (Lucy—C.)—Bryan W. Procter.— 
BNL 

Golden Glove, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Golden Grains. (Br. sels. fr. various orations.) —Jas. 
A. Garfield.—CS 20 

Golden Haire.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
St ella. 

Golden Key, The.—Anon.—DST 
Golden Keys.—Anon.—TT—YBT 
Golden Legend, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Chris- 
tus: A Mystery. 

Golden Mile-stone, The. (Sel.) —H: W. Longfellow.— 
OH 

Golden Orioles, The.—J. H. Hartzell.—POS 
Golden Pippins. (Dial.) —Anon, (ad.) —MPD 
Golden Rain.—Anon.—BS 18 

Golden Robin’s Nest, The. (C.) —J: W. Chadwick.— 
AA 

(Yellow-hammer’s Nest, The.)—HP 
Golden Rod.—Anon.—AD 
Golden Rod, The.—Eve J. Beede.—AD 
Golden Rod, The.—Hopesrill Goodwin.—AD 
Golden Rod, The. ( Vick's Magazine.) —AD 
Golden Rod. See also Golden-rod. 

Golden Rowan.—Bliss Carman.—VA 
Golden Rule, The.—Anon.—DLF—OS 1 (br. sel.) — 
PS (sel.) 

Golden Rule, The.—Anon.—PTS 
Golden Rule, The. (Dial.) —“Bob O’Link.”—DLD 
Golden Rule, The. (Dial.) —Mrs Russel! Kavanaugh. 
—KC 

Golden Rule. (New England Primer.) —OS 1 
Golden Rules tor the Young. (Boy’s Own Paper, The.) 
—BYC 

Golden Scepter, The.—Mabel S. Merrill.—CS 34 
Golden Shoes.—Anon.—CS 5 
Golden Side, The.—Anon.—BS 26—HP 
Golden Silence, The.—W: Winter.—GP 
“Golden Speech, The.” (Sel.) —Queen Elizabeth.— 
OS 3 

Golden Sunset, The.—S: Longfellow.—TAS 
Golden Street, The.—W: O. Stoddaid.—CS 11 
Golden Supper, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Lover’s 
Tale, The 

Golden Text, The.—G: F. Cameron.—TCV—VA 
Golden Yanitee.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Golden Wedding, The.—David Gray. — HBP 
Golden Wedding, The.—W. E. Minshall.—SR 12 
Golden What soevers. (Philippians IV., 8.)— Bible. — 
LI.C 

Golden Year. The. sel. fr. (“Ah! when shall all men’s 
good.’’)—Alfred Tennyson.—IIBP 
Goldenrod.—Anon—NV 

Golden-rod.—Carrie W. Bronson.—DCP (sel.) 

(Lady Golden-rod.)—AD (sel.)—TFS 
Goldenrod.—Elaine (Goodale) Eastman.—AD (sel.) — 
BNL 

Golden-rod.—W: E. Hunt.—TCV 
Golden-rod. (.4hr.)—Lucy Larcom.—PEO 
Goldenrod.—Mrs. F. J. Lovejoy.—COS—NV—PP 
Golden-rod.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Golden-rod. See also Golden Rod. _ 

Golden-tressed Adelaide.—Bryan W. Procter.—FEP— 
PHS—VA—VSG 

Goldfinches.—J:Keat«. See I Stood Tiptoe upon a 
Little Hill. 

Goldilocks.—Jean lngelow. See Brothers and a Ser¬ 
mon. 

Gold-of-Ophir Roses.—Grace A. Dennen.—AA 
Gold-seekers, The.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 
Goldsmith's Daughter, The.—Johann I.. Uhland.— 
HSS 2 

(Diff. tr.) —WR 9 

Goldyn Targe. The, Sel. fr. —W: Dunbar.—WEP 1 
Golf Fiend. The—R. F. B.—TL 
Go-Morrow: or, Lot’s Wife.—Anon.—BeR—DCR 
Gondibert, Sels. fr. —Sir W: Davenant. 

Gondibert, Bk. I., Can. VI., Sel. fr. —WEP 2 
Praise and Prayer. (Br. sel. fr. II., VI.)—OB 
Gondolieds.—Helen H. Jackson.—ASL 
Gondoline. (Abr.) —H: Kirke White.—WR 19 
Gone.—Anon.—HP 
Gone.—W: D. Howells.—BIL 

Gone.—Jean lngelow. See Star’s Monument, The. 
Gone.—C: Mackay.—BIL—-TFY 
Gone. (.4hr.)—J: G. Whittier.—LI.C 
Gone Before.—B: F. Taylor.—CS 12—HNS (abr.) 
Gone Forward.—Marg. J. Preston.—EDY 
Gone in the Wind.—.T. C. Mangan.—TIP 
Gone out Forever.—Anon.—KNE 
Gone with a Handsomer Man.—Will Carleton.—CS 11 
—FTR—PS 


Gonello.—Anon.—WR 9 
Good. The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—BS 18—CS 30 
(What is Good?— C.) —DLF 
(What is the Real Good?)—YBT 
Good Advice. (Motion song.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Good Ad\icc to Talkers.—Anon.—DLS 
Good Ale.—J: Still.—BNL— HBP 

'Jolly Good Ale and Old.)—FEP—GP—OB 
Good All Day.—Anon.—YBT 

Good and Bad Children.—Rob’t I,. Stevenson.—CGV 
—TFS 

Good and Bad Spelling. (Fr. a letter.) —Benj. Frank¬ 
lin.—WR 5 

Good and Better.—Anon.—CS 16—FP 
Good and not Stupid.—Anon.—PTS 
Good Bet, A.—Anon.—CDV 
Good Boy. A.—RoL’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Good By. See Good-by. 

Good Bye. See Good-bye. 

Good Cheer. (Sel. fr. Life.)—Charlotte Bronte.—OS 1 
Good Cigar, A.—Norris Bull.—PPh 
Good Company. (Harper’s Young People.) —COS— 
PP 

Good Conscience, A.—Sir E: Dyer.—FTR (abr.) 

(My Mind [or Minde] to me a Kingdom is.)—BNL 
—FEP 

(Ahr.;—ELP—SM—WEP 1 
(Attrib. to W. Byrd.)—BS 7—EPs—HBP—LLC 
(Peace of Mind.)—PHS 

(Old style spelling in BNL—FEP—HBP.) 

Good Counsail.—Geoffrey Chaucer.—FP 

(Good Counsail of Chaucer— C.) —FEP—WEP 1 
(To Life’s Pilgrim— abr .)—CEL 
Good Counseil of Chaucer. Geoffrey Chaucer. See 
foregoing. 

Good Counsel. (Frags, fr. various authors.)— BNL 
Good Country, A.—Clara .1. Denton.—DFR—LL 
Good Day.—Anon —CP 
Good Deeds.—Sir Edwin 4mold.—WR 9 
Good Deeds.—"1: Chalmers.—PP—YFR 
Good Deed.- Past.—W: Shakespeare. See Troilus and 
Cressida. 

“Good F.nougn fer me.”—Anon.—WR 18 

Good Fight, i he, Sel. fr. (Cause of Bunker Hill, Tne.) 

—G: W: Curtis.—NC 
Good for Evil. (Dial.) —Anon.—DJS 
Good for Evil. (Piose.) —Anon.—WR 17 
Good for Evil. (Dial.) —Capt. Howard.—SD 
Good Friday.—Girolamo Savonarola.—OS 3 
Good Great Man, The.—S: T. Coleridge.—BLP (si. 
abr.)— BNL—FEP— HBP—LLC—YBF 
(Character.)—EPs 

Good, Great Name, A.—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
Good Heart. (Br. sel. fr. Epistle to Davie.)—Roh’t 
Bums.—FPs 

Good in All.—-Clara .1. Denton.—LT. 

Good Joke on Maria, A.—Anon.—CS 31 
Good Library Gone uo in Smoke. A.—E. H. Trafton.— 
MD 

Good Life, A.—Horarius Bonar.—HSS 2 

(“He liveth long who liveth well”— C.) —GG— 
KNE 

(How to Live.)—GP—SSS 

Good Life, Long Life.—Ben .Jonson. See To the Im¬ 
mortal Memory and Friendship of that Noble 
Pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir Henry Morri¬ 
son. 

Good Little Bov and the Bad Little Boy, The.—G: 
Kvle —WR 3 

Good Little Sister, The.—Pho-be Cary.—BLF 
Good Luck and Bad Luck. (After Heine.)—J: Hay.— 
TFS 

“Goqd man suffers but to gain, A.”—Oliver Gold¬ 
smith. See Captivity, The. 

Good Manners. (Dial.) —Anon.—PTS 
Good Manners.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—HSS 2 

(Whole Duty of Children—C.)—BVC—CGV—DLS 
Good Maxims.—Anon.—StD 
Good Measure.—Anon.—WR 12—WR 25 
Good Memory Work.—Anon.—LLC 
Good Morning.—Anon.—YBT 
Good Morning.—Mrs. H. B. Bingham.—CPL 
Good Morning. — Rob’t Browning. See Pippa Passes. 
Good Morning, Merry Sunshine.—Anon.—DST—NV 
(Merry Sunshine.)—NV 
Good Morrow. See Good-morrow. 

Good Name. A.—Anon.—TT 
Good Name. A.—Joel Hawes.—BLP—PEO 
Good Name.—W: Shakespeare. See Othello, the Moor 
of Venice. 

“Good name in man and woman, dear my lord.”—W: 
Shakespeare. See Othello. 


131 







Good 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Good Name more Desirable than Riches, A.—Louis B. 
Coley.—WR 24 

Good Nature and Recklessness. (Frags, fr. various 
authors .)—BNL 

Good News.—Rob’t Browning. See How they Brought 
the Good News from Ghent to Aix. 

Good News from Ghent.—Rob't Browning. See How 
they Brought the Good News from Ghent to 
Aix. 

Good Night.—Anon.—FEP 

Good Night.—Anon —FTA—TAV 

Good Night.—Anon.—TFS 

Good Night.—Hester A. Benedict.—HP 

Good Night.—Sydney Dayre.—NV 

Good Night.—M. E. H. Everette.—CG 1 

Good Night.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—PS—TT 

Good Night.—G: Hill.—POS 

Good Night. (Domestic Poems, II.: “.The sun was 
slumbering.”—T: Hood—HPE 
Good Night.—Victor Hugo.—OS 1 
Good Night.—Mrs. Russell Ivavanaugh.—KER 
“Good Night.”—Reginald W. Kaylor.-—WR 26 
Good Night.—Theodore Ivorner (Ir. by C: T. Brooks). 
BNL 

( Diff. tr. — abr.) —POS 
Good Night.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Good Night.—Rob’t Sands.—FEP 
Good Night. (Fr. North-west Passage.) — Rob’t L. 
Stevenson.—CGV—DLS 

Good Night and Good Morning.—R: M. Milnes, Lord 
Houghton. — BNL — FEP — HSS 2 — LC — 
EPS — OS 1 — NV — PoR — PP — PPSr — 
PTS—TFS—WCL—YBT 

“Good Night, Babette!”—Austin Dobson.—AVP— 
VA 

(Angelus Song— set.) —GP 
Good Night, Good-by.—Dora Green well.—PC 
Good Night, Good Morning.—C:, Lord Bowen.—AVP 
Good Night in the Porch. (Br. sel.) —Rob’t, Lord 
Lytton.—AVP 

Good Night, Little Star.—Anon.—TFS 
“Good Night, Papa.” (American Messenger.) —BS 3 
—CS 10—NPS—PS—YP 
Good of it. The.—Dinah M. Craik.—SAE 
Good Old Man, The.— Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage 
Land. 

Good Old Souls.—Earl of Southesk.—VSG 
Good Old Way, The.—Anon.—CS 22 
Good, Old-fashioned People, The.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
BJC 

Good Omens.—W: Shakespeare.—EPs 
(Sonnet.)—H BP 

(Sonnet CVII.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
Good Play, A.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Good Queen Bess.—Flora N. Montgomery.—TFS 
Good Reading [the Greatest Accomplishment],—J: S. 
Hart.—BS 5—CS 12 

Good Rule, A (Three Gates).—Anon.—CS 37 
Good Rule, A.—Anon.—WR 17 
Good Rule, A.—Alice Carv.—BLF 
Good Ship Castle Down. The.—W : B. McBirney.—TIP 
Good Sister, The.—Christina G. Rossetti Nee Goblin 
Market. 

Good Son. The.—R: H. Dana.—FTR—SAE (abr.) 

Good Strong Heart. A.—E. H. Chapin.—LLC 
(Strong Heart, The.)—HSS 3 
"Good that never satisfies the mind. A.” (Flowers 
of Sion, II.)—W: Drummond—FEP 
(Human Frailty.)—LLC 
(Illusions.)—CEL 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 
Good Tidings.—Anon.—BVC 

Good Tidings. (St. Luke II., 8-15.)— Bible. —OS 1 
Good Time Coming, The—C: Mackav.—FEP (abr.) — 
HBP 

(SI. aim.)— PEO—SM 

Good Time Going, A.—Oliver W. Holmes.—HBP 
Good Way to Play a Joke, A.—Anon.—YFD 
Good Wife, The.—Anon.—MHR 

Good Writing. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: 

Butler.—HPE 
Good-by.—Anon.—BNL 
Good-by.—Anon.—FLS 
Good-by, A.—Ednah P. (C.) Hayes.—AA 
“Good-by.”—Grace D. Litchfield.—HP 
Good-by.—Christina G. Rossetti.—VA 
Good-by, Sweet Day.—Celia Thaxter.—POS 
Good-by. Sweetheart.—Mary Clemmer.—BIL 
Good-by, Winter!—C. S. Stone.—AD 
“Good-bye.” (Prose.) —Anon.—BS 12 
Good-bye.—Anon.—DLS 
(Closing Speech.)—DLF 
Good-bye.—Anon.—FI .S 


Good-bye, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Good-bye.—Ralph W. Emerson.—FEP-—HBP 
(Good By.)—BNL 

Good-bye. (Sailor’s Farewell, The — C.) — Ruthven 
Jenkyns.—TFY (at. to Moore.) 

(Sweetheart, Good-by!)—FI.S 

(“Sweetheart, Good-bye! that flut’ringsail.”)—GG 
(Though Lost to Sight, to Memory for Mem’ry] 
Dear. — CS 13 — FTA — HP — PYO (at. to 
Moore.) 

Good-bye. (Concert rec.) —E. O. Peck.—LPS—PP 
Good-bye, Old Church.—Millie C. Pomeroy.—CS 28 
Good-bye, Old House.—Millie C. Pomeroy-.—CS 23 
Good-bye, Sweet Day.—-Susan Coolidge.—YBT 
Good-bye to Dolly.—Anon.—WR. 17 
Good-children Street.—Eugene Field.—EF—LS 
Goodest Mother, The.—Anon.—HP 
Good-morning. See Good Morning. 

Good-morrow [Song].—T: Heywood. See Rape of 
Lucrece, The. 

Goodness.—Marcus Aurelius Antoninus. See Thoughts 
of Marcus Aurelius. 

Goodness and Greatness. (Br. sels. fr. Essay XVII.: 
Of Goodness, and Goodness of Nature, and fr. 
Essay XI.: Of Great Place— ad.) —Fs. Bacon. 
—BLP 

Goodness and Greatness of God.—C: Spurgeon.—BS 3 
Goodness of God.—Anon.—KNE 
Good-night. See Good Night. 

Goody Blake and Harry Gill.—W: Wordsworth.— 
CGd—CS 24—LLC—SE (sel.) 

Goody Grim versus Lapstone. (Scene.) —Matthews.— 
BC 

Googly-Goo.—Eugene Field.—LS 

Goose Hollow Farmers’ Club.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Goose with the Golden Eggs, The.—rEsop.—OS 1 
Goosey Lucy’s New Year’s Calls. ( Youth's Com¬ 
panion. )—CPL 
Gordon.—Ernest Myers.—VA 
Gordon.—Bertram Tennyson.—EDY—TCV 
Gordon’s Reprieve. (Ad.) —Anon.—NP 
Gory Gambols. (Lehigh Burr.) —CG 2 
Gosling’s Wife Snores.—Fritz Gosling.—BDD 
Gospel of Mystery, The.—Saxe Holm.—TAS 
Gospel of Peace, The.—Jas. J. Roche.—EDY 
Gossip.—Anon.—KNE 
Gossip.—May Cooper.—PR—YA 
Gossip of the Nuts, The.—Anon.—NV 
Gossips, The. (Dial.) —-Anon.—WR 17 
Gossips, The. — Ella W. Wilcox. — PP — PS — 
WR 17 (arr. as dial.)— YPS 
Gotham. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.)—C: Churchill.—WEP 3 
Gottingen Barber, The.—J. E. Carpenter.—CS 24 
Gougane Barra.—Sir Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
Gougaune Barra.—Jeremiah J. Callanan.—BNL— 
CS 10—TIP 

Gourd and the Palm, The. — (Tr. by) C: Mackay. — 
AD—OS 1 

Gouty Merchant and the Stranger, The.—Horace 
Smith.—BNL—CS 2—SS—THP 
Government by Epigrams. (Sel. fr. Sur 1’Eau.)— 
Guy de Maupassant.—OS 2 
Government of the People, The.—G: Bancroft.—SR 8 
Government should Grow with the People. A. (Sel. 
fr. Parliamentary Reform.)—T: B. Macaulay. 
—SS 

Government Spy, The.—W: W T . Story. See Giannone. 
Government Vigor.—Sydney Smith. See False Notions 
of Government Vigor. 

Governor and the Notary, The.—Washington Irving. 
See Alhambra, The. 

Governor Manco and the Soldier.—Washington Irving. 
See Alhambra, The. 

Governor’s Last Levee, The.—Sara B. Kennedy.— 
NP 

Gowans tinder her Feet.—Frances W. Gibson.—CS 24 
Gowk’s Errant [and what Cam’ o’t], A. — J: Ferguson. 

—BS 22—CR—CS 34 
Gowns of Gossamer.—Lucy Larcom.—I.CS 
Grace and Dolly.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Grace and her Friends.—Lucy Larcom.—WCL 
(Grace’s Friends.)—LCS 

Grace and the World. (Sel. fr. Hope.)—W: Cowper.— 
WEP 3 

Grace Darling.—Anon.—CS 25 

Grace for a Child, [A], (Another Grace for a Child— 
C.)— Rob’t Herrick. — BVC — ELP — OH — 
WEP 2—YBF 
(Child’s Grace. A.)—OB 
Grace of Beauty, The.—Anon.—ELP 
Grace of Fidelity, The.—Dr. Niccolls.—BS 12 
Grace Vernon Bussell.—H. S. Drayton.—CS 27 
Grace’s Choice.—C: B Loomis.—TL 


132 




TITLE INDEX 


Grave 


Grace’s Friends.—Lucy Larcom. See Grace and her 
Friends. 

Gracie of Alabama.—Fs. O. Ticknor.—BAB 
Grade’s Cake.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Grade's Kitty—Anon.—BS 14 
Gracious Answer. The.—H: N. Cobb.—SA 

Father, take my Hand. (Sel.)— CS 10—SSS (abr.) 
Gracious Answer, The. (Sel.) —CS 10 
(Promise. The.)—BS 3 

Gracious Time. The.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Gradatim. (C'.)—Josiah G. Holland.—BS 6—CS 6— 
GMS—GP— SO (si. abr.) 

(Gradation— si. abr.) —KNE 
(Only in Dreams— si. abr.) —PEG 
(Way to Heaven, The.)—LLC—OS 2—SM 
Gradation.—Josiah G. Holland. See foregoing. 
Gradgrind’s Idea of Education. (Sel. fr. Hard Times, 
Chs. T. and II.)—C: Dickens.—HSS 2 
Graduating Essay, A.—H. G. Dodge.—WR 15 
Graduation.—Phillips Brooks.—TMR 
Graeme and Bewick. (Fr. Scott’s Border .Minstrelsy.) 

—Anon.—EPs—PEB 2 
Grain of Com, A.—Anon.—AD 
Grain of Truth, A.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 28 
Grammar for the Court of Berlin. (Punch.)— HPE 
Grammar in Rhyme.—Anon.—PPSr—PS 
(Nine Parts of Speech. The. i-—TFS 
Grammar Lesson, A.—Helen W. Grove.—CS 33 
Grammarian’s Funeral, A.—Rob’t Browning.—A VP 
—MRS 

Grampy Sings a Song.—Holman F. Day.—THP 
Grand Advance, The.—Frank H. Gassawav.—BS 25— 
TMD 

(“Advance”)—WR 25 

Grand Old Day. The. (Earlier vers, of The Thursday 
Sabbath Day, in City Festivals.)—Will Carle- 
ton.—BS 18 

Grand Ronde Valley, The.—Ella Higginson.—A A 
Grand Scheme of Emigration.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Grandame. The.—C: Lamb.—WEP 4 
Granddad's Polka —Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 20 
Grandeur of the Ocean.—Walter Colton.—CS 23 
Grandfather Squeers.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Grandfather Watts’ Private Fourth.—H: C. Bunner. 
—BVC—DR 

Grandfather’s Bam.—Anon.—PP—PS—YPS 
(In the Bam.)—WR 14 
Grandfather's Bam.—Eben E. Rexford.—FS 
Grandfather’s Chair. Sels. fr. —Nathaniel Hawthorne. 
Affray in King Street, Boston, 1770. The. (Bated 
on The Boston Massacre.)—MYF 
Pine Tree Shillings, The. (Ch. VI.)—WCLI 1 
Sunken Treasure, The. (Ch. X., and sel. fr. Ch. XI.) 
—WCLI 1 

Grandfather's Clock.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 33 
Grandfather’s House.—Mary McGuire.—CS 24 
Grandfather’s Pants.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Grandfather’s Reverie.—Theodore Parker.—SR 2 
Grandfather’s Rose.—Mary A. Denison.—CD 
Grandfather’s Story.—Mary H. Field.—CS 36 
Grandfather’s “Summer Sweets.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
• Grandma.—Anon.—DST 
Grandma Doll. A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Grandma Keeler Gets Grandpa Keeler Ready for Sun¬ 
day School. (Sel. fr. Cape Cod Folks. Ch. V.) 
—Sarah P. McL. Greene.—NP 
Grandma Robbins’ Temperance Mission.—Emrna D. 
Banks.—BR 

Grandma that’s Just Splendid, A.—Emma A. Opper. 
—WR 17 

Grandma’s Advice to the Girls.—Anon.—SD 
Grandma’s Angel.—Sidney Dayre.—LPS—PP—V R 5 
Grandma’s Garden.—Anon.—WR 4 
Grandma’s Mistake.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Grandma’s Pocket.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Grandma’s Prayer.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Grandma’s Schooldays. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Grandma’s Shamrocks.—F.. A. Sutton.—CS 27_ 
Grandma’s Spectacles.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.— 

TT 

Grandma’s Storv and Mine.—Mrs. F.. J. H. Goodfellow. 
—TT 

Grandma’s Surprise.—Anon.—CS 35 
Grandma's Talk.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Grandma’s Tea.—Lizzie J. Rook.—TT 
Grandma's Wedding Dav. T. C. Harbaugh.—CS 33— 
NPS—WR 7—YP 

Grandmamma’s Fan.—Edith S. Tupper.— V< R 15— 
WR 26 

Grandmother, The.—Victor Hugo.—FP 
Grandmother Gray.—Mary K. Boutelle.—CS 16— 
MYF 


Grandmother to her Grandson.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Grandmothers.—Anon.—LLC 

(Johnnv’s Opinion of Grandmothers.)—BS 2—SD 
—\VR 17 (sd.) 

Grandmother’s Apology, The. (Abr.) —Alfred Tenny¬ 
son.—BS 11 

Grandmother’s Beau.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Grandmother’s Bible.—Hattie A. Cooley.—CS 23 
Grandmother’s Hour with the Hymns.—Mrs. Mary E. 
Lee.—WR 14 

Grandmother’s Sermon.—Ellen A. Jewett.—CS 22 
(Sermon in a Stocking, The.)—HP 
Grandmother’s Spectacles.—T. DeW. Talmage.—CS 13 
Grandmother's S'itches.—A. F. Caldwell.—YBT 
Grandmother’s Story. (The Battle of Bunker Hill.)— 
Oliver W. Holmes. See below. 

Grandmother’s Story of Bunker Hill.—Oliver W. 
Holmes. See jolloicing. 

Grandmother’s Storv of Bunker Hill Battle. (C .)— 
Oliver W. Holmes —AP—MAL—PAP 
(Bunker Hill.)—FMR (abr.) —SE (br. sels) 
(Grandmother's Story [of Bunker Hill].)—BS4 (si. 
abr. )—SE 

Grandmother’s Valentine.—Minna Irving.—EDY 
Grandpa and Baby. (Boston Transcript.) —CS 36 
Grandpa and Bess.—Emily H. Miller.—PEO 
Grandpa and Pet.—Alice L. Richards.—SI, 

Grandpapa.—Dinah M. Craik.—PC—WR 17 ' sd .)— 
YBT 

Grandpapa’s Spectacles.—Anon.— CPI.—D.S—PP— 

YA—YFR 

Grandpa's Courtship.—Helen W. Clarke.—CD 
Grandpa's Spectacies.—Anon.—DI.F 
Grandpa s Way.—Anon.—DST 
Grand3ire. The.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Granger’s Wife. The.—J. W. Donovan.—CS 10—NPS 
— YP 

Gran’ma Al'as [or Al’us] Does.—A. H. Poe.—BS 8— 
DST-FAS—HP 

Granny.— -Ja«. W. Rilev.—WR 15 
“Cranny. Where you Gwine?”—Anon.—DCR 
Granny's Trust.—Anon.—SA 
Grant.—Melville W. Fuller.—CS 29 
Grant.—Frank W. Gunsaulus.—SR 13 
Grant. (Fr. a Speech made at Galena. Ill., Apr. 27, 
1893.)—W: McKinley.—SC 
Grant a T Appomattox.—Eugene H. Levy.—TMR 
Grant at Rest.—Jas. J. Meehan.—EDY 
Grant, the Soldier and Statesman. (Fr. an Oration 
delivered at the dedication of the Grant Monu¬ 
ment, New York, 1897.)—W: McKinley.—TMR 
Grant us thy Peace.—J. Ellerton.—LLC 
Grant’s Place in History.—Anon.—BS 15 
Grant’s Strategy.—Judge Veazey.—BS 16 
Grape-vine Swing, The.—S: M. Peck.—HSS 3—WR 15 
Grape-vine Swing, The —W: G. Simms.—BNL 
Graphic Story of the Light Brigade. A.—Anon.—SR 7 
Grasp of the Dead. The.—Letitia E. Landon.—HSS 1 
Grass, The.—Emilv Dickinson — GN — LC — XV — 
PYO 

Grass.— Fdgar Fawcett.—AD—PO? (si. abr.) 

Grass and Roses.—Jas. F. Clarke.—HDL 
Grasshopper, The. (Independent.) —-XV 
Grasshopper. The. (In Anacreontiques.)—Anacreon 
(t r . by Abraham Cowlev).—BNL—-CGd—HBP 
—LC—PHS 

(On the Grasshopper— tr. by W: Cowper.)—HBP 
Grasshopper [Grassehopper—C.l. The. (To my Noble 
Friend, Mr. Charles Cotton. Ode.)—R : Ixtve- 
laee.—EPs— HBP 

(Sels.) —LC—OB—OEL—WEP 2 (longest.) 
Grasshopner. The.—Alfred Tennyson.—POS 
Grasshopper, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—SN 
Grasshopper and fthel Cricket, The.—Leigh Hunt. — 
—CEL—HBP—I.C—OS 2 
(To the Grasshopper and [thej Cricket.)—BNL— 
FEP—GN—POS—WFP 4 

Grasshopper and Cricket, [The],—J: Keat«.—BNL— 
LLC 

(On the Grasshopper and Cricket— C.)— FEP—GN 
—HBP—LC—OS 2—WEP 4 
(Poetry of Earth. The.'!—WR 1 
Gra'eful. (Charade.) —Anon.—FAD 
Grateful Preacher. The.—J: G. Saxe.—CS 14—DLS 
Grateful Swan. The. (Sel.) —Alice Caiy.—BI.F 
“Gratef’.d to Drink Life’s Cup.”—J. Bowring. See 
Our Duty Here. 

Gratefulness.—G: Herbert.—EPs 

Graliana Dancing. (Sel. fr. Gratiana Dauncing and 
Singing.)—R: Lovelace.—OB 
Gratitude of the World. The —Anon.—KNS 
Grattan.—A. T. De Vere.—EDY 
Grave, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.)— BNL 

1.33 




Grave 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Grave, The, Sals. fr. —Rob’t Blair. 

Grave, The. ( Br. *el.) —BNL 
Omnes eodem Cogimur.—WEP 3 
Pride. ( Rr. sei.) —KNE 
Resurrection, The.—WEP 3 
Self-murder.—WEP 3 
Grave, The.—H: Davenport.—PR 
Grave, The.—Washington Irving. See Rural Funerals. 
Grave by the Sorrowful Sea, The.—L. M. L. Baylev.— 
CS 30 

Grave in Hollywood Cemcte-.v, Richmond. A.—Marg. 
J. Preston.—AA 

Grave in Samoa. A.— T: Macfarltne.—EDY—TCV 
Grave of Bonaparte, The.—Lyman Heath.—FEP 
Grave of Charles Dickens, The.—Anon.—CS 3 
Grave of Keats, The.—Oscar Wilde.—EDY 
(At the Grave of Keats.)—GG 
Grave of Lincoln, The.—Edna D. Procter.—SR 8 
Grave of Love, The.—T: L. Peacock.—FEP—OB— 
WEP 4 

Grave of Mrs. Judson, The.—M. Remick.—FP 
Grave of Shelley, The.—Oscar Wilde.—EDY 
Gravedigger, The.—Bliss Carman.—TCV 
Grave-digger’s Song.—Alfred Austin. See Prince 
Lucifer. 

Graves of a Household, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.— 
CGd—CSS—FEP—FP—G P—PC—WCL 
Graves of the Patriots, The.—J. G. Percival.— 
BNL (br. sel.)— CS 7 

Graves of Union Soldiers at Arlington. The.—Jas. A. 

Garfield. Sec Strewing Flowers on the Graves 
of Union Soldiers. 

Gravestone, A.—W: Allingham.—TIP 
Graveyard Rabbit, The.—Frank L. Stanton.—AA 
Graveyard Scene. The.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Gray Champion, The. (Sel. fr. Twice Told Tales, Ch. 

II.)—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—BS 15 
Gray Day, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SO 
Gray Forest Eagle, The.—Alfred B. Street.—MMR— 
WR 10 

(SI. diff. rerx.) —FMR 

Gray Hair in Youth.—Edith M. Thomas.—TAV 
Gray Honors the Blue. The. (Sel. fr. The Nation’s 
Dead.)—H: W. Watterson.—BS 7 
Gray Mare is the Better Horse, The.—Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.—KER 

Grav Swan. The.—Alice Carv.—CS 7—GN—WCL 
(SI. abr.)— CSS—PPSr 

Great Adventurer, The.—Anon.—See Truth’s Integrity. 
Great American Republic a Christian Stale, The. (Fr. 

Our Christian Heritage, ch. nv The Religious 
Element in our American Civilization.)—Jas., 
Cardinal Gibbons.—BLP—PFP 
Great and Noble Man, A.—W: I. Vilas.—FD 2 
Great are the Myths.—Walt Whitman. See Leaves of 
Grass. 

Great Art. (Rr. sel. fr. Two Paths on Art, Lee. I.)— 
J: Ruskin.—SO 

Great Beef-contract, The. (Facts in the Case of the 
Great Beef Contract— C .)—Mark Twain.— 
BS 4 (si. ahr.) —MHR 
Great Bell of Cologne, The.—Anon.—FR 
Great Bell of Pekin, The.—Jessie W. O’Donnell.— 

WR 12 

Great Bell Roland, The.—Theodore Tilton.—CS 1—S 
Great Blue Heron, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Great Breaih, The.--G: W. Russell.—OB— : VA 
Great Britain and America.—Newmann Hall.—OM 
Great Britain and America.—Edwin O. Wolcott.—SC 
Great Britain and her American [wr. English] Colonies. 
—G: Bancroft. See History of the United 
States. 

Great Commandment, The.— Bible. See Deuteronomy. 
Great Consummation, The.—Edwin Arnold. See Light 
of the World, The. 

Great Distinction of a Nation, The.—W: E. Channing. 
See Spiritual Freedom. 

“Great end of education is not information, but per¬ 
sonal vigor and character, The.” (Philadel¬ 
phia Press.) —GG 

Great Examples.—Lord Byron. See Marino Faliero. 
Great Examples.—E: Everett. See Eulogy on Adams 
and Jefferson (Imperishability of Great 
Examples). 

Great Expectations. (Tah.) —Anon.—TCP 

Great Expectations, Sel fr. (Pip’s Fight— sel. fr. Ch. 

IT.)—C: Dickens.—CS 13 
Great Fit, A.—Rob’t H Newell.—NPS—YP 
Great Ideas. (Sel. fr. On the Elevation of the Labour¬ 
ing Classes.)-—W: E. Channing.—SS 
“Great indeed is the task assigned to woman.” 

( Rlackv'ood’s. )—GG 

Great Issue, The.—E: Everett.—BS 14 


Great Journey, The.—Edwin Arnold. See Maha- 
Bharata, The. 

Great Lives Imperishable—E: Everett. Nee Eulogy 
on Adams and Jefferson. 

Great Man, A.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 

Great Man.^A. (On the Death of the Right Hon.- 

— C.) —Oliver Goldsmith —NA 
Great Man, A.—J: D. Long.—FD 2 
“Great man down, you mark his favorite flies, The.” 

—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 

“Great man is always willing to be little, A.”—Ralph 
W. Emerson. See Compensation. 

Great Minds in their Relations to Christianity.—T: 
Erskine.—SS—SSD 

Great Misgiving, The —W: Wa' son.—OB 
Great Musical Critic,. The.—Anon.— (Tr. by J:0. (T) 
Sargent.—SS 
(Critic, The.)—BC 

Great National Scourge, The.—Anon.—PEO 
(Great Scourge, The.)—TS 

“Great Nature is an Army' Gay.”—R: W. Gilder.—SN 
Great Naval Battle of Manila, The.—Anon.—PRR 
Great Peril of Unrestricted Immigration. The.—H: C. 
Lodge.—NC 

Great Question Settled, The. (Sels, fr. The Society of 
the Army of the Potomac.)—G: W: Curtis.— 
BLP 

Great Remembrance, The. (Abr.) —R: W. Gilder.— 
TMR 

Great Renunciation, The.—Edwin Arnold. See Light 
of Asia, The. 

Great Scourge, The.—Anon. See Great National 
Scourge, The. 

Great Stone Face, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—APr 
—MAL—WGS 

Great Treasure, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Great Voices, The.—C: T. Brooks.—TAS 
Great White Owl, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Great, Wide, Beautiful, Wonderful World. ( C .)—W: 
B. Rands 

(Child’s World, The — wr. at. to M. Browne.)— 
POS (si. diff. vers.) —SM—WCL—YBT 
(Wonderful World, The.)—GMS—PoR 
(World, The.)—OS 1 

Greater Memory.—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—PGT 2 
Greatest Curse to Labor, The.—T. V. Powderly.—FD 2 
(Curse to Labor, The.)—BS 16 
Greatest Fruit of the Declaration.—C: F. Adams.— 
FD 2 

Greatest Party, The.—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
Great-grandmama and I.—Kate L. Watson.—BS 20 
Great-grandmother’s Garden.—M. F. Jacques.—NV 
Greatness.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on Man, A. 
Greatness Based on Morality. (Sel. fr. Foreign Policy.) 
—J: Bright.—OS 3 (abr.) 

(England’s True Greatness.)—SO 
(National Greatness— sel.)—- SAE—SE 
Greatness of his Simplicity.—H. A. Delano.—LLC 
Greatness of Obedience, The.—F: W. Farrar.—NC 
Greatness of the Poet, The.— (Br. sel. fr. Rob’t Burns.) 

—G: W. Curtis—SSD—TMD 
Grecian Fable, A.—Anon.—MYF 
Grecian Festival, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Greece.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Greece.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, The. 

Greediness Punished.—Friedrich Rtickert.—WCL 
Greedy Boy, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Greedy Fox. The.—-Anon.-—CSS—PPSr 
Greedy Richard.—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BVC 
Greek and Turkman, The.—G: Croly.—SS 
Greek at Constantinople, The.— R: M. Milnes, Lord 
Houghton.—AVP 

Greek Idyl, A.—Mortimer Collins.—VA 
Greek Mother’s Lullaby.—Zitella Cocke.—POS 
Greek Reverie, A.—Jas. C. Hodgins.—TCV 
Greek Revolution.—H: Clay. See On the Greek Revo¬ 
lution. 

Greeks’ Return from Battle, The.—Felicia D. Hemans. 
—SS 

(Ancient Greek chant of Victory— C.) —SAE 
(Return from Battle, The.)—PP—YFR 
Green be the Turf. Fitz-Greene Halleck.—LLC 
(Joseph Rodman Drake.)—BNL—EDY—GP 
(On the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake— C.) — 
AA—ASL—FEP—HBP—TAV—WCLG 2 
(To a Friend— sel.) —GMS 
Green Broom.—Anon.—PEB 2 

Green Dove and the Raven, The.—R. D. Joyce.— 
PEB 4 

"Green earth has her sons and her daughters.”— 
(Scattered frays.) —Algernon C. Swinburne.— 
GN 

Green Fields of England.—Arthur H. Clough.—GP 


134 




TITLE INDEX 


Gulistan 


Green Gnome, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.—CR—HBP 
Green Grass under the Snow,The.—Annie A. Preston. 

H P 

Green Grow the Rashes [O],—Rob’t Bums.—BNL— 
WEP 3—YBF 

Green Hill Far Away, The.—Cecil F. Alexander.—TFS 
(There is a Green Hill [far away].)—FEP—LLC— 
VA 

Green Isle of Lovers, The.—Rob’t C. Sands.—A A 
Green Linnet, The.— W: Wordsworth.— PGT 1 — 
WEP 4 

Green Mountain Justice, The.—H: Reeves.—BS 6— 
CS 6—HNS—MHR 
(Country Justice, The.)—WRD 
Green Pea Soup. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book) — 
Punch .)—HPE 

Green River.—W: C. Bryant.—PEO ( set .)—POS 
Green Things Growing.—Dinah M. Craik.—GN (si. 
abr .)—SN 

(Art. by C: H. Fuller as concert rec .)—AD 
Greencastle Jenny.—Helen G. Cone.—BAB 
Greenland Whale Fishery.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Greenwood, The.—W: L. Bowles.—BNL—HBP— 

OS 3 

Greenwood Cemetery.—Crammond Kennedy.—BNL 
Greenwood Cemetery.—W: Wallace.—CS 17 
Greenwood Greetings. ( Arr. by) W. H. Benedict.— 
DFR 

Greenwood Shrift, The.—Rob’t and Caroline Southey 
—BNL—CS 9—HBP 

Greenwood Tree. The.—W: Shakespeare. See As You 
Like It. 

Greeting.—Anon.—DS—YA 

Greeting, A.—T: Heywood. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 
Greeting, A.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
Greeting from England. (London Chronicle .)—PAPm 
Greeting from Far Away.—Friedrich Riickert.—FTA 
Greeting of the Roses, The.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 
Greeting to the “George Griswold.” (Punch .)—EPs 
Greetings to my Love.—T: Heywood. See Rape of 
Lucrece, The. 

Grendel's Mother. (Sel. fr. Beowulf, Pts. 21 and 24.) 

(Tr. bn) 3. L. Hall.—NE 
Gretchen. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Grey Head, The. (C.)—Douglas Jerrold. 

(Helpless Gray Head, The.)—CS 18 
Grey Linnet, The.—Jas. McCarroll.—TCV 
Grey Wolf, The.—Walter Ramel.—SOC 
Greyport Legend, A.—Fs. Bret Harte.—GN—OS 2— 
SR 1 

Gridiron, The. (Sel.)— S: Lover. — MHR — PTS 
(shorter )—SE 

Grief.—Eliz. B. Browning.—OB—WEP 4—YBF 

(“I tell you( hopeless grief is passionless.’’)—PGT 2 
Grief. (Br. sel.) —.1: Dryden.—KNE 
Grief. (Sel. fr. “As a beam o’er the face of the waters 
may glow.”)—T: Moore.—KNE 
Grief.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 

“Grief fills the room up of my absent child.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See King John. 

Grief for the Dead.—Anon.—BNT. 

(All Before.)—GP 

Grief of Achilles for the Slaying of Patroclus, The.— 
Homer. See Iliad, The. 

Grief of Bereavement, The.—Friedrich Schiller. See 
Wallenst ein. 

Grief Unspeakable.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memo- 
riam. 

Griffith Hammerton.—Joy Vetrepont.-—BS 13 
Griggsby’s Station. (C.) —Jas. W. Riley. 

(Back where they Used to Be.)—CH 
Grimalkin. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Grind’s Dream, The.—Arthur F. Gotthold.—CG 3 
Griper Greg.—Anon.—CS 7—MYF 
Griselda.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury Tales, 
The. 

Griselda Goose.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Grizzly.—Fs. Bret Harte.—AA—ASL—OS 2—SN 
Grizzly Grumbler's Advice—Anon.—CS 3 
Grongar Hill.—J: Dyer.—BNL—FEP—HBP—WEP 3 
Groomsman to his Mistress, The.—T: W. Parsons.— 
HBP 

(Groomsman to the Bridesmaid, The.)—FEP 
Groomsman to the Bridesmaid, The.—T: W. Parsons. 
See foregoing. 

Ground Hog. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Ground Laurel, The.—H. F. Gould.—NV 
Grounds of the Terrible.—Harold Begbie.—PYO 
Grove of Curious Trees, A.—W. H. Benedict.—DFR 
Grove of Historic Trees, A.—Anon.—DFR 
Grove of Pines, A.—Anon.—HSS 1 


Groves of Blarnev, The.—Richard*A. Milliken.— 
CS 24 (si. aor.)—HBP 
Growing.—Anon.—CPL 
(Bits of Things.)—AD 
(Oak. The.)—YBT 
Growing.—Anon.—DJS 
Growing.—Marg. E. Sangster.—CPL 
Growing Gray.—Austin Dobson.—BNL 
Growing Old.—Matthew Arnold.—CEL 
Growing Old.—Mrs. M. W. Chase.—CS 37 
Growing Old.—Louisa J. Hall.—TAS 
Growing Old.—Lucy Larcom.—TAS 
Growing Old.—Albert Pike—HDL 
Growing Old.—Marg. Sallume (?).—CS 24 
Growing Old.—Marg. E. Sangster.—HP 
Grown-up Birthday, A.—Susan Coolidge.—BS 19 
Grown-up Land.—Anon—YBT 
Grown-up Land. (St. Nicholas.) —FS 
Growth.—Anon.—CP 
Growth.—Emily J. Bugbee.—AD 
Growth of International Sympathies.—FS—SS 
Growth of the American Republic.—G: Bancroft.— 
BS 1 

Grub Street Elegy, A; on the supposed Death of Par¬ 
tridge, the Almanack Maker. (C .)—(Elegy 
Partridge.)—Jonathan Swift.—ESs 
Grub-street Opera, The, Sel. fr. (Pipe of Tobacco, A — 
song fr. Act III., Sc. 1.)—H: Fielding.—PPh 
Grumble Corner and Thanksgiving Street.—Anon.— 
CS 30—DST 

(Where do you live?)—WR 14 
Grumbler, The.—Dora R. Goodale.—LPS—PP—PS 
Grumbling over Lessons. (Dial.) —Hattie Herbert.— 
SD 

Gualberto’s Victory.—Eleanor C. Donnelly.—CS 16— 
NPS—YP 
(SI. abr.) —FR—SO 

Guard on the Rhine, The.—Max Schneckenburger (tr. 
by G. F. Dunning).—HSS 1—SM 
(Watch on the Rhine, The— diff. tr.) —OS 2 

(Abr.) —LLC (ur. at. to Carl Wilhelm.) — 
WCLG 1 

Guard the Tongue.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Guard Thine Action.—Sallie A. Vance—CS 3 
Guardian-angel, The. (Sel.) —Rob’t Browning.—PGT 2 
Guard’s Story, The.—-Anon.—CS 11 
Guardsman, The.—F. X. Finnegan.—PAPm 
Gucom and the Back-log.—Haliburton.—SCS 
"Gude and Godlie Ballates, The,” Poem fr. James 
the First of Scotland.—WEP 1 
Guenn. (Sel. fr. Ch. IX.)—Blanche W. Howard.— 
WR 2o 

Guerdon, The.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
Guerillas. The.—S. T. Wallis.—AWB 
Guess, The.—Anon.—HR 
Guess! (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
Guess Again. (Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
Guess what’s in my Pocket. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Guessing Nationalities.—S: L. Clemens. See Tramp 
Abroad, A. 

Guessing Song.—H: Johnstone.—PoR 
Guest, The.—Anon.—COS—PP 

Guest, The.—Harriet McE. Kimball.—AA—SR 7— 
TAS—WR 12 

Guidance.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 

Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah!—W: Williams.— 
FEP—SPE (si. abr.) 

Guide Post, The.—Anon.—CS 32 
Guided by a Star.—Carlotta Perry.—SR 9 
Guido Ferranti. (Dial.) —Oscar Wilde.—WR 4 
Guild’s Signal.—Fs. Bret Harte.—NPS—OS 2—YP 
(Engineer’s Signal, The.)—TAV 
Guileless Witness, The.—Anon.—KNE 
(Hard Witness, The.)—DCR 
(Witness, The.)—PR 
Guilielmus Rex.—T:B. Aldrich.-—AA 
Guillotine, The.—C: Dickens. See Tale of Two Cities, 
A. 

Guilt Cannot keep its own Secret.—Dan’l Webster. 

See Murder of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Guilt its own Betrayer.—Dan’l Webster. See Murder 
of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Guilty or not Guilty.—Anon.—CS 9—FR—HP—MYF 
—NPS—TMD—YP 
Guinea Pig, The.—Anon.—NA 

Guinevere. — Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the 
King. 

Guifare (Gastibelza).—Victor Hugo.—WR 9 
Guiteau the Assassin.—J:K Porter.—NC 
Gulf Stream.—Sarah C. Woolsey.—AA 
Gulf-weed.—Cornelius G - Fenner.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP 

Gulistan, The, Sel. fr .—Reginald Heber.—BNI, 


135 





Gumtown 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Gumtown Woman’s Association, The.—H. E. Me¬ 
lt idc.—MCD 

Gunnar, Sel. fr. (Skee-race, The.—Ch. IX., abr.) — 
Hjalmar H. Boyesen.—TMR 
Gunner and the Bird, The.—Anon.—COS—PP 
(Mean Man. A.)—PS 

Gunn’s Leg.—Anon—CS 24—DS—NPS—YP 
Gunpowder Plot.—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
Guns of Peace.—Dinah M. Craik.-—EDY 
Gustatory Achievement, A.—.las. W. Riley.—BJC 
Gustavus, King of Sweden, to his Soldiers.—Pierre 
F. Lefevre.—BLP 

(Gustavus Vasa to the Dalecatlians— si. abr.) —PS 
Gustavus Vasa to the Dalecarlians.—Pierre F. Lefevre. 
See foregoing. 

Guy.—-Ralph W. Emerson.—PI BP 
Guy Mannering, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott. 

Death of Mr. Bertram, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XIII.)— 
FTR 

Lucy Bertram and Dominie Sampson. (Sel. fr. 

Chs. XIV. and XV.)—FTR 
Twist ye, Twine ye. (Song fr. Ch. IV.)—BPB 
Guy’s Ideal.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Gwendolen.—Hattie T. Griswold —WR 24 
Gyda of Varsland.—Anne V. Culbertson.—WR 12 
Gymnastic Drill.—A. E. Hurst.—ID 
Gypsies of the Dane’s Dike, Sel. fr. (Geordie to his 
Tobacco-pipe.)—C: S. Phillips.—PPh 
Gypsy Flower Girl, The.—Ed. L. McDowell.—DES 
Gypsy Wedding, A. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Gypsy. See also Gipsy. 


H 

H. W. L.—J: Nichol.—VA 

“H was an Indigent Hen.”—Bruce Porter.—NA 
Habeas Corpus.—Helen H. Jackson.—AA 
Habeas Corpus Act, The.—J. P. Curran.—SS 
Habet.—W. B. Hooker.—CG 3 
Habitant, The.—W: H: Drummond.—HBR 
Habitant’s Jubilee Ode, The.—W: H: Drummond.— 
TCV 

Hack and Hew.—Bliss Carman.—TCV—VA 
Had I but Known.—Clement Scott.—FLS 
Had I Wist.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—OS 2 
’’Had the great truths waited until the majority voted 
in their favor.”—Paul Cassel.—GG 
Hadad, Sel. fr. —Jas. A. Hillhouse.—AA 
Hag, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—FEP—HBP 
Hagar.—Eliza P. Nicholson.—BS 22—WR 16 
Hagar and Ishmael. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Hagar in the Wilderness.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—CS 21 
Hagar’s Farewell.—Augusta Moore.—CS 33 
Haidee and Juan.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 

Hail, America.—F. L. Knowles.—PAPm 
Hail and Farewell.—Lord Byron.—LH 
(Byron’s Last Poem.)—CEL 
(On my Thirty-seventh Birthday.)—EDY 
(On this Day I Complete my Thirty-sixth Year— 
C.)— FEP—WEP 4 

Hail, Arbor Day.—Lizzie D. Roosa.—AD 
Hail, Bonny September!—Dora R. Goodale.—WR 25 
Hail Columbia.— Jos. Hopkinson. — AA — AWB — 
BNL (hr. sel.) —CP—LI.C (si. abr.) —PAPm— 
SM—TAV—WCLI 2 

(Hail Columbia, Happy Land— sel.) —BLP 
Hail Columbia, Happy Land.—Jos. Hopkinson. See 
foregoing. 

H il,"Holy Light.—J: Milton See Paradise Lost. 
‘‘Hail, old patrician trees so great and good!”—Abra¬ 
ham Cowley. See Of Solitude. 

Hail, Thou once-despised Jesus!—J: Bakewell.—FEP 
Hail to the Veterans.—N. K. Richardson.—CS 1 
Halbret and Hob.—Rob’t Browning.—BS 20 
Half an-Hour before Supper.—Fs. Bret Harte.—CS 11 
Half an Hour with the Poets.—Ellen O. Peck.—PTS 
Half Truth.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—FTA — 
PGT 2 

Half was not Told me, The.—T. De W. Talmage.— 

0g _gsg 

Half-asleep, The.—T: Wade.—OB 
Half-hearted (Macmillan’s Magazine.) —FLS 
Half-waking.—W: Allingham.—LC—VA 
Half-way Doin’s. ( C .)—Irwin Russell.—CDV—CS 19 
—SDR 

(Uncle Pete’s Sermon.)—DE—PS 
Half-way in Love.—J. B. B. Nichols.—FLS 
Halibut in Love, The.—Anon.—HR 
Halifax.—Constance Fairbanks.—TCV 
Hall of Sleep, The.—Theodore Bates.—CG 3 


Hallelujah, Sels. fr. —G: Wither. 

For Summer Time.—LC—OEL—WEP 2 
Prayer of Old Age, The. (Fr. 3 d pt.) —WEP 2 
When we are upon the Seas.—WEP 2 
Hallidav Hunt Breakfast, The.—Alfred Stoddart.— 
WR 22 

Hallo, my Fancy. (Ptly. same as in Percy’s Reliques.) 

—W: Cleland. —BNL (sel.) —FEP 
Hallowed be Thy Name. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Hallowed Ground. (C.) —T: Campbell.—BNL—CS 4 
—FEP—HBP 

(What’s Hallowed Ground?— br. sel.) —KNE—SS 
—TMD 

Hallowe’en. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Halloween.—Rob’t Burns.—FP 
Hallow-e’en.—Nora Hopper.—EDY 
Hal’s Birthday.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
“Halt! Who passes, friend or foe?”—A. H. S.—GG 
Hamadryad, The.—Walter S. Landor.—AVP (abr.) — 
VA 

Hame, Hame, Hame!—Allan Cunningham.—HBP— 
OB—YBF 

(It’s Hame and it’s Hame.)—FEP—GP 
(Loyalty— sel.)— GN—-LH 

Hamilton. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sa¬ 
bine—TCP 

Hamlet, Tab. based on. (Ophelia.) (Scribner’s Monthly.) 
—BS 8—TCP 

Hamlet, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Friendship. (Sel. fr. Act III., Sc. 2.)—-BNL 
Gracious Time, The. (Sel. fr. I., 1.)—GN 
(Hamlet, Br. sel. fr. — sel.) —BNL 
Graveyard Scene. (Sel. fr. V., 1.)—SO 
“Great man down, you mark his favorite flies, The.” 

(Sel. /r. III., 2.)—GC. 

Grief (Sel. fr. I., 2.)—BNL 
Guidance. (Br. sel. fr. V., 2.)—EPs 
Hamlet, Br. sels. fr. —AE (fr. III., 4)—BNL (fr. 
Acts I., 1; I., 3; I., 5; III., 2; III., 4; V., 1; V., 
2.) 

Hamlet. (I., 4.)—IR 

(Hamlet [to the Ghost]-— sel.) —AE (br.) —SE 
Hamlet. (II., 2— si. abr.) —BS 7 
(Hamlet— br. sels.) —BNL 

(Soliloquies from “Hamlet”— 2nd. — sel.) —MRS 
Hamlet, Act III., Sc. IV. (Abr.)— HNS 
(Abr.)— BS 9—CDD 

(Closet Scene from “Hamlet”— abr.) —CS 11 
(Gentleman, A— br. sel.) —KNE 
(Hamlet— br. sel.)- —BNL 
(Hamlet—Closet Scene— abr.) —-SR 12 
(Scene between Hamlet and the Queen— abr.) — 
PS 

Hamlet. (Song fr. IV., 4.)—ELP 

(“How should I your true love know?”)—LC 
(Song.)—HBP—YBF 

Hamlet to the Plavers. (Sel. fr. III., 2.)—LLC 
(SI. abr .)—CSS—OS 2 

(Hamlet’s Advice to the Players— abr.) —HNS— 
HSS 2 (abr.)— IR—PPS 

(Hamlet’s Instruction to the Plavers— abr.) — 
BS 1—CS 1—EA—SO—SR 12—SS 
(Hamlet’s Instructions [to the Players]— abr.) — 
CR—OM 

Hamlet’s Ghost. (Sel. fr. I., 5.)—BS 1—CS 7 
(Ghost in Hamlet , The— br. sels.) —SE 
(Hamlet, Br. sel. fr.- — br. sel. )—BNL 
Hamlet’s Soliloquy. (Sel. fr. III., 1.)—BS 2—EPs 
—FP—GMS—HNS—KNE—SO—WCLG 2 
(“For who would bear the whips and scorns of 
time”— sel.) —GG 

(Hamlet’s Soliloquy on Death.)—CS 1—SS 
(Soliloquies from “Hamlet”—3rd.)—MRS 
(Soliloquy on Death.)—BNL 
(To Be or not to Be.)—OS 3—PYO 
Polonius to Laertes. (Sel. fr. I., 3.)—OS 2 
(SI. abr.) —KNE—LLC—SO—SS 
(Abr.) —GG—GN 

(Polonius’ Advice to Laertes— abr.) —GMS 
Scene from “Hamlet.” (Sel. fr. I., 2.)—KNE 
(Hamlet— br. sel.) —SE 
Scene from “Hamlet.” (II., 1— abr.) —AE 
Soliloquies from “Hamlet.” (1st.-— sel. fr. I., 2.)— 
MRS 

(Hamlet, Br. sels. fr. — br. sels.) —BNL 
(Hamlet’s First Soliloquy— abr.) —IR 
Soliloquies from “Hamlet.” (4 th. — sel. fr. III., 3.) 
—MRS 

(Hamlet, Br. sel fr. — br. sel.) —BNL 
(King’s Repentance, A— abr.) —SR 13 
(Remorse of King Claudius— abr.) —SAE 
Soliloquies from “Hamlet.” (5th. — sel. fr. III., 3.) 
—MRS 


136 




TITLE INDEX 


Hare 


Hamlet ( continued). 

Soliloquies from “Hamlet.” (6th. — sel. fr. IV 4 ) 
—MRS 

("This army led by a delicate and tender prince” 
— sel.)— EPs 

Hamlet at the Boston.—Julia W. Howe.—MRS 
Hamlet—Closet Scene.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Hamlet to the Ghost.—W: Shakespeare. Sec Hamlet. 
Hamlet to t he Players.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet . 
Hamlet’s Advice to the Players.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Hamlet. 

Hamlet’s First Soliloquy.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Hamlet 

Hamlet’s Ghost.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Hamlet’s Instruction^] [to the Players],—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Hamlet. 

Hamlet’s Soliloquy [on Death]. W: Shakespeare. See 
Hamlet. 

Hampton Beach.—J: G. Whittier.—BNL—HBP 
Hand, The —T: DeW. Talmage.—TMD 
Hand for Me, The.—Goodman Barnaby.—PTS 
(Give me the Hand.)—CS 11—PS 
Hand in Hand.—(?) Lowell.—LLC 
Hand of Lincoln. The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 
Handefull of Pleasant Delites, A, Sel. fr. (Proper 
Sonnet, A.)—Anon.—WEP 1 
Handful of Wool, A.—Anon.—FMIt 
Handiwork of Flora, The.—G: Peele. See Arraign 
ment of Paris, The. 

Handkerchief Drill, The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Hand-organ Ball, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Hand-organ Man’s Little Girl, The.—H. H.—CPL 
Hands and Fingers.—Anon.—DLS—LPS—PP 
Hands Drop off; the Work Goes on, The.—S. F. K. 
Bradley.—CS 33 

Handsel Ring, The.—G; Houghton.—AA 
“Handsome is that Handsome Does.”— (Sel. fr. The 
Beautiful.)—J:G. Whittier.—FMR 
(True Beauty— sel.) —SO 

Handy Andy, Sel. fr. (Handy Andy’s Little Mistakes 
—fr. Ch. I.)—S: Lover.— DI—MDD 
(Handy Andy and the Squire— sel.) —PS 
Handy Andy and the Squire.—S: Lover. See Handy 
Andy. 

Handy Andy’s Little Mistakes.—S: Lover. See Handy 
Andy. 

Hang Sorrow. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Hang up the Baby’s Stocking.—Anon. — HSS 2—SR 3 
—WR 17 

“Hangin - On.”—Frank L. Stanton.—WIt 2.5 
Hanging a Picture.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Three 
Men in a Boat. 

Hanging of the Crane, The, Sels. fr. —II: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—BIL 

Household Sovereign.—BNL 
New Household, A—GN 
Hannah Beasley.-—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Hannah Binding Shoes.—Lucv Larcom.— BS 7 —CS 9 
— FEP—GN — GP — LLC — MMR — NPS 
—OS 2—YP 

Hannah Jane.—D. R. Locke.—DCR 
Hannah, the Mother.—Julia Gill.—LLC 

(Christ and the Little Ones.)—CS 24—WCL 
Hannah Tripe in Court.—Anon.—SR 10 
Hannele, Scene fr. —Gerhart Hauptmann.—WR 13 
Hannibal on the Alps.—E. M. Swan.—CS 25 
(Hannibal’s Address.)—SR 5 
Hannibal Pleads for Peace.—Livy. See History of 
Rome. 

Hannibal to his Army.—Livy. See History of Rome. 
Hannibal to the Carthaginian Army—.Livy. See His¬ 
tory of Rome. 

Hannibal’s Address.—E. M. Swan. See Hannibal on 
the Alps. 

Hannibal’s Address to his Army.—Livy. See History 
of Rome. 

Hans and Fritz.—C: F. Adams.— BDD — BS 5 — CDV 
—CS 14—DFY—PS—SDR 
Hans Bleimer’s Mool.—I. H. Brown.—CRR 
Hans Breitmann and the Turners.—C: G. Leland. — 
BDD—DFY 

Hans Breitmann’s Party.—C: G. Leland.— AWH — 
BNL — CRR — DFY — GP — HBP — SCS — 
THP 

Hans Christian Andersen.—Edmund Gosse.— EDY — 
VA 

Hans in a Fix.—Anon.— BDD — DFY — HR—MHR 
Hans’ Midnight Excuses.—Anon.—BDD 
(Waste not. Want not.)—CS 18 
Hans Sourcrout on Signs and Omens.—Anon.—BDD 
(Signs and Omens.)— BS 3—CDV — CS 10 — MHR 
—SDR 

Hans, the Useless.—Walter K. Fobes.—FR 


Hans Vogel.—Rob’t Br'hanan.—VSG—W T R 4 (abr.) 
Hans von Speigel’s Fourth of July Oration.—Gris.— 
DRR 

H’Anthem, The.—Anon.—BS 21 
Happiest Days.—Anon.—FTA 

Happiest Girl in the World, The.—Augusta Webster.— 
OH 

Happiest Heart, The.—J: V. Cheney.—AA—TAS 
Happiest Hour, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Queen 
Mary. 

Happiest Land, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—OS 1 
Happiest Time in Life, The.—R. S. Storrs.—TMR 
Happiness.—J: Keble. See St. Matthew. 

Happiness.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on Man, An. 
Happiness and Duty.—Edith L. Swain.—CS 37 
Happiness of Animals.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Happy are they who Iviss Thee. (Sonnet— C.) — 
Aubrey De Vere.—BIL 

Happy Beauty and the Blind Slave, The.—-E: Bulwer- 
Lytton. See Last Days of Pompeii, The. 
Happy Bird, The.—Anon.—NV 
Happy Child, The.—W : B. Rands.—OH 
(Love and the Child— diff. end.)- —PoR 
Happy Christmas, A. (Dial.)- —Anon, (ad.) —MPD 
Happy Couple, A.—H. E. McBride.—CS 27 
Happy Family, A.—Anon.—CS 28 
Happy Family, A.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Happy Farmer, The.—Anon.—BS 26 
Happy Farmer. The.—Laura M. Haughwout.—WR 14 
Happy Heart, The.—T: Dekker. See Pleasant Comedy 
of Patient Grissell, The. 

Happy Household, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Happy Insensibility.—J: Keats.—OH—PGT 1 
(December.)—GN 
(St anzas— C. ) —OB 
(Winter.)— BPB 

Happy Land, The.—Ivan Turgenief.—FS 
Happy Life, A.—S: Smiles.—HSS 3 
Happy Life, The [or A],—Sir H: Wotten.—EPs 

(Character of a Happv Life, The— C.) — BNL — 
CEL — ELP — FEP — OB — OS 2 — PGT 1 
PHS—WEP 2—YBF 
(Lord of Himself.)—LH 

Happv Little Cripple, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR— 
WR 14 

(Little Hunchback, The— abr.) —NPS—YP 
Happy Little Wife, The.—-Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Happy Lot, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Happy Love. (Burlington Hawkeye.) —CH 
Happy Love.—C<: Mackay.—FTA 
Happy Man, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Happy Man, The.—Annie M. L. Hawes.—TL 
Happy Marriage, The.—E: Moore.—FEP 
Happv Miller, The.—(?) Hood.—PS 
Happy Smoking-ground, The.—R: Le Gallienne.— PPh 
Happy Thought.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—BVC—CGV 
Happy Trees.—Anon.—DCP. 

("Oh, happy trees which we plant to-day.”)—HSS 1 
Happy Trio, The.—Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
Happy Wanderer, The.—Percy Addleshaw.—VA 
Happy Warrior, The. — W: Wordsworth. — EPs — 
HB (sel.) 

(Character of the Happy Warrior, The — C.) — 
BNL (br. sel.) 

Happy Woman, A.-—Anon.—MND 

Happv World, A (Sel. fr. Natural Theologv, Ch. 

‘ XXVI.).—W: Palev—FMR 
Harbison’s Baby, The. (C.— in They All Do It.)— 
Jas. M. Bailey. 

(Baby’s First Tooth, The.)—BS 3—CS 10—DR (si. 
longer.) 

Harbor Mine, The.—F. McK.— PA Pm 
Harbor of San Francisco.—Anon.—PS 
Hard Earned Wages.—Anon.—SR 13 
Hard Lines.—Anon.—BS 23 
Hard Luck.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Hard Shave. A. (Tab.) —Anon.—-BS 6—TCP 
Hard Times.—Anon.—WR 21 

Hard Times, Sel. fr. (Gradgrind’s Idea of Education— 
fr. Chs. I. and II.)—C; Dickens.—HSS 2 
Hard to Beat.—W: A. Thompson.—CG 2. 

Hard to Please.—Anon.—WR 17 
Hard Witness, A.—Anon.—DCR 
(Guileless Witness, The.)—KNE 
(Witness, The.)—PR 
Hard Word, A.—Anon.—WR 17 

Hard Words to Spell.—E. P. Dver. Sec Spelling Class, 
The. 

Hardest Time of All. The.—Sarah Doudney.—HP 
Hard-shell Sermon, A.—Anon.—PS 

(Where the Lion Roareth, and the Wang-doodle 
Moumeth.)—DE 

Hare, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 


137 




Hare 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Hare and Hounds.—T: Hughes. See Tom Brown’s 
School Days. 

Hare with Many Friends, The.—J: Gay.—WEP 3 
Harebell, A.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Harebells.—Emily M. P. Hickey.—A VP 
Hark!—W: Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

Hark! Hark! the Lark.—W: Shakespeare. See Cym¬ 
beline. 

“Hark! Hark! the lark at heaven’s gate sings.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

‘Hark, heard ye not those hoofs of dreadful note.”— 
Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Hark! How all the Welkin Rings!—C: Wesley.—FEP 
(Christmas Hymn.)—WEP 3 
“Hark, now everything is still.” ( Hr. set. fr. The 
Duchess of Malfi, Act. IV., Sc. 2.)—J: Webster. 
—ELP 

(Shrouding of the Duchess of Malfi, The.)—OB 
Hark, the Glad Sound. (Savior’s Message, The—C.) 

—Philip Doddridge.—FEP (w. 3 add. sts.) 
Hark! the Herald Angels.—C: Wesley.—LLC 
(Christmas Day— abr.) —OS2 
Hark! the Mavis.—Rob’t Burns. See Ca’ the Yowes 
to the Knowes. 

“Hark to the solemn bell.”—Anon.—GG 
"Hark, where my blossomed pear -tree in the hedge.” 
—Rob’t Browning. See Home Thoughts, from 
Abroad. 

Harlequin of Dreams, The.—Sidney Lanier.—AA 
Harley’s Trip to Dreamland.—Alice L. Richards.— 
WN 

“Harm is done by everything which tends to vulgar¬ 
ize religion.”—Anon.—GG 

Harmodius and Aristogeiton.—Callistratus ( tr. by Lord 
Denman).—HBP 

Harmony of Love, The.—T: Lodge.—ELP—WEP 1 
Harmosan—R: C. Trench.—CS 5—FEP—HBP—MR 
—MMR—OS 2 

Harold, Sets. fr. —E: Bulwer-Lytton. 

King Harold’s [Speech to his Army before the Bat¬ 
tle of Hastings. ( Sel. fr. Bk. XII., Ch. VII.) 
—BS 14—OS 2 

Search for Harold’s Body, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. IX.) 
—WR 24 

Harold, Sels. fr. —Alfred Tennyson.—BIL (fr. Act III., 
Sc. 2.)—EHT (fr. Acts I.. II., V.) 

“ Love is come with a song and a smile.” (Song fr. 
I., 2.)—BIL 

Harold the Dauntless, Sel. fr. (Fr. Can. II.)—Walter 
Scott.—AD 

Harold the Valiant.—Mary E. (Hewitt) Stebbins.—AA 
Harold the Wanderer.—Lord Byron. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

Harold’s Song.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel, The. 

Harp, The. (Sel. fr. To Himself and the Harp.)— 
Michael Drayton.—EPs 

Harp of a Thousand Strings [,a Hardshell Baptist Ser¬ 
mon], The.—Anon.—CS 9—DS—FS 
Harp that once through Tara’s Halls, The.—T: Moore. 
BNL — BPB — EPs — FEP — GN — HBP — 
PYO—YBF 

Harpalus’ Complaint of Phillida’s Love Bestowed on 
Corin.—H: Howard, Earl of Surrey (?).—EP 
Harper, The. (C.) —T: Campbell, 
bsi (Poor Dog Tray.)—CGd—LC 
Harriet Beecher Stowe.—Paul L. Dunbar.—AA 
Harry of Monmouth (in Historic Boys), Sel. fr. (Battle 
of Shrewsbury, The.)—Elbridge S. Brooks.— 
WR 22 

Harry’s Arithmetic. (St. Nicholas.) —DLS—LPS—PP 
(Arithmetic.)—PS—TT 
Harry’s Dog.—Anon.—COS—PP—PS 
Harry’s Lecture.—L. J. Rook.—LPS—PP—PS 
Harry’s Logic.—L. L. Phelps.—TFS 
Harrv’s Mistake.—Anon.—I.PS—PP 
(Basting Thread. A.)—BR 
(Rogue. A.)—DS—YA 
Harry’s Wish.—Anon.—HVD 

Hart-leap Well.—W: Wordsworth.—BNL—CGd — 
FEP 

Harvard Commemoration Ode.—Jas. R. Lowell. See 
Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration. 
Harvard-Yale Football Game, A.—Waldron K. Post. 
See following. 

Harvard-Yale Football Match, A. (Sel. ad. fr. Jack 
Rattleton Goes to Springfield and Back.)— 
Waldron K. Post.—BS 23 
(Harvard-Yale Football Game, A— diff.ad.) —PFP 
Harvest, The. (Good Housekeeping.) —CS 30 
Harvest.—Ellen M. (Hutchinson) Cortissoz.—AA— 
HBP 

Harvest Drill.—Sara S. Rice.—WR 6 


Harvest Home, Sels. fr. (Thanksgiving Day.) — H: 
Alford.—OS 1 

(Thanksgiving Hymn— ptly. same.) —FEP 
Harvest Home.— (Song fr. King Arthur; or, The British 
Worthy, Act. V., Sc. 1.)—-J: Dryden.—ELP 
Harvest Home Jubilee.—Anon.—EuE 
Harvest Home Song.— .1: Davidson.—VA 
Harvest Hymn.—G: D. Prentice.—SSS 
Harvest Hymn.—J: G. Whittier. See For an Autumn 
Festival. 

Harvest Moon, The. (Sel.) —H: W. Longfellow.—GN 
Harvest of Rum, The.—Paul Denton.—CS 17—SA 
Harvest Song, A.— R: D. Blackmore. See Lorna 
Doone. 

Harvest Song.—Johann W. von Goethe.—HSS 3 
Harvesters, The. (Tab.) (Scribner’s Monthly.) —BS8 
—TCP 

Harvester’s Song, The. (Fr. The Old Wives' Tale.)— 
G: Peele.—EP 

(Harvestmen a-Singing )—ELP 
Harvestmen a-Singing.-—G: Peele. See foregoing. 
Harvest-time.—Johann G. von Salis.—HSS 3 
Has it Come to This?—Marie Reimer.—CG 2 
"Has not Since Been Heard of."—Anon.—MYF 
Has Summer Come without the Rose? (In Lays of 
Franee.)—Art hur O’Shaughnessv. —VA 
(Song).—FTA—PGT 2—WEP 4—YBF 
Hassan Ben Khaled.—Bayard Taylor. See Tempta¬ 
tion of Hassan Ben Khaled. 

"Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star?” (Br. 
sel.) —S: T. Coleridge.—SO 

Hast thou Forgotten Me. — Philip J. Holdsworth.— 
FLS 

Hast thou Heard the Nightingale?—R: W. Gilder.— 
AA 

Haste not! Rest not! — Johann W. von Goethe.— 
BLP (br. sel.)— FP—OS 2 
Hasty Opinions.—T. S. Denison.—FAS 
Hasty Pudding, The. (Abr.) —Joel Barlow.—AWH 
Hat, The.—Anon.—CS 23 
Hat Drill. The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Hate and Revenge.—W: Shakespeare. See King Hen¬ 
ry VI., Pt. II. 

Hate of the Bowl.—Anon.—CS 2—HNS 

(Go, Feel what I have Felt.)—BNL—PS—SM 
(Woman’s Answer on Being Accused of Being a 
Maniac, etc.)—PPSr 

Hatred.—W: Shakespeare. See King Richard III. 
Hatred of the Poor! to the Rich.—Daniel Webster. 
See Natural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, 
The. 

Hats.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Autocrat of the Break¬ 
fast-table, The. 

Hattie’s Views on House-cleaning.—Anon.—COS—DS 
—NPS—PP—PS—YA—YP 
Haunt of the Sorcerer, The.—J: Milton.— See Comus. 
Haunted.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Haunted by a Song.—Anon.—DR 
Haunted Chamber, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—DS—YA 
Haunted Chambers.—Anon.—HP 
Haunted House, The. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I.)—T: Hood.— 
AVP—BS 3—DS—HSS 3—NPS—YP 
Haunt ed Houses.—H; W. Longfellow.—WCLI 2 
Haunted Palace, The.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—ASL— 
BPB—FEP 

Haunted Smithy, The.—W. A. Eaton.—CS26—DS 
Haunted Spring, The.—S: Lover.—PC 
Haunting Eyes.—Caroline Norton.—FTA 
Haunts of the Halcyon. The.—C: H. Luders.—AA 1 
Have a Shine, Sah? (Dial.) —Mrs. S. L. Oberholtzer. 
—CDs 

Have Charity.—Anon.—CS 7 
Have you a Desire?—P: Hausted.—YBF 
Have you been at Carrick?—E: Walsh.—TIP 
"Have you ever seen those marble statues in some 
public square or garden?” — Frd’k W. Rob¬ 
ertson.—GG 

“Have you got a brook in your little heart ?” — Emily 
Dickinson.—OH 

Have you Planted a Tree?—H: Abbey.—WR 17 
(Dedicatory Exercises include this.) —DFR 
(Planting the Tree.)—YBT 

(What do we Plant— C. [when we Plant the Tree]?) 
—AD—PEO 

“Having this day my horse, my hand, my lance.”— 
Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Hawkbit, The .—C: G. D. Roberts.—SN 
Hawke.—H: Newbolt.—EDY 

Haworth Churchyard. (Sel.) — Matthew Arnold. — 
EDY 

Hawthorn.—Anon.—FLS 
Hawthorn. (All the Year Round.)- —HP 
Hawthorne—Amos B. Alcott.—AA 


138 




TITLE INDEX 


Heart 


Hawthorne. (Br. sel. )—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL 
Hawthorne Children, The.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. (Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Hay Field, The.—Agnes E. Wetherald.—TCV 
Hay-fever.—Anon.—CS 18 
Hayloft, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGY 
Haymaker’s Song, The.—Alfred Austin.—VA 
Hayseed’s Impression of the Snap Shot Man, The. 

—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Hazards of our National Prosperity.—W. R. Smith. 
—SS 

Haze. (Verses fr. A Week on the Concord and Merri¬ 
mack Rivers: Tuesday.)—H: D. Thoreau.— 
EPs 

He and She.—Anon.—DLF 

“He and She.” — Edwin Arnold. — BIL — MR— 
SR 11 (si. abr.) 

(Secret of Death, The.)—BNL 
(She and He.— C.) —GP 
He and She.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
He and She; or, A Poet’s Portfolio, Sels. fr.—W : W. 
Story. 

Io Victis. (C.)—AA—FEP 
(Sayings and Doings.)—KNE 
(Song for the Conquered, A.)—BS315—SR 6 
0 Filia Pulchra.—FTA—OH 
He Came too Late. (Parody.) —Anon.—CS 20 
He Came too Late.—Eliz. Bogart.—AA 
He Came to Pay. (After The Aged Stranger, by Bret 
Harte.)—Andrew V. Kelly.—AWH—THP 
He Came Unlooked for.— Sara Coleridge. See Phan- 
tasmion. 

He Caret h.—Faith Tennyson.—CPL 
He Careth for Us.—W: Newell.—YBT 
“He did not notice that I never spoke to her in the 
same key of voice.”—Nathaniel P. Willis.—GG 
He Didn’t Amount to Shucks.—Sam W. Foss.— CS 32 
He Didn’t Ask.—Anon.—WR 14 
He Didn’t Want a Coffin.—Anon.—CS 11 
He Didn’t Want the 'Scription.—Anon.—CRR 
He Doeth his Alms to be Seen of Men.—-Anon.— CS 11 
He Fell among Thieves.—H: Newbolt.—OB 
He Gave him a Start.—R. J. Terwilliger —SR 5 
He Gets There.—C: F. Adams.—SR 7 
(Gets Dhere.)—BS 18 

He Giveth His Beloved Sleep.—Anon. See He Giveth 
His Loved Ones Sleep. 

He Giveth His Beloved Sleep.—Eliz. B. Browning.— 
BS 5—LLC—OS 3 

(Sleep |\ The—C.].)—A VP—BNL (si. abr.)— FEP— 
HBP—VA 


He Giveth His Loved Ones Sleep.—Anon.—CS 26 
(He Giveth His Beloved Sleep.)—SR 9 
He Guessed he’d Fight.—Anon.—CD—SR 4 
He Had Changed his Mind.—Anon.—DSS 
He Had Faith.—Anon.—CS 31—WR 20 (sl.diff. vers.) 
He Had to Speak.—Anon.—WR 12 
He Has Been there Himself.—Welby Walker.—CG 1 
HelHeard her Sing. (Sel.) —Jas. Thomson.—VA 
He Held her Hands.—Anon.—WR 24 
“He is a Brick.”—Anon.—KNS 
He Kissed Me.—Anon.—WR 2 
“He Laughed at Five.”—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
He Leadeth Me.—H: H. Barry.—HDL 
He Let her Know.— (Arr. by) Marion Short.—WR 20 
He Lives Long who Lives Well.—T: Randolph. See 
Precepts. 

He Liveth Long who Liveth Well. (C.) — Horatius 
Bonar.— GG—KNE 
(Good Life. A.)—HSS2 
(How to Live.)—GP (si. abr.)— SSS 
He Loved a Cross-eyed Girl.—J. A. Waldron.—SDR 
He Loved to Steal.—Anon.—SR 12 
“He Loves me; he Loves me not.” (Tab.) —E. C. and 
L. J. Rook.—YFE 

“He Loves me, Loves me not.”—Anon.—CG 1 
He Made the Stars Also.—Lloyd Mifflin.—-ASL 
He Made us Free.—Maurice F. Egan.—AA 
He Never Said he Loved me.—Alaric A. Watts.—FTA 
He Never Smiled again.—Felicia D. Hemans.—EDY 
He Never Told a Lie.—Anon.—CS 15 

(Not George Washington— abr.) —DST 
.He Pays License on a Dog.—Anon.—DES 
He Prayeth Best.—S: T. Coleridge. See Rime of the 
Ancient Mariner, The. 

He Prayeth Well who Loveth Well.—S: T. Coleridge. 

See Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The. 

He Said that he was not our Brother.—J: Banim.—TIP 
He that Believeth Shall not Make Haste. —Sarah C. 
Woolsey.—TAS 

“He that loves a rosy cheek.”—T: Carew. See Dis¬ 
dain Returned. 


He Told me So.—G: Grossmith.—VSG 
He Tried to [Tell his Wife—Anon.—CS 32—PR— 
YA 

He Underst ood.—Anne V. Culberton.—BS 25—HBR 

He Vas Dhinkin’.—“Oofty Gooft.”—DRR 

He Want ed it Let Alone.—Anon.—CS 21 

He Wanted to Know.—S: W. Foss.—WR21 

He Was almost There.—Anon.—-SDR 

“He was a-weary, but he fought his fight.”—R: Realf. 

See Written on the Night of his Suicide. 

He Was never Known to Smile.—C: Barnard.—CS 14 
“He Wasn’t in it.” (Detroit Free Press.) —SR 11 
He Wasn’t Ready.—Anon.—SR 2 

He who Died at Azan.—Edwin Arnold.—HBP—HDL 
(After Death.)—BS 8—OS 3 
(After Death in Arabia—C.)—CS 31—FEP—VA 
(Resurrection of Abdullah )—LLC 
He who Hath Loved.—Walter Malone.—AA 
“He who plants a tree.”—Lucy Larcom. See Plant a 
Tree. 

He Woke the Dead.—Anon.—SR 6 
He Worried about it.—Sam W. Foss.—BS 20 
(Wr. at. to L. Abbott.)—NPS—YP 
He Wouldn’t Hush.—Anon.—SR 3 
(Irrepressible Boy, The.)—BS 10 
Head and t he Heart, The.—J: G. Saxe.—BS 14 
Head of Bran, The.—C.: Meredith.—LH 
Heads, Hearts and Hands.—G. W. Bungay.—HP 
Heads, not Hearts, are Trumps.—Kate Field.—WR 15 
(si. abr.) 

(Forty to Twenty.)—CS 14 

Healing of the Daughter of Jairus. (C.) —Nathaniel P. 
Willis.—FP 

(Healing the Daughter of Jairus— abr.)- —FMR 
Healing the Daughter of Jairus.—Nathaniel P. Willis. 

See foregoing. 

Health, A.—E: C. Pinkney — AA — ASL — BNL — 
FEP—FP—FTA—HBP—TAV 
Health Alphabet.—Anon.—TFS 
Health at the Ford, A.—Rob’t G. Rogers.—AA 
"Health is nerve and nerve is man.”—II• W. Beecher. 
—GG 

Hear him Rave.-—Anon.—CDV 
Hear it and Wish.—Hope Whittier.—YBT 
Hear the Voice. (Introd. to Songs of Experience.)— 
W: Blake.—OB 

Hear, ye Ladies.—J: Fletcher. See Valent inian. 

Heard are the Voices.—Johann W. von Goethe (tr. by 
T: Carlyle).—GP 

Heard ye o’ the Tree of Liberty? (Tree of Liberty, 
The— C.) —Rob’t Burns.—HS (abr.) 

Heare, The.—W: Barnes.—VA 
Hearsay. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Heart, The.—Anon.—CPL 

Heart and Soul. (Verses— C. — Fr. Pansies from Pens- 
hurst and Wilton.)—Sir Philip Sidney.—OEL 
Heart and Will.—W: J. Linton.—VA 
Heart Deaths.—Anon.—HDI. 

Heart, for Every One, A.—C: Swain.—FLS (sel.) — 
FTA 

“Heart may often be cheered by observing, The.”— 
D: Livingstone.—GG 

Heart never Grows Old, The.—Josiah R. Adams.— 
WR 14 

Heart of all the Scene, The.—Ralph W. Emerson. See 
Woodnotes. 

Heart, of Bruce, The.—W: E. Aytoun. See Heart of 
t he Bruce, The. 

Heart of Midlothian, The, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott.. 
Jeanie Deans and Queen Caroline. (Sel. fr. Ch. 
XXXVII.)—MM R 

Pride of Youth, The. (Madge Wildfire’s Song, fr. 
Ch. XL.) 

(Proud Maisie.)—BFV—BPB—OB—YBF 
(“Proud Maisie is in the wood.”)—FEP—HBP 
Heart of Oak.—C: H. Luders.—AA 
Heart of Old Hickory, The.—W: A. Dromgoole. — 
NP (abr.) —SC (ad.) —WR 21 (arr. as mon.) 
Heart of Princess Osra, The, Sel. fr. (Sin of the Bishop 
of Modenstein, The— sel. fr. Ch. V.)—Anthony 
Hope.—NP 

Heart of Stone, A.—J: Haryngton.—ES 

(Lines on Isabella Markham— C.) —-BNL—FEP 
Heart, of the Bruce, The. (C. — in Lays of the Scottish 
Cavaliers.) — W: E. Aytoun. — BNL — 
EDY (sel.) —HB—MR—SO (abr.) 

(Heart of Bruce, The— cond.) —WR 1 
Heart of the War, The.—Josiah G. Holland.—CS 1— 
FEP 

Heart to Let, A.—Anon.—SR 2 
Heart Ventures. (Boston Cult.) —CS 22 
(Sad Ventures.)—HP 
(Sea Ventures.)—SSS 


139 







Heart 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Heart, we Will Forget him.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
“Heart, when broken, is like sweet gums and spices 
when beaten, The.”—J: Bunyan.—GG 
“Heart-affluence in discursive talk.”—Alfred Tennyson. 
See In Memoriam. 

Heartbreak Hill.—Celia Thaxter.—CS 12 
Heart-exchange.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Arcadia, 
The. 

Heartless.—W. H. Smith.—CG 1 

Heartrending Affair, A. (Mon.) —Nellie M. Locke.— 
MN 

Heart-rest.—H: Taylor. See Philip Van Artevelde. 
Hearts. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. II.)—Adelaide A. Procter.— 
BNL 

Heart’s Call, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—BIL—FTA— 
TFY 

Heart ’s Charity, The.—Eliza Cook.—CS 24 
Heart’s Fine Gold, The.—W. O. Bourne.—FP 
“Hearts more or less, I suppose we have.”—H: W. 
Beecher.—GG 

"Hearts of Gold.”—Anon.—FS 
Hearts’ Pictures, The.—H. H. Bice.—CG 1 
Heart’s Resolve, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 15—TCP 
Heart’s Summer, The.—Epes Sargent.—AA 
Heart’s Song, The.—Arthur C. Coxe.—FEP 
Heart’s-ease.—Anon.—HP 
Heart’s-ease.—Mary E. Bradley.—WR 2 
(Pansy— br. set.) —AD 

Heart ’s-ease.—Walter S. Landor.—VA—YBF 
Heart’s-ease, The.—Fannie Williams.—CS 32 
Heat.—Archibald Lampman.—VA 
Heat Lightning.—Jas. W 7 . Riley.—CW 
“Heath this night must be my bed, The.”—Walter 
Scott. See Lady of t he Lake. The. 

Heath-cock, The.—Joanna Baillie.—BNL 
(Black Cock, The— C .)— H BP 
Heathen Chinee, The.—Fs. Bret Harte.—CS 3—HR— 
SE 

(Plain Language from Truthful James— C .)—AWH 
—BNL—EPs—FEP—HBP—THP 
Heathen Chinee’s Reply, The.—Anon.—CS 4 
Heather Ale [: a Galloway Legend—C.].—Rob’t L. 

Stevenson.—PEB 4—VA 
Heaven. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Heaven.—Martha G. Dickinson.—AA 
Heaven. (Br. sel.) —Frd’k W. Faber.—PC 
Heaven.—M. S. Holmes.—CS 3 
Heaven.—Jeremy Taylor.—BNL 
(Of Heaven—C.)—HBP 

Heaven.—Nancy P. Wakefield.—BNL—GP—TAS (br. 
sel.) 

Heaven a Refuge for the Wretched. (Frags, fr. various 
authors.) —BNL 

Heaven Fights on the Side of a Great Principle.—H: 
Grattan.—PS—SS 

Heaven, O Lord, I cannot Lose.—Edna D. Proctor.— 
AA 

"Heaven overarches earth and sea.” (Heaven Over¬ 
arches— C.) —Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Heaven upon Earth, A, Sel. fr. (Two Heavens.)— 
Leigh Hunt.—GN 

(“For there are two heavens, sweet.”)■—BIL 
Heavenly Canaan, The.—Isaac Wat ts.—1IBP 
(“There is a land of pure delight.”)—FEP 
Heavenly Dove, The.—Frederika Bremer.—OS 1 
(Mother’s Hymn.)—WCL 
(Swedish Mot her’s Hymn.)—YBT 
Heavenly Foundations.—Orrie M. Gaylord.—CS 16 
Heavenly Guest, The. (Metrical vers, of Where I.ove is, 
there God is Also.)—Leo Tolstoi (tr. by Celia 
Thaxter).—BS 17 

Heavenly Guide, The.—Anon.—HDL 
Heavenly Jerusalem, The.—Anon. ee New Jerusalem, 

The. 

Heavenly Wisdom.—J: Logan.—FEP 
Heavenward.—I. E. Dickenga.—CS 28 
Heavens are our Riddle, The.—Herbert Bates.—AA 
Heaven’s Magnificence.—W T : A. Muhlenberg.—AA 
Heavier the Cross.—B: Schmolke.—CS 6 
Heaviest Cross of All, The.—K. E. Conway.—AA 
Heaving of t he Lead, The.—C: Dibdin.—BNL 
Heavy Brigade, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—LH 

(Charge of the Heavy Brigade lat Balaclava—C.l. 
The.)—FR 

Heavy Shower, A.—Anon.—MND 
Hebe.—Anon.—WR 15 
Hebe.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AA—ASI.—HBP 
Hebraism and Culture.—Anon.—CP 
Hebrew Capital Despoiled, The.—Reeinald Heber.— 
BLP 

Hebrew Children. The.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Hebrew Coties Developed, The. (New Testament Rec¬ 
ords.) —BLP 


Hebrew Melodies.—Lord Byron. See: 

“All is Vanity, saith the Preacher.” 

Destruction of Sennacherib, The. 

Oh! Snatch’d Away in Beauty’s Bloom. 

She Walks in Beauty. 

Song of Saul before his Last Battle. 

Vision of Belshazzar. 

W T hen Coldness Wraps this Suffering Clay. 

Hebrew Minstrel’s Lament, The. (New England Maga¬ 
zine. 1832.)—BLP 

Hebrew Mother, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—CS 10— 
FMR 

Hebrew Race, The. (Sel. fr Coningsby. Ch. XV.)— 
B: Disraeli, Lord Beaeonsfield.—VSG 
Hebrew Tale, A.— Lydia Sigourney.—CS 8 
Hebrew Wedding [, The], ( Fr. The Fall of Jerusalem.) 
—H: H. Milman—BNL—HBP 

(Bridal Song— sel.) —FEP 

Hecatompathia. The, Sets fr. (Passions II., XL., 
LXV.)—T: Watson.—WEP 1 
Hector O’Halloran. Sel. ad. fr. (Matrimonial Adven¬ 
tures of Dick Macnamara.)—W. H. Maxwell. 
—DI 

Hector Slain by Achilles.—Homer. See Iliad, The. 
Hector’s Exploit at the Barriersof t he Grecian Fleet.— 
Homer. See Iliad, The. 

Hector’s Farewell to Andromache.—Homer. See Iliad, 
The. 

Hect or's Rebuke to Polydamus.—Homer See Iliad, The. 
He’d Had no Show.—Sam W. Foss.—PYO_ 

He’d Nothing but his Violin.—Marv K. Dallas.— 
A A (abr.) 

(Brave Love.)—WR 4 

Hedgerow. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.) —Julia A. Sa¬ 
bine.—TCP 

Heigh-ho! Daises and Buttercups.—Jean Ingelow. 
See Songs of Seven. 

Heigho, My Dearie.—Eugene Field. WTD 
Height of the Ridiculous, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.— 
AA — AWH — BNL — FAS — HPF. — SR 10 
—THP 

Heine’s Grave.—Matthew Arnold.—BNL (si. abr.) — 
EDY (br. sel.) 

Heir of Linne, The. — Anon. (In Percy’s Reliques.) 

—EPs—FEP—HBP (mod. vers.) 

Heiress’ Ruse, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KII 

Held by a Thread. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 

Helen.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 

Helen.—E. A. U. Valentine.—AA 

Helen.—Sarah C. Woolsey.—AA 

Helen and Modus.—Jas. S. Knowles. See Hunchback, 
The. 

Helen at the Scaean Gates.—Homer. See Iliad, The. 
Helen Hunt Jackson.—Ina Coolbrith.—AA—EDY 
Helen in Argos.—F. M. Clapp.—CG 3 
Helen Keller.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 
Helen MacTrever.—H. S. Kent.-—PD 
Helen of Kirkconnel[l]. (Fair Helen of Kirconnell, 
Pt. II.— in Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—BB— 
BPB—LH—OB—OEB 
(John Mayne's vers.) —FEP 

(Burd Helen.)—CEL 

(Fair Helen.) — EPs (si. abr.) — FEP — HBP — 
PEB 1—PGT 1—VSG—WR 21 
Helen on the Rampart.—Homer. See Iliad, The. 
Helena and Hermia.—W T : Shakespeare. See Midsum¬ 
mer Night’s Dream, A. 

Helen’s Babies.—Anon.—DLF 
Helen’s Babies, Sets. fr. —J: Habberton. 

Budge’s Version of the Flood.—BS 5—CS 14 

(Evening with Helen’s Babies, An— sel.) —FTR 
—MYF 

Helen’s Epithalamion.—Theocritus (tr. by Sir E: 

Dyer). See Sixe Idillia. 

Helen’s Song.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 

Heliodore Dead. (Meleager— paraphrased by) Andrew 
Lang—VA 

Helios.—Joel Elias Spingarn.—AA 
Heliotrope.—Anon.—HP 
Heliotrope.—Harry T. Peck.—A A—HBP 
Hell. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Hell, The.—Dante. See Divine Comedy, The. 

“Hell is the infinite ’error of the soul, whatever that 
may be.”—Frd’k W. Robertson.—GG 
“He’ll see it when he wakes.”—Frank Lee.—AWB 
Hellas, Sel. fr. —Percy B. Shelley.—OB 

(Last Chorus of “Hellas.”)—WEP 4 
Hellvellvn. (C.)—Sir Walter Scott.—FEP 

(Helvellyn.)—BNL—CS 6—EPs—FHS 
Helot, The, Sel. fr.— Isabella V. Crawford —TCV 
Help for my Sisters. (Tab.) —Clara J. Denton.—SSE 

"Help, Lord, or we perish.” (Fourth Sunday after 
Epiphany, I.—C.)—Reginald Heber.—FEP 


140 





TITLE INDEX 


Here 


‘Help me Across, Papa.”—Anon.—CS 24—DS—NPS 
—SR 4—YP 

Help One Another.—G: F. Hunting.—NV—YBT 
Help Thou my Unbelief!—I.ouise C. Moulton.—TAS 
Helping Hand, A.—Ella Higginson.—WR 15 
(Always Some One Below.)—HSS 3 
Helping Hand, A.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Helpjng Mamma.—Anon.—WR 17 
Helping Mamma.' ( Motion rec.) —Anon.—COS—PP 
Helping Rule, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LI. 

Helpless Gray Head, The. (Grey Head, The — C.)— 
Douglas Jerrold.—CS 18 
Helpmate, A —A. Melville Bell.—CS 12—MHR 
Helvellyn.—Walter Scott. See Hellvellyn. 

Hemlock Tree, The. (Tr. by) H: W. Longfellow.— 
AD (hr. tel.) 

Hen. The.—Claudius.—BNL 
Hen. The.—Oliver Herford.—NA 
“Hen that cackles loudest, The.”—Anon.—WR 22 
Hence all ye [or you] vain delights. (Song fr. The Nice 
Valour, Act III., Sc. 3.)—[Beaumont and] 
Fletcher.—BNL—HBP 
(Moiancfh]olia.)—CEL—FEP 
(Melancholy.)—OB—PGT 1 — YBF 
(Poet’s Mood.)—EPs 
(Song, A.)—WEP 2 
(Sweetest Melancholy.)—ELP 
Hence Care!—T: Morley.—ELP 
Hen-hussey, The.—Anon.—DES 

Henry Clay, Sel. fr. (Character of Henry Clay.)—W: 
H. Seward.—CS 7 

Henry George.—Bliss Carman.—EDY 
Henry IV.—Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 

Henry the Fourth’s Soliloquy on Sleep.—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See King Henry IV., Pt. II. 

Henry V.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 
Henry V. at [the Siege of] Harfleur.—W: Shakespeare. 
See King Henry V. 

Henry the Fifth Encouraging his Soldiers.—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See King Kenrv V. 

Henry V. to his Soldiers [at the Siege of Harfleur].— 
W: Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 

Henry V. to his Troops.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry V. 

Henry V.’s Audience of French Ambassadors.—W: 

Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 

Henrv V.’s Wooing.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry \. 

Henry VI.—tV: Shakespeare. See King Henry VI. 
Henry W. Grady as an Oiator.—J. W. Le°.—FD 2 
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.—W. W. Story.— 
PEG 

Henry Ward Beecher.—C: H. Phelps.—A A 
Henry’s Speech before Agincourt [Harfleur].—W: 

Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 

Hepatica, The.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Hepsy at the Stale Contention.—Harriet F. Crocker. 
—SR 10 

Hepsy’s Ambition.—Estelle Thomson.—CS 10 
Heptalogia, Sel. fr. (Nephelidia.)—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—NA 

Her Answer.—Anon.—BS 21 
Her Answer.—C. H.—CG 2 
Her Answer.—Anon.—DR 
Her Answer.—J: Bennett.—AA 
Her Answer.—Marv B. Chapman.—FLS 
Her Answer to his Verses.—Raymond Burnham. - 
CG 3 

Her Bonnet.—Mary E. Wilkins.—TAV 
Her Brother’s Cigarette.—Anon.—PPh 
Her Coming. (England’s Parnassus: Descriptions 
of Beauty and Personage—C.)—G: Chapman. 
—EI.P 

Her Confirmation.—Selwvti Image.—VA 
Her Creed.—Sarah K. Belton.—TAS 
Her Dairy.—P: Newell.—NA 
Her Daring Protector.—Anon.—WR 14 
Her Death.—T: Hood. See Miss Kilmansegg and her 
Precious Leg. 

Her Dilemma.—Paul B. McVey.—CG 3 
Her & Shoes.—Anon.—TL 
Her Epitaph.—T: W. Parsons.—AA—ASL 
Her Excuse.—Anon.—PR—YA 

Her Eyes.—Edmund Spenser. See Amoretti and 
Epithalamion 

Her Eyes.—“Viola.”—FLS 

Her Eyes are Wild.—W: Wordsworth.—-HBP 

Her Fifteen Minutes.—Tom Masson.—WR 3 

Her First Appearance. (Cond.) —R: H. Davis. CR 

Her First Baby.—Anon.—CS 35 

Her First Railroad Ride.—Anon.—SR 9 

Her First Shot.—Anon.—WR 2 

Her First Steam-engine.—Mary K. Dallas.—W R 3 


Her First Train.—A. E. Watrous.—TAV 
Her First-born.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—VA—YBF 
(“It was her first sweet child, her heart’s delight.”) 
—PGT 2 

“Her fittest triumph is to show that good.” ( Br. eel. 

fr. A Legend of Brittany, 2nd pt.)—Jas. R. 
Lowell.—BIL—FTA 
Her Flower.—G: A. Soper.—CG 1 
Her Gifts. (The House of Life, Sonnet XXXI.) 
—Dante G. Rossetti—VA 

Her Golden Hair. (Song: ToAmarantha: that she 
would Dishevel her Haire— C.) —R: Lovelace. 
—CEL (eel.) 

(ToAmarantha - that she, etc.— longer sel.) —OB 
Her Grandpa.—C: D. Stewart.—TMR 
(Funny Man, A.)—PS 

Her Heart was False, and Mine was Broken.—Mary K. 
Dallas.—WR 3 

Her Helpfulness.—Dante. See Vita Nuova. 

Her Horoscope.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA 
Her Ideal.—Kate Masterson.—CS 31 
Her Laddie’s Picture.—Mary B. Brainerd.—BS 14 
Her Last Lines.—Emily Bronte.—VA 
(Hymn.)—OS 3 
(Last I.ines.)—OB—WEP 4 
Her Last Verses.—Alice Cary.—FEP 

(Dying Hymn [, A].— C.)— BNL—CS 8—GP— 
HDL—TAS 

Her Last Words.—Anon—FLS 
Her Last Words at Parting.—T: Moore.—FTA 
Her Laugh—in Four Fits. (Washington Post.) — 
BS 19—SR 11—WR 2 
Her Leghorn Hat. ( Yale Record.) —CG 2 
Her Letter.—Fs. Bret Harte.—BNL—BS 8—CR— 
CS 10—CSS—EPs—FEP—MR 
Her Likeness.—Dinah M. Craik.—BNL 
Her Little Feet.—W: E. Henley.—THP 
Her Little Glove.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 2 
Her Lover.—Mrs. S. C. Hazlett.—WR 2 
Her Lovers.—“Bachelor Ben.”—CH—DR 
Her Majesty.—Edgar W. Abbott.—TMR 
Her Moral.—T: Hood. See Miss Kilmansegg and her 
Precious Leg. 

Her Music.—Martha G. Dickinson.—AA 
Her Name.—Anon.—DJS 

Her Name.—Anna [or Anne] F. Burnham.—BR—BS 11 
—DCP— HP—SR 10—WR 15 
Her Name was Smith.—Anon.—W’R 7 
Her No.—Anon.— CH 

Her Passing. (Madrigal— C.) —W: Drummond.— 

OB 

Her Perfect Lover.—Madeline S. Bridges.-—BS 21 
Her Perfect Praise.—Rob’t Browning. See Blot in 
the ’Scutcheon, A. 

Her Photograph.—Frank McHale.—BS 23 

Her Picture.—Ellen M. (Hutchinson) Cortissoz.—AA 

Her Pity.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 

Her Polka Dots.—Peter Newell.—NA 

Her Preference.—Anon.—WR 3 

Her Present.-—F.—CG 2 

Her Programme of Dance.—Alfred L. Spencer.—CG 1 
Her Reason.—Jas. P. Sawyer.—CG 2 
Her Reply.—Lena Lathrop (ur. at. to Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing).—SR 7 

(Woman’s Question, A.)—CS 13—MR—WCLG 2 
Her Reply (Reply to Marlowe— C.) —Sir Walter 
Raleigh.—OB 

(Milk-maid’s Mother’s Answer [, The].)—FEP (w. 
add. st.) —HBP 

(Nymph’s Reply [to the Passionate Shepherd], 
The.)—BN L—G P—P H S 
(Reply to Marlowe, A.)—EP 

(Reply to Marlowe’s The Passionate Shepherd to 
his Love.)—WEP 1 

(Shepherdess’s Reply, The— w. add. st.) —CEL 
Her Roses.—Owen Innsly.—FLS 
Her Satin Fan.—Jas. Goodwin.—CG 1 
Her Shadow.—Eliz. J. (C.) Pullen.—AA 
Her Shpacial-i-ty.—Anon.—SR 13 
Her Sofa.—M. E. W.—TL 
Her Soliloquy.—Frd’k B. Opper.—TT 
Her Thanks.—M. D. Follansbee.—CG 2 
Her Vision.—Anon.—CS 30 
Her Wedding.—Anon.—CS 28 
Her W insome Smile —Harry K. Munroe.—CG 2 
Her Wish.—E. H. G. Dewey.—TL 
Her World.—Emily H. Miller.—HBR 
Heracl[e]itus. (Sel. fr. Callimachus.)—W: [Johnson] 
Cory.—OB—VA 
(Callimachus, Sel. fr.) —-AVP 
Herald Crane, The.—Hamlin Garland.—SN 
Here am I.—Jas. F. Clarke.—HDL 
Here and There.—Alice Cary.-—TAS 


141 




Here 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


< 

“Here, haply too, at vernal dawn.”—Rob't Burns. 

See Humble Petition of Bruar Water, The. 

Here is the Tale.—Antony C. Deane.—NA 
“Here on this blessed Thanksgiving night.”—Josiah G. 
Holland. See Bitter-sweet. 

Here she Goes — and there she Goes.—Jas. Nack.— 
BC—CS 2—MHR—THP 
“Here we Are!”—Mrs. M. F. Butts.—CPL 
Hereafter.—0. F. Ramsay.—SR 13 
Hereafter.—Harriet P. Spofford.—GP 
Hereafter—Rosamund M. Watson.—VA 
Hereditary Policy of America, Sel. fr. (In a Just 
Cause.)—L: Kossuth.—SS 
Heredity.—T: B. Aldrich.—-AA 
Herein is Love.—Susie M. Best.—BIL—FTA 
Here’s a Health to Ane I Lo’e Dear.—Rob’t Burns.— 
HBP 

(Jessy.)—FEP 

Here’s a Health to them that’s Awa.—Rob’t B arns — 
HBP 

Heritage, The. (CM—Jas. R. Lowell.— CS 8 — FEP— 
GMS—LLC—PYO—WCLG 2 
(Our Heritage— si. abr.) —BLP 
(Poor and the Rich, The.)—BS 17 
Hermann and Dorothea. ( Cond .)—Johann W. Von 
Goethe.—WR 11 

Hermes in Calvpso’s Island.—Homer. See Odysseys, 
The. 

Hermion^.—Rob’t Buchanan.—FEP 
HermionA—Bryan W. Procter.—HBP 
Hermit, The.—Jas. Beattie.—BNL—FEP—FTR— 
HBP 


(Night— sel .)—EPs 

Hermit, The.—G: Eliot. See Spanish Gypsy', The. 
Hermit, The.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Vicar of Wake¬ 
field, The. 

Hermit. The.—T: Parnell.—FEP—WEP 3 
Hermit Thrush. The.—Nellv H. Woodworth.—-SN 
Hero. The.— Cardwill.— LLC 
Hero, A.—C: K. Field.—CO 2 
Hero, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Hero, The.—Rob’t Nicoll.—VA 
Hero, The.—Sir H: Taydor.—VA 
(What Makes a Hero?)—PS—SS 
Hero and Leander, Sel. fr. (Bridal Song— fr. Fifth 
Sestyad.)—G: Chapman.—OB (sel.) 

Hero and Leander.—Leigh Hunt.—CS 15 
Hero and Leander. (Sel. fr. the First Sestiad.)—Chris¬ 
topher Marlowe.—WEP 1 

Hero of the Commune, The.—Margaret J. Preston.— 
AA—CS 17 

Hero of the Day, The.—Anon.—NP 
Hero of the Gun, The.—Margaret J. Preston.—BAB— 
TMD 

Hero of the Rank and File, The.—Michael Scanlan.— 
WR 12 

Hero President, The.—Horace Porter.—TMR 
Hero to Leander.—Alfred Tennyson.—BNL—EPs (si. 
abr .1 

Hero Woman, The. (The Wissahikon, Ch. VI .,, abr .— 
in Washington and his Generals.)—G: Lippard. 
—CS 25 

Herod.—Alice Brooks.—BS 21 

Herod, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. Ac* TIL)—Stephen Phillips. 
—AVP 

Herodias.—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—PGT 2 
Heroes.—Anon.—OS 1 
Heroes.—J: B. Gough.—OS 2 
Heroes.—Edna D. Proctor.—OS 3 
Heroes.—Fs. A. Shaw.—CS 21 

Heroes.—Walt Whitman. See Song of Myself, The. 
Heroes and Hero-Worship.—T: Carlyle. See On 
Heroes and Hero-Worship. 

Heroes and Martyrs.—E. H. Chapin.—HSS 1 

Heroes and the Flowers, The.—Rose Hill. (Cond .)—B: 

F. Taylor.—SR 4 
Heroes’ Day, The.—Anon.—PEO 

“Heroes have gone out; quacks have come in.”—T: 

Carlyle. See On Heroes and Hero-worship. 
Heroes of Greece.—Lord Byron. See Siege of Corinth, 
The. 

Heroes of Inkerman.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 31 
Heroes of ’76. The.—G: W. Curtis. See Centennial 
Celebration of Concord Fight 
Heroes of the Land of Penn. — G- Lippard. See 
Battle of Germantown, The. 

Heroes of the “Maine Disaster.”—Rob’t G. Cousins — 
CP 


(Tribute to the Men of the Maine, A.)—SC 
Heroes of the Mines.—I. E. Jones.—CS 18 
Heroic Age, The.—Rufus Choate. See Age of the 
Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History. The 
Heroic Age, The.—R: W. Gilder.—AA 


Heroic Courage.—Phillips Brooks.—TMD 
Heroic Death. A.— (Spectator .)—FAS 
Heroic Deed, The.—G. D. Emery.—;PAPm 
Heroic Love.—Jas. Graham, Marquis of Montrose. See 
My' Dear and Only Love, I Pray. 

Heroic Medley'.—Herman Page.—-SR 4 

Heroic Stanzas on the Death of Oliver Cromwell, Br. 

sel. fr. (Oliver Cromwell. J—J: Dryden.—BNL 
Heroine of St. John, The, Sel. fr. —PierceS. Hamilton.— 
TCV 

Heroism.—Friedrich Schiller. See Wallenstein. 

Heroism and History.—Newton Bateman.—NP 
Heroism in Housekeeping. (Sel. fr. A Letter to Miss 
Smith of Carlisle, about 1856, in Mrs. Alex. 
Ireland’s Life of Mrs. Carlyle.)—-Jane W. Car¬ 
lyle.—OS 3 

Heroism of Elizabeth Jane, The (w. tab). —Anon.—TCP 
Heroism of Horatio Nelson, The.—Frank V. Mills.—NC 
Heroism of the Hungarian People. (Sel. fr. Speech at 
Birmingham, Nov. 12, 1851.)—L: Kossuth.— 
SR 8—SS—SSD 

Heroism of the Pilgrims, The.—Rufus Choate. See 
Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our 
History, The. 

Hero-worship.—W: B. Scott.—VA 

Herr Slossenn Boschen’s Song.—Jerome K. Jerome. 

See Three Men in a Boat. 

Herring is King.—A. P. Graves.—TIP 
Herself all Treasure.—Edmund Spenser. See Amoretti 
and Epithalamion. 

Herself and Myself.—Patrick J. McCall.—TTP 
Hertha.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—OB—VA 
Herv6 Riel.—Rob’t Browning. —- AE (br. sel.) —BNL— 
BS 10 — CR — CS 7—EA—EDY—GN — HBP 
—KNE—LH—MMR—MR—OS 3—PGT 2— 
PSR—SC—TMD (a6r.)—TMR (si. abr.) 

He’s Gane. (On Captain Matthew Henderson— C.) — 
Rob’t Burns.—EPs (sel.) 

( Elegy on Caot.ain Matthew Henderson. ) — 
BNL (abr.)— FEP—HBP (si. abr.) 

Hesitation.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 

Hesperia.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—VA 
HesDerus Sings.—T: L. Beddoes. See Bride’s Tragedy, 
The. 

Hesperus’Song. T: L. Beddoes. See Bride’s Tragedy. 
The. 

Hesperus’ Song.—Ben Jonson. See Cynthia’s Revels. 
Hess.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 

Hester.—C: Lamb.— BNL — BPB — FEP — HBP — 
I.PC — OB — OS 3 — PGT 1 — WEB 4 — 
YBF 

Hetty McEwen.—Lucy Hamilton Hooper.—CS 2 
Hey Nonny No!—Anon.—ELP—OB 
Iley Nonnv No.—Marguerite Merington.—AA 
Hey, the Dusty Miller. (C.—also Dusty Miller, The 
—C.)—Rob’t Burns.—LC 
“Hez” and the Landlord.—Anon.—CS 9—DFY 

(How Hezekiah Stole the Spoons.)—Bell—BS 22 
Hezekiah Bedot.t. — Frances M. Whiieher. See 
Widow Bedott Papers. 

Hezekiah Stubbins’ Oration, July Fourth.—Anon.— 
CS 1—MDD 

Hezekiah’s Arrival.—Anon.—MFD 
Hezekiah’s Art.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Hezekiah’s Proposal.—Anon.—MCS 
Hiartville Shakespeare Club, The.—Belle M. Locke.— 
CS 35 

Hiawatha.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The. 

Hiawatha, Tableaux from, with Readings.—Anon 
See Song of Hiawatha, The. 

Hiawatha’s Brothers.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of 
Hiawatha, The. 

Hiawatha’s Chickens.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song 
of Hiawatha, The. 

Hiawatha’s Childhood.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song 
of Hiawatha, The. 

Hiawatha’s Sailing.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of 
Hiawatha, The. 

Hiawatha’s Wedding-feast.—II: W. Longfellow. See 
Song of Hiawatha, The. 

Hiawatha]s Wooing.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of 
Hiawat ha, The. 

Hie Jacet.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA 
“Hie me, Pater Optime, Fessam Deseris.”—Lucy C. B. 
Robinson.—AA 

"Hie Vir, hie Est.”—C: S. Calverley.—ESs 

Hidden.—S. T. Livingston.—CG 1 

Hidden Brightness.—Anon.—CS 16 

Hidden Flame. (Sono fr. The Maiden Queen—CM— 

J: Dryden.—OB 

Hidden Life.—C. G. Ames.—TAS 
Hidden Joys.—Laman Blanchard.—VA 


142 




TITLE INDEX 


His 


Hidden Love, The.—Arthur H. Clough.—AVP— 
WEP 4 

F.dden Menus. ( Ent .)—Anon.—EuE 
Hidden Path; or, the Atlantic Cable, The.—Eliz. H. J. 
Cleaveland.—BS 23 

Hidden Rose-tree, A. (Sel. fr. Virginia’s Hand.)— 
Marguerite A. Power.—TIP 
Hidden Songster, The.—Anon.—NV 
Hidden Sweets.—Anne C. L. Botta.—POS 
(Sonnet.)—CS 1 

Hidden Uses of Plants.—Martin F. Tupper.—HSS 1 
Hide and Seek.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Hide and Seek.—Julia Goddard.—CS 13 
Hide-and-seek.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL—NV 
Hiding the Skeleton.—G: Meredith. See Modern 
Love. 

Hie Away.—Walter Scott. See Waverley. 

High and Low.—Dora R. Goodale.—PoR 
High and the Low, The (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 


High Art and Economy.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
High Art—Music.—Max Adeler.—CS 6 
High License.—Mrs. Clara Hoffman.—WR 18 
High License.—T. DeW. Talmage.—TS 
High School Girl, The. ( Merchant and Manufacturer.) 
—FS 

High Tide, The.—Anon.—FMR—MYF 
High Tide, The.—Jean Ingelow. See High Tide on the 
Coast of Lincolnshire, The. 

High Tide at Gettysburg, The.—Will H. Thompson.— 
AA—ASL—BAB—BLP—EDY—OS 3 
(Ahr. )—TM D—W R 10 

High Tide [; or, the Brides of Enderby], The.—Jean 
Ingelow. See High Tide on the Coast of Lin¬ 
colnshire, The. 

High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, The.—(C.) Jean 
Ingelow.— BNL — EPs — FEP — FR ( abr .)— 
GN—OS 2—PEB 4—VA—WCLG 1 
(SI. abr.) —AVP—CR 
(Brides of Enderby, The.)—CS 2 
(High Tide [; or, The Brides of Enderbv], The.)— 
BS 2 — LLC — MMR (abr.) — SA (si. abr.) — 
WRD 

High-backed Chair, The.—T. P. Sanborn.—CG 1 
High-born Lady, The.—T: Moore.—PEB 4 
Higher! (Prose.) —Anon.—CS 23 
Higher.—Anon.—MHR 
Higher Education, The.—Anon.—CP 
Higher Education for Women.—Chauncey M. Depew. 
—TMR 

Higher Good. The.—Theodore Parker.—AA—HSS 3 
Higher Pantheism, The.—Alfred lennyson.—HDL— 
YBF 

Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The.—Algernon C. 
Swinburne.—NA 

Higher Views of the Union. (Sel. fr. Lincoln’s Elec¬ 
tion.)—Wendell Phillips.—MMR 
(Is this All?)—FD 1 
Highgate Butcher, The.—Anon.—HR 
Highland Cattle.—Dinah M. Craik.—GN 
Highland Chase, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Highland Light, The. (Fr. Cape Cod.) — H: D. Tho- 
reau.—APr 

Highland Mary.—Rob’t Burns.— CEL — FEP — FTA 
—GP — HBP — MBI. — OB —PGT 1—PYO 
—WCLG 1—WEP 3—YBF 
Highland Stranger, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady of 
i lip L a k e The 

Highland Stream, The. Arthur H. Clough. See 
Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, The. 

Highland War Song.—Walter Scott.—PS 
(Gathering Song of Donald Dhu.)—BPB 
(Gathering Song of Donald the Black.)—PGT 1 
(Gathering Song of Donuil Dhu.)—CEL—GN 
(Pibroch.)—LH 

(Pibroch of Donuil Dhu.— C.) — BNL — BS 25 — 
EPs—FEP—HBP—LC—OS 2—PHS 


(Summons, The— br. sel.) —SE 
Highly Evangelical Osculation.—Anon.—WR 2 
High-mettled Racer, The.—C: Dibdin.—FEP 
Highway, The.—W: C. Gannett.—TAS 
Highway, The.—W; C. Husted.—BS 25 
Highway, The.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Highway Cow, The.—Eugene J. Hall.—HP (abr.) — 
PPSr 

Highwayman’s Ghost, The.—R: Garnett.—PEB 4 
Hik-tee-dik.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Hilda.—Jas. II. Ray hill.—BS 22—PFP 
Hilda, Spinning.—Anon.— CS 21—FMR — PP — PR 
—PS—YPS 

Hilda’s Little Hood.—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.—BS 22 


Hill of Science, The.—J: Aiken.—BLP 
Hills Were Made for Freedom, The. (Fr. Vermont.)— 
W: G. Brown.—GP 

Hillside Cot, The. ( Frag.) —W: E. Channing.—EPs 
Hinc Illae Lachrymse.—Frd’k A. Dixon.—TCV 
Hind and the Panther, The, Sels. fr. —J: Dryden. 
Buzzard, The. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. III.)—WEP 2 
Sects, The. Private Judgment. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I.) 
—WEP 2 

Unity of the Catholic Church, The. (Br. sel. fr. 
Pt. II.)—WEP 2 

Hind Horn.—Anon. See Hynd Horn. 

Hindoo Died, A.—G; Birdseye. See Hindoo’s Death, 
The. 

Hindoo Sceptic, The. (The Spectator .)—HP 
Hindoo’s Death, The.—G: Birdseye.—HP 
(Hindoo Died, A.)—MR 
(Hindoo’s Paradise, The.)—CS 22 
(Paradise.)—AWH—BS 7 

Hindoo’s Paradise, The.—G: Birdseye. See foregoing. 
Hindoo’s Search for Truth, A.—Alfred C. Lyall.—GP 
• (abr.) 

(Meditations of a Hindu Prince [and Skeptic].)— 
AVP—HBP—VA 

Hindrances to Happiness. (MerchantTraveler .)—SR 7 
Hint, A.—Anon.—CS 28—HP 
Hint, A.—Henrietta R. Eliot.—YBT 
Hints.—Lucy Larcom.—TAS 
Hints for Thanksgiving.—Anon.—FuE 
Hippodrome Race, The. (Sel. fr. Serapis, Ch. XXV.) 
—G: Ebers.—WR 4 (arr. by Wilbor.) 

(Chariot Race in Alexandria —longer sel .)—PFP 
Hippopotamus, The.—Oliver Herford.—NA 
Hired Man and Floretty, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Hireling Swiss Regiment, The. (Swiss Mercenaries, 
The— C .)—Victor Hugo.—MMR 
Hiring Help.—F. Crosby.—ED 

His Answer to “Her Letter.”—Fs. Bret Harte.— 
EPs 

His Banner over me.—Gerald Massey.—HDL—VA 
His Birthday.—G. C. Reid.—CG 3 
His Books. (Occasional Pieces, XVIII.— C.) —Rob’t 
Southev.—OB 
(Books.)—BNL 
(Library, The.)—LBB—MBB 
(My Days among the Dead [are Passed].)—FEP— 
HBP—YBF 
(Scholar, The.)—PGT 1 
(Stanzas written in his Library.)—WEP 4 
His Book’s Patron.—Martial (tr. by Andrew Lang).— 
LBB 

His Bookseller’s Address.—Martial (tr. by Andrew 
Lang).—LBB 

His Care.—J: Parker.—HDL 
His Choice and his Destiny.—F. M. Bristol.—LLC 
His Enemy’s Honor. (Play.) —Anon.—NDP 
His Epitaph.—Stephen Hawes.—OB 
His Eye was Stem and Wild. (Punch .)—CS 3—SCS 
—SR 6 

(Fragment, A.)—HPE 
(Madman, The.)—KNE 
His Father took him Home.—S. J. R.—CG 2 
His Finish. (Life .)—BS 26 

His First and Last Drink.—Anon.—PP—PS—YPS 
His First Brief.—Sidney Daryl.—DT 
His First Case.—B. C. L. Griffith.—MN 
His Flying-machine —Anon.—NPS—YP 
His Grange; or, Private Wealth.—Rob’t Herrick.— 
BVC 

His Guiding Star.—Fs. W. Moore.—WR 13 
His Tdea of it.—Susie M. Best.—TT 
His Lady’s Cruelty.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

His Lady’s Praise.—Dante. See Vita Nuova. 

His Last Court.—Anon.—CS 23—DS 
His Letanie to the Holy Spirit. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick. 
(Holy Spirit, The.)—BNL 
(Litany, The )—CEL—ELP—WEP 2 
(Litany to the Holy Spirit.)—EPs—FEP—HBP— 
OB (abr.) 

His Letter.—W. R. Hereford.—CG 2 
His Limitation.—Anon.—SR 13 
His Love.—Anon.—CRR 
His Majesty.—Theron Brown.—A A 
His Majesty the King. (Cond .)—Rudyard Kipling.— 
WR 25 

His Majesty’s Escape at St. Andrews. (Br. sel. fr. 
Of the Danger his Majesty—being Prince— 
Escaped in the Road at Saint Andero.)— 
Edmund Waller.—WEP 2 
His Messenger.—Anon.—HP 
His Mistress.—T: Randolph.—YBF 
(Devout I,over. A.)—OB 


143 




His 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


His Mother’s Cooking.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—BR¬ 
OS 28 

(Just Like a Man.)—CS 36 
His Mother’s Joy.—J: W. Chadwick.—AA 
His Mother’s Sermon.—J: Waison. See Beside the 
Bonnie Brier Bush. 

His Mother’s Song|s].—Mrs. E. V. Wilson (?).—CS 31 
—HS—TMR 

His Name.—Mary Coleman.—FAS 

His Name.—Marg. J. Preston.—BAB 

His Names.—Josephine Pollard.—CS 32 ( abr.) 

(One of his Names.)—SR 13—TFS 
His Neighbor’s Wife.—Anon.—DLF 
His New Brother.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB—CS 37 
His New Suit.—S: E. Kiser.—PA Pm 
His Oath. (Yale Record.)— WR 7 
(Uncertain Pledge, An.)—BS 21 
His Own Pills. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
His Pilgrimage (Sir Walter Raleigh’s Pilgrimage—C.) 
—Sir Walter Raleigh.—OB (abr.) —WEP 1 
(Pilgrim, The— abr.) —OS 3 
(Pilgrimage, [The].)—BNL—EPs (abr .)—FEP 
His Poem. (Yale Record.)— CG 3 
His Poets.—Rob’t Herrick.—I.BB 

(To Live Merrily, and to Trust to Good Ve'«es-— C.) 
—ELP—EPs 

His Poets.—Leigh Hunt.—LBB 
(Sonnet.)—MBB 

His Praver to Ben Jonson. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick.— 
ELP—WEP 2 

(Prayer to Ben Jonson.)—EPs 
His Profession.—Anon.—DST 
His Quest.—Lewis F. Tooker.—AA 
His Reverie.—Lily A. Long.—TFY 
His Riches.—Lilian Grey.—CS 28 
His Sentence.—H: W. Eiiot, Jr.—CG 3 
His Sign.—Anon.—CH 
His Sister.—Anon.—BS 22 
His Speech.—Anon.—PS—TT 
His Statement of the Case.—Jas. II. Morse.—AA 
“His study! with what authors is it stored?”—Alex. 

Pope. See Moral Essays. Epistle IV. 

His Sunday Clothes.—Anon.—GH 
His Sweetheart’s Song.—Fred. C. Dayton.—CS 30 
His Time for Fiddling.—C: B. Lewis.—CS 16 
His Wedded Wife. (SI. abr.) — Rudvard Kipling.— 
WR 20 

His Wedding Morn.—B. C. L. Griffith.—MN 
His Winding-sheet. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick.—OB 
(To his Winding-sheet— abr.) —EPs 
His Last Verses.-—J: Clare.—FEP 
(“I am! yet what I am.”)—EDY 
(Lasciate Ogni Speranza.)—PGT 2 
(Written in Northampton County Asylum.)— 
OB 

Hi-Spi.—Eugene Field. See following. 

Hi-Spv.—Eugene Field.—W’TD 
(Hi-Spi.)—-EF 

Historic Boys, eels. fr. —Elbridge S. Brooks. 

Battle of Shrewsbury, The. (Sel. fr. Harry of 
Monmouth.)—WR 22 

Festival of Mars, The. (Sel. fr. Marcus of Rome.) 
—WR 22 

Historic Codfish, The.—R: W. Irwin.—NC 
Historic Tree of Chicago. The. (Chautauquan.) — 

AD 

Historic Tiees.—E: C. Delano.—AD 
Historic Trees.—Alex. Smith.—HSS 1 
Historical Associations.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Historical Butcher, The.—Anon.—MYF 
Historical Trees.— T.izzie M. Hadley.—AD 
History.—Anon.—BVC 
(King Arthur.)—NA 
History, A.—Anon.—DLF 

History. (Br. sel. fr. Scientific Method Applied t.o 
History, in Short Studies on Great Subjects, 
Yol. II.)—Jas. A. Fronde— FTIl 
History.—W: C: Roberts.—TCY 
Historv of a Life. (C .)—Bryan W. Procter.— BNL 
(Lite, A.)—GP 

History of a Pretty Girl.—Anon.—WR 7 
History of England, Sols. fr. —Jas. A. Froude. 

Coronation Pageant of Anne Bolevn, The. (Scl. fr. 
Yol. I., Ch. V.)—CS 15—DS—NPS—YP 
(Coronation of Anne Bolevn, The— abr.) —TMD 
Death of Marv Stuart. (Sel. fr. XII., XXXIV.)— 
WR 1 

Execution of Sir Thomas More, The. (Sel. fr. II.. 
IX.)—OS 2 

History of France, Sel. fr. (Joan of Arc— sel. fr. Bk 
IX., Ch. III.)—Jules Michelet.—WR 8 
•History of John Dav. (John Dav— C .)—T: Hood.— 
OM (si. abr.) 


“History of mankind as well shows forth the uni¬ 
formity of law, The.”—H : C. Minton.—GG 
History of our Flag.—Albert B. Putnam.—PRR— 
WR 10 

History of Rome, Sets. fr. —Livy. 

Canuleius against Patrician Arrogance. (Sel. fr. 

Bk. IV., Chs. III. and V.)—SS 
Fabius to /Emilius. (Sel. fr. Bk. XXII., Ch. 
XX1XIX ) _SSD 

Hannibal Pleads for Peace. (Cond fr. Bk. XXX., 
Ch. XXX.)—BLP 

Hannibal to his Army. (Cond. fr. Bk. XXI., Chs. 
XLIII., XLIV.)—PS—SS 
(Hannibal to the Carthaginian Armv— abr.) 
—SSD 

(Hannibal’s Address to his Army—Carthage in 
Peril.)—BLP 

Publius Scipio to the Roman Armv before the Bat¬ 
tle of Ticin. (Bk. XXL, Chs. XL.. XLI., cond.) 
—SSD 

(Roman Liberty in Peril— sets. arr. fr. Chs. XL. 
and XLI.)—BLP 
(Scipio to his Army.)—PS—SS 
Scipio Declines Hannibal’s Overtures for Peace. 

(Bk. XXX., Ch. XXXI —si. abr.) —BLP 
Titus Quint ins against Quarrels bet ween * he Senate 
and the People. fBk. III., Ch. LXVII.;seZ. fr. 
LXVIID—SS 

Virginius, as Tribune, Refuses the Appeal of Appius 
Claudius. (Sel. fr. Bk. III., Ch. LVII.)—SS 
History of Rome, Sel. fr. (Monarchy of Ca-sar. The— 
sel. fr. Ch. XXXVIII.)—Theodore Mommsen. 
—TMD 

History of the Civil War, Sel. fr. (Death of Talbot, 
The— sel. fr. Bk. VI.)—S: Daniel.—WEP 1 
History of the Conquest of Mexico, Sels. fr —W: H. 
Prescott. 

How Montezuma Lived. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV., Ch. I.) 
—WCLG 2 

Venice of the Aztecs, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. 111., Ch. 
VIII.)—CS 29—NPS—YP 

History of the Peloponnesian War, Sels. fr —Thucy¬ 
dides (tr. by Benj. Jowett). 

Glory of Athens. (Sel. fr. Speech of Pericles- 1 —Bk. 
II., Ch. LXIV.—a6r.) 

Speech of Pericles.—(Bk. II., Ch. LX.— abr.) —OS 2 
History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella. Scl. fr. 

(Return of Columbus, The— sel. fr. Pt. ' . Ch. 
XVIII.)—W: H. Prescolt.—WR 10 
History of the Restoration of Monarchy in France, 
Sel. fr. (Reign of Napoleon, The—Bk. I., 
Ch. I.— abr.) —Alphonse de Lamartine.—TMD 
History of the United States, Sels. fr. —Gt Bancroft. 
Acadian Exiles, The. (Sel. fr. The American Revo¬ 
lution, Enoch. I., Ch. VIII. 1—WR 5 
Character of the Declaration of Independence. The 
(Sel. fr. Amer. Rev., Epoch III.. Ch. XXVIII.) 
—BS 23 

Discovery of the Mississippi, The. (Sel. fr. His¬ 
torv of the Colonization of America. Pt. 111., 
Ch.' X.)—WR 10 

Great Britain and her American Colonies. (Sel. fr. 

Amer. Rev.. Epoch IF, Ch. XXXVI.)—SR 8 
News from Lexington. The. (Sel. fr. Amer. Rev.. 
Epoch TIL, Ch. XI.)—OS 2 
(Revolutionary Alarm, The— longer.) —FD 1 — 
TMD 

History of the World, Sel. fr. (Province of History, 
The— sel. fr. Ch. CLXXII.)—J: C. Ridpath.— 
PFP 

History of William Penn, Sel. fr. (Monument of Will¬ 
iam Penn, The.)—Rob’t J. Burdette.—TMR 
(Penn’s Monument.)—BS 17—CS 29—FD 1—NPS 
—SR 8—YP 

Hitchen May-day Song, The.—Anon.—CGd 
(Kitchen May-day Song— abr.) —EDY 
(May-day Song.)—OS 2 

Hither, Meadow Gossin. Tell me!—H. P. Beach.—NV 
Hive, The. Sel. fr. (Why, Lovely Charmer?)—Anon. 
—BNL 

Hives and Homes.—Phoebe Cary.—BI.E 

Ho, Boat Ahoy!—Emma S. St dwell.—BS 14 

ITo. every one that Thirsteth!— Bible. See Isaiah. 

"Ho, for Slumbcrland!”—F.ben E. Rexford.—NV 
(For the Slumber Islands, Ho!)—BR—BS 24 
Ho! for the Holidays! (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
“Ho, Reapers of Life’s Harvest!”—Anon.—HSS 3 
(Reaper of Life’s Harvest.)—GP 
Ho, the Harvest Home. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Hobbies.—T. DeW. Talmage.—OM 
Hobbledy Hops.—Anon.—TFS 
Hobson and his Men.—E. F. Burns.—PAPm 
Hobson and his Men.—Rob’t Loveman.—EDY 


144 





TITLE INDEX 


Homeless 


Hobson’s Daring Deed.—Anon.—PRR 
Hock-cart; or, Harvest Home, The.—Rob’t Herrick.— 
EP 

Hod-fellow, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 

Hoe out your Row.—Anon.—DLF—DS—YA 

Hoe your Own Row.—Alice Cary.—CPL—TFS(fer. sel.) 

(Old Maxims— C .)—BLF 
Hoeing and Praying.—Anon.—CS 36 
Hofer, the Tyrolese.—Julius Mosen (tr. by Mangan).— 
PS (si. abr.) 

(Andrew Hofer— diff. tr.) —EDY—OS 1 
(Death of Hofer, The.—Mangan’s tr .)—CS 14 
Hoffenstein’s Bugle. (New Orleans Times-Democrat.) 

_QJJ 

Hohenlinden. (C.) —T: Campbell. —B'FV — BNL — 
BPB — CEL — EDY — EPs — FAS — FEP 
— GN — GP — HB — HBP — HSS 1 — LC — 
PGT 1 — PHS — PSR — SO — WCLG 2 — 
WEP 4—YBF 

(Battle of Hohenlinden [,The].)—CS 14—LLC— 
OS 2—PPSr—PS—SS 
(Battle of Linden, The.)—BLP 
Hold dot Fort for ve vas Coming.—H. Von Dunker 
foodie.—PAPm 

Hold Fast to the Dear Old Sabbath.—G: M. Vickers.— 
CS 28 

“Hold Fast what I Give you.’’—Lily Warner.—WCL 
Hold the Light.—Anon.—CS 12 
Hold Thou me.—Horatius Bonar.—HDL 
Hole in the Carpet, The.—Anon.—CS 9 
Hole in the Floor, The.—Lizzie C. Hardy.—CS 17 
Hole in the Patch, The.—Anon.—CS 17 
Holiday. (Dramatic char.) —Phila Id. Case.—MD 
Holiday, A.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
Holiday Acrostic, A.—Eliz. Lloyd.—HE 
Holiday Convention, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
HE 

Holiday Gobbler’s Address, The.—Anon.—SR 13 
Holiday Home.—H: C. Bunner.—TAV 
Holiday in Arcadia. (Sel. fr. The School of Compli¬ 
ments.)—Jas. Shirley.—CEL 
(Pan’s Holiday.)—EP 

Holiday Speech.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Holiday Task, A.—Gilbert A. a’Becket (cr. also to 
Barclay Philips).—NA 
(Polka Lyric.)—HPE 
Holidays.—H: W. Longfellow.—OH 
Holiness.—Anon.—SSS 

Holland (Description of Holland— C.). —S: Butler.— 
HPE 

Holland House. (Sel.) —T: B. Macaulay —VSG 
Hollow Hospitality. (Satires, Bk. III., Satire 3.)— 
Jos. Hall.—WEP 1 
Holly, The.—Eliza Cook.—POS 

Christmas Holly, The.)—OS 1 (abr.) —PoR (sel.) 
Holly.—Susan Hartley.—NV 
Holly, The.—R. S. Hawker.—BVC 
Hollyhock, A.—Frank D. Sherman.—AA 
Hollyhocks, The.—Craven L. Betts.—AA 
Holly-tree, The.—Rob’t Southey.—AD—BNL—FEP 
—HBP—WEP 4 

Holmes Alphabet, A.— (Comp, fr.) Oliver W. Holme 
—PEO 

Holmes, Extract concerning.—G: W. Curtis.—PEO 
Holmes, Extract concerning.—C: W. Eliot.—PEO 
Holmes, Extract concerning.—W: S. Kennedy.— 
PEO 

Holmes, Extract concerning.—Ray Palmer.—PEO 
Holmes, Extract concerning.—Frances H. Underwood 
—PEO 

Holy Bible, Book Divine.—.T: Burton.—FEP 
Holy Cross Day. — Rob’t Browning. — AVP (sel.) — 
EDY 

Holy Fair, The. (Sel.)— Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
Holy, Holy, Holv!—Reginald Heber. See Hymn for 
Trinity Sunday. 

Holy Land. (Celestial Passion, Pt. II., 0.)—R: W. 
Gilder.—TAS 

Holv Matrimony.—J: Keble.—VA 

Holy Nation, A. (Sel. fr. Of Liberty and Charity.)— 
Richard Realf.—PYO 
Holy One, The. Bible. See Isaiah, 

Holy Spirit, The.—Harriet Auber.—YBT 
Holy Spirit, The.—Rob’t Herrick. See His Letame 
to the Holy Spirit. 

Holy Thursday. (C.—in Songs of Innocence.)—W: 
Blake.—BVC—YBF 
(Charity Children at St. Paul’s.)—FEP 
Holy Tide. The.—Frd’k Tennvson.—OB 
Holy Willie’s Praver. (SI. abr.)— Rob’t Burns.—EPs 
—ESs—HPE—TIIP 

Home.—Anon.—CP _ 

Home. (Prase.) —Anon.—CS 24—NPS—YP 


Home.—Bernard Barton.—BLP 
(At Home— sel.) —HP 

Home.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Traveller, The. 

Home, The. — H: W. Grady. See Homes of t he 
People, The. 

Home.—Dora Greenwell.—BIL—FTA 
Home. (Echoes, XXXII.—To D. H.—C.)—W: E. 
Henley.—GN 

Home.—Leonidas (tr. by Rob’t Bland).—BNL 
Home. (Sel. fr. The West Indies, Pt. III.)—Jas. Mont¬ 
gomery.—WRD 
(Sel.)— FP—WCLG 2 

(Love of Country and Home.)—PPSr (br. sel.) — 
SS (abr.) 

(My Country— abr.)— BNL—SM 
Home.—E: R. Sill.—HBR—TAS 
Home.—T. DeW. Talmage.—CS 26 
Home. (Early vers, of Home they Brought her War¬ 
rior Dead, in The Princess.)—Alfred Tennyson. 
—OS 1 

Home. (“I grieved for Buonaparte”—C.—Sonnet IV. 
in Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty).—W: Wordsworth.—EPs (abr). 
Home Again.—Anon.—BDD—DFY 
Home Again.—M. S. Pike.—LLC 
Home and Mother.—Anon.—TFS 

Home and School the Bulwark of Our Country. (Sel: 

S . The True Greatness of our Country.)—W. 

. Seward.—FD 2 

(America’s True Greatness.)—SR 8 
Home at Last.—G: J. Romanes.—FTA—PGT 2 
Home by the Warm Southern Sea, A.—Mrs. B. C. 
Rude.—AD 

Home, Can I Forget thee!—Anon.—LLC 
Home Charades.—Anon.—EuE 

Home Comfort. (Br. sel. fr. The Delectable Day.)— 
C: Kingsley.—OH 

Home Concert, The.—Mary D. Brine.—BS 21—PFP— 
SR 6 

Home Guard, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Home in the Government, The. (Sel. fr. The Farmer 
and the Cities.) — H: W. Grady.— BS 18 — 
PFP 

Home in View.—J: Newton.—FEP 
Home in War-time.—Sydney Dobell.—VA 
Home is where the Heart is.—Anon.—H P 
Home Life. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Home of my Childhood.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Home of Peace, The (Ballad Stanzas— C.) —T: Moore. 
—CS20 

(“I knew by the smoke that so gracefully curie !.”) 
—BNL—TFY 

Home of the Soul.—Philip Phillips.—BS 22 
Home Picture, A.—Fs. D. Gage.—CS 6 
Home Picture (in Two Scenes), A. (Tab.) —An "i.— 
TCP 

Home Pleasures. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Home Protection. Frances E. Willard.—Wli 18 
Home Rule for Ireland.—Chaunce.v M Depew.—NC 
Home Rule for Ireland.—W: E. Gladstone.—SR 8 
Home Song. (Song— C .)—H: W. Longfellow.—BS 6 
—GN—OH 

Home Song.—Duncan C. Scott.;—TCY 
Home, Sweet Home. (Fr. Clari, the Maid of Milan.)— 
J: H. Payne—AA—HSS 3—LLC (abr., w. diff. 
2nd st.) 

(Sel .) — BNL— FEP— GP— OS 1—SM —TAV— 
WCLG 1 

(Home! Sweet, Sweet Home!)—BLP 
(Sweet Home— sel.) —PC 

Home, Sweet Home.—C. C. Somerville (at. also to 
C: H. Tiffany).—CS 22 
(On the Rappahannock.)—PR 
Home, Sweet Home.—G: That cher.—TK 
Home! Sweet! Sweet Home!—J: H. Payne. See Home. 
Sweet Home. 

Home they Brought her Lap-dog Dead.—C: S. Brooks. 
—THP 

Home they Brought her Warrior.—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Princess, The. 

Home Thoughts from Abroad. (C.) —Rob’t Brown¬ 
ing— AVP — BFV — CGd — LC — OB — 
PGT 2—POS—SN—VA—WEP 4—YBF 
(April in England.)—GN—OS 1 (sel.) 

(“Hark, how mv blossomed pear-tree in the hedge" 
— sel.) —AD 

Home Thoughts from the Sea.—Rob’t Broweiing.— 
LH—OB 

Home to Rest in, A.—H: M.(?) Morford.—FP 
Home, Wounded.—Sidney Dobell.—BNL 
(Basking— sel. )—GP 
Home-coming.—Anon.—HP 
Homeless.—Anon.—CS 34 


145 




Homeless 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Homeless Old Man, The.—Hall Caine. See Bondman, 
The. 

Home-made Fairy Tale, A.—Jas. W Riley—RCR 
Homes of England, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—BNL 
—CGd (abr.) —FEP—PC 
Homes of the People.—Parke Godwin.—NC 
Homes of the People, The. (Sel. fr. Before the Bay 
State Club.)—H: W. Grady.—FD 2—PPS 
(Home, The— si. abr.) —TMD 

( Ptly. like Home in the Government, The— above.) 
Homesick.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Homesick.—David Gray.—BNL 

Homesick in Heaven.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Poet at 
the Breakfast-table, The. 

Homeward.—Anon.—CS 18—HDL—POS 
Homeward Bound. (SI. abr.) —Adelaide A. Procter.— 
WR 13 

Homeward Bound. (In Wild Eden.)—G: E. Wood- 
berry.—AA 

Homeward Road, The.—C: C. Marsh.—CG 1 
Homing, The.—J. J. Rooney.—AA 
Homoeopathic Soup.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
“Honest and Honorable.”—Alice A. Coale.—MD 
Honest Autolycus, An.—Anon.—PGT 1 
Honest Deacon, The.—Anon.—CH—CS 19 
Honest Man, An. (C.) —Dinah M. Craik. 

(To the Memory of Fletcher Harper.)—BNL 
Honest Man’s Fortune, An. (Upon an Honest Man’s 
Fortune— C.) —J: Fletcher.—EPs 
(Our Acts our Angels are— br. sel.) —OS 2 
Honest Money, Sel. fr. (Macaulay’s Prophecy— arr.) 

—Jas. A. Garfield.—NC 
Honest Poverty.—Rob’t Burns.—EPs—HBP 

(For a’That and a’ That.)—BNL—CR—FP—HSS 3 
—MBL—WCLG 2—YBF (abr.) 

(Is there for Honest Poverty— C.) —PHS 
(Man’s a Man for a’ That, A.)—BS 4—FEP—OS 2 
—SM—SPE—WEP 3 
Honest Old Toad, The.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Honest Rum-sellers’ Advertisement, An.—A. Mc- 
Wight,.—CS 14 

Honest Whore, The. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I. Act I., Sc. 12.) 
—T: Dekker.—BNL 

Honesty. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Honesty and Economy. _ (Br. sel. fr. The Way to Make 
Money Plenty in Every Man’s Pocket.)—B: 
Franklin.—HSS 3 

Honesty is the Best Policy.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KJ 

Honesty is the Best Policy.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Honey Dripping from the Comb.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
AA 

Honeymoon, The, Scls. fr. —J: Tobin. 

Confession of Love, A. (Act II., Scs. 2, 3.)—NDP 
(Honeymoon, The.)—WR 8 
Taming a Wife.—NDP 

(Honeymoon, The— sel.) —SE 
Zamora. (Act I., 1, III., 1, IV., 2, V.)—WR 8 
Honez Joseph Unglesteiner.—Anon.—DRR 
Honk! Honk!—Edmund J. Burk.—CS 35 
Honor.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 

Honor. (Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty, Pt. II., 17.)—W: Wordsworth. 
—EPs 

Honor all Men.—Martha P. Lowe.—TAS 
Honor in Bud.—Ben Jonson. See To the Immortal 
Memory and Friendship of that Noble Pair, Sir 
Lucius Cary and Sir Henry Morrison. 

Honor of Bristol, The.—Anon.—LH 
Honor of Labor, The.—T: Carlyle. See Past and 
Present. 

Honor of the Woods, The. (The Story of the Man who 
Didn’t Know Much, Ch. VII.— cond.) —W: H. 
H. Murray.—NP 

Honor thy Father and thy Mother.—Clara J. Denton. 
—SSE 

Honor to the Hammer. (London Economist .)—HSS 3 
Honor to the Laborer.—T: Carlyle. See Past and 
Present. 

Hon. Mr. Sucklethumbkin’s Story.—R: H. Barham. 
See Execution, The. 

Honored Dead, The.—H: W. Beecher.—BLP (si. diff.) 
—HSS 1 (sel.) —SPE 
(Invisible Heroes, The.)—TMD 
(Our Honored Dead.)—FD 1—LLC—WCLG 1 
(Tribute to our Honored Dead, A.)—BS 24—CS 2 
—DFR—HR 

Honoria.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the House, 
The. 

Honoria’s Surrender.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel 
in the House, The. 

Honors, Sel. fr. (Better Way, The.)—Jean Tngelow.— 
GP 


Hooker’s Across.—G: H. Boker.—EDY 
Hoolahan on Education.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
Hoop Drill and March.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Hoop Skirt, The.—Anon.—GH 

Hoosier and his Hanner, The.—W. W T . Fink.—CDV— 
SDR 

Hoosier Describes Rubenstein’s Playing, A.—G: W. 

Bagby. See How “Ruby” Played. 

Hoosier School-master, The, Sel. fr. (Discourse by the 
Rev. Mr. Bosan— sel. fr. Ch. XII.)—E: Eggles¬ 
ton.—BeR 

Hope. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Hope.—Sarah F. Adams.—SR 
Hope.—T: Campbell. See Pleasures of Hope, The. 
Hope, Sel. fr. (Grace and the World.)—W: Cowper.— 
WEP 3 

Hope.—W: D. Howells.—AA 
Hope, A. (C.) —C: Kingsley. 

(Twin Stars Aloft.)—FTA 
Hope.—Emma Lazarus.—TAS 
Hope. (Abr.) —Joaquin Miller.—TAS 
Hope.—W: Shenstone. See Pastoral Ballad, A. 

Hope.—Phillips Stewart.—TCV 

Hope and Fear.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—VA 

Hope.—E: Young. Sec Night Thoughts. 

Hope Deferred.—Anon.—HP 

Hope Deferred. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Hope, Faith, [and] Love.—Friedrich Schiller.—GP— 
OS 2 

(Three Words of Strength.)—HDL 
(Words of Strength.)—BS 9—KNF. 

Hope in Misery. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
“Hope is like a harebell, trembling from its birth.”— 
Christina G. Rossetti.—PoR 
Hope of an Hereafter, The.—T: Campbell. See Pleas¬ 
ures of Hope, The. 

Hope of Immortality, The.—Sir David Lyndesay.— 
WEP 1 

Hope of the Nation, The.—Jacob G. Schurman.— 
TMR 

Hope On.—J: G. Whittier. See Dream of Summer, A. 
Hope Overt aken. (The House of Life, Sonnet XLII.) 

—Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Hope to Feede.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Hopeful Youth, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Hopefully Waiting.—Anson D. Randolph.—BNL 
Hopeless Serenade, A.—Anon.—SR 6 
(Serenade, The.)—BS 12 

(Youth who Played before he Looked, The.)—FS 
Hopes and Fears.—T. H. G.—CG 3 
Hope’s Song.—Helen M. Winslow.—PEO 
Hora Christi.—Alice Brown.—TAS 
Horace.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on Criticism, An. 
Horace.—J. O. Sargent.—A A 

Horace, Bk. IV., Ode 9. Addressed to Archbishop 
King.— (Tr. by) Jonathan Swift.—WEP 3 
Horace Greeley. (Spoken at the Funeral of Horace 
Greeley, Nov., 1872.)—H: W. Beecher.—SC 
Horace Greeley.—Edmund C. Stedman.—GP 
Horace Imitated (First Epistle of the Second Book of 
Horace— C.). —Alex. Pope.—WEP 3 (abr.) 
Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland, 
A. (C.)—Andrew Marvell.—FEP—HBP — 
OB—PGT 1—WEP 2 
(Cromwell and King Charles— sel.) —EPs 
(Death of Charles 1.— sel.) —EHT 

(Execution of Charles First— sel.) —EDY 
(Two Kings.)—LH 

Horatii and Curiatii, The.—T. D. Suplee.—CS 3fi 
Horatius. (C.) —T: B. Macaulay.— FEP — HBP — 
LH (cond.) —MBL 
(SI abr.) —HB—PSR—WCLG 2 
(Sels.) —BS 9—SO 

(Horatius at the Bridge.)—BNL—CS 2 (si. abr.) 
(Sel.) —BLP—CR—FR—FTR—HSS 2—LLC— 
OM—OS 2—SA—SS 

Lays of Ancient Rome, sel. fr. (Sel.)' —FP 
Muster, The. (Sel.) —A VP 
Horatius at the Bridge.—T: B. Maculay. See Horatius. 
Horn, The.— (Tr. by) Leonce Rabillon. See Song of 
Roland. 

Horn, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Hornet , The.—Josh Billings.—BeR 
Horrors of Savage Warfare.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chat¬ 
ham. • See American War, The. 

Horrors of War. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Horrors of War, The.—C: Sumner. See War System 
of the Commonwealth of Nations. 

Horse, The—A Boy’s Composition.—Anon.—CS 18 
Horse Auctioneer, The.—Anon.—BS 19 
Horse Business, The.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Horse that Wins theJRace, The.—Anon.—DCR 


146 




TITLE INDEX 


How are 


Horseback Ride, The.—Sara J. Lippincott.—BNL— 
FEP—FMR—MMR 

Horse-car Incident , A.—B: P. Shillaber.—CS 21 
Horsemanship. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Horseradish.—Anon.—SR 1 

Horse’s Petition to his [or the] Driver, A.—Anon.—PP 
—YFR 

Horse-thief Jim.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 36 
Hortense.—Frank J: Urquhart.—CG l 
Hosanna!—Joshua King.—TFS 

Hosea Biglow’s Lament.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow 
Papers, The. 

Hospitality. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Hoss.—Sarah P. McL. Greene.—BS 19 
Hostage, The.—Helen Booth.—CS 27 
Hostage, The. (Abr.) —Friedrich Schiller.—WR 16 
(Damon and Pythias— longer.) —SS 
Hosting of the Sidhe. The.—W: B. Yeats.—TIP 
Hotel in the Storm, A.—Julia N. Stickney.—WR 15 
Hotspur.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry IV., 
Pt. I. 

Hotspur and the Fop.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Hotspur to Worcester.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Hotspur’s Defence.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
IV., Pt. I. 

Hotspur’s Description of a Fop.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry TV., Pt. I. 

Hotspur’s Quarrel with Henry IV.—W: Shakespeare. 
See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Hotspur’s Soliloquy on the Contents of a Letter.—W: 

Shakespeare. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
Hound, The. ( Sel. fr. The Jaquerie.)—Sidney Lanier. 
—AA 

Hour has Come, The.—Anon.—FTA 
Hour in School, An.—F. Crosby.—ED 
Hour of Comfort, The.—Frances R. Havergal.— 
SSS (sel.) 

(Secret of a Happy Day, The— C.) —HDL 
Hour of Death, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—CS 2— 
GP—WCLG 2 

Hour of Horror, An.—Anon.—CS 26 
Hour of Peaceful Rest, The.—W: B. Tappan.— 
AA 

Hour of Prayer.—Felicia D. Hemans.—CPL—LLC 
Hour of Trial, An.—Anon.—WR 2 
Hour with Whittier, An.—Phebe A. Holder.—CS 32 
Houre’s Recreation in Musicke, An, Sel. fr. (There is a 
Garden in her Face.)—Richard Allison.—BNL 
FEP—TFY 

Hours, The.—Mrs. Gordon.—CPL 
Hours of the Night, Sel. fr. (Peace in God—Third 
Hour.)—Harriet B. Stowe.—BS 8 
House, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—PHS 
House Beautiful, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—BNL 
House Full of Wine, The.—Johnson Barker.—TS 
House is Dark and Dreary, The.—R: H: Stoddard.— 
FEP 

House not Made with Hands, The.—H. E. Gordon.— 
CS 33 

House not Made with Hands, A.—Earle Marble.— 
CS 15 

House of a Hundred Lights, sel. fr. —F. R. Torrence.— 
AA 

House of Busyrane.—Edmund Spenser. See Fairie 
Queene, The. 

House of Clouds, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—WR 15 
House of Death, The.—Louise C. Moulton.—ASL 
House of Fame, The, Sels. fr. —Geoffrey Chaucer. 
Forecast. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I., Proem.)—EPs 
House of Fame, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.)—WEP 1 
(Poet. The— br. sel.) —EPs 
Milky Way, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. II.)—EPs 
Prayer to Apollo. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. III.)—EPs 
House of God, The. (Hymn—Sung at the Second 
Church, Boston, at the Ordination of Rev. 
Chandler Robbins— C .)—Ralph W. Emerson. 
—TAS 

House of Life, The, Sels. fr. —Dante G. Rossetti. 

Birth-bond, The. (Sonnet XV.)—PGT 2—WEP 4 
Broken Music. (Sonnet XLVII.)—VA 
Dark Glass, The. (Sonnet XXXIV.)—VA 
Her Gifts. (Sonnet XXXI.)—VA 
Hope Overtaken. (Sonnet XLII.)—WEP 4 
Inclusiveness. (Sonnet LXIII.)—VA 
Introductory. (Introd. Sonnet.)—VA 
Lost Days. (Sonnet LXXXVI.)-—PGT 2 
Love Enthroned. (Sonnet I.)—WEP 4 
Love-letter, The. (Sonnet XI.)—FTA—OH 
Love’s Lovers. (Sonnet VIII.)—WEP 4 
Lovesight. (Sonnet IV.)—PGT 2—VA—YBF 
Monochord, The. (Sonnet LXXIX.)—WEP 4 


House of Life, The (continued). 

Newborn Death, 1. and II. (Sonnets XCIX. and C.) 
—WEP 4 

One Hope, The. (Sonnet CL)—PGT 2 
Parted Love. (Sonnet XLVI.)—WEP 4 
“Retro me Sathana!” (Sonnet XC.)—PGT 2 
St. Luke the Painter. (Sonnet LXXIV.)—EDY 
Silent Noon. (Sonnet XIX.)—OH—PGT 2—YBF 
Soul’s Beauty. (C. —Sonnet LXXVII.)—PGT 2 
(Sibylla Palmifera.)—WEP 4 
Sun’s Shame, The. (Sonnet XCII.)—PGT 2 
Superscription, A. (C. —Sonnet XCV1I.)—VA 
(Nevermore, The.)—BNL 
Willow-wood, I. (Sonnet XLIX.)—PGT 2 
Without Her. (Sonnet I.III.)—-VA 
House of Night, The, Sel. fr. (Death’s Epitaph.)—-Philip 
Freneau.—AA 

House of Pride, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

House of Representatives, The.—H: C. Lodge.—FD 2 
House of the Trees, The.—Agnes E. Wetherald.—TCV 
—VA 

House of the Wolfings, The, Sel. fr. (War-horn of the 
Elkings — sels. fr. Ch. II.)—W: Morris.— 
BS 19 

House of too Much Trouble, The.—Albert B. Paine.— 
WR 22 

House on the Hill, The.—Edgar Fawcett.—MR— 
WR 16 (abr.) 

House on the Hill, The.—E. A. Robinson.—AA 
House that Jack Built, The.—Anon.—PTS (abr.) —SO 
(Domicile Erected by John, The.)—MHR 
(Modern House that Jack Built, The.)—BNL—CS 3 
(Old, but Good.)—SR 2 

House that was just I,ike its Neighbors, The.—Anon. 
—BS 16 

House where I was Born, The.—T: Hood.—BLP 

(I Remember, I Remember— C.) —BNL—BPB— 
EDY—FEP—FP—GP—HBP—LC—MR— 
OS 1 — PoR — PSR — PYO (abr.)— VS— 
WCL—WCLG 1—YBF 
Old House at Home, The— abr.) —TFS 
Past and Fresent.)—PGT 1 
House with the Cross. The.—Florence W. Snedeker.— 
WR 5 

House-cleaning.—Franklyn W. Lee.—WR 24 
Household Fairy, A.—Fs. Talfourd.—DT 
Household Jewels, The.—Anon.—CS 19 
Household Sovereign, The.— H: W. Longfellow. See 
Hanging of the Crane, The. 

Household Woman, The.—Caroline Gilman.—FEP 
Householder, The.—Rob't Browning. See Fifine at 
the Fair. 

Housekeeper, The. — (Vincent Bourne — Ir. by) C: 

Lamb.—BNL—GN—LC—OS 1—POS—SN 
Housekeeper’s Soliloquy, The.—Frances D. Gage.— 
CS 2 

Housekeeper's Tragedy, A. [or The].—Anon.—GP— 
PPSr 

Housekeeper’s Troubles, A.—Anon.—DST 
Housekeeping.—C: Dickens. See David Copperfield. 
How? (Sel. fr. A Builder’s Lesson.) — J: Boyle 
O’Reilly.—YBT 

How a Blacksmith was Converted.—Anon.—CS 24 
How a Dutchman was Done.—Anon.—BDD—CDV—• 
DFY 

(How Pat Swindled Hans.)—SDR 
How a Frenchman Entertained John Bull.—Anon.— 
BeR (si. abr.) —DFY—SDR 
How a Man Puts Things away.—Anon.—SR 11 
How a Man Should be Judged.—Anon.—CS 2 
As Pebbles in the Sea.)—HP 
Souls, not Stations.)—BLP 
How a Married Man Sews on a Button. (Button 
Off, A— C .— in Life in Danbury.)—Jas. M. 
Bailey—BS 4—CRR 
(Sewing on a Button.)—CS 14—PS 
How a Song Saved a Soul.—Frank L. Stanton.— 
SR 4 

(“Rock of Ages.’’)—FMR (si. diff.) —WR 7 
How a Widow Mourned.—Anon.—CS 22 
How a Woman Does it.—Anon.—DCR 
How an Angel Looks.—Anon.—WR 24 
How an Apple Tree Grows.—Anon.—AD 
How an Engineer Won his Bride.—Jas. N. Johnson.— 
CS 32 

How Arbor Dav is Observed in Various States.—Anon. 
—AD 

"How are Thy Servants Blest, O Lord!" (Ode, An 
— C.) —Jos. Addison.—FEP 
(Hymn.)—HBP 

“How are you. Sanitary?”—Fs. Bret Harte. — AWB 
—PAP 


147 





How Balthazar 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


How Balthazar the King went down into Egypt.—J: 
H. Duvar.—TCV 

How Bateese Came Home.—W: H. Drummond.— 
WR 26 

"How beautiful is youth! how bright it gleams.”—H: 

W. Longfellow. See Morituri Salutamus. 
“How beautiful this night! The balmiest sigh.”— 
Percy B. Shelley. See Queen Mab. 

How Ben Fargo’s Claim was Jumped. —Tom P. Mor¬ 
gan.—BS 18 

(“Jumped”—the Story of Ben Fargo’s Claim.)— 
CS 33 

How Betsey and I Made up. (SI. longer and si. diff. 
fr. present vers, in Works.)—Will Carleton— 
CS 5—FTP. 

How Big was Alexander, Pa?—Anon.—BS 19 
How Bones Caught a Duck.-—Anon.—DSS 
How Bones Cured a Smoky Chimney.—Anon.—DE 
How Brunhild was Received at Worms.—Anon. See 
Nibelungen Lied.. 

How Buck was Brought to Time.—Opie P. Read.— 
DCR 

How Burlington was Saved.—C. Mair.—DR 
How Butter is Made.—Anon.—PS 
(Making Butter.)—TT 

“How calm, how beautiful!”—T: Moore. See Lalla 
Rookh. j 

How Came the Hollv Berries Red?—C: W. E. Chapin, 
Jr.—CG 1 

How Can the Heart Forget Her?—Anon.—OB 
How Christmas came to Crappy Shute. (Leslie’s 
Weekly.) —BS 26 

How Colonel Ashton Signed the Pledge.—Iv. A. Peters. 
—WR 15 

How Columbus Found America.—H. C. Dodge.— 
CS 29 

How Congress fought for Sheridan.—Emma D. Banks. 
—BR 

How Cushing Destroyed the Albemarle.—Anon.—CS 23 
How Cyrus Laid the Cable.—J: G. Saxe.—EDY—PP— 
YFR 

How Daisy W T ent to School.—Anon.—HVD 
How Dennis took the Pledge.—Anon.—BeR—CRR— 
DI—KNE—SDR 

How Did it Happen?—Anon.—COS—PP 
(Baby Nell— sel.)— CPL 
How Did she Know?—Anon.—BS 21—WR 20 
How Do I Look.—Mrs. Bohne.-—FAS 
How Do I Love Thee? — Eliz. B. Browning.—GP — 
TFY 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese-— w. others.) —BNL— 
FEP—HBP—YBF 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese, XLIII.— C.) —VA 
—WEP 4 

(Ways of Love, The.)—FTA—OH 
How Do you Know?—J. P. Hutchinson.—SR 10 
How Dot Heard “The Messiah.”-—Hezekiah Butter- 
worth.—WR 16 

“How fair is the rose!” (Sel. fr. The Rose.)—Isaac 
Watts.—AD 

How Father Carves the Duck.—E. Y. Wright.—PR— 
YA 

(When Father Carves the Duck.)—SR 9—WR 4 
How Gavin Birse Put it to Maggie Lownie. (A Win¬ 
dow in Thrums, Ch. XV.)—Jas. M. Barrie.— 
WGS—WR 13 

How Girls Fish.—Anon.—SR 10—WR 26 
How Girls Study.—Belle MacDonald.—BS 12—CS 27 
—PR—SR 6 

How Good are the Poor! Victor Hugo. See Poor 
Fisher Folk, The. 

How Grandma Danced.—Mary M. Dodge.—SR 9 

(Minuet, The— C.) —DR (w. music) —PS—SR 9— 
TMR 

(Sel. )—GMS—SC 

How Grandpa Proposed.—Anon.-—DCP—WR 7 
How Hans Yager Enjoyed the Opera.—Anon.—BDD 
“How happy could I be with either.” (Br. sel. fr. 
Beggar’s Opera, Act. II., Sc. 2.)—J: Gay.— 
OES 

How Happy I’ll Be!—Anon.—HR—LLC 
How Hazel Kept House.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
How he Does It.—Anon.—PR 
How he Had him.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
How he Lost her. (Somerville Journal) —BS 21 
How he Paralyzed the Chef.—Anon.—GH 
How he Teased Ned.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
How he Saved St. Michael’s.-—Marv A. P. Stansburv. 
—CS 9—FR (ahr .)—MYF 
(SI. ahr. )—BAB—FTR—-HB—PPSr—SA 
How he Whipped him.—Anon.—CS 15 
How Hezekiah Stole t he Spoons.—Anon.—BeR—BS 22 
(“Hez” and the Landlord.)—CS 9—DFY 


How his Garments got Turned.—Anon.—CH—CS 25 
—DS—YA 

How I Edited an Agricultural Paper. (How I Once 
Edited, etc.— C.) —S: L. Clemens.—SO 
(Mark Twain Edits an Agricultural Paper— abr.) 

_0g 7 

(My Editing— cond.) —WR 2 
How I Got Invited to Dinner.—Anon.—HR 
How I Kissed her.—G: M. Ritchie.-—WR 7 
How I Love her.—C. B. Newton.—CG 2 
How I Love my Books. (Wrinkle.) —CG 3 
How I Made my Fortune.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KH 

How I Once Edited an Agricultural Paper.—S: L. 

Clemens. See How I Edited, etc. 

How I Saw Santa Claus.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
How I Tended the Baby.—Anon.—SR 5 

(How Jimmy Tended the Baby.)—CH—CS 25 
How I was Sold. (How the Author was Sold in New¬ 
ark— C.) —S’ L. Clemens.—WR 5 
How I Won my Wife.—W. A. Eaton.—CS 31 
How it Came.—Sydney Dayre.—YBT 
How it Came to Be.—Anon.—SR 11 
How it Happened.—J: Hay.—TFY 
How it Happens.—Anon.—BS 21 
How it Is.—Anon.—SR 11 
How it Once Was. (New York Sun.) —PPh 
How it Really Was.—Grace D. Litchfield.—SR 9 
How it was to Be.—Anon.—SR 11 

How Jake Schne’der Went Blind.—Anon.—BDD— 
BeR—DFY 

How Jamie Came Home. (Lonoer than current ed. in 
Farm Ballads.)—Will M. Carleton.—CS 7— 
SA 

How Jim Turner Broke up the School —Anon.—CS 22 
How Jimmy Tended the Baby.—Anon. See How I 
Tended the Baby. 

How Jinny Eased her Mind.—T: N. Page.—HBR 
How Johnnie Stopped Crying.—Anon.—ASD 
How June Found Massa Linkum.—Eliz. S. Phelps.— 
BS 25 

How Kaiser Wilhelm’s Sister was Won.—Anon.— 
MMR 

How Larrv Sang the “Agnus.”-—Jeannie P. Ewing.— 
CS 36 

How Liab and T Parted.—N. S. Emerson.—SR 1 
(Why Liab and I Parted.)—WR 24 
“How like a winter hath my absence been.”—W: 
Shakespeare.—PGT 1 
(Sonnet.)—HBP—OB (XTT.) 

(Sonnet XCVTI.—(7.)—WEP 1 
How Lisa Loved the King. (Cond.)- —G: Eliot.— 
WR 11 

“How little flattering is a woman’s love.”—H: Tay¬ 
lor.—GG 

How Little Tofn was Saved. — Alex. Anderson. — 
DS (si. abr.) 

(Nottman.)—CS 26 (si. ahr.) —WR 13 
How Long Before the Snow Comes?—Clara Denton.— 
LPD 

How Love Comes.—H: W. Longfellow. See Endy- 
mion. • 

How Lucy Backslid.—Paul I,. Dunbar.—WR 26 
How Many Times.—T: I.. Beddoes. See Torrismond. 
“How many times, as through the rooms I hasten.” 
Ellen M. H. Gates.—GG 

How Manv Voices, (Poems and Epigrams, CLIV.) — 
Walter S. Landor.—FEP 

“How many went from happy homes.”—Anon.— 
HSS 1 

How Marriage is like a Devonshire Lane.—J: Marriott. 
—CS 29 

How Margrave Rudeger was Slain.—Anon. See 
Nibelungen Lied. 

How Mickey Got Kilt in the War.—Anon.—CS 2 
How Mr. Blinks Named the Baby.—Mrs. M. F. Howard. 
—SR 7 

How Mr. Coffin Spelled It. (Detroit Free Press .)—SRI 
How Mr. Coville Counted the Shingles on his House. 
(Mr. Coville Proves Mathematics— C. — in They 
All Do It.)—Jas. M. Bailev.— BS 2—CS 9— 
DDR 

How Mr. Rabbit was too Sharp for Mr. Fox.—JoelC. 

Harris. See Uncle Remus, his Songs and his 
Sayings. 

How Mr. Simonson Took Care of the Baby.—Pauline 
Phelps.—WR 20 

How Mr. Smiggles Went to a Public Dinner.—E. F. 
Turner.—CS 25 

How Mrs. Gaskell Did not Hire a Cook. (Play.) — 
Anon.—PR 

How Mrs. O’Doolahan had Mike Arrested.—S. Jennie 
Smith—CS 34 


148 




TITLE INDEX 


How to 


How Montezuma Lived.—W: H. Prescott. See His¬ 
tory of the Conquest of Mexico. 

How Mose Counted the Eggs. ( Texas Siftings.) — 
CS 29 

(Counting Eggs.)—GH—PS—SR 6 
‘How Mother Did it.”—Anon.—MHR 
How Much Do you Love me? — Mary A. Townsend.— 
FTA 

“How much so ever in this life's mutations.”—Anon.— 
GG 

How my Song of her Began.—Philip B. Marston. — VA 
“How near to good is •what is fair.’’ (Fr. Love Freed 
from Ignorance and Folly.1—Ben Jonson.— 
BNL—ELP 
(Song.)—EPs 

How no Age is Content. (C.)—Henry Howard, Earl 
of Surrey. 

(Age of Children Happiest, The — sel.) —CGd — LC 
(No Age is Content with his own Estate.)—FEP 
How Norman Won the Race.—J. M. Whitson.—WR 25 
How Old Brown Took Harper’s Ferry. (C.)—Edmund 
C. Stedman.—PAP 
(John Brown of Osawatomie.)—EPs 
How Old Erasmus Doctored his Temperance Pledge. 
Anon.—DCR 

How Paderewski Plays the Piano.—Anon.—CRR 
(Piano-music.)—DR—PTS 

How Pat Saved his Bacon. — Anon. See How Terry 
Saved his Bacon. 

How Pat Sold a Dutchman.—Anon.—DE 
How Pat Stopped the Car.—Anon.—SDR 
How Pat Swindled Hans.—Anon. See How a Dutch¬ 
man was Done. 

How Par Went Courting. (Leeds Mercury.) —CD— 
DES—SDR 

How Patriots May be Made.—Sir Rob’t Walpole.—SS 
How Paul Won his Goat.—Anne Borden.—BS 1 
How Persimmons Took Cah ob der Baby. (St. Nicho¬ 
las.)— CS 13—WR 26 
(Take Good Care of Baby.)—SR 9 
How Pussy was Left.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
How Ran da Wen* over the River. ( Fr. Caleb Krinkle). 

—C: C. Coffin.—CS 23—DS 
How Robin Hood Rescued the Widow's Three Sons.— 
Anon.—EHT 

(Robin Hood Rescuing the Widow’s Three Sons.)— 
BB—WEP 1 

How Roses Came Red.—Rob’t Herrick.—ES 
How “Rubv” Plaved.—G: W. Bagbv.—BS S—CS 16— 
FTR—SA 

(Hoosier Describes Rubenstein's Playing, A.)— 
SDR 

How Sad.—May R. McNahh.—PS 
How Salvator Won.—Ella W. Wilcox.—WR 3 
How Santa Claus Came to Simpson’s Bar, Sel. fr. 
(Jovita; or. The Christmas Gift.)— Fs. Bret 
IIarte—DR 

‘‘How shall 1 know thee in the sphere.”—W: C. Bryant. 
See Future Life, The. 

How she Cured him. (Dial.) —DS—NPS—YA — YP 
How she Was Consoled.—Anon.—CRR 
“How should I your true love know.” — W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Hamlet. 

How Siegfried was Slain.—Anon. See Nibelungen 
Lied. 

‘How silently, how silently.”—Phillips Brooks. See 
O Little Town of Bethlehem. 

How Sleep the Brave. (Ode Written in the Beginning 
of the Year 1746— C.) —W: Collins.—BFV— 
BNL—GN—GP—LC—LLC—OB—OS 3—PC 
PSR—SM 

(Ode.)—EPs—FEP—HBP—SS—WEP 3 
(Ode Written in 1746.)—BPB—PGT 1—YBF 
How Soap was First Made.—Anon.—WR 17 
How “Sockery” Set a Hen.—Anon.—BDD 
How Stands the Glass Around?—Anon.—HBP 
How Strange it Will Be.—Frank E. Holliday.—TFY 
“How sweet in winter time we feign the spring.”— 
Anon.—GG 

“How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank!”— 
W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, The. 
How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds.—.T. Newton.— 
FEP 

How Tambo Got Shot.—Anon.—DSS 
How Terry Saved his Bacon.—Anon.—CS 6 
(How Pat Saved his Bacon.)—BC—DI 
How the Author was Sold in Newark.—S: L. Clemens. 
See How I was Sold. 

How the Babies Grow.—Jennie Carroll.—TFS 
How the Bees Came bv their Sting —Carlotta Perry. 
—CS30 

How the Captain Saved the Pay.—Walter Williams.— 
BS 26 


How the Cats Went to Boarding-school.—Anon.— 
CS 15 

How the Celebrated Miltiades Peterkin Paul Got the 
Better of Santa Claus.—J:Brownjohn.—BS16 
(Miltiades Gets the Best of Santa Claus.)—CS 23— 
PR 

How the Church was Built at Kehoe’s Bar.—J: Ben¬ 
nett.—CS 31—NP 

How the Derby Was Won.—Harrison Robertson.— 
HBR 

How the Dimples Came.—Anon.—TFS 
How the Dutchman Killed the Woodchuck.—Anon— 
BDD—CS 11—DFY 

How the Fifty-first Took the Bridge.—Jeff H. Nones— 
CS 30 

How the Flowers Came.—Anon.—DJS 
How the Gates Came Ajar. (Tr. by) Helen L. Bost- 
wick.—CS 4—OS 1—WCL—WR 15 
How the Gentlemen Do after Marriage.—Anon.—CS 9 
How the Gentlemen Do before Marriage.—Anon.— 
CS 9 

How the Gospel Came to Jim Oaks.—Anon.—BS 12— 
CR 

How the Insurance Agent was Squelched. (Detroit 
Free Press.) —SDR 
(“Two Tollar?”)—BDD 

How the King Lost- his Crown.—J: T. Trowbridge.— 
CS 28 

How the I,a Rue Stakes were Lost.— C: N. Hood.— 
BS 24 

How the Lawverfs] Got a Patron Saint.—J: G. Saxe.— 
BC—CS 22 

How the Leaves Came Down.—Susan Coolidge.—AD 
NV—PoR 

How the Money Goes.—Anon.—PS 

How the Oak Grew.—Clara D. Bates.—YBT 

How the Old Horse Won the Bet.—Oliver W. Holmes. 

CS 17—FTR—HNS—SE (sel.) 

How the Organ was Paid For.—Kate A. Bradley.— 
WR 4 

How the Parson Broke the Sabbath.—Anon.—CS 22 
How the Pilgrims Gave Thanks.—Anon.-—PEO 
How the Qua r rel Began. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—YFE 

How the Question Came Home.—Anon.—PP—YPS 
How the Ransom Was Paid.—Anon.—PEO 
How the Refugees Were Saved.—Ellen K. Bradford.— 
CS 36 

How the Revival Came.—Mare. .1. Bidwell.—WR 12 
How the Story Grew.—Anon—YFD 
How the Wind Blows!—Anon.—NV 
How the Yankee Answered the Englishmen.—Anon.— 
PTS 

(Jonathan and the Englishmen— si. diff. and si. 
abr. )—BC 

"How thev Brought the Good News from Ghent to 
Aix.” (C.)— Rob’t Browning.—A VP—BNL 
— B VC — CGd — CR — EPs — FEP — GN — 
HB — HBF — OM — OS 2 — PEB 3— PHS— 
PSR — SAE (br. sel.) —SO—SPE—SS—VA — 
VSO — WEP 4 

(Good News [from Ghent]) SE (sel .)—WRD 
(Rid ' from Gh°nt to Aix, The.)—CS 2—MR 
(Ride to Aix. The.)—HSS 2 
(For parody, see Ride from Ghent to Aix, The.— 
Irwin Beaumont.) 

How they Caught the Panther.— Alfred J. Hough.— 
WR 6 

How they Kept a Secret—Clara Augusta,—SD 
How they Pop the Question.—Anon.—BC 
IIow they Stopped the Run. (Fr. Sport Royal.)—An¬ 
thony Hope.—BS 26 

How Three were Made one.—E: H. Peale.—PR—YA 
How Tim’s Prayer was Answered.—Anon.—CS 22 
How to Ask and Have.—(C.)—S: Lover.—THP 
(To Ask and to Have.)—WR 20 
How to be an Angel.—Anon.—YBT 
How to be Happy.—Anon.—HSS 2 
How to be Noble.—Alfred Tennyson. See Lady Clara 
Vere de Yere. 

How to Break Bad News.—Anon.—PS 
How to Break the Chain.—J: B. Gough.—CS 17 
How to Choose a Wife.—Anon.—CS 25 
How to Cure a Bad Memory.—Anon.—DSS 
How to Cure a Cough.—Anon.—BC—CS 9 
How to Curtail the I iquor Traffic.—Anon.—TS 
How to Deal with Common Natures.—Aaron Hill.— 
FEP 

How to Deal with New-laid Eggs.—Anon.—TFS 
Howto Draft Constitution and Bv-laws.—Anon.— 
PS 

How to Eat a ’Possum.—Anon.—WR 7 
How to Gain Friends.—Anon.—TFS 


149 




How to 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


How to Get Rich.—Anon.—CS 36 
How to Go to Sleep.—C: H. Clark.—SR 1 
How to Have just what we Like.— Horace Smith. — 
BLP 

How to Keep a Bee-hive.—Anon.—DSS 
How to Live.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 

How to Live.—Horatius Bonar. See “He liveth long 
who liveth well.” 

How to Live.—W: C. Bryant. See Thanatopsis. 

How to Live Well on Nothing a Year.—W: M. Thack¬ 
eray. See Vanity Fair. 

How to Look when Speaking.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
How to Make a Boat Fast.—Anon.—DSS 
How to Make a Whistle.—Anon.—AD—WR 17 
How to Make an Imitation of Browning.—Anon.— 
WR4 

How to Make Hasty Pudding.—Anon.—MCS 
How to Make up a Quarrel.—Anon.—KNE 
How to Plant Trees—What to Plant. (Dept, of Agri¬ 
culture.) —DFR 

How to Read.—S. T. Denison.—SR 10 

How to Read me.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 

How to Save a Thousand Pounds.—Anon.—HR 

How to Speak a Piece.—Ruth Davenport.—DCP 

How to Succeed.—T. C. Richmond.—WR 18 

How to Woo.—“Bob O’Link.”—DLD 

How to Write a Letter.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 

How Tom Saved the Train.—G: Birdseye.—WR 4 

How Tom Sawyer Got his Fence Whitewashed.—S: L. 

Clemens. See Tom Sawyer. 

How Tom Sawyer Whitewashed his Fence.—S: L. 

Clemens. See Tom Sawyer. 

How Two Birdies Kept House in a Shoe.—Anon.— 
LPS—PP 

How Two Men Spoke the Same Words.—Sargeant.— 
PS 

How Uncle Fin had the Laugh on the Boys.—Anon.— 
DCR 

How Uncle Podger Hung a Picture.—Jerome K. Je¬ 
rome. See Three Men in a Boat . 

How we Beat the Captain’s Colt.—Campbell Rae- 
Brown.—WR 13 

How we Beat the Favorite.—Adam I.. Gordon.— CS 36 
—FEP—PEB 4—VA—WR 13 
How we Became a Nation.—Harriet P. SpofTord. 
—EDY 

How we Burned the “Philadelphia.”— Barrett East¬ 
man.—BAB—EDY 

How we Fought the Fire.—Will Carleton.—BS 17 
How we Hung Red Shed.— Joaquin Miller.—WR 7 
How we Hunted a Mouse.—Joshua Jenkins.— BS 5— 
CS 12—PR—SR 10 

How we Kept, the Day.—Will Carleton.—BS 23 
How we Killed the Rooster.—Anon—CS 34 
How we Learn.—Horatius Bonar.—GP 
(Price of Truth, The— br. sel.) —WR 17 
How we Plaved “King William.”—.Teannie P. Ewing. 
—CS 36 

How we Take it. — Theodore D. C. Miller. — BLP 
Howard, the Prisoners’ Friend.—H. Humphrey.—FD 1 
(Memory of the Good.)—I.LC 
Howard’s Wish.—Anon.—PS 

Howe’s Masquerade. (Legends of the Province House, 
I.)—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—APr (abr.) 

How’s my Boy?—Sydney Dobell.—BNL—CGd—CS 6 
—FEP—GN—HBP—LO—MMR—OS 1—VA 
Hoyden, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Hoyden, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Hudibras, Sels. fr. —S: Butler. 

Amantium Ine. (Br. sel. fr. Pt,. TIT., Can. I.)— 
WEP 2 

Character of Hudibras, The. (Sel. fr. I., I)—ESs 
Argumentative Theology. (Br. sel.) —WEP 2 
Logic of Hudibras. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
(Hudibras.)—SE 

Muse of Doggerel, The. (Br. sel.) —WEP 2 
New Light. (Br. sel.) —WEP 2 
Presbyterians, The. (Sel.) —EHT—WEP 2 
(Religion of Hudibras, The.)—BNL—THP 
Honour. (Br. sel. fr. I., III.)—WEP 2 
Hudibras, Br. sets. fr. —BNL 

Hudibras’ Sword and Dagger. (Sel. fr. I., I.)— 
BNL 

Marriage. (Br. sel. fr. TIL, I.)—WEP 2 
Martial Music. (Br. sel. fr. I., TT.)—WEP 2 
Morning. (Br. sel. fr. II., IT.)—WEP 2 
Night. (Br. sel. fr. IT., I.)—WEP 2 
Puritans. (Br. sel. fr. II., IT.)—EPs 
Spiritual Trimmers. (Br sel. fr. III., I.)—WEP 2 
Hudibras! Sword and Dagger. — S: Butler. See Hu¬ 
dibras. 

Hudson, The.—G. S. Heilman.—AA 
(Sonnet: to the Hudson.)—CG 3 


Hue and Cry after Cupid, The, Sel. fr. (Venus’ Runa¬ 
way.)—Ben Jonson.—YBF 
Hue and Cry after Fair Amoret, A.—W: Congreve.— 
OB 

(Amoret—C.)—FEP—WEP 3 
Huggin’ Lampposts.—Anon.—DE 
Hugh Gordon’s Iron Mill.—Horace B. Durant..—CS 29 
Hugh of Lincoln. (Jew’s Daughter, The—C.— in Percy’s 
Reliques.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
(SI. abr.) —BB—OEB 

(Sir Hugh; or, The Jew’s Daughter— diff. vers). — 
BPB 

Hugh Sutherland's Pansies.— (Sel. )—Itob’t Buchanan. 
—WR 1 

Hughie Graham.—Anon. See following. 

Hughie the Graeme. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon. 
—I,H 

(Hughie Graham— si. diff. vers. — abr.) —BB 
Hugo Grotius.—Kotzebue.—WR 9 
Hugo’s Child at Play.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Huldy’s Pumpkin Pies.—Alfred Balch.—CS 23 
Hullo.—Sam W. Foss.—BS 20 

Human Body — Lesson in Rhyme.—Anna S. Badlam. 
—LPS—PP 

Human Frailty.—W: Cowper.—HBP 
Human Frailty. (Flowers of Sion. II.) —W: Drum¬ 
mond.—LLC 

(“Good that never satisfies the mind, A.”)—FEP 
(Illusions.)—CEI. 

(Sonnet.)—HBP 

Human Life.—Matthew Arnold.—WEP 4 
Human Life. (C.) —Aubrey T: DeVere.—HDL—VA 
(Sad and Sweet.)—CEL 
(Sad is out Youth.)—A VP—FEP 
(“Sad is our youth, for it is ever going.”)—BNL 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 

(“Sweet is our youth”— sel.) —HSS 3 
Human Life, Sels. fr. —S: Rogers. 

Human Life, Br. sel. fr. —WEP 4 
Marriage. (Br. sel.) —BIL—BNL—FTA 
(Sensibility— sel. )—FP 

Human Life.—W: Shakespeare. See Tempest , The. 
Human Life.—Mrs. J. M. Winton.—CS 19 
Human Littleness.—W. H. De Shon.—SR 6 
Human Plan, The.—C. H. Crandall.—AA 
Human Seasons, The.—J: Keats.—HSS 3—PGT 1— 
WEP 4—WR 1—YBF 

Human Voice, The.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Auto¬ 
crat of the Breakfast-table, The. 

Humanity.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Humanity.—R: W. Dixon.—VA 

Humanity’s Heroes.—Alex. Pope. See Prologue to Mr. 
Addison’s Tragedy oi Cato. 

Humble and Unnoticed Virtue.—Hannah More.— 
CS 10 

Humble Petition of Bruar Water to the Noble Duke 
of Athole, The, Sels. fr.— Rob’t Burns. 

“Here haply, too. at vernal dawn.”—HP 
River’s Supplication, The. (Ptly. like other.) —AD 
Humble Romance, A.—-Juliet W. Tompkins.—CG 2 
Humble-bee, The. (C.) —Ralph W. Emerson.—AA— 
ASL — BFV — FEP—GN—HBP—LC(a6r. )— 
SN—TAV 

(To the Humblebee.)—BNL 
Humblest of the Earth-children, The.—J: Ruskin. 
See Modem Painters. 

Humbugging a Tourist. (Farce.) —Jas. K. (7) Paulding. 
—BC 

Humility.—Rob’t Herrick.—OS 1 
Humility.—Una Locke.—HDL 
Humility.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—EPs 
Humility.—Jas. Montgomery.—CS 14 (sel.) —HBP 
Humming of the Wires, The.—E: A. Rand.—HP 
Humming Top, The.—Anon.—DCR 
Humming Top, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Humming-bird, The.—Ednah P. Clarke.—SN 
Humming-bird, The.—C: Mair.—TCV 
Humming-bird, The.—J. H. St. John.—FMR 
Humming-bird, The.—J: B. Tabb.—SN 
Humming-bird Song.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Humorous Irish Sketch —Saul Sertrew.—DSS 
Humpty Dumpt.y. (In Mother Goose for Grown 
Folks.)—Adeline D. T. Whitney —CS 21— 
MHR—TAV 

Hunchback, The.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Hunchback, The. Sels. fr. —Jas. S. Knowles. 

Helen and Modus. (Sels. fr. Act IV., Sc. 1, and V., 
1.)—NDP 

(Lessons in Love.)—VSG 
(Scene from “The Hunchback.”)—WR 8 
Scenes from “The Hunchback.”—FTlt (sels. fr. I_ 
2 and 3; IV., 2; V., 1.)—WR 9 (T..2— abr.) 
Hunchbacked Singer, The.—Anpn.—CS 30 


150 




TITLE INDEX 


Hymn 


Hundred Louis d’Or, The.—Sabrina H. Dow.—DR 
Hundred Years Ago, A.—Anon.—MYF 
Hundred Years from Now, A.—Mary A. Ford.—CS 14 
—FS 

Hundred Years to Come, A.—C. F. [or W: G.l Brown. 
—CS 12—GP 

Hundred Years to Come, A.—Hiram D. Spencer.— 
FEP—TCV 

Hundreds!—G: Cooper.—TFS 
(Only One.)—AA 
(Our Mothers.)—YBT 

Hundredth Anniversary of the Surrender of Lord Corn¬ 
wallis, The, Sels. fr. —Rob’t C.Winthrop. 
American Example.—FD 1 
Universal Education.—FD 1—SR 5 
Hundred-yard Dash, The.—W: Lindsey.—AA 
Hungary and Austria in Religious Contrast, Sel. fr. 

(No Peace without Liberty.)—L: Kossuth.— 
BLP 

(Peace Inconsistent with Oppression.)—SS 
Hungry Boarder, The.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Hungry Traveler, The.—Anon.—FND 
Hunlco!—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Hunt, The.—Jas. S. Knowles. See Love Chase, The. 
Hunt, The.—Harriet P. Spofford.—AA 
Hunt is up. The.—Anon.—ELP. 

Hunted Squirrel, The.—W: Browne.— See Britannia’s 

Hunter and the Child, The.—Anon.—PS 
Hunter of the Prairies, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AA— 
FEP—HBP 

Hunters, The.—Matthew Arnold. See Church of Brou, 
The. 

Hunter’s Last Ride, The.—Anon.—CS 17 
Hunter’s Song, The.—Bryan W: Procter.—GN—HBP 
—OS 2—VA 

Hunter’s Vision, The.—W: C. Bryant.—HBP 
Hunting. (Fr. Time Vindicated.) — Ben Jonson.— 
BNL 

Hunting a Madman.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 32—PR 
Hunting Eggs. ( Zion’s Herald.) —PHS 
Hunting of the Snark, The, Sets. fr. —Lewis Carroll. 
Baker’s Tale, The. (Sel. fr. Fit TIL)—VA 
Hunting of the Snark, The. (Sel. fr. Fit IT., 
The Bellman’s Speech.)—NA 
Hunting of the Snark, The. (Sels. fr. Fits I., II., 
III.)—THP 

Hunting of the Cheviot, The.—Anon.—BB—PEB 1 
(See also Chevy-Chase.—R: Sheale.) 

Hunting Season, The. (Don’t Talk of September— 
C.)—T: H. Bayly—THP 
Hunting Song.—S: T. Coleridge. See ^polya. 
Hunting Song, A.—H: Fielding. See ‘*A-hunting we 
will go.” 

Hunting Song.—R: Hovey.—ASL 

Hunting Song. (C.) —Walter Scott.—AE (sel.) —BFV 
— BPB — BS 21 — CEL — GN — LC — OS 3 
—PGT 1—YBF 

(Waken, Lords and Ladies Gay.)—BNL 
Hunting Song.—Raymond W. Walker.—CG 3 
Hunting Tower.—Anon.—WR 8 

Huron Chief’s Daughter, The.—Mrs. R. E. M. Lepro- 
hon.—TCV 

Hurrah for the Flag.—Anon.—NV 
(Our Flag.)—GMS 

Hurrah for the Fourth av July.—M. L. Dickinson.— 
SR 2 

Hurricane, The.—W: C. Bryant.—BNL—CS 37— 
PEO (si. abr.) 

Hurts of Time.—Lord Byron.— See Siege of Corinth, 
The. 

Husband and Wife’s Grave, The. (C.) —R: H. Dana. 
—BNL 

(Immortality.)—AA (abr.) 

(Sel.) —GP—SPE 
(“Oh! listen, man!”— br. sel.) —AE 
Husbandman. The.—J: Sterling.—HBP 
Husband’s Experience in Cooking, A.—Anon.—CS 3 
Husband’s Petition, The.—W: E. Aytoun.—HPE 
Husband’s Programme. (Washinoton Post.) —PS 
Hush.—Adelaide A. Procter.—WR 9 
"Hush! ’tis a holy hour! the quiet room.”—Bernard 
Barton.—CS 1 

Hushabv, Sweet my Own.—Eugene Field.—EF— 
WTD 

Huskers, The.—J: G. Whittier.—LC 
Huskin’, The.—Will F. McSparran.—CS 29—NPS— 
YP 

Husking Song.—A. W. Bellaw.—WR 15 
Hyder Ali. (Sel. fr. The Nabob of Arcot’s Debt.)— 
Edmund Burke.—SE 
Hyder Iddle.—Anon.—NA 
Hylas.—Bayard Taylor.—HBP] 


Hylas, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Hylodes, The.—Lewis G. Wilson.—POS 
Hymenaei; or. The Solemnities of Masque and Barriers 
at Court, Sel. fr. (Truth.)—Ben Jonson.— 
WEP 2 

Hymen’s Triumph, Sels. fr. —S: Daniel. 

Eyes, Hide my Love.—ES 
Love.—EPs—ES 

(Love is a Sickness.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—OB 
—YBF 

Love’s Birth and Beginning.—ELP 
(Early Love— sel.) —FTA—OH 

(Hymen’s Triumph, Fr.) —ES—WEP 1 
Hymn: “From the sunny morning.”—Anon.—YBT 
Hymn: “He sendeth sun,” etc.—Sarah F. Adams.— 
VA 

(Father, Thy Will be Done.)—FEP 
Hymn (Ode, An— C.): “How are thy servants blest.” 
—Jos. Addison.—HBP 

(“How are thy servants blest, O Lord.”)—FEP 
Hymn: “The spacious firmament,” etc.—Jos. Addi¬ 
son. See Spectator, The. 

Hymn - “When rising from the bed of death.”—Jos. 

Addison. See Spectator, The. 

Hymn, A.—Jos. Addison.—AE (br. sel.) —HBP 
(“When all thy mercies, O, my God.”)—FEP 
Hymn: “ ‘Come,’ said Jesus’ sacred voice.” (VII.— 
C .)—Anna L. Barbauld. 

(Come unto Me.)—HBP 

Hymn: “Praise to God, immortal praise." (II.— C.) 
—Anna L. Barbauld. 

(Praise to God.)—EPs—FEP—HBP 
Hymn: “Sleep, sleep to-day, tormenting cares.” (XI. 
—C.)—Anna L. Barbauld. 

(Sabbath of the Soul, The.)—BNL—OS 2 
Hymn: “When the angels all are singing.”—Nicholas 
Breton.—HBP 

Hymn: “No coward soul,” etc.—Emily Bronte.—OS 3 
(Her Last Lines.)—VA 
(l ast Lines.)—OB—WEP 4 
Hymn, A. “My Maker! of thy power the trace.”— 
S: T. Coleridge.—FTR 

Hymn: “ Pilgrim, burdened with thy sins.”—G: 
Crabbe.—EEP 

Hymn: “O patient Christ,” etc. — Marg. W. Deland. 
—TAS 

Hymn: “O li’l lamb out in de col’.”—Paul L. Dunbar. 
—A A 

Hymn: “God make my life a little light.”—Matilda 
B. Edwards—YBT 
(Child’s Prayer— abr.) —PoR 
Hymn, An f, or A]. (C .)—Phineas Fletcher.—ELP— 

HBP 

(“Drop, drop, slow tears.”)—BNL—FEP—YBF 
(Litany, A.)—OB 

Hymn: “When gathering clouds,” etc.—Sir Rob’t 
Grant.—HBP 

(“When gathering clouds around I view.”)—FEP 
Hymn, The: “For summer’s bloom,” etc.—Josiah G. 

Holland. See Bitter-sweet. 

Hymn, A.—Saxe Holm.—TAS 

(“I cannot think but God must know.”)—BIL 
(Waiting on God.)—SSS 

Hymn, A. “Hear me, O God,” etc. (Hymn to God, 
the Father, A—C.)—Ben Jonson.—ELP 
Hymn: “Brother, thou art gone,” etc.—Henry H. Mil- 
man.—HBP 

(Burial Hymn.)—FEP—VA 
Hymn, The: “It was the winter wild.”—J. Milton. 

See On the Morning of Christ's Nativity. 
Hymn: “There’s not a leaf within the bower.” 
—Amelia Opie.—YBT 
(God’s Mark on all Things— abr.) —TFS 
Hymn: “In darker days and nights of storm.”—Theo¬ 
dore Parker.—HBP 

Hymn: “I’m but a little child.”—M. H. S.—YBT 
Hymn: “O fly. my Soul.”—Jas. Shirley.—OB 
Hymn, A: “These as they change.”—Jas. Thomson. 
See Seasons, The. 

Hymn: “Lord, when I quit this earthly stage.’ 
—Isaac Watts.—EPs 

Hymn: “O Painter of the fruits and flowers.”—J: G. 
Whittier.—AD 

Hymn at Nightfall.—C: F. Richardson.—YBT 
Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni. (C.)— 
S: T. Coleridge—BNL — BS 25 — FEP— 
GP—HBP—IR—OS 3—PHS 
(Chamouny.)—OM—SS 
(God in Nature— br. sel.) —SE 
(Hymn to Mont Blanc.) — AE (br. sel.) — CR — 
FTR—SE 

(Mont Blanc before Sunrise.) — BS 7—EA — 
SAE (sel.) 


151 







Hymn 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Hymn for America, A.—Susie M. Best.—CS 34 
Hymn for Christ mas.—Felicia Hemans.—GN ( abr.) 

(Christmas Carol— C .)—OS 1 
Hymn: For Easter Sunday. (III.—C.)—Anna L. 
Barbauld. 

(Christ Risen.)—FEP 

Hymn for Family Worship.— H: Kirke White.—FEP 
Hymn for First Sunday after Epiphany (Early Piety). 

(First Sunday after Epiphany — C .)—Regi¬ 
nald Heber.—FEP 
(By Cool Siloam.)—LLC 
(By Cool Siloam’s Shady Rill— sel .)—PoR 
(Siloam’s Shady Rill— abr.) —TFS 
Hymn for my Brother’s Ordination.—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—TAS 

Hymn for Seriousness, An.—J: Wesley.—CEL—WEP 3 
Hymn for Thanksgiving.—S. E. Adams.—HDL 
Hymn for the Dead.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel, The. 

Hymn for the Dedication of a Church.—Andrews Nor¬ 
ton —AA 

(Dedication of a Church, The.)—TAS 
Hymn for the Opening of Plymouth Church, St. Paul, 
Minnesota. (C.)—J: G. Whittier. 

(Church Dedication.)—TAS 
Hymn for the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity.—H: H. 
Milman.—VA 

("When our heads are bowed with woe.”)—FEP 
Hymn for Trinity Sunday. (Trinity Sunday — C.)— 
Reginald Heber.—FEP 
(Holy, Holy, Holy! [Trisagion.])—LLC 
Hymn from “Akbar’a Dream.”—Alfred Tennyson.— 
WEP 4 

Hymn from "The Seasons.”—Jas. Thomson. See 
Seasons, The. 

Hymn in Honour of Beauty.—Edmund Spenser.— 
ELP 

(Beauty— eel.) —BNL—EPs 
Hymn in Praise of Neptune, A.—T: Campion.—ELP— 
OB—PGT 1—WEP 1 

Hymn in Praise of the Natural World, A.—Ellen Beau¬ 
champ.—AD 

Hymn of a Child.—C: Wesley.—WCL 
Hymn of Heavenly Beauty. (Sel .)—Edmund Spen¬ 
ser.—ELP 

Hymn of our Armies.—0. C. Auringer.—PAPm 
Hymn of our First Parents.—J: Milton.—See Paradise 
Lost. 

Hymn of Pan.—Percy B. Shelley.—OB—WEP 4 
Hymn of Praise. (With music.) —Anon.—AD 
Hymn of Praise by Adam and Eve.—J: Milton. See 
Paradise Lost. 

Hymn of the Alamo.—Reuben M. Potter.—BS 26 
Hymn of the Avenger, The.-—T. S. Denison.—FAS 
Hymn of the Churchyard.—J: Bethune.—HBP 
Hymn of the City.—W: C. Bryant.—TAS 
Hymn of the Earth.—W: E. Channing.—A A 
Hymn of th? Hebrew Maid. — Walter Scott. See 

Ivanhoe 

Hymn of the Last Supper.—J: Pierpont.—TAS 
Hymn of the Moravian Nuns of Bethlehem. (C.)— 
H: W. Longfellow. 

(Pulaski’s Banner.)—SR 8 

Hymn of the Nativity, A. (Fr. Steps to the Tem¬ 
ple.)—R: Crashaw.—EP (2 sis. more than 
works.) 

(At Bet hlehem— sel. )—YBF 
(Verses from the Shepherd’s Hymn, — abr.) —OB 
Hymn of the Seasons.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, 
The. 

Hymn of Trust.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA—HDL— 
TAS 

Hymn of Winter.—S: Longfellow.—HDL—TAS 
Hymn on the Fight at Concord.—Ralph W. Emerson. 
See Hymn Sung at the Completion of the Con¬ 
cord Monument. 

Hymn on the Morning of Christ’s Nativity.—J: Milton. 

See On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. 

Hymn on the Nativity.—J: Milton. See On the Morn¬ 
ing of Christ’s Nativity. 

Hymn on the Nativity of My Saviour, A.—Ben Jon- 
son.—EDY 

Hymn on the Seasons.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, 
The. 

Hymn Sung at the Completion of the Concord Monu¬ 
ment.—Ralph W. Emerson.—HBP—TAV 
("By the rude bridge that arched the flood”— 
br.sel .)—SE 

(Concord Fight.)—BSP—HB—PEO (abr.) 
(Concord Hymn—C.)— AA — ASL — EDY — 
FEP—GN—GP—PAP—SM—YBF 
(Concord Monument Hymn.)—BNL 
(Hymn on the Fight at Concord.)—GMS 


Hymn Sung at the Second Church, Boston, at the 
Ordination of Rev. Chandler Robbins. (C.) 
—Ralph W. Emerson. 

(House of God, The.)—TAS 
Hymn t o Adversity'.— T: Gray.— FEP — PGT 1 — 
WEP 3 

Hymn to Aphrodite, A.—J: B. L. Warren, Lord De 
Tabley.—A VP 

Hymn to Apollo.—J: Lyly. See Midas. 

Hymn to Christ, A.—J: Donne.—EPs 
Hymn to Contentment, A.—T: Parnell.—FEP (abr.) — 
WEP 3 (si. abr.) 

Hymn to Cynthia.—Ben Jonson. See Cynthia’s Rev¬ 
els. 

Hymn to Darkness.—J: Norris. — PGT 1 (sel.) — SN 
—YBF (sel.) 

Hymn to Diana.—Ben Jonson. See Cynthia’s Rev- 
els. 

Hymn to God, my God, in my Sickness. (Sel.) —J: 
Donne.—EPs 

Hymn to God the Father.—J: Donne.—ELP—FEP— 
OB—YBF 

Hymn to God the Father, A. (C.) —Ben Jonson. 
(Hymn, AO—ELP 

Hymn to Intellectual Beauty.—Percy' B. Shelley.— 
HBP 

Hymn to Light, The, Sel. fr. —Abraham Cowley.— 
BNL—WEP 2 (shorter.) 

Hymn to Mont Blanc.—S: T. Coleridge. See Hymn 
before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni. 

Hymn to Night.—G: W. Bethune.—BNL 
Hymn to Pan.—J: Fletcher.— See Faithful Shepherd¬ 
ess, The. 

Hymn to Pan.—Ben Jonson. See Pan’s Anniversary. 
Hymn to Pan.—J: Keats.— See Endymion. 

Hymn to Santa Rita.—Alvey A. Adee.—HP 
Hvmn to the Flowers.—Horace Smith.—AD (sel.) — 
BNL—CS 6—FEP—HBP—LLC 
Hymn to the Graces.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs 
Hymn to the Name and Honour of the Admirable 
Saint Teresa, A.—R: Crashaw.—OB 
Hymn to the Nativity.—J: Milton. See On the Morn¬ 
ing of Christ’s Nativity. 

Hymn to the Night.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA—BNL 
—CR—FTR—GMS 

Hymn to the North Star.—W: C. Bryant.—SE 
Hymn to the Spirit of Nature.—Percy B. Shelley. See 
Prometheus Unbound. 

Hymn to the Sun.—G: Darley.—TIP 
Hymn to the Sunrise.—Anon.—NA 
Hymn to the Virgin, A.—Anon.—OB 
Hymn Written for my Divinity-school Graduation. 
(C.)—*J: W. Chadwick. 

(Prayer for Unity, A.)—TAS 
Hymnes of Astraea, in Acrosticke Verse, Sets. fr. —Sir 
J: Davies. 

To the Month of September. (Hymn X.)—WEP 1 
To the Nightingale. (Hymn VI.)—WEP 1 
To the Rose. (Hymn VII.1—ELP 
To the Spring. (Hymn III.)—WEP 1 
Hymns, Ancient and Modern.—R. L. Raymond.—CG 2 
Hynd Horn.—Anon.—BB 

(Hind Horn— diff. vers.)— PEB 2 
(Hynde Horne— diff. vers.) —GN 
Hynde Horn.—Anon. See foregoing. 

Hypatia, Sets. fr. —Ct Kingsley. 

Boat Song, A. (Fr. Ch. III.)—WEP 4 
Hypatia, Sel. fr. (Poem fr. Ch. XXX.)—AVP 
Hyperion, Sels. fr. —J: Keats. 

Ccelus to Hyperion. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—WEP 4 
Hvperion: “As heaven and earth are fairer.” (Br. 
sel. fr. Bk IT.)—EPs 

Hyperion’s Arrival. (Sel. fr. Bk II.)—WEP 4 
Oceanus. (Sel. fr. Bk II.)—WEP 4 
Saturn. (Sel. fr. Bk T.)—WEP 4 
Saturn. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. TT.)—EPs 
Thea. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I.)—EPs 
Hyperion, Sets. fr. —H: W. Longfellow. 

Glimpses into Cloudland. (Sel, fr. Bk. II., Ch. VI.) 
—PEO 

Paul Fleming Resolves. (Sel. fr. Bk. III., Ch. 
VIII.)—LLC 

Poetry of City and Country Life, The. (Sel. fr. 

Bk. I.. Ch. VIII.)—BS 23 
"Setting of a great hope, The.” (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I„ 
Ch. I.)—GG 

Spring. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. II., Ch. I.)—AD 
Success. (Sel. fr. Bk. I„ Ch. VIII.)—SAE 
Hyperion’s Arrival.—J: Keats. See Hyperion. 
Hypochondriac, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Hypochondriac, The.. (Dial.) —Anon.—SED 
Hypochondriac, The.—Dr. Valentine.—BS 3—CRR— 
CS 2—MHR (si. diff. and longest)— NPS—YP 


152 




TITLE INDEX 


I know 


Hypochondriacus. (Fragments of Burton, Extract 
III.—A Conceipt of Diabolical Possession.)— 
Lamb.—HBP 

Hypocrisy. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Hypocrisy. (Epigram.)—S: Butler.—HPE 
Hypocrite, The.—Rob’t Pollok. See Course of Time, 
The. 


I 

1. H. B.—VV: Winter.—AA 

I. M.—R. T. Hamilion Bruce. (C.)—W: E. Henley. 

(Invict us.)—OB—P Y 0— YB F 
“I Am.”—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
I am a Friar of Orders Gray. (Fr. the opera of Robin 
H ood.)—J: O’ Keefe.—B N L—FEP—H B P 
“I am a white falcon, hurrah!” (C.) —R: H: Stod¬ 
dard. 

(Falcon, The.)—AA 

“I am an acme of things accomplished.”—Walt Whit¬ 
man. See Song of Mysel . 

I am Dying.—Anon..—CS (5 
“I am dying, Egypt.”—W: H. Lytle.—SR 4 

(Antonv and Cleopatra.)—AE (sel.) —BNL—CS 9 
—FEP—HP—H R—M R—P YO 
(Antony to Cleopatra.)—AA 
I am Lonely.—G: Eliot.— See Spanish Gypsv, The. 

I am no pickpurse of another’s wit.—Sir Philip Sidney. 

See Astrophel and Stella. 

I am not Old.—Mar, in F. Tupper.—C'S 19 
(Song of Seventy.)—FP 

“I am sick of opinions. I weary to hear them.”—J: 
Wesley.—GG 

"I am struck with the fact that Bismarck, the great 
statesman of Germany.”—Jas. A. Garfield.— 
GG 

“I am t he Good Shepherd.”—Dorothy A. Thrupp.— 
FEP 

I Am! Yet what I Am.—J: Clare.—EDY 
(His Last Verses.)—FEP 
(Lasciate Ogni Speranza.)—PGT 2 
(Written in Northampton County Asylum.)—OB 
I Arise from Dreams of Thee.—Percy B. Shelley. See 
Indian Serenade, The. 

I Ask not for thy Love, 0 Lord.—G: .1. Romanes.— 
TCV 

“I asked 1 he sun.” (TheGalax?/.) —GG 
"I bring you these little song-hlossoms.”—-Lucy Lar- 
cora.—LCS 

“I call that [the Book of Job], aside from all theories 
about it.”—T' Carlyle. See On Heroes and 
Hero-worship. 

“I Can!”—Anon.—PPSr 

“I can as well be hanged, as tell the manner of it.”— 

W: Shakespeare. See Julius Ctesar. 

‘T canna turn the key and my bairn outside.”—Anon. 

See ‘‘T cannot turn,” etc. 

I Cannot Doubt that thev whom ye Deplore.—W: 

W’ordsworth. See Excursion, The. 

“I cannot endure the thought that Christ’s children 
should be less free.”—Beecher.—GG 
“I cannot tell the spell that binds thine image.”— 
Annie C. Ketchum.—FTA 

“I cannot think but God must know.”—Saxe Holm — 
B1L 

(Hymn. A )—TAS 
(Waiting on God.)—SSS 

"I cannot turn the key and mv bairn outside.”—Anon. 

CS 27 

(I canna turn the key and my bairn outside.”)—SDR 
“I Can’t” and “I Can.”—W: A. Butler.—'TFS 
“I Can’t Army,” The.—Anon.—COS—PP—PS 
I Can’t, I Won’t, and I Will.—Anon.—WR 15 
“I care nothing for passing renown.”—T: (?) Chalmers. 

—GG 

“I Count my Time by Times that I Meet thee.” 

(In The New Dav.) — R: W. Gilder.—AA— 

OH 

I Did but Look.—T: Otway.—YBF 
(Enchantment, The—(7.)—FLS—OB 
1 Did it not , “I Done it.”—Anon.—LPS—PP 
I Didn't Mean Anything.—Anon.—FDY 
I Die, Being Young.—David Gray.—VA 
I do Confess thou’rt Sweet.—Sir Rob’t Ayton.—GP 
I Do not Love thee.—Caroline E. S. Norton.—FLS— 

OB 

I Do not Love thee for that Fair. (Sel.) — T: Carew. 
—YBF 

(Compliment, The— C .)—BNL 
“I do not love thee less for what is done.”—II: W. 
Longfellow. See Masque of Pandora, The. 

153 


“1 do not see why God should e’en permit some things 
to be.”—F. G. Browning. See Amen. 

“I Don’t. See It!”—Anon.—PS 
I Doubt It.—Anon.—CG l 
I Dream of Flo.—Albert S. Davis.—CG 2 
“I fain would ask thee to forget.”—Anon.—GG 
I Fear no Power a Woman Wields.—Ernest McGaffey. 
_ \\ 

I Fear thv Kisses f, Gentle Maiden], (To. 

I fear. etc.— C .)—Percv B. Shelley.—BNL— 
FTA—GP—PGT 1—YBF 

‘I feel, when I have sinned, an immediate reluctance 
to go to Christ.”—Rob’t M. McChevne.—GG 
I Fill my Pipe.—A. M. S.—CG 3 
I Flunked To-day.—Albert P. Terhune.—CG 2 
I Forgot.—Anon.—KNE 

I Gave my Life for Thee.—Frances R. Havergal.—VA 
I Give Immortal Praise. (Hymn XXXVIII.)—Isaac 
Watts.—FEP 

I Give mv Heart to Thee.—Staudish J. O’Grady.— 
TIP 

I Give Thee Eternit.v. tldeas, VI.)—Michael Drayton. 

—HBP—YBF 

“I go Fishin’.”—Richard S. Powell.—BS 25 
"I go to prove my soul.”—Rob’t Browning. See Para¬ 
celsus. 

“I grieved, for Buonaparte.” (C .—Sonnet IV. in 
Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs (ahr.) 
I Guess I’m the Man.—Laura S. Parsons.—StD 
“I had a friend once and she was to me.”—Anon.—GG 
“I had a little yellow bird.” (St. Nicholas.) —AD 
“I had no time to hate, because.” (C.)—Emily Dick¬ 
inson. 

(No Time to Hate.)—OH 

“I had rather as a forgiven child, with all the prospects 
of the future.”—Phillips Brooks.—GG 
I Hae Naebody Now.—Jas. Hogg.—FEP 
I Have and Ohl Had I.—Langheim.—OS 1 
“I have been always wonderfully delighted with 
fables.”—Jos. Addison.—HSS 3 
I Have Drank my Last Glass.—Anon.—CS 6—FR 
I Have no Influence?—Anon.—WR l 5 * 

“I have not told my garden yet.” (C.) —Emily Dick¬ 
inson. 

(Secret, The.)—A A 

“I have seen the sea lashed into fury and tossed into 
spray.” (Br. sel. fr. Nomination of John Sher¬ 
man.)—Jas. A. Garfield.—GG 
I Have Something Sweet to Tell you. — Frances S. 
Osgood.—FEP 

“I have sought to counsel vou in vour perplexities.” 
—T: R. Markham.—GG 

"I have the courage to be gay.” — Jean Ingelow. See 
Scholar and Carpenter. 

I Haven’t much Religion.—J. L. Scott.—CS 34 
“I hear a dear, familiar tone.”—Alice Cary. See 
Dream of Home, A. 

‘‘I heard a great big lion in t he bush.”—Anon.—WR 25 
I Heard an Angel. (Sel. fr. The Two Songs.)—W: 
Blake.—PC 

“I hold him great, who for love’s sake.” (Ahr.)—Ade¬ 
laide Procter.—GG 
(Maximus— C .)—SSS 

I Hold Still.—Julius Sturm (tr. hi/ G: W. Doane).— 
GP—MMR 

(God’s Anvil.)—BS 14—CS 11 
I in Thee, and Thou in me.—Christopher P. Cranch— 
TAS 

I Journey through a Desert Drear and Wild.—Anon.— 
HBP 

I Kin nod Trink To-nighd.—Anon.—DRR 
I Kissed the Cook.—Anon.—WR 21 
I Knew bv the Smoke that, so Gracefullv Curled. (Bal¬ 
lad Stanzas—C.)—T: Moore—BNL—TFY 
(Home of Peace, The.)—CS 20 
“I know a maiden fair to see.”—Fs. W. Moore.— 
WR 13 

“I know more than Apollo.”—"Tom o’ Bedlam.”— 
HBP 

I Know Mvself the Best Beloved of All.—Alice W. 
Roilins.—BIL—FTA 

“I know not of the dark or bright.”—H: Alford.—G 
(Oonten'ment.)—BS 4 
(Life's Answer.)—HDL 
(Trust.)—HSS 3—SPE 

“I know not which I love the most.” (Sel. fr. Spring 
Flowers.)—Phrebe Cary.—AD 
I Know not Why.—Mo p ris Rosenfeld.—AA 
“I know that all beneath the moon decays.”—W. 
Drummond.—FEP 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 

“I know that my Redeemer livet.h.”—Anon.—FHS 







I lay 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“I lay in sorrow, deep distressed.”—C:Mackay.—FEP 
“I like cigars beneath the stars.”—Ella W. Wilcox.— 
PPh 

"I live for thee.”—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, 
The. 

“I live for those that love me.”—G. L. Banks. See 
My Aim. 

I Love my Jean. (C. —Of a’ the Airts— also C.) — 
Rob’t Bums.—BNL—BPB—GN—MBL 
( Jean.)—BFV—OB—YB F 

(PT.2 add. doubtful stanzas.) —FEP—FTA—PGT1 
(My Jean.)—CEI. 

(“Of a’ the airts the wind can blaw.”)—EPs— 
WEP 3 

I IiOve my Love.—C: Mackay.—FEP—VS 
I Love my Love.—J. P. Sawyer.—CG 2 
I Love the Birds.—Lydia M. Child.—PS 
(Birds’ Nest.)—TFS 
(If ever I See.)—AD ( w. mus.i —NV 
“I love the fair lilies and roses so gay.”—Dora R. 
Goodale.—AD 

I Love Thee.—M. A. Barnes.—FI.S 
I Love Thee. (C.)—T: Hood.—BIL—FTA 
(Love Thee— sel.) —TLS 
I Love Thee.—J: Oxenford.—FLS 
I Love Thy Kingdom, Lord.— (St. Ambrose, tr. by) 
Timothy Dwight.—FEP 
(Love to the Church— si. abr.) —AA 
I Love you.—Anon.—WR 4 
“I Love you, Dear.”—Anon.—FLS 
I Love you, Dear.—G: W. Crofts.—BIL—FTA—TFY 
I Love you, Mother.—Joy Allison.—HSS 2 

(Which Loved Best.)-DLS— NPS—YBT—YP 
I Loved a Lass.—G: Wither.—OB 
I Loved my Art. (In A Lover’s Diary.)—H. Gilbert 
Parker.—TCV 

“I loved thee for that dear, deep lovingness.”—G: F. 
Armstrong.—BIL 

I Made Another Garden.—Arthur W. O’Shaughnessy. 
—VS 

(Song—C.)—OB—PGT 2—WEP 4 
“I meant to write a valentine.”—Anon.—WR 23 
I Met a Maiden To-day (To My Mother—C.).—W: E. 
Henley.—FTA 

T Met at Eve.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
“I might!”—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

"I ne’er could any luster see.” (C.)—R: B. Sheridan. 
(Song.)—FTA 

“I never cast a flower away.”—Caroline Southey.—GG 
I never Knew it, Love, till Now'.—Juan II., King of 
Castile.—BIL 

“I pity the man who has never, in his best moods.”— 
Phillips Brooks—GG 

I Plucked the Berry. (C.) —W: Motherwell. 

(Sing on, Blithe Bird!)—GN—WCL 
I Prithee Send me back my Heart.—Sir J: Suckling.— 
BNL—FEP—OEL—YBF 
(Song—C.)—ES—FTA—WEP 2 
I Remember, I Remember.—R: H. Barham.—HSS 2 
(Nursery Reminiscences—C.)—BC 
I Remember, I Remember. ( C.) —T: Hood.—BNL— 
BPB—ED Y — FEP — FP — GP— HBP—LC— 
MR—OS 1—Poll —PSR —PYO (abr.)—VS— 
WCL—WCLG 1—YBF 
(House where I Was Born, The.)—BLP 
(Old House at Home, The— abr.) —TFS 
(Past and Present.)—PGT 1 
“I said to the rose,” etc.—Alfred Tennyson. See Maud. 

I Saw a New World (New World, The—C.).—W: B. 
Rands.—VA 

I Saw, I Saw the Lovely Child.—F: W. H. Myers.—VA 
I Saw my Lady Weep.—Anon.—ELP 
(In Lacrimas.)—PGT 1 
(My Lady’s Tears.)—OB 
I Saw Thee.—Ray Palmer.—BNL 
I Saw Three Ships.—Anon.—OS 2—PoR (si. abr.) 

I Saw Three Witches.—Walter Ramel.—SOC 
I Saw Two Clouds at Morning.—J: G. C. Brainard.— 
BNL—GP 

(Epithalamium.)—A A—FEP—HBP 
(To a Friend.)—BS 6 
I See a Form, I See a Face.—Rob’t Burns. 

(This is no my Ain Lassie.)—WFP 3 
“I see men’s judgments are.”—W: Shakespeare. See 
Antony and Cleopatra. 

"I See the Point.”—J. P. McCord.—SR 1 
I Served in a Great Cause.—Horace L. Traubel.—AA 
I Shall be Satisfied.— Anon.— GP—HDL 

(“Not here, not here! not w'here the soarkling 

waters.”)—GG 

I Shall not Pass this Way Again.—Eva R. York.— 


“I sit before my fire alone.”—Nathaniel G. Shepherd 
See Summer Reminiscence, A. 

"I stood beside my window one stormy winter day.”— 
Caroline Leslie.—GG 

“I stood on a tower in the wet.”—Alfred Tennyson. 
New Year, The.—OS 2 

“I stood tiptoe upon a little hill,” Sets. fr. —J: Keats. 
Cynthia’s Bridal Evening.—WEP 4 
Endymion. (Br. sel.) —WEP 4 
Goldfinches. (Br. sel.) —GN—POS 
Minnows.—GN—POS 
Morning.—POS (II.) 

(Sigh of Silence, The— abr.) —GN 
Nature’s Delights.—GP 
Sweet Peas.—GN 

“I stood upon the pebbly strand.”—Anon.—HSS 3 
I Sue for Damages.—Anon.—CS 6 

“I tell you. hopeless grief is passionless.”—Eliz. B. 
Browning.—PGT 2 
(Grief—C.)—OB—WEP 4—YBF 
“I think a great many professors of religion are just 
like backgammon-boards.”—G: W. Bet hune.— 
GG 

Think it’s Wrong, Don’t you?—Anon.—PS 
I Think of Thee.—Friedrich von Matthisson.—FLS 
I Think on thee.—T: K. Hervey.—VA 
“I think when I read that sweet story of old.”— 
Jemima T. Luke.—OS 1 
Child’s Desire, The— sel.) —PC 
"Of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.”)—FEP 
“I thought once how Theocritus had sung.”—Eliz. B 
Browning.—PGT 2 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese, I.— C.) —OB—VA 
—WEP 4 

“I thought to work for him. ‘Master!’ I said.”—Anon. 
—GG 

“I Told you So!”—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
“I Too.”—Constance F. Woolson.—GP 
"I traveled among unknown men.”—W. Wordsworth. 
—CEL—PGT 1—YBF 
(Lucy.)—OB (III.) 

I Vant to Fly.—Anon— BeR—DFY 
I Vash so Glad I Vash Here.—Anon.—BDD—DFY— 
SR 2 

(Puzzled Dutchman, The.)—HR 
I Vunder Vy?—Anon.—BS 26 
I Waited till the Twilight.—C: Swain.—FTA 
"I wake! Ah! would that I could sleep again.”— 
“Montebello.”—GG 

I Wandered by the Brookside.—R: M. Milnes, Lord 
Houghton.—NPS (w. mus.) —YP (w. mus.) 
Brookside, The.)—BNL—CR— FEP—FTA—GP— 
HBP—OH—PGT 2—TFY—VA—VS—YBF 
(Song.)—CGd—FP 

I Wandered Lonely.—W: Wordsworth. See following. 
I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud.—W: Wordsworth.— 

LQ_Qg 3 

(Daffodils [.The].)— BNL—BSP—CR—EPs—FEP 
—FP — FTR — GMS — GN — GP — HBP — 
HSS 1 — LLC — MBL — OB — PGT 1 — 
POS—PYO—SN—YBF 
(I Wandered Lonely.)—BPB—WEP 4 
I Want Mamma. (Harper’s Weekly.) —LPS—PP 
(Little Child. A.)—DJS 

I Want to be a Soldier. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
I Want to be a Soldier. (Parody.) —J. W. Childs.— 
SD 

I Want You.—Anon.—FLS 

“I was ill of an epidemic vile fever.” (Br. sel. fr. A 
Sentimental Journey, Ch. VI.) — Laurence 
Sterne.—GG 

“I was on the Merrimac.”—Anon.—W’R 26 
I Was with Grant.—Fs. Bret Harte.—CS 7 
(Aged Stranger, The—C.)—AA—BS 9—PTS 
I Watch the Ships.—ArthurW. H. Eaton.—TCV 
“I went to her who loveth me no more.” (C.) —Arthur 
W. O’Shaugnessy. 

(Enchainment.)—YBF 
(Song.)—HBP 

I Will Abide in Thine House.—Adeline D. T. Whitney 
—HDL 

I Will Arise and Go unto My Father.—T: W. Higgin- 
son.—TAS 

“I will go forth ’mong men, not mailed in scorn.”— 
Alex. Smith.—GG 

“I Will Help you.”—-Wolstan Dixey.—PEO 
“I Will not Drink.”—J: Wrigglesworth.—WR 18 
I Will not Leave you Comfortless.—Anon.—BS 20 
I Will not Let thee Go.—Rob’t Bridges.—VA 
“I will not speak of war in itself.” (Br. sel. fr. The 
War for the Union.)—Wendell Phillips.—HSS 1 
I Will not Tell.—Andrew Ramsay.—TCV 
I Wish. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 





TITLE INDEX 


If I can 


I Wish I Was a Grown-up.—Mrs. M. F. Butts—KNS— 
PR 

I Wish I Was by that Dim Lake. (C.) —T: Moore. 

(I Wish I Were by that Dim Lake.)—YBF 
I Wish I Were a Bird. Anon.—PS 
I Wish I Were by that Dim Lake.—T: Moore See I 
Wish I Was, etc. 

I Wonder.—Anon.—CS 20 
I Wonder.—Anon.—CS 24 
I Wonder.—Anon.—WR 17 

I Wonder what Maud Will Say?—S: M. Peck.—DES 
I Wonder whom it is from? (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—YFE 

I Wonder Why.—Anon.—CS 29 
I Would I Were a Note.—Anon.—PC 
(Be Content.)—YBT 

I Would I Were an Excellent Divine.—Nicholas Bre¬ 
ton.—BNL 
(Priest, The.)—HBP 
"I would if I could.”—Anon.—PR—YA 
"I would not divorce faith from reason.”—Anon.—GG 
“I would not for ten thousand worlds be that man.”— 
Jos. Doddridge.—GG 

I Would not Live Alway.—W: A. Muhlenberg.—A A— 
CS 21—FEP (si. diff.)— GP (abr.)— LLC (sel.) 
I Would Thou Wert not Fair. (Sel. fr. The Strange 
Fortunes of Two Excellent Princes.)—Nicholas 
Breton.—ELP 

I Wouldna Gie a Copper Plack.— Mary A. Barry.— 
BS 12 

"I Wouldn’t—Would You?”—Anon.—BS 16 (abr.)— 
WRD 

I Wud Knot Dye in Winter.—Anon.—HP 
Ianthe.—Walter S. Landor.—OB 
Ianthe.—Walter S. Landor.—VS 
(Diff. fr. foregoing.) 

Ianthe’s Question. (Poems and Epigrams, CXXXV.) 
—Walter S. Landor.—OB 

Ianthe’s Troubles. (Poems and Epigrams, XXII.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—VA 
Icarus.—Anon.—OB 
Icarus.—Harry L. Koopman.—AA 
Icarus; or. The Peril of Borrowed Plumes. (SI. abr.) — 
J; G. Saxe.—CS 3 

Ice King, The.—A. B. De Mille.—TCV 

Ice Palace, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Iceberg, The.—Edgar Fawcett.—MRS 
Ich Bin Dein.—Gideon W. Seavey (?).—WR 14 
Ichabod.—J: G. Whittier.—AA—ASL—BNL—EDY 
—EPs—FEP—H B P—T A V 
Icilius on Virginia's Seizure.—T: B. Macaulay. See 
Virginia. 

I’d Be—Wouldn’t You?—Anon.—TFS 
“I’d rather have habits than clothes.” (Limerick.) — 
Gelett Burgess.—NA 
Ideal.—Hugh Cochrane.—TCV 
Ideal, An.—T. S. Denison.—SR 10 
Ideal, The. (Hall’s Journal of Health.) —BS 9 
Ideal, The.—Fs. S. Saltus.—AA 

Ideal.—(Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty, Pt. I., XIV.)— W: Wordsworth. 
—LH 

(England.)—GP 

(London, 1802— C .)—PGT 1 (II.)—YBF (II.) 
(Milton.)—LLC—WEP 4 

("Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour.”)— 
GG (abr.) 

(Sonnet: London, 1802.)—HBP 
(To Milton.)—BNL—CEL—EPs—FEP 
Ideal and the Real, The.—I. E. Jones.—CS 16 
Ideal and the Real, The, Br. sel. fr. (Storm in Venice, 
A.)—Joaquin Miller.—POS 
Ideal Citizen, The.—J: Habberton.—BLP 
Ideal Co-ed, The.—C: K. Field.—CG 2 
Ideal Future, An.—T. A. Harcourt.—HP 
Ideal Girl, The.—Anon.—BS 20 

Ideal Husband to His Wife, The.—Sam W. Foss.— 
THP 

Ideal India, The.—Fred. S. Ryman.—CS 26 
Ideal is the Real, The.—Ann Preston.—CS 33 
Ideal Lawyer, The.—J: W. Griggs.—MRS 
Ideal Love.—Michael Angelo.—OH 
Ideal Memory.—W: J. Dawson.—VA 
Ideal with a Roman Nose, An.—Anon.—CS 17 
Ideality. (Sonnet XXXIII.)—Hartley Coleridge.— 
VA 

Ideals.—Edmund H. Sears.—TAS 
Ideals.—David A. Wasson.—TAS 
Ideas the Life of a People.—G: W. Curtis.—CS 3 
(Element of Justice.)—LLC 
Id^es Napol^oniennes.—W: Avtoun.—HPE 
Identity.—T: B. Aldirch.—AA—TAV 
Idiot Boy, The.—Southey.—CS 7—MMR 


Idiot Lad, The.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 32—NPS—YP 
Idiot’s Gallantry, An.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 28 
Idle Hands.— (Dial. — ad. fr.) T. S. Arthur.—MPD 
Idle Love. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Idle Magnet, The.—(7V. by) B. W. Bellamy and M. W. 
Goodwin.—OS 1 

Idle Shepherd-boys. The.—W: Wordsworth.—PC 
Idle Words.—Andrew Peabody.—FMR 
Idleness.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, The. 

Idleness.—S. Weir Mitchell.—AA 
Idleness a Crime.—H: B. Carrington.—BLP—PEO 
Idleness and Ennui. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Idleness is the Mother of all Evil.—Anon.—FDY 
Idler, The.—Jones Very.—AA 

Idolize. (Acting char.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Idols, Sets. fr. —Wendell Phillips.—CR—NC (si. abr.) 
Idyl, An.—C: G. Buck.—THP—WR 7 
Idyl, An. (Harvard Lampoon.) —CG 2 
Idyl of the Period, An. (C.) —G: A. Baker.—CH— 
HNS—PLD 

(Both Sides of the Story.)—SR 7 
Idyl of the Strap, An. (Red and Blue.) —CG 2 
Idylls of the King, Sels. fr. —Alfred Tennyson. 

Crowning of Arthur, The. (Sel. fr. The Coming of 
Arthur.)—EPs—OS 3 
Dedication.—FEP 

(Albert the Good— abr.) —OS 3 
(Prince Consort , The— abr.) —EDY 
(To the Memory of Prince Albert.))—EHT 
Elaine. (Lancelot and Elaine— C.) —AVP (sel .)— 
WR 1 (cond ) 

Enid. (Sels. fr. The Marriage of Geraint and Ger¬ 
aint and Enid.)—WR 1 

Enid’s Song. (Fr. The Marriage of Geraint.)— 
BNL—LLC 

(Turn Fortune [, Turn thy Wheel].)—OS 2— 
PHS—VS 

Gareth. (Sel. fr. Gareth and Lynette.)—TMR 
Gate of Camelot, The. (Sel. fr. Gareth and Lynette.) 
—EPs 

Guinevere. (Cond.) —WR 1 
Guinevere. (Sel. fr. Guinevere.)—CR 
(Arthur’s Farewell— sel.) —WEP 4 
(Guinevere— br. sel.) —SAE 

(King Arthur and Queen Guinevere— abr.) — 
BS 15 

Late, Late, so Late. (Song fr. Guinevere.)—LLC 
(Foolish Virgins, The— w. br. add.) —BNL 
Passing of Arthur, The.—EHT (abr.) 

(Sel.)— LLC—VA (shorter.) 

Song of Elaine. (Fr. Lancelot and Elaine.)—LLC 
Tristram’s Song. (Fr. Guinevere.)—LLC 
Vivien. (Sel. fr. Merlin and Vivien.)—WR 1 
Vivien’s Song. (Fr. Merlin and Vivien.)—VS 
(Song: “In love, if love,” etc.)—OH 
(Song of Vivien.)—LLC 
Iena’s Song.—C: Mair. See Tecumseh. 

“If.”—Anon.—CPL 
If.—Anon.—CS 13—WR 24 
“If.”—Anon.—DLS 
If.—Anon—FTA 
If.—Anon.—NA 

(Nursery Rhymes, IV.: “If an tne world,” etc.— 
diff. vers.) —CGd 
“If.”—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
If. W: D. Howells.—AA 
If.—J.—CG 3 

If. (Our Little Ones.) —CPL 
If.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
If a Brother.—Anon.—DLF 

“If a man’s mind be thoroughly alive, he cannot be 
content with good health.”—Jos. Parker.—GG 
“If all our youth sprung from whatever nationality.”— 
Jas. W. Patterson.—DFR 
If all the Skies.—H: Van Dyke.—HBR 
If all the Voices of Men.—Horace L. Traubel.—AA 
If all the World.—Dollie Radford.—VA 
If Doughty Deeds [my Lady Please],—Rob’t Cunning- 
hame-Graham.—BNL—OB—PGT 1 
(Tell me how to Woo thee.)—FEP 
(To his Lady.)—LH 

If ever I See.—Lydia M. Child.—AD (tv. mus.) —NV 
(Birds’ Nests.)—TFS 
(I Love the Birds.)—PS 

“If flowers could always bloom at eve.” — Anon.— 
HSS 1 

If he’s Bu’sted?—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
If I but Knew.—Amy E. Leigh.—AA 
“ If I can stop one heart from breaking.” (C.) — 

Emily Dickinson. 

(Not in Vain.)—TAS—YBT 


155 




If I Desire 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


If I Desire [with Pleasant Songs].—T: Burbidge.— 
H BP—TFY—VA 

If 1 had Thought thou Couldst, have Died. — C: Wolfe. 
—FEP 

(Lines written to music.)—TIP 
(To Mary.)—BPB—OB—PGT 1 
If I Knew. (Where the Smiles are Kept.)—Anon.— 
YBT 

"If I leave all for thee, wilt thou exchange.”—Eliz. B. 
Browning.—GG—PGT 2 
(Ful[l]ness of Love.)—FTA—OH 
(Sonnets from the Portuguese.) — BNL — FEP— 
HBP—VA (XXXV.— C.) 

If I Should Die To-night. {Parody.) —Ben King.—THP 
If I Should Die To-night.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 27 
—GG—PPSr 

{At. to Arabella E. Smith.)—BNL—BS 3—HP 
If I Were a Bird.—Anon.—AD 

If I Were a Boy Again.—Edgar W. Nye.—SR 5— 
WR 15 

“If I Were a Flower.”—Clara J. Denton.—DFR—LL 
"If I Were a Rose.”—Anon.—HSS 2 
If I Were a Sunbeam.—Lucy Larcom.—GMS—LCS— 
NV 

If I Were a Voice.—C: Mackay.-—FMR—MYF 
{SI. afer.)—BLP—HSS 3—LLC 
"If I were called to point out the most alarming sins of 
to-day.”—Howard Crosby.—GG 
“If I were Dead.”—Coventry Patmore.—OB—PGT 2 
If I Were King.—W. E. Henley.—PPh 
If I Were You.—Anon.—DLS 
If I Were You.—Anon.—PS—TT 
If! If!—Anon.—YBT 
If Ifs and Ands.—Anon.—DLF 

“If it be true that any beauteous thing.”—Michael 
Angelo.—BNL 
(Sonnet.)—BIL—HBP 

“If it was not for the Drink.”—A. L. Westcombe.— 
CS 29 

If it Were True.—Anon.—DS 

"If Jove would give the leafy bowers ”—“Clodia.”— 
AD 

"If life awake and will never cease.”—Josiah G. Hol¬ 
land.—HDL 

If Men be Worlds.—J: Donne.—EPs 
If Mine I Couid but Call Thee.—Anon.—FTA 
"If no one ever marries me.”—Laurens Alma-Tadema. 
—BVC 

Tf Only I Might Write.—Anon.—FLS 
If Only thou Art True.—G: Barlow.—VA 
If Only you Were Here.—Hester A. Benedict.— FLS— 
FTA 

"If she be Made of White and Red.”—Herbert P. 
Home.—VA 

If she but Knew.—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.— FTA— 
PGT 2—VA 

“If she Knew that I am Cupid.”—D. D. P.—TL 
“If Spirits Walk.”—Sophie Jewett.—AA 
If Still They Live [.whom Touch nor Sight],—Edith 
M. Thomas. See Invert ed Torch, The. 

Tf that Were True!—Frances Brown.—HBP 
If the Heart be True.—G: MacDonald.—FLS 
“If the sinner persists in rejecting Christ, the ruin of his 
soul will be his own work.”—Austin Phelps.— 
GG 

“If the World Seems Cold to You.”—Lucy Larcom. 
See Three Old Saws. 

“If there be memory in the world to come.”—Jean 
Ingelow. See Star’s Monument, The. 

“If there should come a time, as well there may.” {All 
the Year Round.) —GG 
(Comfort.)—FTA 

“If Things Was only Sich.”—B:P. Shillaber.—CS 11 
If thou Couldst Know.—Adelaide A. Procter.—HDL 
“If thou couldst know thine own sweetness.”—Fs. T. 
Palgrave.—PnR 

"Tf thou dos„ bid thv friend farewell.”—Coventry Pat¬ 
more. —GG 
(■Parting.)—BNL—HP 

“If thou must love me, let it be for nought.” (Sonnet 
XIV —C.)—Eliz. B. Browning.—PGT 2 
(Love for Love’s Sake.)—OH 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese.) — BNL — 
FEP—HBP—OB (IV.T—YBF 
If thou Wert by mv Side [, my Love], (Lines Addressed 
to Mrs. Heber— C.) —Reginald Heber.—BNL 
—EPs {si. ahr.) —HBP—TFY 
(Lines Addressed to his Wife.)—FEP 
If thou Wert False.—Arthur L. Salmon.—FLS 
If thou Wilt Ease thine Heart (Dirge). — T: L. Bed- 
does. See Death’s Jest Book. 

“If to embody in a breathing word.” — Oliver W. 
Holmes. See Poetry. 


If ’twere Done when ’tis Done.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Macbeth. 

If we Could.—Anon.—CS 8 
If we had but Known.—Anon.—CS 6 
(Regrets.)—FLS 

If we Knew.—Anon.—CS 37—PR 
If we Knew.—Anon.—SSS 
If we Knew.—Virginia M. Haynard.—CS 33 
If we Knew [;or Blessings of To-dayl. (C.)—May R. 
Smith.—CS 3—HP—LLC—SM 
(Blessings of To-day, The.)—SSS 
“If you have gentle words and looks, my friends. 

{Sunday Magazine.) —GG 
rf you Have Seen.—T: Moore.—THP 
(Nonsense— C. )—N A 

“If you mark, my lord.”—Justin McCarthy.—GG 
If you Want a Kiss, why, Take It.—Anon.—HP 
(Concerning Kisses.)—WR 2 
If you Want to be Loved.—Clara J. Denton.—SSE 
“If vou were coming in the Fall.”—Emily Dickinson.— 
OH 

If you Were Here.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
“If you wish to win bright laurels.”—“Luceite.”— 
GG 

“If you would make men honest or pure.”—Anon.— 
FHS 

Ignorance a Crime, in a Republic.—Horace Mann. See 
following. 

Ignorance in our Country a Crime. — Horace Mann.— 
KNE—OM 

(Ignorance a Crime in a Republic— ahr.)- —BS 17— 
SR 8 

Ike after the Opera.—Anon.—CS 14 
Ike Papson’s Courtship.—T. S. Denison. See Man 
Behind, The. 

Ike Walton’s Prayer.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA—MRS 
II Fior degli Eroici Furori.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 
11 Penseroso.—J: Milton.—AE {br. set.) —BNL—BPB 
—ELP — EPs — FEP — HBP — MBL—OB — 
PGT 1—PHS—SN {hr. sel .)—WEP 2 
Iliad, The, Sets. fr. —Homer. 

Camp at Night, The. (Chapman’s tr , sel. fr. Bk. 
VIII.)—BNL—WEP 1 

(Iliad, The, Sel. fr. —Pope’s tr.) —WEP 3 
Combat between Paris and Menel us. (Mum 
ford’s tr.. sel. fr. Bk. III.)—WR 11 

(Helen at the Sca>an Gates— vtly. diff. — Bryant’;- 
tr.) —NE 

(Helen on the Rampart— shorter sels. —Chapman’- 
tr.)— WEP 1 

Defiance of Hector and Ajax. (Pope's tr. — sel. fr. 
Bk. XIII.)—OS 3 

Exploit of Hector, The. (Cowper’s tr. — sel. fr. Bk 
XII.)—LLC 

(Hector’s Exploit at the Barriers of the Grecian 
Fleet.)—SS 

(Triumph of Hector, The—Mumford’s tr.) —PR 
—WR 11 

(Victory of Hector, The—Bryant’s tr. — si. 
longer.)— SO 

Grief of Achilles for the Slaying of Patroclus, 
Menoetus’ Son. (Chapman’s tr. — sel. fr. Bk. 
XVIII.)—WEP 1 

Hector Slain by Achilles. (Cowper’s tr. — sel. fr. 
Bk. XXII.)—SS 

Hector’s Farewell to Andromache— Bryant’s tr. — 
sel. cond. fr. Bk. VI.)—WR 14 

(Parting of Hector and Andromache— shorter 
and ptly. diff.) —NE 

Hector’s Rebuke to Polydamus. (Cowper’s tr. — 
sel. fr. Bk. XII.) 

Reply of Achilles to the Envoys of Agamemnon 
Soliciting a Reconciliation. (Cowper’s tr. — 
sel. fr. Bk. IX.)—PS—SS 
Iliad, The.—Frances H. Newton.—CG 3 
Iliad, Storv of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
I’ll be a Man.—Anon.—DLS 

I’ll Never Love Thee More.—Jas. Graham, Marquis of 
Montrose. See My Dear and Only Love [, I 
Pray], 

I’ll Put it Off.—Anon.—DLS—TFS 
I’ll Take what Father Takes.—W. Hoyle. — CS 9— 
SR 2—TS 

“ I’ll tell thee everything I can.” (C.)—Lewis Carroll. 

(Ways and Means.)—NA 
I’ll Try and I Can’t.— Anon.— COS—PP—PS 
Illinois. {Acting char.) —Anon.—StD 
Illuminated Coal, The.—C: Sangster.—TCV 
Illusions.—(Flowers of Sion, II.)—W: Drummond.— 
CEL 

(“ Good that never satisfies the mind. A.”)—FEP 
(Human Frailty.)—LLC 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 


156 




TITLE INDEX 


In a Theatre 


Illusions.—Rob’t U. Johnson.—TAV 
Illustrated Story, An. (Dial.) —E. C. and I,. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Illustration, An.—Philip Krohn.—SR 2 
Illustration of a Picture.—Oliver W. Holmes.—FP 
Ilmarinen’s Wedding Feast.— (Tr. by) J: M. Crawford. 

See Kalevala, The. 

I’m a Man.—Anon.—HVD 

I’m Getting Too Big to Kiss.—G: M. Vickers.—PS 
"I’m Glad He Knows.”—Tom Brown.—WR 12 
I’m Growing Old.—J: G. Saxe.—FEP—GP 
I’m Little hut I’m Spunky.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KER 

(Speech for a Girl Five Years Old.)—KJ 
I’m not a Single Man.—T: Hood.—WR 12 
“I’m sorry that I spelt the word.”—J: G. Whittier. 
See In School-days. 

“I’m verv happy where I am.”—Dion Boucicault.— 
TIP 

I’m Very Young.—Anon.—DJS—TFS 
I’m with you Once Again.— G: P. Morris.— CS 13— 
FTR—HNS 

Imaginary Conversations, Sels. tr .—Walter S. Landor. 
Bossuet and the Duchess of Fontanges.—ESs 
Washington and Franklin.—MRS 
Imaginary Invalid, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See 
Three Men in a Boat. 

Imaginary- Sick Man. The. (Le Malade Imaginaire, 
So. XIV.)—Jean B. P. Moliere —PS 
Imagination. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Imagination.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, The. 
Imagination and Fancy.—C: C. Everett.—TMR 
Imaginative Crisis, The (Punch.) —HPE 

Imaginative Invention, An.-—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KJ 

Imaginative Sympathy with Nature.—Lord Byron. 

See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Imitation.—Anon.—CS 7—SA 

Imitation of Christ, The, Sels. jr .—Thomas it Kempis. 
" Sigh and grieve that you are vet so carnal and 
worldly.” (Bk. IV., Ch. VII., 2.)—GG 
“Think vou to escane.” (Bk. II., Ch. XII., 6.)— 
FHS3 

“Imitation of Christ w-as written by a hand that 
waited, The.” — G: Eliot. See Mill on the 
Floss, The. 

Imitation of Spenser, Sel.fr. (Morning)—J: Keats. 
—PCS (I.) 

Imitation of Wordsworth, An.—Catharine M. Fan- 
shawe.—NA 

Immensity of Creation, The.—O. M. Mitchell.—LLC 
(Infinity of the Universe, The.)—HSS 2 
Immortal. (Abr.) —Lucy Larcom.—TAS 
“Immortal amaranth, a flow-er w-hich once.”—J: 

Milton. Nee Paradise Lost. 

Immortal Flowers.—Wallace Rice.—AA 
Immortal Memories.—G: A. Sheridan.—BI.P 
Immortal Mind, The. — (In Hebrew Melodies.)—Lord 
Byron.—EPs 

(“When coldness w-raps this suffering clay”— C.) 
—FEP 

Immortal Part. The.—Jos. Addison. Nee Cato. 
Immortal Washington.—Richard C. Dillmore.—TMD 
Immortality.—Anon.—LLC 
Immortality.—Anon.—SR 13 
Immortality. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
I mmort al it y.—M at t hew A rn old.—YB F 
Immortality.—Richard IT: Dana. See Husband’s and 
Wife’s Grave, The. 

Immortality.—Arthur S. Hardy.—AA 
Immortality.—Jean B. Massillon.—CS 8 —SS 
Immortality.—Frd’k W. II. Myers.—VA 
Immortality.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
Immortality.—G. W. Russell.—VA 
Immortality.—Sarah F. Smith.—BI.P 
Immortality.—W: Wordsworth. See Ode: Intima¬ 
tions of Immortality, etc. 

Immortality of Love.—Rob't Southey. See Curse of 
Kehama, The. 

Immortality of True Patriotism.—Jas. A. Garfield. 
See Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union 
Soldiers. 

Immortals. The.—Edward Everett. See Eulogy on 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Immutabilis. Alice L. Bunner. See Vingtaine. 
Impeachment of Hastings Finished.—Edmund Burke. 

See Impeachment of Warren Hastings. 
Impeachment of Mr. Hastings. The.—Edmund Burke. 

See Impeachment of Warren Hast ings. 
Impeachment of Warren Hastings, Sels. fr. —R: B. 
Sheridan. 

Impeachment of Mr. Hastings, The. (Begum 
Speech— abr. )—MRS 


Impeachment of Warren Hastings (coutinued). 

Nature of Justice, The. (Peroration of Begum 
Speech.)—PS 

(Character of Justice— abr.) —TMD 
Impeachment of Warren Hastings, Speeches in the, 
Sels. fr. —Edmund Burke. 

Impeachment of Hastings Finished. (Fr. Speech 
of June 16, 1794.)—FTR 

(Close of Impeachment of Hastings— abr.) —FD 1 
(Peroration against Warren Hastings— si. abr.) — 
SS 

(To the House of Lords— sel.) —OS 2 
Impeachment of Mr. Hastings, The.* (Sel. fr. 

Speech of Feb. 18, 1788.)—MRS 
Impeachment of Warren Hastings. (Sel. arr. fr. 
Speeches of Feb. 16 and 18, 1788.)—CR 
(Despotism Incompatible with Right— abr.) —SS 
Impeachment of Warren Hastings. (Sels. fr. 
Speech of Feb. 18, 1788.)—KNE—OS 3—PI’S 
—PS—SS— SSD 

Oration on the Impeachment of Warren Hastings, 
Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. Speech of Feb. 18, 1788.) 
—Cll 

(Peroration of Burke’s Speech on the Impeach¬ 
ment, etc.)—SE 

Impecunious Fop, The.—Jos. Hall.—ESs 
Imperator Augustus.—Rennell Rodd.—VA 
Imperial Secret , An.—Alex. Dumas.—-NP 
Imperial Soul. The.—Langdon E. Mitchell.—TAS 
Imperious Angler, The.—Jas. W. Riley. See Session 
with Uncle Sidney, A. 

Imperishability of Great. Examples.—Edward Everet t. 

See Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson. 

Impetuous Resolve, An.—Jas. W. Riley.—RC’R 
Impetuous Samuel.—D. Streamer.—NA 
“Imph-m.”—Anon.—BS 18—CR (si. abr.) 

Implora Pace.—C: L. Hildreth.—AA 
Importance of the Agricultural Interest.—Caleb Cush¬ 
ing.—SS 

Imposture, The, Song fr. (Peace Restored.) — Jas. 
Shirley.—ELP 

Impression.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
Impressionistic (Wrinkle.) —CG 3 
Impressions of Niagira. (Sel. fr. American Notes. Ch 
XIV.)— C: Dickens.— CS 20 
(Niagara Falls— abr.) —BS 15 
Imprisoned.—-Lily A. Lefevre.—TCV 
Imprisoned Soul. The.—Walt Whitman.—OB 
Impromptu Fairy-tale, An.—Jas. W. Riley.—B.1C 
Impromptu, on Lord Holland’s Seat, at Kingsgate.— 
T: Grav.—WEP 3 

Impromptu. Upon being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant 
Party. (C.)—T: Moore 
(On being Obliged, etc.)—HPE 
(Upon being Obliged, etc.)—THP 
Improved "Enoch Arden.”—Anon.—HP 
Improviso on a Young Heir’s Coming of Age. (C.) —S: 
Johnson. 

(One and Twenty.)—OB 
In a Child’s Album.—W: Wordsworth.—GN 

(“Small service is true service fw-hile it lasts]"— si. 

diff. fr Poems.)—CS 1—HSS 2 
(To a Child, Written in her Album— C.) —BNL 
In a China-shop.—G:S. Heilman.—-AA 
In a Clear Starry Night.—G: Wither.—HBP 

(“Lord, when those gl rious lights I see ”)—BN I 
In a Copy of Omar Khayyam.—Jas. R. Lowell.—A A 
In a Day, Sel. fr. (The Deaths of Myron and Klydone. t 
—Augusta Webster.—VA 
In a Forest..—Rob’t Southey.—AD 
In a Garden.—Louise C. Moulton.—WR 9 
Tn a Garden.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—PoR 
In a Garden by Moonlight .—T: L. B-ddoes. See T<>r 
rismond. 

Tn a Garret.—Eliz. A. Allen.—AA 
In a Gondola.—Rob’t, Browning.—VA 

In a Gondola. (Song fr. In a Gondola.)—OB 
(Moth’s Kiss First, The.)—BNL—OH 
(Song.)—TFY 

In a Gondola. (SI. diff. vers. fr. Poems.)—Joaquin 
Miller.— BTL 

In a Graveyard.—Anon.—HP 
In a Horse Car.—Will H. Semple.—CS 35 
In a Hundred Years.—Anon.—FMR 
"In a Just Cause.” (Sel. fr. Hereditary Policy of 
America.)—L: Kossuth.—SS 
In a Lecture-room.—Arthur H. Clough.—VA 
In a London Square.—Arthur H. Clough.—PGT 2 
“In a railroad train in Scotland was an old lady wit h a 
large hand-satchel.”—Anon.—WR 22 
In a September Night.—F. W. Home.—VA 
In a Strange Land.—Jas. T. Fields.—GP 
In a Theatre.—Abraham G. Werner.—SO 

157 





In a Year 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


In a Year.—Rob’t Browning.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
In Absence.—Archibald Lampman.—TFY 
In Absence. (IntAbsence, IV.)—Sidney Lanier.—TAS 
In Absence.—J: B. Tabb.—ASL—YBF 
In Action.—Anon.—PAPtn 
In Aesop’s Vein —W: IT. Mitchell.—AWH 
“In after Days.”—Austin Dobson.—AVP—OB—VA 
In alter Time. (Poems and Epigrams, CXXXII.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—VA 

“In all our decisions and actions, it would be well for 
us.” ( Br. sel. fr. Plato; or, The Philosopher, 
in Representative Men.)—Ralph W. Emerson. 
—GG 

In Amity of Soul.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
In an Atelier.—T: B. Aldrich.—CR (d. diff. fr. Poems.) 
—HBR—MRS 

In an Unknown Tongue.—J: W. Chadwick.—OH 
In Answer.—Rose H. Thorpe.—CRR—CS 22 
In Answer to Mr. Pope.—Anne Finch, Lady Winchil- 
sea.—WEP 3 

In Answer to One who Writ a Libel against the Countess 
of Carlisle. (C.) —Edmund Waller. 

(To One who Wrote against a Fair Lady.)— 
WEP 2 

In Apia Bay.—C: G. D. Roberts.—BAB 
“In Apprehension, so Like a God,”—Mary Morgan.— 
TCV 

In April.—Eliz. A. Allen. See Spring at the Capital. 
In April.—Emily G. Arnold.—NV—YBT 
In April.—Helen H. Jackson.—POS 
In April.—Eben E. Rexford.—POS 
In August.—W: D. Howells.—ASL—GN—POS 
In Bachelor’s Hall.—Clarence W. Peabody.—CG 1 
In Bay Chaleur. — Hezekiah Butterworth. — HP — 
WR2 (air.) 

In Behalf of Starving Ireland.—S. S. Prentiss. See 
Relief for Starving Ireland. 

In Blossom Time.—Ina D. Coolbrith.—GMS—TAS 
In Cap and Gown.—Anon.—CG 1 
In Chartres Cathedral.—Rennell Rodd.—HBP 
In Church—during the Litany.—Anon.—BS 15 
In Clonmel Parish Churchyard.—Sarah M. B. Piatt. 
—AA 

In dat Great Gittin’-up Momin’.—Anon.—AA 
In Days Like These.—T. H. Stacy.—PAPm 
In de Mornin’—Eliz. Y. Case.—BS 19 
In Death.—Mary E. Bradley.—AA 
In Defense of Aaron Burr.—Edmund Randolph.—EAO 
In Defence of the British Soldiers.—Josiah Quincy, Jr. 
—EAO 

In Defence of the Christian Sunday.—Alex. P. Doyle. 
—SO 

In Defence of Universal Suffrage, May 20, 1850.—Vic¬ 
tor Hugo.—PS 

In der Schweed Long Ago.—"Oofty Gooft.”—DCR— 
DRR 

In Disgrace.— (Tableau.) —Anon.—TCP 
In Doubt—B. A.—CG 3 

In Earliest Spring. (C.) —W: D. Howells.—AA 
(Earliest Spring.)—OB 

“In Eastern lands they talk in flowers.” (Br. sel. fr. 
The Language of Flowers.)—Jas. G. Percival. 
—AD 

In Ethics.—E. H. W.—CG 3 

“In Excelsis Gloria.”—Anon.—OS 2 

In Exile.—Andrew Marvell.—LH 

(Bermudas, The.)—GN—OB—WEP 2 
(Emigrants in [the] Bermudas, The.)—FEP—HBP 
(Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda.)—BNL—BPB 
—EPs—BC.T 1 

In Explanation.—Walter Learned.—AA 
(Explanation, An.)—HP 
(What Else Could he Do?)—BS 21 
In Extremis.—Alice Brown.—TAS 
In Fairy Land.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
In Favor of a State Law against Dueling.—J: Ran¬ 
dolph.—PS (si. abr.)— SS 
In Favor of Tobacco.—S: Rowlands.—PPh 
In February.—J: A. Symonds.—PoR—POS 
In Fervent Praise of Picnics.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
In Forest Depths.—R: H. Horne. See Orion: An Epic 
Poem. 

In Galilee.—Mary F. Butts.—AA 
In Galilee.—Marg. E. Sangster.—TAS 
In God’s Acre.—Theodore Tilton.—TAS 
In Green Old Gardens.—Mary M. Lamb, Lady Currie. 
—VA 

In Hades.—Anna C. Brackett.—A A 
In Harbor.—Paul H. Hayne.—AA 
In Heaven I’ll Rock thee to Sleep.—Anon.—CS 11 
In his Own Country.—Chas. K. Field.—CG 2 
In his Way a Hero. (Fr. Betties.)—Edwin Pugh .—'■ 
WR 19 


In Honor of the City of London.—W: Dunbar.—OB 
In Hood of Blue.—Anon.—CG 1 

In Imagine Pertransit Homo. (A Book of Airs, fourth 
song.) —T: Campion.—PGT 1 
(Devotion)—OB (1st poem.) 

(Shadow. The.)—ELP 
In Immemoriam.—Cuthbert Bede.—NA 
In Imminent Peril.—B. L. C. Griffith.—MN 
In Jamaica.—J. P. Denison.—CG 1 
In June.—J: W. Chadwick.—HDL—TAS 
In June.—Irene E. Morton.—TCV 
In June.—Nora Perry.—SN—TAV 
In Junior Year.—W: G. Barney.—CG 1 
In Lacrimas.—Anon.—PGT 1 
(I Saw my Lady Weep.)—ELP 
(My Lady’s Tears.)—OB 
In Laleham Churchyard.—W: Watson.—AVP 
In Laudem Amoris.—Anon.—ELP 
(Devotion.)—OB 
(Omnia Vincit.)—PGT 1 

In Leinster. (Two Irish Peasant Songs, I.— C.) — 
Louise I. Guiney.—AA 
(Song: in Leinster.)—ASL 
“In Lighter Vein.”—Eliz. K. Adams.—CG 1 
In Littles.—W: C. Gannett.—TAS 
In Louisiana.—J. W. De Forest —AWB 
In Louisiana.—Albert B. Paine.—AA 
In Love with his Wife. (Play.) —Clara S. Clarke.— 
NDP 

(Merely Players.)—VSG—WR 13 
In Love’s Eternity. (Abr.) —Arthur O’Shaughnessy. 
—PGT 2 

In Love’s Own Time.—Michael Angelo.—FTA—OH 
In Maiden Meditation.—W. C. Nichols.—CG 2 
In Mamma’s Day.—-Curley.—TL 
In Manila Bay.—Chas. Wadsworth, Jr.—PRR 
In March.—W: Wordsworth.—PC 
(After Rain.)—-CEL 

(March.) -BFV—HBP -OS 1 —PHS-PoR 
(Written iu March— C.) —AE—CGd—I.C 
In Matab^je Land.—S: M. Bavlis.— TCV 
In May.— Edwin M. Stern.—SR 12—WR 22 
In May.—Rob’t K. Weeks.—SN 

In Medio Tutissimus Ibis.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
In Memoriam. (C .)—Edwin Arnold. 

Lord Raglan.)—GP 
Raglan.)—EDY—VA 
In Memoriam.—Craven L. Betts.—TCV 
“In Memoriam.”—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
In Memoriam.—Mary Lamb.—PGT 1 
(Child. A.) -OB 

(Parental Recollections.)—WEP 4 
In Memoriam.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—PGT 2 
In Memoriam.—G: D. Prentice.—CS 9 
In Memoriam, Sets, fr.— Alfred Tennyson. 

All is Well. (Sts. 127, 54— sets.) —GP 
April. (115)—YBF 
(Spring.)—SN 

(Stanzas from “In Memoriam.”)—PHS 
April Days. (83)—SN 
Arthur Henry Hallam. (107)—EDY 
Autumn. (11)—SN 

(Landscape— br. sel.) —EPs 
(Peace of Sorrow', The.)—BNL 
Bells of Yule. (28)—PEO 
(Christmas— abr. )—POS 
Birth of Christ, The. (28, 30— sets.) —OS 3 
Christmas. (106)—EPs—HBP 
(Christmas Bells.)—OS 3 

(New- Year. The.)—FTR—PHS—POS—WCLG 2 
(New Year's Eve.)—EDY 
(SI. abr.) —BNL—YBF 

(Old Year and the New— abr.) —BS 1 —CSS— 
PPSr 

(Ring out . Wild Bells.)—CR—CS 3—FP—HSS 2 
—LLC—PSR—SE—SM—SO 
Contemplate all this Work. (118)—HBP—YBF 
Dead Friend, The. ( 22 , 23, 25, 85, 118, 123— sels.) 
—BNL 

Dead in a Foreign Land. (9)—BNL 
Death in Life’s Prime. (78)—BNL 
Dost thou Look Back? (64)—OS 3 
Evening. (84)—HBP 
Grief Unspeakable. (5)—BNL 
In Memoriam. (I-ntrod.) —LLC 

(Strong Son of God, Immortal Love.)—BNL— 
HDL 

In Memoriam, Sels. fr. —AVP (19, 24, 33, 67, 83, 
101)—FEP (1, 32, 54, 78, 106)—OB (9, 10, 11, 
15, 17. 23, 44, 55, 56, 101, 115, 126)—WEP 4 
(19, 35, 54, 109, 123.) 

Mary. (32)—HBP 

My Love has Talked. (97)—HBP 


158 




TITLE INDEX 


In the Graveyard 


In Memoriam ( continued ). 

“My own dim life should teach me this.” (34— 
sel.) HDL 

O Days and Hours. (67)—BIL 
“O [mr. Oh] yet we trust [that somehow good”]. 
(54.)—BNL—GG (abr.)— HBP—HDL—OS 3 
—PYO—YBF 

Old Home, The. (102)—FP 

“One writes that other friends remain.” (6— sel.) 
—HDL 

(In Memoriam, Sel. fr.) —PYO (si. abr.) 

Personal Resurrection. (47)—BNL 
Poet’s Tribute, The. (77)—BNL 
Separation. 117— abr.) —GP 
Spiritual Communions. (94)—GP 
Spiritual Companionship. (94, 51)—BNL 
Spring. (83, 115)—BNL—HBP 
Strife, The. (55)—HBP—SE—YBF 
“That which we dare invoke to bless.” (124)—HDL 
Timeand Eternity. (43)—BNL 
Wedd ing-day, The. ( Abr. fr song fol. 131.)—OH 
“With trembling fingers did we weave.” (30)— 
HDL 

In Memoriam — A. Lincoln. — Mrs. Emily J. Bugbee. 
—HNS 

In Memoriam—Alfred, Lord Tennyson.—T. H. War¬ 
ren.—AVP 

In Memoriam—J. O.—A. E. Watrous.—EDY 
In Memoriam: Nelson; Pitt; Fox.—Walter Scott. See 
Marmion. 

In Memoriam—Prince Leopold.—IT. Halloran.—EDY 
In Memory of Barry Cornwall.—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—EDY 

In Memory of Charles Dickens.—Sue M. Remak.— 
CS 4 

In Memory of General Grant.—H: Abbey —AA 
In Memory of John Lothrop Motley.—W: C. Bryant. 
—AA 

In Memory of Lewis Carroll. (Punch.) —EDY 
In Memory of Lincoln.—J: N. Baldwin.—WR 26 
In Memory of the Pilgrims. — Grenville Mellen — 
WR 10 

In Memory of Walter Savage Landor.—Algernon C. 

Swinburne.—EDY—VA 
In Mexico.—Evaleen Stein.—AA 
In Mid-ocean.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
In Midsummer.—R: K. Munkittrick.—POS 
In Mother’s Room.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
"In multitudes of cases, perhaps the greater part of 
them.”—Morgan Dix.—GG 
In my Heart.—J: Reade.—TCV 
In Nevada.—C: G. Leland.—FEP 
In Nonsense Land.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
In November.—Anon.—WR 4 
In November.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
In November.—Susan K. Phillips.—POS 
In November.—Duncan C. Scott.—VA 
In Obitum M. S. X°. Maij. 1614.—W: Browne.—OB 
(Epitaph.)—ELP 

In Olden Style.—W. F. Barron.—CG 3 
In our Boat.—Dinah M. M. Craik.—GP 
In Pace.—Arthur R. Ropes.—HBP—VA 
In Paradise.—Arlo Bates.—A A 
In Paradise.—Harriet McE. Kimball.—HDL 
In Patience.—Christina G. Rossetti.—HDL 
In Perpetuum. (Wrinkle.) —CG 3 
Tn Pitt i.—Louise de la RamA—WR 12 
In Port.—Rob’t L. Stevenson. See North-west Pas¬ 
sage. 

In Praise of Angling.—Sir H: Wotton.—BNL 

(Description of the Country’s Recreations, A.)— 
EP 

(Verses in Praise of Angling.)—FEP—HBP 
In Praise of Daphne.—J: Lyly. See Midas. 

In Praise of Gilbert White.—W: J. Courthope. See 
Paradise of Birds, The. 

In Praise of his Mistress.— (Abr.) —T: Carew.—ES — 
WEP 2 

In Praise of Lessius, his Rule of Health. (C.) —R: 
Crashaw. 

(Cheap Physician, The.)—BNL 
(Temperance; or, The Cheap Physician.)—HBP 
In Praise of Trees.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

In Praise of Wine.—Anon.—HP 

In Prison.—Sir Roger L’Est range —BNL (s el.) 

(Loyalty Confined.)—FEP 
In Rama.—G. A. Townsend.—AA 

“In regal quiet deep.” (Br. sel. fr. Song for the Night 
of Christ’s Resurrection.)—Jean Ingelow— 
FHS 

In Remembrance of the Hon. Edward Ernest Villiers. 
H: Taylor.—HBP 


In Reply to Mr. Grenville.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 
—SS 

In Reply to those who Denied the National Assembly 
the Legitimate Powers of a National Conven¬ 
tion.—Honors de Mirabeau.—SS 
In Reverie.—Harriet McE. Kimball.—FP—TAV 
In Rotten Row.—W: E. Henley.—PPh 
In San Lorenzo.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—CEL 
In Santa Claus Land.—Clara J. Denton.—HE 
In Santa Claus Land.—Ada S. Shelton.—PP—YPS 
In Satan’s Council-chamber.—Frances E. Willard.— 
WR 18 

In School-days.—J: G. Whittier.—AA—CS 6 —FEP— 
FTR—GMS—SIt 1—TMD—WCL—WCLI 2 
(Sel.—w. tabs.) —TCP 

(“I’m sorry that I spelt the word”— br. sel.) — FTA 
(“Within the master’s desk is seen”— br. sel.) — 
AE 

In September. (Sunday Afternoon.) —NV 
In Shadow.—Arlo Bates.—TAS 
In Sleep.—R: Burton.—AA 
In Snow-time.—Anon.—HP 
In Solitude.—Clinton Scollard.—TAV 
In Song Time, Sel. fr. (Voice—Pt. II.)—Harriet P. 
Spofford.—AA 

In Sorrow.—T: Hastings.—AA—FEP 
“In spite of censorship, in spite of the Index.”—Victor 
_ Hugo.—GG 

In Spring.— (Princeton Tiger.) —CG 3 
In State.—Forceythe Willson.—BNL—EPs— PG 
In Sturmes Not.—Frida Schanz.—WR 19 
In Sugar Time.—Marg. S. Burke.—WR 20 
In Summer-time.—T: S. Collier.—POS 
In Swanage Bay. (SI. abr. and si. diff. fr. Poems.)— 
Dinah M. Craik.—BS 19—WR 1 
In Terror of Death.—Pedro de Alargon.—WR 7 
In Tesla’s Laboratory.—Rob’t U. Johnson.—AA 
In Thanksgiving.—Kathe. E. Conway.—TAS 
“In that hour, which of all the twenty-four.” (Br. 

sel. fr. The Shadow and Substance of the Sab¬ 
bath.)—Frd’k W. Robertson.—GG 
In the Air.—Lucy Larcom.—BIL 

In the Album of Lucy Barton.—Chas. Lamb.—LBB 
—MBB 

In the Bam.—Anon.—WR 14 

(Grandfather’s Barn.)—PP—PS—YPS 
In the Beginning.—Harriet Monroe.—AA 
In the Black Forest.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
In the Bottom Drawer.—Anon.—CS 11—NPS—YP 
In the Breaking of the Day.—Francis L. Mace.—HS 
In the Catacombs.— Harlan H. Ballard.— CS 23— 
THP (abr.) 

In the Cathedral Close.—E: Dowden.—VSG 
In the Children’s Hospital.—Alfred Tennyson.—BS 15 
—HBR—PGT 2—WR 16 
In the Chimney Corner.—Chas. B. Lewis.—CS 20 
In the Choir.—Roy F. Greene.—TL 
In the Churchyard.—C: Lamb. See Rosamund Gray. 
In the Closet.—Laura E. Richards.—COS—PP 
In the Country.—J: Keats.—POS 
(Sonnet— C .)—FEP 

("To one who has been long in city pent.”)—PGT 1 
In the Cross of Christ I Glory.—J: Bowring.—SP E 
In the Crucible.—Anon.—HDL 
In the Dark.—G: Arnold.—TAS 
In the Dark.—Frances L. Bushnell.—AA 
Tn the Dark.—Mary T. Higginson.—AA 
In the Dime Museum. (Arkansaw Traveller.) — 
CS 30 (si. abr.) 

(Boy in a [or the] Dime Museum, A— si. abr.) — 
DCR—WR 20 

(Little Johnny Visits the Dime Museum.)—SR 7 
( Versions vary si.) 

In the Down-hill of Life.—J: Collins.—FEP 
(To-morrow.)—PGT 1—YBF 
In the Dumps.—Anon.—NA 

In the Early Spring Time. (TP.mtm'c.)—Anon.— 
AD 

In the Elevator.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 33 

Tn the Evening.—Hamilton AYdA—FTA 

In the Fight.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, The. 

In the Firelight.—Eugene Field. — AA — EF — HP 
—WTD 

In the Garden. (Br. sel.) —Rob’t Buchanan.—BIL 
In the Garret. (Knickerbocker.) —BS 8 
“In the Garret are Our Boys.”—Anon.—CS 16 
In the Gloaming.—Jas. C. Bayles.—NA 
In the Gloaming.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
In the Golden Birch.—E. G. Roberts.—VA 
In the Golden Morning of the World.—T: Westwood. 
—VA 

In the Grass.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 

In the Graveyard.—Macdonald Clarke.—PYO 


159 




In the Greenwood AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


In the Greenwood. — W: Shakespeare.— See As You 
Like It. 

In the Hall.—Anon.—CS 36—WR 14 
In the Hammock. ( London Society.) —HP 
In the Harbor.—G: R. Sims.—CS 21 
In the Haunts of Bass and Bream.—Maurice Thomp¬ 
son.—SN 

In the Heart.—G: Cooper.—YBT 

In the Highlands. (Songs of Travel and Other Verses, 
XVI.)—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—OB 
In the Hospital.—Mary W. Howland.—ASL—HDL— 
PAPm 

(Requiescam.)—TAS 
(Rest.)—BNL—GP—OS 2—YBF 
In the Hospital.—Algernon Tas»in.—WIt 14 
In the Hospital Ward.—Anon.—WR 2 
In the Jacquerie.—Simcox.—AVP 
In the King’s Garden.—Abbie F. Brown.—TMR 
In the Land where we Were Dreaming.—Dinah B. 
Lucas.—EDY 

In the Library.—Anne C. L. Botta.—MBB 
(Thoughts in a Library.)—FEP 
In the Library.—Clinton Scollard.—LBB—MBB 
In the Lilac-bush.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
In the Looking-glass.—Priscilla Leonard.—CS 36 
“In the Mammoth Cave,” etc.—J. B. Bittinger.—GG 
In the Meadow.—Frank I). Sherman.—LFL—NV 
In the Mile End Road.—Amy Levy.—VA 
In the Mining Town.—Rose H. Thorpe.—FS 
In the Mist.—Sarah Woolsey.—BNL—GP 
In the Month when Sings the Cuckoo.—Alfred Austin. 
—VSG 

In the Morning.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
In the Morning.—C. L. Hill.—YBT 
In the Morning.—E. C. and L. J. Rook—YFE 
In the Name of God, Amen.—W: C. P. Breckenridge. 
—FD 2 

In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful. 

See Koran, The. 

In the Night.—Anon.—NA 

In the Nursery. ( Br. set. fr. Autobiographic Sketches, 
Ch. I.)—T: De Quincey.—LLC 
In the Nursery.—Jean Ingelow.—WR 16 
In the 01’ Tobacker Patch.—S. Q. Lapius.—PPh 
In the Old Churchyard at Fredericksburg.—F. W. Lor- 
ing.—AA 

In the Old Country Churchyard.—Nathan H. Dole.— 
TAS 

In the “Old South.” (C.) —J: G. Whittier.—AA 
(In the Old South Church )—CS 17 
In the Old South Church.—J: G. Whittier. See fore¬ 
going. 

In the Orchard.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
In the Other World.—Harriet B. Stowe.—CS 3 

(Other World. The—C.)—AA—BNI_FEP—GP— 

TAS 

In the Pit. (A hr. and ad. fr. That Lass o’ Lowrie’s, 
Ch. XXXV.)—Frances H. Burnett.—WR 13 
In the Record Room—Surrogate’s Office.—G: A. Baker, 
Jr.—PLD 

In the Rock.—Julia E. Sargent.—YBT 
In the Round Tower at Jhansi.—Christina G. Rossetti. 
—EDY 

In the Royal Academy.—Austin Dobson.—WR 16 
In the Same Line.—Anon.—CS 29 
In the San Joaquin.—Norman Hutchinson.—CG 2 
In the Sea.—Hiram Rich.—GP 

In the Season. (“It is the season now to go.”— C.) — 
Rob’t L. Stevenson.—VA 
(Difference. The.)—OH 

In the Signal Box; a Station Master's Story.—G: R. 
Sims.—BS 13—PR (si. abr.) 

(Station Master’s Story, The.);—CS 24 

“In the smoke of my dear cigarito.” ("-.”)— 

Camilla K. von K.—HP 
In the Spring.—Eva W. McGlasson.—WR 15 
In the States.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—VA 
In the Still, Star-lit Night.—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 
In the Street of By-and-by.—Mrs. Abdy.—CS 17 
(Street of By-and-bve, The.)—PPSr 
In the Swing.—Eudora S. Bumstead.—AD—NV 
In the Tenth Circle. (Dartmouth.Literary Monthly.) — 
CG 3 

In the Time of Strife.—Frank L. Stanton.—PAPm 
In the Train. (Sunday at Hampstead, X.)—Jas. 
Thomson. —OB 

“In the transformat ion of opinion.”—Arthur P. Stanley. 
—GG 

In the Tree-top.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS—PHS 
In the Tunnel.—Anon.—CS 25 
In the Tunnel. ( C.) —Fs. Bret Harte.—BAB 
(Flynn of Virginia.)—PYO 
In the Twilight.—Anon.—BS 26 


In the Twilight.—G: Cotterell.—VA 
In the Twilight.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AA—ASL 
In the Valley of Cauteretz.—Alfred Tennyson.—PGT2 
“In the whole realm of nature there is never found an 
unanswerable instinct.”—Alex. Clark.—GG 
In the Wilderness, Sel. fr. (Mountain Tragedy, A— fr. 

A-Huntingof the Deer.)—C:D.Warner.—WR 5 
In the Wood.—Herbert E. Clarke.—VA 
In the Woods.—Anon.—YBT 
In the Woods.—J: M’Pherson.—TCV 
In the Year that’s Come and Gone.—W: E. Henley.— 
FTA—OH 

“In thee I fondly' hoped to clasp.” (Br sel. fr. To 
D—.)—Lord Byron.—BNL 
In Three Days.—Rob’t Browning.—OH 
In Time of Grief.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
In Time of Peace.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
In Time of Pestilence.—T: Nashe.-—FEP—OB 
(Death’s Summons.)—ELP 
In Time’s Swing.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
In Trouble.—Josephine Pollard.—WR 15 
In Tuscany.—Eric Mackay.—VA 
In Twenty Years.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
In Twos.—W: C. Gannett.—BIL—OH—TAS 
In Unison.—G: McKnight.—TAS 
In Vain.—Rose T. Cooke.—AA 

“ In vain you tell your parting lover.”— Matthew 
Prior.—FEP 

In Vanity Fair.—Florence Tyle^.—CS 27 
In Venice; Dipsvchus Speaks —Arthur H. Clough. See 
Dipsychus. 

In Want of a Servant.—"Clara Augusta.”;—CS 25—;SD 
In Westminster Abbey. (On the Tombs in Westmins¬ 
ter—C.)—Francis Beaumont.—LH 
(Lines on the Tombs in Westminster.)—ELP— 
WEP 2 

(On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey.)—FEP— 
OB—PGT 1—YBF 

In Wreaths of Smoke.—Frank N. Holman.—PPh 

In Youth.—Evaleen Stein.—AA 

In Youth is Pleasure.—Rob’t Wever.-—OB 

“Inasmuch.”—Wallace Bruce.—CD—PFP—WR 24 

Inasmuch.—S. V. R. Ford.—CS 31 

Inaugural Address.—Anon.—CP 

Inaugural Address, Sels. fr. —Jas. A. Garfield. 

“Even from this brief review,” etc. (Br. sel.) —GG 
Inaugural Address—SSD 

Inaugural Address.—T: Jefferson. See Inauguration 
Address. 

Inaugural Address.—Abraham Lincoln. See First, In¬ 
augural Address and Second Inaugural Address. 
Inaugural Address, Mar. 4, 1901, Sel. fr. (National 
Progress.)—W: McKinley.—PEO 
Inauguration Address, March 4, 1801. (C.) —T: Jef¬ 

ferson. 

(First Inaugural Address.)—EAO 
(Inaugural Address— sel.) —OS 3 
(Party Spirit and Good Government— sel.) —SSD 
(Republic the Strongest Government, A— abr.) 
—SS 

Inauguration of Franklin Statue, Boston.—Rob’t C. 
Winthrop. See following. 

Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin, Sels. fr. —Rob’t 
C. Winthrop. 

Franklin as a Christian.—FD 2 
Franklin as a Philanthropist —FD 2 
Franklin as a Philosopher.—FD2 
Franklin as a Printer.—P D 2 
Inauguration of Franklin Statue, Boston.—FD 2 
Inborn Royalty.—W: Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 
Incantation.—J: Dryden. See (Edipus. 

Incantation.—J: Milton. See Comus. 

Incantation from Manfred.—Lord Byron. See Man¬ 
fred. 

Incarnation. The.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 
Incentives to Duty. (Sel. fr. The Scholar, the Jurist, 
the Artist, the Philanthropist.)—Chas. Sum¬ 
ner.—CR 

(Age of Progress— sel.) —LLC 
Inchcape Rock, The.—Rob’t Southey.—BNL—CGd— 
CS 20 —FEP—FMR—FP—LLC—MR—PC— 
PHS—VSG 

(SI. abr.) —GN—HBP—LC—OS 2 
Incident, An.—Agnes MacDonell.—WR 24 
(Only a Soldier.)—WR 8 

Incident at Ratisbon, An.-—Rob’t Browninc. See In¬ 
cident of the French Camp. An. 

Incident (Characteristic of a Favourite Dog).— 
W: Wordsworth.—CGd 

Incident in a Railroad Car, An.—Jas. R Lowell.—LLC 
—TAV 

(God’s Love— br. sel.) —PS 

(“It may be glorious to write”— br. sel.) —GG—HP 


160 





TITLE INDEX 


Infernal 


Incident in the Life of Wendell Phillips, An.—Theo¬ 
dore Weld.—SC 

Incident of ’64, An.—Anon.—WR 14 
Incident of the French Camp. An.— (C.) —Rob’t Brown¬ 
ing. — AVP — BNL — BS 24 — CS 15 — EA 
— EDY — FEP — GN — HB — HBP — LC 
—PHS—SC—VA—VSG—WEP 4 
(Boy of Ratisbon, The.)—BLP 
(Incident at Ratisbon, An.)—OS 2 
(Rat isbon.)—MR—TM D 

Incident of the Johnstown Flood, An.—Monnie Moore. 
—DR 

Incident of the War, An.—Harry W. Kimball.—NPS 
—YP 

Incident of War, An.—Maurice Thompson.—BAB 
Incidents in the Life of my Uncle Arly.—E: Lear.—NA 
Incipit Vita Nova.—W: M. Payne.—AA 
Inclusiveness. (The House of Life, Sonnet LXIII.) 

—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 
Incognita of Raphael.—W: A. Butler.—AA 
Incompatibility: A Charade.—Ella H. Clement.— 
BS 14—TCP 

Incomplete Revelation, An.—Richard A. Jackson— 
CS 23—PR—YA 

Incompleteness.—Octave Feuillet.—FLS 
Incompleteness.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FP 
Inconsistent Expectations.—Anna L. Barbauld.—FAS 
Inconsistent Sex, The.—J: L. Heaton.—TAV 
Inconsolable Husband, The.—Anon.—WR 2 
Inconstancy. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Inconstancy.—Fs. C: McDonald.—CG 2 
Inconstancy.—W: Shakespeare. See Much Ado 
about Nothing. 

Inconstancy and Jealousy. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Inconstanev of Man. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Inconstancy of Woman. (Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Inconstant.—Anon.—CS 6 

“Increasing exactions of the church, The.”—Lawrence 
M. Colfelt.—GG 

Incremation, The. (Fr. Balder Dead.)—Matthew Ar¬ 
nold.—VA 

Indecision.—Anon.—HP—WR 4 
Indemberance.—Carl Pretzel.—CS 9 
Independence. (Fr. Ode to Independence.)—Tobias 
G: Smollett.—GP 

Independence.—Dan’l Webster. See Adams and Jeff¬ 
erson. 

Independence Bell. [July 4th, 1776.]—Anon.—CS 2— 
FR—PR—SA 

(SI. abr .)—BS 1—FTR—PRR —SM — TMD — 
WCLI 2 


Indian Hunter. The.—H: W. Longfellow.—WR 10 
Indian Huntresses; Bow and Arrow Drill.—Anon.— 
WDM 


Indian Love-song.—Robert . Earl of Lytton.—VA 
Indian M«id’s Lament, The.—J: E. Logan.—TCV 
(Blood-red Ring Hung Round the Moon, A.) 
VA 


Indian Names.—Lvdia H. Sigourney.—FEP (si. abr.) 
—LLC—WR 10 

Indian Raid, An.—G- C. Graham.—GS 
Indian Revelry.—Bartholemew Dowling.—FEP 
(Our Last Toast.)—HP 
(Revel, The.)—VA 
(Revelrv of the Dying.!■—BNL 
(Song of the Dying.)—OS 5—MR 
Indian Serenade, The.—Percy B. Shelley. — OB — 
PGT 1—PYO—YBF 


(I Arise from Dreams of Thee.)—GP 
(Lines to an Indian Air.)—BNL—FEP—FTA— 
HBP 


(Serenade, The.)—FP 
Indian Song, An.—W: B. Yeats.—VA 
Indian Song of Songs, Sel. fr. (Song of Krishna. A— fr. 

Sarga the First.)—Sir Edwin Arnold.—GP 
Indian Story, An. (C.)—W: C. Bryant. 

(Ret ribution.)—VSG 
Indian Summer.—Anon.—BNL 

Indian Summer. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Indian Summer, The.—J: H. Bryant.—POS 
Indian Summer.—Eudora S. Bumstead.—POS 
Indian Summer.—C. H. Collester.—CG 3 
Indian Summer.—Emily Dickinson.—ASL 
Indian Summer. J. P. Irvine.—SN 
Indian Summer.—Richard R. Kirk.—CG 3 
Indian Summer.—Alex. McLachlan.—TCV 
Indjan Summer.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 
Indian Summer.—J: G. Whittier. See Eve of Election, 
The. 

Indian Warrior’s Last Song, The.—J. H. Wert.— 
WR 10 

Indianapolis Speech,Sept. 21,1876.—Rob’t G. Ingersoll 
See Speech at Indianapolis, etc. 

Indians.—C: Sprague. See Centennial Ode. 

Indians, The.—Jos. Story.—CS 5—NPS—WR 10— 
YP 


(American Indians, The— abr .)—FAS 
Indian’s Prophecy, The. (Br. sel. fr. An Indian at the 
Burial Place of his Fathers.)—W: C. Bryant.— 
AD 


Indian’s Welcome to the Pilgrim Fathers, The.—Lydia 
H. Sigourney.—A A 
Indifference.—Anon.—NA 

Indifference (Euphrosvne— C .)—Matthew Arnold— 
HBP 


(Independence Bell, Philadelphia— si. abr.) —SR 8 
Independence Bell, Philadelphia.—Anon. See jore- 
going. 

Independence Day.—Jas. G. Blaine.—BLP—DFR 
Independence Day.—L. Parmely.—CS 12 —PRR — 
SR 8 

Independence Day.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—HE 
Independence Day Address.—Anon.—CP 
Independence Day, 1776.—Anon.—PRR 
Independence Day. 1798.—Royall Tyler.—HS 
Independence of Greece.—H: Clay. See On Recog¬ 
nizing the Independence of Greece. 
Independent Charact er.—A non.—CP 
Independent Spirit of the Puritans, The.—H: C. Lodge. 
—MRS 


Indignant Polly Wog.—Marg. Eytinge.—WR 2 
Indignant Scholar. An.—Anon.—DST 
Indignant Woman’s Raid on a Gambler, An.—Anon. 
—WR 19 

Indignation of a High-minded Spaniard. (Sel.) —W: 
Wordsworth.—FTR 

Indirection. (C.) —Richard Realf.—AA—BS 18 (si. 
abr.)— CS 18—GP 

("Fair are the flowers and the children,” etc.)—GG 
Individual Purity the Hope of the State.—C: Sprague. 
—BLP 

(Stability of our Government, The.)—KNE—PFP 
Individualism in Society.—Milford H. Lyons.—SR 9 
Individuality of Conscience in the Voter.—Frances E. 
Willard.—WR 18 


India.—Florence E. Coates.—AA 
Indian, The. (Sel. fr. The Battle of Bloody Brook.)— 
Edward Everett.—OS 3 

(Indian Chief to the White Settler, The.)—BS 3— 
CS 4 

(Indian Chieftain, The— ahr.) —LLC 
(Plea of the Pocomtuo Chief— abr.) —BLP 
(Supposed Speech of a Chief of the Pocomtuc In¬ 
dians— abr.) —PS—SS 

Indian at the Burial-place of his Fathers, An, Br. sel. 
fr. (Indian’s Prophesv, The.)—W: C. Bryant. 
—AD 

Indian Attack. The.—.T: Brownjohn —T3S 26 
Indian Brave. The.—Fs S. Smith.--PP—YFR 
Indian Burying-ground. The. -Philip Freneau.--AA 
Indian Chief 'o the White Settler. The. Edward 
Everett. See Indian, The. 

Indian Chieftain, The.—Anon.—CS 16 
Indian Chieftain, The.—Edward Everett. See Indian, 
The. 

Indian Death-song.—Anne Hunter.—HBP 
Indian Eloquence.—Anon.—SR 12 
Indian Emoeror, The, Sel. fr. (Song: “Ah, fading 
joy!”) J. Dryden.— ELP 


Inducements to Earnestness in Religion.—J: A. James. 

_gg 

Induction, The. Sel. fr. —T: Sackville.—WEP 1 
Industry.—Anon.—KNE 

Industry and Eloquence.—W: H. Wirt.—HNS—KNE 
Industry’ Necessary to the Attainment of Eloquence. 
—H: W T are.—BS 12 

Indwelling God, The.—Frd’k L. Hosmer.—TAS 
Inevitable, The.—Sarah K. Bolton.—AA—CS 32— 
HDL 

Inevitable Trial, The, Sel. fr. (War for the Union, The.) 

—Oliver W T . Holmes,—SSD 
Inexorable. (Madrigal— C.) —W: Drummond.—OB 
(Lament, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Inez de Castro.—Luis de Camoens. See Lusiad, The. 
Infallibility.—T: S. Collier.—AA 
Infamous Legislation.—Edmund Burke.—CS 5 
Infant Jov. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: Blake.— 
BFV—BVC—LC—OS 1—PC—PGT 1—PoR— 
YBF 

Infant’s Dream.—Anon.—BS 18 
Infelicissime. (Nassau Magazine .)—CS 1 
Infelix Felix.—T: D’A. McGee.—TTP 
Infernal Machine, The.—H. E. McBride.—CS 13 


161 






Infida’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Infida’s Song.—Rob’t Greene. See Never Too Late. 
Infidel and Quaker, The.—Anon.—HR 
Infidelity not Friendly to Freedom.—Phillips.—SR 8 
Infinity.—Philip H. Savage.—-AA 
Infinity.—Walt Whitman. See Song of Myself. 
Infinity of the Universe, The.—Ormsby M. Mitchell.— 
HSS 2 

(Immensity of Creation. The.)—LLC 
Inflexible Captive, The, Sel. fr. (Patriotism )—Han¬ 
nah More.—TMR 

Influence.—Rob’t H. Schauffler.— CG 3 
Influence after Death.—J: Gumming.—BS 21 (sel.) 

(Voices of the Dead.)—CS 6 
Influence of American Freedom.—Reverdy Johnson.— 
PR 

Influence of Athens, The.—T: B. Macaulay. See On 
Mitford’s History of Greece. 

Influence of Life. The. (Sel. jr. Jane Austen, Ch. II.— 
in A Book of Sibyls.)—Anne T. Ritchie.— 
KNE 

Influence of Music.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Influence of Natural Objects in Calling Forth and 
Strengthening the Imagination.—W: Words¬ 
worth. See Prelude, The. 

Influence of Poetry on the Working-classes, Sel. fr. 
(Poetry in Battle.)—Frd’k W. Robertson.— 
FD 1 

(Poetry the Language of Symbolism —longer and 
ptly. difj .)—NC 

Influence of the Great Teacher, The.—Anon.—CP 
Influence of Time on Grief. (To Time—C.)—W: L. 
Bowles.—FEP—WEP 4 

(Time and Grief.)—OB 
Informal Prayer, An.—Sam W. Foss.—WR 22 

(Prayer of Cyrus Brown, The— C.) —AWH—THP 
Information Party, An—Anon.—EuE 
Information Wanted.—Anon.—DSS 
Ing£, the Bov-king. (Abr .)—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.— 
BS 17 

Ingersoll’s Dream of the War. ( C .)—Rob’t G. Inger- 
soll. 

(Speech for Decoration Day.)—DFR 
Ingin Summer.—Eva W. McGlasson.—PPh 
Ingomar, the Barbarian, Sc. jr. (Play.) —Frd’k Halm 
(tr. by Maria Lovell).—FTR 
Ingrateful Beauty Threatened. (C.) —T: Carew.— 
OB 

(Ungrateful Beauty.)—ES 
Inheritance.—Mary T. Higginson.—AA 
Inheritance.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Inhospitality.—Anon.—BS 20 
Inhospitality.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Initiated as a Member of the United Order of Half¬ 
shells. (Detroit Free Press .)—BDD 

(United Order of Half-shells, The.)—DCR 
Initiated Tramp, An.—Anon.—CS 23 
Inkerman.—H: Lushington.—AVP 
Inkerman.—R: C. Trench.—EDY 
Inkermann.—C: Mackay.—WR 8 
Inkstand. The.—Sophie May. See Little Prudy. 

Inmate of the Dungeon, The.—W. C. Morrow.—NP 
Inn of Care, The.—S: Waddington.—VA 
Inner Calm, The.—Horatius Bonar.—FEP 
Inner Temple Masque, The (Masque of the Inner Tem¬ 
ple, A). Sels. fr. —W: Browne. 

Charm, The.—WEP 2 

Siren’s Song, The. (Fr. Sc. I.)—BNL—EI.P—ES 
—OB—YBF 

Inner Vision. The. (Sonnet XLVII.)—W: Words¬ 
worth.—PGT 1 

Innocence. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 12—TCP 
Innocence.—-C: Mair—TCV 

Innocence Rewarded.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Vicar 
of Wakefield. The. 

Innocent Child and Snow-white Flower. (C.)—W: C. 
Bryant. 

(Child and the Lilv. The.)—HSS 1 
Innocent Drummer, The.—Fred. W. Adams.—WR 3 
Innocents Abroad, Sels. jr. —S: L. Clemens. 

Damascus. (Sel. fr. Ch. XLIV.)—CS 20—SR 7 
(sel.) 

Experience with European Guides. (Sel. fr. Ch. 
XXVII.)—BS 1 

(Mark Twain’s Description of European Guides.) 
—CS 4 

(Our Guide in Genoa and Rome.)—CR—MHR 

(Our Guides.)—FTR 

Getting under Way. (Sel. fr. Ch. III.)—BS 6— 
MHR 

In On the Sphinx. (Sel. fr. Ch. I.VIII.)—C»G 

nominatus.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel, The. 


Innovat ion.—Anon.—DLS 

(Lines by an Old Fogy.)—HP 
Inquest—Not Extraordinary. (Punch.) —HPE 
Inquiring Friend, An.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Inquiring Yankee, An.—Anon.—BeR 
Inquiry, The.—C: Mackav-—BS 3—CS 2—CSS—PPSr 
—SA—SE (br. sel.) 

(SI. abr.)— HSS 2—PEO 
(“Tell me, ye winged winds.”)—BNL—VA 
Inquisitive Boy, The.—Anon.—DCR 
Inquisit.ve Customer, An.—Anon.—CS 22 
Inquisitve Prince, The.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Inscription. (Anti-Jacobin.)— HPE 
Inscription for a Fountain. (Inscriptions, T.)—Bryan 
W. Procter.—WEP 4 

Inscription for a Monument at Vimeiro.—Rob’t 
Southey.—EDY 

Inscription for a Statue of Chaucer at Woodstock.— 
Mark Akenside.—FEP 

Inscription for my Little Son’s Silver Plate.—Eugene 
Field.—LS 

Inscription for the Apartment in Chepstow Castle, 
where Henry Marten was Imprisoned.—Rob’t 
Southey.—HPE 

Inscription for the Door of the Cell in Newgate, where 
Mrs. Brownrigg was Confined. (Anti-Jacobin.) 
—HPE 

Inscription for the Entrance to a Wood.—W: C. 

Bryant.—AD (si. abr.) —VSG 
Inscription in a Hermitage. (C.) —T: Warton.—HBP 
(Retirement.)—-BNL—SN 

Inscription in Marble in the Parish Church of Faver- 
sham, in Agro Cantiano.—Anon.—EPs 
Inscription on a Sea Shell.—Walter S. Landor. .See 
Gebir. 

Inscription on a Wall in St. Edmund’s Church, in Lom¬ 
bard St., London.—Anon.—EPs 
Inscription on Melrose Abbey.—Anon.—BNL—EPs 
Inscription on the Statue Erected to Captain Boyd.— 
W: Alexander.—TIP 

Inscription to the Mistress of Cedarcroft, Sel. fr. (Sun¬ 
set.)—Bayard Taylor.—AD 
Inside of King’s College Chapel, Cambridge. (C. —Eccle¬ 
siastical Sonnets,Pt. III.,XLIII.)—W: Words¬ 
worth. 

(Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Sel. fr.) —BNL (br. sel.) 
(Within King’s College Chapel, Cambridge.)— 
PGT 1 

Inside Track, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Insight. (Epigram.) —W: Watson.—YBF 
Insignificance of Earth. (7n Astronomical Discourses.) 
—T: Chalmers.—LLC 

Insignificant Existence. (Paraphrase from Miscella 
neous Thoughts— C.) —Isaac Watts.—BNL 
Insomnia.—Anne R. Aldrich.—TAV 
Insomnia.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Inspiration. (Br. sel. fr. To William Simpson.)—Rob’t 
Burns.—EPs 

Inspiration.—S: Johnson.—AA 
Inspiration.—Lily A. Lefevre.—TCV 
Inspiration.—Philip Sidney. See Ast rophel and’Stella. 
Inspiration. (Sel.) —H: D. Thoreau.—AA—ASL— 
EPs—TAS 

Inspiration of Sacrifice, The.—Jas. A. Garfield. See 
Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union Sol¬ 
diers. 

Inspiration of the Bible, The.—E: Winthrop.—FTR— 
KNE 

Inspiration of the Spirit, The.—Seth C. Beach.—TAS 
Instans Tyrannus.—Rob’t Browning.—HBP t 
Instigators of Treason. The.—W: Wirt.—SS 
Instinct of Immortality, The.—Newell D. Hillis.— 
SR 12 

Instinct of Locality in Animals and Birds.—Anon.— 
KNE 

Institution of Arbor Day, The.—Anon.—DFR 
Insubstantial Pageant, An.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Tempest, The. 

Insurance Agents, The “Fat Contributor” on.—A. M. 
Griswold.—CS 9 

Integer Vitae. (A Book of Airs, Pt. I., XVIII.)—T: 
Campion.—OB 

(Man of Life Upright, The.)—ELP—OEL—PGT 1 
(Upright Man, The.)—YBF 
Intellectual Improvement, an Aid to Works of the 
Imagination.—Anon.—CP 
Intellectual Limitations.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Intelligence Office, The.—Anon.—FND 
Intemperance. (Sel. fr. Address on Temperance.)— 
W: E. Channing.—FAS 
Intemperance of Party.—W: Gaston.—SS 
“Intemperance wipes out God’s image.”—J:B. Gough. 
—GG 


162 




TITLE INDEX 


Ireland 


Intensely Utter. (Albany Chronicle.) —CRR—SR 4 
(Fashionable School Girl, The.)—CSS 
(Too Utterly Utter.)—CS 21 
Intensity.— (Char.) —Anon.—FAD 
Interesting Traveling Companion, An.—C: B. Lewis. 
CS 15—S A 

Interlude, An.—Catherine G. Furley.—FLS 
Interlude.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 
International Arbitration.—Jas. R. Lowell.—MRS 
International Band, The.—Oliver Harper.—CS 34 
International Copyright.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AA 
International Copyright, An.—T. N. Talfourd.—SS 
International Episode. An. (March 15, 1889.)—Caro¬ 
line Duer.—AA 

International Episode, An.—Eliza C. Hall.—BS 8 
International Good Will. (New York Tribune .)— 
TMR 

International Ode. ( C .)—Oliver W. Holmes.—PEO 
(God Bless our Father Land.)—FP 
International Race, The.—T. C. DeLeon.—SR 13 
Interrupted Proposal, An.—Anon.—MAD 
Interrupted Proposal, An.—Rob’t C.V. Meyers.—CS 32 
Interrupted Recitation, An.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KJ 

Intervention in the Wars of Europe.—Jeremiah Clem¬ 
ens.—-SS 

Interviewing Mrs. Pratt. (Denver Tribune .)—BS 12 
Interview between Aaron Burr and Mary Scudder. 
(Abr. fr. The Minister’s Wooing, Ch. XXXII.) 
—Harriet B. Stowe.—CR 

Interview between Amy and Lord Leicester at Kenil¬ 
worth.—Walter Scott. See Kenilworth. 
Interview between the School Directors and the Jani¬ 
tor, An. (Dial. fr. The School-ma’am.)—T. 
S. Denison.—SR 1 

Intimations of Immortality.—H: M. Simmons.—BS 21 
Intimations of Immortality [from Recollections of 
Early Childhood].—W: Wordsworth. See Ode: 
Intimations of Immortality, etc. 

Into the Light.—A. Matheson.—YBT 
Into the Noiseless Country.—T: W. Parsons.—AA 
“Into the path of sin.”—-Anon.—GG 
Into the Sunset.—Anon.—CS 36 
Into the World and Out.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—GP 
Intoxicating Cup, The. (Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Intra, Mintra, Cutra. Corn.— \non.—CS 13—LLC 
Intra Muros.—Mary C. Gillington.—PYO 
Introduction, An.—S: L. Clemens.—BeR 

(Mark Twain Introduces Himself.)—DE—PS 
Introduction to “Songs of Experience.” (Hear the 
Voice.)—W: Blake.—OB 

Introduction [to “Songs of Innocence”].—FEP—HBP 
—WEP 3 

(“And I made a rural pen”— br. sel .)—PoR 
(Child and the Piper, The.)—CGd—LC 
(Piper. The.)—BNL—CEL—WCL 
(Piping down the Valleys Wild.)—PoR 
(Reeds of Innocence.)—-OB 
Introduction to “The True-born Englishman.”—Dan’l 
Defoe.—ESs 

Introductory Address.—Anon.—SD 
Introductory to "House of Life.”—Dante G. Rossetti. 
See House of Life, The. 

Introit.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry V. 
Intrusion, An.—D. C. Brewer.—CG 1 
Intry-Mintry.—Eugene Field.—EF—WTD 
Invalid in l odgings, An. (In When a Man’s Single.)— 
Jas. M. Barrie.—CR (abr.) 

Invasion, The, Sel. fr. (C£ad, Mile Fiiilte, Elim!)—Ger¬ 
ald Griffin.—TIP 

Invectice against Demosthenes.—Dinarehus.;—PS 
Invective against Mr. Corry. (Invective against Corry 
— C. — abr.) —H: Grattan—KNE—SS 
(Reply to Mr. Corry.)—BS 3—CR—CS 3—FTR— 
LLC—SC 
(SI. abr .)—KNE 

Invective against Mr. Flood. (Sel. fr. Philippic against 
Flood.)—H: Grattan.—CS 4 (cond.) 

(Reply to Flood.)—PPS 

(Reply to Mr. Flood— cond.) —KNE—OM—PS—SS 
Invective Written by Mr. George Chapman against Mr. 

Ben Jonson, An.—G: Chapman.—ESs 
Inventions. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: But¬ 
ler—H PE 

Inventor’s Wife, The.—Mrs. E. T. Corbett.—CD— 
CS 26—SR 12 —THP 
(SI. abr.)— CRR—PR 

Inventor’s Wife, An.—Jeannie P. Ewing.—CS 35 
Inverted Torch, The, Sels. fr .—Edith M. Thomas. 

“If still they live, Twhom touch or sight].” (LIII.) 

—AA—TAS 
“Tell me.” (XI.)—AA 


Inverted Torch, The (continued). 

“When in the first great hour.” (III.)—AA 
Will it Be So? (LXIX.)—AA 

("Oft have I wakened ere the spring of day.”)— 
TAS 

Investigate. (Char.) —T. S. Denison.—FAS 
Invictus.—W: E. Henley. See I. M.—R. T. Hamilton 
Bruce. 

Invincible. (Fr. A Lover’s Diary.)—Gilbert Parker.— 
VA 

Invincible Armada, The.—Friedrich Schiller.—OS 3 
Invincibles, The.—Dora R. Goodale.—SR 13 
Invisible Bridge, The.—Gelett Burgess.—NA 
Invisible Heroes, The.—H: W. Beecher.—TMD 

(Honored Dead, The.)—BLP (si. diff .)—HSS 1 (sel.) 
—SPE 

(Our Honored Dead.)—FD 1—LLC—WCLG 1 
(Tribute to our Honored Dead, A.)—BS 24—CS 2— 
DFR—HR 

Invitation, An. (Sel. fr. Eclogue I., in The Shepherd’s 
Pipe,)—W: Browne. 

Invitation, The.—T: Dekker. See Sun’s Darling, The. 
Invitation, The. (Dial .)—Clara J. Denton.-—FTT 
Invitation, The. (To Jane— C.) —Percy B. Shellev.— 
FEP—OB 
(.46r.)—PGT 1—SN 

Invitation to Izaak Walton.—C: Cotton.—FEP—GP 
Invitation to the Country, An. — W: C. Bryant.— 
AD (si. abr .)—SN (abr.) 

Invitation to the Zoological Gardens, An. (Punch .)— 
HPE—THP 

(Longer vers .)—BS 16—CS 19 
(Pup-pup-poetry.)—BRR 
Inviting.—D. C. Brewer.—CG 1 

Invocation: “Awake, awake, my Lyre!” (Song fr. The 
Davideis, Bk. III.)—Abraham Cowley.—BNL 
(Lover to his Lvre, The.)—CEL 
(Supplication, A.)—EPs—FEP—PGT 1 
Invocation: “Phcebus, arise!” (Song XXXVI., Pt. I.) 
—W: Drummond.—OB 
(Phcebus, Arise.)—OEL 
(Song.)—ELP—ES—HBP—WEP 2 
(Summons to Love— si. abr .)—PGT 1 
Invocation: “We, children of the free.”—Parr Har¬ 
low.—AD—DFR 

Invocation: “Answer me, burning stars of night!”— 
Felicia D. Hemans.—SS 

Invocation, An: “I never prayed for Dryads, to haunt 
the woods again.”—W: Johnson-Cory.—-PGT 2 
Invocation, An: “We are what suns and winds and 
waters make us.” (Sel. fr. Regeneration.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—VA 

Invocation: “Thou, whose enduring hand,” etc.— 
Edmund C. Stedman.—A A 

Invocation from Paradise Lost.—J: Milton. See Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Invocation in a library, An.—Helen G. Cone.—MBB 
Invocation to Light.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

1 nvocation to Nature.—Percy B. Shelley. See Alastor. 
Invocation to Poesy, An.—C: Mackay.—HP 
Invocation to Rain.—Mrs. Sarah A. Curson.—TCV 
Invocation to Rain in Summer. (Summer Invoca¬ 
tion— C.)—W:C. Bennett—BNL—GN—HBP 
(Rain in Summer.)—NV 

Invocation to Sleep. (Song fr. The Woman-hater, Act 
III., Sc. I.)—J: Fletcher.—BNL—CEL 
(Sleep.)—OB 

Invocation to Sleep.—J: Fletcher. See also Valentinian. 
Invocation to the Spirit of Achilles. (Fr. The De¬ 
formed Transformed, Pt. I., Sc. 1.)—Lord 
Byron —CEL—WEP 4 
Invocation to Tobacco.—II: J. Mellen.—PPh 
Invocation to Youth.—Laurence Binyon.—OB 
Io Victis.—W: W. Story. See He and She; or, A Poet’s 
Portfolio. 

Ion, Sels. fr. (Play .)—Sir T: N. Talfourd. 

Ion, a Tragedy. (Act I., Scs. 1 and 2.)—FTR 
(Sympathy— br. sel. fr. I., 2.)—BNL 
Ion, Br. sel. fr .—BNL 

Iona—A Memorial of St. Columba.—Arthur C. Coxe.— 
AA 

Iona Sonnets.—J: S. Blackie. See Royal Saint, A. 
Iphigeneia and Agamemnon.—Walter S. Landor.— 
BNL—CS 14—HBP—WEP 4 
(Sacrifice.)—-LH 

Iphigenia in Tauris, Sel. fr. (Song of the Parcoe— fr. 
Act IV., Sc. 5.)—Johann W. von Goethe (tr. by 
N. L. Frothingham).—EPs 
Tpsissimus.—Eugene L. Hamilton.—WR 2 
Ireland. (Last Fruit off an Old Tree, XIV.)—Walter 
S. Landor.—TIIP 

Ireland.—Denis F. MacCarthy.—BNL 
Ireland.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 


163 





Ireland 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Ireland.—Dora Sigerson.—OB 

“Ireland is the Gethsemane of Europe.”—Jas. Red- 
path.—GG 

Ireland to be Ruled by Irishmen. (Abr.) —W: E. Glad¬ 
stone.—RS 15 

Irene, Sel. fr. (To-morrow— hr. sel. fr. Act,. III., Sc. 2.) 

—S: Johnson.—BNL 
Iris.—Michael Field.—VA 

Iris.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Professor at the Break¬ 
fast-table, The. 

Irish Agitators, 1834. (Sel. fr. The Repeal of the 
Union.—R: L. Sheil.—OM 
(Repeal of the Union, The.)—PS—SS 
Irish Aliens.—R:I,. Shiel. See following. 

Irish Aliens and English Victories. (Sel. fr. Irish 
Municipal Bill, 1837.)—R: L. Sheil.—PS—SS 
—TMD (si. abr.) 

(Irish Aliens.)—CS 4 (si. abr.) —FD 1 
(Irish Loyalty and Valour— sel.) —OM 
(Irish Valor and Loyalty— sel.)— SSD 
Irish Astronomy.—C: G. Halpine.—AWH—CSS—D1 
“Irish Brigade at Fontenoy, The.”—Bartholomew 
Dowling.—CS 4 
(Battle of Fontenoy.)—FEP 
Irish Church, The.—T- B. Macaulay. .See Estab¬ 
lished Church of Ireland, The. 

Irish Church, The.—R: L. Sheil. See England’s Mis¬ 
rule of Ireland. 

Irish Coquetry.—Anon.—CD—CS 21—DI—DS—YA 
Irish Courtesy. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Irish Disturbance Bill, The.—Dan'l O’Connell.—SO 
(On the Irish Disturbance Bill.)—OM—PPS—PS 
—SS—SSD 

Irish Drummer, The.—Anon.—BC—DI 
Irish Establishment.—R: L. Sheil. See Established 
Church of Ireland, The. 

Irish Grievances. (Sel. fr. Resolution on the Prosecu¬ 
tion of Mr. O’Connell.)—R: L. Sheil.—OM 
Irish Letter, An.—Anon.—CS 5—PTS 

(Affectionate Letter, An— cond. and si. diff.) —HR 
(Bridget O’Hooligoin’s Letter.)—DI 
Irish Letter, An.—Anon.—DI 

Irish Loyalty and Valour.—R: L. Sheil. See Irish 
Aliens and English Victories. 

Irish Lullaby.—A. P. Graves.—TIP 
Irish Melody, An.—J: F. Waller.—HBP 
(Dance Light.)—BNL 
(Kitty Neil.)—CS 22—TIP—VA 
Irish Molly.—W: Collins—SR 9 

(Captain Molly at Monmouth.)—PRR—WR 10 
(Molly Maguire at Monmouth.)—PAP 
Irish Molly O.—Anon —TIP 
Irish Molly O.—Fs. A. Fahy.—TIP 
Irish Mother in the Penal Days. The.—J: Banim.— 
TIP 

Irish Mother’s Lament, The.—Cecil F. Alexander.—TIP 
Irish Municipal Bill.—;R: I,. Sheil. See Irish Aliens 
and English Victories. 

Irish Parliament, The. (Sel. fr. The LTnion, 1799.)— 
W: Conyngham, Lord Plunket.—CR 
Irish Particular. (Punch.) —HPE 
Irish Peasant Girl, The.—C: J. Kickham.—TIP 
Irish Peasant to his Mistress, The.—T: Moore.—OB— 
TIP 

Irish Philosopher, The.—W: B. (?) Maccabe.—CRR— 
CS 18—DI—SR 2 

Irish Picket, The.—Orpheus C. Kerr.—CS 4 
Irish Rapparees, The.—Sir 0: G. Duffy.—TIP—VA 
Irish Reaper’s Harvest Hymn, The.—J: Keegan.—TIP 
Irish Schoolmaster, The.—Jas. A. Sidey.—BS 1—THP 
Irish Sleighride, The.—Anon.—CRR 
Irish Spinning-wheel. The.—Alfred P. Graves.—HBR 
—TIP 

Irish Stew. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery-book.)— 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Irish Traveler, The.—Anon.—DI—HR 
Irish Valor and Loyalty.—R: L. Sheil. See Irish 
Aliens and English Victories. 

Irish Voter, The. (Dial.) —H. S. Kent.—ED 
Irish Widow to Her Son, The.—Ellen Forrester.—CS 35 
Irish Wife, The.—T: D’A. McGee.—VA 
Irish Wild-flower. An.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA 
Irish Witticism.—Anon.—SR 10 
Irish Wolf, The.—Jas. McCarrol!.—TIP 
Irish Wolf-hound, The. (Sel. fr. The Foray of Con 
O’Donnell.)—Denis F. MacCarthy.—SN—VA 
Irish Woman’s Lament, The.—Mary A. Denison. See 
Irishwoman’s Letter. The. 

Irishman, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Irishman, The.—W: Maginn. See following. 

Irishman and the Lady, The.—W: Maginn—THP— 
VA 

(Irishman, The.)—FEP—HBP—HPE 


Irishman’s Lesson, The. (Dial.) —Walley C. (?) Oulton. 
—MPD 

Irishman’s Letter, An.—Anon.—HR 
(Jimmy McBride’s Letter.)—DI 
Irishman’s Panorama, The.—-Jas. Burdette.—BRR— 
CDV—CH (si. abr.)— CRR—DI—SDR 
(Panorama, The— si. abr.)— PTS 
Irishman’s Perplexity, An.—Anon.—CS 26—DCR 
(Pat’s Perplexity.)—SR 9—WR, 3 
Irishwoman’s Letter, The.—Anon—CS 3—LLC—SA 
(Irish Woman’s Lament, The.)—PR 
(Mary O’Connor, the Volunteer’s Wife.)—CD 
(Volunteer’s Wife, The.)—CR—MMR 
(Versions vary si.) 

Iron Bells, The.—Edgar A. Poe. See Bells, The. 

Iron Chest, The, Scene from. —G: Colman.—AE 
Iron Crown, An, Sel. jr. (Death of Little Hacket.)— 
T. S. Denison.—SR 4 

Iron Gate, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA (sel.) —CS 18 
—MAL 

Iron—Silver—Gold.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Irreparableness.—Eliz. B. Browning.—WEP 4 
Irrepressible, The.—Anon.—CS 18 
Irrepressible Boy, The.—Anon.—BS 10 
(He Wouldn’t Hush.)—SR 3 
Irrepressible Boy, An.—Anon.—WR 25 
Irrepressible Conflict, The.—W: H. Seward.—OSS 
Irresolute Resolution.—Anon.—WR 7 
Iry and Billy and Jo. (SI. abr.) —Jas. W. Riley.— 
WR 23 

Is Fidelity Eternal?—J. Q. Strongfeldt.—SR 6 
Is Freedom a Lie?—J. M. Munyon.—CS 33 
I’se Gwine to Jine de Masons.—Anon.—DE 
Is it Anybody’s Business?—Anon.—CS 5 
Is it Come?—Frances Brownie].—FEP—HBP 
Is it Good-bye? (Echoes XLlI.— C.) —W 7 : E. Henley. 
—FTA 

Is it Raining?—Mary F. Butts.—HDL 
Is it Love?—Anon.—WR 12 
Is it Nothing to you?—Anon.—CS 13 
Is it Nothing to you?—May Probyn.—VA 
Is it Well with the Child?—ChristinaG. Rossetti.— OB 
Is it Worth While? (C .)—Joaquin Miller.—BS 19 
(“Is it worth while that we jostle a brother.”)—GG 
“Is it worth while that we jostle a brother.”—Joaquin 
Miller. See foregoing. 

Is it you?—Marv Goodwin.— COS — PP — PR—SM— 
YA 

Is Life Worth Living? (SI. abr.) —Alfred Austin.—LH 
Is Little Bob Tucked in?—Sam W. Foss.—SR 13 
Is Love Blind?— (Punch Bowl.) —CG 3 
“Is not he the wisest man who rids his brow of 
wrinkles?”—Anon.—HSS 3 
Is there a God?—G: F. Cameron.—TCV 
Is there for Honest Poverty. (C.) —Rob’t Burns. — 
PHS 

(For a’ That and a’ That.)—BNL—CR—FP—HSS 3 
—MBL—WCLG 2—YBF (abr.) 

(Honest Poverty)—EPs—HBP 
(Man’s a Man for a’ That, A.)—BS 4—FEP—OS 2 
—SM—SPE—WEP 3 

Is there Room in Angel Land?—Anon.—CS 12 
Is this a Dagger?— W: Shakespeare. Nee Macbeth. 

Is this All? (Sel. fr. Lincoln’s Election.)—W’endell 
Phillips.—FD 1 

(Higher Views of the Union.)—MMR 
“Is thy cruse of comfort failing?”—Eliz. Charles. See 
Cruse that Failed not, The. 

Isaac Rosenthal on the Chinese Question. (Scribner’s 
Monthly. )—BDD—CDV—DF Y 
Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil. (Sel.) —J: Keats.— 
WR 11 

Isabel’s Grave.—Letitia E. Landon.—HR 
Isaiah, Sels. fr. — Bible. 

Despoiler Doomed, The. (Ch. XIII., 2-5, 17-22, 
XIV., sels. —Moses Stuart’s tr.) —BLP 
Ho, Every One that’Thirsteth! (LV.)—BS 6 
Holy One, The. (XL., 28-31.)—LLC 
Isaiah XXXV.—BS 2 

(Selection from the Book of Isaiah.)—AE 
Joyful Messenger, The. (LII., 7-12, tr. by Bishop 
Lowth.)—SS 

Voice in the Wilderness, The. (XL., 3-8.)—LLC 
Woe follows Wickedness. (V., 20-24.)—LLC 
Iseult’s Children.—Matthew Arnold. See Tristram 
and Iseult. 

Island, The, Sels. fr. —Lord Bvron. 

Island, ’1 he.—(Can. II., Sts. 1, 2, 4.)—EPs 
Sea-cave, The. (IV., 6-8, 14— abr.) —EPs 
Sublime Tobacco. (II., 19.) 

(Island, The— sel.)- —BNL 

Island, The. (Fr. The Buccaneer.)—R: H: Dana.— 
BNL 


164 




TITLE INDEX 


It's 


Island Fisherman, An.—Katha. T. Hinkson.—TIP 
Island of Home, The.—Ira J. Bailey.—CS 26 
Island of Shadows, The.-—R: Garnett.—VA 
Island of Sleep, The. ( Fr. The Wanderings of Oisin, 
Bk. III.)—W: B. Yeats.—TIP 
Island of the Scots, The. ( Cond .)—W: E. Aytoun.— 
TMR 

Isle of Beauty. ( W. music — and w. add. st.) —T: H. 
Bayly.—NPS—YP 

Isle of Lone, The.—-Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Isle of Long Ago, The. (Isle of the Long Ago, The— 
C.)—B: F. Taylor.—BS 1—FTR—HNS—KNE 
—SA 

(Long Age. The.)—LLC—WCLG 2 
(River Time, The.)—TAV 
Isle of Lost Dreams, The.—W: Sharp.—VA 
Isle of the Long Ago, The.—B: F. Taylor. See Isle of 
Long Ago, The. 

Isle of Yew.—Anon.—LLC 
Isles, The.—C: G. D. Roberts.—VA 
Isles of Greece, The.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 
“Isn’t God upon the Ocean, just the same as on the 
Land?”—Jas. T. Fields. See Ballad of the 
Tempest, The. 

Isolation. Arthur H. Clough. See Dipsychus. 
Isolation.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
Israfel.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—ASL—BSP—WR 5 
“It.”—Jas. W. Riley. See Session with Uncle Sidney, A 
It Came upon the Midnight Clear.—Edmund H. Sears. 
—FEP—LLC (abr.) 

(Angels’ Song, The.)—AA 
(Glorious Song of Old, The.)—OS 2 
(Peace on Earth.)—TAS 

It is a Beauteous Evening. Calm and Free. (Miscel¬ 
laneous Sonnets, Pt. I., 30.)—W: Wordsworth. 
—FEP—MBL 

(By the Sea.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(Evening on Calais Beach.)—OB 
(On the Beach at Calais.)—WEP 4 
“It is a common saying that religion has nothing to do 
with politics.”—Frd’k W. Robertson.—GG 
"It is a dear delight for the soul to have trust in the 
fidelity of another.” ( Harper’s .)—GG 
"It is a fitting opportunity to advert to the fact that 
a revival of religion.” ( Southwestern Presby¬ 
terian.) —GG 

“It is a sair thing to be misjudged.”—G: Macdonald.— 
FHS 

It is Coming.—M. F. Mosher.—PEO—TS 
It is Common.—Anon.—HP 

It is Enough. (In A Lover’s Diary.)—H. Gilbert Par¬ 
ker.—TCV 

It is Finished.—Christina G. Rossetti.—VA 
It is Great for our Country to Die.—Jas. G. Percival.— 
FEP—HBP 
(Elegiac— C.) —AA 

"It is hard to say farewell to a hope that has cheered 
us.”—W: H. H. Murray.—GG 
It is in Winter that we Dream of Spring,—Rob’t B. 
Wilson.—AA 

“It is More Blessed.” — Rose T. Cooke. — LLC — 
SSS (abr.) 

It is never too Late to Mend, Sets. fr. —C: Reade. 

Digging for Hidden Treasure. (Sel. fr. Vol. TI., 
Ch. II.)—MMR 

Lark in the Gold-fields, The. (Vol. II., Chs. XIII. 
and XIV.)—MMR 
(Lark, The— sel.)— SC 

“It is not Beauty I Demand.”—G: Darley.—AVP 
(Loveliness of Love, The.)—BNL—FEP 
(True Loveliness.)—TIP 
It is not Death to Die.—G: W. Bethune.—AA 
“It is not the best way to teach the truth.”—Jos. Cook. 
—GG. 

“It is said that at the battle of Shiloh.”—G: C. Heck¬ 
man.—GG 

"It is said that when General Grant first took com¬ 
mand.”—Albert E. Winship.—DFR 
"It is the miller’s daughter.”—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Miller’s Daughter, The. 

"It is the property of the religious spirit to be the most 
refining of all influences.” (Br. sel. fr. Bos¬ 
ton.)—Ralph W. Emerson.—GG 
“It is the quiet worker that succeeds.”—Anon.—GG 
“It is the season now to go.” (C.) —Rob’t L. Steven¬ 
son. 

(Difference, The.)—OH 
(in the Season.)—VA 

“It is thy voice that floats above the din. —Sarah 
Doudnev—GG . 

“It is unkind and improper to exult over a triumph. 
—Anon.—GG 

It is well we Cannot See the End.—Anon.—CS 5 


“It isn’t the thing you do, dear.”—Marg. E. Sangster. 
See Sin of Omission, The. 

It Kindles all my Soul.—Casimir of Poland.—BNL 
It Made a Difference.—Anon.—CRR 
It May Be.—Percy Addleshaw.—VA 
“It may be glorious to write.”—Jas. R. Lowell. See 
Incident in a Railroad Car, An. 

It May be Weeds.—Anon.—PPh 
It May not Be.—Anon.—DJS 
“It Might Have Been.”—Anon.—GP 
It Might Have Been.—A. A. Hopkins.—CS S 
“It must be so, Plato, thou reasonest well.”—Jos. Ad¬ 
dison. See Cato. 

It never Comes Again.—R: H. Stoddard.—BNL—LLC 
—MRS 

(Flight of Youth, The— C.) —AA—ASL—YBF 
(Lost.)—FP 

(Never Again.)—FEP—TAV 
(There are Gains for all our Losses.)—HBP 
It never Pays.—Anon.—KNE 
It never Rains, but it Pours.—Anon.—FHE 
“It Rains.”—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
It Snows.—Sarah J. Hale.—HSS 2 
It Snows.—Hannah F. Gould.—YBT 
It Snows! It Snows. (Mother Truth’s Melodies.) —NV 
“It sometimes happens that two friends will meet.” 
(Sunday Afternoon.) —GG 

“It suppresses duration, it suppresses space, it sup¬ 
presses suffering.”—Victor Hugo.—-GG 
"It war Crackit Afore.”—Gath Brittle.—WR 21 
It Was. (Yale Record.)— CG 2 
It was a Lass.—Mary E. Wilkins.—HS 
It was a Lover and his Lass.—W: Shakespeare. See 
As You Like It. 

It was All a Mistake.—Anon.—CS 30 
“It was an eve of autumn’s holiest mood.”—Rob’t Pol- 
lok. See Course of Time, The. 

“It was her first sweet child, her heart’s delight.”—C: 
Tennyson-Turner.—PGT 2 
(Her First-born.)—VA—YBF 
“It was no relief from temporal evils that the Apostle 
promised.”—W: A. Butler.—FHS 
It was not a Success.—Anon.—WR 20 
“It was not anything she said.”—Anon.—FHS 
It was not in the Winter.—T: Hood.—YBF 
(Ballad—C.)—VA 
(Abr.)— HBP—VS 
(Time of Roses— abr.) —OB 
“It was the charming month [of May].” (C. — also 
Charming Month of May, The— C.) —Rob’t 
Burns. 

(Chloe.I—GN—LC 

It wasn’t Me!—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
“Italia, Io Ti Saluto!” — Christina G. Rossetti. — 
PGT 2 

Italian from Cork, The. (Dial.) —Daly—SCS 
Italian Ravine, An.—Percy B. Shelley. SeeCenci.The. 
Italian Song, An. (C.) —S: Rogers.—FEP 
(My Native Vale.)—CEL 

Italian’s Account of George Washington, An.—Anon. 
—WR 21 

Italian’s View on the Labor Question, An.—Joe Kerr. 
—BS 21—WR 21 

Italy (the book), Sels. fr. —S: Rogers. 

Don Garzia.—WRD 
Ginevra.—BNL—FEP 

(SI abr.)—NPS—TMR—WEP 4—YP 
(SI. diff. vers .)—CS 3 

(Lost Bride, The.)—WR 26 
(For another vers, of same story see Mistletoe Bough, 
The.—T: H. Bayly) 

Italy (the poem). —BNL (sel.) —WEP 4 (sel. fr. Ber¬ 
gamo, and Italy, com.) 

Italy, Sel. fr. (Sel. fr. The Alps.)—BNL 
Jorasse. (Abr.) —BNL 

“Nature denied him much.” (Sel. fr. Farewell.)— 
GG 

Naples. (Sel.) —BNL 

Night and Day, The. (Sel. fr. Florence.)—AVP 
Rome. (Sel.) —BNL 
Venice. (Cond.) —BNL 

Ite Domum Satur®, Venit Hesperus.—Arthur H. 
Clough.—VA 

Iter Supremum.—Arthur S. Hardy.—AA 
It’s a Poor Rule that Won’t Work both Ways.—Anon. 
—PTS 

"It’s an Ill Wind-.”—W. L. Kit.chel.—CG 1 

It’s Good to have a Mother.—Mary M. Dodge.—TFS 
(Birdies with Broken Wings— C.) —POR 
It’s Hame and it’s Hame.—Allan Cunningham.—FEP 
—GP 

(Hame, Hame, Hame!)—HBP—OB—YBF 
(Loyalty— sel.) —GN—LH 


165 





It’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


It’s Hard to be Good.—Anon.—WR 2 
It’s my Nature.—Anon.—CS 31 

It’s not Worth While to Hate.—Mrs. Russell Kavan- 
augh.—KJ 

It’s Vera Weel.—Wallace Dunbar.—CD 
Itylus.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—CEL—OB 
Ivhn Ivanovitch. (Sel. — cond.) —Rob’t Browning.— 
WR 1 

Ivan the Czar.—Felicia D. Hemans.—CS 36 
Ivanhoe, Sels. fr. Walter Scott. 

Anglo-Norman Days. (Sel. fr. Ch. I.)—WCLG 1 
Archery Contest, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XIII.)—WCLG 1 
Baron and the Jew, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXII., arr. 
as dial.) —NDP 

Besieged Castle, The. (Abr. and ad. fr. Chs. XXIX. 
and XXXI.)—MMR (longest) —PR—WR 11 
(Scene from Ivanhoe— ad fr. Ch. XXIX.)—CR 
(Storming of the Castle, The— sels. ad. fr. Chs. 
XXIX.-XXXI.)—CS 36 

Hymn of the Hebrew Maid. (Fr. Ch. XXXIX.)— 
HBP 

(Rebecca’s Hymn.)—BNL—FEP 
Trial of Rebecca, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XLIII.)— 
WR 19 

I’ve Been Roaming. (Fr. Lilian of the Vale.)—G: Dar- 
ley—VS 

“I’ve thought of thee. I’ve thought of thee.” (Br. sel. 
fr. The Confessional.)—Nathaniel P. Willis.— 
FTA 

Ivery Inch a Gintleman.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Ivory Crucifix, The.—G. H. Miles.—WR 6 
Ivory Gate, The.—Mortimer Collins.—VA 
Ivry, a Song of the Huguenots. (C.) —T: B. Macaulay 
—BPB — ED Y — FEP — GN — HB — HBP 
—I.C (a6r.)—PPSr—VA 

(Battle of Ivry, The.)—OM (br. sel.) —OS 2—SA— 
SE (sel. — ad.) 

(Abr.)— BS 6 — CEL — CR — CS 5 — FR — GP 
—HSS 1 —SO—SS—TMD 
Ivy, The.—H: Burton.—AD 
Ivy, The.—C: Dickens.— See following. 

Ivy Green, The.—C: Dickens.—BNL—BS 16 (abr .)— 
CS 11 —FEP—GP—POS—VA—VS 
(SI. diff. vers.) —AD—HBP—PHS 
(Ivy, The.)—HSS 1 
Ivy Orations. (3)—Anon.—CP 
Ivy Poem.—Anon.—CP 
Ivy Song.—Anon.—CP 

Izaak Walton to River and Brook.—Eugene Lee-Ham- 
ilton.—VA 

Izaak Walton’s Prayer.—D. L. James.—CG 3 


J 

J. B.—H: C. Bunner.—AA—EDY 
Jabberwocky.—C: L. Dodgson.—NA—THP—VA 
Jack.—Anon.—CS 36 
Jack.—F. M. Stanley.—PR 

Jack and Gill.—A Criticism.—Jos. Dennie.—BS 3 
Jack and I.—Anon.—CS 37 
Jack and Jill.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Jack and Jill.—(Mother Goose Sonnets.)—Harriet S. 
Morgridge.—A A 

Jack and Joan.—T: Campion.—EP 
(Fortunati Nimium.)—PGT 1 
(Rustic Joys.)—YBF 

Jack and Joan (Epitaph, An— C.). —Matthew Prior.— 
HPE 

Jack and Me.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Jack at all Trades.—F. Crosby.—PD 
Jack at the Opera.—C: Dibdin.—THP 
Jack Chiddy.—Alex. Anderson.—CS 20 
Jack Creamer.—Jas. J. Roche.—BS 25 
Jack Frost.—Anon.—DLF 
Jack Frost.—Anon.—NV 

(Who is It?)—PEO (sl. abr.) 

Jack Frost.—Hannah F. Gould.—PoR—WCL 
(Frost, The.)—BNL—NV— 1 TFS— (sl. abr.) 

Jack Frost. (The Independent.) —CPL 
Jack Frost.—Gabriel Setoun.—BVC 
Jack Frost.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Jack Frost and Tom Ruddy.—Anon.—PS 
Jack Grey.—Anon.—COS—PP 

Jack Hall; or, The School Days of an American Boy, 
Sel. fr. —Rob’t Grant. 

Boat Race, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. IX.)—MRS—SC (sl. 
abr.) 

(Jack Hall’s Boat-race— ad. by E. M. Wilbor.)— 
DR 

Jack Hopkins’ Story.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. • 


Jack Horner. (In Mother Goose for Grown Folks.)— 
Adeline D. T. Whitney.—BNL—CS 3 (abr.) 
Jack in the Pulpit.—Clara Smith.—AD (sl. abr.) —NV 
—WCL 

Jack of all Trades. (Ad. fr. The Weathercock.)—J. T. 
AUingham—DT 

(Weathercock, The— abr.) —CS 19—SS 
Jack Rattleton Goes to Springfield and Back, Sel fr. 
—Waldron K. Post. 

Harvard-Yale Foot-ball Match. A.—BS 23 

(Harvard-Yale Foot-ball Game, A— diff. ad.) — 
PFP 

Jackanapes. (Abr. fr. Jackanapes. Chs. IV., V., VI.) 

—Juliana H. Ewing.—WR 25 
Jackdaw, The.—W: Cowper.—WEP 3 
Jackdaw of Rheims.—R: H. Barham.— BC — BNL— 
CS 21—VA 

Jack’s Letter to Bob.—Davis S. Foster.—SR 12 
Jack’s Nap.—Anon.—HVD 
Jackson at New Orleans.—Wallace Rice.—EDY 
Jacob Omnium’s Hoss.—W: M. Thackeray.—HPE 
Jacobite in Exile, A.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—LH 
Jacobite on Tower Hill, The.—G: W. Thombury.— 
EHT—VA 

Jacobite Toast. (To the same [an Officer in the Army 
Extempore, Intended to Allay the Violence of 
Party Spirit—C.)—J: Byrom.—FEP 

(Which is Which.)—HPE 

Jacobite’s Epitaph, A.—T: B. Macaulay.—LH—OB 

(Epitaph on a Jacobite— C.) —AVP—VA—WEP 4 
Jacqueminot.—Bessie Chandler.—FEP 
Jacqueminot.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 2 
Jacqueminot Rose Sunday, A.—Emma D. Banks.— 
BS 19 

Jacqueminot Roses.—Ednah P. Clarke.—POS 
Jacques Cartier.—Matthew R. Knight.—TCV 
Jaffar; an Easter Tradition.—Leigh Hunt.—BNL— 
CGd — CS 6 — HBP —KNE —MR —OS 2 — 
PHS—VSG 

Jaffier Parting with Belvidera. (Sel fr. Venice Pre¬ 
served, Act V., Sc. 2.)—T: Otway.—BNL 
Jail-bird, A.—Anon.—DSS 
Jail-bird’s Story, A.—Anon.—WR 2 
Jail-bird’s Story, A.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 32 
James and the Shoulder of Mutton. — Ann and Jane 
Taylor.—BVC 

James Fitz-James and Ellen.—Walter Scott. See Lady 
of the Lake, The. 

James Henry in School.—Emily Selinger.—WR 22 
James McCosh.—Rob’t Bridges.—AA—EDY 
James Russell Lowell. (Sel. fr. To James Russell Low¬ 
ell.)—Oliver W. Holmes.—PEO 
James Russell Lowell’s Birthday Festival. (At 
a Birthdav Festival— C .)—Oliver W. Holmes. 
—PEO (abr.) 

James IV. at Flodden.—W: E. Aytoun. See Edin 
burgh after Flodden. 

James Thomson. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
James Whitcomb Riley.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Jamie.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—BS 10 (sl. abr.) —CS 23 
—DS 

(Prose vers. abr. and ad.) —FMR 
Jamie Douglas.—Anon.—CS 15—FR 
Jamie’s Word wi’ the Sea.—Rob’t J. Cole.—CG 2 
Jane Austen (in A Book of Sibyls), Sel. fr. (Influence 
of Life.)—Anne I. T. Ritchie.—KNE 
Jane Conquest.—Anon.—BS 6 —CS 16 
Jane de Monfort.—Joanna Baillie. See De Monfort. 
Jane Jones.—Ben King.—CRR—CS 34 
Jane’s Legacv.—Emma E. Brewster.—ASD 
Janette’s Hair.—C: G. Halpine.—GP 
January.—H. S. Cornwell.—TAV 
January.—Rosaline E. Jones.—PEO 
January.—Jas. R,. Lowell. See Vision of Sir Launfal, 
The. 

January.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
January.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
January.—Edmund Spenser.— See Shepheardes Calen¬ 
dar, The. 

January 1 st, 1828. (C .)—Nathaniel P. Willis. 

(New Year, The.)—FP 

January Wind. (Abr.) —Rob’t Buchanan.—OS 2 
Janus.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Janus and January.—H: W. Longfellow.—POS 
Japanese Doll, The.—Anon.—PS—TT. 

Japanese Fan Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Japanese Lullabv.—Eugene Field. — EF—HBR—NV 
—WR 16 

(Little Blue Pigeon.)—WTD 
Japanese Parasol and Fan Drill.—Mary L Gaddes.— 
WR 6 

Japanese Wedding, A. (Pantomime.) —Sara S. Rice. 
—WR 3 


166 




TITLE INDEX 


Jimmy 


Jaqueline.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 29 
Jaquerie, The, Sets. fr .—Sidney Lanier. 

Bettayal.—AA 
Hound, The.—AA 

Jar, The. (“Day and night my thoughts incline”—C.) 
—R: H. Stoddard.—A A 

Jarl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve.—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.— 
WR 8 

(Earl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve— si. abr .)—BS 23 
Jasmine Flower, The.—Saint-Juirs.—WR 7 
Javanese Dancers.—Arthur Symons.—VA. 

Jaybird, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Je suis Americain.—Anon.—CS 22 
Jealous Rose, The.—Anon.—CG 1 
Jealous Wife, The.—Fred E. Brooks.—CS 2S 
Jealousy.—Anon.—FDY 
Jealousy. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Jealousy in the Choir. (Lowell New Moon .)—CH 
Jean. (Of a’ the Airts— C.). —Rob’t Bums.—BFV— 
OB—YBF 

(W. 2 add. doubtful stanzas.)—FEP—FTA— 
PGT 1 

(I Love My Jean —also C.)—BNL—BPB—GN— 
MBL 

(My Jean.)—CEL 

(“Of a’ the airts the winds can blaw.”)—EPs— 
WEP 3 

Jean Anderson, my Joy, Jean.—J. E. Rankin.—BS 1 
Jean Noel: a Story of Christmas in France.—Edith 
Scanned.—WR 24 

Jean Valjean.—Victor Hugo. See I.es Mis^rables. 

Jean Valjean and the Bishop.—Victor Hugo. See Les 
Miserables. 

Jean Valjean’s Sacrifice.—Victor Hugo. See Les Mis6- 
rabl©s 

Jeane.—W: Barnes.—PGT 2 

Jeanie Deans and Queen Caroline.—Walter Scott. See 
Heart of Midlothian, The. 

Jeanie Morrison.—W: Motherwell.—BNL — CEL — 
FEP—FTR—HBP—WCL —WEP 4 
(A&r.)—EPs- FP 

Jeannie Marsh.—G: P. Morris —A A—WR 5 
Jeduthan and Jane.—Anon.—MAD 
Jefferson Davis.—Harry T. Peck.—EDY 
“Jefful, The.’’ (Sel fr. Just One Day.)—J: Habberton. 
—BS 16—DES 

Jehoshaphat’s Deliverance.—G: L. Taylor—BS 13 
Jehovah Tsidkenu.—Rob’t M. McCheyne.—FEP 
Jelly for the Minister.—Anon.—MFD 
Jemima. (2 vers.) —Anon.—BVC 

(There was a Little Girl— ptly. like both versions — 
at. to H: W. Longfellow.)—NA 
Jemima Brown.—Anon.—D.TS 
Jem’s Last Ride.—Mary A. Stansbury.—BS 15 
Jena.—Francis S. Salt us.—EDY 
Jenkins Goes to a Picnic.—Anon.—CS 6—DS—PS 
Jennie.—Fred E. Brooks.—WR 2 

Jenny and Peggy.—Allan Ramsay. See Gentle Shep¬ 
herd, The. 

Jenny Dunleath.—Alice Cary.—CS 18 
Jenny from Ballinasloe.—Anon.—TIP 
Jenny Kissed me.—Leigh Hunt.—BFV—BNL—CS 20 
— FTA — GP — HBP — LC — OB —OH— 
OS 2—YBF 

(Rondeau.)—FEP —WEP 4 
Jenny Malone.—Anon.—CS 20 

Jenny Wren and Robin Redbreast.—Anon.—OS 1 
(Nursery Rhymes, I.)—CGd 
Jenny’s White Rose.—Mrs. H. E. M. Allen.—W T R 7 
Jeptha’s Daughter.—W. W. Marsh.—WR 7 
Jeptha’s Daughter.—Andrew Ramsay.—TCV 
Jephthah’s Daughter.—Lord Byron.—EPs 
Jephthah’s Daughter. (Abr .)—Nathaniel P.iWillis.— 
CS 16 

Jephthah’s Rash Vow.—Miss Howard.—CS 8 
Jere Lloyd on "Phrenology.”—Anon.—CS 11 
Jericho Bob.—Anna E. King.—HS 
Jerry.—Mary L. Dickinson.—BS 11—CS 22—SR 4 
Jerry an’ me.—Anon.—WR 12 
Jerry an’ me.—H. Rich.—ASL 
Jerry the Bobbin-boy.—Anon.—NP 
Jerusalem Avenged. (In Hebrew Melodies.)—Lord 
Byron.—BLP 

(Vision of Belshazzar— C.) —EP«—GN 
Jerusalem by Moonlight. (Sel. fr. Tancred, Bk. TIL, 
Ch. I.)—B: Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield.— 
CS 6—SR 5—TMD 

Jerusalem Delivered, Sets. fr .—Torquato Tasso. 

Shepherd’s Song, The. (Sel. fr. Can. VII.)—WR 11 
Sophronia and Olindo. (Sel. fr. Can. II.)— 
NE (Wiffen’s tr .)—WR 11 (diff. tr.) 

Jerusalem Delivered, Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.— 
NE 


Jerusalem the Beautiful.—M. L. Hoffard.—CS 28 
Jerusalem the Golden.—St. Bernard (tr. by J: M. 
Neale).—LLC (abr.) 

(Sel.)— IIDL—PYO 

(Celestial Country, The.)—BNL (abr.) —FEP 
Jes’ Nail dat Mink to de Stable Do’.—Anon.—DE 
Jessie.—T: E. Brown.—OB 
Jessie.—Fs. Bret Harte.—GN 

Jessie Brown at Lucknow.—G: Vandenhoff.—FMR 
Jessie Cameron.—Christina G. Rossetti.—CS 18 
Jessie, the Flower o’ Dumblane.—Rob’t Tannahill.— 
FEP 

(Flower o’ Dumblane, The.)—BNL 
Jessie’s Book.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Jessv.—Rob’t Burns.—FEP 

(Here’s a Health to ane I Lo’e Dear.)—HBP 
“Jest a-Thinkin’ o’ You.”—Ella Higginson.—WR 21 
Jest ’fore Christmas.—Eugene Field.—CS 34—EF — 
LS 

Jest of Fate, The. (Fate’s Frustrated Joke— C.) —Sam 
W. Foss.—WR 22 
Jester, The.—Anon.—WR 12 
Jester, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Jester Bee.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Jester Condemned [to Death], The.—Horace Smith.— 
CS 3 — KNE — NPS — OM — SCS — SS — 
YP 

Jester’s Sermon, The.—G: W. Thornbury.—BNL— 
CS 9—CSS—FEP—WRD 

Jesu, Lover of my Soul.—C: Wesley. See Jesus, Lover 
of my Soul. 

Jesu, my Strength, my Hope. (Abr.) —C: Wesley.— 
FEP 

Jesuits, The. (Fr. the second of the Satires upon the 
Jesuits.)—.1: Oldham.—WEP 2 
Jesus.—Theodore Parker.—AA—TAS 
Jesus Christ. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Jesus, I mv Cross have taken.—H: F. Lyte.—FEP 
(“Lo, we have Left All.”)—VA 
Jesus Knows.—Anon.—DLS 

"Jesus, Lover of my Soul.”—Eugene J. Hall.—BS 12 
—CS 31 

Jesus, Lover of mv Soul.—C: Wesley.—LLC (abr.) 

(SI. abr.)— HBP—SPE—YBF 
(Christ, the Refuge of the Soul.)—WEP 3 
(Jesu, Lover of my Soul.)—FEP (abr.) 

Jesus Loves Me.—M. Ella Cornell.—SSE 
"Jesus, Master, whom I serve.” (Sel.) —Frances R. 
Havergal.—FHS 

Jesus Shall Reign.—Isaac Watts.—HBP 
(Psalm LXXII.)—FEP 

Jesus the Carpenter.—Catherine C. Liddell.—VA 
Jewels of my Aunt, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 34 
Jewels she Lacked, The.—Anon.—WR 4 
Jewess and her Son, The.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Jewish Disabilities. (Sel.) —T: B. Macaulay.—MRS 
Jewish Hymn in Babylon.—H: H. Milman.—BNL 
Jewish Lullaby.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Jew’s Cemeterv on the Lido, The.—-J: A. Symonds.— 
AVP 

Jew’s Daughter, The. (C. — in Percy’s Reliques.) — 
Anon. 

(Hugh of Lincoln.)—PEB 1 
(SI. abr.) —BB—OEB 

(Sir Hugh; or, The Jew’s Daughter — diff. vers.) — 
BPB 

Jew’s Troubles, A.-Hurwood.—BDD—DRR 

Jim.—A. W. Bellaw.—CS 33 

“Jim.”—Fs. Bret Harte.—AA—BNL—CS 4—MHR 
“Jim.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Jim.—Nora Perry.—TMR 
Jim.—Jas W. Riley.—AWH 
Jim: a Hero.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 28 
Jim, Arizona, 1885>—C: F. Lummis.—BS 19 
(Arizona Jim.)—WR 2 

Jim Bludso [of the Prairie Belle].—J: Hav.—AA—BAB 
—MR—MRS—PYO—SC—WR 21 
Jim Bowker. (Then Ag’in— C.) —SamW. Foss.—BS 26 
Jim Lord’s Cat.—E: B. Nicholson.—WR 21 
Jim Onderdonk’s Sunday-school Oration.—Edgar W. 
Nye.—DCR 

Jim Smiley’s Frog.—S: L. Clemens. See Jumping 
Frog, The. 

Jim Wolfe and the Cats.—S:L. Clemens.—BeR—CS 17 
—DDR 

Jim-Jam King of the Jou-Jous, The.—Alaric B. Start 
—AWH—CG 2—THP 

Jimmie’s Prayer. (Boston Transcript.) —CD—SR 5 
Jimmy Brown’s Attempt to Produce Freckles.—W: L. 

Alden. See Adventures of Jimmy Brown, The. 
Jimmy Brown’s Dog.—W: L. Alden.—DR 
Jimmy Brown’s Prompt Obedience.—-W: L. Alden. See 
Adventures of Jimmy Brown, The. 


167 






Jimmy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Jimmy Brown’s Sister’s Wedding.—W: L. Alden. See 
Adventures of Jimmy Brown, The. 

Jimmy Brown’s Steam Chair.—W: L. Alden. See Ad¬ 
ventures of Jimmy Brown, The. 

Jimmy Butler and the Owl.—Anon.—CS 7—DI—FTR 
—HR—MYF—SA—SR 2 

Jimmy Hoy. (Paddy at Sea.—C.)—S: Lover.— 
BS 16 ( abr.) 

Jimmy McBride’s Letter.—Anon.—DI 
(Irishman’s Letter. An.)—HR 
Jimmy’s Wooing.—Will W. Harney.—TFY 
Jim’s Future. (C.) —Sam W. Foss. 

(Future in Front of Him, A.)—SR 9 
Jim’s Kids.—Anon.—CS 22 
Jim’s Story.—H. S. Tomer.—WR 21 
Jimtown Lyceum.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Jiners, The.—Anon.—CS 20—CSS—SR 7 
Jingle Parties. ( Ent .)—Anon.—EuE 
Jingles. ( Examiner and Chronicle.) —MYF 
Jingles of the Street.-—Anon.—SR 11 
Jinny.—Eva W. McGlasson.—WR 4 
Joam Docasta. (Sel. fr. Eight Hundred Leagues on the 
Amazon, Ch. AVII.)—Jules Verne.—NP 
Joan of Arc.—Anon.—FMR 
Joan of Arc, Sels. fr. —T: De Quincy. 

Execution of Joan of Arc.—CS 3 
Joan of Arc.—CS 3—NPS—YP 

(Shepherd Girl of Domremy.)—LLC 
Martyrdom of Joan of Arc, The.—CR 
Joan of Arc, Sel. fr. (Crowning of the King, The— -fr. 

Bk. X.)—Rob’t Southey.—CS 35 
Joan of Arc at the Stake. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 11— 
TCP 

Joan of Arc in Prison.—Mrs. L. J. B. Case.—WR 4 
Joan of Arc’s Farewell [to Home], (Prologue to Maid 
of Orleans, Sc. IV.)—Friedrich Schiller!—BLP 
—BS 22—FMR—PPSr 
Job, Sels. fr. Bible. 

Job XXVIII.—BS 10 

(Knowledge and Wisdom.)—BS 11 
(True Wisdom—12-28— tr. by G. R. Noyes.)— 
SS 

Omnipotence of Job. (Sels. fr. Chs. XXXVIII., 
XXXIX.— tr. by G. R. Noyes.)—SS 
Select Passages from Book of Job. (Sels. fr. Chs. 
XXXVIII.-XLI.)—AE 
Job.—S: T. Coleridge. See following. 

Job’s Luck. (C.) —S: T. Coleridge. 

(Beelzebub and Job.)—HPE 
(Epigram: ‘‘Sly Beelzebub.” etc.)—BNL 
(Epigram on Job and the Devil.)—FEP 
(Job.)—THP 

Job Trotter’s Secret.—C: Dickens.— See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Jock Johnstone, the Tinkler.— Jas. Hogg.—BNL— 
BS 22 (abr.)— CR 

Jock o’ the Side. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.— 
PEB 1 

Jock of Hazeldean.—Walter Scott. — BFV — BPB ; — 
FEP — GN — HBP — I.C — PEB 3 — PGT 1 
—PSR—WR 8—YBF 
Joe.—Albert Laighton.—FP 
Joe.—Alice Robbins.—CS 5—PS 
Joe and Meg.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Joe Fleming’s Thanksgiving.— (Dial. ad. by) C: S. 
Wayne.—CDs 

Joe Jones—A Parody.—Anon.—CS 7 
Joe, my Pard, the Parson.—S. B. M’Beath.—WR 12 
Joe Sieg. (Eclectic Magazine.) —BS 19 
Joe Striker and the Sheriff.—Anon.-—-CS 29—WR 20 
Joe, the Tramp.—Edgar M. Chipman.—CS 20 
Joe’s Search for Santa Claus.—Irving Bacheller.— 
HS 

Joe’s Way of Doing Chores.—Clara .7. Denton.—WLO 
Jog Alaskar Nordue.—Corinne Sickel.—CG 3 
Jog on, Jog onr, the Foot-path Way].—W: Shakespeare. 
See Winter’s Tale, A. 

John A. Andrew.—Louise C. Moulton.—EDY 
John A. Logan.—G: R. Peck.—NC 
John Alcohol.—Anon.—CS 34 

John and Tibbie Davison’s Dispute. (SI. diff. versions.) 
—Rob’t Leighton.— CDV—CS 14—PS—SDR 
(John and Tibbi"’-- Dispute.)—BS 5—SA 
(John Divid^on.)— OP 

John and Tibbie’s Dispute.—Rob’t Leighton. See fore¬ 
going. 

John Andersen.—Rob’t Burns. See following. 

John Anderson, my Jo. (C.) —Rob’t Burns.—BNL— 
CR — EPs — FEP — FP — FTR — GP — OB 
—PYO—SO—WEP 3 

(John Anderson.) — CEL—HBP—LC—MBL— 
PGT 1—WCLI 2—YBF 
John Avar’s Last Lay.—J: H. Duvar.—TCV 


John Barleycorn.—Rob’t Burns.—BVC—PEB 3—PHS 
(SI. abr.)— BNL—CGd 
(Abr. and si. diff. vers.) —PC 
John Bottlejohn.—Laura E. Richards.—FS 
John Boyle O’Reilly.—Elmer H. Capen.—MRS 
John Bright.—Francis B. Gummere.—AA 
John Brown.—Harry L. Koopman.— AA 
John Brown.—Eugene F. Ware.—EDY 
John Brown of Osawatomie.—Anon.—NC 
John Brown of Osawatomie.—Edmund C. Stedman. 

_EPs 

(How Old Brown took Harper’s Ferry— C '.)—PAP 
John Brown’s Body.—J. D. Sherman.—BS 24 
John Brown’s Ten Little Injuns; Tomahawk Drill.— 
Anon.—WDM 

John Bull and his Law-suit, Preface to. —J: Arbuth- 
not.—ESs 

John Bunyan, Sel. fr. —T: B. Macaulay.—SE—SPE 
John Burns of Gettysburg.-—Fs. Bret Harte.—AWB— 
BAB — BS 17 — CR — CS 4 — FP — HNS — 
MYF—PAP—PAPm 

John Charles Fremont. (To John C. Fremont— C.) — 
J: G. Whittier—BNL 

John Chinaman’s “Cornin’ through the Rye.” (Har¬ 
per’s Magazine.) —CDV—SDR 
John Chinaman’s Protest. — Anon. — CDV — DCR — 
SDR 

John Davidson.—Rob’t Leighton. See John and Tib¬ 
bie Davison’s Dispute. 

John Day. (C.)—T: Hood. 

(History of John Day— si. abr.) —OM 
John Endicott, Sel. fr. (Captain Ivempthorn— ad. as 
play.) —H: W. Longfellow.—NDP 
John George Nicolav.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
John Gilpin.—W: Cowper.—BPB—CGd—CS 7—PC— 
PHS—PSR—WCL 

(Diverting History of John Gilpin, The— C .)—BNL 
—BVC—FEP—GN—HBP—MBL — PEB 3— 
THP 

(Facetious Story of John Gilpin, The.)—MHR 
John Halifax, Gentleman, Sel. fr. (Little Muriel— abr. 

fr. Ch. XXVIII.)—Dinah M. Craik—CS 37 
John Hancock.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. See Centennial 
Oration. 

John Harding.—Mary R. Jarvis.—WR 13 
John Hasty and Peter Quiet.—Anon.—CSS 
John Henry Newman.—Edmund Gosse.—EDY 
John Howard.—Edmund Burke. See Speech at Bris¬ 
tol, Previous to the Election, 1780. 

John Jankin’s Sermon. (Harper's Bazaar.) —CS 8— 
KNE 

(Our Minister’s Sermon.)—BS 7—FEP—SR 7 
John Jones.—Algernon C. Swinburne—NA 
John Jones and I.—C: G. Ames.—CS 23 
John Jones’ Fort une.—H. E. McBride.—SD 
John Knox’s Indictment of the Queen. (Sel. fr. Both- 
well, Act IV., Sc. 7.)—Algernon C. Swinburne— 
VA 

John Mavnard.—Horatio Alger, Jr.—CS 5 
(SI. abr.) —BS 1—FR—PR—PS—SA 
John Maynard, the Hero-pilot.—J: B. Gough.—FTR 
(Pilot, The.)—CS 23—CSS—MMR—WRD 
(Story of John Maynard.)—BS 17 
(Poet. vers, of foregoing story.) 

John Milton. (Br. sel. fr. Progress of Poesy.)—T: 
Grav.—BNL 

John Mitchell. (Sel.) —J: B. O’Reilly.—EDY 
John Mouldy.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
John of Launoy.—Sir H: Taylor. See Philip Van Ar- 
tevelde. 

John of Mt. Sinai.—A. L. Frisbie.—BS 18—CS 29 
John Pelham.—Jas. R. Randall.—-AA—AWB 
(Dead Cannoneer, The.)—EDY 
John Quincy Adams, Sel. fr. (American and the Cor¬ 
sican, The.)—W: H. Seward.—NC 
(Corsican not Content, The— abr.) —WCLG 1 
John Robb and Anna Cobb.—Anon.—MAD 
John Smith’s Will.—B: P. Shillaber.—CS 18 
John Spicer on Clothes.—Abby M. Diaz.—DR 
John Thomson and the Turk.—Anon.—PEB 2 
John Valjohn and the Savoyard.—Victor Hugo. See 
Les Mis<5rables. 

John Ward, Preacher, Sel. fr. (Fire, The— sel. fr. Ch. 

XI.)—Marg. Deland.—WR 5 
John White’s Thanksgiving.—Anon.—CS 33—PP— 
YPS 

John Wickliffe. (Eccles. Sonnets, Pt. II., Son. XVII.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—BNL (sel.) 

(Wicliffe—C.)—EDY 

John Wycliffe and the Bible.—R: S. Storrs.—TMD 
Johneen.—Moira O’Neill.—TIP 

Johnnie Armstrong. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon. 
—BB (abr.) 


168 





TITLE INDEX 


Judge’s 


Johnnie Cope.—Adam Skirving.—WEP 3 
Johnnie of Braidislee.—Anon. See following. 

Johnnie of Breadislee.—Anon.—PEB 2 

(Johnnie of Braidislee— si. abr. and si. diff. arr.) — 
BB 

Johnnie’s Gun.—Clara J. Dent on.—ASD 
Johnnie’s Poetry.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Johnny and the Teacher. ( New York Sun.) —CS 33 
(Mental Arithmetic.)—DES 
(Trials of a School Teacher.)—ASD 
(Trials of a Schoolmistress.)—CH 
Johnny Bartholomew.—T: D. English.—BAB—CS 7— 
FTR—PR 

Johnny Cox.—A. P. Graves.—PEB 4 
“Johnny, I Hardly Knew Ye.”—Anon.—TIP 
Johnny Judkins.—C: F. Adams.—CS 21 
Johnny Scott.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Johnny the Stout.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Johnny-cake, The.—Anon.—WCL 
Johnny-cake, The. (The Nursery.) —HSS 2 
Johnny-jump-up.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Johnny’s Advice.—“Bob o’Link.”—DCP 
Johnny’s Choice.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Johnny’s Confession.—Anon.—WR 17 
Johnny’s Fourth of July.—Anon.—GH 
Johnny’s Lesson.—Anon.—WR 17 
Johnny s Opinion of Grandmothers.—Anon.—BS 2— 
SD—WR 17 (sel.) 

(Grandmot hers.)—LLC 

Johnny’s Pocket.—Anon.—CPL—PP—PR—YFR * 
Johnny’s Sisters.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
John’s Pumpkins.—Mrs. G: Archibald.—LPS—PP 
Johnson’s Ancestors.—Anon.—DSS 
Johnson’s Bedfellows.—Anon.—DSS 
Johnston at Shiloh.—Fleming James.—BAB 
Joined the Blues.—J: J. Rooney.—AA—PAPm 
Joke Versified, A.—(C.)—T: Moore.—FEP—HPE 
(On Taking a Wife.)—THP 
Joker’s Mistake, The.—Lemuel B. C. Josephs.—DR 
Jolly Brick, A.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 21 
Jollv Good Ale and Old.—J: Still.—FEP—GP—OB 
(Good Ale.)—BNL—HBP 
Jolly Goshawk, The.—Anon.—BB 

(Gay Gos[s]-hawk, The— si. diff. vers.)— GN— 
PEB 2 

(Scott ’s vers. — quite diff.) —EPs 
Jolly March.—Lizzie J. Rook.—TT 
Jolly Miller, The.—-Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Jolly Old Crow, The.—Anon.—CSS—PPSr 

(Cunning [of] Old Crow, The — diff. vers.) —AD— 
LLC 

Jollv Old Pedagogue, The.—G: Arnold.—BNL—CS 6— 
FEP—GP—HSS 3 (abr.) —LLC 
Jolly Old Saint Nicholas.—Anon.—WR 17 
Jonathan and the Englishmen.—Anon.—BC 

(How the Yankee Answered the Englishmen— si. 
diff. and si. longer.)— PTS 

Jonathan to John.— Jas. R. Lowell.—AWB—PAP— 
PYO (sel.) 

Jonathan’s Daughters.—H. E McBride.—MFD 
Joner Swallerin’ a Whale.—L: Eisenbein.—CS 31 
Jones at the Barberf’s] Shop.— (Punch.) —BNL—HPE 
—THP 

(Barber’s Shop, The.)—SCS 
Jonson, Ben. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Jorasse. (In Italy.)—S: Rogers.—BNL (abr.) 

Joseph and his Brethren, Sets. fr .—C: J. Wells. 
Patriarchal Home, The.—VA 
Phraxanor t o Joseph.—VA 
Rachel.—VA 

Triumph of Joseph, The.—VA 
Joseph Clayton.—Sarah Parry.—CS 37 
Joseph Rodman Drake.—Fitz-Greene Halleck.—BNL 
—EDY—GP 

(Green be the Turf.)—LLC 

(On the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake— C.) — AA 
—ASL—FEP—HBP—TAV—WCLG 2 . 

(To a Friend— sel.) —GMS 
Joseph II. and the Grenadier.—Anon.—PTS 
Josh Billings on Art emus Ward.—H: W. Shaw.—SR 4 
Josh Billings on Courting. (On Courting— C .— longer 
than rev. vers, in Works.)—H: W. Shaw.—CS 1 
(Courting.)—KNE 

Josh Billings on “Gongs.” (Mv Fust Gong— C.) — 
H : W. Shaw.—CS 3—MHR 

Josh Billings on Laughing. ( Ptly. fr. Laffing and 
Laughing.)—H: W. Shaw.—BC 
Josh Billings on “Manifest Destiny.”—H: W. Shaw.— 
CS 2 


(Manifest Destiny.)—PS 
Josh Billings on the Mule. 


(The Mule— C.)— H: W. 


Shaw.—-BC 


Joshua of 1776, The.-—W. R. Rose.—SR 4—WR 10 ' 


Josiah Allen’s wife as a P. A. and P. I. ; or, Samantha at 
the Centennial, Sets. fr. —Marietta Holley. 

Study in Dialect, A. (Sel. ad. fr. Tirzah Ann as a 
Wife.)—NP * 

Widder Doodle. (Sel .)—SR 13 • 

Josiah Allen’s Wife at a Fashionable Restaurant.— 
(Sel. fr. Samantha at the World’s Fair, Ch. 
XIV.)—Marietta Holley.—SR 12 
Josiah Allen’s Wife at A. T. Stewart’s Store.—Marietta 
Holley. See My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s. 
Josiah and Family at the Centennial.—Emma M. 
Johnston.—CS 13 

Josiah and the Mermaid.—Marietta Holley. See 
Samantha at Saratoga. 

Josiah at the Various Springs.—Marietta Holley. See 
Samantha at Saratoga. 

Josiah’s First Courting.—Anon.—MFD 
Josiah’s Proposal.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Josiar.—Anon.—BS 20 
Josie’s Fault.—Anon.—HVD 
Journey, The.—C: Churchill.—ESs 
Journey, The.-—Mary B. (C.) Hansbrough.—AA 
Journey into Spain, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Outre Mer. 

Journey of Life, The.—S. Jennie Smith.—CS 29 
Journey Onwards, The.—T: Moore.—HBP—PGT 1— 

, " YBF 

(As Slow our Ship— C.)— BNL—BPB—TIP 
Journey South, The.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora 
Leigh. 

Journey to Exeter, A. (To the Right Hon. the Earl of 
Burlington— C.) —J: Gay.—OES (si. abr.) 
Journey to What’s its Name, A.—Anon.—WR 12 
Jove and the Souls.—Jonathan Swift.—EPs (abr.) 

(Day of Judgment, The.—C.)—HPE—WEP 3 
Jovial Beggar, The.—Anon.—BVC—CGd—FEP— 
HBP—OS 1 

Jovial Cobbler of Saint Helen’s, The.—Anon.—BVC 
Jovial Crew; or, The Merry Beggars, Sel. fr. (Merry 
Beggars, The.)—R: Brome.—ELP 
Jovial Priest’s Confession, The.—(Walter de Mapes— 
tr. by) Leigh Hunt.—HPE 

Jovita; or. The Christmas Gift. (Sel. fr. How Santa 
Claus Came to Simpson’s Bar.)—Fs. Bret 
Harte.—DR 

Joy.—Helen H. Jackson.—EPs 

Joy. (In Give me not Tears.) — Rose H. Lathrop.— 
AA 

Joy.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the House, 
The. 

Joy after Sorrow.—Paul Gerhardt.—HDL 
Joy and Peace in Believing. ’ (C.) —W: Cowper.—FEP 
—HBP 

(“Sometimes a light surprises.”)—SAE 
Joy and Sorrow.—Jas. Hedderwick.—FP 
Joy Enough.—Barrett Eastman.—AA 
Joy of Battle, The.—J: Fletcher. See Mad Lover, 
The. 

Joy of Incompleteness, The.—J. Bessemeres.—HP— 
HSS 3 

Joy of Spring.—Leigh Hunt.—AD 

Joy of the Hills, The.—Edwin Markham.—GMS 

Joy of the Morning.—Edwin Markham.—AA 

Joy to the Toiler.—Anon.—HSS 3 

Joyful Messenger, The. See Isaiah. 

Joyful Surprise, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 

Joy-month.—David A. Wasson.—SN 

Joys and Sorrows of Eggs.—H: W. Beecher.—MHR 

Joys of the Road. The.—-Bliss Carman.—BNL—SN 

Juanita.—Joaquin Miller.—A A 

Juberlo Tom.—Rob’t, Overton.—CS 29 

Jubilate.—Anon.—HP 

Jubilate.—G: Arnold.—TAS 

Jubilee of the Flowers, The.—Sarah E. Howard.— 
WR 9 

Judas Maccabseus. (Br. sel. fr. Act II., sc. 1.)—H: W. 
Longfellow.—HDL 

Judas the Second.—Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 
Judge Brown’s Watermelon Story. (Arkansaw Trav¬ 
eller.)—YP—PS—Y PS 
Judge Lynch.—I. Edgar Jones.—CS 33 
Judge not.—Anon.—HP 
Judge not.—Joaquin Miller.—-FAS 
Judge not. (C. — abr.) —Adelaide A. Procter.—BNL— 
CS 12 (abr.) 

(“Judge not! the workings of his brain”— br. sel .)— 

GG 

“Judge not! the workings of his brain.”—Adelaide A 
Procter. See Judge Not. 

Judge of Bellinzona, The.—J. J. Reit.hard.—CS 24 
Judge Pitman on Various Kinds of Weather.—Max 
Adeler. See Out of the Hurly Burly. 

Judge’s Charge to the Grand Jury, The.—C. E. B.— FS 


169 




Judges 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Judges Should be Free.—Jas. A. Bayard.—SS—SSD 
Judge's Temperance Lecture, A.—J. N. Reading.— 
CS 10—NPS—YP 

Judging by Appearances.—Anon.—HR—MHR 
Judgment, The.—Dora R. Goodale.—AA 
Judgment.—Grace E. C. Stetson.—AA 
Judgment Day.—W: D. Howells.—AA 
Judgment in Heaven, A.—-Fs. Thompson.—VSG 
Judicial Tribunals. (Sel. fr. Duties of Massachusetts 
at the Present Crisis.)—C: Sumner.—CS 3; 
Judith. ( Br. sel. fr. Judith and Holofernes— varies 
si.) —T: B. Aldrich.—HDL 
Judith.—W: Young.—AA 

Judith and Holofernes.—T: B. Aldrich. See Judith. 

Judy O’Shea Sees Hamlet.—Lvnn B. Porter.—BS 20 

Juggler, The—G: Kyle.—WR3 

Juggler, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 

Juggling Jerry.—G: Meredith.—VA 

Jugurtha.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA 

Jugurthine War, The, Sets. fr. —Sallust. 

Caius Marius to the Romans on the Objections to 
Making him General. (LXXV.— cond.) —SS 
(Merit before Birth— diff. tr. and abr.) —BLP 
Prince Adherbal before the Roman Senate. (XIV. 
— cond.) —BLP 

Julia.—S: T. Coleridge—HPE—SCS 
Julia.—Rob’t Herrick.—GP (w. add. st.) 

(Rock of Rubies, The—C.)—ES—WEP 2 
Juljet.—L: F. Austin.—DES 

Juliet of Nations.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Casa 
Guidi Windows. 

Julius Caesar.—W: Shakespeare.—WCLG 2 
Sels.: 

Antony’s Lament over Caesar. (Sel. fr. Act III., 
Sc. 1.)—SO 

Cassius. (Sel. fr. I., 2.)—EPs 

(‘‘And this man is now become a god”— br. sel.) 
—SPF. 

(Cassius against Caesar.) — BS 2 — CS 8 — 
ICNE (si. abr.) —SPE 
(Cassius’ Complaint of Caesar— sel.) —PPS 
Cassius Instigating Brutus against Casar.)—FR 
Cassius to Brutus.)—-OS 2 
Julius Caesar— br. sel.) —BNL 
Speech of Cassius, Instigating Brutus to Join 
the Conspiracy against Caesar.)—SS 
Crime. (Br. sel. fr. II., 1.)—EPs 
(Julius Caesar, Br. sel. fr.) —BNL 
Forum Scene, The. (III., 2— si. abr.) —MRS 

(Antony’s Oration over the Body of Caesar— 
abr.)— BLN . 

(Antony on the Death of Caesar— br. sel.) — 
PP—YFR 

(Antony over the Dead Body of Caesar— si. 
abr.) —EPs 

(Antony’s Address to the Romans [on the 
Death of Caesar]— cond.) —CS 3—FR—PPSr 
(Antony’s Oration over Caesar— cond. )—KNE 
—SO 

(Death of Julius Caesar, The— sel.) —EDY 
(Julius Caesar— br. sel.) —AE 
(Marc Antony’s Funeral Oration— sel.) —IR 
(Mark Antony to the People on Caesar’s Death 
— cond.)’ —OS 2—PS—SS 
(Oration of Mark Antony— cond.) —LLC 
(Brutus on the Death of Caesar— sel.) —FR 
(Abr.) —CS 3 EA—LLC—SO 
(Sel.) —PP—YFR 

(Brutus’ Harangue on the Death of Caesar— 
abr.)— KNE 

(Brutus Justifying the Assassination of 
Caesar— abr.) —OS 2 

(Marcus Brutus on the Death of Caesar— abr.) 
—PS—SS 

Julius Caesar— br. sel.) —SAE 
Mark Antony Scene.)—BS 4—CDD—SR 12 
“I can as well be hanged, as tell the manner of it.” 
(Br. sel. fr. I., 2.)—SPE 

Julius Caesar, Br. sels. fr. —AE (fr. III., 1; IV., 3.) 
-BNL (/r. II., 1; II., 2.)—SAE (fr. II., 1; 
III., 1.) 

Julius Caesar, Act IV.. Sc. III. (Sel.) —IR 
(Brutus to Cassius— br. sel.) —SE 
(Julius Caesar— br. sels.) —BNL—SE 
(Quarrel between Brutus and Cassius.)—SO 
(Quarrel of Brutus and CassiusL The].)—CDD— 
CS 10—KNE —LLC—PS—SR 12—SS 
(‘‘That you have wronged me doth appear in 
this”— br. sel.) —SPE 

Julius Caesar, Act IV., Sc. III. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
(Opportunity— si. abr.) —EPs 
(“There is a tide in the affairs ot men.”)— 
WCLI 1 


Julius Caesar (continued). 

Scene from Julius Caesar. (I., 1.)—EA 
(Julius Caesar, Act I., Sc. 1— sel.) —PPS 

(Marullus to the Roman Populace.)—OM— 

pg_gg 

Suspicion. (Br. sel. fr. I., 2.)—KNE 
July.—J: Clare.—FEP—HBP—POS (abr.) 

July.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
July.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
July.—Susan H. Swett.—GN—POS—-YBT 
Jumblies, The. (In Nonsense Songs.)—Edward Lear. 
—NA—THP—VA 

"Jumped”—the Story of Ben Fargo’s Claim.—T. P 
Morgan.—CS 33 

(How Ben Fargo’s Claim was Jumped.)—BS 18 
Jumping Frog, The. (C.) —S: L. Clemens. 

(Mark Twain’s Account of “Jim Smilev”— abr.) — 
CS 5 

(Celebrated Jumping Frog, The— sel. )—BeR 
(Jim Smiley’s Frog— -sel.) —PS 
(That Dog of Jim Smiley’s— sel.) —BeR 
Jumping the Rope.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Junction. The.—Constance Fairbanks.—TCV 
June.—Anon.—PEO 

June.—W: C. Bryant.—AA—BNL—FP (abr.) —GP—SN 
June.—Susan Grant.—CG 3 
June.—Archibald Lamp man.—TCV 
June.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Vision of Sir Launfal, 
The. 

June.—Caroline A. Mason.—CPL 
June.—Mary N. Meigs.—HSS 1 
June.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
June.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 

June.—Edmund Spenser. See Shepheardes Calendar, 
The. 

June Fields.—G: Cooper.—HSS 1 

June in January.—R: K. Munkittrick.—TAV 

June 21st.—G: Birdseye.—AWH 

June Weather.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Vision of Sir 
Launfal, The. 

Jungfrau’s Cry, The.—Stopford A. Brooke.—VA 
Junior Partner Wanted, A.—M. E. Sanford.—NPS— 
YP 

Junior’s Foxy Friends, The.—Ravmond W T . Walker.— 
CG 3 

Junipero Serra.—R: E. White.—CS 27 
Jupiter Amans. (London Leader.) —HPE 
Jupiter and Ten.—Jas. T. Fields.—BS 14—FEP— 
MMR 

Jupiter and the Bee.—.Esop.—OS 1 
Juryman’s Story, A.—Emilia A. Blake.—CS 32 
Just about these Days.—A. T. Worden.—CS 37 
Just as I Am.—Charlotte Elliott.—FEP—VA 
Just as she Told it.—Julia Witheridge.—WR 24 
Just Be Glad.—Jas. W. Riley.—CS 37 
(Kissing the Rod— C .)—HDL 
Just Commonplace.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 19 
Just for To-day.—S: Wilberforce.—HDL—VA (si. 
diff. and si. abr.) 

Just from the City.—H. E. McBride.—St.D 
Just Graduated.—Ruth Max.—FS 
Just Like a Man.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—CS 36 
(His Mother’s Cooking.)—BR—CS 28 

Just Like God.-Viroe.—YBT 

Just Like Them.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 20 
“Just Me.”—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Just One Dav, Sel. fr. (“Jefful, The.”)—J: Habberton. 
—BS 16 

Just One Signal. (Chicago Record.) —PAPm 
Just Over the Way.—Anon.—CS 21 
Just Retribution, The. (Dial. fr. The Peasant Boy.)— 
W: (?) Dimond.—CS 23—PS 
(Peasant Boy’s Vindication, The— si. abr.) —NDP 
Just ’Sposin’.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Just Tribute, A.—Henrietta R. Elliot.—SR 6 
Just Twenty-one.—Mrs. R. K. Todd.—SR 5 
Just what I Wanted. (The Independent.) —CS 34 
Justice.—T: Carlyle. See Past and Present. 

Justice. (Dial.) —Ella H. Clement.—CDs 
Justice.—C: F. Richardson.—TAS 
Justice.—Jessie M. Wood.—TL 
Justice and Mercy.—C: D. Gardette.—MD 
Justice for Dreyfus.—Emile Zola.—MRS 
Justice in a Quandary.—Anon.—GH 
Justice in Leadville, 1878.—Helen H. Rich.—CS 23 
Justice, not Charity.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 35 
Justice to Scotland. (Punch.) —HPE 
Justice to the Whole Country.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Compromise Measures, The. 

Juvenile Inquisitor, A.—Zenas Dane.—DCR 
Juxtaposition.—Arthur H. Clough. See Amours de 
Voyage. 


170 




TITLE INDEX 


Kilmeny 


K 

Kaiser, The.—W. Howitt.—PPSr 
Kaiserblumen, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Kaleder of Sheperdes, 1528, Br. sel. fr. (Books.)— 
Anon.—BNL 

Kalendar Kermesse, The. ( Ent .)—Anon.—EuE 
Kalevala, The, Sels. fr. 

Birth of the Harp, The. (Runes XL., XLI.— abr .— 
J: M. Crawford’s tr .)—NE 
Tlmarinen’s Wedding Feast. (XXI., abr. —Craw¬ 
ford’s tr.) —NE 

Kullervo and the Wheat Cake. (.Sel. }r. XXXIII.— 
Crawford’s tr.) —OS 2 

Legend of Aino, The. (Sels. fr. II. and IV.—J: A. 
Porter’s tr.) —WR 11 

Wainamoinen’s Sowing. (Sel. fr. II.—Porter’s tr.) 
—MMR 

Wooing of the Maid of Beauty. (Sels. fr. VIII., 
XVIII., XIX., XX., XXL—Crawford’s tr.)— 
WR 11 

Kalevala, The, Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Kane.—Fitz-James O’Brien.—BNL—CS 1—FEP 
Kangaroo. (Fr. Ascutnev Charades.)—Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Kansas. (Sel.fr. Crime against Kansas.)—C: Sumner. 
—OS 3 

Karamanian Exile, The.—Jas. C. Mangan.—FEP— 
TIP 

Karl the Fiddler.—Rossiter W. Raymond.—CS 33 
Karl the Martyr. (Abr.)— Anon.—CS 16—FR 
Karma.—W: Canton.—VA 

Karol’s Kiss.—Ben Jonson. See Sad Shepherd, The. 
Kate.—Anon.—CS 25—NPS—YP 
(Lines to Kate.)—PP—YFR 
Kate. (United Irishman, The.) —BS 21 
Kate Ketchem. (Parody on Maud Muller.)—Phcebe 
Cary (?).—CS 7—PS—SA 

Kate Maloney.-Dagonet.—CS 18—NPS—YP 

Kate Shellv.—Eugene J. Hall.—CS 21—FMR (abr .)— 
FTR—PR 

(For another vers, of the story see Brave Kate Shelley 
by Mrs. M. L. Payne.) 

Kate Temple’s Song.—Mortimer Collins.—VA 
Kate’s French Lesson. (Dial.) —Anon.—LPS—PP 
Katey’s Letter.—Helen S. Sheridan, Lady Dufferin. 
—CH 

(Katy’s Letter— w. music.) —NPS—YP 
Kathaleen Ny-Houlahan.—Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 
Katharine Janfarie. (Abr. and si. diff. fr. vers, in Bor¬ 
der Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—BB—FEP 
Katharine’s Appeal to King Henry.—W: Shakespeare. 

See King Henry VIII. 

Kathie Morris.—Anon.—CS 23—DS 
Kathleen Ban Adair.—Fs. Davis.—CS 10 
Kathleen Mavoumeen.— Louise (Macartney) [or Anne 
(Barry)] Crawford.—FEP—VA 
Kathleen O’More.—G: N. Reynolds.—TIP 
Kathrina, Sels. fr. —Josiah G. Holland. 

“Are there not lofty moments when the soul.” (Br. 

sel. fr. Pt. II.—Love.)—GG 
Kathrina, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. II.—Love.)— 
BIL 

Katie.—H: Timrod.—ASL 
Katie an’ me.—Edmund V. Cooke.—WR 22 
Katie Lee and Willie Gray.—Josie R. Hunt [or J. H. 
Pixley].— BS 1 — CS 8 — CSS — FTR — 
MYF—NPS—PPSr—SA—YP 
Katie’s Answer.—Anon.—CS 20—HBR—PPSr 
Katie’s Part.—Susan T. Perry.—YBT 
Katie’s Questions.—Anon.—CS 36 
Katrina.—Anon.—PP—YPS 

Katrina Likes me Poody yell.—“Ooftv Gooft.”—BDD 
—DFY—HR 

Katrina Sees a Game of Foot-ball.—Anon.—CRR 
Katrina’s Visit to New York.—Anon.—BDD— 
CS 23 

(Abr.) —CDV—SDR 

(Simon’s Wife’s Mother Lay Sick of a Fever— abr.) 
—CD 

Katy Didn’t.—Anon.—WR 17 
Katydid.—Oliver W. Holmes.—BNL (sel.) —BS 1 
(Sel. )—CSS—TFS 
(To an Insect— C.) —SN 
(To the Katydid.)—WCLI 2 
Katydid.—Marg. E. Sangster.—CPL 
Katydids, The.—Jas. W. Rilev.—BJC 
Katy’s Letter.—Helen S. Sheridan, Lady Dufferin. 
See Katey’s Letter. 

Kavanagh, Sel. fr. (Seasons in Sweden, The— sel. fr. 

introd. to Frithiof’s Saga, in Driftwood.)—H: 
W. Longfellow.—SE 


Kearny [ut. Kearnev] at Seven Pines.—Edmund C. 
Stedman.—AA—AWB—BAB—MYF—PAP- 
PA Pm 

Kearsarge, The.—Jas. J. Roche.—AA—EDY 

Kearsarge and Alabama.—Anon.—AWB 

Keats.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 

Keats.—Erasmus H. Brodie.-—EDY 

Keats.—Stuart Livingston.—TCV 

Keats.—W: W. Lord. See Ode to England, An. 

Keats.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
“Keats Took Snuff.” (The Globe .)—PPh 
Keenan’s Charge.—G: P. Lathrop.—AA—BAB—CS 21 
—PAPm—SR 1 

(Abr.) —AWB—EDY—PAP—SO—TMD 
"Keep a Stiff Upper Lip!”—Phoebe Cary.—BLF— 
KNE 

Keep it before the People!—A. J. H. Duganne.—PPSr 
Keep out of Debt.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Keep the Holidays.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Keep the Mill a-Going.—T: D. English.—SR 1 
Keep the Record Clean!—Harriet W. Requa.—WR 18 
Keep those Banners.—T: O. Summers.—SR 8 
Keep to the Line.—Ellen Murray.—CS 35 
Keep Trying.-—Anon.—HSS 2 

Keep up with the Times.—Arthur J. Burdick.—CS 36 
Keep Working.—Josephine Pollard. See Over and 
Over Again. 

Keeper, The.—T: Hughes. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days. 

Keepers of the Light, The.—Letitia V. Douglas.— 
CS 31 

Keepers of the Pass, The.—C: G. D. Roberts.—VA 
Keeping a Heart.—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—FTA— 
PGT2 

Keeping his Word.—Anon.—CS 4—FR—FTR 
Keeping House. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Keeping House. (Dial.) —Sophie May.—NDP 
Keeping in Repair. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Keeping Store.—Anon.—HVD 
Keeping Store.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Keeping the Birthday.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Keepsake Mill.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Keepsakes.—Anon.—WR 22 

Kehama.—Rob’t Southev. See Curse of Kehama, The. 
Keith of Ravelston.—Sidney Dobell.—FEP—PEB 3 
(Ballad of Keith of Ravelston. The.)—A VP—OB— 
PGT 2 

Keller’s American Hymn.—Matthias Keller.—BLP 
Kelpius’s Hymn.—Arthur Peterson.—AA 
Kemp Owyne.—Anon. See following. 

Kempion. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—BB 
(Kemp Owyne— diff. vers .)—PEB 2 
Kenilworth, Sels. fr .—Walter Scott. 

Amy Robsart and R: Varney. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXII.) 
—CR 

Interview between Amv and Lord Leicester at Ken¬ 
ilworth. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXV.)—WR 1 
(Countess Amv and her Husband— si. abr.) —CR 
Raleigh. (Sel. fr. Ch. XV.)—WCLG 1 
Kenmure’s On and Awa.—Rob’t Burns.—HBP 
Keno!—M. J. Neville.—DRR 
Kensal Green.—A. W. Drake.—TAV 
Kentucky Babe.—R : H. Buck.—A A 
Kentucky Belle.—Constance F. Woolson.—BS 4— 
CS 12—MR—SA—SE—SPE 
Kentucky Philosophy.—Harrison Robertson.— BS 2— 
CS 21—PS—SR 3—THP 
Kept In.—Ethel L. Beers.—OS 1 
Ker Chew Duet, A.—Anon.—CS 13 
Kerrected.—Florence E. Pratt [or Pyatt].—SR 7 
(Courting in Kentucky.)—AWH—BS 19—THP 
(School-ma’am’s Courting, The.)—CRR—DR 
Keynote of Abolition, The. (Fr. the Liberator, 1832.) 

—W: L. Garrison.—WR 10 
Keystone. (Acting char.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Khamsin.—Clinton Seollard.—A A 

Kickshaw. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. 

Sabine.—TCP 

Kid Sixey’s Christmas.—W: E. Penney.—BS 19 
Kidnapping of Sims, The.—J: Pierpont.—EDY 
Kilbrannon.—R. D. Joyce.—PEB 4 ✓ 

‘ ‘ Killed!”—G: Weatherly.—NPS—YP 
Killed at the Ford.—H: W. Longfellow.—HSS 1—MR 
Killed with Kindness.—Sophie May.—SD 
Killiecrankie. (Fr. Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers.)— 
W: E. Aytoun.—CEL (si. abr.) —EHT (abr.) 
(Burial March of Dundee, The.)—CR (si. abr.) — 
FEP 

(Sel .)—EDY—OM 

Killing of Macbeth.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 

Kilmarnock’s Lament.—Anon.—EDY 

Kilmeny.—Jas. Hogg. See Queen’s Wake, The. 


171 




Kilvany 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Kilvany.—.1: Hay.—OS 3 

(Law of Death, The— C.) —BS 10 ( at. toE. Arnold.) 
Kind Old Oak, The.—Anon.—AD 
Kind Words.—Anon.—AD (sel.) 

(Memory Gems; “Kind hearty,” etc.)—WCLI 1 
(Short Selections: “Kind hearts,” etc.)—SM 
(Short Speeches: Kindness— sel .)—PS 
Kind Words.—Anon.—CPL 
Kind Words. (Prose.) —Anon.—KNE 
“Kind words are the music of the world.” ( Br. sel. fr. 
Spiritual Conferences, Ch. III.)—Frd’k W. 
Faber.—FHS 

Kindergarten Christmas, A.—Hayden Carruth.— 
WR 26 

Kindly Words.—Anon.—TFS (sel.) 

(Speak Gently.)—FP 
Kindness.—C: R. Barrett .—SR 4 
Kindness and Cruelty. (Dial.) —Anon.—PS 
Kindness to Animals.—Anon.—BVC 
Kindness to Animals.—J. Ashby Sterry.—NA 

("Speak gentlv to the herring and kindlv to the 
calf”— abr.) —BVC 

Kindred Quacks. (Punch.) —HPE—SCS 
Kinds of Trees to Plant.—Edmund Spenser.— See 
Faerie Queene, The. 

King, A.—Rob’t Browning. See Pippa Passes. 

King Ailill’s Death.—Whitley Stokes.—TIP 
King Alcohol’s Soliloquy.—Harriet A. Sawyer.— 
WR 18 

King and People. (Sel. fr. By Order of the King, Bk. 

I., Pt. I., Ch. V.)—Victor Hugo.—OS 2 
King and Slave.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FTA—TFY 
King and the Child, The.—Eugene J. Hall.—FAS— 
PP—YFR 

King and the Countryman, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
King and the Locusts, The.—Anon.—CS 8—MYF 
King and the Nightingales, The.—C: Mackay.—WR 1 
King and the Poet, The.—Andreas Kerner.—OS 2 
King and the Pope, The.—C: H: Webb.—TAV 
King and the Spelling Book, The.—Clara J. Denton.— 


King Arthur.—Anon.—NA 
(History.)—BVC 

King Arthur and Queen Guinevere.—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Idylls of the King. 

King Arthur; or. The British Worthy, Sel. fr. (Harvest 
Home —song fr. Act V., Sc. 1.)—J:Dryden.— 
ELP 

King Arthur’s Death. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—HBP 


King Arthur’s Waes-hael.—Rob’t S. Hawker.—OB 
King Bell.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
King Canute.—W: M. Thackeray.—CS 17—EHT (si. 
abr.) 

(Abr.) —HSS 2—SO 

King Canute and his Nobles.—J: Wolcott.—MMR 
King Charles II. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
King Christian the Dane.—Anon.—MYF 
King Christmas.—A. Graham.—SR 3 
King Coal to Uncle Sam.—E. F. Burns.—PAPni 
King Cophetua and the Beggar-maid. (In Percy’s 
Reliques.)—Anon.—OEB 
King Cotton.—Rob’t Mackenzie.—WR 10 
King Death.—Bryan W. Procter.—VS 
King Dollar. (Abr.) —T: D. English.—BS 19 
King Edward the Second.—Christopher Marlowe. See 
Edward the Second. 

King Edward the Third. (Act III., Sc. 5.)—Anon.— 
EHT 


King Edward the Fourth, Sel. fr. (Princes in the 
Tower, The.)—T: Hey wood.—EHT 
King Edwin’s Feast.—J: W. Chadwick.—OS 2 
King Harold’s Speech to his Armv before the Battle of 
Hastings. (Sel. fr. Harold, Bk. NIL. Ch. VII.) 
—E: Bulwer-Lvtton.—BS 14—OS 2 
King Henry. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.— 
PEB 2 

King Henry IV., Pt. I., Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Falstaff and Prince Hal. (Sel. fr. Act II.. Sc. 4.) 
—WR 16 

(Falstaff’s Boasting.)—CS 11 
(Falstaff’s Instinct— br. sel.) —SE 
(Prince Henry and Falstaff.)—BS 5—CDD— 
MHR—SE (abr.) 

Falstaff’s Honor. (Br. sel. fr. V., 1.)—SE 
Hotspur’s Quarrel with Henry IV. (Sel. fr. IV., 
3.)—EPs 

Hotspur’s Soliloquy on the Contents of a Letter. 
(Sel. fr. II., :<.)—PS 

King Henry the Fourth. (I., 1; sel. fr. II., 4.)— 


King Henry the Fourth. (Sel. fr. IV., 1.)—EHT 
(King Henry IV., Act IV., Sc. 1— br. sel .)—BNL 


King Henry IV., Pt. I., (continued). 

King Henry the Fourth. (Sel. fr. V., 4.)—EHT 
(Battle of Shrewsbury— -sel.) —EDY 
(King Henry IV., Act IV., Sc. 1— br. sel.) —BNL 
Scene from “Henry the Fourth.” (I., 3— abr.) —CR 
( F op— sel. )—EPs 

(Hotspur and the Fop.)—LLC 
(Hotspur’s Defence.)—CS 5—FR 
(Hotspur’s Description of a Fop— si. abr.) — 
BNL 

(Hotspur— sel. w. add.) —EPs 

(“But, sirrah, henceforth,” etc.— br. sel.) —AE 
(Hotspur to Worcester— abr.) —PPS 
(King Henry IV.— br. sel.) —BNL 
Scene from “Henry IV.” (Sel. fr. III., 1.)—MPD 
(King Henry— br. sels.) —BNL 
(Rhymers— br. sel.) —CS 18 
King Henry IV., Pt. II., Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Henrv the Fourth’s Soliloquy on Sleep. (Sel. fr. 
Act III., Sc. 1.)—WRD 
(Sleep.)—AE (si. abr.) —BNL—EPs—KNE 
King Henry IV. (Br. sel. fr. I., 1.)—BNL 
King Henry the Fourth. (Sel. fr. IV., 5.)—EHT 
Oracle: “There is a history, etc.” (Br. sel. fr. 
III., 1.)—EPs 

Sickness. (Br. sels. fr. IV., 4 and 5.)—AE 
King Henry V., Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Agincourt. (Prol., si. abr.; prol., Act II., abr.; 
prol.. Act III.; prol.. Act IV., si. abr.; prol.. 
Act V., abr.; also Drayton’s The Battle of 
Agincourt.)—LH 

(Prologues from King Henry V.— prol. to play; 
to Act II,, cond.; to Act III.)—MRS 
Black Prince, The. (Br. sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 4.)— 
EPs 

Henry V. (Sel. fr. I., 1.)—EPs 
Henry V. at Harfleur. (III., 1.)—BS 7 (si. cond.) 
—KNE 

(Henry V., Sel. fr. — cond.) —SAE 
(Henry V. at the Siege of Harfleur.)—OS 3 
(Henry V. to his Soldiers at the Siege of Har¬ 
fleur— si. cond.) —PS 
(Henry V. to his Troops.)—SO 
(Henry’s Speech before Agincourt [Harfleur].)— 
PPS 

(King Henry V., sel. fr.)—EHT 
(King Henry V., Act III., Sc. 1.)—MRS 
(King Henry V. at Harfleur.)—EDY 
(King Henry’s Address to his Soldiers.)—WCLG 2 
(King to his Soldiers before Harfleur, The.) 
—BNL 

(Speech of Henry V.— cond.) —IR 
Henry the Fifth’s Wooing. (Sel. fr. V., 2.)—BS 9 
—CDD—CR (si. diff. )—CS 24—MHR—SR 12 
(Wooing of the French Princess, The.)—VSG 
King Henry V., Sels. fr. (Act II., Scs. 2 and 3, 
cond.) —MRS 

King Henry V., Act I.. Sc. II. (Cond.) —MRS 
(Commonwealth of the Bees, The— sel.) —GN 
(Bees. The— abr.) —POS 

(Henry V.’s Audience of French Ambassadors— 
sel.) —EPs 

King Henry the Fifth, Act IV., Sc. 1. (Sels.) — 
AE (br.)— BNL (br.)— EHT 
Reduction of Harfleur, The. (III., 3.)—EDY 
Scene from “Henry V.” (Sel. fr. IV., 3.)—AE 
(Battle of St. Crispian’s Day— si. abr.) —EPs 
(Crispian’s Day.)—TMD 
(Henry V. to his Soldiers.)—PS—SS 
(Henry V. Encouraging his Soldiers— abr.) —OS 2 
Soliloquy on Character. (Sel. fr. III., 2.)—FAS 
King Henry V. and the Hermit of Dreux.—Rob’t 
Southey.—EHT 

King H“"rv V. at HarfDur.—W T : Shakespeare. See 
King Henry V. 

King Henry VI., Pt, I., Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
King Henry the Sixth. (Act I., Sc. 1— cond.) — 
EHT 

King Henry VI., Act TI., Sc. 4. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
Relief of Orleans. (I., 6.)—EDY 
King Henry VI., Pt. II., Sels. fr. —W; Shakespeare 
Battle of St. Albans. (Act V., Sc. 3.)—EDY 
Death of Cardinal Beaufort. (III., 3.)—EDY 
Death of Jack Cade. (IV., 10— si. abr.) —EDY 
Hate and Revenge. (Br. sel. fr. III.. 2.)—KNE 
(Henry VI, Sel. fr.—br. sel.)— SAE 
King Henry VI, Pt. II. (Br.sel.fr. III., 2.)—BNL 
King Henry VI, Pt. II. (II, 2— si. abr.; IV, 2— 
si. abr.) —EHT 

King Henry VI, Pt, III, Sels. fr. — W: Shakespeare. 
Battle of Barnet. (Act V, Sc. 3.)—EDY 
Battle of Tewksbury. (V, 4— abr.) —EDY 
Battle of Towton. (Sel. fr. II, 6.)—EDY 


172 




TITLE INDEX 


King 


King Henry VI., Pt. III., ( continued). 

King Henry VI., Pt. III. ( Sel. fr. II.. 5.)—EHT 
(King Henry’s Ambition— si. abr .)—HP 
(Shepherd’s Life, A— br. sel .)—BNL 
King Henry VIII., Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Anne Bullen. (Act II., Sc. 3— abr .)—MRS 
Buckingham’s Address on his Way to Execution. 

(.Sel. fr. II., 1.)—SAE 
Cardinal Wolsey. (Sel. fr. IV., 2.)—TMD 
(King Henry VIII.—6r. sel .)—BNL 
King Henry the Eighth. (II., 4— abr .)—EHT 
(Katharine’s Appeal to King Henry— abr .)—SAE 
(Queen Catherine to the King and Court of Car¬ 
dinals— abr .— w. add .)—I MR 
(Queen Katharine’s Appeal to King Henry VIII. 

for Mercy— abr .)—SO 
(Queen Katherine— si. abr .)—MRS 
(Scene from “King Henry VIII.”— si. abr .)— 
WR 14 

(Trial of Queen Katherine.)—EDY (abr .)—SR 12 
(si. abr.) 

King Henry the Eighth. (Sel. fr. III., 2.)—EHT 
(Be Just and Fear Not— sel .)—BLP 
(Cardinal Wolsey.)— SE (sel .)—SS (abr.) 
(Cardinal Wolsey on being Cast off by Henry 
VIII.— abr .)—CS 1—OS 2—SM— SO 
(Cardinal Wolsey’s Soliloquy— sel .)—WCLG 2 
(Fall of Wolsey.)—EDY (sel .)—LLC (abr.) 
("Love thyself last; cherish thou,” etc.— br. sel.) 
—GG 

(“This is the state of man,” etc.— sel .)—HSS 3 
(Wolsey’s Advice to Cromwell— sel .)—-BNL 
(Wolsey’s Fall— sel.) —BNL—BS 2—KNE 
(Wolsey’s Farewell— abr .)—FR 
(Wolsev’s Farewell [Address] to Cromwell— sel.) 
—PS—WCLG 2 

(Wolsey’s Soliloquy—sel.)—PS—SAE (abr.) 
King Henry VIII. (Br. sels. fr. III., 2, and V., 2.) 
—BNL 

Oracle: "We must not stint,” etc. (Br. sel. fr. 
I.. 1.)—EPs 

Scene from “King Henry VIII.” (III., 1.)—WR 14 
(Influence of Music— song—sometimes at. to 
J: Fletcher.)—FEP—HBP 
( Orpheus.)—OB 

(Orpheus with his Lute.)—BPB—EPs—GN 
(Queen Catherine— si. abr.) —NDP—SAE (br. sel.) 
King Henry the Eighth. (Recollections of the Por¬ 
trait of King Henry VIII., Trinity Lodge, Cam¬ 
bridge— C. —Poems of the Imagination, Misc. 
Sonnets, Pt. III., Son. IV.)—W: Wordsworth. 
—EHT 

King Henry’s Address to his Soldiers.—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See King Henry V. 

King Henrv’s Ambition.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VI., Pt. III. 

King is Cold, The.—Rob’t Browning.—BNL 
King is Dead, Long Live the King, The.—Louise C. 
Moult on.—WR 8 

King is Dying, The.—Jas. B. Kenyon.—FEP 
King John, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Constance’s Denunciation of King Philip of France 
and Lymoges of Austria. (Sel. fr. III., 1.)— 
SAE 

(“War! war! no peace! peace is to me a war”— 
sel .)—AE 

Death of Prince Arthur. (Br. sel. fr. Act IV., Sc. 3.) 
—EDY 

Exhortation to Courage. (Br. sel. fr. V., 1.)—FP 
King John, Sels. fr. (Sel, fr. II., 1; br. sel. fr. 
TIL, 1.)—AE 

King John, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. III., 4.)—SAE 
(“Grief fills the room up of my absent child”— 
abr .)—HDL 

(King John, Act III., Sc. 4, Sel. fr .)—BNL 
King John. Selected Scenes. (III., 3.)—EHT 
(Dialogue between King John and Hubert— abr.) 
—AE 

(Tragedy of King John, The, Sel. fr. — abr .)—BS 6 
King John. Selected Scenes. (IV., 1.)—EPIT 
(Arthur in "King John”— br. sel .)—SE 
(Tragedy of King John, The, Sel. fr .)—BS 6 
King John. Selected Scenes. (V., 7— si. abr .)— 
EHT 

(King John, Sel. fr. — br. sel .)—AE 
Speech of the Dauphin. (Sel. fr. V., 2.)—EPs 
“Thou mayst, thou shalt; I will not go with thee.” 

(Br. sel. fr. III., 1.)—AE 
Threatening. (Br. sel. fr.TV., 3.)—KNE 
Tragedy of King John, The, Sel. fr. (Sel. fr. IV., 
2.)—BS 6 

(King John. Act IV., Sc. 2—3 br. sels .)—BNL 
King John and Matilda, Sel.\fr. (Requiem, A.)—Rob’t 
Davenport.—ELP 


King John and the Abbot [of Canterbury], (In 
Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—BB—BNL—BVC 
—CEL—CGd—EPs—HBP—HPE—PEB 2— 
PHS—WR 1 
(Spelling varies si.) 

King John. Selected Scenes.— W: Shakespeare. See 
King John. 

King Lear, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Bluntness. (Br. sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 2.)—KNE 
DoverCliff[s]. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 6.)—BNL—EPs—SN 
King Lear. (I., 1.— abr.) —WR 9 
King Lear. (Br. sels. fr. II., 4, and III., 2.)—EPs 
King Lear. (Br. sel. fr. III., 2.)—SAE 
King Lear. (Br. sel. fr. III., 4.)—BNL 
King Leir [or Lear] and his Three Daught ers. (In Percy’s 
Reliques.)—Anon.—FMR (abr. — si. diff.) —OEB 
(SI. abr.)— BVC—CGd 
King Midas.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
King Neptune. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
King of Boyville, The. (Ad. fr. The Court of Boyville, 
Ch. III.)—W: A. White.—NP 
King of Brentford’s Testament, The.—W: M. Thack¬ 
eray.—FEP—HPE 

King of Day, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
King of Denmark’s Ride, The.—Caroline E. S. Norton 
—Lady Stirling-Maxwell—BFV—BNL—CS 15 
FEP—GN—HBP—HSS 3—LC—MYF—YA 
King of France and the Fair Lady, A.—J: Wolcott.— 
HPE 

King of Glory, The. Bible. — See Psalms. 

King of Kings, The. (Fr. The Contention of Ajax and 
Ulysses.)—Jas. Shirley.—LH 
(Death the Leveller.)—BNL—BPB—OB—PGT 1 
—YBF 

(Death’s Final Conquest.)—EPs (br. sel.) —FEP— 
HBP—OS 2—SS 
(Death’s Triumph.)—CEL 
(Dirge, A.)—ELP—WEP 2 
King of Spain and the Horse, The.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
King of the Crocodiles, The.—Rob’t Southey.—CGd 
King of the Golden River, The. (Ch. I.)—J: Ruskin. 
—MBL 

King of the Night, The.—Brvan W. Procter.—POS 
(Owl, The—C.)—BNL—CGd—LC—SN 
King of Thule, The.—Johann W. von Goethe. See 
Faust. 

King of Yvetot, The.—Pierre J. de Beranger.—AE 
KingO’Toole and Saint Kevin. (Abr.) —S: Lover.-—DI 
King Richard in Sherwood Forest.—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Foresters, The. 

King Richard II., Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Bolingbroke’s Entrance into London. (Sel. fr. Act 
V., Sc. 2.)—EPs 

King Richard the Second. (Sel. fr. II., 1.)—EHT 
(King Richard II., Act II., Sc. 1—2 br. sels.) — 
BNL 

King Richard II. (Br. sels. fr. I., 2, and II., 2.)— 
—BNL 

King Richard the Second. (Sel. fr. III., 3.)—EHT 
(King Richard II., Act III., Sc. 2-— br. sel.) — 
BNL 

King Richard the Second. (Sels. fr. IV., 1, and V., 
fi.)—EHT 

King Richard III., Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Caution. (Br. sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 3.)—KNE 
Conscience. (Br. sel. fr. I., 2.)—KNE 
Earl of Richmond to his Army, The. (Sel. fr. V., 
3.)—PS 

(Richmond to his Army.)—SS 
Hatred. (Br. sel. fr. I., 3.)—KNE 
King Richard III. (Br. sel. fr. I., 3.)—AE 
King Richard III. (Br. sels. fr. I., 3 and V., 3.)— 
BNL 

King Richard the Third. (Sels. fr. IV., 4, and V., 
3; also V., 4.)—EHT 

King Ricard’s Soliloquy. (Sel. fr. I., 1.)—EPs 
(Duke of Gloster, The— br. sel.)— BNL 
(King Richard III.— br. sel.) —BNL 
(Peace— br. sel.) —KNE 
Little Princes, The. (Sel. fr. III.. 1.)—EHT 
Murder of the Princes in the Tower. (Sel. fr. IV., 
3.)—EDY 

Richmond to his Troops. (Sel. fr. V., 3.)—SE 
(Courage— abr.) —KNE 

Scene from “Richard III.” (Br. sel. fr. I.. 2.)—AE 
(Richard III.— abr.) —SAE 
Scene from “Richard III.” (Sel. fr. L, 4.)—AE 
(Clarence’s Dream— abr.) —AE (br. sel.) —BS 4— 
CS 4—EPs—FR—HNS 

(Dream of Clarence, The— si. abr.) —EHT—LLC 
(Richard III.— sel.) —SAE 
(Terror— br. sel.)—KNE 

Soliloquy of King Richard III. (Sel. fr. V., 3.)— 
CS 6—KNE 


173 




King 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


King Richard’s Soliloquy.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Richard III. 

King Robert of Sicily. (Tales of a Wayside Inn: The 
Sicilian’s Tale.)—H: W. Longfellow.—BeR— 
CR—CS 15—HBP—MYF 
(“Angel with great joy received his guest. The— 
br. sel.) —AE 

King Roughbeard and the Princess.—Clara Denton— 
LPD 

King Sheddad’s Paradise. (Sel.) —Edwin Arnold.— 
WR 1 

King Solomon and the Bees. ( C .)—J: G. Saxe. 

(Solomon and the Bees.)—GN 
King Stephen. Sets. fr. —J: Keats.—EHT (sets. fr. Act 
I., Scs. 1 and 2.)—SO (I., 1.) 

King, the Knave, and the Donkey, The, Sel. fr. —Anon. 
—FAS 

King to his Soldiers before Harfleur, The.—W: Shake- 
. speare. See King Henry V. 

King Volmer and Elsie.—J: G. Whittier.—CS 20 
King William Thanks his God.—Anon.—CS 4 
King Winter.—Anon.—DJS 
Kingdom, The.—Lizzie Doten.—MMR 
Kingdom of God, The. — R: C. Trench. — FEP — 
HDL (abr.) 

(Our Father’s Home.)—HBP 
Kingdom of Sham, The.—I. E. Jones.—CS 34 
Kingfisher, The.—Mary Howitt.—POS 
Kingfisher, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Kinglv Presence, The. (Sel.) —Jas. W. Riley.—TAS 
(Das Krist Kindel—C.)—HDL 
Kings and Courtiers.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Kings and Queens.—Marion Douglas.—FAS 
King’s Bell, The.—Anon.-—WR 6 

King’s Daughter, The.—Mary L. Henderson.—AWH 
—BS 19 

King’s Daughter, The.—Algernon C.J Swinburne.— 
PEB 4 

King’s Daughter, The.—Rebecca P. Utter.—CS 35 
King’s Degree, The.—Dorothy A. Shoemaker.—BS 25 
King’s Diary, The.—J: W. Chadwick.—OS 3 
King’s Diversion, The (Le Roi s’Amuse), Sel. fr. 
(Father’s Curse, The— -sel. fr. Act I., Sc. 4.)— 
Victor Hugo.—SO 

King’s Enemy, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

King’s Fool, The.—Stuart Livingston.—TCV 
King’s Joy-bells, The.—Kate A. Bradley.—WR 6 
King’s Kisses, The.—Arthur L. Tubbs.—BS 25 
"King’s Missive, 1661,” The.—J: G. Whittier.—BS 8 
Kings of Men.—J: Reade.—TCV 

King’s Picture, The.—Helen B. Bostwick.—CS 12— 
CSS—HP—HSS 3—KNE 

King’s Progress, The. (In Christ Church Ms.)—Anon. 
_ELP 

(Preparat ions.)—OB—YBF 
King’s Quair. The, Sel. fr. —James the First of Scotland. 
—WEP 1 

King’s Repentance, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Ham¬ 
let. 

King’s Ride, The.—Lucy H. Hooper.—CSS 
King’s Ring, The.—Theodore Tilton.—OS 2 
(All Things Shall Pass Away.)—BS 20—TMR 
(Even this Shall Pass Away.)—DR—HBR 
King’s Ships, The.—Carl [or Caroline] Spencer.—HP— 
TAS 

King’s Son, The.—T: Boyd.—TIP 
King’s Temple, The.—Anon.—CS 11 
King’s Tragedy, The. (Diff. sels. )—Dante G. Ros¬ 
setti.—EHT—PR—VSG 

King’s Visit, The.—W: Morris. See Earthly Paradise, 
The. 

King’s Wooing, The.—-E: Renaud.—WR 8 
Kinmont Willie [or Willy], (In Minstrelsy of the 
Scott ish Border.)—Anon.—BB—BPB—EPs— 
LH—PEB 2—WEP 1 
Kinship.—G: McKnight.—TAS 
Kinship of the Celt, The.—J. I. C. Clarke.—EDY 
Kipling’s Religion.—Anon.—CP 
Kiss, A. (Prose.) —Anon.—WR 12 
Kiss, A.—Austin Dobson. See Rose-leaves. 

Kiss, A.—Alfred Domett.—VS 

Kiss, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL—YBP 

Kiss, The.—Ben Jonson. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Kiss, A.—I,.—CG 2 
Kiss, The.—T: Moore—HPE 
Kiss at the Door, A.—Anon.—CS 7 
Kiss, Dear Maid, The. (On Parting— C.) —Lord 
Byron.—BNL 

Kiss Deferred, The.—Anon.—BS 15—CS 27—SR 5 
Kiss in School, The.—J. W. Palmer.—MHR 

(Smack in School, The.)—AWH—BC—BNL— 
BS 1—CBR—CS 1—FEP—FTR—PTS—THP 


Kiss in the Dark, A. (Farce.) —Anon.—DT 
Kiss in the Dark, A.—Milton Thompson.-—CS 28 
Kiss in the Dark, A.—J: G. Watts.—WR 13 
Kiss in the Rain, A.—S: M. Peck.—AWH—FTA—HP 
—TAV—THP 

Kiss in the Tunnel, The.—Anon.—CS 33 
“Kiss me, Mamma]; I Can’t Sleep].”—Anon.—CS 28— 
PR—WR 15 

Kiss me Softly. (To my Love— C.) —J: G. Saxe.—BIL 
—FTA—GP 

Kissed his Mother.—Eben E. Rexford.—BS 20—PFP 
Kisses.—W: Strode.—BNL—FEP 
Kisses All Round.—Anon.—WR 20 
Kissing Cup’s Race.—Campbell Rae-Brown.—CS 32 
(Winning Cup’s Race.)—WR 14 
Kissing her Flair.—Algernon C: Swinburne.—BNL— 
OH—YBF 
(Rondel.)—VS 

Kissing Inducements.—Anon.—FLS 
Kissing the Rod. (C.) —Jas. W. Riley.—HDL 
(Just be Glad.)—CS 37 
Kissing Time.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Kissing’s no Sin.—Anon.—BNL 

Kit Carson’s Ride. (Longer than present vers, in 
Works.)—Joaquin Miller.—BS 3—CS 8—HR 
—MMR—NPS—YP 

Kit; or. Faithful unto Death.—Anon.—CD—SR 4 
Kitchen Clock, The.—J: V. Cheney.—BS 3—DLS (abr.) 
—DR—PPSr 

Kitchen May-day Song.—Anon.—EDY 
(Hitchen May-day Song, The.)—CGd 
(May-day Song.)—OS 2 
Kite Party, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Kitten, The.—Joanna Baillie.—FEP 
Kitten and [wr. the] Falling Leaves, The.—W: Words¬ 
worth.—BPB—FEP 
(Sel.)— CGd—LC—OS 1—PoR—PTS 
Kitten and the Mouse, The.—Eliz. Prentiss.—PTS (si. 
abr.) 

(Little Kitty [or Kittie].)—LPS—OS 1 (si. abr.) — 
PP—PS 

Kitten Gossip.—T. Westwood.—MYF 
Kitten of the Regiment, The.—Jas. Buckham.— 
TMD 

Kitten that never Grew Old, The.—Anon.—SR 13 
Kittens, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Kittens and Babies.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—BR (si. abr.) 

_0g 28_PR_-YA 

(Which One was Kept?)—DCP—SR 9 
Kittiwakes, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Kitty.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Kitty.—Anon.—TFS 

Kitty —Marion Douglas.—OS 1—WCL—YBT 
Kitty.—0. D. Shanly. See Kitty of Coleraine. 

Kitty and I.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Kitty Bell.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Kitty Clive.—C: Churchill.—EDY 

Kittv Clover. (All si. diff.) —Carrie W. Thompson.— 
WR 2 

(Lulu— si. abr.) —HP 
(Naughty Kitty Clover.)—WR 2 
Kitty Didn’t Mean to.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Kitty in the Basket.—Eliza L. (?) Follen.—PC 
Kitty Knew.—Anon.—DLF—TT 
Kitty Malone.—Kate True.—DI 
Kitty Neil.—J: F. Waller.—CS 22—TIP—VA 
(Dance Light.)—BNL 
(Irish Melody, An.)—HBP 

Kittv of Coleraine.—C: D. Shanlv. [At. also to E. 
Lvsaght.] —BNL—CR—FEP—HBR—THP— 
TIP 

(Broken Pitcher, The.)—CS 14 
(Kitty.)—MHR 

Kittybov’s Christmas.—Amy E. Blanchard.—CS 37 
Kitty’s Bath.—Anon.—HVD 
Kitty’s Birds.—Annie Chase.—DLS—KC 
Kitty’s Christmas Offering.—Anon.—HS 
Kitty’s Laugh.-—Arlo Bates.—AA 
Kitty’s “No.”—Arlo Bates.—AA 
Kitty’s Prayer.—Anon.—CS 25 
Kitty’s Wish.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Knapweed.—Arthur C. Benson.—VA 
Knee-deep in June.—Jas. W. Riley.—CR—SAE—SC— 
SR 9 

Kneel and Pray.—Anon.—YBT 
Kneel at no Human Shrine.—A. F. Kent.—CS 1 
Kneeling at the Threshold.—T: Guthrie.—HDL 
Knickerbocker. (For the Avery “Knickerbocker”— 
C.) —Austin Dobson.—PPh 

Knickerbocker History of New York, Sels. fr. —Wash¬ 
ington Irving. 

Discovery of the Hudson River, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. 
II., Ch. I.)—WR 10 


174 





TITLE INDEX 


Lady 


Knickerbocker History of New York ( continued). 

Dutch Governor, The. ( Sel. fr. Bk. III.. Ch. I.)— 
WCLG 1 

(Renowned Wouter Van Twiller, The— sel.'' — 
WR 5 

(Wouter Van Twiller— sel.) —SE 
Tea Parties in Old Times. (.S el. fr. Bk. III., Ch. 
III.)—WCLG 1 

Uses of History, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. VI., Ch. IX.) 
—SR 8 

William the Testy. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV., Ch. I.)— 
WCLG 1 

Knife of Boyhood, The.—Louise Uphain.—NPS—YP 
Knife-grinder, The.—G: Canning.—EPs—MHR 

(Friend of Humanitv and the Knife-grinder, The.) 
—BNL — ESs — FEP — HBP—HPE—THP 
Knight, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury 
Tales The 

Knight and the Lady, The.—R: H. Barham.—CS 5— 
PR—YA 

Knight and the Lady, The.—Robertson Trowbridge.— 
WR 3 

Knight and the Page, The.—Martha C. Howe.—BS 17 
Knight of Toggenburg, The.—Friedrich Schiller.— 
WR 7 

Knightes Tale, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The. 

Knighting of the Sirloin of Beef by Charles the Second, 
The.—Anon.—OS 2 
(Knighting the Loin of Beef.)—MR 
Knighting the Loin of Beef.—Anon. See foregoing. 
Knightly Welcome, A.—S. K. Cox.—CS 27 
Knight’s False Vow, The.—Anon.—WR 24 
Knight’s Leap, The.—C: Kingsley.—HBP 
Knights of Labor.—T. V. Pi wderlv.—NC—PEO—PFP 
Knights; or. Both Right and Both Wrong, The.—Anon. 
—BC 

Knight’s Toast, The.—Anon.— CS 4 — CSS — FR — 
HSS 2—LLC—PFP—PTS (abr.) 

(My Mother— at. to Walter Scott.)—NPS—YPS— 
YP 

(Toast, The— at. to W: Praed.)—FP 
Knight’s Tomb, The.—S: T. Coleridge.—BNL—FEP 
—GN 

Knight’s Vow, The.—J. B. Lane.—CS 22 
Knittin’ at th’ Stockin’.—Americus W. Bellaw.—AWH 
Knitting.—Anon.—TT 
Knitting.—J. S. Cutter.—WR 4 
Knitting.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 12 
Knocked About.—Dan’l Connolly.—CS 5—HR—MMR 
Knocking.—Harriet B. Stowe.—CS 12 
Knot of Blue, A.—S: M. Peck.—BNL 
(Little Knot of Blue, A.)—FTA 
Know Thyself.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—FP 
Knowing.—Christopher P. Cranch.—LLC 
(Gnosis.)—T AS 

(Stanzas.)—ASL—FEP—HBP—TAV 
(Th ought.)—B NL—G P 

(“Thought is deeper than all speech”— br. sel.) 
—CS 1 

Knowing.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—TAV 
Knowing the Circumstances. (Dial.) —Anon.—PP— 
YFR 

Knowing the Heart of Man.—S: Daniel. Nee To the 
Lady Margaret, Countess of Cumberland. 
Knowledge. (SI. diff. fr. Works.)—T; B. Aldrich.— 
TAS 

Knowledge. (Voice from Afar, A— C.) —J: H: New¬ 
man.—A VP 

Knowledge.—F. G. Scott.—VA 

Knowledge after Death.—H: C: Beeching.—VA 

Knowledge and Wisdom.— Bible. See Job. 

Knowledge and Wisdom.—W: Cowper. See Task, 
The. 

Known by his Works.—Alice Cary.—TAS 

Known unto God.—Constance F. E. R. Runcie.—WR 2 

Kol Nidra. (Fr. The Day of Atonement.)—Jos. 

Leiser.—AA 
Koran, The. Sels. fr. 

Dhoulkarnain. (Sel. fr. Ch. XVIII.)—WR 11 
In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Mer¬ 
ciful. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXVII.)—WR 11 
Korner’s Battle Hymn.—Karl T. Korner.—HDL 
(Battle Hymn.)—BS 16—SS 
Kree.—A. C. Gordon.—AA 
Krinken.—Eugene Field.—EF—WTD 
Kris Kringle’s Surprise.—H: Davenport.—PR—YA 
Krishna.—G: W. Russell.—VA 
Kriss Kringle. (C.) —T: B. Aldrich. 

(“Quite Like a Stocking.”)—GMS—PEO 
Kriss Kringle.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Kriss Kringle’s Visit.—Anon.—PP—YPS 
Ku Klux.—Madison Cawein.—AA 


Kubla Khan [or, a Vision in a Dream],—S: T. Cole¬ 
ridge.— BFV — BNL — BPB— CEL — EPs— 
FEP — GN — HBP — MBL — MRS — OB — 
OS 3—PGT 1—PYO 
(Romance.)—LH 

Kubleh. (Abr .)—Bayard Taylor.—WR 5 
Kullervo and the Wheat-cake.—(TV. by.) J: M. Craw¬ 
ford. See Kalevala, The. 

Kulnasatz, my Reindeer.—Anon.—HBP 
Kyarlina Jim.—A. C. Gordon.—CD—CS 14 
Kyrie Eleison.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—TAS 


L 

La Belle Dame sans Merci [or Mercy].—J: Keats.— 
BFV — BPB — CGd — FEP — HBP — OB — 
PEB 3—PGT 1—SO 
La Derniere Classe.—Alphonse Daudet. 

(Last Lessor., The.)—BS 19 
La Grisette.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA 
La Jeune Malade.— (Dial. ad. fr Andrei Chenier by) 
H. C. Hunt.—SD 

La Tour d’Auvergne.—Maida Buon.—BS 15 — CS 31 
—PR 

La Tricoteuse.—G: W. Thornbury.—EDY—FEP 

La Vesuviana.—Rebe S. Webb.—CG 1 

Labor.—Anon.—HSS 3 

Labor. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 

Labor.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 27 

Labor.—T: Carlyle. See Past and Present. 

Labor.—Orville Dewey. See Nobility of Labor. 

Labor. (Diff. sel .)—Orville Dewey.—PEO 
Labor.—Frances S. Osgood .—See Labor is Worship. 
Labor and Life.—J. H. Morse.—TAS 
Labor and Rest.—Dinah M. Craik.—FP 

(Now and Afterwards.)—BNL—FEP—GP 
Labor and Rest.—Jones Very.—TAS 
Labor Hours have Limits.—-T: B. Macaulay. Nee Ten 
Hours’ Bill, The. 

Labor is Worship.—Frances S. Osgood.—CS 7—HSS 3 
—LLC—PPSr—SM—SS—WCLG 2 
(Labor.)—FMR—KNE (sel.) - 

(Lahore est Orare.)—BS 5 
(To Labor is to Pray.)—BNL 
Labor Question, The.—Anon.—CH 

(Oration on the “Labor Question.”)—BDD—SDR 
Labor Song. (Exercise for girls and boys.) —Anon.— 
DS—YA 

Labor Song. (Fr. The Bell-founder.)—Denis F 
MacCarthy.—BNL 

Laborare est Orare.—Sarah C. Woolsey.—TAS 
Laboratory, The.—Robert Browning.—PGT 2—WR 9 
Lahore est Orare.—Frances S. Osgood. See Labor is 
Worship. 

Laborer, The.—John Clare.—BNL—EPs 
Laborer, The.—W: D. Gallagher.—CS 8—LLC—MMR 
—SM—TAV 

(Look up, Laborer!)—HSS 3 
Laborers, The.—Anon.-—SM 

Laborer’s Noonday Hymn, The.—W: Wordsworth.— 
HPB 

Laboring Classes, The.—Hugh LegarO—PS 
Laborious Writers. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)— 
S: Butler.—HPE 

Lachin y Gair.—Lord Byron.—EPs 
Lachrimse; or. Mirth Turned to Mourning.—Rob’t Her¬ 
rick —EPs 

Lachrymee Musarum.—W: Watson.—VA 
Lachrymatory, The.—C: Tennyson-Tumer.—FEP— 
‘ VA 

Lachrymose Writers.—Horace Smith.—SS 
Laoon and Thyrsis. (Bucolick betwixt Two, A— C.) — 
Rob’t Herrick.—EP 

I,adder of St,. Augustine, The. (C.) —H: W. Longfel¬ 
low.—FTR—GMS—SE (br. sel.) 

(St. Augustine’s Ladder— si. abr .)—SE 
Laddy Blue Eyes.—Minna C. Smith.—TFS 
Ladies’ Band, The. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Ladies’ Battle, Sel. fr. (Pursuit, The— dial.) —Anon.— 
MPD 

Ladies of Athens.—Mrs. M. A. Lipscomb.—DR 
Ladies of St. James’s, The.—Austin Dobson.—VA—VS 
“Ladies, though to your conquering eyes.”—Sir G: 
Etherege.—OB 

Ladies’ Whist Club, The. (Puck .)—CS 37 
Lady. The.—J: Ruskin. See Sesame and Lilies. 

Lady Alice.—Anon.—CGd 

Lady Anne [or Ann] Both well’s Lament. (In Percy’s 
Rehques.)— Anon.—BNL— FEP—HBP 
(Balow— mod. vers .)—OB 
Lady at Sea, The.—T;Hood.—HBP 


175 




Lady 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lady Barbara.—Alex. Smith.—BNL 
Lady Button-Eyes.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Lady Clara Vere de Vere—Alfred Tennyson.—BNL— 
CR—CS 15—EPs—FEP—FTR—SPE (br. sel.) 
(How to be Noble— br. sel .)—PS 
Lady Clare.—Alfred Tennyson.—BFV—CEL—CR— 
CS 4—EPs—FEP—FTR—HNS— LLC — MR 
—PS—SO—WCLG 1 
Lady Elspat.—Anon.—BB 
Lady Franklin.—Eliz. H. Whittier.—EDY 
Lady from the West. The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 34 
Lady Gay Spanker. (Sel. fr. London Assurance — 
play .)-—Dion Boucicault.—CS 25 (abr .)—MRS 
(Scene from “ London Assurance ”— abr .)—SO 
Lady Geraldine’s Courtship.—Eliz. B. Browning.— 
EPs—FEP—HBP—WR 9 

Lady Golden-rod.—Carrie W. Bronson.—AD (sel .)— 
TFS 

(Golden-rod— sel .)—DCP 

Lady Heron’s Song.—Walter Scott. SeeMarmion. 
Lady Hildegarde, The.—Anon. See Lady of the 
Castle, The. 

Lady in Comus, The.—J: Milton. See Comus. 

Lady Isabel and the Elf-Knight.—Anon.—PEB 1 
Lady Jane.—Anon.—CS 31 

Lady Jane Gray. (Dial. fr. The Famous History of 
Sir Thomas Wyatt.)—-J: Webster.—EHT 
Lady Judith’s Vision, The.—Mrs. E. V. Wilson.—BS 14 
Lady Lost in the Wood, The.—J: Milton. See Comus. 
Lady Mabel.—Alfred Austin.—HS 
Lady Macbeth.—Sleep Walking Scene.—W: Shake¬ 
speare .—See Macbeth. 

Lady Mary.—H: Alford.—AVP—VA 
Lady Mary Ann.—Rob’t Burns.—PEB 3 
Lady Maud’s Oath.-—Re. Henry.—CS 30 
Lady Moon.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—HSS2— 
OS 1—PHS—PoR—WCI. 

Lady Moon.—Christina G. Rossetti.—BVC 

(“O Lady Moon[, your horns point toward the east” 
—C.].)—PoR 

Lady of Gedo, The .—(Adapted from the Hungarian by) 
Mary J. Safford.—WR 2 

Lady of La Garaye, The.—Caroline E. S. Norton.— 
AVP 

Lady of Lyons, Sel. fr. F,: Bulwer-Lytton. 

Scene from “ The Lady of Lyons.”—BS 9—CDD 
(Claude Melnotte to Pauline— si. abr .)—VSG 
(Claude Melnotte’s Apology [and Defence]— abr.) 
—CS 6—WRD (si. diff.) 

Lady of Sevilla, The.—Gratiana Chanter.—PEB 4 
Lady of Shalott, The.—Eliz. S. Phelps.—WR 4 
Lady of Shalott,The.—Alfred Tennyson.—AE(seZ.)— 
BS 19 — FEP — GN — HBP — OB — PHS— 
WEP 4 

Lady of the Castle. The.—Anon.—TMR 

(Lady Hildegarde, The. (SI. diff .)—WR 6 
Lady of the Earl, The.—Anon.—FP 
Lady of the Lake, The, Sels. fr .—Walter Scott. 

Alice Brand. (Can. IV., Sts. 12-15.) — BPB — 
EPs (a&r.)—FEP—PEB 3 
(Ballad of Alice Brand, The— abr .)—SO 
Battle of Beal’ an Duine. (VI.. 15-18.)—BS 3— 
CR (abr )—CS 21—HSS 2—SR 1—WEP 4 
Beal’ an Dhuine— si. abr .)—BNL 
(Flight— hr. sel .)—SE 

Blanche of Devan. (Sel. fr. Can. IV., arr. as play.) 
—SED 

Blanche of Devan’s Last Words. (IV., 27— abr.) 
—WRD 

Chase, The. (I., 1-10.)—LH 

(Highland Chase, The— sel .)—OS 2 
(Stag Hunt, The— abr.) —BNL 
Combat between Fitz-James and Roderick Dhu, 
(Sel fr. Cans. IV. and V.. arr. as dial, by J. 
Hughes.)—BS 9—CDD 
Contempt. (V., 30.)—KNE 
(Lady of the Lake.)—BNL 
Coronach. (III., 16.) —BNL —EPs—FEP—HBP 
—LLC—OS 2—PGT 1 
Douglas. Sel. fr. (II., 34.)—AE 

Douglas to the Populace of Stirling. (V., 28.)— 
PRR 

Dreams. (Sel. fr. I., 33.)—EPs 
Fitz-James and Roderick Dhu. (V., 3-17.)— 
BNL (abr .)— CR (diff. abr.) 

(Sel .)—CS 6—FR 

(Combat of Fitz-James and Roderick— sel .)—PS 
(Death Struggle, The— br. sel .)—SE 
(Lady of the Lake— br. sel .)—AE 
Heath this Night must be mv Bed, The. (III., 23.) 
—FEP—YBF 
(Song— C .)—HBP 

(Song of the Young Highlander.)—BNL 


Lady of the Lake, The (continued). 

Highland Stranger, The. (IV., 29-31— abr.) — 

TMD 

James Fitz-James and Ellen. (VI., 25-29— si. 
abr.) —BNL 

(Lady of the Lake— sel.) —AE 
Lady of the Lake, The. (I., 17-19.)—BNL (sel.) 
—WCLI 2 

Ladv of the Lake, The. (Br. sets. fr. I, III, V.)— 
BNL 

Lay of the Imprisoned Huntsman, Sel. fr. (VI., 24 
—abr.)— BNL 

Lodge, The. (I., 26— si. abr.) —AD 
Morning Landscape, A. (III., 2).—TMD 
(Summer.)—POS 

‘‘Rose is fairest when ’tis budding new, The. (IV., 
1— sel.) —AD 

(I.ady of the Lake.)—BNL 
Soldier, Rest! [Thv Warfare O’er.] (I., 31, 32— 
abr.)— BNL—GN (sel.) —HSS 1—OS 1 
(Song— C.) —PHS 

(Song from “ The Lady of the Lake.”) —PPSr 
Song of Clan Alpine. (II., 19, 20.)—BNL 
(Boat Song— sel. )—AD—CR—FEP—LC 
(Clan Alpine.)—EPs 
Trosachs, The. (I.. 11, 12.)—POS 

(Sunset in the Mountains— sel.) —BNL 
Lady of the Lambs, The.—Alice Meynell.—OB 
(Shepherdess, The— C.) —AVP—PYO 
Lady of Vain Delight, The. (Sel. fr. Christ’s Triumph 
on Earth.)—Giles Fletcher.—WR 11 
Lady Penelope Clifton. (Sel. fr. An Elegy on the Death 
of Lady Penelope Clifton.)—Fs. Beaumont.— 
EDY 

Lady Queen Anne. (Dial.) —Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KC 

Lady Rohesia, The. (SI. abr.) —R: H. Barham.— 
BS 13 

Lady Teazle and Sir Peter.—R: B. Sheridan. See 
School for Scandal, The. 

Lady to her Inconstant Servant, The T: Carew.— 
WEP 2 

Lady Turned Serving-man, The. (In Percy’s Re- 
liques.)—Anon.—CGd 

Ladv Wentworth. (Tales of a Wayside Inn: The 
Poet’s Tale.)—H: W. Longfellow.—NPS — 
YP 

‘‘Lady, when I Behold the Roses Sprouting."— 
Anon.—ELP 

Lady who Offers her Looking-glass to Venus, The. 
(Taken from an Epigram of Plato.)—Matthew 
Prior.—OB 

Lady with a Train, The.—Anon.—WR 7 
Lady Yeardle.v’s Guest.—Anon.—SR 13 
Ladv-bird, Lady-bird.—Caroline B. Southev.—NV— 
OS 1 

(Little Ladv-Bird, The.)—WR 12 
(To the Ladybird.)—PHS 
Ladybird’s Race.—Campbell Rae-Brown.—WR 13 
Lady-bug and the Ant, The.—Anon.—CSS—PPSr 
Ladybug, Ladybug.—Anon.—NV 
Ladye Maude.—Cora Fabbri.—WR 15 
Ladye of the Lab, The.—C: K. Field.—CG 2 
Ladye’s Rock, The.—E. J. Armstrong.—PEB 4 
Lady-killer, The. (Dial.) —Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KH 

Lady’s Chamber, A.—S: T. Coleridge. See Chris- 
tabel. 

Lady’s Dream, The.—T: Hood.—FEP—MRS 
Lady’s Song. The. (Beautiful Ladv of the Mav, The 
— C.)— J: Drvden.—EP 

Ladv’s ‘Yes.’ The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BNL—EPs— 
FEP—VSG 

Lafayette.—S: T. Coleridge. See Sonnet: ‘‘As when 
far off,” etc. 

Lafayette, the Faithful One, Sel. fr. (Marquis de La 
Fayette.)—C: Sumner.—W’R 10 
Laffing.—H: W. Shaw. See Josh Billings on Laugh- 
ing. 

“Laid on thine altar, O my Lord divine!” ( New York 
Observer.) 

L’Aiglon, Sel. fr. (Field of Wagram, The— fr. Act V.) 
—Edmond Rostand (tr. by Louis N. Parker). 
—EDY 

Laird o’ Cockpen, The.—Caroline Oliphant, Baroness 
Naime.—BNL—FEP—HBP—PEB 3 
(PEB3 ats. last 2 sts. to Miss Ferrier.) 

Laird o’ Logie, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Laird of Sehelynlaw, The.—J: Veitch.—VA 
Laird of Waristoun, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
“Lake and a fairy boat. A. ” (Si ng for Music — C.) — 
T: Hood.—BPB 
(Song.)—BF V—H B P—LC 


176 




TITLE INDEX 


Land 


Lake Champlain and its Shores, Sel. fr. (Two Drowned 
Lovers— sel. fr. Pt. III.)—W: H. H. Murray.— 
BS 19 

Lake Coriskin. See Lord of the Isles, The.—Sir Walter 
Scot t. 

Lake Isle of Innesfree, The.— W : B. Yeats.—(JB— 
TIP 

Lake Mahopac—Saturday Night.—G: A. Baker, Jr.— 
PLD 

Lake Memory, A.—W: AY. Campbell.—A'A 
Lake of Coolftn, The. ( Recomposed by) P. W. Joyce. 
—PEB 4 

Lake of the Dismal Swamp, The. (Ballad, A. The 
Lake, etc.— C.)—T: Moore.—EPs—FEP 
Lake Saratoga.—-.1: G. Saxe.—CS 23 
Lake Superior.—S: G. Goodrich.—AA 
Laleet.—G: Martin.—TCV 
Lalla Rookh, Sels. fr. —T: Moore. 

“Alas, how light, a cause may move.” (Sel. fr. 

The Light of the Harem.)—BNL 
Araby’s Daughter. (Sel. fr. The Fire-worshippers.) 
—EPs (si. abr.) 

(IF. music.) —NPS—YP 
(“Farewell to thee, Araby’s daughter.”)—BNL 
Caliph’s Encampment, The. ( Hr. sel. fr. The 
Veiled Prophet of Korassan.)—EPs . 

. Curse on the Traitor, A. (Br. sel. fr. The Fire- 
worshippers.)—GP 
(Denunciat ion— abr. )—AE 
Fire-worshippers, The. (Sel. fr. The Fire-worship¬ 
pers.)—WEP 4 

“Fly to t he desert[, fly with me].” (Song of Nour- 
mahal in The Light of the Harem.)—BNL (abr.) 
—HBP 

Gheber’s Bloody Glen, The. (Sel. fr. The Fire- 
worshippers.)—CS 22 

(Gheberto his Followers, The.)—AE (br. sel.) 
(Linda to Hafed— abr.) —BNL 
“How calm, how beautiful.” (Sel. fr. The Fire- 
worshippers. )—AD 
(Calm— -sel., partly same.) —KNE 
Lalla Rookh. (Sel. fr. song: “There’s a bower,” 
etc., in The Veiled Prophet of Korassan.)— 
SAE 

Light of the Harem, The. (Sel.) —WEP 4 
(Feast of Roses, The— partly same.) —WR 11 
(Vale of Cashmir, The.)—BNL 
Nourmahal. (Sel. fr. The Light of the Harem.)— 
MR 

Rebellion. (Br. sel. fr. The Fire-worshippers.)— 
KNE 

“Spirits of fire, that brood not long.” (Br. sel. fr. 

The Fire-worshippers.)—AD 
Syria. (Sel. fr. Paradise and the Peri.)—BNL 
Tear of Repentance, The. (Sel. fr. Paradise and 
the Peri.)—BS 14—FR (si. abr.) —MR— 
VSG 

(Paradise and the Peri— partly same.) —CR 
“There’s a bliss beyond all that the minstrel has 
told.” (Br. sel. fr. The Light of the Harem.) 
—BNL 

L’AUegro.—J: Milton. — BNL — BPB — ELP — EPs 
—FEP — HBP — MBL — OB — OS 3 (si. 
abr.) —PGT 1—PHS—SN (sel.) —VSG—WEP 2 
(Abr.) FTR-GN—LLC—WCLG 2 
( Br. sel.) —SC—SE 

Lamb. The. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: Blake.— 
BFV—BPB—FEP — LC —OS 1—PoR—PYO 
—WEP 3 

(Little Lamb.)—PC 

Lamb that was Missed, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Lambs at Play.—Rob’t Bloomfield.—BNL 
Lambs in the Meadow.—Laurence Alma-Tadema.— 
PoR 

Lament. A. (Madrigal— C.) —W:Drummond.—PGT 1 
—YBF 

(I nexorable.)—OB 

Lament, A.—Nathaniel L. Frothingham.—TAS 
Lament. A. (C.) —C: Kingsley. 

(Merry Lark. The.)—BFV—BNL—YBF 
Lament.—Roden Noel.—A r A 

Lament, A. (C.) —Percy B. Shelley.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP—WEP 4 
(Threnos.)—PGT 1—YBF 

Lament, A. (Remembrance— C.) —Percy B. Shelley. 
—HBP 

Lament for Absalom.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—LLC (si. 
abr.) 

(Absalom— C .)—CS 1—NPS—YP 
(David’s Lament for [or over] Absalom— si. abr.) — 
BS 15—KNE (br. sel.) —OM—PS—SAE (sel.) 
(Patriot King in Mourning, The— abr.)— BLP 
Lament for Chaucer.—T: Hoccleve.—OB 


Lament for Culloden.-—Rob't Burns.—EHT—OB— 
PGT 1 

(Lovely Lass of Inverness, The— C .)—FEP 
Lament for Flodden [Field, A],—Jane Elliott.—CEL— 
EHT—OB—PGT 1 

(Flowers of [or o’] the Forest, The.)—BPB—FEP— 
WEP 3 

Lament for Glencairn.—Rob’t Burns. See Lament for 
James, Earl of Glencairn. 

Lament for Glencoe.—Mary M. Campbell.—FEP 
Lament for his Friend, A. — W: Browne. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals. 

Lament for James, Earl of Glencairn. (C. — sel.) — 
Rob’t Burns.—EPs (sel.) 

(Lament for Glencairn.)—LLC 
Lament for King Ivor.—Whitley Stokes.—TIP 
Lament for Meliboeus, A.—T: Watson.—EP 
Lament for Sir Philip Sidney. (Elegy on a Friend’s 
Passion for his Astrophill, An— C.) —Mathew 
Royden.—EDY 

(On Sir Philip Sidney— sel.) —EPs 
(Sir Philip Sidney.)—BNL 

Lament for the Death of Eoghan Ruadh O’Neill.—T: 
Davis.—TIP 

Lament for the Makaris quhen he was Seik, The.— W: 

Dunbar. See following. 

Lament for the Makers.—W: Dunbar.—OB 

(Lament for the Makaris Quhen he was Seik, The 
—abr.)— WEP 1 

Lament for the Princess of Tir-Owen and Tirconnell.— 
Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 

Lament for Thomas Davis.—Sir Samuel Ferguson. — 
TIP 

Lament in Spring, A. (Sel. fr. Scylla’s Metamorpho¬ 
sis.)—T: Lodge.—EP 
(Spring and Melancholy.)—ES—OEL 
Lament of a Left-over Doll, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Lament of a Mocking-bird.—Frances A. Kemble.—VA 
Lament of Anastasius.—W: B. O. Peabody.—A A 
Lament of Anne Boleyn on the Eve of her Execu¬ 
tion.—Anne Boleyn.—EDY 
Lament of Jacob Gray, The.—H. E. McBride.—CS 5 
Lament of Maev Leith-Dherg, The.—T. W. Rolleston. 
—TIP 

Lament of Mary Queen of Scots on the Approach of 
Spring.—Rob’t Burns.—EHT—EPs 
Lament of Richard During his Imprisonment.— (Tr. 
by) W: E. Avtoun.—EHT 

Lament of the Border Widow [.The],—Anon.—BB— 
BNL—FEP—HBP—OEB—PEB 2—YBF 
Lament of the Irish Emigrant.—Helen S. Sheridan, 
Lady DulTerin.—BNL—BS 24—CS 1 — FEP— 
GP—HBP—OB—TIP—V A—VS—VSG 
Lament of the Irish Maiden, The.—De y Lane.—TIP 
Lament of the Mangaire Sugach.—-E: Walsh.—TIP 
Lament of the Widowed Inebriate, A.—H. J. Duganne. 
—Wll IS 

Lamentable Ballad of the Bloodv Brook, The.—E: E. 
Hale.—EDY 

Lamentable Ballad of the Foundling of Shoreditch, 
The.—W: M. Thackeray.—HPE 
Lamentation for Celin, The.—Anon. (tr. by J: G. Lock¬ 
hart).—FEP—HBP 

Lamentation of Don Roderick, The.— (Tr. by) J: G. 
Lockhart.—FEP. 

Lamentation of Hugh Reynolds, The.—Anon.—TIP 
Lamentation of the Old Pensioner, The.—W: B. Yeats. 
—TIP 

Lamkin.— \non.—BB—PEB 1 (abr.) 

L’Amour, 1’Amour.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 
Lamp, The.—.Esop. 

(Farthing Rushlight, The.)—OS 1 
Lamp, The.—Sarah P. M. Greene.—A A 
Lamp in the West, The.—Ella Higginson.—AA 
Lamplighter, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Lamplighter, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—BVC—CGV 
—LC 

Lancashire Doxologv, A.—Dinah M. Craik.—BNL— 
FEP 

Lancelot and Elaine.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls 
of the King. 

Land across the Sea, A.—W: Morris. See Earthly 
Paradise, The. 

Land beyond the Sea. The.—Frd’k W: Faber.—HBP 
Land Dirge, A. (Sel. fr. The White Devil.)—J: Web¬ 
ster.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Dirge [.A].)—ELP—FEP—OB 
Land o’ the Leal, The.—Caroline Oliphant, Lady 
Nairn.—FEP—HBP—OB—WEP 3 
(Sel.) —BNL — BPB — CEL — PGT 1 — SAE — 
YBF 

Land of Benedictions.—Gulian C. Verplanck.—LLC 
(America’s Contributions to the World.)—SS 


177 





Land 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Land of Beulah, The.—J: Bunyan. See Pilgrim’s 
Progress. 

Land of Counterpane, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.— 
CGV—DLS—GMS—TFS—VA 
Land of Dreams, The.—H. F. Sargent.—POS 
Land of Eternal Summer, The.—J: Milton. See Co- 
mus. 

Land of Lands, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See “You 
ask me why; tho’ ill at ease.” 

Land of Liberty, The.—“Hesperion.”—CS 21 
(My Country.)—POS 

Land of Make-believe, The.-—Anon.—DST 
Land of my Birth, The.—Eliza Cook.—BLP 
Land of Nod, The.—Lucy M. Blinn.—WR 15 
Land of Nod, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson—CGV— VA 
Land of Nod, The— Ella W. Wilcox.—BS 22 
(Beautiful Land of Nod, The—C.)—TAV 
Land of Nowhere, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—WR 15 
(Nowhere.)—TFS 

Land of our Forefathers, The.—E: Everett. See First 
Settlement of New England, The. 

Land of Song, The.—Dwight M. Marvin.—CG 3 
Land of Story-books, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.— 
BFV—CGV— DJS—PoR 
Land of the Afternoon.—Anon.—CS 25 
Land of Thus-and-so, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BS 17 
Land Poor.—J. W. Donovan.—CS 9 
“Land which freemen till, The.”—Alfred Tennyson. 

See “You ask me why, tho’ ill at ease.” 

Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers [,The].—Felicia D. 
Hemans. See following. 

Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers in New England, The. 

(C.) —Felicia D. Hemans.—BNL—EDY— 
FEP—HB—HBP 

(“Breaking waves dashed high, The.”— sel.) — 
SAE 

(Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers, [The].)—EPs— 
GN—GP—PHS—PPSr—PSR 
(Landing of the Pilgrims [,The].)—AD (sel.) —GMS 
—LLC—OS 2—SM—WCLG 1 
(Pilgrim Fathers, The.)—LH—TMD 
Landing of the Pilgrims [,The].—Felicia D. Hemans. 
See foregoing. 

Landlady’s Daughter, The. -— Ludwig Uhland. — 
BNL (tr. by J. S. Dwight)—FS (tr. by E. 
Parsons) 

Landlord of “the Blue Hen,” The.—Phoebe Cary.— 
CS 15 

Landlord’s Last Moments, The.—I. E. Jones.—CS 19 
Landlord’s Visit, The.—De Witt C. Lockwood.—BS 13 
—CS 24—NPS—YP 
Landor.—J: Albee.—AA 
Landor.—Alex. H. Japp.—VA 

Landscape, A.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Landscape.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
L’Ange qui Veille (The Watching Angel — Dans 
l’Alcove Sombre).—Victor Hugo.—WR 25 
Langley Lane.—Rob’t Buchanan.—CS 33—EA ( abr.) 
—FEP—FMR—MMR 

Language.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Rhymed Lesson, 
A. 

Language of Flowers, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Language of Flowers, The, Br. sel. fr. (“ Yet, no—not 
words, for they,” etc.)—T: Moore.—AD 
Language of Flowers, The, Br. sel. fr. (“In Eastern 
lands they talk in flowers.”)—Jas. G. Percival. 
—AD 

Language of Love, The.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Language of Signs, The; or, Two Sides to a Story.— 
Anon.—MYF 

Language of the Learned. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.) 

—S: Butler.—HPE 
Lanty Leary. (C.) —S: Lover. 

(Old Ballad, An.)—WR 14 
(Won’t you Follow me?)—CS 36 
Laodamia.—W: Wordsworth.—BNL (br. sels.) —EPs 
—HBP—WEP 4 

Lapsus Calami—To R. K.—Jas. K. Stephen.—VA 
(Millennium, The.)—THP 
Larch and the Oak, The.—T: Carlyle.—OS 1 
Large Edition, A.—Jos. Lilienthal.—BS 25 
(Full Edition, A.)—CG 3 
Large Room, A.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Lariat Jim. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) —SR 13 
Lark, The.—Jas. Hogg.—HBP—SN—TFS (sel.) 

(Skylark, The.)—BNL—BPB—FEP—GN—GP— 
LC—LLC—OS 1—PHS—WCLG 2 
Lark, The.—C: Reade. See It is never too Late to 
Mend. 

Lark and her Young Ones, The.—Mrs. Russell Kava- 
naugh.—KER 

Lark and the Rook, The.—Anon.—OS 1—PoR 


Lark Ascending, The.—G; Meredith.—VA 
Lark, Flower, Sun, and Shower.—Kate Greenaway.— 
HSS 2 

Lark in the Gold-fields, The,—C: Reade. See It is 
never too Late to Mend. 

Larks.—Katha. Tynan-Hinkson.—TIP 
Larks and Nightingales.—Nathan H. Dole.—AWH 
(Our Native Birds.)—THP 
Lark’s Song, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Larrie O’Dee.—W: W. Fink.—AWH—BS 10—CRR— 
CS 26—CSS—DS—SDR—THP 
(Courtship of Larry O’Dee.)—PPSr 
Larry M’Hale.—C: J. Lever.—TIP 
Larry’s on the Force.—Irwin Russell.—CD—CS 19 
Larvae.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—FP—WCL 
Lasca.—Frank Desprez.—BS 12—MR—PR 
(SI. abr. )—CS 22—HNS 

Las Casas Dissuading from Battle.—R: B. Sheridan. 
See Pizarro. 

Lasciate Ogni Speranza.—J: Clare.—PGT 2 
(His Last Verses.)—FEP 
(I am! yet what I am.)—EDY 
(Written in Northampton County Asylum.)—OB 
Lass Dorothy.—Anon.—WR 6 
Lass of Ballochmyle, The.—Rob’t Burns.—HBP 
Lass of Lochroyan, The. (In Border Minstrelsy— abr.) 
—Anon.—BFV—OB 

(Fair Annie of Lochroyan.)—BB—FEP (longer.) 
(All si. diff. versions.) 

Lass of Richmond Hill, The.—Jas. Upton.—BNL 
Lassie’s Decision, The.—H. D. McAthol.—WR 2 
Last Aboriginal, The.—W: Sharp.—VA 
Last and Best.—Alice Cary.—TAS 
Last and Worst.—Frances E. Allison.—HP 
Last Appeal, A.—F: W. H. Myers.—VA 
Last Appendix to “Yankee Doodle,” The. (Punch.) 
—HPE 

Last Arrival, The.—G: W. Cable.—HP 
(New Arrival, The.)—AA 
Last Banquet, The.—E: Renaud.—CS 16 
Last Battle, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 33 
Last Bowstrings, The.—E. L. White.—AA 
Last Buccaneer, The.—C: Kingsley. See Last Bucca- 
nier. The. 

Last Buccaneer, The.—T: B. Macaulay.—LH 

Last Buccanier, The. (C.) —C: Kingslev.—CEL- 

WEP 4 

(Last Buccaneer, The.)—FEP—VA 
(Pleasant Isle of Aves, The.)—LH 
Last Caesar, The. (SI. abr.) —T: B. Aldrich.—EDY 
Last Chantey, The.—Rudyard Kipling.—VA 
Last Charge.—The.—G: B. Hynson.—CS 25 
Last Charge of Marshal Ney.—Joel T. Headley. See 
Napoleon and his Marshals. 

Last Charge of Ney, The.—Joel T. Headley. See Na¬ 
poleon and his Marshals. 

Last Chorus of “Hellas.” (Chorus fr. Hellas.)—Percy 
B. Shellev.—WEP 4 
(Hellas.)—OB 

Last Conqueror, The. (Ode fr. Cupid and Death: A 
masque.)—Jas. Shirley.—FEP—PGT 1—YBF 
(Might of Death, The.)—WEP 2 
(Victorius Men of Earth.)—HBP 
Last Cup of Canary, The.—Helen G. Cone.—AA 
Last Day, The.—E: Young. See following. 

Last Day Book, the. (Sel. fr. The Last Day, Vol. II., 
Bk. I.)—E: Young.—WEP 3 
Last Dav in District No. 6.—Josephine M. Harriman.— 
WR 15 

Last Day of School, The. (Dial.) —Clara Denton.— 
LPD 

Last Days.—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 
Last Days of a Condemned, Sel. fr. (Secret Execu¬ 
tions— fr. Preface)—Victor Hugo.—MRS 
Last Days of Herculaneum, The, Sel. fr. —Edwin 
Atherstone.—BS 6—CS 22 
(Roman Soldier at the Destruction of Herculaneum, 
The— abr. and ad.) —FR 

Last Days of Pompeii, Sels. fr. —E: Bulwer-Lytton. 
Destruction of Pompeii. (Sels. fr. Bk. V., Chs. 

VII. and X.)—SAE—FTR (abr.) 

Glaucus and the Lion. (Stl. fr. Bk. V., Ch. IV.)— 
WR 12 

(Destruction of Pompeii— ad.) —TMD 
(Last Days of Pompeii— abr.) —MN 
(Vesuvius and the Egyptian— abr.) —NC—PFP 
Happy Beauty and the Blind Slave, The. (Sel. fr. 
Bk. II., Ch. VI.)—WR 9 
(Nydia and lone— ad.) —IR 
Last Night of Pompeii, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV., Ch. 
XVII.)—TMD 

Nydia’s Sacrifice. (Bk. V., Ch. IX.— sel., and Ch. 
X.)—PFP 


178 







TITLE INDEX 


Latimers 


Last Days of Pompeii ( continued.). 

Witch’s Cavern, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. III.. Ch. IX.)— 
IR ( cond. and arr. as dial.) —WR 19 
(Witch of Vesuvius, The— arr. as dial.) —NDP 
Last Dream of the Old Oak Tree, The.—Hans C. 
Andersen.—AD 

Last Drunkard, The.—Anon.—WR IS 

Last Dying Speech and Confession of Poor Puss, The. 

—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BVC 
Last Farewell, The.—E: B. Emerson.—EPs 
Last Fight, The.—Lewis F. Tooker.—AA—HBR 
Last Flower of the Year, The.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Last Furrow, The.—Edwin Markham.—AA 
Last Good-by, The.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA 
Last Hours of Little Paul Dombey, The.—C: Dickens. 

See Dombey and Son. 

Last Hours of Socrates, The.—Anon.—SS 
Last Hours of Webster. (Sel. fr. The Death of Daniel 
Webster.)—E: Everett.—CS 3 
Last Hunt, The.—W: R. Thayer.—AA 
Last Hymn, The.—Marianne Famingham.—BS 5— 
CS 14—FTR—SR 5 
(Drowning Singer, The— w. mus.) —PR 
(Abr .)—NPS-—YP 

Last Invocation, The. (C.) —Walt Whitman.—TAS 
(Imprisoned Soul, The.)—OB 
Last Joumev, The.—Caroline B. Southey.—CS 3— 
HBP 

Last Kick of Fop’s Alley, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Last Landlord, The.—Eliz. A. Allen.—AA 
Last Leaf, The.—Oliver W T . Holmes.—AA—ASL— 
BFV — BNL — FEP — FTR — GP — HBP— 
LC — LLC — OS 2 — PYO (abr.)— SO — TAV 
Last Lesson, The.—Alphonse Daudet. See La Der- 
niere Classe. 

Last Letter, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—BIL 
Last Lines.—Emily Bronte.—OB—WEP 4 
(Her Last Lines.)—VA 
(Hymn.)—OS 3 

Last Lines.—Sir Walter Raleigh.—CEL 
(Conclusion, The.)—OB 
(Death of Sir Walter Raleigh.)—EDY 
(Even such is Time.)—EHT—ELP 
(Lines Found in his Bible.)—BNL 
(Lines W T ritten before his Execution.)—YBF 
(Verses Found in his Bible in the Gate-house at 
Westminster— C '.)—WEP 1 
Last Look, A—G: R. Sims.—CS 26—NPS—YP 
Last Man, The. — T: Campbell. — BPB — CS 6 — 
WCLG 2 (abr.) 

Last May a Braw Wooer.—Rob’t Burns.—PEB 3— 
WEP 3 

Last Mile stones. The.—Pearl Rivers.—CS 6 
Last Minstrel, The.—Sir Walter Scott.—See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel, The. 

Last Night.—Th<?ophile Marzials.—VA 
Last Night.—Clement Scott.—WR 13 
Last Night, The.—Vima Woods.—WR 12 
‘‘Last night in blue my little love was dressed.”—C: 
H. Webb.—OH 

Last Night of Misolonghi, The. (Sel. fr. Andronike.) 

— (Tr. by) Edwin A. Grosvenor. NC—PFP 
Last Night of Pompeii, The.—E: Bulwer Lytton. See 
Last Days of Pompeii. 

Last of his Tribe, The.—H: Clarence Kendall.—VA 
Last of the Barons, The, Sets. fr. —E: Bulwer-Lyt- 
ton. 

Despondent Inventor, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. I., Ch. 
VII.)—SAE. 

Warwick, the King-maker. (Sels. fr Bk. IV., Chs. 
IX. and X.)—BS 23 

Last of the Choir, The.—M. J. Kimball.—CS 33— 
DS (w. mus.) —NPS—YP 

Last of the Eurydice, The.—Sir Joseph Noel Paton.— 
VA 

Last of the Flock, The.—W: Wordsworth.—CGd 
Last of the Light Brigade, The.—Rudyard Kipling.— 
WR 2 

Last of the Mohicans, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. F. Cooper. 
Race for Life, A. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXIII.)—WR 22 
Running the Gauntlet. (Diff. sel. fr. Ch. XXIII.)— 
WCLI 2 

Last of the New Year’s Callers, The.—H: C. Bunner.— 
EDY . . 

Last of the Roman Tribunes, The. (Sel. fr. Rienzi, 
Bk. X., la^t ch.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—SC 
Last Orison, The.—Ezra H. Stafford.—TCV 
Last Parting. The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Last Party. The. (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Last Pipe, The. (London Spectator.) —PPh 
Last Prayer, A.—Helen (Hunt.) Jackson.—A A 
Last Prayer of Mary. Queen of Scotts.—Willis G. Clark. 
—BS 9 (abr.) —CS 9 


Last Prospect, The.—Edmund Waller. See On the 
Foregoing Divine Poems. 

Last Redoubt, The.—Alfred Austin.'—CS 15—NPS— 
VSG—YP 

(Abr.) —BS 20—WR 7 

Last Remonstrance, The, Sel. fr. (Remonstrance.)— 
Rob’t. Earl of Lytton.—FLS 
Last Reservation, The.—Walter Learned.—AA—TAV 
Last Resort, The.—C:G. Halpine.—HPE 
Last Ride Together, The.—Rob’t Browning.—OB 
Last Robin, The.—H: S. Washburn.—POS 
Last Roll-call, The.—Anon.—HDL 
Last Roll-call, The.—C: B. Lewis.—CS 36—WR 7 
Last Rose, The.—J: Davidson.—OB 
Last Rose of Summer, The.—T: Moore.—FEP—HBP 
—LLC—WCLG 2 

(’Tis the Last Rose of Summer— C.) —BNL—PYO 
Last Serpent, The.—T. Croft on Croker.—MYF 
Last Soliloquy of Faustus, The.—Christopher Marlowe. 
See Doctor Faustus. 

Last Sonnet.—J: Keats.—CEL—OB—WEP 4 

(“Bright star! Would I were steadfast as thou 
art.”)—PGT 1—YBF 

Last Speech.—Rob’t Emmet. See On Being Found 
Guilty of High Treason. 

Last Spring, The.—R. D.—CG 3 

Last Station, The. (Detroit Free Press.) —CS 16—PS 
Last Straw, The.—Anon.—BS 24 
Last String, The.—Gust av Hart wig.—WR 2 
Last Summons, The.—Anon.—SR 13 
Last Supper, The.—Joaquin Miller.—TAS 
Last Talk, The.—Anon.—FLS 
Last Taps.—Theodore Roberts.—WR 24 
Last Time [that—C\] I Met Lady Ruth, The.—Rob’t, 
Earl of Lytton.—WR 16 

Last'.Translation, The.—Heinrich Heine (tr. by Eliz. B. 

Browning). See “Thou lovest me not,” etc. 
Last Tree of the Forest, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—AD 
Last Tudor, The.—Annie M. L. Hawes.—CS 34 
Last Utterances of Christ, The, Br. sel. fr. (“We are 
ever taking leave of something that will not 
come back again.”)—Frd’k W. Robertson.— 
GG 

Last Visitor, The.—H: Ames Blood.—FEP 
Last Voyage of the Fairies, The.—W. H. Davenport 
Adams.—PoR 

Last Wish, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—OB 
Last Wish, The.—B. W. Kirkham.—CS 16 
Last Word, The.—Matthew Arnold.—HBP—YBF 
Last Word, The.—Eliz. Sanderson.—CG 2 
Last Words.—Anon.—DS 

(Widder Green’s Last Words.)—CS 13 
Last Words.—Anon.—FLS 
Last Words. (C .)—Winthrop M. Praed. 

(Dying Girl to her Lover, The.)—A VP 
Latakia.—T: B. Aldrich.—PPh 
Lat ches.—C: N. Sinnett.—CS 32 
Late.—Anon.—DJS 

Late at Breakfast. (Dial.) —Anon.—PS 
Late Autumn.—J: S. Thomson.—TCV 
Late, Late, so Late!—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of 
the King. 

Late Leaves. (Poems and Epigrams, CLXI.— C.) — 
Walter S. Landor.—OB 
Late Love.—M. E. Martyn.—FLS 
Late Massacre in Piedmont, The.—J: Milton.—LH 
(On the Late Massacre in Piedmont— C.) —EDY — 
FEP—HBP—PGT 1—WEP 2— YBF 
(Sonnet: On the Late Massacre, etc.)—ELP—EPs 
Late October.—D. M. Jordan.—HP 
Late Spring, The.—Louise C. Moulton.—BNL—GP 
Late Wisdom.—G: Crabbe. See Reflections. 

‘‘Lately our poets [songsters—(?.] loitered in green 
lanes.” (Heroic Idyls, XV.)—Walter S. Lan¬ 
dor.—WEP 4 

Latent Principles of Religion. (Br. sel.) —J: Caird.— 
AE 

Later Life. (Sel.)—Christina G. Rossetti.—AA 
Latest Barbara Frietchie, The. (Parody.) —Anon.— 
DCR—SR 4 

Barbara Frietchie.)—DRR 

Parody on “Barbara Frietchie”— si. diff. vers.) — 

-ot\t\ _nu 

Latest Comfort, The.—F. W. L. Hay.—PPh 
Latest Decalogue, The.—Arthur H. Clough.—THP 
Latest Form of Literary Hysterics. (Chicago Tri¬ 
bune. ) —GH—PS 

Latest Sensation in Podunk.-—F. Crosby.—ED 
Latest Toast, The.—Raymond W. Walker.—CG 3 
Latest Version, The.—G: T. Lanigan.—AWH 
Latimers. The, Sel. fr. (“Settin’ up with Elder 
McK’ag’s Peggy.”)—H: C. McCook.-—WR 21 
(Settin’ up with Peggy McKeag— si. abr.) —BS 25 


179 





Latter 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Latter Day, The.—T: Hastings.—AA 
Latter Rain, The.—Jones Very.—BNL—GN—HBP— 
POS 

Lattice at Sunrise, The.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—VA 
Laud. (Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Pt. II., Son. XLV.)— 
W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
Laudo Puellam.—H. A. Richmond.—CG 1 
Laugh and Grow Fat.—Winthrop M. Praed.—CS 9 
Laugh, and the World Laughs with you.—Ella W. 
Wilcox.—TMD. 

(Solitude—C.)—TAV 
(World as it is, The,)—FS 
Laugh in Church, A.—Anon.—WR 24 
Laughin’ in Meet in’.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Laugh¬ 
ing in Meeting. 

Laughing. (C.)—H: W. Shaw. 

(Josh Billings on Laughing.)—BC 
Laughing Chorus, A.—Anon.—NV—PR 
Laughing Family, The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Laughing in Meeting.—Harriet B.. Stowe. See Sam 
Lawson’s Fireside Stories. 

Laughing Philosopher, A.—G: Cooper.—WR 20 
Laughing Song. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: Blake. 
—BVC—LC 

Laughter.—Anon.—CS 17 

Laughter.—Mrs. C. M. Peat. See Philosophy of 
Laughter. 

Laughter and Death.—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—VA 
Launch of the Ship, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Building of the Ship, The. 

Launching of Cortez’ Ships. (Fr. The Conquest of 
Mexico.)—Kinahan Cornwallis.—EDY 
Launching of the Ship, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Building of the Ship, The. 

Laura. (Fr. Observations in the Art of English 
Poetry.)—T: Campion.—OB 
(Rose-cheek’d Laura.)—ELP 
(Silent Music.)—CEL 

Laura, my Darling.—Edmund C. Stedman.—OH— 
TFY 

Laura Sleeping.—Louise C. Moulton.—A A 
Laurana’s Song.—R: Hovey.—AA 
Laura’s Composition on the Cow.—Anon.—WR 12 
Laura’s Song.—Oliver M. Brown.—VA 
Laureame: the Marble Dream.—Emma D. Banks.— 
BR 

Laurel, The. ( Sel. fr. The Russian Fugitive, Pt. III.) 

—W: Wordsworth.—HSS 1 
Laurel Seed, The.—R: H. Horne.—HS 
Laurel Wreath, The. (Dial.) —Lizzie M. Hadley.— 
HE 

Laurella, Sel. fr. (Morning in the Bay of Naples.)— 
J: Todhunter.—TIP 

Laurie’s Apology.—Dixie Wolcott.—WR 20 
Laus Deo.—Sydney Dobell.—OB 

Laus Deo. — J: G. Whittier. — BLP ( abr .) — BNL — 
EDY 

Laus Infantium.—W: Canton.—VA 
Laus Veneris.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA 
Lavender.—Anon.—HP 

Law. (Sel. fr. The Wolf and the Shepherds. A 
Fable.)—Jas. Beattie.—CS 15 
(Lawyers and the Law.)—BNL 
Law, The. (3 frags, fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: 
Butler.—HPE 

Law.—R: Hooker. See Necessity of Law. 

Law agin It, A.—Mrs. G. Archibald.—CS 27 
Law and Faith and Freedom.—G: F. Hoar.—FD 2 
Law and Humanity.—Raymond N. Kellogg.—NC 
“Law is more than a great river, rising in the far off 
mountains, The.”—C. C. Bonney.—GG 
Law of Death, The. (C.) —J: Hay.—JBS 10 (wr. at. to 
E. Arnold.) 

(Kilvany.)—OS 3 

Law of Habit, The.—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
Law of Human Progress, The, Sel. fr. (Progress of 
Humanity, The.)—C: Sumner.—CS 10—NPS 
—YP 

(Progress is Constant— si. diff.) —BLP 
Law of Labor. The. (Fr. Crisis Thoughts.)—Anon.— 
BLP 

Law of Love as a Rule of Conduct, The.—C: Sumner. 

See True Grandeur of Nations, The. 

Law of Success, The.—J: Sargeant.—SO 
Law of the Jungle, The. (Fr. The Second Jungle 
Book.)—Rudyard Kipling.—VA 
Law of Virtue, The. (Frag.) —Cicero.—BLP 
Law-case, A.—W: Co wrier.—OS 1 
(Nose and Eyes.)—BNL—PC 
(Report of an Adjudged Case— C .)—HPE 
Lawlands of [or o’] Holland, The.—Anon.—BB—BPB 
Laws and Law.—Sophie W. Weitzel.—TAS 
Lawsuit , A. (Dial.) —Anon.—FAD 


Lawyer, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Lawyer and Free Institutions, The.—Chauncey M. 
Depew.—NC 

Lawyer and the Chimney-sweeper, The.—Anon.—HR 
Lawyer, Doctor, Soldier, and Actor, The. (Play.) — 
Anon.—SED 

Lawyers and Donkeys. (Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
Lawyers and Laws. (Sel. fr. Verbatim from Boileau.) 

—Alex. Pope.—BNL 
Lawyers and the Cat, The.—Anon.—CS 9 
Lawyers and the Law. (Frags fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Lawyers and the Law.—Jas. Beattie. See Law. 
Lawyer's Daughter, A.—J. H. Thacher.—;THP—TL 
Lawyer’s Farewell to his Muse, The.—Sir W: Black- 
stone.—FEP 

Lawyer’s Invocation to Spring, The.—H: H. Brownell. 
—AWH—BNL—FEP—GP—THP 
(Lawyer’s Poem to Spring, A.)—TFS 
(Ode on Spring— -si. diff.) —MYF 
Lawyer’s Lullaby, The.—F. H. Coggswell.—SAE 
Lawyer’s Poem to Spring, A.—H: H. Brownell. See 
Lawyer’s Invocation to Spring, The. 

Lawyer’s Stratagem, The.—Anon.—MDD 
“Lay a garland on my hearse.”—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. See Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Lay me Low.—Adam L. Gordon.—HP 
( Valed ict ory..)—V A 

Lay of Ancient Rome, A._—T: Ybarra.—CG 3 
Lay of Norse-Irish Sea-Kings.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Lay of Real Life, A.—T: Hood.—CS 9 
Lay of St. Aloys, The (in Ingoldsby Legends), Sel. fr. 

(City Bells.)—R: H. Barham.—BNL 
Lay of St. Gengulphus, A. ( In Ingoldsby Legends. ) 
—R: H. Barham.—HPE 

Lay of the Brave Cameron, The.—J: S. Blackie.—EDY 
—VSG 

Lay of the Conscription, A.—Anon.—WR 13 
Lay of the Famine, A.—Anon.—TIP 
Lay of the Grateful Patient.—F. D.—TL 
Lay of the Imprisoned Huntsman.—Walter Scott. 
See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Lay of the Laborer, The.—T: Hood.—HSS 3 (sel.) — 
—VA 

Lay of the Last Minstrel, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott. 

Albert Graeme’s Song. (Can. VI., St. 11, 12— 
song.) —PEB 3 

“And said I that my limbs were old.” (III., 1, 2, 
V., 13— sel.) —BNL 
(Lay of the Last Minstrel— sel.) —BIL 
Branksome Hall. (I., 1-6.)—OS 2 
Breathes there the Man. (VI., 1.)—BNL — LLC 
—PYO—SR 8—YBF 

(“Breathes there the man with soul so dead.”)— 
GG 

(Innominat us.)—OB 

(Lay of the Last Minstrel— sts. 1 and 2 abr.) —AE 
(Love of Country [,The].)—BLP—GMS—SM— 
SS—WCLC. 1 

(My Native Land.)—GN—OS 1 
(Patriotism.)—DLS—FTR (sts. 1 and 2.)—GP— 
KNE—PPSr 

Defiance. (I., 18.)-—EPs 

Dies Irse. (VI., following st. 30—Scott’s vers, of T: 
de Celano’s poem.) —FEP 
(Hymn for the Dead.)—BPB 
See also Mass, The, below. 

Fitz-Traver’s Song. (VI., 16-20— song.) —EPs 
Harold’s Song. (VI., 23— -song.) —PEB 3 

(Rosabelle.) — BFV — BPB — CGd —EPs—FEP 
—PGT 1 

Last, Minstrel, The. (Introd.) —WEP 4 

(Lay of the Last Minstrel, The— br. sel.) —SAE 
Mass. The. (VI., 29, 30, and Hymn for the Dead.)— 
EPs 

Melrose Abbey. (II., 1, 8-11.)—BNL 
(Melrose by Moonlight-— sel.) —OS 3 
Poet, The. (V., 1, 2.)—FP 
Scotland. (VI., 2.)—BNL 
Lay of the Lover’s Friend, The.—W: Aytoun.—HPE 
Lav of the Madman.—Anon.—PPSr 
(Abr .)—CS 9—FR—KNE 

Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers, Poems fr. —W: E. 
Aytoun. See: • 

Battle of the Boulevard, The. 

Burial March of Dundee, The. 

Charles Edward at Versailles. 

Edinburgh after Flodden. 

Execution of Montrose, The. 

Heart of the Bruce, The. 

Widow of Glencoe, The. 

Lazarus.—Anon.—PEB 2 

Lazy Boy’s Lesson, A.—Julia A. Tirrell.—HSS 2 
180 




TITLE INDEX 


Legend 


Lazy Daisy.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Lazy Lew.—Anon.—FAS 
Lazy or Not.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Lazy Roof, The.—Gelett Burgess.—NA 
Lazyland.—Marg. Vandegrift.—WR 15 
Le Depart.—G. R. Wallace.—CG 1 
Le Dernier Jour d’un CondamntL (C.)—G: A. Baker, 
Jr.—PLD—TAV 
(Bachelor Coat, The.)—CS 37 
Le Malade Imaginaire, Sel. fr. (Imaginary Sick Man, 
The—Sc. XIV.)—Jean B. P. Moliere.—PS 
Le Mauvais Larron.—Rosamund M. Watson.—VA— 
WR 3 

Le Morte d’Arthur, Sel. fr. (Sir Lancelot— sel. fr. Bk. 

XXL, Ch. XIII.)—Sir T: Mal[l]ory.—OS 3 
Le R4cit d’une Scceur.—Aubrey De Yere.—AYP 
Le Roi s’Amuse (The King’s Diversion), Sel. fr. 

(Father’s Curse, The— sel. fr. Act I., Sc. 4.)— 
Victor Hugo.—SO 

Lead, Kindly Light.—J: H. Newman.—BSP—EDY— 
FEP — HDL — LLC — PYO — SAE — 
WCLG 1—YBF 

(“Lead, kindly light, amid the encircling gloom.”) 
—GG 

(Lead Thou me.)—SSS 

(Pillar of the Cloud, The—C.)—BNL—GP—SM— 
VA 

“Lead, kindly light! amid the encircling gloom.”—J: 

H. Newman. See foregoing. 

Lead, Kindly Light, Pantomime of. —Lucy Jenkins.— 
WR 17 

Lead me, O Lord.—Adelaide Procter.—SSS (si. abr.) 
(Per Pacem ad Lucem— C .)—CS 7—FEP—HDL— 
VA—YBF 

(Through Peace to Light.)—SSS 
Lead the Way.—Lyman Abbott.—BS 13 
Lead Thou me.—J: H. Newman. See Lead, Kindly 
Light. 

“Lead us, Heavenly Father, lead us.”—Jas. Edmeston. 
—FEP 

(Prayer to the Trinity.)—VA 
Leader Haughs.—Minstrel Burn.—BPB 
Leadership of Educated Men, The. (Sel.) —G: W. 
Curtis.—MRS 

Leading the Choir.—Edith M. Norris.—WR 21 
“Leadville Jim.”—W. W. Fink.—CS 27—SR 4 
Leaf after Leaf.—Walter S. Landor.—YBF 
“Leafless are the trees; their purple branches.”— 
Ebenezer Elliott.—AD 
Leaflets, The.—Kate L. Brown.—NV 
Leaflets and Lady-bugs.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Leagued with Death.—Anon.—MR 
Leah the Forsaken. (Act IV., Sc. 2.)—Augustin Daly. 
—BS 8—FTR—SAE 

(Scene from “Leah [the Forsaken].”)—CS27—SR 4 
Leak in the Dike, The.—Phoebe Cary.—BS 5—CS 14 
—FR (si. abr.) 

Leap for Life, A.—G. P. Morris (at. also to Walter Col¬ 
ton).—FTR 

(Main-truck, The.)—CS 1—LLC—PPSr—TAV 
Leap of Curtius, The.—G: Aspinall.—CS 12 
Leap of Roushan Beg, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
CS 17 

Leap Year Farce, A.-—Charlotte Rogers.—SR 10 
Leap-year in the Village with One Gentleman. (Play.) 

—Anon.—BS 8—HD 
Leap-year Mishaps.—Anon.—BS 22 
Leap-year Wooing, A.—David Macrae.—BS 4—MHR 
Lear.—T: Hood.—VA 
Learn a Little Every Day.—Anon.—POS 
Learn Everything You Can.—Anon.—WR 17 
Learn to Labor and to Wait.—T. S. Denison.—FAS 
“Learn to live, and live to learn.”—Anon.—HSS 2 
Learn to Wait.—Anon.—HP 

Learned Negro, The. (Congregationalist.) —AWH— 
CS 11—THP 

(Darkey Preacher, The.)—CDV—SDR 
Learning. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Learning to Pray.—Mary E. Dodge.—CS 5 
Learning to Pray.—Eliz. S. Phelps.—TAS 
Learning to Sew.—Anon.—WR 17 
“Leave God to order all thv ways.”—G: Newman.— 
GG—HDL 

Leave it with Him.—Anon.—SSS—YBT (abr.) 

Leave me Not. (Psalm XXVII.)—Jas. Wedderburn. 
—ELP 

Leave the Liquor Alone.—Anon.—TS 
“Leave the young hearts to nature and to God.” (All 
the Year Round.) —GG 
Leaves, The.—Anon.—AD 

Leaves and the Wind, The.—G: Cooper.—TAV 
(Autumn Leaves.)—GMS (abr.) —NV 
(Wind and the Leaves, The.)—SM 


Leaves at my Window.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
Leaves at Play.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Leaves fromjFatherland.—T. W. Handford.—TFS 
Leaves of Grass.—Walt Whitman. See Song of My¬ 
self. 

Leaves of Grass, Sel. jr. (Great are the Myths— 
Pt. II., abr.) —Walt Whitman.—HBP 
Leaving Jonah.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Leaving the Homestead.—Anon.—CS 18 
Leconte de Lisle.—Edmund Gosse.—EDY 
Lecture, The.—E. T. Corbett.—CS 36 
Lecture by a Yankee.—Anon.—MCS 
Lecture by the New Male Star.—Helen H. Gardener.— 
BS 19 

Lecture on Hornet-ology, A.—Anon.—PTS 
Lecture on Patent Medicines, A.—“Dr. Puff Stuff.”— 
CS 1—DS 

Lecture Recital: Ella Wheeler Wilcox.—Grace B. 
Faxon.—WR 26 

Lecture Recital: Three Women Poets of New Eng¬ 
land.-—Grace B. Faxon.—WR 26 
Lecture to the Crow, A.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Lecture upon the Shadow, A.—J: Donne.—HBP 
Lee to the Rear.—J: R. Thompson.—AWB—BAB 
Leedle Yawcob [or Yacob] Strauss.—C: F. Adams.— 
AWH — BDD — CS 13—CSS —DFY—FTR— 
HP—THP 

(Yawcob Strauss.)—PS 

Lefroy in the Forest.—C: Mair. See Tecumseh: A 
Drama. 

Left.—H. G. Chapman.—CG 1 
Left Alone.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Left Alone at Eighty.—Alice Robbins.—CS 7 
Left Behind.—Eliz. A. Allen.—BNL 

(Loved you Better than you Knew.)—FP 
Left on the Battle-field.—Sarah T. Bolton.—AWB— 
BNL—WRD 

Left Undone.—Marg. E. Sangster.—SSS 

(“It isn’t the thing you do, dear.”— sel.) —BIL— 
FTA 

(Sin of Omission, The— C.) —SR 9 
Legacy of Grant, The.—Chauncey M. Depew.—NC 
Legal Attachment, A.—Anon.—SR 7 
Legend, A. (Boston Pilot .)—CS 24 
(Monk’s Vision, The.)—BS 19—PEO 
(True Artist, The.)—YBT 
Legend, A.—Anna B. Badlam.—HSS 3 
Legend, A.—May Kendall.—VA 
Legend, A.—Rose Osborne.—FHS 

(Bell of the Angels, The.)—CS 29—YBT (abr.) 
Legend, The. (C. — fr. The Pilgrim to Compostella.) 
—Rob’t Southey. 

(Cock and Hen Story, A.)—HPE 
Legend, A. (Roses and Thoms— C.) —R: H. Stod¬ 
dard.—OS 1 

Legend Beautiful, The. (C. —Tales of a Wayside Inn: 
The Theologian’s Tale.)’—H: W. Longfellow. 
(Legend of the Beautiful, The.)—BS 12 
Legend of Aino, The.—(TV. by) J. E. Crawford. See 
Kalevala, The. 

Legend of Arabia, A.—Anon.—-WR 3 
Legend of Bregenz, A.—Adelaide A. Procter.—CR— 
CS 16—FTR—HB—MMR—VSG 
(SI. abr.) —SA—TMR 
(.4 br.) —FR—SO 

Legend of Brittany, A, Sel. fr. (“Her fittest triumph 
is to show that good.”— br. sel. fr. Pt. II.)— 
Jas. R. Lowell.—FTA 

Legend of Christopher Columbus, The, Sel. fr. (Worth 
of Fame, The.)—Joanna Baillie.—BLP (abr.) 
—SS 

Legend of Crystal Spring.—H: W. Austin.—CS 27 
Legend of Don Ditto and the Dutchman. (Fr. New 
Sanford and Merton.)—Anon.—SR 10 
Legend of Easter Eggs, The.—Fitz-James O’Brien.— 
CS 36—DFR 

Legend of Good Women, The. (Sets. fr. The Prologue.) 
Geoffrey Chaucer. 

Daisy, The.—BNL—GP (br. sel.) 

Prologue to the I.egende of Goode Women. (2 sels 
united .)—WEP 1 

(Queen Alcestis and the God of Love— sel .)—LC 
Legend of Hesse, A.—Franz Dingelstedt.—CSS 
Legend of Innisfallen, The.—Minnie D. Bateham.— 
CS 23 

(For diff. vers, see Abbott of Inisfalen, The.—W: 
Allingham.) 

Legend of Kalooka, The.—T. E. Jones.—CS 27 
Legend of King Nilus, The.—Edith Wordsworth.— 
CS 34 

Legend of Kingsale, The.—Anon.—WR 14 
Legend of Montrose, The, Sel. fr. (Orphan Maid, The— 
song fr. Ch. IX.)—Walter Scott.—WR 9 


181 




Legend 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Legend of Ogre Castle, The.—T: D. English.—WR 4 
Legend of Paganini, A.—J. Harrison.—HSS 2 
Legend of Provence, A.—Adelaide A. Procter.—VSG 
Legend of Rabbi Ben Levi, The. (Tales of a Wayside 
Inn: The Spanish Jew’s Tale.)—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—BS 17 

Legend of Rose Sunday, A.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Legend of St. Christopher, The.—Anon.—LLC 
Legend of St. Christopher, The. (2 diff. versions and 
diff. fr. foregoing .)—Mary Fletcher.—CS 26— 
WR 1 

Legend of St. Freda, The.—Sarah D. Hobart.—CS 29 
Legend of St. Valentine, A.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The. (In Sketch Book.)— 
Washington Irving.—WCLI 2 
(Ride of Ichabod Crane, The— sel .)—WR 16 
Legend of the Aspen.—Anon.—AD 
Legend of the Aspen, A. — Bernhard S. Ingemann.— 
HS 

Legend of the Aspen-tree, A. — Eleanore Darby.— 
HSS 1 

Legend of the Beautiful, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Legend Beautiful, The. 

Legend of the Dead Lambs, The. (In After Paradise.) 

—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—VA 
Legend of the Earth, The.—Jean Rameau.—BS 16 
Legend of the Enchanted Soldier, The.—Washington 
Irving. See Alhambra, The. 

Legend of the Fleur-de-lis, The. — Mabel Cronise.— 
CS 33 

Legend of the Haunted Tree, The, Sel. fr. (Fairy 
Song.)—Winthrop M. Praed.—OB 
Legend of the Heather.—Anon.—WR 6 
Legend of the Knot-hole, The.—Edgar W. Nye.— 
WR 20 

Legend of the Lily, The.—Annie Wall.—WR 6 
Legend of the Missions, A.—Lee C. Harby.—WR 6 
Legend of the Moor’s Legacy.—Washington Irving.— 
See Alhambra, The. 

Legend of the Northland, A.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
(SI. abr.)— CSS—PPSr 

Legend of the Organ-builder, The.—Julia C. R. Dorr.— 
BS 13—CS 21—FS—MYF—SR 2 
(SI. abr.)— FMR—SO 

Legend of the Sacks, The. (Juvenile entertainment.) 
—Anon.—EuE 

Legend of the True, A.—Marietta F. Cloud.—WR 7 
Legend of the Willow-pattern Plate.—Anon.—WR3 
Legends of the Little Fay, Sel. fr. (Little Fay, The.)— 
Rob’t Buchanan.—OS 1 

Legends of the Province House. — Nathaniel Haw¬ 
thorne. See Howe’s Masquerade. 

Legislative Union, The.—Sir Robert Peel.—SS 

Legitimate "Strike,” A.—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 

Lemon Party, A.—Anon.—EuE 

Lemonade.—Bessie Chandler.—SR 2 

Lemuel’s Song.—G: Wither.—FEP 

Lenna’s Dream.—Anon.—YFD 

Lenora.—Gottfried A. Burger.—WR 7 

Lenore.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—MRS 

Lent—T. L. Clarke.—CG 2 

Lent.—G: Hyde.—TL 

Lenten Maid, The.—S. R. Kennedy.—CG 2 

L’ Envoi.—Anon.—SCS 

L’Envoi.—Rudyard Kipling.—OB 

L’Envoi.—E. B. Reed.—CG 1 

L’Envoy.—Randolph.—HP 

Leoffricus. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
Leolin and Edith.—Alfred Tennyson. See Aylmer’s 
Field. 

Leona.—Jas. G. Clarke.—CS 7 
Leonard and Margaret.—Rob’t Southey.—FTR 
Leonard and the V. C.—Juliana H. Ewing. See Story 
of a Short Life, The. 

Leonard Tarries Long. (Sun upon the Lake.— C. — fr. 
The Doom of Devorgoil.)—Walter Scott.— 
YBF 

(Datur Hora Quieti.)—PGT 1 
(Evening.)—BPB 

Leonardo da Vinci Poetizes to the Duke in his Own 
Defence, Br. sel.fr. (Perseverance.)—Leonardo 
da Vinci (tr. by W: W. Story).—BNL 
Leonardo’s "Monna Lisa.”—E: Dowden.—VA 
Leonidas.—G: Croly.—BLP (abr.) —EDY—HB—HBP 
Leonidas, Sels. fr. —R: Glover. 

Address of Leonidas.—MMR 
Polydorus and Maron. (Fr. Bk. IX.)—WEP 3 
Leonidas.—Ellen Murray.—CS 26 

Leonidas to his Three Hundred.—Leonidas (tr. by 
Pichat,).—PS—SS 

Leper, The.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—TAV—TMD (si. 
abr.) 

(Abr .)—BNL — BS 7\— CS 3 — EA — HBR — OM 


Les Burgraves, Sel. fr. (Emperor’s Return, The— fr. 

Pt. II, Sc. 6.)—Victor Hugo.—SO 
Les Enfants Perdus.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Les Mis^rables, Sels. fr. Victor Hugo. 

Battle of Waterloo, The. (Fr. Cosette, Bk. I.)— 
PPS (Chs. 3-6, 8, 10, 12, 13— cond .)—PR (o. 
9— cond .)—WCLG 2 (8-13)—WR 11 (5-14— 
cond.) 

(Close of the Battle of Waterloo—14, 15— cond.) 
—BS 23 

(Napoleon’s Overthrow—8, 9— cond .)—CS 25 
(Waterloo—Ch. 16.)—PPS 
Jean Valjean. (Fantine, Bk. VI., Chs. 3-5, 9, 10 
— cond .)—CR 

Gamin, The. (Sels. fr. Marius, Bk. I., Ch. I., and 
Jean Valjean, Bk. I., Ch. XV.)—CS 17 
Jean Valjean and the Bishop. (Fr. Fantine, Bk. 
II.)—HBR (Chs. 1, 3, 5, 10-14— cond.)— 1R 
(3, 5, 10-12— cond.) 

(Bishop’s Silver Candlesticks, The—Ch. 12, arr. 
as play.) —NDP 

(John Valjohn and the Savoyard—Ch. 13— abr.) 
—CSS—MMR 

Jean Valjean’s Sacrifice. (Fantine, Bk. VII., Ch. 
3— cond .)—N C 

Little Gavroche. (Saint Denis, Bk. VI., Ch. 2— 
sel,) _WR 25 

Man Overboard, A. (Fantine, Bk. II, Ch. VIII.) 
—SAE 

Billows and Shadows— si. abr .)—BS 21 
Despair— si. abr .)—KNE 
Les Morts Vont Vite.—H: C. Bunner.—A A 
Lesbia.—W: Congreve.—FEP 
(Silly Fair.)—BNL 

Lesbia Hath a Beaming Eye.—T: Moore.—WEP 4 
Less than Cost.—M. A. Kidder.—CS 15 
Lesson, A.—Anon.—DLF 
Lesson, A.—Anon.—NV 
Lesson, A.—Anon.—YBT 
Lesson, The.—Mary B. Dodge.—BS 8 
Lesson, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Lesson, A.—W: Wordsworth.—PGT 1—YBF 
Lesson for Mamma, A.—Sydney Dayre.—BVC 
Lesson from a Bell, A.—Walter S. Smith.—CS 25 
Lesson from "Fruit of the Spirit.” (Arr. by) P. 
Garrett.—CS 16 

Lesson from the Sunflowers, A.—Clara J. Denton.— 
WLO 

Lesson in Etiquette, A.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Lesson in Geography, A.—Frances Wynne.—TIP 
Lesson in Mythology, A.—Eliza C. Hall.—HP 
Lesson in Reading, A. (Sel. fr. The Autobiography of 
Leigh Hunt, Ch. III.)—Leigh Hunt.—MHR 
Lesson in Tennis, A.—C. F. Coburn.—CH 
Lesson in Weighing, A.—C: R. Talbot.—WR 6 
Lesson of Mercy, A.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Lesson of Mercy, A.—G: Murray.—VA 
Lesson of Obedience, The.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Lesson of the Leaves.—Anon.—AD 
Lesson of the Revolution, The.—Jared Sparks.— 
BLP 

(Teachings of the American Revolution.)—PFP 
Lesson of Trust, The.—Nora Perry.—YBT 
Lesson of Waterloo, The.—Anon.—CS 18 
Lesson of Wisdom for all Manner of Children.— 
Svmon (C: Simeon?).—BVC 
Lesson Worth Enshrining, A.—Anon.—HSS 2—SSS 
Lessons.—Sallie N. Roach.—CS 24 
Lessons from Birds and Bees.—Jas. Hurdis.—YBT 
Lessons from Nature about Trees.—W. H. Benedict.— 
DFR 

Lessons from Scripture Flowers.—M. B. C. Slade.— 
CS 16 

Lessons from the Washington Centennial.—G: A. Gor¬ 
don.—FD 2 

Lessons in Cookery.—Anon.—FAD 
Lessons in Love.—Jas. S. Knowles. See Hunchback, 
The. 

Lessons of Nature, The. (In Flowers of Sion.)—W: 

• Drummond.—FEP—PGT 1—YBF 

Lessons of the Leaves, The.—Anon.—SSS 
"Let dead names be eternized by dead stone.”—Edith 
M. Thomas.—AD 

Let down the Bars.—Philip Morse. See Lovejoy Cow, 
The. 

"Let each man think himself an act of God.”—Philip 
J. (?) Bailey.—CS 1 

Let Every One Sweep before his Own Door.—Anon.— 
CS 8 

'Let, it not be forgotten that patriotism is one of the 
positive lessons.”—R: Edwards.—DFR 
Let it Pass.—Anon.—SSS 
(SI. abr. )—DJS—HSS 2 


182 




TITLE INDEX 


Liberty 


Let Little Hands.—S. M. Kniel.—DJS 

(For Decoration Day.)—DFR—DLS—LPS—PP 
Let me be with Thee.—Charlotte Elliott.—VA 
Let me Forget . ( Trinity Archive.) —CG 3 

“Let me not die before I’ve done for thee.”—Anon.— 
GG 

“Let me not to the marriage of true minds.”—W: 
Shakespeare.—OEL 
(Love.)—LLC 

(Sonnet.) — BNL — EPs — FEP — HBP — 
OB (XVIII.) 

(Sonnet CXVI.— C.) —ELP—WEP 1 
(True Love.)—FTA—OH—PGT 1—PHS 
Let not Woman e'er Complain. — Rob’t Burns. — 
BNL 

Let Santa Claus In.—Anon.—WR 26 
Let the Angels Ring the Bells.—J. E. Rankin.—BS 13 
Let the Toast Pass.—R: B. Sheridan. See School for 
Scandal, The. 

Let there be Light.—Horace Mann.—BLP—LLC 
“Let there be no more accursed races on the earth.”— 
Emilio (?) Castelar.—GG 

“Let those Laugh who Win.”—( Musical sketch — ad. 

by) Alfred B. Sedgwick—DSS 
Let us Alone. (C.)—H: H. Brownell.—AWH 
(“All we Ask is to be Let Alone.”)—CS 1 
(Old Cove, The.)—EPs 

“Let us Have Peace.” ( Ahr.) —H: Watterson.—SC 
(Tribute to Grant, A— diff. abr.) —CS 31 
Let us Kiss and Part.—Michael Drayton. See Love’s 
Farewell. ' 

“Let us learn to be content, with what we have, wit h the 
place we have in life. ”—D: Swing.—GG 
“Let us not fall into the vulgar whim and dishonor the 
century in which we live.”—Victor Hugo.— 
GG 

“ ‘Let us pass over!’ We were far astray.” ( Friends’ 
Review.) —GG 

Let us Try to be Happy.—Anon.—DJS 
Let us Wreathe the Mighty Cup.—Michael Field.—VS 
Letter, A.—Eliz. S. Phelps.—BIL—FTA—TFY 
Letter, A. (To Lady Margaret Cavendish Holles- 
Harley when a child.) See Letter to Lady 
Margaret Cavendish, A.—Matthew Prior. 
Letter, A.—C. S.—CG 2 
Letter and an Answer, A. (Punch.) —HPE 
Letter from a Candidate for the Presidency, A.—Jas 
R. Lowell. See Biglow Papers, The. 

Letter from Italy, The, Sel. Jr. (Blessings of Liberty 
The.)—Jos. Addison.—WEP 3 
Letter from Mr. Ezekiel Biglow, A.—Jas. R. Lowell. 
See Biglow Papers, The. 

Letter from Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Hon. J. T. Buck¬ 
ingham.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow Papers, 
The. 

Letter from Newport, A.—F: W. H. Myers.—VA 
Letter H , The.—Catherine Fanshawe.—CS 26 
(Riddle, A.)—BNL—FEP—GN 
Letter of Advice, A.—Winthrop M. Praed.—WEP 4— 
WR 8 (abr.) 

Letter of Blunders. A.—Anon.—MYF 
Letter of Marque, The.—Caroline F. Orne.—CS 17 
Letter Scene, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 
Letter Signed Hyperion.—Josiah Quincy, Jr.—EAO 
Letter to Ben Jonson, Sel. fr. (Ben Jonson.)—Fs. 
Beaumont.—BNL 

Letter to Benjamin Webb.—B: Franklin.—MAL 
Letter to Bernard Barton, Jan. 9th, 1824.— C: Lamb. 

(Cold in the Head, A— abr.) —OS 3 
Letter to Col. Henry Lee, A, Sel. jr. (Approach to the 
Presidency, The.)—G: Washington.—HS 
Letter to his Little Son.—Martin Luther.—OS 1 
Letter to Lady Margaret Cavendish, A.—Matthew 
Prior.—OB 
(Letter, A.)-—PoR 

Letter to Lord Chesterfield. (To the Right Honorable 
the Earl of Chesterfield— C.) —S: Johnson.— 
OS 3 

(Letter to the Earl of Chesterfield.)—ESs 
Letter to Mr. Johnson (Printer).— W: Cowper.— 
MRS 

Letter to Mother Nature, A.—Sydney Dayre.—WR 24 
Letter to Samuel Mather. (Abr.) —B: Franklin.— 
MAL 

Letter to Santa Claus.-—Emily H. Miller.—CPL 
Letter to Santa Claus, A.—W: 0. Stoddard.—HS 
Letter to the Earl of Chesterfield.—S: Johnson. See 
Letter to Lord Chesterfield. 

Letter to the Rev. Dr. Lathrop, Boston. (To John 
Lathrop— C.) —B: Franklin.—MAL 
Letter to the Rev. John Newton, Nov. 30, 1783. (C.) 

—W: Cowper. 

(Life before the Flood.)—LLC 


Letter to Thomas Flower Ellis, March 30, 1831. (C.) 

—T: B. Macaulay. 

(Passage of the Reform Bill— si. abr.) —CR 
Letters.—Ralph W. Emerson.—BNL 
Letters, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—CS 1—HBP—OH 
Letters for Mr. Smith.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 36 
Letters from Miss Biddy Fudge to Miss Dorothy—in 
Ireland.—T: Moore. See Fudge Family in 
Paris, The. 

Letters of Peter Plymley on “No Popery,” The.— 
Sydney Smith.—ESs 

Letters to Several Personages: To Sir Henry Wootton. 
—J: Donne. See Verses to Sir Henry Woot¬ 

ton. 

Lettice.—Dinah M. Craik.—OH 
Lettice.—Michael Field.—VA 

“Letting go the unworthy things that meet us.”— 
Anna R. Brown.—FHS 

Letting in Light.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Autocrat 
of the Breakfast-table, The. 

Letting the Old Cat Die.—Mary M. Dodge.—CS 15— 
FMR—MYF— NV—PPSr 

Letty’s Globe.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—OB—PGT 2— 
VA—YBF 

Leveling.-—Anon.—WR 13 

Levet, his Death. (C.) —S: Johnson. 

(On the Death of Dr. T.evett.)—FEP 
(On the Death of Mr. Robert Levet. etc., also C.) — 
OB 

(Quiet Life, The.)— LH 
Lewie Gordon.—Alex. Geddes.—WEP 3 
Lex Talionis upon Benjamin West, The.—J : Wolcott. 
—HPE 

Lexington.-—Oliver W. Holmes.—BS 17—SR 8 
Lexington.—Prosper M. Wetmore.—WR 10 
Liberal Education, A.—T: H: Huxley. See follow- 
ing. 

Liberal Education and whereto Find It, A, Sels. fr. —T: 
H: Huxley. 

Education. (Br. sel.) —SE 
Liberal Education, A.—OS 3 
Liberalism.—Anon.—CP 
Liberalistic Temper, The.—Anon.—CP 
Liberator, The, Sel. fr. (O’Connell.)—T: N. Burke.— 
FS 

liberator, The, Sel. fr. (Keynote of Abolition, The.) 

W: L. Garrison.—WR 10 
Libertine, The.—Aphra Behn.—OB 
Liberty.—Frank E. Brush.—CS 13 
Liberty.—W: E. Channing. Sec Spiritual Freedom. 
Liberty.—Orville Dewey.—LLC 

(“Liberty is a solemn thing”— br. sel., included in 
Patriotic Sentiments.)—DFR 
Libert y.—Walter Elliott.—TS 
Liberty.—W: L. Garrison.—OS 2 
(Free Mind, The.)—TAV 
(Freedom for the Mind.)—AA 
(Sonnet Written in Prison.)—BNL 
Liberty. (Ptly. same sel. fr. The American Republic: 
its Dangers and Responsibilities.)—H: George. 
—SSD—TMD 

Liberty.—J: Hay.—AA—TMR 
Liberty.—T: B. Macaulay. See Milton. 

Liberty.—Edith M. Thomas.—TMR 
Liberty. (Sel.) —W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Liberty and Greatness. — Hugh S. (?) LegarA — 
SR 8 

Liberty and Intelligence.—.!: C. Calhoun. See Liberty 
the Meed of Intelligence. 

Liberty and Knowledge. (Sel. fr. Public Dinner at 
New York.)—Dan’l Webster.—FD 1 
Liberty and Union [One and Inseparable],—Dan’l 
Webster. See Reply to Hayne, The. 

Liberty Bell. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Liberty for All.—W: L. Garrison.—AA 
Liberty in Government. (Sel. jr. On Liberty, Ch. V.) 
J: S. Mill.—OS 3 

“Liberty is a solemn thing.”—Orville Dewey.— See 
Libert y. 

Liberty is Strength.—C: J. Fox.—PS (si. abr.) —SS 
Liberty of Man, Woman, and Child, The, Sel. fr. (At 
the Tomb of Napoleon.)—Rob’t G. Ingersoll.— 
CS 30—SC 

Liberty of the Press.—E:D. Baker. See Free Press, A, 
Liberty of the Press, The.—J: P. Curran.—SS 
Liberty of the Press.—Sir Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
Liberty of the Press; or, The Human Mind, 1850.— 
Victor Hugo.—PS—SS 

Liberty or Death.—Patrick Henry. See Speech in the 
Virginia Convention, 1775. 

Liberty or Death. (Sel. fr. The Declaration of Inde¬ 
pendence.)—Rob’t G. Ingersoll.—FS 


183 




Liberty 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Liberty the Meed of Intelligence.—J: C. Calhoun.— 
KNE—SS 

(Liberty and Intelligence.)—SO 
Liberty Tree.—T: Paine.—AD (sc/.)—A\YB—HS 
Library, The.—G: Crabbe.—LBB—MBB 
Library, The.—J: G. Saxe.—LBB—MBB 
Library, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—AA 
Library, The. (Occasional Pieces, XVIII.)—Rob’t 
Southey.—LBB—MBB 
(Books.)—BNL 
(His Books.)—OB 

(My Days among the Dead [are Passed].)—FEP— 
HBP—YBF 
(Scholar, The.)—PGT 1 
(Stanzas 'Written in his Library.)—WEP 4 
Library, The.—J: G. Whittier.—LBB—MBB 
Licensed to Sell: or, Little Blossom.—Marg. J. Bid- 
well—BS 3 

Liddel Bower, The.—Jas. Hogg.—PEB 3 
Lides to Bary Jade. (Scribner’s Monthly .)—BS 3— 
CS 10 

Lie, The. (C.)—Sir Walter Raleigh.—FEP—PHS— 
WEP 1 

(Lye, The— ant. style .)—HBP 
(Soul’s Errand, The.)—BNL—CEL—EPs 
Lie for a Life, A.—G: H: Galpin. See Threads from 
the Woof. 

Life.—Anon.—FP 
Life.—Anon.—FTA 
Life.—Anon—HP 

Life: (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Life.—Fs. Bacon.-—FEP 

(World, The.)—BNL—EI.P 
Life. (C.)—Anna L. Barbauld.—GP —HBP—OB— 
WEP 3 

(Nc/.)—EPs—FEP—PC—PYO—YBF 
(Life and Death— sel.) —CEL 
(“Life! I know not what thou art.”)—BNL 
(Sel.)— HDL—PGT 1 

("Life! we’ve been long together”— br. sel .)—CS 1 
—GG 

(Life’s “Good-morning.”)—FP—OS 1 
Life, Sel. fr. (Good Cheer.)—Charlotte Bronte.—OS 1 
Life.—Alice Brown.—AA 
Life.—R: Coe, Jr.—CS 25—TAY 
Life—S: K. Cowan.—CS 26—DS 
Life.— (Comp, by) Mrs. H. A. Denting.—FEP—HP— 
SR 2 

(Curious Life Poem. A.)—CS 15 
Life. (“Our share of night to bear”— C.) —Emily 
Dickinson.—A A 
Life.—Minnie Gilmore.—TAS 
Life. (C.)—G: Herbert.—BNL—EPs—FEP 
(Life and the Flowers.)—CEL 
Life.—R: M. Milnes. Lord Houghton.—HSS 3 
(“So should we live, that every hour. ”)—CS 1 
Life.—H : King.—FEP 

Life. (Diff. poem.) —H: King (wr. at. to Fs. Beau¬ 
mont).—HBP—Y”BF 
(Life of Man, The.)—CEL 
(On the Life of Man—C.)—ELP 
(Sic Vita.)—BNL—CS 19—FEP 
Life.—Lizzie M. Little.—VA 
Life.—H: W. Longfellow. See Psalm of Life, A. 

Life.—L. F. M.—CG 3 

Life. — Don Jorge Manrique. See Coplas de Man- 
rique. 

Life.—Mary Morgan.—TCV 
Life.—Bryan W. Procter.—FEP—HBP—VA 
Life, A.—Bryan W. Procter.—GP 
(History of a Life—C.)—BNL 
Life.—E: R. Sill.—GMS—HBR—TAS—TFY 
Life.—C: Swain.—VA 
Life.—Jones Verv.—TAS r 

Life.—H. B. Wallace— LLC 
Life.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BNL 
Life.—R: H: Wilde—BNL 

(“My life is like the summer rose.”)—ASI.—FEP 
—Y’BF 

(Stanzas.)—AA—HBP 
Life; a School Scene.—E. H. Trafton.—SD 
Life and Death.—Anon.—HBP 
Life and Death.—Anon.—HP 
Life and Death.—Anna L. Barbauld. See Life. 

Life and Death.—Christopher P. Cranch.—TAS 
Life and Death (Of Life and Death— C.). —Ben Jon- 
son.—FP 

Life and Death.—Omar Khayyam. See Rubaiyat, 
The. 

Life and Death.—Lilia C. Perry.—AA 
Life and Death.—Duncan C. Scott.—TCV—VA 
Life and Death.—V’: Shakespeare. See Measure for 
Measure. 


Life and Death of Jason, The, Sels. fr. —W: Morris. 
“Ah! when will all be ended.” (Br. sel. fr. Bk. 
XVII.)—GG 

Nymph’s Song to Hylas, The. (Song fr. Bk. IV.)— 
OB 

(Song from Jason.)—EPs 
Summer Storm. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.;-—POS 
Life and Love.—Rob’t C. Tongue.—CG 1 
Life and the Flowers.—G: Herbert. See Life. 

Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, Stls. fr.- — 
Washington Irving. 

Discovery of America. The. (Sel. fr. Vol. I., Bk. 
IV’., Ch. I.— w. introd. matter.) —WR 10 
(Columbus Landing in the New World— abr.) — 
WR 5 

“Life appears to me too short to be spent in nursing 
animosity or registering wrongs.”—Charlotte 
Bronte.—GG 

Life before the Flood. (Letter to the Rev. John New¬ 
ton, Nov. 30, 1783— C. — abr.) —W: Cowper.— 
LLC 

Life beyond the Tomb.—Jas. Beattie. See Minstrel, 
The. 

Life Brigade, The.—Minnie Mackay.—CS 17 
Life Clock, The.—Anon.—FP 

Life from Death. (Through Death to Life— C.) — 
Horatius Bonar.—CS 6 

“Life! I know not what thou art.”—Anna L. Bar¬ 
bauld. See Life. 

Life in a Love.—Rob’t Browning.—OH 

Life in its Spring-time.—E. A. Holbrook.—AD 

Life in the Autumn Woods.—Philip P. Cooke.—BNL 

Life in the Chem. Lab.—H: W. Eliot, Jr.—CG 3 

Life is a Ladder.—Anon.—YBT 

“Life is a mystic flame.”—J: S. Van Cleve.—GG 

Life is but a Dream. (C.) —C: L. Dodgson. 

(Of Alice in W’onderland.)—VA 
Life is Love.—W: J. Fox.—VA 
Life is what we Make it.—Orville Dewey.—CS 10 
(A br.) —NPS—Y’P 

Life Lesson, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA—BIL—GMS— 
RCR—TAV 

Life, Liberty and Lager.—Anon.—BDD-—DFY 
Life Mosaic. (C.) —Frances R. Havergal. 

("Master! to do great work for thee, my hand.”)— 
GG 

Life of Cnteus Julius Agricola, Sel. fr. —Tacitus. 

Calgacus [or Galgacus] to the Caledonians. (Sel. 
fr. Calgacus’ Address tothe Britons.)—PS—SS 
Life of Goethe, Br. sel. fr. —G: H: Lewes.—GG 
Life of Man, The.—H: King (at. to Fs. Beaumoni). 
See Life. 

Life of Robert, Second Duke of Normandy, Sel. )r. 
(Whilst Y'outhful Sports are Lasting.)—T: 
Lodge.—ELP 

Life on ihe Moon.—Herbert A. Howe.—TMR 
Life on the Ocean Wave. A.—Epes Sargent.—A A— 
BNL—FEP—GN—GP 
Life or Death.—E. B.—HP 
Life Sculpture.—G: W. Doane.—Y’BT 
(Sculptor. The.)—OS 1 

“Life! we’ve been long together.”—Anna L. Barbauld. 
See Life. 

Life without Love.—Anon.—FI S 

Life without Passion, The. (Sonnet XCIV.— C.) —W: 
Shakespeare.—PGT 1 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—OB (XI.) 

Life-boat, The.—Anon.—HNS 
Lifeboat, The—G : R. Sims—BS 14—CS 24—PR 
Life-boat is a Gallant Bark, The.—Eliza Cook.—SR 1 
Life-drama, A, Sels. /r.—Alex. Smith. 

F orerunners.—VA 
Minor Poet, A.—VA 
Sea-marge.—VA 

Life’s Answer.—H: Alford.—HDL 
(Contentment.)—BS 4 

(“I know not of the dark or bright.”)—GG 
(Trust.)—HSS 3—SPE 
I.ife’s Battle—An Oration.—Anon:—CS 7 
Life’s Battle Field.—E: Brooks.—FAS 
Life’s Common Things.—Florence M. Wright.—YBT 
Life’s Conflict.—W: Whitehead.—CS 7 
Life’s Day. (Tab. rec.) —Mary L. Gaddess.—WR 6 
Life’s Forest Trees.—Ella W. Wilcox.—AD 
I.ife’s Game of Ball.—Anon.—CD—CS 26 
Life’s Gifts.—G: Barlow.—BIL 

Life’s“Good Morning.”—Anna L. Barbauld. See Life. 

Life’s Greeting.—Arthur I,. Green.— CC. 1 

Life’s Heb'.—Jas. Thomson.—VA 

I.ife’s Incongruities.—Egbert Phelps.—C«P 

Life’s Journey. (Abr.) —Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 25 

Life’s Lessons.—Anon.—SM 

Life’s Loom.—W: J. I.ee.—BS 11 


184 




TITLE INDEX 


Lincoln's 


Life’s Love, A.—Anon.—BNL 
Life’s Maxims. ( Popular Educator.) —DLS 
(What to Do.)—DJS 

Life’s Morning, Noon, and Evening.—L.M.D.—FP 
Life’s Mysteries, Br. gel. fr. —Alice Cary.—BIL 
Life’s Lessons.—G: Herbert.—CEL 
(Bosom Sin.)—LLC 
(Sin—C.)—EPs—YBF 
Life’s Paths.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Life’s Pity.—Anon.—FLS 
Life’s Purpose.—D: Lawton.—TS 

Life’s Story. (Story of Life, The—C.)—J: G. Saxe.— 
BS 12 

Life’s Sunsets. ( Christian at IForA'.)—BS 19 
Ljfe’s Truth.—T: S. Collier.—HP 
Life’s Unexpressed.—Anne Elders.—FLS 
Life’s Weaving.—Millie Colcord.—CS 34 
Life-saver, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Lift up your Hearts.—Anon.—CP 
Lifting the Veil. (IF. tabs.) —Anon.—TCP 
Light.—Anon.—KNE 

Light.—Fs. W. Bourdillon.—BNL—BSP—DL§—FEP 
— FLS — FT A — HDL — HP — TFY—YBF 
(Night has a Thousand Eyes, The— C .)—A VP— 
GG—PYO—VA—VS 
Light.—Alice Cary.—TAS 
Light.—Hannah P. Kimball.—TAS 
Light.—G: Macdonald.—VA 
Ljght.—J: Milton. See Comus. 

Light.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Light.—W. P. Palmer.—CS 6 

Light.—Miss A. V. Turner.—SR 11 

Light and Love. ( The Academy.)— HP 

Light and Shade, Br. sel. fr. (“Fail—yet rejoice; 

because no less.”)—Adelaide A. Procter.—CS 1 
Light and the Sky. ( Frags. fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Light at Evening-time.—R. H. Robinson.—HDL 
Light from over the Range, The.—Anon.—CD—CS 27 
—SR 5 

Light from Within. The.—Jones Very.—TAS 
Light in the Window. The.—Patience Oriel.—CS 32— 
DS—YA 

Light of Asia, The, Sets. fr. —Edwin Arnold. 

Great Renunciation, The. (Bks. II., III., IV.. 
cond.) —VSG 

Nirvana. (Sel. fr. Bk. VIII.) 

Secret of Death, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. V.)—HBR 
(Tola of Mustard Seed, The.)—BS 19 
Song of the Devas to Prince Siddartha. (Sel. fr. 
Bk. III.— partly in VSG.)—HBP 
(Light of Asia, The, Sel. fr.) —AYP 
Sorrow of Buddha, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—CS 37 
Light of Love. The.—J: Hay.—FTA 
Light of Other Days. The.—T: Moore.-—BPB—CEL— 
LC—OB—PGT 1—TIP—WCLG 1—YBF 
(Oft, in the Stillv Night—C.)—BNL—EPs—FEP 
—FTA—HBP—LLC—PYO—SM—WEP 4 
Light of Stars, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—HBP 
Light of the Harun, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Light of the World, The. Sels. fr. —Edwin Arnold. 

At. Bethlehem. (Sel. fr. rrol.) —HS 
Great, Consummation, The. (Bk. VI.— sel.) — 
VSG 

Mary’s Story of the Crucifixion. (Sel. jr. Bk. VI.) 
—WR 12 

(Mary at the Sepulchre— abr.) —HS 
(Resurrection, The— si. diff. sel.) —CR 
Pontius Pilate. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—WR 11 
Light on Deadman’s Bar, The.—Eben E. Rexford.— 
TMR 

Light shall be at Eventide.—Heber Evans.—HDL 
Light Shining out of Darkness. (C.)—W; Cowper.— 
FEP—HBP 

(“God moves in a mysterious way.”)—LLC—A BI 
(Providence.)—EPs—HDL 

Light that is Felt. The.—J: G. Whittier.—BS 14— 
HDL—PEO—TAS 
Lighthouse. The.—Anon.—DLF 
Light-house, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Lighthouse, The. (Sel.) —II: \t. Longfellow.—PTS 
Light-house. The.—T: Moore.—CS 10—HSS 3 
Lighthouse, The. (Pharos Loquitur—C.)—Valter 
Scott.—LC 

Light-house Mav.—E. Faxton.—BS 7 
Light-keeper, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Lightkeeper’s Daughter, The.—Myra A. Goodwin.— 
CS 15—NPS—YP 

Lightning Stofy. A.—W. J. Lampton.—CS 23 
Lightning-rod Dispenser. The. (SI. diff. fr. Vorks.)— 
Will Garleton.—CH 

Light’ood Fire, The.—J: H. Boner.—AA 


Lights and Shades. (C .)—Felicia D. Ilemans.—CS 10 
(Despair is never Quite Despair.)—BS n 
Lights o’ London, The.—G: R. Sims.—CS 21 
Lights of Lawrence, The.-—Ernest Shurtleff.—TMD 
’Lijah’s Call to Preach.—Molly E. Seaweli.—WR 18 
Like a Laverock in the Lift.—Jean Ingelow.—BNL— 
GP—TFY 

Like a Little Child. (Father’s Hymn ft r the Mother 
to Sing, The— C.) —G; Macdonald.—OH (si. 
abr.) 

Like a Nettle.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Like a Tree.—Anon.—WR 14 
Like an Indian.—Clara J. Denton.—LPD 
“Like as the culver on the bared bough.”—Edmund 
Spenser. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 
“Like as the Lark.”—T: W. Parsons.—AA 
“Like Crusoe walking by the lonely strand.”—T: B. 
Aldrich.—BFY 

Like his Mother Used to Make. (C.)—Jas. W. Riley 
—HP 

(Coffee my Mother used to Make, The.)—SR 7 
Like to a Coin.—Arlo Bates.-—AA 
Like to the Thundering Tone (Nonseme —C ). —R: 
Corbet.—NA 

Like Washington.—Anon.—TT 
Like Washington.—Clara J. Denton.—DFR—LL 
Likeness, The.—Anon.—CS 9 
(Miniature, The.)—WR 13 
Li’l Pickaninny Coon.—P. H.—CG 3 
Lilac, The.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Lilac, The.—Clara D. Bates.—AD—NV 
Lilac, The. (St. Nicholas.) —YBT 
Lilac, The.—I.vdia H. Sigourney.—HSS 1 
Lilacs.-—Jas. Thomson.—HSS 1 
Lila’s Conclusion.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Lilian.—Alfred Tennyson.—FEP 

Lilian [ter. Lillian] Adelaide Neilson.—Clement Scott.— 
EDY—VA 

Lilian of the Vale, Sel. fr. (I’ve been Roaming.)— 
G: Darlev.—VS 

Lilies.—Leigh Hunt. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers. 

Lilies and Ros^s.—Anon.—YBT 

Lilies of the Field. The. (Fr. The Christian Year.)— 
J: Keble—CEL 

(Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity: The Lilies [Flow¬ 
ers—C.] of the Field.)—WEP 4 
(Flowers.)—FEP 

Lillian Adelaide Neilson.—Clement Scott. See Lilian 
Adelaide Neilson. 

Lilliput I.ectures. See Rands. W: B .—Works in 
Author Index. 

Lilliput Levee. (SI. abr.) —W: B. Rands.—MYF 
Lilliput Notice.—W: B. Rands.—PoR 
Lily. The. (C.)—Jas. G. Percival.—ESS 1 
(Lily of the Valley, The— si. abr .)—NV 
Lily and the Linden, The.—Fred Crosby.—HP 
Lily March and Song.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Lily of Nithsdale, The. — Allan Cunningham. — 
EPs (si. alrr.) 

(She’s Gone to Dwell in Heaven —( '—FEP 
Lily of the Valley, The.—G: Croly.—HSS 1 
Lily of the Valley, The.—Jas. G. Percival. See Lily, 
The. 

Lily of Yorrow, The.-—H: Van Dyke.—AA 
Lilv Servosse’s Ride, The. (Arr. fr. A Fool’s Errand, 
Chs. XXXVI. and XXXVII.)—Albion W. 
Tourg^e.—BS 16 

Lily’s Ball. (Fun and Earnest.) —CSS—NV—PC 
“Lily’s” Thanksgiving, The.—Mrs. Dawson M. 
Phelps.—DFR 

Lily’s Word, A.—Lucy I arcom.—I.CS—YBT 
Limerick I.asses, The.—A. P. Graves.—TIP 
Limericks. (By various authors.)— NA 
Limitations of Genius.—Jas. W. Riley.—C W 
“T.impv Tim.”—T. Harley.—NPS—YP 
Lincoln—.Tas. Russell Lowell. See Ode Recited at the 
Harvard Commemoration. 

Lincoln.—Harriet Monroe. See Ccmmemorat ion Ode. 
Lincoln: A Man Called of God.—J: M. Thurston.—SC 
I.incoln as Cavalier and Puritan.—H: W. Grady. See 
New South. The. 

Lincoln at Gettysburg.—Clark E. Carr.—NP 
Lincoln, the Great Commoner (I.incoln. t he Man of t he 
People— C .)—Edwin Markham.—GMS—GN 
Lincoln the Immortal.—Anon.—CP 
I.incoin, the Man of the People.—Edwin Markham. 

See I.incoln, the Great Commoner. 

Lincoln, the Shepherd of the People. (Sel. fr. Abraham 
Lincoln.)—Phillips Brooks.—SR 8 
(Shepherd of the People, The.)—CS 5 
Lincoln, the Tender-hearted.—H. W. Bolton.—I.I.C. 

I.incoin’s Birthday.—Ida V. Woodbury.—PEO 

185 




Lincoln’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lincoln’s Birthday—February 12, 1809.—D: Swing.— 
LLC 

Lincoln’s Election, Sel. fr. (Higher Views of the Union.) 
—Wendell Phillips— MMR 
(Is this All?)—FD 1 

Lincoln’s Grave, sel. fr. (Prophecy, A.)—Maurice 
Thompson.—AA 

Lincoln’s Last Dream. — Hezekiah Butterworth. — 
ES 12 

Lincolnshire Poacher, The.—Anon.—BVC 
L’Inconnue.—Winthrop M. Praed.—OS 3 
Linda to Hafed.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 

Linden. ( Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Line up, Brave Boys.—Hamlin Garland.—SN 
Linen Bands.—Vance Thompson.—AA 
Lines (C.): “I murder hate by field or flood.”—Rob’t 
Burns. 

(Poet’s Choice, The.)—HPE 
Lines: “Surely a voice hath called her to the deep.”— 
G: A. Greene.—TIP 

Lines: “When youthful faith hath fled.”—J: G. 
Lockhart.—-A VP 

Lines: “Love within the lover’s breast.”—G: Mere¬ 
dith—YBF 

Lines: “In the merry hay-time,” etc.—C. K. Paul.— 
AVP 

Lines. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley.—OB—WEP 4 
(Flight of Love, The.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(“When the lamp is shattered.”)—BNL 
Lines Added to Goldsmith’s Traveller, Br. sel. jr. —S: 
J ohnson.—BNL 

Lines Addressed to - when we Parted for the Last 

Time. (Punch.) —HPE 
(My Last Shirt.)—SCS 

Lines Addressed to a Seagull, Seen off the Cliffs of 
Moher, in the County of Clare.—Gerald 
Griffin.—TIP 

Lines Addressed to his Wife.—Reginald Heber. See 
following. 

Lines Addressed to Mrs. Heber. (C.)—Reginald Heber. 
(“If thou wert by my sidef, my love].”)—BNL— 
EPs (si. abr. )—HBP—TFY 
(Lines Addressed to his Wife.)—FEP 
Lines Addressed to Monsieur Alexandre, the Celebrated 
Ventriloquist. (C.) —Walter Scott. 

(To Mr. Alexandre, the Ventriloquist.)—HPE 
Lines by a Fond Lover.—Anon.—NA 
Lines by a Medium.—Anon.—NA 

Lines by a Person of Quality.—J. B. B. Nichols.— 
VA 

Lines by a Person of Quality. (Song, by a Person of 
Quality—C.)—Alex. Pope.—NA 
(Love Song, in the Modern Taste, A.)—HPE (at. 
to Swift.) 

Lines by an Old Fogy.—Anon.—HP 
(Innovation.)—DLS . 

Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, on 
Revisiting the Banks of the Wye, etc. (C .)— 
W: Wordsworth.-—WEP 4 
(Lines Composed near Tintern Abbey.!—FEP 
("Nature never did betray— sel.’’) —AD ( hr. )-—GG 
(On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye.)—HBP 
(Tintern Abbev.)—BNL 
( Sel.) —EPs—LLC—SN 
(Varying Impressions from Nature— sel.) —GP 
(Love of Nature, The.)—AD 
Lines Composed at Grasmere on Tidings of the Ap¬ 
proaching Dealh of Charles James Fox. (C.) 
—W: Wordsworth. See Lines Written at 
Grasmere, etc. 

Lines for a Little Lassie.—Epes Sargent. See Little 
Cowslin, The. 

Lines for a Verv Little Girl or Boy.—Clara J. Denton. 
—FTT 

Lines for an Exhibition.—Anon.—SD 

(Words of Welcome— abr.) —NPS—SSS—YP 
Lines for Music. (Punch.) —HPE 
Lines. For the Agricultural and Horticultural Exhi¬ 
bition of Amesbury and Salisbury, Sept. 28, 
1858. 

(Song of Harvest, A— C.) —J: G. Whittier.—AD 
Lines Found in his Bible.—Wal er Raleigh. See 
Lines Wri'ten the Night before his Execution. 
Lines Found in the Hand of the Statue of Night at 
Florence in the Sixteenth Century.—Giovanni 
Strozzi.—OS 2 

Lines, Imitated from Rantzau.—I: DTsraeli.-—MBB 
Lines in a Lady’s Album..—Dan’l Webster.—EPs 
Lines Left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree, which stands 
near the Lake of Esthwaite, etc., Sel. fr. (True 
Dignity.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Lines on a Grasshopper.—Anon.—HP 


Lines on a Late Hospicious Ewent.—W: M. Thackeray. 
—EDY—HPE 

Lines on a Picture by Leonardo Da Vinci, called “The 
Virgin of the Rocks.”—C: Lamb. See Lines 
on the Celebrated Picture, etc. 

Lines on a Ring.—Loren M. Luke.—CG 2 
Lines on a Skelton.—Anon.—HBP—PPSr 
(Address to a Skeleton.)—WRD 
(To a Skeleton.)—BNL—CS 4— FEP — PR—PS— 
TMR 

Lines on an X-Ray Portrait of a Lady.—Lawrence K. 
Russell.—TL 

Lines on Doctor Johnson.—J: Wolcott.—THP 
(On Dr. Johnson.)—EDY 

Lines on Isabella Markham. (Sonnet Made on Isa¬ 
bella Markham— C.) —J: Haryngton.—BNL— 
FEP 

(Heart of Stone, A.)—ES 

Lines on Leaving Europe. (C. — sel.) —Nathaniel P. 
Willis.—EPs 

(Going Home-— shorter sel.) —OS 1 
(My Mother.)—GP 

Lines on Leigh Hunt (“Living Dog” and “The Dead 
Lion,” The— C.) —T: Moore.—ESs 
Lines on Naples.—T: Moore. See Lines on the Entry 
of the Austrians into Naples. 

Lines on Revisiting the Country. (C.) —W: C. Bryant. 

(At the Old Home Again.)—BLP 
Lines on the Celebrated Picture by Leonardo da Vinci, 
Called the Virgin of the Rocks. (Two poems.) 
C: I.amb.—LPC 

(Lines on a Picture, etc.— 1st -poem.) —OS 3 
Lines on the Death of Gen. Joseph Reed.—Philip 
F reneau.—EDY 

Lines on the Death of his Son Charles. (C.) —Dan’l 
Webster. 

(On the Death of my Son Charles.)—AA 
Lines on the Death of Napoleon.—Percy B. Shelley.— 
EDY 

Lines on the Death of Sheridan. (2 diff. sets.) 

T: Moore.—BNL—EDY 

Lines on the Entry of the Austrians into Naples. (C.) 
—T: Moore. 

(Lines on Naples— wording si. chgd.) —CSS 
(Occupation of Naples by the Austrians.)—EDY 
(To the Neapolitans— abr.) —OS 2 
Lines on the Hon. Edward Villers, Sel. fr. (Charac¬ 
terization, A.)—Sir H: Taylor.—VA 
Lines on the Mermaid Tavern. (C.) —J: Keats.— 
FEP—WEP 4 

(Mermaid Tavern, The.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Lines on the Portrait of Shakespeare. — Ben Jonson. — 
FEP 

(On the Portrait of Shakespeare— C.) —BNL— 
EDY 

Lines on the Prince of W’ales.—H : Frederick.—EDY 
Lines on the Same Picture [Two Females by Leonardo 
da Vinci] being Removed to Make Place for a 
Portrait of a Lady by Titian.—C: and Mary 
Lamb.—LPC 

Lines on the Tombs in Westminster. (On the Tombes in 
Westminster— C.) —Fs. Beaumont.—ELP— 
WEP 2 

(In Westminster Abbey.)—LH 
(On the Tombs in Westminster Abbev.)—FEP— 
OB—PGT 1—YBF 

Lines Prefixed to “ St. John of Damascus.” — Douglas 
Ainslie.—AVP 

Lines Printed under the Engraved Portrait of Milton. 
(C.)—J: Dryden.—WEP 2 
(Lines Written under the Portrait of John Milton.) 
—BNL 

(Under Mr. Milton’s Picture.)—FEP 
(Underthe Portrait of Milton.)—EPs—OS 3 
Lines Recited at the Berkshire Jubilee, Pittsfield, 
Mass., Aug. 23, 1844. (C.)—Oliver W. 

Holmes. 

(City Men in the Country.)—SS 
Lines Relating to Curran’s Daughter.—T: Moore.— 
PS 

(She is Far from the Land.—C.)—EDY—FEP— 
HBP 

Lines Suggested by a Picture of Two Females by 
Leonardo da Vinci.—C: and Mary Lamb.— 
LPC 

Lines to a Blind Girl.—T: B. Read.—AA 
Lines to a Friend.—J. B. Bensel.—MRS 
Lines to a Monkey.—H: R. Conger.—CG 2 
Lines to a Mule.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Lines to a Transfer Check. (Harvard Lampoon.) — 
CG 3 

Lines to a Young Lady.—E: Lear.—NA • 

(Author of the “Pobble,” The.)—BVC 


186 





TITLE INDEX 


Little Birdie 


Lines to Alexander Pope.—D: Lewis.—EPs 
Lines to an Indian Air.—Percy B. Shellev.—BNL— 
FEP—FTA—HBP 
(1 Arise from Dreams of Thee.)—GP 
(Indian Serenade, The— C.) —OB—PGT 1—PYO— . 
YBF 

(Serenade, The.)—FP 
Lines to Bessy. (Punch.) —HPE 
Lines to Her.—C: F. McClure.—CG 2 
Lines t o Kate.—Anon.—PP 
(Kate.)—CS 25—NPS—YP 
Lines to Miss Florence Huntington.—Anon.—NA 
Lines to Mr. Hodgson. (C.) —Lord Byron. See 
Lisbon Packet, The. 

Lines to Romance, Br. sel. fr. (Romance.) — Lord 
Byron—HSS 3 

Lines to the Des Moines River.—Eugene Parsons.— 
FS 

Lines to the Memory of “Annie.”—Harriet B. Stowe. 
BNL 

Lines to the Stormy Petrel.—Anon.—BNL 
Lines upon Himself. (Upon Himself—C.)—Rob’t 
Herrick—EDY 

Lines Written after a Battle. (Punch.) —HPE 
Lines Written among the Euganean Hills. (C.) — 
Percy B. Shelley. 

(View from the Euganean Hills, North Italy— ahr.) 
—BNL 

(Written among the Euganean Hills— ahr.) — 
PGT 1 

Lines Written at Grasmere on Tidings of the Ap¬ 
proaching Death of Charles James Fox (Lines 
Composed at Grasmere, etc.—C.)—W: Words¬ 
worth.—*EPs 

Lines Written by One in the Tower, being Young and 
Condemned to Die.—Chidiock Tychborn.— 
BNL—FEP 

(Chediock Tichebome.)—EDY 
Lines Written for a School Declamation.—D: Everett. 
—BNL 

(“You’d scarce expect one of my age”— si. abr.) — 
SAE 

Lines Written in a Church-yard.—Herbert Knowles. 

See Lines Written in Richmond Church-yard. 
Lines Written in an Album.—Willis Gaylord.—BNL 
Lines Written in August, 1847.—T: B. Macaulay.— 
AVP 

Lines Written in Early Spring. (C.) —W: Words¬ 
worth— FEP—SN—WEP 4 
(Written in Early Spring.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Lines Written in Imprisonment at Windsor.—H: 
Howard, Earl of Surrey.—WEP 1 
(Prisoned [Prisoner—C.] in Windsor he Recounteth, 
etc.)—FEP 

Lines Written in Kensington Gardens.—Matthew 
Arnold.—AVP 

Lines Written in Richmond Churchyard, Yorkshire.— 
Herbert Knowles.—FEP—HBP 
(Lines Written in a Churchyard.)—CS 9 
(Stanzas Written in the Churchyard of Richmond, 
Y orkshire.)—EPs 

Lines Written on a Blank Leaf of “ The Pleasures of 
Memory.” (C.) —Lord Byron. 

(To Samuel Rogers, Esq.)—EDY 
Lines Written the Night before his Execution.— Sir 
Walter Raleigh —FEP—YBF 
(Conclusion. The.)—OB 
(Death of Sir Walter Raleigh.)—EDY 
(Even Such is Time.)—EHT—ELP 
(Last Lines.)—CEL 
(Lines Found in his Bible.)—BNL 
(Verses Found in his Bible in the Gate-house at 
Westminster— C.) —WEP 1 
Lines Written to Music.—C: Wolfe—TIP 

(“If I had thought thou couldst have died.”)— 
FEP 

(To Mary.)—BPB—OB—PGT 1 
Lines Written under the Portrait of John Milton.— 
J: Dryden. See Lines Printed under the En¬ 
graved Portrait, etc. 

Linette.—Florence Folsom.—WR 22 
Lingering Latimer.—Anon.—MYF 
Linings.—May R. Smith.—YBT 
Lion, The.—Hilaire Belloc.—BVC 
Lion and the Cub, The.—J: Gay.—CGd 
(Abr.) —GN—OS 1 . 

Lion and the Giraffe, The.—T: Pringle.—PIBP 
Lion and the Mouse, The.—Anon.—PTS 
Lion’s Cub, The.—Maurice Thompson.-;—AA 
Lion’s Ride, The.—Ferdinand Freiligrath.—BNL— 
HBP 

Lion’s Skeleton, The.—C: Tennyson-Tumer.—VA 
Lip and the Heart, The.—J: Q. Adams.—A A 


Lips that Touch Liquor must never Touch Mine, The. 
—G: W. Young.—CS 16 

Lips that Touch Liquor shall never Touch Mine. — 
Harriet A. Glazebrook.—TS 
Liquor or Liberty?—Wilbur F. Crafts.—W'R 18 
Liquor Traffic Antagonistic to American Liberty.— 
J : B. Finch.—TS 

Liquor-seller’s Dream, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 33 
Lisbon Packet, The. (Lines to Mr. Hodgson— C .)— 
Lord Byron.—HPE 
Lise.—Rose T. Cooke.—AA 
Lisle’s Dream.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Lisping Child, The.—Anon.—WR 20 
Lisping Lover, The.—Anon.—BS 11—CRR 
List of our Presidents, A. (Youth’s Companion.) — 
PS 

(A br.) —PP—YPS 

Listeners Hear no Good of Themselves. (Tab.). —S. A. 

Frost (?).—BS 5—PR—TCP 
Listening.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Litany.—J: S. Bewley-Monsell.—VA 
Litany, A.—Phineas Fletcher.—OB 

(“ Drop, drop, slow tears. ”)—BNL—FEP—YBF 
(Hymn, An (or A]—C.)—ELP—HBP 
Litany.—Sir Robert Grant .—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Litany, The.—Rob’t Herrick. See Litany to the Holy 
Spirit. 

Litany to the Holy Spirit (His Letanie to the Holy 
Spirit— C. ).—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs—FEP— 
HBP—OB (abr.) 

(Holy Spirit , The.)—BNL 
(Litany, The.)—CEL—ELP—W’EP 2 
Literary Attractions of the Bible.-—Dr. (?) Hamilton. 
—CS 22 

Literary Lady, The. (Sel. fr. epilogue to Hannah 
More’s play , The Fatal Falsehood.)—R: B 
Sheridan.—HPE—THP 
Literary Lottery.—J. A. Macy.—CG 3 
Literary Nightmare, A.—S: L. Clemens.—BRR— 
BS 23 (abr .)—CS 17 

Literary Pursuits and Active Business.—A. H. Everett. 
—CS 6 

Literary Question Discussed, A.—Anon.—MHR 
Literary Recreations.—Eliz. Lloyd.—BS 13 
Literary Vampire, The. (Harvard Lampoon .)—CG 3 
Literature and Elocution. — Willis F. Johnson. — 
BS 25 

Literature and Nature.—S: Waddington.—LBB— 
MBB 

Literature Perverted.—Anon.—BS 21 
Little Acorn.—M. H. Huntington.—AD 
Little Acts of Kindness.-—Anon.—DLS 
Little Advice, A.—Annie L. Lonergan.—WR 14 
Little Aglae [,to her Father—C.].—Walter S. Landor. 
—VA 

Litt le Ah Sid.—Anon.—SDR 
Little Alabama Coon.—Hattie Starr.—AA 
Little All-Aloney.—Eugene Field.—I S 
Little Allie.—Sarah P. Parton.—BS 6—CS 18 
Little and Great.—C: Mackay.—SM-—WCLI 2 

(Deed and a Word, A — sel.) —HP—HSS 2—PYO 
—WR 1 

(Small Beginnings.)—BNL—CS 31—CSS—LLC— 
PPSr—PR—WR 17 

Little Angel, The.—Eliz. Prentiss.—OS 1—PR—YA 
“Little Angels.”—Emma C. Hollinger.—SDD 
Tattle Army, The. (Good Tirn/s .)—HSS 2 
Little Army, The. (Dial.) —I izzie J. Rook.—TT 
Little Artist, The.—Anon.—NV 
Little Assunta.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Little Bare Feet.—Anon.—TFS 
Little Bare Feet.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Little Barefoot.—Anon.—CS 20 

Little Beach-bird, The.—R: H. Dana.—AA—BNL— 
FEP—HBP—HSS 3—SN 
Little Beggars. The.—Anon.—HVD 
Little Bell. — T: Westwood. — BNL — FEP — FMR 
—GN—HBP—LC—OS 1-WCL 
Little Bennie (or Benny].—Annie C. Ketchum.—CSJ3 
—FMR—MYF 
(Benny.)— 1 -WCL 
Little Bessie.—Anon.—CS 22 
Little Bill.—Anon.—BS 24 

Little Billee. (C.) —W 7 : M. Thackerav.—BNL—FEP 
—C.P—NA—THP 

(Three Sailors, The.)—MHR—PEB 3 
Little Bird, The.—Anon.—CPI/—YBT 
Little Bird, The.—Martin Luther.—OS 1 
Little Bird Tells, A.—Anon.—BS 21—DCP 
Little Birdie.—Anon.—AD 

Little Birdie. (Fr. Sea Dreams.)—Alfred Tennvson. 
—OS 1—PC—WCL 

(Bird and the Baby, The.)—PP—PPSr—YFR 


187 




Little Birdie 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Little Birdie ( continued.). 

(Birdie and Baby.)—DCP 
(Cradle Song.)—LC—PGT 2—PS 
(Morning Song.)—GMS 

(“What does little birdie saw”)—BNL—PHS— 
PoR—TFS 

(What the Birdie and the Baby Say.)—HSS 2 
Little Bird’s Story, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Little Black Boy. The. (In Songs of Innocence.)— 
W: Blake—FEP—HBP—OB—YBF 
Little Black Phil.—Hon. C. E. Belknap.—BS 22 
Little Black Rose, The.—Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
Little Black-eyed Rebel, The.-—Will Carleton.—FR— 
PAP—SA 

Little Blue Pigeon. (Japanese Lullaby.)—Eugene 
Field.—WTD 

“Little Blue Ribbons.”—H. Austin Dobson.—TMR— 
WR 1 

Little Bluebeard.—Anon.—WR 17 
Little Bopeep and Little Boy Blue.—S: M. Peck.— 
DES—TAV 

Little Boy, A.—Mattie E. Merriam.—TFS 
Little Boy Blue.—Anon.—HBP 
Little Boy Blue.—Anon.—WR 12 
Little Bov Blue.—Eugene Field.—AA—ASL—EF— 
FEP — GMS — HBR — LLC — PR — TAV— 
TMR—WTD 

Little Boy Blue.—Abby S. Richardson.—BR—HSS 2 
Little Boy Lost, A. (C.) —W: Blake. 

(Orthodoxy.)—EPs 

Little Boy that Died, The.—J. D. Robinson.—CS 7 
—MMR 

Little Boy who Ran Awav, The.—Susan T. Perrw— 
LPS—PP—WR 17 

Little Bov who Went Awav, The.—Sam W. Foss.— 
CS 32 

Little Boy’s Argument, A.—Anon.—WR 17 
Little Boy’s Debate, A.—Anon.—MND 
Little Bov’s First Recitation, A.—Anon.—DLS— 
LPS—PP 

Little Bov’s Lament, The.—Anon.—DLS—DS—PP— 
YA—YFR 

Little Boy’s Lament, The. ( Judge .)—CS 37 
Little Boy’s Lecture, A.—Julia M. Thaver.—PS—TFS 
—TT 

Little Boy’s Plea, A.—Anon.—DST 
Little Boy’s Reasons, A.—Anon.—WR 17 
Little Boy’s Speech, A.—Anon.—KNS—LPS—PP 
Little Boy’s Speech, A.—Anon.—SD 
Little Bov’s Troubles, A.—Carlotta Perrv.—DJS—DS 
—PP—YA (abr.) —YFR 

Little Boy’s Vain Regret, A.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Little Boy’s Valentine, A.—Anon.—BS 11—DST 
Little Boy’s Wants, A.—Kate Lawrence.—CPL 
Little Boy's Wonder, A [or The].—Anon.—LPS—PP 
—PS 

Little Brawl. A. (Verses fr. Strife and Peace: The 
Last Strife.)—Frederika Bremer (tr. by Mary 
Howitt).—OS 1 

Little Breeches.—J: Hay.—AA—AWH—BNL—PYO 
—THP 

Little Britain. (In Sketch Book.)—Washington Ir¬ 
ving.—APr 

Tattle Brother.—Anon.—WR 17 
Little Brother, The.—Alice Cary.—WCL 

(Among the Beautiful Pictures.)—FP—HBP 
(Pictures of Memorv—C.)— BNL — CR — CS 4— 
FTR—GP—HNS—SAE (br. set.)— SM—SPE 
(Sweetest Picture, The.)—BS 14 
Little Brother, The. (Abr.) —W: B. Rands.—PC 
Little Brother, Little Sister.—Alice L. Richards.-—WN 
Little Brother of the Rich. A.—E. S. Martin.-—AA 
Little Brothers of the Ground.—Edwin Markham.— 
SN 

Little Brown Baby.—Paul L. Dunbar.—AWH—HBR 
Little Brown Bird, A.—Anon.—PC 
Little Brown Bushy-tail.—Astley H. Baldwin.—TFS 
Little Brown Cabin, The. (Abr.) —Lucy Larcom.— 
BTL—TFY 

Little Brown Curl, The.—Anon.—CS 23 
Little Brown Hands.—Mary H. Krout.—CPL (set.) — 
CS 12 — FS — GMS — HSS 2 — OS 1 —TFS — 
WCL 

Little Brown Seed, The.—Harriet M. Lothrop.—POS 
Little Brown Seed in the Furrow, The.—Ida W. Ben- 
ham.—AD—PEO 

Little Brown Wren, The.—Anon.—DLF 
Little Bugler’s Alarm, The.—Ernest Glanville.—-BS 25 
Little Busy Bees, The. (Detroit Free Press.) —BS 20 
—DS ♦ 

Little but Long.—Anon.— See Love me Little, Love me 
Long. 

Little by Little.—Anon.—AD—YBT (abr.) 


Little bv Liftle.—Anon.—DJS 

(.4 br. )—DS—PP—PS—SM—YA—YFR 
Little by Little. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
Little bv Little.—Anon.—SSS—YBT (sel.) 

(Br.'sel .)—CS 20—SM—WCLI 1 
Little by Little.—Luella Clark.—NV—SM 
Little by Little the Time Goes by.—Anon.—SM 
Little Carl.—Amelia H. Botsford.—CS 27 
Little Cavalier, A.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Little Charlie.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 32—DS 
Little Charlie’s Big Story. (Springfield, Mass., Re¬ 
publican .)—SR 5 

Little Charlie’s Christmas.—Anon.—BS 18 
Little Chief, The.—Anon.—DCP 
Little Child, A. (Harper’s Weekly .)—DJS 
(I Want Mamma.)—LPS—PP 
Little Child, The.—Albert B. Paine.—AA 
Little Child, I Call Thee.—Douglas Hyde.—TIP 
Little Child shall Lead Them. A.—Anon.—CS 21 
Little Child shall Lead Them, A.—Mrs. L. M. Willis. 
—SSE 

Little Children.—Anon.—DLS 
“Little Children.”—Anon.—TFS 
Little Children.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Little Children.—Mary Howitt.—PoR 
Little Children, Love One Another.—“Fanny.”—YBT 
Little Child’s Hymn, A.—Fs. T. Palgrave.—YA 
Little Child’s Prayer, A.—Anon.-—PS 
Little Child’s Trials, A.—J: Neal.—MYF 
Little Christ el.—Mary E. Bradley.—BS 15-—NPS—YP 
Little Christ el.—W: B. Rands.—FMR—PoR (sel.) — 
WCL (si. abr.) 

Little Christmas Tree, The.—Susan Coolidge.—PEO— 
POS 

Little Church round the Corner, The.—A. E. Lan¬ 
caster.—CS 5-—EDY—HP 
Little Cloak, The.—Lillie E. Barr.—CPL 
Little Clock, The.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Little Cloud, The.—J: H. Bryant.—BNL 
Little Cloud Went Sailing, A.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Little Coat, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Little Conqueror, The.—C: F. Adams.-—HP—PS 
Little Cookie-hookie.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 12— 
WR 23 

Little Cowslip, The.—Epes Sargent.—TFS (sel.) 

(Deeds of Kindness.)—BLP 

(Lines for a Little Lassie-— si. abr .)—YBT 

(Little Things— sel .)—DLF 

(Suppose.)—GMS—NV—SM—TFS (sel ) 

Little Crib Bed, The.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Little Crosses.—Emma F. Wyman.—YBT 
Little Cup-bearer, The.—Anon.—CS 18 (si. abr.) 
(Cup-bearer, The.)—TS 

Little Dago Girl, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 31 
Little Dandelion.—Helen B. Bostwick.— PC — PoR— 
WCL 

“Little David” of Nations. The.—W: C. Duncan.—NC 
Little Dead Prince, A.—Dinah M. Craik.—EDY 
Little Deeds.—Anon.—YBT 

Little Diamond and the Drunken Cabman.—G: Mac¬ 
donald. See At the Back of the North Wind. 
Little Dick and the Clock.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Little Dora’s Soliloquy. (St. Nicholas.) —BS 10— 
CPL—PR—YA 

(What is Baby Good for?)—HSS 3 
Little Dorothy’s Savings.—G: P. Bible.—BS 25 
Little Dot.—Anon.—DS—NPS—YA—YP 
Little Doves, The.—Anon.—NV—PC 
Little Drama, A.—Anon.—WR 14 
Little Dreamer, The.—Anon.—PC—TFS—WR 17 
Little Drops.—Anon.—LPS —PP 
Little Drops of Water.—Julia A. F. Carney. - See 
Little Things. 

Little Drummer, The.— R: H: Stoddard.—BAB 
Little Dutch Garden, A.—Hattie Whitney.—AA 
Little Edward. (C.) —Harriet B. Stowe. 

(Uncle Abel and Li tie Edward.)—WCLI 2 
Little Efforts.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Little Efrum’s Ride.—Patience Oriel.—CS 35 
Little Elf, The.—J: K. Bangs.—AA—PoR 
Little Eloise.—Josiah H. Fletcher.—FMR 
Little Eva.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Uncle Tom’s 
Cabin. 

Little Evangelist, The.—Harriet B. Stowe. See 
Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Little Fair Soul, The.—Menella B. Smedley.—VA 
Little Fay. The. (Sel. fr. Legends of the Little Fay.) 

—Rob’t Buchanan.—OS 1 
Little Feet.—Eliz. A. Allen.—BNL—BS 8 
Little Feller, A. (Michigan Christian Advocate.) — 
BS 24—CS 33—DST 

“Little Feller’s Stockin’, The.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Little Fellow’s Declamation.—Anon.—DLS 


188 




TITLE INDEX 


Little Maud 


Little Field Preachers.—Ella Ives.—YBT 
Little Fireman, The.—J: F. Nieholls.—CS 25 
Little Fisherman, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Little Fisherman, The.—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BVC 
Little Flag-bearer, The.—Anon.—PS 
(Our Flag.)—TT 

Little Flo’s Letter.—Eben E. Rexford.—COS—PP 
(Flo’s Letter.)—DST 
(Oversight of Make-up, An.)—WR 2 
Little Foes of Little Boys.—Anon.—DJS 
Little Folks, The.—Eudora M. Stone.—SR 1 
Little Folks’ Opinions.-—H. E. McBride.—StD 
Little Foxes.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—BS 15 
Little Foxes.—A. H. Morrell. See following. 

Little Foxes and Little Hunters.—A. H. Morrell.— 
LPS—PP—SM (si. abr.) 

(Little Foxes— si. abr.) —TFS—YBT 
Little French for a Little Girl, A.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Little French Lawyer, The, Sels. fr. —Beaumont and 
Fletcher. 

Bridal Song.—ES 
Charm, The.—ELP 

(Song in the Wood.)—ES 
Little Fritz.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 26 
“Little Garaine.”—Gilbert Parker.—PoR 
Little Gardens.—Emilie Poulsson.—YBT 
Little Gavroche.—Victor Hugo. See Les Miserables. 
Little Gentleman, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Little Giffen.—Fs. O. Ticknor. See following. 

Little Giffen of Tennessee.—Fs. O. Ticknor.—AWB 
(Little Giffen.)—A A—BAB—WR 10 
Little Gifts.—Anon.—TT 

Little Girl, A. (Wanted—a Little Girl— C.) —Ella W. 
Wilcox.—TFS 

Little Girl t hat Grew Up, The. ( Zion’s Herald.) —TMR 
Little-Girl-Two-Little-Girls.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Little Girl who Wouldn’t Eat Crusts, The.—Mary M. 
Dodge.—TFS 

Little Girl’s Christmas, A.—Anon.—PS 
Little Girl’s Declaration, A.—Anon.—LPS-—PP 
Little Girl’s Fancies, A.—“A.”—HSS 2—WCL 
(All Things Love Me— br. sel.) —TFS 
(Child’s Fancy, A— si. abr.) —PoR 
(Little Things— br. sel.) —AD 
Little Girl’s Hopes, A.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Little Girl’s Lament, The.—Dora Greenwell.—PC 
Little Girl’s Lecture to Mothers, A.—Anon.—PS 
Little Girl’s Letter, A. ( Wisconsin Farmer.) —PC 
(Nell’s Letter— si. abr.) —PP 
Little Girl's Questions, A.—Anon.—TFS 
Little Girl’s Speech, A.—Anon.—DLS 
Little Girl’s View of Life in a Hotel, A.—Anon.—CS 17 
(Naughty Girl’s Life in a Hotel, A.)—SR 7 
(Naughty Little Girl. The.)—HR 
Little Girl’s Wish. A.—Libbie C. Baer.—WR 17 
Little Girl’s Wonder, A.—Anon.—DLF 
Little Gleaners, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Little Golden-hair.—Will Carleton.—CS 20—FMR 
Little Goldenhair.—F. B. Smith.—BNL—BS 3—CSS 
—HP—HSS 3—LLC—MMR—PPSr 
Little Goose, A.—Eliza S. Turner.—OS 1—PC—WCL 
(Lost— abr. and si. diff.) —DR—PTS 
(Stray Child. A.)—CS 10—NPS—YP 
Little Gossips.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Little Gottlieb. (C.) —Phoebe Cary.—FMR (si. abr.) 

(Little Gottlieb’s Christmas.)—BS 11 
Little Gottlieb’s Christmas.—Phoebe Cary. See fore¬ 


going. 

Little Grace.—Bessie Chandler.—DCP 
Little Gradgrinds, The.—Barbara Broome.—MD 
Little Grand Lama, The. (Fables for the Holy Alli¬ 
ance, VI.)—T: Moore.—HPE—WR 1 (si. abr. 
and si. diff.) _ 

Little Grave, The. (Wording si. diff.) —Anon.—CS 6 
—PEO 

Little Graves.—Lillie S. Curry.—SR 3 

Little Grenadier, The. (Harper’s Young People. )—FS 

Little Gretchen.—Anon.—CS 10 

Little Gretchen.—Hans C. Andersen. See Little 
Match Girl, The. 

Little Grocer that Failed.—Anon.—MR 17 
Little Guinever.—Annie Fields.—AA 
Little Gustava.—Celia Thaxter.—PoR—SAP 
Little Hand. A.—Frank L. Stanton.—BS21—HDL 
Little Hatchet Story, The. (With occasional questions 
bv a five-vear-old hearer.)—Rob’t J. Bur¬ 
dette.— BS'6—CS 13—DS—KNE 
(New Hatchet Story and George Washington. A.) 
—SR 9 

Little Helpers. (Concert rec.) — Anon. — COS — 
DST ( diff. vers. — mon.—abr.) —PP 
(Busy Children at the Farm— abr.) —HSS 2 


Little Helpers.—Anon.—YFD 
Little Helpers. (Dial.) —E. L. Brown.—PR- 
Little Hero, The.—Arthur (?) Matthison. See Little 
Stowaway, The. 

Little Heroine, A.—Belle M. Locke.—CS 35 
Little Highland Shepherdess.—Lilia Vannan.—WR 
Little Homer’s Slate.—Eugene Field.—EF—W ; TD 
Little Housekeeper, The.—Anon.—DLF 
Little Housekeepers.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Little Hunchback, The.—Jas. W\ Riley. See Happy 
Little Cripple, The. 

“Little Jack.”—Eugene J. Hall.—PR—YA 
Little Jack Horner.—Anon.—CDV 
“Little Jack Janitor.”—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Little Jack Two-sticks.—Marion Manville.—CS 31 
Little Jean.—Lillie E. Barr.—PRR 
Little Jew, The.—Dinah M. Craik.—FMR 
Little Jim.—Anon.—CS 2—SA 

(Death of Little Jim, The.)—HNS 
(Poor Little Jim.)—BS 3 
Little Jim.—G: R. Sims.—CS 24—WR 15 
Little Jo.—Mary McGuire.—CS 29 
Little Joe.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 35 
Little Joe’s Flowers.—D: L. Proudfit.—SR 7 

(Poor Little Joe.)—CS 12—CSS—FTR—HNS— 
HP—PR—PS—SO—TMD 

Little Johnnie Visits the Dime Museum. (Arkansaw 
Traveler.)— SR 7 

(Boy in a [or the] Dime Museum, A [or The].— si. 

abr.) —DCR—WR 20 
(In the Dime Museum— si. abr.) —CS 30 
(Versions vary si.) 

Little Johnnie’s “Piece” on Owls.—Anon.—CS 28 
Little Joke, A.—Anthony Hope.—WR 20 
Little Kittens, The.—Anon.—NV 

(Quarrelsome Kittens, The.)—Anon.—NV 
(Two Little Kittens.)—PS 

Little Kitty.—Eliz. Prentiss.—LPS—OS 1 (si. abr.) — 
PP—PS 

(Kitten and the Mouse, The— si. abr.) —PTS 
Little Knight in Green, The.—Katha. L. Bates.— 
AA 

Little Knot of Blue, A.—S: M. Peck.—FTA 
(Knot of Blue. A.)—BNL 
Little Lady, The.—Louise Reviere.—FTT 
Little Lady, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Little Lady of Lavender, The, Sel. fr. (Miss Eva’s 
Visit to the Ogre.)-—Theodora C. Elmslie.— 
BS 24 

Little Lady-bird, The.—Caroline A. Southey.—WR 12 
(Ladybird, Ladybird.)—NV—OS 1 
(To the Lady-bird.)—PHS 
Little Lamb.—W: Blake. See Lamb, The. 

Little Lambkins, The.—Anon.—DLF 
Little Land, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV—PoR 
Little Lazy Cloud, The.—Anon.—NV—SM 
Little Leaf, The.—H : W’. Beecher. See Norwood. 
Little Leaf’s Sacrifice.—Hattie A. Penney.—BS 18 
Little Leaves. The.—G: Cooper.—NV 
Little Light, The. (Good Cheer.)— CPI.—DS—PP— 
YA—YFR 

Little Lights.—Aron.—CPL 
Little Lizette.—Kathe. S. Alcorn.—W’R 15 
Little Lord Fauntleroy, Sel. fr. (Fauntleroy and the 
Earl— cond. fr. Chs. IV. and V., and arr. as 
dial.) —Frances H. Burnett.—NDP 
Little Mabel at Long Branch.—Anon.—W’R 21 
Little Mag’s Victory.—G: L. Catlin.—CS 18—NPS— 
YP 

Little Maid with Lovers Twain.—Jennie E. T. Dowe. 
—BS 15 

Little Maiden and the Little Bird, The.—Lvdia M. 
Child.—W’CL 

Little Maid’s “Amen,” A. (Gospel Expositor.) —SSS 
Little Maid’s Prayer at the Shrine of St. Valentine, 
The.—Anon.—PS 

Little Maid’s Sermon. The.—Susan T. Perry.—BS 18 
Little Mamma.—C: H. W 7 ebb.—AW’H—OS 1—TAV— 
—THP 

Little Margerv. (SI. diff. vers.) —Sarah Joy.—BS 20— 
CS12 

Little Martyr, The.—Anon.—CS 9 

Little Mary and the Birdie.—Anon.—W’R 17 

Little Mary’s W’ish.—Mrs. L. M. Blinn.—CS 7 

Little Match-girl, The. (Little Match-seller. The— C. 

— prrose vers. —2 diff. trans.) —Hans C. Ander¬ 
sen.—BS 17—CS 15 
(Poet. vers. — si. abr.) —BNL 
(Little Gretchen— poet. rers. — abr., w. tab.) —TCP 
(New Year’s Eve— poet, rers.) —OS 1 
Little Match-seller, The.—Hans C. Andersen. See 
foregoing. 

Little Maud.—Anon.—CS 23—FMR 


189 




Little May 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Little May.—Emily H. Miller.—PC—YBT 
(Music.)—NV 
(Music of Nature.)—PTS 
Little May’s Answer.—Anon.—PPSr 
Little Messenger of Love, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Little Midget.—Anon.-—DST—KER—TFS 
Little Milliner, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.—BNL 
Little Mimics.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Little Minister, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. M. Barrie. 

Nanny Saved from the Poorhouse. ( Arr. fr. Chs. 
XII. and XIII.)—WR 26 
(Scene from “The Little Minister”— si. diff. abr.) 
—CR 

Rescue of Gavin, The. (Ch. XL.)—WR 19 
Little Mischief.—Anon.—HVD 
Little Miss Blue Eyes.—Arthur Weir.—TCY 
Little Miss Brag.—Eugene Field.—EF— LS 
Little Miss Limberkin. (C.)—Mary M. Dodge. 

(Miss Limberkin’s Mouse.)—TT 
Little Miss Ray.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Little Miss Trot.—Eben R. Rexford.—CS 34 
Little Mission Band, The. ( Arthur’s Home Maga¬ 
zine .)—CPL 

Little Mistress Merciless.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Little Mistress Sans-Merci.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Little Mollie Whimper.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Little Moments.—Anon.—OS 1—YBT 
Little More, A.—Anon.—WCLG 1 
Little Mother Goose.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Little Mothers, The. ( Motion song.) —Anon.— COS 
—PP 

Little Mothers, The. (Play .)—May Floyd.—WR 17 
Little Motto Bearers, The.—Sue S. Morton.—SSE 
Little Mud-sparrows, The.—Eliz. S. Phelps.—PEO 
Little Muriel. (John Halifax, Gentleman — Ch. 

XXVIII., abr .)—Dinah M. Craik.—CS 37 
Little Musgrave and [the] Lady Barnard [.The], (In 
Percy’s Reliques — diff. versions.) — Anon. — 
BB—PEB 1 

Little Mushrooms, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

Little Nan.—Anon.—BS 25—PEO 
Little Nannie.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS—NV 
Little Nellie in the Prison.—Paul H. Hayne.—CS 20 
Little Nell’s Funeral.—C: Dickens. See Old Curiosity 
Shop, The. 

Little Nipper an’ ’is Ma, The.—G: F. Gouraud.—AA 
Little Nurse, The.—Anon.—WCL 
Little Nurse, The.—Sabine C. A. V. Tastu.—OS 1 
Little Nut People.—E. J. Nicholson.—NV 
Little Oh-Dear.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Little Old . Folks. (Juvenile Entertainment.)—Anon. 
—EuE 

Little Old House by the Shore, The.—Joe Lincoln.— 
CCB 

Little One’s Speech, The.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Little Orator, The.—Thaddeus M. Harris.—LPS—PP 
—WR 5 

Little Orphant Annie. (C.) —Jas. W. Riley.—AA— 
CS 33—OS 1—RCR—TMR 
(Elf-child, The.) —AWH —BR —BS 16 —SR 6— 
THP 

Little Outcast’s Plea, The.—Anon.—BS 25—PFP 
(God after All, A.)—WR 14 
Little Parable, A.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA—TAS 
Little Parable, A.—J: C. Minot.—CG 2 
Little Pat and the Parson.—Anon.—CS 14—MYF 
Little Patriot. The.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Little Paul’s Thanksgiving.—Anon.—DLF—WR 7 
Little Peach, The. (Partial tr. of or suggested by Field’s 
■poem. )—Anon.—NA 

Little Peach, The.— Eugene Field. — DLS — HP— 
THP 

Little Peach Blossom.—Anon.—TT 
Little Peddlers, The.—Millicent Moor.—TFS 
Little Penelope’s Sewing.—Anna M. Pratt.—CPL 
Little People of the Snow, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AP 
Little Phil.—Helen Rich.—CS 21—HP 

(To Mark Mother’s Grave —prose vers .)—CS 21 
Little Pilgrim, A.—Anon.—CS 32—WR 6 (si. abr.) 
Little Pine Tree, The. (Tr. by )—Eudora S. Bumstead. 
—AD—NV 

Little Pitcher, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Little Plant, The.—Anon.—GMS 
Little Planter, A. (Youth’s Companion .)—AD 
Little Princes, The. — W: Shakespeare. See King 
Richard III. 

Little Prisoner, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Little Prudy, Sels. fr. —Sophie May. 

Inkstand, The. (Sel. ad. as dial. fr. Ch. XI.)— 
NDP 

“Playing Hookey.” (A6r. and arr. as dial. fr. Ch. 
VIII.)—NDP 


Little Prudy’s Sister Susy, Sel. fr. (Tiny Quarrel, A— 
ad. fr. Ch. V.)—Sophie May.—NDP 
Little Quaker Sinner, The.—Lucy L. Montgomery.— 
BS 13—SR 13 

Little Rain-drops.—Anon.—NV 
Little Reader, The. ("Olive Leaf.”)—MYF 
(‘‘God is Nowhere.”)—CS 12 
Little Rebel, The.—Jos. Ashby-Sterry.—VA 
Little Red Riding Hood.—Lsetitia E. Landon.—HBP 
Little Red Riding Hood; or. The Wicked Wolf and the 
Virtuous Wood Cutter.— (Dial. — ad. fr.) T: 
Hood (?).—DS—MPD—NPS—YA—YP 
Little Regiment, The.—Anon.—FR 
Little Rocket’s Christmas. — Vandvke Brown. — 
BS 10 (abr.) —CS 15—FTR—NPS—YP 
Little Rose. (Blackwood’s Magazine .)—FP 
Little Saint Cecilia.—Marg. Holmes.—CS 32] 

Little School Alarm [or Schoolma’am], A.—Anon.— 
DLF—LPS—PP—PS 
Little Seamstress, The.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Little Seamstress, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Little Seamstress, A. (St. Nicholas.) —LPS—PP 
Little Seed-cells, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Little Seeds, The.—G: Cooper.—YBT 
Little Servants.—J. K. Nutting.—YBT 
Little Ships in the Air.—E: A. Rand.—NV—YBT 
Little Shoe, A.—Anon.—CS 17 
Little Shoes Did It, The.—Anon.—CS 21 
Little Sigrid.—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.—WR 8 
Little Sister of Alercy, The.—Helen Booth.—CS 29 
Little Snowflakes.—Anon.—NV 
Little Snowflakes.—M. Al. —NA’’ 

Little Song, A.—Duncan C. Scott.—VA 
Little Song, A. (Youth’s Companion.) —COS—PP 
Little Sophv by the Seaside.—C: Tennyson-Turner.— 
PGT 2 

Little Sorrow.—Marian Douglas.—WCL 
Little Speaker, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Little Speech. A.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Little Star.—Anon.—TT 
Little Steenie.—Anna L. Ruth.—CS 11 
Little Stitches.—Anon.—HP 
Little Story, A.—Anne R. Aldrich.—TAV 
Little Stow-away, The.—Arthur (?) Matthison.—CS 14 
—LLC 

(SI. abr. )—BRR—CSS—EA 
(Little Hero, The— poet, vers .)—CS 13—FR—AIYF 
(Stowaway, The— poet, vers.) —NPS—YP 
Little Streams.—Alary Howitt.—HBP—PTS (abr.) 
Little Sunbeam, The.—Anon.—PR—YA—YBT (si. 
abr. and si. diff.) 

(Sunbeam, The— si. diff.) —NV 
Little Sunbeam.—Anon.-—YBT 
Little Sunbeam.—Laura E. Richards.—NV 
Little Sunbeams.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Little Sunflowers. (Juvenile ent .1—Anon.—EuE 
Little Tambourine Girl, The.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Little Teacher, The.—Anon.—COS—PP—PS 
Little Teacher, The.—Sophie E. Eastman.—WR 17 
Little Tee-Hee.—W. W. Fink.—CS 26 
Little Telltale, The. (The Aldine .)—FTR 
(Bobolink, The.)—BS 11—HNS 
(Abr .)—A D—CSS—PPSr 
(Telltale, The.)—BNL—PR—TAIR—YA 
Little Theocritus.—Caroline W. (F.) Paradise.—AA 
Little Things.—Anon.—DJS 
Little Things.—Anon.—DST 
Little Things. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Little Things.—Anon.—LPS—PP 

(Mite Song, A.)—CPI.—TFS (si. longer.) 

Little Things.—Anon.—TFS 
Little Things, The.—Anon.—TFS 
(Speech for a Little Boy.)—KER 
Little Things.—Anon.—WR 17 
Little Things. “A.” See Little Girl’s Fancies, A. 
Little Things.—Julia A. F. Carnev.—FEP (at. to F. 
S. Osgood)—HSS 2—OS 1—PS 
(Little Drops of Water— sel. — at. to Brewer. 1 )—SA1 
Little Things.—Epes Sargent. See Little Cowslip. 
The. 

Little Tin Cup, The.—T: Frost.—WR 6 
Little Tin Plate, A.—Garnet Walch.—WR 13 
Little Tom.—C. B. Lewis.—CS 21 
Little Tommie’s First Smoke.—Anon.—PR—YA 
Little Tommy Smith. (Sel.) —Jas. W. Riley.—SC 
Little Tomtit, The.—Anon.—DST 
Little Travelers. The.—Anon.—FDY 
Little Trooper, The.—Arthur Weir.—TCV 
Little Truant, The.—Airs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Little Turncoats.—Georgia A. Peck.—CS 27 
Little Tyrant.—Anon.—TFS 
(Baby Sleeps.)—CS 20—DLS 
Little Vagabond, The.—W: Blake.—HBP 


190 




TITLE INDEX 


Long 


Little Visitor, A.—Helen S. Perkins.—BS 25 
Little Voices.—Anon.—WR 17 

Little Vulgar Boy, The.—R: H. Barham.-—MHR ( abr .) 

(Misadventures at Margate—C.)—BNL—HPE— 
THP 

Little Watcher, The.—Marg. J. Preston.—HDL 
“Little watchfulness over ourselves, A. ”—Epictetus.— 
SC 

Little Way, A.—F: L. Stanton.—AA 

Little While, A.—Horatius Bonar.—FEP—HBP—VA 

(Beyond the Smiling and the Weeping.— C.) —BNL 
—GP 

Little While, A.—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA—VS 
Little While before the Fall was Done, A. — Fs. Sher¬ 
man.—TCV 

Little While I Fain would Linger Yet, A.—Paul H. 
Hayne.—AA 

Little W’hite Angel of Connemaugh, The.—Miller Hage- 
man.—WR 19 

Little White Beggars, The.—Helen W. Ludlow.—DR 
Little White Hearse, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—CS 25 
Little W T hite Lily.—G: MacDonald.—CGd—OS 1—PC 
PHS—PoR—PTS (abr.) —WCL 
Little White Sun, The.—Annie C. Huestis.—TCV 
Little Wild Baby.—Marg. T. Janvier.—AA—ASL 
Little Willie.—Anon.—NA 
Little Willie.—C: Grant.—PEB 4 
Little Willie Ware.—Anon.—DST 
Little Woman, The.—M. C. Barnes.—BS 21 
Little Women, Sels. fr. —Louisa M. Alcott. 

Familv Jar, A. (Dial. — ad. fr. Ch. XXVITI.)—DS 
—MPD—YA 

Little Women’s Pickwick Club, The. (Ch. X., 
cond. and arr. as play.) —MPD 

Reconciliation, The (Ch. XXI., cond. and arr. as 
play.) —NDP 

Song from the Suds, A. (Song fr. Ch. XVI.)— 
BS 19 

Little Women’s Pickwick Club, The.—Louisa M. Al¬ 
cott. See foregoing. 

“Little word in kindness spoken, A. ” (Fr. Little 
Words of Kindness—7)—Dan’l C. (?) Coles- 
worthy.—GG 

Little Worries.—G: R. Sims.—CS 30 
“Live and love.’’—Eliz. B. Browning. See Drama of 
Exile, A. 

“Live in the sunshine and spend happy days.”—Anon. 
—HSS 3 

Live Oak, The.—H: R. Jackson.—AD 

("With his gnarled old arms and his iron form”— 
sel.) —HSS 1 

Live W’hile you Live.—G: McKnight.—TAS 
Lives of Great Men.—H: W. Longfellow. See Psalm of 
Life, A. 

Living. (London Times.) —HP 
Living Book, The.—E: C. F. Bates.—AA 
“Living Dog” and “The Dead Lion,” The. (C.) —T: 
Moore. 

(Lines on Leigh Hunt.)—ESs 
Living Memory, A.—W: A. Croffut.—AA 
Living Letters. (Jvrenile evt.) —Anon.—EuE 
Living Lost, The.—W: C. Bryant.—FEP 
Living Stones.—Anon.—CS 33 

Living Temple, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA—LLC 
—TAS 

Living Temple, A.—C: Sangster.—TCV 
Living to Thee.—Anne Steele.—LLC 
Living Waters.—Caroline S. Spencer.—BNL 
Living Words, Sel. fr. (Triumph of Peace, The.)— 
Edwin H. Chapin.—SC 
Lixey.—Anon.—DE 

Lizie Lindsay.—Anon. See Lizzie Lindsay. 

Lizzie.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 27 
Lizzie and I are One.—Anon.—CS 17 
Lizzie and the Baby.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Liz[z]ie Lindsay.—Anon.—BB-—PEB 2 (abr. and si. 
diff. vers.) 

Lizy Ann.—Edgar F. Davis.—CG 2 
Llewellyn and his Dog.—W: R. Spencer.—PC (abr. — 
at. to Rob’t Southev). 

(Beth GSlert)—BNL (abr.) —CS 12—FEP—FR (si. 
abr.)— HBP—LLC—MR—VSG 
Llvn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd; or, The Pool of the Diving 
Friar. (Crochet Castle, Ch. XVI.)—T: L. 
Peacock.—PEB 3 

Lo! He Comes, with Clouds Descending!—T: Oliver.— 
FEP 

“Lo, we Have Left All.”—H: F. Lvte.—VA 

(Jesus, I my Cross have Taken.)—FEP 
Load on his Mind, The. (Burlington Hawkeye.) —CH 
Lobster Quadrille, A. (Whiting and the Snail, The— 
C .— fr. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, 
Ch. X.)—Lewis Carroll.—PoR 


Lobster Salad. (Fr. Poetical Cookery-book.) (Punch.) 
—HPE 

Lobsters, The. (Punch.) —HPE 

Lochaber no More. (Song— C.) —Allan Ramsay.— 
BNL—FEP—HBP 

Lochiel’s Warning. (C. — dial.) — T: Campbell.— 
AE (br. sel.)— BNL—BS 7—CDD—CS 10— 
EPs—FEP—FTR—HBP—PS—SS—WRD 
(Wizard's Warning, The.)-—SED 
Lochinvar. (Prose vers, of following.) —Anon.—PFP 
Lochinvar.—Walter.Scott. See Marmion. 

Lochinvar’s Ride.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 
Locked Out.-—Anon.—CS 9 

Locksley Hall.—Alfred Tennyson.—BNL—EPs— 
FEP—HBP—MR—PGT 2—SAE (br. sel.) 
Locomotive, The.—Anon.—FS (arr. as dial.) 

(Engine, The.)—SA 

Lodge, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

Lodge Night.—Anon.—CS 13 

Lodgings for Single Gentlemen.— G: Colman, the 
younger. —BC—THP 

Loehrs and the Hammonds, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Loftv Faith.—Anon.—CS 8 

(Agnes. I Love Thee.)—CH—CRR—SR 5 
Logan, a Mingo Chief, to Lord Dunmore.—Logan.— 
PS—SS 

Logan at Peach Tree Creek.—Hamlin Garland.—EDY 
Logan Braes.—J: Mayne.—FEP—WEP 3 
Log-cabin, The. (Sel. fr. Mass Meeting at Saratoga.)— 
Dan’l Webster.—FD 1 
Logic. (Harvard Lampoon.) —CG 2 
Logic of Hudibras.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 
Logicians. (In Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler. 
—HPE 

Logicians Refuted, The.—Oliver Goldsmith.—ESs 
Logie o’ Buchan.—G: Halket.—WEP 3 
Lohengrin.—A. E. Watrous.—EDY 
Lohengrin.—W: M. Payne.—AA 
“Lollyby, Lolly, Lollyby.”—Eugene Field.—WTD 
London.—J: Davidson.-—BNL—VA 
London. (I. On First Entering Westminster Abbey.) 
-‘-Louise I. Guiney.—AA 

London, Sel. fr. (Thales' Reasons for Leaving Lon¬ 
don.)—S: Johnson.—WEP 3 
London Assurance, Sel. fr. (Play.) —Dion Boucicault. 
Lady Gay Spanker.—CS 25 (abr.) —MRS 
(Scene from London Assurance— abr.) —SO 
London Bee Story, A.—“Quiz.”—CS 18 
London Bridge.—F: E. Weatherly.—VA 
London Churches.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.— 
BNL—YBF 

London, 1802. (Written in London, September, 1802 
1 — C.) — W: Wordsworth. — PGT 1 (I.) — 
YBF (I.) 

(England, 1802.)—OB 

London, 1802. (C. —Poems Dedicated to National 

Independence and Liberty, Pt. I., XIV.)—W: 
Wordsworth—PGT 1 (II.)—YBF (II.) 

^ (England.)—GP 
(Ideal.)—LH 
(Milton.)—LLC—WEP 4 

(“Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour”— 
abr. )—GG 

(Sonnet: London, 1802.)—HBP 
(To Milton.)—BNL—CEL—EPs—FEP 
London Feast.—Ernest Rhys.—VA 
London Housetops. (Cond. fr. The Caxtons, Pt. XIV., 
Ch. II.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—TMR 
London Lackpenny, The. (London Lyckpenny, The.) 
—J: Lydgate.—ESs 
(London Lickpenny— abr.) —WEP 1 
London Lickpenny.—J: Lydgate. See foregoing. 
London Plane-tree, A.—Amy Levy.—VA 
London University, The.—R : H. Barham.—HPE 
Lone Star of Cuba, The.—D: G. Adee.—TMR 
Loneliness.—W. H. Hayne.—TAV 
Lonely Bird, The.—Harrison S. Morris.—A A—SS 
Lonely Bugle Grieves, The. (Fr. Ode on the Cele¬ 
bration of the Battle of Bunker Hill.)—Gren¬ 
ville Mellen.—A A 

Lonely Pine, The.—Arthur J. Lockhart.—TCV 
Long Ago.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Long Ago.—Libbie C. Baer.—DCP—WR 6 
Long Ago.—Mrs. L. A. Bradbury.—HE 
Long Ago.—T: S. Denison.—SR 6 
Long Ago.—Eugene Field.—EF—WTD 
Long Ago, The.—Marg. W. McCutcben.—CG 3 
Long Ago, The.—Benj. F. Taylor.—LLC—WCLG 2 
(Isle of [the— C.] Long Ago, The— C .)—BS 1— 
FTR—HNS—KNE—SA 
(River Time, The.)—TAV 
Long did I Toil.—H: F. Lyte.—FEP 


191 




Long 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Long Deserted.—C: P. Mulvany.—TIP 
Long is the Way.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
Long Life.—Kennedy.—FP 
Long Night, The.—Harry B. Smith.—AA 
Long Sermon, The.—Anon.—TFS 

Long White Seam, The.—Jean Ingelow.—CEL—GN— 
VA—VS—YBF 

Long Years Ago.—Anon.—FLS 

Longest Life, The, Sel. fr. (Goal of Life, The.)—Archi¬ 
bald Lampman.—TCV 
Longfellow.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 
Longfellow.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA 

Longfellow Alphabet, A. (Comp. jr. H: W. Long¬ 
fellow’s Works.)—Anon.—PEO 
Longfellow, Extract Concerning.—G: W. Curtis.— 
PEO 

Longfellow, Extract Concerning.—Octavius B. Froth- 
ingham.—PEO 

Longfellow, Extract Concerning.—Minot J. Savage.— 
PEO 

Longfellow, Extract Concerning.—R: H. Stoddard.— 
PEO 

Longfellow, Extract Concerning.—J: G. Whittier.— 
PEO 

Longfellow, From. (Frags.) —H: W. Longfellow.— 
KNE 

Long-felt Want, The.—Anon.—WR 25 
Longing.—Matthew Arnold.—FTA 
Longing.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrim¬ 
age. 

Longing. (Abr.)- —Jas. R. Lowell.—BS 7—TMR 
Longing.—G. H. Westley.—FLS 

Longing for Death. (Frags, jr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Longing for Home.—Jean Ingelow. See Songs of 
Seven. 

Longing for the Old Plantation.—Addison H. Hin- 
man.—CG 3* 

Longing of a Blessed Heart, The, Sel. jr. (What is 
Love?)—N: Breton.—ELP 
Longings.—Anon.—FLS 

Long-lost Nephew, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 7 
“Look above thee—never eye.”—J: Bowring.—GG 
Look Aloft.—Jonathan Lawrence.—CS 2—OM—TAV 
Look at the Clock.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 
“Look back on time with kindly eyes.” (C.) —Emily 
Dickinson. 

(Time.)—TAS 

Look into the Gulf, A .—Edwin Markham.—AA 
Look not upon the Wine.—Nathaniel P. Willis.— 
BLP—FAS 

(“Look not upon the wine when it is red.”)—PPSr 
'Look not upon the wine when it is red.”—Nathaniel 
P. Willis. See foregoing. 

“Look of sympathy, the gentle word, The.”—Sarah 
Doudney (at. also to T: S. Collier).—GG 
(Not Lost.)—CS 8—SSS—TAV 
Look on the Sunny Side.—Anon.—DLF 
Look out, Bright Eyes. (Song— C. — fr. The False 
One, Act I., Sc. 2.)—Beaumont and Fletcher. 
—FEP 

Look Seaward, Sentinel, Sel. fr. (Chorus of Islanders— 
fr. Pt. IV.)—Alfred Austin.—TMR 
Look up.—Sarah K. Bolton.—YBT 
Look up, Laborer!—W. D. Gallagher.—HSS 3 

(Laborer. The.)—CS 8—LLC—MMR—SM—TAV 
“Looke in thy heart, and write.”—Sir Philip Sidney. 

See Astrophel and Stella. 

Lookin’ Back.—Moira O’Neill.—AVP—TIP 
Looking Ahead.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Looking Around for a Wife.—Anon.—MFD 
Looking for Bargains. (St. Louis Chronicle.) —BS 19 
Looking Forward.— Rob’t L. Stevenson. — CGV— 
DLS 

Looking into the Future.—Gerald Massey.—PR 
Looking out for Me.—Anon.—SSS 
‘Looking over the world on a broad scale.”—Harriet 
B. Stowe.—GG 

Looking unto God.—S: Longfellow.—HDL—TAS 
Looking unto Jesus.—Sarah E. Miles.—TAS 
“Looking upward every day.”—Anon.—FHS 
Looking-glass, The. (To a Lady, upon a Looking- 
glass Sent— C.) —Jas. Shirley.—ES 
Looking-glass for London and Fngland, A. Sel. fr. 
(Do me Right, and do me Reason.)—T: Lodge. 
—ES 

Looking-glass River.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Lookout Mountain f, 1863—Beutelsbach. 18801.—G: L. 

Catlin.—BDD—BS 9—CS 20—PR—PS 
Loom of Life, The.—Anon.—CS 30 
Loon, The.—Alfred B. Street.—AA 
Loons, The.—Archibald Lampman.—TCV—VA 
Lord Bacon. (Frags, fr. various authors.)- —BNL 


Lord Bacon’s Birthday. (C.) —Ben Jonson. 

(On Lord Bacon’s Birthday.)—EDY 
Lord Beichan and Susie Pye.—Anon.—GN 

(Young Beichan [and Susie Pye]— diff. vers.)— BB 
—HBP—PEB 2 (abr. and si. diff.) 

Lord Byron.—Rob’t Pollok. See Course of Time, 
the. 

Lord Byron to the Greeks.—Alphonse de Lamartine. 

—PS—ss 

Lord Careth, The. (Sunday Magazine.) —SSS 
Lord Chatham.—W: Cowper.' See Table Talk. 

Lord Chatham against the American Mar.—W: Pitt, 
Lord Chatham. See American War, The. 

Lord Chatham’s Eloquence. (Sel. fr. William Pitt, 
Earl of Chatham.)—T: B. Macaulay.—IR 
Lord Clive. (Abr.) —Rob’t Browning.—DR 
(Cli\ e— C.)—BS 21 
Lord Derwentwater.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Lord Donald.—Anon. Sec Lord Randal. 

Lord Dundreary and the French Widow.—Anon.— 
CS 17 

Lord Dundreary at Brighton], and the Riddle he Made 
There].—Anon.—CS 7—MHR 
(Lord Dundreary’s Rirldlefs].)—BS 17—HR 
Lord Dundreary in the Country.—Anon.—BS 13 (sel.) 

(Dundreary in the Country.)—CS 13—SE (sel.) 
Lord Dundreary on Mental Photographs.—Anon.— 
CS 17 

Lord Dundreary on “Pwoverbs.”—Anon.—CS 2 
Lord Dundreary Proposing—F. J. Skill.—CS 11 — 
FTR ( abr. )—H R —M H R 

Lord Dundreary’s Riddle[s].—Anon. See Lord Dun¬ 
dreary at Brighton. • 

Lord Helpeth Man and, Beast, The. (Sel. fr. The 
Friend: The Second Landing-place, Essay IV.) 
—S:T. Coleridge.—LLC 

Lord is mv Shepherd, The.—H. W. Baker.—HDL 
(My Shepherd—a6r.)—YBT 
Lord is Risen, The.—C: Wesley.—FEP 

(Easter Hymn.)—CEL—FHS (sel.)— WEP 3 
Lord, it Belongs not to my Care.—R: Baxter.—HDL 
(R esignation.)—FEP 

Lord John Russell.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP 
Lord Lovel.—Anon.—FEP—HBP—LC 
“Lord, make me quick to see.”—R. M. Offord.— 
FHS 

Lord Melbourne.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP 
Lord North’s Ministry Denounced.—W: Pitt, Earl of 
Chatham.—SS 

Lord of Burleigh, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—CGd— 
CS 26—MR 

Lord of Butrago, The.— (Tr. by) J: G. Lockhart.—BNL 
—HB—OS 2 

(Garci Perez de Vargas.)—EPs 
Lord of Himself.—Sir H: Wotton.—LH 

(Character of a Happy Life, The— C.) —BNL— 
CEL — ELP — FEP — OB — OS 2 — PGT 1 
—PHS—WEP 2—YBF 
(Happy Life, The (or A].)—EPs—GP—HBP 
Lord of the Isles, The, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott. 
Bannockburn. (VI., sels. fr. 14-30.)—EHT 
Bruce and the Abbot. (Can. II., sels. fr. Sts. 23-32.) 
—EPs 

(Abbot’s Blessing on the Bruce, The— sel.) — 
OS 2 

Lake Coriskin. (III., 13-16.)—WEP 4 
Lord, Oft I Come.—Lizette W. Reese.—TAS 
Lord Raglan. (In Memoriam— C.). —Edwin Arnold. 
—GP 

(Raglan.)—ED Y—VA 
Lord Randal.—Anon.—CGd—HBP 
(Lord Ronald.)—BB—LC 
(Lord Donald— diff. and longer vers.) —PEB 2 
Lord Ronald.—Anon.— See Lord Randal. 

Lord Ronald’s Bride.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—WR 9 
Lord, Teach a Little Child.—Anon.—PC 
(Prayer, A.)—YBT 

Lord the Good Shepherd. The. (Psalm XXIII —C.) 

—Jas. Montgomery.—HBP 
Lord Thomas and Fair Annet. (In Percy’s Reliques.) 

—Anon.—BB—PEB 1 (si. abr.) 

Lord Thomas and Fair Annie.—Anon. See Fair Annie. 
Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor. (In Percy’s Reliques.) 
—Anon.—BB—CGd 

(Lord Thomasine and Fair Ellinnor— diff. vers.) — 
WR 8 

Lord Thomasine and Fair Ellinnor.—Anon. See fore¬ 
going. 

Lord Thuflow’s Reply to the Duke of Grafton.—E: 
Lord Thurlow.—VSG 
(Reply to Grafton.)—LLC 

(Reply to the Duke of Grafton.)—KNE—OM—PS 
—SS 


192 




TITLE INDEX 


Lotos 


Lord Ullin’s Daughter.—T: Campbell.—BFV—BNL— 
BPB — CGd — CSS — FEP — GN—H BP — LC 
—MR — PC — PEB 3 — PGT 1 — PHS — 
PPSr—VSG—WR 7 

Lord Walter’s Wife.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BNL— 
WR 9 (si. abr.) 

“Lord, what a change within us.”—Anon.—GG 
Lord! When those Glorious Lights 1 See.—G: Wither. 
—BNL 

(In a Clear, Starry Night.)—HBP 
“Lord, with glowing heart I’d praise Thee.”—Fs. S. 
Key.—FEP 

Lords of Thule, The.—Anon.—HBP—OS 2 
Lord’s Prayer, The.—Louisa J. Flail.—TAS 
Lord’s Prayer Illustrated, The.—Anon.—CS 24 
Lord’s Prayer in Verse, The.—Anon.—BS IS 
Lorelei, The. (In Pictures of Travel: The Return 
Home, 2.)—Heinrich Heine (tr. by C. P. 
Cranch).—HBP 

(Lore-Lei, Th e—diff. tr .)—BNL 
Lorna Doone, Sets. fr. —R: D. Blackmore. 

Death of Carver Doone. (Cond. fr. Chs. LXIV. 
and LXV.)—BS 24 

Harvest Song, A. (Exmoor Harvest Song— C .— 
fr. Ch. XXIX.)—HSS 3 
Lorna Doone. (Br. sel. fr. Ch. XXII.)—SAE 
October Morning, An. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXIII.)— 
TMR 

Snow-storm, The. (Cond. fr. Chs. XLI. and 
XLII.)—WR 1 

Lorraine. (Ballad: Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorr$e—C.)— 
C: Kingsley.—CR—CS 20—OS 1—SR 5—VA 
Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree.)—PEB 3—VSG 
Lorraine I.orrSe.)—MR 
Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree.—C: Kingsley. See fore¬ 
going. 

Lorraine Loree.—C: Kingsley. See Lorraine. 

Losers of Money.—Anon.—WR 2 
Losing Side, The.—Arthur E. J. Legge.—AVP 
Loss, A. (Judy.) —PPh 
Loss and Gain.—H: W. Longfellow.—PEO 
Loss and Gain.—Nora Perry.—HBP 
Loss in Delay.—Rob’t Southwell.—WEP 1 
(Procrastination— br. sel.) —KNE 
Loss of National Character.—Jonathan Maxcy.—FD 1 
Loss of Property. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Loss of the “Arctic,” The.—H: W. Beecher.—CS 4— 
NC—SM (si. a6r.)—SPE—WCI.G 1 
Loss of the Birkenhead, The.—Fs. H. Doyle.—EDY— 
HB—PGT 2 

Loss of the College Pump, The.—R. B. Coolidge.— 
CG 3 

Loss of the Emigrants, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—EDY 
Loss of the Eurydice, The.—Edmund Gosse.—EDY 
Loss of the Flornet, The.—Anon.—MMR—SA 
Loss of the San Francisco, 1853.—Edwin H. Chapin.— 
FD 1 

Loss of the Royal George[, The].—W: Cowper.—CGd 
—LC—PGT 1—PHS—PSR 
(On the Loss of the Royal George— C.) —BNL— 
EDY—EPs—GN—HBP—MBL—WEP 3 
(Royal George, The.)—I.H 

Losses.—Frances Brown.—BNL—C'S 14—FEP—HBP 
—PPSr—SAE 
Lost.—Anon.—FP 
Lost.—L. M. Cunard.—BS 17 
“Lost.”—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Lost.—Jas. W. Riley.— WR 2 
Lost.—R: H. Stoddard.—FP 

(Flight of Youth. The—C.)—AA—ASL—YBF 
(It never Comes Again.)-—BNL—LLC—MRS 
(Never Again.)—FEP—TAV 
(There are Gains for All our Losses.)—HBP 
Lost.—Celia Thaxter.—GMS—SAP 
Lost.—Eliza S. Turner. See Little Goose, A. 

Lost and Found.—Anon.—FLS 

Lost and Found[, The].—Hamilton Ai'd^.—BeR— 
BS 5 (si. abr .)—CS 11—LLC—MR—NPS—YP 
Lost and Found.—T: B. Appleget.—BS 3 
Lost and Found.—Emma E. Brewster.—SDD 
Lost and Found.—C. A. Mason.—TAS 
Lost and Found. (Thirteen Years Ago—C.)—Bryan 
W. Procter.—VSG 

Lost and Won.—Miss Chapman.—DDD 
Lost Arts, The.—Anon.—KNE 

Lost Arts, The. (Sel.) —Wendell Phillips.—WCI.G 2 
Lost Babies. The.—Anon.—CS 14—HP 
Lost Bell, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Lost Bride, The.—S: Rogers. See Ginevra. 

Lost but Found.—Horatius Bonar.—VA 

Lost Child, The.—Anon.—TFS 

Lost Child, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 


Lost Child, The. (Dial .)—Harry H. Cushing.—CS 18 
—MD 

Lost Child, The.—J: R. Robinson.—BS 16 
Lost Chord, A [wr., The].—Adelaide A. Procter.— 
AVP — Bell — BNL — Clt — l'S — FTI1 — 
1R—LI.C (abr .)—SE (si. abr.) —SPE—VS 
Lost Chord Found, A.—Willard Holcomb.—CS 34 
Lost Church, The.—Ludwig Uhland (tr. by Sarah H. 
Whitman.)—HBP 
(Tr. by Rob’t Tilney.)—CS 14 
Lost Colors, The.—Mary A. Barr.—TMD 
Lost Colors, The.—Eliz. S. P. Ward.—AA 
Lost Day, A.—Anon.—YBT 

Lost Days. (The House of Life, Sonnet LXXXVI.) 

—Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Lost Doll, The.—Anon.-—TFS 

Lost Doll, The.—C: Kingsley. See Water Babies, The. 
Lost Found, The.—Anon.—CS 31 
Lost Found, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Evange¬ 
line. 

Lost Friend, The.—Norman Gale.—BVC 
Lost Genius, The.—J: Jas. Piatt.—AA 
Lost Heir, The.—Anon.—PTS 

Lost Heir, The.—T: Hood.—BNL —CS 8 — MHR — 
THP 

(A6r.)—HSS 3—SE 
Lost Hours.—R. T. W. Duke.—TAS 
Lost in the City Streets. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Lost in the Snow.-—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Lost Kiss, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—SR 9—TAV—WR25 
Lost Kitten, The.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—PS 
—TT 

Lost Kitty, The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Lost Knife, The.—Anon.—YFD 

Lost Leader, The.-—Rob’t Browning.—AVP—BSP— 
EDY — EPs — ESs — FEP — HBP — LI.C — 
OS 3—VA—WEP 4—WR 16 
Lost Legend, A.—Fs. W. Bourdillon.—SO 
Lost Letter, The.—Clara J. Denton.—I TT 
Lost Letter, A.—Clement Scott.—HP—WII 13 
Lost Lotus, The.—Anon.—PPh 
Lost Love.—Andrew Lang.—FLS 
Lost Love, A.—H. F. Lyte.—PGT 1 
Lost Love, A.—J: A. Symonds.—CEL 
Lost Love, The.—W: Wordsworth. See Lucy. 

Lost May, The. (Abr .)—Bayard Taylor.—AD 
Lost Memory, A.—Philip C. Peck.—CG 2 
Lost Mexican City, The.—McLellan.—FP 
Lost Mr. Blake.—W: S. Gilbert,—C'S 7 
Lost Mistress, The.—Rob’t Browning.—OB—PGT 2 
—YBF 

Lost on Schihallion.—J. C. Shairp.—PGT 2 
Lost on the Desert.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.-—CS 30 
Lost on the Prairie.—Rose T. Cooke.—WCL 
Lost on the Shore.-—Holme Lee.—CS 26—SR 13 
Lost Opportunities. The.—Anon.—FAD 
Lost Opportunity, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Lost Opportunity, The.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow. 
—TT 

Lost Page, The.—Anon.—CS 34 

Lost Penny, The.—Caroline Evans.—DCP—NPS— 
YP' 

Lost Pleiad, The.—W: G. Simms.—AA 
Lost Princess, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Lost Pudding, The.—Eliz. Turner.-—BVC 
Lost Puppy, The.—H : F. Wood.—BS 22 
Lost Sheep, The.—Eliz. C. Clephane.—VA 
(Ninety and Nine, The.)—FEP—LLC (abr.) 

Lost Sheep, The.—Sarah P. McL. Greene.—HP 
(De Massa of de Sheepfol’.)—SR 6—TAV 
(De Sheepfol’.)—A A—ASL—YBF 
Lost Steamer, The. (Sel. fr. The Shady Side of Life.) 
—Eugene J. Hall.—SR 2 

Lost Steamship, The.—Fitz-James O’Brien.—CS 14 
(Second Mate, The.)—AA 
Lost: the Summer.—R: M. Alden.—NV 
Lost: Three Little Robins.—Anon.—LLC 
Lost Tommy.—Julia M. Dana.—DS—YA 
(SI. abr.)— PP—YFR 
Lost Tribune, The.— G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Lost Type, A.—Mrs. M. I, Ra' ne.—SR 12 
Lost, Voice, A.-—P’s. W. Bourdillon.—VS 
Lost War-sloop, The.—Edna D. Proctor.—WR 10 
Lost Watch, The.—“Juvenal.”—CS 16—DS 
Lot of Man, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Lot of Mankind, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Lot of Thousands, The.—Anne Hunter.—FEP 
Lot Skinner’s Elegy.—Jas. T: Fields.—AWH 
Lotos [wr. Lotus]-eaters. The.—PIBP—VA 

Song of the Lotus [or I.otos]-eaters, The. (Sel .— 
Choric Song—C.)—OB—SAE (sel.) 

( Lotos-eaters— sel .)—CR 

193 


/ 





Lottie 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lottie Doughertv.— Dwight Williams.—C'S 22—NFS 
—YP 

Lotty’s Message. — Alex. G. Murdoch. — CS 30 — 
WR 26 (si. abr.) 

Lotus-eaters, The. — Alfred Tennyson. See Lotos- 
eaters, The. 

Loud Call, The.—Anon.—KNE 

Lough Bray.—Standish J. O'Grady.—TIP 

Louis Napoleon, Set. fr. (Death of Louis Napoleon.) 

—Christopher P. Cranch.—EDY 
Louis Napoleon.—Oscar Wilde.—EDY 
Louis Napoleon’s Address to his Army.—W: E. 
Avtoun.—HPE 

Louis XlN. and his Minister. (Dial. ad. jr. The Ref¬ 
ugees, Ch. XIX.)—A. Conan Doyle.—NDP 
Louis XV.—J : Sterling.—FEP—YA 
Louisa Mav Alcott—In Memoriam.—Louise C. Moul- 
ton.—AA— EDY 

Louisburg.—R: Huntington.—TCV 
Love.—Anon.—FLS 
Lave.—Sarah F. Adams.—YA 
Love—S: Butler.—FP—YBF (abr.) 

Love.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, The. 

Love. (Chambers’ Journal.) —FLS—FTA 
Love. (C.)—S: T. Coleridge.—BNL—FEP—HBP— 
OB—PGT 1—WEP 4—WR 8 
(Genevieve.)—EPs 
(Love’s Flame— br. sel.) —FLS 
Love.—S: Daniel. See Hymen’s Triumph. 

Love.—C: Dickens. See V illage Coquettes, The. 

(Song.)— BIL— FTA 
Love. (C.)—C: L. Dodgson. 

(Song of Love, A.)—GN 

Love.—J: Donne. See Eclogue, December 26,1613. 

Love.—G: Herbert.—ELP—OB—YBF 

Love. (Diff. poem.) —G: Herbert.—WEP 2 

Love.—T: K. Hervey.—BNL 

Love.—Jean Ingelow. See Songs of Seven. 

Love.—Ben Jonson.—FTA 
Love.—S: Longfellow.—TAS 

Love. (C.—abrA— Jas. R. Lowell.—BIL—BNL (br. 
sel.) —TFY 

(Tender and True.)—FTA 
Love.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Love.—C: Fs. Richardson —TAS 

Love.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Love.—W: Shakespeare.—LLC 

(“Let me not to the marriage of true minds.”)— 
OEL 

(Sonnet.) — BNL — EPs — FEP — HBP — 
OB (XVIII.) 

(Sonnet CXVL—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
tTrue Love.)—FTA—OH—PGT 1—PHS 
Love.—Alex. Smith.—OB 
Love.—W: W. Storv —FTA—OH 
Love.—C: Swain.—*TFY 

(“Love? 1 will tell thee what it is to love!”)— 
HBP 

Love.—Katrina Trask.—AA 
Love.—G. H. Westley.—FI.S 

Love against Love.—D: A. Wasson.—BNL—EPs—OH 
Love among the Ruins.—Rob’t Browning.—BIL— 
PGT 2—WEP 4 

Love and Absence.—Jas. A. Noble.—FTA 
Love and Age.—T: L. Peacock.—AYP—CS 11—FEP 
—OB 

“Love and believe: for works will follow spontaneous.” 

—H: W. Longfellow. See Children of the 
Lord's Supper, The. 

Love and Books.—Edmund Gosse.—I.BB 

Love and Death.—Anon.—OH 

Love and Death.—Marg. W. Deland.—A A—TAS 

Love and Death.—J: Ford. See Broken Heart, The. 

Love and Death.—Georgianna G. King.—CG 2 

Love and Death.—Rosa Mulholland.—YA 

Love and Death.—Alfred Tennyson.—BII. 

Love and Dutv.—Alfred Tennvson.—AYP 
(What Sequel?— br. sel.) —BII. 

Love and Faith.—Agnes M. Machar.—TCV 
Love and Friendship.—W: I.eggett.—FTA 
Love and Glory.—T: Dibdin.—CGd 
Love anti Humility.—H: More.—EPs 
Love and Labor.-—Anon.—HP 
Love and Latin.—Anon.—BS 19 
Love and Life.—Julie M. I.ippmann.—AA 
Love and Life.—J: Wilmot, Earl of Rochester.—ELP 
—OB 

Love and T.ife.—Sarah Woolsey.—BIT 
Love and Loyalty of the Negro.—H: W. Grady. See 
At the Boston Banquet. 

Love and Marriage of Ferdinand and Miranda, The.— 
W: Shakespeare. See Tempest. The. 


Love and May.—Anon.—ELP 
Love and Murder.—Anon.—MHR 

(Love, Murder, and almost Matrimony.)—CS 2 
Love and Music.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
Love and Phyllis.—T: Lodge. See Love’s Wanton¬ 
ness. 

Love and Pity.—Anon.—FLS—HP 
Love and Poverty.—Elisabeth J. (C.) Pullen.—AA 
Love and Prayer.—S: T. Coleridge. See Rime of the 
Ancient Mariner, The. 

Love and Prudence.—W: W. Story.—OH 
Love and Reason. (Abr.) —T: Moore.—FP 
Love and Song.—Burton W. Lockhart.—TCV 
Love and Stratagem.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Love and the Child. (In Lilliput Lectures.)—W: B. 
Rands.—PoR 

(Happy Child, The-—«>. diff. end .)—OH 
Love and the Sea,—Rob’t E. Gregg.—CG 1 
Love and Theology.—Anon.—WR 4 
Love and Time.—Beatrix D. Lloyd.—AA 
Love and Time.—Denis. F. MacCarthy.—BNL 
Love and War.—Arthur P. Martin.—VA 
Love and Youth.—W: Jas. Linton.—VA 
Love at First Sight. (Sel. fr. Philaster. Act V., Sc. 5.) 

—Beaumont and Fletcher.—EPs 
Love at First Sight.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—FTA 
Love at Sea.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—VA 
Love at the Seaside.—Anon.—CH 
Love Banished Heaven. (Ideas, XXVIII.)—Michael 
Drayton.—ES 

“Love! blessed Love! if we could hang our walls.” (Sel. 

fr. The Bridal Hour A—Alice Cary.—BIL 
Love Came to Me.—Fs. H. Williams.—TAS 
Love Cannot Die.—Anon.—FLS 

Love Ceremonious.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in 
the House, The. 

Love Chase, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. S. Knowles. 

Description of the Chase. (Act II., Sc. 3— abr.) — 
MPD 

(Hunt, The— si. cond .)—MPD 
Scene from “The Love Chase.” (III., 2— abr.)— 
MPD 

Love Conquers Revenge. (Dial. ad. fr. The Cipher 
Despatch.)—Rob't Byr.—NDP 
Love, Death, and Reputation.—C: and Marv Lamb.— 
OS 2 

Love Dissembled.—W: Shakespeare. See As You 
Like it. 

Love Divine, all Love Excelling.—Augustus Toplady. 
—BNL 

Love Doth to her Eves Repair.—Friedrich Riickert (tr. 

by Jas. F. Clarke).—FTA—OH 
Love Elegies of Abel Shufflebottom, The.— Rob’t 
Southey. 

Poet Expatiates on the Beauty of Delia’s Hair, The. 
(III.)—HPE 

Poet Relates how he Obtained Delia’s Pocket-hand¬ 
kerchief, The. (I.)—HPE 
Poet Relates how he Stole a Lock of Delia’s Hair, 
etc.. The. (IV.)—HPE 

Love Enthroned. (The House of Life, Sonnet I.)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Love Extravaganza; A.—C: Maekay.—BIL 
Love for Love’s Sake. (Sonnet XIV.— C.) —Eliz. B. 
Browning.—OH 

(“If thou must love me, let it be for nought.”)— 
PGT 2 

(Sonnet.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—OB (IY.)—YBF 
Love Freed from Ignorance and Folly, Sel. fr. (“How 
near to good is what is fair.”)—BNL—ELP 
(Song.)—EPs 

Love from the North.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PEB 3 
Love Game, A.—W. B. Anderson.—CG 1 
Love Goes a-Hawking.—T: L. Beddoes. See Bride s 
Tragedy. The. 

“Love? 1 will tell thee what it is to love!”—C: Swain. 
See Love. 

Love in a Balloon.—Litchfield Moseley.—BeR—CS 11 

—MYF 

Love in a Cottage.—Anon.—DDM 
Love in a Cottage.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—AWH— 
HPE—THP 

Love in a Life.—Rob’t Browning.—OH 
Love in Exile, Sel. fr .—Mathilde Blind.—YA 
Love in her Sunny Eyes. (Sel. fr. The Change.) — 
Abraham Cowlev.—ES 
(Fragment, A.)—FEP 
(Without and Within.)—YBF 
Love in High Life. (Dial.fr. Pets of Society.)—T. S. 
Denison.—FAS 

Love in the Kitchen. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.—TDT 
Love in the Kitchen.—D: L. Proudfit.—DI 
Love in the Winds.—R: Hovev.—AA—ASL—YBF 


194 





TITLE INDEX 


Loved 


Love in the Valley.—G: Meredith.—HBP (abr .)—OB 
Love in thy Youth.—Walter Porter.—ELP 

(“Love in thy youth, fair maid, he wise.”)—PGT 1 
“Love in thy youth, fair maid, be wise.'^—Walter 
Porter. See foregoing. 

Love in Winter, Hr. eel. /r. (Song.)—Kob’t Bu¬ 
chanan.—VS 

Love is a Hunter Boy.—T: Moore.—FTA 
Love is a Sickness.—8: Daniel. See Hymen’s Tri¬ 
umph. 

Love is a Tree.—Augusta De Gruchy.—FLS 
“Love is a woman with soulful eyes.”—Anon.—CG 1 
Love is Blind.—Anon.—WR 5 

“Love is come with a song and a smile.”—Alfred 
Tennyson. See Harold. 

Love is Dead.—Philip Sidney. See Sidera. 

Love is Enough, Sony fr. —W: Morris.—OB 
Love is Enough.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

Love is Enough. (C.)—Ella W. Wilcox.—TEY 

(“Love is enough, l-et us not seek for gold.”)—GG 
“Love is enough, Let us not seek for gold.”—Ella W. 
Wilcox. See foregoing. 

Love is Eternal.—Carlotta Perry.—BIL—ETA 

Love js Forever.—E. E. Bradford.—FLS 

Love is Like a Dizziness. (Abr.) —Jas. Hogg.—GP 

“Love is Over All.”—Mrs. E. V. Wilson.—CS 27 

Love is Strong.—R: Burton.—A A 

Love Keeping Watch.—8: Hinds.—HDL 

Love Knot. The.—Nora Perry. See Love-knot, The. 

Love Laughs (Trinity Tablet .)—CG 2 

Love Letter. See also Love letter. 

Love Letter, A.—Anon.—FLS 

Love Letters. (Sonnets from the Portuguese, XXVJII.) 
—Eliz. B. Browning.—YBF 
(Lover’s Letters, A.)—CEL 
(My Letters.)—BIL— FTA 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese.) — BNL—FEP— 
WEP 4 (XXVIII.— C.) 

Love Lightens Labor.—Anon.—BNL—CS 5—FMR— 
MMR—PR—TFY 

Love Lights of Home. The.—Frank L. Stanton.—TFY 
Love me if I Live.—Bryan W. Procter.—FLS 
(Song—C.)— HBP 

Love me Little, Love me Long.—Anon.—BNL—HBP 
(Little but Long.)—CEL 

Love me not.—Anon. See “Love not me for comely 
grace.” 

“Love me not, Love, for that I F’irst Loved thee.” 

(In The New Day.)—R: W. Gilder.—OH 
Love Much.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BIL 
Love, Murder, and almost Matrimony.—Anon. See 
Love and Murder. 

Love not.—Caroline E. 8. Norton.— BNL—FEP— 
FLS—HBP—V A 

Love not me.—Anon. See following. 

“Love not me for comely grace.”—Anon.—BNL— 
FEP—FTA—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(Love me not.)—FLS 
(Love not me.)—HBP 

Love Notes. (Echoes XVIII.: To A. D.—C.)—W: E. 
Henley.—BIL—FTA 
(Pleasant Song, A )—OH 

Love of Change.—J: Ruskin. See Stones of Venice, 
The. 

Love of Country, The. (Frags, fr. vartous authors .)— 
BNL 

Love of Country.—Newton Booth.—BS 17—SR 8 
Love of Country.—I. H. Brown.—BS 21—PFP—PRR 
Love of Country.—Rufus Choate. »See American 
Nationality. 

Love of Country.—Jos. Holt.—CS 20 

(Agriculture and Love of Country.)—FD 1 
Love of Country.—Walter Scott. See Lay of fhe Last 
Minstrel, The. 

Love of Country.—Sidney Smith.—SR 8 
Love of Country and Home.—Jas. Montgomery. See 
Home. 

Love of England.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Love of Fame the Universal Passion, Sel. fr. (To the 
Right Hon. Mr. Dodington—Satire III.— abr.) 
—E: Young.—ESs 

Love of God, The.—Saxe Holm.—HDL—TAS 
Love of God, The.—Bernard Rascas (Ir. by W: C. 
Bryant).—BNL 

Love of God, The.—Eliza Scudder.—BNL—HDL— 
TAS 

Love of God Supreme, The.—Gerhard Tersteegen (tr. 
by J: Wesley).—BNL (sel.) 

(Divine Love.)—EPs—HBP (sel.) 

Love of his Life, The.—Anon.—CS 24 
Love of Home.—Anon.—KNE 


Love of Home, I he. — H : V\ . Grady. See Against 
Centralization. 

Love of Jesus.—Jane Taylor.—YB'I 
Love of Justice.—Theodore Parker.—FD 1 
Love of Liberty.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Love of Nature.—W: Wordsworth. See Lines Com¬ 
posed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey. 

Love of the Past. The. (The Sj>ectator .)—HP 
Love of the World Reproved; or. Hypocrisy Detected, 
The.—W; Cowper.—HPE 

Love of Trees. The.—H: W. Beecher. See Discourse 
on Trees, A. 

Love on Deck.—G: Barlow.—BIL 
Love on the Half-shell.—D: L. Proudfit.—BRR— 
CS 14 

Love on the Links.—G. M. Winter.—TL 
Love on the Ocean. (Punch.) —HPE 
Love One Another.—Anon.—YBT 
Love Scene, A.—Anon.—BS 24 

Love Scorns Degrees, (fir. sel. fr. The Mountain of the 
Lovers.)—Paul H. Hayne.—BIL—BNL—GP 
Love Hong, A.—Anon.—BRR 
Love Song.—Anon.—FLS 
Love Song.—G: Darley.—HBP 

(Flower of Beauty, The.)—VA 

(Song.)—OB 

Love Hong by a Lunatic, A.—Anon.—NA 
Love Hong, in the Modem Taste, A. (Hong, by a Per¬ 
son of Quality— C.) —Alex. Pope.—HPE (at. 
to J. Swift.) 

(Lines by a Person of Quality.)—NA 
Love Hong of Henri Quatre, A.—Edwin Arnold.—VS 
Love Still Hath Something of the Sea.—G: Sedley.— 
F EP 

(Song.)—WEP 2 

“Love strong as death—nay. stronger.”—Anon.—GG 
Love Stronger than Locks.—Anon.—WR 7 
Love Symphony, A.—Arthur O'Shaughnessy.—BIL— 
FTA—PGT 2—TFY—VS 

Love Tapped upon my Lattice.—A. M. L. Hawes.—TL 
Love Test, A.—Carl Herloszsohn.—FLH 
Love that Asketh Love again.—Dinah M. Craik—FTA 
Love that Availeth.—Arthur L. Salmon.—FLH 
Love that Lives for Aye. The.—H: M. Peck.—PTA 
“Love that never cold can be.”—J: F.rskine.—CG 3 
Love, the Best Monument.—Anon.—CS 2.0 
Love, the Musician.—Francesco Redi (tr. by K. W. 
Gosse).;—BIL 

Love, the Pilgrim.—Hamilton Aid*?.—VS 
Love Thee.—T; Hood.—P'LS (sel.) 

(I Love Thee— C.) —BIL—FTA 
Love Thee?—T; Moore.—PTA 

Love Thee, Dearest? Love Thee?—T: Moore.—PTA 
Love thou thy Land.—Alfred Tennyson.—WEP 4 
Love Thought, A.—H. Ernest Nichol.—FLS 
Love thy Mother, Little One.—T: Hood.—TP'S (abr.) 

(Child and Mother.)—OS 1—WCL 

(To a Child Embracing his Mother—C.)— FEP — 
HBP 

“Love thyself last; cherish thou hearts that hate 
thee.”—W: Shakespeare. See King Henrv 
VIII. 

Love to the Church. St. Ambrose (tr. by Timothy 
D wight).—A A 

(I Love Thy Kingdom, Lord.)—FEP 
Love Took me Softly by the Hand.—Walter R. Cas¬ 
sets.—BIL 

Love Unchangeable.—Rufus Dawes.—AA 
Love under Difficulties.—Anon.—NPS— YP 
Love under the ledger.—M’Doriald Clarke.—TAV 
Love Unfeigned, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Troilus 
and Criseyde. 

Love Universal.—Anon.—FLS 
Love Unretumed.—H. C. Beeching.—FLH 
Love Unsought.—Emma C. Embury.—AA 
Love up to Date.—S. L. Howard.—GG 2 
Love will Find out the W'ay.— Anon. See Truth’s 
Integrity. 

Love Wins Love.—Anon.—WR 17 

“Love without Thee.”—Hamilton ATdG—FLS 

Love your Brother.—Anon.—DLP' 

“Love your neighbor as yourself.”—G: A. Baker. Jr. 
— BH 4 

(Thoughts on the Commandments— C .)—AA — 
PI.D 

Loved and Lost. The.—Anon.—CS 3 
Loved, not Lost, The. — J: G. Whittier. See Snow¬ 
bound. 

Loved Once, Hr. sel. fr. (“ Say never, ye loved once.”) 
—Eliz. B. Browning.—GG 

Loved One ever Near, The. (Separation.)—Johann 
W. von Goethe (tr. by J. S Dwight).—BIL— 
FTA 


195 




Loved 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Loved you Better than you Knew.—Eliz. A. Allen. 
See Left Behind. 

Lovejoy Cow, The.—Philip Morse.—WR 15 
(Let Down the Bars.)—CS 35 
(Milking-time.)—BS 7—PFP—PR (si. abr.) 
Love-knot, The.—Nora Perry.—AA-—BNL—CS 22— 
FEP—FTA-—PPSr—PR—TAV—TFY 
Love-letter, A. (Abr.) —Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.— 
FLS 

Love-letter, The. (The House of Life, Sonnet XI.)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—FTA—OH 
Love-letters Made in Flowers.—Leigh Hunt.—BNL 
Love-lily.—Dante G. Rossetti.-—WEP 4 
Loveliness. — Maria Lacey. — CPL — PP — TFS — 
YBT—YFR 

Loveliness of Love, The.—G: Darley.—BNL—FEP 
(“It is not beauty I demand.”)—A VP 
(True Loveliness.)—TIP 
Lovelocks.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Lovely, Kind, and Kindly Loving.—Nicholas Breton. 
—ELP 

Lovely Lass of Inverness, The. (C.) —Rob’t Burns.— 
FEP 

(Lament for Culloden.)—EHT—OB—PGT 1 
Lovely Mary Donnelly.—W: Allingham.—BNL—FEP 
—HBP—VA—VS 
(Mary Donnelly.)—CRR—EPs 
Lovely May. (W. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Lovely Scene, A.—Anon.—CG 1—CR—CS 22 
Love-making.—Rebecca M. Reavis.—WR 4 
Love-message, A.-—Lillian C. Barnes.—CG 1 
Love-poems.—G: Wither. See Fair Virtue, the Mis¬ 
tress of Philarete. 

Lover, The (Japan).—R: H. Stoddard.—AA . 

Lover and Birds, The.—W: Allingham.—MMR 
Lover and Friend hast Thou Put Far from Me.— 
Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 

Lover Beseecheth his Mistress not to Forget, The. 
(C.)—T: Wyatt.—WEP 1 
(Appeal, An.)—CEL 
(Forget not Yet.)—ELP—OB 
(Supplication, A.)—PGT 1—PHS 
Lover Complaineth of the Unkindness of his Love, 
The.—T: W r yatt.—WEP 1 
(Lover to his Lute, The.)—CEL 
(To his Lute.)—OB 

Lover having Dreamed Enjoying of his Love, The.— 
T: Wyatt.—WEP 1 

Lover in Winter Plaineth for the Spring, The.—Anon. 
—OB 

"Lover Sheweth how he is Forsaken of such as he 
Sometime Enjoyed, The.” (C.)—T: Wyatt. 
—ELP 

(Vixi Puellis Nuper Idoneus.)—OB 
Lover to his Lady that Gazed much up to the Skies, 
The.—G: Turberville.—ELP 
Lover to his Lady-love, A.—Mary W. Hastings.—CG 3 
Lover to his Lute, The.—T: Wyatt. See Lover Com¬ 
plaineth of the Unkindness of his Love, The. 
Lover to his Lyre, The. (Song jr. The Davideis, Bk. 
III.)—Abraham Cowley.—CEL 
(Invocation.)—BNL 
(Supplication, A.)—EPs—FEP—PGT 1 
Lover to his Mistress, The. (C.) —Hamilton Ai'd5 
(Why I Love Thee.)—FLS 

Lover to the Glow-worms, The.—Andrew Marvell.— 
HBP 

(Mower to the Glow-worms. The— C .)—EP 
Lover with his Loved One Sailed the Sea, A.—Edwin 
Arnold. See With Sa’di in the Garden. 

Lover without Arms, A.—H: Davenport.—AWH—PR 
Lovers.—Anon.—OH 

Lovers.—Matthew Arnold. See Consolation. 

Lovers. (Sel. fr. At One Again.)—Jean Jngelow.—BIL 
Lovers, The.—C. A. S. (at. also to Phoebe Cary).— 
BNL—GP 

(Tragedy on Past Participles, A.)—BS 15 
Lovers, and a Reflection.—C: S. Calverley.—BNL— 
NA—THP 

Lover’s Appeal, The.—T: Wyatt.—CEL—PGT 1 
(Appeal, The.)—OB 

(Earnest Suit to his Unkind Mistress not to For¬ 
sake him. The.)—BNL—ELP 
Lover’s Complaint. (Punch Bowl.) —CG 3 
Lover’s Diary, A, Sonnets fr. —H. Gilbert Parker. 

Art. (2 sons.) —VA 
Envoy.—VA 

(Reunited.)—OB 
I Loved My Art.—TCV 
I nvincible.—VA 
l ove’s Outset.—VA 
Their Waving Hands.—-TCV 
Woman’s Hand, A. (2 sons.)—VA 


Lover’s Lament, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Twelfth 
Night. 

Lover’s Letters, A.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Love 
Letters. . 

Lover’s Lullaby, A.—G: Gascoigne. See Lullaby of a 
Lover, The. 

Lover’s Lullaby, A.—J. Ashby Sterry.—VS 
Lover’s Melancholy, The, Sets. fr. —J: Ford. 

Awakening Song. (Fr. Act V., Sc. 1.)—FEP— 
WEP 2 
(Dawn.)—OB 

Lutist and the Nightingale, The. (Fr. I., 1.)—PS 
(Musical Duel, The.)—BNL 
Lover’s Night Thoughts, The. (Sonnet XXVII.)— 
W: Shakespeare.—FTA—OH 
Lover’s Quarrel, A. (Dial.) —Austin Dobson.—PYO 
(Tu Quoque—C.)—MR 
Lover’s Renewal.—C: Sangster.—TCV 
Lover’s Resolution, The. (Fr. Fidelia.)—G: Wither. 
—OB 

(Author’s Resolution in a Sonnet. The.)—CEL— 
ELP—WEP 2 

(Manly Heart, The.)—EPs—FTA—OEL—PGT 1 
(“Shall I, wasting in despair[el.”)—ES—YBF (abr.) 
(Shepherd’s Resolution, The— C.) —BNL—FEP— 
HBP—PYO (abr.) 

Lover’s Sacrifice, The.—Anon.—CS 18 
Lover’s Song, The.—E: R. Sill.—AA 
Lover’s Tale, The, Br. sels. fr. —Alfred Tennyson. 
Golden Supper, The.—WR 1 

“Love’s arms were wreathed about the neck of 
Hope.”—GG 

Lover’s Tears, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost. 

Love’s a Riddle.—H: Carey.—FLS 

“Love’s arms were wreathed about the neck of Hope.” 

—Alfred Tennyson. See Lover’s Tale, The. 
Love’s Autumn.—Paul H. Hayne.—TFY , 

Love’s Autumn.—J: Payne.—VA 

Love’s Belief. (Sel. fr. Credo.)—Mary A. Townsend. 
—HP 

Love’s Birth and Becoming.—S: Daniel. See Hy¬ 
men’s Triumph. 

Love’s Blindness.—W: Jas. Linton.—VA 
Love’s Blindness. (Frags, jr. various authors.) —BNL 
Love’s Calendar.—Anon.—WR 25 
Love’s Calendar.—T: B. Aldrich.—FTA—TAV 
Love’s Caramels Lost.—Castle Layne.—CS 34 
Love’s Change.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
Love’s College. (Song fr. Mother Bomhie, Act III., 
Sc. 3. )—J : Lyly.—ES 
Love’s Colors.—C. C. Frazer-Tytler.—FLS 
Love’s Coming.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BIL—TFY 
Love’s Confession.—C: Swain.—FTA 
Love’s Course.—Mary B. Chapman.—FLS 
Love’s Dangers. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Love’s Day.—W: B. Forbush.—CG 1 
Love’s Despair.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Love’s Disguise.—J: A. Hamilton.—CG 1 
Love’s Disguises.—Matthew Prior.—YBF 

(“Merchant, to secure his treasure, The.”)—FEP 
—PGT 1 

(Ode, An—C.)—WEP 3 
(Song.)—OB 

Love’s Ecstasy.—T: Heywood.—ES 
Love’s Emblems.—J: Fletcher. See Valentinian. 
Love’s Entrance.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 1 
Love’s Eternity.—E:, Lord Herbert of Cherburv.— 
ELP 

Love’s Farewell. (Ideas, LXI.— C .)—Michael Dray¬ 
ton.—FTA—PGT 1—YBF 
(Come, Let us Kisse and Parte.)—BNL 
(Let us Kiss and Part.)—HBP 
(Parting, The [or A].)—CEL—GP—OB 
(Since there’s no Help.)—OH 
(Sonnet.)—ELP—FEP—WEP 1 
Love’s Final Powers.—G: Barlow.—BIL—FTA 
Love’s Flame.—S: T. Coleridge. See Love. 

Love’s Fulfilling.—Helen H. Jackson.—BIL—TFY 
Love’s Garden.-—Ellen R. Field.—YBT 
Love’s Gifts.—Anon.—FLS 

Love’s Grave.—G: Meredith. See Modern Love. 

Love’s Harvest.—Barry Straton.—TCV 
Love’s Immortality.—Rob’t Southey. See Curse of 
Ivehama, The. 

Love’s Insight.—Anon.—PGT 1 

Love’s Justification. (Second reading.) —Michael An¬ 
gelo.—FTA—OH 
Love’s Kiss.—Helen Hay.—A A 
Love’s Labor not Lost.—H. E. McBride.—DDD 
Love’s Labour’s Lost, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Armado and Moth. (Sel. fr. Act I., Sc. 2 )— 
MPD 


196 





TITLE INDEX 


Lucy 


Love’s Labour’s Lost ( continued). 

Biron’s Canzonet. ( Sel.fr IV., 2.)—ES 
Blossom, The. ( Song fr. IV., 3.)—OB 
(Love’s Perjuries.)—PGT 1 
On a Day, Alack the Day.)—FEP 
Song.)—ES 
Lover’s Tears, The. (Set. fr. IV., 3.)—ES 
Love’s Labour’s Lost. (Rr. sels. fr. I., 1; II., 1: 
IV., 3.)—BNL 

Perjury Excused. (Sel. fr. IV., 3.)—ES 
Rhyme of White and Red. (Sel. fr. I., 2.)—ES 
Spring and Winter, II. (Fr. V., 2.)—OB 

(“When icicles hang by the wall.”)—BNL—ELP 
—FEP—GN—POS~ 

(W T inter.) —BPB — CGd — CEL — LC — OEL— 
PGT 1—PHS—WEP 1 
( Winter Song, A.)—BVC 

“When daisies pied and violets blue.” (Fr. V., 2.) 
—EPs (includes “When icicles,” etc.) 

(Spring.)—EP—ES—OEL 
(Spring and Winter, I.)—OB 
Love’s Language.—Countess of Gifford.—FLS 
Love’s Language.—Fs. T. Palgrave.—BIL 
Love’s Letter-box.—Helen J. Wood.—WR 13 
Love’s Life, A. (Chambers’ Journal.) —FLS—HP 
“Love’s light is strange to you? Ah, me!”—Alice 
Caiy.—BIL 

Love’s Logic.—Anon.—CG 1 
Love’s Logic. (Chambers’ Journal.) —HP 
Love’s Lovers. (The House of Life—Sonnet VIII.)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Love’s Meaning. — Carlotta Perry. — FTA — OH— 
TFY 

Love’s Meinie.—Fs. V*. Bourdillon.—VS 
Love’s Memory.—W: Shakespeare. See All’s Well 
that Ends Well. 

Love’s Miracle.—Hannah P. Kimball.—TAS 
Love’s Music.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
Love’s Noctum.—-Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Loves of the Plants. (Fr. The Botanic Garden.)— 
Erasmus Darwin.—GP 

Love’s Omnipresence.—Joshua Sylvester.—FEP— 
FTA—OH—PGT 1—YBF 
(Ubique.)—OB 
(Sonnet.)—WEP 1 

(“W’ere I as base as is the lowly plain.”)—BNL 
Love’s Opportunitv.—Sophie W. Weitzel.—TAS 
Love’s Outset. (In A Lover’s Diary.) — Gilbert Par¬ 
ker.—VA 

Love’s Pains. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Love’s Perfeotions.—Anon.—ELP 

Love’s Perjuries.—W T : Shakespeare. See Love’s La¬ 
bour’s Lost. 

Love’s Philosophy. (C.) —Percy B. Shellev.—BIL— 
BNL—FEP—GP—HBP—PGT 1—YBF 
(“Fountains mingle with the river, The.”)—HP 
Love’s Poor.—R: Le Gallienne.—VA 
Love’s Power.—Josephine Pollard.—FTA 
Love’s Prayer.—J: Hay.—BIL—FTA 
Love’s Prayer.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 2 
Love’s Prayer.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA 
(Prayer Perfect, The— C.y —TAS 
Love’s Proving.—F: E. W T eatherly.—FTA 
Love’s Punishments.—J. Ashby-Sterry.—FLS 
Love’s Realities.—Anon.—ELP 
Love’s Reasons.—W r : Browne.—ELP 
(Song.)—OB 

Love’s Reminiscences.-—Mary K. Dallas.—W'R 3 
Love’s Request. (“Shall I come, sweet Love, to 
thee”— C.) —T: Campion.—ES 
Love’s Resurrection Day.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA— 
TAS 

Love’s Return.—Minot J. Savage.—TFY 
Love’s Rosary.—G: E. W’oodberry.—A A 
Love’s Roses.—W. F. Gregory.—FLS 
Love’s Sacrifice.—Anon.—TL 
Love’s .Seasons.—Frank D. Sherman.—CH 
Love’s Secret.—Rob’t P. Bates.—CG 2 
Love’s Secret.—W: Blake.—OB—_PGT 1—YBF 
Love’s Secret Name.—J: A. Blaikie.—VA 
Loves she Like Me?—S: Woodworth.—AA 
Love’s Silence.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Love’s Silence.—Augusta Webster.—TFY 
Love’s Spite.—Aubrey T: De Vere.—VA 
Love’s Stratagem.—Hyder Ali.—SR 10 
Love’s Strategy.—R. S. Sharpe.—CS 32 (si. abr.) 

(Conjugal Love.)—MHR 
Love’s Thread of Gold.—Jean Ingelow.—BIL 
Love’s Token.—Alice R. Taggart.—CG 2 
Love’s Transfiguration. (Chambers’ Journal.) —HP 
Love’s Victory.—D: A. Wasson.—OH 
Love’s Waking.—Anon.—FLS 


Love’s Wantonness.—T: Lodge.—ES—W’EP 1 
(Love and Phillis.)—EP 
(Phillis.)—OB (II.)—OEL 
Love’s W’arning.—Ed. Kenealy.—PEB 4 
Love’s Wisdom.—Marg. Deland.—AA 
Love’s Young Dream.—T: Moore.—BNL 
(Abr.)— EPs—FTA 
(IF. music.) —NPS—YP 

Love’s Young Dream.—Helen M. W’aithman.—BS 20 
Love-scrape, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Lovesight. (The House of Life, Sonnet IV.)—Dante 
G. Rossetti.—PGT 2—VA—YBF 
Lovest thou Me?—W: Cowper.—FEP 
I.ove-triology, A, Sel. fr. —Mathilde Blind.—VA 
Lovewell’s Fight.—Anon.—AWB 
Loving and Giving.—Anon.—YBT 
Loving Little Girl. The.—E: C. Rook.—LPS—PP 
Low Countries, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Low Countries, The.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Trav¬ 
eller, The. 

Low Tide on Grand Pre.—Bliss Carman.—TCV 
Low-backed Car, The. (C.)—S: Lover.—BNL—BS 17 
—CR— CS 28— FEP—LC (si. abr.) 

(IF. music.)— DR—NPS—YP 
(Low-back Car, The.)—PR—YA 
Lowell Alphabet, A. (Comp. fr. Lowell’s W’orks.)— 
Anon.—PEO 

Lowell, Extract Concerning.—D: W. Bartlett.—PEO 
Lowell, Extract Concerning.—H. R. Haweis.—PEO 
Lowell, Extract Concerning. (North British Review.) 
—PEO 

Lowell, Extract Concerning.—Frances H. Underwood. 
—PEO 

Lowell, Extract Concerning.—W. C. Wilkinson.—PEO 
Lowland Witch Ballad, A.—W’: B. Scott.—PEB 3 
Lowly Life, The.—Gerald Massey.—YBT 
Loyal Fisher, The.—Anon.—AWB 
Loyal Hearts.—H. Parker.—.SR 12 
Loyal Legion, The.—C: G. Halpine.—WRD 
Loyal to a Trust.-—Anna W 7 . W 7 hitney.—SR 13 
Loyal W’oman’s No, A.—Lucy Larcom.—EPs 
Loyalty.—Allan Cunningham. See Hame, Hame, 
Hame! 

Loyalty Confined.—Sir Roger L’Estrange.—FEP 
(In Prison— sel.) —BNL 
Loyalty to Truth.—Anna H. Shaw.—TMR 
Lucifer and Elissa.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 
Lucifer in Starlight.—G; Meredith.—OB—VA 
Lucile, Sets. fr. —Rob’t Bulwer-Lytton. 

Character of Lucile. (Pt. II., Can. VI., sts. 38-40— 
abr .)—BS 22 

("No stream from its source flows seaward”— 
sel .)—FHS 

Dinner Hour, The. (Pt. I., Can. II., 18, 19.)—VA 
(Lucile, Sel. fr. —II., 19.)—BNL 
Parting before Sebastopol, The. (Pt. II., Can. VI., 
37— abr .)—A VP 

Under Canvas. (Pt. II., Can. VI.. 10-12.)—HSS 1 
Lucinda’s Fan.-—Frank L. Stanton.—TMR 
Lucius Junius Brutus (play), Sel. fr. (Brutus and 
Titus.)—Nathaniel Lee.—SS 
Lucius Junius Brutus[’s Oration] over the Body of 
Lucretia.—J: H. Payne. See Brutus. 

Luck.—Anon.—DJS 

Lucky Call. The.—Anon.—CS 11—HR 

Lucky Horse-shoe, The.—Jas. T. Fields.—CS 22 

Lucky Jim.—Anon.—WR 15 

Lucky Jim.—J: I.. Long.—BS 26 

Lucrece, Sel. fr. —W: Shakespeare.—WEP 1 

Lucv. (C .)—Bryan W. Procter. 

(Golden Girl, A.)—BNL 

Lucy. (“Strange fits of passion I have known”— 
Poems Founded on the Affections, VII.— C.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—OB (I.)—YBF 
Lucy. (Poems Founded on the Affections, VIII.— C.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—BFV (I.)—BNL—FEP 
— GP — HBP (I.) — IR (I.) — OB (II.) — 
WEP 4 (I.) 

(Lost Love. The.)—FTA—PHS 
(“She dwelt among the untrodden ways.”)—MBL 
—PGT 1— PYO—YBF 

Lucy. (Poems Founded on the Affections, IX.— C.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—OB (III.) 

(“I travell’d among unknown men.”)—CEL— 
PGT 1—YBF 

Lucy. (Poems of the Imagination, X.— C.) —W: 
Wordsworth.—BFV (II.)—GN—HBP (II.)— 
IR (ID—OB (TV.)—PHS—WEP 4 (II.) 

(Sel. )—EPs—OS 3 
(Education of Nature, The.)—PGT 1 
(Three Years sheGrew.)— BNL—FEP—GP—MBL 
(“Three years she grew in sun and shower.”)—SN 


197 





Iiucy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lucy. (Poems of the Imagination, XT.— C.)—W: 
Wordsworth.—OB (V.)—WEP 4 (III.) 
(Departed.)—EPs 

(“Slumber did my spirit seal, A.”)—PGT 1— 
YBF 

Lucy Ashton’s Song. ( Fr. The Bride of Lammermoor, 
Ch. III.)—Walter Scott —BPB—OB 
(Beware.)—EPs 

Lucy Bertram and Dominie Sampson.—Walter Scott. 
See Guy Mannering. 

Lucy Gray; or, Solitude.—W: Wordsworth.—BFV— 
BPB — CEL — CGd — FEP — FTR — HBP 
—PC—PGT 1—PoR—WCL—WEP 4 
Lucy’s Flittin’.—W: Laidlaw.—GP 
Lucy’s Song.— C: Dickens. See Village Coquettes, The. 
Ludgate Hill.—A Mystery. (Drama for Every-day 
Life.) (Punch .)—HPE 

Lugubrious Whing-Whang, The.—(C.)—.Tas. W. Riley. 
—NA (sel .)—RCR 
(Mad, Mad Muse, The— sel .)—HP 
Luke Havergal.—E. A. Robinson.—AA 
Luke Major.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Lullaby: “Rockaby, babv, thy cradle is green.”— 
Anon.—CS 23—TFS (sel.) 

(Baby’s Cradle is Green— sel .)—TFS 
Lullaby: “Weep ye no more, sad fountains.”—Anon. 
—ELP 

(Sleep— at. to J: Dowland.)—BNL—HBP 
(Song for Music, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(Tears.)—OB 

Lullaby: “The rook’s nest do rock on the tree-top.’ — 
W: Barnes.—PGT 2 

Lullaby: “Breezes in the tree-tops high.”—Mabel A 
Carpenter.—CG 2 

Lullaby: “Through Sleepy-land doth a river flow.”— 

E. Cavazza.—NV 

Lullaby: “Hush thee, sweet baby.” (Fr. Danae.)— 
T: Davidson.—TMR 

Lullaby: “Golden slumbers kiss your eyes.” — T: 
Dekker. See Pleasant Comedy of Patient Gris- 
sel, The. 

Lullaby: “Bedtime’s come fu’ little boys.” — Paul L. 
Dunbar.—THP 

Lullaby: “Kiver up yo’ haid,” etc. — Paul L. Dunbar. 
—BS 26 

Lullaby: “Hush thee, hush.”—R. D. H.—CG 3 
Lullaby: "I was loung’n amongst m’ pillows.”—Ella 
Higginson.—HSS 2 

Lullaby: “Over the cradle the mother hung.”— 

Josiah G. Holland.—GMS 
(Where shall the Baby’s Dimple Be?—C.)—BS 2 
Lullaby: “Rockaby, lullaby, bees in the clover.”— 
Josiah G. Holland. See Mistress of the Manse, 
The. 

Lullaby: “Bye-bye, drowsiness o’ertaking,” etc. 

(Fr. Ermirde, arr. by) O. E. McFadon.—DR 
Lullaby: “Lullaby and good-night.” (W. music — 
arr. by) O. E. McFadon.—DR 
Lullaby: “Birds in their nests are softly calling.”— 
Grace Mitchell.—POS 

Lullaby, A: "Baloo, loo, lammy, now baloo, my dear.” 

—Caroline Oliphant, Lady Nairn.—OS 1 
Lullaby: “Sleep, sleep, lovely white soul.”—Walter 
Ramal.—SOC 

Lullaby, A.—R: Rowlands.—OB—YBF 

(“Upon my lap my sovereign sits.”)—PGT 1 
Lullaby: “Slumber, slumber, little one, now.”—Frank 
D. Sherman.—LFL 

Lullaby, A: “Cease, warring thoughts, and let his 
brain.” (Sel. fr. The Triumph of Beauty.)— 
Jas. Shirley.—ES—WEP 2 

Lullaby: “Sweet and low.”—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Princess, The. 

Lullaby, A: “Sleep, my darling, sleep!”—Celia Thax- 
ter.—SAP 

Lullaby for Titania.—W: Shakespeare. See Midsum¬ 
mer Night’s Dream, A. 

Lullaby of a Lover, The.—G: Gascoigne. — ELP — 
ES (abr .)—OEL 
(Lover’s Lullaby, A.)—OB 

Lullaby of f wr., on or to] an Infant Chief.—Walter 
Scott.—BVC—LC 
(SI. abr.)— PC—PHS—PoR 
“Lullaby, oh, lullaby.” (Domestic Poems, IV.)—T: 
Hood.—FEP 

(Serenade, A.)—CS 26—HPE 
Lullaby, Rest.—Ellen R. Manchester.—CG 3 
Lullaby Song.—W: P. M’Kenzie.—TCV 
Lullaby Song.—(Anon.— tr. by) Eliz. L. Prentiss.— 
BS 15 

(Cradle Song— si. abr.) —LC—OS 1 
(Abr .)—FEP 

(Sleep, Baby, Sleep!— sel.) —GMS—PC—WCL 


Lullaby to an Infant Chief.-—Walter Scott. See 
Lullaby of an Infant Chief. 

Lullabye, A.—-J: Skelton.—WEP 1 
“Lulu.”—Carrie W. Thompson.—HP (si. abr.) 

(Kitty Clover.)—WR 2 
(Naughty Kitty Clover.)—BS 20 
Lulu Takes Care.—Anon.—DLS 
Lulu’s Complaint.—Anon.—PR—YA 
(Deposed— diff. vers.) —DLS 
(New Baby, The.)—HP 
Lulu’s Picture.—Anon.—HVD 

Lumber Camp Romance, A.—Harriet F. Crocker.— 
WR 21 

Lunar Stanzas.—H. C. Knight.—NA 

Lurline; or. The Knight’s Visit to the Mermaids. 

—R: H. Barham. See Sir Rupert the Fearless. 
Lusiad, The. Sets. fr. —Luis de Camoens (tr. by Mickle). 
Inez de Castro. (Sel. fr. Can. III.)—NE 
Spirit of the Cape, The. (Sel. fr. Can. V.)—NE 
Lusiad, The, Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Lusty May.—Anon.—OB 

Lute Song in “The Sad One,” The.—J: Suckling.— 
WEP 2 

Luther.—Joaquin Miller.—BS 12 

“Luther rebelled against the Pope in behalf of the 
ministry.”—W. H. H. Murray.—GG 
Luther’s Hymn.—Martin Luther. 

(Paraphrase of Luther’s Hvmn, by F: H. Hedge.)— 
AA 

(Mighty Fortress is our God, A— sel.) —BNL 
(Psslm XLVI.— tr. by T: Carlyle.)—HBP 
(Safe Stronghold, A.)—AE 

Lutist and the Nightingale, The.—J: Ford. See 
Lover’s Melancholy, The. 

Lux est Umbra Dei.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 
Lux in Tenebris.-—Katha. Tynan-Hinkson.—TIP 
Lycidas.—T: B. Aldrich.—FP 

Lvcidas.—J: Milton.—BNL (br. sel.) —BPB—EP—EPs 
—FEP —HBP —LH—MBL—OB—PGT 1— 
PHS—WEP 2 
(Fame— sel.) —BNL 
(Flowers— sel.) —HSS 1 
(Lycidas, Sel. fr.) —BNL 
Lydia.—L. W. Reese.—AA 
Lydia’s Ride.—T: Frost.—BS 21 
Lye, The.—Walter Raleigh. See Lie, The. 

Lying.—T: Moore.—HPE 
Lying in State—Walter S. Landor.—HPE 
Lying in the Grass.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
Lyke-wake Dirge, A.—BB—BPB—EPs (abr.) —OB— 
WEP 1 

Lyman Beecher’s First Home.—Lyman Beecher.— 

WR 5 

Lynmouth. (Abr.)—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—PGT 2 
Lyon.—H: Peterson.—AWB—PAPm 
(Death of Lyon, The.)—EDY 
Lyric, A.—E: M. Hulme.—CG 2 
Lyric of Action.—Paul H. Hayne.—BS 22 
(Upward and Onward.)—BS 17 
Lyric Seer. The. (Poet-lore—C.)—Edwin Markham. 
—SR 13 

Lyrical Poem, The.—R: Garnett.—VA 
Lytell Geste of Robin Hode, A.—Anon.—BB 
Lyttel Boy. The.—Eugene Field.—AA—WTD 


M 

M. A., 1822-1888. (C.) —Louise I. Gurney. 

(Pax Paganica— w. add. st.) —AA 
M. P.; or, The Blue Stockings. (Sel. fr. To Sigh, yet 
Feel no Pain— song.) —T: Moore.—FEP—FLS 
Mabel.—Anon.—WR 4 

Mabel, Sel. fr. (At her Window— C. —Pt. I.)—Frd’k 
Locker-Lampson.)—OB 
Mabel.—Jas. W. Riley.—HDL 
Mabel Gray.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Mabel Martin.—J: G. Whittier.—AP (si. abr.) —SO 
(br. sel.) 

Witch’s Daughter, The. (Pts. 1-4, cond.) —CS 19 
—MMR 

Mabel on Midsummer Dav.—Mary Howitt.—PC— 
PHS 

Mabel; or. The Face against the Pane.—T: B. Aldrich. 
—SA 

(Face against the Pane, The.)—CS 19—FR— 
MMR 

Mabel’s May.—R. M. Davis.—CG 3 
Macarius the Monk.—J: B. O’Reilly.—KNE 
Macaulay.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 

(To Macaulay.)—BNL—HBP 
Macaulay.—W: M. Punshon.—NC 


198 




TITLE INDEX 


Magna 


Macaulay’s Prophecy. (Sel. arr. fr. Honest Money.)— 
Jas. A. Garfield.—NC 
Macbeth, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

“Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased?” 
( Br. sel. fr. Act V., Sc. 3.)—GG 
(Macbeth— br. sel.) —BNL 
"If ’twere done when ’tis done,” etc. (Sel. fr. I., 

7 ^_Qg 0 # 

(Macbeth— br. sels.) —AE—BNL 
(Macbeth’s Soliloquy— -br. sel.) —SAE 
Killing of Macbeth. (Sel. fr. V., 8.)—EDY 
Letter Scene, The. (I., 5.) 

(Macbeth, Act L, Sc. 5.)—IR 
(Hesitation— sel.) —EPs 

Macbeth. (Br. sels. fr. I., 3; I., 4; I., 5; II., 3; 
III., 1; III., 2; III., 4; V., 3; V.. 4; V., 5; 
V., 7.)—BNL 

Macbeth and the Witches. (IV., 1.)—BS 10 
(Macbeth— br. sel.) —AE 

(Oracle: “The flighty purpose never is o’ertook” 
— br. sel.) —EPs 

(Witches’ Meeting, The — The Charm— sel.) — 
CGd 

Macbeth to the Ghost. (Br. sel. fr. III., 4.)—SE 
Morning. (Br. sel. fr. I., 6.)—EPs 
(Macbeth’s Castle.)—BNL 
Murder of King Duncan. (Sel. fr. II., 1; II., 2.)— 
CS 13 


(Dagger of the Mind, A— sel.) —BNL 
(Dagger Scene, The.)—BS 6 
(Dagger Soliloquy.)—MRS 
(Is this a Dagger?)—OS 3 

(Macbeth before the Murder of Duncan.)—FR 
(Macbeth[: Selection from the Dagger Scene] 
— sel.)— HNS—SE 
(Murder, The—II., 2.)—BNL 

(Macbeth, Br. sels. fr.) —AE—HNS—SAE 
(Remorse— br. sel.) —EPs 
Night. (Br. sel. fr. III., 2.)—EPs 
Sleep-walking Scene. (V., 1.)—MRS 

(Lady Macbeth—Sleep Walking Scene— abr .)— 
SR 4 

(Macbeth— sel.) —SAE 
(Macbeth, Act V., Sc. 1.)—IR 
“To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow.” 
(Br. sel. fr. V., .5.)—PYO—SE (sel.) 

(Macbeth, Br. sel. fr.) —BNL 
Witches’ Meeting, The. (I., 1, and sel. fr. IV., 1.) 
—CGd 

Macbeth and the WTtches.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Macbeth. 

Macbeth before the Murder of Duncan.— W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Macbeth. 

Macbeth. Selection from the Dagger Scene.—W: 

Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 

Macbeth to the Ghost.—W: Shakespeare. See Mac¬ 
beth. 

Macbeth’s Castle.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 
Macbeth’s Soliloquy.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 
M’Calla and the Middy.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Macdonald’s Charge at Wagram.—Joel T. Headley. 

See Napoleon and his Marshals. 

Macdonald’s Raid.—Paul H. Hayne.—CS 18 
McFingal, Br. sels. fr. —J: Trumbull.—BNL 
MacFlecknoe.—J: Dryden.—ESs 
(Shadwell— sel.) —WEP 2 

Macgregor’s Defence.-—W alter Scott. See Rob Roy. 
M’llrath of Milate.—J: J. Rooney.—PRR 
McKinley’s Funeral Address, Sel. fr. —C. M. Man¬ 
chester.—WR 26 

Maclaine’s Child; a Legend of Lochbuy-Mull.—C: Mac- 
kag^—CS 9—DDR (abr.) —FR (si. abr.) —FTR 


(Clansman to his Chief, The— sel.) —SE 
(Supplication— br. sel.)— AE 
MacLeod of Dare. (Br. sel. fr. ( h. XLV.)—W: Black. 
—SAE 

M’Pherson’s Farewell. (C.) —Rob’t Bums.—HBP 
(Defiance.)—LH 

McSwats Swear Off, The.—Anon.—PR—YA 

McSwinger’s Fate.—Anon.—MCS 

Mad.—W: Littlejohn.—CS 32 

Mad Actor, The.—Frd’k G. Webb.—WR2 

Mad Anthony’s Charge.—Alex. N. Easton.—CS 29 

Mad Cabman’s Song of Sixpence, The. (Punch.) — 


Mad Engineer, The.—Anon.—CS 7—MMR 

(Prussian Railway Conductor’s Story — ad. by 
Walter K. Fobes.)—FR 

Mad Lover, The, Sels. fr. [Beaumont and] Fletcher. 

Joy of Battle, The. (Song fr. Act V, Sc. 4.)—LH 
To Venus. (Sel. fr. IV., 3.)—EPs 
Mad Luce.—Anon.—FMR 


Mad, Mad Muse, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—HP (sel.) 

(Lugubrious Whing-Wnaiig, The— C.) —NA (sel.) — 
RCR 

Mad Mag.—Leonard Wheeler.—CS 16 
Mad Maid’s Song, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—OB—WEP 2 
Mad Marie.—Anon.—WR 2 
Mad—Quite Mad.—Winthrop M. Praed.—ESs 
Mad Song.—W: Blake.—WEP 3 
Madam Hickory.—Wilbur Larremore.—AA 
Madam How and Lady Why, <SeL fr. (Eyes and No 
Eyes— sel fr. Preface.)—C: Kingsley.—WCLI 2 
Madame Arachne.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Mme. Eef.—Anon.—DES 

(French Account of Adam’s Fall— diff. vers.) — 
CS 29 

(Frenchman’s Account of the Fall, A.)—DFY— 
HR 

Madame Roland.—Anon.—EDY 
Madcap April.—Tudor Jenks.—EDY 
Maddening Bowl, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Made in the Hot Weather. (Ballad Made in the Hot 
Weather—C.)—W: E. Henley.—GN 
Made Perfect through Suffering.— S: Johnson.—TAS 
Made to Fit.—Anon.—DRR 
Madman, The. (Punch.) —KNE 
(Fragment, A.)—HPE 

(His Eye was Stern and Wild.)—CS 3—SCS—SR 6 
Madman, The.—T. S. Denison.—FAS 
Madness. (Punch.) —HPE 
Madonna dell’ Acqua.—J: Ruskin.—AVP 
Madonna of Fra Lippo Lippi, A.—Richard W. Gilder. 
—TAS 

Madonna of the Entry, A.—Agnes M. Machar.—TCV 
Madrigal—In praise of two.—Anon.—WEP 1 
Madrigal: “Lady, when I behold the roses sprouting.” 
—Anon.—ELP 
(Dilemma, A.)—PGT 1 

Madrigal: “My love in her attire doth show her wit.” 
—Anon.—ELP—OB—WEP 1 
(My Love’s Attire.)—YBF 
(Poetry of Dress, The, III.)—PGT 1 
Madrigal: (C.) “Like the Idalian queen.”—W: 
Drummond.—OB 

Madrigal. (C.) “My thoughts hold mortal strife.”— 
W: Drummond. 

(Inexorable.)—OB 
(Lament, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Madrigal. (C.) "Sweet rose, whence is this hue?”— 
W: Drummond.—ELP—ES 
Madrigal: (C.) "The beauty and the life.” (C.) — 
W: Drummond. 

(Her Passing.)—OB 

Madrigal: (C.) "This life,” etc.—W: Drummond. 
(Bubble, The.)—ELP 

(“Th-s life, which seems so fair.”)—PGT 1 
Madrigal: “This world a hunting is.” (In Flowers of 
Sion.)—W: Drummond.—W T EP 2 
Madrigal. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Madrigal, A. (Passionate Pilgrim, The, XII.)—W: 
Shakespeare.—LC—PGT 1—PHS 
(Crabbed Age and Youth.)—FEP—HBP—OB 
(Youth and Age.)—EP 

Madrigal: “Take, O take those lips away.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See Measure for Measure. 
Madrigal: "Tell me where is fancy bred." — W: 

Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, The. 
Madrigal, A: “Sweetheart, the year is young.”—Frank 
D. Sherman.—TFY 

Madrona, The.—Fred. M. Somers.—AD 
Madrono.—Bret Harte.—AA 
Maecenas Bids his Friend to Dine.—Anon.—PPh 
Maestro’s Confession, The.—Margaret J. Preston.— 
CS 9—KNE 

Magazine Fort, Phoenix Park, Dublin.—W: Wilkins.— 
TIP 

Magdalen.—Edgar L. Wakeman.—SR 3 
Magdalena.—Anon.—CS 3 
Magdalena.—Anon.—HP 

Magdalena; or, the Spanish Duel.—J. F. Waller.—BeR 
—BRR—BS 5—CR—CS 14—FTR—SA 
Maggie and Thomas h Kempis.— G: Eliot. See Mill 
on the Floss, The. 

Maggie Cuts her hair.—G: Eliot. See Mill on the Floss, 
The. 

Magic Buttons.—Emma C. Dowd.—BS 12 
Magic Car Moved on, The.—Percy B. Shelley. See 
Queen Mab. 

Magic Wand, The.—G: R. Sims.—CS 32—VSG 
Magical Isle, The.—Anon.—CS 8 
Magna est Veritas. (C.)—Coventry Patmore.—PGT 2 
(Truth is Great.)—YBF 


199 





Magnanimity 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Magnanimity in Politics.—Edmund Burke. See 
Speech on Moving his Resolutions for Concilia¬ 
tion with America. 

Magnanimous and Mean.—C: Heavysege.—TCV 
Magnificent Distances.-—Anon.—KNE 
Magnolia-Grandiflora.—Christopher P. Cranch.—AD 
Magpie, The.—Anon.—CS 32 
Magpie and the Monkey. The.—Yriarte.—SS 
Magpie’s Nest, The.—C: and Marv I.amb.—LPC— 
PoR 

Magruder’s Lullaby. (Puck .)—BS 21 
Maha-Bharata. Sels. fr. —(TV. by) Edwin Arnold. 

Great Journey, The. (Sel.) —NE 
Sftvitri; or. Love and Death. (Abr.) —NE 
Maha-Bharata, Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Mahmoud.—Leigh Hunt.—BNL—CGd—CS S f 
Mahmud and Ayaz.—Edwin Arnold. See With Sa’di 
in the Garden. 

Mahmud and the Idol.—Bessie Chandler.—CS 27 
Mahogany-tree, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—BNL— 
EDY—HBP—PHS—YA—VS 
Mahomet.—S: T. Coleridge.—EDY 
Mahsr John.—Irwin Russell.—BRR—SDR 
Maid I Loved, The.—Anon.—FLS 

Maid of Athens, ere we Part.—Lord Byron.—BNL— 
HBP—PYO 

(Maid of Athens.)—FEP—FTA 
Maid of Cloghroe. The.—Anon.—TIP 
Maid of Honor, The, Br. sels. fr. —Philip Massinger.— 
BNL 

Maid of Neidpath, The.—Walter Scott.—PGT 1— 
YBF 

Maid of Orleans, The.—J. E. Sagebeer.—CS 24 
Maid of Orleans. The, Sel. fr. (Joan of Arc's Farewell 
[to Home]—Prol., Sc. IV.)—Friedrich Schiller. 
—BLP—BS 22—FMR—PPSr 
Maiden Citv, The.—Charlotte Elizabeth (Tonna).— 
PEB 4 

Maiden Husking Corn. The.—J. H. Blow.—BS 23 
Maiden Martyr, The.—Anon.—BS 5—CS 14— DS — 
FR—PFP—SA—SC—SR 6 
(Scotland’s Maiden Martyr.)—FTR—HB 
Maiden Missionary, The.—Paul Pastnor.—GH 
Maiden Queen, The. Song fr. (Hidden Flame.)—J: 
Dryden.—OB 

Maiden Song.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PEB 3 
Maiden Spring, The.—(Anon, arr.) —AD— includes: 
Arbutus.—H. H.—AD—DCP—HSS 1 
Daffodil.—Anon.—AD 
Daisy.—Anon.—AD 

Lilies.—Leigh Hunt.—AD (abr.) —HSS 1 (in Songs 
and Chorus of the Flowers.) 

Pink.—Johann W. von Goethe.—AD 
May.—Anon.—AD 

Roses.—Leigh Hunt.—AD (sel.) —HSS 1 (in Songs 
and Chorus, etc.) 

Violets.—Leigh Hunt.—AD (br. sel.) 

(Chorus of Flowers, in Songs and Chorus, etc.) — 
FEP—HBP—HSS 1 (sel.) —PHS 
Maiden to the Moon, The.—J: G. Saxe.—BS 23 
Maiden with a Milking-pail, A. (Reflections— C .)— 
Jean Ingelow.—BNL 

Maidenhood.—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL—FEP 
Maiden’s Choice. The.—H: Carey. See following. 
Maiden’s Ideal of a Husband, A. (Fr. The Contriv¬ 
ances.)—H: Carey.—BNL—TFY 
(Maiden’s Choice, The.)—FKP—HBP 
Maidens’ Lake, The.—Lewis Morris.—YSG 
Maiden’s Last Farewell, The.—J: Paul.—BS 4 
Maiden’s Mishap, The.—Anon.—SCS 
Maiden’s Request, The.—T: Hood (tw. at. to Lover.)— 
MHR 

(Come with the Ring.)—CS 21 
(Please to Ring the Belle.)—BS 24 
Maiden’s Soliloquy, A.—Alaric A. Watts.-—FTA 
Maid’s Lament, The. (Fr. The Examination of Shake- 
sneare.)—Walter S. Landor.—BNL—FEP— 
FP —HBP —OB —PGT2 —VA —WEP 4 
YBF 

Maids of Elfin-mere, The.—W: Allingham.—PEB 4 
Maids of Japan.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Maids of Lee, The.—F: E. Weatherly.—FEP (si. abr.) 

(Bird in the Hand, A.)—VA 
Maid’s Remonstrance, The.—Thomas Campbell.— 
BNL 

Maid’s Tragedy, The, Sels. fr. —Beaumont and Fletcher. 
Aspatia’s Song. (Fr. Act II., Sc. 1.)—OB 
(Dirge.)—ELP 

(“Lay a garland on my hearse.”)—FEP 
(Song.)—CEL—WEP2—YBF 
Bridal Song. (Fr. I., 2.)—OB 
Wedding Song. (Fr. I., 2.)—ES 
Main Hatch, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 


Main Hazir Hun.—M. E. Winslow.—CS 21 
Maine, The.—G. Dichter.—PAPm 
Maine at Gettysburg.—Joshua L. Chamberlain.—SC 
Maine Liquor Law, The. Sel. arr. fr. (Enforcement of 
the Liquor Law, The.)—-Wendell Phillips.— 
MRS 

tTemperance.)—CS 20—TS 
• (Temperance Question, The.)—BS 8—PS (abr.) 
Maine’s Men, The. (St. Louis Republican.) —PAPm 
(Sinking of the Maine.)—FAS 
Main-truck; or. Leap for Life, The.—G. P. Morris.— 
CS 1—I.LC—PPSr—TAV 
(Leap for Life, A.)—FTR 
Maire my Girl.—J; K. Casey.—TIP 
Maister an’ the Bairns. The.—W: Thomson.—BS 12 
Maize, The.—W: W. l osdick.—BNL 
Maize for the Nation’s Emblem.—Celia Thaxter.— 
POS 

Majestic in his Individuality.—J: P. Newman.—LLC 
(Abraham Lincoln.)—BLP—PFP 
(Abraham Lincoln’s Place in History.)—PEO 
Majesty in Misery.—Chari I. of England (7).—EHT 

Majesty of Trifles, The.—Victor Hugo.—PR 
Major Andre. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Major Jones’ Fourth of July Oration.—Anon.—DE 
Major Slott’s Visitor.—C: R. Clark.—SA 
Major-General John Sedgwick. Sels. fr. —G; W; Curtis. 
General Grant, the Silent Captain. (Arr. and 
cond.) —FD 1 

Spirit of Puritanism, The.—NC 
Make t elieve.—Alice Cary.—BLP’ 

Make Believe. (Diff. poem.) —Alice Cary.—BNL 

Make Believe Land.—Anon.—DJS 

Make Childhood Sweet.—Anon.—DS—YA 

Make Room in Heaven.—Horace B. Durant.—CS 30 

Make the Best of It.—Anon.—TT 

Make Thy Way mine.—G: Klingle.—HDL 

Make your Mark.—David Barker.—FP—FTT (abr.) 

Make vour Wills.—-Anon.—MDD 

Make \Vav for Liberty.—Jas. Montgomery.—BNL— 
FEP 

(Arnold Winkelried— abr.) —BS 2—CS 4—OS 2— 
PPSr—SA—TMD 

(Patriot’s Pass-word, The— C .)—AD (sel.) —EDY 
—SS (aim.) 

Makin’ an Editor outen o’ him. (Sel. fr. The Editor’s 
Guests.)—Will Carleton.—CS 13 
Making a Cake.—Clara J. Denton.—LI, 

Making a Man of the Boy.—Anon.—Sll 13 
“Making an Orator.”—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Making an Orator. (In WhilomvilleStories.)—Stephen 
Crane.—SR 13 

Making B’lieve.—Anon.—DST 
Making Brown-bread Cakes.—Gail Hamilton.—FS 
Making Butter—Anon.—TT 
(How Butter is Made.)—PS 
Making him Feel at Home.—Belle M. Locke.—CS 36 
' Making New Year’s Calls.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Making of Man, The.—J: W. Chadwick.—AA 
Making of Man, The.—Algernon C. Swinburne. See 
Atalanta in Calvdon. 

Making Soap.—Anon.-—MFD 
Malaria.—Isabel H. Reid.—BS 12—PPSr 
Malbrouck. (7V. by) Francis Mahony.—FEP—HBP 
Malcontents, The.—J: Dryden. See Absalom and 
Achitophel 

Malib an and the Young Musician.—Anon.—BS 6— 
CS 12 

Malice.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Malony’s Will.—Anon.—DCR 
Malta, Sel. fr. —Carroll Ryan.—TCV 
Malum Opus.—Jas. A. Morgan.—NA 
Malzah and the Angel Zelehtha. C: He vvsege. See 
Saul. 

Mama’s Dear La \—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Mamie’s Request.—Anon.—TFS 
Mamma’s Boy.—Anon.—TFS 
Mamma’s Flower.—M. M. Cass, Jr.—TFS 
Mamma’s Help.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Mamma’s Helper.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Mamma’s Kisses.—Anon.—HSS 2—TFS (si. abr.) 
Mamma’s Little Mar et Woman.—Lizzie J. Rook— 
PS—TT 

Mammy Gets the Boy to Sleep.—Gertrude M. Jones.— 

" BS 24 

Mammy’s Li’l Boy.—H. S. Edwards.—CR—DR 
Mammy’s Story.—Susan A. Weiss.—WR 15 
Man.—Florence E. Coates.—FEP 

Man. (Br. sel. fr. introd. to Of the Soul of Man and the 
Immortality Thereof.)—Sir J: Davies.—OB— 
YBF 


200 








Marble 


TITLE INDEX 


Man.—G: Herbert.—BNL (hr. sel.) —EPs— HBP 
Man. (Poemsand Epigrams, CXLII.—C.)—Walter S. 
Landor.—YA 

Man.—E: \ oung. See Night Thoughts. 

Man after All.—Anon.—KXE 
Man and Ids Shoes. (Old Shoes.)—Anon.—HSS 3 
Man and Nature. Sel. ir. —G: P. Marsh.— D 
Man and Nature.—Rob’t K. Weeks.—AA 
Man and the Cause.—H: C. Lodge.—FD 2 
Man and the Goose, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Man and Woman.—W: Shakespeare. See Much Ado 
about Nothing. 

' Man Behind, The. Sets. fr. —T. S. Denison. 

Ike Papson’s Courtship.—SR 10 
Sword of Damocles. The.—SR 7 
Man behind it to the Theater Bonnet, The.—Anon.— 
GH 

Man by the Name of Bolus, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA 
"Man cannot choose his own life. A.”—M. E. Braddon. 
—GG 

‘Man does not plant a tree for himself. A.”—Alex. 
Smith.—HSS 1 

Man for the Crisis. The.—Anon, {ad.) —NC 
Man for the Hour. The.—A. R. Robinson.—CS 30 
Man from Glengarry. The. Sel. jr. (Hide for Life, 
The—Ch. IV.)—C: Gordon.—IR 
“Man has interests other than those that are material.” 

( Christian Intelligencer.) —GG 
"Man in conscious virtue bold. The.” (Sel. fr. Bk. III., 
Ode ill.)—Horace.—HSS 3 
Man in Nature.—W: R. Thayer.—AA 
Man in the Dark, The.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Man in the Fustian Jacket, The.—G: Moggridge.— 
Wli 2 


Man in the Moon, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BYC—NA 
(Sel.)— BS 18—EA 

Man in the Moon and I. The.—Jacqes Esprit.—GH 
“Man is but a reed, the weakest in nature.”—Blaise 
Pascal. Sec Thoughts. 

“Man is dear to man; the poorest poor.” (Frag.) —W ; 
Wordsworth.—GG 

Man May be Happy.—J: Wolcott.—CS 7—HPE 
Man o’ Airlie. The. Sel. fr. (Water-mill, The.)—Sarah 
Doudney.—HP—-SM (si. abr.) 

(.41. to Dan’l C. McCallum— si. diff. vers.)—BRR 
—CS 14—DS—FMR 


(Water that has Passed. The.)—GP—SR 1 
Man Oetipartite.—Whitley Stokes.—TIP 
Man of Expedients. The.—S. Gilman.—CS 8 
Man of Genius, The.—J: Ruskin. See Stones of 
Yenice. 

Man of Life Upright. The. (A Book of Airs, Pt. I.. 
XVIII.)—T: Campion.—ELP—OEL—PGT 1 
(Integer Vitse.)—OB 
(Upright Man. The.)—YBF 
Man of Nerve. A.—Anon.—DE 
Man of Ross. The.—Alex. Pope. See Moral Essays. 
Man of the World, The. Sel. fr. (it t if B ong. 
The.)—C: Machlin.— C’R 

Man Overboard, A.—Victor Hugo. See Les Mise- 
rables. 

Man to the Angel. The.—G. W. Russell.—YA 
Man Wants but Little Here Below.—J; Q. Adams.— 
BS 5 

(Wants of Man. The.)—BNL—CS6—EPs—WC’LG 
Man was Made to Mourn.— Rob’t Burns.—BNL—FP 
(Melancholy— br. sel.) —KNE 
Man who Apologized, The. (Detroit Free Press.) — 
CH—CS 25 

Man who Felt Sad, The. (Detroit Free Press.) —CS 12 

Man who Frets at Worldly Strife, The.— Jos. R. 
Drake.—AA 

Man who Hadn’t any Objection. The.—Anon.—SR 2 
Man who Rode to Conemaugh, The.—J: E. Bowen.— 
BAB—HSS 3 

Man who Rose from Nothing, The.—Alex. McLacl lan. 
—TCY 

Man who Wears the Button, The.— J. M. Thurston.— 
SC 

Man who Would be King, The.—Rudyard Kipling.— 
WGS 

Man with a Cold in 1 is Head. The.—Anon.—CS 11 
Man with the Hoe, The.—Edwin Markham.—AA— 
BNL 


Man with the Hoe—A Reply, The.—J: 4. Cheney. 


AA 


Man with the Musket, The.—H. S. Taylor.—SR 6 
Man without a Country, The.—H. F. H.—CG 2 
Man without a Country, The, 2 br. sels. fr. — E E. 


Hale—SC—TMR 

Man—"Woman. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 


Man—Woman.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—BNL 
Management: or. The Folly of Fashion.—Mrs. L. E. V. 
Boyd.—SD 

Manama Mission, The, Sel. fr. (Sympathy with South 
American Republicanism.)—Dan’l Webster.— 

pg_gg 

Manassas.—Catherine M. Warfield.—AWB—EDY 
M andalay.—Rudyard Kipling.—A VP—H B R 
Mandolin, The.— R.C.—CG 3 
Manfred, Sels. fr. —Lord Byron. 

Apparition, The. (Br. sel. fr. Act III., Sc. 4.)—EPs 
Incantation. (Sel. jr. I., 1.)—EPs 
Manfred. (Br. sel. fr. I., 1)—BNL 
Manfred. (Sel. fr. I.. 2.)—EPs 
(Soliloquy of Manfred— abr.) —PS 
Manfred’s Soliloquy. (Sel. fr. III., 4.)—FP 
(Coliseum, The— abr.) —OS 3 
(Coliseum by Moonlight. The— si. abr.) —BNL— 
MRS 

Manfred's Soliloquy.—Lord Byron. See foregoing. 
Manhood. (Frags, fr. various authors J—BNL 
Manhood.—G: K. Morris.—BS 15—PEO 
"Manhood will come and old age will com , and the 
dying-bed will come.”—T- (?) Chalmers.—GG 
Maniac, The.—C: G. Beede.—WR 19 
Maniac, The.—Matthew XI. Lewis.—BNL—CS 4— 

PPSr 

(Progress of Madness. The.)—PS 
Manifest Destiny.—H: W. Shaw.—PS 

(Josh Billings on Manifest Destiny.)—CS 2 
Manila Bay.—H. E. W.. Jr.—EDY—PAPm 
Manita. Sel. fr. —W: M’Donnell.—TCY 
Manitou’s Garden.—Lucy Larcon .—LCS 
Mankind. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Manliest Man. The.—G: W. Bungay.—HSS 2—SM 
Manly Boy, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—J^DP 
Manly Heart, The.—G: Wither. See Shepherd’s Reso¬ 
lution, The. 

Manly. Loving Boy, A.—Anon.—TFS 
Mannahatta.—Walt Whitman—AA 
Manners, 2 diff. br. sels. fr. — Ralph W. Emerson.— 
AE—WR 5 

Manners and Customs. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Mannix the Coiner.—M. Hogan.—PEB 4 
Mano; a Poetical History, Sels. fr. —Richard W. Dixon. 
Of a Vision of Hell, which a Monk Had.—VA 
Of Temperance in Fortune.—YA 
Skylark. The.—YA 

Manor Lord. The.—G: Houghton.—AA 
Man’s a Man for a’ That, A.—Rob’t Burns.—BS 4— 
FEP—OS 2—SM—SPE—WEP 3 
(For a’ That and a’ That.)—BNL—CR—FP— 
HSS 3—MBL—WCLG 2—YBF (abr.) 

(Honest Poverty.)—EPs—HBP 
(Is there f r Honest Poverty—C.)—PHS 
Man’s Capacity for Education.—Sumner Ellis.—FD 2 
Man’s Ingratitude.—W: Shakespeare. See As You 
Like It. 

Man’s Life. (Sel. fr. The Parting Hour.)—G: Crabbe. 
—FP 

Man’s Love.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 

Man’s Material Triumphs.—Fayet.—SS 
Man’s Mission.—Mrs. W. R. Wilde.—CS 4 
Man’s Mortality.—Simon Wastell. S e Microbiblion 
Man’s Name, A.—Richard Realf.—BAB—EDY 
Man's Pillow.—Irving Browne.—AA 
Man’s Story, A.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
"Man’s value and progress in this life must be meas¬ 
ured. A.”-—W. H. H. Murray.—GG 
Mansie Waugh’s First and Last Plav.—D. M. Moir.— 
CS 18 

Mantle of St. John de Matha, The.—J: G. Whittier.— 

CS 2 

Manual of Parliamentary Rules and Practice.—Anon. 
—PS 

Manual Training and Intellectual Development.— 

Anon.-—CP 

Many things thou Hast Given me, Dear Heart.— 
Alice W. Rollins.—AA 
Maple.-—T: D. English.—AD 
Maple Leaves.—T: B. Aldrich.—GN 
Maple-tree, The.—Susanna S. Moodie.—TCV 
Marathon.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. Sec Athens; Its Rise 
and Fall. 

Marathon.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Marathon by Starlight.—Richard Montgomery.—BLP 
Marble Faun, The, Sels. fr. —Nathaniel Hawthorne. 
Faun of Praxiteles, The. (Sel. fr. h. I.)—IR 
Frolic of the Carnival, A. (Sels. fr. hs. XLVIII. and 
XLIX.)—WR 5 


201 








Marble 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Marble Queen, The.—Sarah C. Woolsey.—TMD 
Marc Antony.—Anon.—CP 

Marc Antony’s Funeral Oration.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Julius Caesar. 

Marc Antony’s Original Oration. {Parody.) —Anon.— 
CS 18 

March.—Anon.—HP • 

March. {All the Year Round .)—POS 
March.—W: C. Bryant.—LLC 
{SI. abr.)— GN—PC—POS 
March.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
March. (C.) —Mary M. Dodge. 

(Nearly Ready.)—PoR 
(Spring.)—AD 

March. {Frag.) —Rob’t Loveman.—AA 
March.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
March.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
March. (C.) —May R. Smith. 

(What March Does— si. diff. vers. fr. Poems.)— 
YBT 

March.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
March.—C: H. Webb.—AA 
March.—Constance F. Woolson.—FMR 
March.—W: Wordsworth.—BFV—HBP—OS 1—PHS 
—PoR 

(After Rain.)—CEL 
(In March.)—PC 

(Written in March— C.) —AE—CGd—LC 
March for the Children.—E. A. Holbrook.—AD {si. 
abr. and w. music.) 

(Children’s Arbor Day March.)—AD 
March of Freedom, The.—Theodore Parker.—BLP 
March of Mind, The.—J: Loflland.—CS 12 
March of the Chinese Lanterns.—Anon.—WDM 
March of the Rebel Angels.—J: Milton. See Paradise 
Lost 

March, Song, and Drill with Dolls. — E. C. and L. J. 
Rook -DM 

March to Moscow, The.—Rob’t Southev.—FEP— 
OM (si. abr.) 

Marching Along.—W: B. Bradbury.—AWB — PAPm 
Marching Along. (In Cavalier Tunes.)—Rob’t Brown- 
ing.—EHT—FEP—MRS—VA 
Marching Song.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Marching Still.—M. Irving.—PAPm 
Marching through Georgia.—H. C. Work.—AWB— 
PAPm 

Marco Bozzaris.—Fitz-Greene Halleck.—AA—BNL— 
EDY — FEP — FTR — GN — HB — HBP — 
HNS—OS 2—PPSr—TAV—WCLG 2 
(Si. abr.) —BS 7—CS 1—OM—SM—TMD 
(Sel.) —SO—SS 
(Br. sel.) —AE—LLC 
(Patriot’s Death, The—hr. sel.) —GP 
Marco’s Death.—Beverly R. Wood.—CS 27 
Marcus Brutus on the Death of Caesar. — W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Julius Caesar. 

Marcus of Rome (in Historic Boys), Sel. fr. (Fes¬ 
tival of Mars, The.)—Elbridge S. Brooks.— 
WR 22 

Mare Mediterranean.—J: Nichol.—VA 
Margaret.—Walter S. Landor.—VA—YBF 
(Forsaken.)—VS 

(“Mother, I cannot mind my wheel.”)—OB 
Margaret: a Pearl.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Margaret Fuller.—Amos B. Alcott.—AA 
Margaret Gray.—C: Lamb. See Rosamund Gray. 
Margaret Love Peacock.—T: L. Peacock.—PGT 2— 
VA 

Margaret’s Broken Slate.—Anon.—DST 
Margaret’s Guest.—E. E. Lay.—CS 28 
Margaret’s Song in "Faust.”—Johann W. von Goethe. 
See Faust. 

Margarit® Sorori.—W: E. Henley.—OB 
Margarite of America, A, Br. sel. fr. (Solitary Shep¬ 
herd’s Song, The.)—T: Lodge.—EP 
Margery Daw.—F: E. Weatherly.—CS 21 
Margery Miller.—Anon.—CS 13' 

Margie’s Thanksgiving.—E. S. Bumstead.—HS 
Margins.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Marguerite.—Evelyn N. Schroeder.—BS 22—PFP 
Marguerite.—J: G. Whittier.—WR 5 
Marguerite of France.—Felicia D. Hemans.—CS 22— 
FMR—VSG 

Mariam, the Fair Queen of Jewry, Sel. fr. (Revenge 
of Injuries— sel. fr. Act IV.)—Lady Eliz. 
Carew.—BNL 
(True Greatness.)—YBF 
Marian.—T: Ashe.—VA 
Marian Drury.—Bliss Carman.—VA 
Mariana.—Alfred Tennyson.—AE (br. sel .)—OB 
Mariana in the South.—Alfred Tennyson.—HBP 


Marian’s Child.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora 
Leigh. 

Mariar in Heaven.—Mather D. Kimball.—CS 36 
Maria’s Purse.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Marie Antoinette, Sel. fr. (Execution of Louis XVI., 
The— dial.) —Anon.—DtS 

Marie Antoinette.—T: Carlyle. See French Revolu¬ 
tion, The. 

Marie Antoinette [Queen of France]. (Br. sel. fr. 

Reflections on the French Revolution.)—Ed¬ 
mund Burke.—OS 3 (abr.) —SS—VSG 
(Apostrophe to the Queen of France.)—PS 
(Queen of France and the Spirit of Chivalry, The.) 
—TMD 

Marie de Meranie, Sel. fr. (Parting of King Philip and 
Marie, The.)—J: W r . Marston.—VA 
Marigold.—H: S. Candee.—CG 2 
Marigold.—R • Garnett.—BFV 
Marigold Lane.—M. E. W.—TL 
Marigolds.—Susan Hartley.—NV 
Marigolds.—J: Keats.—HSS 1 

Marina and the River-god. W: Browne. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals 

Mariner’s Description of a Piano, A.—Anon.—CS 19 
Mariner’s Dream, The.—W: Dimond.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP 

(Sailor-boy’s Dream, The.)—CS 15—MYF—OM— 
SS 

Mariner’s Hymn.—Caroline B. Southey.—FP 
Mariners of England, The.—T: Campbell.—BFV 
(“Ye Mariners.”)—LH 

(Ye Mariners of England—C.)—BNL—BPB—BVC 
— CEL — CGd — CR — EHT — EPs — FEP — 
GN—GP —HB HBP — LC — OB — OS 1— 
PGT 1—PHS—PSR—WCLG 2—WEP 4 
Mariner’s Wife, The.— Jean Adam (at. also to W: J. 
Mickle).—FEP 

(Sailor’s Wife, The.)—BFV—BNL—GN—GP— 
LC—PGT 1 

(There’s nae Luck about the House.)—BS 6—EPs 
—HBP—WEP 3 

Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice, Sels. fr. — Lord 
Byron. 

Doge’s Sentence, The. (Fr. Act V., Sc. 1.)— 
MPD 

Dying Speech of Marino Faliero. (Fr. V., 3.)—SS 
(Curse of Marino Faliero, The— br. sel.) —CR 
Great Examples, Procreative Virtue of. (Sel. fr. 
II., 2.)—SS 

Marino Faliero to the [Venetian] Conspirators. 
(Br. sel. fr. III., 2.)—SS—VSG 
“They never fail,” etc. (Br. sel. fr. II., 2.)—GG 
Mario.—Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 

Marion’s Dinner.—Edward C. Jones.—CS 15—WR 10 
Marion’s Faith, Sel. fr. (Ray’s Ride— sel. fr. Ch. XIV.) 
—C: King.—SC 

Marion’s Lament.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Mariposa Lily, The.—Ina Coolbrith.—AA 
Mariquita, the Bandit’s Daughter.—Ella S. Cummins. 
—WR 5 

Marit.—T: Ashe.—VS 
Marit and I.—Anon.—BS 13 
Marit® Su®.—W: Philpot.—OB 

Marius amidst the Ruins of Carthage.—Winthrop M. 
Praed—OS 2 

Marjorie.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 

Marjorie’s Almanac. (C.) —T: B. Aldrich.—NV—PoR 
—SM 

(Our Almanac.)—AD 
Marjory May.—Anon.—CS 24 
“Mark.”—Ernest McGaffey.—AA 
Mark Antony Scene.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius 
C®sar. 

Mark Antony to the People on C®sar’s Death.—W: 

Shakespeare. See Julius C®sar. 

Mark of the Rose, The.—H. T. Kingsbury.—CG 1 
Mark Twain and a [or the] Reporter.—S: L. Clemens. 
See following. 

Mark Twain and the Interviewer.—S: L. Clemens.— 
BS 2—CS 12—KNE—SR 1 
(Encounter with an Interviewer, An— C.) —CR 
(Mark Twain and a [or the] Reporter— si. abr.) — 
PTS—SE 

Mark Twain as a Farmer.—S: L. Clemens.—DS 
Mark Twain Edits an Agricultural Paper.—S: L. 
Clemens.—CS 7 (abr.) 

(How I Edited [How I once Edited—C.] an Agri- 
ucltural Paper.)—SO 
(My Editing— cond.) —WR 2 
Mark Twain Introduces Himself.—S: L. Clemens.— 
DE—PS 

(Introduction, An.)—BeR 


202 




TITLE INDEX 


Martyr’s 


Mark Twain on Juvenile Pugilists.—SrL. Clemens.— 
CS 6 

Mark Twain on the 19th Century.—S: L. Clemens.— 
DCR 

Mark Twain on the Weather. (Speech on the Weather 
—C.)—S: L. Clemens.—CS 13 
(New England Weather.)—SA—WCLG 2 (si. abr.) 
Mark Twain Tells an Anecdote of A. Ward.—S: L. 
Clemens.—CS 8 

(Mark Twain’s Anecdote on A. Ward.)—CRR 
Mark Twain Visits Niagara. (Visit to Niagara, A— C.). 
S: L. Clemens.—CS 16 
(Day at Niagara, A.)—BS 6—SA 
Mark Twain’s Account of “Jim Smiley.”—S: L. Clem¬ 
ens. See Jumping Frog, The. 

Mark Twain’s Anecdote on A. Ward.—S: L. Clemens. 
See Mark Twain Tells an Anecdote of A. 
Ward. 

Mark Twain’s Description of European Guides.—S: L. 

Clemens. See Innocents Abroad. 

Mark Twain’s First Interview with Artemus Ward. 
—S: L. Clemens.—CS 4—DDR 
(My First Interview with Artemus Ward.)— 
MHR 

Mark Twain’s “Great Beef-contract.” See Facts in 
the Case of the Great Beef Contract, The. 

Mark Twain’s Mining Story.—S: L. Clemens.—SR 5 
Mark Twain’s Opinion of Chamber-maids. (Concern¬ 
ing Chamber-maids— C.) — S: L. Clemens.— 
CS 2 

Mark Twain’s Story of the Bad Little Boy.—S: L. 
Clemens.-—CS 9 

Mark Twain’s Story of the Good Little Boy.—S: L. 
Clemens.—CS 11 

Mark Twain’s Watch.—S: L. Clemens.—CS 15 
Marlborough at Blenheim.—Jos. Addison. See Cam¬ 
paign, The. 

Marlow Madrigal, A.—Jos. Ashby-Sterry.—VA 
Marmara.—Clara Barton.—TMR 
Marpessa, Br. sel. fr .—Stephen Phillips.—A VP 
Marmion, Sels. fr .—Walter Scott. 

Camp, The. (Can. IV., 23-31.)—WEP 4 
Christmas in [the] Olden Time. (Sel. fr. introd. to 
VI.)—BNL—OS 2 (abr .)—PEO (diff. abr.) 

( Christmas— sel .)—POS 

(Christmas Eve in the Olden Time— abr.) —FTR 
(Christmas in England— sel.) —GN 
(Old English Christmas, The— abr.) —BVC 
Constance de Beverly. (II., 17—33— cond.) —WR 1 
(Convent Scene from Marmion— abr.) —MR 
Death of Marmion [The]. (VI., 28—33— abr.) — 
SO—SS (sel.)— VSG (abr.) 

Flodden [Field], (VI., 22-32 — abr.) — BNI, — 
LH (abr.) 

(Sel.)—EHT— 1 TMD 
(Battle of Flodden, The—sel.)—GP 
In Memoriam: Nelson, Pitt, Fox. (Sel. fr. introd. 
to I.)—LH 

(Nelson, Pitt, Fox.)—OB 
(Pitt and Fox— sel.) —EHT 
Lochinvar. (Lady Heron’s Song—V., 12.)—BNL 
—BVC—CEL—CR—CSS—EPs — FEP — GN 
— HB — HBP — HSS2 — IR — LC — LH — 
MR — MRS — OS 2 — PC — PEB 3 — PPSr — 
SAE (br. sel.) —SS—VSG—WCLI 2 
(Lochinvar’s Ride.)—BS 2—CS 3—OM—SPE— 
(Young Lochinvar.)—BFV—BPB—CGd—FTR 
HNS—PHS—PSR 
Marmion. (VI., 13—15.)—FP 

(Marmion and Douglas— si. abr.) —BNL—CS 7— 
LLC—WCLG 1 

(Abr .)—CR — EA — FTR — HB — HNS — 
—KNE— OM—SM—SPE 
(Marmion Taking Leave of Douglas— abr .)—SS 
(Parting of Douglas and Marmion.)—OS 2 (abr.) 
—PPSr (si. abr.) 

Norham Castle. (I., 1—8.)—BNL 
Where Shall the Lover Rest? (III., 10, 11.)— 
BPB—FEP—PGT 1—PYO 
Marmion and Douglas.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 
Marquis de La Fayette. (Sel. fr. Lafayette, the Faith¬ 
ful One.)—C: Sumner.—WR 10 
Marquis of Lome’s Visit to the North-west, The.—W: 
Kirby.—TCV 

Marquis of Lossie, The, Sel. fr. (Mr. Graham and Lady 
Clementina—Ch. LX., si. abr.) —G: Macdonald. 
—FTR 

Marriage.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 

Marriage. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler. 
—HPE 

Marriage. The. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.—TDT 
Marriage.—S: Rogers. See Human Life. 


Marriage a La Mode. (A Tetralogy.)—G: A. Baker, 
Jr.—PLD 

Marriage Ceremony, The.—Anon.—BDD—CRR 
Marriage Hymn.—Shakespeare and Fletcher. See 
Two Noble Kinsmen, The. 

Marriage of Geraint, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Idylls of the King. 

Marriage of Santa Claus, The.—Anon.—SR 3 
Marriage of the Dwarfs, The.—Edmund Waller.— 
WEP 2 

(Of the Marriage of the Dwarfs— C.) —HPE 
Marriage of the Flowers, The.—S. H. M. Byers.—AD— 
DR 

Marriage of Tirzah and Ahirad, The, Br. sel. fr. —T: B. 
Macaulay.—SAE 

Marriage Ring, A.—G: Crabbe.—OB 
Marriage Tour, A.—S. J. Pardessus.—CS 35 
Married by the New Justice of the Peace.—Anon.— 
MND 

Married Love-letter, A.—Anon.—PR—YA 
Married Lover, The.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel 
in the House, The. 

Married Man and the Bachelor, The.—Anon.—SR 4 
Married State, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Married to Josiah Allen.—Marietta Holley. See My 
Opinions and Betsy Bobbet’s. 

Marry me. Darlint, To-night.—W. W. Fink.—AWH— 
BS 13 

Marrying a Poetess.—Anon.—MAD 
Marrying for Money.—H. E. McBride.—SD 
Marseillaise, The.—Rouget de l’lsle.—OS 2 
(SI. abr.) —BNL—BS 24 
(French National Hymn.)—GP 
(Marseilles Hymn.)—SR 8 
Marseilles Hymn.—Rouget de l’lsle. See foregoing. 
Marsh Song—Sunrise.—Eugene Field.—GH 
Marsh Symphony, A.—Roy L. M’Cardell.—WR 20 
Marshal Ney’s Last Charge at Waterloo.—Joel T. 

Headley. See Napoleon and his Marshals. 
Marshes of Glynn, The.—Sidney Lanier. — AA — 
TAS (br. sel.) 

Marston Moor.—Winthrop M. Praed.—MYF 

(Sir Nicholas at Marston Moor—C.) — EDY — 
PEB 3 

Marsyas.—Lewis Morris. See Epic of Hades, The. 
Marsyas.—C: G. D. Roberts.—VA 
, Martha.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—TAS 
Martha, Song fr. (Gypsy’s Warning, The.)—Flotow 
and St. Georges.—KER 
Martha or Mary?—C. A. Mason.—TAS 
Marthy Virginia’s Hand.—G: P. Lathrop.—TAV— 
WR4 

Martial Friendship.—W: Shakespeare. See Coriolanus. 
Martial Music.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 

Martin Chuzzlewit, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Quarrel of Sairey Gamp and Betsev Prig. (Sel. fr. 

Ch. XLIX.— ad. as dial.) —MPD 
Ruth Pinch’s Housekeeping and what Came of it. 

(Sel. fr. Chs. XXXIX. and LI 11.)—BS 23 
St rm at Sea. (Sel. fr. Ch. XV.)—CS 27 
(Wild Night at Sea, A.)—BS 17 
Unsuccessful Attempt to Raise the Wind, An. 

(Sel. fr. Ch. IV.— arr. as dial.)— MPD 
When Duty Begins. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXI.) — 
CS 10 

Martin Luther.—C. P. Krauth.—TMD 
Martin Luther at Potsdam.—-Barry Pain.—NA 
Martin Luther’s Letter to his Little Son. (Arr.)— 

Martin Luther.—OS 1 
Martin Relph.—R: Browning.—WR 19 
Martin to his Man. (Fr. Deuteromelia.)—Anon.—NA 
Martin’s Puzzle.—George Meredith.—HSS 2 
Martin’s Reward.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Martyr and the Conqueror, The.—H: W. Beecher. See 
Abraham Lincoln. 

Martyr Chief, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Ode Recited 
at the Harvard Commemoration. 

Maftyr of the Arena, The.— Epes Sargent.—CS 21— 
NPS—YP 

Martyr President, The—Henry Ward Beecher. See 
Abraham Lincoln. 

Martyr to Science; or, Wanted, a Confederate, A. 

(Farce.) —F. Weston.—BC 
Martyrdom of St. Lucy, The.—J: M. Neale.—EDY 
Martyrdom of the Archbishop of Paris, The.—J: M. 
Neale—EDY 

Martyrs, The.—Emily Dickinson.—TAS 
Martyr’s Hymn, The.—Martin Luther (tr. by W: J: 
Fox).—BNL—HBP 

Martyrs of the Maine, The.—R. Hughes.—PAPm 
Martyrs of Uganda, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 26 
Martyr’s Memorial.—Louise I. Guiney.—AA 

203 






Martyr-spy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Martyr-spy, The. ( Sel. fr. Address at Unveiling Hale 
Statue.)—C: D. Warner.—TMR 
Marullus to the Roman Populace.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Julius Caesar. _ 

Marvel of Marvels.—Christina Georgina Rossetti.— 
OB 

Mary.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—PGT 2 
Mary—A Reminiscence.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—PGT 2 
Mary Alice Smith (Where is Mary Alice Smith?—C.).— 
Jas. W. Riley.—BS 19 ( abr.) 

Mary Ambree.—Anon. (In Percy’s Reliques of An¬ 
cient English Poetry.)—BPB 
Mary Ames.—Anon.—NA 
Mary and Dinah.—Lizzie J. Rook.—PS—TT 
Mary and her Pet Squirrel.—Anon.—AD 
Mary and the Swallow.—Marion Douglas.—PS 
Mary Ann’s Child.—W: Barnes.—CGd 
Mary Ann’s Escape.—S. Jennie Smith.—CS 29 
Mary Ann’s Wedding.—Anon.—BeR 
Mary Arden.—Eric Mackay.—VA 

Mary at the Sepulchre. — Edwin Arnold. See Light 
of the World, The. 

Mary Booth.—T: W. Parsons.—A A 
Mary Butler’s Ride.—B: F. Taylor.—BAB 
Mary Donnelly.—W: Allingham.—CR—EPs 

(Lovelv Mary Do nelly.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—VA 
—VS 

Mary Ellen Attends a School of Elocution.—Mary S. 

Hopkins.—WR 26 
Mary Jane.—Anon.—NA 
Mary Jane and I.—Annie Rothwell.—DR 
Mary Macneil.—Erskine Conolly.—FEP 
Mary Magdalene. At the Door of Simon the Pharisee. 
—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 

Mary Maloney’s Philosophy. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
—NPS—YP 

Mary Morison. (C.)—Rob’t Burns.—BNL—CEL— 
FEP —GP —MBI. —OB—PGT 1—WEP 3— 
YBF 

(D- v'i io .)—LH 

Mary O’Connor, the Volunteer’s Wife.—Mary A. Den¬ 
ison—CD 

Irishwoman’s Lament, The.)—PR 
Irishwoman’s Letter, The.)—CS 3—I.LC—SA 
(Volunteer’s Wife, The.)—CR—MMR 
(Versions vary si.) 

Mary of Castle Cary.—Hector Macneil.—AE—FEP 
Mary of ti e Wild Moor. (With music.) —Anon.—NPS 
YP 

Mary, Queen of Scots. (SI. abr .)—H G. ’tell.—NPS 
—PR (si. abr. )—YP 
(Abr. and ptlii. diff.) —CS 9—DS 
Mary Queen of Scots.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—PGT 2 
Mary Queen of Scots.—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
Mary Stuart, Sel. fr. (Execution of Queen Mary— sel. 
fr. Ch. XXXIV.)—Alphonse de Lamartine.— 
BS 11 

Mary Stuart. Sels. fr. —Friedrich Schiller (tr. by Jos.. 
Mellish). 

Mary Stuart. (Act III., Sc. 2.)—BS 6—CDD 
(Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland.t—PS 
Mary Stuart. (Act III., Sc. 4.)—FTR—SR 6— 
WR 11 

Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland.—Friedrich Schiller. 
See foregoing. 

Mary the Cook-maid’s Letter to Doctor Sheridan — 
Jonathan Swift.—THP 

Mary the Maid of the Inn.—R: Soutnev.—CGd—CS 11 
—DS 

Mary the Mother of Jesus.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—SR 3 
“Mary, the mother sits on the hill.”—Langdon E. 
Mitchell.—TAS 

Maryland.—J. R. Randall.—EPs 

(My Maryland.)—AA—ASI.—A WB—GP 
Maryland Battalion, The.—J: W. Palmer.—AA—BAB 
—EDY 

Maryland Yellow-throat, The.—H : Van Dyke.— ASL 
—TMR 

Mary’s Cradle Song.—W: C. Gannett.—TAS—YBT 
(Mary’s Manger Song.)—I AS 
Mary's Diminutive Sheep.—Anon.—CS 10 
Mary’s Dream.—J: Lowe.—PYO 
Mary’s Lamb.—Sarah J. Hale.—PC 
Mary’s Night Ride.—G: W. Cable. See Dr. Sevier. 
Mary’s Singing-lesson.—Anon.—WR 2 
Mary’s Story of the Crucifixion.—Edwin Arnold. See 
Light of the World, The. 

“Ma’s Attic.”—Forrest Crissey.—HBR 
Mascha.—Ivan Tourgenieff.—WR 8 
Masher, The.—C: G. Leland.—AWH—THP 
Mask of Anarchy, The, tir. sel. fr. (“Men of England, 
heirs of glory”— sts. 37, 38.)—Percy B. Shelley. 
—YBF 


Mask of Death, The.—Paul Hamilton Hayne.—TAS 
Masked Ball, The.—Anon.—SED 
Masks.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Masks.—R: Burton.—TAV » 

Masonic Emblems.—Anon.—CS 2 
Masque, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 28 
Masque and the Reality, The.—W: Rounseville Alger. 
—BS 22 

Masque at the Marriage of the Lord Hayes, Sel. fr. 
(Triumph Now—song IV.)—T: Campion.— 
EHT 

Masque of Alfred, Sel. fr. Jas. Thomson. See Rule 
Britannia. 

Masque of Oberon, Br. sel. fr. (Buz [or Buzz], Quoth 
the Blue Fly.)—ELP—NA 

Masque of Pandora, The, Br. sels. fr. —H: W. Long¬ 
fellow. 

“I do not love thee less for what is done.” (Fr. 
Pt. VIII.)—BIL 

Voices of the Forests, The. (Fr. Pt. VI.)—AD 
Masque of Pleasure and Virtue (Pleasure Reconciled 
to Virtue—C.)—Songs 1, 2, 3.—Ben Jonson. 
—EPs 

Masque of the Gentlemen of Gray’s Inn and the Inner 
Temple, A, Sels. fr. (Song: “Shake off your 
heavy trance.”)—Ben Jonson.—EDY (1st 
song)—EPs (1st and 2nd songs and sel. fr. 4th.) 
Masque of the Inner Temple, A.—W: Browne. Sec 
Inner Temple Masque, The. 

Masque of the Metamorphosed Gipsies, A, Sels. fr. — 
B Jonson. 

“Fairy beam upon you, The.”—ELP 

(Song from Gypsies’ Metamorphoses— 2nd song.) 
—EPs 

(Wish, A.)—LC—OS 1 
Song: “The owl is abroad.”—EPs 
Masque of the New Year, The.—Elsie M. Wilbor.— 
DR 

Masque of the Seasons, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Masquerade, A.—Anon.—PC—WCL 

(Only Playing.)—BR (si. abr.) —CS 22 
Masquerading. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 

YFE 

Masques, Sel. fr. (Sel. fr. song in Time Vindicated.)— 
Ben Jonson.—BNL 

Mass. The.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel. The. 

Mass’ Crawford, Isam, and the Deer.—Harry S. 

Edwards. See Two Runaways, The. 

Mass Meeting at Saratoga. Sel. fr. (Log-cabin, The.) 

— Fan’1 Webster.—FD 1 
Massachusetts.—H: C. Lodge.—SC 
(Tribute to Massachusetts, A.)—NC 
Massachusetts.—Dan’l Webster. See Reply to Hayne, 
The. 

Massachusetts and South Carolina.—Dan’l Webster. 

See Reply to Hayne. The. 

Massachusetts Line, The.—Rob’t Lowell.—AWB 
Massacre at Scio, The.—W: Cullen Bryant.—EDY 
Massacre of the Macpherson.—W: E. Aytoun.—FEP 
—HBP—VA 

Massacre of Zoroaster, The.—Fs. Marion Crawford. 
See Zoroaster. 

Massa’s in de Cold [or th-' Cold, Cold] Ground.— 
Stephen C. Foster.-—AA—TAV 
Massasauga, The.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 
Master.—A. Conan Doyle.—WR 26 
Master and Man.—Anon.—NA 

Master Character of Victor Hugo, The.—J. C. Sellers, 
Jr.—SR 11 

Master Johnny’s Next-door Neighbor.—Fs. Bret Harte. 
—BS 9—CS 19 

Master of the Situation.—Anon.—MND 
Master Skv-lark, Songs fr. —J: Bennett. 

Sky-lark’s Song, The. (Fr. Ch. XXXVI.)—AA 
Song of the Hunt, The. (Fr. Ch. I.)—A A 
Master Sleeps, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Master Spirit, The. (Br. sel. fr. The Conspiracy of 
Charles, Duke of Byron, Act III., Sc. 1.)—G: 
Chapman.—EPs 
Master Squirrel.—Anon.—CPI 

"Master! to do great work for thee, my hand.” (Life 
Mosaic— C.) —Frances R. Havergal.—GG 
Master-builder, The.—Isabella V. Crawford.—TCV 
Master-chord, The.—W: Caldwell Roscoe.—VA 
Master-knot, The.—Omar Khayyam (Fitzgerald). See 
RubdiyAt. 

Masterpiece of Brother Felix, The.—R: E: White.— 
CS 27 

Master’s Invitation, The.—A. D. F. Randolph.—AA 
Masters of the Situation.—Jas. T. Fields.—BS 7—SPE 
Master’s Pen—A Confession.—Anon.—SR 13 
Master’s Touch, The.—Anon.—BS 26—CS 36 


204 




TITLE INDEX 


May 


Master’s Touch, The.—Horatius Bonar.—BNL—BS 7 
—-GP—HDL—SSS—VA 
(God’S Hand— abr.) —SSS 

Master’s Work, The.—W: Ordway Partridge.—TAS 
Mat and Hal and I.—Onlie Ama Snow.—CS 14 
Match, A.—Algernon C: Swinburne.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP—PYO—TFY—VA—VS 
Match and Shingle Social.—Anon.—EuE 
Match of Love, The.—Anon.—FLS 
Match-boy, The. ( Tab.) —Anon. —COS—NPS—PP— 
YP 

Matches and Overmatches.—Dan’l Webster. See Re¬ 
ply to Hayne, The. 

Match-making Mamma, The.—Anon.—WR 7 
Mater Amabilis.—Emma Lazarus.—TMR 
Mater Dolorosa.—W: Barnes. See Mother’s Dream, 
The. 

Mater Dolorosa.—C. C. Hahn.—HDL 
Mater Se\ era.—Stephen L. Gwynn.—TIP 
Mathematical.—Lehigh Burr.—CG 2 
Mathematics and Physics. (Sel. ad. fr. Genesis of Sci¬ 
ence.)—Herbert Spencer.—SE 
Matildy Goes to Meetin’.—L: Eisenbeis.—CS 33 
Matildy’s Beau.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Matin Song.—T: Heywood. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 
Matinal Musings. (C.) —G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
(Next Morning.)—CS 20 
Matins.—W: H. Burleigh.—TAS 

Matins (Mattens, or Morning Prayer— C.) —Rob’t Her¬ 
rick.—EPs 

(Morning Prayer— abr.) —YBF 
Matins [at St. Mary’s].—Edna Dean Proctor.—CS 21— 
OS 2 

Matrimonial Adventures of Dick Macnamara. (Sel. 
ad. fr. Hector O’Halloran.)—W. H. Maxwell.— 
DI 

Matrimonial Advertisement, The.—Clara Augusta.— 
CS 9—SD 

Matrimonial Bugs and the Travelers, The.—Anon.— 
HR 


Matrimonial Controversy, A.—Anon.—WR 16 
(Gimlet vs. Corkscrew.)—SR 13 
Matrimonial Happiness.—J: Lapraik.—FEP 
Matrimonial Mix, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 35 

Matrimonial Tiff, A.-Pickering.—MDD 

Matrimony.—Anon.—CS 19 

Matrons and Maids.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 
Matrons and Maids. (Fr. Beppo.)—Lord Byron.— 
TUP 

Matt. F. Ward’s Trial for Murder.—J: J. Crittenden.— 
CS 18—NPS—YP 

Mattens.—Rob’t Herrick. See Matins. 

Matter of Duty, A.—Anthony Hope. See Dolly Dia¬ 
logues, The. 

Matter of Opinion, A. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Matter of Words, A.—Anon.—WR 20 
Matthew the Miner.—Frank L. Stanton.—WR 26 
Matthew XXV.— (Bible .)—SPE 
Mattie's Retort.—Anon.—WR 4 

Mattie’s Wants and Wishes.—Grace Gordon.—DS— 
HP (si. a6r.)—NPS—YA—YP 
Matumus’ Address to his Band.— E: Spencer.—CS 17 
Maud.—H: S. Leigh.—THP 
Maud, Sels. fr. —Alfred Tennyson. 

Come into the Garden, Maud. (Pt. J.,22.)—BNL 
—FEP—HBP—IR—VA 
(Garden Song, The.)—EPs—PHS 
(“1 said to the rose, etc.”— br. sel .)—AE 
(Maud.)—OB 

(Sel.) —FTA—OH 

“For I irust, if an enemy’s fleet came yonder round 
by the hill.” (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I.. 1.)—LH 
Maud.—EPs (Pt. I., 5.)—WEP 4 (Pt. I., 18.) 

“O, let the solid ground.” (Pt. I., 11.) PGT 2 
"O [wr. Oh], that ’twere possible.” (Pt. II., 4.)— 
AVP—HBP—PGT 2 


-GN—OS 1—SN 


(Br. sel.) —OB—YBF 
Prayer, The. (Pt. X., V.)—EPs 
Shell. The. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., 2.)- 
—TMD—TMR—VA 

Maud Muller. (Tab. on Whittier’s poem.) —Anon.— 
BS 9—TCP 

Maud Muller.—Hans Breitman. See Maud Muller in 
Dutch. 

Maud Muller.—J: G. Whittier—AA—AP—BNL— 
BS 3 — CS 1 — FEP — FP — FTR — HBP— 
HNS (si. abr.)— MR—SA 
Maud Muller. (A New Version.)—Anon.—DI.S 
Maud Muller, Chinese Version of.—Jos. B. Smiley.— 


CS 30 

Maud Muller Drill.—Anon.—WDM 
Maud Muller [in Dutch],— Hans Breitman.—BDD— 
BeR—DFY—DRIt 


Maud Muller’s Moving.—Anon.—SR 3 

Maude and the Cricket.—Anon.—NV 

Maude Clare.—Christina Rossetti.-—FEP—PEB 3 

Maud’s Birthday.—Anon.—COS—PP—PS (si. abr.) 

Maud’s Command; or, Yielding to Temptation.—H. E. 

McBride.—MTD 
Maureen.—J: Todhunter.—OB 
Maurice de Gudrin.—Maurice F. Egan.—AA—TAS 
Maurine, Sel. fr. (My Ships —verses fr. Pt. III.)—Ella 
W. Wilcox.—SR II 

Mawgan of Melhuach.—Rob’t S. Hawker.—VA 
Maximilian.—J: G. Saxe.—EDY 

Maxims of George Washington. (Br. sels. fr. Farewell 
Address and fr. First Inaugural Address.)— 
DFR 

Maxims to Guide a Young Man.—Anon.—KNE 
Maximus. (Abr .)—Adelaide A. Procter.—SSS 
(“I hold him great, who for love’s sake.”)—GG 
May.—Anon.—AD (in Maiden Spring, The.)—HSS 1 
May.—Anon.—DST 
May.—Anon.—PEO , 

May.—R. M. Alden.—NV 

May.-Clarke.—AD 

May.—H. S. Cornwell.—TAV 
May.—Helen B. Curtis.—NV 
May.—Danske C. Dandridge.—TAS 
May.—Marg. Deland.—YBT 
May.—J. C. Harrison.—CG 3 
May.—Ben Jonson. See Vision of Delight , The. 
May.—W: G. Park—AD 
May.—Jas. Gates Percival.—BNL—HBP 
(Reign of May, The-— C .)—FEP 
May.—Eben E. Rexford.—AD 
May.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
May.—C. R. Saunders.—CG 3 
May.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL—PoR 
May.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
May.—Edmund Spenser. See Shepheardes Calendar, 
The. 

May.—Edward, Lord Thurlow.—OB (abr.) 

(Song to May.)—FEP—HBP 
May.—T: Watson.—FEP 
May and Death.—Rob’t Browning.—WEP 4 
May and Love.—Stopford A. Brooke.—BIL 
May Bug, The.—Annette von Brandis.—WR 12 
May Celebration.—Anon. See May Celebration for 
Young Children. 

May Celebration.—Anon.—DFR—KJ (I.) 

May Celebration.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
May Celebration (II.).—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

May Celebration [for Young Children],—Anon.—DFR 
—KNS 

May Colvin.—Anon.—BB 

May Court in Greenwood.—Laura U. Case.—CS 14 

May Day.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 

May Day.—G:Darley. See Sylvia; or. The May Queen. 

May Day.—Emma A. Opper.—AD 

May Day. See also May-day. 

Mav Day—a Moving Drama.—Florence Howe Hall.— 
ASD 

May Days.—Anon.—WR 14 

May, 1840. (Sonnets on the Seasons, V.) — Hartley 
Coleridge.—WEP 4 

May Flower, The.—Hopestill Goodwin.—AD 
May in the Green-wood.—Anon.—OB 
May Margaret.—Thdophile Marzials.—VA—YBF 
May Memories.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
May Morning, A.-—T: Hood.—AD 
(Song— C.) —HBP—VS 

May Morning.—J: Milton.—AD—BNL—CEL — YBF 
(On May Morning.)—CGd—LC 
(Song: A May Morning.)—POS 
(Song on Mav Morning— C.) —ELP—FEP-—GN— 
HBP—OS 2—PYO—SE 
May Morning.—Eliza L. Sproat.—AD 
May Morning.—Celia Thaxter.—AA 
May Morning Lesson, A.—Anon.—AD 
May Queen, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FAD 
May Queen, The. ( Diff. dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Mav Queen. The.—Alfred Tennyson.—BNL—CS 2— 
FEP—HBP—PC—SE (br. sel.) 

(Cond.) —FP—TCP (w. tab.) 

(Sel.)— AD—OS 1—PHS 

May Queen Conclusion. (Concl.— si. abr .)—BS 2 
New ^ ear’s Eve. (Br. sel .)—SE 
May Song, A.—Anon.—AD 

May Song, A.—Mary M. Lamb, Lady Currie.—VA 
May Song, A.—-Anna M. Pratt.—AD 
“May sun sheds an amber light, The.”—W: C. 
Bryant.—AA 

“May the glad dawn.”—Anon —FHS (abr.) 

(Easter Greeting.)—TFS 


205 






May 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AXD RECITATIONS 


May 30, 1893.—J: K. Bangs.—AA 
May to April.—Philip Freneau.—AD 
“May you never say of a brother dear.”—Phoebe Cary. 
See To the Children. 

May-children.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
May-day.—Anon.—DJS—WR 17 (br. sel.) 

May-day. Sel. fr. (April [and May].)—Ralph W. Em¬ 
erson.—GN—POS 
May-day.—Rob’t Herrick.—CEL 

(Corinna’s Going a-Maying— C.) —EP—EPs—FEP 
—OB—WEP 2 

(Corinna’s Maying.)—OEL—PGT 1 
(Going a-Maying.)—GN—LH 
May-day. See also May Day. 

May-day Song. ( Old English.) —A- on.—OS 2 
(Hitchen Slay-day Song, The.)—CGd 
(Kitchen May-day Song— abr.) —EDY 
May-day Sports. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Maydes Metamorphosis, The, Sel. fr. (Song of the 
Fairies— fr. Act II., Sc. 2.)—J: Lyly.—FEP 
(Urchin’s Dance, The.)—ELP 
Mayflower, The.—Erastus W. Ellsworth.—AA—WR 10 
Mayflower, The.— E: Everett. See First Settlement of 
New England, The. 

Mayflower, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Mayflower, The.—J: M’Pherson.—TCV 
Mayflower.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AA 
Mayflowers, The.—J: G. Whittier.—NV 
Maymie’s Story of Red Riding Hood.- 1 —Jas. W. Riley. 
—CW 

Mayonette River, The. ( Tulane Collegian.) —CG 3 
Mayor of Scuttleton, The.—Mary M. Dodge.—NA 
May-pole, The.—Anon.—WR 1 
Maypole, A. (Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
May-pole Dance, The.—Anon.—DFR 
May-pole Drill, No. I.—A. E. Hurst.—ID 
May-pole Drill, No. II.—Marguerite W. Morton.—ID 
May’s Apple-tree.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
May’s Five Dollar Note.—Anon.—HVD 
May’s Flower.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Mazeppa (C). —Lord Byron. (Diff. br. sels.) —AE— 
BNL—FP—HNS—SE 
(Mazeppa’s Ride— cond.) —MRS 
Mazeppa’s Ride.—Lord Byron. See foregoing. 
Mazurka of Chopin’s, A.—C: F. Richardson.—W T R 2 
Mazzini.—Laura C. Redden.—BNL—GP 
Me and Bill.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 26 
Me and [oran’] Jim. (Chicago Times.) —BS20—WR 7 
Me and Jones.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 26 
Me and my Dog. (Harper’s Weekly.) —CRR 
Me and Thee.—(TV. by) Ellice Hopkins.—FLS 
Meadow Lands, The.—Arthur W. H. Eaton.—TCV 
Meadow Lark, The.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 
Meadow Larks.—Ina Coolbrith.—GMS 
Meadow Road, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Meadow Talk.—Caroline Leslie.—GMS 
Meagher’s Defense.—T: F. Meagher.—SC 

(On Being Found Guilty of Treason.)—CS 3 
Mean Man, A.—Anon.—PS 

(Gunner and the Bird. The.)—COS—PP 
Meaning of the Flag, The.— H: W. Beecher. See 
National Flag, The. 

Meaning of the Four Centuries, The.—Anon.—WR 10 
Meaning of Victory, The.—C: Devens.—TMR 
Means of Acquiring Distinction,—Sydney Smith.— 
PEO 

Means to Attain Happy Life, The. (Martial— tr. by) 
H: Howard, Earl of Surrey.—BNL—ELP— 
FEP—HBP—OB—WEP 1 
Measure for Measure, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Each and All. (Br. sel. fr. Act I., Sc. 1.)—EPs 
(Measure for Measure, Br. sel. fr.) —BNL 
Frustra. (Song fr. IV., 1— also contained in Beau¬ 
mont and Fletcher’s The Bloody Brother, V., 
2.)—PGT 1 
(Madrigal.)—FT A 

(Measure for Measure, Act IV., Sc. 1, Sel. fr.) — 
ELP 

(Song from “Measure for Measure.”)—ES 
("Take, O, take those lips away.”)—EPs—OB— 
YBF 

(IF. add. st. — form found in The Bloody 
Brother.)—BNL—GP— HBP 
Life and Death. (Br. sel. fr. III., 1.)—EPs 
Sister Pleads for a Brother’s Life, A. (II., 2— 
abr.) —CS 10 

Abuse of Authority. (Br. sel.) —BNL 
(Merciful Heaven!— abr.) —EPs 
Pravers. (Br. sel.) —EPs 

Measure for Measure.—Harriet P. Spofford.—BIL— 
FTA 

Measure of Beauty, The. (Give Beauty all her Right 
— C.) —T: Campion.—ELP 


Measure of the Perfect Life, The.—Ben Jonson. See 
To the Immortal Memory and Friendship of 
tha Noble Pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir Henry 
Morrison. 

"Measures not Men.”—G: Canning.—SS 
Measuring the Baby.—Emma Alice Brown. — CS 12— 
PR—YA 

Mechanical Epoch, The.—J. P. Kennedy.—SS 
(Age of Work, The.)—BLP 

Medal, The. A Satire against Sedition. (C.) —J: Dry- 
den. 

(Epistle to the Whigs.)—ESs 
Meddlesome Matty.—[Ann and] Jane Taylor. — BVC 
—OS 1 

Medical Man, A. (Comedietta.) —W: S. Gilbert.— DT 
Medieval Eventide Song.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Mediocrity in Love Rejected (Song— C.).— T: Carew. 
(Give me more Love [or more Disdain].)—BNL— 
FLS—FTA—YBF 
Meditation.—S. G. Bulfinch.—TAS 
Meditation for his Mistress, A.—Rob’t Herrick.—OB 
Meditation in Winter.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Meditation upon a Broomstick, A.—Jonathan Swift.— 
ESs 

Meditations of a Hindoo Prince and Skeptic.—Sir Alfred 
C. Lyall. See following. 

Meditations of a Hindu Prince.—Sir Alfred C. Lyall.— 
A VP—VA 

(Hindoo’s Search for Truth, A.— abr.) —GP 
(Meditations of a Hindoo Prince and Skeptic.)— 
HBP 

Meditations on Immortality.—Adair Welcker.—BS 19 
Medley: “Oh dear! Oh dear! Oh dear me, suz!” etc. 

—Emma Dunning Banks—Bit 
Medley, A: “On Linden, when the sun,” etc.— Eli*. 
M. Irving.—CH 

Medley, A: “Once upon a midnight dreary.”—Anon. 
—BS 16 

Medley, A: “The boy stood on the burning deck.”— 
Clara J. Denton.—WLO 

Medley: “To be, or not to be—that is the question.” 
—H. M. Soper.—SR 3 

Medley—Mary’s Little Lamb.—Anon.—CS 18—SR 1 
Medusa.—Rob’t K. Weeks.—AA 
Meerschaum.—"Wrongfellow.”—PPh 
Meet we no Angels, Pansie?—T: Ashe.—OB 
(At Altenahr.)—VS 

Meeting.—Rob’t Browning. See Meeting at Night. 
Meeting.—G:Crabbe. See Tales of the Hall. 

Meeting.—Christina Rossetti.—YBF 
(Pause. A—C.)—PGT 2 
Meeting, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BNL 
Meeting after Long Absence.—Lilia C. Perry.—AA 
Meeting at Night.—Rob’t Browning.—A VP—MRS— 
OB—VA—WR 15 
(Meeting.)—BNL—YBF 

Meeting of Evangeline and Gabriel, The.—H:W. Long¬ 
fellow.— See Evangeline. 

Meeting of Liquor Dealers, A.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Meeting of Orion and Artemis.—R: H. Home. See 
Orion: an Epic Poem. 

Meeting of Orlando and Rosalind, The.—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See As You Like It. 

Meeting of the Clabberhuses, The.— Sam W. Foss.— 
AWH—THP—WR 25 

Meeting of the Dryads, The. (Sel.) —Oliver Wendell 
Holmes.—^AD 

Meeting of the Ships, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—BNL 
—CSS 

Meeting of the Waters, The. (C.) —T: Moore.—FEP 
(Vale of Avoca, The.)—BNL 
Meeting-house is Split, The.—L: Eisenbeis.—CS 34 
Meeting-place, The. (C.) —Horatius Bonar.—OS 2 
(We shall Meet and Rest— abr.) —LLC 
Meg Blane, Sel. fr. (“O Mither, dinna dee!”— sel. fr. 

Pt. IV.)—Rob’t Buchanan.—GP 
Meg May’s Valentine.—Anon.—HS 
Meg Merrilies.—J: Keats.—LC—PoR 
Mein Katrine’s Brudder Hans.—Emma Dunning 
Banks.—BR 

Melancholia.—Anon.—NA • 

Melancholia.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See Melan¬ 
choly. 

Melancholy. (Fr. The Nice Valour, Act III., Sc. 3.)— 
OB—PGT 1—YBF 

(“Hence, all ye [or you] vain delights.”)—BNL— 
HBP 

(Melanc[h]olia.)—CEL—FEP 
(Poet’s Mood.)—EPs 
(Song.)—WEP 2 
(Sweetest Melancholy.)—ELP 
Melancholy. — Rob’t Burns. See Man was Made to 
Mourn. 


206 




TITLE INDEX 


Menagerie 


Melancolia.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See Melan¬ 
choly. 

Melencolia.—Jas. Thomson. See City of Dreadful 
Night, The. 

Melendy Prize Oration, The.—Stephen A. Douglas.— 
'SR 12 

Melik the Black.—Clinton Scollard.—BS 20 
Melincourt, Sel. fr. (Flower of Love, The.)—T: Love 
Peacock.—WEP 4 

Melismata, Sel. fr. (Bellman’s Song, The.)—Anon.— 
ELP 

Melrose Abbey.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel, The. 

Melrose by Moonlight.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel, The. 

Melting Moments.—Anon.—CS 8—DDR—MHR 
Melting of the Earl’s Plate.—G: W. Thombury.—EHT 
—VA 

Melville and Coghill.—Andrew Lang.—VA 
Membranous Croup and the McWilliamses. (Experi¬ 
ence of the McWilliamses with Membranous 
Croup—C.)—S: L. Clemens.—BS 5—SR 10 
Memento Mori.—G: Herbert.—LH 

(Virtue [or Vertue]— C.) —ELP—EPs—FEP—FP 
—GP—HBP—LC—OB—OS 2—PHS 
(Virtue Immortal.)—BNL—PYO—YBF 
(Virtuous Soul, The.)—CEL 
"Memento Mori.”—H: Peterson.—CS 18 
Memnon.—Clinton Scollard.—AA 

Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, The, Sel. fr. (Princess’s 
Tragedy, A.— sel. fr. Ch. XII.)—W: M. Thack¬ 
eray.—WGS 

Memorabilia.—Rob’t Browning.—VA—YBF 

Memorable Dessert, A.—Anon.—HBP 

Memorial Address on Gen. George H. Thomas.—Jas A. 

Garfield. See Gen. George H. Thomas: His 
Life and Character. 

Memorial Address on the Life and Character of James 
A. Garfield. (C.)—Jas. G. Blaine. 

(Eulogy on Garfield— abr.) —BS 10 

Death of Garfield[, The]. (.Sel.) —FD 1—NC— 
PPS—SC—SSD (si. abr.) —TMD—WCLG 1 
(Eulogy on President Garfield.)—LLC 
(Oration on James A. Garfield.)—CS 21 
Garfield’s Early Life. (Sel.) —FD 2 
Memorial Day.—Anon.—DFR 
Memorial Day.—T: S. Collier.—BS 13 
Memorial Day.—Edgar Fawcett.— HSS 1 
Memorial Day.—W: H: Little.—SR 5 
Memorial Day.—J: D. Long.—MRS 
Memorial Day.—Z. F. Riley.—HS 
Memorial Day.—Margaret Sidney—PEO 
Memorial Day.—S: F. Smith.—WR 17 
Memorial Day.—Cy Warman.—EDY 
Memorial Day Address.—W. J. Bryan.—TMR 
Memorial Day at the Farm.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Memorial Day—1892. (C.) —Ella W. Wilcox. 

(Decoration Day.)—WR 4 
Memorial Day Exercise.—Anon.—DFR 
Memorial Day Poem.—S. F. Bennett.—SR 11 
Memorial Hymn—J. A. Garfield.—David Swing.—GP 
Memorial, or Decoration Day.—.Anon.—HSS 1 
Memorial Services in Honor of General Grant in 
Augusta, Maine, Aug. 8, 1885, Sel fr. (Per¬ 
manence of Grant’s Fame, The.) — Jas. G. 
Blaine.—NC—PEO—PFP 

Memorial Verses. (SI. abr .)—Matthew Arnold.—A VP 
—VA—WEP 4 

(Death of Goethe— sels.) —EDY 
(“ When Goethe’s death was told, we said ”— sel.) 
—GG 


Memorial Verses on the Death of Th^ophile Gautier, 
Br. sel. fr. (Th^ophile Gautier.)— Algernon 
C. Swinburne.—EDY 
Memories.—Anon.—HP 
Memories.—Anon.—SR 10 
Memories.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Memories.—Alex. H. Japp.—VA 
Memories.—G. D. Prentice.—-AA 
Memories of the Heart.—Anon.—SR 9 
Memories of the War.—Marion P. Riche.—CS 30 
Memory. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Memory.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA—ASL—YBF 
Memory.—W: Browne.—OB 
Memory, A.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 
Memory.—W: E. Channing.—EPs 
Memory.—T: Fuller.—OS 3 

Memory.—Jas. A. Garfield.—CS 20—FTR—SR 4 

(“When the rough battle of the day is done” — 
sel.) —GG 

Memory.—Oliver Goldsmith.—OB 

Memory.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 

Memory. (W. add.) —Walter S. Landor.—HBP—VA 


Memory. A.—IrvilleC. LeCompte.—CG 2 
Memory.—C: H. Luders.—BNL 
Memory. A.—D. Mac.Aleese.—TIP 
Memory. (People’s Magazine.) —HP 
Memory.—Francis, Earl of Rosslyn.—VA 
Memory.—Duncan C. Scott.—BS 21—TCV 
Memory.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 

Memory.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Friendship.)—TFY 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—HBP—OB (III.) 

(Sonnet XXX.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
("When to the sessions of sweet silent thought.”)— 
BNL 

Memory. (Sel. fr. Ode to Memory, St. 3.)—Alfred 
Tennyson.—EPs 

Memory.—W: Wordsworth.—FTR 
Memory: An Address before the Order of Elks.— 
Anon.—CP 

Memory and Hope.—Mrs. L. E. V. Boyd.—SDD 
Memory and the Muses.—T: Hobbes.—LLC 
Memory Gems.—DLS—GMS—WCLI 1 
Memory in Absence. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
"BNL 

Memory of Abraham Lincoln, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. A. 
Garfield. 

Abraham Lincoln.—NC—PEO 
On the Assassination of President Lincoln. (Br. 
sel., ptly. incl. in NC, etc.)—GG 
Memory of Earth, The.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Memory of Joys, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Memory of Sorrows, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Memory of the Dead, The.—Frd’k W. Faber.—HDL 
Memory of the Dead, The.—J: K. Ingram.—HBP— 
TIP—VA 

Memory of the Good.—H. Humphrey.—LLC 
(Howard, the Prisoner’s Friend.)—FD 1 
Memory of the Heart, The.—Dan’l Webster.—BNL— 
' GP—TFY 

Memory of Washington, The.—E: Everett. See 
Character of Washington, The. 
Memory-bridges, The.—Julie M. Lippmann.—BS 22 
Memory’s Message.—Anon.—CP 
Memory’s Wildwood.—Anon.—CS 6 
Memory-tricks. (Dial.) —Anon.—PTS 
Men, The.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Men, The.—Maurice Bell.—AWB 

Men always Fit for Freedom.— T: B. Macaulay. See 
Milton. 

Men and Boys. Theodore Korner (tr. by C: T. Brooks ) 
—BNL 

Men and Deeds of the Revolution, The. (Sel. fr. The 
Principle of the American Constitutions.)— 
E: Everett.—MRS 

Men behind the Guns, The.—J: J. Rooney.— AA— 
EDY—PAPm 

Men of England.—T: Campbell.—FEP 
“Men of England, heirs of glory.” (Br. sel. fr. The 
Mask of Anarchy.)—Percy B. Shelley.—YBF 
Men of Gloucester, The.—Laura E. Richards.—BS 21 
Men of God.—Alex. D. Hill—SR 2 
Men of Gotham, The.—T: L. Peacock. See Nightmare 
Abbey. 

Men of Mo mmoy, The.—Joe Cone.—EDY 
Men of my Heart’s Desire.—Theodore Roberts.— 
TCV 

Men of Old. The. — R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton. 
—BNL—FEP 
(A5r.)—FP—PGT 2—YBF 
Men of the Alamo, The.—Jas. J. Roche.—BAB 
Men of the “Merrimac,” The.—Clinton Scollard.— 
BAB—EDY 

Men of the North, The.—W. T. Allison.—TCV 
Men of the North.—J: Neal.—AA 
Men of the North and West.—R: H. Stoddard.—AWB 
—EDY—PAPm 

Men of Ware, The.—F; E. Weatherly.—FEP 
Men to Make a State, The.—G: W. Doane.—CS 17— 
SM 

“Men try to drown the floating dead of their own souls 
in the wine-cup.”—G: D. Prentice.—GG 
Men who do not Lift, The.—Anon.—CS 30—PR — 
YA 

Men who Never Die.— E: Everett. See Eulogy on 
.Vam' and Jefferson. 

Men who Wore the Shield, The.— Kate B. Sherwood.— 
WR 12 

Menagerie, The.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Menagerie, The.—J. Honeywell.—CS 10—CSS—HR— 
MHR 

Menagerie Song, A. (Harpers’ Young People.) — 
CPL 


207 




Menaphon 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Menaphon, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Greene. 

Boron's Description of Samela.—EP 
(Samela.)—CEL—FEP—OB—WEP 1 
Doron’s Eclogue ..oined with Carmela’s.—EP 
Doron’s Jig.—LC 
Menaphon’s Roundelay.—LC 
Menaphon’s Song.—ES 
Sephestia’s Lullaby.—OB 

(Sephestia’s Song to her Child.)—ELP—PGT 1 
WEP 1 

(“ Weep not, my wanton.”)—YBF 
Menaphon’s Roundelay.—Rob’t Greene. See Mena¬ 
phon. 

Menaphon’s Song.—Rob’t Greene. See Menaphon. 
Mendax.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
Mended Vase. The.—W: R. Sims.—CS 32 
Mendicant. {Charade.) —Anon.—TCP 
Mendicant, The.—Rob’t M. Bard.—KNE 
Mendicant, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Mendicants, The.—Bliss Carman.—VA 
Mendicants.—M. E. H. Everett.—CG 2 
Mending the Clock.—-Jas. M. Barrie.—SR 12 
‘‘Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin.”—Madison Cawein.— 
PAPm 

Men’s Wicked Ways.—Anon.—DR 
(Penance.)—FTA 

Mental Activity.—W: (?) Barrow.—KNE 
Mental Arithmetic.—Anon.—DES 
(Johnny and the Teacher.)—CS 33 
(Trials of a School Teacher [or Schoolmistress].)— 
ASD—CH 

Mental Faculties, The.-Wayland.—KNE 

Mephistopheles, General Dealer.—Anon.—CS 10 
Mercantile Transaction, A.—Fs. A. Humphrey.—BR 
{SI. a6r.)—PR—YA 
Mercedes.—T: W. Parsons.—EDY 
Mercedes.—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 

Mercenarv Matches. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Merchant and the Book-agent, The.—-Anon.—CS 25 
Merchant of Venice, The, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Casket Scene, The. (Sel. fr. Act TIL, Sc. 2.)— 
,WR 9 

(Portia’s Speech to Bassanio on his Choice of the 
Casket— br. sel.—ptly. same.) —SAE 
Fancy. (Song— C. — fr. III., 2.)—ES 
(Love.)—BNL—OB 
(Madrigal.)—LC 

(Merchant of Venice, The, Act III., Sc. 2, Sel. fr.) 
—ELP 

(Song from “The Merchant of Venice.”)—FEP 
(“Tell me where is fancy bred.”)—EPs—YBF 
(Young Love.)—PGT 1 

Fourth Act of “The Merchant of Venice.” (IV., 
1.— abr.)— CS 17 

(Merchant of Venice, The, Sel. fr.) —BNL (br. 
sel.) —SC (sel.) 

(Mercy— br. sel.) —CS 7—-KNE—TMD (longer.) 
(Portia to Shylock— sel.)-— OS 3 
(Portia’s Plea for Mercy— -sel.) —SO 
(Portia’s Speech on Mercy.) — EA (sel.) — 
PYO (br. sel.) 

(Quality of Mercy, The— br. sel.) —PS 
(“Quality of mercy is not strained, The”— br. sel.) 
—GG 

(Trial Scene [, The]— sel.) —CDD—LLC—SR 12 
Merchant of Venice, The. ( Play — si. cond.) — 
WCLG 2 

Merchant of Venice, The. ( Br. sels. fr. I., 1; II., 1; 
V., 1.)—BNL 

Merchant of Venice, The, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. I., 1.) 
—AE 

(Pomposity— sel. )—KNE 

Merchant of Venice, Act III., Sc. 1. (4&r.)— 

HNS 

(Shylock— br. sel.) —SE 
(Shylock for the Jews— sel.) —PPS 
Music. (Sel. fr. V., 1.)—BNL (si. cond.) —SO 
(Merchant of Venice, The, Sel. fr.) —FP 
(Moonlight— br. sel.) —EPs—SN 
(Music by Moonlight— br. sel.) —OS 2 
(Power of Music, The— br. sel.) —GN 
Out and Inward Bound. (Br. sel. fr. II., 6.)—EPs 
Portia’s Picture. (Br. sel. fr. III., 2.)—BNL 
Scene from “The Merchant of Venice.” (I., 2.)— 
MPD 

(Colloquy between Portia and Nerissa regarding 
the Suitors— abr.) —SAE 
(Portia, in “The Merchant of Venice” — br. sel.) 
—SE 

Shylock Lends the Ducats. (I., 3.— si. cond.) — 
BS 22 

(Malice— br. sel.) —KNE 


Merchant of Venice, The ( continued). 

(Merchant of Venice, Br. sels. fr.) —BNL—HNS 
—SAE 

(Shvlock to Antonio.)—CS 3—FR (ptly. diff.) — 
SE 

(Shylock’s Soliloquy and Address— -sel.) —PS 
“Merchant, to Secure his Treasure, The.”—Matthew 
Prior.—FEP—PGT 1 
(Love’s Disguises.)—YBF 
(Ode, An— C.)— WEP 3 
(Song.)—OB 

Merchants of Old England, The, Sel. fr. —G. Smythe, 
Viscount Strangford.—AVP 
Merchants of the Revolution.—Elliot C. Cowdin.— 
FD 2 

Merciful Heaven.—W: Shakespeare. See Measure for 
Measure. 

Merciles Beaute.—Geoffrey Chaucer.—OB 
Mercury Vindicated by the Alchemists at Court 
(Masques at Court), Sel. fr. (Sc ng of Nature 
— C.) —Ben Jonson. 

(Nature.)—EPs 

Mercutio’s Description of Queen Mab.— W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Mercy.—W • Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Mercy of God, The.—Matthew R. Knight.—TCV 
Merely Players. (Play.) —Clara S. Clarke.—VSG— 
WR 13 

(In Love with his Wife.)—NDP 
Meriky’s Conversion.—Julia Pickering.—CS 18 
Merit before Birth.—Sallust. See Jugurthine War, The. 
Merits of Fulton’s Invention.—Ogden Hoffman.—SS 
Merlin (I.).—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA 
Merlin and Vivien.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of 
the King. 

Mermaid, The.—Anon.—OEB 
Mermaid, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Mermaid, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—GN 
(Sel.)— LC—OS 1 

Mermaid of Padstow, The.—R: Garnett.—PEB 4 
Mermaid Tavern, The.—J: Keats.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Lines on the Mermaid Tavern— C.) —FEP—WEP 4 
Merman, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—GN—LC (br. sel.) 
Merry Andrew.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Merry Autumn Days.—C: Dickens. See Village 
Coquettes, The. 

Merry Bee, A.—Jos. Skipsey.—VS 

Merry Beggars, The. (Sel. fr. The Jovial Crew; or, 
The Merry Beggars.)—Richard Brome.—ELP 
Merry Bells of Oxford, The.—Anon.—ELP 
“Merry, blue-eyed laddie goes laughing through the 
town, A.”—Juliet W. Tompkins.—CG 1 
Merry Christmas.—Anon.—HP—NV 
“Merry Christmas.” (Acrostic.) —Anon.—WR 26 
Merry Christmas and a Glad New Year, A.—G: Cooper. 
—PEO 

Merry Christmas Time, The.—G: Arnold.—PEO 
Merry Heart, A.—Anon.—KNE 
Merry Journey, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Merry Lark, The. (Lament, A.— C.) —C: Kingsley.— 
BFV—BNL—YBF 
Merry Mike.—Anon.—NPS—YP 

Merry Month of May, The.—T:Dekker.— See Shoe¬ 
maker’s Holiday, The. 

Merry Pranks of Robin Good-fellow, The. (In Percy’s 
Reli ques.)—Anon.—F EP—HBP 
(Robin Good-fellow— si. abr.) —WR 15 
Merry Rain.—Anon.—NV 
Merry Soap-boiler, The.—Anon.—HR—MMR 
Merry Spring.—Anon.—AD 

Merry Summer Months, The.—W: Motherwell.— 
HBP 

(They Come, the Merry Summer Months— C.) — 
BNL—POS (abr.) 

Merry Sunshine.—Anon.—NV 

(Good-morning, Merry Sunshine.)—DST 
Merry Youth. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Merry-go-round, The.—Roden Noel.—VA 
Mesopotamia.—Anon.—KNE 

(’Tis Sweet to Roam— sel.) —NA 
Message, A.—P. B.—PAPm 
Message, A.—Sydney Dayre.—BS 18 
(Telephone Message, A.)—DCP 
Message, A.—H.—CG 1 

Message, The. (Fr. The Fair Maid of the Exchange.) 
—OB 

(Go, Pretty Birds.)—FEP 
(Phillis.)—EP 
(To Phyllis.)—ES—OEL 
(“Ye little birds that sit and sing.”)—ELP 
Message for the Children, A.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Message from Bony, A.—Anon.—CS 29 


208 





TITLE INDEX 


Might 


Message from Mama in Heaven, A. (Good Housekeep¬ 
ing .)—CS 37 

(Telegram, The.)—NPS—SR 5—YP 
Message from the South, A.—Booker T. Washington.— 
SC 


Message of an vEolian Harp, Sel. fr. (We Cannot Love 
too Much.)—Frances R. Havergal.—BIL 
Message of the Dove, The.—E. Nesbit.—BS 16 
Message of the Flowers, The.—Anon.—DLF 
Message of the New Year, The.—Anon.—HDL 
Message of the Rose, The.—Anon.—HP 
Message of the Seasons, The.—Anon.—DST 
Message of the Snowdrop, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Message of Victory, The. (Fr. Songs from Dramas.) 
—Augusta Webster.—HP 
(News to the King.)—VA 

Message the Roses Bring, The.—Jas. P. Sawyer.—FTA 
(Prom-roses.)—CG 2 

Message to Garcia.—Elbert Hubbard.—SE 13 
Messenger Boy, The.—G: Ade.—CS 37 
Messenger Hours, The.—Amy Parkinson.—TCV 
Messenger of Spring, The.—.1: Logan.—POS 
(Cuckoo, The.)—WCL 

(Ode to the Cuckoo— at. to Bruce.)—CEL—CGd 
(To the Cuckoo—C.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—OB— 
PYO (abr .)—SN 

Messiah.—Alex. Pope.—EP—FEP—HBP 
Metamora.—J: A. Stone (?)—WR 23 

(Metamora to his Warriors— diff. vers .)—SAE 
(Metamora to the Council—3rd vers .)—DDR 
Metamora to his Warriors.—J: A. Stone (?) See fore¬ 
going. 

Metamora to the Council.—J: A. Stone (?). See above. 
Metamorphoses, Sel. fr. (Death of Ajax, The.)— Ovid 
(tr. 6;/ Winthrop M. Praed).—OS 2 
Metamorphosis, A.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Metamorphosis.—Lloyd Mifflin.—LLC 
Metamorphosis. — (Princeton Tiger .)—CG 3 
Metaphorical Papers.—B: Franklin—CS 14 
(Paper.— C.) —BNL—WR 5 
Metaphysics.—Oliver Herford.—NA 
Metempsychosis of the Pine. (C.) —-Bayard Taylor. 

(Spirit of the Pine, The— abr .)—AD 
Meteors.—Anna P. Eichberg.—HP 
Methinks the Measure.—P. A. Hutchinson.—AA 
Methodist Camp Meeting, A.—W. H. Head.—SR 11 
Methodist Class-meeting, A. — J. J. Wray. See 
Nestleton Magna. 

Metrical Feet. (Abr.) —S: T. Coleridge.—BNL 
Miaouletta.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Mice.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Mice, The.—Anon.—DST—HSS 2 
Mice at Play.—Neil Forrest.—BS 11—EA (abr .)— 
MYF—SR 10 

Michael.—W: Wordsworth.—HBR 
(Michael and his Son— sel .)—FTR 
Michael and is Son.—W: Wordsworth. See foregoing. 
Michael Angelo, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. Monologue in Pt. 

II.)—H: W. Longfellow.—BIL 
Michael Angelo Buonarotti.—Christopher P. Cranch.— 
EDY 

Michael Dwyer.—T. D. Sullivan.—PEB 4 
Michael Robartes Remembers Forgotten Beauty.—W: 
B. Yeats.—TIP 

Michael Strogoff. (Sel. fr. ( h. XIV.)—Jules Verne.— 
PFP 

Michael the Archangel II.—Dinah M. Craik.—EDY 
Mick Tandy’s Revenge. —( Youth’s Companion .)— 

BS io 


Mickey Coaches his Father.—Ernest Jarrold.—PR— 
WR 12—Y A 

Mickey Feeney and the Priest.—Anon.—DCR 
Mickey Free and the Priest.—C: Lever.— See Charles 
O’Malley. 

Mickey Free’s Letter to Mrs. M’Gra.—C: Lever. See 
Charles O’Malley. 

Microbiblion, Sel. fr. (Man’s Mortality.)—Simon Was¬ 
ted (tr. by O’Donovan).—BS 12—CS 14—HBP 
(Sel.) —BNL—CEL—FEP 
(Of Man’s Mortality.)—ELP 
(What is Man?— sel.) —TFS 
Microcosm, The.—Walt Whitman. See Song of Myself. 
Mid the Breakers.—Ernest Aye-Williams.—CS 35 
’Mid the Roses.—F. T. Gerould.—CG 2 
Midas, Sels.fr. —J:Lyly • 

Daphne. (A Song of Daphne to the Lute— C. — fr. 
Act IV., Sc. 1.)—ES 
(In Praise of Daphne.)—CEL 
Hymn to Apollo. (Song— C. — fr. V., 3.)—ELP 

(Song to Apollo.)—ES ___ 

Pan’s Song. (Song— C. — fr. IV., 1.)—WEP 1 
(Syrinx.)—ES 


Middle Aged Man and the Two Widows, The.—Jean 
La Fontaine.—SCS 

Midges.—Robert, Lord Lytton.—HBP 
Midges Dance aboon the Burn, The.—Rob’t Tanna- 
hill— BNL—FEP—HBP 
Midges in the Sunshine.—Anon.—-HP 
Midgets’ Greeting, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Midnight.—Jas. R. Lowell.—POS 

Midnight and Moonshine, Br. sel. fr. (“O God ! This 
is a holy hour.”)—W: Motherwell.—AE 
Midnight Charge, The.—Clement Scott.—CS 24 
Midnight Episode, A.—Anon.—DDM 
Midnight Express, The.—Sherman D. Richardson.— 
CS 22 

Midnight Hymn, A.—Anon.-—SSS 
Midnight Hymn.—T: Ken.—FEP 

Midnight in London. (Abr.) —Ardennes Jones-Foster. 
—BS 19—PFP—WR 19 

Midnight Mass, The.—Richard E. White.—CS 27 
Midnight Meditation, A.—W: Aytoun.—HPE 
Midnight Tragedy, A.—Anon.—CRR—CS 30 
Midnight Train, The.—Mrs. C. Nichols.—FS 
Midnight Wind, The.—W: Motherwell.—HBP 
Midshipman, The.—L. D. Nichols.—ASD 
Midshipmite. The.—Clement Scott.—CS 23 
Midsummer.—Oliver W. Holmes.—SN 
Midsummer.—Abbie F. Judd.—AD 
Midsummer. Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Midsummer. (C.) —J: T. Trowbridge.—AA—FEP— 
HBP—POS—SC (sel.)— TAS 
(Abr.) —AD—BS 15 
(Summer.)—GP 

Midsummer Day, A.—Rose T. Cooke.—HSS 1 
(Reve du Midi.)—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Midsummer Day Scene, A.—C: G. Eastman.—CS 7 
(Afternoon Nap, The.)—WCL 
(Farmer Sat in his Ea ' Chair, The.)—GP—TAV 
(Picture, A.)—BNL—FEP 
Midsummer Invitation.—Myron B. Benton.—SN 
Midsummer Madrigal, A.—J: Macfarlane.—TCV 
Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Approach of the Fairies, The. (Sel. fr. Act V., Sc. 
1.)—CGd—LC—PHS 

(Oberon and Titania to the Fairy Train— sel.) 
—GN 

Birds. (Br. sel. fr. III., 1.)—FEP 
Clown’s First Rehearsal, The. (I., 2.)—MPD 
Clown’s Second Rehearsal, The. (Sel. fr. III., 1.) 
—MPD 

Compliment to Queen Elizabeth. (Sel. fr. II., 1.) 
—BNL (sel.) —EPs 

Course of True Love, The. (Br. sel. fr. I., 1.)— 
BNL 

(“Ah me! for aught that I could ever read.”)—GG 
Fairies’ Lullaby. (Sel. fr. II., 2.)—BNL 
(Fairyland, II.— song fr. BNL.)—OB 
(Lullaby for Titania.)—BFV—CGd— GN—LC 
(Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sel. fr.) —ELP 
Helena and Hermia. (Sel. fr. III., 2.)—GN 
Midsummer Night’s Dream. (Br. sels. fr. IV., 1; 
V., 1.)—BNL 

Puck and the Fairy. (Br. sel. fr. II., 1.)—GN— 
POS 

(Midsummer Night's Dream, Br. sel. fr.) —BNL 
(Fairy Land, I.— sang fr. GN, etc.) —OB 
(Fairy Song.)—BFV 
(Fairy to Puck, The.)—OS 1 
(Fairy’s Song, A.)—PC 

(Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sel. fr.) —ELP 
(Over Hill and over Dale.)—FEP—YBF 
(Song of the Fairy.)—HBP—LC—PHS 
Woodbine. (Br. sel. fr. II., 1.)—HSS 1 
(Midsummer Night’s Dream— sel.) —-BNL 
(Violet Bank, A— sel.) —PoR—POS 
Midsummer Song, A.—R: W. Gilder.—OS 1—PoR 
Midsummer’s Noon in the Australian Forest, A.—C: 
Harpur.—VA 

Midwinter.—J: T. Trowbridge.—AA—GN—POS 
Miggles. (Cond.) —Fs. Bret Harte.—WR 2 
Might Makes Right. (National Preceptor, 1835.)—BLP 
(Sowing and Reaping— si. abr.) —LLC 
Might of Death, The. (Ode. fr. Cupid and Death.)— 
Jas. Shirley.—WEP 2 

(Last Conqueror, The.)—FEP—PGT 1—YBF 
(Victorious Men of Earth.)—HBP 
Might of Love, The.—Alice Cary.—CS 12—DS 
Might of One Fair Face, The.—Michael Angelo.— 
FTA 

("Might of one fair face sublimes my love, The.”)— 
HBP 

“Might of one fair face sublimes my love. The.”— 
Michael Angelo. See foregoing. 


209 





Mighty 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mighty Fortress is our God, A.— Martin Luther ( tr. by 
F: H: Hedge).—BNL ( sel.) 

(Paraphrase of Luther’s Hymn.)—AA 
(Psalm XLVI.— tr. by T: Carlyle.)—HBP 
(Safe Stronghold, A.)—AE 

Mighty Heart, The.—Ralph W. Emerson. See Wood- 
notes. 

"Mighty ocean rolls and raves. The.”—Arthur H. 

Clough. See Songs in Absence. 

Mighty Word, “No,” The.—Theodore L. Cuyler.—BLP 
Mignon.—S: M. Peck.—FTA 

Mignon Aspiring to Heaven.—Johann W. von Goethe. 

See Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship. 
Mignonette.—G. B. Bartlett.—EPs 
Mignon’s Song.—Johann W. von Goethe. See Wilhelm 
Meister’s Apprenticeship. 

Mike Gets a Job. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 

Mike Hooter’s Bear Story.-Hall.—BC 

Mike McGaffaty’s Dog.—Mark Melville.—CS 22 

Miles Keogh’s Horse.—J: Hay.—EDY 

Miles Standish’s Encounter with the Indians.—H: W. 

Longfellow. See Courtship of Miles Stan dish. 
The. 

Military Command.—Anon.—HNS 
Military Discipline. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Military Insubordination. — H: Clay. See Military 
Supremacy Dangerous [to Liberty], 

Military Qualifications Distinct from Civil.—J: Ser¬ 
geant—KNE—OM—SS 

Military Steeple-chase, The.—Louise de la Ramt)e. 
See Under Two Flags. 

Military Supremacy Dangerous [to Liberty]. (Sel. fr. 

On the Seminole War.)—H: Clay.—BS 14— 
LLC—OM 

(Military Insubordination— ptly. diff.) —SS 
Military Training in the Schools.—H: B. Carrington.— 
“BLP 

Milking.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP—WCL 
Milking Maid, The. (Farm Walk, A— C.) —Christina 
G. Rossetti.—BNL 

Milking Time.—Philip Morse.—BS 7—PFP—PR (si. 
abr.) 

(Let Down the Bars.)—CS 35 
(Lovejoy Cow, The.)—WR 15 
Milking Time.—Christina G. Rossetti.—LC—OS 1— 
PoR 

Milkmaid, The.—W: Allingham.—PEB 4 
Milkmaid, The.—Austin Dobson.—VS 
Milkmaid, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Milkmaid, The.—R. Lloyd.—CGd 
Milkmaid, The.—T: Nabbes.—EP 
Milkmaid, The.—Jeffreys Taylor.—BNL 
Milk-maid’s Mother’s Answer [The]. (Reply to Mar¬ 
lowe— C.) —Sir Walter Raleigh.—FEP (w. add. 
st.)— HBP 
(Her Reply.)—OB 

(Nymph’s Reply [to the Passionate Shepherd], The.) 

—BNL—GP—PHS 
(Reply to Marlowe, A.)—EP 

(Reply to Marlowe’s The Passionate Shepherd to 
his Love.)—WEP 1 

(Shepherdess’s Reply, The— w. add. st.) —CEL 
Milkmaid’s Song, The.—Sydney Dobell.—BNL 
Milk-maid’s Song, The. (Passionate Shepherd, The— 
C.) —Christopher Marlowe.—FEP (1st vers.) — 
HBP (2nd vers. — si. shorter.) 

(Passionate Shepherd to his Love, The—1st vers.) 
— BFV — BPB — CEL — ES — LC — OEL 
—PGT 1—YBF 

( 2nd vers.) — BNL — EP — FTA — GP — OB 
—WEP 1 

(Shepherd to his Love, The—1st vers.) —CGd—GN 
—PHS 

Milky Way, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See House of 
Fame, The. 

Mill on the Floss, The, Sels. fr. —G: Eliot. 

Aunt Pullet’s Bonnet. (Sel. fr. Bk. I., Ch. IX.)— 
VSG 

Flood on the Floss, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. VII., Ch. 
V.)—WR 1 

Maggie and Thomas a Kempis. (Sel. ad. fr. Bk. 
IV., Ch. III.)—FMR 

(" ‘Imitation of Christ’ was written by a hand 
that waited, The”— sel.) —GG 
Maggie Cuts her Hair. (Sel. ad. fr. Bk. I., Ch. VII.) 
—FMR 

Mill on the Floss, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. I., Ch. I.)— 
LLC 

Ogg, the Son of Beorl. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. I., Ch. XII.) 
—LLC 

"There is something sustaining in the very agita¬ 
tion.” (Br. sel. fr. Bk. IV., Ch. II.)—GG 
Mill River Ride.—J. W. Donovan.—CS 9—DS 


Millais’s “Huguenots.” (SI. diff. versions.) (London 
Spectator .)—BS 20 (si. abr .)—EDY 
Millennium, The.—T: Moore.—HPE 
Millennium, The.—Jas. K. Stephen.—THP 
(Lapsus Calami.)—VA 

Miller and his Son, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Miller and the Maid, The.—F. M. Scott.—HP 
Miller of Dee, The.—Eva L. Ogden.—CS 20—PPSr— 
SAE 

Millet of [the] Dee, The.—C: Mackay.—CSS—PHS 
Miller’s Daughter, The, Sels. fr .—Alfred Tennyson. 

“It is the miller’s daughter.” (Song .)—FTA 

(Miller’s Daughter, The.)—BNL—FEP—HBP— 
OB 

Miller’s Daughter, The. (Diff. sel .)—OH 
Miller’s Maid, The.— Fred E. Brooks.—CS 28—WR 15 
“Millet and Zola.”—Rob’t O. A. Crewe-Milnes, Earl of 
Crewe.—AVP 

Milling-match between Entellus and Dares, The.— T: 
Moore.—HPE 

Million Little Diamonds, A. (C.) —Mary F. Butts.— 
AA—GMS—HSS 2 
(Dewdrops.)—AD 

(Winter Jewels.)—COS—CPL—DLS—PP 
Millionaire and the Barefoot Boy, The.—G. T. L.— 
HSS 3 

Milly.—May R. Smith.—PP—YPS 
Miltiades Gets the Best of Santa Claus.—J: Brownjohn. 
—CS 23—DS 

(How the Celebrated Miltiades Peterkin Paul Got 
the Better of Santa Claus.)—BS 16 
Miltiades Peterkin Paul.—J: Brownjohn.—CS 15— 
NPS—Y'P 

Milton.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 
Milton.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA 
Milton, Sels. fr. —T: B. Macaulay. 

Charles the First.—SO 
Distrust of Liberty.—LLC 

(Fruits of Liberty, The.)—MYF 
(Liberty— sel .)—OS 2 

(Men Always Fit for Freedom— sel .)—OS 2 — PS 
—SS 

Puritans, The.— SE 

(Sel .)—BS 5—CS 14—PR—TMD (ptly. diff.) 
(Puritan, The— sel .)—BLP 
Milton.—Lloyd Mifflin.—AA 
Milton.—Ernest Myers.—EDY 
Milton.—Alfred Tennyson.—WEP 4 
Milton. (Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty, Pt. I., XIV.)—W: Wordsworth. 
—LLC—WEP 4 
(England.)—GP 
(Ideals.)—LH 

(London, 1802—C.)—PGT 1 (II.)—YBF (II.) 
(“Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour”— 
abr .)—GG 

(Sonnet: London, 1802.)—HBP 
(To Milton.)—BNL—CEL—EPs—FEP 
Milton, John. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
“Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour.”—W: 

Wordsworth. See foregoing. 

Milton’s Prayer of Patience.—Eliz. L. Howell—AA— 
CS 7—FEP—LLC (si. abr .)—TAS 
(Milton’s Soliloquy in his Old Age.)—HSS 3 
(Old and Blind— at. to Milton.)—BS 2 
Milton’s Soliloquy in his Old Age.— Eliz. Lloyd. See 
Milton’s Prayer of Patience. 

Mimic, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Mimicking Others.—Anon.—WR 17 
Mimnermus in Church.—W: Johnson-Cory.—OB—VA 
Mind, The. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Mind of Man, The.—Mark Akenside. See Pleasures of 
Imagination, The. 

Mind, the Glorv of Man.—Dan’l Wise.—CS 11—HSS 3 
—KNE 

Mind your Business.—Wolstan Dixey.—PEO 
“ Mind your own Business.” (Dial.) —H. E. McBride. 
—CS 5—MD 

Mind your P’s.—Anon.—WR 4 
Minding the Hens.—F. W. 'Loring.—SR 5 
(Tildy.)—WR 21 

Mjnd’s Eye, The. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Mind’s Eye, .The.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, 
The. 

Mine.—Dinah M. Craik.—OH 

Mine Host of “The Golden Apple.” — T: Westwood. 
—BVC—GN 

Mine Katrine.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—BS 7—CS 16— 
DFY 

Mine Moder-in-law.—C: F. Adams.—AWH—DRR— 
GH 

(Mine Mother-in-law.)—DCR 
(Mother-in-law, The.)—CS 31 


210 





TITLE INDEX 


Miss Jones 


Mine own Country.—Kathe. L. Bates.—CS 36 
Mine Schildhood.—C: F. Adams.—BS 12—CS 22 
(Tucked oup in Ped.)—GH 
Mine ShiJdren.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—BS 13 
Mine Vamily.—C: F. Adams.—BS 9—CS 21 

(Dutchman’s Family, The— si. diff. wording.) — 
DRR 

Miner’s Death, The.—J: Hanover.—SA 
Mines of Avondale, The.—Alice Cary.—CS 17 
Miniature, The.—Anon.—WR 13 
(Likeness, The.)—CS 9 
Ministering.—Anon.—SSS 
Ministering Angels.—Emily Judson.—CS 4 
Minister’s Grievances, The.—Max Adeler.—CH—CS 27 
—CH 

Minister’s Housekeeper. The.—Harriet B. Stowe. See 
Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories. 

Minister’s Quarter Pay-day, A.—Anon.—CS 6 
Minister’s Wife, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Minister’s Wooing, The, Sel. fr. (Interview between 
Aaron Burr and Mary Scudder— abr. fr. Ch. 
XXXII.)—Harriet B. Stowe.—CR 
Ministry of Angels [, The],—Edmund Spenser. See 
Faerie Queene, The. 

Ministry of Hassan, The.—Eliz. A. Allen.—YBT 
Minnesingers Lied, The.—J: H. Duvar.—TCV 
Minnie and Winnie.—Alfred Tennyson.—HSS 2—NA 
Minnie’s Secret.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Minnows.—J: Keats. See “I stood tiptoe upon a little 
hill.” 

Minor Poet, A.—Alex. Smith. .See Life-drama, A. 
Minot’s Ledge.—Fitz-James O’Brien.—CS 12—FR— 
SA 

Minstrel, The.—Johann W. von Goethe. See Wilhelm 
Meister’s Apprenticeship. 

Minstrel, The. Edna D. Proctor.—OS 3 

Minstrel, The; or, The Progress of Genius, Sets. fr. — 

jr^g Beattie 

Life Beyond the Tomb. (Bk. I., Sts. 25-27.)—SS 

Minstrel, The, Br. sets. fr. (I., 1; II., 17— abr.) — 
BNL 

Minstrel, The, Sel. fr. (I., 32-38, 40.)—WEP 3 
(Morning—38, 39.)—BNL—CEL 
(Summer Mom, A—38-40.)—GP 
Nature. (I., 9.)—EPs 
Reasons for Humility. (I., 50.)—CS 1 
Minstrel-boy, The.—T: Moore.—BPB—CEL—GN— 
OS 1—SO—YBF 

Minstrels and Maids.—W: Morris. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 

Minstrel’s Curse, The.—Ludwig Uhland ( tr. by Rob’t 
Tilney).—AE (br. sel.) —CS 13 
Minstrel’s Marriage Song.—T: Chatterton. See .Ella. 
Minstrels of the Marshes, The. (Farmer’s Voice.) — 
CS 35 

Minstrel’s Roundelay.—T: Chatterton. See /Ella. 
Minstrel’s Seven Ages, The.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Minstrel’s Song.—T: Chatterton. See /Lila. 

Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, Ballads fr. — (Edited 
by) Walter Scott. See: 

Annan Water. 

Armstrong’s Goodnight. 

Barthram’s Dirge. 

Battle of Otterbourne, The. 

Bonny Hind, The. 

Broomfield Hill, The. 

Brown Adam. 

Clerk Saunders. 

Cospatrick. 

Douglas Tragedy, The. 

Dowie Dens of Yarrow, The. 

Eve of St. John, The. 

Fair Annie. 

Fair Helen. 

Flowers of the Forest, The. 

Frav o’ Suport, The. 

Gallant Grahams. The. 

Gay Gos-hawk, The. 

Graeme and Bewick 
Hughie the Graeme. 

Jock o’ the Side. 

Johnnie Armstrong. 

Johnnie of Breadislee. 

Katharine Janfarie. 

Kempion. 

King Henry. 

Kinmont Willie. 

Laird o’ Logie, The 

Lament of the Border Widow, The. 

Lass of Lochroyan, The. 

Lord Randal. 

Lyke-wake Dirge, A. 

Outlaw Murray, The. 


Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (continued). 

Queen’s Marie, The. 

Sir Patrick Spens. 

Thomas the Rhymer. 

Twa Corbies, The. 

Wife of Usher’s Well, The. 

Willy’s Lady. 

Young Redin. 

Young Tam Lin. 

Mint Julip, The.—C: F. Hoffman.—AA 
Minuet, The.—MarvM. Dodge.—BS 17—DR (w. mus.) 
—PS—TMR 
(Sel.)— GMS—SC 
(How Grandma Danced.)—SR 9 
Minute Men of Northboro, The.—Wallace Rice.—EDY 
Minute Men of ’75 [or ’76], The. —G; W: Curtis. See 
Centennial Celebration of Concord Fight. 
Minute-gun, The.—R. S. Sharpe.—BNL 
Minutes, The.—Anon.—TFS 

(Take Care of the Minutes.)—SM 
(What the Minutes Say— si. abr.) —PP—YFR 
Mirabeau Dying.—W; R. Wallace.—EDY 
Miracle of Cana, The.—Fred E. Brooks.—CS 29— 
WR 15 

Miracle of the Egg, The. (Youth’s Companion.) —CS 31 
(Egg a Chicken, An.)—LPS—PP—PS 
Miracle of the Roses, The. (Rose, The— C. — si. abr.) 
—Rob’t Southey.—HS 

Miracle Workers, The. (Sel.) —Eliz. A. Allen.—SN 
Miracles.—T: B. Aldrich.—TAS 

Miraculous Pitcher, The. (In The Wonder Book.) 

—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—WCLI 1 
Mirandy.—Eva W. McGlasson.—DES 
Miriam’s Song.—T: Moore.—BS 16—FEP 
(Sound the Loud Timbrel— C.) —OS 1 
Mis’ Rose.—R. R. Kirk—CG 3 
Mis’ Smith.—Albert B. Paine.—AWH 
Misadventures at Margate. (C.) —R: H. Barham.— 
BNL—HPE—THP 
(Little Vulgar Boy, The— abr.) —MHR 
Miscellaneous Thoughts, Sels. fr. —S: Butler.—HPE 
Mischief. (Dramatic char.) —T. A. E. Holcomb.—StD 
Mischief Makers.—Anon.—CS 6 
Mischievous Daisy.—Joanna Matthews.—CD 
Misconceptions.—Rob’t Browning.—HBP—OB—PYO 
—VA 

Miser, The.—G: W. Cutter.—CS 10—NPS—PS^TP 
Miser, The.—C: Dickens. See Christmas Carol, A. 
Miser, The.—Rob’t Pollok. See Course of Time, The. 
Miser and his Three Sons, The. (Sel. fr. Essay III., 
On Happiness of Temper.)—Oliver Goldsmith. 
—OS 1 

Miser and Plutus, The. (Sel.) —J: Gay.—KNE—PS 
—SA 

Miser and the Mouse, The.—Anon.—PS 

Miser Fitly Punished, The.-Osborne.—CS 4— 

FR—SR 11 

Miserere of St. Peter’s Church at Rome. (Fr. Old 
Rome and New Italy.)—Emilio Castelar.—FS 
Miseries of War, The.—T:(?) Chalmers.—BS 14—KNE 
Miser’s Excuse, The.—Douglas Jerrold.—WR 13 
Miser’s Fate, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Miser’s Will, The.—G: Birdseye.—CS 21—NPS—YP 
Misery. (Sel.)— G: Herbert.—WEP 2 
(See also Pulley, The.) 

Misfit. (Charade.) —Anon.—TCP 

Misfortune. (Frag.) —Beaumont and Fletcher.—KNE 
Misfortune of Civil War, The.—Mrs. R. M. Swander.— 
PD 

Misfortunes never Come Singly.—Col. D. Streamer.—NA 
Misfortunes of Elphin, The, Sel. fr. (War-song of Dinas 
Vawr, The —• fr. Ch. XI.) — T: L. Peacock. — 
BPB — BVC — CEL — HBP — PEB 3—VA— 
WEP 4 

Misrepresentation.— J: B. L. Warren, Lord De Tabley. 
—AVP 

Miss Agnes.—Lucy B. Ewing.—CS 36 
Miss Biddy’s Epistle. (Sel. fr. The Fudge Family in 
Paris, Letter V.: From Miss Biddy Fudge to 

Miss Dorothy-.)—T: Moore.—THP 

Miss Edith Helps Things Along.—Fs. Bret Harte.— 
BS 6—CRR—CS 16—DS 

Miss Eva’s Visit to the Ogre. (Sel. fr. The Little Lady 
of Lavender.)—Theodora C. Elmslie.— BS 24 
Miss Flora McFlimsey.—W: A. Butler. See Nothing 
to Wear. 

Miss Fret and Miss Laugh.—Anon. See Miss Laugh 
and Miss Fret. 

Miss Higginson’s Will. J. A. Bellows.—CS 5—MD 
Miss January Jones’ Lecture on Woman’s Rights.— 
Anon.—PS 

Miss Jones.—Harry Romaine.—TL 

211 






Miss Judith 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Miss Judith Macan.—C: Lever. See Charles O’Malley, 
the Irish Dragoon. 

Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg, Sels. fr. —T: 
Hood. 

Her Death.—VA 

Her Moral. (C.)—PYO—VA 
(Gold.)—CS 21—TFS 
(Miss Kilmansegg, Sel. fr.) —BNL 
Miss Laugh and Miss Fret.—Anon.—PR—YA 

(Miss Fret and Miss Laugh.)—TFS 
Miss Limberkin’s Mouse. (Little Miss Limberkin— 
C.)—Mur M. Dodge.—T < 

Miss Maloney Goes to the Dentist.— Anon.— BeR — 
DDR—WR 21 

Miss Malonv on the Chinese Question.—Alary M. Dodge. 
— BS 2 — CDV — CS 6 — DDR — D1 — FTR 
—H R—M H R—N PS—OM—S A—YP 
Miss Margaret.—(2V. by) Fs. A. Shaw.—FTT 
Miss Milligan’s Party.—Zenas Dane.—DSS 
Miss Alilly O’Naire.—Willard G. Bleyer.—CG 2 
Aliss Alinerva’s Disappointment.—Airs. E. T. Corbett. 
—CH—CS 19 

Aliss Nancy’s Gown.—Zitella Cocke.—AA—FEP 
Aliss Nightingale.—Alex. Smith.—EDY 
Aliss O’Mulligan Takes a Bicycle Ride.—Louise H. 
Savage.—CS 25 

Aliss Pinkerton’s Academy for Young Ladies.—W: M. 

Thackeray. See Vanity Fair. 

Miss Simmons’ New Bonnet.—Laurie A. Raymond.— 
CH 

Miss Splicer Tries the Toboggan.—“Clara Augusta.”— 
SR 6 

(Toboggan Slide, The.)—BS 19 
Aliss AVillow.—Susie E. Kennedy.—NV 
Miss Witchazel and Mr. Thistlepod.—Rob’t J. Bur¬ 
dette.—BS 17—WR 21 
Missed his Chance.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Misses at School, The.—Anon.—CS 37 
Missing Ship, The.—J: B. Gough.—CS 14—NPS—YP 
Alissing Ships, The.—Albert Laighton.—WR 22 
Mission of a Song, The.—R. J. Hoffner.—BS 26 
Mission of America, The.—J: Q. Adams.—SO 
Alission of the Anglo-Saxons, The.— F. J. Walsh.— 
FS 

Alission of the Press, The.—Edwin L. Shuman.— 
SR 7 

Alission of the Public School, The.—W: DeW. Hyde.— 
SC 

Alission of Thomas Hood, The.—Anon. (Ad.) —NC 
Alission Tea Party, The.—Emma H. Nason.—TMD 
Alissionary. The. (7'ab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Missionary Doll, The.—Anon.—DCP 
Alissionary Hymn, The.—Anon.—CS 23 
Missionary Hymn. (Before a Collection Made for the 
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel— C.) 
—Reginald Heber.—FEP—LLC 
Alissionary Hymn.—S: F. Smith.—FEP 
Alissionary Work at Home.—Anon.—AIFD 
Alist. (Verses fr. A Week on the Concord and Alerri- 
mac Rivers: Tuesday.)—H: D. Thoreau. — AA 
—BNL—EPs—SN 

Mist Opening in the Hills.—W: AVordsworth. See 
Excursion, The. 

Alistake, A.—Airs. J. T. Greenleaf.—COS—PP 
Alistakes AVill Occur.—Anon.—WR 4 
Air. Abraham Cowley’s Death and Burial amongst the 
Ancient Poets (C.), Sels. fr. —Sir J: Denham. 

Elegy on Cowley, The, Sel. fr. —WEP 2 
(Abraham Cowley— br. sel.) —BNL 
Air. and Airs. Bowser’s Family Jar. (Detroit Free 
Press.) —SR 7 

Air. and Mrs. Popperman.—Anon.—DCR—WR 3 

(Then and Now.)—CS 26 
Mr. and Airs. Santa Claus.—Anon.—DFR—KNS 
Mr. and Mrs. Skinner.—Hardwick.—BC 
Mr. Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s Line. (Thrilling 
Scenes in Dixie— C .— abr.) —C: F. Browne — 
SCS 

(Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s Line.)—CS 2 
Mr. Barker’s Picture.—Max Adeler.—WR 25 
Air. Barney Alaguire’s Account of the Coronation — 
R: H. Barham.—FEP—THP—VA 
Mr. Beecher and the Waifs.—Anon.—BS 15 
Mr. Blifkin’s First Baby. (Gleason’s Monthly.) —CS 9 
Mr. Bosbyschell’s Confession.—Anon.—CS 17 
Air. Bowser among the Dressmakers.—Anon.—DES 
Air. Bowser Takes Precautions.—Anon.—CS 29—NPS 

Mr. Brown has his Hair Cut.— Anon.— BS 17 — SR 9 
—WR 22 

Mr. Bumble and Airs. Corney. C: Dickens. See 
Oliver Twist. 


Air. Bunting.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

Mr. Caudle and his Second Wife.— Douglas Jerrold (?) 

—CRR—CS 10—NPS—YP 
Mr. Caudle has been Alade a Alason.—Douglas Jerrold. 
—MDD 

(Caudle has been Alade a Alason— C. — abr.) — CS 3 
—OA1 

Air. Caudle has Been to Greenwich Fair. — Douglas 
Jerrold.-—SCS 

Air. Caudle has Lent an Acquaintance the Family 
Umbrella. (C.) —Douglas Jerrold. 

(Curtain Lecture by Mrs. Caudle, A— si. abr.) — 
SO 

(Mrs. Caudle’s Umbrella Lecture.)—CS 1—DDR 
Air. Caudle Having (Has— C.) Lent Five Pounds to a 
Friend.—Douglas Jerrold.—CS 5 
Air. Caudle Wants a “Latch-key.” (Air. Caudle, Hav¬ 
ing Come Home a Little Late, Declares that 
Henceforth “He Will Have a Key”— C.) — 
Douglas Jerrold.—BC 
Air. Caudle’s Hat.—Anon.—CS 19 
Mr. Caudle’s Wedding Dinner. (Air. Caudle has not 
Acted “Like a Husband” at the Wedding Din¬ 
ner— C .)—Douglas Jerrold.—A1DD 
Air. Clay and the AVar of 1812, Sels. fr. —H: Clay. 

For the War of 1813.—SS 

Speech on the War of 1812—PPS 
Mr. Copernicus and the Proletariat.—H:C. Banner.— 
WR 8 

Mr. Coville on Danbury.—Jas. Al. Bailey. See Air. 
Coville’s Easy Chair. 

Mr. Coville Proves Alathematics. (C. — in They All 
Do It.)—Jas. Al. Bailey. 

(How Mr. Coville Counted the Shingles on his 
House.)—BS 2—CS 9—DDR 
Air. Coville’s Easy Chair. (Coville Convalesces— C. — 
in They All Do It.)—Jas. Al. Bailey.—CS 9— 
DDR 

(Air. Coville on Danbury.)—-BS 2 
Mr. Cross and Servant John.—Anon.—PS 
Mr. Cypress’s Song in Ridicule of Lord Byron.—T: L. 

Peacock. Nee Nightmare Abbey. 

Mr. Diffident’s Speech.—Anon.—SR 4 
Mr. Dooley Defines a Poet.—Finley P. Dunne (?).— 
SR 13 

Air. Dooley in Peace and in War, Sel. fr. —Finley P. 
Dunne. See below. 

Air. Dooley on a Populist Convention. (Fr. Air. Dooley 
in Peace and in War.)—Finley P. Dunne.— 
CS 37 

Mr. Eisseldorf and the Water Pipe.—Anon.—CS 31— 
PR—SR 10—YA 

Mr. Finney’s Turnip.—Anon.—NA 
Air. Fogg’s Account of a Scientific Experiment.—Anon. 
—SA 

Mr. Graham and Lady Clementina. (The Alarquis of 
Lossie, Ch. LX.— si. abr.) —G: Macdonald.— 
FTR 


Air. Gregsbury and the Deputation.—C: Dickens. See 
Nicholas Nickleby. 

Mr. Grey’s Motion fora Reform in Parliament, Alay 26, 
1797, Sel. fr. ("Vigor of Democratic Govern¬ 
ments, The.)—C: J. Fox.—SS 
Air. Haines’s Able Argument. (Arkansaw Traveller .)— 
TMR 

Mr. Hammond’s Parable — The Dreamer.—Jas. W. 
Riley.—CAV 

Air. Harris’s Comic Song.—Jerome K. Jerome. See 
Three Men in a Boat. 

Air. Hoffenstein’s Bugle.—Anon.—SR 4 
Mr. Hop-toad.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Mr. Hopwell’s Theory of Suppressing a Fire in a The¬ 
atre. (Detroit Free Press.) —SR 4 
Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Editor of “The Atlantic 
Monthly.”—. as. f . 1, well. See Biglow 

Papers, The. 

Air. Hunter’s Mistake.—Anon.—DDAI 
Mr. Johnson on Lawyers.—Anon.—DSS 
Mr. Johnson on the Beautiful!—Anon.—DSS 
Air. Johnson on Wine.—Anon.—DSS 
Mr. Jonathan Bangs.—A. B. Cole.—CS 25 
Air. Kris Kringle. (Cond.) —Dr. S. Weir Mitchell.— 
BS 22 

Mr. Aleek’s Dinner.—Anon.—CS 36 
Mr. Merry’s Lament for “Long Tom.”—J: G. C. Brain- 
ard.—AA 


Mr. Middlerib’s Experiment.—Rob’t J. Burdette. See 
Movement Cure for Rheumatism, The. 

Mr., Miss, and Mrs., Sel.fr. (Everyday Case, An.)— 
C: Bloomingdale, Jr.—BS 26 
Air. Alolony’s Account of the Ball.— W: AL Thackerav 
— BNL — FEP — HBP — AIRS — PR—THP 
—YA 


212 




TITLE INDEX 


Mrs. Tubbs 


Mr. Nobody.—Anon.—BVC—PPSr—PR—YA 

(Abr.)— HSS 2—PP— YPS 

Mr. O’Hoolahan’s Mistake.—Anon.—CS 15—DI—NPS 
—YP 

Mr. Perkins at the Dentist’s. (C.—in Lite in Danbury.) 

—Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 15 

Mr. Perkins Buys a Dog. (First Dog, The — C.—in 
Life in Danbury.)—Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 8 
Mr. Perkins Helps to Move a Stove. (C.—in Life in 
Danbury.)—Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 8 
Mr. Pickwick in a Dilemma.—C: Dickens. See Pick¬ 
wick Papers, The. 

Mr. Pickwick in the Wrong Room.—C: Dickens. See 
Pickwick Papers, The. 

Mr. Pickwick’s Dilemma.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Mr. Pickwick’s Proposal to Mrs. Bardell.—C: Dickens. 

See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Mr. Pickwick’s Romantic Adventure with a Middle- 
aged Lady in Yellow Curl Papers.—C: Dickens. 

See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Mr. Piper’s Mittens.—E: F. Turner.—CS 24 
Mr. Potts’ Story.—Max Adeler.—BS 22 
Mr. Puff’s Account of Himself. (Sel. ad. fr. The Critic; 
or, A Tragedy Rehearsed, Act I., Sc. 2.)—R; 

B. Sheridan.—SS 

Mr. Rogers and Monsieur Denise.-Matthews.— 

DFY—MDD 

Mr. Rootle’s Economy.—Anon.—CS 13 
Mr. Sanscript’s Ride Down Hill.—Anon. See following. 

Mr. Sanscript’s Slide [or Ride] Down Hill.—Anon.— 

CS 21—NPS—YP 

Mr. Schmidt’s Mistake.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—CD— 

CS 14—DCR—DFY—SDR 
Mr. Skiff and his Bees.—Anon.—DS 
Mr. Slocum.—Ella Rodman Church.—WR 14 
Mr. Spoopendvke Hears Burglars.—-Stanley Huntley. 
—DCR 

(Spoopendyke’s Burglars.)—CS 19 
Mr. Sprechelheimer’s Mistake.—W. W. Crane.—SR 1 
Mr. Spring’s Concert.—Anon.—AD (abr.) 

(Concert Given by Mr. Spring, A.)—TFS (abr.) 

(Concert in the Wood, The.)—KER—WR 4 
Mr. Stiver’s Horse. (C. — in Life in Danbury.)—Jas. M. 
Bailey.—CS 7 

Mr. Styx Rejoices on Account of a New Wellspring.— 

' Anon.—MCS 

Mr. The. Cibber. (Essay XXV.— si. abr.) —Oliver Gold¬ 
smith.—BS 19 

Mr. Tongue.—Anon.-—COS—PP—PS 
Mr. Traver’s First Hunt.—R; H. Davis.-—SC 
Mr. Webster to Mrs. Paige.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Morning. 

Mr. Weller in Affliction.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Mr. W T eyler.—Anon.—- T S 
Mister William.—W: S. Gilbert.—THP 
Mr. Winkle on Skates.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Mr. Winkle Puts on Skates.—C: Dickens. See Pick¬ 
wick Papers, The. 

Mr. Winkle’s Adventure.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Mr. Worth’s Farm Hands.—Anon.—MAD 
Mister, yer Gittin’ Old.—Lu B. Cake.—CS 35 
Misther Denis’s Return. (Fr. Th’ Ould Master.)—Jane 
Barlow.—TIP 

Mistletoe Bough, The.—T: H. Bayly.—BNL—FEP— 

OS 3 

(Genevra— dram, by Emma S. Stillwell.)—CDs 

(For another version of same story see Ginevra, by 
S: Rogers.) 

Mistress, The, Sels. fr. —Abraham Cowley. 

Spring. The—WEP 2 
Wish, The.—OB—WEP 2 
Mrs. Bacon, Lawyer.—Howell L. Piner.—W T R 23^ 

Mrs. Bean’s Courtship.—“Clara Augusta.”—DFY 
Mrs. Bolivar’s Quilting.—H. Elliot McBride.—MHD 
Mrs. Brady’s Conundrum.—Anon.—GH 
Mrs. Brindle’s Cowslip Feast.—Anon.—NV 
Mrs. Brindle’s Music Lesson.—Anon.—WR 4 
Mrs. Britzenhoeffer’s Troubles.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 
Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Green.—G. L. Banks.-—CS 9 
Mrs. Brown on Modern Houses.—Arthur Sketchley.— 
BeR 

Mrs. Brown on the State of the Streets.—Arthur 
Sketchley.-—BeR 

Mrs. Brownlow’s Christmas Party. (Every Other Sat¬ 
urday.) —CS 29 

Mrs. Brown’s Husbands.—Anon.—CS 21 
Mrs. B.’s Alarms.—Jas. Payn.—VSG 
Mrs. Caudle has Taken Cold.-—Douglas Jerrold. Cb 6 

213 


Mrs. Caudle Needs Spring Clothing.—Douglas Jerrold. 
See following. 

Mrs. Caudle Urging the Need of Spring Clothing. (Mrs. 
Caudle Thinks it “High Time that the Children 
should have Summer Clothing”— C. — si. abr.) 
—Douglas Jerrold.—CS 4—MHR 
(Mrs. Caudle Needs Spring Clothing.)—PS 
Mrs. Caudle’s Lecture [on Shirt buttons]. (On Mr. 
Caudle’s Shirt-buttons— C .)—Douglas Jerrold. 
—BS 21—CS 2 

Mrs. Caudle’s Umbrella Lecture.—Douglas Jerrold. 
See Mr. Caudle has J ent an . cquaintance the 
Family Umbrella. 

Mrs. Christopher Columbus.—Marie S. Cowell.—WR 10 
Mrs. Dove’s Boarding-house.—Jos. (?) Barber.—MDD 
Mrs. Eliz. Wheeler.—Rob’t Herrick.—HBP 
Mrs. Fillisy’s Burglar-alarm. — Birch Arnold. — 
WR 20 (si. abr.) 

(Burglar Alarm, The.)—CH 
Mrs. Frances Harris’ Petition.—Jonathan Swift.—ESs 
Mrs. Golightly.—Gertrude Hall.—AA 
Mrs. Greylock Tells about the Play.—Anon.—WR 4 
Mrs. Guptill Gets ahead of the Grip. — S. Jennie 
Smith.—CS 34 

Mrs. Hardcastle’s Journey. — (Sel. ad. fr. She Stoops 
to Conquer, Act. V.) — Oliver Goldsmith. — 
NDP 

Mrs. Harwood’s Secret. (Play ad. fr. The Story of a 
Governess.)-—Mrs. M. O. W. Oliphant.—NDP 
Mrs. Hemans.—B. Hallock.—EDY 
Mrs. Jones’ Lodger.—Edwin Coller.—CS 24 
Mrs. Jones’ Pirate.—C: Heber Clark.—THP 
Mrs. Jones’s Pudding.—Anon.—CS 33 
Mrs. Jones’s Revenge. (Arr. by E. R. Ingraham.)— 
BS 20 

Mrs. June’s Prospectus.—Susan Coolidge.— MYF— 
PHS 

(SI. abr.)— PP—YPS 

Mrs. Leo Hunter.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick Papers, 
The. 

Mrs. Lofty and I.—Anon.—CSS—HSS 3—PPSr—PS 
Mrs. McDuffy on Baseball. (Detroit Free Press .)— 
CS 37 

Mrs. McShane’s Shopping Expedition.—S. Jennie 
Smith—CS 30 

Mrs. McWilliams and the Lightning.—S: L. Clemens.— 
BS 8—CS 19 

Mrs. Magoogin on Spring Bonnets and Spring Poetry.— 
J: J. Jenkins—DES 

Mrs. Malaprop’s Idea of Education.—R; B. Sheridan. 

See Rivals, The. 

Mrs. Marigold.—Anon.—BS 20 

Mrs. Middlerib’s Letter. (Burlington Hawkeye.) — C H 
WR 26 

Mrs. Murphv’s Recipe for Cake.—S. Jennie Smith.— 
CS 28 

Mrs. O’Toole and the Conductor.—S. Jennie Smith.— 
CS 31 

Mistress of Philarete, The.—G: Wither. See Fair Vir¬ 
tue, the Mistress of Philarete. 

Mistress of the Manse, The, Sels. fr.— Josiah G. Hol¬ 
land. 

Lullaby. (Fr. Love’s Consummations, V.)—AA 
(Rockaby, Lullaby.)—PoR 
Mistress of the Manse, Fr. (Br. sel. fr. Love's Exper¬ 
iments, XVII.)—BIL 

Mrs. Partington’s Reflections on New Year’s Day.— 
B: P. Shillaber.-—WR 5 

Mrs. Pickett’s Missionary Box. (Abr .)—Alice M.Eddv. 
—BS 15 

Mrs. Pickles Wants to be a Man.—Mary Kyle Dallas.— 
WR 3 

Mrs. Piper.—Marian Douglas.—DES—PP—PS—YPS 
Mrs. Potts’ Dissipated Husband.—Anon.—CS 18— 
SRI 

Mrs. Poyser “Has her Say out.”—(Adam Bede, Ch. 

XXXII.)—G Eliot.—VSG 
Mrs. Pussy.-—Anon.—NV 
Mrs. Santa Claus.—May R. McNabb.—PS 
Mistress Sherwood’s Victory.—Eva L. Ogden.—NP 
Mrs. Slowly at the Hotel.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Mrs. Smart Learns how to Skate.—"Clara Augusta.” 
—DFY—PR—YA 

Mrs. Smith.—Frd’k I.ocker-Lampson—THP 
Mrs. Smith Improves her Mind.— Mary K. Dallas.— 
WR 3 

Mrs. Smith’s Boarders.—H. E. McBride.—SD 
Mrs. Thompson’s Nephew.—Anon.—MAD 
Mrs. Tubbs and Political Economy.—Mary K. Dallas. 
—WR 3 

Mrs. Tubbs at the Sewing Circle.—Belle M. Locke.— 
CS 36 





Mrs. Walker’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mrs. Walker's Betsey.—H. B. Bostwick.—BS 9 
Mrs. Ward’s Visit to the Prince.—Mary W. Janvirn.— 
BS 9 

Mrs. Willis’s Will.—Emile Souvestre.—DT 
Mrs. Winkle’s Grandson.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Mrs. Woffington’s Portrait. (Sel. fr. Peg Woffington, 
Ch. XIII.)—C: Reade.—WR 13 
Mrs.* Wright’s Conversation with her Irish Acquaint¬ 
ance. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Mite Song, A.—Anon.—CPL (si. abr.) —TFS 
(Little Things— si. abr.) —LPS—PP 
Mitherless Baim, The.—W: Thom.—BNL—FEP—GP 
—VA 

Mither’s Knee, A.—Anon.—BS 14 
Mitten, The.—A. W. Bellaw.—WR 15 
Mixed Relationship, A.—Anon.—CS 24 
(Strangely Related— si. abr.) —SR 4 
Miyoko San.—Mary McN. Fenollosa.—AA 
Mizpah.—Clement Scott.—CS 27 
Mo Craoibhin Cno.—E: Walsh.—TIP 
Moan, Moan, ye Dying Gales.—H: Neele.—BNL 
Mocking-bird, The.—Anon.—WR 9 
Mocking-bird, The.—Jos. R. Drake.—POS 
(Mocking-bird’s Song, The.)—HSS 3—NV 
Mocking-bird, The.—Ednah P. (C.) Hayes.—AA 
Mocking-bird, The.—Sidney Lanier.—AA 
Mocking-bird, The.—Frank L. Stanton.—AA 
Mocking-bird, The.—H. J. Stockard.—AA 
Mocking-bird, The.—Walt Whitman. See Out of the 
Cradle Endlessly Rocking. 

Mocking-bird’s Song, The.—Jos. R. Drake. See Mock¬ 
ing-bird, The. 

Model, A.—Dollie Radford.—VA 

Model American Girl, The.—Virgil A. Pinkley.— 
BS 11 

Model Church, The.—J: H. Yates.—HP—KNE 

(Old Man in the Model Church, The— si. abr.) —BS 2 
—CS 7—SA 

Model Discourse, A.—Anon.—BS 7—SR 2 
(Model Sermon, A.)—CS 18 
Model Farmer, The.—Anon.—FND 
Model Husband, The.—Eleanor M. Denny.—SR 10 
Model Lesson, The. (Play.) —Anon.—PR 
Model Love-letter, A.—Anon.—CS 8—PS 
Model Sermon, A.—Anon. —See Model Discourse, A. 
Model Tea Party, A.—M. H. F. Donny.—COS—PP 
Model Woman, The.—Anon.—BS 14—SR 6 
Models, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Moderation. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Modern Athenian, A.—Anon.—WR 20 
Modem and Mediaeval Ballad of Mary Jane, The.— 
Anon.—SR 6 

Modem Belle, The.—Anon.—AWH—CS 11 (si. diff.) — 
THP 

Modem Book, The.—M. R.—CG 2 
Modern Cain, The.—E. Evans Edwards.—BS 1—CS 2 
—SA—SR 2 

Modem Chivalry.-—M. D. S.—SD 
Modem Cymon, The.— Bryan W. Procter.—CS 10 
Modern Education.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Modem Elijah, A.—R: Yorke.—WR 7 
Modern Facilities for Evangelizing the World.—H: W: 
Beecher.—BS 11 

Modem Flirtation, A.—Anon.—KNS 
Modem Girl, The.—Tom Masson.—BS 20 

(We all Know her.)—CS 31—PR—SR 10—YA 
Modern Hero, A.—J. Verey.—VSG 
Modern Hiawatha, The.—Anon.—NA 
Modem High School Valedictory.—Rob’t J. Burdette. 
—SR 6 

Modern House that Jack Built, The.—Anon.—BNL— 
CS 3 

(Domicile Erected by Jack, The.)—MHR 
(House that Jack Built, The.)—PTS (abr.) —SO 
(Old, but Good.)—SR 2 
Modern Instance, A. (Red and Blue.) —CG 2 
Modern Knighthood.—Anon.—CP 
Modern Love, Sels. fr. —G: Meredith. 

“All Other Jovs.” (St. IV.)—VA 
Coin of Pitv, The. (XLIV.)—VA 
Hiding the Skeleton. (XVII.)—VA 
Love’s Grave. (XLIII.)—OB 
One Twilight Hour. (XLVII.)—VA 
Modern Loyalty.—Anon.—SR 1 
Modern Martyrdom, A.—Sam W. Foss.—AWH 
"Modern newspaper is not merely a private enterprise, 
The.”—C. C. Bonney.—GG 
Modern Painters, Sels. fr. —J: Ruskin. 

Beauty of the Clouds. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., Sec. III., 
Ch. I.)—LLC 
(Open Sky, The.)—IR 
(Skv, The.)—SO 


Modern Painters (continued). 

Clouds, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. VII., Ch. I.)—SO (abr.)— 
VSG 

(Cloud Beauty— ptly.diff.) —IR 
Death of Moses, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. V., Ch. XX.)— 
TMD 

Earth’s First Mercy, The. (Sel.fr. Pt. VI., Ch. X.) 
—TMR 

(Humblest of the Earth-children, The.)—BS 13 
(Mosses, Earth’s Humblest Children.)—SR 3 
“On the whole there are much sadder ages.” (Sel. 

fr. Pt. IV., Ch. XVI.)—GG 
Pine Tree, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. VI., Ch. IX.)—AD 
Sky, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., Sec. II., Ch. II., w. add. 

fr. Stones of Venice.)—BS 10—OM 
True Contentment. (Sel. fr. Pt. IX. Ch. XI.)— 
BS 5 

Utility of the Beautiful, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. III., Sec. 
I., Ch. I.)—SS 

Water. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., Sec. V., Ch. I.)—SE 
Modern Pirates, The.—Herbert Welsh.—BS 25 
Modem Poet, The.—Alice Meynell.—VA 
Modern Psyche, A.—Eliza C. Hall.—TL 
Modem Robinson Crusoe, The.—Anon.—FND 
Modern Romans, The.—C: F. Johnson.—AA—HBR 
Modem Seer, A. (Philadelphia Press.) —BS 26 
Modem Shakespeare, The. (Yonkers Gazette.) —CS 25 
Modern Summer Hotel, A. (Traveler’s Record.) — 
SR 4 

Modem Version of the Merchant of Venice, A.—Jos. 
Barber.—DR 

Modem Wedding Rites.—Anon.—CH 
Modem Youth, A.—Isabel S. Goodhue.—CS 37 
Modest Couple, The.—W: S. Gilbert.—THP 
Modest Maid, The.—A. H. Morris.—WR 9 
Modest Poet, The.— (Yale Record.) —CG 3 
Modest Wit, A.—Selleck Osborne.—BS 4—CS 1—OM 
—OS 1 

Modulation.-Lloyd.—CS 5—HNS—WRD 

(“’Tis not enough the voice be loud and clear”— br. 
sel.)— SA 

Mogg Megone, Sel. fr. (Story of Ruth Bonython, The 
— cond.) —J: G. Whittier.—WR 16 
(Ruth Bonython— si. diff.) —VSG 
(Spring— br. sel.) —HSS 1 
Mohammed.—Robert, Earl of Lytton.—WR 1 
Mohammed and Seid.—Harrison S. Morris.—AA 
Moll. (Sel. fr. To Samuel Bindon, Esq.)—Jonathan 
Swift.—HPE 

Moll Jarvis O’Morley.—G: R. Sims.—CS 25 
Mollie Pitcher.—Kate B. Sherwood.—EDY 
Mcllie’s Little Ram.—Anon.—PS 
Molly.—Anita M. Kellogg.—DR 
Molly Carew.— S: Lover.—HBP—PPSr—SAE 
Molly Maguire at Monmouth.—W: Collins.—PAP 
(Captain Molly at Monmouth.)—PRR—WR 10 
(Irish Molly.)—SR 9 
Molly Muldoon.—Anon.—MHR 
Moloch—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Moloch to the Fallen Angels.— J: Milton. See Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Molony’s Lament.—W: M. Thackeray.—IIBP 
Momentous Question, A.—Schuyler Colfax.—TS 
Moments.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—A VP 
“Moments there are in life—alas, how few!”—Rob’t 
Southey.—GG 

Monadnoc.—Ralph Waldo Emerson.—AP 
Monarch of the Old Regime, A.—F. M. Michael.—CG 1 
Monarch of the Woods. (With mus.) —Anon.—AD 
Monarchie, The, Sel. fr. —Sir D: Lyndesay.—WEP 1 
Monarchy of C-csar, The. (Sel. fr. The History of 
Rome, Ch. XXXVIII.)—Theodore Mommsen. 
—TMD 

Mona’s Waters.—Anon.—BS 11—CS 7—FTR—HR— 
—M M R —S A—TM R 

Monastery, The, Sel. fr. (Border Ballad — fr. Ch. 
XXV.)—Walter Scott.— FEP—GN—HBP — 
LC—OS 2—PYO 

(Border Song.)—GP—LLC (si. abr.) 

Mon-da-min. (Br. sel.) —Bayard Taylor.—AD 
Monday; or, The Squabble.—J: Gay. See Shepherd’s 
Week, The. 

Mohammed.—T: Carlyle. See On Heroes and Hero 
Worship. 

Money, Sel. fr. (Sudden Fortune, A—Act II., Sc. 1, 
abr.) —E: Bulwer-Lytton.—VSG 
Money is King.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Money Musk. (Old Bam, The— sel. fr. 3rd pt.: The 
Old Barn’s Tenantry; 4th pt.: Money Musk) 
—B:F. Taylor.—BRR—BS 14—CS 18—CSS— 
SR 1 (4th pt. only.) 

(IT. mus. — si. abr.) —BR 

2] 4 





TITLE INDEX 


Morality 


Moneyless Man, The.—H. T. Stanton.—CS 5 
Mon-goos, The.—Oliver Herford.—AA 
Monk and the Friar, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See 
Canterbury Tales, The. 

Monk in his Cell, A. (Tableau.) (Scribner’s Monthly.) 
—BS 8—TCP 

Monkey, The.—Mary Howitt.—-GN—NV (si. abr.) 
Monkey’s Glue, The.—Goldwin Goldsmith.—NA 
Monkey’s Wedding, The.—Anon.—NA 
Monk’s Adventures, The.—Joe Kerr.—SR 10 
Monks and the Giants, The, Sel. jr. — J: Hookham 
Frere.—WEP 4 

Monk’s Magnificat, The.—E. Nesbit. See Singing of 
the Magnificat, The. 

Monk’s Prayer, The.—C: C. Hahn.—BS 18 
Monk’s Song. (Fr. The Roman.)—Sydney Dobell.— 
WEP 4 

Monk’s Vision, The. (Boston Pilot.) —BS 19—PEO 
(Legend, a.)—CS 24 
(True Artist. Th .) — 1 B 1' 

Monna Innominata. Sels. fr. —Christina G. Rossetti. 
Abnegation. (Sonnet XII.)—VA 
First Meeting, The. (II.)--FTA—OH 
Sonnet: “ O my heart’s heart,” etc. (V.)—BIL 
Sonnet: “Trust me, I have not earned,” etc. 

(VI.)—BIL 
Trust. (XIII.)—VA 

Monochord, The. (The House of Life, Sonnet LXXIX.) 

—Dante G. Kossetti.—WEP 4 
Monody on Chatterton.—S: T. Coleridge. See Monody 
on the Death of Chatterton. 

Monody on the Death of an Only Client. (Punch.) — 
FEP—HPE 

Monody on the Death of Chatterton (C.), Sel. fr. 

(On the Death of Chatterton— sel. fr. latest 
vers.) —-S: T. Coleridge.—EDY 
Monody on the Death of Sheridan.—Lord Byron. See 
following. 

Monody on the Death of the Right Hon. R. B. Sheri¬ 
dan. (C.)—Lord Bvron. 

(Monody on the Death of Sheridan— br. sel.) — 
BNL 

(On the Death of [Richard Brinsley] Sheridan— 
abr.) —EDY—PS (longer.) 

Monroe Doctrine, The.—Lewis Cass.—MRS 
Monroe Doctrine, The.—Jas. Monroe.—AI 
Monroe Doctrine, The.—J: M. Thurston—SC 
Monsieur Carnot’s Death.—J: H. Ingham.—EDY 
Monsieur Jacques. (Dial.) —M. Barnett.—MPD 
Monsieur McGint^.—Anon.—NA 

Monsieur Mocquard between Two Fires.—Anon.—DFY 
Monsieur Tonson.—J: Taylor.—CS 4—DFY—FTR— 
MHR 

Monster Cannon, The.—Victor Hugo. See Ninety- 
three. 

Monster Diamond, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—CS 19 
Monstrous Relations in Newspapers.—Fisher Ames.— 
MRS 

Mont Blanc before Sunrise.—S: T. Coleridge. See 
Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamoumi. 
Montanus’ Sonnet (I., II.— fr. Rosalynde; or, Euphues’ 
Golden Legacy.)—T: Lodge.—EP 
Montcalm and Wolfe, Sel. fr. (Battle of the Plains of 
Abraham, The — sel. fr. Ch. XXVII.) — Fs. 
Parkman.—WCLG 1 

Montefiore.—Ambrose Bierce.—AA—EDY 
Monterey.—C: F. Hoffman.—AA—AWB—BAB—BNL 
— EDY — FEP — HB — HBP — OS 1 — 
PAP—PAPm—PPSr—TAV 
(Storming of Monterey, The.)—BLP 
Montgomery at Quebec.—Clinton Scollard.—BAB— 
EDY 

Month of Apple Blossom. (IF. mus.) —Anon.—AD 
Month of Apple Blossoms, The.—H: W. Beecher.— 
BS 15 

Month of Mars, The. (October— C.) —B: F. Taylor.— 
BS 2—SA 

Month of May. (Youth’s Companion.) —AD—TT (abr.) 
Month of Maying, The.—Anon.—ELP 
Months, The.—Anon.—BVC 

Months, The.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—PP—PS—YPS 
(Months and Holidays, The.)—HE 
Months, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Months and Holidays, The.—Lizzie M. Hadley. See 
Months, The. 

Months and Seasons.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Montravers O’Brien.—G: Thatcher.—TH 
Montreal.—W. D. Schuyler-Lighthall.—VA 
Montrose’s Love.—Jas. Graham, Marquis of Montrose. 
—FTA. See My Dear and Only Love [, I 
Pray]. 

Monument of Trees, A.—J. P. McCaskey.—AD 


Monument of William Penn, The. (Sel. fr. History of 
William Penn.) — Rob’t J. Burdette.— TMR 
(Penn’s Monument.)—BS 17—CS 29—FD 1—NPS 
—SR 8—YP 

Monument to Shakespeare, A. (William Shakespeare, 
Third Pt., Conclusion, Sec. V.) — Victor Hugo. 
—MRS 

Mood, A.—T: B. Aldrich.—ASL 

Mood, A.—Winifred Howells.—AA 

Mood, A.—A. Troubetzkoy.—AA 

Moods. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Moods (Sir J. S.—C.).—Sir J: Suckling.—EPs 

(Constancy.) — BNL — CEL — ELP — ES — OEL 
—WEP 2—YBF 

(Constant Lover, The.)—FEP—OB 
Moon, The.—Anon.—OS 1 

Moon, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Moon.—H: Rowe.—OB 

Moon, The, I. (The Waning Moon— C.) —Percy B. 
Shelley.—OB 

Moon, The, II.—Percy B. Shelley.—OB (si. abr.) 

(To the Moon—C.)—CEL 

(SI. abr.)— FEP—PGT 1—YBF 
Moon, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Moon among Trees, The.—W: Wordsworth. See Ex¬ 
cursion, The. 

Moon and Dawn. (Sunday Magazine.) —HP 
Moon and the Child, The.—G: Jacque.—PP—YFR 
Moon is Up, The.—Anon.—NA 
Moon, so Round and Yellow.—Anon.—CPL 
Moon was a-VVaning, The.—Jas. Hogg.—HBP 
Moone, The.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Mooni.—H: Clarence Kendall.—OB 
Moonlight.—W: P. M’Kenzie.—TCV 
Moonlight.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Moonlight in Italy.—Eliz. C. Kinney.—AA 
Moonlight in Summer.—Rob’t Bloomfield.—BNL 
Moonlight on the Alhambra.—Washington Irving, See 
Alhambra, The. 

Moonlight on the Campus.—Frd’k E. Pierce.—CG 3 
Moonlight on the Prairie.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Evangeline. 

Moonlight Song of the Mocking-bird.—W: II. Hayne.— 
AA 

Moonrise.—Ernest Jones.—BP 
Moonrise.—Frank D. Sherman.—AA 
Moonrise in the Rockies.—Ella Higginson.—AA 
Moonshine.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Moonshine.—W. S. Moody, Jr.—TL 
Moon-struck, Br. sel. fr. (That Light.) — Dinah M. 
Craik.—HDL 

Moor Calaynos, The.—J: G. Lockhart.—WR 14 

Moorlands of the Not.—Anon.—NA 

Moor’s Revenge, The.-Miciewicz.—CS 36—KNE 

_gg 

Moose Hunt, The.—Anon.—WR 7 

Moral.—Alfred Tennyson. See Day-dream, The. 

Moral and Physical Science Friendly to Freedom.—E. 
H. Chapin.—SS 

Moral Cosmetics.—Horace Smith.—BNL—SS 
Moral Courage.—Anon.—KNE 
Moral Courage.—F: W. Farrar.—NC 
Moral Courage.—Sydney Smith.—BS 15—OS 2 
Moral Crisis, A.— C: W. Parkhurst—NC 
Moral Effects of Intemperance.—H: W. Beecher.— 
BS 5 

Moral Essays, Sels. fr. —Alex. Pope. 

Death of the Duke of Buckingham, The. (Sel. fr. 
Epistle III.)—EDY 

Man of Ross, The. (Br. sel. jr. II.)—EDY—EPs 
—WRD 

Moral Essays, Br. sels. fr. —BNL (fr. II., III., IV.) 
Moral Essays, Epistle I. (Alrr.) —WEP 1 

(Ruling Passion, The.)—BNL (sel.) —YBF (br. sel.) 
Nature. (Br. sel. fr. IV.)—AD 
Moral Force against Physical.—Dan’l Webster. See 
following. 

Moral Force of Public Opinion. (Sel. fr. The Revolu¬ 
tion in Greece.)—Dan’l Webster.—MRS 
(Moral Force against Physical— abr.) —SS 
(Public Opinion.)—TMD 
Moral in Sevres, A.—Mildred Howells.—AA 
Moral Law for Nations.—J: Bright.—TMR 
Moral Power the Most Formidable.—J: McLean.— 
SS 

Moral Warfare, The.—J: G. Whittier.—PEO 
Morality.—Matthew Arnold.—WEP 4 

(“We cannot kindle when we will”— sel.)— HDL 
Morality the Basis of Civilized Society—Belief in God 
the Basis of Morality. — Maximilien M. I. 
Robespierre.—PS—SS 


215 





Morals 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Morals, Sel. fr. (“ We all complain of the shortness 
of time”— br. sel. fr. Ch. XIX.)—Seneca.— 
WCLI 1 

Morals of Marcus Aurelius, The, V.—( C.) —R: H. 
Stoddard. 

(Boast Not.)—YBT 
Moravian Hymn.—J: Wesley.—EPs 
Moray and his Thirty.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
More Ancient Mariner, A.—Bliss Carman.—SN—VA 
More Cruel than War.—W. S. Hawkins.—CS 12—CS 33 
More Hullahbaloo!—T: Hood.—MHR ( abr.) 

(Singing for the Million.)—CS 8 {si. abr.) 

“More in the garden grows than what is sown.”— 
Horatius Bonar.—FHS 

More in the Man than in the Land.—Anon.—CS 35 
“More Love to Thee, O Christ!”—Eliz. Prentiss.—SAE 
“More things are wrought by prayer.”—Alfred Tenny¬ 
son. See Morte d’Arthur. 

“More Truth than Poetry.”—E. W. W.—SR 10 
Morgan.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 
Moritura.—Marg. G. (G.) Davidson.—AA 
Morituri Salutamus, Sels. fr. —H: W. Longfellow. 

Age.—BS 4 

Morituri Salutamus.—C’R—Ci-S 
Morituri Salutamus.—TMD 

(“How beautiful is youth! how bright it gleams” 
— br. sel .)—GG 

Mormon Widower’s Lament, The.—Anon.—CS 4 

Morn.—Mrs. J. L. Gray.—CS 12 

Morn.—Helen M. F. (Hunt) Jackson.—AA 

Morn of Inkerman, The.—H: Lushington.—AVP 

Morning. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Morning. (Sel. fr. Awaking.)—W: Allingham.—EPs 

Morning.—Jas. Beattie. See Minstrel, The. 

Morning.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Morning.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 

Morning.—J: Cunningham.—BNL 
Morning.—Sir W: Davenant.—YBF 
(Aubade.)—OB 
(Dawn-song.)—CEL 
(Song— C.)— FEP—WEP 2 
Morning. (Out of the Morning— C.) —Emily Dickin¬ 
son.—AA 

Morning.—E: Everett. See Uses of Astronomy, 
The. 

Morning.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The. 

Morning.—T: Heywood. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 
Morning.—J: Keats. See "I Stood Tiptoe upon a 
Little Hill.” 

Morning. (Sel. fr. Imitation of Spenser.)—J: Keats. 

—GN—POS (I.) 

Morning.—J: Keble.—FEP 
Morning.—D. W. Marvin.—CG 3 
Morning.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Morning.—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
Morning.—Philip H. Savage.—AA 
Morning. (“Hark, hark!” etc.)—W: Shakespeare. 
See Cymbeline. 

Morning. (“Look, love, what envious,” etc.)—W: 

Shakespeare. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Morning. (“This castle,” etc.)—W: Shakespeare. 
See Macbeth. 

Morning. (Mr. Webster to Mrs. Paige, Richmond, 
April 29, 1847—C.)—Dan’l Webster.—FTR 
Morning after the Ball.—W: Wordsworth. See Pre¬ 
lude, The. 

Morning among the Hills.—Jas. G. Pereival.—FMR 
—FP 

Morning and Afternoon Chapel.—T: Hughes. See 
Tom Brown’s School Days. 

Morning and Evening.—Philip P. Frost.—CG 3 
Morning and Night. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Morning and Night.—R: W. Gilder. See Celestial 
Passion, The. 

“Morning Argus” Obituary Department, The.—Max 
Adeler See Out of the Hurly Burly. 
Morning Bird, The.—Roswell M. Field.—BS 24 
Morning Call, The.—Anon.—FDY 
Morning Calls.—Anon.—FHE 
Morning Chat, A.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Morning Fancy.—Mary MoN. Fenollosa.—AA 
Morning Glories.—Anon.—SSS 
Morning Glory. See Morning-glory. 

Morning Hymn.—Anon.—NV—YBT 
Morning Hymn.—T: Ken.—FEP 

Morning Hymn [in Paradise], A.—J: Milton. See Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Morning Hymn.—Isaac Watts. See Morning Song, A. 
Morning Hymn for a Child.—J : Pierpont.—TAS 
Morning in August.—Jas. H. Morse.—POS 
Morning in Camp.—Herbert Bashford.—AA 


Morning in London.—Jonathan Swift.-—OES 

(Description of the Morning, A— C.) —WEP 3 (si. 
abr.) 

Morning in London.—W: Wordsworth.—HBP—OS 3 
(Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 
1802— C.)— WEP 4 

(“Earth has not an 3 dhing to show more fair.”)— 
HBR 

(Sonnet Composed upon Westminster Bridge.)— 
BNL—FEP—MBL 

(Upon Westminster Bridge.)—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(Westminster Bridge.)—LLC—WR 1 
Morning in May.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury 
Tales, The. 

Morning in the Bay of Naples. (Fr. Laurella)—J: 
Todhunter.—TIP 

Morning in the Mountains.—W: Wordsworth.—EPs— 
LLC 

Morning Landscape, A.—Walter Scott. See Lady of 
' the Lake, The. 

Morning Meditations.—T: Hood.—BNL 
Morning Miracle, A.—C. M. Dickinson.—TAS 
Morning Prayer.—Anon.—TFS 
Morning Prayer.—Rob’t Herrick. See Matins. 
Morning Psalm, The.—Marianne Farningham.—CS 22 
Morning Ride, A. (The Wheelman.) —FTR 
Morning Song.—Joanna Baillie. See Beacon, The. 
Morning Song.—G: Darley. iSee Sylvia; or, The May 
Queen. 

Morning Song, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 
Morning Song. (Fr. Sea Dreams.)—Alfred Tennyson. 
—GMS 

(Bird and the Baby, The.)—PP—PPSr—YFlt 
(Birdie and Baby.)—DCP 
(Cradle Song.)—LLC—PGT 2—PS 
(Little Birdie.)—OS 1—PC—WCL 
(What Does Little Birdie Say?) — BNL — PUS — 
PoR—TFS (sel.) 

(What the Birdie and the Baby Say.)—HSS 2 
Morning Song, A. (C.) —Isaac Watts. 

(Morning Hymn.)—TFS 

Morning Song [for Imogen], A.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Cymbeline. 

Morning Songs.—Edith M. Thomas.—YBT 
Morning Sprite, The.—Clinton H. Collester.—CG 3 
Morning Star, The.—F H: Hedge.—TAS 
Morning Street, The.—J: J. Piatt.—FEP 
Morning Thought, A.—Edward R. Sill.—TAS 
Morning-glories. See Morning Glories. 

Morning-glory.—Anon.—YBT 

Morning-glory.—Helen H. Jackson.—AD (sel.) —OH 
Morning-glory, The.—Maria W. Lowell.—AA—BNL— 
FEP—HBP—WCL 

Morning’s Mail, A.—Edmund V. Cooke.—CS 37 
Morpheus.-—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Mors Benefica.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 
Mors et Vita.—R: H: Stoddard.—AA 
Mors Jabrochii.—Anon.—NA 

Mortal and Immortal.—Rob’t C. Waterston.—TAS 
Mortality.—W: Knox.—HBP 

(“O [or oh], whv should the spirit of mortal be 
proud?”)—BNL (si. abr.)— CS 1 —DDR—FAS 
—FEP —HSS 3 (br. sel.)— LLC—PS—PYO— 
WCLG 2—WRD 

Morte d’Arthur. (Abr.) —Lord Tennyson.—AVP— 
BNL—HBP—WEP 4 (sel.) 

“More things are wrought by prayer.” (Br. sel.) — 
GG 

(Pray for my Soul.)—HDL 
(Prayer.)—BS 22—CS 16 
Mortgage on the Farm, The.—Anon.—CS 34 
Mortifying Mistake, A.—Anna M. Pratt.—AA—DJS— 
WR 24 

Mortis Dignitas.—R: Burton.—TAV 
Mosaic Poetry.—Anon. See My Love. 

Mosaics.—Jotham Winrow.—CS 13 
Moses and the Angel.—Edwin Arnold.—WR 9 
Moses at the Fair.—J. S. Coyne.-—SS 
Moses in Sight of the Promised Land.—W. B. O. Pea¬ 
body.—SS 

Moses on Pisgah.-—Jas. S. Wallace.-—CS 23 
Moses, the Sassy; or, the Disguised Duke.—Artemus 
Ward.—BeR 

Moss Rose, The.—Friederich W. Krummacher.—BNL 
—PHS—POS 

Moss Supplicateth for the Poet, The.—R H; Dana. 
—AA 

Moss-covered Onion, The.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Mosses, The.—M. A. Browne.—IISS 1 
Mosses—Earth’s Humblest Children.—J: Ruskin. See 
Modern Painters. 

Mosses from an Old Manse, Sel. fr. (Drowne’s Wooden 
Image.)—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—APr 


216 





TITLE INDEX 


Mountains 


Most Alone in Greatest Company.—Philip Sidney. 

See Astrophel and Stella. 

Most Extraordinary Calamity that Befell Mr. Winkle, 

A.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Most Fellows Know.—Tobe Hodge.—Wit 1.5 
(One Thing He Forgot.)—SR 5 
Motes and Mountains.—Anon.—DI.S 
Moth-eaten.—Margaret E. Sangster.—CS 17 
Mother.—Anon.—HP 
Mother.—Anon.—YBT 
Mother.—Elaine Goodale.—OH 
Mother.—J: G. Whittier. See Snow-bound. 

Mother and Child.—W: G. Simms.—BNL 
Mother and her Child, The.—Anon.—CS 4 
Mother and Poet.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BNL—CS 3 
—EDY—FEP—FTR —- HBP — HBR — SC — 

VA—WCLG 2 | 

(.4 hr.)—BS 13—FMR—MMR—SA 
Mother and Son. (Underwoods, XXV.)—Itob’t L. 
Stevenson.—EH 

Mother Bird, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Mother Bomhie, Sel. fr. (Love’s College— song fr. Act 
III., Sc. 3.)—J: Lyly — ES 

Mother Country. (.Sel.) — Christina G. Rosshtti. — 
PGT2 ' \ 

Mother England.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Mother Goose, Scene fr. —Clara J. Denton.—LPD1 
Mother Goose, Tab. fr. —Anon.—PR 
Mother Goose for Grown Folks, Sels. fr. —Adeline D. 

T. Whitney. 

Humpty Dumpty—CS 21—MHR—TAV 
Jack Horner.—BNL—CS 3 (abr.) 

Rags and Robes.—TAV 
Victuals and Drink.—BeR—BS 17—MHR 
Mother Goose Lullabies.—Anon.—OS 1 
Mother Goose Medley.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Mother Goose Reception and Drill.—E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—DM 

Mother Goose Sonnets.—Harriet S. Morgridge.—AA 
Mother Goose’s Dinner Party.—Alice L. Richards.— 

SL 

Mother Goose’s Party.—Anon.—HVD 
Mother, Home and Heaven.—Anon.—CS 11 
Mother, Home, Heaven.—W: G. Brown.—GP 
Mother Hubbard. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Mother Hubberd’s Tale, Sel. fr. (At Court.)—Ed¬ 
mund Spenser.—OS 3 
(Spenser at Court.)—EPs 

Mother, I Cannot Mind my Wheel.—-Walter S. Landor. 
—OB 

(Forsaken.)—VS 
(Margaret.)—VA—YBF 
Mother Love.—Mary Clemmer.—HDL 
Mother Margery.—G: S. Burleigh.—HBP 
Mother of the Gracchi, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 10— 
TCP 

Mother Robin.—-Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Mother. Watch!—Anon.—OS 1 
Mother Wept.—Jos. Skipsey.—VA 

“Mother who conceals her grief, The.”—T: B. Read.— 

See Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The. 

Mother who Died too. The.— Edith M. Thomas. — 

AA 

Motherhood.—C: S. Calverley.—BNL—THP—WR 24 
Mother-in-Law, The.—C: F. Adams.—CS 31 
(Mine Moder-in-law.)—AWH—DRR—GH 
(Mine Mother-in-law.)—DCR 
Mother-in-law. The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BS 17 
Motherland, The. (Poems Dedicated to National 
Independence and Liberty, Pt. L, XVII.)— 

W: Wordsworth.—LH 

(“When 1 have borne in memory what has tamed.”) 
—PGT 1 

Motherless.—Eliz. B. Browning. Nee Aurora Leigh. 
Motherless T rkevs, The.—Annie D G. Robinson.— 
MYF—WCL 

Mother-love. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Mothers and Fathers; Two Pictures.—Mary K. Dallas. 

—WR 3 

Mother’s Angel, The.—Ludwig Dyer.—SR 7 
Mother’s Answer, A.—Lill e E. Barr.—CS 21 
Mother’s Blessing, The.—Anon.—HP 
Mother’s Blessing.—W: Shakespeare. See All’s Well 
that Ends Well. 

Mother’s Children.—Jas. Otis.—COS—PP 
(Muzzer's Children— diff. vers.) —WR 15 
Mother’s Cradle-song, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Mother’s Daring, A.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 26—DS— 
WR 13 

Mother’s Diary, A.—Anon.—CS 14 
Mother’s Doughnuts.—C: F. Adams.—CD—CS 27— 
DCR—SR 4 

217 


Mother’s Dream, The.—W: Barnes.—CR—PGT 2— 

YBF 

(Mater Dolorosa.)—OB 

Mother’s Easter Scarf, The.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Mother’s Excuse, A.—Sara J. Lippincott.—WCL 
“Mother’s Fool.”—Anon.—CS 12—HR—PPSr 
Mother’s Girl.—Anon.—HSS 2—TFS 
Mother’s Heart, The.—Caroline E. Norton.—BNL— 
HBP 

Mother’s Hired Man.—F. M. Baker.—WR 17 
Mother’s Hope, The.—Laman Blanchard.—BNL— 
HBP 

Mother’s Hymn.—Frederika Bremer.—WCL 
(Heavenly Dove, The.)—OS 1 
(Swedish Mother’s Hymn.)—YBT 
Mother’s Hymn, The.—W: C. Bryant.—TAS 
Mother’s Hymns.—Emily G. Weafherbee.—WR 6 (abr.) 

(My Mother’s Hymns.)—CS 33 
Mother’s Jewels, The.—Richard C. Trench.—PPSr 
Mother’s Lament, A.—W: Wordsworth.—SAE 
(Affliction of Margaret, The— C.) —PGT 1 
Mother’s Last Song, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—HBP 
Mother’s Love.—Anon.—YBT 
Mother’s Love.—T; Burbidge.—HBP—VA 
Mother’s Love, A. (Br. sel.) —Jas. Montgomery.— 
BNL—IvNE 

Mother’s Lullaby.—Mamie T. Short.—WR 2 
Mother’s Mending Basket.—Mrs. M. A. Kidder.— 
BS 19 

Mother’s Morning Prayer, A.—Anon.—WCL 
Mothers of the Sirens, The.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Mother’s Picture, A.—Edmund C. Stedman.—OH 
Mother’s Portrait, A.—W: Cowper. See On the Re¬ 
ceipt of my Mother’s Picture. 

Mother’s Prayer.—Jack Crawford.—WR 18 
Mother’s Room.—Anon.—CS 37 
Mother’s Sacrifice, The.—Seba Smith.—BNL—CS 9 
Mother’s Song.—Anon.—GN 
Mother’s Song.—Anon.—OS 1 
Mother’s Song, The.—Virginia W. Cl -lid.—AA 
M ther’s Song, The.—W: P. McKenzie.—TCV 
Mother’s Songs.—Alonzo W. Smith.—CS 36 
Mother’s Thoughts, A.—Fs. D. Gage.—CS 21 
Mother’s Tinder Falins, A.—S. Jennie Smith.—CS 30 
Mothers Watch the Little Feet.—Anon.—TFS 
Mother’s Way.—Anon.—WR 17 
Mother’s World.—Marg. H. Allen.—TCV 
Mother-song.—Alfred Austin. See Prince Lucifer. 
Moth’s Kiss First, The. — Rob’t Browning. See In a 
Gondola. 

Moth-song.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 
Motion: For Prayers in Convention. (C.) —B: 
Franklin. 

(God Governs.)—SS 

Motion of the Leaves, The.—H: W. Beecher. See 
Walk among Trees, A. 

Motion Song—Daisy Fair.—Annie Chase.—-AD 
Motives of Action. — W: Murray, Lord Mansfield. — 
MYF 

Motto for a Tobacco Jar.—Anon.—PPh 
Motto; or. Example, The.—Mrs. C. M. Peat.—-SDD 
Mount of Laws, The.—Hall Caine. See Bondsman, 
The. 

Mt. Pisgah’s Christmas ’Possum.—Paul L. Dunbar.— 
WR 25 

Mount Rainier.—Herbert Bashford.—AA 
Mount Vernon, the Home of Washington.—W; Day.— 
BLP 

Mountain, The. (Frag.)— W: E. Channing.—EPs 
Mountain and the Squirr 1, The.— Ralph W. Emerson. 
—AD—BV —CGd—CS 29—GMS—OS 1—PC 
—PHS—POS—PS—PTS—WCL 
(Fable—C.)—AWH—HBP—LC—PoR—THP 
Mountain Ash, The.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, 
The. 

Mountain Brook, A.—C: O. Judkins.—CG 2 
Mountain Echo, The.—W: Wordsworth.—WEP 4 
Mountain of Miseries, The.—Jos. Addison. See Spec¬ 
tator, The. 

Mountain of the Lovers, Br. sel. fr. (Love Scorns 
Degrees.)—Paul H. Hayne.—BIL—BNL— 
GP 

Mountain Stream, A. (Smith College Monthly.) —CG 3 
Mountain to the Pine, The.—Clarence Hawkes.—AA 
Mountain Torrent, The.—C: Maekay.—YBT 
Mountain Tragedy, The. (Cond. fr. No Thoroughfare, 
Act III.)—C: Dickens.—WR 16 
Mountain Tragedy, A. (Sel. fr. In the Wilderness: A- 
Hunting of the Deer.)—C: D. Warner.—WR 5 
Mountains, The. (Frags, fr. various aut'ors.) —BNL 
Mountains, The.—Cyrus A. Bartol.—TAS 
Mountains.—E. M. Morse.—CS 24—NPS—YP 
Mountains of Life, The.—J. G. Clark.—CS 11 





Mountebanks 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mountebanks, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Mountebanks, The.—C: H: Luders.—AA 
(Passing Show, The.)—WR 4 
Mounted Knight, The.—Anon.—CS 31 
Mourner, The.—Anon.—PS 
Mourner a la Mode, The.—J: G. Saxe.—BS 16 
“Mournful funeral slow proceeds behind, The.”—J: 
Wilson.—HBP 

Mournful Story, A.—Anon.—MCS 
Mournful Tale, A.—H. E. McBride.—CS 33 
Mourning. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Mourning Garment, The, Sets. fr. —Rob’t Greene. 

Description of the Shepherd and his Wife, The.— 

Shepherd’s Wife’s Song, The. (C.)—EP—ES 
(Shepherd and the King, The.)—BNL 
Mourning Hero’s Vision, The.—Louis Kossuth.—BLP 
Mourning Veil, The.—J. L. Harbour.—SR 13 
Mouse, The.—Harding Cox.—CS 27 
Mouse, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Mouse, The. — Mrs. C. V. Jamison. See ’Toinette’s 
Philip. 

Mouse Trap, The. (Farce — abr.) —W: D. Howells.— 
BS 15—HD 

Mouse-hunting.—Gail Hamilton.—TMR 
Mouse-hunting.—B: P. Shillaber.—CS 5—DDR 
Mouse’s Petition, The. (SI. abr.) —Anna L. Barbauld. 
—CGd 

Moved by a Crank.— (Arr. by) U. S. Allen.—WR 20 
Movement Cure for Rheumatism, The.—Rob’t J. Bur¬ 
dette.—CS 24—NPS—YP 
(Mr. Middlerib’s Experiment.)—SR 3 
(New Cure for Rheumatism, A.)—BS 13 
Moving.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Moving Finger Writes, The. Omar Khayyam (tr. by 
E: Fitzgerald). See Rubaiyat, The. 

Mower in Ohio, The.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
Mower to the Glow-worms, The. (C .)—Andrew Mar¬ 
vell.—EP 

(Lover to the Glow-worms, The.)—HBP 
Mowers, The.—Myron B. Benton.—BNL 
Mowers, The.—A. M. F. Robinson.—PEB 4 
Moytura, Sel. fr. (Sword of Tethra, The.)—W: Lar- 
minie.—TIP 

Mozart at the Fireside.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Mozart’s Requiem.—Felicia D. Hemans.—EDY 
Mp-ta-ta.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Much Ado about Nothing, Sets. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Benedick’s Soliloquy. (Sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 3.)— 
SAE 

Much Ado about Nothing, Sel. arr. fr. (Sels. fr. I., 
1 and II., 1.)—SR 12 

Much Ado about Nothing, Br. sels fr. —BNL (fr. 

IV., 1; V., 1.)—SAE (fr. III., 3.) 

Sigh no more, Ladies. (Song— C. — fr. II., 3.)— 
FEP—WEP 1 
(Inconstancy.)—ES 
(Man and Woman.)—OEL 

(Much Ado about Nothing, Act II., Sc. 3, Sel. 
fr.)— BNL (sel.) —ELP 

“When he shall hear she died upon his word.” 
(Br. sel. fr. IV., 1.)—GG 

Much Taste and Small Estate. (Sel. fr. The Progress 
of Taste.)—W: Shenstone.—WEP 3 
Mucker’s Love Song, The.—E. L. Dudley.—CG 3 
Muckle-mou’d Meg.—Jas. Ballantine.—VA 
Muckle-mouth Meg. — Rob’t Browning. — BS 19 — 
TMR (si. abr.)—VA— WR 23 
(Another vers, of foregoing story.) 

Mud Cakes.—Ethel E. Sleeper.—WR 17 

Muddled Metaphors.—Tom Hood, Jr.—NA 

Muffled Drum’s Sad Roll, The.—Theodore O’Hara. 

See Bivouac of the Dead, The. 

Muffet. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine.— 
TCP 

Muiopotmos; or, The Fate of the Butterfly, Br. sel. fr. 
(Fate of the Butterfly, The.)—Edmund 
Spenser.—BNL * 

Mulberry Garden, Sel. fr. —Sir C: Sedley. 

Child and Maiden.—PGT 1 (abr.) 

(Song from the Mulberry Garden.)—WEP 2 
(Song to Chloris.)—CEL 
(To a Very Young Lady.)—BNL—FEP 
(To Chloris— abr.) —OB 
Mule, The. (C.)—H: Shaw. 

(Josh Billings on the Mule.)—BC 
Mule and the Bees, The.—Luck Melone.—CS 19 
Mule Ride in Florida, A.-—Anon.—BeR 
Mulford.—J: G. Whittier.—AA 
Mulligan’s Gospel.—Annie Herbert.—CS 12 
Mullins the Agnostic.—C. M. Snyder (at. also to A. T. 
Worden).—CS 35 
(Agnostic, The— si. abr.) —SR 13 


Multitude of Littles, The.—Newman Hall.—TS 
“Multum Dilexit.”—Hartley Coleridge.—VA 
Multum in Parvo.—Mortimer Collins.—-VS 
Mumford’s Pavement.—Anon.—CS 15—NPS—YP 
Mummy, The.—Horace Smith.—PPSr (abr.) 

(Address to the Mummy at [or in] Belzoni’s Exhi¬ 
bition.)—BNL—CS 6—FEP—HBP 
(To a Mummy.)—OS 3—SO (abr.) 

Mum’s the Word. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Munchausen Outdone. (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Munster War-song, The.—R: D. Williams.—TIP 
Murat. (Sel. fr. Ode from the French.)—Lord Byron. 
—BNL—EPs 

Murder, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 
Murder of Captain Joseph White, The, Sels. fr. —Dan’l 

Wphstpr 

Murder Will Out—WCLG 2 

(Crime its own Detector— abr.) —CR (br. sel.) — 
CS 1—OM (sel.) —SR 9 

(Cr.me Revealed by Conscience— abr.) —BS 24 
(Guilt its Own Betrayer [or. Guilt Cannot Keep 
its Own Secret]— sel.) —SS 
(Murderer’s Secret, The— sel.) —FD 1 
(Murderer’s Self-betrayal, The— sel.) —PS 
(Power of Conscience, The—S el.) —LLC 
(Secret of Murder, The— sel.) —MRS 
(Speech in the Knapp Trial, Sel. fr. — abr.) — 
AE 

Murder of Darnlev, The. (Fr. Bothwell.)—W: E. 
Aytoun.—EDY 

Murder of King Duncan.—W: Shakespeare. <See 
Macbeth 

Murder of Lovejoy [at Alton, Illinois, 1837], The, Sel. 

fr. —Wendell Phillips.—FD 2—NC (si. abr.) 
Murder of Nancy [Sikes], The.—C: Dickens. See 
Oliver Twist. 

Murder of Riccio, The.—W r : E. Aytoun.—EDY 
Murder of the Princes in the Tower.—W: Shakespeare. 
See King Richard III. 

Murder of Thomas a Becket, The.—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Becket. 

Murder of Thomas a Becket in Canterbury Cathedral, 
The.—Augustin Thierry.—OS 2 
Murder Will Out.—Dan’l Webster. See Murder of 
Captain Joseph White, The. 

Murdered Traveller, The.—W: C. Bryant.—EPs 
Murderer’s Confession, A. (Cond.) —Edgar A. Poe.— 
PFP 

(Tell Tale Heart, The— C.)—BS 16 
Murderer’s Secret, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Mur¬ 
der of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Murderer’s Self-betrayal, .The—Dan’l Webster. See 
Murder of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Murillo’s Trance.—Marg. J. Preston.—CS 12 
Murphy’s Mystery of the Pork-barrel.—Anon.—BeR 
Muse, The.—G: Wither.—EPs 
Muse of Doggerel. The.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 
Muses’ Elysium, The, Sels fr. —Michael Drayton. , 
Contest, A. (6th Nymphal.)—EP 
Description of Elizium. (Introd.) —EP 
Ferryman, Venus, and Cupid, The. (Sel. fr. 7th 
Nymphal.)—CGd 

‘Muses that sing Love’s sensual empirie.” (A Coronet 
for his Mistress’ Philosophy, I.)—G: Chapman 
—BNL 

Mushroom Hunt, The.-Halpin.—HPE 

Music.—Anon.—PTS 

Music. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Music. (Br. sel. fr. The Voice of Music.)—Felicia D. 
Hemans.-—EPs 

Music.—Rob’t Herrick.—CEL—WEP 2 

(To Music, to Becalm his Fever— C.) —FEP—OB 
Music.—J: Keats. See Eve of St. Agnes, The. 

Music.—Emily H. Miller. See Music of Nature. 

Music.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Music.—W: Strode.—FEP 

(Praise of Music— abr.)— CEL 

(Song: In Commendation of Music— abr.) —ELP 
Music.—G: M. Vickers.—PS 
Music and Memory.—J: Albee.—AA 
Music and Moonlight, Song fr. (Song I.)—Arthur 
O’Shaughnessy.—WEP 4 

Music and Morals, Sel. fr. (Remembrance — sel. fr. 

Bk. I., Ch. VIII.)—H. R. Haweis.—LLC 
Music and Words. (Pt. V.)—R: W. Gilder.—MRS 
Music at Mrs. Ponto’s.—W: M. Thackeray. See Book 
of Snobs, The. 

Music by Moonlight.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant 
of Venice, The. 

Music Everywhere.—W: P. Mulchinock.—CS 22 
Music Grinders, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AWH (si 
abr.)— SO—TAV 


218 





TITLE INDEX 


My countrymen 


Music Hath Charms. ( Rockland Courier Gazette.) — 
SR 3 

Music in Camp.—J: R. Thompson.—AA—AWB— 
BS 15—CS 17—GP—PAP—PAPm—SR 6 
Music in the Night.—Harriet P. Spofford.—AA 
Music in the Soul.—Anon.—HP 
Music in the Street.—Anon.—TIP 
Music Lesson, The.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Music Lesson, A.—Alex. H. Japp.—VA 
"Music of art is but the imitation of the music of 
nature, The.”—W. H. Robertson.—GG 
Music of Hungary.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
Music of Labor, The.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Music of Nature, The.—J: V. Cheney.—POS 
Music of Nature.—Emily H. Miller.—NV 
(Little May.)—PC—YBT 
(Music.)—PTS 

Music of Nature, The.—Mary F. Ormsby.—DES 

Music of Nature.-Pierpont.—FP 

Music of the Night.—J: Neal.—AA 
Music of the Past, The.—Anon.—CD 
Music of the Waves, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Music, when Soft Voices Die,—Percy B. (Shelley.— 
BNL—FEP—OB—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 

(To-.—C.)—WEP 4 

Musical Bore, The.—Anon.—DCD 
Musical Duel, The.—J: Ford. See Lover’s Melan¬ 
choly, The. 

Musical Frogs, The.—J: S. Blackie.—CS 17 
"Musical! how much lies in that.—T: Carlyle. See On 
Heroes and Hero-worship. 

Musical Instrument, The, Sel. fr. —Anon.—AE 
Musical Instrument, A.—Eliz. B. Browning.—A VP— 
BNL—BSP—FEP—LLC—OB—VA—WEP 4 
Musical Mary Jane.—Anon.—DSS 
Musical Threnody, A.—Anon.—CS 36 
Music-hall, The.—Theodore Wratislaw.—VA 
Musician’s Tale, The. (The Ballad of Carmilhan— si. 
abr. — in Tales of a Wayside Inn.) — H: W. 
Longfellow.—BR 2 

Musick’s Duel, Sel. fr. (Nightingale’s Song, The.)— 
Richard Crashaw—BNL 

Music’s Silver Sound.—W: Shakespeare. See Romeo 
and Juliet. 

Musidorus’ Song.— Sir Philip Sidney. See Arcadia, 
The. 

Musings.—-H: W. Longfellow.—PEO 
Musmee, The.—Edwin Arnold.—VA 
Musquito, The.—W: C. Bryant.—HPE 

(To a Mosquito— C .)—BNL (si. abr.) 

Mustapha, Sels. fr. —Fulke Greville, Lord Brook'-. 
Chorus of Priests.—WEP 1 
Chorus of Tartars.—WEP 1 
Mustard and Cress.—Norman Gale.—BVC 
Muster of the North, The.—Sir C: G. Duffy.—TIP 
Mustered Out.—Anon.—CS 27 
Mustered Out.—W. E. Miller.—HSS 1 
(Wounded.)—CS 1 

(Abr. and u\ 2 sts. fr. Watson’s The Wounded 
Soldier.)—FTR—H NS 

Mutabile. (W es ley an Literary Monthly .)—CG 3 
Mutability.—Percy B. Shelley.—HBP 
Mutability.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Mutability.—W: Wordsworth.—OB—WEP 4 
Mutilated Currency Question, The. (Brooklyn Eagle.) 
—CD—SR 4 

Mutton Chops. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery-book. 
Punch.) —HPE 

Mutual Development Society; or, Capital vs. Labor, 
The.—R. M. Swander.—PD 
Mutual Love. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Muzzer’s Children.—Jas. Otis.—WR 15 

(Mother’s Children— diff. vers.) —COS—PP 
My After-dinner Cloud.—H: S. Leigh.—PPh 
My Age.—Anon.—TT 
My Aim.—G. L. Banks.—HP 

(“I live for those that love me.”— br. sels.) —GG— 
SM 

(What I Live For.)—CS 23—HSS 2 (a6r.)—SSS 
Mv Ain Countree (or Countrie].—Allan Cunningham.— 
HBP— LC 

(“Sun rises bright in France, The.”— abr.) —FEP 
—OB 

My Ain Countrie.—Mary L. Demarest.—HDL 
My Ain Fireside.—Eliz. Hamiliton.—BNL—FEP 
My Ain Wife.—Fs. Bennoch.—CDV—SDR 
My Ain Wife.—Alex. Laing.—VA 
My Ambition. (Sel. fr. Speech at the Barbecue at 
Lexington in Honor of Mr. Clay.)—H: Clay. 
—SO 

(Ambition of a Statesman.)—FTR—OM—WR 2 C 


My Angeline. (Fr. The Wizard of the Nile.)—Harry 
B. Smith.—THP 

My Aunt.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AWH—HPE—MDD 
—THP 

My Aunt Maria.—Elsie M. McCullum.—WR 12 
My Autumn Walk.—W: C. Bryant.—AA—BNL 
My Aviary.—Oliver W. Holmes.—SN 
My Babes in the Wood.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA— 
GP 

My Baby Brother.—Sarah E. Howard.—TT 
My Balloon Ascent.—Anon.—MYF 
My Bath.—J: S. Blackie.—VA 
My Beacon.—Emily H. Miller.—HBR 
My Beautiful Child.—W. A. H. Sigourney.—CS 3 
My Beautiful Lady.—T: Woolner.—VA 
My Bed is a Boat. — Rob’t L. Stevenson. — CGV — 
DLS—TFS 

My Bess.—Raymond W. Walker.—CG 3 
My Best Friend.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
My Big Brother. (New York World.) —CS 37 
My Bird.—Emily C. Judson.—AA—FEP 
My Birds.—Anon.—YBT 
My Birth.—Minot J. Savage.—AA 
My Birthday.—T: Moore.—TIP 
My Birthday.—J: G. Whittier.—TAS 
My Boarding-houses.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
“My boat is on the shore.”—Lord Byron.—PYO 
(Friendship.)—LH 

(To Thomas Moore—C.)—BNL—GP—HBP— 
YBF 

My Bonnie Mary. (C .—Silver Tassie, The —also C .)— 
Rob’t Burns.—OB 
(Before Parting.)—LH 
(Bonnie Mary.)—GP 
(Farewell, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
My Books.—Fs. Bennoch.—MBB 
My Books.—Austin Dobson.—LBB—MBB 
My Books.—W. F. Johnson.—LBB—MBB 
My Books.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA—LBB—MBB 
My Books. (Fr. An Autobiographical Fragment.)— 
Bryan W. Procter.—LBB—MBB 
My Boy.—F. M. Gilbert.—CS 33 
My Boy.—Frances A. M. Johnson.—TFS 
My Boy Fritz.—Ellen Murray.—CS 27 
My Bread on the Waters.—G: L. Catlin.—CS 17 
My Brigantine. (Sel. fr. The Water Witch, Ch. XV.) 

Jas. F. Cooper.—AA—BNL 
My Brother Henry. (Sel. fr. My Lady Nicotine, Ch. 

XIV.)— Jas. M. Barrie.—VSG—WR 13 
My Brother Jean.—Anon.—KNS 
My Callie.—P. A. P.—CG 3 

My Captain.—Walt Whitman. See O Captain, My 
Captain. 

My Carlo Talks.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—PS— 
TT 

My Catbird.—W: H. Venable.—AA 
My Charmer.—Edmund Waller.—EPs 
My Child—J: Pierpont.—AA—BNL—CS 9—FEP— 
HBP—HDL—SE (br. sel.)— TAV 
"My child and schollar, take good heed.”—BVC 
“My child woke crying from her sleep.” (C.) —G: 
Macdonald. 

(God Watcheth.)—HDL 
My Childhood Home.—B: P. Shillaber.—CS 7 
(Picture, A.)—FP 

My Childhood’s Love. — C: Kingsley. See Water 
Babies, The. 

My Children.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
My Chillun’s Pictyah.—Anne V. Culbertson.—WR 7 
My Choice.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
My Christmas Card.—G. B. Fowler.—CG 1 
My Cid’s Triumph. (Poem of the Cid.)—(7V. by) 
Ormsby. See Cid, The. 

My Cigar.—Arthur W. Gundry.—PPh 
My Cigarette.—R: Barnard.—PPh 
My Cigarette.—Tom Hall.—PPh 
My Cigarette.—C: F. Lummis.—HP—PPh (at. to C. 
A. Snyder.) 

My Composition about Pins.—Anon.—WR 17 
My Comrade.—Edwin Markham.—AA 
My Comrade.—Jas. J. Roche.—AA 
My Comrade Canoe.—W: C. Roberts.—TCV 
My Country.—Louis S. Amonson.—CS 33 
My Country. (School exercise for Fourth of July .)— 
Mrs. L. A. Bradbury.—EE 
My Country.—"Hesperion.”—POS 
(Land of Liberty, The.)—CS 21 
My Country.—Jas. Montgomery. See West Indies, The. 
My Country. (Sels. — ptly. same.) —G: E. Woodberry. 
—AA—WR 10 

My Country! ’Tis of Thee.—S: F. Smith. See America. 
“My countrymen! the moments are quickly passing.”— 
H: A. Brown. See Centennial Oration. 

219 






My countrymen AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“My countrymen! this anniversary has gone by for¬ 
ever.”—H: A. Brown. See Centennial Oration. 
My Country’s Flag.—Juniata Stafford.—TT 
My Creed.—Alice Cary.—CS 7 
(SI. abr. )—FP—TAV 
My Darlings.—Alice Cary.—HDL—TAS 
My Darling’s Shoes.—Anon.—FP—SR 2 
My Da ghter Jane.—Sarah L. Flowers.—CS 17 
My Daughter Louise.—Flomer Greene.—BS 20—CS 21 
- HP 

My Days • mong the Dead [are Passed], (Occasional 
Pieces, XVIII.—C.)—Rob’t Southey.—FEP 
—HBP—YBF 
(Books.)—BNL 
(His Books.)—OB 
(Library, The.)—LBB—MBB 
(Scholar, The.)—PGT 1 
(Stanzas Written in his Library.)—WEP 4 
My Dead.—F. L. Hosmer.—TAS 

My Dear and Only Love [I Pray],—Jas. Graham, Mar¬ 
quis of Montrose.—FEP—HBP 
(Pt. I.)—BNL—ELP 
(Heroic Love—Pt. I. abr.) —LH 
(I’ll Never Love Thee More—Pt. I. abr.) —EPs— 
OH 

(SI. abr. )—OB—YBF 
(Montrose’s Love—Pt. I. abr.) —-FTA 
“My dear mistress has a heart.”—J: Wilmot, Earl of 
Rochester.—FEP 
(Song.)—WEP 2 

“My Dearling.”—Eliz. A. Allan.—AA 
My Dejeuner h la Fourchette.—T: H. Bayly.—FEP 
My Delftware Maid.—Ralph Alton. 

My Delight and thy Delight.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB 

My Dog.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 

My Dog and I.—Marie M. Marsh.—WR 4 

My Dog “Sport.”—T: Street.—MYF 

My Doggie.-—Anon.—DST 

My Dolls.—Bertha G. Davis.—CS 31 

My Dolly.—Anon.—PS—TT 

My Double, and how He Undid Me. (Cond.) —E 
E. Hale.—BS 22 
My Dream.—Anon.—NA 
My Early Home.—J: Clare.—-PGT 2 
My Early Home.—Alex. Clark.—BS 1 
My Early Love.—Anon.—FLS 
My Editing.—Mark Twain.—WR 2 (cond.) 

(How I [once—C'.] Edited an Agricultural Paper.)— 
SO 

(Mark Twain Edits an Agricultural Paper— abr.) 

_Qg - 

My Elm Tree.—Rebecca D. Rickoff.—AD 
My Enemy.—Alice W. Brotherton.—AA 
My Epitaph.—D: Gray.—VA 
My Experience in Elocution.—J: Neal.—MMR 
My Experience in the Dry Goods Business.—G: 
Thatcher. —T Iv 

My Eyes! How I Love You.—J: G. Saxe.—BNL—TFY 
My Faith.—Anon.—MR 

My Faith Looks up to Thee.—Ray Palmer.—FEP— 
SAE—TAV 
(Faith.)—AA—TAS 

My Familiar. (C.)—J: G. Saxe.—AWH—THP 
(Bore, The.)—KNE 

My Farm of Edgewood, Set. fr. (Water in Landscape 
— sel. fr. Ch. I.)—Donald G. Mitchell.—LLC 
My Father.—W: Drennan.—TIP 
My Father was a Farmer.—Rob’t Burns.—MBL 
My Fatherland.—Hoffman von Fallersleben.—BLP 
My Fatherland.—W: C. Lawton.—AA 
My Father’s Child.—Gertrude Bloede.—AA—HDL 
My Father’s Half-bushel.—Anon.—MYF 
My Feet.—Gelett Burgess.—NA 
My Fiancee.—Philip C. Reilly.—CS 37 
My Fiddle. (Abr.) —Ja . W Riley.—WR 2 
My Fire.—Loren Palmer.—CG 3 

My First and Last Appearance. — E: F. Turner. — 
VSG 

My First Cigar.—R-ib't J. Burdette.—SYS 
My First Interview with Artemus Ward. (First Inter¬ 
view with Artemus Ward-— C .)—Mark Twain. 
—MHR 

(Mark Twain’s First Interview with Artemus 
Ward.)—CS 4—DDR 
My First Kiss.—S: M. Peck.—FTA 
My First Play. (SI. abr.)—C: Lamb.—MRS 
My First Political Speech.—Max Adeler. See Out of 
the Hurly Burly. 

My First Reading.—H: Irving.—VSG 

My First Recital.—W. A. Eaton.—CS 33—NPS—YP 

My First School.—Anon.—WR 3 

My First Singing Lesson.—C. S. Brown, Jr.—CS 30 

My First Speech.—Anon.—TS 


My Fountain Pen.—R b’t J. Burdette.—BS 23—CS 34 
My Friendly Pipe. (Detroit Tribxme.) —PPH 
My Friend’s Secret.—B: P. Shillaber.—CS 10 
“My fugitive years are all hasting away.”—W: Cowper. 

See Poplar Field, The. 

My Fust Gong. (C.) —H: W. Shaw. 

(Josh Billings on Gongs.)—-CS 3—MHR 
My Garden.—T: E: Brown.—OB—YBF 
My Garden Acquaintance. (Fr. My Study Windows.) 

J i«. R. Lowell.—APr 
My Garden Plot.—Anon.—CS 19 
My-Garden Wall.—Irene E. Morton.—TCV 
My God, I Love Thee.—St. Francis Xavier (tr. by E: 
Caswell) .—BNL— HBP 

My Good-for-Nothing.—Emily Huntington Miller.— 
PC—PS—WCL 

(What are you Good for?)—OS 1 
(What Boys are Good for— abr.) —TFS 
My Grandmother’s Fan.—S: M. Peck.—SO—WR 4 
My Grandpa.—Anon.—WR 17 
My Great Mistake.—Carmen Golden.—CS 36 
My Great-aunt’s Portrait.—Anon.—TMR 
My Grief on the Sea.—Douglas Hyde.—OB—TIP 
My Guest.—Anna J. Granniss.—TAS 
My Guide.—G: F. Savage-Armstrong.—VA 
“My half-day’s work is done.”—Anon.—GG 
My Heart and I.—Eliz. Barrett Browning.—GP— 
SC (br. sel .)—VA 

My Heart is a Lute.—Blanche Elizabeth, Lady Lind¬ 
say.—VA 

“My heart is awed within me when I think.”—W: C. 

Bryant. See Forest Hymn, A. 

My Heart is High above.—Anon.—OB 
My Heart Leaps up.—W: Wordsworth. See follow¬ 
ing. 

My Heart Leaps up when I Behold. (C.) —W: Words¬ 
worth.—PGT 1—SN 

(Rainbow, The.)—BNL—CGd—FEP— GP— LC— 
OB —YBF 

“My heart was heavy, for its trust had been.” (Forgive¬ 
ness— C.) —J: G. Whittier.—GG 
My Heart’s in the Highlands.—Rob’t Burns.—BNL— 
FEP — GN — HBP — LC — MBL — OS 1 — 
PHS—YBF 

My Heart’s Treasure.—J. G. F. Nicholson.—FTA 
My Heid is Like to Rend, Willie.—W: Motherwell.— 
BNL—HBP 

My Hero.—J: P. True.—PR 
My Home.—Anon.—NA 
My Home in the Wildwood.—Anon.—AD 
My Honey, My Love.—-Joel C. Harris.—AA 
My Jean (Of a’ the Airts— C.) —Rob’t Burns.—CEL 
(I Love mv Jean— also C.) —BNL—BPB—GN— 
MBL 

(Jean.)—BFV—OB—YBF 

( W. 2 add. doubtful stanzas.) —FEP—FTA— 
PGT 1 

(“Of a’ the airts the wind can blaw.”)—EPs— 
WEP 3 

My Jean (Though Cruel Fate— C.) —Rob’t Burns.— 
BIL—FTA 

My Jessie.—Mrs.-Edwards.—PC 

My John.—W: Hosea Ballou.—MR 
My Josiar.—Anon.—HP 
My Kate.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BIL—PC 
My King.—Anon.-—FLS 

My Kingdom.—Louisa M. Alcott.—DLS—YBT 
My Kingdom.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—-CGV 
My Laddie’s Hounds.—Marguerite E. Easter.—AA 
My Lady.—Anon.—CG 1 

My Lady Goes to the Play.—Arthur Ketchum.—CG 2 
My Lady Nicotine, Sel. fr. (My Brother Henry— fr. Ch. 

XIV.)—Jas. M. Barrie.—VSG—WR 13 
My Lady of the Links.—Anon.—TL 
My Lady on the Links.—A. H. Gilbert.—CG 3 
My Lady’s Coach.—Anon.—WR 19 
My Lady’s Eyes.—Anon.—FTA 
My Lady’s Grave.—Emily Bronte.—OB 
(Song.—C)—VA 
My Lady’s Tears.—Anon.—OB 
(“I saw my lady weep.”)—ELP 
(In Lacrimas.)—PGT 1 
My Lambs.—Anon.—CS 9 

My Last Chance.—Anthony Hope. See Dolly Dia¬ 
logues, The. 

My Last Duchess.—Rob’t Browning.—AVP—BS 22— 
BS 25—VA—WR 15 
My Last Shirt.— (Punch.) —SCS 

(Lines Addressed to-on the 29th of September, 

etc.)—HPE 

“My last word to you is, be courageous!”—Jean-Paul 
Richter.—GG 

My Legacy.—Helen H. Jackson.—BNL—EPs—GP 
220 







TITLE INDEX 


My Psalm 


Mv Letter.—Grace D. Litchfield.—AA 
My Letters.—R: H. Barham—HPE 
My Letters.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BIL—FTA 
(Love Letters.)—YBF 
(Lover’s Letters, A.)—CEL 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese.) — BNL — FEP — 
HBP 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese, XXVIII.—C.)— 
WEP 4 

“My life is like the summer rose.”—R: H: Wilde.— 
ASL—FEP—YBF 
(Life.)—BNL 
(Stanzas.)—A A—HBP 
My Lighthouse.—Celia Thaxter.—HDL 
My Little Bo-peep.—Frank E. Holliday [or S. B. M’Ma¬ 
nus].—CS 28—WR 4 

My Little Boy.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
My Little Brown Pipe.—Amelia E. Barr.—PPh 
My Little Dear.—Dollie Radford.—VA 
My Little Doll.—C: Kingsley. See Water Babies, The. 

My Little Friend.—Sarah E. Eastman.—CPL 
My Little Girl.—S: M. Peck.—AA 
My Little Lady.—T. B. Westwood.—OS 1 
My Little Neighbor.—Mary A. Mason.—AA 
My Little Newsboy.— Ada M. Melville.—SR 9 — 
WR 19 (si. abr.) 

My Little One.—Edgar Fawcett.—TAS 
My Little Saint.—J: Norris.—BNL 
My Little Sister.—Anon.—DJS 
My Little Tease.—G: F. Lyman.—BS 21 
My Lord Tomnoddy. (Hon. Mr. Sucklethumbkin’s 
Story.)—R: H. Barham.—CS 1 
(Execution, The—C.)—BS 25—FEP 
My Lord Tomnoddy.—Rob’t B. Brough.—FEP -THP 
—VA 

My Lost Baby.—Anon.—HP 
My Lost Love. (All the Year Round.) —HP 
My Lost Youth. — H: W. Longfellow. — AA—OB— 
PHS 

My Love.—Anon.—BNL 
(Mosaic Poetry.)—WRD 
(Poetical Patch Quilt, The.)—SR 1 
My Love.—Anon.—-HBR—WR 3 

My Love.—-Hamilton AVd£. See My Love’s Worth all 
the World. 

My Love.—W. F. Fox.—CS 20 
My Love.—Rob’t Jones.—EP 
My Love.—Jas. R. Lowell.—ASL—FEP—HBP 
My Love. (Sonnet I.)—Jas. G. Percival.—FTA— 
OH 

My Love and I.—Arthur D. Ficke.—CG 3 
My Love for thee.—R: W. Gilder. See following. 

“My love for thee doth march like armed men.” (C.) 

—R: W. Gilder.—OH 
(My Love for thee.)—ASL 

My Love has Talked.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Me¬ 
na ri-m. 

My Love is Dead.—T: Chatterton. See ..Ella. 

My Love of Long Ago.—-M. H. Browne.—WR 23 
My Love—Oh! She is My Love.—-Douglas Hyde.— 
TIP 

My Lover.—Anon.—WR 13 
My Lover.—Florence McCurdy.—CS 28 
My Lover.—Emma M. White.—PR 
My Love’s Attire.—Anon.—YBF 
(Madrigal.)—ELP—OB—WEP 1 
(Poetry of Dress, The, III.)—PGT 1 
My Love’s Worth all the World. (C.)—Hamilton 
A'id4. 

(My Love.)—FLS 

My Ma, She Knows.—Anon.—SR 13 
My Mary.—W': Cowper.—OB 

(To Mary—C.)—FEP—WEP 3 
(To the Same.)—PGT 1 

My Maryland.—Jas. R. Randall.—AA—ASL—A W B— 

GP 

(Maryland.)—EPs 
My Matilda Jane.—Anon.—MCS 

My Mauria ni Milleon. — (TV. by) G. Sigerson.— 
PEB4 

My Meerschaum Pipe.—-Johnson M. Mundy.—PPh 
My Meerschaums.—Chas. F. Lummis.—PPh 
My Minde [or Mind] to Me a Kingdom Is.—Sir E: Dyer. 
—BNL—FEP 
(Abr.) —ELP—SM—WEP 1 
(At. to W: Byrd.)—BS 7—EPs—HBP—LLC 
(Good Conscience, A— abr) —FTR 
(Peace of Mind.)—-PHS 
(Old style spelling in BNL—EEP—HBP) 

My Mistake.—E. P. G.—CG 2 

My Mistress’s Boots. — Frd’k Locker-Lampson. — 
THP 

My Mother.—-Anon.—PS 

221 


My Mother.—Anon. (at. to Walter Scott and to Win- 
throp M. Praed.)—NPS—YP 
(Knight’s Toast, The.)—CS 4—CSS—Fll—HSS 2— 
PFP—PTS («6r.)—LLC 
(Toast, The.)—FP 
My Mother.—.!: A. Currie.—'TCV 
My Mother.—Josephine Pollard.-*-SSS 
My Mother.—W: Bell Scott.—VA 
My Mother.—-Nathaniel P. Willis. See Lines on Leav¬ 
ing Europe. 

My Mother at the Gate.—Matilda C. Edwards.—CS 14 
My Mother’s Bible.—G: P. Morris.—AA—BNL—CSS 
My Mother’s Hands.—Ellen M. H. Gates.—HP 
(Beautif il Hand .)—i, —H ^ 3 (abr.) 

My Mother’s Hymn.—Anon.—TFS 
My Mother’s Hymns.—Emily G. Wetherbee.—CS 33 
(Mother’s Hymns— abr.) —-WR 6 
My Mother’s Picture.—W: Cowper.—BNL—EPs (sel ) 
—LLC 

(Mother’s Portrait, A— sel.) —BS 14 
(On the Receipt of mv Mother’s Picture [out of 
Norfolk—C.].)—FEP—HBP—MBL—WCLG 2 
—WEP 2 

My Mother’s Song.—Emma M. Johnston.—CS 23 
My Mule.—Theodore Crowl.—BS 1—CS 18 
My Muse.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
My Music (Sonnet CXXVIII.— C.) —W: Shakespeare. 
—OH 

(Sonnet.)—EPs 

My Nanie, O.—Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
My Nanie’s Awa. (C.)—Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
(My Nannie’s Awa.)—GN—MBL 
My Nannie’s Awa.—Rob’t Burns.— See foregoing. 

My Native Land.—W: D. Lightfall.—TCV 
My Native Land.—J: Boyle O’Reilly.—BNL 
My Native Land.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel, The. 

My Native Vale.—S: Rogers.—CEL 
(Italian Song, An— C.) —FEP 
My Neighbor.—Anon.—D.JS 
My Neighbor.—Lizzie C. Hardy.—CS 18 
My Neighbor Jim.—O. F. Pearre.—WR 4 
My Neighbor Jim.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
My Neighbor’s Baby.—Washington Gladden.—CS 13 
_sss 

(Baby over the Way, The.)—HP 
My Neighbor’s Call.—Georgia A. Peck.—CS 31—PR— 
YA 

“My New Pittayatees.”— (Dial. ad. fr.) T: Hood(?).— 
BeR—MPD 

My New World.—Irving Browne.—AA 
My Next Door Neighbor.—Anon.—DCD 
My Old Counselor.—-Gertrude Hall.—AA 
My Old Gray Nag.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
My Old Home.—Ellen O’Leary.—TIP 
My Old Kentucky Home [, Good-night],—Stephen C. 
Foster.—AA—BNL—FEP—GP—TAV 
(Old Kentucky Home, The.)—ASL 
My Old Rag Doll.—Harriet F. Crocker.—WR 25 
My Only Jo and Dearie, O.—R: Gall.—FEP 
My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s, Sets. fr. — Marietta 
Holley. 

Fourth of July in Jonesville. (Abr .)—CH—SR 10 
Josiah Allen’s Wife at A. T. Stewart’s Store. (Alex¬ 
ander’s Store— C.) —CS 14 
Samantha Smith becomes Josiah Allen’s Wife. 

(Married to Josiah Allen.— C.) —BS 5 
Woman’s Rights. (Dial. ad. fr. Wimmen’s Speah.) 
—BS 7—HD 

My Other Chinee Cook.—Jas. B. Stephens.—THP 
My Other Cloe’s.—Anon.—WR 14 
My Other Me.—Grace D. Litchfield.—AA 
My Owen.—Ellen M. P. Downing.—TIP 
My Owl.—H. S. Cornwell.—TAV 

"My own dim life should teach me this.”—Alfred Ten¬ 
nyson. See In Memoriam. 

My Partner. (Everv-dav Characters, IV.)—Winthrop 
M. Praed.—HPE—THP 

My Peggy.—Allan Ramsay. See Gentle Shepherd, The. 
My Phyllis.—W: C. Fitch.—CG 1 
My Pipe. (German Smoking Song.)—Anon.—PPh 
My Pipe and I.—Elton J. Buckley.—-PPh 
My Pipe is Out.—Herbert M. Hopkins.—CG 2 
My Plavmate.—J: G. Whittier.—ASL—BFV—EPs— 
FEP—GP—PHS—WCLG 2 
My Poems.—Ida W. Wheeler.—TL 
My Politics.—G. W. Pierce.—CG 2 
My Pony.—“A.”—PoR 
My Pony.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
My Portrait.—Walt Whitman.—BNL 
My Poultry Yard.—Anon.—CSS 
My Present.—Anon.—PS 

My Psalm.—J: G. Whittier.—FEP—HBP—TAS 


I 





My Purest 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


My Purest Longings Spring.—Arthur W. H. Eaton.— 
TCV 

My Pussy.—Anon.—DCP—HSS 2 
My Pussy Cat.—Anon.—PS 
My Queen.—Anon.—FLS 
My Queen.—W: Winter.—AA 
My Quest.—W. T. O.—CG 2 
My Question.—Anon.—YBT 
My Recollectest Thoughts.—C: E. Carryl.—NA 
My Religion. (Sel. jr. Ch. XII.)—Count Leo Tolstoi. 
—MRS 

My Ride.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
My Rights.—Sarah C. Woolsey.—TMR 
My Risen Lord, I Feel Thy Strong Protection.—Anon. 
—HDL 

My Rival.—Bessie Chandler.—CH—SR 10 
My Rival.—Rudyard Kipling.—HBR—SO—WR 4 
My Robin.—Sarah K. Bolton.—YBT 
My Room-mate.—S. L. B.—CG 3 
My Rose.—Hildegarde Hawthorne.—AA 
My Rose and Hers.—Thatcher H. Guild.—CG 3 
My Roses Blossom the Whole Year Round.—W: C. 
Bennett.—VS 

My Secret. (C.)—Felix Arvers (tr. by. H: W. Long¬ 
fellow). 

(Secret, The.)—FLS 

My Shadow.—Rob’t Louis Stevenson.—CGV—COS— 
DJS—DST—GMS—HSS 2—LC—PP 
My Shakespeare.—H: C. Bunner.—LBB—MBB 
My Shepherd.—H: W: Baker.—YBT ( abr.) 

(Lord is my Shepherd, The.)—HDL 
My Shine.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
My Ship.—Eliz. A. Allen.—BXL—FEP 
My Ship and I.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
My Ships.—W: M. Bunn.—CS 34 
My Ships.—Ella W. Wilcox.—SR 11 
My Silk« and Fine Array.—W: Blake.—FEP 
* (Song—C.)—OB—WEP 3 
My Sister.—Anon.—MYF 

My Sister has a Beau.—RoyF. Greene.—TMR 

My Sister's Husband.—Emma E. Brewster.—ASD 

My Slain.—R: Realf.—GP 

My Soldier Boy.—Anon.—PRR 

My Son John.—G: Thatcher.—TK 

My Song.—Olivia G. L. Wilson.—FTA 

My Soul and I. (.Sel.) —J: G.|Whittier.—LLC 

My Speech.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—PS—TT 

My Spirit Longeth for Thee. (Desponding Soul’s Wish. 

The—C.)—J: Byrom.—HBP 
My Springs.—Sidney Lanier.—TAS 
My Star.—Rob’t Browning.—OH 
My Strawberry.—Helen H. Jackson.—ASL 
My Sweet SweetiDg.—Anon. See My Swete Swetyng. 
My Sweetheart.—Sydney Dayre.—TPS 
My Sweetheart.—R. W. K.—CG 3 
My Sweetheart.—S: M. Peck.—BS 26 
My Sweetheart’s Baby Brother.—Marv K. Dallas.— 
WR 3 

My Sweetheart’s Face.—J: A. Wyeth.—BNL 
My Swete Swetyng.—Anon.—CEI. 

(My Sweet Sweeting— mod. spelling — el. abr.) —BNL 
“My Three Little Texts.’’—-Anon.—DLF 
My Three Loves.—-H: S. Leigh.—PPh 
My Thrush.—Mortimer Collins.—VS 
My Time Table.—Anon.—TT 

My Times are in Thy Hand.—Christopher N. Hall. 
—VA 

My Times are in Thy Hands.—A. L. Waring.—HDL 
(Supplication— abr.) —YBF 
(Thy Will be Done.)—FEP 
My Treasures.—Wilbur D. Spencer.—CG 2 
My Treasures.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
My Tree. (Youth’s Companion.) —AD 
My Triumph, Br. sel. jr. (“And present gratitude,” 
etc.)—J: G. Whittier.—FHS 
“My true love hath my heart [and I have his].”—Sir 
Philip Sidney. See Arcadia, The. 

My Trundle Bed.—Anon.—BS 5 
My Twentieth Birthday.—M. K.—WR 6 
My Uninvited Guest.;—May R. Smith.—AA 
My Valentine.—Jennie L. Hopkins.—WR 5 
My Vesper Song.—Marv R. Butler.—BS 22—CS 20— 
HDL 

My Visit to Niagara.—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—MAL 
My Walk to Church.—H. N. Powers.—TAS 
My Web of Life.—Anon.—FHS 
My Week.—Anon.—TFS 

My Welcome Beyond.—Allie Wellington.—CS 4 
My Wife.—G: Thatcher.—TK 

Mv Wife and Child.—H: R. Jackson.—BNL—CS 15— 
PYO 

My Wife and I.—Anon.—CS 15 
My Wife and I.—Anon.—HPE 


My Wife is a Woman of Mind.—Anon.—BS 17 
(Woman of Mind, The.)—BC 
My Wife’s a Winsome Wee Thing. (C.) —Rob’t Burns. 
—BNL—HBP—TFY—YBF 
(Winsome Wee Thing, The.)—FEP—LC 
My Wife’s Husband.—C: R. Risley.—CS 34 
My Wife’s Mother.—Anon.—DCD 
My Wind.—R. R. Kirk.—CG 3 

My Window Ivy. (SI. abr.) —Marv M. Dodge.—POS 
—YBT 

My Zoological Flame.—Edna E. Linsley.—CG 3 
Mygel Snyder’s Barty.—Gus Williams.—BDD—BeR— 
DFY 

Myles O’Hea.—Chas. J. Kickham.—TIP 
Myra.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. See following. 
Myra’s Fickleness.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.—EP 
(Myra— abr. )—ES—OB 
“Myrtis,” Sel. jr. —Walter S. Landor.—VA 
Myrtle and the Vine. The, Sel. jr. (Gluggity Glug.)— 
G: Colman, the younger. —BNL—GP 
Myrtle’s Letter.—Alice Lewis Richards.—SL 
Myself.—Harriet E. Arey.—AD 
Myself.—Mrs. Gusun.—CPL 
Myself.—Walt Whitman.— See Song of Myself. 
Mysteries, The.—W: D. Howells.—GP 
Mysteries of Life, The.—Francois R. A. de Chateau¬ 
briand. See Genius of Christianity, The. 
Mysterious Darkey, The.—Anon.—DE 
(16,000 Years Ago.)—SCS 

Mysterious Duel, A. (Harper’s Weekly.) —CS 20—SR 5 
(Duel between Mr. Shott and Mr. Nott, The.)—CH 
(Wonderful Duel. A— si. abr.) —FS 
Mysterious Guest, The.—Fowler Brannock [or Brad- 
nack].—CS 30 (abr.)— KNE— PFP 
Mysterious Portrait, a Story of Japan, The.—G: Japy. 
—BS 22 

Mysterious Rappings.—B: P. Shillaber.—CS 18—SR 6 
Mystery, A.—Mary E. Hoyt.—CG 2 

Mystery, A.-Metcalfe.—TL 

Mystery.—Minot J. Savage.—TAS 
Mystery, The.—G: F. Savage-Armstrong.—VA 
Mystery, A.—J: A. Symonds.—OH 
Mystery, The.—Lilian Whiting.—AA 
Mystery of Doom, The.—Chas. Heavysege.—TCV 
Mystery of God, The.—F. L. Hosmer.—TAS 
Mystery of Life.—Alfred Tennyson.—LLC 
Mystery of Life in Christ, The.—Eliz. Prentiss.—CS 8 
Mystic Trumpeter, The.—Walt Whitman.—HBP— 
TAS (br. sel.) 

Mystic Veil, The.—T: Whytehead.—CS 12 (abr. and si. 
diff. vers.) 

(Second Day of Creation, The.)—AVP 
Mystic Weaver, The.—Anon.—CS 6—WCLI 2 
Mystical Ecstasy, A.—Francis Quarles.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Divine Rapture, A.)—OB 

Myth, A. (Night Bird, The— C.) —C: Kingslev.—GN 
—VA 

Mythology.—Friedrich Schiller. See Wallenstein. 


N 

“N” for Nannie and “B” for Ben.—Mary K. Dallas.— 
BS 8—WR 3 

Naaman, the Leper. (Dial.) —Mrs. L. M. Willis.— 
SSE 

Nabob, The,—Susanna Blamire.—FEP 
Nabob of Arcot’s Debt, The. Sel. fr. (Hyder Ali.)— 
Edmund Burke.—SE 

Nae Shoon.—Jeremiah E. Rankin (wr. at. to Hugh 
MiUer).—OS 1 

(Babie, The.)—AA—BNL—FEP—LC (abr.) 

Nae Star was Glintin.—Eliza Cook.—CS 25 
Name, A.—W. F. Fox.—CS 8 

Name in the Sand, A.—Hannah F. Gould (at. also to 
G. D. Prentice).—AA—CS 12—CSS—FEP 
—PPSr 

Name of Old Glory, The.—Jas. W. RUey.—GN (abr.) — 
SR 13 

Name of Washington, The.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Character of Washington, The. 

Name your Poison.—G: Sennott.—CS 34 
Nameless Guest, The.—Jas. C. Harvey.—CS 27 
Nameless Hero, A.—E. M. Traquair.—SR 5 
Nameless One, The.—Jas. C. Mangan.—EDY—OB— 
TIP 

Names of Good Omen, Therapia on the Bosphorus. (C.) 
—Frd’k W. Faber. 

( Therapia.)—AVP 
Naming DoUy.—Anon.—DJS 
Naming the Baby.—Anon.—BS 18—WR 5 
Naming the Baby.—Marian Douglas.—COS—PP—SD 


009 






TITLE INDEX 


National 


Naming the Baby. ( Harper’s Bazar.) —GH 
Naming the Chickens.—Mrs. L. B. Bacon.—MYF 
{Abr.)— PR—YA 

Naming the Tree.—Mrs. B. C. Rude.—AD 

Nancy Blynn’s Lovers. J: T. Trowbridge.—MYF 

Nancy Dawson.—Herbert P. Horne.—YA 

Nancy Lee.—F: E. Weatherly.—VA 

Nancy Matilda Jones.—Anon.—MCS 

Nanny Saved from the Poorhouse.—Jas. M. Barrie. 

See Little Minister, The. 

Nansen.—Nickolay Grevstad.—-SR 
Nantasket. ( Sel .)—Mary C. Ames.—SN 
Nantucket Skipper, The.—Jas. T. Fields.—BNL—CS 5 
—CSS—FEP—GP 
(Alarmed Skipper, The— C.) —MHR 
Naomi and her Daughters-in-law. ( Tab .)—Anon.— 
BS 11—TCP 

Naples. {In Italy.)—S: Rogers.—-BNL {sel.) 
Napoleon.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold. 
Napoleon.—Richard W. Gilder.—EDY 
Napoleon.—J: G. Lockhart.—FEP 
Napoleon.—Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 
Napoleon and his Marshals, Sels. fr. —Joel T. Headley. 
Burning of Moscow, The. {Sel. fr. Ch. IX.)—PPS 
Last Charge of Ney, The. {Sel. fr. Ch. XXIV.) 
—BS 14—NPS—OM—SR 3—YP 
(Marshal Ney’s Last Charge at Waterloo— abr.) 
—FR 

(Waterloo.)—NC—PFP 
{Sels. vary si.) 

Macdonald’s Charge at Wagram. {Sel. fr. Ch. VIII.) 
—SR 6 

Napoleon and the British Sailor. (C.)—T: Campbell. 
—BNL 

(Napoleon and the Sailor— abr.) —CGd 
(Soldier and Sailor.)—LH 

Napoleon and the Sailor.—T: Campbell. See foregoing. 
Napoleon at Rest.—J: Pierpont.—SR 3 
(Exile at Rest, The— abr.)— AA 
Napoleon at St. Helena. {Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Napoleon at the Pyramids.—G: R. Graff.—BS 21 
Napoleon Bonaparte. —-C: Phillips.—CS 4—HNS—IR 
{Sel.) —PS—SR 4 {longer.) 

(Analysis of the Character of Bonaparte— sel.) —-PS 
(Character of Napoleon Bonaparte— sel.) —FAS 
Napoleon Bonaparte and Toussaint l’Ouverture. Wen¬ 
dell Phillips. See Toussaint l’Ouverture. 
Napoleon the Little, Sels. fr. —Victor Hugo. 

Napoleon the Little. {Sel. fr. Bk. I., Ch. VII.)— 
MRS 

“This century is the grandest of centuries.” {Br. 

sel. fr Conclusion, Pt. II., Ch. II.)—GG 
“This century proclaims the sovereignty of the cit¬ 
izen.” {Br. sel. fr. Conclusion, Pt. II., Ch. II.) 
—GG 

(Present Age, The— cond. fr.two foregoing sels.) 
—TMD 

Napoleon II., Duke of Reichstadt.—Fs. S. Saltus.— 
EDY 

Napoleon’s Advice to an Actor.—Anon.—BS 21 
Napoleon’s Ambition and Shelley’s Doubt. — W: 
De Shon.—NC 

Napoleon’s Farewell.— {Tr. by) Lord Byron.—EDY 
Napoleon’s Final Return. {Sel. fr. Crowned and Buried.) 

—Eliz. B. Browning.—OS 3 
Napoleon’s Midnight Review.—Jos. C. von Zedlitz {tr. 

by Clarence Mangan).—FEP 
Napoleon’s Overthrow. — Victor Hugo. See Les Mise- 
rables. 

Naravena: Spirit of God. {Tr. by) Sir W: Jones.— 
EPs 

Narcissa.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 

Narrow Escape, A. {Dial.) —Anon.—MFD 
Narrow House, The.—Anon.—HP 

Narrowness of Specialties, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.— 
TMD 

Naseby.—T: B. Macaulay.—A VP—BNL—EDY—FEP 
—HB—HBP 

(Battle of Naseby, The—C.)—BPB—CEL—EHT 
—VA—WEP 4 
{Abr.) —CSS—E A—PSR 

Nashville Exposition, The. ( Fr. a speech delivered at 
the Nashville Exposition, June 11, 1897.)—W: 
McKinley.—TMR 

Nat Ricket at Cricket.—Alfred H. Miles.—CS 36 
Nathan Hale.—Joe Cone.—EDY 

Nathan Hale.—Fs. M. Finch.—AWB—EDY—OS 2— 
PAP—PAPm—PYO—TM R 
(A br.) —SM—WCLG 1 
(Patriot, The— abr.) —PRR 
Nathan Hale.—Eugene Geary.—DS—NPS—YP 
Nathan Hale, the Martyr Spy. I. H. Brown.—BS 18 
—CS 31—PFP—PRR 


Nathan the Wise, Sel. fr. (Opal Ring. The— fr. Act 
III., Sc. 7.)—Gotthold E. Lessing.—-DR 
(Ring. The.)—MMR 

Nathaniel Hawthorne. {Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Nathan’s Case. {Sunday School Times .)—BS 1 
Nation Born in a Day, A.—J: Q. Adams. — DFR — 
WR 10 

(Declaration of Independence, The.)—PEO—PS— 
SS 

National Anthem by Dr. Oliver Wendell H-.—Rob’t 

H. Newell. See Poems Received in Response 
to an Advertised Call for a National Anthem. 

National Anthem by Gen. Geo. P. M-.—Rob’t H. 

Newell. See Poems Received in Response to 
an Advertised Call for a National Anthem. 

National Anthem by N. P.W-.—Rob’t H. Newell. 

See Poems Received in Response to an Adver¬ 
tised Call for a National Anthem. 

National Anthem by Thomas Bailey A-.—Rob’t H. 

Newell. See Poems Received in Response to 
an Advertised Call for a National Anthem. 

National Anthem by William Cullen B-.—Rob’t H. 

Newell. See Poems Received in Response to 
an Advertised Call for a National Anthem. 
National Banner, The. {Br. sel. fr. The Battle of Lex¬ 
ington.)—E: Everett.—CS 6—KNE 
(Flag. The.)—SO 
(Our National Banner.)—LLC 
(Stars and Stripes, The.)—CP 
National Cemetery at Gettysburg, Br. sel. fr. (Gettys¬ 
burg. )—E: Everett.—OS 2 
National Clock. The.—T: Starr King.—SE 
National Constitution and Rum, The.—A. Willey.— 
WR 18 

National Decay.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Deserted Vil¬ 
lage, The. 

National Distinction Depends upon Virtue. W: E. 

Channing. SeeSpiritual Freedom. 

National Duties.—Theodore Roosevelt.—AI 
National Ensign, The.—Anon.—BS 9 
National Ensign, The.—A. P. Putnam.—PTS 
(Our Flag.)—FD 2 

National Ensign, The.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. See Flag 
of the Union, The. 

National Flag, The. Sels. fr. {In Patriotic Addresses.) 
—H: W. Beecher.—TMR 
American Flag, The.—PEO 

{Abr .)—CS 10—NPS—PRR—SR 8-WR 10-YP 
Meaning of the Flag, The. {Br. sel .)—DFR 
National Flag, The. {Ptly. diff. sels.) —NC—TMR 
Our National Flag. {Ptly. diff. sel .)—SC 
(Our Flag— sel. )—PEO—WR 17 {diff.) 

National Flag, The. — C: Sumner. See Are we a 
Nation? 

National Flower, The.—Lucy Larcom.—AD—NV 
National Glory. {Sel. fr. On the Direct Tax.)—H: 
Clay—LLC 

National Gratitude.—H: Grattan. See Declaration of 
Irish Rights. 

National Greatness.—J: Bright.—See England’s True 
Greatness. 

National Hatreds.—Rufus Choate. See Barbarity of 
National Hatreds. 

National Hymn. Fs. Marion Crawford. See New Na¬ 
tional Hymn, A. 

National Hymn, The.—Janet E. H. Richards.—TMR 
National Hymn.—S: F. Smith.—OS 1 {sel.) 

(America.)—PAPm 

{Sel.) — AA—FEP—SM—TAV—WCLI 2 
(My Country, ’tis of Thee— sel .)—BS 6—LLC—SAE 
—SPE 

National Injustice.—Theodore Parker.—BLP—OS 3 
National Life.—Rufus Choate. See American Na¬ 
tionality. 

National Monument to Washington. (C.— sel.) —Rob’t 
C. Winthrop.—BS 3—CS 2 
(Washington Monument.)—FD 1—PEO—TMD 
National Morality.—H: W. Beecher.—SO 
National Music of Ireland, The, Sel. fr. (Power of 
Music, The.)—T: N. Burke.—FS 
National Ode, Read at the Celebration in Independ¬ 
ence Hall, Philadelphia, July 4,1876, Sels. fr .— 
Bayard Taylor. 

America. {Sel. fr. I., 3.)—AA 

("She takes but to give again”— sel .)—GG 
National Ode, Sel. fr. {Sel. fr. I., 1.)—BNL 
National Paintings, The: Colonel Trumbull’s “The Dec¬ 
laration of Independence.”—Jos. R. Drake. 
—AA 

National Progress. {Sel. fr. Inaugural Address, Mar. 

4, 1901.)—W: McKinley.—PEO 
National Prohibition.—T: De Witt Talmage.—TS 


223 









National 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


National Prohibition Party our Only Deliverer, A.—J. 
C. Ray.—TS 

National Song.—Alfred Tennyson. See Foresters, 
The. 

Nationality.— Rufus Choate. See American Nation¬ 
ality. 

Nationality.—T: Davis.—TIP * 

Nationality.—J. K. Ingram.—TIP 
Nations and Humanity.—G: W. Curtis. See Patriotism. 
Nation’s Birthday, The.-—Mary E. Vandyne.—PEO 
Nation’s Day of Praise, The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Nation’s Dead, The.—Anon.—CP 
Nation’s Dead, The.—Anon.—HB—TMR 
Nation’s Dead, The, Sel. fr. (Gray Honors the Blue, 
The.)—H: Watterson.—BS 7 
Nation’s Defenders, The.—Hezekiah Butterworth. — 
BS 23 

Nation’s Duty to Slavery, The, Sel. fr. (North and the 
African, The.)—H: W. Beecher.—NC 
Nation’s Honor, A.—F. R. C'oudert.—TMD 
Nation’s Hymn, The.—Anon.—WRD 
Nation’s Strength. A.— See Psalms. 

Nation’s Test, A, Sel. fr. (Daniel O’Connell—Pt. VI., 
abr.)— J: B. O’Reilly.—EDY 
Nativity, The.—Alfred Domett.—AVP 

(Christmas Chant, A.)—CS 16—PTS (abr.) 
(Christmas Hvmn, A—C.)—EDY—FEP—GN— 
HBP—OS'2—PGT 2—VA (old style.) 

Nativity, The.—L. P. Hopkins.-—PEO 
Nativity, The.—H: Milman.—AVP 
Nativity, The.—T: B. Read.—PP—SR 3—YPS 
Natural Comparisons with Perfect Love.—Anon.— 
YBF 

Natural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, The, Sets. fr. 
—Dan’l Webster. 

Fraudulent Party Outcries.—BS 16-—FTR 
(Hatred of the Poor to the Rich— abr.) —SS 
Natural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, The.—FD 1 
Natural Theology, Sel. fr. (Happy World, The— sel. fr 
Ch. XXVI.)—W: Paley.—FMR 
Nature. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —HSS 3 
Nature.—Jas. Beattie. See Minstrel, The. 

Nature.—T: Carlyle. See On Heroes and Hero Wor¬ 
ship. 

Nature, Set. fr. —Camille Flammarion.—SAE 
Nature. (Song of Nature— C.—fr. Mercury Vindi¬ 
cated from the Alchemists at Court.)—Ben 
Jonson.—EPs 

Nature.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA—ASL—TAS—YBF 
Nature.—Hugh Miller— PP—YFR 
Nature.—Alex. Pope. See Moral Essays. 

Nature. (SI. abr.) —H: D. Thoreau.—ASL 
Nature.—Jones Very—BNL—HBP—SN—TAS 
Nature.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 

Nature a Hard Creditor. (Sel. fr. The Stump Orator.) 

—T: Carlyle.—KNE—SO—SS 
Nature and the Child.—J: L. Spalding. See God and 
the Soul. 

Nature and the Children:—E. E. Higbee.—LLC 
(Arbor Day and the Children— abr.) —AD 
Nature and the Poet.—W: Wordsworth.—PGT 1 

(Elegiac Stanzas Suggested by a Picture of Peele 
* Castle in a Storm.— C. — sl. abr.) —FEP 
(On a Picture of Peel Castle in a Storm — sl. abr.) — 
HBP 

Nature and the Poets, Sel. fr. —J: Keats. See “I stood 
tiptoe upon a little hill.” 

“Nature denied him much.” (Sel fr. Farewell, in 
Italy, the book.) —S: Rogers.—GG 
Nature Designed for our Enjoyment. (Sel. fr. Popular 
Amusements.)—H: W. Beecher—SAE 
Nature in Spring.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, 
The. 

“Nature never did betray.”—W: Wordsworth. See 
Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern 
Abbey. 

Nature of Christ, The. (In Plymouth Pulpit: New 
Series, Vol. I.)—H: W. Beecher.—PPS 
Nature of Eloquence, The.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Nature of Justice, The.—R: B. Sheridan. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 

Nature of Man. The.—Louise I. Beecher.—BS 18 
Nature of Oratory, The.—W T : A. Quayle.—SR 11 
Nature of True Eloquence.— Dan’l Webster. See 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Nature Prayer, A.—I. Edgar Jones.—CS 25 
Nature Proclaims a Deity.—Francois R. A. Chateau¬ 
briand. Sec Genius of Christianity, The. 
Nature: The Artist.—F. L. Knowles.—AA 
Nature versus Education. (Dial.) —S. A. Frost.— 
FND 

Nature’s Chain.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on Man, The. 


Nature’s Daughter.—Lord Byron.—MR 
(For Music.)-—OB 

(Stanzas for Music C.) — CEL — FEP — HBP — 
WEP 4—YBF 

("There be none of beauty’s daughters.”)—PGT 1 
Nature’s Delights.—J: Keats. See “I stood tiptoe 
upon a little hill.” 

Nature’s Monotony.—Anon.—CS 36 
Nature’s Party.—Hannah Coddington.—HSS 2 
Nature’s Poem.—F. S. Palmer.—CG 1 
Nature’s Secret.—Josephine Canning.—YBT 
Nature’s Temple.—David Vedder.—AD 
Nature’s Thoughtfulness.—M. F. Butts.—NV 
Nature’s Tribute Suggests Ours. (With mus .) — Jared 
Barhite.-—AD (sel.) 

(Arbor Day Tribute.)—AD 

“Naught is the same as if love had not been.”—Edwin 
Arnold. See With Sa’di in the Garden. 
Naughty Bob.—Anon.—WR 4 
Naughty Claude.—Jas. W 7 . Riley.—RCR 
Naughty Crow, The.—Alice L. Richards—SL 
Naughty Doll, The.—Eugene Field.—DJS—WTD 
Naughty Girl, The.—Anon.—PS 
Naughty Girl’s Life in a Hotel, A.—Anon.—SR 7 
(Little Girl’s View of Life in a Hotel, A.)—CS 17 
(Naught y Lit tie Girl, The.)—HR 
Naughty Greek Girl, The.—Anon.—CH 
Naughty Hens, The.—Anon.—TT 
Naughty Hornet. A.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Naughty Kitty Clover.—Carrie W. Thompson.—BS 20 
(Kitty Clover.)—WR 2 
(“Lulu”— sl. abr.)— HP 

Naughtv Little Comet, A.—Ella W. Wilcox.— NV— 
WR 22 

Naughty Little Fred.—Anon.—WR 17 
Naughty Little Girl, The.—Anon. See Naughty Girl’s 
Life in a Hotel, A. 

Naughty Words. (Dial.) —Anon.—WR 17 
Naughty Zell.—Anon.—SR 11 

Nautical Conversation, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—CS 34 
Naval Service. (Dio! ) —Anon.—DSS 
“Nay, I’ll stay with the lad.”—Lillie E. Barr.— BS 10 
“Nay, sail I not.”—H: Taylor. See Philip van Arte- 
velde. 

Near the Dawn.—Anon.—HP 
Near the Lake.—G: P. Morris.—AA—TAV 
Nearer Home.—Phoebe Carv. — AA—BNL (sl. abr. 
and sl. diff .)—BS 14—FEP—GP—HDL— 
HSS 3—PYO—TAS—TAV 
(Abr .)—CS 4—FTR—HNS 

Nearer, mv God, to Thee.—Sarah F. Adams.—AE— 
BNL—FEP—GP—HBP 
(Nearer to Thee.)-—VA 

Nearer to Thee.—Sarah F. Adams. See Nearer, My 
God, to Thee. 

“Nearer to Thee.”—I. Edgar Jones.—CS 29 
Nearest Friend, The.—Frd’k W. Faber.—WCL 
Nearing Home.—Anon.—CS 29 
Nearing Port.—C. P. R.—HP 

“Nearly one hundred years ago there was a day of re¬ 
markable gloom and darkness.”—Rob’t E. 
Lee.—GG 

Nearly Ready (March— C.). —Mary M. Dodge.—PoR 
(Spring.)—AD 

’Neath the Cotton-wood Trees.—B. C. Rude.—AD 
Nebuchadnezzar.—J: Gower. See Confessio Amantis. 
Nebuchadnezzar for Nebuchadnezzahl.—Irwin Russell. 

—BNL—BS 8—CRR—FS—SR 5—TMR 
Necessity of Independence, The.—S: Adams. See 
American Independence. 

Necessity of Law.—R: Hooker.—SS 
(Law— sel .)—OS 3 

Necessity of Outside Agitation, The.—Wendell Phil¬ 
lips. See Daniel O’Connell. 

Necessity of Reform in Parliament.—Lord Grey.—SS 
Necessity of Religion.—Victor Hugo.—KNE—PS—SS 
Neckan, The.:—Matthew Arnold.—FEP—LC 
Necker’s Financial Plan. Sept. 26, 1789.—Honors de 
Mirabeau.—PS—SS 

Necklace, The.—Guy de Maupassant.—MRS (cond.) — 
—WGS 

Necks—a Boy’s Composition.—Laura M. Bronson.— 
GH—SR 10 

(Essay on Necks— abr .)—DES 
Ned’s Best Friend.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—-YFE 
Need for a Prohibition Party, The.—J: B. Gough.— 
—WR 18 

Need of Christ, The.—Anon.—PS 
Need of Heroism To-day.—A. McElroy Wylie.—WR 18 
Needle, The.—S: Woodworth.—GN 
Needles and Pins.—Anon.—CS 35—PR—YA 
Needless Fear. (“Afraid? of whom am I afraid?”— C.) 
—Emily Dickinson.—TAS 

904 




TITLE INDEX 


New Englander 


Neglect of Little Things. (Sel. fr. Thrift, Ch. IX.)—S: 
Smiles.—VSG 

Neglected Call, The.—Hannah L. Neale.—CS 22— 
FEP 

Neglected Pattern, The. (Our Pattern— C .)—Phoebe 
Cary.—PPSr 

Negro and the South, The.—Anon.—CP 
Negro Funeral, The. (C.)—Will Carleton. 

(Funeral, The.)—CD 

Negro in American History, The.—Frank F. Laird.— 
NC 

Negro Lullaby. (Lullaby—C.)—Paul Laurence Dun¬ 
bar.—'THP 

Negro Prayer.—Anon.—BS 3 
Negro Prayer, A. ( Methodist Recorder .)—BS 4 
Negro Problem, The.—H: W. Grady. See At The Bos¬ 
ton Banquet. 

Negro Sermon on Memory, A.—Anon.—WR 9 
Negro Slavery.—H:, Lord Brougham.—SSD 
Negro Soldier, The.—B. M. Channing.—PRR 
Neighbors.—Anon.—CD—SR 5 

Neighbors of the Christ Night.—Nora A. Smith.—PoR 
Nekros.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 

Nell. ( Cond .)—Rob’t Buchanan.—CS 15—NPS—YP 
Nell and Her Bird.—Mary Mapes Dodge.—PC 
Nell Gwynn.—-Algernon C. Swinburne.—EDY 
Nell Gwynne’s Looking-glass. — Laman Blanchard.— 
VA 

Nellie.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Nellie Walsh.—C: Barnard.—WR 16 
Nellie's Decorations.—Winifred Davis.—WR 17 
Nellie’s Easter Eggs.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Nellie’s Prayer.—G: R. Sims.—CS 32—PR 
Nell’s Christmas Stocking. {Play .)—J. L. Harbour.— 
NDP 

Nell’s Letter. {Wisconsin Farmer.)—See Little Girl’s 
Letter, A. 

Nelly Tells how Baby Came.—T: S. Collier.—HP 
Nelson.—Gerald Massey.—EHT 
Nelson, Pitt, Fox.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 
Nemesis.—C. H. Crandall.—PAPm 
Neophyte.—Eugene F. Ware.—THP 
Nepenthe, Sel. fr. —G: Darley.—TIP 
Nephelidia. {Fr. The Heptalogia.) — Algernon C. 
Swinburne.—N A 

Nephon’s Song.—G: Darley. See Sylvia; or, The May 
Queen. 

Neptune’s Triumph for the Return of Albion, Sel. fr. 

(Song.)—Ben Jonson.—EPs 
Nerves.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

Nervous Little Man, The.—Malcolm Douglas.— FAS 
Nervous Woman, The.—Anon.—DE 
Nessun Maggior Dolore.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Hough¬ 
ton.—PGT 2 
(Shadows.)—OB 

Nest Eggs.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Nest-builders, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Nestleton Magna, Sels.fr .—J. J. Wray. 

Methodist Class Meeting, A.—BS 13 
Sister Agatha’s Ghost. {Ad .)—BS 14 
Nestlings.—F. C. A.—HP 

Nestor to Hector.—W: Shakespeare. —See Troilus and 
Cressida. 

Nests. (The Eagle’s Nest, Lee. VIII., Sec. 205, si. 

abr .)—J: Ruskin.-—OS 1 
Net-braiders, The.—T: Wade.—VA 
Netley Abbey.—R: Harris Barham.—HPE 
Nets and Cages.—T: Moore.—HPE 
Nettie Budd before her Second Ball.—Mary K. Dallas. 
* —WR 3 

Never Again.—R: H. Stoddard.—FEP—TAV 
(Flight of Youth, The— C.) —AA—ASL—YBF 
(It Never Comes Again.)—BNL—LLC—MRS 
(Lost.)—FP 

(There are Gains for All our Losses.)—HBP 
Never Break a Promise.—Anon.—DJS 
Never Despair.—S: Lover.—SS 

Never Give Up. — Martin F. Tupper. — CS 8 — 
HSS 2 {abr .)—MYF 

Never Look Back.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Never Mine de Why en Wharfo’.— {Dial .)—Anon.— 
DCD 

Never or Now.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AWB—EPs 
(Now or Never— sel.) —TMR 
Never out of Sight.—Anon.—FAS {abr.) —YBT 
Never Plav Truant.-—Anon.—TT 
Never Say Fail.—Anon.—DS—PP—YA—YFR 
Never the Time and the Place.—Rob’t Browning.— 
PGT 2—YBF 

Never too Late, Sels. fr .—Rob’t Greene. 

Infida’s Song.—ES 
Palmer’s Ode, The.—WEP 1 


Never too Late to Mend.—C: Reade. See It is Never 
too Late to Mend. 

Never-ending Progress.-Spaulding.—LLC 

Nevermore.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 

Nevermore, The. (The House of Life, Sonnet XCVII.) 
—Dante Gabriel Rossetti.—BNL 
(Superscription, A— C.) —VA 
New Alcestis, A. (C .)—Bryan W. Procter. 

(Recalled to Life.)—VSG 

New Americanism, The. (Sel.) —H: Watterson.—SC 
-—TMR (shorter.) 

New Arrival, The.—G: W. Cable.—AA 
(Last Arrival, The.)—HP 
New Baby. The.—Anon.—HP 
(Deposed— diff. vers.) —DLS 
(Lulu’s Complaint.)—bR—YA 
New Baby, The. (Dial.) —Frances H. Burnett.—NDP 
New Baby, The.—C. M. Snyder.—WR 15 
New Beacon’s Set.—J: J. Rooney.—PAPm 
New Birth, The.—Herman Merivale.—CS 19 
New Book. A.—Anon.—DLS 
New Boy, The. (Dial.) —G: C. Graham.—GS 
New Boy, The.—T: Hughes. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days. 

New Castalia, The.—W: H. Ward.—AA 
New Christmas, The. (Dial.) —Clara J. Denton.— 
FT! 

New Church Organ, The.—Will M. Carleton.—AWH— 
BNL—BS 2—CS 6—GP—HR—MR 
New Country Occupied, The.—Cunningham Geikie.— 
BLP 

New Cry, The.—Ben Jonson.—ESs 
New Cure for Rheumatism, A.—Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
BS 13 

(Mr. Middlerib's Experiment.)—SR 3 
(Movement Cure for Rheumatism.)—CS 24—NPS 
-YP 

New Day, The, Sels. fr .—R: W. Gilder. 

After-song.—AA—BIL—TAV 
Dawn. (Prelude—C.)—BNL—GP—SN 
‘‘I count my time bv times that I meet thee.”—AA 
—OH 

“Love me not, love, that I first loved thee.”—OH 
“My love for thee doth march like armed men.”— 
(C .)—OH 

(My Love for Thee.)—ASL 
“Oh, love is not a summer mbod.”—BIL—FTA— 
OH—TFY 

"Smile of her I love, The.”—BIL 
Song. (C.)— AA—FTA—OH 

f“Not from the whole wide world I chose thee.”) 
—BIL 

Song: “Years have flown,” etc.—AA—ASL 
Sower, The.—TAS 

“There is nothing new under the sun.”—TAV 
New Deacon, The.-—Wade Whipple.—WR 24 
New Declaration of Independence, A [or The]. (Sel 
fr. Address Delivered at the Independence Day 
Celebration, Woodstock, Conn., 1888.)—Clinton 

B. Fisk.—CS 28—TS (si. diff. and abr.) 

New Doctor, The.—Parmenas Mix.—AWH 

New Emancipation, The.—Dwight Williams.—TS 
New England.—Anon.—FP 

New England.—Caleb Cushing. See New England in 
the War of 1812. 

New England.—Jas. G. Percival.—AA—BLP—WR 10 
New England.—G. D. Prentice.—AA 
New England. (Sel. fr. Address on the Landing of 
the Pilgrims.)—S. S. Prentiss.—FD 1 
(Glorious New England.)—CS 1 
New England and Virginia. (Br. sel. fr. The Pilgrim 
Fathers.)—Rob’t C. Winthrop.—BLP 
New England Character. (Sel. fr. Speech at the Din¬ 
ner of the New England Society of New York.) 
—Jas. G. Blaine.—SC 

New England Civilization.—W: P. Frye.—SC 
New England Climate in Summer, The.—Jtufus Choate. 
—MRS 

New England in the War of 1812.—Caleb Cushing.— 
SSD 

(New England.)—CR 
(Sectional Services in the Last War )—SS 
New England in Winter.—J: Greenleaf Whittier. See 
Snow-bound. 

New England Tragedies, The, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. 

Act I., Sc. 3.)—H: W. Longfellow.—HDL 
New England Weather. (Speech on the Weather— 

C. ) —S: L. Clemens.-—SA—WCLG 2 (si. abr.) 
(Mark Twain on the Weather.)—CS 13 

New Englander as a Citizen. The. (A Thanksgiving 
Day address.) —Anon.—CP 

New Englander in History, The.—H. L. Wayland.—NC 


225 





New England’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


New England’s Chevy Chase.—E: E. Hale.—AE— 
BS 10 

New England’s Dead.—I: McLellan.—AA—-HSS 1 
New England’s Fairest Boast.—S. S. Prentiss.—FD 1 
New Ezekiel The.—Emma Lazarus.—A A 
New Fairy Story, A.—Edouard R. L. Laboulaye.— 

New Fern, A.—“A.”—PoR 

New Girl’s Logic, The.—Mrs. Howard J. Curtis.— 
WR 25 

New Guides to Faith and Belief, The.—Anon.—OS 3 
New Hail Columbia. (Additional Verses—C.)—Oliver 
W. Holmes.—LLC 

New Hatchet Story and George Washington, A.—Rob’t 
J. Burdette.—SR 9 

(Little Hatchet Story, The.)—BS 6—CS 13—DS— 
KNE 

New Heaven, The.—Eliza Scudder.—TAS 
New “Hey Diddle Diddle.” ( London Clarion.) —FAS 
New Holiday, A.—G: W. Curtis.—AD 
(Arbor Day.)—HSS 1 

New House, The. ( Sel. fr. The Unhappy Lot of Mr. 

Lot.)—Jas. Russell Lowell.—AWH 
New House: Old Home.—J: W. Chadwick.—OH 
New Household, A.—H: W. Longfellow. See Hanging 
of the Crane, The. 

New Inn, The, Sel. fr. (Perfect Beauty.)—Ben Jonson. 
—ES—YBF 

(Vision of Beauty, A—C.)—BNL 
New Jerusalem, The, Sel. fr. (“ Bathed in unfallen 
sunlight.”)—Horatius Bonar.—GG 
New Jerusalem, The. (Song of Mary the Mother of 
Christ.)—D: Dickson (?).—FEP—HBP 
(Sels.—si. diff.) —BNL—OB 
(Heavenly Jerusalem, The— si. diff. sel.) —CEL 
New Joke, The.—-F. T. Easton.—CG 1 
New Kind of Doll, A.—Anna L. Jack.—TT 
New Liberty Bell, The.—H. B C—PEO 
“New Light.”—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 

New Magdalen, The.—R. L. Cary, Jr.—HP 
New Memorial Day, The.—A. B. Paine.—PAPm 
New Mittens, The.—E. C. Rook.—LPS—PP 
New Moon, The—Mrs. Follen. —D J S—N V— PC—W CL 
WR 17 

New Muff and Collar, The.—Kate E. Peet.—SDD 
New Multiplication Table, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
New National Hymn, A.—Fs. Marion Crawford.— 
PEO 

(National Hymn.)—WR 10 
New Occasional Address, A.—Anon.—BC 
New “Old Mother Hubbard.”—Anon.—CS 10 
New Party Needed, A.—J: B. Finch.—WR 18 
New Patriotism, The.—R: W. Gilder.—TMR 
New Poet, A.—W: Canton.—VA 
New Preacher, The.—Philip J. Bull.—CS 17 
New Preacher, The. {Dial.) —“Silonius.”—SDD 
New Prince, New Pomp.—Rob’t Southwell.—EPs— 
GN—OS 3 

New Quarters, The.—Anon.—HVD 
New Republic, The.—-Leon Gambetta.—OS 3 
New Rosette, The. (W. mus.) —G: M. Vickers.—PS 
New Sanford and Merton, Sel. fr. (Legend of Don 
Ditto and the Dutchman.)—Anon.—SR 10 
New Santa Claus, A.—J. Gertrude Menaid.—DCP 
New Series of Census Questions, A.—Anon.—BS 18 
New Simile for the Ladies, A.—T: Sheridan.—HPE 
New Sister, The.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
New Slate, The.—Anon.—BS 11 
New Slavery, The.—Anon.—WR 18 
New Song—of New Similes, A.—J: Gay.—HPE 
New South.—H: W. Grady.—MRS (abr.) —-PPS 

(Sels.) — BS 16—NC—OS 2 (br.)—PR—PS— 
SAE—SC—SO—SR 5—WR 25 
(Confederate Soldier, The— sel.) —OS 3 
(Southern Soldier, The.)—PEO 
(Lincoln as Cavalier and Puritan— sel .)—LLC 
(Old and the new South, The— hr. sel.) —OS 2 
New South, The.—H: W. Grady. See also South and 
her Problems, The. 

New Story, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 25 
New Sunday-School Scholar, The.—M. Ella Cornell.— 
SSE 

New Tambourine Drill.—E. C. and I.. J. Rook.—DM 
New Thanatopsis.—W: H. Holcombe.—CS 5 
New Theory of Frost: or, the Story of the Frost-king, 
A.—A. E. Brackett.—PPSr 

New Timon, The, Sel fr. (St. James’s Street on a Sum¬ 
mer Morning.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP 
New Toreador,The. ( London Fun.) —PAPm 
New Toy,. The.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
New Version of a Certain Historical Dialogue, A.— 
Rob’t J. Burdette.—WR 3 


New Version of “A Man’s a Man for a’ That.”—C. 
Mackay.—CS 6 

New Way to Pay Old Debts, A, Br. sel. fr. —Philip 
Massinger.—BNL 

“New Woman,” The.—E.Matheson.—TMR 
New Woman, The.—Emma P. Seabury.—WR 24 
New Woman Considered, The.—Sarah M. Graham.— 
WR 25 

New World, The. (C.)— W: B. Rands. 

(I Saw a New World.)—-VA 
New World, The.—Jones Very.—AA 
New Year, A.—Anon.—HP 
New Year, The.—A. H. Baldwin.—HSS 2 
(On the Threshold.)—PEO 
New Year, The.—Mary F. Butts.—TT 
New Year, The.—C. Innes Cameron.—SSS 

New Year, the.-Colton.—HS 

New Year, The.—G: Cooper.—PEO 
New Year, The.—Violet Fuller.—HS 
(Ring, Joyful Bells!)—PEO 
New Year, A.—Marg. E. Sangster.—PEO 
New Year, The. (“I stood on a tower in the wet.”)— 
Alfred Tennyson.—OS 2 

New Year, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See also In 
Memoriam. 

New Year, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
New Year, The. (January 1st, 1828— C .)—Nathaniel 
P. Willis.—FP 

New Year, The. (Youth’s Companion.) —CPL 
New "Year Calls. (Dial.) —T. S. Denison.—FAS 
New Year Ledger, The.—Amelia E. Barr.—CS 28 
New Year, The; or, Which Way?—Lyman Abbott.— 
BS 13 

New Year Song.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
New Year’s Address, A.—E Brooks.—BS 2—PEO 
New Year’s Burden, A.—Dante G. Rossetti.—TFY 
New Year’s Chime, A.—Anon.—HS—SE (sel.) —SR 1 
New Year’s Day.—Anon.—PEO 

New Year’s Day at Asolo.—Rob’t Browning. See 
Pippa, Passes 

New Year’s Deed, A.—Gertrude Smith.—NPS—YP 
New Year’s Dream, A.—Jean-Paul Richter. See Two 
Roads, The. 

New Year’s Eve.—Anon.—CS 1—SA—WRD 
New Year’s Eve.—Hans C. Andersen. See Little 
Match Girl, The. 

New Year’s Fve.—F. A Bartleson.—PAP 
New Year’s Eve.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—OS 3 
(Age and Song— C.) —FEP 
New Year’s Eve.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memo¬ 
riam. 

New Year’s Eve. — Alfred Tennyson. See also May 
Queen, The. 

New Year’s Eve—Midnight.—Frederika R. Macdonald. 
—VA 

New Year’s Exercise, A.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—SSE 
New Year’s Gift to Brian, Lord Bishop of Sarum. A. 
—W: Cartwright.—WEP 2 

New Year’s Gifts, The. (A Psalm for New Year’s 
Eve—C.)—Dinah M. Craik.— SSS 
(Address to the New Year— sels.) —HSS 2 
New Year’s Guest, A.—Eliza F. Moriarty.—PEO 
New Year’s Hymn. (Faithful Promises—C.)—Fran¬ 
ces R. Havergal.—BS 18 

New Year’s Resolve.—Ella W. Wilcox.—PEO—SSS 
New Year’s Story, A.—Jas. Challen.—WR 7 
New Year’s Talk, A.—Laura E. Richards.—PP— 
YPS , 

New Year’s Vows.—Anon.—DLF 
New Year’s Wishes.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
New York State Program for Arbor Day, 1889.—A. S. 
Draper.—DFR 

New Zealand Regret, A.—Eleanor Montgomery.— 
VA 

New-born Babe, The.—Mrs. Morris.—CS 2 
Newborn Death. I. (The House of Life, Sonnet 
XCIX.)—Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Newborn Death. II. (The House of Life, Sonnet C.) 

—Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Newcastle Apothecary, The. (Abr.) —G: Colman.—CS 1 
—PS 

Newcomes, The, Sel. fr. (Description of the Venus 
of Milo— sel. fr. Ch. XX.)—W: M. Thackeray. 
—OS 3 

Newest Promises and Perils of Temperance Reform, 
The, Sels. fr. —Jos. Cook. 

Our Duty.—WR 18 

Promises and Perils, etc., The.—WR 18 
New-fashioned Singin’.—H: B. Smith.—WR 4 
Newly Wedded, The.—Winthrop M. Praed.—FTA— 
OH—VA 

New-made Honor.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 


226 





TITLE INDEX 


Night 


Newness. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Newport Beach.—H: T. Tuckerman.—BNL 
News, The.—C: Sprague. See Curiosity. 

News.—T: Traherne.—OB 

News from Lexington, The.—G: Bancroft. See His¬ 
tory of the United States. 

News from the War. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
News of a [or the] Day [The]. (SI. diff. versions.) — 
Mrs. S. T. Bolton.—DR—HSS 1 
News to the King. (Fr. Songs from Dramas.) — 
Augusta Webster.—VA 
(Message of Victory, The.)—HP 
Newsboy, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Newsboy, The.—E. T. Corbett.—CS 13 
Newsboy in Church, A.—T: J. Kelly.—CS 37 
Newsboy’s Debt, The.—H. R. Hudson (at. also to 
Helen H. Jackson).—CS 14—VSG 
(Abr.) —BS 12—SR 1 
Newsboy’s Funeral, A.—Anon.—CS 34 
Newspaper, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow Papers, 
The. 

News-telling Bore, The.—Anon.—PS 
Next Morning.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—CS 20 
(Matinal Musings.)—PLD 
Next of Kin.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Next Summer.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Next Year.—Anon.—YBT 
Next Year.—Nora Perry.—PEO 
Niagara.—Anon.—CS 17 
Niagara.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Niagara.—J: G. C. Brainard.—BS 6—FEP 
(Fall of Niagara, The.)—BNL—TAV 
Niagara Falls.—C: Dickens. See American Notes. 
Niagara’s Sacrifice.—Anon.—SR 6 
Nibelungen Lied, Sels. fr. 

How Brunhild was Received - at Worms. (Sel. fr. 

Adventure X.—Lettsom’s tr.) —NE 
How Margrave Riideger was Slain. (Sel. fr. Adv 
XXXVII.—Lettsom’s tr.)— NE 
How Siegfried was Slain. (Sel. fr. Adv. XVI.— 
diff. tr.) —WR 11 

Nibelungen Lied, Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.— 
NE 

Nice Correspondent, A.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.— 
BIL—FEP—FTA—HBP—OH 
Nice Distinction, A.—Kate Vannah.—BS 21 
“Nice distinctions are troublesome.’ - —G: Eliot.—GG 
Nice People, The. (Abr.) —H: C. Bunner.—WR 14 
Nice Point, A. ( Enigram .)—Gotthold E. Lessing.— 
HPE 

Nice Valour, Sel. fr. (“Hence, all ye [or you] vain 
delights”— fr. Act III., sc. 3.)—J: Fletcher.— 
BNL—HBP 

(Melanc[h]olia.)—CEL—FEP 
(Melancholy.)—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(Poet’s Mood, The.)—EPs 
(Song, A.)—WEP2 
(Sweetest Melancholy.)—ELP 
Nicest One, The.—Anon.—DJS 
Nicholas Nickleby, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Mr.. Gregsbury and the Deputation. (Sel. fr. Ch. 

XVI., arr. as dial.) —MPD 
Nicholas Nickleby Leaving the Yorkshire School. 
(Chs. XII. and XIII. cond. )—CS 16 
(Schoolmaster Beaten, The— sel.) —BS 10 
Nicholas Nickleby Seeking a Situation. (Sel. fr. 

Ch. XVL, arr. as dial.) —MPD 
Squeers’ School. (Sel. fr. Ch. VIII.)—OS 2 
Nicholas Nickleby Leaving the Yorkshire School.—C: 

Dickens. See Nicholas Nickleby. 

Nicholas Nickleby Seeking a Situation.—C: Dickens. 
See Nicholas Nickleby. 

Nickerdemus Quadrille. (Texas Siftings.) —CH 
Nickle Plated.—I. E. Jones.—CS 31 
Nicknames of the States.—H: U. Johnson.—CS 30 
Nicodemus Dodge.—S: L. Clemens.—BS 11 
Niger.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
Nigger Baby.—Bertha M. Wilson.—MN 
Night. (Frags, fr. various authors:) —BNL 
Night.—Jas. Beattie. See Hermit, The. 

Night. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: Blake.—OB— 
WEP 3 

(Sel.) —BFV—BPB—LC—YBF 
(Sun Descending, The— br. sel.) —HSS 2 
Night.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 

Night.—Mary F. Butts.—PoR 

Night.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Night. (Sonnet XVIII.)—Hartley Coleridge.—FEP 
Night.—W: Habington. See Castara. 

Night.—C: Heavysege.—TCV 

Night.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Three Men in a Boat. 


Night.—J. Mifflin.— ASL 

Night.—Jas. Montgomery.—BNL—CS 12,—LLC 
Night.—Jas. Montgomery. See also Alps, The. 

Night.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 

Night.—Percy B. Shellev.—BSP—GP—OB 

(To Night— C.) — BNL — FEP — HBP — WEP 4 
—YBF 

(To the Night,)—BFV—PGT 1—PHS 
Night.—Percy B. Shelley. See also Queen Mab. 

Night.—Philip Sidney. See Arcadia, The. 

Night.—Rob’t Southey. See Thalaba. 4 

Night, The.—H: Vaughan.—YBF 
Night,—Jos. B. White. See Night and Death. 

Night.—C. Whitehead.—PGT 2 
Night.—Edward Young. See Night Thoughts. 

Night after Christmas, The.— Anon. — BC — BS 7 — 
CS 16—PPSr 

Night after Night.—Gertrude Bloede.—AA 
Night and Dav. (C.)—Mary M. Dodge.—PoR 
(God Sees.')— 1 TFS 

Night and Day.—R. M. Gibbs.—CG 1 
Night and Day.—Sidney Lanier.—AA 
Night and Day, The. (Sel. fr. Florence, in Italy.)— 
S: Rogers.—AVP 

Night and Day. (C.)—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
(“When the golden day is done”—br. sel.) —PoR 
Night and Death.—Jos. B. White.—BSP—EPs—GP— 
SN 

(Night.)—BNL—PYO 
(Sonnet to Night.)—POS 
(To-night.)—FEP—HBP—OS 3—YBF 
Night and Love. (C. — song fr. Ernest Maltravers, 
Bk. III., Ch. I.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton. 

(Song.)—CR—FLS (br. sel .)• 

(“When stars are in the quiet skies.”)—FEP— 
FTA—VA 

Night and Morning. (Dial.) —Mrs. L. E. V. Boyd.— 
SD 

Night and Morning. ( Good Words.) —HP 
Night and Sleep. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Night and Tempest,—Lord Byron. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

Night at Sea.—Letitia E. Landon.—HBP 
Night before Christmas, The.—Jean Agave.—CPL 
Night before Christmas, The.— Clement C. Moore.— 
BS 7 

(Christmas Times.)—PHS 
(St. Nicholas’ Dashing Ride.)—-SR 3 
(Visit from St. Nicholas, A.)—AA—BNL—EDY— 
HBP—OS 1—PC—PoR—SM—WCL—WCLI1 
Night before Execution, The.—Anon.—CS 4 
Night before Larry was Stretched, The.—Anon.— 
PEB 4 (abr. and si. diff.)— TIP 
Night before the Wedding, The; or, Ten Years After. 
—Alex. Smith.—BNL 

Night before Waterloo, The.—Lord Byron. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Night Bird, The. (C.) —C: Kingsley. 

(Myth, A.)—GN 

Night Express, The.—Cosmo Monkhouse.—AVP 
Night Has a Thousand Eyes, The. (C.) —Fs. Bour- 
dillon.—AVP—GG—PYO—VA—VS 
(Light.) — BNL — BSP — DLS — FEP — FLS — 
FTA—HDL—HP—TFY—YBF 
Night in a Down-town Street.—C: G. D. Roberts.— 
TCV 

Night in Camp.—Herbert Bashford.—AA 
Night in Eden.—Mrs. — Evans.—CS 23 
Night in Italy, A.—Rob’t. Earl of Lytton. See Wan¬ 
derer, The. 

Night in June, A.—Alfred Austin.—VS 
Night in Lesbos, A.—G: Horton.—AA 
Night in the Desert.—Rob’t Southey. See Thalaba. 
Night in the Mediterranean, A.—Anon.—AVP 
Night in the Red Sea, A.—Alfred Lyall.—AVP 
Night is Near Gone, The.—Alex. Montgomerie [or ry],— 
OB 

(Night is Nigh Gone—Allan Cunningham’s vers. — 
abr.)— HBP 

Night is Nigh Gone.—Allan Cunningham. See fore¬ 
going. 

Night is Still, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—TAV 
Night Journey of a River, The. (Sel.) —W: C. Bryant. 
—PEO 

Night Mail North, The.—H: Cholmondely-Pennell.— 
CS 35 

Night Mists.—W: H. Hayne.—AA 
Night of Horror, A.—Anon.—KNE 
Night of Terror, A.—Paul L. Courier.—CS 9—MYF 
Night Picture, A.—S. P. Cranch.—SR 1 
Night Piece, The.—Rob’t Herrick. See Night Piece: 
To Julia, The. 

Night Piece, A.—W: Wordsworth.—SN 

227 




Night 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Night Piece on Death. A, Sel. fr. —T: Parnell.— 
WEP 3 

Night Piece: To Julia, The. (C.)—Rob’t Herrick. 
-—BNL (sel.) —EPs—FEP—HBP—OB— YBF 
(Night Piece, The.)—BFV—ELP—ES—WEP 2 
(To Julia.)—OEL 

Night Quarters.—H: H. Brownell.—GN 
Night Ride on the Engine, A.—Emma Shaw.—CS 29 
Night Sea, The.—Harriet P. Spofford.—EPs 
(Ballad.)—ASL 

Night Shade.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Night Sky, The.—C: G. D. Roberts—VA 
Night Song.—Matthias Claudius.—HBP 
Night that Baby Died, The.—Nicholas Nile.—CS 17 
Night Thoughts.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in 
the House, The. 

Night Thoughts (Bks. I.-VIII.: The Complaint.), 
Sels. fr. —E: Young. 

Aspiration. (Sel. fr. Night IV.)—WEP 3 
Death. (Sel. fr. Night IV.)—KNE 
Death of Friends, The. (Sel. fr. Night III.)— 
WEP 3 

Hope. (Br. sel. fr. Night VII.)—KNE 
Narcissa. (Br. sel. fr. Night V.)—BNL 
Nature. (Br. sel. fr. Night VI.)—FP 
Night. (Br. sel. fr. Night IX.: Consolation.)—GP 
Night Thoughts. (Sel. fr. Night I.)—PS 
(M an— sel .)—B N L 
(Time— sel.) —BNL—FP 
(Time’s Midnight Voice— sel .)—SS 
Night Thoughts. (Br. sels. fr. Nights II., V., VI.) 
—BNL 

On Procrastination. (Sel. fr. Night I.)—WRD 
(Procrastination.)—BLP—BNL—LLC 
Penitence. (Br. sel. fr. Night IX.)—EPs 
Procrastination. (Sel. fr. Night I.)-—WEP 3 
Pursuit of Frivolous Pleasures, The. (Sel. fr. 
Night I.)—SS 

Sleep. (Br. sel. fr. Night I.)—EPs 
(Night Thoughts. Sel. fr .)-—BNL 
Socrates. (Br. sel. fr. Night V.)'—EPs 
Stream of Life, The. (Sel. fr. Night V.)—WEP 3 
Night Watch, The.—Francois E. J Coppee.—SR 11 
(A hr .') ' 1 1 —CS 28—TMR (shorter.) 

Night Watch, The.—W: Winter.—AA 
Night Wind. The.—Eugene Field.—GMS—LS—POS 
WR 25 

Night with a Ventriloquist, A.— (SI. diff. ahr.) —H: 
Cockton.—CS 6—MHR 

Night with a Wolf, A. (Story for a Child, A— C.) — 
Bayard Taylor.—ON—PHS—WCL 
Night-blooming Cereus, The.—Harriet Monroe.—AA 
Night-cap Sociable, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Nightfall.—J: Carver.—POS 
Nightfall.—W. W. Ellsworth.—CS 20—SA—SPE 
Nightfall.—W: H. Furness.—TAS 

(Eternal Light— si. diff. vers .)—HDL 
(Evening Hymn.)—A A 
Nightfall; a Picture.—Alfred B. Street.—BNL 
Nightfall in Dordrecht.—Eugene Field.—AA—EF— 
PoR—WTD 

Nightingale, The. (Ode XV.: To the Evening Star 
— C.) —Mark Akenside.—OB 
Nightingale, The.—R: Barnfield. See Cynthia. 
Nightingale, The.—(Gil Vicente— tr. by) J: Bowring. 
—BNL 

Nightingale, The.—(Maria T. Visscher— tr. bp) J: 
Bow'ring.—BNL 

Nightingale, The.—S: T. Coleridge.-—HBP 
Nightingale, The.—J: Keats. Nee Ode to a Nigh ingale, 
Nightingale, The.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 
Nightingale, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Nightingale.—.las. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Nightingale, The.—L E. Van Norman.—WR 6 
Nightingale, The. (Poems of the Imagination. Sonnet 
IX.— C.)— W: Wordsworth—SN—WEP 4 
Nightingale and the Glowworm, The.—W: Cowper.— 
POS 

(Abr. )—BNL—CGd—LC—OS 1—PoR 
“Nightingale, as soon as April bringeth, The.”—Philip 
Sidney. See Sidera. 

Nightingale in the Study, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.— 
BFV 

Nightingales.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB 
Nightingale’s Death-song, The. (A6r.) — Felicia 
Hemans.—EPs 

Nightingale s Departure, The.—Charlotte Smith.— 
HBP 

(On the Departure of the Nightingale.)—FEP 
Nightingale’s Song, The. (Round my own Pretty 
Rose— C.) —T: H. Bayly.—EPs 
Nightingale’s Song, The. (Sel. fr. Musick’s Duel.)— 
R: Crashaw.—BNL 


Nightmare Abbey, Sels. fr. —T: L. Peacock. 

Men of Gotham, The. (Song fr. t h. XI.)—VA— 
WEP 4—YBF 

(Three Men of Gotham.)—OB 
Mr. Cypress’s Song in Ridicule of Lord Byron. 
(Song fr. < h. XI.)—WEP 4 

Nightmare of a Freshman Sign Swiper.—W. D. Flagg 

—CG 2 

Nightmare of India, A.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Nights, The.—Adelaide Procter.—SO 
Night’s Adventure, A.—Anon.—SCS 
(Fragment, A— si. diff. vers.) —KNE 
Nights and Days.—Sybd L. Fox.—CG 3 
Nights of Music.—T: Moore.—FTA 
Nights of Venice, The.—G: Sand.—OS 2 
Nights with Uncle Remus, Sel. fr. (Brer Rabbit and 
the Little Girl—Ch. III., «(»'•.)—Joel C. Harris 
—WR 7 

Night-swans, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Night-wind.—Beatrix D. Lloyd.—AA 
Nihil Humani Alienum.—Titus M. Coan.—AA 
Nikolina.—Celia Thaxter.—GMS—GN (abr.) —-SAP 
Nikolson’s Nek.—C: E. Russell.—EDY 
Nile, The.—Leigh Hunt.—CEL—FEP—YBF 
Nile Notes of a Howadji, Sel. fr. (Under the Palms— 
Ch. XXII.— cond.) —G: W: Curtis.—AD 
Nilsson.—Sidney Lanier.—EDY 
Nimmers, The.—J: Byrom.—SCS—WEP 3 (abr.) 

Nine Cent-girls, The. (Cond.) — H: C. Bunner.— 
WR 9 

Nine Days’ Wonder, A, Sel. fr. (Oh [O—C.], Let me 
Dream.)—Hamilton Aide.—VS 
Nine Graves in Edinbro.—Irwin Russell.—WR 9 
Nine Little Goblins.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Nine Muses, The.—Blanche W. Bellamy and Maud W. 
Goodwin.—OS 1 

Nine Parts of Speech, The.—Anon.—TFS 
(Grammar in Rhyme.)—PPr—PS 
Nine Suitors, The.—Anon.—CS 35—WR 20 
Nineteenth Century Ends Slavery. The.—Lucius 
Q. C. Lamar.—BLP 

Nineteenth Century Teacher, The.—Anon.—SR 3 
(School Statistics.)—BS 10 
Nineteenth of April, 1775, The.—G: F. Hoar.—FD 2 
Nineteenth of April, 1861, The.—Lucy Lareom.— 
WR 10 

Ninetieth Psalm. (Paravhrnse.) —Anon.—DST 
Ninety and Nine. The.—Eliz. C. Clephane.—FEP— 
LLC (abr.) 

(Lost Sheep, The.)—VA 

Ninety-eight.—Dr.-Campion.—CS 24 

Ninety-eight in the Shade.—Joe Lincoln—CCB 
Ninety-nine in the Shade.—Rossiter Johnson.—HP— 
OS 2 

Ninety-three, Sels. fr .—Victor Hugo. 

Carronade, The. (Pt. L, Bk. II., Chs. IV., V., VI.— 
si. cond .)—WCLG 2 

(Monster Cannon, The— abr .)—BS 3—CS 11 — 
TMD (shorter ) 

Children of the Bonnet Rouge, The. (Sels. arr. 
and cond. fr. Pt. I., Bk. I., and Pt. Ill,, Bks. 
II. and V.)—DES 

Ninkum Land, The. (Portland Oregonian .)—CS 31 
Niobe, Sel. fr. —Frd’k Tennyson.—VA 
Nirvana.—Edwin Arnold. See Light of Asia. The. 
Nisus and Eur.valus.—Virgil .—See /Eneid. 

Nix, The.—R: Garnett.—CGd 

Nix’s Mate.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—BS J 

No.—Anon.—SM 

“No!”—Anon.—WR 6 

“No!”—Eliza Cook.—TFS 

(Bravest Thing, The— scl .)—DLS 
No!—T: Hood. See November. 

“No.”—Eben E. Rexford.—YBT 

No Age Content with his Own Estate. (How no Age 
is Content— C.) —H: Howard, Earl of Surrey. 
—FEP 

(Age of Children Happiest, The— sel.) —CGd—LC 
No and Yes.—T: Ashe.—VS 

No Baby in the House.—Clara G. Dolliver.—BNL 
No Boy Knows.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
"No candid observer will deny that whatever of good 
there may be.” (Springfield Republican.) —GG 
No Chance for an Alibi.—Anon.—SR 10 
No Conflict Now.—C: Devens.—BLP 
No Death.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
No Excellence without Labor.—W: Wirt.—BLP — 
PEO 

(Culture the Result of Labor.)—CS 11—DS 
“No Fellow.”-—Anon.—GH 
No Flowers.—Anon.—PEO 

“No free government was ever founded.”—Josiah 
Quincy. Jr.—HSS 1 


s. 


228 





TITLE INDEX 


Norval 


No God.—N. K. Richardson.—BS 4 (si. abr )—CS 1— 

J, No Hint of Stain.”—W: V. Moody. See Ode in Time 
of Hesitation, An. 

No Hope for English Literature. (C.) —Sam W. Foss. 

(No Hope for Literature.).—GH 
No Hope for Literature.—Sam W. Foss. See fore¬ 
going. 

No Jewell’d Beauty.—Gerald Massey.—FT A 
No Kiss.—Madge Elliot. — BS 11—CRR—CS 25—' 
SR 11 


No Man Knoweth his Sepulchre. (Sel.) —W: C. 
Bryant.—BLP 

No More.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 

No More. (Song of Autumn, A— C.) —Arthur H. 
Clough.—HBP 

No More.—B. F. Willson.—ASL 
No More Sea.—Anon.—GP 
No More Words.—F. Lushington.—PAPm 
No Mortgage on the Farm.—J: H. Yates.—CS 8 
No, not More Welcome.—T: Moore.—TIP 
No One Else is you.—Anon.—FLS 
No Peace without Liberty. (Sel. fr. Hungary and 
Austria in Religious Contrast.)—L: Kossuth.— 
BLP 


(Peace Inconsistent with Oppression— longer and si. 
diff.) —SS 

No Room for Mother. (Lockport Express.) —PFP 
No Royal Road to Victory.—Irving Glen.—WR 12 
“No Saloons up There.” (Baltimore Methodist.) — 
CS 34—PR —TS 

No Science for him.—Lurana W. Sheldon.—WR 21 
(Too Progressive for him.)—CS 32—PR—YA 
No Sects [or Sect] in Heaven.—Eliz. H. J. Cleaveland. 

—CS 2—FTR—HNS—HP—HR—PS 
No Slave beneath that Starry Flag.— G: L Taylor. 
See following. 

No Slave beneath the Flag.—G: L. Taylor.—PEO 
(No Slave beneath that Starry Flag.)—BLP 
No Smoking Allowed.—J. H. Bailey.—CS 22 
No Stockings to Wear.—Anon.—PR-—YA 
“No stream from its source.”—Rob’t, Lord Lytton. 
See Lucile. 

No Surrender! No Compromise.—J. O. Peck.—TS 
No Telephone in Heaven.—Anon.—WR 21 
No Thoroughfare, Sel. fr. (Mountain Tragedy, The— 
cond. fr. Act III.)—C: Dickens.—WR 16 
No Time Like the Old Time.—Anon.—GP 
No Time Like the Prase:.t.—Phoebe Cary.—HSS 2— 
KNS 


(Arr. fr. Now and Obedience, tv. adds.) 

No Time to Plate. (“I had no time to hate, because” 
— C.) —Emily Dickinson.—OH 
No Trust in Time. (Fr. Flowers of Sion.)—W: Drum¬ 
mond.—FEP 

(Sonnet from "Flowers of Sion.”)—WEP 2 
(Sonnet—Posting Time.)—ELP 
No Wonder.—Frank T. Easton.—AWH—CG 1 
No Work the Hardest Work.—Caroline F. Orne.— 
WRD 

(Toilers, The.)—HSS 3 
Nobility.—Alice Cary.—LLC—SM (abr.) — 

(True Worth— br. sel .)—PS 

(“True worth is in being, not seeming”— br. sel .)— 
GG—WCLI 1 

Nobility of Labor.—Orville Dewev.—-AE—FAS— 
FD 1—LLC—PP—PS—SS—YFR 
(Ashamed to Toil?— abr.) —HSS 3 
(Labor— abr.) —BS 17-—PEO—SE 
Noble Answer, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—WR 17 
Noble Balm, The. (Ode, An—C.)—Ben Jonson.— 
OB 


Noblest Public Virtue, The.—H: Clay. See On the 
Bank Veto. 

Nobly Born, The.—E. S. H.—EPs—OS 3 (abr.) 

Nobody Cares.—Anon.—BS 21 
Nobody Knows but Mother.—Anon.—PS 
Nobody There.—Anon.—CS 9 

Nobody’s Child.—Phila H. Case [or Chase]—BS 1— 
CS 2—PS—SA 

Nobody’s Dog.—Anon.—TFS 
Nobody’s Mule.—Anon.—SR 10 

Nocturnal Reverie, A.—Anne Finch, Lady Winchil- 
sea.—FEP—WEP 3 

Nocturnal Sketch [A],—T: Hood.—BNL—CS 17—OS 2 
—SR 7 

(Blank Verse in Rhyme.)—HBR—HR 
Nocturnal upon St. Lucie’s [or Lucy’s] Day, A. (Sel.) 
J: Donne.—EDY 

Nocturne.—T: B. Aldrich.—HBP—PYO 
Nocturne. (An Echo of Chopin.) (All the Year 
Round.) —HP 

Nocturne.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Nocturne.—Gerald Griffin.—VA 

Nocturne of Consecration, A.—C: G. D. Roberts.— 
TCV 

Nocturne of Spiritual Love, A.—C: G. D. Roberts.— 
TCV 

Noel.—R: W. Gilder.—AA 
Noey Bixler.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Noey’s Night-piece.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Nola Kozmo.—W: (?) Baine.—CS 22—NPS—YP 
Noll’s Journey. (Abr. and arr.) —Drexa Henrv.— 
BS 20 

Nominating General Grant.—Roscoe Conkling.—NP 
Nominating James G. Blaine for President. (C.) — 
Rob’t G. Ingersoll. 

(Plumed Knight, The— cond.) —SC 
Nomination of John Sherman, Br. sel. fr. (“I have 
seen the sea,” etc.)—Jas. A. Garfield.—GG 
Non Nobis.—Anon.—OB 

“Non Omnis Moriar.” (Third book of Odes, song 
XXX.)—Horace.—TMD 

None of Self and all of Thee.— Theodore Monod.— 
HDL 

Nones and Ides.—Anon.—AE 

Nongtongpaw. —C: Dibdin.—CGd—CS 3—FEP—THP 
—WR 20 

Nonsense.—Anon.—NA 
Nonsense. (C.)—R: Corbet. 

(Like to the Thundering Tone.)—NA 
Nonsense. (C.) —T: Moore.—NA 
(If you Have Seen.)—-THP 
Nonsense Alphabet. (No. 6.)—E: Lear.—CPL 
Nonsense Verses.—C: Lamb.—NA 
Nook and a Book, A.—W: Freeland.—M BB 
Noon of Life, The.—Clement Scott.—FLS 
Noontide.—J: Leyden.—BNL 

Noozell and the Organ-grinder.—“Ah-Mie.”—CS 15— 
DFY 

Nora M’Guire’s Lovers.—W: Whitehead.—CS 20 
Nora Mulligan’s Thanksgiving Party.— Louise H. 
Savage.—CS 31 

Nora’s Charm.—Phcebe Cary.—BLF 

Nora’s Vow.—Walter Scott.—AE (sel.) —BFV—BPB 

Norham Castle.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 

Norine.—Anon.—SR 6 

Norman Ba tie-song.—Anon.—OS 1 

Normans, The.—F. P. Tracy.—SE 

Noms Watering YggdrasiU, The.—W: B. Scott.—VA 

Norse Lullaby.—Eugene Field.—EF—NV—WTD 

North.—Anon.—CP 

North American Indians.—C: Sprague.—BS 2—LLC 
—WR 10 


(True Balm.)—LH 

Noble Lav of Aillinn, The.—Stopford A. Brooke.— 
TIP 

Noble Living. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Noble Nature, The.—Ben Jonson. See To the Immor¬ 
tal Memory and Friendship of that Noble Pair, 

Noble Old E’m, The.—Ja=. W. Rd v— BJC 
Noble Revenge, The.—Anon.—CS 6—PS 
(After Twenty Years.)—NPS—YP 
Noble Revenge.—T: De Quincey.—CS 7 
Noble Stranger, The.—Anon.—CS 26—PR—YA 
Noble Tuck-man, The.—Jean Ingelow.—NA 
Nobleman and the Pensioner, The.—Gottlieb K. Pfeffel 
(tr. by C: T. Brooks).—BNL 
Nobleman’s Wedding, The.—W: Allingham.—PEB 4 
Nobler Exercise, A.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 


(American Indian, The— abr.) —CS 4—PS 
North and South. (Youth’s Companion.) —TT 
North and the African, The. (Sel. fr. The Nation’s 
Duty to Slavery.)—H: W. Beecher.—NC 
North Wind.—Dinah M. M. Craik.—HBP 
Northern Cobbler, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—GP 
(Yorkshire Cobbler, The.)—BS 9 
Northern Farmer. (New Style.)—Alfred Tennyson.— 
PGT 2—THP 

Northern Farmer. (Old Style.)—Alfred Tennyson.— 
PGT 2—VA—WEP 4 

Northern Laborers.—C. Naylor.—OM (abr.) 

(American Laborers.)—SS 
Northern Lights, The.—B: F. Taylor.—BNL 
Northern Seas, The.—W: [or Mary] Howitt.—GN—PC 
—PHS 

Northern Star, The: A Tynemouth Ship.—Anon.— 
BFV 


Noblest Hero, The. (Dial .)—Alice Gray.—SDD 
Noblest Men, The.—G: S. Bungay.—HSS 3 
(Earth’s Noblemen— si. diff. vers .)—CS 20 


North-west Passage.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
(Good-night—Pt. I.)—DLS 
Norval.—J: Home. See Douglas. 


229 




Nor vein 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Norvem People.—Irwin Russell.—WR 14 
Norwegian Wedding-march of Grieg, in Verse, The.— 
C: W. Johnson—BLP 
Nor’-west Courier, The.—J: E. Logan.—VA 
Norwood, Sels. fr. —H: W 7 . Beecher. 

Anxious Leaf, The. (C. — sels. fr. Ch. XVI.)—AD 
(Little Leaf, The.)—HSS 1 
(What a Little Leaf Said— si. abr .)—TFS 
Biah Cathcart’s Proposal. (Sel. fr. Ch. III.)—CS 7 
—MMR 

Coming and Going. (.Sel. fr. Ch. XVI.)—BS 1 
Tommy Taft. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXIX.)—BS 4—CS 20 * 
Nosce Teipsum, Sels. fr. —Sir J: Davies. 

Soul Compared to a River, The.—WEP 1 
Soul Compared to a Virgin Wooed in Marriage, The. 
—WEP 1 

Nose and the Eyes, The.—W: Cowper.—BNL 
(Law-case, A.)—OS 1 
(Report of an Adjudged Case— C .)—HPE 
Nose out of Joint.—C: F. Adams.—DLS 

(Charley’s Opinion of the Baby.—Anon.—Varfa- 
tion on this.) —PR—PS 
(Welcome, Little Stranger.)—HP 
Nose out of Joint, A.—Mrs E. J. H. Goodfellow.— 
TT 

Nosegay, A.—J: Reynolds.—OB 
Noses.—H: F. Wood.—BS 18 

Nostradamus’s Prophecy. (SI. abr.) —Andrew Mar¬ 
vell.—ESs 

Not a Born Orator.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Not a Child. (1st poem.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.— 
OS 1 

Not a Sous Had he Got. (SI. abr. — in a note to The 
Cynotaph.)—R: H. Barham.—HPE 
Not all Imagination.—Anon.—WR 7 
“Not all who seem to fail have failed indeed.” (Fr. 

Politics for the People.)—Anon.—GG 
Not as I Will.—Helen H. Jackson.—HDL—HSS 3— 
TAS \ 

Not Ashamed of his Occupation. (Dial.) —Morton.— 
SS 

Not Ashamed of Ridicule.—Anon.—BS 22 
Not Blind.—H. M. H.—CG 1 

“Not, Celia, that I juster am.”—C: Sedley.— FEP— 
FTA—PGT 1 
(Constancy.)—YBF 
(To Celia.)—ELP—OB 
Not Changed but Glorified.—Anon.—HDL 
Not Every Day Fit for Verse.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs 
“ Not from the whole wide world I chose thee.” 
(Song fr. The New Day.)—R: W. Gilder.— 
BIL 

(Song.)—AA—FTA—OH 
Not George Washington.—Anon.—DST (abr.) 

(He Never Told a Lie.)—CS 15 
Not Guilty.—Harry S. Edwards. See Trial of Ben 
Thomas, The. 

Not Guilty?—J. W. Hatton.—CS 22—NPS—YP 
“Not here, not here, not where the sparkling waters.” 
—Anon.—GG 

(I Shall be Satisfied.)—GP—HDL 
Not I.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—NA 
Not in the Programme.—Edwin Coller.—BS 20 (sel.) 
—CS 26 (si. diff. vers.) 

Not in Vain. (“If I can stop one heart from breaking” 
— C.) —Emily Dickinson.—TAS—YBT 
Not Knowing. (C.) —Mary G. Brainard.—AA—HDL 
—SSS—TAV 

(God Knoweth— wr. at. to Bridgman.)—LLC 
Not Lost.—Sarah Doudney (at. also to T: S. Collier).— 
CS 8—SSS—TAV 

("Look of sympathy, the gentle word, The.)—GG 
Not Mine.—JuliaC. R. Dorr.—SSS 
Not Now.—Mrs. C. Pennefather.—HDL 
Noton the Battle-field.—J: Pierpont.—BNL (sel.)— 
0g 2_ppsr 

Not One to Spare.—Ethel L. Beers.—BNL—GP 
(Which?)—OH 

(Which Shall it be?)—CS 3—FEP—LLC—OS 1— 
PPSr 

Not Opposed to Matrimony.—Anon.—DE 
Not ours the Vows.-—Bernard Barton.—BNL—FEP 
—FTA—HBP—TFY 

Not Quite. (Dial. ad. fr. Paul Pry.)—J: Poole.—NDP 
Not Quite a Bargain. (Dial.) —Clara Denton.—LPD 
Not so Easy.—Eliza Doolittle.—SD 
Not so Well Acquainted.—Georgene Traver.—CS 24 
“Not to be served, O Lord, but to serve man.”—Walter 
C. Smith.—FHS 

‘Not to Myself Alone.”—J. R. Webb [or S: W: Par¬ 
tridge].—BLP—HSS 3 
Not Understood.—T: Bracken.—CS 35 
Not Very Far.—Horatius Bonar.—CS 7 


Not Victims of Money Microbes.—Anon.—WR 20 
“Not Wanted.”—Anon.—CS 35 

Not what he Wanted. (Dial.) —J. D. Vinton.—StD 
Not Willin’.—Anon.—CS 29—WR 15 
Not Worth Knowing. (Dial.) —Anon.—MD 
Not Yet, Br. sel. fr. (Our Country.)—W: C. Bryant. 
—SE 

Not Yet.—Fs. Bret Harte. See “Not yet, O friend! 
not yet.” 

Not Yet.—Caroline A. Mason.—TAS 
“Not yet, O friend! not yet.” (Not Yet— C. — song 
fr. Cadet Grey, Can. II., St. 13.)—Fs. Bret 
Harte.—GG 

Note for a Nosegay, A.—Jas. P. Webber.—CG 3 
Note to Santa Claus, A.—Anon.—DLF 
“Noted Traveler, A.”—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Noten Like a Patience.— (Reported by) Mrs. T. S. 
Oughton.—BS 19 

Notes from a Battle-field.—S. C. Stone.—PP—YFR 
Notes of a Honeymoon.—Austin Dobson.—WR 9 
Nothin’ to Say. (Sel.) —Jas. W. Riley.—SR 6 
Nothing. (Harper’s Bazar.) —SR 1 
Nothing and Something.—D. S. T. Butterbaugh.— 
WR 2 

Nothing at all in the Paper To-day.—Anon.—CS 6— 
HP 

Nothing but Flags.—Anon.—PRR 
Nothing but Leaves.—Lucy E. Akerman.—BNL— 
CS 8—FEP—PPSr—SSS 
Nothing but Leaves.—M. H. G.—MRS 
Nothing for Use.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 27 
Nothing in it.—C: Mathews.—SS 
Nothing is Lost.—Anon.—CS 20 
Nothing Lost in Nature—Gail Hamilton.—LLC 
Nothing to Do.—Anon.—SSS 

Nothing to Wear.—W: A. Butler.—BNL—CS 4 (cond.) 
—FEP 

(Sel.) —FS—SR 9 
(Cast-off Garments— sel.) —BC 
(Miss Flora McFlimsey— abr.) —AWH—THP 
Nothing to Wear.—M. G. Crocker.—CPL 
Nothing Under the Sun is New.—Marc E. Cook.—HBP 
Noth’n’ ’t AIL—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Notoriety. (Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
Notorious Glutton, The.—Ann and Jane Taylor.— 
BVC 

Nottman.—Alex. Anderson.—CS 26 (si. abr.) —W 7 R 13 
(How Little Tom was Saved— si. abr.) —DS 
’Nough for Me.—Jas. Foley, Jr.—SR 13 
Nourmahal.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 

Novel Christmas-tree, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KC 

Novel Poem, A.—Anon.—BS 22 
Novel Readers, The.—Anon.—FND 
Novel Reading.—Anon.—FDY 
Novel Reading.—Anon.—SDD 
November.—W: C. Bryant.—BS 25—FP 
November.—Alice Cary.—BLF—NV—YBT 
November.—C. L. Cleaveland.—SN 
November. (Sonnets on the Seasons. XII.)—Hartley 
Coleridge—FEP—HBP—LC—PEO—YBT 
November.—A. J. F.—CG 3 
November.—Mrs. S. Frances Harrison.—TCV 
November. (C.) —T: Hood.—GN—OS 2—POS 
(No!)—BNL—HPE—THP 
(November in England.)—SN 
November.—S: Longfellow. See November and April. 
November.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
November.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
November.—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 
November and April. (C.) —S: Longfellow. 

(April— sel.) —SN 
(N ovember— sel. )—SN 
November Child, A.—R: W. Gilder.—OS 1 
November, 1813. (C.) —W: Wordsworth. 

(George III.)—EHT 

November Good-night, A.—Ethel L. Beers.—POS 
November in England.—T: Hood. See November. 
November, 1793.—W: L. Bowles.—WEP 4 
November’s Cadence.—Jas. Carnegie, Earl of Southesk. 
—VA 

November’s Come.-—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 

Now.—Anon.—HSS 3 

Now.—Anon.—TFS 

Now.—Phcebe Cary.—BLF 

(No Time Like the Present— arr. fr. Now and 
Obedience, w. adds.) —HSS 2—KNS 
Now.—Mary B. Dodge.—AA 
“Now!” (SI. abr.) —-Frances R. Havergal.—CS 14 
Now.—C: Mackay.—LLC 

Now. (C.) —Adelaide A. Procter.—CS 7—HDL 

(“Rise! for the day is passing”— br. sel.) —GG— 
HSS 3 


230 




TITLE INDEX 


0, Inexpressible 


Now and Afterwards. (C.)—Dinah M. M. Craik.— 
BNL—FEP—GP 
(Labor and Rest.)—FP 

“Now, believe me, God hides some ideal in every 
human soul.”—Rob’t Collyer.—FHS 
Now, Grandpapa. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
“Now I Lay me Down to Sleep.”—Anon.—CS 5—HP 
(Ptly. same —CS 5 includes Unfinished Prayer. The 
—Anon.— in HP.) 

Now I Lay me Down to Sleep.—Anon.—CS 26 
Now I Lay me Down to Sleep.—Eugene H. Pullen.— 
AA 

Now I Lay me Down to Sleep. (Wichita Eagle.) — 
BS 23—LLC (si. abr.)— PR 

Now is the Cherry in Blossom.—Mary E. (Wilkins) 
Freeman.—AA 

Now is the Time.—Jones Very.—AD 

(“Bud will soon become a flower, The”— sel.) — 
HSS 3 

Now or Never.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Never or 
Now. 

Now or Never.—Ellen Pickering.—DDD 
"Now, soul, be very still and go apart.”—Mary A. 
Barr.—GG 

“Now thank we all our God.”—Martin Rinkart.—LLC 
Now the Day is Over.—Sabine Baring-Gould. See 
Child’s Evening Hymn. 

Now the Noisy Winds are Still.—Mary M. Dodge.— 
PoR 

Now the Sun is Sinking.—Anon.—NV 
Now, Wouldn’t you Like to Know.— Dyer Smith.— 
CG 3 

Nowhere.—Ella W. Wilcox.—TFS 
(Land of Nowhere, The.)—WR 15 
Nox Nocti Indicat Scientiam.—W: Habington. See 
Castara. 

Nubian, The.—Walter Scott. See Talisman, The. 

No. 5 Collect Street.—S. J. Pardessus.—CS 34 
Number 999.—E: F. Turner.—CS 28 
Number Ninety-one.—Anon.—CS 10 
Number One.—C: R. Talbot.—YBT 
Number Twenty-five.—Anon.—CS 27 
Numbers, Sels. fr. Bible. 

Balaam’s Parables. (Sels. fr. Chs. XXIII. and 
XXIV.)—BS 15 

(Balaam’s Prophecy in Behalf of Israel — ptly. 
same.) —SS 

Numbers Altered. (Punch.) —HPE 
Nun, The.—Leigh Hunt.—FEP—HBP 
Nun at her Devotions, A. (Tab.) (Scribner’s Monthly.) 
—BS 8—TCP 

Nun Danket Alle Gott.—Martin Rinkart.—LLC 
Nunc Amet qui nunquam Amavit.—Coventry Pat¬ 
more. See Angel in the House, The. 

Nun’s Lament for Philip Sparrow, The. (Sel. fr. 

Phyllyp Sparowe.)—J: Skelton.—CGd 
Nun’s Priest’s Tale.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales. 

Nuptial Eve, A.—Sydney Dobell.—VA 
Nuptial Song.—J: B. L. Warren, Lord De Tabley.— 
AVP 

Nuremberg.—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL 
Nurse Winnie Goes Shopping.—Hannah M. Johnson. 
—BS 17 

Nursery Fable, A.—Will H. Wall.—PS—TT 
Nursery Reminiscences. (C.) —R: H. Barham.—BC 
(I Remember, I Remember.)—HSS 2 
Nursery Rhymes.—Anon.—CGd 

I. : “Jenny Wren fell sick.” 

(Jenny Wren and Robin Redbreast.)—OS 1 

II. : “There were three jovial Welshmen.” 

(Three Jovial Huntsmen— si. diff. vers.) —NA 

III. : “There was an old woman, as I’ve heard tell.” 
(Old Market-woman, The.)—OS 1 

IV. : “If all the world was apple-pie.” 

(“If”— diff. vers.) —NA . 

V. : “There was a little boy and a little girl.’ 
Nursery Rhymes Drill.—Mary L. Gaddess.—WR 17 
Nursery Song.—Mrs. Carter [or Mrs. J. Morrison]. 

NV—PC—PHS __ 

(Recitation for Three Little Girls.)—LPS—PP 
(What the Mother Heard.)—PPSr 
Nursery Stove, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Nurses’Song. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: Blake. 

—BPB—BVC—LC—YBF 
Nursing.—C: and Mary Lamb.-—LPC 
Nut Hard to Crack, A.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Nut-brown Maid, The. (In Percy’s Reliques.) 
Anon.—FEP—OB—OEB—PEB 1 


N utting.—Anon.—N V 
Nutting.—Lucy M. Blinn.—CS 18 
Nutting. (SI. aim.) —W: Wordsworth.—POS 
Nutting Expedition, A.—Anon.—CS 26 


Nuts to Crack, No. I. (Acting char. — for boys.) —Clara 
J. Denton.—WLO 

Nuts to Crack, No. II. (Acting char.—for girls .)— 
Clara J. Denton.—WLO 

Nydia and lone.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Last Days 
of Pompeii, The. 

Nydia’s Sacrifice.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Last Days 
of Pompeii, The. 

Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn, The. 
(C.)—Andrew Marvell.—FEP—HBP 

(Death of the White Fawn.)—BNL 

(Girl Describes her Fawn, The— sel.) —BPB— 

PGT 1—YBF 

(Nymph Mourning her Fawn, The— sel.) —EPs 

Nymph Mourning her Fawn, The.—Andrew Marvell. 
See foregoing. 

Nymph of the Severn, The.—J: Milton. See Comus. 

Nymphydia: The Court of Fairy, Sels. fr. —Michael 
Drayton. 

Arming of Pigwiggen, The.—GN—WEP 1 

Queen Mab’s Visit to Pigwiggen.—LC 

Nymph’s Passion, A.—Ben Jonson.—EP 

Nymph’s Reply [to the Passionate Shepherd], The.— 
Sir Walter Raleigh.—BNL—GP—PHS 

(Her Reply.)—OB 

(Milk-maid’s Mother’s Answer.)—FEP (w. add. st.) 
—HBP 

(Reply to Marlowe, A.)—EP 

(Reply to Marlowe’s The Passionate Shepherd to 
his Love.)—WEP 1 

(Shepherdess’ Reply, The— w. add. st.) —CEL 

Nymph’s Song to Hylas, The. (Song fr. The Life and 
Death of Jason, Bk. IV.)—W: Morris.—OB 

(Song from Jason.)—EPs 

Nyum-Nyum, The.—Anon.—NA 


o 

“O babie, dainty Babie Bell.”—T: B. Aldrich. See 
Baby Bell. 

O, Boys, Carry me ’Long. Stephen C. Foster.—TAV 
O, Breathe not his Name! (Rob’t Emmett).—T: 

Moore. See Oh! Breathe not his Name. 

O Captain! My Captain! Walt Whitman.—AA— 
EDY — FEP — GN — HBR— LLC — OB — 
PAP — PAPm — PYO — SC — SQ — SR 8 — 
TAV—TMR—YBF 
(My Captain.)—OS 3 
O Christ, Our King.—Anon.—HS 

“O come, let us sing unto the Lord.” Bible. See 
Psalms. 

O Come Quickly! (Divine and Moral Songs, XI.— C.) 

—T: Campion.—OB—YBF 
O Crudelis Amor. (Book of Airs, XX.— C.) —T: Cam¬ 
pion.—PGT 1 
(Vobiscum est lope.)—OB 
(When thou Must Home.)—ELP 
O Days and Hours.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Me- 
moriam. 

O Dear Me!—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
O, Do not Wanton with those Eyes.—Ben Jonson.— 
BNL 

(Song— C.) —ES 

O Earth! Art thou not Weary?—Julia C. R. Dorr.— 
AA 

“O earth! Thou hast not any wind that blows.”—R: 

Realf. See Symbolisms. 

O Fain Would I.—Anon.—YBF 

O Fairest of the Rural Maids.—W: C. Bryant.—AA— 
ASL— BNL 

O Filia Pulchra.—W: W. Story. See He and She; or, A 
Poet’s Portfolio. 

“O Fons Bandusise.”—Austin Dobson.—VA 
“O glorious Easter morning!”—Sarah K. Bolton.— 
FHS 

O God.our Help in Ages Past.—I: Watts.—YBF 
O God, that Madest Earth and Sky.—Reginald Heber. 
—HDL 

"O God! This is a holy hour.” (Br. sel. fr. Midnight 
and Moonshine.)—W: Motherwell.—AE 
O Happy Soul that Lives on High.—I: Watts.—FEP 
“ O happy Thames, that didst my Stella bear.”— 
Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 

“O how feeble is man’s power.” (Sel. fr. Song.)— 
J: Donne.—EPs 

O, how the Thought of God Attracts! (SI. abr.) — 
Frd’k W. Faber.—BNL 

O, Inexpressible as Sweet. (C. — in Wild Eden.)— 
G: E. Woodberry.—A A 
(Silence of Love, The.)—ASL—FTA 


231 





O Lady Moon 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“O Lady Moon[, your horns point toward the east”—C.]. 
—Christina G. Rossetti.—PoR 
(Lady Moon.)—BVC 

O Lark of the Summer Morning.—Anon.—NV 
O, Lay thy Hand in mine. Dear!—Gerald Massey.— 
BNL—GP—TFY 

O [wr. Oh], Let me Dream. (Sel. fr. A Nine Days’ 
Wonder.)—Hamilton Aid(5.—VS 
"0, let the solid ground.”—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Maud. 

“O life, O death, O world, O time.”—R: C. Trench.— 
PGT2 

(Suffering.)—HDL 

“O life, O silent shore.” (Sel. fr. Sitting on the Shore.) 
—Dinah M. Craik—HSS 3 

O Little Town of Bethlehem. (Abr .)-—Phillips Brooks. 

—AA—FEP—GN 
(Child of Bethlehem, The.)—TAS 
(“How silently, how silently”— br. sel.) —FHS 
O Lord, Thy Wing Outspread.—W: J. Blew.—VA 
“O love and death!” (Br. sel. fr. Edith.)—Felicia D. 
Hemans.—BIL 

O Love, if Life Should be.—Anon.—FLS 
O. M. B.—Ford M. Brown.—VA 

O, Mally’s Meek, Mally’s Sweet.—Rob’t Burns.— 
GN 

O Martyrs Numberless.—Anon.—PEO 
“O Mary, go and call the cattle home.”—C; Kingsley. 

See Sands of Dee, The. 

“O [or Oh] mistress mine, [where are you roaming?]”— 

W: Shakespeare.-—OEL 

“O Mither, dinna dee!” (Sel. fr. Meg Blane, Pt. IV.)— 
Rob’t Buchanan.—GP 

O, Mither, Sing a S ng to the Bairns.—Alex. Anderson. 

—CS 37 

“O Modern Girl.”—Eliz. K. Adams.—CG 1 
O Mores!—Albert E. Thomas.—CG 2 
"O Mother of a Mighty Race.”—W: C. Bryant. See 
“Oh, Mother, etc.” 

“O mothers whose children are sleeping.” (Christian 
Union.) —GG 

O [or Oh], my Luve’s Like a Red, Red Rose.—Rob’t 
Burns.—BNL—EPs—GP—PGT 1 
(Red, Red Rose, A.) — BIL — BPB — FEP —FTA 
—• HBP — LC — MBL — OB — WEP 2 — 
YBF 

O Nanny,.Wilt thou Gang wi’ Me [or Go with Me]? 

(In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—BNL—FEP 
“O Navis.”—Austin Dobson.—VA 
O Near Ones, Dear Ones.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—BIL 
O, not by Graves.—W. R. Wallace.—FP. 

“O piety! O heavenly piety!”—Anon.—GG 
“O pious mother! kind, good, brave and truthful.”— 

T: Carlyle.—FHS 

O, Saw ve Bonnie Lesley?—Rob’t Burns.—BNL—- 
GP 

(Bonnie Lesley [or Leslie].)— FEP — HBP — OB— 
PGT 1 

O, Saw ye the Lass?—R: Ryan.—BNL—GP 
O Say, thou Best and Brightest.—T: Moore.—FTA 
O Sleep, my Babe.—Sara Coleridge.—OB 
O, Snatched away in Beauty’s Bloom!—Lord Byron. 

See "Oh, snatch’d away,” etc. 

O, Stay, Sweet Warbling Wood-lark. (C.)—Rob’t 
Burns. 

(Address to the Woodlark— also C.) —WEP 3 
O, Struck beneath the Laurel. (In Wild Eden.)—G: 

E: Woodberry.—A A 

O Swallow, [Swallow,] [Flying South],—Alfred Tenny¬ 
son. See Princess, The. 

O, Sweet Content!—T: Dekker. See Pleasant Comedy 
of Patient Grissell, The. 

O that ’twere Possible.—Alfred Tennyson. See Maud. 

O, the Pleasant Days of Old!—Frances Brown. See 
Oh! the Pleasant, etc. 

O, the Sight Entrancing.—T: Moore. See Oh, the Sight 
Entrancing. 

O Thou, from Whom all Goodness Flows.—T: Haweis. 
—FEP 

“OThou great Friend to all the sons of men!”—Theo¬ 
dore Parker.—GG 

(Way, the Truth, and the Life, The.)—BNL-—GP 
O Thou of Little Faith.—G: Macdonald.—HDL 
O Thou, the Contrite Sinners’ Friend.—Charlotte 
Elliott.—FEP 

“O, Thou who dry’st the mourner’s tear.”—T: Moore. 

See “Oh, Thou,” etc. 

“O Victor Emmanuel the king.” (Br. sel. fr. The 
Sword of Castruccio.)—BNL 
"O were I a cross on thy snowy breast.” (Eton Maga¬ 
zine.)— A VP 

O Were my Love yon Lilac Fair.—Rob’t Burns.— 

OB 

232 


O [wr. Oh], Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast.—Rob’t 
Burns.—BPB—MBL—WEP 3—YBF 
(Address to a Lady.)—HBP 
O What Can Little Hands Do?—Anon.—-YBT 
O [or Oh], Why Should the Spirit of Mortal be Proud?— 
W: Knox.— BNL (si. abr.) — CS 1 — DDR — 
FAS — 1- EP — HSS 3 (br. sel.) — LLC — PS 
PYO—WCLG 2—WRD 
(Mortality.)—HBP 

O Wind of the Mountain!—T: Westwood.—VA 
“O winds! ye are too rough, too rough!”—Alice Cary.— 
BIL 

“O! winter twilight, while the moon.”—Fs. W: Bour- 
dillon.—GG 

O Winter! Wilt thou never Go?—D: Gray.—BNL 
“O Word of God Incarnate.”—W: W. How.—FEP 
O World, be Nobler.—Laurence Binyon.—OB 
O ye Sweet Heavens!—T: W. Parsons.-—AA 
O ye Tears!—C: Mackay.—VS 
“O Years, you Have Vanished.”—-Anon.—CP 
O Yet we Trust [that Somehow Good],—Alfred Tenny¬ 
son. See In Memoriam. 

O Youth whose Hope is High.—Rob’t Bridges.—VA 
Oak, The. (In The Plea of the Trees.)—Anon.—AD 
Oak, The.—Anon.—AD—HSS 1 
Oak, The.—Anon.—YBT 
(Bits of Things.)—AD 
(Growing.)—CPL 

Oak, The. (In Choosing a “State Tree.”)—Jos. Bro- 
beck ——.A.D 

Oak, The.—J: Dryden.—HSS 1 

Oak, The. (Fr. Fall of the Oak.)—G: Hill—AD— 
HSS 1 

Oak, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD—HSS 1 (sel.) 

Oak, The.—Jas. Montgomery.—AD 
Oak, The.—Mrs. E. O. Smith.—AD 
Oak, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—OS 2 
Oak and the Briere, The.—Edmund Spenser See 
Shepheardes Ca endar, The. 

Oak and the Mistletoe Seed, The.—Anon.—AD 
Oak in a Storm, An. (Mon. amt pant.fr. Romance) 
—Abraham Dreyfus.—WR 13 
Oak of our Fathers, The.—Rob’t Southey.—AD 
Oak Tree, The.—Anon.—AD 

Oak Tree, The. (SI. abr.) —Mary Howitt.—AD— 
LLC 

Oaks, The.—J. C. Johnson.—AD 
Oak’s Farewell, The.—G: H. Stover.—CG 3 
Oaks of Monte Luca, The. (Sel.) —H:W. Longfellow. 
—AD 

Oasis.—E: Dowden.—TIP 

Oasis of Sidi Khaled, The. (In Love Sonnets of Pro¬ 
teus.)—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—HBP 
Oath, The.—T: B. Read.—CS 1 
Oath of Freedom, The.—Jas. B. Hope.—AWB 
Obedience. (C.) —Phoebe Cary.—BLF—SM—WR 17 
(Do your Best— sel .)—TT 

(No Time Like the Present— arr. fr. Now and 
Obedience, w. adds .)—HSS 2—KNS 
Obedient Servants, The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Obermann Once More. (Sel .)—Matthew Arnold.— 
OS 3 

Oberon and Titania to the Fairy Train.—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 
Oberon’s Feast.—Rob’t Herrick.—WEP 2 
Obeying Orders.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Obeying Pleasantly.—Anon.—WR 17 
Obituary.—T: W. Parsons.—AA 
Object of Missions, The.—Fs. Wayland.—CS 11 
Oblation, The.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—LH 
Obligations of Wealth, The.—Anon.—CP 
Obliging Druggist, The.—Anon.—PS 
(Encouraging Self-murder.)—GH 
Obliging h,is Landlady.—C: D. Hickman.—WR 24 
Oblivion’s Gate.—Frank M. Larned.—CG 1. 

O’Branigan’s Drill.—W. W. Fink.—CS 24—DCR 
Obrig Grange, Sel. fr. —Walter C. Smith.—VA 
Obsequies of David the Painter.—Pierre J. Beranger. 

(tr. by Fs. Mahoney).—GP 
Obsequies of Stuart.—J: R. Thompson.—EDY 
Observation Party, An.—Anon.—EuE 
Observations by Rev. Gabe Tucker.—J. A. Macon. 

See Rev. Gabe Tucker’s Remarks. 

Observations on the Art of English Poesy, Sel. fr. — 
(Laura.)—T: Campion.—OB 
Rose-cheek’d Laura.)—ELP 
Silent Music.)—CEL 
Obstacle, An.—Charlotte P. Stetson Gilman.—SR 9 
Obstinate Music-box, The.—S. V. R. Ford.—CS 28 
Obstinate Old Man, An.—G: Horton.—WR 4 
Obstructive Hat in the Pit, The.—F. Anstey.—BS 20 
—CS 33—WR 9 

Obtaining a Promise.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 




TITLE INDEX 


Ode 


Obtaining Help in the Country. (Dial.) —Anon.— 
MPD v 


Occasional Prologue, An.-—-Anon.—BC 
Occupation of Naples by the Austrians. (Lines on the 
Entry of the Austrians into Naples— C.) —T: 
Moore.—EDY 

(Lines on Naples— ivording si. chgd.) —CSS 
(To the Neapolitans— abr.) —OS 2 
Ocean, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Ocean. The.—R: H. Dana.—POS 
Ocean, The. (SI. abr.) —Jas. Montgomery.—BNL 
Ocean.—-Rob’t Pollok. See Course of Time, The. 
Ocean, The.—Bryan W. Procter..—HSS 3 

(Address to the Ocean— si. abr.) —BNL—FP 
Ocean.—C: Sprague.—EPs 

Ocean, The.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—BNL—POS 
Ocean Burial, The.—W: H. Saunders.—FTR 
Ocean of Life, The.—Laura Rose.—SSE 
‘‘Ocean stood like crystal, The.”—R. C. W.—GG 
Ocean Wanderer, The.—-Anon.—NA 
Ocean’s Dead, The.—S. V. R. Ford.— CS 29 
Oceanus.—J: Keats. Nee Hyperion. 

O’Connell.—E: Bui wer-Lytton.—A VP 
O’Connell. (Sel. fr. The Liberator.)—T:N. Burke.—FS 
O’Connell’s Heart.—A. H. Dorsey.—CS 9 
October.—Anon.—HP 
October.—W: C. Bryant.—PEO 
October.—(C.)—Di'nah M. Craik.—EDY— POS 
(Autumn’s Processional— br. sel.) —GN 
October.—D. M. Jordan.—HP 
October.—R: K. Munkittrick.—AWH 
October.—Dollie Radford.—VA 
October.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
October.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
October. (C.) —B: F. Taylor. 

(Month of Mars, The.)—BS 2—SA 
October.—Jones Very.—POS 
October.—W T : H. Withrow.—TCV 
October here Again.—Anon.—HSS 2 
October in Tennessee.-—Walter Malone.—AA 
October Love Song.— (Campus.) —-CG 3 
October Morning, An.—R D. Blackmore. See Lorna 
Doone. 

October Trees.—Edith B. Abercrombie.—CG 3 
October’s Bright Blue Weather.—Helen H. Jackson.— 
GN—NV 

October’s Party.—G: Cooper.— COS — DST — NV — 
PP-WR 15 

Odd I See, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Odd Number, The, Sel. fr. (Necklace, The.)—Guy de 
Maupassant.—MRS 
Odd Sea-saws.—Anon.—BS 24 
Odd to a Krokis.—Anon.—NA 

Ode, An. (C.) —“How are thy servants blest,” etc.— 
Jos. Addison. 

(“How are thy servants blest, O Lord.”)—FEP 
(Hymn.)—HBP 

Ode, An: “The spacious firmament,” etc.—Jos. Addi¬ 
son. See Spectator, The. 

Ode: “Behold, out walking in these valleys.”—Bar- 
nabe Barnes.—ELP 

Ode, An: “As it fell upon a day.”—R:Barnfield. See 
Cynthia. 

Ode: “How sleep the brave.”—W: Collins. See Ode 


Written in 1746. 

Ode, An: “Now each creature joys the other.”—S: 

Daniel.—EP . 

Ode: “I am the spirit of the morning sea. —R: W. 
Gilder.—A A 

Ode: “W’hat constitutes a state.”—Sir W: Jones. Nee 
Ode in Imitation of Alcaeus, An. 

Ode, An: “High-spirited friend.”—Ben Jonson. 
(Noble Balm, The.)—OB 

(True Balm.)—LH . „ T 

Ode (C.): “Bards of passion and of mirth. — J: 
Keats.—HBP—WEP 4 
(Bards of Passion and of Mirth.)—OB 
(Ode on the Poets.)—PGT 1—PHS 
(To the Poets.)—FEP 

Ode: "We are the music makers.” (Sel.) —Arthur 
O’ Shaughnessy.—OB—PGT 2—YBF 
Ode, An ( C.): “The merchant,” etc— Matthew Prior. 
—FEP—WEP 3 

(Love’s Disguises.)—YBF pf , T . 

(“Merchant, to secure his treasure, the. ) rUi l 
(Song.)—OB 

Ode: Autumn. (C.) —T:Hood.—VA 
(Autumn.)—BNL-—HBP—OB 
(Ode to Autumn.)—CEL _ _ , 

Composed on May Morning. (C.) W: W ords- 
worith. 

(First of May— si. abr.) —EPs 


Ode: 


Ode for a Master Mariner Ashore.—Louise I. Guiney.— 
AA 

Ode for a Social Meeting.—Oliver W. Holmes.—BNL 
—THP 

Ode for Ben Jonson, An.—Rob’t Herrick.—ELP— 
WEP 2 

(Ode to Ben Jonson.)—BNL—EPs 
(To Ben Jonson.)—EDY 

Ode for Decoration Day.—H: Peterson.—AA (sel.) — 
CS 9—HSS 1—PEO 

Ode for Decoration Day.—S. D. Phelps.—BLP 
Ode (for Music) on St. Cecilia’s Day. (C.) —Alex. 

Pope. See Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day. 

Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day.—J: Dryden. See Song for 
St. Cecilia’s Day, A. 

Ode for the Canadian Confederacy, An.—C: G D. 
Roberts.—TCV 

Ode for Washington’s Birthday.—Oliver W. Holmes.— 
DFR 

Ode from the French, Sel. fr. (Murat.)—Lord Byron.— 
BNL—EPs 

Ode in Imitation of Alcaeus, An.—Sir W: Jones.— 
FEP 

(Ode: “What constitutes a state.”)—HBP 
(Our Country’s Needs—Finch— contains this, abr.) — 

sss 

(What Constitutes a State.)—BNL—GG—GP— 
SE (sel.) 

(Abr.) —LLC—PPSr—SM—WCLG 2 
Ode in May.—W: Watson.—OB 

Ode in Memory of Dr. Hoffmann, Sel. fr. (The Spec¬ 
tator.)— BV C 

Ode in Time of Hesitation, An, Sets. fr. W: V. Moody. 
“No Hint of Stain.”—AA 
Robert Gould Shaw.—AA 

Ode: Intimations of Immortality in Early Childhood. 
(C.)—W: Wordsworth.—FEP—OB—WEP 9 
(Immortality.)—-EPs 

(intimations of Immortality.)—AE (sel.) —HBP— 
LLC (cond.)— OS 3 

(Ode on Immortality.)—GP—PH- 5 —WCLG 2 
(Ode on Intimations of Immortality [in Early 
Childhood].)—PGT 1 

(“Thanks to the human heart by which we live”— 
br. sel.) —HSS 1 

(“There was a time,” etc.)—BNL 
(“We will grieve not”— br. sel.) —GG 
Ode: Laura Sleeping.—C: Cotton.—ELP 
Ode of Thanks for Certain Cigars, An.—Jas. R. Lowell. 
—PPh 

Ode: Of Wit.—Abraham Cowley.—WEP 2 
Ode on a Distant Prospect of Cla- Jiam Academy.—T: 
Hood.—HPE 

Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College.—T: Gray. 
— PGT 1—PHS—WEP 3 
(Eton College.)—EPs 

(On a Distant Prospect of Eton College— C.) — 
BNL (br. sels.) —FEP—HBP—MBL 
Ode on a Fair Spring Morning.—Lewis Morris.—PGT 2 
Ode on aGrecianUrn. (C.) —J: Keats.—BNL—BSP— 
CEL — HBP — HBR — MRS — OB — OS 3 — 
PGT 1—PYO (sel.)— WEP 4 
(On a Grecian Urn.)—FEP 

Ode on a Jar of Pickles.—Bayard Taylor. See Echo 
Club, The. 

Ode. On a Sermon against Glory. (C. —Ode XVII.)— 
Mark Akenside. 

(On a Sermon against Glory.)—HBP 
Ode on Art.—C: Sprague.—FP (abr.) 

(Art.)— SS 

Ode on Christmas.—J. E. Clinton.—PEO 
Ode on Conflicting Claims.—R: W. Dixon.—VA 
Ode: On Decorating the Graves of [the] Confederate 
Dead [or Soldiers].—H: Timrod. See Ode 
Sung on the Occasion of Decorating, etc. 

Ode on Immortality.-—W: Wordsworth. See Ode: 

Intimations of Immortality, etc. 

Ode on Intimations of Immortality [from Recollections 
of Early Childhood].—W: Wordsworth. See 
Ode: Intimations of Immortality, etc. 

Ode on Melancholy.—-J: Keats.—OB 
Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day (Ode for Music on St. Cecilia’s 
Day — C.)- —FEP 
(Descend, ye Nine— sel.) —GN 
Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day.—J: Dryden. See Song for 
St. Cecilia’s Day, A. 

Ode on Science.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
Ode: On Solitude.—Abraham Cowley. See Of Solitude. 
Ode on Solitude. (C.) —Alex. Pope.—FEP—HBP— 
LC—PYO—SN 
(Ode to Solitude.)—BNL 
(Quiet Life, The.)—CEL 
(Solitude.)—PGT 1—YBF 


233 




Ode 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Ode on the Assassination of President Garfield.—Anon. 
—GG 

Ode on the Birth of our Saviour, An. ( Abr .)—Rob’t 
Herrick.—GN 

Ode on the Celebration of the Battle of Bunker Hill, 
Sel. fr. (Lonely Bugle Grieves, The.)—Grenville 
Mellen.—AA 

Ode on the Death of Mr. Thomson.—W: Collins. See 
Ode on the Death of Thomson. 

Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. (C.)— 
Alfred Tennyson.— EHT (sel.) — FEP — VA 
—WEP 4 

(Burial of the Duke of Wellington— sel.)— EDY 
(On the Death of the Duke of Wellington — 
sel.) —BNL 

(Path of Duty, The— br. sel.) —KNE 
Ode on the Death of Thomson. (C.)—W: Collins.— 
BNL (br. sel.) —EDY 

(Ode on the Death of Mr. Thomson.)—FEP— 
WEP 3 

Ode on the Morning of Christ’s Nativity.—J: Milton. 

See On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. 

Ode on the Passions.—W: Collins. See Ode to the 
Passions. 

Ode on the Pleasure Arising from Vicissitude.—T: 
Gray.—BNL (br. sels.) —PGT 1 (sel.) 

(Spring, sel.) —LC 

Ode on the Poets.—J: Keats. See Ode: ‘‘Bards of 
passion,” etc. 

Ode: On the Spring. (C.) — T: Gray.— PGT 1 — 
WEP 3 

(On the Spring.)—FEP 
(Spring.)—BNL 

Ode on the Unveiling of the Shaw Memorial on Boston 
Common, An.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Ode on Venice, Sel. fr. (Race with Death, The—Pt. 
I.)—Lord Byron.—LH 

Ode I.—Horace. See Death of Cleopatra, The. 

Ode Read at the One Hundredth Anniversary of the 
Fight at Concord Bridge, Br. sel. fr. (Ode to 
Freedom.)—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 
Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration, July 21, 
1865. (C.) —Jas. R. Lowell.—AA 

Abraham Lincoln. — (Sts. 5, 6— abr.) — BNL— 
PAP (abr.) —TMD 

(Commemoration Ode— sel. fr. Sts. 3, 5,6, 8, 11, 
12— abr.) —EPs—HB (abr.) —OS 3 (sel.) 
(Lincoln.)—BS 16—PEO 
(Martyr Chief, The.)—LLC 
(Our Country Saved— sel.) —MMR 
Unreturning Brave, The—st. 8, abr.) —GP 
Ode, Sung at the Opening of the International Exhibi¬ 
tion, Br. sel. fr. —Alfred Tennyson.—BNL 
Ode Sung in the Town Hall,' Concord, July 4, 1857.— 
Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—GN 
Ode Sung on the Occasion of Decorating the Graves of 
the Confederate Dead.—H: Timrod.—EPs 
(At Magnolia Cemetery.)—A A 
(Decoration Day at Charleston.)—GP 
(Ode on Decorating the Graves of [the] Confederate 
Dead [or Soldiers].)—HSS 1—OS 3 
(‘‘Sleep sweetly in your humble graves.”)—BNL 
Ode XXXVII.—Horace. See Death of Cleopatra, 

The. 

Ode to a Butterfly.—T: W. Higginson.—AA 
Ode to a Nightingale. (C.) —J: Keats.—BNL—HBP—- 
PGT 1—SN—WEP 4 
(SI. abr.) —GP—OB 
(Nightingale, The— br. sel.) —EPs 
(To a Nightingale.)—FEP 
Ode to a Rhinoceros.—Hilaire Belloc.—BVC 
Ode to a Skylark.—Percy B. Shelley.—WR 7 
(Sky-lark, The— abr. )—HSS 3—WCLG 2 
(To a Skylark— C.) — BFV — BPB — FEP — GMS 
—GN — GP — LLC — OB —[OS 3 — PGT 1 
—PHS -VSG—WEP 4 
(Abr.)—CR—IR 
(Sel.) —EPs—SE 
(To the Skylark.)—BNL—HBP 
Ode to an Indian [Gold] Coin.—J: Leyden.—FEP— 
HBP—LLC 

Ode to an Infant Son.—T: Hood. See Parental Ode to 
my Son, etc., A. 

Ode to Apollo.—J: Keats.—FTR 

Ode to Autumn.—T: Hood. See Ode: Autumn. 

Ode to Autumn.—J: Keats.—PGT 1—SN 
Autumn.)—POS 

To Autumn.—C.)—CEL — FEP — HBP — OB — 
WEP 4—YBF 
Ode to Beauty.—Ralph W. Emerson.—HBP 
Ode to Ben Jonson.—Rob’t Herrick. See Ode for Ben 
Jonson, An. 

Ode to Burns.—Anon.—SR 9 


Ode to Duty. (C.) —W: Wordsworth. — FEP — HBP 
—OB—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 4 
(Sels.) —BNL—EPs—TMD 
(Duty— sel. )—HDL 
(To Duty.)—LH 

Ode to Endymion Porter.—Rob’t Herrick.—WEP 2 
Ode to England, An, Sels. fr. —W: W. Lord. 

Keats.—AA 
Wordsworth.—AA 

Ode to Evening. (C.) —W: Collins.— EPs — FEP — 
HBP—OB—PGT 1—WEP 3 
( Evening.)—CEL 
(To Evening.)—BPB 

Ode to Fortune.—Halleck and Drake.—A A 
Ode to France.—Jas. R. Lowell.—EDY 
Ode to Freedom.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Ode Read at 
the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Fight 
at Concord Bridge. 

Ode to Himself[, An],—Ben Jonson.— EPs (si. abr .)— 
OEL—WEP 2 
(To Himself.)—FEP 

Ode to Independence, Sel. fr. (Independence.)—Tobias 
G. Smollett.—GP 

Ode to Independence Hall, An.—J. S. Mitchell.— BS 4 
CS 12—PRR—SR 8 

Ode to Leven Water.—Tobias Smollett.—FEP 
(To LeVen Water— si. abr.) —OB 
Ode to Liberty.—W: Collins.—WEP 3 
Ode to Master Anthony Stafford.—T: Randolph.—OB 
—WEP 2 

Ode to Memory, Sel. fr. (Memory.)—Alfred Tennyson. 
—EPs 

Ode to Miss Carteret, The, Sel. fr. —Ambrose Philips.— 
WEP 3 

Ode to Mr. C. Cotton, Sel. fr. R: Lovelace. See 
Grasshopper, The. 

Ode to Mother Carey’s Chicken.—Theodore Watts- 
Dunton.—VA 

Ode to my Little Son.—T: Hood. See Parental Ode to 
my Son, etc., A. 

Ode to my Pipe.—Andrew Wynter.—PPh 
Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte, Br. sel. fr. (Washing¬ 
ton.)—Lord Byron.—EDY 
Ode to Niagara.—Anon.—BS 26 
Ode to Peace.—W: Tennant.—BNL 
Ode to Perry.—T: Hood.—HPE 
Ode to Psyche.—J: Keats.—OB 
Ode to Rae Wilson, Esquire.—T: Hood.—HPE 
Ode to Rum, An.—W: G. Brown.—CS 9 
Ode to Simplicity.—W: Collins.—OB—PGT 1 
Ode to Sir William Sidney on his Birthday, Sel. fr. (To 
William Sidney on his Birthday.)—Ben Jon¬ 
son.—EPs 

Ode to Solitude.—Alex. Pope. See Ode on Solitude. 
Ode to Spring.—Anna L. Barbauld.—WEP 3 
Ode to Spring.—H: H. Brownell.—MYF (si. diff.) 
(Lawyer’s Invocation to Spring, A.) — AWH— 
BNL—FEP—GP—THP 
(Lawyer’s Poem to Spring, A.)—TFS 
Ode to the American Flag.—Jos. R. Drake.—PEO— 
SR 8 (si. abr.) 

(American Flag, The.) — AA — BNL — BS 3 — 
CS 1 — DFR — EDY — FEP — FTR — 
GMS — GN (sel.)— GP — HBP — LLC — OM 
— PAP — PPSr— SE — SM — SS — WCLG 1 
—WRD 

(Br. sels.) —OS 1—SAE 
(Flag of the Free—br. sel.)— PRR 
Ode to the Assertors of Liberty, An. (Ode Written 
1819, before the Spaniards had Recovered their 
Liberty, An— C.) —Percy B. Shelley.—MRS 
Ode to the Cuckoo.— J: Logan (at. also to Michael 
Bruce).—CEL—CGd 
(Cuckoo, The.)—WCL 
(Messenger of Spring, The.)—POS 
(To the Cuckoo.— C.) — BNL — FEP — HBP — 
OB—PYO (abr.)— SN 

Ode to the Deity.—Gabriel R. Derzhavin (tr. by J: 
Bowring).—BS 4 

(God.) — AE (br. sel.) — CS 4 — FTR — GP — 
HBP—HNS (abr.) 

Ode to the Devil.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 

Ode: To the Evening Star. (Ode XV.— C.) — Mark 

A Irpn^lfiA 

(Nightingale, The— abr.) —OB 
Ode to the Gowdspink.—Rob’t Ferguson.—WEP 3 
Ode to the Great Sea-serpent on his Wonderful Re¬ 
appearance. (Punch.) —HPE 
Ode to the Human Heart.—Laman Blanchard.—NA 
Ode to the Immortal Memory of Sir Lucius Cary and 
Sir Henry Morrison.—Ben Jonson. See To 
the Immortal Memory and Friendship of that 
Noble Pair, etc. 


234 





TITLE INDEX 


Of Three 


Ode to the Legislature.—J: G. Saxe.—BS 4 
Ode to the Northeast Wind. (C.) —C: Kingsley.—GN 
—PHS—VSG 
(Welcome. A.)—LH 

Ode to the Passions.—W: Collins.— AE (br. sel.) — 
FTR (gl. abr.) —TMD (sel.) 

(Ode on the Passions— si. abr.) — BS 3 — KNE — 

ss 

(Passions. The— C.) — BNL — CS 23 — EPs (si. 
abr. )—FEP—HBP—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 3 
Ode to the Pious Memory of the Accomplished Young 
Lady, Mrs. Anne Ivilligrew.—J: Dryden.— OB 
(To the Pious Memory, etc.— C.) —WEP 2 
Ode to the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of 
Scotland, An. (SI. abr.)— W: Collins.—WEP 3 
Ode to the Roc.—W: J. Courthope. See Paradise of 
Birds, The. 

Ode to the Royal Society (To the Royal Society— C.). 

Sel. jr. —Abraham Cowley — WEP 2 
Ode to the Spleen, An, Sel. fr. —Anne Finch, Lady 
Winchilsea.—WEP 3 

Ode to the Trees.—Maggie M. Welsh.—AD 
Ode to the West Wind. — Percy B. Shelley.—CEL 
— FEP — GP (sel.) — HBP — OB — PGT 1 
—WEP 4 

Ode to Tobacco. (C.)—C: S. Calverley.-PPh— 

THP 

(To Tobacco.)—BNL 

Ode to Tobacco. (Fr. letter to Mr Bingham, Sept. 22, 
1801.)—Dan’l Webster.—PPh 
Ode to Tranquillity.— S: T. Coleridge.—FTR 
Ode to Winter.—T: Campbell.—PGT 1 
Ode upon a Question Moved whether Love should 
Continue for Ever, An.—E: Lord Herbert of 
Cherbury.—WEP 2 

Ode, Written during the Negociations with Buona¬ 
parte, in January, 1814.—Rob’t Southey.— 
WEP 4 

Ode, Written 1819, before the Spaniards had Re¬ 
covered their Liberty, An.—Percy B. Shelley. 
See Ode to the Assertors of Liberty, An. 

Ode Written for the Consecration of Sleepy Hollow 
Cemetery.—Frank B. Sanborn.—EPs 
Ode Written in 1746. (Ode Written in the Beginning 
of the Year 1746— C.)—W: Collins.—BPB— 
PGT 1—YBF 

(How Sleep the Brave.)—BFV—BNL—GN—GP— 
LC—LLC—OB—OS 3—PC—PSR—SM 
(Ode.)—EP —FEP—HBP—SS—WEP 3 
Odes of Anacreon, Sel. fr. See Ode XLIV. 

Odor, The.—G: Herbert.—HBP 

Odysseus Reveals Himself to his Father.—Homer. 
See Odyssey, The. 

Odysseus’ Speech to Nausicaa.—Homer. See Odyssey, 
The. 

Odyssey, The, Sels. fr. —Homer. 

Bending of the Bow, The. (Sels. fr. Bks. XXI., 
XXII., Bryant’s tr.) —NE 
Hermes in Calypso’s Island. (Sel. fr. Bk. V., 
Chapman’s tr.) —WEP 1 

Odysseus Reveals Himself to his Father. (Sel. 

fr. Bk. XXIV., Chapman’s (r.)-WEP 1 
Odysseus’ Speech to Nausicaa. (Sel. fr. Bk. VI., 
Chapman’s tr.) —WEP 1 

Palace of Alcinoiis, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. VII., 
Bryant’s tr.) —NE 

Song the Sirens Sung, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. XII., 
Chapman’s tr.) —WEP 1 
Odyssey, The.—Andrew Lang.—OB—VA 
Odyssey, The Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
CEdipus, Sels. fr. —J: Dryden. 

Incantation. (Sel. fr. Act III., Sc. 1.)—ELP 
CEdipus, Act IV., Sc. 1, Br. sel. fr. —BNL 
CEnone; or, the Choice of Paris. (Sel.) —Alfred Tenny¬ 
son.—EPs 

Of a Certaine Man.—Sir J: Harrington.—BNL 
Of a Precise Tailor.—Sir J: Harrington.—-FEP 
Of a Rose, a Lovely Rose, of a Rose is al myn Song.— 
Anon.—OB 

Of a’ the Airts.—Rob’t Burns. See following. 

“Of a’ the airts the wind can blow.” (Of a’ the airts 
—C.)—Rob’t Burns.—EPs—WEP 3 
(I Love my Jean— also C.) —BNL—BPB—GN— 
MBL 

(Jean.)—BFV—OB—YBF 

(W. 2 add. doubtful sts.) —FEP—FT A—PGT 1 
(My Jean.)—CEL 

Of a Vision of Hell, which a Monk Had.—R: W. Dixon. 

See Mano: a Poetical History. 

Of Alice in Wonderland. (Life is but a Dream— C .)— 

C: L. Dodgson.—VA 

“Of all the reproaches which arise against a man in his 
chamber of study.”—C. J. Vaughan.—GG 

235 


"Of all the solemnities of which the mind can conceive, 
death is the greatest.”—David Swing.—GG 
Of Baiting the Lion.—Owen Seaman.—NA 
Of Blue China.—Andrew Lang.—VA 
(Ballade of Blue China—C.)—OS 2 
Of Circumspection.—G: Chapman.—ELP 
Of Clementina. (Poems and Epigrams LXXI.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—OB 
(Sixteen.)—FEP—VS 

Of Corinna’s Singing. (A Book of Airs, No. VI.,— C.) 

—T: Campion.—WEP 1 
Of Course.—Juliet W. Tompkins.—CG 1 
Of Course they Met.—-Anon.—WR 8 
Of Cruelty to Animals. (Fr. Proverbial Philosophy.) 

—Martin F. Tupper.—BNL’ 

Of Goodness, and Goodness of Nature.—Fs. Bacon. 

See Goodness and Greatness. 

Of Great Place.—Fs. Bacon. See Goodness and 
Greatness. 

Of Heaven. (C .)—Jeremy Taylor.—HBP 
(Heaven.)—BNL 

Of Henry George [who Died Fighting against Political 
Corruption-—C.].—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
Of his Choice of a Sepulchre.—Andrew Lang.—VA 
Of his Dear Son, Gervase.—Sir J: Beaumont. See 
On my Dear Son, Gervase Beaumont. 

Of his Love’s Beauty.—Ben Jonson. See Celebra¬ 
tion of Charis, A. 

Of Idle Words. Bible. See St. Matthew. 

Of Joan’s Youth.—Louise I. Guiney.—AA 
Of Liberty and Charity, Sel. fr. (Holy Nation, A.)— 
R: Realf.—PYO 
Of Life.—Andrew Lang.—VA 
Of Life and Death. (C .)—Ben Jonson. 

(Life and Death.)—FP 

Of Man’s Mortality.—Simon Wastell. SeeMicrobiblion. 
Of Masques and Triumphs. (Essay XXXVII.) — 
Fs. Bacon.—MBL 

Of my Dear Son, Gervase Beaumont.—Sir J: Beau¬ 
mont. See On my Dear Son, Gervase Beau¬ 
mont. 

Of Myself. (C .)—Abraham Cowley.—BNL—FEP 
CWish A 'l_rKT_WCT9 

Of Negotiating. (Essay XLVII.)—Fs. Bacon.—MBL 
Of Old Sat Freedom on the Heights.—Alfred Tenny¬ 
son.—BNL (sel.)-GV —WEP 4 
Of One who neither Sees nor Hears.— R: W. Gilder.— 
A A 

Of One who Seemed to have Failed.—-S. Weir Mitchell. 
—AA 

Of Solitude. (C .)—Abraham Cowley.—FEP 

(“Hail, old patrician trees so great and good”— 
ge l )_ad 

(Ode: On Solitude.)—ELP 
(On Solitude.)—HBP—WEP 2 
Of Studies. (C .—Essay L.)—Fs. Bacon.—LLC (si. 
abr .)—MBL 
(Books— si. abr .)—CR 
(Studies— si. abr .)—OS 3 
Of Such as I Have.—Sarah C. Woolsey.—TFY 
“Of such is the kingdom of Heaven.”—Jemima T. 
Luke.—FEP 

(Child’s Desire, The— sel .)—PC 
(“I think when I read that sweet story of old”— 
si. abr .)—OS 1 

Of Suspicion. (Essay XXXI.)—Fs. Bacon.—MBL 
Of Temperance in Fortune.—R: W. Dixon. See 
Manor a Poetical History. 

Of the Book-hunter.—Andrew Lang.—VA 

(Ballade of the Book-hunter— C.) —LBB—MBB 
Of the Child with the Bird at the Bush.—J: Bunvan.— 
WR 7 

Of the Club.—Joseph Addison. See Spectator. The. 

Of the Courtier’s Life, written to John Poins (C.), Sel. 
fr .—Sir T: Wyatt. 

(Second Satire, Sel. fr .)—WEP 1 
Of the Danger his Majesty (being Prince) Escaped in 
the Road at Saint Andero, Br. sel. fr. (His 
Majesty’s Escape at St. Andrew’s.)—Edmund 
Waller—WEP 2 

Of the Lost Ship.—Eugene R. White.—AA 
Of the Marriage of the Dwarfs. (C .)—Edmund 
Waller—HPE 

(Marriage of the Dwarfs, The.)—WEP 2 
Of the Passing away of Brynhild.—W: Morris. See 
Story of Sigurd the yolsung, The. 

Of the Progress of the Soul, Br. sel. fr. (Elegy on 
Mistress Elizabeth Drury.)—J: Donne.—EPs 
Of the Soul of Man, and the Immortality thereof, Br. 

sel. fr. (Man.)—Sir J: Davies.—YBF 
Of the Warres in Ireland. (Fr. Epigrams, Bk IV., 
Ep. 6.)—Sir J: Harrington.—BNL 
Of Three Girls and their Talk.—Boccaccio.—OH 







Of Travel 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Of Travel. (Essay XVIII.)—Fs. Bacon.—MBL 
Of Truth (Essay I Sel.fr. (Truth.)—Fs. Bacon.— 

OS 2 

Off for Slumber-land.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Off Havana.—J: H. Ingham.—EDY 
Off Riviere du Loup.—-Duncan C. Scott.—TCV 
Off to London. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Off to School We Go.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Off to the War. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Offering for Cuba, An.—Ida T. Bell.—BS 25 
Offertory, An.—Mary M. Dodge.—PoR 
Officer Brady.—Rob’t W: Chambers.—THP 
Office-seeker’s Platform, The.—Anon.—CS 9—KNE 
O’Flaherty and John Stubbs.—Sam W. Foss.—CS 34 
“Oft have I wakened ere the spring of day.”—Edith 
M. Thomas. See Inverted Torch, The. 

Oft in the Stilly Night, (C.)—T: Moore.—BNL— 
EPs — FEP — FTA — HBP — LLC — PYO 
—SM—WEP 4 

(Light of Other Days, The.)—BPB—CEL—LC— 
OB—PGT 1—TIP—WCLG 1—YBF 
(“When I remember”— sel.) —HSS 3 
“Often I linger where the roses pour.”—Julia C. R. 
Dorr.—AD 

Ogg, the Son of Beorl.—G: Eliot. See Mill on the 
Floss, The. 

O’Grady’s Goat.—Will S. Hays.—BS 18 
Ogre, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Oh!—Anon.—PS—TT 

Oh! Arranmore, Loved Arranmore. (C.) —T: Moore. 

(Arranmore.)—HBP 
Oh, Ask not Thou.—J. E. Saxby.—HDL 
“Oh, be at least able to say in that day.”—C: Kings¬ 
ley.—FHS 

Oh, Bless us!—Anon.—TFS 

Oh [wr. Ol Breathe not his Name (Robert Emmett). 

-T: Moore.—BNL—CS 17—ED 1 —FEP—HBP 
Oh, Call it by Some Better Name.—T: Moore.—FTA 
“Oh courage! there he comes.” (Frag.) —Joshua 
Sylvester.—H B P 
Oh, Dear!—Anon.—HVD 

Oh, Dear Me. (Dial.) —Marion Douglas.—ASD 
“Oh, dear! w-hat can the matter be?”—H: Fielding (?). 
—OES 

Oh! Doubt me not.—T: Moore.—FTA 
Oh, Fear not thou to Die.—Anon.—HBP 
Oh, Fear to Call it Loving.—Eliz. B. Browning. See 
Woman’s Shortcomings, A. 

“Oh, first of human blessings, and supreme!”—Jas. 

Thomson. See Britannia. 

Oh, for a Man!—M. C. Hungerford.—CS 32—SR 11 
Oh, Golden-rod.—W. L. Jaquith.—PEO 
“Oh, happy trees which we plant to-day.”—Anon. — 
HSS 1 

(Happy Trees.)—DCP 

"Oh heart of God that pities all! ”—Alfred Tennyson. 
—GG 

“Oh how kindly hast Thou led me.”—T: Grinfield.— 
FEP 

"Oh, if every one could put his arms round one other 
one.”—J: B. Gough.—GG 

Oh, if thou Be’st True Lover.—Edwin Arnold.—BIL 
“Oh, if thou lovest and art a woman.”—Letitia E. 
Landon.—GG 

“Oh, keep their memory green who led.”—W. H. 
Venable.—GG 

Oh, Lady Mine.—Ethel M. Kelley.—CG 3 
Oh [O—C.], Let me Dream. (Sel. fr. A Nine Days’ 
Wonder.)—Hamilton Aide.—VS 
"Oh, let me know.” (Sel.) —Frances R. Havergal.— 
—FHS 

“Oh, let us carry hence each one.”—Anon.—GG 
“Oh, listen, man!”—R: H: Dana. See Husband’s 
and Wife’s Grave, The. 

Oh, Little Child.—Eugene Field.—WTD 

Oh, Look at the Moon!—Mrs. Follen.—HSS 2 

Oh, Love is not a Summer Mood. (In The New Day.) 

—R: W. Gilder.—BIL—FTA—OH—TFY 
“Oh, man, boast not thy ‘lion heart.’ ”—S. F. Streeter. 
—CS 1 

“Oh, may I join the choir invisible.”—G: Eliot.—BNL 
— EDA' — FEP — GG — GP — HBP — HBR 
—VA 

(Choir Invisible, The.)—HDL (abr.) —LLC—OS 3 
Oh [or O], Mistress Mine.—W: Shakespeare.—TFY 
“Oh [wr. O], Mother of a Mighty Race.” ( C .)—W: C. 
Bryant—HBP 
(America.)—AA—BNL, 

(“What cordial welcome greets the guest”— br. sel.) 
—GG 

Oh, my Geraldine.—F. C. Burnand.—NA 
Oh, my Luve’s like a Red, Red Rose.—Rob’t Burns. 
See O, my Luve’s Like a Red, Red Rose. 


“Oh! never wear a brow of care.”—Anon.—HBP 
Oh, no—not e’en [e’' n—C.] when First we Loved. — 
T: Moore.—FTA 

Oh, No—of Course not.—J. B. Smiley.—CS 30 
“Oh! Promise me.”—H: F. Wood.—GH 
“Oh [Ah—C.], sad are they who know not love.” (Two 
Songs from the Persian, II.— C.) —T: B. 
Aldrich—FTA (abr.) 

(Sad are they who Know not Love— abr.) —TFY 
(Who Know not Love.)—OH 
Oh! Say not Woman’s Heart is Bought.—T: L. Pea¬ 
cock.—FTA 

(She Loves and Loves Forever.)—FLS 
(Song.)—TFA' 

Oh, Sir!—(TV. and ad. by) Alfred Ayres.—DR 
"Oh [wr. O]! snatch’d away in beauty’s bloom.” (C.) 
(In Hebrew Melodies.)—Lord Byron.—BNL— 
FEP—HBP—WEP 4—A'BF 
(Elegy.)—PGT 1 

“Oh, surely who will guide.”—Julia A. Wolcott.— 
HDL 

“Oh, sweet is the sound of the shuttle and the loom.” 
-Read.—AE 

“ Oh, talk not to me of a name great in story.”— 
Lord Byron. See Stanzas Written on the Road 
between Florence and Pisa. 

Oh, that ’twere Possible.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Maud. 

Oh, that we Two were Maying.—C: Kingsley. See 
Saint’s Tragedy, The. 

Oh! the Golden, Glowing Morning. (New York 
Herald.) —BS 19 

"Oh, the long, long years are flown.”—Anon.—FHS 
Oh [or O]! the Pleasant Days of Old!—-Frances Brown. 
—BNL — FEP — HBP — HSS 3 (br. sel.)— 
OS 2 

("Oh, those blessed days of old”— br. sel.) —HSS 3 
(Pleasant Days of Old, The.)—FMR 
Oh [ur. O], the Sight Entrancing, Sels. fr. — T: Moore. 
—BNL 

Oh, the Sports of Childhood; or, Swinging ’neath the 
Old Apple Tree.—O. R. Barrows.—AD (w. 
mus.) 

(Swinging 'neath the Old Apple Tree.)—LLC 
“Oh, those blessed times of old.”—Frances Brown. 

See Oh, the Pleasant Days of Old. 

“Oh, thou to-morrow! mystery! (Songs of the Soul 
—C.)—Joaquin Miller—GG 
“Oh (wr. O] thou who dry’st the mourner’s tear.” 
(C.) —T: Moore. 

(God the True Source of Consolation.)—HNS 
(Resignation.)—KNE (abr.) —THP 
“Oh to be ready when death shall come.”—Anon.— 
GG 

Oh! to See him Once Again.—Arthur G. Butler.— 
FTA 

Oh! Weary Mother.—Barry Pain.—NA 
Oh, Wert thou in the Cauld Blast.— Rob’t Burns. 
See O, Wert thou, etc. 

“Oh! what a lot of folks to-night.”—“Bob o’Link.”— 
DCP 

Oh, What a Sell!—Clara J. Denton.'—ASD 

“Oh! What is man. great maker of mankind!” 

(Dignity of Man, The— C.) —Sir J: Davies.— 
HBP 

Oh! Where do Fairies Hide their Heads?—T: H. 
Bayly.—HBP—VA 

Oh! Why Should the Spirit of Mortal be Proud?—W: 

Knox. See O, W'hy Should the Spirit, etc. 
“Oh! Wilt thou Sew my Buttons On?” (Punch .)— 
HPE 

“Oh, with w'hat pride I used.”—Jas. S. Knowles. See 
William Tell. 

"Oh, would I were a boy again.”—Mark Lemon.— 
HSS 3 

“Oh yet we trust [that somehow good].”—Alfred 
Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 

Ohn;iwa.—J: Hunter-Duvar. See De Roberval. 
O’Hussey’s Ode to the Maguire.—Jas. C. Mangan.— 
TIP 

Oil on the Brain.—S. A. McKeever.—SD 
Oil Yourself a Little.—Anon.—KNE 
O’Kavanagh, The.—J. A. Shea.—PEB 4—SS 
O’Kelley Cabin, The.—Dion Boucicault. See Shau- 
graun, The. 

Ol’ Pickett’s Nell.—Mather D. Kimball. — AWH— 
DR 

Ol’ Tunes, The.—Paul L. Dunbar.—CS 35 
Old, The.—Anon.—PTS 

Old.—Ralph Hoyt.—AA—BNL (sel.) —TAV (si. abr.) 
Old, The.—Roden B. Noel.—OB 
(Dying.)—VA 

Old Ace.—Fred E. Brooks.—CS 32—WR 4 


23C 





TITLE INDEX 


Old Folks 


Old Actor’s Story, The.—G: R. Sims.—CS 23—PFP— 
WR 26 (si. abr.) 

(Actor’s Story, The.)—PR 

Old Admiral, The. (Admiral Stewart, U. S. Navy.)— 
Edmund C. Stedman.—BNL—EDY—MRS 
Old Age. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Old Age.—Edmund Waller .—See following. 

Old Age and Death. (Fr. Verses upon his Divine 
Poesy.)—Edmund Waller.—BNL—YBF 
(Old Age.')—OB 
(Last Prospect, The.)—ELP 
Old Age of Temperance.—W: Shakespeare. See As 
You Like It. 

Old Amontillado.—M. E. W. G.—CG 1 
Old and Blind.—Eliz. L. Howell.—BS 2 (wr. at. to 
Milton.) 

(Milton’s Prayer of Patience.)—AA—CS 7—FEP— 
LLC (si. abr.) —TAS 

(Milton’s Soliloquy in his Old Age.)—HSS 3 
Old and New, The.—Anon.—CP 

Old and New Year, The.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.— 
HE 

Old and New Year Ditties, III. (C.) —Christina G. 
Rossetti. 

(Passing Away.)—OB 
Old and the New, The.—Anon.—BS 24 
Old and the New, The.—Mary McGuire.—CS 24 
Old and the New, The.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Old and the New South, The.—H: W. Grady .—See 
New South, The. 

Old and the New Year, The.—Anon.—FP 
Old and the New Year, The. (Includes A Dead Past— 
si. abr., and The Present.)—Adelaide A. 
Procter.—HS 

(Present, The— also in) FP—OS 2 
Old and Young.—Fs. W. Bourdillon.—VA 
Old and Young Courtier, The. (C. — -in Percy’s Re- 
liques.)—Anon.—-FEP—HBP 
(Old Courtier, The— sel.) —BVC—CGd 
Old Apple-tree, The.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Old Apple-woman, The.—Anon.—MMR 
Old Apple-woman, The.— H. . McBride.—MD 
Old Arithmetic, The.—Anon.—WR 20 
Old Arm-chair, The.—Eliza Cook.—BNL—FEP— 
TAV—TFS (sel.) 

(SI. abr. )—CS 25—PC 

Old Artillerist. The.—Meredith Nicholson.—PAPm 

Old Aunt, The.—Anon.—MAD 

Old Aunt Mary’s. (C.) —Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 

(“Out to Old Aunt Mary’s.”)—BS 13—SAE (br. set l 
Old Bachelor, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Old Ballad, Ah. (Dial.) —Anon.—KJ 
Old Ballad, An. (Lantv Leary— C.) —S: Lover.— 
WR 14 

(Won’t you Follow me?)—CS 36 
Old Barn, The.—B: F. Taylor. See Money Musk. 

Old Baron, The.—T: Miller.—VA 

Old Battle-field, An.—Frank L. Stanton.—BNL 

Old Beau, The.—Edgar Fawcett.—TAV 

Old Benedict Arnold.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 19 

Old Bill Stevens.—Anon.—DCR 

“Old Bob White.”—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 

Old Books.—Anon.—MBB 

Old Books are Best.—Beverly Chew.—LBB—MBB 
Old Books, Fresh Flowers.—Jos. Boulmier.—LBB 
Old Braddock.—J: V. Cheney.—BAB 
Old Bridge at Florence, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
OS 3 

Old, but Good.—Anon.—SR 2 

(Domicile Erected by John, The.)—MHR 
(House that Jack Built, The.)—PTS (abr.) —SO 
(Modern House that Jack Built, The.)—BNL— 
CS 3 

Old Canoe, The.—Albert Pike.—CS 8 
Old Canteen, The.—Harry S. Edwards.—BS 21 
Old Canteen, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 35 
Old Canteen, The.—G. M. White—CS 23—PS 
Old Carryall, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Old Cavalier, The.—Sir Fs. H. Doyle.—EHT—FEP— 
VA 

Old China. (In Essays of Elia.)—C: Lamb.—MBL 
Old Christmas.—Anon.—PEO 
Old Christmas. (SI. abr.) —Mary Howitt.—PC 
(Abr.)— GN—OS 1 

Old Christmas Forty Years Ago!—Mrs. C. F. Candy.— 
KJ 

Old Christmas Returned.—Anon.—GN 
Old Chums.—Alice Cary.—CR—CS 7—CSS—MMR— 
WCLG 1 

Old Church, The.—H. H. Johnson.—DR 
Old Church at Lismore, The.—Ellen M. Downing.— 
AVP—TIP 

Old Church Bell, The.—Anon.—CS 17 


Old Church Bells.—Anon.—CS 18 

Old Churchyard of Bonchurch, The.—Philip B. Mar- 
ston.—VA 

Old Church-yard Tree, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Old City Church. The.—F: E. Weatherly.—WR 7 
Old Clay Pipe, The.—A. B. Van Fleet.—PPh 
Old Cloak, The.—Anon. (In Percy’s Reliques).— 
OB 

(Take thv Old Cloak about Thee— C.) —FEP—HBP 
—H'PE 

Old Clock, The.—Guy Carleton.—CS 22 
Old Clock, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Old Clock 
on the Stairs, The. 

Old Clock against the Wall, The—Anon.—CS 11— 
NPS—YP 

(Old Cottage Clock, The— sel.) —PS 
Old Clock in the Corner, The.—Eugene J. Hall.— 
SR, 2 

Old Clock on the Stairs, The. (C.) —H: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—BS 2—CR—CS 3—FEP—FP (si. abr.) 
—PPSr—PS—SO—TAV—WCLG 2 
(Old Clock, The.)—FMR 

Old Constitution, The.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Old 
Ironsides. 

Old Continentals, The.—Guy H. McMaster.—BS 13- 
PAP—PAPm—SE 

(Carmen Bellicosum.)—AA—AWB—BNL—FEP 
GN—GP—HB—HBP—LC—OS 2 
(Song of the War.)—KNE 

Old Coquette, The. (Br. sel. fr. Satire V., On Women.) 
—E: Young.—WEP 3 

Old Cottage Clock, The.—Anon. See Old Clock 
against the Wall, The. 

Old Courtier, The.—Anon. See Old and Young 
Courtier, The. 

Old Cove, The.—-H: H. Brownell.—EPs 
(“All we Ask is to be Let Alone.”)—CS 1 
(Let us Alone— C .)—AWH 
Old Cradle, The.—E. M. Griffith—WR 4 
Old Curiosity Shop, The. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Old Curiosity Shop, The, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Burial of Little Nell. (Sel. fr. t h. LXXII.)—DDR 
—WRD 

(Little Nell’s Funeral.)—CS 3 

(Old Curiosity Shop— br. sel.) —SAE 
Death of Little Nell. (Sel. fr. < h. LXXI.)—BS 1 
— CS8 —DS —NPS—OS 1 (br. sel.) — SM 
—WCLG 1—YP 

(Old Curiosity Shop— hr. sel.) —SAF 
Dick Swiveller and the Marchioness. (Sels. fr. Chs. 
LVII. and LVIII.)—CR—HBR 
Old Daddv Turner. (Detroit Free Press.) —CS 20— 
SAE 

Old Daguerreotypes, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Old Darky’s Defense, The.—Anon.—WR 21 
Old Days. (Harvard Advocate.) —CG 2 
Old Deacon’s Lament, The.—E. T. Corbett.—CS 13— 
HP 

Old Dobbin.—Eliza Cook.—WCL 
Old Dobbin.—Will L. Iveese.-—WR 24 
Old Doll to the New One, The.—Felix Leigh.— 
WR 17 

Old England.—Ebenezer Elliot.—BLP (si. abr.) 

(England.)—SS 

Old English Christmas, The.—Walter Scott. See 
Marmion. 

Old Erasmus’ Temperance Pledge.—Anon.—DCR 
Old Faiths in New Light.—S. P. N. Smyth.—TMD 
Old Familiar Faces, The. (SI. abr.) —C: Lamb.— 
BNL—FEP—GP—HBP—LLC—OB—PGT 1 
—PYO—WEP 4—YBF 

Old Farmer Gray gets Photographed.—Anon.—CS 9— 
SR 9 (abr.) 

Old Farm-house, The.—Anon.—CS 19 
Old Fiddling Josey.—Irwin Russell.—HP 
Old Fire-dog, The.—T: Frost.—WR 7 
Old Fireplace, The.—Anon.—BS 16 
Old Fisherman, The.—Anon.—CS 32—PR—YA 
Old Fisherman, The.—Jean Ingelow. See Brothers 
and a Sermon. 

Old Fisherman’s Prayer, The.—Jean Ingelow. See 
Brothers and a Sermon. 

Old Flag, The. (C.)—H: C. Bunner.—TAV 
(Salute the Flag— abr.) —PAPm 
Old Flag Forever. (Diff. fr. vers, in Works.)—Frank 
L. Stanton.—PAPm 

Old Flemish Lace.—Amelia W. Carpenter.—AA 
Old Flower-beds, The.—Hezekiah Butterworth. — 

BS 23 

Old Folks.—Anon.—BS 8 
Old Folks. (Prose.) —Anon.—FAS 
Old Folks. (Dial.) —Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
(Playing Old Folks.)—PS 


237 





Old 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Old Folks at Home.—Stephen C. Foster.—AA—FEP 
—GP—TAV 

Old Folks’ Room, The.—Anon.—FP 
Old Folks’ Thanksgiving.—Anon.—WR 14 
Old Forsaken School-house, The.—J: H. Yates.—BS 3 
—CS 8—SA 

Old Fortunatus, Sel. fr. (Praise of Fortune, The.)— 
T: Dekker.—WEP 2 
Old Friends.—Anon.—HP 
Old Friends.—B. J. M’Dermott.—CS 30 
Old Gaelic Cradle-song, An.—Anon. See following. 

Old Gaelic Lullaby.—Anon.—PoR—WCL 
(Old Gaelic Cradle-song, An.)—OS 1 
Old Gentleman who Married a Young Wife, The.— R: 

B. Sheridan. See School for Scandal, The. 

Old Glory.—Anon.—CP 

“Old Glory” at Pekin.—Clara B. Brown.—SR 13 
Old Grenadier’s Story, The.—G: W. Thornbury.— 
BS 21—FR—HSS 1—VA 

Old Grimes.—Albert G. Greene.—AWH—BNL—BS 7 
—B VC—FEP—TA V—TH P 
Old Grimes’ Hen.—J. M. Barron.—SRI 
Old Grudge against England, The.—Rufus Choate. 

See Enmity toward Great Britain. 

Old Hat, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Old Hay-mow, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Old Heads on Young Shoulders.—Mrs. L. E. V. Boyd. 
—StD 

Old Hemlock, An.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Autocrat 
of the Breakfast-table, The. 

Old Hen, An—M. M. D.—TFS 

Old Home, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
Old Home and the New, The.—Rob’t Bleakie.—BLP 
Old Home Folks, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Old Homestead, The.—Wallace Bruce.—BS 14 
Old Homestead, The.—H: Davenport.—PR 
Old House at Home, The.—T: Hood.—TFS ( abr .) 
(House Where I was Bom, The.)—BLP 
(I Remember, I Remember— C.) —BNL—BPB— 
EDY—FEP—FP—GP — HBP — LC — MR — 
OS 1 — PoR — PSR — PYO (abr.)— VS— 
WCL—WCLG 1—YBF 
(Past and Present.)—PGT 1 
Old House in the Meadow, The.—Anon.—CS 10 
Old House on the Hillside, The.—H. E. McBride.— 
CS 28 

Old Huldah.—E. N. Gunnison.—CS 14 

(Women of Marblehead, The— abr.) —FR 
“Old Ironsides.” (C.)—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA— 
AE (br. sel.) — ASL — AWB — BFV — BNL 
— BS 5 — EPs — FEP — GN — LC — LLC — 
PAP — PAPm — PC — SM — SO — SS — 
TAV—WCLG 2—YBF 
(Old Constitution, The.)—OS 2 
( battered Ensign, The— br. sel.) —PRR 
“Old Ironsides.”—H:C. Lodge.—NC 
Old Jack in the Well.—Anon.—CS 22 
Old Jack Watt’s Christmas.—Anon.—CS 32—PR 
Old Jane.—T: Ashe.—PGT 2 

Old Kentucky Home, The.—Stephen C. Foster.—ASL 
(My Old Kentucky Home [,Good-night].)—AA— 
BNL—FEP—GP—TAV 
Old King Cole.—M. C. Hungerford.—CS 23—DS 
Old Knight’s Treasure, The.—H: Morford.—CS 22 
Old Letters.—Anon.—BS 12 
Old Letters.—W: J. Benners. Jr.—CS 30 
Old Letters.—W. L. Kitchel.—CG 1 
Old Letters. (SI. diff vers. fr. Poems )—Frd’k 
Locker-Lampson.—FEP 
Old Log Schoolhouse, The.—Anon.—SR 9 
Old Love, The.—C: Kingsley. See Water Babies, The. 
Old Love Song.—Anon.—CEL 
Old Love Song, The.—W: C. Gannett.—OH 
Old Lover, An.—Rob’t Jones.—OH 
Old Maid, The.—G: Barlow.—VA 
Old Maid, The.—H. M. Garrett.—CS 23—ED 
Old Maid, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Old Maid, The.—Amelia B. Welby.—BNL 
Old Maid’s Prayer, The.—Anon.—WR 20 

(For another vers, of same story, see Anv !One 
Will Do.) 

Old Maid’s Warning, An.—Mattie M. Caslin.—WR 20 
Old Man, The.—Eugene Field.—-HBR 
Old Man and Death, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KER 

Old Man and Jim, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA—BS 16 
—SAE (sel.)— SR 7 

Old Man by the Brook, The.—W: Wordsworth.—FP 
Old Man Dreams, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—BNL— 
FEP—OH 

Old Man Goes to School, The.—J: H. Yates.—CS 18 
Old Man Goes to Town, The.—J. G. Swinerton.— 
BS 13 


Old Man in the Model Church, The.—J: H. Yates. 
See Model Church, The. 

Old Man in the Palace Car, The.—J: H. Yates.—CS 20 
—PR—SR 1 

Old Man in the Stylish Church, The.—J: H. Yates.— 
CS 6—KNE 

Old Man in the Wood, The.—Anon.-;—CS 10—PHS 
(To Inconsistent Husbands— si. diff. vers.) —KJ 
Old Man Whiskery-Whee-Kum-Wheeze.—-Jas. W. 
Riley.—BJC 

Old Man’s Address to Young Wives, An.—Anon.— 
MCS 

Old Man’s Carousal, The.—Jas. K. Paulding.—AA 
Old Man’s Comforts, The.—Rob’t Southey. See fol¬ 
lowing. 

Old Man’s Comforts, and how he Gained Them, The. 
(C.) —Rob’t Southey.—CGd 
(Father William.)—PC—PPSr 
(Old Man’s Comforts, The.)—BNL—FP 
Old Man’s Counsel, The. (Sel.) —W: C. Bryant.—AD 
Old Man’s Darling, An. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Old Man’s Funeral, The. (Sel.) —W: C. Bryant.—EPs 
Old Man’s Idyl, An.—R: Realf.—AA—CS 28—GP 
Old Man’s Laughing Song. (IF. mas.—in A Gay Old 
Man Am I.)—Alfred B. Sedgwick.—DSS 
Old Man’s Prayer, The.—Jean Ingelow. See Brothers 
and a Sermon. 

Old Man’s Ship ComesVHome, The.—H. II. Brown.— 
WR 24 

Old Man’s Song, An.—R: Le Gallienne.—VA 
Old Man’s Story, An.—Milton Thompson.—CS 29 
Old Man’s Vigil, The.—Theron Brown. See Old Wife, 
The. 

Old Market-woman, The.—Anon.—OS 1 
(Nursery Rhymes, III.)—CGd 
Old Maxims: “Hoe your own row.” ( C .)—Alice 
Cary.—BLF 

(“Hoe your own Row.”)—CPL—TFS (br. sel.) 

Old May Day.—Anon.—BVC 
Old Methodist’s Testimony, The.—Anon.—CS 24 
Old Mill, The.—T: D. English.—AA 
Old Minstrel, The.—Anon.—CS 34 
Old Mirror, The.—Sarah H. Whitman.—HBP 
Old Mortalitv, Sel. fr. (Answer — motto fr. Ch. 
XXXIV.)—Walter Scott.—OB 
(Sound, Sound the Clarion.)—-YBF 
Old Mountain Tree, The. (IF. toms.)—A non.—AD 
Old Navy, The.—Erd’k Marryat.—LH 

(Captain Stood on the Carronade, The.)—BVC 
Old Oaken Bucket, The.—S: Woodworth.—BLP— 
BNL—CS 25—FEP—GP—LLC—OS 1—PPSr 
PYO—SM—TAV—WCLG 1 
(Bucket, The.)—AA—ASL—HBP 
Old Oaken Bucket, The.—Parody.—Anon.—CRR 
(Parody—The Old Oaken Bucket.)—CS 2 
“Old, Old Song,” The. — C: Kingsley. See Water 
Babies, The. 

Old, Old, Story, The.—Anon.—WR 15 
Old, Old Story, The.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Old, Old Story, The.—Mary K. Dallas.—CS 22—WR 3 
Old Organ, The.—Helen Booth.—CS 29 
Old Pedhar Carthv from Clonmore.—Patrick J. Mc¬ 
Call.—TIP 

Old Photograghs.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Old Pincher. (SI. abr.) —Eliza Cook.—BVC 
Old Pine Box, The. (C .)—Frank L. Stanton. See 
Ole Pine Box, The. 

Old Pipe of Mine.—J: J. Gormlev.—PPh 
Old Poet to Sleep, An.—Walter S. Landor.—HBP 
Old Politician, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.—HBP 
(Freedom’s Ahead.)—SAE 
(Tom Dunstan; or, The Politician— C .)—FEP 
Old Professor, The.—Anon.—CS 12 
Old Quarrel, An.-—Frances C. Baylor.—WR 5 
Old Quizzle.—-Anon.—HR 
Old Rat’s Tale, An.—Anon.—WR 17 
Old Reading-class [, The—C.].—Will Carleton.—CS 23 
Old Rhyme, An.—Rob’t Herrick.—HP 
(To Electra—C.)—ELP— FTA—OB 
Old Road, The.—Jones Very.—AA 
Old Robin.—J: T. Trowbridge.—BS 7 
Old Robin of Portingale. (In Percy’s Reliques.) — 
.Anon.—PEB 1 

Old Rome and New Italy, Sel. fr. (Miserere of St. Peter’s 
Church at Rome.)—Emilio Castelar.—FS 
Old Roundsman’s Story, An.—Marg. Eytinge.—BS 15 
—HSS 2 

Old Rye Makes a Speech.—Anon.—See following. 

Old Rye’s Speech.—Anon.—DLS 
Old Rye Makes a Speech.)—SD 
Song of the Corn, The.)—LPS—PP 
(Song of the Rye— si. abr .)—PS 
Old St. David’s at Radnor.—H: W. Longfellow.—FEP 


238 







TITLE INDEX 


Omnia 


Old Sampler, The.—Marg. E. Sangster.—CS 13 (si. abr.) 

(“Elizabeth, Aged Nine”—C.)—OS 1 
Old Santa has Struck.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Old Saw, An.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Old School Clock, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—PR—WR 2 
Old School Exhibitions, The.—Frank L. Stanton.— 
CS 33 

Old School-house, The.—Anon.—CS 5—HSS 3 
Old School-house, The.—H. E. McBride.—CS 25 
Old Schoolmaster, The.—G: W. Bungay.—SR 1 
Old Scottish Cavalier, The.— W: E. Aytoun.—GN—LC 
Old Sedan Chair, The. — Austin Dobson. — FEP — 
WR 1 (si. abr.) 

Old Sergeant, The. — Forcevthe Willson. — AA — 
AWB (si. abr.) — BS 6 — CS 15 — GP — HB — 
MMR—PAP 

Old Sermon, The.—Anon.—CS 36 
Old Sexton, The.—Park Benjamin.—AA—GP 
(Sexton, The.)—CS 8 

Old Shoes.—Anon. See Man and his Shoes, A. 

Old Shrines and Ivy, Sel. fr. (Field of Culloden, The.) 
—W: Winter.—TMR 

Old Sir Walter.—G. W. Thornbury.—PEB 3 
Old Slave’s Lament, The.—Anon.—W T R 1 
Old Soldier Tramp, The.—Joaquin Miller.—CS 23 
Old Soldier’s Story, The.—E. A. Duncan.—CS 13 
Old Song.—Anon.—FLS 
Old Song, An.—Anon.—HP 
Old Song.—E: Fitzgerald.—GN (sel.) —OB 
Old Song Resung, An. (Down by the Salley Gardens 
—C.) —W: B. Yeats.—VA 
Old Song Reversed, An.—R: H. Stoddard.—AA 
Old Souls.—T: G. Hake.—VA 

Old South Meeting-house, The, Sel. fr. (Plea for the 
Old South Church, Boston.)—Wendell Phillips. 
—FD 1—PPS 

“Old Speckle.”—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Old Speckled Hen.—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
Old Squire, The.—Wilfred S. Blunt.—VA 
Old State House, Boston (Rededicated, 1882), The.— 
S: A. Green.—FD 2 

Old State House, Boston (Restored, 1882), The.— 
W: H. Whitmore.—FD 2 
Old Stoic, The.—Emily Bronte.—VA—WEP 4 
Old Stone Basin, The.—Susan Coolidge.—PEO 
Old Story, The.—Anon.—BS 21 
Old Story, An.—Anon.—KNS 
Old Story, An.—Anon.—WR 20 
Old Story, The.—Eliz. A. Allen.—GP 
Old Story, The.—Alice Cary.—CS 16 
Old Story, The.—J: O’Hagan.—AVP—HBP—PEB 4 
—TIP 

Old Story Over Again, The.—Jas. Henry.—TFY 
Old Story, The. (Scientific Version.)—Anon.—BS 16 
Old Street, An.—Virginia W. Cloud.—AA 

Old Sugar’s Courtship.-Robb.—BC 

Old Surgeon’s Story, The.—Eleanor C. Donnelly.— 
CS 17 

Old Sweet Song, The.—Anon.—CS 14 
Old Sweetheart of Mine, An.—Jas. W. Riley.—PPh— 
WR 4 

( SI. abr.)— BS 16—SR 7 

Old Sword on the Wall, The,—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Old Tennant Church.—George W. Bungay.—CS 29 
Old Thanksgiving Days, The.—Ernest W. Shurtleff.— 
PEO 

Old Thirteen, The.—C: T. Brooks.—CS 17 
Old Thought, An.—C. H. Luders.—AA 
Old Time and I.—Mark Lemon.—HP 
Old Time Bells, The.—A on.—HS 
Old Time Lovers. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Old Time Plays. (Motion sonn.) —E. C. and L. J. 

Rook.—YFE 
Old Times.—Anon.—GP 

Old Times and New.—A.' C. Spooner.—CS 4—SA 
Old Tramp, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Old Tree, The.—Anon.—AD 
Old Tubal Cain.—C: Mackay.—LLC—PPSr 
(Tubal Cain.)—BLP (abr.) —BNL—CS 2 
Old Tyme Tayle.—Jack Benne t. See Ye Old Tyme 
Tayle, etc. 

Old Valentine, An.—G: Birdseye.—PR 
Old Village Choir, The. (C.)—B: F. Taylor.—SR 2 
(Old-fashioned Choir, The.)—TAV 
Old Violin, The.—Maurice F. Egan.—AA 
Old Violin, The.—Mary Stewart.—CS 36 
Old Vote for “Young Master,” An.—Eva M. De Jar- 
nette.—BS 21 

Old Ways and the New, The.—J: H. Yates.—CS 10— 
HSS 2 

Old Wife, The.—Theron Brown.—BS 22—CS 35—PR 
(Old Man’s Vigil, The.)—NPS—YP 


Old Wife’s Kiss, The.—Anon.—CS 9 
Old Wine in New Bottles.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Old Winter.—T: Noel.—BVC—GN 
Old Winter, Esquire.—Alfred M. Lynes.—PP—YPS 
Old Wives’ Tale, The, Sel. fr. (Harvesters’ Song, The.) 
—G: Peele.—EP 
(Harvestmen a-Singing.)—ELP 
Old Woman’s Complaint, An.—R. L. Roys.—CS 24 
Old Woman’s Love Story.—Anon.—CD 
Old Woman’s Railway Signal, The.—Elihu Burritt.— 
Qg 12 - _ds 

Old Wood, The.—Hugh Kelso.—AD 
Old World and the New, The.—G: Berkeley. See On 
the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in 
America. 

Old Yankee Farmer, The.—Anon.—BS 1—CS 5 
Old Year, The.—Violet Fuller.—HS 
Old Year, The. (Little Corporal .)—SSS 
Old Year and the New, The.—-Josephine Pollard.— 
BS 11 

Old Year and the New, The.—Eben E. Rexford.—BS 10 
Old Year and the New, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
In Memoriam. 

Old Year out and the New Year in, The. (IF. mus .)— 
Mrs. Russell Kayanaugh.—KER 
Olden Love-making.—Nicholas Breton.—EP 
Olden Times, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Oldest Story, The.—J: W. Chadwick.—OH 
Oldest Woman on Record, The.—Anon.-—DSS 
Old-fashioned Choir, The.—B: F. Taylor. See Old 
Village Choir, The. 

Old-fashioned District School, The. (Ent.) —Anon.— 
EuE 

Old-fashioned Flowers.—Ethel Lynn.—AD 
Old-fashioned Fourth, An. (Play.) —Anon.—EuE 
Old-fashioned Garden, Sel. fr. —J: R. Hayes.—AA 
Old-fashioned Garden, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Old-fashioned Lesson, An.—Anon.—YBT 
Old-fashioned Mother, The.—Anon —SR 2 
Old-fashioned Roses.—Jas. W. Riley.—WR 2 
Old-fashioned Sea-fight, An.—Walt Whitman. See 
Song of Myself. 

Old-school Punishment.—Anon.—BNL—CS 19 
Old-time Breakdown, An.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KER 

Old-time Negro, An.—C: H: Smith.—Bill Arp.—WR 15 
Old-time Sleigh-ride, The.—A on.—CS 20 
Ole Bull’s Christmas.—Wallace Bruce.—WR 22 
“Ole Marster’s” Christmas, The.—Sam W. Small.— 
CD—CRR 

Ole Mistis. (Abr .)—J: T. Moore.—BS 26 
Ole [Old—C.] Pine Box, The. (Abr .)—Frank L. Stan¬ 
ton—WR 21 

Ole Settlers’ Meetun.—R: L. Dawson.—DCR 
O’Lincoln Family, The.—Wilson Flagg.—MYF 
(SI. abr.) —BNL—SN 

Olive Tree, The.—Sabine Baring-Gould.—GN 
Olive Tree, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—AD 
Olive Trees of Palestine .—(Hours at Home .)—AD 
Oliver Cromwell.—J: Dryden. See Poem upon the 
Death of his Late Highness, etc. 

Oliver P. Morton, Br. sel. fr. (“Strong men have 
strong convictions.”) Jas. A. Garfield—GG 
Oliver Twist, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Courtship of Mr. Bumble and Mrs. Cornev, The. 
(Ad. fr. ( hs. XXIII., XXIV., XXVII.)— 
WR 25 

(Mr. Bumble and Mrs. Corney— abr .)—MPD 
Death of Bill Sykes [Sikes—C.], The. (Ch. L.— 
cored.)—CS 28—NP 

Murder of Nancy Sikes, The. (Ch. XLVII.— 
cored.)—BS 24 

(Murder of Nancy, The— sel .)—VSG 
Oliver Wendell Holmes.— W: H. Hayne.—EDY 
Oliver’s Advice, Sel. fr .—Valentine Blacker.—BNL 
Olive’s Advice.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Olivia.—E: Pollock.—AA 

Olivia.—W: Shakespeare. See Twelfth Night. 

Olivia. (Sel. fr. The Talking Oak.)—Alfred Tennyson. 
—GN 

OlrigGrange, Sel.fr. (Daughters of Philistia.)—Walter 
C. Smith.—VA 

Olympic Crown, The.—-E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Athens; 

its Rise and Fall. 

Om.—G: W. Russell.—VA 
Omar and the Persian.—Sarah Williams.—VA 
Omar Khayyam, Sel. fr. —E: Fitzgerald. See Rubai¬ 
yat. Omar KhayyiVm. 

Omen, The. (Wrinkle .)—CG 3 

Omnes eodem Cogimur.—-Rob’t Blair. See Grave, The. 
Omnia Vincit.—Anon.—PGT 1 
(Devotion.)—OB 
(In Laudem Amoris.)—ELP 


239 





Omnipotence 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Omnipotence of Jehovah. Bible. See Job. 
Omnipotent, The.—Walter Scott. See Antiquary, 
The. 

Omnipresence. (Under Laurels and Maples—C.)— 
E: E. Hale.—HDL 

On-.—T: Moore.—HPE 

On a Bad Singer. (C.) —S: T. Coleridge. 

(Epigram on a Bad Singer.)—FEP 
(Epigrams.)—BNL 

On a Bank as I Sat a-Fishing. (C. — in Walton’s Corn- 
pleat Angler.)—H:Wotton.—EP 
(Spring Idyll, A.)—CEL 
On a Beautiful Day.—J: Sterling.—BNL 
On a Birthday. (Lord Aberdare’s.)—Sir Lewis Morris. 
—AVP 

On a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s “Monasticon.”—T: 
Warton.—FEP 

(Sonnet—Written in a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s 
“Monasticon”— C .)—WEP 3 
On a Boy’s First Reading of King Henry V.—S. Weir 
^lltcll^ll —— 

On a Bust of Dante.—T: W. Parsons. — AA — ASL — 
BNL—FEP—HBP—PYO (abr.)— TAV 
(Bust of Dante.)—FP 

On a Candle. (.Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On a Cannon. (Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On a Caricature.—-T: Sheridan.—HPE 
On a Carrier who died of Drunkenness. (Epitaph on 
John Adams, of Southwell, a Carrier, etc.— C.) 
—Lord Byron.—HPE 

On a Cast from an Antique.—G: Pellew.—AA 
On a Cat Killed while Attempting to Rob a Dove-cote. 
—Anon.—OS 2 

On a Celebrated Ruling Elder. (Epitaph on a Cele¬ 
brated Ruling Elder.— C.) —Rob’t Burns.— 
HPE 

On a Certain Lady at Court.—Alex. Pope.—OB 
On a Circle. (Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On a Clock.—Frank D. Sherman.—BIL 
On a Club of Sots. (Epigram on a Club of Sots— C.) 
—S: Butler.—HPE 

On a Contented Mind.—Thomas, Lord Vaux.—FEP 
On a Corkscrew. (Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On a Cyclamen, Plucked at Cana of Galilee, and Pre¬ 
sented to a Bride.—Edwin Arnold.—BIL 
On a Day, alack the Day.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Love’s Labour’s Lost 
On a Dead Child.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB 
On a Dead Poet.—Frances S. Osgood.—AA 
On a Distant Prospect of Eton College. (C.) — T: 
Gray.—BNL (br. sels.) —MBL 
(Eton College.)—EPs 

(Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College.)— 
PGT 1—PHS—WEP 3 
On a Fan. (C. — riddle.) —Jonathan Swift. 

(Fan, A.)—HPE 

On a Fan that Belonged to Marquise de Pompadour. 
(C.) —Austin Dobson.—BNL—VA 
(Pompadour’s Fan, The.)—PYO 
“On a far shore my land swam far from my sight.”— 
Anon.—GG 

On a Favourite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes. 
—T: Gray. See On the Death of a Favourite 
Cat, Drowned, etc. 

On a Ferry Boat.—Richard Burton.—AA 
On a Fly Drinking out of his Cup.—W: Oldys.—OB 
(“Busy, curious, thirsty fly.”)—FEP 
(Fly, The.)—CEL—HBP 
(To a Fly.)—LC 

On a Fly-leaf of a Book of Old Plays.—Walter Learned. 
—TAV 

(On the Fly-leaf, etc.)—LBB—MBB 
On a Forgotten By-way.—A. E. Watrous.—TAV 
On a Full-length Portrait of Beau Marsh.—Philip D. 

Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield.—HPE 
On a Girdle. (C.) —Edmund Waller.— BNL — ELP 
— EPS (abr.) — ES — FEP — FTA — OB — 
OEL—PGT 1—PYO —WEP 2—YBF 
(Girdle, A.)—GP 

On a Grave at Grindelwald.—F: W. H. Myers.—VA 
On a Grave in Christ-Church, Hants.—Oscar F. Adams. 
—AA 

On a Great Man whose Mind is Clouding.— Edmund C. 
Stedman.—AA 

On a Grecian Urn.—J: Keats. See Ode on a Grecian 
Urn. 

On a Greek Vase.—Frank D. Sherman.—AA 
On a Hundred Years Hence.—W: M. Thackeray.— 
ESs 

On a Lady Singing.—T: W. Parsons.—HBP 
On a Lap-dog.—J: Gay.—HPE 

On a Lute Found in a Sarcophagus.—Edmund Gosse. 


On a Magazine Sonnet.—Russell H. Loines.—AA 
On a Miniature.—H: A. Beers.—AA 
On a Motion to Censure the Ministry. (Sel. fr. Parlia¬ 
mentary Speech of Feb. 21, 1783, on American 
Peace.)—W: Pitt.—SS 

On a Noted Coxcomb.—Rob’t Burns. See On a Scotch 
Coxcomb. 

On a Painted Lady with Ill Teeth. (Epigram on a 
Painted Lady with Ill Teeth, An— C.) —Ed¬ 
mund Waller.—HPE r*'" 

On a Pair of Dice. (Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On a Pale Lady with a Red-nosed Husband.—Anon.— 
HPE 

On a Pen. (Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On a Pet Cat.—G: A. Persell.—CG 3 
On a Photograph.—R. Wilton.—PGT 2 
On a Picture.—-Anne C. Lynch Botta.—BNL 
On a Picture of Leander.—J: Keats.—WEP 4 
On a Picture of Peel Castle in a Storm.—W: Words¬ 
worth.—HBP (si. abr.) 

(Elegiac Stanzas. Suggested by a Picture of Peele 
Castle in a Storm.— C .)—FEP (si. abr.) 
(Nature and the Poet.)—PGT 1 
On a Piece of Tapestry.—G: Santayana.—AA 
On a Portrait of Columbus.—G: E. Woodberry.—AA 
On a Portrait of Servetus.—R : W. Gilder.—EDYli* 

On a Portrait of Wordsworth by B. R. Haydon.—Eliz. 
B. Browning.—BNL 

On a Prayer-book Sent to Mrs. M. R.—R: Crashaw.— 
FEP—HBP 

On a R eader of his Own Verse.—(C.)—S: T. Coleridge. 
(Epigram: “Hoarse M;evius reads his hobbling 
verse.”)—BNL 

On a Recent Classic Controversy. (Two Poems.)—J: 
G. Saxe.—HPE 

On a Rejected Nosegay. (Punch.) —HPE 
On a Scotch Coxcomb. (On a Noted Coxcomb— C.) — 
Rob’t Burns.—HPE 

On a Sermon against Glory. (Ode XVII.—On a Ser¬ 
mon, etc.— C .)—Mark Akenside.—HBP 3 

On a Shadow in a Glass. (Riddle — abr.) —Jonathan 
Swift.—HPE 

On a Spaniel Called “Beau” Killing a Young Bird.—W: 

Cowper.—BPB—LC—PoR 
On a Sprig of Heath.—Anne Grant.—FEP 
On a Squinting Poetess.—T: Moore.—HPE 
On a Stone Thrown at a Very Great Man.—J: Wolcott. 
—HPE 

On a Suicide.—Rob’t Burns.—HPE 
On a Summer’s Eve.—G.—CG 1 
On a Tear. (C.)—S: Rogers.—FP 
(Tear, A.)—BNL 

On a Tear which Angelina Observed Trickling down 
my Nose at Dinner Time. (Stanzas for the 
Sentimental, I.) (Punch.) —HPE 
On a Thrush Singing in Autumn.—Sir Lewis Morris.— 
VA 

On a Tobacco Jar.—Bernard Barker.—PPh 
On a Traveling Speculator.—Philip Freneau.—AA 
On a Tuft-hunter. (Epitaph on a Tuft-hunter.— C.) — 
T: Moore—HPE 

On a Usurer. (Epitaph on Demar the Usurer.—C.)— 
Jonathan Swift.—HPE 

On a Virtuous Young Gentlewoman that Died Sud¬ 
denly.—W: Cartwright.—OB (abr.) —WEP 2 
On a Wag in Mauchline. (Epitaph on a Wag in 
Mauchline.— C.) —Rob’t Burns.—HPE 
On a Young Poetess’s Grav .—Rob’t Buchanan.— 
VA 

On Afric’s Golden Sands. (University Herald.) — 
CG 2 

On Altering the Virginia Constitution.—J: Randolph. 
—SS 

On American Industry. (Sel.) —H : Clay.—EAO 
On American Taxation.—Edmund Burke. See Speech 
on American Taxation. 

On an Artist.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
(Actor, An.)—THP 

On an Attempt to Coerce him to Resign. (Sel. fr. Par¬ 
liamentary Speech, Feb. 20th. 1784.)—W: Pitt. 
—SS 

On an Ill-read Lawyer.—J: G. Saxe.—HPE 
On an Infant Dying as Soon as Born.—C: Lamb.—FEP 
—OB—PGT 1—WEP 4 

On an Inscription.—Arthur J. Munby.—LBB—MBB 
On an Intaglio Head of Minerva.—T: B. Aldrich.— 
ASL—BNL (abr. and si. diff.) —FEP 
On an Old Muff.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.— BNL (si. 

diff. wording.) —THP—VA 
On an Old Song.—W: H. Lecky.—AVP 
On an Ugly Person Sitting for a Daguerreotype.—J: G. 
Saxe.—HPE 


240 





TITLE INDEX 


On Lord Bacon’s 


On an Urn.—R: Garnett.—VA 

On Anacreon. (Antipater, the Sidonian, to Anacreon 
—C.)—Antipater of Sidon (.paraphrase of T: 
Moore).—HBP 

On Andrew Turner.—Rob’t Burns.—HPE 
On Another’s Sorrow.— (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: 
Blake.—FEP—HBP—PC 

On-Asleep. (C.)—S: Rogers. 

(Sleeping Beauty, A [or The].) — BNL — FTA — 
PGT 1—YBF 

On Babies. (Abr.) —rJerome K. Jerome.—HBR 
(Babies.)—BS 21 

On Banks [Banck—C.I the Usurer.—Ben Jonson.— 
HPE 

On Barclay’s Apology for the Quakers. (.46r.)—Mat¬ 
thew Green.—WEP 3 

On Behalf of the People of Boston, in Support of the 
Memorial of December 18, 1765.—J: Adams.— 
EAO 

On being Found Guilty of High Treason.— Rob’t 
Emmet.—PS—SS 

Extract from the Last Speech of Robert Emmet. 
(Set.)— BS 1 

Last Speech. (Sel.)— FD 1 
Speech in his own Defence. (Sel.) —OS 2 
Speech of Vindication. (Sel.) —CS 8—FTR (abr.) 
—OM 

(All sels. ptly. alike). 

On being Found Guilty of Treason.—T: F. Meagher.— 
CS 3 

(Meagher's Defence.)—SC 

On being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party. (Im¬ 
promptu: Upon being Obliged, etc.— C.) —T: 
Moore.—HPE 

(IJpon being Obliged, etc.)—THP 
On being Suspected of Receiving Overtures from the 
Court, May 22, 1790. —Honors de Mirabeau. 
—SS—SSD 

On Bishop Atterburv. (Epigram on Bishop Atter- 
bury— C.) —Matthew Prior.—HPE 
On Board the Cumberland, March 7, 1862. (C.) —G: 

H. Boker—AWB—CS 1—WR 10 
(Attack of the “Cumberland.”)—SA 
On Board the Victory.—Ednah Robinson.—WR 22 
On Burning a Dull Poem.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On Butler’s Monument.—S: Wesley.—HPE 
On Calais Sands.—Andrew Lang.—VA 
On Captain Barney’s Victory over the Ship General 
Monk.—Philip Freneau.—EDA 
On Captain Grose’s [On the Late Captain Grose’s—C.] 
Peregrinations through Scotland, Br. sel. fr. — 
Burns.—BNL 

On Captain Matthew Henderson. (C.) —Rob’t Burns. 
(Elegy on Captain Matthew Henderson.) — 
BNL (abr.) —FEP—HBP (si. abr.) 

(He’s Gane— sel.) —EPs 
On Catullus.—Walter S. Landor.—OB 
On Certain Books.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—LBB — 
MBB 

On Charges against Roman Catholics.— (Sel. fr. The 
Catholics of Ireland.)—R: L. Sheil.—SS 
On Chev’ril the Lawyer.—Ben Jonson.—HPE 
On Chloris Walking in the Snow.—Anon. (at. to T: 
Carew and to Rob’t Herrick).—ES 
(Chloris in the Snow.)—OB—OEL 
On Conquering America.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 

See American War, The. 

On Courting. (C.) —H: W. Shaw. 

(Josh Billings on Courting— longer than present 
vers.) —CS 1 

On Court-worm.—Ben Jonson.—WEP 2 
On Crutches.—W: R. Rose.—WR 24 
On Dean Swift’s Proposed Hospital for Lunatics.—T. 
Sheridan.—HPE 

On Dogs and Cats.—Alex. Dumas.—MRS 
On Dr. Hill’s Farce.—D: Garrick.—FEP 
On Dr. Johnson.—J: Wolcott.—EDY 
(Lines on Dr. Johnson.)—THP 
On Don Surly.—Ben Jonson.—ESs 
On Dorilis.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
On Diirer’s “Melencolia.”—W: Watson.—VA 
On Elizabeth L. H.—Ben Jonson.—OB 
( Epitaph.)—EPs 

(Epitaph on Elizabeth L. H.— C.) — BNL — FEP 
—HBP—WEP 2 

On Eloquence.—W: C. Preston. See Eloquence and 
Logic. , 

On Factotum Ned. (Fragment of a Character— C.) — 
T: Moore.—HPE 
On Fame.—J: Keats.—YB1 
On Fell.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
On First Entering Westminster Abbey. (London, I.) 
—Louise I. Guiney.—AA 


On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer. (C.) —J: 
Keats.— BFV — BNL (br. sel.) — BPB — 
BSP — CEL — EP — FEP — GN — HBP — 
LLC—OB—PGT 1—WEP 4—YBF 
(Sonnet: On First Looking, etc.)—OS 3 
(To the Adventurous.)—LH 
On Frequent Executions.—Sir W. Meredith.—SS 
On Friendship.—W: Cowper. See Friendship. 

On General Wolfe.—Anon.—EDY 

On George the Third’s Patronage of Benjamin West. 

( Two epigrams.) —P: Pindar.—HPE 
On Government.—Alex. Hamilton. See General Gov¬ 
ernment and the States, The. 

On Government Extravagance.—J: J. Crittenden.— 
SS 

On Grandnapa’s Kne°.—T. W. Handford.—TFS 
On Great Sugarloaf.—G. A. Greene.—TIP 
On Grizzel Grim TGrimme—C.I.—Rob’t Burns.— 
HPE 

On Happiness of Temper, Sel. fr. (Miser and his Three 
Sons, The.)—Oliver Goldsmith.—OS 1 
On Heights of Power.—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
On her Dancing.—Jas. Shirley.—-ES 
On Heroes and Hero Worship, Sels. fr. —T: Carlyle. 
“Heroes have gone out, quacks have come in.” 

(Sel. fr. The Hero as Man of Letters.)—GG 
"I call that [the Book of Job] aside from all theories 
about it,” etc. (Sel. fr. The Hero as Prophet.) 
—GG 

Mohammed. (Br. sel. fr. The Hero as Prophet.)— 
FS 

"Musical! how much lies in that.” (Br. sel. fr. The 
Hero as Poet.)—GG 

Nature. (Sel. fr. The Hero as Divinity.)—FS 
On Himself.—Rob’t Herrick.—YBF 
On Himself. (In The Last Fruit off an Old Tree.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—VA—WEP 4—YBF 
(Finis.)—OB 

(On his Seventy-fifth Birthday.)—A VP 
On Himself.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Fable for Critics, A. 
On his being Arrived at [or to] the Age of Twenty-three. 
(C.)—J : Milton.—EDA’—EPs—FEP—HBP— 
WEP 2—YBF 

On his Blindness. (C .)— J: Milton.— BNL — CEL — 
EDY—FEP— GN—HBP— HDL —LH— LLC 
—OB—OS 3—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 2—WR 1 
—YBF 

(Bi dness.)—GP 

(Sonnet: On his Blindness.)—ELP—EPs 
On his Deceased Wife.—J: Milton.—OB—YBF 
On his Divine Poems.—Edmund Waller. See On the 
Foregoing Divine Poems. 

On his Friends.-—Meskin Aldaramy.—OS 3 
On his Majesty’s Recovery from the Small-pox.— W: 
Cartwright.—WEP 2 

On his Marriage to Mary Godwin. (Sel. fr. To Mary 
Wollstonecraft Godwin.)—Percy B. Shelley.— 
EDY 

On his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia. (C.) —H: 
Wotton.—ELP—W’EP 2 

(Elizabeth of Bohemia.) — BPB — EPs — OB — 
PGT 1—YBF 

(To his Mistress, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia.)— 
BNL 

(To his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia.)—FEP 
(You Meaner Beauties.)—HBP 
On ids Own B.indness.—J: Milton.—BNL—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—HBP 
(To Cyriack Skinner— C.) —FEP 
(“These eyes, though clear— sel.) —HDL 
On his Return from Spain.—T: Wyatt.—WEP 1 
On his Seventy-fifth Birthday.—Walter S. Landor. 
See On Himself. 

On his “Sonnets of the Wingless Hours.”—Eugene Lee- 
Hamilton.—VA 

On Holy Willie. (C.) —Rob’t Burns. 

(Epitaph on Holy Willie— also C.) —ESs—HPE 
On Homeward Wing.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
On Ink. (Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On John Dove.—Rob’t Bums.—HPE 
On Kingston Bridge.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 
On Laurence Sterne.—Anon.—EDA’ 

On Lebanon.—D:Gray.—AA 

On Lending a Punch Bowl.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA 
—FP—TAV 

On Liberty. Sel. fr. (Liberty in Government.— Sel. fr. 
Ch. V.)—J:S. Mill.—OS 3 

On Limiting the Hours of Labor, 1846.—T: B. Ma¬ 
caulay. See Ten Hours Bill, The. 

On Living Too Long. (Poems and Epigrams, 
CXCVIII.)—Walters. Landor.—VA 
On Lord Bacon’s Birthday. (Lord Bacon’s Birthday 
— C.) —Ben Jonson.—EDY 


241 





On Lord Dudley AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


On Lord Dudley and Ward.—S: Rogers.—HPE 
On Love.—Sir Rob’t Ayton.—BNL 
On Lucretia Borgia’s Hair.—Walter S. Landor. See 
On Seeing a Hair of Lucretia Borgia. 

On Lucy, Countess of Bedford.—Ben Jonson.—EPs— 
FEP—WEP 2 

On May Morning.—J: Milton.—CGd—LC 

(May Morning.) — AD — BNL — CEL — YBF 
(Song: A May Morning.)—POS 
(Song on May Morning —C.) — ELP — FEP — GN 
—HBP—OS 2—PYO—SE 
On Melancholy.—Rob’t Burton.—CEL 
On Milton’s Paradise Lost. — Andrew Marvell.— 
WEP 2 

On Mr. Caudle’s Shirt-buttons. (C.)—Douglas Jer- 
rold. 

(Mrs. Caudle’s Lecture [on Shirt Buttons].)—BS 1— 
CS 2 

On Mr. Clay’s Resolutions.—Dan’l Webster. See Con¬ 
stitution and the Union, The. 

On Mr. Foot’s Resolution in the United States Senate, 
Jan. 21, 1830, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Y. Hayne. 

On Mr. Webster’s Defence of New England.—SS 
(Reply to Mr. Webster.)—PS 
South Carolina and the Union.—TMD 

(South Carolina [in the Revolution]— si. abr.) — 
CR—SSD 

(South during [or in] the Revolution [The]— si. 
abr.) —KNE—OM—SO—SS—WR 10 
South during the War of 1812, The.—PS—SS 
On Mr. Tierney’s Motion, December 11, 1798.—G: 
Canning.—PS—SS 

On Mr. Webster’s Defence of New England.—Rob’t Y. 

Hayne. See On Mr. Foot’s Resolution, etc. 
On Mrs. Tofts [.a Famous Opera Singer—C.].—Alex. 
Pope.—-HPE 

On Mitford’s History of Greece, Sels. fr. —T: B. Ma¬ 
caulay. 

Courtesies of War.—HSS 1 
Influence of Athens, The.—OS 3 
On Music.—WalterS. Landor.—VA 
On Music.—T: Moore.—TIP 

(Pleasures of Memory— sel.) —FP 
On my Birthday, July 21.—Matthew Prior.—OB 
On my Dear Son [Deare Sonne—C.], Gervase Beau¬ 
mont.—Fs. Beaumont.—FEP 
(Of his Dear Son, Gervase— br. sel.) —OB 
(Of my Dear Son, Gervase Beaumont.)—YBF 
On my Finding Angelina Stop Suddenly in a Rapid 
After-supper Polka.—(Stanzas for the Senti¬ 
mental, III.)— (Punch.) —HPE 
On my Joyful Departure from the same City [Cologne].) 
—S: T. Coleridge. 

(Expectoration, An.)—HPE 
On my Refusing Angelina a Kiss under the Mistletoe. 

(Stanzas for the Sentimental, II.) (Punch.) — 
HPE 

On my Thirty-seventh Birthday.—Lord Byron. See 
On this Day I Complete my Thirty-sixth Year. 
On National Character. (Sel. fr. The First Battles of 
the Revolutionary War.)—E: Everett.—SSD 
(Our National Character.)—FD 1 
On Observing a Vulgar Name on the Plinth of an 
Ancient Statue.—Walter S. Landor.—HPE 
On, On, Forever.—Harriet Martineau.—VA 
(“Beneath this starry arch”— br. sel.) —GG 
On one Delacourt’s Complimenting Carthy on his 
Poetry. (In Epigrams against Carthy.)— 
Jonathan Swift.—HPE 

On One who Died Discovering her Kindness.— J: Shef¬ 
field.—OB 

On One who Died in May.—Clarence C. Cook.—AA 
On Overtures of Peace from Napoleon.—C: J. Fox.— 
SSD 

(Partition of Poland, The, 1800.)—OM—PS—SS 
On Parliamentary Innovations.—H: (7) Beaufoy.—SS 
On Parliamentary Reform.—Lord J: Russell.—SS 
On Parting. (C.)—Lord Byron. 

(Kiss, Dear Maid, The.)—BNL 
On Parting with his Books.—W: Roscoe.—FEP 

(To my Books on Parting with them.)—LBB— 
MBB 

On Phillis’ Sickness.—T: Lodge.—EP 
(Phillis’ Sickness.)—WEP 1 
On Precedents in Government.—Lewis Cass.—SS 
On Procrastination.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 

On Reading-.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 

On Reading a Poet’s First Book.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 
On Receipt of a Rare Pipe.—W. H. B.—PPh 
On Receiving a White Pink.—“Viola.”—FLS 
On Receiving the Master’s Degree from Harvard. — 
Booker T. Washington.—SC 
(Address at the Harvard Alumni Dinner.1—MRS 


On Recognizing the Independence of Greece.—H: Clay. 

See On the Greek Revolution. 

On Reducing the Army.—W: Pulteney.—SS 
On Returning a Copy of Halleck’s Poems.—Eliz. 
M. Chandler.—FEP 

On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye.—W: Wordsworth. 
—HBP 

(Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey 
on Revisiting, etc.— C .)—WEP 4 
(Lines Composed near Tintern Abbey.)—FEP 
(Tintern Abbey.)—BNL 
(Sel. )—EPs— LLC—SN 
(Varying Impressions of Nature— sel .)—GP 
On Revisiting the River Loddon.—T: Warton.—FEP 
(To the River Lodon—C.)—WEP 3 
On Rising with the Lark.—C:Lamb. See That we 
should Rise with the Lark. 

On Salathiel Pavy.—Ben Jonson.—OB 

(Epitaph on Salathiel Pavv, a Child of Queen Eliza¬ 
beth’s Chapel. An — C.) — FEP — WEP 2 — 
YBF 

On Samuel Rogers.—Lord Byron.—HPE 
On Scotland.—J: Cleveland.—HPE 
On Seeing a Hair of Lucretia Borgia. (C.) —Walter S. 
Landor. 

(On Lucretia Borgia’s Hair.)—VA 
On Seeing a Wounded Hare Limp by Me.—Rob’t 
Burns—SN 

On Seeing an Execution. (Ptmch .)—HPE 
On Seeing the Busts of Newton, Locke, and Others.— 
Jonathan Swift.—HPE 

On Seeing Verses Written upon Windows at Inns.— 
Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On Simony.—Jos. Hall.—ESs 

On Sir John Vanbrugh—Poet and Architect.—Dr.- 

Evans.—EDY 

On Sir Kenelm Digby.—Anon.—EDY 
On Sir Philip Sidney.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.— 
EPs 

(Elegy on Sir Philip Sidney, An— abr.) —WEP 1 
On Sir Philip Sidney. (Fr. An Elegy on a Friend’s 
Passion for his Astrophill.)—Matthew Royden. 
See Sir Philip Sidney. 

On Sivori’s Violin.—Frances S. Osgood.—AA 
On Sleep.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
On Snow. (Riddle .)—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On Snow-flakes Melting on his Lady’s Breast.—W: M. 
Johnson.—AA 

On Solitude.—Abraham Cowley. See Of Solitude. 

On Solitude. (In Flowers of Sion.)—W: Drummond. 
—ELP 

On Some Buttercups.—Frank D. Sherman.—AA 
On Some Lines of Lopez de Vega. (Burlesque of the 
Following Lines of Lopez de Vega—C.)—S: 
Johnson.—HPE 

On Some Roses Sent Anonymously.—Anon.—CG 1 
On Southey’s Death.—Walter S. Landor.—WEP 4 
On Sudden Political Conversions.—Dan’l Webster. 
See Remarks on the Political Course of Mr. 
Calhoun in 1838. 

On Taking a Wife.—T: Moore.—THP 
(Joke Verified, A— C.)— FEP—HPE 
On the American Revolution.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chat¬ 
ham. See American War, The. 

On the American War.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 

See American War, The. 

On the Art-unions.—T: Hood.—HPE 
On the Assassination of Lincoln.—Tom Taylor. See 
Abraham Lincoln. 

On the Assassination of President Lincoln.—Jas. A. 
Garfield. See Memorv of Abraham Lincoln, 
The. 

On the Atchafalaya.—H: W. Longfellow. See Evan¬ 
geline. 

On the Bank Veto, Sel. fr. (Public Virtue.)—H:Clav.— 
CS 5—KNE 

(Noblest Public Virtue, The— si. abr.) —PS—SS— 
TMD 

(Patriotism Inculcates Public Virtue— si. abr.) — 
SR 8 

(True Patriotism— sel .)—SO 
On the Beach.—Anon.—WR 3 
On the Beach.—W: Whitehead.—CS 25 
On the Beach at Calais. (Miscellaneous Sonnets, Pt. I., 
30.)—W: Wordsworth.—WEP 4 
(By the Sea.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(Evening on Calais Beach.)—OB 
(It is a Beauteous Evening, Calm and Free.)—FEP 
—MBL 

On the Birthday of Catherine of Braganza.—Helen C.( ?) 
Knight.—EDY 

On the Bluff.—J: Hay.—BS 18 


242 






TITLE INDEX 


On the Foregoing 


On the Borders of Cannock Chase.—Jean Ingelow.— 
WR 1 

On the Bridge.—Arthur R. Ropes.—YA 
On the Brink.—C: S. Calverley.—VA—\VR 8 
On the Calendar.—Anon.—WR 22 
On the Campagna.—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 
On the Captivity of the Countess of Anglesey. (The 
Countess of Anglesey, Lead Captive by the 
Rebells, at the Disforresting of Pewsam— Song 
—C.)—Sir W: Davenant.—WEP 2 
On the Castle of Chillon.—Lord Byron. See Prisoner 
of Chillon, The. 

On the Channel Boat.—Anon.—CS 19 
On the Church’s Danger.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On the Civil War in America.—J: Bright.—OS 3 
On the Cliffs, Sel. fr. (Sappho.)—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—VA 

On the Coast of Man.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
On the Conclusion of his Odes.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
On the Coronation of Queen Victoria.—Jedediah Hunt¬ 
ington.—EDY 

On the Countess Dowager of Pembroke. {In Lans- 
downe MS.)—-W: Browne [or Ben Jonson],— 
OB 


(Epitaph on the Countess of Pembroke— C.) —BFV 
— BNL {w. add. st.) — EDY — ELP — FEP 
—WEP 2—YBF 

On the Death of —-- — .—R: M. Milnes, Lord Hough¬ 
ton.—AVP 

On the Death of a Favourite Canary. — Matthew 
Arnold. See Poor Matthias. 

On the Death of a Favourite Cat [.Drowned in a Tub 
of Goldfishes—C.].)—T: Gray—HPE—THP 
(On a Favourite Cat, Drowned, etc.) — BFV — 
CGd {si. abr. )—GN—OB—PGT 1 
On the Death of a Friend’s Child, Br. sel. fr. (“ ’Tis 
sorrow builds the shining ladder up.”)—Jas. 

R. Lowell.—HDL 

On the Death of a Metaphysician.—G: Santayana.— 
AA 

On the Death of a Particular Friend. {Sel. fr. On the 
Death of Mr. Aikman.)—Jas. Thomson.—OB 
On the Death of an Infant. — Dirk Smits {tr. by H. 

S. Van Dyk).—HBP 
(Death of an Infant.)—WCL 

On the Death of Benjamin Franklin.—Philip Freneau. 
—EDY 

On the Death of Burbage.—T: Middleton.-—EDY 
On the Death of Burns.—W: Roscoe.—EDY—HBP 
On the Death of Canon Kingsley.—Paul H. Hayne.— 
EDY 

On the Death of Captain Nicholas Biddle.—Philip 
F reneau.-—EDY 

On the Death of Chatterton. {Sel. fr. Monody on the 
Death of Chatterton— latest vers.) —S: T. Cole¬ 
ridge.—EDY 

On the Death of Coleridge. (C.)—C: Lamb. 

(Death of Coleridge, The.)—LLC 
On the Death of Decatur.—W: Crafts.—EDY 
On the Death of Dr. Johnson.—W: Cowper.—EDY 
On the Death of Dr. Levett.—S: Johnson. See On the 
Death of Mr. Robert Levet, etc. 

On the Death of Dr. Swift, Sel. fr. (Verses on the 
Death of Dr. Swift.) — Jonathan Swift.— 
WEP 3 

On the Death of General Taylor.—Rob’t T. Conrad.—SS 
On the Death of General Worth.—G: W. Cutter.—EDY 
On the Death of George the Third. (C.) —Horace 
Smith. See Contrast, The. 

On the Death of James Hogg.—W: Wordsworth.— 
EDY 


(Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James 
Hogg— C .)—MBL 

(Passing of the Elder Bards, The— sel .)—VA 
On the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake. (C.)—Fitz- 
Greene Halleck.— AA — ASL — FEP — HBP 


—TAV—WCLG 2 


(Green be the Turf.)—LLC 

(Joseph Rodman Drake.)—BNL—-EDY—GP 

(To a Friend— sel .)—GMS 

On the Death of Little Mahala Ashcraft.—Jas. W. 
Riley.—AA 

On the Death of Lord Hastings.— {Abr.) —J: Dryden.— 


EDY 

On the Death of Mr. Addison.—T: Tickell.—-FEP 

(To the Earl of Warwick on the Death of [Mr.] 
Addison.)—BNL—WEP 3 {abr.) 

On the Death of Mr. Aikman.—(C.)—Jas. Thomson. 

See On the Death of a Particular Friend. 

On the Death of Mr. Crashaw.—Abraham Cowley.— 


WEP 2 

On the Death of Mr. Fox.—Lord Byron.—EDL 
On the Death of Mr. Hone, R. A.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 


On the Death of Mr. Perceval.—T: Moore.—EDY 
On the Death of Mr. Robert Levet, a Practiser in 
Physic. (C.) (Levet, his Death— alsoC.j —S: 
Johnson.—OB 

(On the Death of Dr. Levett.)—FEP 
On the Death of Mr. William Hervev.—Abraham Cow¬ 
ley.—WEP 2 
{Abr.)— OB—PGT 1 

On the Death of Mrs. Browning.—Sydney Dobell.— 
EDY—VA 

On the Death of Mrs. Holland.—Mrs. Earl.—AVP 
On the Death of Mrs. Throckmorton’s Bullfinch.—W: 
Cowper.—WEP 3 

On the Death of M. d’Ossoli and his Wife, Margaret 
Fuller.—WalterS. Landor.—EDY—VA 
On the Death of my Son Charles. (Lines on the Death 
of his Son Charles— C.) —Dan’l Webster.—AA 
On the Death of Oliver Cromwell. {Br. sel. fr. Poem 
upon the Death of his late Highness, Oliver, 
Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and 
Ireland, A.)—J: Dryden.—EDY 
(Oliver Cromwell— br. sel.) —BNL 
On the Death of [Richard Brinsley] Sheridan.—Lord 
Bvron. See Monody on the Death of the 
Right Hon. R.'B. Sheridan. 

On the Death of Richard Burton, Br. sel. fr. (Burton.) 

—Algernon C. Swinburne.—EDY 
On the Death of Sir Philip Sidney.—H: Constable.— 
OB 

(Sonnet Prefixed to Sidney’s Apology for Poetry, 
1595.)—WEP 1 

On the Death of Sir Thomas Wyatt.—H: Howard, Earl 
of Surrey.—WEP 1 

On the Death of Southey. (Poems and Epigrams, 
LXXXV.)—WalterS. Landor.—EDY 
On the Death of the Duke of Wellington.—Alfred 
Tennyson. See Ode on the Death, etc. 

On the Death of the Rev. George Whitefield.—Phillis 
Wheatley.—EDY 

On the Death of the Right Hon.-. (C.)—Oliver 

Goldsmith. 

(Great Man, A.)—NA 

On the Death of Waller.—Aphra Behn.—WEP 2 
On the Death of Washington.—Theodore Dwight.— 
EDY 

On the Deaths of Thomas Carlyle and George Eliot.— 
Algernon C. Swinburne.—VA 
On the Declaration of Independence.—R: S. Storrs.— 
WR 10 

On the Defeat of a Great Man.—W: W. Lord. See 
following. 

On the Defeat of Henry Clay.—W: W. Lord.—FEP 
(On the Defeat of a Great Man.)—AA 
On the Departure of Sir Walter Scott from Abbotsford 
for Naples.—W: Wordsworth.—BPB—WEP 4 
On the Departure of the Nightingale.—Charlotte 
Smith.—FEP 

(Nightingale's Departure, The.)—HBP 
On the Devon Coast.—Arthur Chamberlain.—SR 12 
On the Direct Tax, Sel. fr. (National Glory.)—H: 
Clay—LLC 

On the Disappointment of the Whig Associates of the 
Prince Regent at not Obtaining Office. (Epi¬ 
gram Written in the Last Reign — C.) —C: 
Lamb.—HPE 

On the Doorstep.—Edmund C. Stedman.—FEP 

(Doorstep, The— C.) — AWH — CS 9 — FP — 
FTA—OH—TAV 

On the Elevation of the Labouring Classes, Sel. fr. 

(Great Ideas.)—W: E. Channing.—SS 
On the Eve of W[ar.—Danske Dandridge.—PAPm 
On the Expunging Resolution, 1837. (C.— abr.) —H: 

Clay.—PS 

(Expunging Resolution, The.)—OM—SS 
On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic. (C.)— 
W: Wordsworth.—FEP—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(Venice.)—LH 

On the Federal Constitution.—Alex. Hamilton. See 
Speech on the Compromises of the Constitution. 
On the Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz.—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—EPs 

(Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz, The.—C.)—BNL— 
GMS—PHS 

On the Five Senses. {Riddle — si. abr.) —Jonathan 
Swift.—HPE 

On the Fly-leaf of a Book of Old Plays.—Walter 
Learned. See On a Fly-leaf, etc. 

On the Flv-leaf of Manon Lescaut.—Walter Learned.— 
AA 

On the Foregoing Divine Poems. (C.)—Edmund Waller. 
(Last Prospect, The— abr.) —‘ELP 
(Old Age [and Death]— abr.) —BNL—OB—YBF 
(On his Divine Poems.)—FEP 


243 







On the Freeing 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


On the Freeing of the Serfs. (Verses fr. A Russian 
Journey: The Czar.)—Edna D. Proctor.— 
EDY 

On the Frontier.—I. E. Jones.—CS23—DS 
On the Funeral of Charles [the] First, at Night, in St. 
George’s Chapel, Windsor.—W: L. Bowles.— 
EDY—FEP—HBP—OS 3 

On the Grasshopper.— Anacreon ( tr. by W: C-owper). 
—HBP 

(Grasshopper, The— tr. by Abraham Cowley, in 
Anacreontiques.) — BNL— CGd—HBP—LC— 
PHS 

On t he Grasshopper and Cricket. (C.) —J: Keats.— 
FEP—GN—HBP—LC—OS 2—WEP 4 
(Grasshopper and Cricket [, The].)—BNL—LLC 
(Poetry of Earth, The.)—WR 1 
On the Greek Question.—J: Randolph.—SS 
On the Greek Revolution, Sels. fr. —H: Clay. 

America’s Duty to Greece.—PPS 

(Duty of America to Greece.— Sel .)—OM 

(On Recognizing the Independence of Greece.) 

—PS—SS 

(Sympathy with the Greeks— sel.) —EA—SO 
Greek Revolution. ( Ptly. same .)—SC 
On the Heights.—E: Dowden.—TIP 
On the Heights.—Lucius H. Foote.—AA 
On the Hillside.—A.I. M.—YBT 
(Trust.)—HP 

On the Ice.—Anon.—BS 17—SA 

On the Irish Disturbance Bill.—Dan’l O’Connell.—OM 
—PPS—PS—SS—SSD 
(Irish Disturbance Bill, The.)—SO 
On the Judiciary Act, 1802. (Sel. fr. Second Speech on 
the Judiciary Establishment.) — Gouverneur 
Morris.—OM—SS 

On the Lady Manchester. (C.) —Jos. Addison. 

(Countess of Manchester, The.)—HPE 
On the Late Captain Grose’s Peregrinations through 
Scotland. (C.) —Rob’t Burns. See On Cap¬ 
tain Grose’s, etc. 

On the Late Massacre in Piedmont. (C.)—J: Milton. 
—EDY — FEP — HBP — PGT 1 — WEP 2 — 
YBF 

(Late Massacre in Piedmont, The.)—LH 
(Sonnet: On the Late Massacre, etc.)—ELP—EPs 
On the Late S. T. Coleridge.—Washington Allston.— 

AA 

On the Life of Man. (C .)— H: King (ut. at. to Fs. 
Beaumont).—ELP 
(Life.)—HBP—YBF 
(Life of Man, The.)—CEL 
(Sic Vita.)—BNL—CS 19—FEP 
On the Life-mask of Abraham Lincoln.—R: W. Gilder. 

—AA—ASL—BNL—YBF 
On the Lord General Fairfax.—J: Milton.—EDY 
On the Lord’s Prayer.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
On the Loss of the Royal George. (C.)—W: Cowper. 

— BNL — EDY — EPs — GN — HBP — 
MBL—WEP 3 

(Loss of the Royal George [, The].)— CGd — LC — 
PGT 1—PHS—PSR 
(Royal George.The.)—LH 

On the Monument Erected to Mazzini at Genoa.— 
Algernon C. Swinburne.—EDY—VA 
On the Moon. (Riddle .)—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On the Morning of Christ's Nativity (C.) —J: Milton. 

—BPB—FEP—HBP 

(Ode on the Morning of Chr st’s Nativity.)—BFV— 
PGT 1 

Hymn, The. (C.)—PGT 1 
(Christmas— br. sel .)—SE 
(Christmas Hymn.)—EPs 

(Hymn on the Morning of Christ’s Nativity.) 
—OB—PHS 

(Hymn on [or to] the Nativity.)—BS 25 (sel.) 
—ELP—OS 3 

(“ Ring out. ye crystal spheres”— br. sel .)—HP 
On the Mount.—F. L. Hosmer.—TAS 
On the Nat vity of Christ.—W: Dunbar.—OB 
On the Ocean.—Jas. T.Fields. See Tempest, The. 

On the Origin of Evil.—J: Byroro.—WEP 3 
On the Other Train: a Clock’s Story. —Anon. —BS 22 
—CS 19—FMR—NPS—SC—SO—SR 6—YP 
On the Ottawa.—E: H. Dewart.—TCV 
On the Oxford Carrier. (On the University Carrier— 

C.) —J: Milton.—NA 

On the Picture of an Infant [.Playing near a Precipice]. 
(From a Greek Epigram— C.) — Leonidas of 
Alexandria (tr. by S: Rogers).—BNL—HBP 
On the Picture of the Last Supper, at Milan. .(Br. sel. 
fr. PadreBandelli Proses totheDuke Ludovico 
Sforza about Leonardo da Vinci.)—W: W. 
Story.—OS 3 

244 


On the Plains.—Fs. Brooks.—A A 

On the Portrait of Shakespeare. (C.) —Ben Jonson.— 
BNL—EDY 

(Lines on the Portrait of Shakespeare.)—FEP 
On the Prairie.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 28 
On the Proposal to Erect a Monument in England to 
Lord Byron.—Emma Lazarus.—AA 
On the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in 
America.—G: Berkeley.— BNL — FEP— 
HBP—YBF 
(America.)—SS 
(American Destiny.)—BLP 
(Old World and the New, The.)—FP 
(Verse: Westward the Star of Empire—6r. sel.) — 
EPs 

(Westward the Course of Empire— abr.) —GP 
On the Prospect of War [with Great Britain, 1811].—J: 
C. Calhoun.—PS—SS 

On the Punishment of Louis XVI. — Maximilien M. I. 
Robespierre.—PS 

On the Queen’s Return from the Low Countries.—W: 
Cartwright.—OB 

“On the ramparts bare, stood the ladv fair.”—Anon.— 
MYF 

On the Rappahannock.—C. C. Somerville (at. also to 
C:H. Tiffany.)—PR 
(Home, Sweet Home.)—CS 22 
On the Rappahannock. (Diff. / oem.) —C: H. Tiffany. 
—CS 32 

On the Receipt of mv Mother’s Picture [out of Norfolk 
—C.].—W: Cowper.— FEP — HBP — MBL— 
WCI.G 2—WEP 3 
(Mother’s Portrait, A— sel.) —BS 14 
(My Mother's Picture.)— BNL — EPs (sel.) — LLC 
On the Refusal of the Chambers of Vacations of Rennes 
to Obey the Decrees of the National Assembly. 
—Victor Riquetti, Marquis de Mirabeau.—SS 
On the Resolution to put the Commonwealth into a 
State of Defence—before Virginia Convention. 
—Patrick Henry. See Speech in the Virginia 
Convention. 

On the Rhine.—W: L. Bowles.—BNL 
On the River.—Howard W. Long.—CS 25 
On the Road.—Paul L. Dunbar.—AA 
On the Road.—Tudor Jenks.—NA 
On the Road to Chorrera.—Arlo Bates—AA 
On the Road to Dreamtown.—Eben E. Rexford— 
CS 33 

On the Ruins of a Country Inn.—Philip Freneau—A A 
On the Sea. (SI. diff. fr. present vers.) —Bayard Tay¬ 
lor.—FP 

On the Seminole War, Sels. fr. —H: Clay. 

Military Insubordination.—SS 
Military Supremacy Dangerous [to Liberty].— 
(Ptly. same as SS.)—BS 14—LLC—OM 
On the Shore.—Sidney Lanier.—TAV 

(Evening Song—C.)—ASL—BIL—GP—PYO 
On the Shores of Tennessee.—Ethel L. Beers.—CS 1— 
FEP—HNS 

On the Slain at Chickamauga.—Herman Melville.—AA 
—EDY 

On the Soul of Man and the Immortality Thereof, Br. 

sel. fr. (Man.)—Sir J: Davies.—-OB—YBF 
On the Sphinx. — S: L. Clemens. See Innocents 
Abroad. 

On the Spring.—T: Gray. See Ode: On the Spring. 
On the Stair.—R: Burton.—CG 1 
On the Stair.—C. F. Lester.—CS 37 
On the Stairs.—Anon.—CG 1 

On the Stairs. (Fr. Tales of Mean Streets.)—Arthur 
Morrison.—WGS 
On the Stairway.—Anon.—BS 13 
On the Stairway.—Lucy Larcom.—-LCS 
On the Stamp Act.—Jas. Otis.—EAO 
On the Statue of King Charles I. at Charing Cross in 
the Year 1674.—Edmund W’aller.—FEP 
On the Sunny Side.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
On the Sunset Line.—Beaumont Claxton.—CS 36 
On the Taking of Namur by the King of Great Britain. 
(Sel. fr. An Englisn Ballad on the Taking of 
Namur, etc.)—Matthew Prior.—EDY 
On the Terrace.—E. -Nesbit.—WR 24 
On the Threshold.—A. H. Baldwin.—PEO 
(New Year, The.)—HSS 2 

On the Tomb of Guidarello Guidarelli at Ravenna.— 
Walter W. Greg.—AVP 

On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey. (On the Tombs 
in Westminster— C.) —Fs. Beaumont.— FEP 
—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(In Westminster Abbey.)—LH 

(Lines on the Tombs in Westminster.)—ELP— 
WEP 2 

On the Train. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 


I 




TITLE INDEX 


One-legged 


On the Union.—Ben Jonson.—EDY 
On the University Carrier. (C.) —J: Milton. See On 
the Oxford Carrier. 

On the Verge.—W: Winter.—AA 
On the Vowels. (C.)—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
(Riddle, A.)—GN 

On the Weather.—Ferris Greenslet.—CG 2 
"On the whole, there are much sadder ages than the 
early ones.”—J: Ruskin. See Modern Painters. 
On the Windows of King’s College Remaining Boarded. 
—R: H. Barham.—HPE 

On the Winter Solstice.—Mark Akenside.—WEP 3 
On the Writs of Assistance.—Jas. Otis.—EAO 
On this Day I Complete my Thirty-sixth Year. (C.)— 
Lord Byron.—FEP—WEP 4 
(Bvron’s Last Poem.)—CEL 
(Hail and Farewell.)—LH 
(On my Thirty-seventh Birthday.)—EDY 
On Time.—J: Milton.—OB 
On Time. {Riddle.) —Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
On Tiptoe.—G: F. Cameron.—TCV 
(Standing on Tiptoe.)—VA 
On to Freedom.—A. J. H. Duganne.—CS 4 
“On to the sacred hill.”—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
On Two Beautiful One-eyed Sisters.—Gotthold E. 
Lessing.—HPE 

On Two Gentlemen.—Anon.—HPE 
On Two Lean Millers. (C.) —J: Byrom. 

(Epigram on Two Monopolists— si. diff. vers.) — 
FEP 

On Tying Daphne’s Shoe.—J. S. Bryan.—CG 2 
On Various Subjects.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
On Waking from a Dreamless Sleep.—Annie Fields.— 
AA 

On War with France or America, 1778. (Sel. fr. 

Amendment to the Address on the King’s 
Speech at the Opening of the Session, Nov. 26, 
1778.)—C: J. Fox.—PS 

On Washington’s Farewell Address.—St. John Honey- 
wood.—EDY 

On Which Side are You?—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
On William Graham of Mossknowe. (C.)—Rob’t 
Bums. 

(Epitaph on W-.)—HPE 

On William Hogarth — in Chiswick Churchyard.— 
Anon.—EDY 

On Woman.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Vicar of Wake¬ 
field, The. 

On Women (Satire V.), Br. sel. fr. (Old Coquette, 
The.)—E: Young—WEP 3 
Once. ( Child World.)— AVP 
Once.—W. L. Lampton.—WR 15 
(Unexpected, The.)—BS 21 

“Once as our Saviour walked with men below.”—Anon. 
—AD 

Once at Battle Eve.—Mary H. Krout.—BLP 
“Once at midnight, just as Arktos.”—Anacreon.— 
AE 

Once Before.—Mary M. Dodge.—AA 
“Once from the town a starling flew.” (St. Nicholas.) 
—BVC 

Once More.—Jas. C. Hodgins.—TCV 
Once More.—Oliver W. Holmes.—CS 9—SE (br. sel.) 
Once on a Time.—Emily H. Miller.—PP—YPS 
Once to Every Man and Nation.-—-Jas. R. Lowell. See 
Present Crisis, The. 

Once upon a Time.—Louisa Bushnell.—BS 5 
Once upon a Time.—Caroline B. Southey. — FEP — 
HSS 3 


Onconvanience, An. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
One.—Arlo Bates.—TFY 
One Advantage of Volapiik.—McG. J.—CG 1 
One and One.—Anon.—CPL 

One and Twenty. (Improviso on a Young Heir’s 
Coming of Age— C.) —S: Johnson.—OB 
One at a Time.—Ernest Whitney.—YBT 
One Bachelor of Many. (Harper’s Magazine.) —SR 6 
One beneath Old Glory.—Anon.—PAPm 
One by One.—Anon.—HP 

One by One.—Adelaide A. Procter.— DLF — FEP — 
GN—OS 1—SM (si. abr.) —TFS (br. sel.) 

One Cent and Costs. (Boston Globe.) —SR 3 
One Country.—Frank L. Stanton.—AA 
One Country—One Sacrifice.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
One Day.—Jas. B. Bensel.—POS 

One Day Solitary. (SI. abr.) —J: T. Trowbridge.— 
CS 18—NPS—YP 
One Dear Smile.—T: Moore.—FTA 
One Easter Day.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
One Face.—Sarah K. Bolton.—BIL—FTA 
One Face Alone.—S: T. Coleridge. See Phantasmion. 
One Flower for Nelly.—-Rose H. Thorpe.—BS 11 
One for Everybody.—Anon.—DSS 


One Forgotten, The.—Dora Sigerson.—TIP 
One Glass More.—Anon.—CS 6—SR 2 
One Glass Too Much.—Anon.—TS 
One Good Turn Deserves Another. (Punch.) —HPE 
One Good Turn Deserves Another. (Dial.) —J: T. 
Trowbridge.—ASD 

One Gray Hair, The.—Walter S. Landor.— BNL — 
FEP—H BP 

(One White Hair, The.)—VA 
One Heart’s Enough for Me.—Levi Cheyney.—FP 
One Hope, The. (The House of Life, Sonnet CL)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 

One Hundred Years from Now.—-C: Rowland.—CS 17 
One in Blue, and One in Gray.—Anon.—CS 12 
(Blue and the Gray, The.)—HP 
One in the Infinite.—G: F. Savage-Armstrong.—VA 
One isn’t Loved Every Day.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. 
NeeAux Italiens. 

One Little Hatchet.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
One Little Star.—Susan Coolidge.—YBT 
One Lovely Name.—Walter S. Landor.—VS 
One More Year.—A. Norton.—PEO 
One Niche the Highest.—Elihu Burritt.—CS 7—PFP 
(SI. abr.)— BS 17—PR 

(Ambitious Youth, The— si. diff. vers.) —WRD 
(Scene at the Natural Bridge.)—CR 
One Night with Gin.—Anon.—CS 5 
One of Christ’s Little Ones.—Anon.—WR 24 
One of God’s Little Heroes.—Marg. J. Preston.—CS 37 
—TMR 

One of his Animal Stories.—Jas. W. Riley. See Session 
with Uncle Sidney, A. 

One of his Names.—Josephine Pollard.—SII 13—TFS 
(His Names— abr.) —CS 32 
One of Many.—Minnie D. Bateham.—CS 36 
One of the Common People.—J. W. Hamilton.—FD 2 
One of the Dewsenburys.—Anon.—MC 
One of the Heroes.—Eben E. Rexford.—PR 
One of the Six Hundred.—Anon.—CS 18 
One Saturday.—Annie D. Robinson.—AA 
One Step at a Time.—Anon.—-DJS 

One Story’s Good till Another is Told.—C: Swain.— 
SS 

One Summer.—J. M. L.—CPL 

One Thanksgiving Day.—Preserved Wheeler.—SR 10 
One Thanksgiving Day out West.—Emma D. Banks.— 
BR 

“One there is who has silently advanced through time 
from the beginning.”—Frederika Bremer.—GG 
One Thing at a Time.—M. A. Stoddart.—LPS—PP 
(Work and Play.)—TFS 
One Thing He Forgot.—Tobe Hodge.—SR 5 
(Most Fellows Know.)—WR 15 
“One thing is sure, the day of the Lord is hastening 
on.”—W. X. Ninde.—GG 

One Touch of Nature.— Rob’t J. Burdette.—NPS— 
YP 

One Touch of Nature.—W: Shakespeare. See Troilus 
and Cressida. 

One Twilight Hour.—G: Meredith. See Modern Love. 
“One, Two, Three!”—H: C. Bunner.—HBR—PoR— 
TAV—TMR 

One, Two, Three.—Marg. Johnson.—GMS 
One Volume More. (Bannatyne Club, The— C.) — 
Walter Scott.—LBB 

One Way of Love.—Rob’t Browning.— HBP — VA — 
WR 8—YBF 

One Way of Trusting.—Hannah P. Kimball.—A A 
One White Hair, The.—Walter S. Landor. See One 
Gray Hair, The. 

One who Stays at Home, The.—Burneston Lane.— 
BS 20 

"One with yawning made reply, The.”-Brooks. 

—SO 

One Word.—Wallace Bruce.—BS 20—WR 8 
“One word is too often profaned.”—Percy B. Shelley. 
—FEP—FTA—OH—PGT 1—YBF 

(To-.— C.)— HBP—OB—WEP 4 

One Word More.—Rob’t Browning. See following. 
One Word More. To E. B. B.— Rob’t Browning.— 
VA 

(To E. B. B.— sel.) —OH 

One Writes that Other Friends Remain.—Alfred Ten¬ 
nyson. See In Memoriam. 

One-hoss Shay, The; or, The Deacon’s Masterpiece.— 
Oliver W. Holmes — BNL — CR — MHR — 
SE (sel.) 

(Deacon’s Masterpiece, The; or, The Wonderful, etc. 

—C.)—AWH—EPs—FEP—THP 
(Wonderful “One-hoss Shav,” The.)—AD (sel.) — 
CS 2 

One-legged Duck, The.—F. Hopkinson Smith. See 
One-legged Goose, The. 


245 







One-legged 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


One-legged Goose, The.—J. R. Planche.—CS 24 
One-legged Goose, The. (Sel. fr. Colonel Carter of 
Cartersville, Ch. III.)—F. Hopkinson Smith.— 
BS 24—CS 31—HBR—WR 4 
(One-legged Duck, The— arr. by W: H. Head.)— 
SR 11 

Oneyda’s Death Song, The. (Sel. fr. Gertrude of 
Wyoming, Pt. III.)—T: Campbell.—WEP 4 
Only.— (The Argosy.) —HP 
Only.—Jessie Gordon.—CS 26—FHS (sel.) 

Only.—Charlotte Murray.—SSS 
Only.—Carlotta Perry.—-BS 9—YBT 
Only.—J: W. Storrs.—BS 13 
Only.—G: Thatcher.-—TK 
Only a Baby.—Anon.—HP—TFS 

Only a Baby.—Addie Layton. See Only a Baby 
Small. 

Only a Baby Small.—Matthias Barr.— FTT — GP — 
PC (sel.)— PP—PS—YFR 
(Only a Baby— at. to Addie Layton.)—BS 5 
Only a Beggar Boy.—Hattie T. Volk.—SR 6 
“Only a Bit of Childhood Thrown Away.”—Maud 
Moore.—HP 

Only a Boy.—-Anon.-—BS 2—CS 9 
(Our Jim.)—TFS (sel.) 

Onlv a Chicken. (Part rrc .)—Eugenie J. Hall.—LPS 
—PP 

Only a Curl.—Eliz. B. Browning.— CS 9 — FP — NPS 
—YP 

Only a Drunkard.—Anon.—CS 34 

Only a Drunkard.—C. J. Clingan.—CS 23 

Only a Glass of Cider.—Mrs. £. J. Richmond.—SR 2 

Only a Glove.—Anon.—CS 20 

Only a Jew.—Anon.—CS 16 

Only a Little.—Dora Goodale.-—PEO 

Only a Little Child.—Anon.—YBT 

Only a Little Chinese Talk.—Anon.—SR 13 ' 

Only a Little Thing.—Mrs. M. P. Handy.—PEO 
Only a Pin.—I. H. Brown.—CRR 

Onlv a Shaving.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—MYF (sel.) 
—VSG 

Only a Smile.—Florence McCurdy.—CS 29 
Only a Soldier.—-Agnes MacDonell.—WR S 
(Incident, An.)—WR 24 
Only a Song.—Anon.—CS 28—-SSS 
Only a Sparrow.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Only a Tramp.—T. G. La Moille.—FS 
Only a Woman.—Dinah M. M. Craik.—-BNL 
Onlv a Woman.—Hester A. Benedict.—CS 11—DS— 
HP 

Only a Woman.—Tom Masson.—CS 32 
Only a Woman’s Hair.—J. A. Noble.—EDY 
“Only a Year.”—Harriet Beecher Stowe.—BNL—FP 
—GP 

Only an Insect.—Grant Allen.—TCV 
Only Another Footprint.—Anon.—MND 
“Only Cooning.”—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Only Faithful.—Sarah Williams.—FTA 
Only Five.—Anon.—KER—TFS 

Onlv Five Minutes to Live. (Arkansaw Traveler.) — 
SR 4 

Only for This.—Louisa Jackson.—FLS 
Only in Dreams.—Josiah G. Holland. See Gradatim. 
Only Joe.—Jas. R. Reed.—CS 32—HP—WR 4 
Only Once.—Anon.—W T R 4 
Only One.—G: Cooper.—A A 
(Hundreds.)—TFS 
(Our Mothers.)—YBT 

Only One!—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—TFS (sel.) 

(Rhyme of One, A.)—OH 
Only One Kind Word —Ella Dare.—WR 15 
Only One Life.—Anon.—FP 
Only One Mother.—B. C. Dodge.—DCP 
Only Playing.—Anon.—BR (si. abr.) —CS 22 
(Masquerade, A.)—PC—WCL 
Only Seven.—H: S. Leigh.—BNL—THP 
Only Sixteen.—-Anon.—CS 9 

Only the Brakesman.—Constance F. Woolson.—CS 22 
Only the Clothes she Wore.—N. G. Shepherd.—BNL 
Only True Life, The.—Horace B. Durant.—CS 28 
Only Waiting.—Frances L. Mace.—BNL—CS 4—-GP 
“Only way to clear the track of life is to leave no 

enemy behind. The.”—Rev. Dr. - 

Twitchell.—GG 

Onnalinda, Sel. fr. (Burning Ship, The.)—J. H. Mc- 
Naughton.—DES 

“Oolaghaun,” The.—Dion Boucicault. See Shaugraun, 
The. 

Oor Wee Laddie.—W: Lyle.—WR 21 
Opal Ring, The. (Sel. arr. fr. Nathan the Wise, Act 
III., Sc. 7.)—Gotthold Lessing.—DR 
(Ring, The.)—MMR 
Open Door, The.—Anon.—-CS 22 


Open Door, An.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
Open or Shut? (Dial. ad. fr. “A Door must be either 
Open or Shut.”)—Alfred de Musset.—NDP 
Open Question, An. (C.) —T: Hood. 

(Sunday Question, The.)—HPE 
Open Secret , An.—Anon.—DJS 
Open Secret, An.—C. A. Mason.—AA 
Open Secret , An.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Open Sky, The.—J: Ruskin. See Modern Painters. 
Open Steeplechase, The.—Anon.—CS 32 
Open the Gates as High as the Sky. (Dial.) —Mrs. 

Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Open Window, The.-—H: W. Longfellow.—FIBP 
Open your Mouth. (Tab.) —-Anon.—TCP 
Open your Mouth and Shut your Eyes. (Tab.) — 
Anon.—TCP 

Opening Address.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Opening Address.—Mrs. M. E. Cornell.—HE 
Opening Address.-—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Opening Address, The. (Dial.) —L. J. and E. C. Rook. 
—CDs 

Opening Dialogue.—Anon.—DLD 

Opening of the Mississippi in 1862, The.—W: E. Lewis. 
—NC—PFP 

Opening of the Original Prologue to the Confessio 
Amantis.—J: Gower. See Confessio Amantis. 
Opening of the Piano, The. (Atlantic Monthly.) — 
FP 

Opening of the Thirteenth of Cinkante Balades.—J: 
Gower.—WEP 1 

Opening Recitation. (For twelve little girls.) —Mrs. 
Russell Kavanaugh. — lvj 

Opening Scene at the Trial of Warren Hastings, The. 

—T: B. Macaulay. See Warren Hastings. 
Opening Song. (Tab. w. song.) —Anon.—KJ 
(Song of the States.)—PP—YFR 
Opening Speech, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—MND 
(Salutatorian’s Difficulties, A.)—PS 
Opening Speech for a Boy.—Anon.—KNS 
Opening Speech (for a Small Boy).—Anon.—DLF 
Opening the Campaign.—Anon.—CS 21 
“Opera is an experiment, bold even to the verge of 
absurdity. The.”—Jonathan Edwards.—GG 
Opera Mad. (Extravaganza.) —Anon.—-SED 
Opera Music for the Piano.—Anon.—MHR 
Ophelia. (Tab. based on Shakespeare’s Hamlet.)— 
Anon.—BS 8—TCP 
Opinion.—S: Butler.—HPE 

Opinion. (Sel. ad. fr. Familiar Letters, Bk. III., Letter 
5.)—Jas. Howell.—KNE 
Opinionative, The.—S: Butler.—HPE 
Opinions Stronger than Armies. (SI. diff.) —Luther A. 
Ostrander.—PFP—SR 8 

Opportunities of the Scholar.—H: W. Grady. See 
Against Centralization. 

Opportunity.—Anon.—CS 18 
Opportunity.—Madison Cawein.—A A 
Opportunity.—J: J. Ingalls.—AA—PYO—SR 13 
Opportunity.—Arthur Ketchum.—CG 2 
Opportunity.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius C®sar. 
Opportunitv.—E: R. Sill.— BS 21—GMS — GN — 
H B R—T AS—T A V—TM D 

Opportunity for Effort.—G: R. Russell. See following. 
Opportunity for Work.—G: R. Russell.—CS 1—DS 
(Opportunity for Effort.)—SR 3 
Opportunitv to Labor.—T: B. Reed.—PEO—SC— 
TMR 

Opposite Examples. — Horace Mann. — CS 1 — 
KNE (abr.) —LLC 

Opposition to Misgovernment.—Dan’l Webster.—SS 
Optimism. (Blackwood’s Magazine.) —CS 33 
O’Quirk’s Sinecure. (Dial.) —Harrv and J: Kurnell.— 
DE 

Or Ever the Earth Was. (Fr. Book of Day-dreams.)— 
C: L. Moore.—AA 

“Or, suppose, on the other hand, he had told you the 
plea was granted.”—Alex. B. Jack.—GG 
Oracle, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Oracle: “Mine honesty and I,” etc.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Antony and Cleopatra. 

Oracle: “The flighty purpose,” etc.—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Macbeth. 

Oracle: "There is a history,” etc.—W: Shakespeare. 

See King Henry IV., Pt. II. 

Oracle: “There is a mystery,” etc.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Troilus and Cressida. 

Oracle: "We must not stint,” etc.—W: Shakespeare. 

See King Henry VIII. 

Orange and Green.—Anon.—PR 
Orange Tree, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
Orara.—H. C. Kendall.—PGT2 

Oration against Catiline.—Cicero. See First Oration 
against Catiline. 


246 






TITLE INDEX 


Ostler 


Oration at the Laying of the Corner-stone of the Bunker 
Hill Monument.—Dan’l Webster. See Bunker 
Hill Monument , The. 

Oration for a Boy, An.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Oration for a Six Year Old Boy, An.—Anon.—-DLS 
Oration in New York City, 1882, Sel. fr. (Decoration 
Day.)—Rob’t Ing'ersoll.—PS—SR 3 
Oration of Mark Antony.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Julius Ca-sar. 

Oration on Hamilton.—Gouvemeur Morris.—EAO 
(Funeral Oration by the Dead Body of Hamilton— 
C— abr .)—MRS 

Oration on Idols.—Wendell Phillips. See Idols. 
Oration on Lafayette.—E: Everett. See Eulogy on 
Lafayette. 

Oration on the Crisis.—Anon.—MHR 
Oration on the Crown, The, Sels. fr. Demosthenes. 
Athenian Patriotism.—SR 8 

(Public Spirit of [the] Athenians.)—SS—SSD 
Exordium. (Lord Brougham’s tr .)—SS 
Fortune of .Eschines.—FTR 
Oration on the Crown.—OS 3 

(Close of the Oration on the Crown— abr., diff. 
tr .)—SO 

Reply to .Eschines, Pts. I. and II. (Lord Brough¬ 
am’s tr .)—PS 

(Demosthenes not Vanquished by Philip— abr. fr. 
Pt. 1.)—SS 

Oration on the Impeachment of Warren Hastings.— 
Edmund Burke. See Impeachment of Warren 
Hastings. 

Oration on the "Labor” Question.—Anon.—BDD— 
SDR 

(Labor Question, The.)—CH 
Oration on Washington.—Fisher Ames.—EAO 
Oration on Washington.—E: Everett. See Character 
of Washington, The. 

Orations on Philip.—Demosthenes. See Philippics. 
Orator, The.—Otto von Bismarck.—OS 2 
Orator, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP 
Orator Described, The.—R: B. Sheridan.—BLP 
(Perfect Orator, The.)—HSS 2 
Orator Puff. (.Fr. The M. P.; or, The Blue Stocking.) 
—T: Moore.— BNL — BS 1 — CS 9 — MHR 
—SA 

Orator’s Cause, The.—J: D. Wright.—-NC 
Orator’s Epitaph, The.—HLord Brougham.—HPE 
Orator’s First Speech in Parliament, An.—-Alex. Bell. 
—MHR 

Oratory. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Oratory.—H: W. Beecher.—BS 6 
Oratory.—(?) Maory.—KNE 

Oratory among the Arts.—Anna L. Shafer.—SR 12 
Oratory and the Press.—Dan’l Dougherty.—BS 2— 
CS 8—HSS 2 

Oratory of Wendell Phillips, The. (Sel. fr. Wendell 
Phillips.)—T: W. Higginson.—FD 2 
Orbits.—R: Le Gallienne.—VA 
Orchard, The.—Hugh Kelso.—AD 
Orchard Blossoms.—-Felicia D. Hemans.—AD—LLC 
Orchard-lands of Long Ago, The.—Jas. W. (Riley.— 
HP 

Orchestra; or, A Poeme of Dauncing, Sel. fr. (Antinous 
Praises Dancing before Queen Penelope.)— 
Sir J: Davies.—WEP 1 
(Dancing of the Air, The— sel .)—BNL 
Ordeal by Fire, The, Sel. fr .—Edmund C. Stedman.— 
HDL 

Ordeal of Richard Feverel, The. Sel. fr. (Ferdinand 
and Miranda— sel. fr. Chs. XIV. and XV.)— 
G: Meredith.—-MRS 
Order.—Anon.—LPS—PP 

Order for a Picture, An.—Alice Cary.— BS S — CR — 
CS 8 — FTR — HNS — LLC — MMR — SA — 
WCLG 2 

(Abr. )—PPSr—TMR 

Order of Nature, The.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on 
Man, An. 

Orders not to Go. (Dial.) —Anon.—WR 17 
O’Reilly’s Billy Goat.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Organ, The.—Washington Irving. See Westminster 
Abbey. 

Organ Creations.—H. W. Warren.—BS 6 
Organist, The.—Matthias Barr.—PR—WR 12 
Organist, The.—Archibald Lampman.—BS 26 
Organ-tempest of Lucerne, The.—Hezekiah Butter- 
worth.—BS 24 

Orient, The.—Lord Byron. See Bride of Abydos, The. 
Orient Yourself.—-Horace Mann.—SO 
Origin of Didactic Poetry, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—EPs 
Origin of Ireland, The. (National Teachers’ Monthly.) 
—HBP—THP 

(Birth of Ireland, The.)—BRR—CSS—PPSr 


Origin of Scandal, The. (The Argonaut.) —BS 14—FS 
—SR 5 

Origin of Shoes, The.—Edmund J. Burk.—CS 36 
Origin of the Banjo, The.—Irwin Russell. See Christ¬ 
mas Night in the Quarters. 

Origin of the Harp, The.—T: Moore.—BNL 
Origin of the Opal.—Anon.—BNL 

Origin of the Peacock, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KER 

Origin of the Red Moss Rose.—Anon.— DLF 
Origin of the White, the Red, and the Black Men. (A 
Seminole Tradition — C. — sel. fr. The Semi- 
noles—Origin of the White, the Red and the 
Black Men: The Conspiracy of Neamathla.)— 
Washington Irving.—WCLG 1 
Origin of Violets.—-Anon.—POS 

Original Draft of the Declaration of Independence, The. 

—T: Jefferson. See Declaration of Independ¬ 
ence, The. 

Original Liquor League, The.—T. De Witt Talmage.— 
TS 

Original Love Story, An.—Anon.—CS 27—DCR 
Original Maxims of George Washington.—G: Washing¬ 
ton.—PEO 

Original Parody, An. (On Cato’s Soliloquy on the 
Immortality of the Soul, by Addison.)—Anon. 
—BC 

Origins.—-C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Orioles, The.—Anon.—WCL 
Orion.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—VA 
Orion: An Epic Poem, Sels. fr. —R: H. Horne. 
Akinetos.—VA 
Distraught for Meropti.—VA 
Eos.—VA 

In Forest Depths.—VA 
Meeting of Orion and Artemis.—VA 
Orlando Furioso, Sel. fr. (Death of Zerbino, The— sels. 
fr. Can. XXIV., Sts. 49-91.) — Ariosto (tr. by 
W: S. Rose).—NE 

Orlando Furioso, Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Orlando’s Wooing.—W: Shakespeare. See As You 
Like It. 

Ormolu’s Tenement House.—Fitz-James O’Brien.— 
CS 19 

Orphan, The. Sels. fr. —T: Otwav. (Br. sels. fr. Act 
II., Sc. 1 and III., 1.)—BNL 
Orphan Billy.—Arthur J. Burdick.—SR 12 
Orphan Born.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—-SYS 
Orphan Boy, The, Sels. fr. —Amelia Opie. 

Orphan Boy. (Br. sel.) —AE 
Orphan Boy’s Tale. The.—FEP 
Orphan Boy’s Tale, The.—Amelia Opie. See Orphan 
Boy, The. 

Orphan Maid, The. (Song fr. The Legend of Montrose, 
Ch. IX.)—Walter Scott.—WR 9 
Orphan’s Dream of Christmas, The.—-Anon.—WR 6 
Orphan’s Prayer, The.—Anon.—CS 19 
Orphan’s Trust, The. (Dial.) —H. C. Hunt.—SDD 
Orpharion, The, Sel. fr. (Orpheus’ Song.)—Rob’t 
Greene.—WEP 1 

Orpheus.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry VIII. 
Orpheus and Eurydice.—N. M. Baskett.—CS 24 
Orpheus and Eurydice. (Abr.) —J: G. Saxe.—SPE— 
SR 7 

Orpheus and the Mariners Make Answer.—Frank T. 

Marzials. See Two Sonnet-songs. 

Orpheus’ Song.—Rob’t Greene. See Orpharion, The. 
Orpheus to Beasts.—R: Lovelace.—HBP 
Orpheus with his Lute.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VIII. 

Orra, Sel. fr. (Chough and [the] Crow, The.)— 
Joanna Baillie.—CEL—WEP 4 
(Outlaw’s Song, The.)—OB 

Orsames’ Song [in "Aglaura”]. (Fr. Aglaura.)—Sir J: 
Suckling.—ELP—ES—WEP 2 
(Encouragements to a Lover.)—PGT 1 
(Song—C.)—HBP 
(To a Lover.)—YBF , 

(Why so Pale [and Wan, Fond Lover]?)—BNL— 
PEP—GP—OB—OEL—PYO 
Orthod-Ox Team, The.—Fred E. Brooks.—CDV— 
WR 21 

Orthodoxv. (Little Boy Lost, A— C.)— W: Blake.— 
EPs 

Orthography.—G: Stevens.—CS 29 
Osme’s Song.—G: Darley. See Sylvia; or. The May 
Queen. 

Osmunda Regalis, The.—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Ossian’s Address to the Sun. (Sel. fr. Carthon.)—Jas. 
MacPherson.—HSS 2—PT S 
(Address to the Sun.)—CS 22 
“ ’Ostler Joe.”—G: R. Sims.—BS 25 (abr.) —MR 


247 




Othello 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Othello, the Moor of Venice, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Othello, Br. sels. fr. —AE (fr. Act II., Sc. 1.)—BNL 
(fr. II., 1; III., 4; IV., 2; V., II.) 

Othello, the Moor of Venice, Act III., Sc. 3.—SR 12 
(Good Name— sel .)—OS 1 

(‘‘Good name in man or woman, dear my 
lord.”)—GG 

(Othello, Br. sel. fr.) —BNL 
(Othello— sel .)—SE 

Othello’s Address to the Duke of Venice and the 
Senators. (Sel. fr. I., 3.)—MRS 
(Course of Love, The— sel .)—OH 
(Othello— sel .)—AE 

(Othello’s Apology.)—BS 1—CS 9—KNE—SPE 
(Othello’s Courtship.)—WCLG 2 
(Othello’s Defence.)—BNL—EPs—SO 
(“She thanked me, and bade me,” etc.— br. sel.) 
—SPE 

Othello’s Farewell. (Br. sel. fr. III., 3.)—PS 
(Othello, Br. sel. fr.) —AE—BNL 
Othello’s Last Words. (Br. sel. fr. V., 2.)—EPs 
Othello’s Remorse. (Br. sel. fr. V., 2.)—BNL 
Regrets of Drunkenness. (Sel. fr. II., 3.)—SS 
(Cassio’s Lost Reputation— abr.) —WR 18 
Othello’s Address to the Duke of Venice and the Sena¬ 
tors.—W: Shakespeare. See Othello, the Moor 
of Venice. 

Othello’s Apology.—W: Shakespeare. See Othello, the 
Moor of Venice. 

Othello’s Courtship. — W: Shakespeare. See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice. 

Othello’s Defence.—W: Shakespeare. See Othello, the 
Moor of Venice. 

Othello’s Farewell.—W: Shakespeare. See Othello, the 
Moor of Venice. 

Othello’s Last Words.—W: Shakespeare. See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice. 

Othello’s Remorse.—WShakespeare. See Othello, the 
Moor of Venice. 

Other Children.—ltob’t L. Stevenson.—HSS 2 
(Foreign Children— C .)—CGV 
Other Fellow, The. (Sel. fr. The Evolution of Dodd, 
Ch. XIII.)—W: H. Smith—SC 
Other One, The.—Harry T. Peck.—AA 
Other One was Booth, The.—Edmund V. Cooke.—CS 33 
Other People’s Children. (Dial.) —Mrs. E. R. A.—StD 
Other Side. The. (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Other Side of the Moon, The.—Edgar Fawcett.—MRS 
Other World, The. (C.)—Harriet B. Stowe.—AA— 
BNL—FEP—GP—TAS 
(In the Other World.)—CS 3 
Ottawa.—Duncan C. Scott.—TCV—VA 
O-U-G-H-.—C: B. Loomis.—EuE—SAE 
Ouglou’s Onslaught, Br. sel. fr. (“Tchasson Ouglou is 
on!”)—W: Motherwell.—AE 
Ould Doctor [or Doether] Mack.—Alfred P. Graves.— 
CS 30—THP 

Ould Master, Th’, Sel. fr. (Misther Denis’s Return.) 
—Jane Barlow.—TIP 

Ould Plaid Shawl, The.—Fs. A. Fahy.—TIP 
Our Acts our Angels Are.—J: Fletcher. See Upon an 
Honest Man’s Fortune. 

Our All Around.—Anon.—MAD 
Our Almanac.—T: B. Aldrich.—AD 

(Marjorie’s Almanac— C.) —NV—PoR—SM 
Our Anniversary.—Mrs. M. E. Cornell.—SSE 
Our Arbor Day in May.—Anon.—AD 
Our Army and Navy.—W: T. Sherman.—FD 2 
Our Aunt Lucy.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Our Autocrat. (Sel.) —J: G. Whittier.—PEO 
Our Baby.—Anon.—WR 17 
Our Banner.—W. P. Tilden.—PRR 
Our Banner Unrent; its Stars Unobscured.—Lawrence 
S. Ross.—BLP 

Our Beloved Dead. (Troy Times .)—BS 18 
Our Biggest Fish.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Our Boat to the Waves.—W: E. Channing.—BNL (si. 
abr.) 

(Sea Song.)—EPs 

Our Book-shelves.—T: G. Hake—LBB—MBB 
Our Boys are Marching On.—J. H. Jewett.—PAPm 
Our Casuarina Tree.—Toru Dutt.—VA 
Our Cause.—W: J. Linton.—VA 

Our Centennial Celebration.—Orestes Cleveland.— 
CS 12—PRR 

Our Cherished Flag.—Jas. Montgomery. See Our Flag. 

Our Childhood’s Home.—R. S.—HP 

Our Children.—W: C. Bryant.—TAS 

Our Choir.—Anon.—BS 15 

Our Christ.—Lucy Larcom.—TAS 

Our Christian Heritage. Sel. fr. (Great American Re¬ 
public a Christian State, The.)—Jas., Cardinal 
Gibbons.—BLP—PFP 


Our Christmas.—Julia Wolcott [or Walcott],—CS 34— 
PR—SR 11—WR 12 

Our Church Sociable.—Louis Eisenbeis.—CS 31 
Our C’lumbus.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 27 

Our Colors at Fort Sumter.-Aldrich.—FP 

Our Comrades.—Anon.—PEO 
Our Constitution.—H. W. Bolton.—SR 8 
Our Constitution.—Chauncey M. Depew.—FD 2 
Our Country. (Dial.) —Anna F. Bayley.—DLD 
Our Country. (Br. sel. fr. Not Yet.)—W: C. Bryant.— 
SE 

Our Country.— T; S. Grimke. See Duty of Literary 
Men to America. 

Our Country. (Fr. Speech Del’d Apr. 30, 1889.)— 
B: Harrison.—SSD—TMD 

Our Country. (Fr. Speech Del’d Nov. 1, 1894.)—B: 
Harrison.—TMR 

Our Country.—W; J. Pabodie.— BLP—CS 20—PRR 
Our Country.—Edna D. Proctor.—SR 10 
Our Country.—Epes Sargent.—BLP—PEO 
Our Country. (Sel.) —J: G. Whittier.—TMR 
Our Country Saved.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Ode Re¬ 
cited at the Harvard Commemoration. 

Our Countrymen in Chains. (Expostulation— C.) —J: 

G. Whittier.—TMD (si. abr.) 

Our Country’s Call.—R: Barry.—PRR 
Our Country’s Call.—W; C. Brvant.—AWB—CS 2— 
PRR—WRD 

Our Country’s Flag.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—DLD 
Our Country’s Greatness.—G: F. Hoar.—PRR 
Our Country’s Needs.—J: B. Finch.—SSS 

(Includes What Constitutes a State— abr. —by Sir 
W: Jones.) 

Our Country’s Wealth. (Dial.) —E. C. Rook.—CDs 

Our Cousins.-White.—MDD 

Our Daily Reckoning. (Mail and Express.) —HSS 2 
(At Set of Sun.)—CS 14 
Our Daisy.—Anon.—TFS 
Our Darling.—Anon.—HP 
Our Daughter. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Our Dead.—G: D. Campbell, Duke of Argyle.—PGT 2 
Our Dead Heroes.—W. J. C. Train.—DFR 
Our Dead Soldiers.—Fs. A. Walker.—FD 2 
Our Debating Club.-—E. F. Turner.—CS 26—DCR 
Our Defenders. (Defenders, The— C.) —T: B. Read.— 
CS 1 

Our Delight .—E. Murray.—LPS—PP 
Our Dim Eyes Seek a Beacon.—Anon.—HDL 
Our Dog.—H : Davenport.—PR 
Our Dogs. (Abr.) —Dr. J: Brown.—MBL 
Our Drummer Boy.—Fred Hildreth.—WR 7 
Our Duties to our Country.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Our Duties to the Republic.—Jos. Story.—FTR—KNE 
—SS 

(Destiny of our Country.)—OS 3 
(Our Duty to the Republic.)—LLC 
(Our Future.)—BLP 
(Responsibilities of our Republic.)—HNS 
(Responsibility of American Citizens.)—WRD 
(Shall America Betray Herself?)—FD 1—SR 5 
(Sels. vary somewhat.) 

Our Duty.—Jos. Cook. See Newest Promises and 
Perils of the Temperance Reform. 

Our Duty Here.—Sir J: Bowring.—AD 

(“Grateful to Drink Life’s Cup”— sel.) —HSS 3 
Our Duty to the Philippines.—W: McKinley. See 
Future of the Philippines. 

Our Expanding Republic, Sels. fr. —H: Watterson. 
Columbian Oration. (Cond.) —SO 
(Retrospect, A— ptly. same.) —TMR 
Dedication of Columbian Exposition.—BLP 
Schools Take Part, The.—BLP 
Our Fallen Heroes.—Chauncey M. Depew.—SAE 
Our Fallen Heroes.—G: B. Griffith.—HBP 
Our Fathers.—C; Sprague. See Centennial Ode. 

Our Father’s Home.—R: C. Trench.-—HBP 

(Kingdom of God, The.)—FEP—HDL (abr.) 

Our Favourite Hymn. (Tenn. University Mag.) —CG 3 

Our Federal Constitution.-Fuller.—FD 2 

Our First Commander.—W: F. (?) Vilas.—SR 1 
Our First Experience with a Watchdog.—Frank R. 

Stockton. See Rudder Grange. 

Our First Fire-crackers.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Our First ThanksgivingDay. ( Youth’s Companion.) — 
PP—YPS 

Our First Young Love.—Anon.—FTA 
Our Flag.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Our Flag.—Anon.—DJS 

Our Flag. (Dial.) —Anon.—DLD—LPS—PP 
Our Flag.—Anon.—DST 
Our Flag.—Anon.—GMS 

(Hurrah for the Flag.)—NV 


248 








Out 


TITLE INDEX 


Our Flag.—Anon.—NY 
Our Flag.—Anon.—TT 

(Little Flag-bearer, The.)—PS 
Our Flag.—Anon.—WR 17 
Our Flag.—C: F. Alsop.—PRR 

Our Flag.—H: W. Beecher. See National Flag, The. 
Our Flag.—Jas. Montgomery.—DCP—DFR 
(Our Cherished Flag.)—PEO 
Our Flag.—A. P. Putnam.—FD 2 
(National Ensign, The.)—PTS 
Our Flag. (Concert rec.)—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Our Flag.—A. L. Stone.—BS 17 

(“Rally Round the Flag.”)—PEO 
Our Flag at Apia.—Annie B. King.—TMD 
Our Flag is There.—Anon.— BLP — CP — WR 17 (si. 
diff. vers.) 

Our Folks.—Ethel L. Beers.— BS 1 — CR — CS 5— 
FTR—HNS—MM R—SA—WRD 
Our Future.—J: Ireland.—BLP 

Our Future.—Jos. Story. See Our Duties to the Re¬ 
public. 

Our Future Work.—Anon.—DST 

Our Garden.—-Juliana H. Ewing.—NV—WR 17 

Our Gardener’s Burial.-Johnstone.—-BLP 

(Gardener’s Burial, The.)—AVP—LLC 
Our Glorious Language.—Anon.—WR 26 
(English Language, The.)—SR 13 
Our Goddess. (Wrinkle.)— CG 3 

Our Guide in Genoa and Rome.—S: L. Clemens. See 
Innocents Abroad. 

Our Guides.—S: L. Clemens. See Innocents Abroad. 
Our Gunner's Shot.—-Anon.—CS 23—DS 
Our Happy Warrior.—H. P. Collier.—FD 2 
Our Heritage.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Heritage, The. 

Our Hero.—Harry Romaine.—TL 
Our Heroes.—J: A. Andrew.— BLP (si. abr.) —WRD 
Our Heroes.—Phoebe Cary (?).—BS 26—PP—YPS 
Our Heroes.—O. F. Pearre.-—WR 7 
Our Heroes and Martyrs.—Edwin H. Chapin.—FD 1 
Our Heroes’ Graves.—Anon.—PEO 
Our Hired Girl.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Our Hired Girl.—Frank R. Stockton. See Rudder 
Grange. 

Our History.—Julian C. Verplanck.—BLP (abr.) 

(American History.)—SR 8 
Our Holidays. (Ent.)- —Anon.—EuE 
Our Holidays.—Eliz. Lloyd.—HE 
Our Homemaker.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—TMR 
Our Homestead.—PhcebeCarv.—WCL 
Our Honored Dead.—Anon.—TIP 

Our Honored Dead.—H: W. Beecher.— FD 1 — LLC— 
WCLG1 

(Honored Dead, The.)—BLP (si. diff.) —HSS 1 (sel.) 
—SPE 

(Invisible Heroes, The.)—-TMD 
(Tribute to our Honored Dead, A.) — BS 24 —CS 2 
—DFR—HR 

Our Honored Heroes.—S. F. Smith.—PEO 
(Decoration Day.)—HSS 1 
Our Jim.—Anon.—TFS (sel.) 

(Onlv a Boy.)—BS 2—CS 9 
Our Ladve of the Snow.—T: D’A. M’Gee.—TCV 

Our Land.-King.—HS 

Our Last Toast.—Bartholomew Dowling.—HP 
(Indian Revelry.)—FEP 
(Revel. The.)—VA 
(Revelry of the Dying.)—BNL 
(Song of the Dying.)—CS 5—MR 
“Our Left.”—Fs. O. Ticknor.—EDY 
Our Limitations.—Oliver W. Holmes.—TAS 
Our Little Queen.—Emily Warren.—WCL 
(Daisy.)—TMR 
Our Lives.—Anon.—CS 27 
Our Lost.—Marg. E. Sangster.—SSS 
Our Love shall Live.— Edmund Spenser. See Amo- 
retti and Epithalamion. 

Our Martyred Dead.—Mark Trafton.—BLP 
Our Mary and the Child Mummy.— C: Tennyson- 
Turner.—PGT 2 

Our Master.—J G. Whittier.—TAS 
Our Minister’s Sermon. (Harper’s Bazar.) — BS 7— 
FEP—SR 7 

(John Jankin’s Sermon.)—CS 8—KNE 
Our Mother Tongue.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton. 
—GN 

(Envoy to an American Lady.)—VA 
Our Mothers.—G: Cooper.—YBT 
(Hundreds!)—TFS 
(Only One.)—AA 

Our Mother’s Sampler.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Our Nation and Flag.— C: Sumner. See Are we a 
N ation ? 


Our National Anniversary.—A. H. Rice.—PEO 
Our National Banner. (Br. sel. fr. The Battle of Lex¬ 
ington.)—E: Everett.—LLC 
(Flag, The.)—SO 

(National Banner, The.)—CS 6—KNE 
(Stars and Stripes, The.)—CP 
Our National Character. (Sel. fr. The First Battles of 
the Revolutionary War.)—E: Everett.—FD 1 
(On National Character.)—SSD 
Our National Curse.—T. DeW. Talmage.—SSS 
Our National Flag.—H: W. Beecher. See National 
Flag. The. 

Our Nationality.—T: S. King.—BLP 
Our Native Birds.—Nathan H. Dole.—THP 
(Larks and Nightingales.)—AWH 
Our Navy.—Anon.—AWB—PAPm 
Our New Relations.—W: McKinley. See Future of 
the Philippines. 

Our New Servant.—Jas. M. Barrie.—WR 25 
Our New Walk.—W: L. Alden. See Adventures of 
Jimmy Brown, The. 

Our Old Doctor.—Anon.—CS 21 
Our Orders.—Julia W. Howe.—AA 
Our Oriole Neighbors.—Beverly Moore.—MYF 
Our Own. (C.)—Marg. E. Sangster.—BIL—BS 4 (at. 
to S. H. T.)—CS 13—FT A—HP—LLC—TAV 
(Unkind Words.)—OH 
Our Own Dear Land.—J. R. Thomas.—HS 
Our Pattern. (C.) —Phoebe Cary. 

(Neglected Pattern, The.)—PPSr 
Our Platform.—Theodore L. Cuyler.—TS 
Our Pledge to Puerto Rico.—C. E. Littlefield.—SC 
Our Presidents.—Laura E. Richards.—LPS—PP 
Our Railroads.—Anon.—CS 21 

Our Ranks are Getting Thin.—Louis Eisenbeis.—CS 35 
Our Recent Diplomacy.—J: Hay.—AI 
Our Regiments of Reform.—T. DeWitt Talmage.—TS 
Our Relations to [or with] England.— E: Everett. 

See First Settlement of New England, The. 
Our Relations with Europe.—G: Washington. See 
Farewell Address. 

Our Republic. (Sel. fr. The Circumstances Favorable 
to the Progress of Literature in America.)— 
E: Everett.—SO 

(American Experiment of Self-government, The.)— 
SS—SSD—TMD 

Our Responsibilitv as a Nation.—H: A. Boardman.— 
SSD 

Our Rich Heritage.—J: M. Thurston.—SC 
Our Scarlet King.—Harold M. Bowman.—CG 2 
“Our share of night to bear.” (C.) —Emily Dickinson. 
(Life.)—AA 

Our Shepherd.—Frances R. Havergal.—YBT 
Our Ships at Sea.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 13 
Our Sir Robin.—Anon.—NV 
Our Sister.—( Household Words.) —MMR 
Our Sister.—Horatio N. Powers.—GP 
Our Skater Belle.—Anon.—BNL 
Our State.—J: G. Whittier.—HB—HBP 
Our Sweet Unexpressed!—W. F. Fox.—CS 12 
Our Temperance Banner.—Anon.—DLS 
Our Thanksgiving Accept.—W: D. Howells.—PEO 
(Thanksgiving [, A]— -C.) —HDL—TAS 
Our Throne’s Decay.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Our Traveled Parson.—Will Carleton.—BS 7—CS 18 
—FTR 

Our Traveller.—H. C. Pennell.—THP 
OurTwo Opinions. (C.)—Eugene Field.—AA—EF—OH 
(Two Opinions.)—BS 21—WR 15 
Our Verse.—Anon.—HVD 
Our Very Best.—Anon.—TT 

Our Visitor and what he Came for.—Anon.—CS 14 
Our Warfare and our Duty.—Theodore L. Cuvier.—TS 
Our Washington.—Eliza W. Durbin.—PEO 
Our Watch Words.—Clara J. Denton.—I.L 
Our Weddin’-day.—Belle C. Greene.—CS 32 
Our Wee White Rose.—Gerald Massey.—BNL 
Our Whippings.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Our "Whole Country.—Anon.—CS 8—PRR 
Our Willie.—Anon.—FTR 
Our Willows. (Hours at Home.) —AD 
Our Work.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Our W T orst Foes.—G: W: Curtis. See Centennial 
Celebration of Concord Fight. 

Our Wrongs.—C. F. H.—CG 2 
Ourselves Alone.—J: O’Hagan.—TIP 
Out.—T: H. Bayly. See Out, John! 

Out and Into.—Anon.—CS 24 

Out and Inward Bound.—W: Shakespeare. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice. 

Out at Sea.—J. S. Fletcher.—CS 30—DES—PR 

Out in the Cold.—Anon.—KNE 

Out in the Cold.—Jennie Harrison.—YBT 


249 








Out 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Out in the Dark.—Stephen L. Gwynn.—TIP 
Out in the Fields.—Anon.—HDL 
Out in the Meadow.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Out in the Sobbing Rain.—Dora Shaw.—CS 8 
Out in the Streets.—T: D. English.—CS 3 
Out, John! (C.) —T: H. Bayly.—HSS 3 
(Out.)—CS 10 

Out of Adversity.—J: Milton. See Samson Agonistes. 
Out of Doors.—Jas. R. (?) Lowell.—LLC 
Out of her Reckoning.—Anon.—WR 24 
Out of Italian. A Song. (C.)—R. Crashaw. 

(Song, A: To Thy Lover.)—HBP 
Out of Muhlqueen’s Alley.—Agnes L. Provost.—BS 26 
Out of Shadow.—Mary D. Chellis.—HDL 
Out of the Bottle.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking.—Walt Whitman. 

_aa 

(Mocking-bird, The— sel.) —BNL 
Out of the Deeps of Heaven.—R: H: Stoddard.—TAS 
Out of the Depths.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Out of the East.—Stockton Bates.—CS 35 
Out of the Heart. ( Dedication .)—J: W. Chadwick.—OH 
Out of the Hurly Burly, Sels. fr. —C: H. Clark. 
Avalanche of Drugs, An. (Ch. XIX.)—BS 26 
Catching the Morning Train. (Sel. fr. Ch. IV.)— 
CS 10 

(Reaching the Early Train— si. diff.) —BS 3 
Judge Pitman on Various Kinds of Weather. (Sel. 
fr. Ch. XVII.)—BS 4 

"Morning Argus” Obituary Department, The. 

(Sel. fr. Ch. VIII.)—BRR—CS 10 
My First Political Speech. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXIII.)— 
CS 11 

Story of Bishop Potts, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XV.)— 
CS 17 

Out of the Morning. (C .)—Emily Dickinson. 
(Morning.)—AA 

Out of the Old House, Nancy.—W T ill M. Carleton.—AA 
CS 8—DDR—PS (sel.) 

Out of the Way.—Emma C. Dowd.—BS 18 
Out of the Window.—S. A. Brock.—CS 35 
Out Sleighing with Sophia.—G: V. Hobart.—WR 26 
“Out to Old Aunt Mary’s.”—Jas. W. Riley. See Old 
Aunt Mary’s. 

Out West.—Anon.—HP 
Outcast , The.—Anon.—BS 19 
Outcast, The.—Anon.—WR 24 
Outcast, The.—Mary L. Ritter.—HP 
Outcast’s Dream, The.—Olive Bell.—HP 
Outgrown.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—BNL—EPs—GP— 
WR 14 (abr.) 

Outillon Saidi. (IF. mr/s.) —Anon.—HE 
Outlandish Knight, The.—Anon.—CGd 
Outlaw. The.—M. Henderson.—CS 27 
Outlaw, The. (Dial.)— Jennie Joy.—MD 
Outlaw, The.—Walter Scott.— See Rokeby. 

Outlaw Murray, The. (The Song of the Outlaw Murray 
• — in Border Minstrelsy.)-—Anon.—BB (abr.) 
Outlaw of Loch Lene, The.—Jeremiah J. Callanan.— 
OB—TIP 

Outlaws, The.—E. J. M’Phelim.—SR 6 
Outlaw’s Song, The. (Song fr. Orra, Act III., Sc. 1.) 
—Joanna Baillie.—OB 

(Chough and [the] Crow, The.)—CEL—WEP 4 
Outline. (Sel. fr. The Recluse, Bk. I., conclusion.)— 
W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Outlook.—Archibald Lampman.-—TCV 
Out-of-door Arithmetic.—Anon.—NV 
Outrageous Fortune.—Anon.—WR 14 
Outre Mer, Sels. fr. —H: W. Longfellow. 

Journey into Spain, The.—APr 
Valley of the Loire, The.—APr 
Outside.—Anon.—CS 25 
Outside the Fold.—E: Willett.—DLS 
Outward Bound.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Outward Bound.—W: Allingham.—MMR 
Outward Bound.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Outward Shows, The. (Harvard Lampoon.)—CG 2 
Outwards or Homewards. (Patience— C.) —Fs. W. 
Bourdillon.—HP 

Oven-bird, The.— Frank Bolles.—SN 
Over and Over Again.—Josephine Pollard.—BS 22— 
HSS 2—OS 1—SM—YBT 
(Keep Working— sel.) —PS 
Over behind der Moon.—Joe Kerr.—GH 
Over Hill, over Dale.— W: Shakespeare. See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream, A. 

Over in the Meadow.—Oliver A. Wadsworth.—PHS— 
WCL 

Over the Bare Hills.—Anon.—DST 
Over the Crossin’. (Springfield Republican.) —CD— 
NPS—TMR—YP 


Over the Divide.—Marion Manville.—CS 31 
Over the Fence.—Anon.—PS 

(Boy and his Conscience, The— abr. — si. diff.) —YBT 
Over the Green Downs.—Jean Ingelow.—LLC 
Over the Hill.—E. H. Hastings.—WR 22 
Over the Hill. (Tell Me— C.) —G: Macdonald.—HSS 3 
(SI. abr.) —BS 1—CEL—LLC 
Over the Hill from the Poor-house.—Will Carleton.— 
BS 8—CS 19 

Over the Hill to the Poor-house.—Will Carleton.— 
BNL—BS 2—CS 4—PS 

Over the Hills and Far Away.—Dinah M. Craik.—BS 5 
Over the Hills and Far Away.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Over the Hills from the Poor-house.—May Mignonette. 
—CS 5—PS 

Over the Orchard Fence.—Harry J. Shellman.—BS 12 
—PFP 

“Over the lattice there clambered a vine.”—Anon.— 
WR 21 

Over the Range.—Anon.—CS 36 
Over the Range.—J. H. Mills.—HBP 
Over the River.—Nancy P. Wakefield.—BNL—BS 1 
—CS 2 (at. to Mrs. J. M. Winton)—FEP—FMR 
— FP — FTR — GP — HBP — HNS — LLC 
—SA—SAE (br. sel. )—SM—WCLG 2 
Over the River of Drooping Eyes.—Anon.—BS 25 
Over the Threshold of my Library.—( Tr by) H: 

Drury.—LBB—MBB 
Over their Graves.—H: J. Stockard.—AA 
Overboard!—Edith Elmer.—BS 21 
Overcoat he Got, The.—Anon.—BDD 
Overcome by Love.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

Overcometh!—Marg. E. Sangster.—CS 23—SSS 
Overdone Economy.—J: Wolcott.—CS 34 (abr.) 

''Economy.)—HPE—SCS (si. abr.) 

Overdrawn Accounts.—Nettie H. Pelham.—SR 9 
Overflow of Great River, The.—Georgia A. Peck.— 
CS 26 

Overheard at the Zoo.—C: M. Snyder.—GH 
Overheard in a Garden, Epilogue to. (Gold.)— Oliver 
Herford—THP 

Overland Mail, The.—Rudyard Kipling.—CS 32 
Oversight of Make-up, An.—Eben E. Rexford.—WR 2 
(Flo’s Letter.)—DST 
(Little Flo’s Letter.)—COS—PP 
Overture. Omar Khayyitm. See Rubaiyiit. 

Overture from “Thrasymedes and Eunoe.”—Walter S. 

Landor. See Thrasymedes and Eunoe. 
Overtures from Richmond.—F. J. Child.—AWB 
Overwork. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Ovid’s Banquet of Sense—Narratio, Br. sel. fr. (Thames, 
The.)—G: Chapman.—WEP 1 
Owd Pinder.—Edwin Waugh.—VA 
Owd Roa. (A br.) —Alfred Tennyson.—WR 1 
Owed to Halifax.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SR 7 
“Owed” to my Pocket-book.—Anon.—HP 
Owed to the Steem Fire Engine.—A. Skwirt.—CS 1 
Owen Moore.—Anon.—BS 23 
Owen’s Oath.—Frd’k M. Holmes.—CS 31 
Owl, The.—Anon.—HBP 

Owl. The.—Bryan W. Procter.—BNL—CGd—LC— 
SN 

(King of the Night, The.)—POS 
Owl. The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Song: The Owl. 
Owl and Nightingale, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—IvC 

Owl and the Bell, The.—G: Macdonald.—EA 
Owl and the Pussy-cat, The.—E: Lear.—CSS—DST— 
GMS—NA—OS 1—PoR—PPSr—WCL 
Owl Critic, The.—Jas. T. Fields.—AWH—BVC—BS 7 
—CS 18—EA—NPS—SR 10—THP—YP 
Owl in Church.—Rosa V. Jeffrey.—DES 
Owd’s Court. The.—Jean Agave.—CPL 
Owyhee Joe’s Story.—Rounseville Wildman.—BS 23 
Oxen, The.—Anon.—NV 

“Oxen that, Rattle the Yoke and Chain.”—Walt Whit¬ 
man. See Song of Myself. 

Oxford and her Chancellor.—W: Alexander.—AVP 
Oxford Boat-race.—Arthur C. Coxe.—DS 
Oxford County.—J: D. Long.—SC 
Oxford in 1845.—W: Alexander.—AVP 
Oxfordshire Children’s May Song.—BVC 
Oxfordshire Guy Fawkes’ Song.—Anon.—BVC 
Oxus.—Matthew Arnold. See Sohrab and Rustum. 
Oyster Yarn, An.—Anon.—WR 24 
Oysterman, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—SR 10 

(Ballad of the Oysterman, The— C.) —CR—CSS— 
—PPSr—THP 

Ozymandias.—Percy B. Shelley. See following. 
Ozymandias of Egypt. (Sonnet.—Ozymandias— C .)— 
Percy B. Shelley.—BNL—OS 3—PGT 1—YBF 
(Ozymandias.)—FEP—LLC 


250 





TITLE INDEX 


Papa’s 


P 

‘Pa Never Does.”—Anon.—WR 25 
Pacific Shore, The.—Anon.—BLP 

“Pack clouds away [, and welcome day].”—T: Hey- 
wood. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 

Package. ( Acting char.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Packet of Letters, A.—Oliver Herford.—BS 18 
Packing the [Knowledge] Box.—Mrs. E. J. H. Good- 
fellow—PS—TT 

Paddle vour Own Canoe.—Mrs. Sarah T. Bolton.— 
KNE—PPSr 

Paddy and his Musket.—Anon.—SCS 
(Pat and his Musket.)—DI 
Paddy at Sea. (C.)—S: Lover. 

(Jimmy Hoy— abr.) —BS 16 
Paddy Blake’s Echo.—S: Lover.—CS 17—DI—OS 2 
Paddy Dunbar. ( Parody on Walter Scott’s Lochin- 
var.)—“Sir We-alter Scott.”—WR 13 
Paddy Fagan’s Pedigree.—Anon.—DI 
Paddy McGrath’s Introduction to Mr. Bruin.—Anon.— 
CS 15—DI 

Paddy Moore.—Fred E. Brooks.—W T R 16 
Paddy O’Rafther.—S: Lover.—DI—SCS—THP 
Paddy the Piper.—S: Lover.—BeR—DI 
Paddy the Sport, Sel. fr. (Pat and the Fox.)—S: 
Lover.—DI 

Paddy’s Courting.-—-W. A. Eaton.—CS 26—DS 
Paddy’s Dream.—Anon.—BeR—DI 
Paddy’s Excelsior. ( Harper’s Magazine.) —CS 6 
(Pat’s Excelsior.)—BS 1 
Paddy’s Lament.—Anon.—CS 23—DS 
Paddy’s Reflections on Cleopatra’s [or Cleopathera’s] 
Needle.—Cormac O’Leary.—GH—PS 
(Reflections on Cleopathera’s Needle.)—AWH— 
THP 

Padre Bandelli Proses to the Duke Ludovico Sforza 
about Leonardo da Vinci, Br. sel. fr. (On the 
Picture of the Last Supper at Milan.)—W: W. 
Story.—OS 3 
Paganini.—Anon.—BS 20 

Page and the Maid of Honor, The (Effect at a Dis¬ 
tance).—JohannW. von Goethe.—WR 8 
Page of Lancelot, The.—May Kendall.—VA 
Paid Bill, The. (Punch.)— HPE 

Pain and Weariness. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Pain in a Pleasure Boat.—T : Hood.—TMD 
Pain in the Side, A.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Pain of Love.—H: Constable.—GP 

(Sonnet. “To live in hell,” etc.)—FEP 
Pain of Love, The.—Abraham Cowley. See Change, 
The. 

Painful Plough, The.—Anon.—BVC 
Painted Fan, A.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA 
Painter of Seville, The.—Susan Wilson.—BS 3—CS 2 
—FTR—HNS—SA 

Painter who Pleased Nobody and Everybody, The. — 
J: Gay.—BNL (br. sels.) —FEP (sel.) 

Painter’s Studio, The.—Anon.—SED 
(Art and Artifice.)—CS 1 
Pair of Fools, A.—Jas. K. Stephen.—HBR 
Pair of Gloves, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 25 
Pair of Lions, A.—Harry M. Cushing.—StD 
Pairing Time Anticipated. (Sel.) —W: Cowper,— 

CGd 

Palabras Carinosas.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA—FTA—OH 
Palabras Grandiosas.—Bavard Taylor. See Echo Club, 
The. 

Palace, The.—T. S. Denison.—SR 3 
Palace Beautiful, The.—J: Bunyan.— See Pilgrim’s 
Progress. 

Palace o’ the King, The.—W: Mitchell.—BS 9—CS 16 
Palace of Alcinous, The.—Homer (W: C. Bryant).— 
See Odyssey, The. 

Palace of the Days, The.—Rossiter W. Raymond - 
CS 35 

Palace of the Gnomes.—Maria G. Brooks.— See Zophiel. 
Palamon and Arcite.—Geoffrey Chaucer (tr. by J: 

Dryden). See Canterbury Tales, The. 

Palaver. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Palermo. (Sel. fr. The Disciples.)—Harriet E. H. King. 
—VA 

Palestine.—Fred E. Brooks.—WR 4 
Palestine. (Sel.) —J: G. Whittier.—PTS 
Palice of Honour, The, Sels. fr. —Gawain Douglas. 
Ballade in Commendation of Honour. (Sel. fr. 
Pt. III.)—WEP 1 

Desert Terrible, A. (Sel. fr. Pt. I.)—WEP 1 
Fete ChampStre, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. II.)—WEP 1 


Palingenesis.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. See Wanderer, 
The. 

Palinode, A.—Edmund Bolton.—WEP 1 
Palinode—Autumn.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AA—FEP 
Palladium.—Matthew Arnold.—TMD—WEP 4 
Pallas.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 

Pallas in Olympus.—C: Kingsley.— See Andromeda. 
Palm ami Pine.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton. See 
Palm-tree and the Pine, The. 

Palm and the Pine, The.—Bayard Taylor.—AD 
Palmer, The.—D: L. Proudfit.—BS 19 
Palmer, The. (SI. abr.) —Walter Scott.—CGd 
Palmer’s Ode.—Rob’t Greene. See “Never too Late. 
Palmer’s Vision, The.—Josiah G. Holland.—EA— 
WR 6 (sel.) 

Palmerston and Lincoln.—G: Bancroft.—BS 1 
Palmetto and the Pine, The.—Virginia L. French.— 
BS 6—CS 13 

Palmetto and the Pine, The.—Manley H. Pike.—TMD 
Palm-tree, The.—J: G. Whittier.—AD—BNL—PC 
Palm-tree and the Pine, The.—R: M. Milnes, Lord 
^Houghton.—CEL 
(Palm and Pine.)—EPs 

Pamela in Town.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 
Pan in Love. (SI. abr.) —W: W. Story.—BNL 
Pan in Wall Street.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA— 
ASL—FEP—WCLI 2 
Panacea, A.—R. O. Ryder.—CG 2 
Panacea.—Annie N. Scribner.—CG 2 
Pandora (Paradise of Children, The— C.). —Nathaniel 
Hawthorne.—WCLI 1 

Pandosto, Sel. fr. —Rob’t Greene. See Praise of 
Fawnia, The. 

Panegyric on America.—C: Phillips.—FD 1 (sel.) 
(America.)—CS 6—PRR 
(American Republic, The.)—LLC 
(Destiny of America.)—BS 14—OM (abr.) 
Panegyric on Julius Caesar. (Sel. fr. Speech in Behalf 
of Marcus Claudius Marcellus.)—Cicero.—FTR 
Panegyrics on Washington. (By various authors.) — 
DFR 

Panglory’s Wooing Song. (Fr. The Sorceress of Vain 
Delight.)—Giles Fletcher.—FEP—HBP 
(Wooing Song.)—OB 

Panic. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Panorama, The.—Jas. Burdette.—PTS (si. abr.) 

(Irishman’s Panorama, The.)—BRR—CDV—CH 
(si. abr.) —CRR—DI—SDR 
Pan’s Anniversary; or, The Shepherd’s Holyday, Sels 
fr. —Ben Jonson. 

Hymn to Pan.—ELP 

Shepherd's Holiday [or Holyday], The. — EP— 
OEL—WEP 2 

Pan’s Holiday. (The School of Compliments, Act. V., 
Sc. 3.)—Jas. Shirley.—EP 
(Holiday in Arcadia.)—CEL 
Pan’s Song.—J: Lyly. See Midas. 

Pansies.—-Sarah Doudney.—HP 
Pansies.—Tom Hood.—HSS 1 
Pansies, The.—Ruth Wilson.—HSS 1 
Pansies from Penshurst and Wilton, Sel. fr. (Heart and 
Soul—Verses— C.) —Philip Sidney.—OEL 
Pansy.—Mary E. Bradley. See Heart’s Ease. 

Pansy Party, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Pansy Song.—Anon.—NV 
Pantaloon Fight, A.—-H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Pantheism and Theism.—T: W. Higginson.—TAS 
Pantheist’s Song of Immortality, The.—Constance C. 
W. Naden.—VA 

Pantheon, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Panther, The.—Anon.—NA 

Panther’s Choice, The. (Chicago Times.) —CS 36 
Pantomime, A.—Anon.—-BS 12 

Pantomime of Campbell’s “Pleasures of Hope.”— 
Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 

Pantomime of “Lead, Kindly Light.”—Lucy Jenkins. 
—WR 17 

Pantomime of “Where are you going, my pretty 
maid?”—Agnes Crawford.—WR 20 
Paolo and Francesca, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. Act II.)— 
Stephen Phillips.—A VP 

Papa and the Boy.—J. L. Harbour.—GH—WR 7 
(Papa’s Little Boy.)—SR 9 
Papa Can’t Find me.—-Anon.—CS 13—TFS 
“Papa Says so. Too.”—Jennie T. H. Lewis.—BS 1 
Papa to his Heir. (Punch.) —HPE 
Papa was Stumped.—Anon.—BS 21 
Papa’s Best Girl.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Papa’s Birthday. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Papa’s Coming.—Carlos.—FTT 

Papa’s Letter.—Anon.—CS 14 — FTR — MR — PS — 
SR 2 


251 




Papa’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Papa’s Little Boy.—J. L. Harbour. See Papa and 
the Boy. 

Papa’s Little Girl.—Anon.—FAS 
Papa’s Watch.—Anon.—DLS 
Paper. (C.) —B: Franklin.—BNL—WR 5 
(Metaphorical Papers.)—CS 14 
‘"Paper Don’t Say,” The.—Anon.—DCR—FAD (arr. 
as dial.) 

Parable, A.—Helen H. Jackson.—AD 
Parable against Persecution, A.—B: Franklin.—OS 2 
Parable from Liebig, A.—C: Kingsley.—FEP 
Parable of Nature, A.—Anon.—VSG 
Parable of the Spirit, A.—J: A. Goodchild.—VA 
Parable of the Wrecks, The. — W: O. Stoddard.— 
BS 23 

Paracelsus, Sets. fr. —Rob’t Browning. 

“I go to prove my soul.” (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I.) — 
HDL 

Song from “Paracelsus.” (Fr. Pt. IV.)—VA 
(Wanderers, The.)—OB 

Thus the Mayne Glideth. (Sel. fr. Pt. V.)—OB 
Paradise.—G: Birdseye.—AWH—BS 7 
(Hindoo Died, .4.)—MR 
(Hindoo’s Death, The.)—HP 
(Hindoo’s Paradise, The.)—CS 22 
Paradise.—Frd'k W. Faber.—VA 
Paradise and the Peri.— 1 T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
Paradise Enow.—Omar Khayyam (E: Fitzgerald).— 
See Rubaivat. 

Paradise Lost, Sels. fr. —J: Milton. 

Adam Describing Eve. (Sel. fr. Bk. VIII.)—BNL 
(Adam Describing the Creation of Eve— abr .)— 
FTR 

Adam to Eve. (Sel. fr. Bk. IX.)—BNL 
Adam’s Account of his Creation. (Sel. fr. Bk. VIII.) 
—FTR 

Adam’s Morning Hymn in Paradise. (Sel. fr. Bk. 
V.)—BNL 

(Hymn of our First Parents— si. abr.) —SS 
(Hymn of Praise by Adam and Eve— -sel.) —POS 
. (Morning Hymn [in Paradise].)—AE (br. sel.) — 
LLC—SE (si. abr.) 

(Song of Praise— sel.) —POS 
Apostrophe to Light. (Sel. fr. Bk. III.):—NE 
(Hail, Holy Light— sel. w. add.) —GP 
(Invocation to Light.)—BNL—SE (sel.) 
(Light.)—OB 

Battle of the Angels. (Sel. fr. Bk. VI.)—BNL 
(Paradise Lost— sel.) —SE 
Belial’s Address, Opposing War. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.) 

_gg 

Concord. (Sel. fr. Bk. III.)—IR 

(“Immortal amaranth, a flower which once”— 
br. sel.) —AD 

Departure from Paradise, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. 
XII.)—BNL 

Discord. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.)—IR 
Eve to Adam. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. XI.)—BNL 
Evening. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. IV.)—FP—POS 
(Evening in Paradise.)—BNL—GN—OS 2 
(Paradise Lost, Sel. fr. — abr.) —SAE 
Eve’s Lament. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. XI.)—BNL 
(Eve’s Lamentation.)—AD 
Eve’s Mirror. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV.)—WR 11 
Faithful Angel, The. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. V.)—BNL 
Moloch to the Fallen Angels. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.)—SS 
Morning. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. IV.)—POS 
Paradise Lost, Sel. fr. — abr.) —BNL 
World Beautiful, The.)—GN 
"On to the sacred hill.” (Br. sel. fr. Bk. VI.)— 
AE 

Paradise Lost. (Br. sels. fr. Bks. II., IV., V., IX.) 
—BNL 

Paradise Lost, Bk. I.—WEP 2 

Invocation from Paradise Lost. (Sel.)— SO 
March of the Rebel Angels. (Sel.) —FP 
Paradise Lost. (Br. sels.) —BNL—SE 
Satan. (Sel.) —NE 
(Moloch— br.) —SE 

(Satan’s Speech to his Legions.)—PS 
Paradise Lost, Bk. IV., Sel. fr. —WEP 2 
Adam and Eve. (Sel.) —BNL 
(Scene in Paradise, A —br.) —GN 
Eternal Spring. (Br. sel.) —GN 
Paradise Lost, Bk. X , Sel. fr. —WEP 2 
Raphael’s Account of the Creation. (Sel. fr. Bk. 

VII.)—FP—TMD (abr.) 

Satan. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.)—OS 3 
(Paradise Lost— br. sel.) —BNL 
Satan’s Encounter with Death. (Sel. fr. Bk. II.)— 
SS 

(“Whence and what art thou, execrable shape” 
— sel .)—AE 


Paradise Lost (continued). 

To be no More. (Br. sel. fr. Bk. II.)—EPs 
(Paradise Lost, Sel. fr .)—BNL 
Wi-dom and Goodness of God, The. (Br. sel. fr. 
Bk. V.)—KNE 

Paradise Lost, The Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Paradise of Birds, The, Sels. fr. —W: .1. Courthope 
Birdcatcher’s Song.—VA 
In Praise of Gilbert White.—VA 
Ode—to the Roc.—VA 

Paradise of Children, The. (C.) —Nathaniel Haw¬ 
thorne. 

(Pandora.)—WCLI 1 
Paradise Regained. Sels. fr.—J: Milton. 

Paradise Regained. (Bk. III.— abr.) —WEP 2 
(Paradise Regained— br. sel.) —BNL 
(Saviour’s Reply to the Tempter, The— sel.) —SS 
(Temptation of the Vision of the Kingdoms of the 
Earth, The— sel., iv. add. fr. Bk. IV.)—NE 
(True Glory— sel.) —BLP 

Paradise Regained.—BNL (br. sel. fr. Bk. IV.)— 
WEP 2 (sel. fr. Bk. 1.) 

Paradise Regained, The Story of.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Paradisi Gloria.—T: W. Parsons.—AA—ASL—TAS— 
YBF 

Paradox, A.—Anon.—-EuE 

Paradox, The.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the 
House, The. 

Paradox of Time, The.—Austin Dobson.—CS 24—PYO 
“Paradoxical as it may appear, war, the demon¬ 
scourge of humanity.”—Anon.—GG 
Paradyse of Dainty Devises, The, Sel. fr. (Aman- 
tium Ine.)—R. Edwards.—-OB—-WEP 1 (sel.) « 
Parallel between Pope and Dryden. (Sel. fr. Pope.)— 
S: Johnson.—AE—KNE 

Paranaeticall, or Advisive Verse, to his Friend, Mr. 
John Wicks, A. ( C.) —Rob’t Herrick. 

(Easy Life, The.)—CEL 

Paraphrase from Miscellaneous Thoughts. (C.)—Isaac 
Watts 

(Insignificant Existence.)—BNL 
Paraphrase of Luther’s Hymn.—Martin Luther. (F: 

_ H. Hedge.)—AA 

(Mighty Fortress is our God, A— sel.) —BNL 
(Psalm XLVI.— tr. by T: Carlyle.)—HBP 
(Safe Stronghold, A.)—AE 
Paraphrase of Psalm XXIII.—Jos. Addison.—FEP 
(Translation of the Twenty-third Psalm.)—CEL 
Paraphrase upon Luke 1st, Sel. fr. —G: Sandys.— 
WEP 2 

Parasol Drill, The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Parasol Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Parcae, The.—Anon.—KNS 
“Pardnership.”—Eleanor Kirk.—WR 21 
Pardon, The.—Jennie Joy.—MD 

Pardon Complete.—Clara G. Dolliver.—CS21—PP— 
PS—YPS 

Pards.—Effie W. Merriman.—WR 2.5 
Parent. (Pantomime charade.)—E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Parent Reprimanded, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Parent with the Hoof, The.—Anon.—CH 
Parental Discipline.—Anon.—BS 20 
Parental Ode to my Son, Aged Three Years and Five 
Months, A. (C. —Domestic Poems, II.)—T - 
Hood.—HPE—THP—WEP 4 
(Ode to an Infant Son.)—WRD 
(Ode to my Little Son.)—CS 1—FEP 
(To my Infant Son.)—BNL 
Parental Recollections. C: and Mary Lamb.—WEP 4 
(Child, A.)—OB 
(In Memoriam.)—PGT 1 
Pariah, The.—Johann W. von Goethe.—WR 9 
Paris and Helen.—W: Aytoun. See Puffs Poetical. 
Parisina, Sels. fr. —Lord Byron. 

Execution, The. (Sts. XV., XVI., XVII.— abr.) — 
EPs 

Parisina, Sel. fr. (St. I.)—WEP 4 
(Twilight.)—CEL 

Parlement of Foules, The, Sels. fr. — Geoffrev Chaucer. 
Parlement of Foules, The. (Sels.) —WEP 1 
Irees, Flowers, and Birds. (Br. sel.) —GP 
Parliament of Man, The.—J: H: Brown.—TCV 
Parliamentary Law.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Parliamentary Reform.—H:, Lord Brougham.—OM— 
—SS 

Parliamentary Reform, Sels. fr. —T: B. Macaulay. 
Government should Grow with the People.—SS 
Public Opinion and the Sword, October 10, 1831.— 
OM—PS (sel.) —SS—SSD 

Parliamentary Speech of Feb. 20. 1784, on the Motion 
by Mr. Powys, etc., Sel. fr. (On an Attempt 
to Coerce him to Resign.)—W: Pitt.—SS 





TITLE INDEX 


Passionate 


Parliamentary Speech of Feb. 21, 1783, on American 
Peace, Sel. fr. (On a Motion to Censure the 
Ministry.)—W: Pitt.—SS 
Parlor Base Ball.—-Anon.—EuE 
Parlor Entertainment, A.—Anon.—FAD 
Parlor Lamp, The.—Maurice E. M’Loughlin.—WR 4 
Parnell.—Lionel Johnson.—EDY 
Parody, A.-—Anon.—BS 7 

Parody for a Reformed Parliament. (Punch.) —HPE 
Parody on “Barbara Frietchie.”— Anon.— BDD — 
GH 

(Barbara Frietchie— si. diff. vers.) —DRR 

(Latest Barbara Frietchie. The.)—DCR—SR 4 
Parody on Pope.—Sydney Smith.—FEP 
Parody on the Declaration of Independence.—Anon.— 
DDR—MDD 

Parody—The Old Oaken Bucket.—Anon.—CS 2 
(Old Oaken Bucket, The.—Parody.)—CRR 
Parrhasius. (C.)—Nathaniel P. Willis.—AA 
(Sel.) —BNL—KNE—SC (br. sel.) —WRD 
(Parrhasius and the Captive.)-—CS 2—PFP (abr.) 
(Sel.)— BS 3—FTR—LLC—SR 2 
Parrhasius and the Captive.—Nathaniel P. "Willis. Nee 
foregoing. 

Parrot, The.—Anon.—HVD 
Parrot, The.—T: Campbell.—AVP 
(SI. abr.) —CGd—LC—OS 1 
Parrot and the Cuckoo, The.—Anon.—WR 1 
Parrot in a Deacon’s Meeting, A.—Anon.—CS 30 
Parrots, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 35 
Parsifal at Baireuth.—Irving Browne.—EDY 

Parson and the Corkscrew, The.-Moncrieff.—BC 

Parson and the Spaniel, The.—Anon.—RH 
Parson and the Widow, The.—Anon.—MDD 
Parson Gray.—Oliver Goldsmith.—NA 
Parson Jinglejaw’s Surprise.—Wade Whipple.—DCR 
Parson Kelly.—Marion Douglas.—SR 6 
Parson Lee.—Anon.—KNE 
Parson Policy.—Mrs. Alex. McV. Miller.—CS 30 
Parson’s Comforter, The.—Frd’k Langbridge.—HP 
Parson’s Conversion, The.—W: H. H. Murray.—HBR 
Parson’s Cradle, The.—-Anna R. Diehl.—DES 
Parson’s Daughter, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Parson’s Fee; or, The Bag of Beans, The. (Tab.) — 
Anon.—BS 11—TCP 

(Includes The Wedding Fee, by R. M. Streeter, also 
in CS 12.) 

Parson’s Horse Race, The.—Harriet B. Stowe. See 
Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories. 

Parson’s Sociable, The.—Anon.—CS 17 
(Donation Party, The.)—FAS 
Parson’s Vacation, The.—T.ouis Eisenbeis.—CS 28 
Part of an Ode to the Immortal Memory, etc.—Ben 
Jonson. See To the Immortal Memory, etc. 

Parted.—Madame - Desbordes-Valmore.—OH 

Parted Friends. (Friends— C.) —Jas. Montgomery.— 
BNL—GP 

(Friend after Friend Departs.)—FEP 
Parted Love. (The House of Life. Sonnet XLVI.)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Parterre, The.—E. H. Palmer.—NA 
Parthenia. (Dial.) —Anon.—BS 5—CDD 
Partial Critic, A.—Anon.—WR 25 
Parties.—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
Parting.—Anon.—ELP 
Parting.—Emily Dickinson.—A A—ASL 
Parting, The for A], (Ideas LXI.— C .)—Michapl 
Drayton.—CEL—GP—OB 
(Come, Let us Kisse and Parte.)—BNL 
(Let us Kiss and Part.)—HBP 
(Love’s Farewell.)—FTA—PGT 1—YBF 
(Since there’s no Help.)—OH 
(Sonnet.)—ELP—FEP—WEP 1 
Parting, The.—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
Parting.—Gerald Massey.—FLS—T’TA—PGT 2 
Parting, The, Br. sel. jr. —J. Norris.—BNL 
Parting.—Coventry Patmore.—BNL—HP 

(“If thou dost bid thy friend farewell.”)—GG 
Parting and Meeting Again.—W: B. Scott.—VS 
Parting at Morning.—Rob’t Browning.—AVP—MRS 
—OB—VA 

(With Meeting at Night.)—WR 15 
Parting before Sebastopol, The.—Robert, Earl of 
Lytton. See Lucile. 

Parting Glass, The.—Philip Freneau.-;—AA 
Parting Hour, The, Sel. fr. (Man’s Life.)—G: Crabbe. 
—FP 

Parting Hour, The.—Olive Custance.—VA 
Parting Hour, The.—E: Pollock.—CS 3 
Parting Hymn.—Anon.—BS 3 
Parting in Dreamland, A.—J: A. Symonds.—CEL 
Parting Lovers, The.—(Anon.— Ir. by) W: R. Alger. — 
BNL 


Parting Lovers.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BNL 
Parting Lovers, The.—Mary E. Day.—BS 1—CS 21— 
KNS 

Parting of Douglas and Marmion.—Walter Scott. See 
Marmion. 

Parting of Hector and Andromache, The.—Homer. 
See Iliad, The. 

Parting of King Philip and Marie, The. (Sel. fr. Marie 
de Meranie.)—J: W. Marston.—VA 
Parting of the Ways, The.—Jos. B. Gilder.—AA 
Parting Song.—T: T. Swinburne.—CG 1 
Parting Words.—Anon.—FLS 
Parting Words.—Felicia D. Hemans.—HNS 
Parting Words.—Esther Kent.—CS 13 
Parting Words.—Philip B. Marston.—BIL 
Partition of Poland, The, 1800.—C: J. Fox.—OM— 
PS—SS 

(On Overtures of Peace from Napoleon.)—SSD 
Partnership.—Anon.—COS—PP—PS 
Partridges.—Alonzo T. Worden.—POS 
Party, The.—Anon.—HVD 

Party at Mr. Wigglesworth’s. A. (Rockland Courier.) 
—SR 7 

Party Caucus, The.—-Horace B. Durant.—CS 31 
Party Spirit and Good Government. T: Jefferson. 

See Inauguration Address. 

Pa’s Mem’ry.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Pa’s Soft Spot.—D. A. Ellsworth.—CS 37 
Pa’s Ways.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Paschal Moon, The.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 
Pass.—Eugene F. Ware.—THP 

Pass in the Indian Hills, The. (Sets.) — Frd’k W. 
Robertson.—OS 2 

Pass of Kirkstone, The. (Sel.) —W: Wordsworth.— 
EPs 

Passage, The.—Ludwig Uhland (tr. by Sarah Austin). 

—BNL—HBP—LLC—OS 2—SS 
Passage in the Life of St. Augustine, A. — Anon.— 
BNL 

Passage of the Reform Bill (Letter to Thomas Flower 
Ellis, March 30, 1831— C.). —T: B. Macaulay. 
—CR (si. abr.) 

Passage to India, Sel. fr. (Sea of Faith, The— sel. fr. 

Sec. IX.)—Walt Whitman.—TAS 
Passed off the Stage.—Jas. Buckharn.—WR 7 
Passer-by, A.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB—VA 
Passing and Glassing.—Christina G. Rossetti.—VA 
Passing Awav.-—J: Pierpont.—BS 3—CR— CS 10 — 
FEP—SA—SE (br. sel.) —SR 1 
Passing Away. (Old and New Year Ditties, III.—C.) 

—Christina G. Rossetti.—OB 
Passing Bell at Stratford, The.—W: Winter.—AA 
Passing By.—Dinah M. Craik.—CS 11 
Passing of Arthur, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls 
of the King. 

Passing of March, The.—Rob’t B. Wilson.—SN 
Passing of Olaf, The. (Sel. fr. Thelma, Ch. XXXII.) 
—Marie Corelli.—WR 19 

(Crimson Shroud of Olaf Guldmar, The —-longer and 
si. diff .)—PFP 

Passing of Summer, The.—W: E. Hunt.—TCV 
Passing of the Elder Bards, The.—W: Wordsworth. 

See Extempore Effusion upon the Death of 
James Hogg. 

Passing of the Horse.—Anon.—CRR 
Passing of tlie Rubicon, The.—Jas. S. Knowles.—KNE 
—PS—SE (si. diff. vers.) 

(Cresar Passing the Rubicon.)—CS 4—OM 
(Caesar's Passage of the Rubicon.)—SS 
(Crossing [of] the Rubicon [,The].)—LLC—OS 2 
Passing Show, The.—C: H : Luders.—WR 4 
(Mountebanks, The.)—A A 
Passing Song, A.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 
Passing under the Rod.—-Mary S. B. Dana.—CS 13 
(Under the Rod.)—SAE 

Passing Understanding.—Frd’k L. Hosmer.—TAS 
Passing Year. The.— Anon.—PEO 
Passion and Patience.—Ellen T. Fowler.—FLS 
Passion Flower, The.—E. C. Howarth.—TAS 
Passion in the Desert, A.—Honors de Balzac.—WGS 
“Passion of my Lord of Essex, A.”—Rob’t Devereux, 
Earl of Essex.—ELP 
(Wish, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Passion Sunday.— Venantius r ort nat i .—HBP 
Passionate Pilgrim, The, Sel. fr. —-W : Shakespeare. 
Crabbed Age and Youth.—FEP—HBP—OB 
(Madrigal, A.)—LC—PGT 1—PHS 
(Youth and Age.)—EP 

Passionate Reader to his Poet, The.—R: Le Gallienne. 
—VA 

Passionate Shepherd, The, Sels. fr .— Nicholas Breton. 
Second Pastor’s Song.—EP 
Third Pastor’s Song.—EP 


253 






Passionate 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Passionate Shepherd to his Love, The. (Passionate 
Shepherd, The— C.) —Christopher Marlowe.— 
1st vers. —BFV—BPB—CEL—ES—LC—OLL 
—PGT 1—YBF 

(2nd vers. — si. shorter.) —BNL—EP—FT A—GP 
—OB—WEP 1 

(Milkmaid’s Song, The.) — FEP (1st vers.) — 
HBP (2nd vers.) 

(Shepherd to his Love, The—1st vers.) —CGd—GN 
—PHS 

Passion-flower.—Sir Aubrey de Vere.—AD 
Passions, The. An Ode for Music. (C.)—W: Collins. 
— BNL — CS 23 — EPs (si. abr.) — FEP — 
HBP—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 3 
(Ode on the Passions— si. abr.) —BS 3—KNE—SS 
(Ode to the Passions.)—AE ( br. sel .)—FTR (si. 

abr .)—TMD (sel.) 

(Revenge— br. sel .)—SE 

Passions II., XL., LXV. (Fr. The Hecatompathia.)— 
T: Watson.—WEP 1 

Past, The. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Past, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AA—LLC 
(To the Past.)—ASL 
Past.—Winifred Howells.—AA 

Past and Future of Poetry, The.—W: Cowper. See 
Table Talk. 

Past and Present, Sels. fr. —T: Carlyle. 

Aristocracy. (Sel. fr. Bk. III., Ch. VIII.)—OS 3 
Awa|t the Issue. (Sel. fr. Bk. I., Ch. II.)—FMR— 

(Justice— abr .)—SS 

Heard are the Voices. (Verses tr. fr. Goethe —in 
Bk. II., Ch. XVII.)—GP 

Honor of Labor, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. III., Ch. II.) — 
BS 26 

(Labor-— sel .)—BS 17—-TMR 
(Work.)—PEO—PP—YFR 

(Honor to the Laborer— abr .)—HSS 3 
Work. (Sel. fr. Bk. III., Chs. XI. and XII.— ptly. 
like BS 17, etc.)—LLC 

(Sacredness of Work— sel .)—HSS 3—TMD 
(Work.)—OS 2 

Past and Present.—T: Hood.—PGT 1 
(House where I was Bom, The.)—BLP 
(I Remember, I Remember— C.) —BNL—BPB— 
EDY—FEP—FP—GP—HBP—LC—MR— 

OS 1 — PoR — PSR — PYO (abr.)-y S— 
WCL—WCLG 1—YBF 
(Old House at Home, The— abr .)—TFS 
Past Friends.—Frd’k W. Faber.—A VP 
Past Meridian (Ballad of the Past Meridian— C.). —G: 
Meredith.—WRD 

Past Perils and the Perils of To-day, Sel. fr. (Sup¬ 
pressed Repudiation.)—H: W. Beecher.—NC 
Past Years of Home. (Poems of the Imagination, 
Miscellaneous Sonnets, XLII. — C.) — W • 
Wordsworth.—-WEP 4 
(View from Fox How.)—A VP 
Pastel.—Fs. S. Saltus.—AA 

Pastime of Pleasure, The, Sels. fr .—Stephen Hawes. 
Amoure Laments the Absence of La Belle Pucel. 

(Sel. fr. Can. XXX.)—WEP 1 
Character of a True Knight. The. (Sel. fr. XXVIII.) 
—WEP 1 

(True Knight, The— sel .)—OB 
Description of La Belle Pucel. (Sel. fr. XXX.)— 
WEP 1 

Dialogue between Graunde Amoure and La Belle 
Pucel. (Sels. fr. XVIII. and XIX.)—WEP 1 
Pastor McKnock’s Address.—Anon.—BC 
Pastor Wanted, A.—Anon.—CS 7 
Pastoral, A.—Nicholas Breton.—FEP 
(Phillis the Fair— abr.) —BNL 
Pastoral, A.—J: Byrom.—BNL—FEP 
Pastoral, A.—S: Daniel.—EP 
Pastoral, A.—Thdophile Marzials.—VA 
Pastoral, A.—J. B. B. Nichols.—VA 
Pastoral.—W: Shenstone. See following. 

Pastoral Ballad [,A], — W: Shenstone. — FEP — 
WEP 3 (Pt. I. abr.) 

Pastoral. (Pt. II.)—CEL 

(Hope.)—EP 

(Shepherd’s Home, The— sel.) —CGd—GN—LC 
—PHS 

Pastoral Catch, A.—.7: Dickenson.—ELP 
Pastoral Courtship, A, Sel. fr. —T: Randolph.—WEP 2 
Pastoral Dialogue, A.—T: Carew.—EP—WEP 2 
Pastoral Pictures. (C.) —Rob’t Buchanan. 

(Summer Pool, The.)—VA 

Pastoral Song between Phillis and Amarillis, A.—H: 
Constable.—WEP 1 

Pastoral upon the Birth of Prince Charles, A.—Rob’t 
Herrick.—EP 


Pastorals, Sel. fr. (Daffodils— fr. Eclogue IX.)— 
Michael Drayton.—EP 

Pastor’s Reverie, The.—Washington Gladden.—FEP 
—HP 

Pasture, A.—F: L. Knowles.—A A—CG 2 
Pat and his Musket.—Anon.—DI 
(Paddy and his Musket.)—SCS 
Pat and the Fox.—S: Lover. See Paddy the Sport. 
Pat and the Gridiron.—S: Lover.-—DI—SCS 
Pat and the Oysters.—Anon.—DI—SR 4 
Pat and the Pig.—Anon.—BeR—CDV—CS 23—KNE 
—PTS (sel.)— SDR 

Pat and the Yankee.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Pat Answers the Advertisement. (Dial.) —DS—YA 
Pat Flanigan’s Logic.—Anon.—CS 24 
Pat Magee.—Anon.—-WR 14 
Pat O’Flanigan’s Colt.—Anon.—DI 
Patchwork Philosophy.—Anon.—CS 21 
Patent Medicine.—F. Crosby.—PD 
Patent Right Agent, The.—^non.—FAD 
Patents Applied for.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Pater Filio.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB 
“Pater Vester Pascit Ilia.”—-Rob’t S. Hawker.—VA 
Path, The.—W:C. Bryant.—SM 
Path of Duty, The.—G: F. Hoar.—SC 
Path of Duty, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Ode on 
the Death of Wellington. 

Path of Independence, The.—Anon.—FP 
Path of Sorrow, The. (Sel. fr. To an Afflicted Protest¬ 
ant Lady in France.)—W: Cowper.—HDL 
Path of the Cyclone, The.—Meta E. B. Thome.—DES 
Pathetic Incident of the Rebellion, A.—Anon.—PFP 
(Confederate Sergeant, The— si. diff. vers.) —NC 
Pathos of Applause, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW T 
Pathos of Thackeray and Dickens, The.—Julien M. 
Elliott.—NC 

Pathways in Palestine.—Anon.—SSS 
Patie and Peggy.—Allan Ramsay. See Gentle Shep¬ 
herd, The. 

Patie and Roger.—Allan Ramsay. See Gentle Shep¬ 
herd, The. 

Patience.—Anon.—WR 22 
Patience. (C.) —Fs. W. Bourdillon. 

(Outwards or Homewards.)—HP 
Patience.—Emma Lazarus.—TAS 
Patience.—W: J. Linton.—VA 

(Be Patient— at. to R: C. Trench.)—HBP—MYF— 
POS 

Patience with Love.—G: Klingle.—CS 20 
Patient.—Anon.—HP 

Patient Griselda. (Fr. the Decameron.)—Boccaccio. 
—WGS 

Patient Griselda.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The. 

Patient Grissell.—T: Dekker. See Pleasant Comedy 
of Patient Grissell. The. 

Patient Joe.—Anon.—HR—MMR 
Patient Mercy Jones.—Jas. T. Fields.—CS 20—PPSr 
Patriarchal Home, The.—C: J. Wells. See Joseph and 
his Brethren. 

Patrick Dolin’s Love Letter.—O. F. Starkey.—BS 1 
(Pat’s Love Letter— cond.) —PR—YA 
Patrick O’Rouke and the Frogs.—G: W. Bungav.—- 
CS 8—DI 

Patriot and Traitor, The.—G: Lippard. See Benedict 
Arnold. 

Patriot Dead, The.—S: F. Smith.—BLP 
(Breathe Balmy Airs.)—HSS 1 
(Precious Lives.)—WR 17 

Patriot King in Mourning, The.—Nathaniel P. Willis.— 
BLP (abr.) 

(Absalom—C.)—CS 1—NPS—YP 
(David’s Lament for [or over] Absalom— si. abr.) — 
BS 15—OM—PS 
(Sel.) —KNE (br.) —SAE 
(Lament for Absalom— si. abr.) —LLC 
Patriot Mother, The.—Anon.—PEB 4 
Patriot President, The.—Tom Taylor. See Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Patriot Sons of Patriot Sires.—S: F. Smith.—BLP— 
TMR 

Patriot Spy, The.—F. N. Finch—PRR (abr.) 

(Nathan Hale.)— AWB — EDY — OS 2 — PAP — 
PAPm—PYO—TMR 
(Abr.)— SM—WCLG 1 

Patriotic Boy, A.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—PS— 
TT 

Patriotic Prince, The.-—H: B. Carrington.—BLP 
Patriotic Recitations.—Anon.—PRR 
Patriotic Sentiments. (Fr. diff. authors.) —DFR 
Patriotic Smoker’s Lament, The. (The St. James 
Gazette. )—PPh 

Patriotic Song.—J: G. Kinkel.—BLP 


254 




TITLE INDEX 


Pebbles 


Patriotic Tourist, The.—R: K. Munkittriek.—AWH 
Patriotic Words for the Young.—E: E. Hale.—BLP 
Patriotism, Sels. fr .—G: W: Curtis. 

Nations and Humanity.—BS 8—CS 11—OM—OS 3 
—SE (sel.) —SR 8—TMD 
Patriotism— sel. )—SO 

"Through all history, from the beginning”— br. 

sel.) —HSS 1 
(True Patriotism is Unselfish— si. diff.) —PEO 
Patriotism.—J: Ireland.—CS 37 
Patriotism.—T: F. Meagher.—BLP—SR 5 
(Sel.)— CS 6—FD 1—SE 

Patriotism. (Sel. fr. The Inflexible Captive.)—Han¬ 
nah More.—TMR 
(Duty to One’s Country.)—SS 
Patriotism.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel, The. 

Patriotism and Freedom.—Joanna Baillie.—LLC 
Patriotism at Squawville. (Denver Post.) —PAPm 
Patriotism Inculcates Public Virtue.—H: Clay. See 
On the Bank Veto. 

Patriotism of American Women.—T: B. Read. See 
Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The. 

Patriots and Martyrs.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Patriot’s Bride, The.—Sir C: G. Duffy.—GP 
Patriot’s Cry, The.—H: B. Carrington.—BLP 
Patriot’s Death, The.—Fitz-Greene Halleck. See Marco 
Bozzaris. 

“Patriots have toiled, and in their country’s cause.”— 
W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Patriot’s Pass-word, The. — Jas. Montgomery. — 
AD (sel.)— EDY—SS (abr.) 

(Arnold Winkelried — abr.) —BS 2—CS 4—OS 2— 
PPSr—SA—TMD 

(Make Way for Liberty.)—BNL—FEP 
Pat’s Bondsman.—Lillian A. Moulton.—CRR—SR 2 
Pat’s Correspondence.—W. M. Griffin.—CS 12—DCR 
Pat’s Criticism.—O: F. Adams.—DI 
Pat’s Dilemma.—Anon.—DCD 

Pat’s Excelsior. (Harper’s Magazine.) See Paddy’s 
Excelsior. 

Pat’s Excuse.—Anon.—PS 
Pat’s Letter.—Anon.—CH 

Pat’s Letter.—"Queerquill.”—CD—-DI—HP—SR 1 
Pat’s Love.—“Joe Jot, Jr.”—NPS—YP 
Pat’s Love Letter.—O. F. Starkey. See Patrick 
Dolin’s Love Letter. 

Pat’s Mistake.—Anon.—CS 26 

Pat’s Perplexity.—Anon.—SR 9—WR 3 

(Irishman’s Perplexity, An.)—CS 26—DCR 
Pat’s Purchase.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Pat’s Reason. (Brooklyn Eagle.) —CH—SR 5 
Pat’s Secret.—Anon.—CS 30 

Pat’s Wisdom.—Anon.—CS 29—DS—NPS—YA—YP 
Patsy’s and Tom’s Thanksgiving.—Alice L. Richards. 
—WN 

Pattin’ Juba.—Frances E. Wadleigh.—CS 30 
Paudeen O’Rafferty’s Say Voyage.—Anon.—DI— 
MDD 

Paul at Athens. Bible. See Acts of the Apostles. 
Paul before King Agrippa.— Bible. See Acts of the 
Apostles 

Paul Faber, Surgeon, Sel. fr. (That Holy Thing— 
verses fr. Ch. XLIX.)—G: Macdonald.—OB— 
YBF 

Paul Fleming Resolves.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Hyperion. 

Paul Jones’ Victory.—Anon.—AWB—EDY 
Paul Pry, Sels. fr. —J: Poole. 

Not Quite. (Dial, ad.) —NDP 
Paul Pry at Doubledot’s. (Dial.) —MPD 
Paul Pry at Doubledot’s.—J: Poole. See foregoing. 
Paul Revere’s Ride.—G: W: Curtis. See Centennial 
Celebration of Concord Fight. 

Paul Revere’s Ride. (Tales of a Wayside Inn: The 
Landlord’s Tale.)—H: W. Longfellow.—AWB 
—BAB — BNL — FEP — FTR —HB — MR — 
PAP—SE (br. sel.)— TMR (abr.) 

(SI. abr.)— CS 2—GMS—HR—SR 8 
Paul Venarez.—Eben E. Rexford.—FMR 
(Ride of Paul Venarez, The.)—CS 1—PR 
Paul’s Defense before Agrippa. Bible. See Acts of 
the Apostles. 

Paul’s Defense before Festus and Agrippa. Bible. See 
Acts of the Apostles. 

Paulus the Lawyer.—Lindsay.—HPE 
Pauper Girl, The.—-Georgene Traver.—CS 24—NPS— 
YP 

Pauper’s Child, The.—Augusta Moore.—CS 32 
Pauper’s Death-bed, The.—Caroline B. Southey.— 
BNL—CS 1—FEP—FTR—HBP—PPSr—SS 
Pauper’s Drive, The.—T: Noel.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Pauper’s Revenge, A.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 26 


Pause, A. ( C .)—Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
(Meeting.)—YBF 

Paving the Streets.—Mrs. L. C. McVean.—WR 18 
Pawnbroker’s Shop, The.—Anon.—CS 19—WRD 
Pawns, The.—W: Young. See Wishmakers’ Town. 
Pax Paganica. (M. A., 1822-1888— C.) —Louise I. 

Guiney.—AA (w. add. st.) 

Pax Vobiscuml—G: L. Taylor.—BS 1 
Payin’ Honest Debts.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Paying her Fare.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Peace. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Peace.—W. T. Adams.—DLF 

("Peace to the brave who nobly fell.”)—HSS 1 
Peace.—Mary C. Ames.—GP 
Peace.—Phoebe Cary.—BNL—EDY 
Peace.—C: De Ivay.—SN 
Peace.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—HS 
Peace.—G: Herbert.—EPs—FP 
Peace.—C: F. Richardson.—TAS 
Peace.—W: Shakespeare. See King Richard III. 
Peace.—C: Sumner. See True Grandeur of Nations, 
The. 

Peace.—Jas. Thomson. See Britannia. 

Peace.—H: Vaughan.—CEL—ELP—GN—HBP—OB 
Peace and War.—Percy B. Shelley. See Queen Mab. 
Peace at-an.v-price Man, A. (Baltimore Life.) —PAPm 
Peace! Be Still.—Anon.—-HDL 

Peace Congress of the Union, The.—E: Everett. See 
Battle of Bunker Hill, The. 

Peace Hath her Victories. (Diff. fr. rev. vers.) —Wal¬ 
lace Rice.—BAB 

Peace in God. (Hours of the Night—Third hour— C.) 
—Harriet B. Stowe.—BS 8 

Peace Inconsistent with Oppression. (Sel. fr. Hun¬ 
gary and Austria in Religious Contrast.)— 
Louis Kossuth.—SS 
(No Peace without Liberty.)—BLP 
Peace Men, The.—T: S. King.—SSD 
Peace of Christmas-time, The.—Eugene Field.—TAS— 
WTD 

Peace of Death, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Peace of Mind.—Sir E: Dyer.—PHS 
(Good Conscience, A— abr.) —FTR 
(My Minde [or Mind] to me a Kingdom Is.)—BNL— 
FEP 

(.46r.)—ELP—SM—WEP 1 
(At. to W: Byrd.)—BS 7—EPs—HBP—LLC 
(Old style spelling in BNL—FEP—HBP.) 

Peace of Sorrow, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Peace on Earth.—Jas R. Lowell.—LLC (si. abr.) 

(Christmas Carol, A— C. — si. diff.) —TAS 
Peace on Earth.—Edmund H. Sears.—TAS 
(Angels’ Song, The.)—AA 
(Glorious Song of Old, The.)—OS 2 
(It Came upon the Midnight Clear.)—FEP — 
LLC (abr.) 

Peace on the Sea. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Peace Restored. (Song—C.— fr. The Imposture.)— 
Jas. Shirley.—ELP 

“Peace to the brave who nobly fell.”—W. T. Adams. 
See Peace. 

Peace to the Slumberers.—T: Moore.—HBP 
Peace! What do Tears Avail?—Bryan W. Procter.— 
HBP—V A—VS 

Peaceable Secession.—Dan’l Webster. See Constitu¬ 
tion and theUnion, The. 

"Peaceful western wind, The.”—Rob’t Campion.—OEL 

Peacemaker, The.—Anon.—YFD 

Peacemaker, A.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 

Peach, The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 

Peach Blossoms.—-Hannah F. Gould.—AD 

Peacock, The.—Anon.—NV 

Peacock on the Wall, The.—Anon.—WR 1 

Peak Sisters, The. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 

Peaks, The.—Stephen Crane.—AA 

Pearl , a Girl, A.—Rob’t Browning.—OH 

Pearls.—R: H: Stoddard.—GP 

Peasant Boy, The, Sel. fr. (Just Retribution, The.)—- 
W. (?) Dimond.— CS 23—PS 
(Peasant Boy’s Vindication, The— si. abr.) —NDP 
Peasant Boy’s Vindication, The.—W. (?) Dimond. 
See foregoing. 

Peasant Heroine, A.—Christian Burke.—WR 13 
Peasants, The.—Jerome Iv. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Peasants’ Chorus, The.—G: Darley. See Sylvia; or, 
The May Queen. 

Peasant’s Return, The.—W: Barnes.—EPs 
Pebble and the Acorn, The.—Hannah F. Gould.— 
AD 

Pebbles.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL—NV 


255 





Peculiar 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Peculiar Neighbor, The.—Harriet M. Spaulding.— 
CS 24—NPS—YP 
( A br. )—DS—Y A 

Pedant, The.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Peddler, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Peddler’s Caravan. The.—W: B. Rands. See Pedlar’s 
Caravan, The. 

Pedlar, A.—Anon.-—OB 
Pedlar, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Pedlar’s Caravan, The.—W: B. Rands.—BVC—PoR 
(Peddler’s Caravan, The.)—KER 
Pedler and his Trumpet, The. ( Sel .)—T: Hood.—WR 1 
(Tale of a Trumpet. The— ptly. diff. sel.) —SE 
Peepsy.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Peepy Tsnot Dead.—-Rob’t K. Kernighan.—TCV 
Peevish Boy, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Peg Woffington, Sel. fr. (Mrs. Woffington’s Portrait— 
sel. fr. Ch. XIII.) —C: Reade.—WR 13 
Pegasus in Pound.—H: W. Longfellow.—LC 
Pegging Away.—Anon.—HSS 3 

Peggy.—Allan Ramsay. See Gentle Shepherd, The. 
Peggy’s Garden, and what Grew Therein.—Celia 
Thaxter.—SAP 

Peleg and Patience.—Anon.—MAD 

Pelican, The.—Jas. Montgomery. See following. 

Pelican Island, Sels. fr. —Jas Montgomery. 

Birds. (Sel. fr. Can. III.)—BNL 
Coral Reef. (Sel. fr. II.)—BNL 
Pelican, The. (Sel. fr. IV.)—BNL 
Sea Life. (Sel. fr. I.)—BNL 
Pelters of Pyramids.—R: H. Horne.—VA 
Pemberton, Sel. fr. (Execution of Andr6, The-—Pt. 

III., Ch. XIII.)—H: Peterson.—BS 23—PFP 
Pen, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Pen Mightier than 
the Sword, The. 

Pen and the Album, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—VA 
Pen Mightier than the Sword, The, (C.) —E: Bulwer- 
Lytton. 

(Pen, The.)—OS 2 

Pen Photographs of Dickens’ Readings, Sel. fr. —Kate 
Field.—MRS 

Penalty of Genius, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Penance.—Anon.—FTA 

(Men’s Wicked Ways.)—DR 
Penance. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 

“Penalties; quarrel not with the old phraseology, good 
readers.”—T: Carlyle.—GG 
Pendennis, Sel. fr. (At the Church Gate.)—W: M. 
Thackeray — AVP — BNL —FEP — FTA — 
HBP — OH — PGT 2 — PYO (si. abr.)— VA 
—VS—YBF 

Penitent, A.—Marg. Eytinge.—CS 37—SR 1 
Penitent, The.—J: Keats. See Eve of St. Agnes, The. 
Penning a Pig.—Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 24 
Penn’s Monument. (Sel. fr. History of William Penn.) 
—Rob’t J. Burdette.—BS 17—CS 29—FD 1— 
NPS—SR 8—YP 

(Monument of William Penn, The.)—TMR 
Pennsylvania’s Lament, The. (Omaha World.) —-BS 16 
Penny Showman, The.—H. C. Newton.—CS 33 
"Penny ye Meant to Gi’e, The.”—Anon.—CS 14 
Pensive and Faltering.—Walt Whitman.—TAS 
Pensiveness.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Penthea’s Dying Song.—J: Ford. See Broken Heart, 
The. 

People, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
People always Conquer, The.— E: Everett.—FD 2— 
OS 2 (sel.) —PS 

(People Triumphant, The.)—BLP 
People and King.—R: B. Sheridan. See Popular and 
Kingly Examples. 

People and their Palace, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
People Delivered, A.—Cunningham Geikie.—BLP 
People of the United States, The. (2 diff. sels.) —S. 

Grover Cleveland.—FD 2—TMD 
People Triumphant, The.—E: Everett. Nee People 
always Conquer. The. 

People Will Talk.—Emma M. Buckingham.—MD 
People’s Holidays, The.—-Marianne Farningham.— 
PEO 

People’s Petition, The.—Wathen M. W. Call.—EHT— 
VA 

People’s Song of Peace, The. (Fr. Song of the Cen¬ 
tennial.)—-Joaquin Miller.—BNL—BS 15—SM 
Pepita, the Gipsy Girl of Andalusia.—Anon.—CS 12 
Per Aspera ad Astra.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Per gl’ Occh’ almeno non v’e Claiisura.—E. C. Pember. 
—AVP 

Per Pacem ad Lucem. (C.)—Adelaide A. Procter.— 
CS 7—FEP—HDL—VA—YBF 
(Lead Me, O Lord— si. abr.) —SSS 
(Through Peace to Light.)—SSS 


“Perche Pensa? Pensando s’nivecchia.”—Arthur H. 
Clough.—WEP 4 

Per-contra; or, Matrimonial Balance, The.—Gotthold 
E. Lessing.—HPE 
Perdita.—Florence E. Coates.—A A 
Perdita. (Harvard Advocate.) —CG 2 
Perdita.—Mrs. W. R. Jones.—DR 
Perduret atque Valeat. (Valedictory.) —Anon.—CP 
Perfect Beauty. (Song fr. The New Inn, Act IV., Sc. 
3.)—Ben Jonson.—ES—YBF 
(Vision of Beauty, A.)—BNL 
Perfect Day, A. (Monologue.) —Clyde Fitch.—WR 24 
Perfect Day, The.—Edna D. Proctor.—TAS 
Perfect Faith, A.—Seumas B. McManus.—CS 29 
Perfect Feast, A.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Perfect Greyhound, The.—Anon.—BVC 
Perfect Life, The.—Ben Jonson. See To the Immortal 
Memory and Friendship of that Noble Pair, 
etc. 

Perfect Love.—Archibald Lampman.—TFY 
Perfect Man, The.—Anon.—CS 25 
Perfect Orator, The.—R: B. Sheridan.—HSS 2 
(Orator Described, The.)—BLP 
Perfect Sailor, The.—C: Dibdin.—LH 

(Tpm Bowling.) —BNL—BPB—FEP—HBP—PC 
—YBF 

Perfect Wife, The.—Anon.—BS 20 
Perfect Woman. (Poems of the Imagination, VIII. 
— C.) —W: Wordsworth.—OB 
(Portrait, A.)—LLC 
(Seen, Loved, Wedded.)—FTR 
(“She was a phantom [of delight].”)—BNL—BSP 
— FEP — GP — HBP — MBL — PGT 1 
—WEP 4—YBF 

Perfectibility.—W: R. Thaver.—TAS 
Perfectly Awfully Lovely Story, A.—Anon.—BS 15 
Perfume.—Edmund W. Gosse.—BNL 
“Perhaps it may have been little thought of.”—T: (7) 
Chalmers.—GG 

“Perhaps it will all come right at last.” (Br. sel. fr. 
Wishing and Having.)—R: H. Stoddard.— 
BIL 

“Perhaps ’twas boyish love.”—Edmund C. Stedman.—- 
BNL 

Pericles.—G: Croly. See following. 

Pericles and Aspasia. (C.)—G: Croly.—HBP 
(Pericles.)—AVP 

Pericles and Aspasia, Sels. fr .—Walter S. Landor. 
Cleone to Aspasia.—WEP 4 

Corinna, from Athens, to Tanagra. (Corinna 
to Tanagra, from Athens—C.)—CEL—WEP 4 
Peril of the Mines, The.—Anon.—CS 21 
Peril of the Passenger Train, The.—Mrs. A. D. Gillett. 

_Qg 28 

Perils of Invisibility, The.—W; S. Gilbert.—CS 16— 
THP 

Perils of Parliamentary Reform.—J: W. Croker.—SS 
“Perish policy and cunning.”—Norman Macleod.—GG 
Perished.—Mary L. Ritter.—BNL 
Periton’s Ride.—Miller Hageman.—WR 15 
Perjury Excused.—W; Shakespeare. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost. 

Perkin Warbeck. (Sels. fr. Act V., Scs. 2, 3.)—J: 
Ford.—EHT 

Permanence of Grant’s Fame, The. (Sel. fr. Memorial 
Services in Honor of General Grant.)—Jas. G. 
Blaine.—NC—PEO—PFP 

Permanency of Empire, The.—Wendell Phillips.—SSD 
—TMD 

Pernicious Weed!—W: Cowper. See Conversation. 
Peronella.—Anon.—CS 31 

Peroration against Warren Hastings.—-Edmund Burke. 

See Impeachment of Warren Hastings. 
Peroration of Burke's Speech on the Impeachment of 
Warren Hastings.—Edmund Burke. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 

Peroration of Buzfuz:—Bardell vs. Pickwick.— C: 

Dickens. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Peroration of Webster’s Plymouth Rock Oration.— 
Dan’l Webster. Nee First Settlement of New 
England, The. 

Peroration of Webster’s Reply to Hayne.—Dan’l Web¬ 
ster. See Reply to Hayne, The. 

Perpetual Youth.—Maurice F. Egan.—TAS 
Perpetuity.—Clinton Scollard.—TAV 
Perplexed Housekeeper, The.—Anon.—MHR 
Perplexing Question.—Anon.—DLF 
Perry’s Celebrated Victory on Lake Erie.—Anon.— 
PRR 

Perry’s Victory.—Anon.—EDY 
Perry’s Victory.—Jas. G. Percival. See following. 
Perry’s Victory [on Lake Erie—C.].—Jas. G. Percival. 
AWB—PAP 


256 





TITLE INDEX 


Philippic 


Persephone.—Jean Ingelow.—WR 9 
Perseverance.—Anon.—HSS 2 

Perseverance.— R. S. S. Andros.— BNL—LLC (abr.) 

—POS 

(Swallow, The.)—HSS 2 

Perseverance. (Br. sel. fr. The Useful Life.)—Horatius 
Bonar.—HDL 

Perseverance.—Oliver W. Holmes.—KNE 
Perseverance.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Perseverance. (Br. sel. fr. Leonardo da Vinci Poetizes 
to the Duke in his own Defence.)—Leonardo 
da Vinci (tr. by W: W. Story).—BNL 
Persevere.—Anon.—DCP 
Persevere.—Anon.—DLF 

(Drive the Nail Aright.)—SM 
Persevere.—J: Brougham.—CS 7 
Persevere.—Jane E. Gormley.—DCP 
Persian Love Song.—-Blanche Lindsay.—FLS 
Persicos Odi.—C: E. Merrill, Jr.—AA 
Persistence. (Poems and Epigrams, XI.— C.) —Wal¬ 
ter S. Landor.—VA 
Personal. (Chicago Tribune.) —CH 
Personal Characteristics—Men. (Frags, fr. various 

authors.) —BNL 

Personal Characteristics—Women. (Frags, fr. various 
authors.) —BNL 

Personal Charms. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Personal Influence.—J. O. Branch.—BS 21 
Personal Resurrection.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Personality and Uses of a Laugh, The.—Anon.—KNE 
Personating Olders.—Anon.—MAD 
Personified Sentimental, The. (Songs without Sense, 
I.)—Fs. Bret Harte.—NA 

Persuasions to Joy: a Song. (Song, Persuasions to 
Enjoy— -C.) —T: Carew.—OB 
Perverse. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Perverse Hen. The.—Anon.—CS 6—DS 
Perversion of the Bible.—Rob’t Pollok.—CS 5 
Peschiera.—Arthur H. Clough.—VA 
Pessimism. (Blackwood.) —HP 

Pessimist, The. (C. — also The Sum of Life.)—Ben 
King.—NA 

(Too Bad.)—PR—YA 

Pessimistic Philosopher, The.—Anon.—CS 26 
Pet and Bijou.—Helen M. Bean.—DR 
Pet and her Cat. (Harper’s Young People.) —DLS— 
HS 

Pet Coon. The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Pet Lamb, The.—W: Wordsworth.—FEP—HBP— 
MBL—OS 1—PC (abr.) —PHS (si. abr.)— PoR 

(Sel.) —HSS 2—PPSr 

Pet Name, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BNL—PGT 2 
Pet of the School, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KH 

Petah.—Anon.—SR 4 
Pete Ivory’s Ordeal.—Anon.—SR 13 
Peter Adair.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 30 
Peter Cooper.—-Joaquin Miller.—AA—EDY 
Peter Grey.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Peter Klaus.—Anon.—CS 28 
Peter Longpocket.—Anon.—CS 17 
Peter Mulrooney and the Black Filly.—Anon—CS32 — 
DI—SR 11 

(Feeding the Black Fillies.)—BeR 
Peter Peabody’s Stump Speech.—-Anon.—MCS 
Peter Sorghum in Love.—Alf. Burnett.—CRR—DFY 
—HR 

(Yankee in Love, A.)—CS 2—NPS—YP 
Peter-bird, The.—H: T. Stanton.—NV 
Peter’s Ride to the Wedding.—Anon.—CS 5—CSS— 
MYF—PPSr 

Petit Jean.—Mary A. Barr.—CS 21 
Petit Maitre, and the Man on the Wheel, The.—J: W T ol- 
cott.—HPE 

Petition, A.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Petition. (C.) —Jane Taylor. 

(“Ah, dear papa, did you but know”— abr.) —BVC 
Petition to Time, A. (C.) —Bryan W. Procter.—BLP— 
CEL—CR—FEP—HBP—VA—VS—WEP 4— 
YBF 

(Time— br. sel.) —SE 
Petra.—J. W. Burgon.—AVP 

Petrarch’s Tomb.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Petrified Fern, The.—Marv L. B. Branch.—AA—AD— 
BNL — CS 37 — HSS 3 — LLC — MYF — 
POS — PPSr — PTS — SO — TAV — TMD 
Pets of Society, Sel. fr. (Love in High Life— dial.) — 
T. S. Denison.—FAS 

Petticoat Government.—Miss-Chapman.—DDD 

Pewee, The.—J: T. Trowbridge.—SN 


Phsedria and the Idle Lake.—Edmund Spenser. See 
Faerie Queene, The. 

Phaethon; or, the Amateur Coachman.—J: G. Saxe.— 
HPE 

Phantasmion, Sels. fr .—Sara Coleridge. 

He came Unlooked for.—VA 
One Face Alone.—VA 

Phantastes. A Faerie Romance for Men and Women 
Sel.fr. (Song: “‘O lady, thy lover is dead, 
they cried”— fr. Ch. XX.)—G: Macdonald.— 
HBP 

Phantasy, A. (Campus .)—CG 3 
Phantasy, Sel. fr. —Alex. R. Garvie.—TCV 
Phantasy. ( Yale Record .)—CG 2 

Phantom, The, Sel. fr. (Song: “They who may tell 
love’s wistful tale”— fr. Act I., Sc. 4.)—Joanna 
Baillie.—WEP 4 

Phantom, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Phantom. (Pantomime char.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Phantom, The.-—-Bayard Taylor.—HBP 
Phantom Ball, The.—Rosa V. Jeffrey.—DES 
Phantom Caravan, The.-—Omar KhayyJm (Fitzgerald). 
See Rubaiyi'it. 

Phantom Isles, The.—J: Monsell.—CS 5 
Phantom Light of the Baie des Chaleurs, The.—Arthur 
W. H. Eaton.—TCV 

Phantom of the Rose, The.—Jerome A. Hart.—HP 
Phantom Party, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Phantom Ship, The.—S: T. Coleridge. See Rime of 
the Ancient Mariner, The. 

Phantom Ship, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—BFV 
Phantom Ship, Ihe . (Cruise of the Mystery, The.— 
C.) —Celia Thax'er.—BS 10 
Phantoms.—T: Ashe.—VA 
Phantoms, The. (Baltimore News.) —PAPm 
Phantoms All.—Harriet P. Spofford.—AA 
Phantoms of St. Sepulchre, The.—C: Mackay.—CS 12 
Phaon, the Ferryman.—J: Lyly. See Sapho and 
Phaos. 

Pharisee and Sadducee.—Anon.—CH—SR 5 
Pharos Loquitur. (C .)—Walter Scott. 

(Lighthouse, The.)—LC 

PhaudrigCrohoore.—J: S. Le Fanu—CS20(sZ. abr .)—DI 
Pheidippides.—Rob’t Browning.—OS 3—SC (cond .)— 
WR 1 (si. abr.) 

Phenomenal Baby, A.—Anon.—WR 7 
Phenomenal Memory, A.—Anon.—WR 26 
Phil Blood’s Leap.—Rob’t Buchanan.—CS 15—PEB 4 
—VSG 

Philanthropic Love of Power.—Dan’l Webster.— 
FD 1 

Philaster, Sel. fr. (Love at First Sight —sel fr. Act 
V., Sc. 5.)—Beaumont and Fletcher.—EPs 
Philip, my King.—Dinah M. Craik.—BNL—EDY— 
FEP—HBP—OS 1—VA—WCL 
Philip of Macedon.—Demosthenes. See Philippics, 
The. 

Philip of Pokanoket (in Sketch Book), Sel. fr. (Death 
of King Philip.)—Washington Irving.—WR 10 
Philip to Adam.—Arthur H. Clough. See Bothie of 
Tober-na-Vuolich, The. 

Philip van Artevelde, Sels. fr. —H: Taylor. 

Artevelde. (Br. sel .)—BIL 
(“Nay, said I not.”)—GG 
Artevelde’s Vision.—VSG 
Elena’s Song.—OB 
(Song.)—VA 

Heart Rest. (Br. sel .)—BNL 
John of Launoy. (Br. sel .)—VA 
Philip van Artevelde. (Br. sel.) —EDY—VA 
Philip van Artevelde, Br. sels. fr .—BNL 
Philip van Artevelde to the Men of Ghent.—PS 
(Van Artevelde to the Men of Ghent.)—SS 
Revolutions.—VA 

(Van Artevelde’s Defence of his Rebellion— ptly. 
diff.)—SS 

Song: “Down lay in a nook my lady’s brach.”— 

HBP—VA 

Van den Bosch and Artevelde.—SS 
(Philip van Artevelde— br. sel .)—BNL 
Wife, A. (Br. sel .)—BNL 

Philip van Artevelde to the Men of Ghent.—H: Taylor. 
See Philip van Artevelde. 

Philip van Artevelde’s Defence of his Rebellion.—H: 

Taylor. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Philippians, Sel. fr. (Golden Whatsoevers—IV., 8.) 
Bible .—LLC 

Philippic against Flood, Oct. 28, 1783. (C.) — H: 

Grattan. 

(Invective against Mr. Flood— cond .)—CS 4 
(Reply to Flood.)—PPS 

(Reply to Mr. Flood— cond.) —KNE—OM—PS—SS 


257 





Philippics 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Philippics (Orations against Philip), Sels. fr. —De¬ 
mosthenes. 

Against Bribery. ( Sel. fr. 3rd. Ph.)—PS 
Against Philip. (Sel. fr. 1st.)—PS—SS 
(Philip of Macedon— diff. tr .)—SSD 
Degeneracy of Athens, The. (Sel. fr. 3rd. (?) )— 
BLP—PS—SS 

Democracy Hateful to Philip, The. (Sel. fr. 8th. 
(?) )—PS—SS 

Venality the Ruin of Greece. (Sel. fr. 9th. (?) )— 
PS—SS 

Philippine Islands, The.—J: D. Long.—PFP 
Phillida and Coridon [or Corvdon], — Nicholas Breton. 
—BNL—FEP—HBP—OEB—YBF 
(SI. abr.) —EP—ES—OB—WEP 1 
Phillida Flouts Me.—Anon.—EP 
(Abr.)— CEL—OB 

Phillida’s Love-call [to her Corydon, and his Replying]. 
-—Anon.—EP—WEP i 
(Phyllida’s Love-call.)—OB 
Phillips Brooks.—Bliss Carman.—TCV 
Phillips Brooks.—J: H. Ingham.—EDY 
Phillips Brooks.—Harriet P. Spofford.—EDY 
Phillis.—Anon.—EP 
Phillis.—W: Drummond. See Phyllis. 

Phillis. (Fr. The Fair Maid of the Exchange.)—T: 
Heywood.—EP 
(Go, Pretty Birds.)—FEP 
(Message, The.)—OB 
(To Phyllis.)—ES—OEL 
(“Ye little birds that sit and sing.”)—ELP 
Phillis—T: Lodge.—EP—OB (I.— abr.) 

(To Phillis the Fair Shepherdess— at. to Dyer.)— 
ES—WEP 1 

Phillis.—'T: Lodge.—OB (II.)—OEL 
(Love and Phillis.)—EP 
(Love’s Wantonness.)—ES—WEP 1 
Phillis.—Sir C: Sedley. See folio-wing. 

Phillis is my Only Joy.—Sir C: Sedley.—BNL 
(Phillis.)—CEL—EP 
(Song.)—WEP 2 

Phillis’ Sickness.—T: Lodge.—WEP 1 
(On Phillis’ Sickness.)—EP 
Phillis the Fair.—Nicholas Breton.—BNL (abr.) 
(Pastoral, A.)—FEP 

Phillis the Fair. (C.) —Rob’t Bums. See Phyllis the 
Fair. 

Phillis the Fair Shepherdess.—Sir E: Dyer.—W T EP 1 
Phillis’s Age.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Philomel.—R: Bamefield. See Cynthia. 

Philomel to Corydon.—W: Young.—AA 
Philomela.—Matthew Arnold.—BNL—FEP—HBP— 
OB—PGT 2— SN—VA 
Philomela.—Philip Sidney. See Sidera. 

Philomela, the Lady Fitzwater’s Nightingale, Sels. fr. 
—Rob’t Greene. 

Philomela’s Ode [that She Sung in her Arbour— 
—C.].—ELP—HBP—WEP 1 
Philomela’s Second Ode.—EP 
Philomela’s Ode.—Rob’t Greene. See Philomela, the 
Lady Fitzwater’s Nightingale. 

Philomela’s Second Ode.—Rob’t Greene .—See Philo¬ 
mela, the Lady Fitzwater’s Nightingale. 
Philosopher, A.—Sam W. Foss.—AWH 
Philosopher and the Ferryman, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Philosopher and the Lover, The; to a Mistress Dying. 
(C .)—Sir W; Davenant. 

(To a Mistress Dying.)—OB 
Philosopher in the Apple Orchard, The. (In Comedies 
of Courtship.)—Anthony Hope.—WR 20 
Philosopher Toad, The.—Rebecca S. Nichols.—BNL 
Philosopher’s Devotion, The.—H: More.—ELP—HBP 
Philosopher’s Escape, The.—Eva Lovett.—TMD 
Philosopher’s Scales, The.—Jane Taylor.—BLP (abr.) 

—BNL (si. abr .)—CS 14 
Philosophia Amoris.—G. L. R.—CG 1 
Philosophy. ( Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Philosophy.—C. W. Crannell.—CG 2 
Philosophy. (Fr. A Scholar and his Dog.)—J. Mars- 
ton.—BNL 

Philosophy.-Thomson.—KNE 

“Philosophy has sometimes forgotten God, as a great 
people never did.”—G: (?) Bancroft.—GG 
Philosophy of Laughter.—Mrs. C. M. Peat.—BS 8 
(Laughter— self )—HSS 3 

Philosophy of Progress.—E. W. Dunlavy.—SR 13 
Philosophy of Sport, The.—C; Mackay.—PPSr 
Phil’s Complaint.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Phcebe-bird, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—TAV 
Phoebe’s Exploit.—Fs. Lynde.—BS 23 
“Phoebus, Arise.” (Song XXXVI., Pt. 1.)—W: 
Drummond. —O EL 
( Invocation.)—OB 


“Phoebus, Arise” (continued). 

(Song.)—ELP—ES—HBP—WEP 2 
(Summons to Love— si. abr.) —PGT 1 
Phoebus with Admetus.—G: Meredith.—OB 
Phoenix, The.—Arthur C. Benson.—OB 
Phoenix and the Turtle, The. (C.) —W; Shakespeare. 
—OB 

(Phoenix and Turtle-dove.)—EPs 
Phoenix and Turtle-dove.—W: Shakespeare. See 
foregoing. 

“Phosphor, Bring the Day.”—Fs. Quarles.—ELP 
Photograph Album, The.—Ella Bevier.—CRR 
Photograph Gallery, The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Photograph in a Shop Window, A.—Bernard McEvoy. 
—TCV 

Photographic Album.—H: D. (?) Ryder.—A VP 
Photographs, The.—Anon.—CH 

Phraxanor to Joseph.—C: J. Wells. See Joseph and 
his Brethren. 

Phrenologist to his Mistress, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Phrenology.—D. L. Demorest.—SD 
Phuss and Phret.—-Anon.—WR 15 
Phyllida’s Love-call.—-Anon. See Phillida’s Love-call. 
Phyllis. (Phillis— C.) —W: Drummond.—GN—LC 
Phyllis and Corydon.—-Arthur W. Cotton.—CG 1 
Phyllis and Damon.—Nora Hopper.—TIP 
Phyllis the Fair. (Phillis the Fair— C.) —Rob’t Burns. 
—LC 

Phyllis’s Slippers.—H. A. Richmond.—CG 2 
Phyllyp Sparowe, Sel. fr. (The Nun’s Lament for 
Philip Sparrow.)—J: Skelton.—CGd 
Physical Education.—Anon.—KNE 
Physician in Spite of Himself, The, Sel. fr. (Dorcas 
and Gregory—Act I., Scs. 1-4.)—Jean B. P. 
de Moliere.—WR 11 

Physician’s Story, A.—Dr.-Munro.—CS 13 

Physics.—W: Whewell.—BNL 

Piano Mania, The.—Jennie June.—MMR 

Piano-music.—Anon.—DR—PTS 

(How Paderewski Plays the Piano.)—CRR 
Piazza, The.—Eugene Field. See following. 

Piazza Tragedy, A.—Eugene Field.—THP 
(Piazza, The.)—AWH 
Pibroch.—Walter Scott. See folloiving. 

Pibroch of Donald Dhu. (C.)—Walter Scott.—BNL 
— BS 25 — EPs — FEP — HBP — LC — OS 2 
— PHS 

(Gathering Song of Donald Dhu [or the Black].)— 
BPB—PGT 1 

(Gathering Song of Don il Dhu.)—CEL—GN 
(Highland War-song.)—PS 
(Pibroch.)—LH 
(Summons, The— hr. sel.) —SE 
Picaninny’s Cyclone, The.—-Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Piccaninny Lullaby.—Anon.—DST 
Picciola.—Rob’t H. Newell.—AA—WR 10 
Piccola.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 

Piccolomini, The.—Friedrich Schiller. See Wallenstein. 
Pickaninny, The.—Anon.—WR 7 
Picket before Bull Run, The.—J: W. Day.—FP 
Picket Guard, The.—Ethel L. Beers.—AWB—BNL— 
CR—CS 2 (at. to L. Fontaine).—HSS 1—MR 
—PAP—PAPm—WRD 
(All Quiet along the Potomac.)—AA—FEP 
Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg. (Chicago Ledger.) — 
SR 6 

Pickpocket, The.—Anon.—-W R 24 

Pickwick in the Wrong Bedroom.—C: Dickens. See 
Pickwick Papers. The. 

Pickwick Papers, The, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Bardell and Pickwick. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXIII.)— 
BS 3 

(Address of Sarjeant Buzfuz— abr.) —MDD 
(Buzfuz versus Pickwick— abr.) —OM 
(Peroration of Buzfuz— abr.) —BE 
(Pickwick Trial, The— longer and ad. as dial.) — 
MPD 

(Speech of Sergeant Buzfuz in the Case of Bar- 
dell against Pickwick— abr.) —FAS—BS 
Elder Mr. Weller’s Sentiments on Literary Com¬ 
position, The (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXII.)—BS 5 
(Sam Weller and his Father— abr.) —NDP 
(Sam Weller’s Valentine— abr.) —FND—MDD— 
MPD 

(Abr.) —CS 3—FTR—NPS—YP 
(Tab.) —TCP 

Goblins, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXVIII.)—HS 
Ivy Green, The. ( Verses fr. Ch. VI.) —BNL — 
BS 16 (abr.) —CS 11—FEP—GP—POS — VA 
—VS 

(SI. diff. vers.) —AD—HBP—PHS 
(Ivy, The.)—HSS 1 


258 






TITLE INDEX 


Pilgrim’s 


Pickwick Papers, The ( continued). 

Jack Hopkins’ Story. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXI.)—CS 24 
—NPS—YP 

Job Trotter’s Secret. (Sel. ad. fr. Ch. XVI.)—MDD 
Mr. Pickwick in a Dilemma. (Ch. XII.— abr.) —CS2 
(Mr. Pickwick’s Dilemma.)—MHR 
(Mr. Pickwick’s Proposal to Mrs. Bardell— sel.) 
—FTR—HNS 

Mr. Pickwick’s Romantic Adventure with a Middle- 
aged Lady in Yellow Curl-papers. (Sel. fr. Ch. 
XXII.)—MHR 

(Getting in the Wrong Room— abr .)—CS 1 
(Mr. Pickwick in the Wrong Room— abr .)—PS 
(Pickwick in the Wrong Bedroom— abr .)—CR 
Mr. Weller in Affliction. (Sel. fr. Ch. V.)—SDR 
Mr. Winkle’s Adventure. (Sel. fr. Chs. XXIV. and 
XXV.)—WR 16 

Mrs. Leo Hunter. (Sel. fr. Ch. XV.)—WR 1 
Most Extraordinary Calamity that Befell Mr. 

Winkle, A. (Ch. XXXV.-conrf.)-MHR 
Pickwickians on Ice, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXIX.)— 
PR—YA 

(Mr. Winkle [Puts] on Skates— abr .)—BS 14—SO 
Pickwickians Taken for Informers, but Rescued bv 
the Stranger, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. II.)—WR 9 
Pickwick Trial, The.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Pickwickians on Ice, The.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Pickwickians taken for Informers, but Rescued by the 
Stranger, The.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Picnic at Selina, The. (Abr .)—Frank L. Stanton.— 
CS 34 

Picnic Party, The.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Picnic-time.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Picture, A.—Anon.—CG 1 
Picture, The.—Anon.—CS 8 
Picture, A.—Anon.—CS 19 
Picture, A.—Anon.—PGT 1 
Picture, A.—Anon.—YBT 
Picture, A.—C: G. Eastman.—BNL—FEP 
(Afternoon Nap, The.)—-WCL 

(Farmer Sat in his Easy Chair, The.)—GP—TAV 
(Midsummer Day Scene, A.)—CS 7 
Picture, A. (Sel.) —Josiah G. Holland.—POS 
Picture, The.—W: B. Rands. See Doll Poems. 
Picture, A.—E: B. Reed.—CG 2 

Picture. ( Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine.— 
TCP 

Picture, A.—B: P. Shillaber.—FP 
(My Childhood Home.)—CS 7 
Picture of Death, A.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, The. 
Picture of Little T. C. in a Prospect of Flowers, The. 
(C.)—A. Marvell.—OB—PGT 1 
(Picture of T. C., The.)—FEP 
Picture of Riot. (Sel. fr. The Bowge of Courte.)—J: 
Skelton.—WEP 1 

Picture of T. C., The.—Andrew Marvell. See Picture 
of Little T. C., etc. 

Picture of the Last Supper.—Louise E. V. Boyd.— 
CS 35 

Picture on the Wall, The.—A. W. Hawks.—CS 33 
Picture-books in Winter.—Robt. L. Stevenson.—CGV 
—LBB—MBB 

Pictures from Appledore, sels. fr. —J: Russell Lowell. 
Appledore—IR 
Appledore in a Storm.—MMR 
Pictures of Memorv. (C.)—Alice Cary.—BNL—CR— 
CS 4 — FTR — GP — HNS — SAE (hr. sel.) — 
SM — SPE 

(Among the Beautiful Pictures.)—FP—HBP 
(Little Brother, The.)—WCL 
(Sweetest Picture, The.)—BS 14 
Pictures of Memory.—J: Reade.—TCV 
Pictures of Travel, Sels. fr .—Heinrich Heine. 

Du Bist wie eine Blume. (Tr .)—FTA 
Fisher’s Cottage, The. (Tr. by C - G: Leland.)— 
BNL—HBP 
Lore-lei, The.—BNL 

(Lorelei, The— tr. by C. P. Cranch.)—HBP 
Thine Eyes. (Tr. by J. F. Ballantyne.)—FTA—HP 
Water Fay, The. (Tr. by C: G. Leland.)—HBP 
Piece of Advice, A.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Piece of Bunting, A.—F. W. Palmer.—BS 1 
Piece of News; or, Aunt Ray’s Cat, A.—Marg. Sydney. 
—ASD 

Piece of Red Calico, A.—Andrew Scroggin.—CS 20— 
CSS—SR 9 

Piece of String, The.—Guy de Maupassant. 

(String, The.)—WGS 

Piecing the Preacher’s Quilt.—Idora M. Plowman.— 
WR 15 


Pied Piper of Hamelin, The.—Rob’t Browning.—BVC 
— CGd — CS 13 — FEP — GN — HBP — 
MHR (si. abr.) — OS 1 — PHS — PSR — 
WCL—WCLI 1 
(Abr.)— BNL—LLC 

Pierian Spring, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Piero da Castiglione, Song fr. —Stuart Sterne.—BIL 
Pierre La Forge’s Dream.—Eva Mink.—SR 3 
Pierrot’s Valentine.—Minnie B. Goodman.—HS 
Piers Ploughman.— G: Gascoigne. See Steel Glass, 
The. 

Piety. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler.— 
HPE 

Piety and Civic Virtue.—C. H. Parkhurst.—NC—SC 
Pig. The.—Rob’t Southey.—HPE—SCS 
Pig and the Hen, The.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Pig and the Magpie, The.—Peter Pindar.—HPE 
Pigeon House, The. (Blades and Flowers.) —NV 
Piggy and the Crows.—Anon.—WR 17 
Pike County Wedding, A.—Anon.—CS 22 
Pilgrim, The.—J: Bunyan. See Pilgrim’s Progress. 
Pilgrim, The.—Sarah H. Palfrey.—A A 
Pilgrim, The. (Sir Walter Raleigh’s Pilgrimage— C.) 
Sir Walter Raleigh.—OS 3 (abr.) 

(His Pilgrimage.)—OB (abr.) —WEP 1 
(Pilgrimage [,The].)—BNL—EPs (abr.) —FEP 
Pilgrim, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Pilgrim, The.—Friedrich Schiller.—WCLG 2 
Pilgrim Ancestors, The.—David C. Robinson.—TMD 
Pilgrim Charter and Covenant, The.—T; Russell.— 
FD 2 

Pilgrim Commemoration, The.—J: D. Long.—FD 2 
Pilgrim Fathers, The.—Rufus Choate. See Age of the 
Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History, The. 
Pilgrim Fathers, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—LH— 
TMD 

(“Breaking waves dashed high, The”— sel.) —SAE 
(Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers [or Pilgrims], The.) 
—AD (sel.) — EPs — GMS —GN—GP—LLC— 
OS 2—PHS—PPSr—PSR—SM—WCLG 1 
(Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers in New England, 
The—C.)—BNL—EDY—FEP—HB—HBP 
Pilgrim Fathers, The.—Isaac McLellan, Jr. See Pil¬ 
grim Fathers, The.—J: Pierpont. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—MAL 
Pilgrim Fathers, The.—J: Pierpont.—AA—HBP— 
PSR—YBT 

(IF. add. by I. McLellan, Jr.)—WR 10 
Pilgrim Fathers, The, Br. sel. fr. (New England and 
Virginia.)—-Rob’t C. Winthrop.—BLP 
Pilgrim Fathers, The. (Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Pt. 
III., Son. XIII.: Aspects of Christianity in 
America, I.)—W: Wordsworth.—EDY—EHT 
Pilgrim Monument, The.—J. Q. A. Brackett.—FD 2 
Pilgrim to Compostella, The, Sel. fr. (The Legend— 
C.) —Rob’t Southey. 

(Cock and Hen Story, A.)—HPE 
Pilgrim to Pilgrim (As you Came to the Holy Land— 
C.).—Sir Walter Raleigh.—ELP 
Pilgrimage, The.—Sir Walter Raleigh. See Pilgrim, 
The. 

Pilgrimage in Search of Do-Well.—W: Langland. 

See Vision of Piers [the] Plowman. 

Pilgrimage to Kevlar [Kevlaar—C.], The.—Heinrich 
Heine.—WR 8 (Pts. 1 and 2.) 

Pilgrims, The, Sel. fr. (Knight, The.)—Geoffrey 
Chaucer.—OS 3 

Pilgrims, The.—Chauncey M. Depew.—BS 18—PS 
Pilgrims, The, Sel. fr. (What we owe the Pilgrims.)— 
Wendell Phillips.—NC 
Pilgrims, The.—Adelaide A. Procter.—HDL 
Pilgrims, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Pilgrims of Ply¬ 
mouth, The. 

Pilgrims and the Peas, The.—J: Wolcott.—CS 11 
(Abr.)— BNL—HPE—THP 
Pilgrims as Conquerers, The.—H: C. Lodge.—FD 2 
Pilgrims’ Idea of Home, The.—J. M. W. Hall.—FD 2 
Pilgrims of New England, The.—Rufus Choate. See 
Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our 
History, The. 

Pilgrims ot Plymouth. The. (C.) —J: G. Whittier. 

(Pilgrims. The— si. abr.) —MMR 
Pilgrims of the Night, The. (C. — si. abr.) —Frd’k W. 
Faber.—HDL 

(Angelic Songs are Swelling.)—LLC 
Pilgrim’s Progress, Sels. fr. —J: Bunyan. 

Land of Beulah, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. I.)—OS 2 
Palace Beautiful, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. I.)—WCLI 1 
Pilgrim, The. (Verses fr. Pt. II.)—BPB—GN— 
HBP 

Shepherd Boy Sings in the Valley of Humiliation, 
The. ( Verse8 fr. Pt. II.)—GN—OB 
(Song.)—PYO 


259 





Pilgrim’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Pilgrim’s Vision, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—WR 10 
Pillar of the Cloud, The. (C.)—J: H. Newman.—BNL 
—GP—SM—VA 

(Lead, Kindly Light.)—BSP—EDY—FEP—HDL 
—LLC—P YO—WCLG 1—SAE—YBF 
(“Lead, kindly light, amid the encircling gloom.”)— 
GG 

(Lead Thou Me.)—SSS 

(Pantomime of “Lead, Kindly Light,” by Lucy 
Jenkins.)—WR 17 

Pillar of Trajan, The.—W: Wordsworth.—AVP 
Pilot, The.—T: H. Bayly.—FEP—SS 
Pilot, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. F. Cooper. 

Capture of the Whale, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XVII.)— 
WCLI 2 

Pilot, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. V.)—WCLI 2 
Pilot [.A Thrilling Incident],The.—J: B. Gough.—CS 23 
—CSS—MMR—WRD 
(John Maynard, the Hero-pilot.)—FTR 
(Story of John Maynard.)—BS 17 
Pilot’s Bride, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 29 
Pilot’s Daughter, The.—W: Allingham.—EPs 
Pilot’s Story, The.—W: D. Howells.—CS 19—SC— 
SR 7 

(Abr.) —FR—PFP 

Pimpkin versus Bodkin.—Anon.—CS 14 
Pin, A.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BS 16—DES—SR 6 
Pindarique Odes, Sels. fr .—Abraham Cowley. 

Brutus.—WEP 2 
To Mr. Hobbes.—WEP 2 
Pine Needle.—W: H. Hayne. See Pine-needles. 

Pine Town Darkey Debating Society, The. ( Harper’s 
M agazine. )—CD—CD V—SDR 
Pine Tree, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Pine Tree, The.—J: Ruskin. See Modern Painters. 
Pine Tree Academy, The.—V. E. Scharff.—AD 
Pine Tree Shillings, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne. See 
Grandfather’s Chair, 

Pine Tree’s Choice, The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Pine Valley Boys, The.—H. E. McBride.—MAD 
Pine Woods, The.—John, Lord Hanmer.—VA 
Pine-needles.—W: H. Hayne.—AD 
(Pine Needle.)—NV 
Pines, The.—Anon.—WR 14 
Pines, The.—Julie M. Lippmann.—AA 
Pines, The.—Harriet P. Spofford.—AA 
Pines and the Sea, The.—Christopher P. Cranch.—AA 
Pine-tree Buoy, The.—Harrison S. Morris.—AA 
Pink, The.—Johann W. von Goethe.—HSS 1 
(In The Maiden Spring.)—AD 
Pink Perfumed Note, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 30 
Pins.—Anon.—DCP 
Pio Nono.—Julia W. Howe.—EDY 
Pioneers.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 
Pious. (Acting Charade.)—E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Pious Editor’s Creed, The.—Jas. B. Lowell. See Big¬ 
low Papers, The. 

Pipe, The. (Philadelphia Times .)—PS 
Pipe and Can.—G: Wither.—OB (si. abr.) 

(Tobacco.)—PPh — 

Pipe and Tobacco.—Anon.—PPh 
Pipe Critic, The.—Walter Littlefield.—PPh 
Pipe, Merry Annot.—Nicholas Udall (?).—ELP 
Pipe of Pan, The.—Eliz. A. Allen.—SN 
Pipe of Tobacco, A. (Song fr. The Grub-street Opera, 
Act III., Sc. 1.)—H: Fielding.—PPh 
Pipe of Tobacco, A.—J: Usher.—PPh 
Pipe you Make Yourself, The.—H: E. Brown.—PPh 
Pipe-player, The.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
Piper, The. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: Blake.— 
BNL—CEL—WCL 

(“And I made a rural pen”— br. sel .)—PoR 
Child and the Piper, The.)—CGd—LC 
Introduction [to Songs of Innocence].)—FEP— 
HBP—WEP 3 
(Piping down the Valleys Wild.)—PoR 
(Reeds of Innocence.)—OB 
Pipes and Beer.—Edgar Fawcett.—MRS—PPh 
Pipes at Lucknow, The.—J: G. Whittier.—FMR—GN 
—TMD 

Piping down the Valleys Wild.—W: Blake. See Piper, 
The. 

Pippa Passes, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Browning. 

Good Morning. (Song fr. Morning.)—OS 1—PoR 
(Pippa’s Song.)—BVC—OB—WEP 4—YBT 
(Song from “Pippa Passes.”)—GMS—LC—VA 
(Year’s at the Spring, The.)—PYO—YBF- 
King, A. (Sel. fr. song in Evening.)—EPs 
New Year’s Day at Asolo. (Sel. fr. Introduction.) 
—IR 

(Pippa Passes— br. sel .)—SN 
You’ll Love me Yet. (Song in Evening.)—OB 


Pippa’s Song.—Rob’t Browning. See Pippa Passes. 
Pip’s Fight. (Sel. fr. Great Expectations, Ch. XI.)— 
C: Dickens.—CS 13 

Pirate Story.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV—VA 
Pirate, The, Sel. fr. (Farewell— song.) —Walter Scott. 
—LH 

Piscator and Piscatrix.—W: M. Thackeray.—ESs 
Piscatory Eclogues.—Phineas Fletcher. See Prize, 
The. 

Pitcher of Mignonette, A.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 
Pitcher or Jug.—M. P. Chick.—LPS—NPS—PP—YP 
Pitt.—E: Buhver-Lytton.—AVP 
Pitt and Fox.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 

Pitt’s Reply to Walpole.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham.— 
FTR—HNS 

Answer of Pitt to Walpole, The.)—OS 3 
Reply of Mr. Pitt [to Sir Robert Walpole].)—KNE 
—TMD (cond.) 

(Reply of Pitt to Walpole.)—CS 4 
(Reply to Sir Robert Walpole, 1741.)—PS—SS 
(Reply to Walpole.)—LLC 
“Pitty Fower,” The.—Augusta Moore.—CS 34 
Pittypat and Tippytoe.—Eugene Field.—EF—GMS— 
WTD 

Pity for Poor Africans. (C.)—W: Cowper. 

(Preaching vs. Practice— abr.) —PS 
Pity of it, The (C.) —G: Macdonald. 

(Sweet Peril.)—CEL 

Pity of the Leaves, The.—E. A. Robinson.—AA 
Pity of the Park Fountain, The.—Nathaniel P. Willis. 
—FP 

Pity the Poor Blind!—Anon.—DDM 

Pity the Sorrows of a Poor Old Man.—Anon. ( Inel . 

in A Gay Old Man Am I— mxis. mon.) —DSS 
Pity ’tis, ’tis True.—Herbert Welch.—CG 2 
Pixy People, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Pizarro (tr. fr. Katzebue’s Spaniards in Peru), Sels. fr. 
—R: B. Sheridan. 

Las Casas Dissuading from Battle. (Act I., Sc. 1.) 
—LLC 

Pizarro and Rolla. (IV., 2.)—NDP 
Speech of Rolla to the Peruvian Army. (Sel. fr. 
II., 2.)—PS 

Rolla to the Peruvians.)—LLC 
Rolla’s Address to the Peruvians.)—CS 8— 
KNE (at. to Knowles)—OM—SS 
Pizarro and Rolla.—R: B. Sheridan. See Pizarro. 
Place de la Revolution. (C.)—H: H. Brownell. 

(Death of Robespierre.)—EDY 
Place for Everything, and Everything in its Place, A. 
(Dial. )—Anon.—FD Y 

Place in thy Memory, A.—Gerald Griffin.—VA 
(Song.)—FTA 

Place of Athletics in College Life, The.—Chauncey M. 
Depew.—NC 

Place of Love, The.—S. C. Brackett.—CG 1 

Place of Rest, The.—Heloise Durant.—DS 

Place of the Damned, The.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 

Place of the Imagination in the Art of Expression, The. 

—A. J. F. Behrends.—BS 16 
Place of the Individual in American Society, The, Sel. 

fr. (Tendencies of Self-government, The.)— 
Lyman Abbott.—TMR 

Place to Die, The.—Michael J. Barry. See follovnng. 
Place where Man Should Die, The.—Michael J. Barry. 
—GP—HB (abr.)— HBP 
Place to Die, The.)—FEP 
Where Man Should Die.)—CS 6 
Plaidie, The.—C: Sibley.—BNL—GP—THP 
(Adoon the Lane.)—BS 3 

Plain and Pleasant Talk about Fruits, Flowers, and 
Farming, Sel. fr. (Family Government.)—H: 
W. Beecher.—SR 4 
Plain Direction, A.—Anon.—WR 1 
Plain Language from Truthful James. (C.) —Fs. Bret 
Harte.—AWH — BNL — EPs—FEP—HBP— 
THP 

(Heathen Chinee, The.)—CS 3—HR—SE 
Plain Man’s Dream, A.—Frd’k Keppel.—AA 
Plain People, The.—Anon.—CP 
Plain Tale of 1893, A.—Anon—EA 
Plain-spoken Philosophy.—Howard Y. Newell.—WR 24 
Plaint.—Ebenezer Elliott.—OB—WEP 4 
Plaint of Jonah, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
"Plan not, nor scheme, but calmly wait.”—J: R. (?) 
Macduff.—GG 

Planet of my Light.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astro- 
phel and Stella. 

Plant a Tree.—Lucy Larcom.—AD—DCP (br. sel.) — 
LLC—PEO 

(“He who plants a tree”— br. sel.) —HSS 1 
(Who Plants a Tree— abr.) —TMR 
Plant Song.—Nellie M. Brown.—NV 


260 




TITLE INDEX 


Ploughman 


Plant the Oak.—Addie V. McMullen.—AD 
“Plant the trees, children.”—Anon.—AD—DFR 

‘‘Plant trees and care for them.”-Larrabee.— 

HSS 1 

Plant Worship. ( Gentleman’s Magazine.) —AD 
Plantation Ditty, A.—Frank L. Stanton.—AA 
Plantation Pictures.—Andrews Wilkinson.—WR 4 
Planted.—Anon.—AD 

Planted Himself to Grow.—Anon. See Planting Him¬ 
self to Grow. 

Planting for the Future.—Harriet B. Wright.—AD 
Planting Himself to Grow.—Anon.—PP—TFS—-YFR 
(Planted Himself to Grow.)—NV 
Planting of the Apple-tree [,The].—W: C. Bryant.—AA 
— AD — BNL — GN — HSS 1 — LLC — SN 
—WCLG 1—WR 4 

Planting the Oak.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—FIS 
Planting the Tree.—H: Abbey.—YBT 

(Dedicatory Exercises include this.) —DFR 
(Have you Planted a Tree?)—WR 17 
(What do we Plant— C. [when we Plant the Tree]?) 
—AD—PEO 

Planting the Tree.—E. P. Waterbury.—AD—DFR 
“Planting” Wheat.—May M. Anderson.—PR—YA 
Platform of the Constitution, The. (Sel. jr. Remarks 
on the Political Course of Mr. Calhoun in 1838.) 
—Dan’l Webster.—SS 

(Against Secession— ptly. fr. this and ptly. jr. The 
Constitution and the Union.)-—SSD 
Plato and Diogenes.—Jas. F. Gore.—CS 34 
Plato; or, The Philosopher {in Representative Men), 
Br. sel. fr. (“In all our decisions and actions 
it would be well for us.”)—Ralph W. Emerson 
—GG 

Plato to Theon.—Philip Freneau.—AA 
Platonic.—Anon.—FT A 

Platonic.—W: B. Terrett.—BNL—CS 6—MR—PPSr 
—SR 13 {si. ahr.) 

Platonic Friendship, A.—Jas. M. Barrie.—WR 22 
Platypus, The.—-Oliver Herford.-—NA 
Play of Fancy, A. {Japanese drill.) —Mary S. Far- 
rand.—WR 24 

Play of “King Lear,” The.—W; Watson.—VA 
Play Softly, Boys.—Teresa B. O’Hare.—BS 26 
Playful. {Char.) —Anon.—BS 13—TCP 
Play-house Musings.—Jas. Smith.—HPE 
Playing Barber.—Anon.—TFS 
Playing Bo-Peep with a Star.—-Anon.—HSS 2 
Playing Carpenter.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Playing Church.—Anon.—PS 

Playing Doctor. {Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Playing Drunkard.—Fs. S. Smith.—PP—PS—YPS 
Playing Entertainment.—Anna Hopper.—WR 21 
Playing for Keeps.—Nettie H. Pelham.—WR 2 
Playing Fourth of July.—M. F. Burlingame.—SD 
Playing Grandma. {Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Playing Grown-up. {Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Playing “Grown-up.”—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Playing “Hookey.” ( Abr. and arr. as dial. fr. Little 
Prudy, Ch. VIII.)—Sophie May.—NDP 
Playing Old Folks. {Dial.)— Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfel- 
low.—PS 
(Old Folks.)—TT 

Playing School. (Dial.) —Anon.—MND 
Playing School. (Dial.) —Anon.—WR 17 
Playing School. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Playing School.—Lida P. Caskin.—BS 13—DR 
Playing School. (Dial.) —S. J. Smith.—DLD 
Playing Store. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Playing with Fire.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Playmate Hours, The.—Mrs. T: W. Higginson.—OH 
Playmates, The.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 
Plays. (Poems and Epigrams, CXCVII.)—Walter S. 
Landor.—VA 

Playthings.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 

Plea for “Castles in the Air,” A.—Jacob Gough.— 
HP 

Plea for Charity.—Alice Cary.—TAS 
Plea for Cuba, A.—J; M. Thurston. See Affairs in 
Cuba. 

Plea for Enthusiasm, A.—Anon.—NC 
Plea for Spring Poetry, A.—R. K. K.—CG 3 
Plea for the Animals.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, 
The. 

Plea for the Old South Church, Boston. (Sel. fr. The 
Old South Meeting-house.)—Wendell Phillips. 
—FD 1—PPS 

Plea for the Sailor, A.—W:Mountford.—PS (abr.) — 
SS 

Plea for the Union.—W: H. Seward.—SSD 
Plea for William Freeman, A. (Sel. fr. Defence of 
William Freeman.)-—W: H. Seward.—NC 


“Plea of emotional insanity or transitory mania, The.” 
—Murray Hoffman.—GG 

Plea of the Pocomtuc Chief. (Sel. fr. The Battle of 
Bloody Brook.) E: Everett.—BLP (abr.) 
Indian, The.)—OS 3 

Indian Chief to the White Settler, The.)—BS 3— 
CS 4 

(Indian Chieftain, The.)—LLC (abr.) 

(Supposed Speech of a Chief of the Pocomtuc In¬ 
dians— abr.) —PS—SS 

Plea of the Trees, The.— (Arr. by) W. H. Benedict.— 
AD—DFR 

Pleading Extraordinary.—Anon.—CS 3 
Pleasant Acquaintance, A. (Tab.) —Anon. — BS 14 
—TCP 

Pleasant Comedy of Patient Grissell [or Grissil or Gris- 
sill], The, Sels. fr. —T: Dekker. 

Beauty, Arise!—ES 

Content. (Fr. Act I., Sc. 1.)—CEL—ELP—WEP 2 
(Happy Heart, The.)—BNL—PGT 1—YBF 
(0, Sweet Content.)—EP 
(Sweet Content.)—FEP-—OB 
Lullaby: “Golden slumbers,” etc.—ELP—FEP— 
LC—WEP 2—YBF 

Pleasant Days of Old, The.—Frances Brown.—FMR 
(Oh [or O], the Pleasant Days of Old!)—BNL—FEP 
—HBP—HSS 3 (br. sel.)— OS 2 
Pleasant Isle of Aves, The.—C: Kingsley.—LH 
(Last Buccaneer, The.)—FEP-—VA 
(Last Buccanier, The— C.) —CEL—-WEP 4 
Pleasant Song, A. (Echoes XVIII.: To A. D.— C.)— 
W: E. Henley.—OH 
(Love Notes.)—BIL—FTA 
Pleasant Weather.—Anon.—PPSr 
Pleasant Words.—Anon.—FAS 
Pleasant Words.—Anon.—YBT 
Please Do not Speak so.—Anon.—WR 17 
“Please, preacher-man, can I go home?”—Anon.— 
CS 30—DST 

“Please to Ring the Belle.” (C.)— T: Hood.—BS 24 
(Come with the Ring.)—CS 21 
(Maiden’s Request, The— at. to S: Lover.)—MHR 
Pleasure at Home.—Anon.—PS 

Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue (C.), Sels. fr. (Masque 
of Pleasure and Virtue—Songs I., II., III.)— 
Ben Jonson.—EPs 

Pleasure-boat, The.—R : H. Dana.—BNL—FTR ' 
Pleasures of Heaven, The. (Sel. fr. Eupheme, IX.: 

Elegy on my Muse.)—Ben Jonson.—FP 
Pleasures of Hope, The, Sels. fr. —T: Campbell. 

Downfall of Poland, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. I.)— 
GP (sel.) —SR 8 

(Battle of Maciejo ice— sel.) —EDY 
(Fall of Warsaw, 1794—abr.)—OM—PPSr—SS 
(Poland— sel.) —BN L 
Hope. (Sel. fr. Pt. II.)—BNL 

(Hope of an Hereafter, The— ptly. same.) —FP 
(“With thee, sweet Hope, resides the heavenly 
light”— br. sel.) —AE 

Pleasures of Hope, The. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I.)—FP 
(Hope— abr. )—EPs 

Pleasures of Hope, Pantomime of. (By Howell L. 
Piner.)—WR 23 

Pleasures of Imagination, The, Sels. fr. —Mark Aken- 
side. 

Compensations of the Imagination. (Sel. fr. Bk. 
III.)—SS 

Pleasures of Imagination, The. (Sels. fr. Bk. I.)— 
EPs—WEP 3 (abr.) 

(Delights of Fancy— sel.) —BNL 
(Mind of Man, The—abr.)—SS 
Pleasures of Memory.—T: Moore.—FP (sel.) 

(On Music— C.) —TIP 

Pleasures of Memory, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. II.)—S: 
Rogers.—WEP 4 

Pleasures of Picnic-ing.—Anon.—CS 12 
Pleasures of the Telephone.—Anon.—DCR 
Pleasures of War. (Frags, fr. various authors )—BNL 
Pledge, The.—Anon.—PS 

Pledge at Spunky Point, The.—J: Hay.—AWH 
Pledge with Wine.—Anon.—CS 2-—FMR (abr.) —PS 
(Bridal Feast— poet. vers. —F. C. Long.)—CS 4 (abr.) 
—SA 

(Bridal Wine-cup, The.)—WRD 

(Dram, by A. F. Bradley.)—-CS 14—ED 
(Dram, by Sidney Herbert.)—BS 4—CDD 
Plighted.—A. D. 1887.—Alice W. Brotherton.—DES 
Plorata Veris Lachrymis.—W. Barnes.—PGT 2 
Plough, The.—R: H. Horne.—OB—VA 
Plough Land’s Song, The. (Uncle Remus and his 
Friends—his Songs and Ballads, I.)—Joel C. 
H arris 

Ploughman, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—BNL—MAL 


261 





Pluck 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Pluck.—Marcus M. Pomeroy.—FAS 
Plum Cake, The.—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BVC 
Plumber’s Revenge, The.—Anon.—WR 2 
Plumed Knight, The. (Nominating James G. Blaine 
for President— C .— cond.) —Rob’t G. Ingersoll. 
—SC 

Plunkettville Literary Society, The.—Anon.—MC 
Plymouth Rock. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. 
Sabine.—TCP 

Plymouth Rock.—Dan’l Webster. See First Settle¬ 
ment of New England, The. 

Po’ Little Jude.—R. Haekley.—WR 15 
Pobble Who Has no Toes, The. — E: Lear.— BVC — 
NA 

Pocahontas. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Pocahontas.—Mary Hartwell.—SDD 
Pocahontas.—W: M. Thackeray.—GN—OS 2 
Pockets. (Ad.) —Julian Hawthorne.—BS 14 
Poem for a Silver W T edding, A.—Anon.-—CP 
Poem for the Dedication of the Fountain at Stratford- 
on-Avon, presented by George W. Childs of 
Philadelphia. (C .)—Oliver W. Holmes. 
(Stratford Fountain.)—BS 16 
Poem of the Cid.—J: Ormsby. See Cid, The. 

Poem of the Cid, Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Poem of the Universe, The.—C: Weldon.—VA 
Poem Read at the Dinner Given to the Author by the 
Medical Profession of the City of New York, 
April 12, 1883, Sel. fr. (Strong Heroic Line, 
The.)—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA 
Poem Read at the Founding of [the] Gettysburg Monu¬ 
ment.—C: G. Halpine.—CS 1—WRD 
Poem upon the Death of his Late Highness, Oliver. 
Lord Protector of England, Scotland and Ire¬ 
land, A, Br.sel.fr. (On the Death of Oliver 
Cromwell )-—J: Dryden.—EDY 
(Oliver Cromwell— br. sel .)—BNL 
Poems. (XVI.)—Emily Dickinson.—BNL (1st poem.) 
Poems. (XVII.)—Emily Dickinson.—BNL (2nd 
poem.) 

(Certainty.)—TAS 
(Chartless.)—A A—GN 

Poems by a Seamstress, Sel. fr. (Dreamer, The.)— 
Anon.—BNL 

Poems Composed in the Summer of 1833, Sel. fr. 
(Poems, Composed or Suggested during a Tour, 
in the Summer of 1833: Sonnet XXXVII.— 
C.) —W T : Wordsworth.—BNL (br. sel.) 

Poems Received in Response to an Advertised Call for 
a National Anthem.—Rob’t H. Newell. 

National Anthem bv Dr. Oliver Wendell H-. 

—BNL 

(Rejected “National Hymns,” The, III.)—THP 

National Anthem by Gen. George P. M-.—BNL 

National Anthem by N. P. W-.—BNL 

(Rejected “National Hymns,” The, VI.)—THP 

National Anthem by Thomas Bailey A--.—BNL 

(Rejected “National Hymns,” The, VII.)—THP 

National Anthem by William Cullen B-.—BNL 

(Rejected “National Hymns,” The, V.)—THP 

Rejected "National Hymns,” The, I. By H-y 

W. L - ngf-w.—THP 

Rejected "National Hymns,” The, II. By J - hn 
Gr — nl — f Wh — t — r.—THP 
Rejected “National Hymns,” The, IV. By R -lph 
W - ldo Em - r - - n—THP 
Poe’s Cottage at Fordham.—J: H. Boner.—AA 
Poesie.—Rob’t Reid.—TCV 
Poesy.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Poetry. 

Poet, The.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 

Poet, The.—W: C. Bryant.—AA—BNL 
Poet, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See House of Fame, 
The. 

Poet, The. Sara J. D. Cotes.—TCV 
Poet, The.—Cornelius Mathews.—AA 
Poet, The.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel, The. 

Poet, The.—C. S. T—EPs 
Poet and Lark.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
Poet ana Painter.—H. R. Hudson.—SR 3 
Poet and the Alchemist, The.—Horace Smith.—SS 
Poet and the Child, The.—Winifred Howells.—A A 
Poet at the Breakfast-table, The, Sels. fr. —Oliver W. 
Holmes. 

Fashionable Piano Music. (Sel. fr. Ch. III.)—KNE 
Gambrel-roofed House and its Outlook, The. 

(Story fr. Ch. I.— si. abr.) —APr 
(“Where we love is home”— br. sel. fr. Homesick in 
Heaven, in Ch. I.)—BIL 
Poet Dreardt of Heaven, The.—Anon.—FP 
Poet Expatiates on the Beauty of Delia’s Hair, The. 
(The Love Elegies of Abel Shufflebottom, III.) 
—Rob’t Southey.—HPE 


Poet Expressed his Feelings Respecting a Portrait in 
Delia’s Parlor, The. (The Amatory Sonnets 
of Abel Shufflebottom, IV.)—Robert Southey. 
—HPE 

Poet Foiled, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Poet in the City, The.—Catherine C. Liddell.—VA 
Poet in the Woods, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Poet of Earth.—Stephen H. Thayer.—AA 
Poet of Fashion, The.—Jas. Smith.—ESs 
Poet of Nature, The.—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 
Poet of To-day, The.—Sarah J. Lippincott.—BNL 
Poet Proves the Existence of a Soul from his Love for 
Delia, The. (The Amatory Sonnets of Abel 
Shufflebottom, III.)—Rob’t Southey.—HPE 
Poet Relates how he Obtained Delia’s Pocket-hand¬ 
kerchief, The. (The Love Elegies of Abel 
Shufflebottom, I.)—Rob’t Southey.—HPE 
Poet Relates how he Stole a Lock of Delia’s Hair, and 
her Anger, The. (The Love Elegies of Abel 
Shufflebottom, IV.)—Rob’t Southey.—HPE 
Poeta Nascitur.—T: Ashe.—VA 

Poetaster, The, Sel. fr. (Banquet of Sense, The— 
song fr. Sc. 5.) —Ben Jonson.—ES 
Poetic Inspiration.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Poetic Mystery, The.—Anon.—HP 
Poetic Principle, The.—Edgar A. Poe. See Poetry. 
Poetical Cookery-book, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
(Roasted Sucking-pig— br. sel.) —BNL 
Poetical Courtship.—L. P. Hills.—CS 28 
Poetical Patch Quilt, The.—Anon.—SR 1 
(Mosaic Poetry.)—WRD 
(My Love.)—BNL 
Poet-lore. (C.) —Edwin Markham. 

(Lyric Seer, The.)—SR 13 
Poetry.—L. H. Foote.—AA 
Poetry, Sels. fr. —Oliver W. Holmes. 

“If to embody in a breathing word.” (Sel. fr. Pre¬ 
lude and Pt. V.)—HP 
Poesy. (Sel. fr. Prelude.)—FP 
Poetry.—Edwin Markham.—AA 
Poetry. (SI. abr.) —Jas. G. Percival.—SA 
Poetry. (Sel. fr. The Poetic Principle.)—Edgar A. Poe. 
Poetry. (Br. sel. fr. Preface to Lyrical Ballads.)—W: 
Wordsworth.—LLC 

"Poetry, and its twin-sister, Music, are the most sub¬ 
lime and spiritual of arts.”—Philip (?) Schaff. 
—GG 

Poetry and the Poor.—W. W. Stowe.—HP 
Poetry in Battle. (Sels. fr. two lectures on The Influence 
of Poetry on the Working-classes.)—Frd’k W. 
Robertson.—FD 1 

(Poetry the Language of Symbolism— longer and 
ptly. diff.) —NC 

Poetry of City and Country Life, The.—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow. See Hyperion. 

Poetry of Dress, The.—Anon.—PGT 1 (III.) 
(Madrigal.)—ELP—OB—WEP 1 
(My Love’s Attire.)—YBF 

Poetry of Dress, The. — Rob’t Herrick. — EPs — 
PGT 1 (I.)—YBF 

(Delight in Disorder— -C.) —BNL—ELP—ES—FEP 
—HBP—OB—OEL—PYO—WEP 2 
Poetry of Dress, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—PGT 1 (II.) 
(IJpon Julia’s Clothes— C.) —ELP—OB—<)H— 
W T EP 2 

(Whenas in Silks.)—YBF 
(Whenas in Silks my Julia Goes.)—BNL 
Poetry of Earth, The.—J: Keats.—WR 1 

(Grasshopper and Cricket [.The].)—BNL—LLC 
(On the Grasshopper and Cricket—C.)—FEP—GN 
—HBP—LC—OS 2—WEP 4 
Poetry of Science, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Hunt. 

Poetry of Science.—KNE 
Wonders of an Atom, The.—KNE 
Poetry of Science, The. (Sel. fr. Education: What 
Knowledge is of Most Worth?)—Herbert 
Spencer.—CS 26 

Poetry on an Improved Principle. (Punch.) —HPE 
Poetry, Prose and Fact. (Dial.) —Mrs. Russell Kav- 
anaugh.—KJ 

Poetry the Language of Symbolism.—Frd’k W. Rob¬ 
ertson. See Poetry in Battle. 

Poets, The. (Sonnet XXIII.— C.) —T: B. Aldrich.— 
TAS 

Poets, The.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora Leigh. 
Poets. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler.— 
HPE 

Poet’s Admiration, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Poet’s Ambition, The.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Poets and Poetry. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Poets at Tea, The.—Barry Pain.—THP (abr.) —VSG 


262 









TITLE INDEX 


Popanilla 


Poet’s Bridal-day Song, The.—Allan Cunningham. 
—BNL—FEP—HBP 

Poet’s Choice, The. (Lines— C.) —Rob’t Burns.— 

HPE 

Poet’s Complaint of his Muse, The, Sel. fr. —T: Otway. 
—WEP 2 

Poet’s Dream, The.—Percy B. Shelley. See Prome¬ 
theus Unbound. 

Poet’s Epitaph, A.—-Ebenezer Elliott,—EDY—FEP— 
HBP—VA—WEP 4 (si. abr.) 

(Burns.)—BNL 

Poet’s Epitaph.—Joel E. Spingarn.—CS 3 
Poet’s Epitaph, A.—W: Wordsworth.—WEP 4 
Poet’s Friend, The.—Alex. Pope .—See Essay on Man, 
An. 

Poet’s Funeral, The.—Fs. N. Zabriskie.—CS 23 
(Tribute to Longfellow, A.)—BS 13—SR 4 
Poet’s Good Wishes for the most Hopefull and Hand¬ 
some Prince, the Duke of Yorke, The. (C.)— 
Rob’t Herrick. 

(To the Duke of York.)—WEP 2 
Poet’s Hope, A, Sel. fr. —W: E. Channing.—AA— 
EPs (si. abr.) 

( Br. sel.) —ASL—YBF 

Poet’s Impulse, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

Poet’s Journal, The, Sels. fr .—Bayard Taylor. 

Praise. (Hymn fr. Third Evening.)—TAS 
Prayer. (Hymn fr. First Evening.)—TAS 
Poet’s Mind, The, Sel. fr. (To the Critic.)—Allred 
Tennyson.—EP s 

Poet’s Mood, The. (Sel. fr. The Nice Valour, Act III., 
Sc. 3.)—J: Fletcher.—EPs 
(‘‘Hence, all ye [or you] vain delights.”)—BNL— 
HBP 

(Melanc[h]olia.)—CEL—FEP 
(Melancholy.)—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(Song, A.)—WEP 2 
(Sweetest Melancholy.)—ELP 
Poet’s Mom, The.—Walter S. Bigelow.—GH 
Poet’s Pipe, A.—R: H. Shepherd,—PPh 
Poet’s Retirement, The.—Andrew Marvell. See Gar¬ 
den, The. 

Poet’s Secret, The.—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 
Poet’s Simple Faith, The.—Victor M. Hugo.—HDL 
Poet’s Song, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—OS 3 
Poet’s Song to his Wife.lThe.—Bryan W. Procter.— 
BNL—FEP—HBP—TFY—V A—VS—YBF 
Poet’s Thought, A.—Bryan W. Procter.—HBP—VA 
Poet’s Tribute, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Poet’s Vow, The.—T: Lodge. See Rosalynde; or, 
Euphues’ Golden Legacy. 

Poet’s World, The.—Percy B. Shelley. See Prome¬ 
theus Unbound. 

Poet-tree.—H. C. Dodge.—CH 

Poganuc People, Sel. fr. (Zeph Higgins’ Confession — 
abr. fr. Ch. XXX.)—Harriet B. Stowe.—CS 17 
Point Sublime, Colorado Canon.—J. E. Nesmith.— 
BS 24 

Pointer’s Dyspeptic Goat.-Von Boyle.—CH 

Points of the Compass, The.—Anon.—NV 
Poisoned.—Vincent Amcott.—DT 
Poisoned Darkys, The.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Poisonous Fruit.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Poker.—Anon.—HP 

Poland.—T: Campbell. See Pleasures of Hope, The. 
Polar Quest. The.—R: Burton.—AA 
Policeman’s Story', The.—G: Birdseye.—CS 21 
Polish.—S: Butler.—HPE 

Polish Boy, The.—Ann S. Stephens.—AE (br. sel.) — 
FTR—HNS—PS 
(SI. abr.) —BS 2—CS 3—FR—SA 
Polish May Song. (With music.) —Anon.—AD 
Politeness.—Anon.—OS 1 
Politeness.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Political Corruption.—G: McDuffie.—CS 7 
Political Duties and Responsibilities of University Men. 
—S. Grover Cleveland.—SSD 
(College and the Nation. The— sel.) —TMR 
Political Equality the Soul of the Republic.—S: W. 
McCall.—FD 2 

Political Infidelity, Sel. fr. (Rub-a-dub Agitation, A.) 
—G: W: Curtis.—NC 

Political Stump Speech, A.—Fred A. Parker.—CS 37 
Politicians. (7n Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler. 
—HPE 

Politics.—Marion Douglas.—MYF 
Politics and Journalism.—C: E. Smith.—SSD 
Politics for the People, Sel. fr. —Anon.—GG 
Polka Lyric, A.—Barclay Philips [or Gilbert A. k 
Becket—].—HPE) 

(Holiday Task, A.)—NA 


Polliwog, The.—Anon.—NA 

Polly.—W: B. Rands.—OS 1 (si. abr. — at. to G: Mac¬ 
donald)—PoR—V A—WCL 
Polly—C: W. Shope.— CG 2 
Polly’s Dilemma.—Anon.—DLF 
Polly’s Lecture to Dolly.—Anon.—DJS 
Polly’s Thanksgiving.—A. C. Stoddard.—HS 
Polonius’ Advice to Laertes.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Hamlet. 

Polonius to Laertes. —- W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Polonius to Laertes—“Renewed.”—Anon.—CH 
Poly-dorus and Maron.—R: Glover. See Leonidas. 
Polyolbion, Sel. fr .—Michael Drayton.—WEP 1 
Pomona Describes her Bridal Trip.—Frank R. Stock- 
ton. See Rudder Grange. 

Pompadour, The.—G: W. Thorn bury.—FEP 
Pompadour’s Fan, The.—Austin Dobson.—PYO 

(On a Fan that Belonged to the Marquise de Pom¬ 
padour— C. )—B N L—V A 

Pompeian Preacher. A, Br. sel. fr. — May R. Smith. — 
HDL 

Pompeii—Anon.—CS 24—FD 1 (si. abr.)— NPS—YP 
Pompey’s Ghost.—T: Homi.—MRS 
Pomposity.—W: Shake*! eare. See Merchant of 
Venice The. 

Pomp’s Story. (.4<7. fr. Cudjo’s Cave, Ch. XIV.)— 
J: T. Trowbridge.—NP 
Pond, The. (Abr.)— J: Bvrom.—TMD 
Pontius Pilate.—Edwin Arnold. See Light of the 
World, The. 

Pool of the Diving Friar, The. (Llyn-y-Dreiddiad- 
Vrawd.)—T: L. Peacock.—PEB 3 
Poor and Little Greece.—Harvey N. Shepard.—FD 2 
Poor and the Rich, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—BS 17 
(Heritage, The—C.)—CS 8—FEP—GMS—LLC— 
PYO—WCLC. 2 
Poor Brother.—Anon.—NA 
Poor Child’s Hymn, The. (C.)—Mary Howitt. 

(Child’s Hymn, The.)—PC 

Poor Dear Grandpapa.—D’Arcy W. Thompson.—NA 
Poor Dog Trav. (Harper, The— C.) —T: Campbell.— 
CGd—LC 

Poor Fisher Folk, The. (Si. abr.) —Victor Hugo (tr. 
by H. W. Alexander).—MMR 
(How Good Are the Poor— abr.) —CR—OS 3 
Poor French Sailor’s Scottish Sweetheart, A.—W: J. 
Cory.—VA 

Poor Indian, The.—Anon.—PS 
Popr Irish Boy, The.—Eliza Cook.—WR 9 
Poor Jack.—S: K. Cowan.—WR 2 
Poor Jack.—C: Dibdin.—BNL—FEP 
Poor Little Boy’s Hymn, The.—J: B. Gough.—CS 19 
(Dying Boy, The!)—DS—NPS—YP 
Poor Little Children.—Victor Hugo.—OS 1 
Poor Little Jim.—Anon.—BS 3 

(Death of Little Jim, The.)—HNS 
(Little Jim.)—CS 2—SA 

Poor Little Joe.—David L. Proudfit.—CS 12—CSS— 
FTR—HNS—HP—PR—PS—SO—TMD 
(Little Joe’s Flowers.)—SR 7 
Poor Little Mother, A.—Mary L. B. Branch.—CPL— 
LPS—PP 

Poor Man and the Fiend, The.—Rev. - Maclellan. 

—WRD 

Poor Matthias.—Matthew Arnold.—SN 

(On the Death of a Favorite Canary'— sel.) —PGT 2 
Poor Men vs. Rich Men.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

Poor Old Horse.—Anon.—BVC 
Poor Old Maids.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Poor Player at the Gate, The.—G: Vandenhoff.—CS 3 
Poor Relation, The.—Anon.—MDD 
Poor Richard’s Almanac.— B: Franklin. See Way to 
Wealth, The. 

Poor Robin.—Anon.—YBT 
Poor Rule, A.-—Anon.—BS 20—WR 14 
"Poor, sad Humanity.” — H: W. Longfellow. See 
Christus: A Mystery. 

Poor Sick Lucy.—Anon.—HVD. 

Poor Susan.—W: Wordsworth.—PC 

(Reverie of Poor Susan, The— C.) —BPB—LC— 
MBL—PGT 1—WEP 4—YBF 
Poor Tartar. A Hungarian Legend. (C.) —J:G. Saxe. 
(Tartar, The.)—KNE 

Poor Voter on Election Day, The.—J: G. Whittier.— 
CS 3 

Poor Withered Rose.—Rob’t Bridges.—VA 
Poor Work Don’t Pay. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Poor-house Nan.— Lucy' H. Blinn.—BS 12—TMR (si. 
abr.) 

Popanilla on Man. (The Voyage of Captain Popanilla, 
Ch. IV.)—B: Disraeli.—ESs 


263 







Pope 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Pope.—Craven L. Betts.—TCV 

Pope, Sel. fr. (Parallel between Pope and Dryden.)— 
S: Johnson.—AE—KNE 

Pope and the Net, The.—Rob’t Browning.—THP 
Pope at Twickenham.—C: Kent.—VA 
Pope’s Charade, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Poplar, The.—R: Harris Barham.—HPE 
Poplar Field, The.—W: Cowper.—BPB—FEP—PGT 1 
—WEP 3 

("My fugitive years are all hasting away”— br. sel.) 
—AD 

Poplar-tree, The.—Anon.—HSS 1 

Poppies.— Leigh Hunt. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers. 

Poppies in the Wheat.—Helen M. F. (Hunt) Jackson.— 
AA 

Popping Com.—Anon.—CS 12—DS—GP 
Popping the Question. (Tableau.) —Tony Denier.— 
TDT 

Popping the Question.—Messrs. Fezandie.—MN 
Popping the Question.—Rob’t Grant. — CRR — CS 14 
—MRS 

Popping the Question.—I. E. Jones.-—CS IS 
Poppoea.—C: P. Mulvaney.—TCV 
Poppy.—Mary A. Barr.—AD 
Poppy, The. (C.)—T: H. Bayly.—FEP 

(Reading a Tragedy.)—BC 
Poppy, The.—Jane Taylor.—NV—PC 
Poppy, The.—Fs. Thompson.-—OB 
Poppy Seed, A.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Poppyland Limited Express, The.—Edgar W. Abbott. 
—SR 11 

(Rapid Transit.)—BS 21 
Popular Americans.—Anon.-—BS 20 
Popular Amusements, Sel. jr. (Nature Designed for 
our Enjoyment.)—H: W. Beecher.—SAE 
Popular and Kingly Examples.— R: B. Sheridan.—SS 
Popular Elections.—G: McDuffie. See Popular Interest 
in Elections. 

Popular Error. A.—J: Starkie.—CS 21 
Popular Fallacies.—C: Lamb. See That we should 
Rise with the Lark. 

Popular Interest in Elections.—G: McDuffie.—SS 

(Popular Elections— abr.) —NPS-—-YP 
Popular Poplar Tree, The.—Blanche W. Howard.—AD 
Popular Recollections of Bonaparte. (Souvenirs du 
Peuple.) — Pierre J. B^ranger ( tr. by ' Fs. Ma- 
hony).—BNL—EDY 

Popular Science Catechism.—Anon.—BS 12 
Popular Song, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Porphyria’s Lover.—Rob’t Browning.—OB 
Port of Ships, The.—Joaquin Miller. See Columbus. 
Portent.—Celia Thaxter.—SR 2 

Portents and Fears. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Portia, in the Merchant of Venice.—W: Shakespeare. 

See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Portia to Shylock.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant 
of Venice, The. 

Portia’s Picture.—-W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of 
Venice, The. 

Portia’s Plea for Mercy.—W: Shakespeare.— See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The. 

Portia’s Speech on Mercy.—W: Shakespeare. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The. 

Portia’s Speech to Bassanio.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Merchant of Venice, The. 

Portiere. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sa¬ 
bine.—TCP 

Portrait, A.—Jos. Ashby-Sterry.—VA 
Portrait, The. (Dial.) —Isabel B. Bowman.—PR 
Portrait, A.—Eliz. Barrett Browning.—BNL—GN 
Portrait, A.—Caroline Duer.—A A 
Portrait, The.—J:[orT:] Heywood. See Praise of his 
Lady, etc., A. 

Portrait, The.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—BNL—BS 16 
—CS 11—FEP—MR 
Portrait, The.—Clement Marot.—FTA 
Portrait, The.—Dante Gabriel Rossetti.-—VA—WEP 4 
Portrait, The. (Southern Collegian.) —CG 2 
Portrait, A. (Trinity Tablet.) —CG 2 
Portrait, A.—W: Wordsworth. See Perfect Woman. 
Portrait and the Critics, The.—Anon.—CS 26 
Portrait Gallery, Sels. fr. —H: W. Beecher. 

Cynic, The. (Cond.)— BS 3—CS 19—LLC— SM — 
WCLG 2 

Demagogue, The.—BS 2—KNE 

(Dishonest Politician, The— ptly. same.) —CS 8 
Portrait of a Lady.—Anon.—WR 14 
Portrait of a Warrior, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Portrait of Addison. — Alex. Pope. See Epistle to Dr. 
Arbuthnot. 

Portraits, The.—Anon.—MYF 


Portraits. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Portraits from the Canterbury Tales.—Geoffrey Chau¬ 
cer. See Canterbury Tales, The. 

Positively the Last Performance! (Punch.) —DCR— 
TMR 

Positivists, The.—Mortimer Collins.—THP 
Possession. (Frags, jr. various authors.) —BNL 
Possession.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—BNL 
Possession.—Bayard Taylor.—BNL—TFY 
Possibilities. (Frags. }r. various authors.) —BNL 
Possible Consequences of a Comet Striking the Earth 
in the Pre-Glacial Period. (Sel. jr. Ragnarok.) 
Ignatius Donnelly.—BS 11 

'Possum Run Debating Society, The.—Anon.—DE—SP 
Post, The. Fireside in Winter, The.—W: Cowper. See 
Task, The. 

Post Mortem.—Fanny Parnell.—TIP 
(After Death.)—VA 

Post Mortem.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Sonnet XXXII— C.)— WEP 1 
Post Nummos Virtus.-—Martin J. Spalding.—CS 7 
Post that Fitted, The.—Rudyard Kipling.—WR 4 
Postage. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sa¬ 
bine.—TCP 

Poster-girl, The.—-Carolyn Wells.—AWH—THP 
Posthumous.—Henry A. Beers.-—-AA 
Postilion of Nagold, The.—G: L. Catlin.—CS 35 
Postmaster, The —Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Post-meridian.—W. P. Garrison.—AA 
Post-nuptial Reverie, A.—Roy F. Greene—TL 
Pot, and a Pipe of Tobacco, A.—Anon.—PPh 
Potato, The.—T: Moore.—CS 19 
Potato Bug, A. Anon.—CRR 

Potatoes. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sa¬ 
bine.—TCP 

Potency of English Words.—J: S. Macintosh.—BS 9— 
FTlt 

Potion Scene, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Romeo and 
Juliet. 

Potter’s Field, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 24 
Potter’s Wheel, The.—Rob’t Browning. See Rabbi 
Ben Ezra. 

Pound, Sir! A.—Anon.—FAS 

“Pour out thy love like the rush of a river.”—Rose 
T. Cooke.—BIL 

Poveri! Poveris!—Joaquin Miller.—OS 2 
Poverty. (Frags, jr. various authors.) —BNL 
Poverty Party, A. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Power.—T: S. Collier.—AA 
Power.—J: Ruskin.—OS 3 

(True Kings of the Earth, The.)—OM 
Power of Conscience, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Mur¬ 
der of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Power of Free Ideas, The.—G: W. Curtis.—SAE 
Power of Habit, The.—J: B. Gough.—SC 

(Abr. )—BS 3—CS 5—CSS—FR—LLC—PS—SO 
Power of Justice, The. Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.- 
KER 

Power of Love, The.—Anon.—SR 9 
Power of Love, The. Beaumont and Fletcher. See 
Valentinian. 

Power of Love and Beauty. (Frags, fr. various 
authors.) —BNL 

Power of Music, The. (Fr. The National Music of Ire¬ 
land.)—T: N. Burke.—FS 

Power of Music, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The. 

Power of Music, The.—T. DeWitt Talmage.—SAE 
Power of Music. (C.) —W: Wordsworth. 

(Blind Fiddler, The.)—FTR—LLC 
Power of Prayer ; or, The First Steamboat up the Ala¬ 
bama, The.—Sidney and Clifford Lanier.— 
BRR—GP—HBR 

Power of Public Opinion, The.—Dan’l Webster.—SS 
Power of Temper, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

Power of the Tongue, The. (St. James, Ch. III.) 
Bible. —BS 12 

(Tongue, The—v. 2-8.)—LLC 
Power of Words, The. (Sel. fr. W T ords.)—Edwin P. 
Whipple—LLC 

“Power to converse well is a very great charm, The.”— 
J: Ruskin.—GG 

Practical Charity.—G: Crabbe. See Borough, The. 
Practical Jokes.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 1 
Practical Regeneration, A.—Anon.—BS 25 
Practical Religious Instruction. (Sel.) —Victor Hugo. 
—SS 

Practical Way for Christians to Reform the Theatre, 
The. (Baltimore American.) —GG 
Practical Young Woman, A.—Irwin Russell.—BS 8 
Praterita ex Instantibus.—W. D. Schuyler-Lighthall. 
—VA 


264 




TITLE INDEX 


Prelude 


Prairie.—Herbert Bates.—AA 
Prairie, The, Sets. fr. —Jas. F. Cooper. 

Prairie on Fire, The. ( Sel. fr. Ch. XXIII.) — 

WCLI 2 

Stampede, The. ( Sels. fr. Chs. XV4II. and XIX.)— 
WCLI 2 

Prairie Fire, The.—C. W. Hall—TMR 

Prairie Greyhounds.—E. Pauline Johnson.—TCV 

Prairie Mirage, The. ( Detroit Free Press.) —CS 31—PR 

Prairie on Fire, The.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 

Prairie on Fire, The.—Jas. F. Cooper. See Prairie, The. 

Prairie Path, The.—Anon.—HP 

Prairie Princesses, The. (Play.) —Anon.—NDP 

Prairie States, The.—Walt Whitman.—BNL 

Praise. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Praise.—G: Herbert.—BNL 

Praise.—E: Osier.—FEP 

Praise.—Bayard Taylor. See Poet’s Journal, The. 
Praise and Prayer.—Sir W: Davenant. See Gondibert. 
Praise for the Fountain Opened. (Zechariah, XIII., 1.) 
—W: Cowper.—FEP 

Praise of Ceres. (Sel. fr. Silver Age.)—T: Heywood.—LC 
Praise of Fawnia, The. (C.— fr. Pandosto.)—Rob’t 
Greene. 

(Fawnia.)—ELP—OB—WEP 1—YBF 
Praise of Fortune, The. (Sel. fr. Old Fortunatus.)— 
T: Dekker.—WEP 2 

Praise of his Lady, A.—J: for T:] Heywood.—OB 
(Portrait, The— abr.) —BNL—EPs 
Praise of his Love, wherein he Reproveth Them that 
Compare their Ladies with his. A.—H: Howard, 
Earl of Surrey.—FEP—WEP 1 
(Give Place, ye lovers.)—BNL 
Praise of Homer, The.—G: Chapman.—EPs 
Praise of Little Women.—Juan Ruiz de Hita (fr. by 
H: W. Longfellow).—MHR—SR 3 
Praise of Music.—W: Strode.—CEL (abr.) 

(Music.)—EPs—FEP—HBP 
(Song: In Commendation of Music— abr.) —ELP 
Praise of Princess Mary, A.—J: Heywood.—EHT 
Praise of Spenser, The.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Praise of Sydney, The.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Praise of the Cat.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Praise of the Thames.—Sir J: Denham. See Cooper’s 
Hill. 

Praise of Woman, Br. sel. fr .—C: Mackay.—BNL 
Praise of Women.—Rob’t Mannyng.—OB 
Praise to God. (Hymn II.— C.) —Anna L. Barbauld. 
—EPs—FEP—HBP 

Praise-God Barebones.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 
Praxiteles and Phryne.—W: W. Story.—AA—FEP 
Pray for my Soul.—Alfred Tennyson. See Morte 
d’Arthur. 

Pray for the Dead.—A. W. H. Eaton.—AA 
Pray, Love, Work and Sing.—Anon.—YBT 
Prayer, A: “O Jesus, dear Jesus.”—Anon.—YBT 
Prayer, A.—Anon.—YBT 

(“Lord, teach a little child.”)—PC 
Prayer. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Prayer, A.—Anne R. Aldrich.—TAV 
Prayer, A.—Anne Bronte.—VA 

Prayer. The. (Earthquake-prayer, The — C.) —Will 
i Carleton.—CD 

Prayer.—Hartley Coleridge.—VA—YBF 
Prayer, A.—Ina D. Coolbrith.—TAS 
Prayer. (“At least to pray is left, is left”— C.) —Emily 
Dickinson.—TAS 

Prayer, A.—Brooke Herford.—YBT 
Prayer.—Eliza M. Hickok.—SR 6 
Prayer, A.—Selwyn Image.—VA 
Prayer.—Mary, Queen of Hungary.—BNL 
Prayer.—Jas. Montgomery. See “Prayer is the soul’s 
sincere desire.” 

Prayer, A.—Nora Perry.—TAS 
Prayer.—C: F. Richardson.—A A 
Prayer, A.—E: R. Sill.—AA 
Prayer, A.—Rob’t Southey.—YBF 
Prayer, A.—Bayard Taylor. See Poet’s Journal, The. 
Prayer.—Jeremy Taylor.—OS 3 
Prayer.—Alfred Tennyson. See Morte d’Arthur 
Prayer, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, The. 
Prayer, The.—Jones Very.—TAS 
Prayer and Potatoes.—J. T. Pettee [or Peltree].—CS 5 
—KNE—MYF 

Prayer for Indifference.—Fanny C.reville.—OB 
Prayer for Life, A.—G: S. Burleigh.—BNL 
Prayer for Saturday Evening.—Anon.—TFS 
Prayer for the Nation. ( Boston Transcript.) —PAPm 
Prayer for Unity, A. (Hymn Written for My Divinity- 
school Graduation— C.) —J: W. Chadwick.— 
TAS 


Prayer in Battle. The.—J: H. Hewitt.—CS 27 
Prayer in Prospect of Death, A.—Rob’t Burns.—FP 
Prayer in Sorrow, A.—Louise C. Moulton.—IIDL 
“Prayer is the application of want to Him who only 
can relieve it.”—Hannah More.—GG 
“Prayer is the soul’s sincere desire.”—Jas. Mont¬ 
gomery.—SAE (abr.) 

( Prayer— sel. )—LLC 
(What is Prayer?— C.)— FEP—HBP 
Prayer Living and Dying, A.—Augustus M. Toplady. 
—HBP 

(Rock of Ages [.cleft for me].)—FEP—SAE—YBF 
Prayer of Agassiz, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BNL— 
TMD (si. abr.) 

Prayer of Columbus, The. (Br. sel.) —Walt Whitman. 
—TAS 

Prayer of Cyrus Brown, The. (C.) —Sam W. Foss.— 
AWH—THP 

(Informal Prayer, An.)—WR 22 
Prayer of Nature, The.—Lord Byron.—FP 
Prayer of Old Age, The.—G: Wither. See Hallelujah. 
Prayer of the Satirist.—O. L.—CG 3 
Prayer of Theocritus for Syracuse, The.—Theocritus 
(tr. by Sir E: Dyer). See Sixe Idillia. 

Prayer Perfect, The. (C.) —Jas. W. Riley.—TAS 
(Love’s Prayer.)—AA 

Prayer to Apollo. — Geoffrey Chaucer. See House of 
Fame, The. 

Prayer to Ben Jonson.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs 

(His Prayer to Ben Jonson— C.) —ELP—WEP 2 
Prayer to Fate, A. (Poems and Epigrams, CLXVII.) 

—Walter S. Landor.—YBF 
Prayer to the Trinity.—Jas. Edmeston.—VA 
(“Lead us, Heavenly Father, lead us.”)—FEP 
Prayer to the Wind, A.—T: Carew.—ES—WEP 2 
Prayers.—H: C. Beeching.—LH—OB—VA 
Prayers.—Walter S. Landor. See Gebir. 

Prayers.—W: Shakespeare. See Measure for Measure. 
Prayers for the Dead.—Edna D. Proctor.—TAS 
Prayers of Children.—Anon.—CS 6 
Prayer-seeker, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BeR 
Praying and Loving.—S: T. Coleridge. See Rime of 
the Ancient Mariner, The. 

Praying for Papa.—Anon.—CS 25—SR 5 
Praying for Rain.—J: Wolcott.—CS 3—HPE—SCS 
Praying for Shoes.—Paul H. Hayne.—BS 16—CS 26 
Preaching and Missions. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

“Preaching may be compared to lightning.”—Enoch 
Pond.—GG 

Preaching versus Practice. — YV: Cowper. See Pity 
for Poor Africans. 

Precarious Predicament, A.—E. H. Trafton.—MD 
Precedents.—Lewis Cass. See On Precedents in Gov¬ 
ernment. 

Precepts.—T: Randolph.—CS 16 

(He Lives Long who Lives Well— sel.) —FP 
Precious Lives.—S: F. Smith.-—WR 17 
(Breathe Balmy Airs.)—HSS 1 
(Patriot Dead, The.)—BLP 
Predestination.—Anon.—SR 13 

Predictions Concerning the Fourth of July.—J: Adams. 
—WR 10 

Predictions of Disunion.—W: Pinkney.—SS 
Pre-existence.—Paul H. Hayne.—BNL—GP 
Preface [to Poemsl.—Frd’k W. Faber.—A VP 
Preface to Lyrical Ballads, Br. sel. fr. (Poetry.)—W: 
Wordsworth.—LLC 

Preface to “The Finding of the Book and Other 
Poems.”—W: Alexander.—AVP 
Pregnant Comment, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—OH 
Prehistoric Smith.—David L. Proudfit.—AWH—THP 
“Prejudice is prejudgment. It is forming an opinion 
without examining.”—Anon.—GG 
Prelude:—"Words, words.”—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
Prelude, A: "O covering grasses! O unchanging 
trees!” (Sel.) —Fs. Sherman.—TCV 
Prelude: "England! Since Shakespeare died,” etc.— 
Edmund C. Stedman.—VA 
Prelude, A. ( C .)—Maurice Thompson. 

(Fertility.)—ASL 

Prelude. The, Sels. fr. —W: Wordsworth. 

Apparition on the Lake. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—WEP 4 
Ascent of Snowdon. (Sel. fr. Bk. XIV.)—WEP 4 
Defile of Gondo. (Sel. fr. Bk. VI.)—WEP 4 
Influence of Natural Objects in Calling Forth and 
Strengthening the Imagination. (Sel. fr. Bk. 
I.— first printed as sep. poem.) —BNL—HBP— 
WEP 4 

(Skating— abr.) —EPs—GN—POS 
Morning after the Ball. (Set. fr. Bk. IV.)—WEP 4 
Prelude to an Evening’s Recitations, A.—Anon.— 
MDD 


265 





Premature 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Premature Proposal, The.— {Dram, by) A. F. Bradley. 

_Qg _pj) 

Preparation.—Mary F. Butts.—YBT 
Preparation and Battle. {Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Preparing a Flunk.—Anon.—CG 1 
Preparing for a Picnic.—-Anon.—YFD 
Preparations.—Anon.—OB—YBF 
(King’s Progress, The.)—ELP 
Presage.—Celia Thaxter.—BIL—FTA 
Presbyterians, The.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 
Prescience.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA—ASL 
Presence. The.—Jones Very.—TAS 
Presence in Absence. {Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Present, The. {Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Present, The.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FP—OS 2 
{Included in Old and the New Year, The.)—HS 
Present Age, The, Set fr. —W: E. Channing.—SSD 
(A6r.)—PFP—SR S {si. longer.) 

Present Age, The.—Victor Hugo. See Napoleon the 
Little. 

“Present age, exultant over the many recent wonder¬ 
ful triumphs. The.”—H: C. Minton.—-GG 
Present and Future Faiths, The. {Sel .)—Phillips 
Brooks.—OS 3 

Present Crisis, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—FP—HDL {br. 
sel .)—TAS 

(Cond.) —TS—WR 10 

(Once to Every Man ano Nation— sel .)—LLC 
Present in Absence.—J: Donne (?).—PGT 1 {abr.) 
(Absence— abr.) —YBF 

(“Absence, hear thou my protestation.”)—ELP 
(That Time and Absence Proves rather Helps than 
Hurts to Loves.)—OB 

Present Time Best Pleaseth, The. (C.) — Rob’t Her¬ 
rick. 

(This Age Best.)—ELP 

Presentation Address to a Foreman by a Workman, A. 
—Anon.—CP 

Presentation of a Flag to a Regiment Departing for 
War.—Anon.—CP 

Presentation of the Keys of a New School Building by 
the Architect.—Anon.—CP 
“Presentation of the Trumpet, The.”—Anon.—SR 10 
Presentation Oration.—Anon.—CP 
Presentation Speech.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Presentation Speech.—Anon.—PS 
Presentiment.—Ambrose Bierce.—AA 
Presentiments.—T. S. Denison.—SR 2 
Presenting to a Lady a White Rose and a Red on the 
Tenth of June, Sel. fr. —W: Somerville. See 
White Rose, A.—Somerville and Congreve. 
President Garfield, Br. sel. fr. (“Ah, me! how dark 
the discipline of pain.”)—H: W. Longfellow.— 
HDL 

President Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address.— 
Abraham Lincoln.—CS 3 

(Second Inaugural Address.)—AI—LLC—MRS— 
OS 3—PPS—SO {si. abr.) 

President McKinley’s Last Address [or Speech],—W: 
McKinley.—AI—NP {abr.) 

President Washington’s Receptions.—W: Sullivan.— 
HS 

Presidential Protest, The, Sels. fr. —Dan’l Webster. 
Executive Power to be Dreaded.—FD 1 
Representative, The.—FD 1 
Resistance to Oppression in its Rudiments.—SS 
President’s Address, A.—Anon.—CP 
Presiding Officer’s Address at a Public Debate, The. 
—Anon.—CP 

Press, The. {Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Press. The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The 
Press, The. (Ad.)—Ebenezer Elliott.—-SS 
Press Evangel, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—DES 
Press On.—Park Benjamin.—BLP {si. abr .)—CS 5— 
FP {abr.) 

Press the Protection of the People, The.—Dan’l 
O’Connell.—PS 

Presto Change.—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 30 
Presto Furioso.—Owen Seaman.—THP 
Pretext of Rebellion, The.—Stephen A. Douglas.— 
CS 2 

"Prettiest Girl, The.”—Mary D. Brine.—DS—YA 
Pretty Cow.—Jane Taylor.—PC 
(Thank you. Pretty Cow.)—PoR 
Pretty Girl of Loch Dan, The.—S: Ferguson.—BNL 
Pretty is that Pretty Does.—Alice Cary (?)—DLS— 
GMS 

Pretty Little Blue Bird. (W. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Pretty Maid of Kissimmee, The.—Joel Benton.—CS 31 
Pretty Pictures, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Pretty Rose-tree, The.—T: Moore.—AD 


Pretzel’s Speech before the Illinois Assembly.—Carl 
Pretzel.—BDD—DRR 

Preventive “No,” A.— Bible. See Proverbs of Solo¬ 
mon, The. 

Price, The.—Tom Masson.—WR 22 
Price, The.—Walter H. Pollock.—FLS 
Price of a Drink, The.—Josephine Pollard.—BS 15— 
CS 22—SR 6 

Price of High License, The.—A. J. Waterhouse.— 
WR 18 

Price of Truth, The.—Horatio Bonar.— See How We 

Pride.—Robt. Blair. See Grave, The. 

Pride.—Earl of Sterlene.—KNE 

Pride agaiust Pride. {Dial. ad. fr. Donna Diana.)— 
Westland Marston.—NDP 

Pride and Vanity. {Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Pride of Ancestry.—G: Croly.—SS 
Pride of Batterv B, The.—Frank H. Gassaway.—BR— 
CS 13—FR—MR—TMD 

Pride of Youth, The.—Walter Scott. See Heart of 
Midlothian, The. 

Pride Rebuked.—Anon.—PS 
Priest, The.—-Nicholas Breton.—HBP 

(“I would I were an excellent divine.”)—BNL 
Priest, A.—Norman Gale.—VA 
Priest and his Mare, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Priest and the Mulberry-tree, The.—T: L. Peacock.— 
CGd—GN—LC 

Priest’s Evening Song, The.—J: Fletcher. See Faith¬ 
ful Shepherdess, The. 

Priest’s Morning Song, The.—J: Fletcher. See Faith¬ 
ful Shepherdess, The. 

Priest’s Prayer, A.—Martha G. Dickinson.—AA 
Primary Class, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Prime of Life, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 27 
Primeval Forest, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 

Evangeline. 

Primrose, The.—T: Carew. See Primrose, The.— 
Rob’t Herrick. 

Primrose [, The—C.]. {Sel.) —J: Clare.—AD 
Primrose, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs—FEP—OB— 
YBF 

(At. to T: Carew— si. diff. vers.) —ELP—ES 
Primrose Dame, A.—Gleeson White.—VA 
Primrose of the Rock, The.—W: Wordsworth.—FP— 
FTR 

Prince.—Harriet L. Childe-Pemberton.—BS 20—PFP 
—VSG 

Prince Adeb.—G: H. Boker.—BNL 
Prince Adherbal before the Roman Senate.—Sallust. 
See Jugurthine War, The. 

Prince Amadis, Sel. fr. (Flight of the Wild Swans, 
The—Sts. 33-37.)—Frd’k W. Faber.—A VP 
Prince and his Mistress.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Prince Consort, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of 
the King. 

Prince Eric’s Christ-maid.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Prince Eugene.— (Tr. by) J: Hughes.—EDY—HBP 
Prince Hal.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 

Prince Henry and Falstaff.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Prince Lucifer, Songs fr. —Alfred Austin. 

Grave-digger’s Song.—VA 
Mother-song.—VA 
Prince of Peace, The.—Anon.—HP 
Prince Otto, Sel. fr. —Rob’t L. Stevenson. See 
Princess and the Countess, The. 

Prince Riquet’s Song. — Stopford A. Brooke. See 
Riquet of the Tuft. 

Princes. (Sels. fr. The Crown of Wild Olive, Lecture 
III. War.)—J: Ruskin.—OS 3 
Prince’s Bow and Arrows, The.—Sam W. Foss.—DCP 
Prince’s Feather.—Mary E. Bradley.—CS 23 
Prince’s Hunting, The.—H: W. Austin.—CS 28 
Princes in the Tower, The. (Fr. King Edward the 
Fourth.)—T: Heywood.—EHT 
Prince’s Progress, The, Sel. fr. (Bride Song.)—Chris¬ 
tina G. Rossetti.—OB 
(Too Late.)—AVP 

Princess, The, Sels. fr. —Alfred Tennyson. 

As thro’ the Land. ( Song fol. Pt. I.)—VA—YBF 
(“As thro’ the land at eve we went.”)—FEP 
(Reconciliation, The.)—HBP 
(We Kiss’d Again with Tears.)—BIL—TFY 
Ask me no More. (Song fr. Pt. VI.)—FEP—GP— 
HBP—OH—PGT 2—VA—YBF 
(Songs from “The Princess,” III.)—CEL 
Bugle Song. (Fr. Pt. III.)—BS 1—BSP—BVC— 
CR—CS 2 — EPs — FEP — FTR — GMS — 
GN — GP — HBP — HNS — HSS 2 — LC — 

■ LLC — OM — OS 2 — PPSr — PSR — PYO 
—SA—SM—SO—VA—VS—WCLG 1 


266 





TITLE INDEX 


Professor’s 


Princess, The ( continued). 

(Blow, Bugle [.Blow],)—OB—PHS 
(Bugle, The.)—BNL—YBF 
(Princess, The, Sel. fr.) —SAE ( sel.) 

(Songs from “The Princess.”)—CEL (II.)— 
MRS (III.) 

(Splendour-Falls on Castle Walls, The.)—WEP 4 
“Come down, O maid.” ( Song fr. Pt. VII.)—OB 
Days that Are no More, The. (Song fr. Pt. IV.)— 
FEP—HBP 

(Princess, The, Sel. fr.) —FP 
(Retrospection.)—BNL 
(Song of the Maiden.)—LLC 
(Songs from “The Princess,” II.)—MRS 
(Tears, Idle Tears.)—BSP—FTR—GP—OS 3— 
PYO—VA—VS—WEP 4 —YBF 


Home they Brought her Warrior [Dead]. (Song fr. 
Pt. V.)—BNL—FEP—HSS 1—PHS—YBF 
(Home— carlo vers.) —OS 1 
(I Live for Thee.)—CS 19—LLC 
(Songs from “The Princess,” IV.)—CEL 
(Widow and Child, The.)—HBP 
In the Fight. (Song fr. Pt. V., Interlude.)—EPs 
Thy Voice is Heard [thro’ Rolling Drums].)— 
FEP—V A—YBF 


Lullaby. (Fr. Pt. II.)—BFV—BNL—BS 1—HBP 
—HSS 2—LC—OS 1—WCLI 2—YBF 


(Princess, The, Sel. fr .)—SC 
(Songs from “The Princess.”)—CEL (I.)— 
MRS (IV.) 

(Sweet and Low.)—EA—FEP—GMS—LLC— 
NV—PHS—PoR—SO—VA—VS 
O Swallow, Flying South. (Song fr. Pt. IV.)—GP 
—TFY 


(O Swallow, Swallow [.Flying South].)—BNL— 
YBF 

(Songs from “The Princess,” I.)—MRS 
Princess, The. (Br. sels. fr. Pts. IT. and VI.)—SAE 
Summer Night. (Song fr. Pt. VII.)—OB 
Tribute to Motherhood, A. (Sel. fr. Pt. VII.)—SAE 
Woman’s Cause. (Sel. fr. Pt. VII.)—OH 
(Woman— abr.) —BS 3 

Princess and the Countess, The. (Dial. ad. fr. Prince 
Otto, Ch. XIII.)—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—NDP 
Princess and the Rabbi, The.—W. L. Gardner.—CS 23 
Princess’ Finger-nail, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BS 19 
Princess Fuzz.—Anon.—DLS 

Princess Imra and the Goatherd.—Emma D. Banks.— 
BR 

Princess’s Tragedy, A. (Sel. fr. The Memoirs of Barry 
Lyndon, Ch. XII.)—W: M. Thackeray.—WGS 
Principle of the American Constitutions, The, Sel. fr. 
(Men and Deeds of the Revolution, The.)—E: 
Everett.—M RS 

Principles of the Revolution, The.—.Tosiah Quincy.— 
BLP—PEO 

Printing Press, The.—Edwin H. Chapin.—-FD 1 
Prior to Miss Belle’s Appearance.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
AWH—THP—WR 14 

Priscilla.—Ellen M. H. Cortis oz.—FTA—OH 
Priscilla.—S: M. Peck.—TL 
Priscilla. (Yale Record.) —CG 2 

Priscilla Prim’s Views on Woman s Rights.—Anon— 


Private Devotion.—-Phoebe H. Brown.—AA—TAV 
Private Judgment.—J: Dryden. See Hind and the 
Pantner, The. 

Private of the Buffs [ \or, the British Soldier in China, 
The]. (C.)—Sir Fs. H. Doyle.—BNL—HB— 
HBP—LH—VA 

(British Soldier in China, The.)—PGT 2 
Private Rehearsal, A.—Anon.—WR 14 
Private Rehearsal, A.—Belle M. Locke.—CS 35 
Private’s Glory, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Prize, The (Piscatory Eclogues, VII.), Sel. fr. (Stella 
and Mira—-Sts. XXII.-XXVII.) — Phineas 
Fletcher.—EP 

Prize Contest on Domestic Accomplishments, A.— 
Anon.—EuE 

Pro Mortuis.—H: A. Blood.—TAS 
Pro Mortuis.—Fs. T. Palgrave.—VA 
Pro Patria et Gloria.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Pro Patria Mori.—T: Moore.—PGT 1 

(“When he, who adores thee”— C.) —EDY—FTA— 
TIP—WEP 4 

Pro Tem. (Play.) —B. L. C. Griffith.—SPC 
Problem, A.—Bessie Chandler.—CPL 
Problem, A.—G. P. Day.—CG 2 

Problem, The.—-Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—BNL— 
FEP—HBP 
(Responses— sel.) —GP 
(Problem, The.)—TAS 

Problem of Life, The.—Theodore Tilton.—SR 3 
Problem of Self-government, The.—Chauncey M. 
Depew.—FD 2 

Problem of the Universe, The.—O. M. Mitchell.— 
SSD 

Procession of the Flowers. The.—Sydney Dobell.—GN 
(Chanted Calendar, A.)—OB 
Procession of Time, The.—G: Chapman. See Tears of 
Peace, The. 

Processional.—Alice A. (S.) James.—AA 
Proclamation, The.—J: G. Whittier.—EDY 
Proclamation of Emancipation (1863).—Abraham Lin¬ 
coln.—AI 

Proclamation of the Columbian Exposition, A.—B: 
Harrison.—BLP 

Proclamation to the Army of Italy.—Napoleon Bona¬ 
parte.—OS 3 (abr.) 

(Bonaparte to his Army in Italy— diff. tr .)—BLP 
(To the Army of Italy— si. same.) —PS—SS— 
SSD 

Proclivior. (Variation on Longfellow’s Excelsior.) 

(Punch.) —HPE 
Procrastination.—Anon.—CS 30 

Procrastination.—Rob’t Southwell. See Loss in Delay. 
Procrastination.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 
Procreative Virtue of Great Examples.—Lord Byron. 
See Marino Faliero. 

Procrustes’ Bed.—Carlotta Perry.—CS 25 
Proctor Knott on Duluth.—Proctor Knott.—CS 34 
Prodigal Son, The. (St. Luke, Ch. XV.— abr.) Bible. 
—AE—BS 1—EA 

Prodigal’s Return, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Proem:—"There is no rhyme that is half so sweet.”— 
Madison Cawein.—A A 

Proem:—“If this little world to-night.”—Oliver Her- 


CS 27 


ford.—AA 


Prisoned [Prisoner— C.] in Windsor he Recounteth his 
Pleasure there Passed.—H: Howard, Earl of 
Surrey.—FEP 

(Lines Written in Imprisonment at Windsor.)— 
WEP 1 

Prisoner, The. (Sel.) —Emily Bronte.—OB 

Prisoner for Debt. The.—J : G. Whittier.—CS 10 

Prisoner in Windsor he Recounteth his Pleasure there 
Passed.—H: Howard, Earl of Surrey. See 
Prisoned in Windsor, etc." 

Prisoner of Chillon, The.—-Lord Byron.—BNL—FEP 
—HBP—MBL—SA (sel.) —WCLG 2 (si. abr.) 

(Abr.)— BS 5—EDY 

(Br. sel.)— EPs—SE 

Sonnet on Chillon (C. — intro l. to i oem). —WEP 4 

(Chillon.)—OS 3 

(“Eternal spirit of the chainless mind”— sel.)— 
GP 

(On the Castle of Chillon.)—PGT 1—YBF 

Prisoner of the Bastile, The.—Mrs. J. O. Warner.— 
CS 33 

Prisoner to a Robin who Came to his Window, The. 

(Verses to a Robin Red-breast, etc.— C.) — 
Jas. Montgomery.—PC 

Prisoners of Naples, The, Sel. fr. —J: G. Whittier.— 
HDL 

Prisoner’s Plea, The. (Ad.) —Anon.—NP 

Priuli and Jaffier. (Sel. fr. Venice Preserved, Act I., 
Sc. 1.)—T: Otway.—SS 


(Earth.)—THP 

Proem, A —“When in mv walks I meet some ruddy 
lari.”—S: Ward—AA 

Proem:—“1 love the old melodious lays.”—J: G. Whit¬ 
tier.—A A 

Proem in A terwhiles.—SAE 

“Profaneness i° a low, grovelling vice.”—Edwin C. (7) 
Chapin.—WCLI 1 

Profession of Faith, Sel. fr. —Blaise Pascal.—GG 

Professional Education, Sel. fr. (Study of Latin and 
Greek.)—Sydney Smith.—LLC 

Professional Pride. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 

Professor, The.—F. Crosby.— ED 

Professor at the Breakfast-table, The, Sels. fr. —Oliver 
W. Holmes. 

Faithful Little Wife, A. (Sel. fr. Ch. XII.)—SR 1 
Iris. (Sel. fr. Ch. III.)—WR 5 
Professor at the Breakfast-table, The. (Br. sel. fr. 
Ch. II.)—AE 

Robinson of Leyden ( Ferses/r. Ch. VII.)— EDY 

Professor Dinkelspeigelmann on the Origin of Life.— 
Anon.—DRR 

Professor Gunter on Marriage.—G: Kyle.—WR 3 

Professor in Shafts, The.—Elijah Kellogg.—SR 1 

Professor Puzzled, The. (Dial.) —F. B. Wilson.— 
BS 6—HD—WRD 

Professor’s Ball Game, The.—Will H. Irwin.—WR 
25 

Professor’s Present, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 


267 




Prof.’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Prof.’s Little Girl. The.—C: K. Field.—CG 2 
Program—At the Tree.—Anon.—DFR 
Programmes.—Anon.—PS 
Progress.—Anon.—CS 17 
Progress.—N. Michell.—CS 10 

Progress is Constant.—C: Sumner. See Progress of 
Humanity, The. 

Progress of Curiosity, The; or, A Royal Visit to Whit¬ 
bread’s Brewery, Sel. fr. (Birth-day Ode.)—J: 
Wolcott.—H PE 

Progress of Humanity, The. (Sel. fr. The Law of 
Human Progress.)—C: Sumner.—CS 10—NPS 
—YP 

(Progress is Constant— si. cliff.) —BLP 
Progress of Madness, The.—Matthew G. Lewis.—PS 
(Maniac, The.)—BNL—CS 4—PPSr 
Progress of Poesy, The.—T: Gray.—BNL ( br. sels.) — 
FEP—OB—PGT 1—WEP 3 
(John Milton— br. sel.) —BNL 
Progress of Poetry, The.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
Progress of Sir Jack Brag, The.—Anon.—AWB 
Progress of Taste, The, Sel. fr. (Much Taste and Small 
Estate.)—W: Shenstone.—WEP 3 
Progressive Peanut Party, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Prohibition a Blessing to the Poor.—H: W. Grady. 
See folio'ring. 

Prohibition in Atlanta.—H: W. Grady.—NC 

(Business Side of Prohibition— vtly. same .)—TS 
(Prohibition a Blessing to the Poor— vtly. same as 
NC)—TS 

Prohibition in Kansas.—J: J. Ingalls.—WR 18 
Prohibition Party a Necessity, A.—A. B. Leonard. — 
WR18 

Prohibition Song of Good Fellowship. — Lydia H. 
Sigourney.—WR 18 

Prohibition the Only Safeguard for Youth.—G: L. 
Taylor.—TS 

Prohibition the True Anti-poverty Party.—W. J. 
Demorest.—TS 

Prohibition the Ultimatum.—A. A. Phelps.—TS 
Prohibition’s Bugle Call.—Mrs. Lide Meriwether — 
WR 18 

Prohibition’s Might.—R. L. Bruce.—WR 18 
“Project of connecting the planting of trees, The.’’— 
B. Pickman Mann.—AD 

Prologue:—“Dear friends, we thank you for your con¬ 
descension.”—Anon.—BC 

Prologue: “I am the herald of a band of brothers.”— 
Anon.—DLF 

Prologue:—"Ladies and Gentlemen:—You need not 
shudder in anticipation.”—Anon.—DLS 
Prologue: “Kind friends, you see us mustered here.” 

(Dial .)—'“Bob O’Link.”—DCP 
Prologue:—“Ladies and gentlemen, let me ask.”— 
"Bob O’Link.”—DCP 

Prologue, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury 
Tales, The. 

Prologue:—“A prologue? Well, of course, the ladies 
know.”—Oliver W. Holmes.—SCS 
Prologue and Epilogue to “Amboyna; or, The Cruelties 
of the Dutch to the English Merchants.” (C.) 
—J: Dryden. 

(Satire on the Dutch.)—ESs 
Prologue for a Boy.—Anon.—DST 
Prologue for a Boy and a Girl.—Anon—DJS 
Prologue for a Child. (2)—Anon.—DJS 
Prologue for a Child.—Anon.—DLS 
Prologue for a Small Child.—Anon.—DCP 
Prologue for a Tiny Tot.—Anon.—DST 
Prologue from “King Henry V.”—W: Shakespeare. 
See King Henry V. 

Prologue Spoken at the Opening of the Drury Lane 
Theatre.—S: Johnson. See following. 

Prologue Spoken by Garrick at the Opening of the 
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. (C.) —S: John¬ 
son.—FEP 

(Prologue Spoken at the Opening of the Drury Lane 
Theatre.)—WEP 3 
(Shakespeare— sel .)—BNL 

Prologue to “A Word to the Wise.”—S: Johnson.— 
WEP 3 

Prologue to Aureng-Zebe, or the Great Mogul.—J: 

Dryden. See Aureng-Zebe. 

Prologue to Mr. Addison’s Tragedy of Cato.—Alex. 
Pope—FEP 

(Humanity’s Heroes— sel .)—BNL 
Prologue to “The Apprentice.”—Anon.—MDD 
Prologue to the Canterbury Tales.—Geoffrey Chaucer. 
See Canterbury Tales, The. 

Prologue to “The Dreme”, Sel. fr .—Sir David Lyndesay. 
—WEP 1 

Prologue to the Legende of Goode Women.—Geoffrey 
Chaucer. See Legend of Good Women, The. 


Prologue to the Satires (Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot i — 
Alex. Pope—WEP 3 
Addison. (Sel.) —BNL 
Scandal. (Sel.) —BNL 
Sporus—Lord Hervey. (Sel.)- —BNL 
Prologues to the Hineid, Sels. fr. —Gawain Douglas. 
Scottish Winter Landscape, A. (Sel. fr. Prol, to 
Bk. VII.)— VS EP 1 

Spring. (Sel. fr. Prol. to Bk. V.)—WEP 1 
Promenading Ontology.—E. T. D.—CG 3 
Promenading Psychology.—F. K. Curtis.—CG 1 
Prometheus.—I ord Byron.—WEP 4 
Prometheus Unbound, Sels. fr. —Percy B. Shelley. 
Hymn to the Spirit of Nature. (Fr. Act. II., sc. 
5.)—HBP—YBF 

(Voice in the Air, Singing.)—W EP 4 
Poet’s Dream, The. (Song fr. Act I.— si. abr.) — 
PGT 1 

(Poet’s World, The.)—YBF 
Semichorus I. of Spirits. (Fr. II., 2.)—WEP 4 
Semichorus II. (Fr. II., 2.)—WEP 4 
Sunrise. (Br. sel. fr. II., l.) : —POS 
Promise.—Anon.—HP 

Promise, The.—H: N. Cobb. See Gracious Answer, 
The. 

Promise, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—TAS 
Promise of Spring, The.—Helen M. Merrill.—TCV 
Promised Land To-morrow, The.—Gerald Massey.— 
CS 23 

(To-day and To-morrow.— si. diff. vers.) —PR— 
LLC 

Promises and the Perils of Temperance Reform, The.— 
Jos. Cook. See Newest Promises and Perils, etc. 
Promoted.—Mary S. Bacon.—TAV 
Prompt Messenger, A. (Dial.) —G:C. (?) Colman, the 
younger. —MPD 

Prompt Obedience.—W: L. Alden. See Adventures 
of Jimmy Brown. 

Prom-roses.—Jas. P. Sawyer.—CG 2 

(Message the Roses Bring, The.)—FTA 
Proof, The.—Lucy Larcom.—TAS 
Proof Positive.—Anon.—BS 15—PR—YA 
Proper Distinction. (The Jest Book.) —MRS 
Proper Man, A.—Ben Jonson.—CEL 
Proper Sonnet, A. (Fr. A Handefull of Pleasant De- 
lites.)—Anon.—WEP 1 
Proper Woman, A.—T: Carew.—CEL (abr.) 

(Disdain Returned—C.)—FEP—HBP 
(SI. abr.) —ELP—ES—WEP 2 
( A br.) —EPs—OEL 

(“He that loves a rosy cheek”— abr.) —BNL 
(True Beauty [.The]— abr. )—BFV—FTA—PGT 1 — 
YBF 

(Unfading Beauty, The— abr.) —OB 
Prophecies. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Prophecies.-Cobbe.—N A 

Prophecy.—Florence M. Alt.—WR 22 
Prophecy, A. (Poems and Epigrams, LVII.)—Wal¬ 
ter S. Landor.— VA—YBF 
(Proud Word you Never Spoke.)—OB 
Prophecy, A. ( Fr. Lincoln’s Grave.)—Maurice Thomp¬ 
son.—AA 

Prophecy of Capys, The.—T: B. Macaulay.—WCLG2 
Prophecy of Enterprise, A. (Frags, fr. various 
authors. )—-BNL 

Prophecy of Famine. The, Br. sel. fr. (Description of his 
Muse.)—C: Churchill.-—WEP 3 
Prophecy of Samuel Sewall, The.—J: G. Whittier.— 
AP 

Prophet, The.—G. M. Perkins.—CG 3 
Prophetess.—J: G. Whittier. See Snow-bound. 
Prophetic Mirror, A.—Carlisle Smith.—WR 7 
Prophets of the Hive, The,—Anon.—BVC 
Proposal, A. (Puck?) —CH 

Proposal.—Bayard Taylor.—BIL—FP—FTA—TAV 
Proposal, The.—Marg. Vandegrift.—DR 
"Proposed religious amendment to the Constitution, 
The.”—F. A. Noble—GG 

Prosopopoia; or, Mother Hubberd’s Tale. Sel. fr. (At 
Court.)—Edmund Spenser.—OS 3 
(Spenser at Court.)—EPs 
Prospective Visit, A.—Jas. W. Riley.-—CW 
Prospects of California, The.—Nathaniel Bennett.—SS 
Prospects of the Republic, The. (Sel. fr. The Circum¬ 
stances Favorable to the Progress of Litera¬ 
ture in America, The.)—E: Everett.—BS 11— 
SR 4 

(American Experiment of Self-government, The— 
abr.) —SS—SSD—TMD 
(Our Republic— abr.) —SO 

Prosperity.—W. II. Smith. See Hazards of our 
National Prosperity. 

Prosperous Couple, A.—Anon.—CS 35 

268 




TITLE INDEX 


Public 


Prospice.—Rob’t Browning.—BSP — HBR—HDL— 
PGT 2 — SAE —VA—WEP 4—YBF 
Protect us through the Coming Night. (IF. music.) — 
Anon.—AD 

Protection of Americans in Armenia, The.—W. P. 
Frye.—SC 

Protest, A.—Arthur H. Clough.—VA 
Protest, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—OH 
Protestant Ascendency.—J: O’Hagan.—TIP 
Protestants’ Joy, The.—Anon.—EDY 
Protestation, The.—T: Carew.—ES—WEP 2 
Protestation. The.—Selwyn Image.—VA 
Protestations.—C: Mackay.—BIL 
Prothalamion. — Edmund Spenser. — ELP — OB — 
PGT I—PHS 

Prototype. A.—Anon.—CS 31 

Proud Maisie.—Walter Scott. See Heart of Midlo¬ 
thian, The. 

“Proud Maisie is in the Wood.”—Walter Scott. See 
Heart of Midlothian, The. 

Proud Miss MacBride, The. (Abr.)—J: G. Saxe.— 
BNL 

Proud Winter Cometh.—Ernest W. Shurtleff.—POS 
Proud Word you Never Spoke.— Walter S. Landor. 
See Prophecy, A. 

Proverb—All that Glitters Is not Gold, A. (Play.)— 
S. A. Frost.—BS 5 

Proverbeel Feelossofy.—“Agrikler.”—CS 13 
Proverbial Philosophy, Sel. fr. —Martin F. Tupper.— 
BNL 

Proverbs.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Proverbs of Solomon, The, Sels. fr. Bible. 

Preventive” No,” A. (Ch. IV., 14, 15.)—BLP 
Solomon, the Wise King. (Sels. fr. Ohs. IV. and 
XXII.)—BLP 

Proverbs, or Rhymes and Reasons.—E. C. and I,. J. 
Rook.—SSE 

Providence.—W: Cowper.—EPs—HDL 

("God moves in a mysterious way.”)—LLC—YBF 
(Light Shining out of Darkness— C.) —FEP—HBP 
Providence. (Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity— C.) — 
Reginald Heber.—GN 

(God Provideth for the Morrow— abr.) —AD 
Providence. (Sel.) —G: Herbert.—EPs 
Provider, The.—Louise I. Guiney.—WR 25 
Province of History, The, Br. sel. fr. (“World’s history 
is a divine poem. The.”)—Jas. A. Garfield.— 
GG 

Province of History, The. (Sel. fr. History of the 
World, Ch. CLXXII.)—J: C. Ridpath.—PFP 
Province of Woman, The.—-Hannah More.—FP 
Proving the Question.—Anon.—WR 17 
Provisional Forgiveness.—Anon.—KNE 
Prudence. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Prudent Words. (Frags, fr. various authors.)— BNL 
Priming Trees.—H. R. Sanford.—AD 
Prussian Armistice, The. (Sel.)- —Leon Gambetta.— 
OS 2 

Prussian National Anthem.—Anon.—GP 
Prussian Railway Conductor’s Story, The.—Anon. 
(ad. by) Walter K. Fobes.—FR 
(Mad Engineer, The— diff. vers.) —CS 7—MMR 
Psalm XIII. (Paraphrase.) —Fs. Davison.—HBP 
Psalm XVIII. (Paraphrase.) —T: Stemhold.— EPs 
(br. sel.) —HBP 

Psalm XIX. (Paraphrase —Pt. IT.)—I: Watts.—HBP 
Psalm XXIII. (Paraphrase.) —Fs. Davison.— HBP 
Psalm XXIII. (Paraphrase.) —Jas. Merrick.—HBP 
Psalm XXIII. (C. — paraphrase.) —Jas. Montgomery. 

(Lord the Good Shepherd, The.)—IIBP 
Psalm XXIIT. A Pastoral Hymn. (C.) —Jos. Addison. 

(Translation of the Twenty-third Psalm.)—CEL 
Psalm XXVII.—Jas. Wedderburn. See Leave me not. 
Psalm XLVI.—Martin Luther.—HBP (T: Carlyle’s tr.) 
(Mighty Fortress ! •> our God, A—F: H. Hedge’s tr. 
—sel.)— BNL 

(Paraphrase of Luther's Hymn—Hedge.)—AA 
(Safe Stronghold, A—Carlyle.)—AE 
Psalm XLVI. (Paraphrase— Pt. I.)—I: Watts.—HBP 
Psalm LXV. ( Paraphrase■ —Pt. II.) — I: Watts.— 
HBP 

Psalm LXXII. (Paraphrase.)— Jas. Montgomery.— 
FEP 

(Reign of Christ on Earth, The.)—HBP 
Psalm LXXII. (Paraphrase —-Pt. II.) — I: Watts.— 
FEP 


(Jesus shall Reign.)—HBP 

Psalm LXXXIV. ( Paraphrase.) —H: F. Lyte.—FEP 
Psalm LXXXVII. (Paraphrase.)— J: Newton.—FEP 
Psalm XC. (Paraphrase.) —Anon. 

(Ninetieth Psalm.)—DST 

Psalm XC., Sel. fr. (Time Past, Time Passing, Time to 
Come.)—Jas. Montgomery.—HBP 


Psalm XC. (Paraphrase —Pt. II., si. abr.) —I: Watts. 
—FEP 

Psalm XCIII. (Paraphrase.) —Sir Philip Sidney [or 
Countess of Pembroke].—EPs 
Psalm XCVI. (Sing unto the Lord.)—Sir Philip Sid¬ 
ney [or Countess of Pembroke].—EPs 
Psalm XCVIII. (Paraphrase— Pt. 11.) — I: Watts. 
—FEP 

Psalm C. (Paraphrase.) —-W: Kethe.—FEP 
Psalm C. (Paraphrase.) —Tate and Brady. — FEP — 
HBP 

Psalm C. (Paraphrase —Pt. II., abr. and diff. vers.) — 
I: Watts.—FEP 

Psalm CXVII. (Paraphrase —Pt. II.)—I: Watts.— 
HBP 

Psalm CXXI. (Paraphrase— Pt. XVIII.)—I: Watts. 
—FEP 

Psalm CXXXIX. (Paraphrase .)—Sir Philip Sidney [or 
Countess of Pembroke].—EPs 
Psalm CXLVIII. ( Paraphrase.) —G: Wither.—FEP 
Psalm for New Year’s Eve, A. (C.) —Dinah M. Craik. 
(Address to the New Year— sels.) —HSS 2 
(New Year’s Gifts, The.)—SSS 
Psalm of Hope, A.-—W. F. Fox.—CS 11 
Psalm of Life, A.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA—BNL — 
CS 2 — FEP — FTR — GMS — HBP— KNE 
—LLC — PHS — SE — SO — TAV—WCLI 2 
(Life— ptly. same sels.) —EPs—GN 
(Lives of Great Men— br. sel.) —PS 
Psalm of Marriage.—Phoebe Cary.—CRR—CS 2 — 
PPSr 

Psalm of the Union, A.—W: R. Wallace.—WRD 

(United States National Anthem— abr. — si. diff. 
vers.)— CS 2 

Psalm of the West, Sel. fr. (Battle of Lexington, The.) 

—Sidney Lanier.—GP—PAP 
Psalm of Trust, A.—Frd’k L. Hosmer.—TAS 
Psalm-book in the Garret, The. (Abr.) —B: F. Taylor. 
BS 12 

Psalms of David, Sels. fr. Bible. 

Psalm I—LLC 
Psalm VIII.—LLC 
Psalm XIX.—PYO—SAE 

Psalm XXIII. — BS 1 — GMS — LLC — NV — 
SAE (v. 1-4.) 

(Recitations from the Bible.)—FTT 
(Twentv-third Psalm, The.)—EA—PS (arr.) 
Psalm XXIV.—BS 1—IR—PYO 
(King of Glory, The. 1-8.)—NV 
Psalm XXXIII. 

(Nation’s Strength, A.)—BLP (8-22)—SS (12-22 
— diff. tr.) 

Psalm XXXVII.—LLC (1-11.) 

Psalm XLVI.—PYO 
Psalm XLVIII.—PYO 
, Psalm LXXXIV.—PYO 
Psalm LXXXV.—LLC 
Psalm XC.—BS 8—LLC 
Psalm XCI.—SPE 
Psalm XCV.—BS 14 

(Psalms, The.)—AE (1-7.) 

Psalm XCVI. 

(Song of Praise, A.)—SSS 
Psalm C.—LLC 

Psalm CIII.—LLC (8-22)—SC (1-5, 19-21.) 

Psalm CIV. 

(Psalms, The.)— AE (1-3, 5.) 

(Reverence.)—SE 
Psalm CXXI.—GMS—PYO 
Psalm CXLVI.—LLC 
Psalm CXLVIII. 

(Exhortation to Praise God.)—SS 
Psyche.—H: A. Beers.—TAS 
Psycholophon.—Gelett Burgess.—NA 
Public Dinner at New York, Sels. fr. —Dan’l Webster. 
Benefits of the Constitution.—BS 23 
(Glorious Constitution, The.)—TMR 
Liberty and Knowledge.—FD 1 
Public Dishonesty. (Sel. fr. Twelve Causes of Dis¬ 
honesty.)—H: Ward Beecher.—BS 2—PS 
Public Opinion.—F: W. Farrar.—CS 21—FD 1—TS 
Public Opinion. (Sel.) —Wendell Phillips.—NC — 
TMR 

Public Opinion. (Sel. fr. The Revolution in Greece.)— 
Dan’l Webster.—TMD 
(Moral Force against Physical— abr.) —SS 
(Moral Force of Public Opinion.)—MRS 
Public Opinion and the Sword.—T: B. Macaulay. See 
Parliamentary Reform. 

"Public opinion employs no officers.”—W: H. H. Mur¬ 
ray.—GG 

“Public opinion is the collective judgment of men.”— 
W. H. H. Murray.—GG 


269 




Public 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Public Opinion the Reliance of our Government. (Sel. 
fr. Revolution in Congress.)—Jas. A. Garfield. 
—FD 2 

Public School Teacher in the Republic, The.—G: T. 
Balch.—BLP 

Public Speech.—H..W. Bellows.—BS 13 
Public Spirit of [the] Athenians.—Demosthenes. See 
Oration on the Crown, The. 

Public Virtue. (Sel. fr. On the Bank Veto.)—H: Clay. 
—CS 5—KNE 
(True Patriotism— sel.) —SO 
Public Worrier, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 27 
Publius Scipio to the Roman Army before the Battle 
of Ticin.—Livy. See History of Rome. 

Puck and the Fairy.—W: Shakespeare. See Midsum¬ 
mer Night’s Dream, A. 

Pudd’nhead Wilson, Sel. fr. (Tom and Roxy— sel. fr. 
Chs. VIII. and IX., ad. as dial.) —S: L. 
Clemens.—NDP 
Puer ex Jersey.—Anon.—NA 

Puffing. (Fr. Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler.— 
HPE 

Puffs Poetical.—W: Aytoun. 

Paris and Helen.—HPE 
Tarquin and the Augur.—HPE 
Pugilists, The.—Anon.—BC 

Pulaski’s Banner. (Hymn of the Moravian Nuns of 
Bethlehem— -C.) —H: W. Longfellow.-—SR 8 
Pull-back, A.—Anon.—HP 

Pulley, The. (C.)—G: Herbert.-—CEL (w. 3 sts. fr. Mis¬ 
ery.)— EPs—FEP—OB—WEP 2—YBF 
(Gifts of God, The.)—BNL—FP—OS 2—PGT 1 
Pulmonic Passion.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Pulpit and Politics, The.—C: H. Parkhurst.—NC 
Pulpit Oratory.—Dan’l Doughertv.—BS 3—CS 10 — 
LLC 

“Pulpit plagiarist ruins his style. The.”—J. M. Buck- 
ley.—GG 

Pumpkin, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BNL—DFR—LLC 
—MMR (abr.) 

Pumpkin-pie.—Anon.—DJS 
Pungent. (Charade.) —Anon.—TCP 
"Pupil of the eye is the portal.”—Dan’l (?) March.— 
—GG 

Pup-pup-poetry. (Punch.) —BRR 

(Invitation to the Zoological Gardens, An.)—HPE 
—THP 

(Longer vers.) —BS 16—CS 19 
Pure and Holy Motive.—D. W. Thompson.—LLC 
Pure and True and Tender.—H.—FTA 
Pure Hypothesis, A.—May Kendall.—VA 
Purest Pearl, The.—Anon.—CS 5—KNE 
Purgatory, The.—Dante. See Divine Comedy, The. 
Puritan, The.—G: W: Curtis. See Puritan Spirit, The. 
Puritan, The.—T: B. Macaulay. See Milton. 

Puritan and the Dutchman. The.—Anon.—CP 
Puritan and the Pilgrim, The.—G: F. Hoar.—TMD 
Puritan of Essex County, The.—II: C. Lodge.—NC 
Puritan Sabbath, The. (Sel. fr. Address at the Annual 
Banquet of the New England Society in New 
York City, Dec. 23, 1895.)—H: Van Dvke.— 
SC 

Puritan Spirit, The, Sel. fr. (Puritan, The.) — G: W: 
Curtis.—BS 14 

Puritan Spirit, The —R. S. Storrs.—SC 
Puritanism.—G: F. Hoar.—FD 2 
Puritans.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 

Puritans, The.—T: B. Macaulay. See Milton. 
Puritans, The.—Heman L. Wayland.—TMR 
Puritan’s Dilemma, The. (Dial.) —F. Crosby.—CS 21 
—PD 

Puritans on the Way to Church. (Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

Purple Asters.—Arthur W. H. Eaton.—TCV 
Purple Beech, The. (Garden and Forest.) —AD 
Purple Blossoms.—Anon.—CG 1 
Purple Cow, The.—Gelett Burgess.—NA 
Purple Island, The, -Sel. fr. (Shepherd’s Life, The— 
fr. Can. XII.)—Phineas Fletcher.—EP 
Purpose.—Anon.—CS 27 
Purpose.—C: R. Barrett.—SR 5 

Purpose. (Fr. To a Writer of the Day.)— Langdon E. 
Mitchell.—A A 

Purpose, A.—H: C. Pearson.—CS 21 
Purpose.—J: J. Piatt..—AA 
Purse and the Sword, The.—J: C. Calhoun.—SS 
Pursuit, The. (Dial. fr. Ladies’ Battle. )—Anon.—MPD 
Pursuit of Character and Service.—Phillips Brooks.— 
FD 2 

Pursuit of Frivolous Pleasures, The.—E: Young. See 
Night Thoughts. 

Pursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties.—Anon.— 
FND 


Pursuit of Legal Advice under Difficulties, The.—A 
Family Scene.—Theodore Hook.—MHR 
Pussy and the Poppies. (Youth’s Companion.) —AD 
Pussy Clover.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Pussy Wants a Corner.—W. A. Stout.—CS 30 
Pussy Willow.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Pussy Willow, The.—Anon.—NV 
Pussy Willow.—Marian Douglas.—AD—NV 
Pussy Willows.—Anon.—DJS 
Pussy-cat.—“Aunt Effie.”—BVC—PC 
Pussy’s Better Nature.—Annie Hughes.—W T R 13 
Pussy’s Class.—M. M. D.—PHS—SR 13 
Pussy’s Picture.—Lizzie J. Rook.—TT 
Put Flowers in \ our Window.—Anon.—AD 
Put Out that Fire.—W: M. Taylor.—TS 
Put Yourself in her Place.—C: Barnard.—CS 24 
Putting Down the Window.—Anon.—CS 16 
Putting his Armor On.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Putting on Airs.—Anon.—FHE 

Putting the Children to Bed. (Tab.) —Anon.—COS— 
DS—NPS—PP—YA—YP 
Putting up o’ the Stove.—Anon.—CS 1—PS 
Putting up Stoves.—Anon.—-CS 5—KNE 
Putty Man, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Puzzle, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Puzzle, A.—Marg. Eytinge.—BS 21 
Puzzled.-—Annie T. Slosson.—CS 26 
Puzzled Census Taker, The.—J: G. Saxe.—CRR — 
CS 14—CSS—MYF 

Puzzled Dutchman, The.—Anon.—HR 

(I Yash so Glad I Vash Here.)—BDD—DFY—SR 2 
Puzzled Dutchman, The.—C: F. Adams.—BS 2—CS 5 
—PR—PS—YA 

Puzzles in Figures.—Anon.—EuE 
Puzzling Example, A.—Anon.—DJS 
Puzzling Question, A.—Anon.—DLF 
Pwize Spwing Poem. (San Francisco News Letter.) 
—BS 9 

Pygmalion.—W: B. Scott.—VA 
Pygmalion and Galatea.—W: S. Gilbert.—MN 
(Act I.)—VA (sel.) —VSG (abr.) 

(Shorter sel .)—BS 21—PS 
Pyramids not all Egyptian.—G. O. Barnes.—CS 13 
Pvramus and Thisbe.—J: G. Saxe.—CS 18—FTR— 
HNS—MHR—S A 

Pyrotechnic Polyglot.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
(Dialect Medley.)—SDR 
Python, The.—Hilaire Belloc.—NA 
Pyxidanthera. The.—A. C. Bristol.—AA 


Q 

Qua Cursum Ventus.—Arthur H. Clough.—AVP— 
BNL — EPs — FEP — HBP — PGT 2 —YA— 
WEP 4—YBF 
Quack, The.—Anon.—FAD 
Quack Doctor, The.—Anon.—DCD 
Quack Medicines.—G: Crabbe. See Borough, The. 
Quackery.—J. W. Bonfield.—SD 

Quaker and the Robber, The.—S: Lover. See 
Quaker’s Meeting, The. 

Quaker Boy, The.—Brummell Jones.—WR 12 
Quaker Graveyard, The.—S. Weir Mitchell.—A A 
Quaker Ladies.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 
Quaker Meeting and Social.—Anon.—EuE 
Quaker Widow, The.—Bayard Taylor.—A A—CS 2— 
FEP 

Quakerdom. (The Formal Call.)—C: G. Halpine.— 
BNL—PTS (si. abr.) 

Quakeress Bride, The.—Eliz. C. Kinney.—AA 
Quaker’s Meeting, The. (C .)—S: Lover.—THP 
(Quaker and the Robber, The.)—CS 8 
Quality of Mercy [Is not Strained], The.—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Quarrel. A. (little Folks.) —DCP 
Quarrel, The.—C: Mackay.—CS 26 
Quarrel between Brutus and Cassius, The.—W: 

Shakespeare. See Julius Csesar. 

Quarrel between Sir Peter and Lady Teazle.—R: B. 

Sheridan. See School for Scandal, The. 
Quarrel of Brutus and Cassius.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Julius Ciesar. 

Quarrel of Friends, The.—S: T. Coleridge. See Chris- 
tabel. 

Quarrel of Sairey Gam]) and Betsey Prig.—C: Dickens. 
See Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Quarrel of Squire Bull and his Son Jonathan [, The].— 
Jas. K. Paulding.—BS 4—WR 10 
Quarrel of the Flowers, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Quarrel of the Wheels, The.—T: D. English.—CS 26 


270 




TITLE INDEX 


Quietness 


Quarrel Scene from “School for Scandal.”—R: B. 

Sheridan. See School for Scandal, The. 
Quarreling. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Quarrels of Friends. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Quarrelsome Boy, The.—W. T.—KNS 
Quarrelsome Kittens, The.—Anon.—DST 
(Little Kittens, The.)—NV 
(Two Little Kittens.)—PS 
Quart of Milk, A.—Emma D. Banks.—BR—CH 
Quatorzain.—H: Timrod.—AA 

Quatrain:—“Oh! to be wafted away.”—Anon.—NA 
Quatrain:—“My song is silenced, yet the echo stays.” 
—Kendall Banning.—CG 3 

Quatrain:—“The red rose petals droop and fall.” 
(M orningside .)—CG 3 

Quatrain, A: “Hark at the lips,” etc. — Frank D. 
Sherman.—AA 

Quatuor Novissima.—W: Shakespeare.—CEL 
(Sonnet VIII.)—OB 

(Sonnet LXXIII.— C.) —ELP—FEP—WEP 1 
(That Time of Year.)—YBF 

(“That time of vear thou may’st in me behold.”)— 
OEL—PGT 1 

Queen, The.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the 
House, The. 

Queen Alcestis and the God of Love.—Geoffrey 
Chaucer. See Legend of Good Women, The. 
“Queen Anne’s Lace.”—Georgia Benedict.—CG 3 
Queen Arjamand’s Dagger. — Edwin Arnold. See 
With Sa'di in the Garden. 

Queen Catharine.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Queen Catharine to the King and Court of Cardinals. 

— W: Shakespeare. See King Henry VIII. 
Queen Elizabeth.—Anon.—HR 
Queen Elizabeth.—Sarah Williams.—EHT 
Queen Henrietta Maria.—Oscar Wilde.—EDY 
Queen Hynde, Sel. fr. (Boat-race, The.)—Jas. Hogg. 
—SAE 

Queen in her Carriage Riding by, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Queen Isabella’s Resolve.—Epes Sargent.—WR 10 
Queen Katharine’s Appeal to Henry VIII.—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See King Henry VIII. 

Queen Katherine.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Queen Mab. — T: Hood. — BVC — OS 1 — WR 26 (w. 
mus.) 

Queen Mab.—W: Shakespeare. See Romeo and Juliet. 
Queen Slab, Sels. fr. —Percy B. Shelley. 

Drones of the Community, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. III.) 
—SS 

Magic Car Moved on. The. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. I.)— 
GN 

Night. (Sel. fr. Pt. IV.)—BNL 
( Br. sel. )—H NS—POS 

("How beautiful this night! The balmiest sigh” 
— hr. sel.) —-AE 

(Peace and War.)—HSS 1—SS 
Sunset. (Sel. fr. Pt. II.)—BNL—BS 26 
To Ianthe, Sleeping. (Sel. fr. Pt. I.)—BNL 
War. (Sel. fr. Pt. IV.)—BNL 
Queen Mab’s Visit to Pigwiggen.—Michael Drayton. 

See Nymphidia: The Court of Fairy. 

Queen Margaret to William de la Pool, Duke of Suf¬ 
folk. (Sel.) —Michael Drayton.—WEP 1 
Queen Mary, Sels. fr. —Alfred Tennyson. 

Queen Mary. (Act V., sc. 5— abr.) —BS 9—CDD 
(Happiest Hour, The— hr. sel.) —B1L 
Queen Mary. (Sels. fr. Acts III., IV., V.)—EHT 
(Song of the Milkmaid— fr. III., 5.)—BNL 
Wyatt’s Harangue to the London Crowd. (Sel. fr. 
II., 1.)—MYF 

Queen of a Night, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 

KC 

Queen of Beauty, The.—Anon.—CS 4 
Queen of Corinth, The, Sel. fr. (Song fr. Act III., 
Sc. 2.)—J: Fletcher.—WEP 2 
(Weep no More.)—ELP—FEP—OB 
Queen of France and the Spirit of Chivalry, The. ( Br. 

sel. fr. Reflections on the French Revolution.) 
Edmund Burke.—TMD 
(Apostrophe to the Queen of France.)—PS 
(Marie Antoinette [, Queen of France].)—OS 3 (ahr.) 
—SS—VSG 

Queen of -Flowers, The. (Tab.)-— Tony Denier.—TDT 
Queen of Prussia’s Ride. The.—A. L. A. Smith.—CS 21 
—NPS—YP 

Queen of the School.—Anon.—DFR 
“Queen of the silver bow, by thy pale beam.”—Char¬ 
lotte Smith.—AE 

Queen Oriana’s Dream.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Queen Vashti.—T. DeWitt Talmage.—CS 28 
Queen Vashti’s Lament.—J: Reade.—BS 11—SR 4 


Queen’s Ball, The, Sel. fr. —Mrs. Archer Clive.—A VP 
Queen’s Last Ride, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—WR 26 
Queen’s Letter, The. (Cond. fr. Rupert of Hentzau, 
Chs. XVII. and XVIII.)—Anthony Hope.— 
NP 

Queen’s Marie, The. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon. 
—OB 

Queen’s Song.—Stopford A. Brooke. See Riquet of 
the Tuft. 

Queen’s Vespers, The.—Aubrey T. DeVere.—VA 
Queen’s Wake, The, Sels. fr. —Jas. Hogg. 

Abbot M’Kinnon, The. (Night III.—The Seven¬ 
teenth Bard’s Song.)—FEP 
Fate of Macgregor, The. (Night II.—The Eleventh 
Bard’s Song.)—CS 23—MMR 
Kilmeny. (Night II.— The Thirteenth Bard’s 
Song.)—BNL—EPs (sel.) —FEP—IIBP — OB 
Witch of Fife, The. (Night I.—The Eighth Bard’s 
Song.)—EPs 

Queen’s Year. The.—I. N. F.—TMR 

Queer Boy, The.—W H. Salter.—BS 19—WR 15 

Queer Doll, A.—Anon.—CPL 

Queer Fish they Caught, The.—Mary D. Brine.—CPL 
Queer Fit, A. (Play.) —Anon.—CS 5—MD 
Queer Hole, A.—Anon.—DLF 

Queer Little House, The.—Anon.—COS—DJS—NPS 
—PP—YP 

Queer Scholars, The.—Anon—COS—PP 
(Frogs at School— abr. )—WR 17 
Queer Table, A.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Queer Word. A.—Anon.—WR 25 

Quelling of the Blatant Beast, The.—Edmund Spenser. 
See Faerie Queen, The. 

Quentin Durward, Sel. fr. (County Guy— song fr. Ch. 
IV.)—Sir Walter Scott.—BFV—BNL—BPB 
—EPs—FEP—LC—WEP 4 
(Serenade, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Query, A. (Good Words.)—HP 
Quest, The.—Eliza Scudder.—TAS 
Quest. (Fr. Corda Concordia.)—Edmund C. Stedman. 
—AA 

Quest of three Kings, The.—E. Murray.—HE 
Question, A.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Question, A.—Anon.—CS 13—DS—YA 
Question, A.—Maurice F. Egan.—TAS 
Question, A.—Karl von Halm (tr. by H. I. D. Ryder). 
—BIL—FT A 

Question, A.—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
?—F. A. Le H— HP 
Question.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
Question, The. (C.) —Percy B. Shelley.—FEP—HBP 
—OB 

(Dream of the Unknown, A.)—PGT 1 
Question of Nations, The.—B. W. Richardson.—TS 
Question, The. To Lisetta.—Matthew Prior.—OB 
Question Whither, The.—G: Meredith.—HSS 3 
Questionings.—F. H. Hedge.—EPs 
Questions.—H: S. Kent.—CS 16 
Questions.—J. M. L.—CPL 
Questions.—Kate Lawrence.—YBT 
Questions.—G. V. S.—YBT 

Questions. Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Questions about Women.—Anon.—PS 
Questions and Answers. (SI. abr.) —Oliver W. Holmes. 
—LLC 

Questions Easily Answered.—Anon.—DE 
Questions of the Hour.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—FP 
Qui Laborat, Orat.—Arthur H. Clough.—WEP 4 
Quia Amore Langueo.—Anon.—OB 
Quicksand, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 31 
Quidnunckis [Quidnunkis—C.], The.—J: Gay.— ESs 
Quiet Evening at Cards, A.—-Anon.—WR 7 
Quiet Eye, The.—Eliza Cook.—VA 
Quiet Life, The.—W: Byrd.—ELP 
(Song.)—HBP 

Quiet Life, The. (Levet, his Death— C.) —S: John¬ 
son.—LH 

(On the Death of Dr. Levett.)—FEP 
(On the Death of Mr. Robert Levet, etc.— also C.) — 
OB 

Quiet Life, The.—Alex. Pope.—CEL 

(Ode on Solitude—C.)—FEP—HBP—LC—PYO— 
SN 

(Ode to Solitude.)—BNL 
(Solitude.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Quiet Mr. Smith, The.—Sarah P. W. Parton.—MHR 
Quiet Pilgrim, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA—TAS 
Quiet Smoke, A.—W. H. Neall.—CS 31 
Quiet Soul, A.—J: Oldham.—OB 
Quiet Street, The.—Anon.—SA 
Quiet Summer Resort , A.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Quietness.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—TAS 


271 




Quilting 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Quilting, The.—Anna Bache.—CS 6 
Quince. (Every-day Characters, II.)—Winthrop M. 
Praed.—FEP 

Quip, The.—G: Herbert.—EPs—WEP 2 

Quite a History.—Arlo Bates.—BVC 

Quite Like a Stocking. (Kris Kringle— C.) —T: B. 

Aldrich.—GMS—PEO 
Quite Possible.—Anon.—CG 1 
Quits.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Quiz Sociable, The.—Anon.—EuE 
Quo Vadis, Sel. fr. —Henry K. Sienkie\vicz ; 

Contest in the Arena, The. (Ch. LXV.— abr .)— 
TMD 

(Fight with the Aurochs, The.)—BS 25—PEP 
(Rescue of Lygia, The— abr.)— SC 
(Ursus and the Aurochs— abr.) —WR 19 
Quotations. For a Class Exercise.—Anon.—AD 
“Quoth a young Sadducee.’’ (Ben Karshook’s Wis¬ 
dom, II.)—Rob’t Browning.—SO 
Quousque Tandem, O Catilina?—A. L. Frisbie.—SR 3 


R 

Rab and his Friends.—Dr. J: Brown.—MBL 
Rab the Ranter’s Bag-pipe Playing. (Fr. Anster 
Fair.)—W: Tennant.—WEP 4 
Rabbi and the Prince, The.—Jas. C. Harvey.—-WR 6 
Rabbi Ben Ezra.—Rob’t Browning.—PGT 2—WEP 4 
(Potter’s Wheel, The— sel.) —HDL 
Rabbinical Origin of Women, The.—T: Moore.—HPE 
—THP 

Rabbi’s Present, The. (Cornhill Magazine.) —HP 
Rabbi’s Vision, The.—Frances Brown.—CS 20 
Rabble; or. Who Pays, The. (Fr. Miscellaneous 
Thoughts.)—S: Butler.—HPE 
Rabboni.—Marg. J. Preston.—CS 8 
Rabia.— (Tr. by) Jas. F. Clarke.—EPs 
Rabiah’s Defense.—T: W. Higginson.—SO 
Raccoon, The.—Anon.—NV 

Race, The. (Sel. fr. Anna Karenina, Chs. XXIV. and 
XXV.)—Lyof Tolstoi—PR—WR 11 
Race, The.—Lew Wallace. See Ben-Hur. 

Race, The—X. Y. Z.—CPL 

Race at Devil’s Elbow, The.—Jas. Buckham.—WR 24 

Race for a Wife, A.—Jas. M. Barrie.—WR 13 

Race for Dear Life, A.—Anon.—PRR 

Race for Life, A.—Anon.—KNS 

Race for Life, A.—Anon.—WR 14 

Race for Life, A.—Jas. F. Cooper. See Last of the 
Mohicans, The. 

Race for Life, A.—W. W. Marsh.—PR 
Race for Life, A.—J. L. Molloy.—CS 32—DS—NPS— 
PR—YP 

Race of the Boomers, The.—R: Burton.—PR 
Race of the Flowers [, The],—W: B. Rands.—AD—PC 
Race of the “Oregon,” The.—J: J. Meehan.—EDY— 
PA Pm 

Race Prejudice.—Anon.—WR 15 
Race with Death, The. (Sel. fr. Ode on Venice, Pt. 
1.)—Lord Byron.—LH 

Race with the Flames, The. (Who was he? Pt. I., 
abr.; sel. fr. Pt. II.)—W. H. H. Murray.—HBR 
Rachel. (Sel. fr. Pt. III.)—Matthew Arnold.—EDY 
Rachel.—C: J. Wells. See Joseph and his Brethren. 
Racy Stump Speech, A.—Anon.—CS 1 
Rag Babies.—Anon.—WR 17 
Ragged Robin.—I.. A. Twamley.—NV 
Ragged Sailors.—Anon.—PEO 

Raggedv Man, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BVC (sel.) — 
RCR 

Haggles.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 36 
Raglan. (In Memoriam— C.) —Sir Edwin Arnold.— 
EDY—VA 
(Lord Raglan.)—GP 

Ragnarok, Sel. fr. (Possible Consequences of a Comet 
Striking the Earth in the Pre-Glacial Period.)— 
Ignatius Donnelly.—BS 11 

Rags and Robes. (In Mother Goose for Grown Folks.) 

—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—TAV 
Rahat, The.—J. J. Rooney.—AA 
Raillery.—B: S. (?) Stillingfleet.—KNE 
Railroad Car Scene, A.—Anon.—CS 5—SR 4 
(Compensation— poet, vers.) —CS 5 
Railroad Clocks.—Anon.—CS 2 

Railroad Crossing, The.—Hezekiah Strong.—CS 24— 
NPS—SR 9—YP 

Railroad Nursery Rhyme. (Punch.) —HPE 
Railroad Rhyme. (C.) —J: G. Saxe.—BNL 
(Rhyme of the Rail— br. sels.) —SAE—SE 
Railroad Train, The.—Minna C. Smith.—ASD 
Railway Chase, The.—David Macrae.—CS 26 


Railway Gilpin, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Railway Matinee, A.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—BS 10— 
CS 21 

(Abr. and arr. as dial, by M. W. Morton.)—CDs 
Railway of Life, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Railway Station, The.—Archibald Lampman.—TCV 
Railway Station in the North of England, A.—W: An¬ 
derson.—CS 14 

Railway Traveler’s Farewell to his Family, The. 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Raimond Released. (The Vespers of Palermo, Act V., 
Sc. 3— abr.) —Felicia D. Hemans.—NDP 
Rain.—Anon.—HP 
Rain, The.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Rain, The.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Rain, The.—Anon.—NV 
Rain.—Marg. Deland.—NV 
Rain.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Rain and Storm. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Rain and Sunshine.—Phcebe Cary.—BLF 
Rain Coach, The.—Anon. See Raindrops’ Ride, The. 
Rain Fairy, The.—Anon.—HVD 
Rain in September.—Mortimer Collins.—POS 
Rain in Summer. (Summer Invocation—C.)—W: C. 
Bennett.—NV 

(Invocation to Rain in Summer.)—BNL—GN— 
HBP 

Rain in Summer.—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL—GMS— 
SN—WCLG 2 
(SI. abr.) —CGd—FP—GN 

Rain in the Garret. (Br.sel.fr. Dream Life: Dreams 
of Boyhood, I.)—Donald G. Mitchell.—OS 2 
Rain in the Heart.—Anon.—HP 

Rain on the Roof.—Coates Kinney.—BNL—CS 2— 
GP—HBP—HP—HSS 3—PPSr—SA 
Rain upon the Roof, The.—Mrs. F. B. Gage.—HP 
Rainbow, The.—Anon.—CS 7—LLC—SA 
Rainbow, The.—Anon.—CS 15 
Rainbow, The.—Anon.—HSS 2 

Rainbow, The.—Anon. (Incl. in An April Day.) — 
WR 9 

Rainbow, The.—Anon.—YFD 

Rainbow, The.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 

Rainbow, The.—T: Campbell.—POS (abr.) 

(To the Rainbow—C.)—FEP—SS 
(SI. .abr. )—EPs—S N 

Rainbow, The.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Rainbow, The. (Anticipation and Retrospection— C. 

— abr.) —J: Keble.—CGd—-FP—OS 1 
Rainbow, The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Rainbow. (Pantomime Charade.)—E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—YFE 

Rainbow, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Rainbow, The.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Rainbow, The [or A].—W: Wordsworth.—BNL—CGd 
—FEP—GP—LC—OB—YBF 
(“My heart leaps up when I behold”— C.) —PGT 1— 
SN 

Rainbow and its Emblems, The.—Anon.—DLD 
Rainbow Drill.—Marguerite W. Morton.—ID 
Rainbow Drill.—C. H. Sherman.—WR 17 
Rainbow Festival, The.—Anon.—EuE 
Rain-crow, The.—Madison Cawein.—AA 
Raindrops, The.—Anon.—DST 
Rain-drops.—Anon. See Raindrops’ Ride, The. 
Rain-drops, The.—Delia L. Colton.—CS 24 
Raindrops’ Ride, The.—Anon.—DS—NPS—YP 
(Rain Coach, The.)—TT 
(Rain-drops— si. abr.) —SM 
Rain-harp, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Rain-lesson, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—PTS 
Rainy Day, A.—Anon.—HP 
Rainy Day, A.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Rainy Dav, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL—BS 1— 
CR—CS 14—FEP—HDL—NV—SA—SR 6— 
TAV 

Rainv Day, The. ( Motion song.) —E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—YFE 

Raise the Gates. (Tab.) —Anon.—COS—NPS—BP— 
YP 

Raising a Beard. (Texas Siftings.) —CS 32 
Raising the Devil.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 
Raising the Flag at Sumter. (Sel. fr. Address at the 
Raising of the Union Flag over Fort Sumter.)— 
H: W. Beecher.—SR 2 
Raising the Wind.—W. H. Neall.—CS 33 
Raja of India Sends a Chessboard to Nushirvan, The.— 
Firdausi. See Shah-Nameh, The. 

Rajput Nurse, A.—Edwin Arnold.—BS 20—CS 28— 
PFP 

Rale Convanience, A. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Raleigh. Sir Walter Scott. See Kenilworth. 

Raleigh’s Cell in the Tower.—Dante G. Rossetti.—EHT 


272 




TITLE INDEX 


Recipe 


"Rally Round the Flag.”—A. L. Stone.—PEO 
Ralph Coleman’s Reformation.—H. E. McBride.— 
MTD 

Ralph Waldo Emerson, Br. sel. fr. (Extract concern¬ 
ing Emerson.)—Oliver W. Holmes.—PEO 
Ralph Waldo Emerson.—Mrs. E. C. Kinney.—PEO 
Ramayana, The, Sels. fr. —(TV. by) H. H. Milman. 
Death of Yajnadatta, The.—NE 
Descent of the Ganges, The.—NE 
Ramayana, The Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Rambling Rhyme of Dorothy, A.—Arthur C. Train.— 
CG 2 

Rambo-tree, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Ramon.—Fs. Bret Harte.—BNL—CRR 
Randall McDonald.—T. D. McGee.—PEB 4 
Randolph of Roanoke.—J: G. Whittier.—FEP 
Ranger.—Anon.—PC 

Ranger, The, Sel. fr. —J : G. Whittier.—SC—SE 
Ranger’s Grave.—Garoline B. Southey.—PC 
Rape of Lucrece, The, Sels. fr. —T: Heywood. 

Good-morrow [Song]. (Fr. Act IV., Sc. 6.)—FEP 
—OEL 

(Greeting, A.)—CEL 

(Greetings to my Love— sel.) —ES 

(Matin Song.)—OB 

(Pack Clouds Away.)— BNL — ELP — SN — 
YBF 

(“Pack clouds away, and welcome day”— sel.) — 
AE—PGT 1 

(Song.)—HBP—LC—TFY 
Song of the Bell. (Fr. IV., 6.)—ELP 
Rape of the Bell, The.—Augusta Moore.—CS 33 
Rape of the Lock, The.—Alex. Pope.—FEP ( an . I., 
II., IV., V.)—HBP—WEP3 (II., III.)— 
WR 11 (I.) 

Age of Queen Anne, The. (Sel. fr. Can. III.)— 
EHT 

Belinda. (Sel. fr. Can. II.)-—BNL 
Toilet. The. (Sel. fr. Can. II.)—BNL 
Raphael. (Sel.) —J: G. Whittier.—LLC 

("We shape ourselves the joy or fear”— ptly. same 
sel. )—GG 

Raphael’s Account of the Creation.—J: Milton. See 
Paradise Lost. 

Rapid Transit.—Edgar W. Abbot.—BS 21 
(Poppyland Limited Express, The.)—SR 11 
Rapture, The, Sel. fr. —T: Carew.—W T EP 2 
Rare Moments.—C: H. Phelps.-—AA 
Rare Willy Drowned in Yarrow.—Anon.—HBP 
“Rarely, rarely contest thou.”—Percy B. Shelley.— 
FEP 

(Song.)—HBP 

(Spirit of Delight, The.)—CEL 
Rarest Pearl, The.—S. F. Fiester.—CS 2S 
Raschi in Prague. (Sel.) —Emma Lazarus.—WR 5 
Rationalistic Chicken, The.—Anon.—BS 4—CR 
(First Problem, The.)—SR 10 
Ratisbon.—Rob’t Browning.—MR—TMD 
(Boy of Ratisbon, The.)—BLP 
(Incident of Ratisbon, An.)—OS 2 
(Tnci ent of the French Camp, An— C.) —AVP—• 
BNL — BS 24 — CS 15 — EA — EDY —FEP 
— GN — HB — HBP — LC — PHS — SC — 
VA—VSG—WEP 4 
Rats.—Jane Loudon.—FTR 
Rats.—J: McIntosh.—BeR 
Raven, The. (Parody.) —-Anon.—DCR 
Raven, The. (C.)—S: T. Coleridge. 

(Raven and the Oak, The.)—CGd 
Raven, The.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—ASL—BNL— 
BS 4 — CGd — CR — CS 1 — FEP — FP — 
GN — HBP — HNS — HSS 2— M YF — PPSr 
—PS—PSR—SE (sels.)— VSG—WRD 
Raven and the Oak, The.—S: T. Coleridge. See Raven, 
The. 

Ravenna Pine Forest, Sel. fr. —Leigh Hunt.—AD 
Raven’s Tomb, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Itavenswood and Lucy Ashton.—Walter Scott. See 
Bride of Lammermoor, The. 

Ray’s Ride. (Sel. fr. Marion’s Faith, Ch. XIV.)—C: 
King.—SC 

Razor Seller, The.—J: Wolcott.—BNL—BS 24—CS 3 
—HPE 

Reaching the Early Train.—Max Adeler. See Out of 
the Hurly Burly. 

Reaction against the Classics, The.—Anon.—CP 
Read this, Boys.—Anon.—SSS 
Read to Sleep.—Marg. J. Preston.—CS 2 
Readen ov a Head-stwone.—W: Barnes.—PGT 2 
Reading.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora Leigh. 
Reading a Letter.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Reading a Tragedy.—T: H. Bayly.—BC 
(Poppy, The—C.)—FEP 


Reading for the Thought. J: Ruskin. See Sesame 
and Lilies. 

Reading the List.—Anon.—AWB 
Reading the Will. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Reading the Will. (Play.) —Epes Sargent [or W. B. 
Fowle].—PS 
(Will, The.)—MPD 

Reading Works of Fiction—A Debate.—F. Crosby.— 
PD 

Ready.—Phcebe Cary.—AWB—BAB—PAP 
Ready, Ay, Ready.—Herman C. Merivale.—VA 
Ready for a Kiss. (Christian Weekly, The.) —BS 5— 
DLS (abr.) 

Ready for Duty.—Anna B. Warner.—AD—PHS 
(Brave Little Flower, The.)—PPSr 
(Daff y-down-dilly.)—PoR 
Real Elocution. (Dial.)— Anon.—PP—YFR 
Real Gentleman, The.—Anon.—KNE 
Real Power.—Anon.—PEO 
Real Santa Claus, A.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Realism.—Arthur C. Benson.—VA 
Realism of Dickens, The.—W: A. Lathrop.—NC 
Reality.—Martha G. Dickinson.—AA 
Reality of Literary Property.—T: N. Talfourd.—SS 
Realization.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Realm of Fancy, The.—J Keats.—PGT 1 
(Fancy— C.)— BNL—FEP—HBP—OB 
Realm of Love, The.—G. T. Bispham, Jr.—CG 3 
Reaper. The.—W: Wordsworth.—PGT 1—PHS—YBF 
(Solitary Reaper, The— C.) —BFV—BPB—FEP— 
GN—HBP—HSS 3—OB—WEP 4 
Reaper and the Flowers, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
BNL—LC—LLC—PC—SSS—TAS—WCLI 2 
Reaper of Life’s Harvest.—Anon.—GP 
(Ho, Reapers of Life’s Harvest!)—HSS 3 
Rear Guard, The.—Irene F. Brown.—EDY 
Reason, The.—Anon.—WR 20 

Reason and Instinct.—Alex. Pope. See Essay on 
Man, An. 

Reason off Duty.—E. S. Loomis.—WR 18 
Reason Why, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Reason Why, The.—Anon.—CS 26 
Reason Why, The.—Anon.—EDY 
Reason Why, The.—Anon.—FTA 
Reason Why, The.—Anon.—KNS 
Reason W’hy, The.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Reason Why, The.—Mary E. Bradley.—DS—NPS— 
WR 15—YA—YP 

Reason Why, The.—G: Cooper.—YBT 
Reason Why, The.—J. P. Prickett.-—WR 10 
Reason Why, The.—Katharine H. Terry.—CS 29 
Reasonable Doubt, A.—E: Bushnell.—BS 26 
Reasonable Man, A.— (Tr. by) Lucy H. Macqueen.— 
WR 26 

Reasons for Drinking.—H: Aldrich.—THP 
(Why Drink Wine?— diff. vers.) —HP 
Reasons for Humility.—Jas. Beattie. See Minstrel. 
The. 

Reasons Why.—T. Sheppard.—PS 
Reawakening.—Carl Spencer.—WR 10 
Rebecca’s After-thought.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Rebecca’s Hymn.—Walter Scott. See Ivanhoe. 
Rebecca’s Revenge.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Rebekah.—M. E. H. Everett.—CG 3 
Rebellion, The.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Rebellion.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 

Rebels of Boston Pefore the Revolution, The, Sel. fr. 
(Supposed Speech of James Otis.)—Lydia M. 
Child.—OS 2—SC—SS 
(Freedom must Triumph.)—SR 8 
(Speech against the Stamp Act— abr.) —BS 15 
Rebuff, A.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Recalled.—Marg. J. Preston.—BS 21 
Recalled to Life. (New Alcestis, A— C.) —Bryan W. 
Procter.—VSG 

Receipt for a Racket, A.—M. E. B.—PR—WR 12— 
YA 

Receipt for Hash.—H: W. Shaw.—BS 22 
Receipt for Salad. A.—Sydney Smith. See Recipe fo 
Salad, A. 

Receiving and Giving.—Anon.—YBT 
Receiving Calls.—Almedia Brown.—BS 12 
Reception, The.—Ellen Pickering.—DDD 
Recess Speeches.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Recessional.—Rudvard Kipling.—BS 25—CR—EDY 
— FEP — GMS — GN — HBR — HDL—OB— 
YBF 

Recessional.—C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Recipe for a Modern Bonnet.—Anon.—HPE 
Recipe for a Modern Novel.—Anon.—CS 17 
Recipe for a Poem. (New York Evening Post.) —HP 
Recipe for a Salad, A.—Sydney Smith. See Recipe 
for Salad, A. 


273 





Recipe 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Recipe for an Appetite.—Alice Cary.—BLF 

Recipe for Potato Pudding. — Frances M. Whitcher. 

See Widow Bedott Papers, The. 

Recipe for Salad, A.—-Sydney Smith.—BNL 
• (Receipt for Salad, A.)—tIBP 
(Recipe for a Salad, A.)—FEP 
(Salad.)—HPE 
Reciprocity.—Anon.—WR 2 
Recitation, Sel. fr. —W: E. (?)Channing.—AE 
Recitation: “I love my papa, that I do.”—Mrs. Rus¬ 
sell Kavanaugh.—KJ 

Recitation: “It’s very hard, kind friends, for me.”— 
Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Recitation: “Much has been said by poets wise.”— 
Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Receitation for a Bov.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KC 

Recitation for a Boy Three Years Old.— Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.—KJ 

Recitation for a Dozen Little Girls.—Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.—KC 

Recitation for a Little Child.—Mrs. Russell Kavan¬ 
augh.—KC 

Recitation for a Small Boy.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
—KJ 

Recitation for a Very Little Girl.—Annie Chase.— KC 
(Spring.)—TT 

Recitation for a Very Small Girl.—Mrs. Russell Kav¬ 
anaugh.—KJ 

Recitation for any Number of Small Children.—Mrs. 
Russell Kavanaugh.-—KC 

Recitation for Six Very Little Girls.—Annie Chase.— 
DLD 

Recitation for Three Little Girls.—Mrs. J. Morrison 
[or Carter).—LPS—PP 
(Nursery Song.)—NV—PC—PHS 
(What the Mother Heard.)—PPSr 
Recitations from the Bible. (Psalm XXIII.) Bible. — 
FTT 

(Twenty-third Psalm, The.)—EA—PS 
Recitations in Concert.—Anon.—PS 
Reckermemper der Poor.—Anon.—DRR 
Reckoning with the Old Year.—Mrs. Mary E. Fox- 

well.—BS 8 

Reclaimed; or, Sunshine Comes at Last.—H. E. Mc¬ 
Bride—CS 31 

Reclaimed Brother; or, the Chain of Roses, The.— 
H. E. McBride.—SDD 

Reclaimed Father, The.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Recluse, The, Sel. fr. (Outline— sel. fr. 1st Bk., con¬ 
clusion.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Recluse Hermit, The.—J: Donne. See Ecologue, Dec. 
26, 1613. Allophanes finding Idios in the 
Country, etc. 

Recognition, A . (Fr. Sonnets to George Sand.)—Eliz. 

B. Browning.—BNL 
Recognition.—J: W. Chadwick.—AA 
Recognition, The.—W: Sawyer.—THP 
Recollection.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
Recollection.—Amelia W. Carpenter.-—-AA 
Recollection, A.—H. M. Nickerson.—TCV 
Recollection, The. (C.) —Percv B. Shelley.—BPB (si. 
abr.) —PGT 1—POS (sel.)— SN 
(To Jane—the Recollection— si. abr.) —WEP 4 
Recollection, the Strongest Influence.—Anon.—CP 
Recollections of a Gifted Woman, Br. sel. fr .—Nathan¬ 
iel Hawthorne.—AE 

Recollections of Childhood.—C: Lamb. See Rosa¬ 
mund Gray. 

Recollections of my Christmas Tree. (Christmas Tree, 
A— C. — in Reprinted Pieces.)—C: Dickens.— 
CS 8—LLC—SAE 

Recollections of the Portrait of King Henry VIII., 
Trinity Lodge, Cambridge. (C.)—W: Words¬ 
worth. 

(King Henrv the Eighth.)—EHT 
Recompense, The.—Anon.—FLS 
Recompense. The.—C. H. Dorrie.—PAPm 
Reconcilement, The.—J: Sheffield.—OB 
Reconciliation, The.—Louisa M. Alcott. See Little 
Women. 

Reconciliation.—W: Pitt, Lord Chatham. See First 
Step to Reconciliation with America, The. 
Reconciliation.—C. A. Mason.—AA 
Reconciliation, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, 
The. 

Reconsidered Verdict, The. Gilbert Venables.—HBR 
Reconstructed Man, A.—Anon.—MAD 
Record of a Life, The.—-H: D. Gray.—CG 2 
Record of the Hours, The.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Recrimination.—Ella W. Wilcox.—AA 
Recruit, The.—Rob’t W. Chambers.—A A—THP— 
WR 26 


Re-cured Lover Exulteth in his Freedom, The.—Sir T: 
W yatt.—F EP 

Red and the Blue, The.—H. A. Roby.—PAPm 
Red and White Roses.—T: Carew.—ES 
Red Bird, The.—W: H. Hayne.—DES 
Red Cross Knight and Una, The.—Edmund Spenser. 
See Faerie Queene, The. 

Red Fisherman; or, The Devil’s Decoy, The.—Winthrop 
M. Praed.—BPB—ESs 

Red Harlaw, The.—Walter Scott. See Antiquary, 
The. 

Red Herrings. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery-book.) 
(Punch.) —HPE 

Red Jacket, The.—G: M. Baker.—BS 2—CS 11—DS— 
FR (si. abr.)— NPS—YP 
(Fireman, The.)—SA 

Red Jacket. (C.) —Fitz-Greene Halleck.—AA 
(To a Portrait of Red Jacket— cond.) —W T R 10 
Red King, The.—C: Kingsley.—EHT 
Red King’s Warning, The.—Anon.—PS 
Red Poppies in the Sabine Valleys near Rome. — W: 

Sharp. See Sospiri di Roma. 

Red, Rea Rose, A.—Rob’t Burns.—BIL—BPB—FEP 
—FT A— H B P—LC — MBL — OB — WEP 3— 
YBF 

(“O, my luve’s like a red, red rose.”)—BNL—EPs— 
—GP—PGT 1 

Red Riding Hood.—J: G. Whittier.—GMS 
Red Riding Hood Drill.—Anon.—WDM 
Red River Voyageur, The.—J: G. Whittier.—FEP— 
PHS 

Red Sandwort.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Red, the White, the Blue, The.—Kate B. Sherwood.— 
PEO 

Red Thread of Honour, The.—Sir Fs. H. Doyle.—I.II 
(SI. abr.)— PGT 2—PSR 

Red Thread of Honour, The.—J. A. Noble.—PEB 4 
(Same subject as foregoing.) 

Red. White and Blue, The.—Anon.—TT 
Red, White and Blue, The.—D: T. Shaw (also at. to 
Timothy Dwight ).—WCI.I 2 
(Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean.)—CP (si. abr.) — 
LLC—PAPm (si. diff. vers.) 

(Columbia, the Lana of the Brave.)—BLP 
Redbreast Chasing the Butterfly, The.—W: Words¬ 
worth.—CGd—LC 

Red-top and Timothy.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Reductio ad Absurdum.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PI.D 
Reductio ad Absurdum.—A. B. Simonds.—CG 1 
Reduction of Harfleur, The.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry V. 

Redwing’s Song.— S. J. Douglass.—TFS 
Reed, The.—H: B. Carpenter.—AA 
Reed-player, The.—Duncan C. Scott.—VA 
Reeds of Innocence. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: 
Blake.—OB 

(“ And I made a rural pen ”— br. sel.) —PoR 
(Child and the Piper, The.)—CGd—LC 
(introduction [to Songs of Innocence]— C.) —FEP 
—HBP—WEP 3 

(Piper, The.)—BNL—CEL—WCL 
(Piping down the Valleys Wild.)—PoR 

“Reflected in the lake I love.”-Townshend.— 

GG 

Reflections.—G: Crabbe.—FP 
(Late Wisdom—sel.)—OB 
Reflections in the Pillory.—C: Lamb.—FTR 
Reflections in [wr. on] Westminster Abbey.—Jos. Addi¬ 
son. See Spectator, The. 

Reflections Looking over a Gate at a Pool in a Field. 
(C.) —Jean Ingelow. 

(Maiden with a Milking-pail, A.)—BNL 
Reflections of a Proud Pedestrian.—Oliver W. Holmes. 
—HPE 

Reflections of Sir Walter Scott. (Fr. Diary for Dec 
18, 1825.)—Walter Scott.—LLC 
Reflections on Cleopathera's Needle.—Cormac O’Leary. 
—AWH—THP 

(Paddy’s Reflections on Cleopathera’s [or Cleopat¬ 
ra’s] Needle.)—GH—PS 

Reflections on the French Revolution, Br. sel. fr. (Apos¬ 
trophe to the Queen of France.)—Edmund 
Burke.—PS 

(Marie Antoinette [.Queen of France].)—OS 3 
(abr.) —SS—VSG 

(Queen o France and the Spirit of Chivalry, The.) 
—TMD 

Reflections on Westminster Abbey.—Jos. Addison. See 
Spectator, The. 

Reflections on Westminster Abbey.— Washington Ir¬ 
ving. See Westminister Abbey. 

Reflective Retrospect, A.—J: G. Saxe.—FEP 


274 





TITLE INDEX 


Reliques 


Reform Bill, The. ( Sel. fr. A Speech Delivered in the 
House of Commons on the 2nd of March, 1831.) 
—T: B. Macaulay.—CR 
(Reform that you may Preserve— sel.) —SS 
Reform Bill a Second Bill of Rights, The. (Sel. fr. A 
Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on 
the 5th of July, 1831.)—-T: B. Macaulay.—SS 
Reform in Parliament.—Lord Grey. See Necessity of 
Reform in Parliament. 

Reform Irresistible. (Sel. fr. A Speech Delivered in 
the House of Commons on the 16th of Decem- 
per, 1831.)—T: B. Macaulay.—SS 
Reform that you may Preserve.— T: B. Macaulay. See 
Reform Bill, The. 

Reform will Go on, The.—Anon.—CS 9 
Reformation.—H. B. Niles.—SDD 
Reformation of the Knave of Hearts. (Fr. Nos. 11 
and 12 of the Microcosm.)—G: Canning.—ESs 
Reformed Man’s Lament, A.—Anna Linden.—CS 17 
Reformed Mormon Tippler, The.—H. E. McBride.-— 
DDD 

Reformer, A.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Reformer, The.—Horace Greeley.—LLC—TMR (si. abr. ) 
Reformer, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BNL 
Refuge of the Ideal, The.—Hannah P. Kimball.—TAS 
Refugees, The, Sel. fr. (Louis XIV. and his Minister— 
Ch. XIX., cond. and arr. as dial.) —A. Conan 
Doyle.—NDP 

Regard for the Negro Race.—H: W. Grady. See At the 
Boston Banquet. 

Regency Resolutions, Dec. 31, 1810, Sel. fr. (Defence 
of Pitt.)—G: Canning.—SS 
Regeneration, Sel. fr. (Invocation, An.)—Walter S. 
Landor.—VA 

Regiment Song.—Frank L. Stanton.—PAPm 
Regiment's Return, The.—E. J. Cutler.—CS 18—MMR 
Regina Cceli.—Coventry Patmore.—VA 
“Reg’lar Army Man, The.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Regret.—Jean Ingelow.—BS 5—CS 14—HDL (sel.) 
Regret.—R: Le Gallienne.—VA 
Regrets.—Anon.—FLS 

(If We had but Known.)—CS 6 
Regrets.—J. Ashby-Sterry.—VS 

Regrets of Drunkenness.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Othello, the Moor of Venice. 

Regulus.—Emily A. Braddock.—WR 9 
Regulus.—T. Dale.—CS 11—DS 

Regulus before the Roman Senate.—Epes Sargent. 

See Regulus to the Roman Senate. 

Regulus to the Carthaginians.—Elijah Kellogg.—CS 11 
DS—OM—PPS 

(Abr. — but speech comp.) —BS 13—PS 
(Curse of Regulus, The— diff. vers.) —CS 2—KNE 
(Supposed Speech of Regulus.)—NPS—YP 
(Return of Regulus, The— abr. fr. CS 11— speech 
abr.) —TMD 

Regulus to the Roman Senate.—Epes Sargent.—CS 3 
—LLC—PS—SS 

(Regulus before the Roman Senate— abr.) —BLP 
Rehearsal, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FND 
Rehearsal, The.— (Dial.) Ella H. Clement.—YFD 
Rehearsal, The.—H. E. McBride.—SD 
Reign of Christ on Earth, The.—Jas. Montgomery.— 
HBP 

(Psalm LXXII.)—FEP 

Reign of May, The. (C.)—Jas. G. Percival.—FEP 
(May.)—BNL—HBP 

Reign of Napoleon, The. (The History of the Restora¬ 
tion of Monarchy in France, Bk. I., Ch. I.— 
abr.) —Alphonse de Lamartine.—TMD 
Reign of Peace, The.—Eliza Thornton.—BLP 
Reincarnation.—D: B. Sickels.—AA 
Reinforcement.-—Anon.—TS 
Rejected. (Dial.) —Anon.—MAD 
Rejected.—Anon.—TL 

Rejected National Hymns, The. (Poems Received in 
Response to an Advertised Call for a National 
Anthem.)—Rob’t H. Newell. 

I. By H-y W. L - ngf-w.—THP 

II. By J -hn Gr - - nl- -f Wh - - t - - r.—THP ' 

III. By Dr. Ol-v-r W - nd - -1 H-lmes.—THP 

(National An hem by Dr. Oliver Wendell H-.) 

—BNL 

IV. By R-lph W-ldo Em-r—n.—THP 

V. By W -11 - - m C -11 - n B - y - nt.—TH P 

(National Anthem by William Cullen B-.)— 

BNL 

VI. By N. P. W-ll-s.—THP 

(National Anthem by N. P. W-.)—BNL 

VII. By Th-m-s B-il-y Aid—ch.—THP 

(National Anthem by Thomas Bailey A-.)— 

BNL 

National Anthem by Gen. George P. M-.—BNL 


Rejection of the Reform Bill. (Sel. fr. Speech at 
Taunton in 1831 on the Reform Bill not Being 
Passed. )-^Sydney Smith.—SS 
Rejoicing [Rejoicings—C.] upon the New Year’s Com¬ 
ing of Age. (Cond.) —C: Lamb.—HS—WR 26 
Relapse.—C: Kellogg Field.—CG 2 .,•* j, 

Relapse, The.—T: Stanley.—OB • n -1 

Relations of Booksellers and Authors, The. (A Tale of 
a Tub, Sec. X.)—Jonathan Swift.—ESs 
Released [— January, 1878—C'.]—J: B. O’Reilly.— 
EDY 

Released.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—TAS 
Relenting Mob, A. — Victor Hugo (tr. by Lucy H. 
Hooper).—BS 18—PFP 

(Civil War [an Episode of the Commune].)—CS 32 
—DR (si. abr.) J 

Relentless Time.—H: W. Longfellow. See Coplas de 
Manrique. 

Relentless Tyrant, A.—Anon.—KNS 
Reliance on God. (Casket.) —FP 
Relics.—Annie D. Ware.—CS 16 
Relics.—W: Winter.—FTA 

Relief for Starving Ireland, 1847.—S. S. Prentiss.— 
PS 

(Appeal in Behalf of Ireland— si. longer and ptly. 
diff.)— FTR— HNS 

. (In Behalf of Starving Ireland— sel.) —OM 

(Sending Relief to Ireland.)—SS 
Relief of Lucknow, The—Anon. (Ad.) —NC 
Relief of Lucknow, The.—Rob’t T. S. Lowell.—BNL— 
BS 1 — CS 11 — EPs — FEP — HB — HBP— 
LLC — MMR — OM — OS 2 — SA — SC — 
TMR 

Relief of Orleans.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VI., Pt. I. 

Religio Laici, Sel. fr. (Tradition.)—J: Dryden.— 
WEP 2 

Religion and Doctrine. (C.)—J: Hay.—CS 13 

(Blind Man’s Testimony, The.)—BS 18 
Religion Independent of Government. (Sel. Jr. The 
Catholic Question, May 31,1811.)—H: Grattan. 
—SS 

Religion of Hudibras, The.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 
Religion of Revolutionary Men.—Alphonse de Lamar¬ 
tine.—SS 

Religious Character of President Lincoln, The. (Fr. 
the funeral address, April 19th, 1866.)—Rev. 
P. D. Gurley.—PEO—WRD 
Religious Meditation. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Religious Persecution.—Anon. See Folly of Religious 
Persecution. 

Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, Sels. fr. — (Edited 
by) T: Percy. See: 

Adam Bel, Clym of the Clough, and William of 
Cloudesle. 

As ye Came from the Holy Land. 

Babes in the Wood. The. 

Baffled Knight, The; or, Lady’s Policy. 

Bailiff’s Daughter of Islington, The. 

Ballad of Chevy-Chase, The. 

Barbara Allen’s Cruelty. 

Battle of Otterbum, The. 

Blind Beggar’s Daughter of Bednall-Greene, The.^i 

Bonny Earl of Murray, The. 

Brave Lord Willoughby. 

Child of Elle, The. 

Child Waters. 

Edom o’ Gordon. 

Edward, Edward. 

Fair Margaret and Sweet William 

Fairy Queen, The. 

Flodden Field. 

Friar of Orders Gray. 

Frolicksome Duke, The; or, The TinKer’s Good 
Fortune. 

Gil Morrice. 

Glasgerion. 

Heir of Linne, The. 

Jew’s Daughter, The. 

King Arthur’s Death. 

King Cophetua and the Beggar maid. 

King John and the Abbot of Canterbury, 

King Leir and his Three Daughters. 

Lady Anne Bothwell’s Lament. 

Lady Turned Serving-man, The. 

Leoffricus. 

Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard. 

Lord Thomas and Fair Annet. 

Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor. 

Mary Ambree. 

Nut-brown Maid, The. 

O Nanny, Wilt thou Gang wi’ Me? 


275 








Reliques 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Reliques of Ancient English Poetry ( continued). 

Old and Young Courtier, The. 

Old Robin of Portingale. 

Robin Good-fellow. 

Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne. 

Sir Andrew Barton. 

Sir Lancelot du Lake. 

Sir Patrick Spens. 

Spanish Lady’s Love, The. 

Sweet William’s Ghost. 

Take thy Old Cloak about Thee. 

Truth’s Integrity (Love will Find out the Way). 
Waly. Waly, Love be Bonny. 

Wandering Jew, The. 

Winifreda. 

Young Waters. 

Relish of Fair Prospect.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 
Remain! (Poems and Epigrams, L I—Walter S 
Landor.—OB 
(Appeal, The.)—VA 
Remarkable Case, A.—Anon.—WR 12 
Remarkable Experience. A.—Anon.—GH 
Remarkable Honeymoon Trip, A.—Laurence Lee.— 
WR 26 

Remarkable Instance of Presence of Mind.—Anon.— 
CS 9 

Remarkable Longevity.—-Anon.—OS—YA 
Remarks at the Dedication of the National Cemetery 
at Gettysburg, Nov. 19, 1863.—Abraham 

Lincoln. See Address at the Dedication of the 
Cemetery at Gettysburg. 

Remarks on the Character and Writings of John Milton, 
Sel.fr. (Defense of Poetry.)—W: E. Channing. 
—SE 

Remarks on the Political Course of Mr. Calhoun in 
1838, Sels. fr.— Dan’l Webster. 

On Sudden Political Conversions. (Br. sel.) —SS 
Platform of the Constitution, The.—SS 

(Against Secession — ptly. fr. The Constitution 
and the Union.)—SSD 

Remedy as Bad as the Disease, The.—Anon.—HR 
Remedy Worse than the Disease, The.—Matthew Prior. 
—THP 

Remember.—An on.-—TFS 
Remember.—Christina G. Rossetti.—OB—VA 
Remember, Boys Make Men.—Mary E. Tucker.—NPS 
—SSS—YP 

Remember now thy Creator. (Ecclesiastes, Ch. XII.) 
Bible.— BS 4—LLC (1-7.) 

Remember or Forget.—Hamilton Ai'dA—VA—VS — 
YBF 

Remember the Maine.— Rob’t B. Wilson.—CS 37 — 
PAPm 

Remembered.—J. L. Gordon.—PAPm 
Remembrance.—J: H. Boner.—AA 
Remembrace.—Emily Bronte. — AVP — HBP — OB 
—PYO (si. abr.) —WEP 4 
Remembrance , A.—Willis G. Clarke.—AA 
Remembrance. (Sel. fr. Music and Morals, Bk. I., Ch. 

VIII.)—H. R. Haweis—LLC 
Remembrance.—G. P. Lathrop.—AA 
Remembrance.—Jas. G. Percival. See Retrospection. 
Remembrance, A.—J. C. Shairp.—AVP 
Remembrance. ( C .)—Percy B. Shelley. 

(Lament, A.)—HBP 
Remembrance.-—Rob’t Southey.—FP 
Remembrance of God.—W: H. Furness.—TAS 
Reminding the Hen.—Bessie Chandler.—DLS—HSS 2 
—WR 15 

Reminiscence, A.—Anon.—FAS 
Reminiscence.—Anon.—FLS 
Reminiscence.—T: B. Aldrich.—A A 
Reminiscence, A.—J: F. Clarke.—OH 
Reminis’ence of Exhibition Day, A.—Rob’t J. Bur¬ 
dette.—BS 10 

Reminiscence of Lexington, A.—Theodore Parker.— 
OM—PPS 

Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist.—T: Hood.—HPE 
(Epicurean Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist— C.) 
—FEP 

Remonstrance, A. (Sel. fr. The Last Remonstrance— 
wording chgd .)—Rob’t, Lord Lytton.—-FLS 
Remonstrance with the Snails.—Anon.—BNL 
Remorse. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Remorse, Sel. fr. (Song: “Hear, sweet spirit”— fr. Act 
III., Sc. I.)—S: T. Coleridge.—HBP 
Remorse.—W: Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 

Remorse (Stanza, April, 184-.— C .).—Percy B. Shellev. 
—OB 

Remorse and Retribution (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Remorse of King Claudius.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Hamlet. 


Remorseful Cakes, The.—Eugene Field.—TFS 
Removal, The. (Verse vers, of following.) —Anon.— 
CS 21— SCS 

Removal, The. (Dial.)- —Sydney Hamilton.—MD 
Renouncement.—Alice Meynell.—FLS— OB — VA — 
YBF 

Renowned Wouter Van Twiller, The.—Washington 
Irving. See Knickerbocker History of New 
York, The. 

Rent-day, The.— (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Renunciants.—E: Dowden.—VA 
Renunciation, A. (A Book of Airs, XII.,— C.) —T 
Campion.—PGT 1 

Renunciation, A. (Surrender, The— C.) —H: King.— 
OB (si. abr.) 

(Surrender— sel.) —YBF 

Renunciation, A.—E: Vere, Earl of Oxford.—BNL— 
FEP 

Renyi.—-Helen Booth.—CS 27 

Reopening of the Drury Lane Theatre (Address Spoken 
at the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre— C.) — 
Lord Byron.—EDY 
Reparation.—Anon.—WR 24 
Repartee.—Ben W. Davis.—CS 24 
Repartee.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Repartee.—S. A. York.—CG 1 

Repeal Claimed by Americans as a Right. (Fr. a speech 
of Jan. 20, 1775.)—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 
—PS—SS 

Repeal of the Stamp Act, The.—Jonathan Mayhew.— 
MRS 

Repeal of the Union. — Dan’l O’Connell. — CR — 
PPS (cond.) 

Repeal of the Union, The, Sel. fr. —R: L. Shiel.—PS—SS 
(Irish Agitator-, 1834.)—OM 
Repentance.—Anon.—WR 4 
Repentance.—Anon.—WR 15 
Repentir de Noel.—Sarah Bernhardt.—WR 7 
(Christmas Repentance, A— tr.) —WR 7 
Reply, Sel. fr. (Early Death.)—Hartley Coleridge.— 
OB 

Reply, The.—J: Norris.—HBP 

Reply of Achilles to the Envoys of Agamemnon, Soli¬ 
citing a Reconciliation.—Homer. See Iliad. 
The. 

Reply of Mr. Pitt [to Sir Robert Walpole].—W: Pitt, 
Earl of Chatham. See Reply of Pitt to Wal¬ 
pole. 

Reply of Pitt to Walpole.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 
—CS 4 

(Answer of Pitt to Walpole, The.)—OS 3 
(Pitt’s Reply to Walpole.)—FTR—HNS 
(Reply of Mr. Pitt.)—KNE 

(Reply of Mr. Pitt to Sir Robert Walpole— cond.) 
—TMD 

(Reply to Sir Robert Walpole, 1741.)—PS— 
(Reply to Walpole.)—LLC 

Reply to “A Woman’s Question.”—Nettie H. (?) Pel¬ 
ham.—CS 13 

Reply to Address Presenting Colors of France to the 
United States, sel. fr. (France and the United 
States.)—G: Washington.—SS 
Reply to -Eschines. — Demosthenes. See Oration on 
the Crown, The. 

Reply to Essays and Reviews, Sel. fr. —Anon.—GG 
Reply to Flood. (Philippic against Flood— C.) —H: 
Grattan.—PPS 

(Reply to Mr. Flood— cond. )—KNE—OM—PS—SS 
(Invective against Mr. Flood— cond.) —CS 4 
Reply to Grafton.—Edward, Lord Thurlow. See Re¬ 
ply to the Duke of Grafton. 

Reply to Hayne, The (Second Speech on Foot’s Reso¬ 
lution), Sels. fr. —Dan’l Webster. 

Liberty and Union [, One and Inseparable],—BS 2 
— CS 1 — FD 1 — FTR — KNE — LLC 
— OS 3 — PPS — PS — SC — SM — SO — 
SPE (ptly. diff.) — SR 8 — SS — TMR (abr.) 
— WCLG 1 (ptly. diff.) 

(Peroration of Webster’s Reply to Hayne— abr.) 
—SE 

Massachusetts and South Carolina.—FTR—SPE 
(Massachusetts— abr.) —OS 2 

(South Carolina and Massachusetts.)—CR— 
FD 1—MRS—OM—PS— SO — SS — TMD — 
WCLG 1 

(Tribute to Massachusetts— abr.) —SE 
Reply to Hayne.—BS 8 (sel.) —PPS 

(Matches and Overmatches— sel.) —FD 1—FTR 
—SS 

Reply to Hayne.—IR 

(Liberty and Union.)—SO 

Reply to John Randolph. (W. add.) —H: Clay.—PS 

276 




TITLE INDEX 


Rest 


Reply to “Lines Found in the Hand of the Statue of 
Night at Florence” by Giovanni Strozzi.-—r 
Michael Angelo.—OS2 

Reply to Lord North, 1774.—Isaac Barr<$.—OM—SS 
Reply to Macaulay’s “Reform Irresistible.”—J: W. 
•Croker.—SS 

Reply to Marlowe (C.), A.—Sir Walter Raleigh.—EP 
(Her Reply.)—OB 

(Milk-maid’s Mother’s Answer.)—FEP (w. add. st.) 
—HBP 

(Nymph’s Reply [to the Passionate Shepherd], The.) 
—BNL—GP—PHS 

(Reply to Marlowe’s The Passionate Shepherd to 
his Love.)—WEP 1 

(Shepherdess’s Reply, The.)—CEL (w. add. st.) 
Reply'to Marlowe’s The Passionate Shepherd to his 
Love.—Sir Walter Raleigh. See foregoing. 
Reply to Mr. Corry. (Invective against Corry— abr.) — 
H: Grattan.— BS 3 — CR—CS 3—FTR—LLC 

_gQ 

(SI. abr.) —OM—SE 

(Invective against Mr. Corry.)—KNE—SS 
Reply to Mr. Flood.—H: Grattan. See Reply to Flood. 
Reply to Mr. Webster, Jan., 1830.—Rob’t Y Hayne. 

See On Mr. Foot’s Resolution. 

Reply to Mr. Wickham in Burr’s Trial.—W: Wirt—SS 
Reply to Sir Robert Walpole. 1741.—W: Pitt, Earl of 
Chatham. See Reply of Pitt to Walpole. 
Reply to the Duke of Grafton.—E:, Lord Thurlow.— 
—IvN E—OM —PS—SS 

(Lord Thurlow’s Reply to the Duke of Grafton.)— 
VSG 

(Reply to Grafton.)—LLC 
Reply to “The Welcome.”—W. F. Fox.—CS 10 
Reply to Threats of Violence. (Sel. fr. Stamp Officers' 
Salaries. 1790.)—J: P. Curran.—PS—SS 
Reply to Walpole.—W: Pitt, Earl of Chatham. See 
Reply of Pitt to Walpole. 

Reply to Webster.—Rob’t Y. Hayne. See On Mr. 

Webster’s Defence of New England. 

Report, The.—Ellen Pickering.—DDD 
Report Amer. Home Miss. Society, Sel. fr. —Anon.—GG 
Report of an Adjudged Case. (C.)—W: Cowper.— 
HPE 

(Law-case, A.)—OS 1 
(Nose and Eyes.)—-BNL—PC 
Reporter’s Prayer, A.—-J. A. Fraser, Jr.—WR 12 
Repose, A.—Bryan W. Procter.—-WEP 4 
Representative, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Presiden¬ 
tial Protest, The. 

Representative Government Trustworthy. (Arr. fr. 

speech of HCmilius, in Life of ASmilius.)— 
Plutarch.—BLP 

Representative Men, Sel. fr. (“In all our decisions 
and actions it would be well for us”— hr. sel. fr. 
Plato; or, The Philosopher.)—Ralph W. Emer¬ 
son.—GG 

Reproach, A.—Flavel S. Mines.—-WR 4 
Reprove Gently.—Anon.—CS 15 

Republic, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Building of 
the Ship, The. 

Republic Defined, A.—Alphonse de Lamartine.—BLP 
(Establishment of the Republic.)—SS 
Republic of New England, The. (Sel. fr. The Common 
Citizen-soldier.)—J: B. O’Reilly.—FD 2 
Republic or a Monarchy, A?—Victor Hugo.—SS—SSD 
Republic the Strongest Government, A.—T: Jefferson. 
•See Inauguration Address. 

Republican Press, The. (Fr. a speech delivered before 
the Republican Press Association of Ohio, Sept. 
8,1896.)—W: McKinley.—SSD 
Republic’s Duty, The. (Fr. a speech delivered at the 
Atlanta Peace Jubilee, Dec. 16, 1898.)—W: 
McKinley.—TMD 

Reputation, (brags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Requiem, A. (Sel. fr. King John and Matilda.)— 
Rob’t Davenport.—ELP 
Requiem, A.—H: King.—YBF 

Requiem: "Breathe, trumpets, breathe.”—G: Lunt. 

See Requiem for One Slain in Battle. 

Requiem.—Sir Jos. N. Patton.—VA 
Requiem.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—AVP—BFV—OB— 
PYO—VA 

Requiem [for One Slain in Battle]. — G: Lunt. — AA 
—EPs 

Requiescam.—Mary W. Howland.—TAS 
(In the Hospital.)—ASL—HDL—PAPm 
(Rest.)—BNL—GP—OS 2—YBF 
Requieseat.—Matthew Arnold.—AVP—OB—PYO — 
■ WEP 4 

Requieseat.—Oscar Wilde.—GP 
Requital, The.—Adelaide A Procter.—VA 
Rescue, The.—Marion P. Riche.—CS 31 


Rescue, The.—B: F. Taylor.—NC 
Rescue of Albret, The.—T: D English.—CS 32 
Rescue of Chicago, The.—H: M. Look.—CS 5 
Rescue of Gavin, The.—Jas. M. Barrie. See Little 
Minister, The. 

Rescue of Lygia, The.—Henryk Sienkiewicz. See Quo 
Vadis. 

Rescue of Mr. Figg, The.—Anon.—CS 32—DS—YA 
Rescued.—Anon.—WR 6 
Rescued.—Celia Thaxter—SAP 

“Resembles life that once was held of light” (What is 
Life?—C.).—S: T. Coleridge.—HP 
Resentment.—G: H Clarke.—TCV 
Reserve.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
Reserve.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA 
Resignation. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Resignation, Sel. fr. —Matthew Arnold.—WEP 4 
Resignation.—R: Baxter.—FEP 

(“Lord, it belongs not to my care.”)—HDL 
Resignation!, The—C.].—T: Chatterton.—FEP—HBP 
(Faith.)—P O 

Resignation (Wednesday before Easter— C.). — J: 
Keble.—CEL 

Resignation. (Poems and Epigrams, C.— C.) —Walter 
S. Landor.—OB 

(“Why, why repine, my pensive friend.”)—HP— 
WEP 4 

Resignation.—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL—CS 12— 

FEP — HDL — LLC — PS — SO (abr.) — 
TAS—TAV—WCLI 2 

Resignation (“Oh thou who dry’st the mourner’s tear” 
— C.). —T: Moore.—KNE (abr.) —THP 
(God the rue Source of onsolation.)—HNS 
Resignation.—W Shakespeare. See Romeo and Juliet. 
Resignation and Despair. (Holy Sonnets, IX.)—J: 
Donne.—CEL 

Resigning.—Dinah M. M. Craik.—HDL 
Resistance of Mal-administration.—S. Grover Cleve¬ 
land.—FD 2 

Resistance to British Aggression.—Patrick Henry. See 
Speech in the Virginia Convention, 1775. 
Resistance to Oppression in its Rudiments.—Dan’l 
Webster. See Presidential Protest, The. 
Resisting a Mother’s Love.—Anon.—CS 14—SR 1 
Resolution. (Harper's Magazine.) —PTS 
(Doing and Giving—sel.)—HSS 2 
(Gentle Hints— si. abr.) —DLS 
Resolution and Independence.—W: Wordsworth.— 
HBP—MBL 

Resolution on the Prosecution of Mr. O’Connell, Sel. 

fr. (Irish Grievances.)—R: L. Sheil.—OM 
Resolve, The.—-Alex. Brome.—OB 
Resolve of Regulus, The.—Epes Sargent.—PS 
Resolved?—G. A. P.—CG 3 
Respect the Aged.—Alcide Richenbach.—FAS 
Respect the Burden.—Dinah M. Craik.—CS 14 
Respectability. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Respectability.—Rob’t Browning.—VA 
Respice Finem.—Fs. Quarles.—OB 
Respite, The.—Maria G. Brooks. See Zophiel: or. The 
Bride of Seven. 

Response of a College Professor to a Complimentary 
Resolution.—Anon.—CP 

Response to Beautiful Snow, A.—Sallie J. Hancock.— 
SR 2 

Responses.—Ralph W. Emerson. See Problem, The. 
Responsibilities of a Recommendation of War.— 
Horace Binney.—SS 

Responsibilities of our Republic.—Jos. Story. See 
Responsibility of American Citizens. 

Responsibilities of Young Men, The.—Bishop- 

Clark.—SSD 

Responsibility of American Citizens.—Jos. Story.— 
WRD 

(Destiny of our Country.)—OS 3 
(Our Duties [or Duty] to the Republic.)—FTR— 
KNE—LLC—SS 
(Our Future.)—BLP 

(Responsibilities of our Republic.)—HNS 
(Shall America Betray Herself?)—FD 1—SR 5 
(Sels. vary somewhat.) 

Responsibility of our Country, The.—Jas. Madison.— 
SR 8 

Rest.—Anon.—CS 22 

Rest.—Anon.—HP 

Rest.—Amy E. Blanchard.—-CS 35 

Rest. (Chambers’ Journal.) —HP 

Rest.—Rose T. Cooke,—TAS 

Rest.—Johann W. von Goethe (<r. by J: S. Dwight). 
—PHS (sel.) 

(Sweet is the Pleasure.)—HBP 
(True Rest.)—BNL—YBF (abr.) 


277 




Rest 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Rest.—Mary W. Howland. See Requieseam. 

Rest.—J: A. Jennings.—CS 25 
Rest.—G: MacDonald.—BS 8 

Rest. (Waiting for the Morning—C.)—J: H. New¬ 
man.—A VP 

Rest.—Percy S. Payne.—TIP 
Rest.—Chiistina G. Rossetti.—OB 
Rest.—Abram J. Ryan.—BS 4 
Rest.—Marg. L. Woods.—VA 
Rest at Eventide.—T: D’A. McGee.—HP 
Rest for the Weary.—Emma F. Swingle.—CS 29 
Rest in the Grave. (Temple Bar.)— HP 
Rest is not Here.—Caroline, Laciy Naime.—HBP 
Restitution.—Anon.—GP 
Restitution.—J: W. Bengough.—TCV 
Restless Youth, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Restoration of the Union, The.—Alex. H. Stephens.— 
SSD 

Restraining Jotham.—Anon.—MND 
Result of Cruelty. The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Results of the American War. (Sel. fr. Amendment 
to the Address of Thanks on the King’s Speech 
at the Opening of the Session, Nov. 27, 1781.) 
—C: J. Fox.—SS 

Resurgam.—Seymour S. Short.—AD 
Resurrected Heart s, The.—Josie F. Cappleman.—WR 7 
Resurrection, The.—Edwin Arnold. See Light of the 
World, The. 

Resurrection, A.—Helen G. Cone.—TAS 
Resurrection, The.—Rob’t Blair. See Grave, The. 
Resurrection.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 
Resurrection.—W. J. C. Train.—DFR 
Resurrection Morn.—Ellen Murray.—CS 31 
Resurrection of Abdullah.—Sir Edwin Arnold.—LLC 
(After Death.)—BS 8—OS 3 
(After Death in Arabia— C.) —CS 31—FEP—VA 
(He who Died at Azan.)—HBP—HDL 
Resurrection of Christ.—H: Ware, Jr.—TAS 
Resurrexit.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—HE 
Resuscitation of Fancy.—C: Tennvson-Turner.—PGT 2 
Retaliation [,The—w.L—Oliver Goldsmith —ESs — 
WEP 3 (sel.) 

(Edmund Burke— br. sel.) —EHT—LLC 
Retired Cat, The.—W: Cowper.—HPE 
Retired Statesman, The.—W: Cowper. See Retire¬ 
ment. 

Retirement, The.—C: Cotton.—BNL—FEP—HBP— 
SN 

Retirement, Sets. fr. —W: Cowper. 

Dejection and Retirement. The Retired States¬ 
man.—WEP 3 
What to Read.—WEP 3 

Retirement. (Olney Hymns, XLVII.)—W: Cowper.— 
FEP (diff. poem.) 

Retirement.—T: Warton.—BNL-—SN 

(Inscription in a Hermitage— C .)—HBP 
Retirement.—H: Kirke White.—CEL 
Retort, The.—Anon.—CSS—PPSr—PS 
Retort.—Paul L. Dunbar.—AA 

Retort, The.—G: P. Morris.—A WH—BNL—CS 9— 
DS—HPE—MH R—TH P—Y A 
Retreat. The.—H : Vaughan.— CEL—ELP—EPs—OB 
—PGT 1—WEP 2—YBF 
Retreat from Moscow, The.—Anon.—FP 
Retreat from Moscow, The.—Walter Thornbury.— 
E ■ Y 

Retribution.—Anon.—CS 29—NPS—-YP 
Retribution.—Anon.—WR 14 

Retribution. (Indian Story, An— C.) —W: C. Bryant. 
—VSG 

Retribution.—Anthonv Hope. See Dolly Dialogues, 
The. 

Retribution.—Abraham Lincoln. See Second Inau¬ 
gural Address. 

Retribution.—David L. Proudfit.—HP 
Retribution.—Frie rich von Logau (tr. bu H: W. 
Longfellow).—BNL 

Retributive Justice.—T: Corwin.—SSD 
"Retro me, Sathana!” (The House of Life, Sonnet 
XC.)—Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Retrospect, A.—R: D. Hubbard.—TMD 
Retrospect, A.—Victor Hugo.—MRS 
Retrospect. A. (Poems and Epigrams, LXV.)—Walter 
S. Landor.—YBF 

Retrospect, The, Sel. fr. —Burton W. Lockhart.—TCV 
Retrospect, A.—H: Watterson. See Our Expanding 
Republic. 

Retrospection.—Anon.—HP 
Retrospection.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Retrospection.—Garnet B. Freeman.—HP 
Retrospection.—Sir Alfred Lyall.—VSG 
Retrospection, Br. sel. fr. (Remembrance.)—Jas. G. 
Percival.—FP 


Retrospection.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, The. 
Retrospections. (C.)—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. 

(Wanderer, The, Sel. fr.) —A VP 
Retrospective, A.—Anon.—SR 4 
Return!—Sydney Dobell.—OB 
Return, The.—Annie Fields.—AA 
Return, The.—G. A. Greene.—TIP 
Return, The.—L. F. Tooker.—ASL 
Return.—J: Wilmot.—OB 
(Song.)—WEP 2 

Return from Battle, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—PP— 
YFR 

(Ancient Greek Chant of Victory—C.)—SAE 
(Greeks’ Return from Battle, The.)—SS 
Return of British Fugitives.—Patrick Henry.—SS 
Return of Columbus, The. (Sel. fr. History of the 
Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, Pt. I., Ch. 
XVIII.)—W: H. Prescott—WR 10 
Ret rn of Columbus, The.—Epes Sargent.—WR 10 
Return of May, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—AD 
Return of Napoleon from St. Helena, The.—Lydia H. 
Sigourney.—A A—EDY 

Return of Regulus, The.—Elijah Kellogg. See Regu- 
lus to the Carthaginians. 

Return of Spring.—Pierre Ronsard.—BNL—HBP 
Return of Spring, The. ( Abr .)—Bayard Taylor.—AD 
Return of the Birds, The. (Sel.) —W: C. Bryant.—AD 
Return of the Dead, The. (Abr.) —Edna D. Procter. 

—DDR—FMR (si. diff. abr.) 

Return of the Hillside Legion.—Ethel L. Beers.—BRR 
—CS 14 

Return of the Hoe, The. (Drake’s Magazine.) —HBR 
Return of the Swallows, The.—Edmund W. Gosse.— 
FMR 

Return of Youth, The.—W: C. Bryant.-—FP 
Return to Nature.—J. C. Shairp.—PGT 2 
Returned Brother, The.—H. E. McBride.—StD 
Returning from the War. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.— 
TDT 

Returning Home.—R: C. Trench.—PGT 2 
Reuben James.—Jas. J. Roche.—BS 19—CS 33 
Reunion of Peter and Jane.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Reunited. (Fr. A Lover’s Diary.)—Gilbert Parker.—OB 
(Envoy.)—VA 

Reunited.—Frank L. Stanton.—PAPm 
Reunited Country, A. (Response to Toast “Our 
Country” at Atlanta Peace Jubilee, Dec., 
1898.)—W: McKinley.—TMD 
Reunited Love.—R: D. Blackmore.—HP 
Rcve du Midi.—Rose T. Cooke.—-BNL—FEP—HB 
(Midsummer Day, A.)—HSS 1 
Revealed.—Harry L. Koopman.—AA 
R^veilR, The.—Fs. Bret Harte.—AWB—EDY—GN— 
LH—PAPm 

(What the Drums Say.)—BS 25 
R4veilR.—Michael O’Connor.—AA—AWB—BS 25— 
FEP 

Revel, The.—Bartholomew Dowling.—VA 
(Indian Revelry.)—FEP 
(Our Last Toast.)—HP 
(Revelry of the Dying.)—BNL 
(Song of the Dying.)—CS 5—MR 
Revelation. (Ch. XXII., 1-14.) Bible. —BS 4 
Revelation.—Edmund Gosse.—OB 
Revelations of a Pocket.-—Anon.—DDM 
Reveler’s Dream, The.—C: Mackay.—WR 18 
(Dream of the Reveler, The.)—SR 2—TS 
Revellers, The.—Anon.—CS 19 
Revellers, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—FP 
Revelry of the Dying.—Bartholomew Dowling. See 
Revel, The. 

Revels.—Anon.—ELP 

Revels of the Csesars, The.—Amelia B. Edwards.— 
WR 1 

Revenge. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Revenge.—Annie R. Blount.—WR 9 

Revenge, The.—Messrs-FezandiA—MN 

Revenge, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 32 
“Revenge,” The: A Ballad of the Fleet. (C.) —Alfred 
Tennyson.—BS 21—CR—EDY—EHT—GP— 
HB—MRS—OS 3—PGT 2—PSR—WEP 4 
(Ballad of the Fleet, A.)—LH 
Revenge, Br. sels. fr. —E: Young.—AE—KNE (fr. Act 
V., Sc. 2.) 

Revenge of Hamish, The.—Sidney Lanier.—HBR 
Revenge of Injuries. (Sel. fr. Maria n, Act IV.)—Lady 
Eliz. Carew.—BNL 
(True Greatness.)—YBF 
Reverence.— Bible. See Psalms of David. 

Reverence Due from the Old to the Young, The.—C: 
R. Lowell.—CP 

Reverence for Law.—Jos. Hopkinson.—BLP 
Reverence for the Flag.—Horace Porter.—SC 


278 




TITLE INDEX 


Ride 


Rev. Gabe Tucker’s Remarks.—J. A. Macon.—AWH 
—BS 10—THP 

(Observations by Rev. Gabe Tucker— abr .)—PR— 
YA 

Rev. John Smith of Arkland Prepares his Sermon, The. 
—S. R. Crockett.—CS 35 

Rev. Oleus Bacon, D.D., in Memoriam.—Anon.—CS 12 
Rev. Uncle Jim’s Sermon, The.—Anon.—DE 
Reverie.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Reverie, A.—Frd’k G: Scott.—TCV 
Reverie in Church.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—BS 3—CS 10— 
NPS—YP 

(Easter Morning—C.)—PLD 
Reverie of Poor Susan, The. (C.)—W: Wordsworth. 
—BPB—-LC—MBL—PGT 1—WEP 4—YBF 
(Poor Susan.)—PC 

Reveries of a Bachelor. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 10— 
TCP 

Reveries of a Bachelor, Sel. fr. (The Sea—Fourth 
Revery, I.— cond.) — Donald G. Mitchell.— 
SR 12 

Reveries of a Bachelor.—W. C. Nichols.—CG 1 
Reverse; or, Mrs. Cludd, The.-—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
Reverses.—J: H. Newman.—VA 
Review of the Dead, The.—H: J. Stockard.—BLP 
Review of the Grand Armv, The.—Anon. (Ad.) — 
NC 

Revised Proofs.—-Bernard M'Evoy.—TCV 
Revival, The.—Horace Smith.—HPE 
Revival, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Day-dream, 
The. 

Revival Hymn.—Joel C. Harris. See Uncle Remus: 

His Songs and his Sayings. 

Revival of Romance.—-Edith M. Thomas.—TAV 
Revocation, A.—Sir T: Wyatt.—OB 
Revolt of Islam, The, Sel. fr. (Child of Twelve, A— 
sel. fr. Can. II.)—-Percy B. Shelley.—GN 
Revolt of "Mother,” The. (Abr.) —Mary E. Wilkins. 
—HBR 

(Arr. by Eva Coscarden.)—DR 
Revolution in Congress, Sel. fr. (Public Opinion the 
Reliance of our Government.)—Jas. A. Gar¬ 
field.—FD 2 

Revolution in Greece, The, Sels. fr. (Moral Force of 
Public Opinion.)—Dan’l Webster.—MRS 
(Moral Force against Physical— abr.) —SS 
(Public Opinion.)—TMD 

Revolutionary Alarm, The.—G: Bancroft. See His¬ 
tory of the United States. 

Revolutionary Desperadoes.—Sir Jas. Mackintosh.— 
FTR • 

Revolutionary Hero, A.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow 
Papers, The. 

Revolutionary Men.—Alphonse de Lamartine. See 
Religion of Revolutionary Men. 

Revolutionary Rising, The.—T: B. Read. See 
Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The 
Revolutionary Sermon, A.—Hugh H: Breckenridge.— 
CS 4—PS (si. abr.) 

Revolutions.—W: Shakespeare.—EP —PGT 1—YBF 
(Sonnet)—ELP (LX.—C.)—FEP 
Revolutions.—Sir H: Taylor. See Philip van Arte- 
velde. 

Revulsion, The.—-Coventry Patmore. See Angel in 
the House, The. 

Reward of Earnest Effort, The.—Mrs. M. E. Cornell.— 
SSE 

Reward of Innocent Love, The.—W: Habington. See 
Castara. 

Reward of Merit, A. (Trinity Tablet.) —CG 2 
Reward of the Cheerful Candle, The.—Mary V. Wor- 
stell.—HS 

Rhapsody, A.—T. H. Gould.—CG 3 
Rhine, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Rhode Island to the South.—F. W. Lander.—AWB 
Rhododa hne, Sels. fr. —T: L. Peacock. 

Spell of the Laurel-rose, The.—WEP 4 
Vengeance of Bacchus, The.—WEP 4 
Rhodora. The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—AD— 
ASL—BNL—FEP—GN—HBP—IK—LC— 
PEO (sel.)—TAS—YBF 

Rhoecus.—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL (br. sel.) —HBP 
(Abr.)-AA —LLC (si.) 

Rhotruda.—F: G. Tuckerman.—EPs 
Rhyme for Priscilla, A.—Frank D. Sherman.—AWH 
—THP 

Rhyme of Death’s Inn, A.—Lizette W. Reese.—TAS 
Rhyme of Jennie Eaglehart, The.—Anon.—WR 16 
Rhyme of Life, A.—C: W. Stoddard.—GP 
Rhyme of One, A.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—OH 
(Only One!— sel.) —TFS 

Rhyme of Robin Puck, A.—Helen G. Cone.—WR 15 


Rhyme of the Duchess May «?.), The.—EPs—FEP 
Duchess May. (The Rhyme.)—WR 1 (cond.) 

(End of the Siege, The— sel .)—CEL 
(Rhyme of the Duchess May— diff. cond .)—CR 
Rhyme of the Rail. (C.)—J: G. Saxe.—SAE (br. sel.) 
—SE (br. sel.) 

(Railroad Rhyme.)—BNL 
Rhyme of the Time, A.—Anon.—PTS 
Rhyme of the Year, A.—Anon.—PP—YPS 
Rhyme of White and Red, The.—W: Shakespeare. 
Nee Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Rhyme Six Hundred Years Old. A.—Anon.— 
YBT 

Rhymed Lesson, A (Urania), Sels. fr .— Oliver W. 
Holmes. 

Language.—AE 

(Words on Language.)—SPE 
(Urania, A Rhymed Lesson— sel .)—SO 
Rhymed Lesson, A, Br. sel. fr .—SO 
Rhymed Will of Hunnis, The.—W: Hunnis.— 
EDY 

Rhymelet, A.—Anon.—BS 13 

Rhymers.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry IV., 
Pt. I. 

Rhymes for Hard Times. — Norman McLeod. — 
PR (si. abr.) 

(Trust in God.)—CSS—PPSr 
"Rhymes of Ironquill,” Three.—Eugene F. Ware.— 
THP 

Rhymes on the Road, IX. (Eternal London.)—T: 
Moore.—HPE 

Rhymes on t e Wing, Sel. fr. —Rob’t J. Burdette. See 
"There was a young man of Cohoes.” 

Rib, The.—Ernest McGaffey.—HBR 
Ribbon Drill.—Marg erite W. Morton.—ID 
Rich in the Lord.—Frances F. Cobbe.—HDL 
Rich Little Dolly, The. (Wide Awake .)—CPL 
Rich Man and the Poor, The.—Ivan I. Khemnitzer.— 
KNE—SS 

Richard Brinsley Sheridan. (Frags, fr. various 
authors .)—BN L 

Richard Hakluyt’s Men.—Wallace Rice.—EDY 
Richard Somers.—Barrett Eastman.—AA 
Richard III.—Fs. S. Saltus.—EDY 
Richard III. —- W: Shakespeare. See King Richard 
III. 

Richard to the Princes of the Crusade.—-Walter Scott. 
See Talisman, The. 

Richard’s Reformation.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Richelieu and France.—E Bulwer-Lytton. See Riche¬ 
lieu; or, The Conspiracy. 

Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy, Sels. fr. —E: Bulwer- 
Lytton. 

Cardinal’s Soliloquy [,The]. (Sel. fr. Act III., Se. I.) 

—TMR (abr .)—VA 
Richelieu. (IV., 2.)—FIBR 
(Abr.)— FTR—SR 6 

(Scene from Richelieu— si. cond .)—CS 26 
Richelieu.—CR (Sels. fr. IV., 1, 2.)—SE (br. sel. 

fr. III., 1.)—WR 11 (II., 1.) 

Richelieu and France. (IV., 1.)—KNE—SS— 
TMD 

(Richelieu— br. sel .)—AE 
(Richelieu’s Vindication.)—SO 
Richelieu’s Vindication. — E Bulwer-Lytton. See 
Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy. 

Riches. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Riches Have Wings!—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Richest Prince, The.—Andreas J. Komer.—BLP 
Richie Story.—Anon.—PEB 2 

Richmond to his Army.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Richard III. 

Richmond to his Troops.—W • Shakespeare. See King 
Richard III. 

"Rid of the world’s injustice and his pain.”—Oscar 
Wilde.—GG 

Riddle, A.—Anon.—NA 
Riddle. (C.) —Anna L. Barbauld. 

(Words.)—LLC 

Riddle, A. (A Book.)—Hannah More.—GN 
Riddle, A. (The Letter “H.”)—Catharine Fanshawe. 
—BNL—FEP—GN 
(Letter H , The.)—CS 26 

Riddle, A. (The Vowels.)—Jonathan Swift.—GN 
Riddler, The.—C: G. Leland.—CSS—PPSr 
Riddles, Two.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 

Ride.—President-Bate.—BS 19 

Ride by Night, The.—E: W. Thomson.—BS 26 
Ride for Life, The. (The Man from Glengarry, Ch. IV.) 
—C: Gordon.—IR 

Ride from Ghent to Aix, The. (Parody.) —Irwin 
Beaumont.—TL 


279 






Ride 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Ride from Ghent to Aix,The.—Rob’t Browning.—CS 2 
—MR 

(Good News [from Ghent].)—SE ( sel .)—WRD 
(‘‘How they Brought the Good News from Ghent 
to Aix”—C.) — AYP — BNL — BVC — CGd — 
CR — EPs — FEP — GN — HB — HBP — 
OM — OS 2 — PEB 3 — PHS — PSR — 
SAE (hr. sel.) — SO — SPE — SS — VA — 
VSG — WEP 4 
(Ride to Aix, The.)—HSS 2 
Ride of Collins Graves, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AE— 
BAB—BS 17—CS 13—SA 

Ride of Death, The.—Eugene J. Hall. —CS 32—DS 
—WR 19 (si. abr.) 

Ride of Ichabod Crane, The.—Washington Irving. 

See Legend of Sleepy Hollow’. The. 

Ride of Paul Venarez, The.—Eben E. Rexford.—CS 21 
—PR 

(Paul Venarez.)—FMR 

Ride of Jennie McNeal, The.—Will Carleton.—BAB— 
—BS 6—CS 17—FR—FTR—HNS 
Ride on in Majesty.—H: H. Milman.—VA (si. abr.) 
(Christ Crucified.)—FEP 

Ride on the Black Valley Railroad [,A].—I. N. Tarbox. 
—CS 11—SR 7 

Ride to Aix, The.—Rob’t Browning. See Ride from 
Ghent to Aix, The. 

Ride to Bumpville, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Ride to Cherokee, The.—Amelia W. Carpenter.— 
AA 

Ride to the Lady, The.—Helen G. Cone.—AA 
Rider of the Black Horse, The.—G: Lippard. See 
Benedict Arnold. 

Rider of the Knee, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Riderless Steeds, The.—Anon.—SR 9 
Riding Down.—Nora Perry.—AA—CR—CS 20—HBP 
—OH 

Riding in the Cars. (For a boy.) —Mrs. Russell Kav- 
anaugh.—KJ 

Riding in the Cars. (For a girl.) —Mrs. Russell Kav- 
anaugh.—KJ 

Riding on a Rail.—Mary K. Dallas.—BS 20 
Riding to the Hunt.-—W T . A. Leahy.—CG 1 
Riding to the Tournament, The.—W. G. Tliornbury. 
—BS 17 

Riding Together.-—W: Morris.—AVP—BNL 
Rienzi, Sels. fr. —E: Bulwer-Lytton. 

Appeal to the Romans. (Sel. fr Bk. II., Ch. III.) 
—SR 6 

Last of the Roman Tribunes, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. 
X., last ch.)—SC 

Rienzi.—Mary R. Mitford. See Rienzi’s Address to 
the Romans. 

Rienzi to the Roman Conspirators in 1347.—T: Moore. 
—PS 

Rienzi to the Romans.—Mary R. Mitford. See Rienzi's 
Address to the Romans. 

Rienzi’s Address [to the Romans]. (Sel. f.. Rienzi, 
Act II., Sc. 2.)—Mary R. Mitford—BS 4—CS 1 
—EDY—FR—FTR—HNS—LLC—OM—OS 2 
PPSr—SR 8—WCLG 2 

(Rienzi to the Romans.)—BNL—CR—KNE— 
PS—SO—SS—TMD 

Rienzi’s Last Appeal to the Romans.—-Cola di Rienzi. 
—KNE 

Rift of the Rock, The.—Annie Herbert.—CS 14 
Rifts in the Cloud, Br. sel. fr. (“Way at times may 
dark and dreary seem The.”)—Will Carleton. 
—FHS 

‘‘Right about Face.”—Mary D. Brine.—HSS 2 
Right and Wrong.—Anon.—HP 
Right Building.—W: J. Duncan.—CS 35 
Right Living.—Anon.—CS 30 
Right Makes Might.—Anon.—TS 
Right Man for the Place, The.—Sam W. Foss.—SR 9 
Right Must Win, The.—Frd’k W: Faber.—FEP 
(SI. abr.)— BNL—HDL—VA 
(Songs of Devotion, Sel. r. — sel.) —GG 
Right of Free Discussion.—Dan’l Webster.—KNE— 
OS 2 (abr.) 

Right Standard. The. (Sel. fr. Shadows of the Stage, 
2nd Series, Pt. I.)—W: Winter.—MRS 
Right to Tax America, The.—Edmund Burke.—OM 
Righteous Never Forsaken, The.-—Anon.—CS 9 
Righteous War, A.—-W. S. Witham.—TMD 
Rights and Duties.—Frd’k W. Robertson.—NC 

(True Liberty —shorter i.ni vtly. diff.) —BI.P— 
PEO 

Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The.—S: T. Coleridge.— 
BFV — BNL — BPB — FEP — HBP — MBL 
—OB—PEB 3—WCLG 2—WEP 4 
Ancient Mariner, The.—CGd (cond .)—SE (br. sel. 
fr. Pt. IV.) 


Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The (continued). 

Love and Prayer. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. VII.)—FTR 
(He Prayeth Best— abr.) —GMS 
(He Prayeth Well who Loveth Well.)—PC 
(Abr.)— GG—HSS 2—WCLI 1 
(Praying and Loving— abr.) —OS 1 
Phantom Ship, The. (Pt. III.— si. abr.) —SO 
Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The. (Pt. II.— si. 
abr.) —IR 

(Dead Calm at Sea— br. sel.) —LLC 
Rime of the Ancient Miller. (Parody.) —Rob’t J. 

Burdette.—SYS 
Rinaldo.—H: Peterson.—AA 

Ring, The. (Sel. arr. fr. Nathan the Wise, Act III., 
Sc. 7.) — Gotthold E. Lessing (tr. by Ellen 
Frothingham).—MMR 
(Opal Ring, The.)—DR 

Ring and the Book, The, Dedication to.—Rob’t 
Browning.—WEP 4 

Ring Down the Drop—I Cannot Play.—J. W. Watson. 
—CS 11 

Ring Drill.—A. E. Hurst.—ID 

Ring from the Rim of the Glass, Boys.—J: C. Anthony. 
—CG 2 

Ring, Happy Bells.—Lucy Larcom.—DFR—DST 
Ring, Joyful Bells!—Violet Fuller.—PEO 
(New Year, The.)—HS 
Ring Out the Old.—Anon.—SM 
Ring Out, Wild Bells.—M. M. Hughes.—SR 3 
Ring Out, Wild Bells!—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

“Ring out, ye crystal spheres.”—J: Milton. See On 
the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. 

Ring Posy, A.—Christina G. Rossetti.—OH 
“Ring! Ring! of liberty and peace!”—H: B. Carring¬ 
ton.—BLP 

Ring the Bell Softly.—Dexter Smith.—CS 3 
Ringan Gilhaize, Sel. fr. (Covenanters and Charles 
Stuart, The.)—J: Galt.—FD 1 
Ringer of the Chimes, The.—Jeannie P. Ew’ing.—CS 34 
Ringer’s Veangence, The. (SI. abr.) —H: Abbey.—WR 9 
Ringleted Youth of my Love.—Douglas Hyde.—TIP 
Rings, The.—Louise I. Guiney.—ASL 
Rings and Seals.—T: Moore.—HPE—SCS 
Ring’s Motto, The.—Anon.—CS 23—DS—HP 
Riot’s Climbing of a Hill.—W: Browne. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals. 

Rip Van Winkle. — Washington Irving. — APr — 
CS 8 (sel.) —MAL—MRS (cond.) —WCLI 1— 
WGS 

Rip van Winkle. (Sels. arr. fr. Acts I. and II.)— 
Washington Irving (dram, by Jos. Jefferson).— 
BRR—GH—HBR 
Ripe Grain.—Dora R. Goodale.—GP 
Ripened Fruit.—T: O’Hagan.—TCV 
Riquet of the Tuft, Songs fr. —Stopford A. Brooke. 
Prince Riquet’s Song.—VA 
Queen’s Song.—VA 
“Rise,” A.—Ernest McGaffey.—AA 
Rise and Fall of Wolsey, The. S: Johnson. See 
Vanity of Human Wishes, The. 

“Rise! for the day is passing.”—Adelaide A. Procter. 
See Now. 

Rise, my Soul, and Stretch thy Wings.—Rob’t Sea- 
grave.—FEP 

Rise of Man, The.—J: W. Chadwick.—AA 
Rise of the Dutch Republic, The. Sel. fr. (Fall of 
Antwerp, The— sel. fr. Bk. II., Ch. V.)—J: L. 
Motley.—IR 

“ ‘Rise,’ said the Master, ‘come unto the feast.’ ”— 
H: Alford.—BNL 
(Bride. The.)—OB 
Risen with Christ.—Anon.-—SSS 

Rising, The.—T: B. Read. See Wagoner of the Alle- 
ghanies. The. 

Rising in 1776, The.—T: B. Read. See Wagoner of 
the Alleghanies, The. 

Rising of 1776, The.—T: B. Read. See Wagoner of the 
Alleghanies, The. 

Rising of the Moon, The.—J. K. Casey.—TIP 
Rising of the People, The.—Elbrioge j. Cutler.—WR 10 
(Drum-call in 1861, The— cond.) —MMR 
Rising, Watching Moon. The.—Anon.—TFS 
Ritter Hugo.—C: G. Leland.—BNL 
(Ballad—C.)—HBP 
(Ballad of the Mermaid.)—AWII—THP 

Rival Broom Makers, The.-Wolcot.—MDD 

Rival Darkies, The.—Anon.—DE 
Rival Drummers. The.—Anon.—CRR 
Rival Lodgers, The.—T: (?)Morton. See Box and 
Cox. 

Rival Orators, The.—Anon. See Rival Speakers, The. 
Rival Singer, The.—Anon.—CS 27 




TITLE INDEX 


Robinson 


Rival Speakers, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—BS 4—HD— 
PS 


(Rival Orators, The.)—MPD—NPS—YP 
Rival Sweetheart, The.—Jerome C. Bull.—SR 10 
Rivals, The. ( Sel .)—J: Clare.—EP 
Rivals, The.—Bessie Chandler.—BS 20 
Rivalry in Love.—W: Walsh.—BNL 
(Rivals.)—OB 

Rivals, The, Sels. fr. —R: B. Sheridan. 

Challenge, The. ( Abr. fr. Act III., Sc. 4, IV., 1, and 
V., 3.)—NDP 

Cool Reason. (Sel. fr. II., 1.)—BS 6—CDD 
(Rivals, The— si. abr .)—IR 
(Scenes from “The Rivals”—2nd sel .)—SO 
Duel, The. (Sel. fr. V., 3.)—PS 

(Duel Scene from “The Rivals,” The.)—CS 29 
(Scene from “The Rivals”— si. diff .)—EA 
Rivals, The. (III., 1.)—BS 8—CDD 
Scene from “The Rivals.” (Sel. fr. IT., 1, and III., 
1 2 

Scenefs] from “The Rivals.” (I., 2,)—MRS (abr .)— 
SO (sel.) 

(Mrs. Malaprop’s Idea of Education— sel .)—OS 3 
Rivals, The.—H. G. Smith.—WR 12 
Rivals.—W: Walsh. See Rivalry in Love. 

River, The.—Anon.—CS 5 

River, The.—S: G. Goodrich.—NV—POS 

River, The.—E: H. Plumptre.— FEP 

River, The, Br. sel. fr. (Evening Scene, An— si. diff. 

vers .)—Coventry Patmore.—PGT 2 
River, The.—Caroline B. Southey—BS 9—OS 1—POS 
River, The -—Hiram L. Spencer.—TCV 
River Fight, The. H: H. Brownelll.—AWB—PAP 
(Sel.) —AA—BAB 

River God to Amoret, The.—J: Fletcher. See Faith¬ 
ful Shepherdess, The. 

River of Commerce, The.—O. L.—CG 3 
River of Life, The. (Thought Suggested by the New 
Year. A— C.)— T: Campbell.—BNL—PGT 1 — 
YBF 

River Path, The.—J: G. Whittier.—FP—TAV 
River Song.—F. B. Sanborn.—EPs 
River Thames, The.—Sir J: Denham. Sec Cooper’s 
Hill. 

River Time, The.—B: F. Taylor.—TAV 

(Isle of [the—C.] Long Ago, The.)—BS 1—FTR— 
HNS—KNE—SA 
(Long Ago, The.)—LLC—WCLG 2 
Rivermouth Rocks.—J: G. Whittier. See Wreck of 
Rivermouth, The. 

River’s End, The.—Matthew Arnold. See Sohrab and 
Rustum. 

Rivers of England, The. (Ideas, XXXII.: To the 
River Ankor.)—Michael Drayton.—FEP 
River’s Supplication, The.—Rob’t Burns. See Hum¬ 
ble Petition of Bruar Water to the Noble Duke 
of Athole, The. 

Riviera, The.—Helen H. Jackson.—POS 
Rivulet, The. (Br. sel.) —W: C. Bryant.—EPs 
Rivulet, The.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS—PoR 
Rizpah.—Mrs. Lucy Blinn.—BS 10—SR 3 
Rizpah.—J: Reade.—TCV 

Rizpah.—Alfred Tennyson.—BS 25—MRS— PGT 2— 
—VA 

Rizpah.—G:M. Vickers.—CS 36—PS 
Road to Fairy-land, The.—Anon.—TT 
Road to Happiness Open, The.—-Alex. Pope .—See 
Essay on Man, An. 

Road to Heaven, The.—G: R. Sims.—CS 26—DS— 
WR 2 (abr.) 

Road to Ruin. The, Scenes fr. (Play.) —T: Holcroft. 
—MRS 

Road to the Trenches. The.—H: Lushington.—AI P 
Road to Wrinkletown, The.—Irving C. Lambert.— 
SR 13 


Road to Yesterday, The.—Anon.—PR 
Roadside Lesson, A.—Nellie F. Wells.—5 BT 
Roadside Path, The.—D. H. Killian.—SR 12 
Roadside Preacher, The.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Roaming. (IF. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Roast Beef of Old England, The.—H: Fielding and R: 
Leveridge.—BNL—BVC 

Roast Pig.—C: Lamb. See Dissertation upon Roast 
Pig. 

Roasted Sucking-pig. (Punch.) See Poetical Cook¬ 
ery-book. 

Rob Rov, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott. 

Death of Morris. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXI.)—CS 4 
Macgregor’s Defence. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXV )—FD 1 
Rob Roy’s Grave.—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Robber, The.—Anon.—CS 16—MMR 


(Same in prose .)—FMR 

Robber under the Bed, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—Mr D 


Robbie Rockaway.—C. H. Collester.—CG 3 
Robbie Tamson’s Smiddie.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Robe of Innocence, The.—Anon.—FTT 
Robert .—Julia T. Bishop.—WR 19 
Robert Browning.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
(To Robert Browning.— C.) —EDY 
Robert Browning. ( Philadelphia Press.) —BS 18 
Robert Browning Personalia, Sel. fr. (Browning’s 
First Manuscript.)—Edmund Gosse.—MRS 
Robert Bruce and the Spider.—Bernard Barton.— 
CS 24 

(Bruce and the Spider— abr.) —BNL 
Robert Bruce and the Spider (Try again— C.). —Eliza 
Cook.—YBT (abr.) 

Robert Burns, Br. sel. fr. (Greatness of the Poet, The.) 

—G: W. Curtis.—SSD—TMD 
Robert Emmet.—T: Moore. See “Oh, breathe not his 
name.” 

Robert Gould Shaw.—W: V. Moody. See Ode in 
Time of Hesitation, An. 

Robert of Lincoln.—W C. Bryant.—BFV—BNL— 
BS 6—CS 16—FMR—FTR—HNS—HSS 2 — 
LC (abr.) — MYF — NV — PUS — PoR — 
PPSr (sel.) —WCL—WCLG 1 
Robert Southey.—Lord Byron. See English Bards 
and Scotch Reviewers. 

Robespierre’s Last Speech.-—Maximilien M. I. Robes¬ 
pierre.—PS—SS—SSD 

Robin, The. (Sel. fr. To the Robin.)—Eliza Cook.— 
AD (w. mus.) 

Robin, The.—Katherine Van D. Harkee.—CG 2 
Robin, The.—Celia Thaxter.—NV 
Robin, The.—J: G. Whittier.—-AD 
Robin Adair. — Lady Caroline Iveppel. — BNL — 
FEP 


Robin and Makyne. (SI. diff. versions.) —Rob’t Henry- 
son.—fiP—OB 

Robin and [the] Chicken [,The].—Anon.—AD—TFS 
(Self-esteem.)—LLC 
Robin Burns.—Gerald Massey.—EDY 
Robin Good-fellow. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.— 
WR 15 (si. abr.) 

(Merry Pranks of Robin Good-fellow.)—FEP— 
HBP 

Robin Hood.—J: Keats.—MRS—OS 2 
(Abr.) —LC—LLC 

Robin Hood, Sel. fr. (I am a Friar of Orders Gray.) 

—J: O’Keefe.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Robin Hood, Songs fr .—Leonard MacNally.—MRS 
Robin Hood and Allin [or Allen, or Allan] a Dale.— 
Anon.— BNL — CGd — FEP — HBP — OEB 
—PHS 


Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne. (In Percy’s 
Reliques.)—Anon.—OEB (si. abr.) —PEB 1 
Robin Hood and the Bishop of Hereford.—Anon.— 
CGd—OS 2—PHS 

Robin Hood and the Monk.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Robin Hood Rescuing the Widow’s Three Sons.— 
Anon.—BB—WEP 1 

(How Robin Hood Rescued the Widow’s Three 
Sons.)—EHT 

Robin Hood’s Death and Burial. (In Percy’s 
Reliques.) —Anon.— BB— CEL—OEB—PC— 
PEB 1—WEP 1 

Robin or I?—Sarah E. Sprague.—GMS 
Robin Redbreast.—W: Allingham.—BFV—CGd— 
FEP — HBP — HSS 2 — LC — OS 1 — PHS 
PoR—YBF—YBT 

Robin Redbreast, The.—“Aunt Effiie.”—PC—PR— 
YA 

Robin Redbreast.—G: W. Doane.—AA 
Robin Redbreast.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Robin Redbreast.—E. A. Mathers.—AD 
Robin Redbreast’s Secret.— (Youth’s Penny Gazette.) — 
AD—DST (sel.) —KER (si. abr.) 

Robin’s Apology.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Robin’s Come.—W: W. Caldwell.—AD (abr.) —HP— 
SN 


Robin’s Farewell.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Robin’s Flight , The.—Fanny B. Bates.—YBT 
Robin’s Message.—Fannie L. Hall.—YBT 
Robin’s Nest, The.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF 
Robin’s New Year.—Anon.—DST 
Robin’s Rain-song.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Robin’s Return.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Robin’s Secret.-—Katharine I.. Bates.—AA 
Robin’s Song, The.—Anon.—LLC 
Robinson Crusoe.—C: E. Carryl.—AA—AWH—TAV 
—THP 


Robinson Crusoe, Sels. fr. —Dan’l Defoe. 

Crusoe’s Fight with the Wolves. (Sel. fr. Sec. 
XXIX.)—FTR 


281 




Robinson 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Robinson Crusoe ( continued). 

Friday’s Frolic with a Bear. ( Sel. fr. Sec. XXIX.) 
—FTR 

Getting Supplies from the Wreck. (Sel. fr. Sec. 
V.)—WCLI 1 

Robinson Crusoe in Verse.—J. A. Brown.—BS 2 
Robinson of Leyden.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Pro¬ 
fessor at the Breakfast-table, The. 

Rob’s Mittens. (Youth’s Companion.) —PS—TT 
Rob’s Temptation.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Rock and the Sea, The.—C: P. Stetson.—BS 26 
Rock me to Sleep, Mother.—Eliz. A. Allen.—AA—BNL 
—BS 11— CS 11—FEP—HSS 3—LLC—MMR 
— PYO 

Rock of Ages. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
“Rock of Ages.”—Ella M. Moore (at. also to E: H. Rice). 
— BeR — BNL — BS 3 — CR — CS 7 — CSS 
—FTR — HDL — HP — LLC — PEO—PPSr 
—SA 

“Rock of Ages.”—Frank L. Stanton.—FMR (si. diff.) 
—WR 7 

(How a Song Saved a Soul.)—SR 4 
Rock of Ages.—Augustus M. Toplady.—FEP—YBF 
(Prayer Living and Dying, A.)—HBP 
"Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me!”—Augustus M. Toplady. 
See foregoing. 

Rock of Cashel, The.—Sir Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
Rock of Rubies, The. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick.—ES— 
WEP 2 

(Julia— w. add. st.) —CP 
Ro kaby. - Anon.—TFS 

Rock-a-bye, Baby, on the Tree Top.—Anon.—AD 
Rock-a-by Lady, The.—Eugene Field.—BS 24—EF— 
LS—POS 

Rockaby, Lullaby.—Josiah G. Holland. See Mistress 
of the Manse, The. 

Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep.—Emma H. Willard. 
—AA—HBP—PYO (abr.) 

Rocking Hymn, A. (Sweet Baby, Sleep.)—G: Wither. 

Rocking the Baby.—Madge Morris.—HP 
Rocks of Mt. Desert, The.—E. M. T.—CG 1 
Rocks of my Country. (Cliffs of Dover, The— C.) — 
Felicia D. Hemans.—BLP—SS 
Roderick [,the Last of the Goths— C.], Sel. fr. (Fr. 
Can. XXV.: Roderick in Battle.)—Rob’t 
Southey.—W EP 4 

Rodney’s Ride.—Elbridge S. Brooks.—CS 29—NPS— 
PRR—WR 6—YP 
(Caesar Rodney’s Ride.)—TMD 
Roger and Dolly. (Blackwood.) —HPE 
Rogers’ Groups. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Roger’s Wish.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Rogue, A.—Anon.—DS—YA 
(Basting Thread, A.)—BR 
(Harry’s Mistake.)—LPS—PP 
Roguery Taught by Confession.—J: Wolcott.—HR 
Rokeby, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott. 

Allen-a-Dale. (Song— C. —Can. III., st. 30.)— 
BFV—BPB—EPs—FEP—LC—PC—PSR 
Brignall Banks. (Song—C.—III., 16-18.)—EPs—OB 
(Edmund’s Song.)—WEP 4 
(Outlaw, The.)—BPB —FEP —HBP—LH— 
PGT 1 

Buccaneer, The. (I., 5-10.)—WEP 4 
Cavalier, The. (V., 20.)—BPB1 
Death of Bertram, The. (VI., 32, 33.)—SS 
Friar of Orders Gray. (Ballad— C. —V., 27.)— 
EPs 

Rover, The. (Song —C.—fol. III., 28.)—BFV— 
PGT 1 

(Rover’s Adieu, The.)—OB 
(Song.)—HBP 

(“Weary lot is thine [.fair maid]. A.”)—BPB— 
EPs—YBF 

Youth. Sel. fr. IV., 11.)—FP 
Roland’s Death.— (Tr. by) Leonce Rabillon. See Song 
of Roland, The. 

Roll, Jordan, Roll.—Anon.—AA 
Roll On.—Anon.—CS 19 

“Roll on, thou deep and dark blue ocean—roll'”—Lord 
Byron. .See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Roll Out, O Song.—Frank Sewall.—AA 
Rolla to the Peruvians.—R: B. Sheridan. See Pizarro. 
Rolla’8 Address to the Peruvians.—R: B. Sheridan. 
See Pizarro. 

Roll-call [.The].—Nathaniel G. Shepherd.—AA—AWB 
—CS 4—CSS—HB—HBP—HP—KNE—LLC 
—PAPm—PPSr—PRR 
(Calling the Roll.)—HSS 1 
Rollicking Mastodon, The.—Arthur Macy.—NA 
Roman, The, Sel. fr. (Monk’s Song.)—Sydney Dobell. 
—WEP 4 


Roman Father, The.—J: H. Payne. See Brutus: or. 
The Fall of Tarquin. 

Roman Father’s Sacrifice, The.—T: B. Macaulay. See 
Virginia. 

Roman Legend, A.—Jas C. Harvey.—CS 31 
Roman Legions, The.—J: Mitford.—VA 
Roman Mirror, A.—Rennell Road.—VA 
Roman Senate and the American Congress, The. (Sel. 
fr. Address before the Congress of the United 
States in 1851.)—Louis Kossuth.—BLP 
Roman Sentinel, The.—Ward M. Florence.—CS 21— 
DS—NPS—YP 

Roman Soldier at the Destruction of Herculaneum, 
The.—Edwin Atherstone.—FR (abr. and ad.) 

(Last Days of Herculaneum, The, Sel. fr.) —BS 6— 
CS 22 

Roman Valentine, A.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Romance. (Br. sel. fr. To Romance.)—Lord Byron.— 
HSS 3 

Romance.—S: T. Coleridge. See Kubla Khan. 
Romance, Sel. fr. (Oak in a Storm, An— mon. and 
pantomime.) —Abraham Dreyfus.—WR 13 
Romance, A.—Eugene Field.—HP 
Romance.—Mildred Howells.—AA 
Romance.—Andrew Lang.—VA 
Romance.—Gabriel Setoun.—PoR 
Romance. (Songs of Travel, etc., VII.)—Rob’t L. 
Stevenson.—OB 

Romance at Home.—Sarah P. Parton.—MYF—SR 2 
Romance in the Rough, A.—A. P. Martin.—WR 13 
Romance in Verse, A.—Anon.—CS 11 
Romance in Words Frequently Mispronouncea, A.— 
Anon.—BS 22 

Romance of a Carpet.—Rob't J. Burdette. See Ro¬ 
mance of the Carpet, The. 

Romance of a Hammock.—Anon.—BS 11 
Romance of a Hat.—Anon. (tr. by Eliz. W. Latimer).— 
SR 4 

Romance of a Rose.—Maurice E. McLaughlin.—WR23 
Romance of a Rose, The.—Nora Perry.—CR—MRS 
Romance of a Year, The.—M. E. W. Sherwood.—DR 
Romance of Britomarte, The.—A. L. Gordon.—VSG 
Romance of Nick Van Stann, The.—J: G. Saxe.—BS 2 
—CS 3—HR 

Romance of the Carpet, The.— Rob’t J. Burdette. — 
AWH—CS 14—SR 9—THP 
Romance of the Ganges, A. (Abr.) —Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing.—SR 11 

Romance of the Matterhorn, A.—Esme Stuart.— 
WR 19 

Romance of the Revolution, A.—Anon.—PR 
Romance of the Rood-loft, A.—H. S. Clarke.—BS 14 
Romance of the Saw-dust, A.—G: A Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Romance of the Swan’s Nest. The.—Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing.—AF. (hr. sel.) — BNL — BS 1 A —CEL— 
CGa (abr.) — CR — GN — LC — MR — PEB 3 
—WCL 

Romance of the War, A. (Dial. — ad. fr. “Spirit of 
’76.")—Anon.—MPD 
Romance of To-day, A.—Anon.-—TL 
Romany Song.—C: G. Leland.—OH 
Romanzo to Sylvia.—G: Darley. See Sylvia; or. The 
May Queen. 

Romaunt of the Page, The. — Eliz. B. Browning. — 
DR (sel.) —PEB 3 

Romaunt of the Rose, The, Sel. fr. —Geoffrev Chaucer. 
—WEP 1 

Romaunt of the Rose, The.—Austin Dobson.—BNL 
Rome. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Rome.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Rome. (In Italy.)—S: Rogers.—BNL (sel.) 

Rome and Carthage.—Victor Hugo.—BS 17—CS 6 — 
DS—FD 1—KNE—PPS—PS—SE—SS 
Rome in Midsummer, Sel. fr. (Coliseum. The.)—II: W. 
Longfellow.—OS 3 

Rome Wasn't Built in a Day. (For a boy.) —Alice 
Cary.—DS—YA 

Romeo and Juliet. Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 

Dawn. (Br. sel. fr. Act III., Sc. 5.)—EPs 
(Morning— sel.) —GP 

Music’s Silver Sound. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 5.)—GN 

Potion Scene, The. (IV., 3— abr.) —MRS 

Queen Mab. (Sel. fr. I., 4.)—BNL—EPs 
(Abr.)— CGd— LC 

(Mercutio’s Description of Queen Mab— si. abr.) 
—HNS 

Resignation. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 5.)—HDL 

Romeo and Juliet, Br. sels. fr. —AE (fr. II., 2) — 
BNL (fr. III., 2; V., 1)— SE (fr. II., 2.) 

Romeo and Juliet, Sel. fr. (Br. sel. fr. II., 6.)— AE 
—HNS 

Romeo and Juliet, Act II., Sc. 5. (Sl.cond.) —WR 9 
(Romeo and Juliet— br. sel.) —AE 


282 




TITLE INDEX 


Rose-bush 


Romeo and Juliet ( continued). 

Romeo and Juliet: Balcony Scene. (II., 2.1 —CDD 
—CR (8el.) —CS 3—PR—SR 12 
(Soliloquy of Romeo in the Garden— sel.) —PS 

Romeo’s Presage. (Br. sel. fr. V., 1.)—EPs 
Romeo and Juliet. (Altered.)—Anon.—CS 18 
Romeo and Juliet. (The Latest Correct Version of the 
Balcony Scene.) Dial. —Anon.—BDD 
Romeo and Juliet. The Way it Should be Read in 
1880. (Dial.)—Burlington Hawkeye. —DE 
Romeo’s Presage.—W: Shakespeare. See Romeo and 
Juliet. 

Romney and Aurora.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora 
Leigh. 

Romola, Sels. fr. —G: Eliot. 

Romola and Savonarola. (Ch. XL.— abr.) —CR 
(Romola’s Flight— arr. by Mrs. S. Saxton.)— 
W’R 24 

Tito’s Armor. (Ad. fr. Chs. XXVII., XXVIII., 
XXXIV.)—NDP 

Romola and Savonarola.—G: Eliot. See Romola. 
Romola’s Flight.—G: Eliot. See Romola. 

Rondeau. “A ruined rose,—I hold it so.”—Anon.— 
CG 1 

Rondeau.—Theodora Bates.—CG 3 
Rondeau,-—Leigh Hunt.-—FEP—WEP 4 

(Jenny Kissed Me.)—BFV—BNL—CS 20—FTA— 
GP—HBP—LC—OB—OH—OS 2—YBF 
Rondeau for St. Valentine’s Day, A.—W: Clyde Fitch. 
—CG 1 

Rondeau to Ethel, A.—Austin Dobson.—VA 
Rondel:—“I’d draw the knot as tight as man can 
draw.”—J. J. Mack, Jr.—CG 2 
Rondel: “Kissing her hair, etc.”— Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—VS 

(Kissing her Hair.)—BNL—OH—YBF 
Rondel: “Out of the past remembered eyes.”—M. G. 
Tuttiett.—BIL 

Rondel of Love, A.—Alex. Scott.—OB 
Rook and the Sparrows, The.—C: and Marv Lamb.— 
LPC 

Rookery, The.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—VA 
Room at the Top.—G: Branson.—PTS 
Room Enough for All.—Anon.—CS 26 
Room for Children.—Anon.—CPL 
Room for You.—G: R. Howarth.—CS 18 
Room’s Width, The.—Eliz. S. P. Ward.—AA 
Rory of the Hills.—C: J. Kickham.—TIP 
Rory O’Moore; or. Good Omens. (C.) —S: Lover.— 
BNL — CS 20 — FEP — GP — HBP — HBR 
■—LC—M RS—TH P—TIP—V A 
Rory O’More’s Present to the Priest.—S: Lover.—DI 
—HR 

Rosa Dartle’s Revenge.—C: Dickens. See David Cop- 
perfield. 

Rosa Rosarum.—Mrs. Darmesteter.—VA 
Rosabella’s Lovers.—Anon.—MND 
Rosabelle.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 
Rosader’s Description of Rosalynd.—T: Lodge. See 
Rosalynde; or, Euphues’ Golden Legacy. 
Rosader’s Sonetto.—T: Lodge. See Rosalynde; or, 
Euphues’ Golden Legacy. 

Rosalie.—Washington Allston.—A A—BNL 
Rosalie.—W: C. Richards.—GP 
Rosalie.—Juliet W. Tompkins.—CG 1 
Rosalind’s Complaint.—T: Lodge. See Rosalynde; or, 
Euphues’ Golden Legacy, 

Rosalind’s Description.—T: Lodge. See Rosalynde; 

or, Euphues’ Golden Legacy. 

Rosalind’s Madrigal.—T: Lodge. See Rosalynde; or, 
Euphues’ Golden Legacy. 

Rosalind’s Scroll. (Sel. fr. The Words of Rosalind’s 
Scroll.)—Eliz. B. Browning.—OB 
Rosaline.—T: Lodge. See Rosalynde; or, Euphues’ 
Golden Legacy. 

Rosalynde; or, Euphues’ Golden Legacy, Sels. fr. —T• 
Lodge. 

Montanus’ Sonnet. (I.)—EP 

Montanus’ Sonnet. (II.)—EP 

Poet’s Vow, A.—EP 

Rosader’s Description of Rosalynd. (Rosalynde’s 
Description— C.) —ELP—WEP 1 
(Rosalind’s Description.)—ES 
(Rosaline.) — BNL — EPs — FEP — OB — 
PGT 1—YBF 

Rosader’s Sonetto (Rosader’s Second Sonetto-— C.). 
—FEP 

Rosalind’s Complaint.—BNL 

(Rosalind’s Madrigal.)—ES—FEP—OB 
(Rosalynd’s Madrigal— C.) — OEL — PGT 1 — 
WEP 1 

Rosalynd’s Madrigal.—T: Lodge. See Rosalynde; or, 
Euphues’ Golden Legacy. 


Rosamund, Sel. fr. —Algernon C. Swinburne. See fol¬ 
lowing. 

Rosamund at Woodstock. (Fr. Rosamund.)—Alger¬ 
non C. Swinburne.—VA 
Rosamund Gray, Sels. fr.— C: Lamb. 

In the Churchyard. (Sel. fr. Ch. XI.)—LLC 
Margaret Gray. (Sel. fr. Ch. I.)—FTR 
Recollections of Childhood. (Sel. fr. Ch. XI.)—LLC 
Rosary, A.—C: W. E. Chapin, Jr.—CG 1 
Rosary, The.—Rob’t C. Rogers.—AA—ASL—FLS— 
YBF 

Rosary of mv Tears, The.—Abram J. Ryan.—BNL— 
CS 17—SSS 

Rosciad, The, Sel. fr. (Characters of Actors.)—C: 

Churchill.—WEP 3 
Rose.—Anon.—AD 
Rose, The.—Anon.—HSS 1 

Rose, The. (Sel. fr. Ode XLIV.)—Anacreon (tr. by T: 
Moore).—AD 

Rose, The.—W: Browne.—OB 

(Vision of the Rose, The.)—ELP 
Rose, The.—W: Cowper.—BNL 
Rose, A.—Sir R: Fanshawe.—OB 
Rose, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs 
(Go, Happy Rose!)—CEL 

(To the Rose [: A Song— C .] — ELP —- ES—OEL— 
WEP 2—YBF 

Rose, The. (Abr.) —R: Lovelace.—ELP—ES—WEP 2 
Rose, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—CS 21 
Rose, The.—Pierre Ronsard.—PYO 
Rose, The. (C.) —Rob’t Southey. 

(Rose, The— si. abr.) —HS 

Rose, The. (Sel. fr. The Temptation of Hassan Ben 
Khaled.)—Bayard Taylor.—BNL 
Rose, The.—-Edmund Waller.—HBP 

(Go, Lovely Rose!)—BFV—BNL (w. add. st. by K. 
• White) — EPs — FEP — OB — OEL—PGT 1 
—PYO—YBF 

(Rose’s Message, The.)—CEL 
(Song— C.)— ELP—ES—WEP 2 
Rose, The, Sel. fr. (“How fair is the rose!”)—I: Watts. 
—AD 

Rose Adair.-—Malachy Ryan.—TIP 
Rose and a Thorn, A.—Mrs. Louise E. V. Boyd.—MD 
Rose and Root.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
Rose and the Fair Lily, The.—W: Motherwell.—PEB 3 
Rose and the Gardener, The.—Austin Dobson.—OS 2 
(Fancy from Fontenelle, A— C.) —A VP—BNL 
Rose and the Gauntlet, The.—J: Wilson [or J: Ster¬ 
ling].—BNL—HBP 

Rose and the Ring, The.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.— 
AVP 

Rose and the Sunflower, The.—Anon.—DLF 
Rose and the Wind, The.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
Rose and Thom, The.—Paul H. Hayne.—A A 
Rose at it Again.—Mitchell D. Follansbee.—CG 1 
Rose Aylmer.—Walter S. Landor.— BFV — BPB — 
FEP—OB—VA—VS—YBF 
("Ah! what avails the sceptred race!”)—WEP 4 
Rose Aylmer’s Hair, Given by her Sister.—Walter S. 
Landor.—VA 

Rose by the Wayside, The.—D. A. Drown.—FP 
Rose in October, The.—Mary Townley.—SN 
“Rose is fairest when ’tis budding new, The.”—Walter 
Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

“Rose kissed me to-day.”—Austin Dobson. See Rose- 
leaves. 

Rose of Avondale, The.—Helen Booth.—CS 28 
Rose of Kenmare, The.—Alfred P. Graves.— 

HBR 

Rose of Rome, A.—G: H. Galpin. See Threads from 
the Woof. 

Rose of Stars, The. (In Wild Eden.)—G: E. Wood- 
berry.—AA 

Rose of the World, The. — Coventry Patmore. See 
Angel in the House, The. 

Rose of the World, The.—W: B. Yeats.—TIP—VA 
Rose Song.—W: Sawyer.—FLS 

“Rose that all are praising. The.” (Sel.) —T: H. 
Bayly.—BNL 

Rose thou Gav’st, The.—C: Swain.—VA 
Rose upon my Balcony, The.— W: M. Thackeray See 
Vanity Fair. 

Rose will Fade, A.—Dora Sigerson.—TIP 
Rosebud, The. (Sel.) —W: Broome.—OB 
Rosebud in Lent, A.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Rosebud or Thom?—Anon.—COS—PP 
Rosebuds. ( Bowdoin Orient.) —CG 2 
Rosebud’s First Ball.— (New York Star.) —HP—WR 17 
Rose-bush, The.—Anon.—HP 
Rose-bush, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
Rose-bush, The. (Anon.— tr. by) W: W. Caldwell.— 
BNL—CS 37 


283 




Rose-cheeked 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Rose-cheeked Laura. ( Fr. Observations on the Art 
of English Poesy.)—T: Campion.—ELP 
(Laura.)—OB 
(Silent Music.)—CEL 

Rose-colored Note, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—DDM 
Rose-leaves, Sels. fr. —Austin Dobson. 

“Rose kissed me to-day” (Kiss, A—C.).—FTA 
"Ureeus Exit.”-—OB 

Rosemary and Rue.—-Floyd W. Jefferson.—CG 3 

Roses.—Anon.—FLS 

Roses.—Anon.—PEO 

Roses.—Edgar Fawcett.—AD 

Roses.—Leigh Hunt. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers. 

Roses and Thorns. (C.) —R: H. Stoddard. 

(Legend, A.)—OS 1 

Rose’s Cup, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—AA—LFL 
Rose’s Message, The.—Mary W. Abbott.—CG 1 
Rose’s Message, The.—Edmund Waller. See Rose, The. 
Rose’s Mite. The.—Abby M. Hall.—CG 1 
Roses of Memory.—A. C. Gordon.—AA 
Rose’s Plaint, The.—FBH—CG 1 
Rosicrucian, The.—Dinah M. Craik.—W R 9 
Roslin and Hawthornden.—H: Van Dyke.—AA 
Rossini.—J: Todhunter.—EDY 

Rosy Musk-mallow, The.—Alice E. Gillington.—VA 
Rosy North, The.—Anon.—WR 24 
Rough and Smooth.—Josephine Pollard.—PPSr 
Rough Diamond, The.—J: B. Buckstone.—CS 15 
(Country Cousin, The.)—SED 
Rough Rhyme on a Rough Matter, A. (Bad Squire, 
The— fr. Yeast, Ch. IX.)—C: Kingsley.—BNL 
Roughing It, Sels. fr. —S: L. Clemens. 

Buck Fanshaw’s Funeral. (Ch. VI., abr.) —BS 2 
—CS 9 

(Abr.)— DDR— DS—HR 

Coyote, The. (Ch. V., abr.) —TMD , 

Round.—C: Dickens. See Village Coquettes, The. 
Round my own Pretty Rose. (C.) —T: H. Bayly. 

(Nightingale’s Song, The.)—EPs 
Round of Life, The. — Alex. Lamont. — CS 22 — 
HSS 3 (abr.) 

Round Table, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of 
the King, The. 

Round the Year.—G: Cooper.—WR 25—YBT 
Roundel, The.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—VA 
Round-up, A.—H: C. Bunner.—WR 14 
Rover, The, Sel. fr. (Song by Rogero [the Captive].)— 
G: Canning.—ESs—FEP 
(Song of One Eleven Years in Prison.)—HBP—THP 
(Song. Sung by Rogero, etc.)—HPE 
(University of Gottingen, The.)—MHR—OS 2 
Rover—S. D.—CPL 

Rover, The.—Walter Scott.— See Rokeby. 

Rover in Church.—Jas. Buckham.—BS 17—CS 34— 
DES—NV 

Rover’s Adieu, The.—Walter Scott. See Rokeby. 
Rover’s Petition.—Jas. T. Fields.—BS 9 
Roving Journey-man, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Row in the Kitchen, A.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Rowfant Books, The.—Andrew Lang.—MBB 
Rowfant Library, The.—Andrew Lang.—MBB 
Rowland for an Oliver, A. (The Jest Book.) —MRS 
Royal Adventurer, The.—Philip Freneau.—AWB 
Royal Birthday, A.—W. J. C. Train.—DFR 
Royal Bumper Degree, The. (Peck’s Sun.) — 
CRR (abr. )—GH 

Royal George, The.—W: Cowper.—LH 

(Loss of the Royal George[, The].)—CGd—LC— 
PGT 1—PHS—PSR 

(On the Loss of the Roval George— C.) —BNL— 
EDY — EPs — GN — HBP — MBL — WEP 3 
Royal Guest, The.—Julia W. Howe.—BNL 
RoyalMummy to Bohemia, The.—C: W. Stoddard.—AA 
Royal Princess, A. — Christina G. Rossetti.—BS 7— 
CS 17—VSG 

Royal Race, A.—Jas. M’Carroll.—TCV 
Royal Saint, The. (Iona Sonnets, II.)—J: S. Blackie. 
—VSG 

Royal Tarts, The.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Royal Victory over the Dutch, The.—Anon.—EDY 
Royalty.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 1 
Royalty.—D. A. Wasson.—EPs 
Royalty of Virtue, The.—H: C. Potter.—TMD 
Rub-a-dub Agitation, A. (Sel. fr. Political Infidelity.) 
—G: W: Curtis.—NC 

♦Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, Sels. fr. — (Tr. by) E: 
Fitzgerald. 

And yet—and yet! (Sts. XCVI.-C1.)-—VA 
Life and Death. (XVII., XVIII., XXIV., XXVII., 


Rubaiy&t of Omar KhAyyAm (continued). 

Master-knot, The. (XXXI.-XXXIX.)—VA 
Moving Finger Writes, The. (LXVI.-LXXII.)—VA 
Omar Khayyam, From.—OB 

I. (XII.-XV.) 

II. (XVII.-XXIV.) 

III. (XCI., C., CI.) 

Overture. (I.-III.)—VA 
Paradise Enow. (XI.-XXIV.)—VA 
Phantom Caravan, The. (XLII.-XLVIII.)—VA 
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. (XVIII.-XXVIII. 
—A VP 

Rubber. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.) — Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Rubies. (Poems and Epigrams, CVIII.)—Walter S. 

Landor.—FTA-—VS 
Rubric.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 

Ruby’s Stratagem.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Rudder Grange, Sels. fr. —Frank R. Stockton. 

Our First Experience with a Watchdog. (Abr. fr. 

Chs. VII. and VIII.)—BS 15 
Our Hired Girl. (Ch. III.— cond.)- —WR 15 
Pomona Describes her Bridal Trip. (Sel. fr. Ch. 
XVI.)—PR—YA 

That Other Babv at Rudder Grange. (Sels. fr. Chs. 
XIX. and XX.)—HBR 
Rudeness.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 

Rudolph the Headsman.—Oliver W. Holmes. See 
Autocrat of the Breakfast-table, The. 

Rue.—Anon.—FLS 

Rugby Chapel.—Matthew Arnold.—EDY (br. sel.) — 
WEP 4 

Ruggles & Co. (Dial.) —C: S. Wayne.—CDs 
Ruined Chapel, The.—W: Allingham.—TIP 
Ruined Cottage, The.—Clara V. (?)Maclean.—CS 15 
Ruined Library, A.—Walter H. Pollock.—LBB—MBB 
Ruined Merchant, The.—Cora M. Eager.—CS 3 
Ruined Nest, The.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Ruining the Minister’s Parrot.—Anon.—SR 2 _ 

Ruinous Consequences of the American War.—W: 
Pitt, Earl of Chatham—SS 

Ruins of Babylon, The.—Frd’k C: (?) Husenbeth.— 
CS 10 

Ruins of Rome, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

Rule, Britannia. (Fr. Masque of Alfred.)—Jas. Thom¬ 
son. — BNL — BS 23 — FEP — FP —PGT 1— 
YBF 

Rule for Birds’ Nesters, A.—Anon.—BVC 
Rule Golden, The.—Anon.—YFD 

Rules and Lessons.—H: Vaughan.—HBP—Y1JF (sel.) 
Rules of School.—Anon.—DCP 

Ruling Passion, The.—Alex. Pope. See Moral Essays. 
Ruling Passion, The.—W: H. Switer.—PR—YA 
Rum Everywhere. (Irish World.) See following. 

Rum Evil, The. (Irish World.) —TS 
(Rum Every where.)—WR 18 
Rum Fiend, The.—W: H. Burleigh. See Rum Ma¬ 
niac, The. 

Rum Fiend’s Portrait, The.—T: De Witt Talmage.— 
CS 10 

Rum Maniac, The.-Allison.—CS 2 

Rum Maniac, The.— (Rev. and ad. fr. T: W. Nott’s 
Rum’s Maniac and W: H. H. Burleigh’s The 
Rum Fiend, by) Frank H. Fenno.—SA 
Rum the Worst Enemy of the Working-classes.—T: 

De Witt Talmage.—TS 
Rumpus, A.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Rumpus in a Shoemaker Shop, A. — H. E. McBride.— 
MCD 

Rum’s Devastation and Destiny.—W: Sullivan.—CS 22 
Rum’s Maniac.—T. W. Nott.—BS 2—CS 3 
(See also Rum Maniac, The.) 

Rum’s Ruin.—E. C. Dunn.—SR 1 
Rum-seller’s Invitation, The.—Anon.—SSS 
Rumseller’s Song, The.—C. W. Denison.—CS 22 
Runaway, The.—Jas. W. Riley. See following. 
Runaway Boy. The. (C.) —Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
(Runaway, The.)—WR 4 

Runaway Boy, The. (Prose.) —Jas. W. Riley.—CS 36 
Runaway Match, A.—Anon.—DDM. 

Runaway Ride, A.—Frances Millard.—WR 14 
Runaways, The.—Anon.—FAD 
Running a Race.—C. W. F.—PR—WR 12 
(Tear and the Smile, The.)—DCP 
Running Away.—Anon.—TFS 
Running for Congress.—F. Crosby.—ED 
Running for Office.—-H. E. McBride.—DDD 
Running the Batteries.—Herman Melville.—AWB 
Running the Cuban Blockade, Sel. fr. (Death of Garcia, 
The.)—W: O. Stoddard.—SR 13 


XLVI., LXIX., LXX.)—OS 3 

*In accordance with Houghton, Mifflin & Co.’s edition. 

284 






TITLE INDEX 


Sailor’s 


Running the Gauntlet.—Jas. F. Cooper. See Last of 
the Mohicans, The. 

Running the Weekly.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Rupert of Hentzau, Sel. fr. (Queen’s Letter, The— cond. 
fr. Chs. XVII. and XVIII.)—Anthonv Hope.— 
NP 

Rural Felicity.—Anon.—FHE 

Rural Funerals (in Sketch Book), Sel. fr. (Sorrow for 
the Dead.)—Washington Irving.— CS 5—LLC 
(Grave, The—a’>r.)- KNE —SAE 
Rural Hours, Br. sel. fr. —Susan F. Cooper.—AD 
Rural Infelicity.—C: B. Lewis.—BS 22 
(Goin’ Somewhere.)—CS 13—DCR 
Rural Lesson in Rhetoric, A.—Anon.—MHR 
Rural Life. (Frags, fr. various a>"-ors.) —BNL 
Rural Life in England, Sel. fr. (Charms of Rural Life, 
The.)—Washington Irving.—IR 
(English Scenery— sel.) —SE 
Rural Remonstrance, A. ( Boston Courier.) —GH 
Rus in Urbe.—Clement Scott.—VA 
Ruskin’s “Ethics of the Dust.”—Anon.—CP 
Russia.—Nathan H. Dole.—AA 

Russia the Antagonist of the United States.—L: Kos¬ 
suth.—MRS 

Russia the Enigma of Europe.—Gilbert H. Grosvenor. 
—NC 

Russian and Turk.—Anon.—NA 
Russian Christmas, A.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Russian Fantasy, A.—Nathan H. Dole.—AA 
Russian Courtship, A.-—Anon.—CS 34—PR—YA 
Russian Fugitive, The, Sel. fr. (Laurel. The— sel. fr. Pt. 

III.)—W: Wordsworth.—HSS 1 
Russian Journey, A, Sel. fr. (On the Freeing of the 
Serfs— fr. The Czar.) — Edna D. Proctor.— 
EDY 

Russian Nihilism.—Wendell Phillips.—FD 2 
Rustic Bridal; or, The Blind Girl of Castle Cuille (Blind 
Girl of Castel Cuille, The— C.).— H: W. Long¬ 
fellow.—BS 17 

Rustic Courtship.—Anon.—CS 16 
Rustic Joys.—T: Campion.—YBF 
(Fortunati Nimium.)—PGT 1 
(Jack and Joan.)—EP 

Rustic Lad’s Lament in the Town, The.—D: M. Moir. 
—BNL 

Rustic Song.—T: Dekker. See Sun’s Darling, The. 
Rustle of a Wing, The.—Consider B. Carter.—SR 5 
Rusty Sword, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 34—PS 
Ruth.—T: Hood. — BNL — FEP — GN — GP —HBP 
—OB—OH—OS 3—VA—YBF 
Ruth and Naomi.—W. B. O. Peabody.—BLP 
Ruth Bonython (Mogg Megone— C. — cond.). —J; G. 
Whittier.—VSG 
(Spring— br. sel.) —HSS 1 

(Story of Ruth Bonython, The— si. diff.) —WR 16 
Ruth; or, the Influences of Nature.—W; Wordsworth. 
—PGT 1 

Ruth Pinch’s Housekeeping — and what Came of it.— 
C: Dickens. See Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Ruthie’s Faith in Prayer.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Ruthless Time.—W: Shakespeare. See Troilus and 
Cressida. 


s 

S. P. C. A., The.—Anon.—YFD 
‘S” Supper and Sociable.—Anon.—EuE 
Sabbath, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Sabbath, The.—T. Frelinghuysen.—-BS 21 
Sabbath, The.—Jas. Grahame.—BNL 
Sabbath Bells, The.—Anon.—HP 
Sabbath Day, The.—S. G. Bulfinch.—TAS 
Sabbath Evening.—G; D. Prentice.—FEP 
Sabbath Morning, The.—J: Leyden.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP 

Sabbath Morning in the Country.—Philip J. Bailey. 
$€€• Festus. 

Sabbath of the Soul, The. (Hymn XI.— C.) —Anna 
L. Barbauld.—BNL—OS 2 
Sabbatia, The.—Jones Very.—-TAS 
Sable Sermon.—I. E. Jones.—CS 29 
Sable Theology.—I. E. Jones.—-CD 
Sabrina Fair.—J: Milton. See Comus. 

Sacheverel.—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
Sack of Baltimore, The.—T: O. Davis.—BNL—EDY— 
FEP—PEB 4—TIP—VA 

Sacred Cypress Tree, The. (Sel.) —J: G. W’hittier.— 
AD 

Sacred Influences.—Jos. Cook.—LLC 
Sacredness of the Union.—H: Clay.—OS 2 
Sacredness of Work, The.—T; Carlyle. See Past and 
Present. 


Sacrifice.—Ralnh W. Emerson.—HB 
Sacrifice.—Walter S. Landor.-—LH 

(Iphigenia and Agamemnon.)—BNL — CS 14— 
HBP—WEP 4 

Sacrifice.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Sacrifice of Genius, The.—R. S. Hichens.—WR 13 
Sacrilege.—T: S. Collier.—BS 20—PR 
Sacrilegious Gamesters, The. (SI. abr.) —Eliza Cook. 
—CS 25 

Sacristan’s Household, The, Sel. fr. (Sentry on the 
Tower, The.)—Anon.—MMR 
Sad Accident, A.—Anon.—-DJS 
Sad and Sweet.—Aubrey T: De Vere.—CEL 
(Human Life.)—HDL—VA 

(‘‘Sad is our youthr, for it is ever going].”)—AVP 
—BNL—FEP ' 

(Sonnet.)—HBP 

(“Sweet is our youth”— sel.) —HSS 3 
Sad are they who Know not Love.—T: B. Aldrich. 

See Two Songs from the Persian. 

Sad Case. A.—Clara D. Bates.—LPS—PP 

Sad Day, The.—T: Flatman.—OB 

Sad Fate of a Policeman, The.—Anon.—DCR—WR 3 

“Sad is our youth[, for it is ever going].”—Aubrey T: 

de Vere. See Sad and Sweet. 

Sad Memories.—C: S. Calverley.—PEB 4 
Sad Mistake, A.—Josephine E. P. Scribner.—CS 32 
Sad Mother, The.—Kathe. T. Hinkson.—VA 
Sad One, The, Sel.fr. (Lute Song.)—J: Suckling.— 
WEP 2 

Sad Shepherd, The, Sets. fr. —Ben Jonson. 

.Eglamour’s Lament. (Act I., Sc. 1.)—GP 
(Earine.)—EP 

(Sheoherd’s Love, The.)—GP 
.•Eglamour’s Lament. (Sel. fr. I., 2.)—EP 
Karol’s Kiss. (Sel. fr. 1., 2.)—EP 
Sad Story, A.—-Anon.—MCS 

Sad Story of a Little Boy that Cried, The. (St. Nicho¬ 
las.)— BVC 

Sad Story of Blobbs and his Pullet, The.—Anon.— 
CS 18 

Sad Ventures. (Boston Cultivator.) See Sea Ven¬ 
tures. 

Saddened Tramp, A.—Anon.—HP 
Saddest Fate, The.—Anon.—HDL (abr.) —HP 
“Saddest thing that can befall a soul, The.”—Alex. 
Smith.—GG 

Saddle to Rags.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Safe Attachment, A.—S. St. G. Lawrence.—TL 
Safe Stronghold, A.—Martin Luther.—AE (tr. by T: 
Carlyle.) 

(Mighty Fortress is our God, A— tr. by F: H. Hedge 
— sel.) —BNL 

(Paraphrase of Luther’s Hymn—Hedge.)—AA 
(Psalm Forty-six—Carlyle.)—HBP 
Safest Plan, The. ( Scribner’s Monthly .)—SDR 
Safety in the Rock.—J. D. Gillilan.—CS 37 
Saga of King Olaf, The (Tales of a Wayside Inn; The 
Musician’s Tale), Sel. fr. (Crew of the Long 
Serpent, The.)—H: W. Longfellow.-—BVC 
Sagamore, The.—B: P. Shillaber.—FP 
Sage Counsel.—Arthur T. Quiller-Couch.—BVC—NA 
Said I not So?—G: Herbert.—BNL 
Said Tulip, “That is so.”—Madge Elliot.—NV 
Sail on the Clouds', A.—Mary I.. Wyatt.—POS 
Sailing.—Ralph D. Paine.—CG 1 
Sailing beyond Seas.—Jean Ingelow.—VA 
Sailing of King Olaf, The.—Alice W. Brotherton.— 
BS 9 

(Abr.) —FR—SPE 

Sailing of the Fleet, The. (New York Tribune.) — 
PAPm 

Sailing the Mississippi at Midnight.—Walt Whitman. 
—SO 

Sailor, The.—W: Aliingham.—CGd—EPs—VA 
Sailor, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Sailor Boy, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—WEP 4 
Sailor Boy at Prayers, The.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Sailor Girl, The.—A. P. Graves.—PEB 4 
Sailor Santa Claus, A.—Patience Stapleton.—SR 6 
Sailor-boy’s Dream, The.—W; DimoncL—CS 15— 
MYF—OM—SS 

(Mariner’s Dream, The.)—BNL—FEP—HBP 
Sailor’s Apology for Bow-legs, A.—'T: Hood.—THP 
Sailor’s Consolation, The.—C: Dibdin (at. also to W: 

Pitt).—BNL—BVC—FEP—GP—MYF 
Sailor’s Farewell, The. (C.) —Ruthven Jenkyns. 
(Good-bye— at. to Moore.)—TFY 
(Sweetheart, Good-by!)—FLS 

(“Sweetheart, good-bye! that flut’ring sail.”)—GG 
(Though Lost to Sight, to Memory Dear.)—CS 13— 
FT A—HP— PYO (at to Moore.) 

Sailor's Funeral, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—CS 3 


285 




Sailor's 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Sailor’s Mother, The.—W: Wordsworth.—CGd (si. 
abr.) —PC 

Sailor’s Return, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Sailors’ Song.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s Jest Book. 
Sailor’s Story, A.—C. H. N. Thomas.—CS 15 
Sailor’s Story, The.—G: M. Vickers.—PS 
Sailor’s Wife, The.—Jean Adam [a/, also to W: J. 
Mickle].— BFV — BNL — GN — GP — LC — 
PGT1 

(Mariner’s Wife, The.)—FEP 

(There’s Nae Luck About the House.)—BS 0—EPs 
—HBP—WEP 3 

Sailor’s Wife, The.—C: Mackay.—FEP 
Sailor’s Yam, A.—F. T. Davis.—WR 13 
Sailor’s Yarn. A.—Jas. J. Roche.—NA 
St. Agnes’ Eve. ((?.)—Alfred Tennvson.—EDY— 
FEP—OB—OS 3—PGT 2—WtP 4—WR 25 
—YBF 

(Eve of St. Agnes.)—A VP 

Saint and Sinner.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Saint Anthony.—Eli*. W. Latimer.—WR 6 
St.*Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes.—Anon.—EDY— 
FElP—HBP 

St. Augustine’s Ladder.—H: W. Longfellow.—SE (si. 
abr.) 

(Ladder of St. Augustine. The—C.)—FTR—GMS 
—SE (6r. sel.) 

Saint Brandan.—Matthew Arnold.—OS 3 
Saint Brigid.—Rosa Mulholland, Lady Gilbert.—TIP 
Saint Cecilia. (SI. abr.) —Lewis Morris.—WR 2 
St. Cecilia.—Cornelius O’Brien.—TCY 
St. Cecilia’s Day.—J: Dryden. See Song for St. Ce¬ 
cilia’s Day, A. 

Saint Christopher.—W: D. Howells.—SR 3 
St. Clement’s Day Rhyme.—Anon.—BYC 
Saint Columha.—Lionel Johnson.—EDY 
St. Distaff’s Day. (Sf. abr.) —Rob’t Herrick.— 
EDY 

Saint Elizabeth.—C: Kingsley. See Saint’s Tragedy, 
The. 

St. Francis and the Wolf.—Katha. Tvnan-Hinkson.— 
TIP 

St. George and the Dragon.—Eli*. W. Latimer.—BS 9 
St. George’s, Hanover Square.—Frd’k Locker-Lamp- 
son.—OH 

St. James, Srls. fr. — Bxblr 

Power of the Tongue. The. (Ch. III.)—BS 12 
(Tongue. The—r. 2-S.)—LLC 
St. James's Street on a Summer Morning. (Fr. New 
Timon.)—E: Bui wer-Lyt t on.—AY P 
Saint John Baptist.—W: Drummond. See St. John 
the Baptist. 

St. John Baptist.—Arthur O'Shaughnessy.—PGT 2 
“St. John of Damascus.” Lines Prefixed to.—Douglas 
Ainslie.—AYP 

St. John the Aged.—Anon.—BS 6—CS 21 
Saint John [the] Baptist. (Fr. Flowers of Sion.)—W: 
Drummond.—EDY—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(For the Baptist.)—FEP—WEP 2 
(Sonnet: Repent, Reoert!)—EI.P 
St. John’s Eve.— C: J. Kickham.—TIP 
Saint Jonathan.—J: G. Saxe.—SCS 
St. Kevin.—S: Lover.—DI 
St. Luke, Srls. fr. Bible. 

Good Tidings. (Ch. II., 8-15.)—OS l 
Prodigal Son, The. (Ch. XV.. abr.) —AE—BS 1 — 
EA 

St. Luke the Painter. (The House of Life. Sonnet 
LXXIV.)—Dante G. Rossetti.—EDY 
St. Margaret’s Eve.—W: Allingham.—PEB 4 
St. Martin and the Beggar.—Marg. E. Sangster.— 
BS IS—TMD 

St. Martin’s Day.—Browne Willis.—EDY 
St. Matthew, Sels. fr. Bible. 

Beatitudes, The. (Ch. V.. 3-12.)—LLC 
Of Idle Words (XIV., 34-37.)—LLC 
Trust in God. (VI.. 26-34.)— BS 3 
Saint Matthew.—J: lveble.—A VP 
(Happiness— br. sel.) —FP—OS 1 

(“There are in this loud stunning tide.”)— 
HDL 

St. Michan’s Churchyard.—Rose Kavanagh.—TIP 
St. Nicholas.—M. J.H.—MD 

St. Nicholas’ Dashing Ride.—Clement C. Moore. See 
Night before Christmas. The. 

Saint Nick. (Boston Biuloet.) —PP—SR 3—YPS 
Saint Pancras Bell.—Shirley Brooks.—OS 2 
Saint Patrick and the Impostor.—Aubrey de Vere.— 
WR 6 

St. Patrick of Ireland, mv Dear!—W: Maginn.—HBP 
—THP 

St. Patrick was a Gentleman.—H: Bennett.—BNL— 
EDY—FEP—HBP 


St. Patrick's Day. (SI. abr.) —Ben King.—BS 21 
St. Patrick’s Martyrs.—Anon.—CS 17 
Saint Paul. (Br. sels.) —Frd’k W. H. Myers.—AVP 
—VA 

St. Paul at Melita.—J. H. Newman.—EDY 
Saint Peray.—T: W. Parsons.—HBP 
St. Peter’s [Church] at Rome.—Lord Byron. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

St. Peter’s Complaint, Sel. fr. —Rob’t Southwell.— 
WEP 1 

St. Peter’s Day.—J: Keble.—EDY—HBP 
St. Peter’s Politeness.—Anon.—CS 31 
St. Philip Neri and the Youth. (Dial.) —J: Byrom.— 
MPD—WRD 

St. Pierre to Ferrardo. (TheWife. Act IV., Sc. 3.)— 
Jas. S. Knowles.—-CS 4—FR—f3S 
St. Romauld.—Rob’t Southey.—CGd 
St. Simeon Stylites.—Enrico Nencione.—EDY 
St. Stephen's, Sel. fr. (Consequences of the Reforma¬ 
tion.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP 
St. Swithin. (In Two Promises.)—Anon.—BVC 
St. Swithin’s Chair.—Walter Scott.—BPB 
Saint Svmphorien.—Rose T. Cooke.—OS 3—TAV 
Saint Ursula. t The Story of St. Ursula — si. abr. — in 
Fors Clavigera, Letter LXXI.)—J: Ruskin.— 
WR 6 

St. Valentine’s and St. Patrick’s Day. (IV. music.) — 
Emma D. Banks.—BR 

St. Valentine’s Dav. (In Love Sonnets of Proteus.)— 
Wilfrid S.'Blunt.—OB 

St. Valentine’s Day.—Helen W. Clark.—PR—WR 12 
St. Valentine’s Day.—E: Valentine.—HS 
St. Valentine’s Day among the Birds.—Anon.—FAS 
St. Valentine’s Dav in a Country Village. (Tab.) — 
Anon.—TCP 

St. Valentine’s Eve.—E. IV. Burlingame.—CG 2 
Saint Valentine’s Eve.—Ernest McGaffey.—EDY 
St. Valentine’s Magic Wand.—W: Waterfield.—HS 
St. Valentine’s Revenge.—Clara J. Denton.—HE 
Saint’s Tragedy, The, Sels. fr. —C: Kingsley. 

Crusader Chorus. (Act II.. Sc. X.—abr.)—VA 
“Oh, that we two were maving.” (Song fr. II., 9.) 
—BIL 

(Song—C.)—VA 

Saint Elizabeth. (Acts I.—III.— cond.) —WR 1 
Saints’ Messenger, The.—Anna J. Granniss.—TAS 
Sairy Jackson’s Baby.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Sal Parker’s Ghost.—Edwin Coller.—CS 24—NPS— 
YP 

Salad.—Mortimer Collins.—THP 
Salad.—Svdnev Smith.—HPE 
(Receipt for Salad, A.)—HBP 
(Recipe for a Salad. A.)—FEP 
Saladin, Malek Adhel. Attendant. (Harper's Monthly.) 

See Saracen Brothersf, The]. 

Sal.immbo's Appeal. (Br. sel. fr. Salammbo, Ch. III.) 

—Gustave Flaubert.—WIt 13 
Salathiel. the Wandering Jew.—G: Croly. See Tarry 
thou till I Come. 

Sale of the Pig. The.—Jessie F. O’Donnell.—DES 
Salem, A. D. 1692.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 
Sallie’s Visit to the City.—Anon.—FHE 
Sally.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 2 
Sally Ann’s Experience—Eliza C. Hall.—WR 22 
Sallv from Coventrv, The.—G. W. Thornburv.—EPs 
Sallv In our Aliev.—H: Carev.—BNL—CEL—FEP— 
OB—PGT 1—PYO (abr.) 

Sally Simpkin’s Lament.—T: Hood.—THP 
Salome.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Saloon and the Home, The.—E. K. Young.—TS 
Saloon in Politics, The.—Clinton B. Fisk.—WR 18 
Saloon in Relation to Morals, The.—G. E. Pentecost.— 
WR 18 

Saloons Must Go! (IV. music.) —Frances E. Willard.— 
WR 18 

Salopia Inhospitalis.—Douglas B. W. Sladen.—VA 
Salt-water Adventures.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Salu-Ta-Tat-U.-A. Ry.—Anon.—MCS 
Salutation to the Kelts.—T: D’A. McGee.—TIP 
Salutatorian’s Difficulties, The.—Anon.—PS 
(Opening Speech, The.)—MND 
Salutatory: ‘‘Ladies and gentlemen, I come.”—Anon. 

See Salutatory Speech for a Boy of Ten. 
Salutatory: “Our exhibition has begun.”—Anon.— 
DLF 

Salutatory: “Our program we have put in print.”— 
Anon.—DJS 

Salutatory. A: "Parents and friends, you have come.” 
—Anon.—MCS 

Salutatory: "A welcome, friends assembled here."— 
L. Crosby.—DLS 

Salutatory. (1): "I have often heard it said.”—Clara 
J. Denton.—LL 


286 










TITLE INDEX 


Sat«d 


Salutatory. (2): "Small oaks from mighty acorns 
grow.”—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Salutatory Address: “I am requested to open.”— 
Anon.—PS 

Salutatory Delivered at Princeton University.—Anon. 
—CP 

Salutatory for a Small Boy.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh. 
Id 

Salutatory: For very Small Pupils, either Girls or 
Boys.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Salutatory Speech for a Boy of Ten.—Anon.—KJ 
(Salutatory.)—DBF 

Salute the Flag.—H: C. Bunner.—PAPm ( abr.) 

(01.1 Flag, The—C.)—TAV 
Salve!—T: E. Brown.—OB 
Salve!—Hezekiah Butterworth.—BS 26 
Sam.—Albert Hardy.—PR 

Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories, Sels fr. —Harriet B. 
Stowe. 

Laughing [or Laughin’] in Meeting [or Meetin’L— 
BS 3—CDV—CS 11—CSS—SA—SDR 
Minister’s Housekeeper. The. (Cond.) —DR 
Parson’s Horse Race, The.— (Sel.) —SR 10 
Sam Weller and his Father.—C: Dickens. See Pick¬ 
wick Papers. The. 

Sam Weller’s Valentine.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers. The. 

Sam Weller’s Valentine. {Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Samantha at Saratoga, Sets. fr. —Marietta Holley. 
Josiah and the Mermaid. {Sel. fr. Oh. XI.)—DS 
Josiah at the Various Springs. {Sel. fr. Ch. XV.)— 

WR9 

Samantha at the Centennial.—Marietta Holley. See 
Josiah Allen’s Wife as a P. A. and P. I. 
Samantha at the World’s Fair, Sel. fr. (Josiah Allen’s 
Wife at a Fashionable Restaurant,— eel fr. Ch. 
XIV.)—Marietta Holley.—SR 12 
Samantha Smith Becomes Josiah Allen’s Wife.—Mar¬ 
ietta Holley. See My Opinions and Betsey 
Bobbet’s. 

Samantha’s Talk.—Samantha Jones.—SR 10 
Sambo’s Lullaby.—Anon.—DCP 
Sambo’s New Year Sermon.—I. E. Jones.—CS 36 
Sambo’s Right to the Kilt.—C. G. Halpine.—AA 
Same, The.—G. D.—CG 1 

“Same old baffling questions! O my friend. The.”—J: 
G. Whittier.—GG 
(Trust.—C.)—HDL 

Samela.—Rob’t Greene. See Menaphon. 

Sammie—Sallie.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Sample Rooms.—Anon.—CS 21—TS 
Sam’s I/etter. {Fr. Our [or The] American Cousin.)— 
Anon.—BS 9—CS -0—CSS—SR 4 
Samson. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Samson.—F. G. Scott.—VA 
Samson Agonistes, Sele. fr. —-J: Milton. 

Samson Agonistes. (Much cond .)—EPs 
(Death of Samson, The— eel.) —MRS 
(Destruction of the Philistines.)—S3 
(Eyeless at Gaza— sel.) —LH 
(Out of Adversity— hr. sel.) —LH 
(Samson Agonistes— 1st sel.) —OB 
Samson Agonistes —-!nd sel. (Br. sel.) —OB 
Samson Agonistes. (Sel.) —WEP 2 
Samson Agonistes. ( Br. eels.) —BNL 
Samson on his Blindness.— (Br. sel .)—BNL 
Samson on his Blindness.—J: Milton. .See Samson 
Agonistes. 

Samuel Adams and the New England Town Meeting. 
—G: W. Curtis. See Centennial Celebration 
of Concord Fight. 

Samuel Hoar.—Franklin B. Sanborn.—AA 
Samuel Short’s Success.—Anon. See Simon Short’s 
Son Samuel. 

San Miniato.—J: Sterling.—OS 3 
San Terenzo.—Andrew Lang.—VA 

Sanctity of State Obligations. (Br. sel. fr. Speech in 
Wall Street, 1R40.)—Dan’l Webster.—SS 
Sanctity of Treaties, 1796.—Fisher Ames.—PS—SS 
Sanctuary.—Louise I. Guiney.—AA 
Sanctuary, The.—Horace Smith. See folUnring. 
Sanctuary within the Breast, The.—Horace Smith.— 
BLP 

(Sanctuary, The— sel.) —SS 
Sand.—Anon.—CS 33 

Sandalphon. (C.)—H : W. Longfellow.— AE — CR — 
FTR—HNS—SE—SPE 

(Sandalphon, the Angel of Prayer.)—FMR—MMR 
Sandalphon, the Angel of Prayer.—H: W. Longfellow. 
See foregoing. 

Sand-man, The.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 27 
Sand-man, The.—G: Cooper.—CS 29 


Sandman, The.—Marg. Vandegrift.—PoR 
Sandman’s Daughter, The.—Anon.—DLF 
Sandpioer, The. (C .)—Celia Thaxter.— AA — BNL 
— GN — HBP —OS 1 —POS — SAP — 8N — 
T AS—T A V—TM R—WC L— YBT 
(Sandpiper and I, The.)-^-GMS 
Sandpiper and I, The.—Celia Thaxter. See foregoing. 
Sandpiper’s Nest. The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Sands o’ Dee. The.—C: Kingsley.—BNL. .See follow¬ 
ing. 

Sands of Dee, The. (C.—in Alton Locke.)—C: Kings¬ 
ley— A VP — CEL — FEP — GN — GP — 
HSS 2 — LC — OB — PC — PEB 3 — PGT 2 
—VA—VS—WEP 4—YBF 
(“O Mary, go and call the cattle home.”)—HBP 
(Sands o’ Dee. The.)—BNL—CGd—FP 
Sandy Hook.—G: Houghton.—AA 
Sandy Macdonald’s Signal.—Leo Ross.—CS 22 

(Foxes’ Tails. The.,—BS 11—CDV—SDR ( vtly. arr. 
as di/il.) 

Sandy’s Ghost; or. A Proper New Ballad of the New 
Ovid’s Metamorphoses, as it was Intended 
to be Translated by Persons of Quality.—Alex. 
Pope.—ESs 

Sandy’s Romance.—H: Davenport.—PR 
Sang of the Outlaw Murray, The.—Anon. See Outlaw 
Murray, The. 

Santa and his Reindeer.—M. H. Steen. PS 
Santa Barbara.—Fs. ¥. Browne.—AA 
Santa Claus.—Anon.—BVC—PoR 
Santa Claus.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Santa Claus.—Anon.—TFS 
Santa Claus.—Anon.—WR 6 
Santa Claus.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Santa Claus’ Agent.—Hannah M. Kohaus.—HS 
Santa Claus and the Motherless Children.—Sophia P. 
Snow.—MYF 

(Annie and Willie’s Prayer.)— BS 1 — CS 5 — CSS 
—FTR—H R—PPSr—SA 
Santa Claus and the Mouse.—Anon.—WR 12 
Santa Claus Frolic.—-G: M. Baker.—DFR 
Santa Claus in Spite of Himself.—Rossi ter W. Ray¬ 
mond.—CS 34 

Santa Claus in the Mines.—Anon.—BS 12 
Santa Claus Outwitted.—Clara J. Denton.—HE 
Santa Claus’ Sr-eech.—T: W. Butts.—KNS 
Santa Claus’s Reception.—Jean Halifax.—WR 17 
Santa Filomena. ( C .)—H: W. Longfellow.—EPs—SE 
("Whene’er her. where’er] a noble deed is wrought ” 
—br. set.) —FHS—GG 

Santa’s Queer Joke.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Santa’s Secret.—Anon.—PR—YA 
Santiago.—T: A. Janvier.—EDY 
Sanyassi, The.—Philip G. Hamerton.—VA 
Sapho and Phao (C.), Sele. fr. —J: Lyly 

Arrows for Love. (The Song, in making of the 
Arrowes—C.— fr Act IV., Sc. 4.)—ES 
Phaon, the Ferryman.— (Sel. fr. I., 1.)—OS 2 
Sappho’s Song. (Song— C .— fr. III., 3.)—WEP 1 
Sapphics of the Cab-stand. (Punch.) —HPE 
Sappho. (Sel. fr. On the Cliffs.)—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne.—VA 

Sappho and Phao.—J: Lyly. See Sapho and Phao. 
Sappho’s Song.—J: Lyly. See Sapho and Phao. 
Sara.—G: D. Sutton.—WR 12 

Saracen Brothers^ The’. (Harper’s Monthly .)—BS 5 

_CDD—CS 10—S 4 

fSaladin, Malek Adhel, Attendant.)—SS 
Sarah Ann Miranda.—Anon.—CS 36 
Sarah’s Proposal.—C: Barnard.—CS 31 
Sara’s Conversion.—Anon.—DDM 
Saratoga Waiter, The. (Dial.) —White.—SCS 
Sargent’s Portrait of Edwin Booth at "The Players.” 

—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Sarmon to Skillettvillers.—Anon.—MCS 
Sartor Resartus, Sel. fr. (Everlasting No, The—Ch. 

VIII.— al/r. )—T: Carlyle.—BS 19 
“Sary Emma’s Photygraphs.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Sary “Fixes up” Things.—Albert B. Paine.—AWH — 
THP 

Sash, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Sassafras.—S: M. Peck.—AA 
Sasso di Dante, The.—.3: Rogers.—A VP 
Satan. (Sel. fr. Sospetto d’Herode, Bk. I.)—R: Cra- 
shaw.—EPs 

Satan.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Satan and the Grog-seller.—W. H. Burleigh.—BS 6— 
CS 18 

Satan’s Encounter with Death.—J: Milton. See Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Satan’s Speech to bis Legions.—J: Milton. Sec Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Sated One, The. (Punch.) —HPE 


287 











Satire 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Satire Addressed to Friend that is about to leave the 
University, etc., A, Sel. fr. (Domestic Chap¬ 
lain, The.)—J: Oldham.—WEP 2 
Satire V.—On Women, Br. sel. fr. (Old Coquette, 
The.)—E: Young.—WEP 3 

Satire on a Conceited Playwright. (To Mr. Edward 
Howard, on his Plays— C.) —C: Sackville, Earl 
of Dorset.—ESs 

Satire on the Dutch. (Prologue and Epilogue to 
“Amboyna; or. The Cruelties of the Dutch to 
the English Merchants.”)—J: Dryden.—ESs 
Satire on the Pension System, 1786.—J: P. Curran.— 
PS—SS 

Satire on the Syde Taillis—Ane Supplicatioun Directit 
to the Kingis Grace.—Sir D: Lyndsay.—ESs 
Satire on the Whig Poets. {SI. abr.)— Alex. Pope.—ESs 
Satire upon Plagiaries, Br. sel. fr. (Apology for Pla¬ 
giaries, An.)—S: Butler.—WEP 2 
Satire upon the Weakness and Misery of Man, Sel. fr. 
(Upon the Weakness and Misery of Man.)—S: 
Butler.—WEP 2 

Satires upon the Jesuits, Sel. fr. (Jesuits, The — fr. 

2nd Satire.)—J: Oldham.—WEP 2 
Satirist. The.—Harry L. Ivoopman.—AA 
Satisfied.—Hester A. Benedict.—HP 
Satisfied.—Charlotte F. B. Rose.—TAS 
Satisfied all Round.—Anon.—DCD 
Saturday Afternoon.—Nathaniel P. Willis.-—FEP — 
HBP—HSS 3 (abr.) —WCL 
Saturday Night.—Anon.—PPSr 
Saturn.—J: Keats. See Hyperion. 

Saturninus.—Kathe. E. Conway.—AA 
Satvr, The.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The. 

Satyre of the Threie Estaitis, Ane. Sets. fr. —Sir D: 
I.yndesay. 

Pardoner.—\VEP 1 
Pauper.—WEP 1 
Veritie.—W E P 1 

Satyrs’ Dance, The.—Anon.—ELP 
Satyr’s Service, The.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful Shep¬ 
herdess, The. 

Saul, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Browning. 

David Playing before Saul. (Sts. 5-7.)—CEL 
David Singing before Saul (8-10).—WEP 4 
Saul, Sel. fr. (18 —abr.) —HDL 
Saul, Scenes fr. —C: Heavysege. 

David Exorcising Malzah, the Evil Spirit from the 
Lord.—V A 

Flight of Malzah. The—VA 
Malzah and the Angel Zelehtha.—VA 
Saul and Jonathan. (Second Samuel, L, 19-27.) 
Bible. —BLP 

Saul before his Last Battle. {Fr. Hebrew Melodies.) 
—Lord Byron.—PS 

(Song of Saul before his Last Battle—C.)—EPs 
Saunders McGlashan’s Courtship.—D: Kennedy.— 
BS 23—CR {si. diff. vers.)— HBR 
Sausage. ( Pantomimic char.) —Anon.—TCP 
Sausage-maker’s Ghost, The.—T: Hood.—CS 17 
Savage, A.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AA 
Savannah.—A. S. Burroughs.—EDY 
Save the Other Man.—Marg. J. Preston.—CS 11— 
NPS—YP 

Saved. {Dial, and tab.) —Anon.—CS 8—StD 
Saved. (Dial.)— Anon.—MAD 
Saved.—Stockton Bates.—CS 28 
Saved.—Jenny Joy.—CS 5 
Saved.—Mrs. L. M. Sloper.-—CS 37 
Saved by a Boy. (.4hr.)—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—BS 23 
Saved by a Ghost.—Eben E. Rexford.— 1 CS 21—NPS 
—YP 

Saved by a Hymn. (New York Evangelist.) —CS 34 
Saved by a Rattlesnake.—Anon.—CS 25 
Saved from Suicide.—Anon.—KNS 
Saved from the Poor House.—Anon.—MFD 
Saving Mission on Infancy, The.-—Harriet W. Hodson. 
—BS 7 

Saving Mother.—Anon.—PPSr 
Saving the Cider.—Anon.—CS 23—DS 
‘‘Savior, again to Thv dear name we raise.”—J. Eller- 
ton.—LLC 

“Savior! I follow on.”—Horace L. (7) Hastings.— 
SAE 

Saviour, Who thy Flock art Feeding.—W: A. Muhlen¬ 
berg.—FEP 

Saviour’s Message, The. (C.)—Philip Doddridge. 

(Hark, the Glad Sound— w. 3 add. sts.) —FEP 
Saviour’s Reply to the Tempter, The.—J: Milton. See 
Paradise Regained. 

Savitri; or. Love and Death.—( Tr. by) Edwin Arnold 
See Maha-Bharata, The. 

Savonarola.—W: M. Punshon.—NC 


Savonarola and Lorenzo. (Ad. fr. Savonarola.)— 
Alfred Austin.—NDP 

Saw ye Bonnie Lesley.— Rob’t Burns. See Bonnie 

Saxon Grit.—Rob’t Collyer.— CS 20 — EDY — GP — 
HB {si. abr.) 

Say!—L. I. Melroy.—PS 

“Say never, ye loved once.” (Br. sel. fr. Loved Once.) 
Eliz. B. Browning.—GG 

Say not the Struggle Naught Availeth. (C.)—Arthur 
H. Clough. —AVP — C,P — HDL — OB — 
PGT 2—SO—WEP 4—YBF 
(Courage.)—OS 3 
(Despondency Rebuked.)—HBP 
“Say ye, that years roll on and ne’er return?” (To the 
Comtesse de Molande about to marry the Due 
de Luxembourg— C .)—Walter S. Landor.— 
WEP 4 

Saying, not Meaning.—W: B. Wake.—HPE—SCS 
Sayings and Doings.—W: W. Story. See He and She; 
or, A Poet’s Portfolio. 

Scale of Minds.—W: Wordsworth. (Verses, fr. Post¬ 
script of 1835.)-—EPs 

Scaling of Perce Rock, The. {Sel. fr. The Battle of the 
Strong, Bk. V., Ch. XL.)-—Gilbert Parker.— 
PFP 

“Scallywag.”—Caroline B. I.e Row.—BS 22—WR 21 
Scalp, The.—C. F. Savage-Armstrong.—TIP 
Scandal.—Mary E. C. Johnson.—CS 26 
Scandal.—Alex. Pope. See Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot. 
Scandal and Slander. {Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Scandal Monger, The. (Dial.) —Ellen (7) Pickering.— 
MDD 

Scandal Mongers.—Silas Dinsmore.—HP 
Scandal on the Brain.—Blanche B. Beebe.—SD 
Scandinavia. (Charade.) —Anon.—FAD 
Scaped.—Stephen Crane.—AA 

"Scarcely Hope had shaped for me.” (Br. sel. fr. 

Andrew Rykman’s Prayer.)—HDL 
Scarecrow, The.—Wallace E. Mather.—WR 2 
Scarecrow, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Scarf Drill.—A. E. Hurst.-—ID 

Scarlet Letter, The, Sel. fr. (Elf-child and the Minister, 
The.)—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—CR (sel. fr. 
Chs. VII. and VIII.)—WR 2 ( arr. fr. Ch. VIII.) 
Scarlet Tanager, The.—Joel Benton.—AA 
Scarlet Tanager, The.—Mary A. Mason.—AA 
“Scatter in Spring-time a handful of seeds.”—Anon.— 
YBT 

Scatter the Germs of the Beautiful.-—Anon.—CS 13 
Scene at Doctor Blimber’s.—C: Dickens. See Dombey 
and Son. 

Scene at Niagara Falls.—C: Tarson.—CS 14 
Scene at the Natural Bridge.—Elihu Burritt.—CR 
(Ambitious Youth, The— si. diff. vers .)—WRD 
(One Niche the Highest.)—ES 7—PFP—SC 
( SI. abr .)—BS 17—PR 

Scene between Hamlet and the Queen.—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Hamlet. 

Scene from Cyrano de Bergerac.—Edmund Rostand. 
See Cyrano de Bergerac. 

Scene from “Douglas.” A.—J: Home. See Douglas. 
Scene from “Hamlet.”—W:Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Scene from “Henry IV.”—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Scene from “Henry V.”—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry V. 

Scene from “King Henry VIII.”—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry VIII. 

Scene from “Julius Csesar.”—W: Shakespeare. See 
Julius Ca'sar. 

Scene from “Leah.”—Augustin Daly. See Leah the 
Forsaken. 

Scene from “London Assurance.” — Dion Boucicault. 
See London Assurance. 

Scene from “Richard III.” — W: Shakespeare. See 
King Richard III. 

Scene from “Richelieu.” — E: Bulwer-Lytton. See 
Richelieu. 

Scene from “The Hunchback.”—Jas. S. Knowles. See 
Hunchback, The. 

Scene from “The Iron Chest.”—G: Colman.—AE 
Scene from “The Lady of Lyons.”—E: Bulwer-Lytton. 
See Lady of Lyons, The. 

Scene from the Life of Robin Hood, A.—Mrs. Russell 
Kavanaugh.—KER 

Scene from “The Little Minister.”—Jas. M. Barrie. 
See Little Minister, The. 

Scene from “The Love Chase.”—Jas. S. Knowles. See 
Love Chase, The. 

Scene from “The Merchant of Venice.”—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Merchant of Venice, The. 


288 




TITLE INDEX 


Schools 


Scene from "The Rivals.”—R: B. Sheridan. See Rivals, 
The. 

Scene from "The Spanish Gypsy.”—G. Eliot. See 
Spanish Gypsy, The. 

Scene in a Backwoods School.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Scene in a Photograph Gallery.—Anon.—MC 
Scene in a Railway Station.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
Scene in a Street Car.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Scene in an Irish School.—Gerald Griffin.—MN1R 
Scene in Court , A.—Anon.—CS 23 
Scene in Court, A.—Anon.—PD 

Scene in Paradise, A.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
Scene in the Bobtown School, A.—H. E. McBride.— 
MHD 

Scene on the Austrian Frontier, A. (Punch.) —HPE 
Scene on the Battlefield, A.—H: W. Grady. See South 
and her Problems, The. 

Scenes at the Police Court.—Anon.—DE. 

Scenes from “The Hunchback.”—Jas. S. Knowles. See 
Hunchback, The. 

Scenes from the Life of an Office-boy. (Tab.) —Anon. 
—TCP 

Scenes from “The Rivals.”—R: B. Sheridan. See 
Rivals, The. 

Scenes from "The School for Scandal.”—R: B. Sheridan. 

See School for Scandal, The. 

Scent of a Good Cigar, The.—Kate A. Carrington.— 
PPh 

Scented Grove. The.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pftstor&l^ 

Schake und Agers.—I. H. Brown.—CRR—CS 28 (si. 
abr.) 

Schemer, A.—Edgar L. Warren.—PEO 
Schill. (Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty, Pt. II., Sonnet XIX.— ('.) —W: 
Wordsworth.—EPs 

Schiller’s Dying Vision.—Agnes M. Macharr.—TCV 
Schlausenheimer’s Alarming-glock.—A. Von Boyle.— 
BDD 

Schlausheimer Don’t Conciliate.—A. Von Boyle.— 
BDD—CS 12—DRR—DS 

Schlosser’s Ride. (Parody on Sheridan’s Ride.)— 
Anon.—BDD—DFY 

Schneider Sees Leah.—“Uncle Schneider.” See fol¬ 
lowing. 

Schneider’s Description of the Play of Leah.—“Uncle 
Schneider. ’ ’—B R R—CSS 

(Schneider Sees Leah.)— BDD — BeR — BS 2— 
DFY—SDR 

Schneider’s Ride. ( Parody on Sheridan’s Ride.)—Gus 
Phillips [or “Oofty Gooft”].—CS 9—DRR 

(SI. diff. vers.) —BDD—-DFY 
Schneider’s Tomatoes.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—CD— 
CDV—CS 24—DFY—SDR 

Schnitze[r)l’s Philosopede. — C: G. Leland. — BDD — 
DFY (abr.) —DRR 

(Schnitze[r]l’s Velocipede— si. diff. vers.) —CDV— 
CRR 

Schnitzerl’s Velocipede.—C: G. Leland. See forego¬ 
ing. 

Scholar, The. (Occasional Pieces, XVIII.— C.) — 
Rob’t Southey.—PGT 1 

(Books.)—BNL 

(His Books.)—OB 

(Library, The.)—LBB—MBB 

(My Days among the Dead [are Passed].)—FEP — 
HBP—YBF 

(Stanzas Written in his Library.)—WEP 4 
Scholar, The.—H: Taylor. See Edwin the Fair. 
Scholar and Carpenter, Br. sels. jr. —Jean Ingelow. 

God’s Time.—-SR 1 

I Have the Courage to be Gay.—BIL 
Scholar and his Dog, A, Sel. jr. (Philosophy.)—J. 
Marston.—BNL 

Scholar and the State, The.—Frank S. Black.—TMD 
Scholar in a Republic, The, Sels. ]r. —Wendell Phillips. 

Distrust of the People.—FD 2 . 

(Scholar’s Distrust, The— ptly. same.)— NC 

Educate the Masses.—FD 2 

Scholar in Public Life, The. (Ptly. diff. sels.) —Chaun- 
cey M. Depew.—NC—SSD 

Scholar of Thebet Ben Khorat. (Sel.) —Nathaniel P. 
Willis.—PFP 

Scholar, t e Jurist, the Artist, the Philanthropist, The, 
Sel. fr. (Incentives to Duty.)—C: Sumner.— 
CR 

(Age of Progress— sel.) —I,LC 
Scholar-Gypsy, The.—Matthew Arnold.—AV P—OB— 
PGT 2 

(Flee fro’ the Press— sel.) —LH 
Scholar’s Convention, The.—Julia H. May.—FS 
Scholar’s Distrust, The.—Wendell Phillips. See Schol¬ 
ar in a Republic, The. 


Scholar’s Mission, The.—G: Putman.—WRD 
Schone Rothraut.—J: A. Goodchild.—VA 
School.—Anon.—DJS 
(Six Years Old.)—TFS 
(Six-year-old, A.)—PS—TT 
(Speech for a Six-year-old.)—KER 
School, The.—Fitz-Hugh Ludlow.—HSS 2—WCL 
School Affairs in Riverhead District.—C. W. Deans.— 
SDD 

School and School-fellows.—W: M. Praed.—FEP— 
HPE (si. abr.) 

School, Before and After.—Anon.—LLC 
(Before and After School.)—WR 7 
(School Children.)—HSS 2 
School Begins To-day.-—-J: H. Yates.—BS 9 
School “Called.”—B: F. Taylor.—BS 6 
School Cantata.—Louisa P. Hopkins.—CS 25 
School Children.—Anon. See School, Before and After. 
School Committee, The. (Dial.) —W. B. Fowle.—MPD 
School Committee Man, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
School Episode, A.—Anon.—WR 7 
School Episode, A.—Emma Shaw.—CS 30 
School Fencibles.—W: Cory.—LH 
School for Scandal, The, Sels. fr. —R: B. Sheridan. 

Let the Toast Pass. (Song fr. Act III., Sc. 3.)—BNL 
Quarrel between Sir Peter and Lady Teazle. (II., 
1: I., 2 —br. sel. ; III., 1— sel.)— BS 10—HD 
(Lady Teazle and Sir Peter— abr.) —CR 
(Old Gentleman who Married a Young Wife, The 
— sel.)— BC 

(Quarrel Scene from "School for Scandal.”)— 
CS 17 

(Scenes from "The School for Scandal”— abr.) — 
FTR 

(School for Scandal— br. sel.) —SE 
(Sir Peter and his Lady Quarrel— abr.) —VSG 
School in an Uproar. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
School is Out.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
School of Compliments, The, Sel fr. (Holiday in Ar¬ 
cadia— song fr. Act V., Sc. 3.)—Jas. Shirley.— 
CEL 

(Pan’s Holiday.)—EP 
School or Work.—Anon.—FHE 
School Statistics.—Anon.—BS 10 

(Nineteenth Century Teacher, The.)—SR 3 
School “Takes Up.”—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
School-bell, The.—Clara J. Denton.—W T LO 
School-boy, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AP 
School-boy, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
School-boy on Corns, A.—Anon.—BS 14—CS 26—DS 
School-boy’s Apples, The.-—Anon.—CS 23—DS 
Schoolboys’ Strike, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—BS 24— 
WR 26 

Schoolday. (Dramatic Charade.) —Mrs. Sara K. Hunt. 
—MD 

School-day, A.—Will F. McSparran.—CH—CRR 
School-days. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
School-girl, The.—W: H. Venable.—AA 
School-girl’s Troubles, A.—Annette Marsh.—PR 
School-house, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow 
Papers, The. 

Schooling a Husband.—Anon.—CS 10 
School-ma’am, The.-—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
School-ma’am, The, Sel. fr. (Interview between the 
School Directors and the Janitor, An.)—T. S. 
Denison.—SR I 

School-ma’am’s Courting, The.—Florence E. Pratt [or 
Pyatt].—CRR—DR 

(Courting in Kentucky.)—AWH—BS 19—THP 
(Kerrected.)—SR 7 

Schoolmaster, The.— (Dial.) —W. T. Adams.—NDP 
Schoolmaster, The.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Deserted 
Village, The. 

Schoolmaster Abroad, The.—Anon.—FDY 
Schoolmaster Abroad with his Son, The.—C: S. Calver- 
ley.—THP 

Schoolmaster Beaten, The.—C: Dickens. See Nicholas 
Nickleby. 

Schoolmaster’s Conquest, The.—Anon.—CS 19 
School-master’s Guests, The. (SI. abr.) —Will Carle- 
ton.—BS 5—CS 14 

Schoolmaster’s Sleep, The.—Ben W T . Davis.—CS 9 
School-mistress, The.—Lucy Larcom.—PTS 
Schoolmistress, The.—W: Shenstone.—FEP—HBP 
(Suffering and Sympathy— br. sel.) —WEP 3 
(Village Schoolmistress, The— sel.) —BNL 
Schoolroom I Love the Best, The.—Kathe. L. Bates.— 
WR 17 

(Vacation Song.)—POS 
Schoolroom Idyl, A.—C: B. Going.—PR 
Schools and Colleges of our Country, The.—C: W. 
Eliot. See Washington and our Schools and 
Colleges. 


289 







Schools 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Schools and Teachers.—Anon.—SE 
Schools Take Part, The.—H: Watterson. See Our 
Expanding Republic. 

School-teacher, The.—H:, Lord Brougham.—BLP 
School-time.—Anon.—WR 17 

Science Friendly to Freedom.—E. II. Chapin. See 
Moral and Physical Science Friendly to Free¬ 
dom. 

"Science, if true to itself, must come back to a personal 
God.”—Noah Porter—GG 

Science Religious.—E: Hitchcock. See True Science 
and Religion (True Science ought to be Re¬ 
ligious). 

Scientific Genesis, The.—Anon.—BS 17 
Scientific Method Applied to History, Br. sel. fr. (His¬ 
tory.)—Jas. A. Froude.—FTR 
Scientific Party, A.—I. H. Brown.—CRR 
Scintillate. (Charade.) —Anon.—FAD 
“Scipio.”—Walter S. Keplinger.—CS 29—NPS—YP 
Scipio Declines Hannibal’s Overtures for Peace.—Livy. 
See History of Rome. 

Scipio to his Army.—Livy. See History of Rome. 
Scipio to the Senate.—D. A. Wasson.—MYF 
Scorching versus Diamonds.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 20 
Scorn not the Sonnet. (Misc. Sonnets, Pt. II., No. 1.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—FEP 
(Sonnet, The.)—BNL—OB (II.)—YBF 
Scorn to be Slaves.—Jos. Warren. See Constitutional 
Liberty and Arbitrary Power. 

Scot to Jeanne d’Arc, A. (Sel .)—Andrew Lang.— 
EDY—VA 

Scotch Heather.—Marion Manville.—BIL 
Scotch Hymn.—Anon.—HDL 
Scotch Jeanie’s Story.—Anon.—BS 19 
Scotch Philosophy of Kissing. (Harper’s Magazine .)— 
CDV—SDR 

Scotch Witness, A.—Anon.—WR 22 
Scotch Words.—Rob’t Leighton.—MHR 
Scotland.—Rob’t Burns. See To the Guid Wife of 
Wauchope House. 

Scotland.—Edmund Flagg.—FD 1"—TMD (si. abr.) 
Scotland.—Walter Scott. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel, The. 

Scotland’s Maiden Martyr.—Anon.—FTR—HB 

(Maiden Martyr, The.) — BS 5 — CS 14 — DS — 
FR—PFP—SA—SC—SR 6 
Scots Apostasie, The.—J: Cleiveland.—ESs 
Scots, Wha Hae.— (C.) —Rob’t Burns.—PYO 

(Bannockburn.)— BS 5 — EDY — EPs — FEP — 
GN — HB — HBP — LC — OS 1 — PHS — 
WEP 3—YBF 
Later vers .)—BPB 

IF. two add. sts.)— BLP—BNL—GP—HSS 1 
(Battle of Bannockburn —later vers .)— CEL — EHT 
(Bruce’s Address [to his Army].)—LC 
(Later vers.) —CSS—PPSr 

Scott and the Veteran.—Bayard Taylor.—CS 1—NPS 
—PAP—WRD—YP 
Scottish Ballad, A.—W: Lyle.—WR 4 
Scottish Winter Landscape, A.—Gawain Douglas. See 
Prologues to the AJneid. 

Scourge of War, The.—W: H. Burleigh.—BLP—LLC 
Scream from the American Eagle in Dakota, A.—Anon. 
—CRR 

Scripture Etchings for Arbor Day. (Scattered verses.) 
— Bible .—WR 11 

Scripture Questions.—Anon.—DCR 
Scripture Scenes. (2 tabs.) —Anon.—TCP 
Scripture Tableaux.—Anon.—TCP 
Scrooge and Marley.—C: Dickens. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Scrooge Fulfils his Vow.—C: Dickens. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Scrooge’s Reformation.—C: Dickens. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Sculpin.—Anon.—BeR 
Sculptor, The.—G: W. Doane.—OS 1 
(Life Sculpture.)—YBT 
Sculpture. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Scurrilous Scribe, The.—Philip Freneau.—AA 
Scylla’s Metamorphosis, Sel. fr. (Lament in Spring, 
A.)—T: Lodge.—EP 
(Spring and Melancholy.)—ES—OEL 
Scythe Song. — Andrew Lang. — GN — SN — VA — 
YBT ' 

Sea, The.—Anon.—NA 

Sea, The.—Bernard Barton.—BNL 

Sea, The.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Sea, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrim¬ 
age. 

Sea.—Lord Byron. See Corsair, The. 

Sea, The.—Ralph W. Emerson. See Sea-shore, The. 
Sea, The.—Mary Howitt.—POS 


Sea, The.— (Sel. fr. Reveries of a Bachelor.—Fourth 
Reverie, I .—Cond .)—Donald G. Mitchell.— 
SR 12 

Sea, The.—Eva L. Ogden.—CS 37 
Sea, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—AE (br. sel.) — BNL — 
CEL — FEP — GN — HBP — HSS 2 — LC — 
OS 2—POS—SN—VA—VS—WEP 4 
(Song of the Sea, A.)—LH 
Sea, The.—R: H: Stoddard. See Sea, The [Storm], 

Sea, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Break, Break, 
Break. 

Sea and Land Victories.—Anon.—AWB 
Sea and Shore.—Harry L. Koopman.—AA 
Sea Ballad.—Sydney Dobell. See Balder. 

Sea Captain’s Story, The.—Lord Lytton (?).—W’RD 
Sea Child, A.—-Bliss Carman.—VA 
Sea Child.— See also Sea-child. 

Sea Dirge, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Tempest, The. 
Sea Dreams, Sel. fr— Alfred Tennyson. See “What 
does little birdie say?” 

Sea Fight, The.—Anon.—BNL 

Sea Fight, The.—C: Kingsley. See Westward Ho! 

Sea Fight. See also Sea-fight. 

Sea Fowler, The.—Mary Howitt.—LC—VA 
Sea Gull. See Sea-gull. 

Sea Gulls.—R. W. Page.—CG 3 
Sea Irony.—J. L. Heaton.—AA 

Sea Life.—Jas. Montgomery. See Pelican Island. The. 
Sea Longings.—T: B. Aldrich.—SN 
Sea of Faith, The. (Sel. fr. Passage to India, Sec. IX.) 
—Walt Whitman.—TAS 

Sea of Fire, The. (Br. sel. fr. St. 32.)—Joaquin Miller. 
—BIL 

Sea of Troubles, A. (Dial.) —G: M. Baker.—MPD 
Sea Shell. The.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, The. 
Sea Shell. See also Sea-shell. 

Sea Side Songs. (C.) —Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. 

(Serenade.)—CEL 

Sea Slumber-song.—Roden Noel.—VA 
Sea Song.—W: E. Channing.—EPs 

(Our Boat to the Waves-— si. abr.) —BNL 
Sea Song, A.—Allan Cunningham.—GN—LH—PYO 
(Abr.) —EPs—LLC 
(At Sea.)—BFV—PSR 

(“Wet sheet and a flowing sea, A.”)—BNL—BVC— 
FEP — HBP — LC — OS 2 — PC — PGT 1 — 
YBF 

Sea Song, A. (Williams Literary Monthly.) —CG 3 
Sea Song. See also Sea-song. 

Sea, The [Storm— C.]. —R: H. Stoddard.—AA—HBP 
Sea Story, A.—Emily H. Hickey.—PEB 4—VA 
Sea Ventures. (Boston Cult.)—SSS 
(Heart Ventures.)—CS 22 
(Sad Ventures.)—HP 
Sea-birds.—Eliz. A. Allan.—AA 
Sea-bird’s Cry, The.—Edith F JParsons.—CG 3 
Sea-cave, The.—Lord Byron. See Island, The. 
Sea-child, The.—Eliza Cook.—VA 
Sea-child. See also Sea Child. 

Sea-fight, The.—Anon.—HBP 

Sea-fight, A.—Walt Whitman. See Song of Myself. 
Sea-fight. See also Sea Fight. 

Sea-gull, The.—A. D. MacNeill.—TCV 
Sea-gulls. See Sea Gulls. 

Sea-king, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—VS 
“Sea-maids’ Music, The ”—Ernest Myers.—VA 
Seal Lullaby. (Verses i receding The White Seal, in 
The Jungle Book.)—Rudyard Kipling.—PoR 
Sealed Orders.—Anon.—CS 27 
Sea-limits, The.—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 
Seaman’s Happy Return, The.—Anon.—HBP 
Sea-marge.—Alex. Smith. See Life-drama, A. 

Sea-mews in Winter Time.—Jean Ingelow.—CS 37— 
POS (abr.) 

Search, The.-—Ernest Crosby.—AA 
Search after God.—T: Heywood.—HBP 
( Search after Happiness; or. The Quest of Sultaun Soli- 
maun. The.—Walter Scott.—HPE 
Search for Happiness, The. (Play.) —Mary L. Gad- 
dess.—WR 4 

Search for Harold’s Body, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. 
See Harold. 

Search for the Fairies, A. (Play.) —Clara Denton.— 
LPD 

Search Questions. (S. S. exercise.) —Anon.—PS 
Searching for Happiness. ( Tab. )—Anon.—TCP 
Searching for the Slain.—Anon.—CS 3—FTR—NPS— 
PS—YP 

(After the Battle.)—HSS 1 
Sea’s Influence, The.—W: E. Hunt.—TCV 
Sea’s Love, The.—F: E. Weatherly.—HP 
Sea’s Spell, The.—Susan M. Spalding.—AA 
Sea-serpent, The.—PlanchA—NA 


290 




TITLE INDEX 


Sects 


Sea-shell, The—H. W —HSS 2 

Sea-shell, The—G: Macdonald— BIL—TFY 

Sea-shell. See also Sea Shell. 

Sea-shell Murmurs.—Eugene Lee-Hamilton.—VA 
Sea-shore, The. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Sea-shore, The, Sel. fr. (Sea,The.)—Ralph W. Emerson. 
—BNL 

Sea-shore, The.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, 
The. 

Sea-side Flirtation, A.—S: M. Peck.—DES 

Seaside Incident, A.—Marc Cook.—HP—TAV—WR 2 

Seaside Well, The.—Anon.—BNL 

Sea-sleep.—T: L. Harris.—AA 

Seasonable Sweets.—C.—PPh 

Sea-song.—W: D. Baker.—CG 1 

Sea-song. See also Sea Song. 

Sea-song from the Shore, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—PoR 
Seasons, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—DJS 
Seasons, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—MD 
Seasons, The. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—’BNL 
Seasons, The.—Jas. (?) Grahame.—FP 
Seasons, The.—M. E. N. Hathaway. See Signs o£ the 
seasons. 

Seasons, The.—Hattie Home.—SDD 
Seasons, The. (Literary recreations.) —Eliz. Lloyd.— 
BS 13 

Seasons. The.—Helen A. Ricker.—NV 
Seasons, The.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Seasons. The, Sels. fr. —Jas. Thomson. 

Autumn, Sels. fr. 

“Oh, bear me then.” (Br. sel. in Thoughts on 
the Forest.)—AD 
Stag Hunt, The.—-BNL 
Storm in Harvest.—WEP 3 
Hymn. A. (C.) 

(Hymn of the Seasons.)—FEP 
(Hymn on the Seasons.)—BNL 
(Seasons, The— sel .)—-FP 
(Universal Hymn of Nature, The— abr .)—SS 
Seasons, The, Br. sels. fr .—BNL 
Spring, Sels. fr. 

Angling—BNL 

Coming of the Rain, The.—WEP 3 
Connubial Life.—BNL 

(Soul Culture— br. sel .)—BLP 
Domestic Birds. (Br. sel .)—BNL 
Early Spring.—AD 

Nightingale, The. (Br. sel.) —EPs—LC 
Nature in Spring.—GP 

(“Who can paint like nature,” etc.— br. sel.) 
—BS 8 

Plea for Animals, A.—BNL 
Rainbow, The.—GP 
Songsters. The.—BNL—POS 
Spring, The. (Br. sel .)—AD 
Summer, Sels. fr. 

Bat hing.—BNL 

“Hence, let me haste.” (Br. sel .)—AD 
Sheep Washing.—WEP 3 
Thunder-storm, The.—GP 
‘Welcome, ye shades.” (Br. sel .)—AD 
Winter, Sels. fr. 

Death Typified by Winter.—SS 
I.ost in the Snow.—EPs 
Snow Scene, A.—WEP 3 
(Snow Storm. The.)—GP 
(Winter Scenes.)—BNL 

Seasons.—Kate D. Walster.—AD—DLD (arr. as dial.) 
Seasons in Sweden, The. (Sel. fr. Kavanagh— fr. 

introd. to Frithiof’s Saga, in Driftwood.)—H: 
W. Longfellow.—SE 

Seasons of Life. The.—Rob’t Southey.—HSS 3 
Sea-swallow«, The.—A. C. Swinburne.—PEB 4 
Seat for Three, A.—Walter Crane.—VA 
Seaward.—Jeanette B Gillespy.—CG 3 
Seaward.—Celia Thaxter.—A A. 

Seaward (In Wild Eden.) — G: E. Woodberry.— 
AA (sel.) 

Sea-way.—Ellen M. H Cortissoz.—AA 
Sea-weed.—Will A. Dromgoole.—BS21 
Seaweed.—H: W. Longfellow— BNL—HBP—SE (br. 
sel .)—-SO 

(Drifting— br. sel .)—SE 

Sea-weed, The.—Elisabeth J. (C.) Pullen.—AA 
Second Brother, Sel. fr. (Song: “Strew not earth,’ 
etc.)—T: L. Beddoes.—VS 

Second Bunker Hill Monument Oration.—Dan’l W eb- 
ster. See Completion of the Bunker Hill Mon¬ 
ument, The 

Second Crucifixion, The.—R: Le Gallienne.—OB 
Second Day of Creation, The.—T: Whytehead.—A VP 
(Mystic Veil, The— abr. arul si. diff. vers .)— CS 12 


Second Dirge.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s Jest 
Book. 

Second Hymn for Advent, The. (C.)—Jeremy Taylor. 

(Christ’s Coming to Jerusalem in Triumph.)—CEL 
Second Madrigal, The.—Lord De Tabley.—VS 
Second Mate, The.—Fitz-James O’Brien.—AA 
(Lost Steamship, The.)—CS 14 
Second Inaugural Address.—Abraham Lincoln.—AI 
— LLC — MRS — OS 3 — PPS — SO (si. abr.) 
(President Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address.)— 
CS 3 

(Retribution— sel. )—PS 

(With Malice towards none, with Charity for all— 
br. sel.) —HSS 1 

Second Oration against Catiline. (Catiline Expelled.) 
—Marcus Tullius Cicero.—-CS 5—OS 3—PS— 
SS 

Second Pastor’s Song, The.—N: Breton. See Passion¬ 
ate Shepherd, The. 

Second Prize, The. (Dial.) —H. E. McBride.—StD 
Second Quest, The.—Jos. R. Drake. See Culprit Fay, 
The. 

Second Review of the Grand Army.—Fs. Bret Harte.— 
EDY 

Second Samuel, Sel. fr. (Saul and Jonathan—Ch. I., 
19-27.)— Bible. —BLP 

Second Satire, The (Of the Courtier’s Life, written 
to John Poins—C.), Sel. fr. —Sir T: Wyatt.— 
WEP 1 

Second Song—To the Same.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Song: The Owl. 

Second Speech on Foot’s Resolution.—Dan’l Webster. 
See Reply to Hayne, The. 

Second Speech on the Judiciary Establishment, Sel. fr. 
(On the Judiciary Act.)—Gouverneur Morris. 
—OM—SS 

Second Sunday after Easter. — J: Keble. — AVP — 
WEP 4 

Second Sunday after Trinity.—J: Keble.—AVP 
Second Trial, A.—Sarah W. Kellogg.—BS 14—HBR 
(Commencement.)—PFP 
Second Volume, The.—Rob’t M. Bell.—AA 
Secret, The.—Anon.—AD—DLF 
Secret, The.—Anon.—COS—PP 
(Birdie’s Secret.)—DJS 
Secret, A.—Anon.—YBT 

Secret, The (My Secret— C.). —Felix Arvers (tr. by H: 
W. Longfellow).—FLS 

Secret, The. (Dial.) —“Cousin Fannie.”—SD 
Secret, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

Secret, The. (“I have not told my garden yet”— C.) 

—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
Secret, A.—Mrs. G. M. Howard.—PEO 
Secret, The.-—Cosmo Monkhouse.—VA 
Secret, A.—Helen I. Moorhouse.—POS 
Secret, The.—Harriet B. Stowe.—TAS 
Secret, The. (In Wild Eden.)—G: E. Woodberry.— 
AA—ASL—FTA—YBF 
Secret Combination, The.—Ellis P. Butler.—TL 
Secret Dispatches, The. (Ad.) —Anon.—NP 
Secret Executions. (Sel. fr. -preface to Last Days of a 
Condemned.)—Victor Hugo.—MRS 
Secret of a Happy Dav. The. (C.)—Frances R. Haver- 
gal.—HDL 

(Hour of Comfort, The-— sel.) —SSS 
Secret of Death, The.—Edwin Arnold. See Light of 
Asia, The. 

Secret of Death, The.—Edwin Arnold. See also She 
and He. 

Secret of Life, The.—Sabine Baring-Gould.—VSG 
Secret of Lincoln’s Power, The. (Sel. fr. Abraham 
Lincoln.)—H: Watterson.—SC 
(Abraham Lincoln— -ptly. same sel.) —SR 11 
Secret of Murder, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Murder 
of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Secret of the Nightingale, The.—Roden Noel.—VA 
Secret of the Sea, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—PHS 
Secret of the Sunflower, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Secret Place, The.—H: F. Lyte.—VA 
Secret Place of the Most High, The.—W: C. Gannett. 
—TAS 

Secret Sorrow, The. (Punch .)—HPE 
Secretary, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FAD 
Secretary. The.—Matthew Prior.—WEP 3 
Secrets of Masonry, The.—Anon.—CS 17 
Secrets of the Heart, The.—Austin Dobson.—WR 12 
Sectarian Tyrannv, 1812. (Sel. fr. The Catholic Ques¬ 
tion, April 23, 1812.)—H: Grattan.—PS—SS 
Sectional Services in the Last War.—Caleb Cushing.— 
SS 

(New England [in the War of 1812].)—CR—SSD 
Sects. The. Private Judgment.—J: Dryden—WEP 2 
See Hind and the Panther, The. 

291 





See 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


See what it is to Love.—Sir Philip Sidney. See As- 
trophel and Stella. 

Seed, The.—Anon.—AD 

Seed, The.—Anon.—-NV 

Seed, The.—Anon.—YBT 

Seed Sower, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 

Seed Time. See also Seed-time. 

Seed Time Hymn.—J: Keble.—YA 
Seed Word.—Anon.—AD 
Seeds.—Anon.—CS 4 

Seedsman, The.—Rob't J. Burdette.—SYS 
Seed-time. (Storing exercises.) —Mrs. L. A. Bradbury. 
—SSE 

Seed-time.—Patrick J. Coleman.—TIP 
Seed-time. See also Seed Time. 

Seed-time and Harvest.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. 
See Cselica. 

Seed-time and Harvest.—J: G. Whittier.—HBP 
Seein’ Things.—Eugene Field.—BS 24—EF—LS 
Seeing a Ghost. (Dial.) —Julia A. Crouch.—SDD 
Seeing and not Seeing.— (Trans, by) C. T. Brooks.— 
CS 1 

Seeing Santa Claus. (Dial.) —Mrs. L. A. Bradbury.— 
HE 

Seeing Through.—Anon.—CS 10 

Seek not to Understand her.—C: F. Hoffman.— 
FTA 

Seeker in the Marshes, The.—Dan’l L. Dawson.—AA 
Seeking a Country.—H: B. Carrington.—BLP 
Seeking Rest.—Anon.—CS 18—DS 
Seeking the May-flower.—Edmuna C. Stedman.—SN 
Seen and Unseen.—D: A. Masson.—TAS 
Seen, Loved, Wedded.—W: Wordsworth. See “She 
was a phantom of delight.” 

Seer and the Dreamers, The. (Dial.) —Ellen Murray. 
—CS 29 

Segovia and Madrid.—Rose T. Cooke.—AA 
Seizure, The; or, A Sentimental Maiden’s Mistake. 

(Dial.)—- Esther W. Brown.—CDs 
Self-conceit. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Self-conceit.—Millie C. Pomeroy.—SR 7 
Self-culture.—Anon.—BS 14 
Self-denial. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Self-dependence.—Matthew Arnold.— BS 25 — HBR 
—PYO—TMR 

Self-discipline.—G: W. Russell.—VA 
"Self-ease is pain; they only rest.” (Br. sel. fr. The 
Voices.)—J: G. Whittier.—GG 
Self-esteem.—Anon.—LLC 

(Robin and [the] Chicken[, The].)—AD—TFS 
Seif-exiled, The.—Walter C. Smith.—VA 
Selfish and Lend-a-hand.—Mary F. Butts.—YBT 
Selfish Prayer.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
Selfishness of Society.—T. S. Denison.—FAS 
Self-life.—J: Pulsford.—BS 16 

Self-made Man in American Life, The.—Grover Cleve¬ 
land.—AI 

Self-murder.—Rob’t Blair. See Grave, The. 
Self-respect.—Cato.-—BLP 

Self-sacrificing Ambition.—Horace Greeley.—BLP 
(Ambition.)—OS 2 

Selkirk Grace, The. ( C.) —Rob’t Burns. 

(Child’s Grace, A.)—PoR 
Sella.—W: C. Bryant.—AP 

Selling a Coat; or, How a Jew Trained a Clerk.—Anon. 
—CS 10—PS. 

Selling off at the Opera House. (Punch.) —HPE 
Selling the Baby.—Ada Carleton.—CS 29.-—WR 14 
Selling the Farm.—Anon.—BS 7 
Selling the Farm.—Beth Day.—BS 9 
Selling the Image.—Mrs. C. V. Jamison. See ’Toinette’s 
Philip. 

Semichorus of Spirits.—Percy B. Shelley. See Prome¬ 
theus Unbound. 

Seminoles, The, Sel. fr. (Origin of the White, the 
Red and the Black Men.)—Washington Irving. 
—WCLG 1 

Seminole’s Defiance, The.—G. W. Patten.—HNS— 
LLC—OM—OS 1 
(Seminole’s Replv. The.)—CS 1 
(Abr. ) —FTR—PPSr—S A 

Seminole’s Reply, The.—G. W. Patten. See foregoing. 
Semper Idem.—H. D. Hale.—CG 1 

Sempronius’s Speech for War.—Jos. Addison. See 
Cato. 

Senator Entangled, A. (Fr. The Dodge Club.)—Jas. 
de Mille.—BRR—MHR 
(Abr.)— CR—FTR 

(Senator’s Dilemma. The.)—BS 3—CDV—SDR 
Senator Ingalls’ Great Speech on Death of Burnes, of 
Missouri. (Eulogy on the Death of Congress¬ 
man James N Burnes. of Missouri.— C.) —J: 
J. Ingalls.—SR 7 (alrr.) 


Senator’s Dilemma, The.—Jas. De Mille. See Senator 
Entangled, A. 

Senator’s Grandmother, The.—Patience Stapleton.— 
DES 

Sending Relief to Ireland.—S. S. Prentiss. See Relief 
for Starving Ireland. 

Seneca Lake.—Jas. G. Percival.—BNL 

(To Seneca Lake—C.)—FEP—GP—HBP—SN 
Senex Jubilans.—W; Reed.—BS 20 
Senior and the Rose, The.—Eva L. Soule.—CG 2 
Senior Schedule, A.—Mary H. McLean.—CG 2 
Senior’s Plea, A.—J; C. Underwood.—CG 2 
Sennacherib.—Lord Byron.—LH 

(Destruction of Sennacherib, The — C.) — AE — 
BFV — BNL — BPB — CEL — CGd — CS 14 
— EPs — FEP — GN — HB — HBP — LLC 
— MBL — MR — OS 2 — PHS — PPSr — 
PSR—PYO—SS—YBF 

“Sensation novel has had its day. The.”—Justin Mc¬ 
Carthy.—GG 

Sense and Spirit.—G. F. W.—TCV 

Sen^ of Public Duty, The.—A. E. Pillsbury.—FD 2 

Senses, The.—Anon.—COS—PP—PS 

Senses, The.—Anon.—PTS 

Sensibility.— S: Rogers. See Human Life. 

Sensible.—Anon.—FAS 
Sensible Serenade, A.—L. M. L.—CG 2 
Sensitive Plant, The.—Percy B. Shelley.—HBP (w. 1 
add. st.) — POS (sel. fr. Pt. I.)—WR 25 (abr.) 
Sensual Delights Lowest.—Anon.—LLC 
Sent Back by the Angels.—Frd’k Langbridge.—CS 29 
(SI. abr.) —BS 17—WR 21 
Sent by Express. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Sent to Heaven.—Adelaide A. Procter.—CS 37—VS 
Sent with a Rose to a Young Lady.—Marg. Deland—.AA 
Sentence, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Sentence of Death on the High Seas.—Arthur Matthi- 
son.—CS 16—NPS—YP 

Sentences.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the 
House, The. 

Sentimental.—S: T. Coleridge.—HPE 
Sentimental Journey, A, Sel. fr. (“ I was ill of an 
epidemic vile fever”— br. sel. fr. Ch. VI.) — 
Laurence Sterne.—GG 

Sentiments and Life-thoughts.—Anon.—CS 6 
Sentinel of Metz, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 26 
Sentinel Songs, Sels. fr. —Abram J. Ryan. 

Cause of the South. The.—BNL 
Sentinel Songs.—BNL 

Sentry on the Tower, The. (Fr. The Sacristan’s 
Household.)—Anon.—MMR 
Separate as Billows, but One as the Sea.—Alex. 
Stephens.—BLP 

Separation.—Anne R. Aldrich.—FLS 
Separation.—Alice L. Bunner. See Vingtaine. 
Separation.—Martha G. Dickinson.— AA 
Separation.— Johann W. von Goethe. See Loved One 
Ever Near, The. 

Separation.—Fs. Kazinezi.—FTA 
Separation.—Walter S. Landor.—OB 
Separation.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
Separation from Traitors.—Cicero. See First Oration 
against Catiline. 

Sephestia’s Lullaby.—Rob’t Greene. See Menaphon. 
Sephestia’s Song to her Child.—Rob’t Greene. See 
Menaphon. 

September. (SI. abr.) — G: Arnold. — BNL — GP — 
POS (abr.)— YBT (sel.) 

September.—Adelaide V. Finch.—WR 17 
September.—S. Frances Harrison.—TCV—VA 
September. (SI. abr.) —Helen H. Jackson.— NV — 
PoR—WR 17 
(Abr.) —DST—OS 1 

September.—Archibald Lampman.—TCV 
September.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
September.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
September Days.—G; Arnold.—POS 
(Sweet September— br. sel.) —GN 
September, 1802, near Dover. (C.) —W: Wordsworth. 

(English Channel, The.)—EPs 
September, 1815.—W: Wordsworth.—PEO 
September, 1819. (Sel.) —W; Wordsworth.—EPs 
September Gale, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—CSS—SO 
September in Australia,—H: C. Kendall.—-VA 
“September Mornin’s.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
September Robin, A.—Dinah M. Craik.—POS 
September Violet, A.—Anon.—PEO 
September Violet. A.—Rob’t U. Johnson.—BNL 
Sepulcher in the Garden, The.—H: W. Beecher.—MRS 
Serapis, Sel. fr. (Chariot Race in Alexandria—Ch. 
XXV.— abr.) —Georg Ebers.—PFP 
(Hippodrome Race, The — arr. by Elsie M. Wilbor 
— abr.) —WR 4 


292 




TITLE INDEX 


Shadow 


Serenade, The: “A youth went out.”—Anon.—BS 12 
(Hopeless Serenade, A.)—SR 6 
(Youth who Played before he Looked, The.) — FS 
Serenade, The: “Black cuffy had come.”—Anon.—- 
SR 10 

Serenade: “Oh, hearing sleep, and sleeping hear.”— 
W: Allingham.—VS 

Serenade: “Lute! breathe thy lowest.”—Edwin 
Arnold.—VS 

Serenade: "Dearest, do not you delay me.” (Song— 
C. — fr. The Spanish Curate, Act II., Sc. 5.)— 
Beaumont and Fletcher.—ES 
(Speak, Love!)—HBP 

Serenade: “Sleep sweet, beloved one,” etc. — Rob’t 
Buchanan.—VS 

Serenade: “Awake thee, my lady-love!”—G: Darley. 

See Sylvia; or. The May Queen. 

Serenade: “ Softly, O midnight hours.” — Aubrey De 
Vere.—OB 
(Song.)—VS 

Serenade: “Ah, sweet! thou little knowest how.”—T: 

Hood—FTA—HBP—YBF 
Serenade, A: “Lullaby, oh, lullaby.” (Domestic 
Poems, IV.)—T: Hood.—CS 26—HPE 
(“ Lullaby, oh, lullaby.”—FEP 
Serenade: “Stars of the summer night!”—H: W. 

Longfellow. See Spanish Student, The. 
Serenade: “The day is down into his bower.”—Rob’t, 
Lord Lytton. See Sea Side Songs. 

Serenade!. A]: “ Look out upon the stars,my love.”— 
E: C. Pinkney.— AA —ASL — FTA— HBP— 
YBF 

Serenade, A: “Smile, lady, smile.” ( Punch .)— HPE 
Serenade, A. ( Son'i fr. Quentin Durward, Ch. IV.)— 
Walter Scott—PGT 1—YBF 
(County Guy— C.) — BFY— BNL—BPB— EPs— 
FEP—LC—WEP 4 

Serenade, The.—Percy B. Shelley.—FP 
(“I arise from dreams of thee.”)—GP 
(Indian Serenade, The— C.) — OB — PGT 1—PYO 
—YBF 

(Lines to an Indian Air.)— BNL — FEP — FTA — 
HBP 

Serenade: “The western wind is blowing fair.”— 
Oscar Wilde.—GP 

Serenade, A. Set to music by the Chevalier Neukomm. 

—Bryan W. Procter.—VS 
Serf’s Secret. The.—W: V. Moody.—CG 1 
Sergeant of the Fiftieth, The.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Sergeant Prentiss’ First Plea.—N. L. F. Bachman.— ; 
PFP 

Sergeant’s Story, The.—Anon.—PFP 
Serious Mishap, A.—S. Jennie Smith.—CS 33 
Sermon, The.—Anon.—US 22 
Sermon, The.—Louisa M. Alcott.-—PFP 
Sermon for the Sisters, A.—Irwin Russell.—AWH—- 
DCR 

Sermon for Young Folks, A.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Sermon from a Thorn-apple Tree, A. (Sri. fr. Thorn- 
apple.)—Emily H. Miller.—AD 
Sermon in a Stocking, The.—Ellen A. Jewett.—HP 
(Grandmother’s Sermon.)—CS 22 
Sermon in Flowers, A.—Addie F. Davis.—CS 35 
Sermon in Rhyme, A.—Anon. — BS 19 — CS 24 — 
DST (abr.) 

Sermon in Verse, A.—Anon.—KNE 

(“Tired! well, and what of that?”)—GG 
(WTiat of that?)—HP 
(SI. abr.) —BS 15—PEO 
Sermon of Life, A.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—CS 30 
Sermon on Keards, Hosses. Fiddlers, and Foolin' with 
the Gals, A.—Anon.—DE 

Sermon on the Death of Abraham Lincoln. — H: W. 

Beecher. See Abraham Lincoln. 

Sermon Time.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 

Sermons.—J: Ruskin. See Stones of Venice. The. 

Sermons in Stones.—Alice Cary.—TAS 

Serpent of the Still, The.—J: Lofland.—BLP 

Served hingRight.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 

Service.—Anon.—CP 

Serving.—G: Cooper.—YBT 

Sesame and Lilies, Sets. fr. —J: Ruskin. 

Ladv. The. ( Sel. fr. Lecture II.: Lilies—Of Queens’ 
Gardens.)—QS 3 

Reading for the Thought. (Sel. fr. Lecture I.: 
Sesame—Of King’s Treasures.)—EA 
Sesostris. (Sonnet V.)—IJoyd Mifflin.—AA—ASL— 
YBF 

Session with Uncle Sidney. A.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Qne of his Animal Stories. 

Uncle Brightens Up. 

Sings a “ Winky-tooden ” Song. 

And Makes Nursery Rhymes. 


Session with Uncle Sidney, A (continued). 

Diners in the Kitchen, The. 

Imperious Angler, The. 

Gathering of the Clans, The. 

“It.” 

Daring Prince, The. 

Set Fair.—Anon.—DSS 

Seth Peter’s Report of Daniel Webster’s Speech.— 
Sam W. Foss.—CS 32 
Settin' the Flags.—Jas. C. Purdy.—CS 37 
“Settin’. up with Elder McK’ag’s Peggy.” (Sel. fr. 
The Latimers. Ch. XIV.)—H: C. McCook.— 
WR 21 

(Settin’ up with Peggy McKeag— si. abr.) —BS 25 
Settin’ up with Peggy .McKeag.—H: C. McCook. See 
foregoing. 

Setting a Hen.—Anon.—BS 8—CSS 

(“Sockery” Setting a Hen.)—CS 18—FTR—SR 1 
Setting Sail.—Emily Dickinson.—TAS 
Setting Sun, The.—Anon.—NV 
Settler. The.—Alfred B. Street.—AA—BNL 
Settling under Difficulties.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SR 10 
Seven Ages, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Seven Ages. The.—W: Shakespeare. .See As You Like It. 
Seven Ages of Man, The. — W: Shakespeare. See As 
You Like It. 

Seven Ages of Man, Shakespeare’s. (Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

Seven Davs in a Week. (Concert piece.) —Cora W. Fos¬ 
ter—KC—PS—TT 

Seven Days’ Wonder. (For a Church fair.) —Anon.— 
EuE 

Seven Fiddlers, The.—Sebastian Evans.-—PEB 3 
Seven Invincibles, The. (New England Magazine.) — 
SR 8 

Seven Poor Travellers, The. (Abr.) —C: Dickens.— 
MBL 

Seven Sisters. The: or. The Solitude of Binnorie, The. 

—W: Wordsworth.—CGd—PEB 3 
Seven Sleepers of Eohesus. The. (SI. abr.) —Johann 
W. Von Goethe.—WR 8 
Seven Stages. The.—Anon.—SR 2—Wll 15 
Seven Times One!—Exultation].—Jean Ingelow See 
Songs of Seven. 

Seven Times Two[—Romance].—Jean Ingelow. See 
Songs of Seven. 

Seven Times Three—Love.—Jean Ingelow. See 
Songs of Seven. 

Seven Times Four[—Maternity].—Jean Ingelow. See 
Songs of Seven. 

Seven Times Six—Giving in Marriage.—Jean Ingelow. 
See Songs of Seven. 

Seven Times Seven—Longing for Home.—Jean Inge¬ 
low. See Songs of Seven. 

Seven Virgins. The.—Anon.—OB 
Seven Whistlers, The.—Alice E. Gillington.—VA 
Seven Wonders of the World. The.—Blanche W. Bel¬ 
lamy and Maud W. Goodwin.—OS 1 
Seventh Plague of Egypt, The.—G: Crolv.—CS 4—FR 
—SS 

Seventh Song.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Seventy-six. (C.)—W: C. Bryant.—BLP (abr.) 

(Story of Seventy-six, The.)—PPR 
Several Cats. (Golden Days.) —BS 17 
Sewing Circle, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FND 
Sewing on a Button. (Button off, A— C. — in Life in 
Danbury.)—Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 14—PS 
(How a Married Man Sews on a Button.)—BS 4— 
CRR 

Sextain.—W: Drummond.—WEP 2 
Sexton, The.—Park Benjamin.—CS 8 
(Old Sexton. The.)—AA—GP 
Shacob’s Lament.—Anon.—CS 25—PR—YA 
(“Bevare of the Vidders.”)—CD 
(Widow, The.)—CDV 

Shade of the Trees, The. (C.) —Marg. J. Preston. 

(Under the Shade of the Trees.)—AWB—EDY— 
LLC (si. abr. and si. diff.) 

Shaded Water, T e.—W: G. Simms.—BNL 
Shadow, The. (A Book of Airs, 4th Song.)—T: Cam¬ 
pion.—ELP. 

(Devotion—1st poem.)—OB 
(In Imagine Pertransit Homo.)—PGT 1 
Shadow, The.—Arthur H. Clough.—WEP 4 
Shadovr, The (Song That Women are but Men’s 
Shadows—C.)—Ben Jonson.—OB 
(Song: “Follow a shadow, etc.)—FEP 
Shadow, A.—Adelaide A. Proctor.—B1L 
Shadow', The.—R. H. Stoddard.—AA 
Shadow and the Substance of the Sabbath, The, Br. 
sel. fr. (“In that hour, w'hieh of all the 
twenty-four.”—Fred’k W. Robertson.—GG 


293 




Shadow 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Shadow Boat, A.—Arlo Bates.—TAV 
Shadow Children.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Shadow Dance, The.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA 
Shadow from an Insane Asylum, A.—Horace B. 
Durant.—CS 32 

Shadow March.—Rob’t L. Stevenson. See North¬ 
west Passage. 

Shadow of a Flower, The.—Felicia D. Hemans. — 
CS 37 

Shadow of a Song, The.—Campbell Rae-Brown.—DR 
Shadow of Doom, The (All’s Well— C.). —Celia Thax- 
ter.—BS 11 

Shadow of the Cross, The. (Abr.) —Edwin Arnold.— 
SAE 

Shadow of the End, The.—Ethel W. Hawkins.—CG 3 
Shadow of the Night. A.—T: B. Aldric .—AA 
Shadow of the Rock, The.—Frd’k W. Faber.—AVP 
Shadow on the Blind, The.—Anon.—CS 8 
(Abr.) —M YF—OM 

Shadow on the Wall, The.—Anon.—CS 9 
Shadow Pantomimes.—Anon.—EuE 
Shadow Pictures.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Shadow River.—E. Pauline Johnson.—TCV 
Shadow Rose, The.—Rob’t C. Rogers.—AA 
Shadow Ships.—Newton M. Hall.—CG 1 
Shadow-evidence.—Mary M. Dodge.—A A 
Shadows.—Anon.—CS 7—MR 
Shadows.—Anon.—HP 

Shadows.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—OB 
(Nessun Maggior Dolore.)—PGT 2 
Shadows.—W: S. Kennedy.—SN 
Shadows. (The Lantern.) —CS 16 (abr.) —HPE 
Shadows, The. (IF. add. st., and si. diff.) —G: Mac¬ 
donald.—WCL 

Shadows.—C. E. Meetkerke.—FLS 
Shadows. (Richmond Christian Advocate.) —SSS 
Shadows.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Shadows, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—A A—LFL 
Shadows Lengthen, The.—Anon.—HDfe 
Shadows of the Stage, Sel. fr. (Right Standard, The 
— fr. Second series, Pt. I.)—W: Winter.—MRS 
Shadows on the Curtain.—E: H. Dewart.—TCV 
Shadows on the Snow.—I. Edgar Jones.—CS 31 
Shadow-town Ferry.—Lilian D. Rice.—OS 1 (abr.) 

(Ferry for Shadowtown, The.)—CS 37—GMS 
Shadwell.—J: Dryden. See MacFlecknoe. 

Shady Side of Life, The, Sel. fr. (Lost Steamer, The.) 

—Eugene J. Hall.—SR 2 
Shag, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Shah-Nameh, The, Sets. fr. —Firdausi (tr. by S: Robin¬ 
son). 

Raja of India Sends a Chessboard to Nushirvan, 
The.—NE 

Zal and Rudabeh.—NE 

Shah-Nameh, The Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 

Shakes.—Anon.—DSS 

“Shake’s Telephone.”—C: B. Lewis.—BDD 

Shakespeare.—Matthew Arnold.—OB—WEP 4 

Shakespeare.—H: A. Blood.—AA 

Shakespeare.—G: S. Bryan.—CS 18 

Shakespeare. (Sonnet XXVIII.)—Hartley Coleridge. 

—BNL 

(To Shakespeare— C.) —VA 

Shakespeare.—B: Johnson. See Prologue Spoken by 
Mr. Garrick at the Opening of the Theatre 
Royal, Drury Lane. 

Shakespeare.—J: Sterling.—HBP—OS 3—VA 
Shakespeare and Milton.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
Shakespeare Improved.—Anon.-—DE 
Shakespeare’s Dream.—Anon.—WR 1 
Shakespeare’s England, Br. sel. fr. —W: Vinter.—SAE 
Shakespeare’s Mark Antony.—Walter B. iWinchell.— 

NC 

Shakespeare’s Seven Ages of Man. (Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

Shakesperian Perversion, A.—Anon.—WR 6 

Shall America be Ruled Forever by the Liquor Power? 

—Jos. Ireland.—TS 

Shall America Betrav Herself?—Jos. Story.—FD 1— 

SR 5 

(Destiny of our Country.)—OS 3 
(Our Duties [or Duty] to the Republic.)—FTR— 
KNE—LLC—SS 
(Our Future.)—BLP 

(Responsibilities of our Republic.)—HNS 
(Responsibility of American Citizens.)—WRD 
(Sets, vary somewhat.) 

Shall Jefferson Davis be Restored to Full Citizenship? 

Sel. fr. ( Amnesty of Jefferson Davis, The.)— 
Jas. G. Blaine.—NC 

“Shall an American citizen be scourged?”—Rob’t F. 

Stockton. See Against Flogging in the Navy. 
Shall Bess Come Hame?—Fred E. Brooks.—CS 28 

294 


“Shall I come, sweet Love, to thee.” (C.) —T: Cam¬ 
pion. 

(Love’s Request.)—ES 

“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”—W-; 
Shakespeare.—OEL—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—HBP—OB (I.) 

(Sonnet XVIII.—C.)—WEP 1 
(To his Love.)—PGT 1—PHS 
Shall I Look Back.—Anon.—HDL 
Shall I Tell you [whom I Love]?—W: Browne. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Shall I, Wasting in Despair.—G: Wither. See Shep¬ 
herd’s Resolution, The. 

Shall the Baby Stay?—Anon.—-CS 7 
Shall we Give up the Union?—Dan’l S. Dickinson.— 
CS 2—SSD 

(Give up the Union?— sel.) —OS 2 
Shall we Know Each Other There?—Anon.—CS 6— 
NPS—YP 

Shall we Meet Again?—G: D. Prentice.—CS 26—FS 
Shameful Death.—W: Morris.—BFV—VA 
Shamrock, The.—Maurice F. Egan.—AA 
Shamus O’Brienf, the Bold Boy of Glingall],—J. S. 
Le Fanu (at. also to S: Lover.)—CR—CS 1— 
DDR—HR—MMR—SA—SDR 
(Shemus O’Brien.)—HB—TIP 
(Versions vary somewhat.) 

Shan Van Vocht[, The].—Anon.—EDY (si. abr.) —HB 
(Abr.)— HBP—'TIP 

Shandon Bells, The.—Fs. S. Mahony.—AVP—VA— 
VSG 


(Bells of Shandon, The.)—BNL—BS 2—CR—OS 3 
— EA — FEP — GP — HBP — HR — HSS 3 
— LLC — MMR — OB — OS 2 — PSR — PYO 
—SA—SR 2—TIP—VS 
Shane’s Head.—J: Savage.—TIP 
Shannon, The.—Sir Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
“Shannon” and the “Chesapeake,” The.—T: T. 
Bouv6.—BAB—EDY 

“Shape alone let others prize, The.—Mark Akenside.— 
BNL 


Shapes and Signs.—Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 
Shaugraun, The, Sets. fr. —Dion Boucicault.—BRR 
Conn’s Description of the Fox Hunt. (Act I., 
Sc. 3.)—BRR 

O’Kelley Cabin, The. (III., 1.)—BRR 
“Oolaghaun,” The. (III., 2.)—BRR 
Tailor’s Thimble. The. (II., 4.)—BRR 
She Always Made Home Happy.—Anon.—CS 15 
She and He. (C.) —Edwin Arnold.—GP 

(He and She.)—BIL—MR—SR 11 (si. abr.) 
(Secret of Death, The.)—BNL 
She Came and Went.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AA—ASL— 
HBP—YBF 

She Cut his Hair. (Abused Boy, An— C. — in They All 
Do It.)—Jas. M. Bailey.—BS 12 
She Didn’t Want to Meddle.—Anon.—SR 12 
She “Displains” It.—Jas. W. Riley.—WR 14 
She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways. (Poems 
Founded on the Affections, VIII.— C.) —W: 
Wordsworth.—MBL—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 
(Lost Love. The.)—FTA—PHS 
(Lucy.) —BFV —BNL —FEP —GP—HBP (I.) 
—IR (I.)—OB (II.)—WEP 4 (I.) 

She Earned her Half.— N. P. Babcock.—WR 24 
She had Busjness with the Boss Mason.—Anon.—CS 22 
She is a Maid of Artless Grace.—Gil Vicente (tr. by 
H. W. Longfellow).—HBP 

She is Far from the Land. (C.)—T: Moore.—EDY— 
FEP—HBP 


(Lines Relating to Curran’s Daughter.)—PS 
“She is not fair to outward view.”—Hart lev Coleridge. 
—BNL—FEP—FTA—PGT 1—YBF 
(Song—C.)—HBP—OB—VA—WEP 4 
She is so Pretty.—Pierre J. de B^ranger (tr. by Ethel 
Grey).—FLS 

She just Keeps House for me.—Jean Blewett.—TCV 
She Liked him Rale Week—Andrew Wauless.— BS 18 
She Loves and Loves Forever. (C.) —T: L. Peacock. 


(“Oh, say not woman’s heart is bought.”)—FTA 
(Song.)—'TFY 

She Meant Business. (Detroit Free Press .)—CS 15— 
NPS—SR 10—YP 

She never was a Boy.—S. E. Kiser.—WR 26 

She Referred him to her Pa. (Somerville Journal.) — 

(t CH—SR 5 

“She rose from her untroubled sleep.” (Br. sel. fr. 

Chamber Scene.)—Nathaniel P. Willis.—BNL 
She Sayeth “No.”—Bertrand A. Smallev.—CG 2 
She Shook her Head.—J. P. Sawyer.—CG 2 
She Showed him Stars.—Anon.—WR 15 
She Still Wins. (The Tech .)—CG 2 




TITLE INDEX 


Shiner 


She Stoops to Conquer, Sel. fr. (Mrs. Hardcastle’s 
Journey— sel. ad. fr. Act V.)—Oliver Gold¬ 
smith.—NDP 

“She takes but to give again.”—Bayard Taylor. See 
National Ode. 

"She thanked me, and bade me,” etc. — W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Othello, the Moor of Venice. 

She walks in beauty. (Fr. The Hebrew Melodies.)— 
Lord Byron. — BNL — EPs — FEP — HBP— 
MBL—OB—WEP 4—YBF 
(“She walks in beauty, like the night.”)—PGT 1 
—PYO 

She Wanted an Epitaph.—Anon.—CS 12 
She Wanted to Hear it Again.—Anon.—BS 15 
She Wanted to Learn Elocution.—Anon.—CS22—SR 7 
She was a Beauty.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 
‘She was a phantom [of delight]. (Poems of the Imagi¬ 
nation—VIII.—C.) — W: Wordsworth.—BNL 
— BSP —FEP —GP — HBP—MBL—PGT 1 
—WEP 4—YBF 
(Perfect Woman.)—OB 
(Portrait, A.)—LI.C 
(Seen, Loved, Wedded.)—FTR 
“She was Mine.”—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in 
the House, The. 

She was not Fair nor Full of Grace.—Bryan W. Proc¬ 
ter—VS 

“She was sent forth.”—Letitia E. Landon.—BIL 
She was Travelling all Alone.—Frank Marion.—WR 15 
She Washed for Him.—Howard Fielding.—BS 18 
She Waved.—Anon.—SO 

She Wore a Wreath of Roses.—T: H. Bayly.—HBP 
—VA 

She Would be a Mason.—Jas. C. Naughton.—CS 11— 
SR 5 (si. abr.) 

She Wouldn’t Listen.—Anon.—WR 7 
Sheep and Lambs.—Katha. T. Hinkson. — OB — 
PoR (abr.) —VA 

Sheep Washing, The.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, 
The. 

Sheep-shearing, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Winter’s 
Tale, The. 

Shell, The.—Walter S. Landor. See Gebir. 

Shell, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Maud. 

Shelley.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 
Shelley.—Alex. H. Japp.—VA 
Shelley.—G: Martin—TCV 

Shelling Peas.—Christopher P. Cranch.—CS 12—MYF 
Shells of Ocean.—J. W. Cherry [or Merry].—LLC 
(W. mus.) —NPS—YP 
Shelter.—C: S. Calverley.—AVP 
Shelter.—W: J. Lee.—CS 11 
Sheltered.—Sarah O. Jewett.—VSG 
Shemuel.—E: Bowen.—AVP 

Shemus O’Brien.—Jos. S. Le Fanu. See Shamus 
O’Brien. 

Shepheardes Calendar, The, Sets. fr. —Edmund Spenser. 
April (abr.): Colin’s Lay of Elisa.—EP 

(Ditty, in Praise of Eliza, Queen of the Shep¬ 
herds, A— abr.) —OB 

Chase after Love, The. (Sel. fr. March.)—WEP 1 
December.—EP 

(Complaint of Age, The— abr.) —WEP 1 
Description of Maying. (Sel. fr. Maye.)—WEPfl 
(May.)—EP _ 

Fable of the Oak and the Briar. (Sel. fr. Feb¬ 
ruaries—WEP 1 

(Oak and the Briere, The— sel.) —WR 11 
January (Januarie— C .).—EP 
June.—EP 

Shepherd, The. (In Songs of Innocence.)—W: Blake. 
—BVC—LC 

Shepherd and the King, The.—Rob’t Greene. See 
Mourning Garment, The. 

Shepherd Boy, The.—Letitia E. Landon.—HBP 
Shepherd Boy Sings In the Valley qf Humiliation, The 
—J: Bunyan. See Pilgrinrs Progress. 
Shepherd Boy’s Carol, The.—Anon.—HS 
Shepherd Dog of the Pvrenees, The.—Ellen Murray. 
—CS 25 

Shepherd Girl of Domremy.—T: De Quincey. See 
Joan of Arc. 

Shepherd Maiden, A.—E: C. Lefroy.—VA 
Shepherd of King Admetus, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.— 
BFV—LLC—-WCLI 2 

Shepherd of the People, The. (Sel. fr. Abraham Lin¬ 
coln.)—Phillips Brooks.—CS 5 
(Lincoln, the Shepherd of the People.)—SR 8 
Shepherd to his Love, The.— Christopher Marlowe. 

See Passionate Shepherd to his Love, The. 
Shepherd to the Flowers, The.—Anon.—ELP 
Shepherdess, The.—Alice Meynell.—AVP—PYO 
(Lady of the Lambs, The.)—-OB 


Shepherdesses’ Garlands, The. — W: Browne. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Shepherdess’s Reply, The. (Reply to Marlowe—C.) 
—Sir Walter Raleigh.—CEL (w. add. at.) 

(Her Reply.)—OB 

(Milk-maid’s Mother’s Answer.)—FEP (w. add. st.) 
—HBP 

(Nymph’s Reply [to the Passionate Shepherd], The.) 

—BNL—GP—PHS 
(Reply to Marlowe, A.)—EP 

(Reply to Marlowe’s The Passionate Shepherd to 
his Love.)—WEP 1 

Shepherds, The. (In Flowers of Sion.)—W: Drum¬ 
mond.—EPs 

Shepherd’s Calendar, The.—Edmund Spenser. See 
Shepheardes Calendar, The. 

Shepherd’s Description of Love, The.—Sir Walter 
Raleigh.—EP 

Shepherds’ Holiday [or Holyday], The.—Ben Jonson. 
See Pan’s Anniversary. 

Shepherd’s Home, The.—W: Shenstone. See Pastoral 
Ballad. 

Shepherd’s Hunting, The. (Sel. fr. 4th Eclogue.)— 
G: Wither—HBP 
Eclogue. (Sel.) —EP 
Eclogue IV. (Sel.) —WEP 2 
Shepherd’s Hymn, The.—R: Crashaw. See Hymn of 
the Nativity, A. 

Shepherd’s Life, The. (Sel. fr. The Purple Island, 
Can. XII.)—Phineas Fletcher.—EP 
Shepherd’s Life, A.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VI., Pt. III. 

Shepherd’s Love, The.—Ben Jonson. See Sad Shep¬ 
herd. The. 

Shepherd’s Pipe, The, Sels. fr. —W: Browne. 

Death of Philarete, The. (Eclogue IV.)—EP 
Invitation, An. (Sel. fr. Ec. I.)—EP 
Shepherd’s Praise of his Sacred Diana, The.—Anon.— 
ELP 

Shepherd’s Resolution, The (C. — fr. Fidelia.)—G: 
Wither.—BNL—FEP—HBP—PYO (abr.) 
(Author’s Resolution in a Sonnet, The.)—CEL— 
ELP—WEP 2 

(Lover’s Resolution, The.)—OB 
(Manly Heart. The.)—EPs—FT A—OEL—PGT 1 
(Shall 1, Wasting in Despair[e].)—ES—YBF (abr.) 
Shepherd’s Sirena, Sel. fr. (Sirena.)—Michael Dray¬ 
ton.—EP—OB 

Shepherd’s Song, The.—Torquato Tasso. See Jeru¬ 
salem Delivered. 

Shepherd’s Song of Venus and Adonis.—H: Constable. 
—WEP 1 

Shepherd’s Story, The.—D: J. Burrell.—CS 30 
Shepherd’s Swain, A.—G: Wither. See Fair-Virtue, 
the Mistress of Philarete. 

Shepherd’s Trophy, The.—Alfred Ollivant. See Bob, 
Son of Battle. 

Shepherd’s Week, The, Sels. fr. —J: Gay. 

Monday; or. The Squabble. (Pastoral I.)—EP 
Shepherd’s Week, Sel. fr. (Past. II.: Tuesday; or. 
The Ditty— cond .)—WEP 3 
Thursday; or, The Spell. (Past. IV.)—EP 
Shepherd’s Wife’s Song, The.—Rob’t Greene. See 
Mourning Garment, The. 

Sheridan.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY • 

Sheridan, Richard Brinsley. (Frays, fr. various au¬ 
thors.) — BNL 

Sheridan’s Ride.—T: B. Read.—AWB—BAB—BNL 
— BRR — CS 1 — DDR — FEP — FR — GN 
— HB — HNS — HSS 1 — OS 2 — PAP — 
PAPm—PPSr—PS R—SM—TAV—WRD 
Sheriff of Cerro-Gordo. The. (Abr.) —Fred E. Brooks. 
—WR 21. 

Sheriff of Saumur. The.—J: G. Saxe.—BS 24 
Sheriff Thome.—J : T. Trowbridge.—BS 7 
Sheriff’s Honor, The.—Anon.—NP 
Sherman.—R: W. Gilder.—A A—EDY 
Sherman on the Veterans.—W: T. Sherman.—DFR 
(Veterans, The.)—PS 

Sherman Tornado, The.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Sherman’s March.—Anon.—AWB 
Sherman’s March.—Fred E. Brooks.—CS 30—WRD9 
Sherman’s March to the Sea.—S: H. M. Byers.—AWB 
—PAP 

She’s All my Fancy Painted him.— Lewis Carroll.—NA 
"She’s cursed, said the skipper,” etc.—J: G. Whittier. 

See Wreck of Rivermouth, The. 

She’s Gane to Dwall in Heaven. (C.) —Allan Cun¬ 
ningham.—FEP 

(Lily of Nithsdale, The— si. abr .)—EPs 
Shibboleth!—E. H. J. Cleveland.—CS 3 
Shield, The.—S. G. W.—EPs 
"Shiner” and the Waifs, The.—Anon.—SR 11 





Shining 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Shining Little House, The.—Helen H. Jackson.—YBT 
Shining Web, The.—Anon.—NV 
Ship, The.—Lloyd Mifflin.—-AA 

Ship, The. (Sonnets XVII., XVIII., XIX.)—Rob’t 
Southey.—FP 

Ship in the Desert, The, Br. sel. fr. (Dreamers.)—Joa¬ 
quin Miller.—GP 

(“Ah, there be souls none understand” — abr.) — 
GG 

Ship o’ the Fiend, The.—Anon.—BB (si. abr.) 

(Demon Lover, The — diff. vers.) — BPB — 
WR 21 (si. abr.) 

(Dsemon Lover, The— si. abr.) —CGd—PEB 2 
Ship of Faith, The—Anon.—BRR—BS 7—CDV— 
CS 17—CSS—HBR—SDR 

Ship of State, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Build¬ 
ing of the Ship, The. 

Ship of State, The.—W: P. Lunt.—BS 14—LLC—SS 
Ship on Fire, The.—H: Bateman.—MMR—PPSr (abr.) 
Ship on Fire, The.—C: Mackay.—HSS 2—PS (si. abr.) 
Ship-boy’s Letter, The.—Anon.—CS 36 
Ship-builders, The.—J: G. Whittier.—MAL 
Ships. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Ships at Sea.—Rob’t B. Coffin.—BNL—EPs—FEP— 
HBP—LLC—MMR—MRS 
Ships at Sea.—Allie W. Rollins.—CS 21 
Ships that Pass in the Night, Sel. fr. (Traveler and 
the Temple of Knowledge, The—Ch. VI.)— 
Beatrice Harraden.—BS 22 
Shipwreck, The.—Lord Byron. See Don Juan. 
Shipwreck, The. (Sel. fr. Can. III., 5.)—W: Falconer. 

—BNL (sel.) —WEP 3 
Shipwreck, The.—E. H. Palmer.—NA 
Shipwrecked.—-Francois Copp^e.—CS 19 
Shirley Chase.—Mortimer Collins.—AVP 
Shock of Bereavement, The. (Poems of the Imagi¬ 
nation—Misc. Sonnets. XXVII.—C.) — W: 
Wordsworth.—WEP 4 
(Desideria.);—OB—PGT 1 

Shockheaded Cicely and the Two Bears. (C.) —W: B. 
Rands. 

(Cicely and the Bears.)—MYF 

Shocking Mistake, A.-Pickering.—MDD 

Shoemaker’s Cabinet, The.—Anon.—PTS 
Shoemaker’s Daughter, The.—T: D. English.—CS 22 
Shoemaker’s Holiday, The, Seh. fr. — T: Dekker. 

Merry Month of May, The. (Sojig fr. Act III., Sc. 
5.)—ELP 

Tro',1 the Bowl! (The Second Three Men’s Song— 
V., 4.)—ELP 

Shoemaker’s Troubles, A.—Anon.—MND 

Shonny, Don’d you Hear me?—“Oofty Gooft.”—BDD 

Shonny Schwartz.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—CS 23— 

‘ DRR—FS 

Shoo Flies.—Anon.—BeR 
(Abr.)— BDD—DFY 

Shooting. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL , 
Shooting Song, A.—W: B. Rands.—BVC 
Shopping.—Anon.—SR 13 

“Shore is lined with anchored ships, The.”—Helen H. 
Jackson.—BNL 

Shore of Eternity, The. (SI. abr.) —Frd’k W: Faber. 
—BS 16' 

Short Christmas Performance, A.—Anon.—DFR—KC 
Short Conversation, A.—Anon.—CDV 
Short Hymn upon the Birth of Prince Charles, A.—H: 
Wotton.—ED Y 

Short Missionary Service, A.—Clara J. Denton.—SSE 
Short Selections. (Fr. various authors.) —SM 
Short Selections.—W: Shakespeare.—WCLG 2 
Short Sensational Story.—-Anon.—CS 16 
Short Sermon, A.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Short Speech, A.—Anon.—DLS 

Short Speeches for Little Philosophers. (Fr. various 
authors.) —PS 

Short Temperance Speech, A.—Anon.—DLS 
Shorten Sail.—G: B. Dodington, Lord Melcombe.—OB 
Shortness of Life, The.—Fs. Quarles.—FEP 
“Shot through the Heart.”—Ina M. Porter.—EDY 
“Should I not Love my Flowers?”—Dora Greenwell. 
—HSS 1 

Shout the Glad Tidings.—W: A. Muhlenberg.—FEP 
“Shoutin’.”—Frank L. Stanton.—CS 29 
Shouting Jane.—S. V. R. Ford.—CS 28 
Shower, The. (In An April Day.)—Helen E. Brown. 
—WR 9 

Showing off an Elocutionist.-—A. M. Griswold.— CS 33 
Showman on the Woodchuck, A.—Anon.—HR 
Shriving of Guinevere, The.—S. Weir Mitchell.—BS 10 
Shrouding of the Duchess of Malfi, The. (Br. sel. fr. 
The Duchess of Malfi, Act IV., Sc. 2.)—J: 
W ebster.—OB 

(“Hark, now everything is still.”)—ELP 


Shrubbery, The.—W: Cowper.—PGT 1 
Shuffle-Shoon and Amber-Locks.—Eugene Field.— 
EF—LS 

Shule Agra.—Anon.—PEB 4 
Shule Aroon.—Anon.-—TIP 
Shim the Bowl.—Eliza H. Barker.—CS 15 
Shut the Door.—Anon.—PTS 
Shut your Cattle In.—Mrs. B. C. Rude.—AD 
Shut-eye Train, The.—Eugene Field.—EF—LS 
Shy Gallant, The.—Mrs. Russell Ivavanaugh.—KC 
Shylock.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Shylock for the Jews.—W: Shakespeare. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The. 

Shylock Lends the Ducats.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Merchant of Venice, The. 

Shylock to Antonio.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant 
of Venice, The. 

Shylock’s Soliloquy and Address.—W: Shakespeare. 

See Merchant of Venice. The. 

Shyness of Love. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Si, Do, Re.—Mrs. B. C. Rude.—TFY 

Si Jeunesse Savait!—Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 

Siberia.—Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 

Sibyl, The.—T: G. Hake.—VA 

Sibyl.—J : Payne.—VA 

Sibylla Palmifera.—Dante G. Rossetti. See Soul’s 
Beauty. 

Sic Itur.—Arthur H. Clough.—PGT 2 
Sic Passim.—Alice M. Ardagh.—TCV 
Sic Semper.—Will L. Graves.—CG 2 
Sic Transit.—W. B. Anderson.—CG 1—PPh 
Sie Transit.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Sic Transit.—T: Campion.-—PGT 1 
(Davand Night.)—ELP 
Sic Vita.—H: King.—BNL—CS 19—FEP 
(Life.)—HBP—YBF 
(Life of Man, The.)—CEL 
(On the Life of Man— C .)—ELP 
Sicilian Captive, The. (Br. sel., w. mus.) —Felicia 
Hemans.—WR 6 

Sicilian Night, A.—E: C. Lefroy.—VA 
Sicilian’s Tale, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See King 
Robert of Sicily . 

Sick Bov’s Plan, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Sick Child, The. (Punch.)— HPE 
Sick Doll, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
Sick Doll, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Sick Kitty, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Sick Little Girl, The.—Anon.-—DLF 
Sick Rooster, The.—Helen A. Goodwin.-—WR 20 
Sick Stock-rider, The.—Adam L. Gordon.—AVP (br. 
sel .)—VA 

Sickness. — W: Shakespeare. See King Henry IV., 
Pt. II. 

Siddons and her Maid.—Walter S. Landor.—HPE 
Sidera, Sels. fr. —Philip Sidney. 

Dirge, A. (XIII. Love is Dead— C.) —OEL— 
WEP 1 

“Nightingale, as soon as April bringeth, The.” 
(XII. Song: The Nightingale—C.)—PGT 1 
• (Philomela.)—OB—WEP 1 (sel.) 

(Sonnet: Philomela— sel.) —ELP 
Sidney Godolphin.—Clinton Scollard.—AA—EDY 
Sidney Lanier.—W: H. Hayne.-—EDY 
Sidney, Sir Philip. (Frags fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Siege and Conquest of Alhama.—Lord Byron. See 
Very Mournful Ballad on the Siege, etc. 

Siege of Belgrade.—Anon.—BNL—FEP 
Siege of Calais, The.—Will V. McGuire.—CS 33 
Siege of Corinth, The, Sels. fr. —Lord Byron. 

Alp’s Decision. (Sts. XVIII.—XXI.— cond.) —TMD 
(Hurts of Time—XVIII.— si. abr.) —EPs 
Heroes of Greece. (Sel. fr. XV.)—CS 7 
(Dead Hero^^— abr.)— SE 
Siege of Corin^MChe. (Cond.) —WR 11 
Siege of CorinM&he. (XXII.)—EPs 
Storming of CorirflB, The. (XXII., XXIV., XXV., 
XXX.-XXXIII.) 

Siege of Cuautla, The: The Bunker Hill of Mexico.— 
Walter S. Logan.—WR 22 

Siege of Derry, The.—Cecil F. Alexander.—EDY—TIP 
Siege^of Havana, The. (Rivington’s Gazette.) See 
* Siege of Savannah, The. 

Siege of Lucknow, The.—H. Savile Clark.—VSG— 
WR 13 

Siege of Savannah [mt. Havana], The. (Rivington’s 
Gazette.)— EDY 

Siege of the Alamo.—Eliz. L. Saxon.—BS 19—PFP 
Siege of Valencia, The, Sels. fr. —Felicia D. Hemans. 
Ballad of Roncesvalles, A.—WEP 4 
Dirge: “Calm on the spirit [bosom—C.l of thy 
God.”—FEP—OB—WEP 4 






TITLE INDEX 


Since 


Siege of Zamora, The.—( Tr. by) Rob’t Southey. See 
Cid, The. 

Siena, Sel. fr. (Sodoma’s Christ Scourged.)—G: E. 
Woodberry.—TAS 

Sierras [from the Sea—C.], The.—Joaquin Miller.—GP 
Sigh, A.—Harriet P. Spofford.—AA—ASL—FTA 
“Sigh and grieve that you are yet so carnal and 
worldly.” — T: h Kempis. See Imitation of 
Christ. The. 

Sigh for Knockmany, A.-—-W: Carleton.—TIP 
Sigh no more, Ladies.—W: Shakespeare. See Much 
Ado about Nothing. 

Sigh not for Love.—Helen Hay.—AA 
Sigh of Silence, The.—J: Keats. See “I stood tiptoe 
upon a little hill.” 

Sighs, Tears, and Smiles. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 

■—BNL 

Sight in Camp in the Daybreak gray and Dim, A.— 
Walt Whitman.—AA—HBP 
Sign of Distress, The.—Anon.-—CS 8 
Sign of the Cross, The.—J: H. Newman.—VA 
Signal Man, The. ( Cond. and ad.) —C: Dickens.—NC 
Signalman’s Story, The.-—Jessie H. Wheeler.—WR 19 
Signals of Distress.—Rob’t Crompton.—TS 
Sign-board, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 14—SR 6— 
WR 15 

Significance of the Spanish War, The.—J: D. Long.— 
SC 

Signing of Magna Charta, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. 
See Three Men in a Boat. 

Signing of the Declaration, The.—G: Lippard. See 
Fourth of July, 1776. The. 

Signing of the Pledge. (Dial.) —Anon.—CS 16 
Signing the Pledge.—Anon.—SR 2 
Signing the Pledge. (Tab.)—Anon.—TCP 
Signing the Pledge. (Dial .)—Ella C. Clement.—CDs 
Signor Billsmethi’s Dancing Academy.—C: Dickens. 
See Sketches by Boz. 

Signs and Omens. — Anon. — BS 3 — CDV—CS 10— 
M HR—SDR 

(Hans Sourcrout on Signs and Omens.)—BDD 
Signs of an Early Spring.—Anon.—DSS 
Signs of Foul Weather.—E: Jenner. See following. 
Signs of Rain.—E: Jenner.—BNL—CGd—PoR 
(Signs of Foul Weather— si. diff. vers.) —BVC 
Signs of the Seasons, The.—-M. E. N. Hatheway.—YBT 
(Seasons, The— abr.) —YBT 
Signs of the Times.—H. C. Dodge.—AWH 
Signs of the Zodiac.—Anon.—OS 1 
Sigurd the Volsung. See Story of Sigurd the Volsung, 
The. 

Silas Mamer, Sels fr. —G: Eliot. 

Discussion at the Rainbow, The. (Ch. VI.)—VSG 
Silas Mamer. (Sel. fr. Ch. I.)—WCLG 1 
Silence.—Anon.—FTA 
Silence.—Anon.—KNE 
Silence.—T: Hood.—OB—WR 1—YBF 

Silence.-Lynch.—HP 

Silence.—J. H. Morse.—AA 
Silence.—Edgar A. Poe.—TAS 
Silence.—J: L. Spalding. See God and the Soul. 
Silence is Golden. (Fr. The World to Come.) (Chau- 
tauquan .)—AD 

Silence of Love, The.—Hamilton Drummond.—FTA— 
HP (si. abr.) 

Silence of Love, The. (In Wild Eden.)—G: E. Wood- 
berry.—ASL—FTA 

(“O, inexpressible as sweet”— C.) —AA 
Silence of the Hills, The.—W: P. Foster.—BNL 
Silence Party, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Silenced Singer, The.—W: J. Linton.—VA 
Silences.—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—PGT 2—-VA 
Silent Armv of Memorial Day, The.—Julia C. Jones.— 
DR 

Silent Baby.—Ellen B. Currier.—BNL 
Silent Grand Army, The.—E. M. H. C.—PEO 
Silent Harp, The.—Anon.—-CS 13 
Silent Influence.—Anon.—KNE 
Silent Land, The.—Kate S. McLean.—GP 
Silent Lover, The. — Sir Walter Raleigh. — FEP — 
OB (br. sel.) 

Silent Multitude, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—FP 
Silent Music. (Fr. Observatio s in the Art of English 
Poesy.)—T: Campion.—CEL 
(Laura.)—OB 

(Rose-cheek’d Laura.)—ELP 
Silent Noon. (The House of Life, Sonnet XIX.)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—OH—PGT 2—YBT 
Silent Partner, The. (Mon.) —Fannie A. Matthews.— 
MN 

Silent Tower of Bottreaufx], The.—Rob’t S. Hawker.— 
CS 18—MMR—SR 1—VA 
Silent Voices, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—PGT 2—\ A 


Silent Warriors, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Silent Watch, The.—Alice Brown.—TAS 
Silent Woman, The, Sel. fr. —Ben Jonson. See Sim¬ 
plex Munditiis. 

Silhouettes.—Annie K. Pillsbury.—CG 2 
Silkweed.—Philip H. Savage.—A A 
Siller Croun, The.—Susanna Blamire.-—BNL—FEP 
Silly Billy. (SI. abr.) —Fred E. Brooks.—WR 25 
Silly Fair.—W: Congreve.—BNL 
(Lesbia.)—FEP 

Silly Song, A.—Dinah M. M. Craik.—VS 
Siloam’s Shady Rill. (First Sunday after Epiphany— 
C.) —Reginald Heber.—TFS (abr.) 

(By Cool Siloam.)—LLC 
(By Cool Siloam’s Shady Rill— sel.) —PoR 
(Hymn for First Sunday after Epiphany.)—FEP 
Silver Age, Sel. fr. (Praise of Ceres.)—T: Heywood.— 
LC 

Silver Bells, The.—Edgar A. Poe. See Bells, The. 
Silver Bird’s Nest, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Silver Boat, The.—Anon.—GMS 
Silver Cup, The.—Anon.—CS 26—DS 
Silver Dollar, The. (Dial.) —H. E. McBride.—SD 
Silver Lining, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—MND 
Silver Penny, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Silver Plate, The.—Marg. J. Preston.—BS 17 
Silver Question, The.—Oliver Herford.—NA 
Silver Tassie, The. (C.) —Rob’t Burns. 

(Before Parting.)-—LH 
(Bonnie Mary.)—GP 
(Farewell, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(My Bonnie Mary— also C.) —OB 
Silver Thaw, The.—Charles G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Silver Wedding, The.—Mrs. C. M. Stowe.—CS 6—SR 7 
Silvia.—W: Shakespeare. See Two Gentlemen of 
Verona, The. 

Silvia; or. The May Queen.—G: Darley. See Sylvia; 
or, The May Queen. 

Similar Case, A. (Acta Columbiana.)- —CG 1—CH— 
CR—PR—YA 

Similar Cases.—Charlotte P. S. Gilman.—AWH 
Simile, A.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Aurora Leigh. 
Simile, A.—Matthew Prior.—HPE—WEP 3 
Similia Similibus Curantur.—R. H. Newell.—CS 20 
Simon.—John F. Herbin.—TCV 

Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester.—Jas. Lincoln.— 
EHT 

Simon Grub’s Dream.—Anon.—CS 33—NPS—YP 
Simon Lee, the Old Hu-tsman.—W: Wordsworth.— 
PGT 1 

Simon Short’s Courtship.—Anon. See following. 

Simon Short’s Son Samuel.—Anon.—CS 8 
(Samuel Short’s Success.)—SA 
, (Simon Short’s Courtship.)—SR 10 
Simon Solitary’s Ideal Wife.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Simon’s Burden.—Rose T. Cooke.—SSS 
Simon’s Wife’s Mother Lay Sick of a Fever.—Anon.— 
CD (abr.) 

(Katrina’s Visit to New York.)—BDD—C’S 23 
(Abr.)— CDV—SDR 
Simple Church, The.—Anon.—CS 28 
Simple Maid, A. — J: B. L. Warren, Lord De Tabley. 
—VA 

Simple March. A.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Simple Nature.—G: J. Romanes.—PGT 2 
Simple Ploughboy, The.-—Anon.—PEB 2 
Simple Sign, A.—Anon.—CS 29—WR 15 
Simple Simon. (Mother Goose Sonnets.)—Harriet S. 
Morgridge.—AA 

Simplex Munditiis. (Song fr. [Epicoene; or,] The Silent 
Woman, Act I., Sc. 1.)—Ben Jonson.—OB 
(Freedom in Dress.)—BNL—EPs—YBF 
(Song.)—FEP—HBP—WEP 2 
(Sweet Neglect, The.)—ES—OEL 
Simplicity.—M. Woolsey Stryker.—YBT 
Sim’s Little Girl.—Mary Hartwell.—CS 14 
Sin. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Sin.—R; (?) Baxter.—PP—YFR 
Sin. (C.) —G: Herbert.-—EPs—YBF 
(Bosom Sin.)—LLC 
(Life’s Lessons.)—CEL 

Sin of Omission, The. (C.) —Marg. E. Sangster.—SR 9 
("It isn’t the thing you do, dear”— sel.) —BIL—FTA 
(Left Undone.)—SSS 

Sin of Sir Pertab Singh, The.—Sir Frd’k Pollock.— 
AVP 

Sin of the Bishop of Modenstein, The. (Sel. fr. The 
Heart of Princess Osra, Ch. V.)—Anthony 
Hope.—NP 

“Sin runs to passion; passion to tumult in character.” 
—Austin Phelps.—GG 

“Since Cleopatra Died.”—T: W. Higginson.—AA 
Since First I Saw your Face.—Anon.—OB 


297 





Since 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Since she Went Home.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—CS 28— 
WR 23 

Since there’s no Help. (Ideas LXI.— C .)—Michael 
Drayton.—OH 

(Come, Let us Kisse and Parte.)—BNL 
(Let us Kiss and Part.)—HBP - 
(Love’s Farewell.)—FTA—PGT 1—YBF 
(Parting, The [or A].)—CEL—GP—OB 
(Sonnet.)—ELP—FEP—WEP 1 
Since we Parted.—Rob’t, Lord Lytton.—FLS 
Sincerity the Soul of Eloquence.— Johann W. von 
Goethe.—CS 9—SS 

Sinfonia Eroica.—Alice A. (S.) James.—AA 
Sing.—Mary E. Carter.—YBT 
Sing a Song a Sixpence.—Anon.—BS 14 
Sing a Song of Christmas.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KC 

Sing a Song to me.—Anon.—AD—LLC 
Sing Again.—Marie Van Vorst.—AA 
“Sing, children, sing!”—Celia Thaxter. See Song of 
Easter, A. 

Sing for the Garish Eye.—-W: S. Gilbert.—-NA 

Sing on, Blithe Bird! (I Plucked the Berry—C.)—W: 

Motherwell.—GN—WCL 
Sing, Pretty Birds.—Anon.—YBT 

Sing unto the Lord. (Paraphrase of Psalm XCVI.)— 
Philip Sidney.—EPs 

Sing-away Bird, The. (SI. diff. fr. Poems.)—Lucy 
Larcom.—FS 

Singer, The.—Wade Robinson.—HDL 
Singer, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—PoR 
Singer, The. (SI. abr.) —J: G. Whittier.—BIL ( br. 
sel.)— CS 4 

Singer and the Child, The.—Adeline E. Gross.—CS 25 
Singer of One Song, The.—H: A. Beers.—AA 
Singers, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—LLC 
Singer’s Alms, The. ( C. — u\ 2 add. sts.) —H: Abbey.— 
CS 14 

(Stranger’s Alms, The— si. abr.) —TMD 
(For another vers, of the same story see Song of the 
Market Place, The, by Jas. Buckham.) 

Singer’s Climax, The.—Anon.—CS 21—DS—NPS—YP 
Singer’s Prelude, The.—W: Morris. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 

Singing.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV—LC 
Singing across the Water.—Wesley Stretch.—CS 21 
Singing Baby, The.—Grace Winthrop.—WR 19 
Singing for the Million. (Abr.)— T: Hood.—CS 8 
(More Hullahbaloo— C .— more abr.) —MHR 
Singing Heart, The.—Danske C. Dandridge.—TAS 
Singing in God’s Acre, The.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Singing Joseph.—Annie A. Preston.-—PP—YPS 
Singing Leaves, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—GN 
Singing Lesson, A.—Jean Ingelow.—HSS 3—LLC— 
OS 2—PHS 

Singing of the Magnificat, The.—E. Nesbit.—YSG 
(Monk’s Magnificat, The— abr.) —BS 17—WR 6 
Singing of You.—Anon.—FLS 
Singing Stars.—Kathe. T. Hinkson.—VA 
Singing Temperance Songs. (Dial.) —J. D. Vinton.— 
MD 

Single Head of Wheat, A. — Mrs. L. C. Eldred. — 
BS 17 (si. abr. )—CS 20—FMR 
Sings a “Winky-tooden” Song.—Jas. W. Riley. See 
Session with Uncle Sidney, A. 

Singular Sangfroid of Baby Bunting, The.—Guy W. 
Carry 1.—NA 

Sinking of the Maine. (St. Louis Republican.) —FAS 
(Maine’s Men, The.)—PAPm 
Sinking of the Merrimac, The.—Arthur D. Hall.—MRS 
Sinking of the Merrimac, The.—R: P. Hobson.—PRR 
Sinking of the Ships, The.—-W. B. Collison.—PRR 
Sinking the Merrimac.—Joe Cone.—-EDY 
Sinless Child, The, Sel. fr. —Eliz. O. Smith.—AA 
Sioux Chief’s Daughter, The. (SI. diff. fr. Poems, 
rev. ed.) — Joaquin Miller. — BS 8 — CS 19 
—HSS 2 (abr.) —NPS—PFP—YP 
"Sir, an attempt has been made to alarm the com¬ 
mittee.”—H: Clay.—SO 

Sir Andrew Barton. (In Percy’s Reliques— si. diff. 
versions.) —EPs—PEB 1 

Sir Arthur and Charming Mollee.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Sir Arthur and Lady Ann.—Hew Ainslie.—PEB 3 
Sir Cupid.—F: E. Weatherly.—TMR 
Sir Dandelion.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Sir Dilberry Diddle.—Anon.—OES 
Sir Eldric.—A. M. F. Robinson.—PEB 4 
Sir Francis Drake. — C: Kingsley. See Westward Ho! 
Sir Galahad.—Alfred Tennyson.—OS 2—PHS—VA 
Sir Hugh; or, The Jew’s Daughter. (Jew’s Daughter. 
The— C.—in Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon.—BPB 
(Hugh of Lincoln— diff. vers.) —PEB 1 
(SI. abr.) —BB—OEB 


Sir Hugo’s Choice.—Jas. J. Roche.—BS 21 
Sir Humphrey Gilbert.—H: W. Longfellow.—ASL 
Sir J. S. (C.) —Sir J: Suckling. 

(Constancy.)— BNL — CEL — ELP — ES — FEP 
—OEL—WEP 2—YBF 
(Constant Lover, The.)—OB 
(Moods.)—EPs 

Sir John A. MacDonald.—J; W. Bengough.—TCV 
Sir John Franklin.—G: H. Boker.—CS 1 

(Ballad of Sir John Franklin, A.)—AA—EDY 
Sir John Franklin.—Alfred Tennyson.—EDY 
Sir John Suckling’s Campaign.—Sir J; Mennis (?)— 
CGd 

Sir Lancelot. (Sel. fr. Le Morte d’Arthur, Bk. XXI., 
Ch. XIII.)—Sir T: Mal[l]ory.—OS 3 
Sir Lancelot du Lake. (In Percy’s Reliques— ad. fr. 

Malory’s Le Morte d’ Arthur.)—Anon.—CGd 
Sir Lark and King Sun: A Parable. (Verses fr. Adela 
Cathcart, Ch. XVI.)—G: MacDonald.—GN 
Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere.—Alfred Tennyson. 
—VA 

Sir Launfal and the Leper.—Jas. R Lowell. See Vision 
of Sir Launfal, The. 

Sir Marmaduke.—G: Colman (the Younger).— BFV — 
BNL—FEP—HBP 

Sir Marmaduke’s Musings.—Theodore Tilton.—AA 
Sir Nicholas at Marston Moor. (C.) — Winthrop M. 
Praed.—EDY—PEB 3 
(Marston Moor.)—MYF 
Sir Patrick Spence.—Anon. See following. 

Sir Patrick Spens. (In Border Minstrelsy and Percy’s 
Reliques.)—Anon. — BFV — BPB — EPs — 
FEP—GN—HBP —LH (si. abr.) — OEB — 
WEP 1 

(Abr.)— BB—OB 

(Sir Patrick Spence.)—PEB 1 (sel.) —PHS (abr.) 
(Br. sel. used as text to Dejection: An Ode, by S: 
T. Coleridge.) 

Sir Pavon and St. Pavon.—Sara H. Palfrey.—EPs 
Sir Peter and his Lady Quarrel.—R: B. Sheridan. See 
School for Scandal, The. 

Sir Philip Sidney.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Sir Philip Sidney. (Fr. An Elegy on a Friend’s Passion 
for his Astrophill.)—Matthew Royden.—BNL 
(Lament for Sir Philip Sidney.)—EDY 
(On Sir Philip Sidney— sel.) —EPs 
Sir Robert Walpole.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—AVP 
Sir Robert Walpole against Mr. Pitt.—KNE 
(Against Mr. Pitt, 1741.)—PS—SS 
(Against William Pitt.)—SSD 
(Walpole’s Attack on Pitt.)—BS 17—FTR 
Sir Robin.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 

Sir Roger at his Country House.—Jos. Addison. See 
Spectator, The. 

Sir Roger de Coverley Papers.—Jos. Addison. See 
Spectator, The. 

Sir Roger de Coverley’s Sunday.—Jos. Addison. See 
Spectator, The. 

Sir Rupert the Fearless.—R: H. Barham.—HPE 

(Lurline: or, The Knight’s Visit to the Mermaids— 
cond.) —WR 1 

Sir Rupert’s Wife.—G: R. Sims.—NPS—YP 
Sir Sidney Smith.—T: Dibdin.— CGd (si. abr.) — EDY 
—HBP (at. to C: Dibdin.) 

Sir Thomas Wyatt.—Sir Antonio Sentleger.—EDY 
Sir Turlough; or, The Churchyard Bride.—W: Carleton. 
—PEB 4—TIP 

Sir Walter Raleigh and Queen Elizabeth.—F. M. 
Allen.—BS 20 

Sir Walter Raleigh to a Caged Linnet.—Eugene Lee- 
Hamilton.—EDY—VA 

Sir Walter Raleigh’s Pilgrimage. (C.) —Sir Walter 
Raleigh. 

(His Pilgrimage.)—OB (abr.) —WEP 1 
(Pilgrim, The— ibr.) —OS 3 
(Pilgrimage[, The].)—BNL—EPs (abr.) —FEP 
Sir Walter Raleigh’s Verses Found in his Bible in the 
Gate-house at Westminster.—Sir Walter Ral¬ 
eigh. See Verses Found in his Bible, etc. 

Sir Walter Scott.*—Lord Byron. See English Bards 
and Scotch Reviewers. 

Sir Walter Scott.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
Sir Walter Scott. Br. sel. fr. (“Triumphs of the war¬ 
rior are bounded by the narrow theatre of his 
own age, The.’ - )—W: H. Prescott.—HSS 1 
Sir Walter Scott and his Dogs. (Sel. fr. Abbotsford.) 

—Washington Irving.—FTR 
Sir Walter Scott in Westminster.—J: Hay.—NC 
Sir Walter’s Honor. (Sel.) —Marg. J. Preston.—TMD 
Sir William Napier and Little Joan.—Celia Thaxter.— 
SAP 

Sir William Pepperell’s Well.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
298 




TITLE INDEX 


Sleep 


Sirena. (Fr. The Shepherd’s Sirena.)—Michael Dray¬ 
ton.—EP—OB 

Sirens, The, Br. sel. fr. —Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 
Sirens Sing, The.—Frank T. Marzials. See Two Sonnet 
Songs. 

Sirens’ Song, The.—W: Browne. See Inner Temple 
Masque, The. 

Siren’s Wedding-ring, The.—G. H. Jessop.—CS 23 
Sirloin. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine— 
TCP 

Sis’s Beau.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Sistah Lize.—W: W. Cook.—CS 37 
Sister.—J: G. Whittier. See Snow-bound. 

Sister Agatha’s Ghost.—J. J. Wray. See Nestleton 
Magna. 

Sister and Bluebirds.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Sister and I.—Anon.—BS 7—CS 18—NPS—YP 
Sister, Awake.—Anon.—OB—YBF 
Sister Ernestine’s Beau.—Belle M. Locke.—CS 36 
Sister Helen.—Dante G. Rossetti.—PEB 3—VSG 
Sister Madeleine.—Clare Everest.—HP 
Sister Mary of the Love of God.—Rosa Mulholland.— 
VA 

Sister Months, The.—Lucy Larcom.—POS 
Sister of Charity, The.—-Gerald Griffin.—CS 12 
Sister of Mercy, The. (Tab.)—' Tony Denier.—TDT 
Sister Pleads for a Brother’s Life, A.—W: Shakespeare. 

See Measure for Measure. 

Sister Simmons.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Sisterly Confidences.—Rhoda Broughton.—WR 20 
Sisterly Scheme, A.—H: C. Bunner.—BS 21—DR (abr.) 
Sisters, The.—H. C. Hunt.—SD 
Sisters, The.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 
Sisters, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BFV—CS 10 
"Sister’s Best Feller.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Sister’s Cake.—Eugene Field.—NPS—YP 
Sister’s Expostulation on the Brother’s Learning Latin, 
The.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Sisyphus.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Sisyphus, Sel. fr.— C: Mackay.—A VP 
Sit Down, Sad Soul. (C .)—Bryan W. Procter.—BNL 
—HBP—VA—VS 

(“Sit down, sad soul, and count ”— -l. abr.) — 
HSS3 

Sitting on the Shore, Sel. fr. (“O Life, O silent shore.”) 
—Dinah M. Craik.—HSS 3 

Situation of a University, The.—Elmer H. Capen.— 
MRS 

Six Carpenters’ Case. The.—Sir Frd’k Pollock.—VA 

Six Kinds of Manners.—Abby M. Diaz.—HSS 2 

Six Little Maids from School.—Anon.—ASD 

Six Little Words.—Anon.—TFS 

Six Love Letters.—Anon.—CS 25—WR 20 

Six o'clock P. M.—Anon.—PP—YFR 

Six Years Old.—Anon.— -See School. 

Six Years Old.—Esther Flemitlg.—KC 
(From One to Six.)—PS—TT 
Sixe Idillia. Sels. fr. — Theocritus (tr. by Sir E: Dyer). 
Helen’s Epithalamion.—WEP 1 
Prayer of Theocritus for Syracuse, The.—WEP 1 
Sixteen. (Poems and Epigrams, LXXI.)—Walter S. 
Landor.—FEP—VS 
(Of Clementina.)—OB 
Sixteen and Sixty.—Anon.—CS 23 
16.000 Years Ago.—Anon.—SCS 
(De Mysterious Darky.)—DE 
Sixty and Six[; or, A Fountain of Youth—C.].—T: W. 
Higginson.—OS 1 

Sixty Years Ago.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Sixty Years Ago. (Harper’s Young People.) —HSS 3 
Sixty-four and Sixty-five.—Anon.—BS 2 
Sixty-second Birthday of Swinburne, The.—C: E. 
Russell.—EDY 

Six-year-old, A.—Anon. See School. 

Skater and Wolves.—G: H. Clarke.—TCV 
Skaters, The.—-Grace W. Leach.—CG 2 
Skater’s Song.—Anon.—FP 
Skating. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNI. 

Skating.—W: Wordsworth. See Prelude, The. 

Skating Hath Charms.—H. H.—CG 2 
Skating Song, A. (Abr.) —Ephraim Peabody.—BVC 
Skating Song.—Cora I. Warburton.—CG 2 
Skee-race, The. (Gunnar, Ch. IX., abr.) —Hjalmar H. 
Boyesen.—TMR 

Skein of Zephyr, A.—Anon.—CG 1 
Skeleton at the Feast, The.—Jas. J. Roche.—AA 
Skeleton in Armor, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA— 
AE (br. sel.) —BFV—FEP—MRS — TAV — 
WCLG2 
(Abr.) —FP—SO 

Skeleton in the Cupboard, The.—Frd’k Locker-Lamp- 
son.—VA 

Skeleton’s Story, The.—Anon.—BS 12 


Skeptic, The. (Br. sel. fr. The Borderers, Act IV., Sc. 

2.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
Sketch of a Young Lady Five Months Old.—Winthrop 
M. Praed.—OH 

Sketch of his Own Character.—T: Gray.—WEP 3 
Sketch of Moses, A.—Horace L. Hastings.—BLP 
Sketch of the “Old Coaching Days,” A.—J: Poole.— 
CS 6 

Sketch-book, The.—Washington Irving. See: 

Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The. 

Little Britain. 

Philip of Pokanoket. 

Rip van Winkle. 

Rural Funerals. 

Rural Life in England. 

Voyage, A. 

Westminster Abbey. 

Widow and her Son, The. 

Sketches.—J: G. Whittier. See Among the Hills. 
Sketches by Boz, Sel. fr. (Drunkard’s Death, The— 
C. — sel.)—C: Dickens.—BS 24—CS 6 
(Abr.) —FR—KNE (more abr.) 

(Convict’s Death, The— si. diff. abr .)—NC 
Skilful Listener, The.—J: V. Cheney.—AA 
Skimpsey.—Alfred Stoddart.—BS 20 
Skipper Ben.—Anon.—BS 15 

Skipper Ireson’s Ride.—J: G. Whittier.—AA—ASL— 
CS 8—EPs—FEP 

Skipper’s Love; or, the Tide Will Turn, The.—Mary A. 

Barr.—BS 16 
Skipping.—Anon.—TFS 

Skull, The [or A].—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Sky, The.—J: Ruskin. See Modern Painters and Stones 
of Venice, The. 

Sky. The.—R: H. Stoddard. See following. 

Sky is a Drinking-cup, The. (C.)—R: H. Stoddard.— 
WR 17 

(Sky, The.)—AA—HSS 2 

Skylark, The. (Fr. Mano: a Poetical History.)—R:W. 
Dixon.—VA 

Skylark, The.—Miller Hageman.—WR 2 
Skylark, The.—Jas. Hogg. -— BNL — BPB — FEP — 
GN—GP—LC—LLC—OS 1—PHS—WCLG 2 
(Lark, The.)—HBP—SN—TFS (sel.) 

Skylark, The.—Percy B. Shelley. See To a Skylark. 
Skylark, The.—Frd’k Tennyson.—GN (br. sel .)— 
PGT 2—SN 

Sky-lark’s Song, The.—J: Bennett. See Master Sky¬ 
lark. 

Skylight. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Sky-making.—Mortimer Collins.—THP 
Slander.—Anon.—BS 8—CS 9—HP 
Slander.—W: Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

Slang. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Slang versus Dictionary. (Dial.) —Anon.—FND 
Slaughter House, The —Alfred Young.—CS 32 
Slave, The.—R: H. Home.—VA 
Slave of Boston, The—Theodore Parker.—NC 
Slave Singing at Midnight, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
HBP 

Slavery.—W: Cowper.—See Task, The. 

Slavery. (Sel. fr. The American Tract Society.)—Jas. 
R. Lowell.—OS 3 

Slave’s Auction, A.—W. E. Eaton.—WR 24 
Slaying of the Niblungs, The.—W: Morris. See Story 
of Sigurd the Volsung, The. 

Sleep.—Anon. (At. to J: Dowland.)—BNL—HBP 
(Lullaby.)—ELP 

(Song for Music, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(Tears.)—OB 

Sleep.—T: B. Aldrich.—A A—TAS—TAV 
Sleep.—Alice Brown.—AA 

SleepL The — C.].— Eliz. B. Browning. — AVP — 
BNL (si. abr.)— FEP—HBP—VA 
(He Giveth his Beloved Sleep.)—BS 5—LLC—OS3 
Sleep.—T; Sackville, Lord Buckhurst.—WEP 1 
Sleep.—S: Daniel. See Sonnets to Delia. 

Sleep. (Song fr. The Woman-hater, Act III., Sc. 1.)— 
J: Fletcher.—OB 

(Invocation to Sleep.)—BNL—CEL 
Sleep.—Johann W. von Goethe. See Wanderer’s Night- 
song. The. 

Sleep.—Ada L. Martin.—HBP 

Sleep.—W: Shakespeare. See King Henry IV.. Pt. II. 
Sleep.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sleep.—Lewis F. Tooker.—AA 

Sleep.—Virgil (tr. by Gawain Douglas). See .Eneid, 
The. 

Sleep.—J: Wolcott.—BNL 

Sleep.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 

“Sleep and his Brother Death.”—W: H. Hayne.—AA 


299 





Sleep 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Sleep, angry beauty [, sleep and fear not me!].”—T: 

Campion.—PGT 1—YBF 
Sleep at Sea.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Sleep, Baby, Sleep. — Anon. ( tr. by Eliz. L. Prentiss). 

See Lullaby Song. 

Sleep, Baby, Sleep.—I. L. Jones.—TFS 
Sleep, Comrades, Sleep.—H: W. Longfellow.—PEO 
(Decoration Day— C.) —BLP—BS 11 
Sleep, my Treasure.—E. Nesbit.—PoR 
Sleep, Silence’ Child.—W: Drummond.—YBF 
Sleep, Soldier, Sleep!—Anon.—DJS 
“Sleep sweetly in your humble graves.”—H: Timrod. 

—BNL 

(At Magnolia Cemetery.)—AA 
(Decoration Day at Charleston.)—GP 
(Ode on Decorating the Graves of [the] Confederate 
Dead [or Soldiers].)—HSS 1—OS 3 
Sleep Time in Darktown. ( Baltimore American.) — 

CS 37 

Sleep, Weary Child.—Carl Plough.—CS 17 
Sleepe.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sleeper, The.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—ASL—BPB 
Sleeping and Dreaming.—Josiah G. Holland.—GP 
Sleeping Babe, The.-—S: Hinds.—FEP 
(Baby Sleeps.)—BNL 
Sleeping Beauty.—G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 
Sleeping Beauty, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 

Sleeping Beauty, A [or The.]. (On-Asleep—C.)— 

S: Rogers.—BNL—FTA—PGT 1—YBF 
Sleeping Beauty, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Day¬ 
dream, The. 

Sleeping Boy, The. (Tab.) —E: H. Trafton.—MD 
Sleeping Child, A.—Arthur H. Clough.—PoR—WCL 
Sleeping May.—Rebekah Willis.—TT 
Sleeping Princess of Aphrodite, A.—Rob’t C. Rogers. 

—AA 

Sleeping Sentinel, The.—Fs. De H. Janvier.—CS 1— 

SA 

Sleeplessness. (Poems of the Imagination, Pt. I., Misc. 
Sonnets, XIV.')—W: Wordsworth.—BNL 
(To Sleep.) —FEP —HBR—MBL— PGT 1—PYO 
—YBF 

Sleep-walking Scene, The.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Macbeth. 

Sleepy.—Anon.—CS 28 
Sleepy Hollow.—W: E. Channing.—EPs 
Sleepy Man.—C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Sleigh Song.—G. W. Pettee.—BNL 
Sleighing Song.—J: Shaw.—AA 
Sleigh-ride, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Slight Miscalculation, A.—B. L. C. Griffith.—SPC 
Slight Mistake, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Slight Mistake, A.—Anon.—WR 20 
Slight Mistake, A.—Anthony Hope. See Dolly Dia¬ 
logues, The. 

Slight Misunderstanding, The.—Anon.—CS 5 
(Frenchman’s Mistake, The.)—DFY 
Slight Misunderstanding, A. (Comedietta.) —Anon. — 
DDM 

Slight Misunderstanding, A. (Dial.) —Mrs. G. S. Hall. 

—NPS—YP 

Slim Teacher of the Cranberry Gulch, The.—Anon.— 

CS 28 

Sloth, The.—Ruth lyimball-Gardiner.—TL 
Slow and Sure.—Susan Coolidge.—POS 
“Slowly and sadly we laid him down.”—C: Wolfe. See 
Burial of Sir John Moore. The. 

Slowlvs at the Photographer’s, The.—Marv K. Dallas. 

—WR 3 

Slowlys at the Theatre, The.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
“Slumber did my spirit seal, A.” (Poems of the Imagi¬ 
nation, Xl.)—W: Wordsworth.-—PGT 1— 
YBF 

(Departed.)—EPs 
(Lucy.)—OB (V.)—WEP4 (III.) 

Slumber Song’, A. A. H. Aiken.—WR 4 
Slumber Song.—J: Fletcher. See Valentinian. 

Slumber Song.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Sly Little Maid. A. ( Trinity Tablet.) —CG 2 
Sly Old Rat, A.—Parmenas Mix.—FS 
Sly Thoughts.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the 
House, The. 

Smack in School, The.—W: P. Palmer.—AWH—BC— 
BNL — BS 1 — CRR — CS 1 — FEP — FTR 
—PTS—THP 

(Kiss in School, The.)—MHR 
Smack “Out” of School, The.—Anon.—CS 25 
Small and Early.—Tudor Jenks.—AA 
Small Beginnings.—C: Mackay.— BNL—CS 31—CSS 
—LLC—PPSr—PR—WR 17 
(Deed and a Word, A— sel.) —HP—HSS 2—-PYO— 
WR 1 

(Little and Great.)—SM—WCLI 2 

300 


Small Beginnings of Great Historical Movements.—G. 

S. Hillard.—OM 
Small Boy, The.—Anon.—KNS 
Small Boy’s Loquitur, The.—-Anon.—GH 
Small Boy’s Questions, A.—Emma H. Nason.—SR 13 
Small Dressmaking. (Youth’s Companion.) — LPS— 
PP 

Small Pitchers Have Large Ears. Mrs. Russeli Kava¬ 
naugh.—KJ 

“Small service is true service! while it lasts].”—W: 
Wordsworth. See To a Child, Written in her 
Album. 

Small Things.—Anon.—WR 17 
Small Things.—F. Bennoch.—PPSr 
Small Things.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.—CS 19 
Smallest Grade, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Smallest of the Drums, The.-—J: Buckham.—BAB— 
PAPm 

Smart Boy, A.—Anon.—MND 
Smart Girl, A.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Smatterers. (Fr. Misc. Thoughts.)—S: Butler.— 
HPE 

Smile and a Frown, A.—Emma C. Dowd.—BS 25 
Smile and Never Heed me.—C: Swain.—BNL 
Smile and the Sigh, The.—G. T. Johnson.—BS 14 
“Smile of her I Love, The.” (In The New Day.)—R: 
W. Gilder—BIL 

Smile Whenever you Can.—Anon.—DJS 
Smiles and Tears.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Smiling Demon of Notre Dame, A.-—Sophie Jewett.— 
AA 

Smiling Listener, The.—Anon.—SE 

Smith and the King, The.—E: Carpenter.—WR 22 

Smith Family, The. (Entertainment.) —Anon.—EuE 

Smith Family, The.—Anon.—WR 20 

Smith’s Bargain Day.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 34 

Smiting the Rock.-—Anon.—CS 21—FMR 

Smoke, The. (C.) —G: Macdonald. 

(Smoke of Sacrifice, The.)—BS 13 
Smoke.—H: D. Thoreau. See Walden. 

Smoke and Chess.—S: W. Duffield.—PPh 
Smoke is the Food of Lovers.—Jacob Cats.—PPh 
Smoke of Sacrifice, The.—G: Macdonald. See Smoke, 
The. 

Smoke Traveller, The.-—Irving Browne.—PPh 
Smoked-American Theology.-—I. E. Jones.—CS 24 
Smoker, The.—Anon.—HPE 
Smoker’s Calendar, The.—Anon.—PPh 
Smoker’s Reverie, The.—Anon.—PPh 
Smoking Away.—Fs. M. Finch.—PPh 
Smoking Song.—Anon.—PPh 
Smoking Spiritualized.—Anon.—HBP—PPh 
Smooth Day, A.—“Joe Jot, Jr.”—CS 21—NPS—YP 
Smooth Divine, The.—Timothy Dwight.—AA 
Smooth Path, A.—MillieC. Pomeroy.—SR 3 
Snackin’-Turple Man, The.—Anon.—DE 
Snail, The.—V. Bourne.—CGd 

Snake and the Baby, The.—Sir Edwin Arnold.—VSG 
Snare and a Delusion, A. (Yale Record.) —CG 2 
Snarls and Scowls.-—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Snarl’s Children.—Anon.—MAD 
Sneezing.—Leigh Hunt.-—BNL-—CS 12 
Sneezing Man, The.—Ward M. Florence.—CS 8 
Sniggles Family, The.— (Ent.) —Anon.—EE 
Sniveler, The. (Sel. fr. Croakers of Society and Liter¬ 
ature.)—Edwin P. Whipple.—KNE 
Snobbery. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Snobs.-—W: M. Thackeray. See Book of Snobs, The. 
Snorkey’s Version of the Flood and the Ark.—Anon. 
'—GH 

Snow, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
Snow.—Eliz. A. Allen.—SN 
Snow.—A. E. C.—NV 
Snow.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Snow, The.-—W: Whitehead.—CS 25 
Snow.—W: Wordsworth. See French Army in Russia, 
The. 

Snow.—A Winter Sketch.-—Ralph Hoyt.—BNL 
Snow and Sun.—Mortimer Collins.—TFY 
(To F. C.. 20th February, 1875.)—VS 
Snow Brigade, The. (Motion Song.)—E. C. and L. J. 
Rook.—YFE 

Snow Flake, A.—T: B. Aldrich.—TAV 
Snow in Town.—Richman Mark.-—BVC 
Snow of Age, The.-—Anon.—CS 6 
Snow Party, A.-—Anon.—EuE 

Snow Scene, A.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Snow Song.—Lucv Larcom.—I.CS 

Snow Song.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 

Snow Sorcery.—C: I,. Hildreth.—POS 

Snow Storm, The.—Ethelwyn Wetherald.—VA 

Snow Twins, The.—P. B. Power.—HS 






TITLE INDEX Soldier 


Snow-bird, The.—Anon.—NV 

Snowbird, The.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—PoR—POS 
Snow-bird, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Snow-birds. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 10—TCP 
Snow-birds, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Snowbirds.—Archibald Lampman.—POS 
Snow-bird’s Song, The.—Fs. C. Woodworth.-—NV 
(Chick-a-de-dee.)—PS 

Snow-bound: A Winter Idyl.—J: G. Whittier.—AP— 
MAL 

Mother. (Sel.) —AA 
Prophetess. (Sel.) —-A A 
Sister. (Sel.) —AA 

New England in Winter. (Sel.) —BNL 
(Firelight— sel. w. add.) —AA 

(Loved, not Lost, The— sel.) —SR 7 
(Snow-bound— sel. )—B1L—FTA 
(Snow-bound.)—SAE (br. sel.) —SN 
(Abr.) —GN—SPE 
(Snowstorm, The— sets.) —POS 
(World Transformed, The— sel.) —AA 
Snow-bound, Br. sets. fr. —BNL—HDL 
Snowdrop, The.—Anon.—POS 

Snowdrop, The. (Songs for the Little Ones at Home.) 
—NV 

Snowdrop, A.—Harriet P. Spofford.—GN 
Snowdrops.—Laurence Alma-Tadema.—PoR 
Snowdrop’s Call, The.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Snowed Under. (Sel.)— Ella W. Wilcox.—'TFS 
Snow-filled Nest, The.—Rose T. Cooke.—SN 
Snowflakes.—Anon.—YBT 
Snow-flakes.-—C: L. Benjamin.—YBT 
Snowflakes.—J: V. Cheney.—POS 
Snowflakes.—Mary M. Dodge.—AA—DCP-—PoR 
Snow-flakes.—H: W. Longfellow.—BNL—YBF 
Snowflakes.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Snow-flakes and Snow-drifts.—Martha T.Gale.—DR 
Snow-image, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—APr 
Snowing of the Pines, The.—T: W. H lgginson.—AA— 
GN 

Snow-man, The.—Anon.—TT 
Snows, The.—C: Sangster.—BNL 
Snowshoe Song, A.—Arthur Weir. See following. 
Snowshoeing Song.—Arthur Weir.—VA 
(Snowshoe Song, A.)—TCV 
Snow-shower, The.—W: C. Bryant.—BNL—NV 
Snow-shower, The.—Mary L. Duncan.—NV 
Snow-song, A.—H: Van Dyke.—HBR 
Snow-storm, The.—Anon.—NV 

Snow-storm, The.—R: D. Blackmore. See Lorna 
Doone. 

Snow-storm, A [or The].—C: G. Eastman.—BNL— 
CS 8—HBP 

Snow-storm, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.— AA — BNL 
—FP—GN—HBP—POS—WR 5 
Snowstorm, The.—J. Hazard Hartzell.—POS 
Snow-storm, The.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Snowstorm, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Snow-bound. 
Snow-weaver, The.—-Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Snuff.—Rob’t Southey.—HPE 
Snuff-boxes, The.—Anon.—BVC 

Snug Little Island, The, Br. sel. fr. (Tight Little 
Island, The.)—T: Dibdin.—BNL 
Snyder’s Nose.—A. M. Griswold.— BDD — BRR — 
CS 10—DFY—MYF 

“So, as I sat upon Appledore,” etc.—J: G. Whittier. 

See Wreck of Rivermouth, The. 

“So every little child I see.” (Br. sel. fr. A Glimpse 
of Youth.)—Josiah G. Holland.-—HP 
So Glad.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
So I Got to Thinkin’ of her.—Jas. W. Riley.—WR 2 
So Little.—Anon.—WR 17 

“So live, that when thy summons comes to join.”—W: 

C. Bryant. See Thanatopsis. 

So Much May be Done. (Hebrew Journal.) —SSS 
“So nigh is grandeur to our dust.” (Sel. fr. Volun¬ 
taries, III.)—Ralph W. Emerson.—HSS 3 
(Duty.)—GN—OS 1 

So she Refused him. (Boston Transcript.) —BS 21 
"So should we live that every hour.”—R: M. Milnes, 
Lord Houghton.—CS I 
(Life.)—HSS 3 

So Slow to Die. (In Wild Eden.)—G: E. Woodberry. 
_ \\ 

So, So, Rock-a-by So!—Eugene Field.—EF—-LS 
So Sweet.—Anon.—CG 1 

So Sweet is She.—Ben Jonson. See Celebration of 
Charis, A. 

So Sweet Love Seemed.—Rob’t Bridges.—VA 
So the Snow Comes Down.—Mary F. Butts.—POS 
“So these lives that had run thus far in separate 
channels.”—II: W. Longfellow. See Courtship 
of Miles Standish, The. 


So Tired.—M. E. Townsend.—HDL 

So Wags the World.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—AA 

So was I.—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 31 

So, we’ll Go no More a-Roving. (C.)- —Lord Byron.— 
BPB—WEP 4 

(We’ll Go no More a-Roving.)—OB 
Soap Bubbles.—Anon.—CG 2 
Soap Bubbles. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Soap-bubble, A.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 1 
Soarin’ o’ the Eagle, The.—M. F. Ham.—PAPm 
Sobbing.—Alfred Tennyson. See Dora. 

Sober Second Thought, A.-—Anon.—MFD 
Social Glass, A.—Anon.—WR 22 
Social Heredity.—J: K. Ingram.-—TIP 
Social Pleasures. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Social Scale, The.—S. L. T.—DS 
Society Boy, The.—Anon.—WR 14 
Society Flirtation.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Society for Doing Good, A.-—H. Elliot McBride.-—DDD 
Society for the Suppression of Gossip, The.—Anon.— 
FAD 

Socjety Martyr, A.—J: C. Anthony.—CG 2 

Society of the Army of the Potomac, The, Sel. fr. 

(Great Question Settled, The.)—G:W. Curtis. 
—BLP 

Society upon the Stanislaus [mt. Stanislaw], The. (C.) 
—Fs. Bret Harte.— AA — BNL — FEP — GP 
—PYO—THP 

(Throes of Science, The.)—MHR 
Sockery Kadahcut’s Ivat.—Anon.—BDD—SDR 
“Sockery” Settinga Hen.—Anon.—CS 18—FTR—SR 1 
(How “Sockery ” Set a Hen.)—BDD 
(Setting a Hen.)—BS 8—CSS 
Socks for John Randall.—Mrs. P. H. Phelps.—CS 7 
Socrates Snooks.—Anon.— BS 2 — CS 2 —PR — PS 
—WRD 

Sod House in Heaven, The.—Harry E. Mills.—WR 21 
Sodoma’s Christ Scourged. (Sel. fr. Siena.)—G: E: 
Woodberry.—TAS 

Sofa, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Soft and Sweet the Zephyrs Sigh. (IF. music.) —Anon. 
—AD 

Soft Black Overcoat with a Velvet Collar, A.—Rob’t 
C. V. Meyers.—CS 15 

Soft Guitar, The.—P. H. Bowne.—PR-—YA 
“Soft is Thy Rest.”-—W: D. Baker.—CG 1 
Soft-hearted Bill.—W. Sapte, Jr.—CS 27 
“Softly now the light of day.”—G: W. Doane.—LLC— 
SAE 

(Evening.)—A A 

(Evening Contemplation.)—FEP 
Softly the Evening Shadows.—Dan’l C. Brewer.—B1L 
—FTA 

Softlv Woo awav her Breath.—Brvan W. Procter.— 
BNL—CS 4—HBP 

Soggarth Aroon.—J: Banim.—TIP—VA 
Sohrab and Rustum.—Matthew Arnold.— HBP — 
WR 16 (cond.) 

(Death of Sohrab, The— sel.) —LH 
(Combat , The— sel.) —VA 
(Oxus— br. sel.) —VA 

(River’s End, The.)—POS 
(Sohrab and Rustum, Sel. fr. — obr.) —WEP 4 
Sojourners.—Anon.—SR 6 
Solace in Winter.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Soldier, The. (Fr. The King, the Knave and the 
Donkey.)—Anon.—F AS 
Soldier, A.—Joanna Baillie.—KNE 
Soldier and Sailor.—T: Campbell.-—LH 

(Napoleon and the British Sailor— C .)—BNL 
(Napoleon and the Sailor— abr.) —CGd 
Soldier and the Pard, The. (Abr.) —Bayard Taylor.— 
WR 2 

Soldier and the Virgin Mary, The.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Soldier Bird, The.—Anon.—MYF 
Soldier Boy, The.—J: D. Long.—SC 
Soldier Boy, The.—W: Maginn.—VA 
Soldier Boy for me. The.—S: E. Kiser.—PAPm 
Soldier from Bingen, The.—Caroline E. S. Norton.—SS 
(Bingen on the Rhine.) —BNL — CS 1 —DDR— 
FEP — FP — LLC — MR — OS 2 — PPSr 
—WRD 

Soldier Going to the Field, The. (Song: The Souldier 
Going to the Field— C.) —Sir W: Davenant.— 
CEL—YBF 

Soldier of the Empire, The. (Sel.) —T: N. Page.—SC 
Soldier Poet, A.—Rossiter Johnson.—AA 
Soldier, Rest.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Soldier, Rest! [Thy Warfare O’er],—Walter Scott. 

See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Soldier, Soldier.—Rudyard Kipling.—PEB 4 
Soldier Tramp, The.—“Don Santiago Carlino.”—CS 27 
—SR 5 


3C1 






Soldier's 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Soldier’s Burial, The.—Caroline Norton.—HSS 1—PEO 
Soldier’s Cradle-hymn, The.—Mary McGuire.—CS 23 
—PR ( w. mu8.) 

Soldier’s Departure, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Soldier’s Dream, The.—T: Campbell.—BNL—BPB— 
CEL — CGd — EPs — FEP — HBP — HSS 1 
—LLC — OS 1 — PC — PGT 1 — PHS— PPSr 
—PSR—SS—YBF 

Soldier’s Dream, The. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.—TDT 
Soldier’s Faith, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—SC 
Soldier’s Grave, A.—J: Albee.—AA 
Soldier’s Heart, A. (Baltimore News .)—PAPm 
Soldier’s Home, Washington, The.—Joaquin Miller. 

—BS 14 

Soldiers in Camp. (Tab .)—Tony Denier.—TDT 
Soldier’s Joy, The. (With music .)—Emma D. Banks. 

—BR 

Soldier’s Monument, The.—J: L. Swift.—FD 1 
Soldier’s Mother, The.—Anon.—BR 2 
Soldiers of Freedom. (Frags, fr. various authors .)— 
BNL 

Soldiers of the Sun.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Soldier’s Offering, A.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 27 
Soldier’s Pardon, The.—Jas. Smith.—CS 9—NPS—PS 
—YP 

Soldier’s Reprieve, The.—R. D. C. Robbins.—BRR— 

BS 2—CS 3—CSS—LLC 
Soldier’s Reprieve, The.—Rose H. Thorpe.—FR 
Soldier’s Retrospect, A.—Kate B. Sherwood.—WR 5 
Soldier’s Return, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Soldier’s Return, The.—Rob’t Bloomfield.—BNL 
Soldier’s Return, The. (Dial.) —B. C. L. Griffith.— 

MN 

Soldier’s Return, The.—Hudson Tuttie.—DES 

Soldier’s Return, The. (Dial.) -White.—BC 

Soldier’s Re-union.—S. F. Bennett.—SR 3 
Soldier’s Tent, The.—Helene Vacaresco.—HS 
Soldier’s Widow, The. (SI. abr .)—Nathaniel P. Willis. 

—BLP 

Solemn Book-agent, The. (Detroit Free Press .)—DCR 
—DRR 

Soliloquies from “Hamlet.”—W: Shakespeare. See 
Hamlet. 

Soliloquy, A.—Rixby Forbes.—SR 9 
Soliloquy, A.—Walter Harte.—BNL-—HBP 
Soliloquy at the Oak Grove (8:55 A. M.).— H: W. 
Palmer.—CG 3 

Soliloquy by a Girl of the Period.—Anon.—SR 3 
Soliloquy from “Hamlet.”—W T : Shakespeare. See 
Hamlet. 

Soliloquy of Arnold.—E: C. Jones.—CS 1—WR 10 
Soliloquy of Douglas — Solemnity. — J: Home. See 
Douglas. 

Soliloquy of King Richard ITT.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Richard III. 

Soliloquy of Manfred.—Lord Byron. See Manfred. 
Soliloquy of Romeo in the Garden.—W: Shakespeare. 

See Romeo and Juliet. 

Soliloquy of the Dying Alchemist.—Nathaniel P. Wil¬ 
lis.—WRD (si. abr.) 

(Dving Alchemist, The— C .)—CS 6—FP 
(Abr.) —FR—PS 

Soliloquy on Character.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry V. 

Soliloquy on Death.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 
Soliloquy: on Immortality.—Jos. Addison. See Cato. 
Solitarv Reaper, The. (C.) —W: Wordsworth.—BFV 
—BPB—FEP —GN —HBP —HSS 3—OB — 
WEP 4 

(Reaper, The.")—PGT 1—PHS—YBF 
Solitary Shepherd’s Song, The. (Br. sel. fr. A Margarite 
of America.)—T: Lodge.—EP. 

Solitary-hearted, The.—Hartley Coleridge.—OB 
(Stanzas— C.) —WEP 4 
Solitude. (Frags, fr. various authors.', —BNL 
Solitude.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrim¬ 
age. 

Solitude.—E. R. G.—CG 3 
Solitude.—Frd’k Peterson.—AA 
Solitude.—Alex. Pope—PGT 1—YBF 

(Ode on Solitude—C.p-FEP—HBP—LC—PYO— 

SN 

(Ode to Solitude.)—BNL 
(Quiet Life, The.)—CEI. 

Solitude.—Philip H. Savage.—AA 
Solitude.—H: Kirke White.—HBP 
Solitude. (C.) —Ella W. Wilcox.—TAV 

(Laugh and the World Laughs with you.)—TMD 
(World as it is. The.)—FS 
Solitude and the Lily.—R: H. Horne.—YA 
Solitude of Alexander Selkirk, The.—W: Cowper.— 
BPB 

(Sel .)—PGT 1—PSR 

30? 


Solitude of Alexander Selkirk, The (continued). 
(Alexander Selkirk.)—OS 2 

(Verses Supposed to be Written by Alexander Sel¬ 
kirk.)—BNL — CGd — FEP — HBP — MBL 
—WCLG 2 

Solium Fac’, A.—Anon.—PP—YFR 

(De Old Plantation Mule— si. abr.) —CRR 
Solomon and his Sages.—Anon.—CS 16 
Solomon and Mamma.—Anon.—OS 1 
Solomon and the Bees. (King Solomon and the Bees— 
C.)—J: G. Saxe.—GN 

Solomon and the Sparrow.—Caroline C. Joachimsen.— 
WR 2 

Solomon Grub.—Jonas Cook.—CS 33 
Solomon, the Wdse King. (Bible.) See Proverbs. 
Solomon’s Wise Choice.—I. N. Tarbox.—YBT 
Solstice. (C .)—Edith Thomas. 

Summer Solstice, The. (Sel.) —EDY 
Winter Solstice, The. (Sel.) —EDY 
Solution, The.—J: W. Ryan.—CS 20 
Solution of the Southern Problem, The.—Booker T. 
Washington.—SC 

Solway Sands.—Eliz. Craigmyle.—VA 
Some “Arabian Nights” People.—Clara Denton.— 
LPD 

Some Children of the Bible.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
SSE 

Some Day of Days.—Nora Perry.—FTA—GP—OH 
(“Some day, some day of days, threading the 
street”— at. to E. S. Phelps.)—GG 
Some Day or Other.—Louise C. Moulton.—TAS 
“Some day, some day of days, threading the street.” 

—Eliz. S. Phelps. See Some Day of Days. 
Some Delusions of High License.—Herrick Johnson.— 
WR 18 

Some Famous Trees.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Some Future Day.—Arthur H. Clough. See Songs in 
Absence. 

Some Geese.—Oliver Herford.—NA 
Some Hallucinations. — Lewis Carroll. See Strange 
Wild Song. A. 

“Some hearts go hungering through the world.”— 
Anon.—GG 

Some high or humble enterprise of good.”—Anon.— 
HSS 3 

Some Lover’s Dear Thought.—Sarah Woolsey.—BIL 
Some Mother’s Child.—Fs. L. Keeler.—CS 10 
“Some murmur when their sky is clear.”—R: C. 
Trench.—GG 

Some Noted Characters.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Some of the Children.—Isabel F. Bellows.—TFS 
Some Old School-books.—Anon.—PEO 
Some One Loves us Best.—M. E. Vandyne.—HSS 2 
Some Opinions.—Anon.—CPL 
Some Polite Dogs.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Some Rules.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
“Some say that kissin’s a sin.”—Anon.—WR 22 
Some Stylish “Cumpny.”—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Some Suppositions.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Some Sweet Day.—Lewis J. Bates.—HP 
"Some Tangled Hair.”—Anon.—CG 1 
Some Time.—Eugene Field.—EF—OH—WTD 
Some Verses to Snaix.—Anon.—NA 
Some Very Famous People.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Some were Empty, Sel. fr. (Christmas Eve.)—Anon. 
—GMS 

Some Years in Washington’s Life.—M. L. Stanley.— 
DFR 

Somebody.—Anon.—BNL—TFY 
“Somebody.”—Anon.—CG 1 
Somebody. (2) Anon.—DJS 
"Somebody’s.”—Rae McRay.—CS 29 
Somebody’s Boy.—Anon.—WR 6 
Somebody’s Darling.—Maria La Conte.—AWB—BNL 
—CS 2—HSS 1—PAPm—SA 
Somebody’s Knocking.—Anon.—AD 
Somebodv’s Mother. (Macmillan’s Magazine.) —PP— 
YBT—YFR 

(SI. o'r.t—CS 17—FR—FTR—PR—SM 
Somehow.—Anon.—CS 24 

Somehow or Other.—Anon.—HP—KNE (si. abr.) 
Something Better.—Clara J. Denton.—DFR—LL 
Something Beyond.-—Mary Clemmer.—HDL 
Something Cheap.—C: Swain.—FP 
Something Each Day.-—Anon.—YBT 
Something Great.—Florence Tvler. — BS 18—NPS— 
WR 6—YP 

Something Split.—Anon.—CS 16 
Something to be Done.—Mary D. Chellis.—TS 
Something to be Thankful for. (Dial.) —Clara .T.Den- 
t on—DFR —LL—W LO 
Something to Do.—Anon.—YBT 

Something to Do. (Abr .)—Frances R. Havergal.—YBT 





TITLE INDEX 


Song 


Something to Hate.—Anon.—TS 

Something to our Advantage.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
Something to Remember.—Anon.—DLF 
Sometime.—Anon.—CS 15 
Sometime.—Hosea Q. Blaisdell.—CS 18 
Sometime.—May R. Smith.—HDL—HP—TAS 
(God Knoweth Best— br. sel.) —SSS 
(“Sometime, when all life’s lessons have been 
learned.”)—CS 15 (abr.) —GG (sel.) 

Sometime.—F. A. F. W. W.—BS 9 

Sometime—Somewhere. — Ophelia G. Browning (ur. 

at. to Rob’t Browning).—SSS 
"Sometime, when all life’s lessons have been learned.” 

—May R. Smith. See Sometime. 

Sometimes.—Louisa F. Story.—HP 
“Sometimes a light surprises.”—W: Cowper.—SAE 
(Joy and Peace in Believing.—C.)—FEP—HBP 
Somewhere.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—TAS 
Somewhere.—Alfred C. Shaw.-—LLC 
Somewhere or Other. — Christina G. Rossetti. — 
FLS ( art. )—FTA— PGT 2—YBF 
Somnambulist, The.—Anon.-—MND 
Son of Abdallah, A.—Albion W. Tourgee. See Son of 
Old Harry, A. 

“Son of God goes forth to war. The.”—H. S. Cutler.— 
LLC 

Son of Old Harry, A, Sel. fr. (Son of Abdallah, A.)— 
Albion W. Tourgee.—NP 
Son-Dayes.—H: Vaughan.—FEP 

Sonet: “Fra bank to bank, fra wood to wood I rin.”— 
Mark A. Boyd.—OB 

Song: “The chestnuts shine through the cloven rind.” 
—T: B. Aldrich.—FP 

Song: "O spirit of the summertime.”—W:Allingham. 
—VS 

Song: “Joy came in youth as a humming bird.”— 
Sophie M. Almon-Hensley.—TCV 
Song: “Oh, welcome bat and owlet gray.”—Joanna 
Baillie. See Song Written for a Welsh Air 
Called “The Pursuit of Love.” 

Song: “The bride she is winsome and bonny.”—Joanna 
Baillie. See Song, W r oo’d and Married and A’. 
Song: “They who may tell love’s wistful tale.” (Fr. 
The Phantom, Act I., Sc. 4.)—Joanna Baillie. 
—WEP 4 

Song, A:—“I shouldn’t like to say, Pm sure.”—G:A. 
Baker, Jr.—PLD 

Song, A: “Spring-time is coming again, my dear.”— 
G: A. Baker, Jr.—PLD 

Song: “Come here, fond youth, whoe’er thou be.” (I. 
—C.)—Anna L. Barbauld. 

(What it is to Love— si. abr.) —FLS 
Song: “Fain would I wake you,” etc.—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. See Wit at Several Weapons. 

Song: “Hence, all ye [or you] vain delights.”—Fs. Beau¬ 
mont. See Nice Valour, The. 

Song: “Shake off your heavy trance.” (Songs fr. 
Masque of the Gentlemen of Gray’s Inn, 
and the Inner Temnle, A.)—Fs. Beaumont.— 
EDY (1st song)—EPs (1st and 2nd songs, and 
sel. fr. 4th.) 

Song: “Do not fear to put,” etc. — Beaumont and 
Fletcher. See Faithful Shepherdess, The. 
Song: "Lay a garland on my hearse.”—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. See Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Song: “How many times, etc.”—T: L. Beddoes. See 
Torrismond. 

Song:"My goblet’s golden lips are dry.”—T: L. Bed- 
does.—VS 

Song: “Strew not earth,” etc. (Fr. The Second 
Brother.)—T: L. Beddoes.—VS 
Song: "Who is the baby, that doth lie.”—T: L. Bed¬ 
does. See Bride’s Tragedy, The. 

Song: “Love in fantastic triumph sate.” (Fr. Abde- 
lazar.)—Aphra Behn.—OB 
(Song from Abdelazar.)—WEP'2 
Song: “In thy white bosom Love is laid.”—J: A. 
Blaikie.—VA 

Song: “How sweet I roamed from field to field.”—W : 
Blake.—FEP—WEP 3 

Song: “Memory, hither come.”—W: Blake.—M EP 3 
Song: (C.) “My silks and fine array.”—W: Blake.— 
OB—WEP 3 

(My silks and fine array.)—FEP 
Song: “O fly not pleasure,” etc.—Wilfrid S. Blunt.— 
OB 

Song: “ True as the needle to the pole,” Br. sel. fr. — 
B. Booth.—BNL 

Song: “See, O see! How every tree.” (Fr. Elvira.) 

—G: Digby, Earl of Bristol (?).—ELP 
Song (C): “The linnet in the rocky dells.”—Emily 
Bronte.—VA 
(My Lady’s Grave.)—OB 


Song: “Day, in melting purple,” etc.—Maria G. 
Brooks. See Song of Egla. 

Song: “For her gait if she be walking.”—W: Browne. 
—OB 

(Love’s Reasons.)—ELP 

Song: “Welcome, welcome do I sing.”—W: Browne. 
—CEL—ES—WEP 2 
(Welcome[, The].)—ELP—FEP—OB 
(Welcome, welcome.)—HBP—YBF 
(” Welcome, welcome, do I sing.”)—BNL 
Song: “Nay but you, who do not love her.”—Rob’t 
Browning.—OB 

Song: “The moth’s kiss, first.”—Rob’t Browning. 
See In a Gondola. 

Song: “O love is like the roses.” (Fr. Love in 
Winter.)—Rob’t Buchanan.—VS 
Song: "When stars are in the quiet skies.” (Night 
and Love—C.— fr. Ernest Maltravers, Bk. III., 
Ch.l.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—CR — FLS (br. sel.) 
(When Stars are in the Quiet Skies.; — FEP— FTA 
—VA 

Song: “He that is down,” etc.—J: Bunyan. See 
Pilgrim’s Progress. 

Song: “What pleasure have great princes.”—W: 
Byrd—HBP 
(Quiet Life, The.)—ELP 

Song ( C .): “Earl March look’d on his dying child.” 
—T: Campbell. 

(“Earl March look’d on his dying child.”)—PGT 1 
—YBF 

Song (C.): "How delicious is the winning.”—T: Camp¬ 
bell—HBP (si. abr.)— YBF 
(First Kiss, The.)—BNL—FTA 
Song: Withdraw not yet those lips and fingers.”— 

T: Campbell.—FTA 

Song (C.): “Ask me no more where Jove bestows.”— 
T: Carew.— ELP — ES—HBP— OB—WEP 2 
—YBF 

("Ask me no more where Jove bestows.”)—FEP— 
OEL 

Song: "Would you know what’s soft?” — (At. to) 
T: Carew.—ES—WEP 2 

Song: “Love, by that loosened hair.”—Bliss Carman. 
—VA 

Song: "Heaven! ’Tis delight to see how fair."—- 
Charles, Duke of Orleans (tr. by Costello;.—FTA 
Song: “Wilt thou be mine?”—Charles, Duke of 
OHeans (tr. by Costello).—FTA 
Song: “For me the jasmine buds unfold.”—Florence 
E. Coates.—FEP 
(World is Mine, The.)—AA 

Song: “Bud into blossom, flower into fruit.”—Rob't 
J. Cole.—CG 3 

Song (C.): “She is not fair to outward view.”—Hartley 
Coleridge.—HBP—OB—VA—WEP 4 
(“She is not fair to outward view.”)—BNL—FEP 
—FTA—PGT 1—YBF 

Song(C.): “’Tis sweet to hear the merry lari.”— 
Hartley Coleridge. See Song: The Lark. 

Song: “Hear, sweet spirit, hear the spell.” (Fr. 
Remorse, Act III, Sc. 1.)—S: T. Coleridge.— 
HBP 

Song (C.): “False though she be,” etc.—W: Congreve. 
—WEP 3 

(“False though she be [to me and love].”)—FTA— 
OB 

Song, A: “ To thy lover.” (Out of Italian—C.)—R: 
Crashaw.-—HBP 

Song: “Only tell her that I love.”—J: L. Cutts.— 
OB 

Song: "Are they Shadows that we see?”—S: Daniel. 
—ELP 

( Eidola.)—ES—OEL 

Song: “Sweet in her green dell,” etc.—G: Darley.— 
OB 

(Flower of Beauty, The.)—VA 
(Love Song.)—HBP 

Song (C.): “The lark now leaves his watery nest.” 
—Sir W: Davenant.—FEP—WEP 2 
(Aubade.)—OB 
(Dawn-song.)—CEL 
(Morning.)—YBF 

Song: "The boat is chafing at our long delay.”—J: 
Davidson.—OB 

Song: “Seek not the tree of silkiest bark.”—Aubrey 
T: De Vere.—VA—VS—YBF 
Song: “Singthe old song, amid the sounds dispersing.” 
—Aubrey de Vere.—HBP 

Song: “Softly, O midnight hours!”—Aubrey De Vere. 
—VS 

(Serenade.)—OB 

Song: “When I was young, I said to sorrow.”— 
Aubrey De Vere.—TIP—VS 


303 




Song 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Song: “Love is not a feeling to pass away.”—C: 

Dickens. See Village Coquettes, The. 

Song: “Go and catch a falling star.”—J: Donne.— 
OB—WEP 1 

Song: "Sweetest love, I do not go.”—J: Donne.— 
ELP—WEP 1 

(“O how feeble is man’s power ”— eel.) —EPs 
Song: “Dorinda’s sparkling wit and eyes.” — C:Sack- 
ville, Earl of Dorset.—WEP 2 
(“ Dorinda’s sparkling wit and eyes.”)—FEP 
Song: “Phillis, for shame, let us improve.”—C: Sack- 
ville, Earl of Dorset.—WEP 2 
Song: “Phoebus, arise!” (Song XXXVI., Pt. I.)—W: 
Drummond—ELP—ES—HBP—WEP 2 
(Invocation.)—OB 
(“Phoebus, arise!”)—OEL 
(Summons to Love— l. abr .)—PGT 1 
Song: “Ah, fading joy!” ( Fr. The Indian Em¬ 
peror.)—J: Dryden.—ELP 

Song: “ When another’s voice thou hearest.”—Helen 
S. Sheridan, Ladv Dufferin.—VS 
Song: “Child, is thy father dead?”—Ebenezer Elliott. 
—WEP 4 

Song, The.—J: Erskine.—AA 

Song, A: “First the fine, faint dreamy motion.”— 
Norman Gale.—VS 

Song: “This peach is pink, with such a pink.”—Nor¬ 
man Gale.—VA 

Song: “Wait but a little while.”—Norman Gale.— 
VA—VS 

Song: “O ruddier than the cherry!” (Fr. Acis and 
Galatea, Pt. II.)—J: Gay.—OB 
Song: “The silent bird is hid in the boughs.”—Rosa 
Mulholland, Lady Gilbert—TIP 
Song: “Not from the whole wide world,” etc.—R: W. 
Gilder— AA—FTA—OH 

(“Not from the whole wide world I chose thee.”)— 
BIL 

Song: “Years have flown since I knew thee first.”— 
R: W. Gilder.—A A—ASL 

Song (C.): “Sweet are the thoughts that savor of 
content.” (Fr. Farewell to Follie [or Folly].)— 
Rob’t Greene.—HBP—WEP 1 
Content.)—BNL—EP—FEP 
Contentment.)—YB F 
(Sweet Content.)—OEL 

Song: “A place in thy memory, dearest.”—Gerald 
Griffin.—FTA 

(Place in thy memory. A.)—VA 
Song: “ There are days when the sun shines warm and 
bright.”—Emelyn B. Hartridge.—CG 1 
Song: “Sing me a sweet, low song of night.”—Hilde- 
garde Hawthorne. 

Song: “Pack clouds away,” etc.—T: Heywood. See 
Rape of Lucrece, The. 

Song: “A lake and a fairy boat.” (Song for Music — 
C.)—T: Hood.—BFV—HBP—LC 
(“Lake and a fairy boat, A.”)—BPB 
Song (C.): “O lady, leave thy silken thread.”—T: 
Hood.—HBP—VS 
(May Morning, A.)—AD 

Song: “The stars are with the voyager.”—T: Hood. 
—VS 

Song:—“I wander’d by the brookside.”—R: M. Milnes, 
Lord Houghton.—CGd—FP 
(Brookside, The.)— BNL — CR — FEP — FTA— 
C.P—HBP—OH—PGT 2—TFY—VA—VS— 
YBF 

(“I wandered bv the brookside” — rr. music.) — 
NPS—YP 

Song: “Thy face I have seen as oneseeth.”—Sophie 
Jewett.—AA 

Song: “Follow a shadow,” etc. (Song.—That W T omen 
are but Men’s Shadows—C.)—Ben Jonson.— 
FEP 

(Shadow, The.)—OB 

Song: “How near to good is what is fair.” (Fr. Love 
Freed from Ignorance and Folly.)—Ben Jon¬ 
son —EPs 

(“How near to good is what is fair.”)—BNL— 
ELP 

Song (C.): “Oh, do not wanton with those eyes.”— 
Ben Jonson.—ES 

(“0 do not wanton with those eyes.”)—BNL 
Song: “See the chariot at hand.”—Ben Jonson. See 
Celebration of Charis, A. 

Song: “Spring all the graces of the age.” (.Chorus fr. 
Neptune’s Triumph for the Return of Albion.) 
—Ben Jonson.—EPs 

Song: “Still to be neat,” etc.—Ben Jonson. See 
Simplex Munditiis. 

Song: “The owl is abroad.”—Ben Jonson. See 
Gipsies Metamorphosed, The. 


Song (C.): “I had a dove and the sweet dove died.” 
—J: Keats.—CGd—LC—PoR 
(Dove, The.)—OS 1 

Song: “Oh! that we two were maying.” — C: Kings¬ 
ley. See Saint’s Tragedy, The. 

Song: “She's somewhere in the sunlight strong.” — 
R: Le Gallienne.—OB 

Song, A: “She sat alone by the gray stone wall.”— 
Addie I. Locke.—CG 1 

Song: “Thy braes are bonny.”—J: Logan. SeeSong: 
The Braes of Yarrow. 

Song (C.): “Stav, stay at home.”—H: W. Longfellow. 

(Home Song.)—BS 6—GN—OH 
Song(C.): “Violet! sweet violet! ”—Jas. R. Lowell. 
(Violet. The— si. abr.) —AD 

Song: O bird, thou dartest to the sun.—Maria W. 
Lowell.—AA 

Song: “Pan’s Syrinx was a girl indeed.”—J: Lyly. 
See Midas. 

Song: “What bird so sings, yet does so wail?”—J: 

Lyly. See Alexander and Campaspe. 

Song: “We must love and unlove, and it may be.” — 
Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. See Wanderer, The. 
Song, A: “This I learned from the birds.”—Fs. C: 
McDonald.—CG 2 

Song: “I dreamed that I woke from a dream.” 
(Song fr. Wilfrid Cumbermede. Ch. LVI.)—G: 
Macdonald.—VA 

Song: “ ‘O lady,* thy lover is dead,’ they cried.” 

( Song fr. Phantastes. A Faerie Romance for 
Men -rnd Women, Ch. XX.)—G: MacDonald. 
—HBP 

Song: “All glorious as the rainbow’s birth.”—Gerald 
Massey.—VS 

Song: “My fair, no beauty of thine will last.”—Alice 
Meynell.—VA 

Song: “Nymphs and shepherds, dance no more.”—J: 
Milton. See Arcades. 

Song: “O’er the smooth enamelled green.”—J: Mil- 
ton. See Arcades. 

Song: “Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph,” etc.—J: Milton. 
See Comus. 

Song: “Who calls me bold because I won my love.” 
—Cosmo Monkhouse.—VA 

Song:—“Love took my life and thrill’d it.”—Sir 
Lewis Morris.—VA 

Song: “Where the soft shadows fall.”—Irene E. 
Morton.—TCV 

Song: “The pouring music, soft and strong.”—F: H. 
W. Mvers.—VA 

Song: “Your heart is a music-box, dearest.”—Frances 
S. Osgood.—AA 

Song: “Has summer come without the rose.” (In 
Lavs of France.)—Arthur O’Shaughnessv.— 
FTA—PGT 2—WEP 4—YBF 
(“Has summer come without the rose?”)—VA 
Song (C.): “I made another garden, yea.”—Arthur W. 
O’Shaughnessy.—OB—PGT 2—WEP 4 
(I Made Another Garden.)—VS 
Song: “I went to her.” etc. (“I went to her who 
loveth me no more” — C.) — Arthur W. 
O’Shaughnessy.—HBP 
(Enchainment.)—YBF 

Song, A: “Oh, the hopper grass is clattering and 
flying all the day.”—S. P.—CG 2 
Song: “ When thv beauty appears.”—T: Parnell.— 
OB 

(When your Beauty Appears.)—BNL 
Song: “For the tender beech and the sapling oak.” 

—T: L. Peacock.—BFV—LC—PoR 
Song: “Oh! say not a woman’s heart,” etc.—T: L. 
Peacock.—TFY 

(“Oh! say not woman’s heart is bought.”)—FTA 
(She Loves and Loves Forever— C.) —FLS 
Song: “We break the glass, whose sacred wine.”—E: 
C. Pinkney.—AA—ASL 

Song: “The merchant, to secure his treasure.”-— 
Matthew Prior.—OB 
(Love’s Disguises.)—YBF 

(“Merchant, to secure his treasure. The.”) — FEP 
—PGT 1 

(Ode, An—C.)—WEP 3 

Song ( C.): “Love me if I live.”—Brvan W. Procter.— 
HBP 

(“Love me if I live.”)—FLS 
Song: “Gray is the sky, but naught care I.”—W. T. R. 
—CG 3 

Song: “O for a moon to light me home!” — Walter 
Ramal.—SOC 

Song: “At setting day and rising morn.”—Allan 
Ramsay. See Gentle Shepherd, The. 
Song(C-): “Farewell to Lochaber.”—Allan Ramsay. 
(Lochaber no More.)—BNL—FEP—HBP 


304 





TITLE INDEX 


Song for 


Song, A: “Knowest thou but joy.”—H. R. Remsen.— 
CG 2J 

Song, A (C.): “There is ever a song somewhere, my 
dear.”—Jas. W. Riley.—GMS 
(Ever a Song Somewhere.)—YBT 
Song: “Absent from thee I languish still.”—J: Wil- 
mot, Earl of Rochester.—WEP 2 
(Return.)—OB 

Song: “Dear, from thine arms then let me fly.”—J: 

Wilmot, Earl of Rochester.—ELP 
Song: “My dear mistress,” etc.—J: Wilmot, Earl of 
Rochester.—W’EP 2 

(“My dear mistress has a heart.”)—FEP 
Song: "W T hen on those lovely looks I gaze.”—J: Wil¬ 
mot, Earl of Rochester.—WEP 2 
Song: "O roses for the flush of youth.”—Christina G. 
Rossetti.—VS 

Song: “Two doves upon the selfsame branch.”— 
Christina G. Rossetti.—VS 

Song: “When I am dead, my dearest.”—Christina G. 

Rossetti.—OB—PGT 2—VS—YBF 
Song: “A weary lot is thine,” etc.—Walter Scott. 
See Rokeby. 

Song: “Allen-a-Dale has no fagot,” etc.—Walter 
Scott. See Rokeby. 

Song: “0 Brignall banks,” etc.—Walter Scott. See 
Rokeby. 

Song: “Soldier, rest! thy warfare o’er.” — Walter 
Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Song: “The heath this night must be my bed.”— 
Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Song: “Where shall the lover rest.”—Walter Scott. 
See Marmion. 

Song (C.): “Love still has something of the sea.”—Sir 
C: Sedley.—W T EP 2 

(“Love still hath something of the sea.”)—FEP 
Song: ‘ ‘ Phillis is my only joy.” —Sir C: Sedley.—WEP 2 

(Phillis.)—CEL—EP 
(“Phillis is my only joy.”)—BNL 
Song: “Fear no more the heat o’ the sun.” — W: 

Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

Song: “Hark, hark! the lark,” etc.—W: Shakespeare. 
See Cymbeline. 

Song: “How should I your true love know.” — W: 
Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 

Song: “On a day (alack the day).”—W: Shakespeare. 
See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Song: “Orpheus with his lute.” — W: Shakespeare. 
See King Henry VIII. 

Song: “Tell me where is fancy bred.”—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Song: “Under the greenwood tree.”—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See As You Like It. 

Song: “Love in mv heart; Oh heart of me, heart of 
me!”—W: Sharp.—VA 

Song: “Who has robbed the ocean cave.”—J: Shaw. 
—AA—ASL—FTA 


Song: “Rarely, rarely comest thou.”—Percy B. Shel¬ 
ley.—HBP 

(“Rarely, rarely comest thou.”)—FEP 
(Spirit of Delight, The.)—CEL 
Song: “Had I a heart for falsehood framed.” ( Air 
fr. The Duenna, Act III., Sc. 1.)—R: B. 
Sheridan.—TIP 

Song: “I ne’er could any luster see.” ( Sel .)—R: B. 
Sheridan.—FTA 

Song (C.): “Ye virgins, that did late despair.” (Fr. 
The Imposture.)—Jas. Shirley. 

(Peace Restored.)—ELP 

Song: “Who hath his fancy pleased.” Sir Philip 
Sidney.—OB 

Song: “W’ake now, my love, awake.” — Edmund 
Spenser. See Epithalamion. 

Song: “I prithee send me back my heart.”—Sir J: 
Suckling.—ES—FTA—WEP 2 
(“f prithee send me back my heart.”)—BNL—FEP 
—OEL—YBF 

Song: “Love, Reason, Hate, did once bespeak.”—Sir 
J: Suckling. 

(Dance, The.)—W T EP2 

Song(C.): "No, no, fair heretic! it needs must be. 
—Sir J: Suckling. 

(True Love.)—ES 

Song(C-): “When, dearest, I but think of thee.”— 
Sir J: Suckling. 

("When,dearest, I but think,” etc.)—OB 
Song ( C .): “Why so pale?” (Fr. Aglaura.)—Sir J: 
Suckling.—HBP 

(Encouragements to a Lover.)—PGT 1 
(Orsames’ Song [in "Aglaura”].)—ELP—ES—WEP 2 
(To a Lover.)—YBF 

(“Whv so pale [and wan, fond lover]?”)—BNL— 
FEP—GP—OB—OEL—PYO 


Song: “O lips that mine have grown into.” (Fr. 

Felise.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—VS 
Song: “Daughter of Egypt, veil thine eyes.”—Bayard 
Taylor.—AA 

Song: “Down lay in a nook my lady’s brach.”—Sir 
H: Taylor. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Song: “Quoth tongue of neither maid nor wife,” Sir 
H: Taylor. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Song: “In love, if love be love.”—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Idylls of the King. 

Song (C.): “The winds, as at their hour of birth.”— 
Alfred Tennyson. 

(We are Free.) SAE 

Song: “We sail toward evening’s lonely star.”—Celia 
Thaxter.—AA—GP 

Song: “ ’Tis said that absence conquers love.”—Frd’k 
W. Thomas.—AA 

(“ ’Tis said that absence conquers love.”)—FTA 
Song(C.): “Tell me, thou soul of her I love.”—Jas. 
Thomson. 

(To her I Love.)—WEP 3 

Song: "Bring from the craggy haunts of birch and 
pine.”—J: Todhunter.—TIP 
Song: “Go, lovely rose!”—Edmund Waller.—ELP— 
ES—WEP 2 

(“Go, lovely rose!”)—BFV—BNL—EPs—FEP— 
OB—OEL—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 
(Rose, The.)—HBP 
(Rose’s Message, The.)—CEL 
Song(C.): “Whilst I listen,” etc. — Edmund W’aller. 
(To Chloris.)—ES 

Song:—“I never knew how dear thou wert.”—Catharine 
Warfield.—FTA 

Song: "April, April, laugh thy girlish laughter.”—W: 
Watson.—OB 
(Song to April.)—GN 

Song: “The poets sing that love is blind.” (Wellesley 
Magazine.) —CG 3 

Song: “I bade thee stay. Too well I know.”—Sarah 
H. Whitman.—HBP 

Song: "A bird in my bower.”—Fs. H. Williams.—AA 
Song, A: “I do not ask—dear love—not I.”—Rob’t B. 
Wilson.—TFY 

Song: “O [or Oh], say not that my heart is cold.”— 
C: Wolfe—HBP—WEP 4 

Song: A May Morning.—J: Milton. See Song on May 
Morning. 

Song about Singing, A.—Anne R. Aldrich.—AA 
Song and Science (“The Twilight of the Poets”).— 
Milicent W. Shinn.—AA 

Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle upon the Res¬ 
toration of Lord Clifford, the Shepherd, to the 
Estates and Honors of his Ancestors.—W: 
W ordsworth.—FEP 
(Two Victories— sel.) —LH 
Song before Grief, A.—Rose H. Lathrop.—AA 
Song before the Entry of the Masquers. (Chorus— C. — 
fr. The Fortunate Isles and their Union.)— 
Ben Jonson.—WEP 2 

Song by a Person of Quality. (C.)—Alex. Pope. 
(Lines by a person of Quality.)—NA 
(Love Song, in the Modern Taste, A— at. to Swift.) 
—HPE 

Song, by Glycine.—S: T. Coleridge. See Zapolya. 

Song by Rogero [the Captive]. (Fr. The Rover.)— 
G: Canning.—ESs—FEP 

(Song of One Eleven Years in Prison.)—HBP— 
THP 

(Song Sung by Rogero, etc.)—HPE 
(University of Gottingen, The.)—MHR—OS 2 
Song, by Two Voices.—T: L. Beddoes. See Bride’s 
Tragedy, The. 

Song for a Catarrh, A. (Punch.) —HPE 
Song for July 12th, 1843.—J: De J. Frazer.—TIP 
Song for Lexington, A.—Rob’t K. Weeks.—AA 
Song for May, A.—Eben E. Rexford.—AD 
Song for Music, A.—Anon.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Lullaby.)—ELP 

(Sleep— at. to Dowland.)—BNL—HBP 
(Tears.)—OB 

Song for Music.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
Song for Music. (C.) —T: Hood. 

(“Lake and a fairs' boat, A.”)—BPB 
(Song.)—BFV—HBP—LC 
Song for Punch Drinkers. (Punch.) —HPE 
Song for St. Cecilia’s Day, A. (C.) —J: Dryden.— 
BNL — ELP — FEP — OB — PGT 1 — 
WEP 2—WR 11 

(Fife and Drum— hr. sel.) —GN—OS 1 
(Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day— si. abr.) —SO 
(Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day.)—FP (sel.) —IR 
(St. Cecilia’s Day.)—EPs—W T CLG 2 
(Trumpet’s Loud Clangor, The— sel.) —LC 


305 




Song 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Song for September, A.—T: W. Parsons.—HBP— 
TAV 

Song for the Asking, A.—Fs. O. Ticknor.—AA 
Song for the Conquered, A. — W: W. Story. See He 
and She; or, A Poet’s Portfolio. 

Song for the Fleet, A.—Clinton Scollard.—PAPm 
Song for the Girl I Love, A.—Frd’k Langbridge.— 
HP 

Song for the Hot Winds, A.—Harriet M. Davidson.— 
HP 

Song for the Hour, A.—W. F. Dunbar.—PAPm 

Song for the Lute.—Edmund Gosse.—VS 

Song for the New Year.—Eliza Cook.—HS 

Song for the Night of Christ’s Resurrection, Br. sel. fr. 

(“In regal quiet deep.”) — Jean Ingelow.— 
FHS 

Song for the Sailor-men, A. (Baltimore News .)— 
Anon.—PAPm 

Song for the Seasons, A.—Bryan W. Procter.—HBP 
Song for Tree-planting.—Sara J. Underwood.—AD— 
DFR 

Song for Winter.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Song from a Drama (Stanzas for Music— C. — fr. an un¬ 
finished drama).—Edmund C. Stedman.— 
—AA 

Song from a Drama.—Edmund C. Stedman.—BIL— 
TFY 

Song from Abdelazar.—Mrs. Aphra Behn.—WEP 2 
(Song: “Love in fantastic,” etc.)—OB 
Song from .Ella, A.—T: Chatterton. See .Ella. 

Song from Ben-Hur.—Lew Wallace. See Ben-Hur. 
Song from “Epicoene; or, The Silent Woman.”—Ben 
Jonson. See Simplex Munditiis. 

Song from Gypsies’ Metamorphoses.—Ben Jonson. See 
Gipsies Metamorphosed, The. 

Song from Jason. (Fr. Life and Death of Jason, Bk. 
IV.)—W: Morris.—EPs 
(Nymph’s Song to Hylas, The.)—OB 
Song from “King Arthur.”—J:Dryden. See Harvest 
Home. 

Song from "Lays of France.”—Arthur O’Shaugh- 
nessy.—WEP 4 

Song from “Love in Winter.”—Rob’t Buchanan.— 
VS 

Song from “ Measure for Measure.”— W: Shakespeare. 

See Measure for Measure. 

Song from “Midas.”—J: Lyly. See Midas. 

Song from Neptune’s Triumph.—Ben Jonson.—EPs 
Song from “Paracelsus.”—Rob’t Browning. See Para¬ 
celsus. 

Song from “Pippa Passes.”—Rob’t Browning. See 
Pippa Passes. 

Song from the Arcadia, A.—Sir Philip Sidney. See 
Arcadia, The. 

Song from “The Lady of the Lake.”—Walter Scott. 
See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Song from “The Merchant of Venice.”—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Song from "The Mulberry Garden.”—Sir C: Sedley.— 
WEP 2 

Child and Maiden— abr .)—PGT 1 
Song to Chloris.)—CEL 
To a Very Young Lady.)—BNL—FEP 
To Chloris— abr .)—OB 
Song from “The Nice Valour.”—J: Fletcher. See 
Sweetest Melancholy. 

Song from “The Second Brother.”—T: L. Beddoes.— 
VS I 

Song from the Ship.—T: L. Be ddoe s. See Death’s 
Jest Book. 

Song from ‘The Sophy.”—Sir J: Denham.—W T EP 2 
Song from the Suds, A.—Louisa M. Alcott. See Little 
Women. 

Song from “The Two Noble Kinsmen.”—Shakespeare 
and Fletcher. See Two Noble Kinsmen, The. 
Song from “The Wild Wagoner of the Alleghanies.”— 
T: B. Read. See Wagoner of the Alleghanies, 
The. 

Song from “Torrismond.”—T: L. Beddoes. See Tor- 
rismond. 

Song from “Valentinian.”—Beaumont and Fletcher. 
See Valentinian. 

Song in Autumn, A.—Arthur J. Stringer.—TCV 
Song in Color, A.—Anon.—YBT 

Song:. In Commendation of Music.—W: Strode.— 
ELP (abr.) 

(Music.)—EPs—FEP—HBP 
(Praise of Music— abr.) —CEL 
Song—in Imitation of Sir John Eaton, A. (C.) —J: 
Wilmot, Earl of Rochester. 

(" Too late, alas! I must confess.”)—BNL—FEP 
Song in Imitation of the Elizabethans.—W: Watson.— 
VA 


Song: In Leinster. (Two Irish Peasant Songs, I.)— 
Louise I. Guiney.—ASL 
(In Leinster— C.) —AA 

Song, in Making of the Arrowes, The. —J: Lyly. See 
Sapho and Phao. 

Song in March.—W: G. Sims.—AA—POS 
Song in Praise of Spring.—Bryan W. Procter.—HSS 1 
Song in the Dell, The.—C: E. Carryl.—AA 
Song in “The Foresters.”—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Foresters, The. 

Song in the Night, The.—Jas. Buckham.—NV 
Song in the Storm, The.—Jas. Buckham.—NV 
Song in the Wood.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See 
Little French Lawyer, The. 

Song in the Wood, The.—W: Browne. See Inner Tem¬ 
ple Masque. 

Song—Mediocrity in Love Rejected. (C.) —T: Carew. 
(Give me more Love [or more Disdain].)—BNL— 
FLS—FT A—YBF 

Song my Mother Sings, The.—T: O’Hagan.—TCV 
Song my Paddle Sings, The.—E. Pauline Johnson.— 
HBR—TCV—VA 

Song of a Heathen, The.—R: W. Gilder. See Celestia 
Passion, The. 

Song of a Summer Stream, The. (Sel.) —Frances R. 
Havergal.—POS 

Song of an Angel.—Frd’k Tennyson.—PGT 2 
Song of an Old Dollar Bill.—D. W. Curtis.—CS 25 
Song of Angiola in Heaven.—Austin Dobson.^—GP 
Song of Arbor Day.—Sarah J. Pettinos.—AD (w. mus.) 
—HSS 1—PEO 

Song of Ariel.—W: Shakespeare. See Tempest, The. 
Song of Arno, A.—Grace E. C. Stetson.—AA 
Song of Autolycus.—W: Shakespeare. See Winter’s 
Tale, The. 

Song of Autumn, A. (C.) —Arthur H. Clough. 

(No More.)—HBP 

Song of Autumn, A.—Rennell Rodd.—HBP 
Song of Birds.—H: W. Longfellow. See Birds of Kil- 
lingworth, The. 

Song of Braddock’s Men, The.—Anon.—AWB—EDY 
Song of Callicles [in Sicily, The],—Matthew Arnold. 

See Empedocles on Etna. 

Song of Canada, A.—Rob’t Reid.—TCV 
Song of Celadyne, The*—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Song of Chanson de Roland, The. — (Tr. by) J: 

O’Hagan. See Song of Roland, The. 

Song of Clan-Alpine.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the 
The 

Song of Clover, A.—“Saxe Holm.”—GN—NV 
Song of Daphne to her Lute, A.—J: Lyly. See Midas. 
Song of Consecration.—E. A. Holbrook.—AD 
Song of Content, A.—J: J. Piatt.—TAS 
Song of David, The.—C. Smart. See Song to David, A. 
Song of Dedication.—Ellen Beauchamp.-—AD 
Song of Degrees, A.—Marg. Vandegrift.—AWH 
Song of Dewey’s Guns, The.—Sam W. Foss.—PAPm 
Song of Doubt, A.—Josiah G. Holland.—TAS 
Song of Early Autumn, A.—R: W. Gilder.—SN 
Song of Easter, A. (C.) —Celia Thaxter.—GMS— 
SAP—TAS 

(“Sing, children, sing!”— sel.) —FHS 
Song of Echo.—Ben Jonson. See Cynthia’s Revels. 
Song of Egla.—Maria G. Brooks.—AA 

(“Day, in melting purple dying.”)—BNL—FEP 
(Song.)—HBP 

Song of 1876, The.—Bayard Taylor.—CS 12 
Song of Elaine.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the 
King. 

Song of Empedocles, The.—Matthew Arnold. See 
Empedocles on Etna. 

Song of Enchantment, The.—Edmund Spenser. See 
Faerie Queen, The. 

Song of Eros. (Fr. Agathon.)—G: E:Woodberry.— 
AA 

Song of Fairies. (Fr. Amyntas; or. The Impossible 
Dowry.)—T: Randolph (tr. by Leigh Hunt).— 
FEP—HBP 
(Fairies’ Song.)—BNL 

(Song of Fairies Robbing an Orchard— C .)—BVC 
Song of Faith.—W: Croswell.-—TAS 
Song of Faith, A.—Josiah G. Holland.—TAS 
Song of Faith Forsworn, A.—J: B. L. Warren, Lord De 
Tabley.—VA 

Song of Farewell, A.—Dora Greenwell.—VA 
Song of Fionnuala, The.—T: Moore.—EPs—TIP 
Song of Giuki, The.—W: Morris. See Story of Sigurd 
the Volsung, The. 

Song of Growth, A.—C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Song of Harvest, A. (C.) —J: G. Whittier. 

(Lines—for the Agricultural and Horticultural Ex¬ 
hibition, etc.) AD— 


306 




TITLE INDEX 


Song 


Song of Hiawatha, The, Sels. fr.- —H: W. Longfellow. 
Famine, The. (Pt. XX.)—FP—FTR—MR 
{Si. abr.) —BS 3—CS 1—SA 
(Death of Minnehaha— sel.) —AA 
(Hiawatha— br. sels.) —SAE—-SE 
Ghosts. The. (Pt. XIX.)—BS 2 
(Hiawatha— br. sel.) —SAE 
(Disasters— abr. )—FP 

Hiawatha’s Childhood. (Pt. XXII.— abr.) —BVC 
{Sels.) —LC—W CL 
(Hiawatha’s Brothers— br. sel.) —PoR 
(Hiawatha’s Chickens— br. sel.) —PoR 
Hiawatha’s Sailing.—(Pt. VII.)—BVC 
Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast. {Br. sel. fr. Pt. XI.) 
—PEO 

Hiawatha’s Wooing. (Pt. X.)—CS 1 
South Wind, The. {Sel. fr. Pt. II , The Four Winds.) 
—BS 7 

Story of “Hiawatha,” The. (Introd.— cond.; sel. fr. 
Pt. I.: The Peace Pipe, sel. fr. Pt. II.: The Four 
Winds.)—AD 
Tableaux from Hiawatha. 

Death of Minnehaha, The. {Fr. Pt. XX.)—BS 9 
—TCP 

Tableaux from Hiawatha, with Readings.—BS 13 
—TCP 

I. Infancy and Childhood. {Fr. Pt. XXII.) 

II. The Wooing. {Fr. Pt. X.) 

III. The Famine. {Fr. Pt. XX.) 

Song of Hiawatha, The. An English Criticism. {Punch.) 
—HPE 

Song of Impossibilities, A.—Winthrop M. Praed.— 
NA 

Song of Israel. Bible. See Exodus. 

Song of Joy, The.—Carl Spencer.—YBT 
Song of Krishna, A. {Sel. fr. The Indian Song of 
Songs, Sarga the first.)—Sir Edwin Arnold.— 
GP 

Song of Love, A. (Love— C.) —C: L. Dodgson.— 
GN 

Song of Love Despairing and about to Die. (C.) {Fr. 
The Captain.)—J: Fletcher. 

(Away, Delights!)—OB 
Song of Luddy-Dud, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Song of Madame Do-as-you-Would-be-Done-by, The. 

C: Kingsley. See Water Babies, The. 

Song of Maelduin.—T. W. Rolleston.—TIP 
Song of Marion’s Men.—W: C. Bryant.—AWB—BAB 
—BFV —BNL —CS 15—FEP—HB—HBP— 
HSS 1—LC—OS 1—PAP—PAPm — PS (abr.) 
—PSR—SM—WCLG 1 

Song of Mary the Mother of Christ.—Anon. See New 
Jerusalem, The. 

Song of Mila, The.—S. Sterne.—PAPm 
Song of Mina’s Soldiers \wr. The].— Felicia D. Hemans. 
—PS 

Song of Moses. Bible. See Exodus. 

Song of Motto and Perkin. {Song fr. Pastorals, Ninth 
Eclogue.)—Michael Drayton.—OEL 
Song of Myself {formerly called Walt Whitman), Sels. 
fr. —Walt Whitman. 

Bare-bosomed Night. (St. 21, abr.) —SN 
Heroes. {Sel. fr. 33, 35.)—AA 

(Dying Fireman, The— sel. fr. 33.)—LH 
(Old-fashioned Sea-fight, An—35, 36.)—HBP 
(Sea-fight, A—35.)—LH 
Infinity. (44, 45— abr.) —A A 

(‘‘I am an acme of things accomplished”—44 
abr.) —SN 

(Song of Myself— sel. fr. 44.)—YBF 
Leaves of Grass. (6, sel. fr. 20.)—AA 
Microcosm, The. (31.)—SN 
Myself. (1.)—AA 

‘‘Oxen that rattle the yoke and chain.” (13.)—SN 
You Sea! {Sel. fr. 22.)—SN 
Song of Nature.—Ralph W. Emerson.—SN 
Song of Nature. (C. — fr. Mercury Vindicated from 
.the Alchemists at Court—Masques at Court.) 
—Ben Jonson. 

(Nature.)—EPs 

Song of Nourmahal in “The Light of the Harem.’ — 
T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 

Song of One Eleven Years in Prison.—G: Canning. 

See Song by Rogero the Captive. 

Song of Palms. (Abr.) —Arthur O’Shaughnessy.— 
PGT 2 

Song of Paris and CEnone.—G: Peele. See Arraign¬ 
ment of Paris, The. 

Song of Praise, A. Bible. See Psalms. 

Song of Praise.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

Song of Rebecca, the Jewess.—Anon.—WR 5 
Song of Riches, A.—Katha. L. Bates.—AA 


Song of Roland, The, Sels. fr. —Anon. 

Horn, The. (TV. by Leonce Rabillon.)—NE 
Death of Roland, The. (7>.&2/J:0’Hagan.)—BS 10 
(Roland’s Death— tr. by Rabillon.)—NE 
Song of Roland, Story of the.—Kate M. Rabb.—NE 
Song of St. Francis, A.—H: N. Maugham.—BVC 
Song of Saratoga.—J: G. Saxe.—CS 7—MHR—MR 
Song of Saul before his Last Battle. (C.)—Lord 
Byron.—EPs 

(Saul before his Last Battle.)—PS 
Song of Seasons, A.—Eliz. R. Macdonald.—TCV 
Song of Seventy, The.—Martin F. Tupper.—FP 
(I am not Old.)--—CS 19 

Song of Sherman’s Army, The.—C. G. Halpine.—CS 1 
—PAP 

Song of Singing, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Song of Solomon, Sel. fr. (Spring is Coming—Ch. II., 
11, 12.) Bible. —AD 

Song of Spring, A.—Helen C. Bacon.—NV 
Song of Spring.—E: Youl.—HBP—TFS {sel.) 
(Flowers, The.)—HSS 1 

Song of Steam, The.—G: W. Cutter.—BNL—BS 8— 
MYF {abr.) 

{SI. abr. — diff.) —CS 7—HSS 3 
Song of Summer, A.—Anon.—NV 
Song of Summer, A.—Marg. E. Sangster.—HDL 
Song of Tavy, The.—W: Browne. See Britannia’s 
orsl^ 

Song of the All-wool Shirt.—Anon.—DS—NPS—YA 
—YP 


Song of the American Eagle.—Anon.—BS 13—CS 23 
Song of the Ancient People, The, Sel. fr. —Edna D. 
Proctor.—AA 

Song of the Battle of Morga r ten. (C.)—Felicia 
Hemans.—EDY 

(Battle of Morgarten.)—BS 14—NPS—YP 
Song of the Battle Ships.—C. F. Harper.—PAPm 
Song of the Battle-flag.—Anon.—CS 21 
Song of the Bee, The.—Marion Douglass.—NV 
Song of the Bell.—T: Heywood. See Rape of |Lu- 
crece The. 

Song of the Bicycle, The.—Anon.—CS 36 
Song of the Brook. {Fr. The Brook: An Idyl.)— 
Alfred Tennyson. — BNL — CR — FEP — 
FTR—HBP—LLC—SAE {br. sels.) 

(Brook, The.)—AE {sel.) — BFV — BS 5 — CGd— 
CS 12—GMS —LC —OS 1— PGT 2 — PHS— 
POS (afrr.)—PSR—SM—SN—WCL—WCLI 1 
—WEP 4 

{SI. abr.) —GN—SC 

Song of the Bullet.—Jas. W. Riley.—PAPm 
Song of the Camp, The. (C.)—Bayard Taylor.—A A 
—ASL — BIL — BNL — BS 9 — FEP — GN 
—GP — HB — LLC — OM — OS 2 —JPYO— 
TAV — TMR—WCLG 1 

(Crimean Incident, A.)—HSS 1 
Song of the Cannon, The.—Sam W. Foss.4#-PAPm 
Song of the Centennial, Sel. fr. (People’s Song of 
Peace, The.)—Joaouin Miller.—BNL — BS 15 
—SN 


Song of the Chattahoochee.—Sidney Lanier.—AA— 
ASL—HBR 

Song of the Chimney.—Anon.—SR 1 
Song of the Corn, The.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
(Old Rye Makes a Speech.)—SD 
(Old Rye’s Speech.)—DLS 
(Song of the Rye— si. abr.) —PS 
Song of the Corn Popper, The.—Laura E. Richards.— 
TFS ; 

Song of the Cornish Men.—Rob’t S. Hawker. See 
Song of the Western Men, The. 

Song of the Cossack to his Horse, The.—Pierre J. 

de Beranger {tr. by Francis Mahony).—MMR 
Song of the Crickets, The.—Emily H. Miller.—BS 6 
Song of the Daisy.—E. C. Glover.—HSS 1 
Song of the Decanter.—Anon.—CS 1—PS 
Song of the Devas to Prince Siddartha, The.—Edwin 
Arnold. See Light of Asia, The. 

Song of the Drunkard.—W. Hargreaves.—CS 4 
Song of the Dying.—Bartholomew Dowling.—CS 5—MR 
(Indian Revelry.)—FEP 
(Our Last Toast.)—HP 
(Revel, The.)—VA 
(Revelry of the Dying.)—BNL 
Song of the Elfin Miller.—Allan Cunningham.—OS 1— 
WCL 

Song of the Elfin Steersman.—G: Hill.—AAI1 
Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda.—Andrew Marvell. 
—BNL—BPB—EPs—PGT 1 
(Bermudas[, The].)—GN—OB—WEP 2 
(Emigrants in [the] Bermudas, The.)—PEP—HBP 
(In Exile.)—LH 


307 





v>. 


V\ \ l\c \ :\ : V K Y \ M> :x>\". V V. 10\ > 


S*«* * ■•!>* Stariwth V S*. *- A\>Mr- »«e 

' X ej. Y tCY! !v..’.:*tR SO . 

4MBfc4 

S’n* ,j. ..he ‘ h.. -wv ‘ "he M *.'•-»* X. e,.wS 

i.M NO > • ,'%> ■ ■■'■ 

, Vs©h..-t>> ilnw*. "he ■ iX> 

S.-.tK .he ;'A. • '» At» V >.. ..ne- 

\ .Rbl $ 

S’hK >. he * h«e. v. ; v ~K.-k Si.*..". .v.- VO. 

S’.hK >. ..he ‘ ■ v». 'he. OS O . : 

h.’iis >. ..he . h.tej he k T -'.’eex :! S « 

Smk >• .'H ’>-'*• "he s.*.-*.:- . .he '. s.-> X 

. K V nee. ■h.- 

S'.IK he . h*HKK S.K..«K kit.V. A .' 1 

S>uk >. >e ■•eek S* • S> ~. ,v» .' ..kt 

Sibk ■>. -he ><».k 'net- Si-.,.- .v* .\. ,i*3- 

S’ilK .!»• WkV S’:' Ts.ir.hhe > 

Sk SS 

S’.'ik ■ ' sw S ' ' ■>•■ 

S.'.'K >. '.he .is. .x "he . ... k-s. ■ Vi'S 

_vy‘o 

S'»ik ■’* -he •■ -. v > a ^ Sw Xe X 

Ltfce X 

S>ok >. » .•k.V'' h ; uehe*. "he <./«,■>*.. • 

BHP« 

N-.ijs - tv . ti. "e*.. ‘t... .* ’ -I ■ ' ... '>• .. KK J'.' 

"ht Vs*. XU.-rtHiffujee rv 

* V 1 • less- S v } SO 

S'.'tK • she ■ ... . The V S..ine». S* V»s.»' 

Sk; 

Sens >. he • *.» Xv. S S.O....K >■' ' ■ •...• 

S.'.-tv u he V ajjK Vheneee' . ..•’.<•* X k 

S'.ik ’> .**>•** 'he V.-K '■ |S. kv' 

S'.IK ' >e .K'h‘ ‘IK •' ’* Ox '=' S\. 

S’.'IK •> .»»• .’»’ ••».’. '•e. .'he k i>.'.- A $ 

S'.IK ■>. r» . x . rx* ro >** 

M .»?«'<•»}•• ;i *rs The 

S’fts ’ he -<w HjeiK :—’Iik . .-oes >. £i 

S. ;tK ' ’! ... B’i V ' O. ? 

S’.tK ' he V.k 'i'. sk-xs. S» -oese 

r*he 

S.mk • .•» .•'...tie ■ \ S 'et-.-e" h.' «k »»«~e — 

hS 

S’itK ’. \ kSi’. ..■•’K'e :'he S!>eK. s.’.'H.h*.?Ji — 

SS :V •» S v 

‘■ ■r WK. •<. »*, Mit"l (W S > k '.'!h 

fhe. 

S.’tiK ■. ’e Kt.k. . ft. : aft.*.••*...• k itee: 

WiW? 

S-.tK • he v. . hhe.- • • • S. • ..■. •* ,t S 

K.’i. Sue 'ftitafKiti. 

S’iijl ■ he V. ’..j'is.rK.h. ■ ■' k . ' ;k" S. 

S’.tv -he V.•...-. K.r She.'he- S. •- ••"•,•' r — 

ss 

S«lft ’ he V. .. . . ...'WK S -. jttt S.f ' SjC.-iit})' 

>. he xJntrheji’ee The 

S.-.ik ' • J* '■ ’ S> OS 

"S' ■ »*. • SheS *e ■«.!. 

S.’ttK • he V !H> -. S,*., hn.- -4 S •» ’ S« k. 

Phrt h .'ruei, 

S'ok u obe V^rhi . ,i V t ■ v 

S’HK ’ hi \ • k ! .'’. ..er 1 !• :” 

" • . • h ..... . k ..•■ '"he ss rr 

S.'.it k.».ha—TOS 

• ' hi '■ 

—v’eea .-ifrei .'«■.—5*0 t J 

'A 'liiiw »'H.t ..h-.-ujch ..he tK’v'. >et ' 

SV. 

^"h»»n Stmrf’iw <. mrr- '* 'S 

ShltK > n h. Y ’hi. H —X \ 

S.-.IK ’■ . ?».tr iS -S' 

S'UK > he ’SCV 'h- ",e»tKK •>»«■ !k. V r- it - TPX 
S»nK ' he 'k :n V’ S hh 'is. .' k\ 

SiilJK ' he >< 4h!»!. * - hhiirer h. :■ Tv.'.-ts. • '• 

S-. •>. •- -»).hhH.’-ft «' e’.’tt . ■ «e. he f \ . 

1 ~ " h. rtChK.T —.Kfhi 

S»hk e he '-rte "he hk. S.'.-khKn.—.T¥l.' 

flf tte ^MMtk The - 

FS—Y\ 

SttiK ->i sraut. The —1C. XSitees. 

S. u«*(i,i.in—.'ET’S 

Sl'HK he - >•!» —T T ■» SS J 

S.MK ' he 'h:. K ., - ”... ... :K 

StlJK ' he hh' "-I ^ K/jir nu/rt • rum 

FAFtt 

S.lrtK 1 he V .-;CK'f" S.n '■* SK'.feK 

"he 

he -JBSS ? 

S'itJC > ’te '.m. ■. - k. A Okf —O' ? 

SitJK I ht ine ' - k;;J 'te Tk... uik'- ‘ K ft 

Snnhe -it rrj, i.pie. S SSeewtASi—A? 

- 'Hi. ' he -o :i . ■ ■ >.:te. " S> 


Sv.\i ..>>» .'..-k-e: '. KV.•' Se ?V.V StW vV.hKJ. '.he 

S-.i-.i ,v I-he k.•■.'.■.• >.■: S.'.-.-.i , .h# v\vv 

ShAt .v i.he S-'T’* Vlf).-*. N k 

St*,* -Y .^i* S^k ki-...-. :vS S 

ShAt .y . be Ste*. k Xk ;i. Vhitf—Tv'x 

Syak .Y S he See. The '. ..TK-vk-.'.— kVS 

S. ...i ., ...v he* v :%-*•«.*. xx :S.K.A >« Shj» '.hi 
jSMg iW See XX *1 iVe.—JU komk—OS >S 
Syaj .. t he Sh . . The : ..\v :- N . %'S i — 

; ;. : S> : TX . < k 

—xx oik;; 

S' v i >. • v : h S : 

. he. x r./rK *- 'A' V 

• . ••. ■.- .:■■■ ■> it :, 

MTK, MSS 4—JPT - 

ft OVhateiT 

ShAK -y , .’if S.v. . ie ‘ Oe $ 

S- .J^ ,Y S. - .-.k-e * "AJ.. .'.K .. '. k —4'Jhj. 

Sy»»k ,y i.he S-il.*hwK — kO tie. liMpw — FAF 
S.hrfi .* ...he S ...> .. The. :v. S- S.- .• k •.-.— 

JUk 

5.. .-.4 .-. . hi S.Jc—■. •. Vhe.- k-h...’ '. .’S tx. tttr X— 

v»r 

S ■martiasmCwt.’lW. JUwi. Wfe—HHtC 
e ti vibe sSjpwww.—I mw. V««mm Star* 
Vwiie - X i 

S. s h •# S.JK-N '.’he—s' - XX o 'S— 

w 

SiK"K iSr- 

S . S, >„-■>. . hi ..'...rsi V .-oihvilh.— 

S.'AK h '.he S.'X iiK k ''/ft. e.i '•— k.- ..-.— 

ar? 1 —\ r&; 

/OhetA.'uR S-atcT—3£J 

Sttal«ittasawowr fibgrtai—Bk 1 nHlinw fTilfl 

5.. -.< .. . he S. ■ t\ ts '... S> w.— 

V£f4 

■■ ViKhiey.—RX4.—MS 

s 

' • S'wtead S. i?(t 

IDhei 

s. ,:.i . be Ttantx Ita.—SMk>\ XL SnUtak*- 

Syak .Y hit} .NUKr.'.'.-'K ki-.-c. — : .':0 

Syak ti ttta TShjLtam*b»c, —M. fHiBtoitinii 
S .-.4 .. hi Vi ' ki .'.h; ■ S . — k_k 

. ... hi li ' ." 4* li •. • e 

The -. KK 1‘ 3 fii.ie.—k s tttr 

S'.Jtk i. hi V’. li. Vb.'ff s> ' 

i "i 

, k nui- KUKr ‘ "w. '.in—««.. —JPCff 1 

. SajjTee' .•£ S see.h.’m The.'—1WX 

S.' 1 T){ h "Jii '• Kir*. .'J>i. K'ttr . rfiiKTee.' — V k’« 

S S3-..—Jk*Wfc:—Lsh V 

: s —!MS4<*SrO 

S.’Ojf -Y tibf W'kxie. V-. 

S . . hi i."i V ’ ■! •.!;■■ : .' 

—£S!Fir—B.JK—FYkT—V.\ 

S -. 

S .4 S' V. *it*. ’’.i ... i Si.? hi .. 

-vx 

S .iiJt . hr ‘ T. S 

S. /eh- ’itn 

S.Yt>t ti ■. >tf * aa. Tta —1L By Jkfltai—Did 

cxibeUtkaMrWunibi—. .>.-s SSI • 

S Sjtajb—1 

s be Ywaft MB^Utadtak—BCatac h«vcs. See 

L the tTtaw 

S }>.i«.. •.' TV: > •.■- St. S • 

The. 

S '.4 i k V ' .. I ...— .:--. e 

S • ■ i .Mi - A- 

mm—.XA 

S.:« > 'Tv: k .’itri'ik v • • i . —JLX. 

S . ■ . . -. • ' hi 

3ko* 

Smc k '•C Lt.’ihK X.—Bmmx—HO 
SmjK rfBtae' 

S ' .4 ’ ’ f It "K S . 4-t hi : ; 7li, X. 

ttV — *. H,f uur-tttiu. ' — <o Xi.eo.'.'ijifcj.'. — 

ss 

S s. - V 

S.'UK > '■ PS . Sr. 1.—TV .- 

S.'HfcC hi 'S.ryc Allheim m. ‘ — t.i'.n —X X 
«t» k. S.’.r 

SKiK' '.Y hStK 

s .4 u ' "< .-it .' -- —■ '£.? 

- ' 

XtUY ».>.'*!; n* —Ai?k——OSL —X SJ 
’Tteitice IttMiadte.x——■LC 
S ,.it ■ >. . lit i—i. nac — O.ys 
S'litf •'ri-hu»»ti»>.'ut* .' —1' .'xhv 

> S . 1,4 • . 4 '■ V . 

S on - ; 1 h'S. X *K •'. - itin. SS 





TITLE, 1XVEX 




-n :<■■•&?■. .a, "TU Sfaww ~—<0 C* 

A*e **>m# lay Kmm lUnrfAtnu-m 

**«*« «UWt S'llW *WWf. TU#..—S*.”. W }' 1ft*-**fc *4 

—TU*# "* m#a *v* vm Km ♦ S"aa»ni#rt fC.'r— 
Bm fatutn*. 

TU# —OR 

'iwj-v-m 

, ■*# ft-**#:* i# T *r* v* <C —i IL#**-. 

• iV*"*** if T»w» 7U« j—ftft* w# — FEE— 

t* 7 f i 

*•'*■* -Tvr fern** **#Bv»u*y —ffftft frt «v >■ 

T wf A##* ww —«. ir.f >—ftWL 
Vws-*. . le Dv»#..— f; jCns&x Aer Sang; "7 i«i'. t 
< w t ’ «u», 

‘ v -i I • ** wt — KT' >..t 

Tv* Life# fit. 

•Tj**: Ti# .'jw'r Swhuj—C — y?.»s—.«#7 CftferiiiJi*#— 

A Aft 

Ts Hi I#-!.- # awsrw a ~'r "ji —fflZP 

TU# .'..jptk ■Tr-n^’.— A ..## Id V ,>r —A A 
**■-’*<*' "7i# .'ft jr.- -vats.,#—'*’■.• 8Hc isn>' Sv&wj A#* 

Siff#rt 

%■••«: iU» *>■>- •« ^flas TU#—W IX. —*A 

%v**v TU# •'ftrl Ihm^ Vn<r- Tf v tins Sasti# — 
Ai/'virt 7«wr»» — FfSSft—l/_ 

T»» TJ»— * w< —v> 1 —ft-, ft: 

^vkt ti* 8 mm* kinar. TU# —fB-iwww tr v/ €?; CU#=>- 
Aw -Ott- j —ty . 


*#y#r» — 


•Huftar: 


TU#.. 


«C. 


Ti# -tr nftti##- f /nnj it# it i# F#ir' 

'aWHfew* 'ivny to «*# Pi#Wi TU# >—<CEL— V3sJ7’ 

®«MT Hi * Kr Tvwn* jr.> vr -nr if -i# Tw- .a 

vi# Swritec /:: Drv'-fm.—€® 

»r«i^,—Ti A.uaarwf i;i ilw* m# wwUA lAtth## »• i#r 
A.»r# ■?« ft 

Tt % AltSSrmr. lit ,•-ft Lot » 1 .-V** —f.TA 

.Tvs' V.-.'## 5i*ur —trr ■ —CK. 

**•* trt, —I' lyV- ^ W -tn# 

^Jtgf t* Jfcjr.iL—* ; '"*> ix^r.o. — < r D?S 
^'iw. —^--Si 

Vjwt *ji i&ws»n-j».—.' J , ’#r.»s#r. ,?^j* TtMBUtiwt— 

Va*—T.«v '■jet* (f<T,—TU# Jtiw. OC. —ftUtinanwuM* 
>■ Vi .Vn. J'.nam — KLft—' Mt&l 
.J^TUt t# a# -»uv rr:. “th-Tl# »*>«» "■—ftTT 

T* Ctta — Eh — ES — rtr— 5T A—&XF—0ft 
—1—FT©—TOT 
hi r #rw» —!>•!■:•. Uiuwt.—£?-* 

*rrug Hi f 5Urr-M —-*-T ( ■ r »s''jV} ?** Ur.r.^ J - jr. *T’li» 

M'vJbw ?7 'rfvrl#n. 

Hi L^y-,1 ' A !,—— 
'■T Ks* \ prfo> «s#^ vrf 

■*>vwr y it. tu# v —ftvr i 

%t»« Hi H#r >: «r — 7 l*V i 

■Vjsar hi -.«r 2 *dsury A.—©r. A ttit#r, £*tx Tiur Timiiev 
■-t# "f .# •■»»» -y ?U-iiiacxs# 

*■' «c. T i ^utaaw r in»M - i# IP u—in — ft ]Li" tiont# 
Ti ,'jvwu , Gwo« Hi 11 # "® wrt^ 

Vn^ Hi aEe^ —Jimuu Iwrwimj—ftftft 

—£ ^taj TUiitj-v —5'ftft—ftftft 

Vjwt hi jE-etier 2«r.t *i.—,'u ?' ft« .-«•.—Al» 

V.asr Ti 3*7 Im'j'jwraavr Wj»rn»s« <C —T 'jkt» 
Ti Uuc Jrutpitfewiiuaii W .or .ns*. —<j© 

S*B«p Ti J'»- -in#—W; W.-tTTft ■!«» fttn.rU'?- F^n- 

iSs# Tk 

hi# £i!*ms<r -^Htr—T Ci»pfi kB.—POT II— 

TftP 

rf5"aBHMr Srw TU# :■—SSKL 

T- • i# ft »r.:aur "-i-r —ftftft—Si.' 

"S>--_» v •*.# .< rvw *>r «v.. 4 - - ,i 

?■#*'!«.- AJk 

5u«* hi tJ# lt»:<# Tow#—ft A HWfenr.ir.— a3> 

Srajf t* • i# it*. —ft ? dvr-# —Fr.SfS ] ^ 

trier *r ftW U'fai TU# —AE> v w/.-ta >—SAT. 
hi ra# Cpacm TU# — * nm.—Eaft 
Vjtaf t# tU# T i*#».—» «. W vC .Inr—AD 
%rjur »» ftnjy. Ta#.— Vtr> ft. 5. T iraur —'.ftT 
3 n maf *ri,* fitatnrt. A.—AfttfcwCMnm.—AA 
.H'nar •Utfcwui * S^sm# A.— r * ! ftrv?U—ftftU 
■ft r^f »' - -jf.ru; i ft iuj.i—-^ir ft'.-v-n Ajrof.Ui "*'ja 

ft* ft a -.a# ftvr-'.i»r 

Vrjr THwim Jt’iai#—A. W ftefljtv —2J- if; 

Shese B-.r;«jvw tris». A.—M. ft ft.—TftT 
.*>'ur A v i mrf M:*rr*ri ixui k <i ; — 7 -..aaaa 
&BJIV 

-Vj tf. - The ■ -. 1 # »n# # w.nunm# ta>t vmi 7 ’ — 

Trftft i 

Wnatm m ■»#»<' n -..i# ftrtr Du.-ta "K tr'. cbc — 
C ■ i i I 'Bb Vmt if IUm ii w i t —©ft—WEFT 
hre^e. WrUMteak far * T6-«nn Aiar "TU# ftirvu- *€ 

Lot# ~ iff i—7main# fttndi# 

ftnar ' h B#if niTS(» i#r in.i ■ v#r mv ' —Fftft 

3rja? r nvft n.-. Swwr. —W ; C„ laam.ia. —AA 


ftaft; *# 


if nt* hwmai ?V»—ft,.*-. -. C « 

f.--asi««—ft Jf: —AA 

ft-.Hyt CUtit’Mt if nutt —L#«r. SJr 

QrMT.ilt if J4fv#j fV»vw>!i*s M: —ftjfcft—2 

—FJiii 

CWs«»wi—<#. —#>£ 

Sn«sp if ti# t' W fm ai * .>—?’!!?“ 

Iaw#« —Jf.J* ’. 
ftitww*.—3S*ft I 
ft-'##t —J 

—Jf.itft I 
^ J 

V.aass' iML—7 ftaant#—A A 

ami ftvnia —Jfir JTiah» ftuaaey 

■;«• Atwhmuh *r.v-: Ui##. 

‘■Mia Zdtxkmh —Ariir.jtroti. 7T'«ii«ner 
WW? « W..—A A 
.WAhkhi** if fieum TV#—3fft 
Va#< ii 1r# ftiiiur. ■*—A A 
7* r# #m if K-r w g pi*# ,.—TA 
■'.■ »-%#r. fti-r: • : to^. A* - —T a 
S'-.air.» • t» Why 111: *—7 B#r.-n#rr Aot 

Wawnftf Afcy-iawit 

*ftawp fc -.ia -fti-.Tw# Lwnfar ‘—AiStsc Aow.it. tue 

C-llttlfep 

friia ft!i«?r,»«r. if is# Talk '—Snipfeoil A. irv>K*. 
■** fti#om if iAft Toth. 

V.r.irt kir/ ftykna •• TV# .Wniiv Cf.##r. '—C I«Ti#y 

■-. ;i i^ TV* 16*7 ^fOKKC. 

ik'jBP U.ir. 1 . 'TU*» ftmeoao.'—Alfijet T#KC3<*nt A«r 

ft-a>ts»»K TV# 

krtva ’TV# ftfawoutf. <Wh #7 '—Cr EU«t. Bm 
kr.’Mv.tte. ( Vrj>**7 Ti# 

V*b t. >aiT M#r.t» i«.« ft—Artlttar $ TUnuei. 

Aia# itkftw.—Wftft 4 

l6.tr-".? «*«• iii> utosr TU# '—FGT 2 

'• -# : • .-•» ■■■’. v .--• '■ ... It r. > it-.-— _ 

A Aft 

•■.-.■ ftVft—FEP—Gft—CT 5 — 

3fKft—1/.—TA—WO* TISF 

V.n«* .« *>«#t —W C. iSicooRHj#.—Eft 
V.r.«t - la# '■ .iriiii. thurrm^am Hmvirrtr —1* € 
i'ir.«? •• w no«r --.r.a: TU#—Sltucar L Tmool— 
*" .< T 

S’-.OSP if ftr TU#—J LyVy i*w> A iraamnir one 

'.IKH5IWW 

Sr oar? if 2 j#i-vbioc i#_ — Jh« - TU# P..bth.t Sir 

■" r. —TftfT: ** ftasrutr—•>* 

•v.atri if ft27#n#B## —W ftiaat# 

AU. ktiadiixwer 
AhokuTU# 

■ • -'jidowunoj m “V.r.«? if £au#n«r.«# 

TU*#r TU#. 

ktiuo? if Paar,rti»n«ft —W ftWtat S«b 
T hiaua# ? wmt wc TUe. 
fjwHlr ftifio*. A. 
fttnr’aa- .-»er. TU# 

Bin? TUurario^r.. 

Aosaar. #151. 

fanmnSwetiMk i» "Ik,nap if im.a.i«i»ne#. ‘ 
la.r.1.-. TU#. 

T aawpnn’ ~, aac. 

Ltrm# ft-amt ftsgi. TU#. 

Tfiato, 

Siirap-s Sntwf. 

■On AatKla#r*s knmw 

1 UkisU#!ih^. TU#. _ 

•*■• '.-.j? if -B-itiTi. — U»ar. r.a#\,‘'in — 1 . _0 *• laaw —Filr 

••»• »•• V •■ ■■*•’ r.tv ; • ..ham. t — — r ' . — 

OKU - - _ 

m — WCLr— WCU 2 — YBF 

i cx> •■' T'ai#“ m# »r,r. —ftS5 

-#■ v 7 ■ •»• . v ., .i. •.n-.:>T.-.#— —S' .—7 ' — 

r M 2—?E* 

S#i«l Times TUime Lii#. iC.— ft’JTl 

Tan# —3V7T—Fft—Vft 

Bma i TUn## F vwf Wam#-h.i- •■—' ,.—B 5TL—>~ 

TSeusift-Utt Ibauaifts aian Isaitiwwwi?#.'—IXT 

T'.ai#p Sin '.•-Twr x .WAr—.ita# —nJTL 

T — aar aa JKar^iaaR ■—-Fft 
S#i»c T’.aiRB #i»##E.. Lnmnc Inr ftitae. 

T: .-. my" y : -.r Bsm# —•'Tfc—'Uft—xT-T 
"t-.tujg «f la# ftllvmin —l#i*t ffiaati J#»> Smsa? aac 
TUntnw if lii# Fur *>#711 

ii.tura if 13# ''Ucr.—€ S Siy newm.—E3S 2 

Sap off itfar Siwfce WraBdwa. BdLjk. 

■ots-ul —i#aa irupanw — f VH'.l. 

7 - •.,» -#•> •• - — %■■:*■■; 7 r. .’: —■■-a 

- 1 . 2 - - 11 # ’ - ■ .'ill" V’ .#- 

' a 1 ■.■•■: -.t v 1 --— 

-■-.ruap if -ta# ^ lisas if ftiriH i*0 . — xacikb- 

—..'#113: jaoRu-'f —ft" 7 ' C 


•-o? 









Songs 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Songs of the Winter Days.—G: Macdonald. See Song 
of Winter Days. 

Songs without Sense, Sels. fr. —Fs. Bret Harte.— 
NA 

Personified Sentimental, The. (I.)—NA 
Swiss Air. (III.)—NA 

Songs without Words.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Song’s Worth, A.—Susan M. Spalding.—AA 
Song-sparrow, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—SN 
Song-sparrow, The.—Edward W. Thomson.—TCV 
Song-sparrow, The.—H: van Dyke.—SN 
Songsters, The.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Songstress, The.—Jos. Skipsey.—VS 
Sonnet: “I saw her once, once only, long ago.”— 
Anon.—FLS 

Sonnet: ‘‘In the desert of the Holy Land I strayed.” 
—Anon.—HBP 

Sonnet (C.): ‘‘When this young land.” (XXIII.)— 
T: B. Aldrich. 

(Poets, The.)—TAS 

Sonnet: ‘‘Ah, sweet Content.”—Barnabe Barnes.— 
ELP 

Sonnet: ‘‘The honey-bee that wanders all day long.” 
—Anne C. L. Botta.—CS 1 
(Hidden Sweets.)—POS 

Sonnet: ‘‘Fra bank to bank,” etc.—Mark A. Boyd. 
See Sonet: ‘‘Fra,” etc. 

Sonnet: “Sion lies waste, and Thy Jerusalem.”— 
Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. See Caelica. 
Sonnet: “Fairest, when bv the rules of palmistry.”— 
W: Browne.—WEP 2 
Sonnet, The.—E: B. Brownlow.—TCV 
Sonnet: “Long time a child, and still a child, when 
years.” (Sonnet IX.) 1 —Hartley Coleridge.— 
WEP 4 

Sonnet: “As when far off the warbled strains are 
heard.” (Sonnets on Eminent Characters, IV.: 
Lafayette—C.)—S: T. Coleridge.—WEP 4 
Sonnet: “A low full sweep of instrumental string.” 
(Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 

Sonnet: “Happy are they who kiss thee.” (C.) —Au¬ 
brey De Vere. 

(Happy are they who Kiss Thee.)—B1L 
Sonnet : “Sad is our youth,” etc.—Aubrey T: De Vere. 
—HBP 

(Human Life.)—HDL—VA 
(Sad and Sweet.)—CEL 
(Sad is our Youth.)—A VP—FEP 
(“Sad is our youth, for it is ever going.”)—BNL 
(“Sweet is our youth”— set.) —HSS 3 
Sonnet: “Death, be not proud,” etc. (Holy Sonnets, 
X.)—J: Donne.—ELP 
(Death.)—OB—YBF 

Sonnet : “Since there’s no help,” etc.—Michael Dray¬ 
ton. See Since there’s no HelD. 

Sonnet: “A good that never satisfies,” etc. (Flowers 
of Sion, II.)—W: Drummond.—HBP 
(“Good that never satisfies the mind, A.”)—FEP 
(Human Frailty.)—LLC 
• (Illusions.)—CEL 

Sonnet: “Alexis, here she stay’d,” etc.—W: Drum¬ 
mond.—WEP 2 

(“Alexis, here she stay’d.”)—FEP 
(Spring Bereaved, III.)—OB 
Sonnet (C.): “ Dear chorister.” etc. — W: Drummond. 

See Sonnet:—To the Nightingale. 

Sonnet: “I know that all beneath the moon decays.” 
—W: Drummond.—HBP 

(" I know that all beneath the moon decavs.”)— 
FEP 

Sonnet: “If crost with all mishaps,” etc.—W: Drum¬ 
mond.—WEP 2 

Sonnet: “In my first years,” etc.—W: Drummond.— 
WEP 2 

Sonnet: “Of mortal glory, O soon darkened ray!”— 
W: Drummond.—HBP 

Sonnet: “Then is she gone,” etc.—W: Drummond.— 
WEP 2 

Sonnet: “Thou window, once which served,” etc.—W: 
Drummond.—WEP 2 

Sonnet: “Triumphing chariots,” etc. (Urania, I.— C .) 
—W: Drummond.—HBP 
(Change.)—LLC 

Sonnet, The.—R: W. Gilder.—AA—TAV 
Sonnet: “Die down,” etc.—D: Gray.—HBP 
(Die Down, O Dismal Day.)—BNL 
Sonnet (C.): “Cupid abroad was ’lated,” etc.—Rob’t 
Greene. 

(“Cupid abroad was dated in the night.”)—OEL 
(Cupid’s Ingratitude.)—ES 
Sonnet, The.—J: F. Herbin.—TCV 
Sonnet: “Were its name,” etc.—Leigh Hunt.—MBB 
(His Poets.)—LBB 


Sonnet: "After dark vapours,” etc.—J: Keats. 

(Sonnet Written in January, 1817.)—WEP 4 
Sonnet: “When I have fears that I may cease to be.” 
(C.) —J: Keats. 

(Fear of Death, The.)—YBF 
(Sonnet Written in January, 1818.)—WEP 4 
(Terror of Death, The.)—PGT 1 
(“When I have fears that I may cease to be.”)— 
OB 

Sonnet: “ Give me that growth,” etc. (Son. VII.-* 
<ibr.) —Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 
Sonnet: “I cannot think that thou, ” etc. (Son. X.) 
—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 

Sonnet: “I thought our love at full,” etc. (Sou. 

XXVII.)—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 
Sonnet: “My loVe, I have no fear,” etc. (Son. IX.) 
—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 

(“ With my [thy—C.] love this knowledge too was 
given ”— br. set.) FTA 

Sonnet: “Our love is not a fading,” etc. (Son. XXV.) 
—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 

Sonnet: “As when, O lady mine,” etc. ( Sel .)— 
Michelangelo ( tr. by Mrs. H: Roseoe).—BNL 
Sonnet: “If it be true,” etc.—Michelangelo (tr. by 
J. E. Taylor).—BIL—HBP 
(“If it be true that any beauteous thing.”)—BNL 
Sonnet: “The prayers I make will then be sweet in¬ 
deed.”—Michelangelo (tr. by S: Wordsworth). 
—HBP 

Sonnet: “Yes, hope may with my strong desire keep 
pace.”—Michelangelo (tr. by W: Wordsworth). 
HBP 

Sonnet, A: “Dear, if you love me, hold me most your 
friend.”—Alice D. Miller.—AA 
Sonnet: “If in the field,” etc. (Sonnet, imitated from 
the Italian of Gaetana Passerini—C.)—Jas. 
Montgomery.—AD „ 

Sonnet: “How orient is thy beauty,” etc.—Fs. 
Quarles.—HBP 

Sonnet: “Nor mvrrh, nor cassia,” etc.—Fs. Quarles. 
—HBP 

Sonnet: “Who ever smelt the breath,” etc.—Fs. 
Quarles.—HBP 

Sonnet: “O my heart’s heart.”—Christina G. Rossetti. 
See Monna Innominata. 

Sonnet: “Trust me, I have not earned.”—Christina G. 

Rossetti. See Monna Innominata. 

Sonnet. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Sonnet: "Because I oft in Dark Abstracted Guise.”— 
Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sonnet: “Come, Sleepe,” etc.—Sir Philip Sidney. 
See Astrophel and Stella. 

Sonnet: “In martial sports I had my cunning tried.” 
—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Sonnet: “O happie Thames,” etc.—Sir Philip Sidney. 
See Astrophel and Stella. 

Sonnet: “With how sad steps,” etc.—Sir Philip Sid¬ 
ney. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Sonnet: “Fayre is my love,” etc.—Edmund Spenser. 

See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Fresh Spring, the herald of love’s mighty 
king.”—Edmund Spenser. See Amoretti and 
Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Joy of my life.” etc.—Edmund Spenser. 

See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Lackvng my love,” etc.—Edmund Spenser. 

See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Like [or Lyke] as a ship,” etc.—Edmund 
Spenser. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 
Sonnet: “Men call you fair.” etc.— Edmund Spenser. 

See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “More than most fair.” etc.—Edmund Spen¬ 
ser. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet:. “Most glorious Lord of life,” etc.—Edmund 
Spenser. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 
Sonnet: “Sweet smile, the daughter,” etc.— Edmund 
Spenser. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 
Sonnet: “The doubt which ye misdeem,” etc.—Ed¬ 
mund Spenser. See Amoretti and Epitha¬ 
lamion. 

Sonnet: “Thrise happie she,” etc.—Edmund Spenser. 

See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet : “What guvle is this,” etc.—Edmund Spenser. 

See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet, A: “Two voices are there; one is of the deep.” 
—Jas. K. Stephen.—VA 

Sonnet (C): “Of thee, kind boy, I ask no red and 
white.” — Sir J: Suckling. 

(Truth in Love.)—WEP 2 

Sonnet: “There shines the morning star!”—W. Stevens 
—CG 3 


310 




TITLE INDEX 


Sonnet 


Sonnet: “Were I as base,” etc.—J. Sylvester.— 
WEP 1 

(Love’s Omnipresence.) — FEP — FTA — OH 
POT 1 — YBF 
(Ubique.)—OB 

(“Were I as base as is the lowly plain.”) - BNL 
Sonnet, The.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 
Sonnet: “The crimson moon uprising,” etc.—E: 

Hovel, Lord Thurlow.—HBP 
Sonnet: “The nightingale is mute,” etc.—E: Hovel, 
Lord Thurlow.—HBP 

Sonnet: “’Tis much immortal beauty,” etc.—E: 
Hovel, Lord Thurlow.—HBP 
(Beauty.)—BNL—YBF 

Sonnet: “Who best can paint th’ enamelled robe of 
spring.”—E: Hovel, Lord Thurlow.—HBP 
Sonnet: “All beautiful things bring sadness.”—R: C. 
Trench.—VA 

Sonnet, A: “Take all of me,—I am thine own, heart, 
soul.”—Amelie Troubetzkoy.—AA 
Sonnet: “What has this bugbear death that’s worth 
our care?”;—W: Walsh. See Sonnet: Death. 
Sonnet: “Mysterious night! when our first parent 
knew.”—J. Blanco White. ( Incl. in Day Con¬ 
ceals, by J. P. Nichol.)—SS 

Sonnet: “If thy sad heart, pining for human love.”— 
Sarah H. Whitman.—AA 

Sonnet: “Oft since thine earthly eyes have closed on 
mine.”—Sarah H. Whitman.—AA 
Sonnet: “On our lone pathway bloomed no earthly 
hopes.”—Sarah H. Whitman.—AA 
Sonnet: “When first I looked into thy glorious eyes.” 
( Fr. Sonnets on Edgar Allan Poe. )—Sarah H. 
Whitman.—A A 
(To Edgar A. Poe.)—EDY 
Sonnet: “Alas, what boots the long,” etc. (Poems 
Dedicated to National Independence and 
Liberty, Pt. II., 12.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
(What Boots the Quest?)—LLC 
Sonnet: “It is not to be thought of,” etc. (Poems 
Dedicated to National Independence and 
Liberty, Pt. I., 16.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
(Destiny.)—LH 

(Faith and Freedom— br. sel.) —GN 
Sonnet, The: “Nuns fret not,” etc. (Misc. Sonnets, 
Pt. I., 1.)—W: Wordsworth.—OB (1.) 

(Gains of Restraint, The.)—WEP 4 
Sonnet, The: “Scorn not the sonnet,” etc. (Misc. 
Sonnets, Pt. II., 1.) —W: Wordsworth.—BNL 
—OB (II.)—YBF 
(Scorn not the Sonnet.)—FEP 
Sonnet: “The world is too much with us.” etc. (Poems 
of the Imagination, Misc. Sonnets, Pt. I., 33.) 
—W : Wordsworth.—FEP 
(We’re out of Tune.)—LLC 
< World. The.)—OB 

(World is too much with us, The.)—BNL—GP — 
HBP HBR PYO—SN—YBF 
(“World is too much with us: late and soon, The.”) 
—BSP—PGT 1 

(World’s Ravages, The.)—WEP 4 
Sonnet: Complaint of a Lover Rebuked.—H : Howard, 
Earl of Surrey.—ELP 

Sonnet. Composed on a Journey Homeward.—S: T. 
Coleridge.—WEP 4 

Sonnet Composed upon Westminster Bridget, Lon¬ 
don, 1802],—W: Wordsworth.—BNL—FEP— 
MBL 

(Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 
1802—C.)—WEP 4 

(“Earth has not anything to show more fair.”)— 
HBR 

(Morning in London.)—HBP—OS 3 
(Upon Westminster Bridget, Sept. 3, 1802]).—OB 
—PGT 1—YBF 

(Westminster Bridge.)—LLC—WR 1 
Sonnet Composed while the Author was Engaged in 
Writing a Tract, Occasioned by the Conven¬ 
tion of Cintra. (C.)—W: Wordsworth. 
(Convention of Cintra.)—EDY 
Sonnet: Czar Alexander the Second. (C.)—Dante G. 
Rossetti. 

(Alexander II.)—EDY 
Sonnet: Death. (C.)—W: Walsh. 

(Sonnet: “What has this bugbear.”)—WEP 3 
Sonnet: Description of Spring.—H: Howard, Earl of 
Surrey.—ELP 

(Description of Spring.)—FEP—HBP—LC—OB— 
PHS—WEP 1 

Sonnet: Eternal Love.—Philip Sidney. See Astro- 
phel and Stella. 

Sonnet Found by Mrs. Alexander Ireland.—Leigh 
Hunt.—MBB 


Sonnet Found in a Deserted Mad House.—Anon.—NA 
Sonnet from “Cynthia.”—R: Barnfield. See Cynthia. 
Sonnet from Flowers of Sion.—W: Drummond. See 
Sonnet: Posting Time. 

Sonnet from Petrarch.—T: W. Higginson.—OH 
Sonnet: Geraldine.—H: Howard, Earl of Surrey.— 
ELP 

(Description and Praise of his Love, Geraldine.)— 
CEL 

Sonnet: Heart-exchange.—Philip Sidney. Ste Ar¬ 
cadia, The. 

Sonnet, Imitated from the Italian of Oaetana Pas- 
serini. (C.)—Jas. Montgomery. See Sonnet: 
“If in the field,” etc. 

Sonnet jn a Garden.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
Sonnet in Dialogue, A.—Austin Dobson.—HBR 
Sonnet: Inspiration.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

Sonnet: London, 1802.—W: Wordsworth.—HBP 
(England.)—GP 
(Ideal.)—LH 

(London, 1802—C'.)—PGT 1 (II.)—YBF (II.) 
(Milton.)—LLC—WEP 4 

(“Milton! thou sbouldst be living at this hour”— 
abr. )—GG 

(To Milton.)—BNL—CEL—EPs—FEP 
Sonnet: Love is Enough.—Philip Sidney. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

Sonnet Made on Isabella Markham, when I First 
Thought her Fair, etc. (C.)—Sir J: Haryng- 
ton. 

(Heart of Stone, A.)—ES 
(Lines on Isabella Markham.)—BNL—FEP 
Sonnet: Majuba Hill.—J: K. Ingram.—TIP 
Sonnet on Chillon.—Lord Byron. See Prisoner of 
Chillon, The. 

Sonnet; On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer.— 
J: Keats.—OS 3 . 

(On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer—C.)— 
BFY — BNL {hr. sel.) — BPB — BSP — CEL 
— EPs— FEP — GN — HBP — LLC — OB— 
PGT 1—WEP 4—YBF 
(To the Adventurous.)—LH 
Sonnet: On his Blindness.—J: Milton.—ELP—EPs 
(Blindness.)—GP 

(On his Blindness—C.)—BNL—CEL—EDY—FEP 
—GN—HBP—HDL—LH—LLC—OB—OS 3 
—PGT 1—PHS—WEP 2—WR 1—YBF 
Sonnet on the Death of Mr. Richard West.—T: Gray. 
—WEP 3 

Sonnet: On the Late Massacre in Piedmont.— J: 
Milton.—ELP—EPs 
(Late Massacre in Piedmont, The.)—LH 
(On the Late Massacre in Piedmont—C.)— EDY— 
FEP—HBP—PGT 1—WEP 2—YBF 
Sonnet—One Day, Sel. fr. ("There is no sorrow.”)— 
Marg. J. Preston.—GG 

Sonnet.—Ozymandias. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley. 

(Ozymandias [of Egypt].)—BNL—FEP—LLC— 
OS 3—PGT 1—YBF 

Sonnet: Philomela.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Sidera. 
Sonnet: Posting Time.—W: Drummond.—ELP 
(No Trust in Time.)—FEP 
(Sonnet from “ Flowers of Sion.”)-—WEP 2 
Sonnet Prefixed to Sidney’s Apology for Poetry, 1595. 
—H: Constable.—WEP 1 
(On the Death of Sir Philip Sidney.)—OB 
Sonnet: Repent, Repent!—W: Drummond. See Saint 
John the Baptist. 

Sonnet Sequence. A. (Pts. I. and II.)—G: Mac¬ 
donald:—HDL 

Sonnet : Spring.—W: Drummond. See Spring Be¬ 
reaved, II. 

Sonnet: Suggested by Mr. Watts’ Picture of Love and 
Death.—Blanche E. Fitzroy, Lady Lindsay.— 
VA 

Sonnet: Sweet Bird. (In Flowers of Sion.)—W': 
Drummond.—ELP 

(To a [or the] Nightingale.)—BNL—FEP—WEP 2 
(To the Redbreast.)—HBP 
Sonnet: The Crucifixion. (C.)—Jas. Montgomery. 
(Crucifixion, The.)—PS 

Sonnet: To a Bird that Haunted the Waters of 
Laaken in the Winter.—E: Hovel, Lord Thur¬ 
low.—HBP 

(To a Bird that Haunted, etc.)—BNL—FEP 
Sonnet to a Clam (To a Clam— C.). —J: G. Saxe.— 
HPE 

Sonnet to a Monkey.—Marjorie Fleming.—BVC 
Sonnet: to Cyriac Skinner.—J : Milton.—HBP 
(On his own Blindness.) BNL—YBF 
(To Cyriack Skinner—C.)—FEP 
Sonnet to Delia.—S: Daniel. See Sonnets to Delia. 


311 





Sonnet 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATION6 


Sonnet to Duty. ( C.) —T: W. Higginson. 

(To Duty.)—-AA 

Sonnet to his Friend Maister R. L.—R: Barnfield.— 
WEP 1 

Sonnet to my Mother. (C.)—H: Kirke White. 

(To my Mother.)—PC 
Sonnet to Night.—Jos. B. White.—POS 
(Night.)—BNL—PYO 

(Night and Morning.)—BSP—EPs—GP—SN 
(To Night.)—FEP—HBP—OS 3—YBF 
Sonnet: To Sir Henry Vane. (To Sir Henry Vane, 
the Younger— C.) —J: Milton.—EPs 
Sonnet to Sir W. Alexander.—W: Drummond.—WEP 2 
Sonnet to Sir W. Alexander. (To Sir Wiliiam Alexander, 
with the Author’s Epitaph— C. — appended to 
The Cypresse Grove.)—W: Drummond.—ELP 
—WEP 2 

Sonnet to Solitude. (C.) —J: Keats. 

(Solitude.)—LLC 

Sonnet: To the Hudson.—G: S. Heilman.—CG 3 
(Hudson, The.)—AA 

Sonnet: To the Lady L. S. (Ideas, IV.)—Michael 
Drayton.—ELP 

Sonnet: To the Lord General Cromwell.—J: Milton.— 
HBP 

(To the Lord General.)—LH 

(To the Lord General Cromwell[, on the Proposals 
of Certain Ministers, etc.—C'.].)—BNL—EHT 
—FEP—OS 3—WEP 2—YBF 
Sonnet to the Moon, A.—C: Best.—WEP 1 
Sonnet: To the Moon.—Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

Sonnet: To the Nightingale. (Sonnet — C.) — W: 

Drummond.—ELP 
(To the Nightingale.) FEP 
Sonnet to the Nightingale. (C.) J: Milton.—ELP 
(To the Nightingale.)—BNL ( br.sel .)—FEP—HBP 
YBF 

Sonnet: To the Redbreast.—J:Bampfylde. FEP 
Sonnet: To the River Ankor. (Ideas, LIII.—Another 
to the River Ankor—C.)—Michael Drayton.— 
ELP 

Sonnet. To Toussaint L’Ouverture.—W: Words¬ 
worth.—HBP 

(To Toussaint L’Ouverture— C.) —BNL—EDY 
(Toussaint L’Ouverture.)—SO—WR 1 
Sonnet—Written after Seeing Windsor Castle.—T: 
W arton.—FEP 

Sonnet Written during his Residence in College.—C: 
Wolfe—TIP 

Sonnet Written in a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s “Monas- 
ticon.”—T: Warton.—WEP 3 
(On a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s “Monasticon.”)— 
FEP 

Sonnet Written in January, 1817.—.1: Keats. See 
Sonnet: “After dark vapours,” etc. 

Sonnet Written in January, 1818.—J: Keats. See 
Sonnet: “When I have fears,” etc. 

Sonnet Written in Prison.—W: L. Garrison.—BNL 
(Free Mind, The.)—TAV 
(Freedom for the Mind.)—AA 
(Liberty.)—OS 2 

Sonnets, Sels. fr.- —W: Shakesneare. 

II.: “When forty winters,” etc.—-WEP 1 
XII.: “When I do count the clock.” etc.-—EPs— 
FEP—HBP—WEP 1 
(Approach of Age.)—BNL 
XVIII.: —FEP—HBP—OB (I.)—WEP 1 

(“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s dav?”)— 
OEL—YBF 

(To his Love.)—PGT 1—PHS 
XXL: “So is it not with me,” etc.—HBP 
XXIII.: “As an imperfect actor,” etc.—WEP 1 
XXV.: “Let those who are in favor,” etc. — 
BNL (sel.) —HBP 
XXVII.: “Weary with toil,” etc. 

(Lover’s Night Thoughts, The.)—FTA—OH 

XXIX. : “When, in disgrace with fortune,” etc.— 
ELP—FEP—HBP—OB (II.)—WEP 1 

(Amor Omnia Vincit.)—FTA—OH 

(Consolation, A.)—PGT 1—PHS 

(When in Disgrace )—BS 25—PYO—WR 23 

XXX. —ELP—FEP—HBP—OB (III.)—WEP 1 
(Friendship.)—TFY 

(Memory.)—PGT 1—YBF 

(“When to the sessions of sweet silent thought.”) 
—BNL 

XXXI. : “Thy bosom is endeared,” etc.—HBP— 
OB (IV.) 

XXXII.: “If thou survive,” etc.—WEP 1 
(Post Mortem.)—PGT 1—YBF 
XXXIII.: “Full manv a glorious morning,” etc.— 
ELP—EPs—FEP—HBP—SN—WEP 1 


Sonnets—Shakespeare ( continued ). 

XXXIV.: “Why didst thou promise,” etc.—HBP 
LIL: “So am I as the rich,” etc.—EPs—WEP 1 
LIII.: “What is your substance,” etc.—HBP— 
OB (V.) 

LIV.: “O [or Oh], how much more doth beauty,” 
etc.—EPs—FEP—HBP—OB (VI.)—WEP 1 
LV.: “Not marble nor the gilded monuments.”— 
FEP—HBP 

LVII.: “Being your slave,” etc.—OB (VII.) 
(Absence.)—-PGT 1 

LIX.: “If there be nothing new,” etc. 

(Spoils of Time, The— 3d son.) —FP 
LX.: “Like as the waves, etc.”—ELP—FEP 
(Revolutions.)—EPs—PGT 1—YBF 
(Spoils of Time, The—A th son.) —FP 
LXIV.: “When I have seen,” etc. 

(Spoils of Time, The— 3th son.) —FP 
(Time and Love, I.) —PGT 1 (I.) —PHS— 
YBF (I.) 

LXV.: “Since brass, nor stone,” etc. 

(Spoils of Time, The— 6th son.) —FP 
(Time and Love, II.)—PGT 1—YBF 
LXVI.: “Tired with all these,” etc.—ELP—FEP 
—WEP 1 

(World’s Way, The.)—PGT 1 
LXX.: “That thou art blamed,” etc.—HBP— 
WEP 1 

LXXI.: “No longer mourn for me,” etc.—ELP— 
FEP 

(Triumph of Death, The.)—PGT 1 
LXXIII.—ELP—FEP—OB (VIII.)—WEP 1 
(Quatuor Novissima.)—CEL 
(That Time of Year.)—YBF 
(“That time of year thou may’st in me behold.”) 
—OEL—PGT 1 

LXXV.: “So are you to my thoughts,” etc.—HBP 
LXXXVII.—HBP—OB (IX.) 

(Farewell! Thou art too Dear.)—BNL 
(“Farewell! Thou art too dear for my posses¬ 
sing.”)—PGT 1 

XC.: “Then hate me when thou wilt,” etc.— 
BNL (sel.) —OB (X.)—WEP 1 
XCIV.: “They that have power to hurt,” etc.— 
FEP—OB (XI.) 

(Life without Passion, The.)—PGT 1 
XCVI.: “Some say thy fault is youth,” etc.—HBP 
XCVIL—HBP—OB (Xll.)—WEP 1 

(“How like a winter hath my absence been.”)— 
PGT 1 

XCVIII.: “From you have I been absent,” etc.— 
EPs—HBP—OB (XIII.)—WEP 1 
(Absence.)—GP 
(Garden of Love, The.)—OH 
XCIX.: “The forward violet,” etc.—BNL—HBP 
C.: “Where art thou, muse,” etc. 

(Spoils of Time, The— 1st son.) —FP 
CII.: “My love is strengthen’d,” etc.—OB (XIV.) 
—WEP 1 

CIV.—ELP—FEP—OB (XV.)—WEP 1 
To me, Fair Friend.) EPs 

“To me, fair friend, you never can be old.”)— 
PGT 1 

CVL—ELP—FEP—HBP—OB (XVI.)—WEP 1 
(To his Love.)—PGT 1 (II.)—YBF 
(“When in the chronicle of wasted time.”)— 
BNL—OEL 

CVII.: “Not mine own fears,” etc.—ELP—HBP 
—WEP 1 

(Good Omens.)—EPs 
CVIII.: “What’s in the brain,” etc. 

(Spoils of Time, The—2d son.)—FP 
C1X.: “O never say that I was false,” etc.—ELP 
—HBP—OB (XVII.) 

(Unchangeable, The.)—FTA—PGT 1 
CX.: “Alas, ’tis true I have gone here and there.” 
—WEP 1 

CXI.: “O, for my sake do you with Fortune 
chide.”—EPs—WEP 1 

CXVI. — BNL — ELP — EPs — FEP — HBP — 
OB (XVI1D—WEP 1 

(“Let me not to the marriage of true minds.”)— 
OEL 

(Love.)—LLC 

(True Love.) — BIL — FTA — GP—OH—PGT 1 
—PHS 

CXIX.: “What potions have I drunk,” etc.— 
WEP 1 

CXXVIII.: “How oft, when thou, my music.” 
etc.—EPs 
(My Music.)—OH 

CXXIX.: “The expense of spirit,” etc.—ELP— 
OB (XIX.) 


312 







TITLE INDEX 


Soul’s 


Sonnets—Shakespeare ( continued). 

CXXX.: “My mistress’ eyes,” etc. 

(Common Sense.)—EPs 

CXLVI.: “Poor soul, the centre of my sinful 
earth.”—ELP—FEP—OB (XX.) 

(Soul and Body.)—PGT 1—YBF 
CXLVIII.: “O me, what eyes hath Love,” etc. 
(Blind Love.)—PGT 1 

Sonnets from Astrophel and Stella.—Sir Philip Sidney. 
See Astrophel and Stella. 

Sonnets from the Poems.- -W : Drummond.—WEP 2 
Sonnets from the Portuguese, Sels. fr. —Eliz. B. 
Browning. 

I.—OB—VA—WEP 4 

(“I thought once how Theocritus,” etc.—PGT 2 

III. : “Unlike are we,” etc.—OB (II.) 

IV. : “Thou hast my calling,” etc.—VA—WEP 4 

V. : “I lift mv heavy heart,” etc.—VA 

VI. —B N L—FT A—OB (III.)—V A—W EP 4—YB F 
(Far and yet Near.)—-OH 

(“Go from me. Yet I feel that I shall stand.”) 
—PGT 2 

IX.: “Can it be right to give,” etc.—VA 
XII.: “Indeed this very love which is my boast.” 
—BNL 

XIV.:—BNL—FEP—HBP—OB (IV.)—YBF 
(“If thou must love me let it be for naught.”)— 
PGT 2 

(Love for Love’s Sake.)—OH 
XVIII.: “I never gave a lock of hair away.”— 
BNL—FEP—HBP—V A—YBF 
XX.: “Beloved, my Beloved, when I think.”—VA 
XVI.: “Say over again, and yet once over again.” 
—BNL—FEP—HBP 

XXII.: “When our two souls stand up,” etc.— 
OB (V.)—VA 

XXIII.: “Is it indeed so?” etc.—VA 
XXVI.: “I lived with visions,” etc.—VA 
XXVII.: “My own Beloved, who hast lifted me.” 
—WEP 4 

XXVIII.: “Mv letters! all dead paper,” etc.— 
BNL—FEP—WEP 4 
(Love Letters.)—YBF 
(Lover’s Letters, A.)—CEL 
(My Letters.)—BIL—FTA 
XXXlI.: “The first time that the sun,” etc.—BNL 
XXXV.:—FEP—HBP—VA 

(Ful[l]ness of Love.)—FTA—OH 
(“If I leave all for thee, wilt thou exchange.”)— 
GG—PGT 2 

XXXVIII.: “First time he kissed me,” etc.—BNL 
—FEP—HBP—VA 
(First, Second, Third.)—OH 
(Three Kisses.)—BIL—FTA—G? 

XXXIX.: “Because thou hast the power,” etc.— 
VA 

XLI.: “I thank all who have loved me, ’ etc.—VA 
XLIII.: “How do I love thee?” etc.—BNL—FEP 
—HBP—VA—WEP 4—YBF 
(How do I Love Thee?)—GP—TFY 
(Ways of Love, The.)—FTA—OH 
Sonnets in Shadow.—Arlo Bates.—BNL 
Sonnets on Edgar Allan Poe, Sel. fr. —Sarah H. Whit¬ 
man. See Sonnet: “When first I looked,” etc. 
Sonnets on Eminent Characters.—S: T. Coleridge. 

See Sonnet: “As when far off,” etc. 

Sonnets on the Seasons.—Hartley Coleridge. See: 
May. 1840. 

November. 

Sonnets to Delia, Sels. fr. —S: Daniel. 

Beauty, Time, and Love, I. (Sonnet VI.)—OB 
Beauty, Time, and Love, II. (XII.)—OB 
Beauty, Time, and Love, III. (XXXII.)—OB 
Beauty, Time, and Love, IV. (XXXVIII.)—OB 
Beauty, Time, and Love, V. (XLVII.)—OB 

(“Beauty, sweet love, is like the morning dew.”) 
—OEL 

(Sonnet to Delia.)—ELP 
Beauty, Time, and Love, VI. (XLVII I.)—OB 
Beauty, Time, and Love, VII. (LII.)—OB 
Care-charmer Sleep. (LI.)—ELP—YBF 

(“Care-charmer sleep, son of the sable night.”) 

—OEL—PGT 1 
(Sleep.)—FEP 
(Sonnet to Delia.)—WEP 1 
(To Delia.)—BNL 

Sonnets to George Sand.—Eliz. B. Browning. 

Desire, A.—BNL 
Recognition, A.—BNL 

Sonnet’s Voice, The.—Theodore W. Dunton.—VA 
Sons of the Nation.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Sons of the Widow, The. (Widow at Windsor, The— 
C .)—Rudyard Kipling.—WR 21 


Sons of Turann, The.—J: Todhunter.—TIP 
Son’s Wish, The.—Anon.—HR 
Soothsay.—Dante G. Rossetti.—WEP 4 
Sophomore, The.—Anon.—CG 1 

Sophomore’s Soliloquy, The. (Michigan University 
Mag.)— WRD 

Sophronia and Olindo.—Torquato Tasso. See Jerusa¬ 
lem Delivered. 

Sophy, The, Song fr. —Sir .1: Denham.—WEP 2 
Sorceress of Vain Delight, The, Sel. fr. (Panglory’s 
Wooing Song.)—Giles Fletcher.—FEP—HBP 
(Wooing.)—OB 

Sore Disappointment.—Th. Koehner (tr. by E. F. L. 
Gauss).—SR 6 

Sorra the Day.—Eva Best.—SR 7 
Sorrow. (Sel. fr. The Complaint of Rosamond.)—S 
Daniel.—KNE 

Sorrow.—Aubrey T. De Vere.—HDL—OB—TIP-—VA 
Sorrow.—Celia Thaxter.—HDL 
Sorrow.—-Katrina Trask.—AA 
Sorrow.—Chr. Wilster.—WR 2 
Sorrow and Joy.—R: H: Stoddard.—TAV 
Sorrow for Sin.—-Ann Taylor.—YBT 
Sorrow for the Dead.—Washington Irving. See Rural 
Funerals. 

Sorrow of Buddha, The.—Sir Edwin Arnold. See 
Light of Asia, The. 

Sorrow of Rohab, The.—Arlo Bates.—HBR 
Sorrow of the Sea, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Sorrowful Lamentation of Callaghan, Greally and Mul¬ 
len.—Anon.—TIP 

Sorrowful Sea-gull, The.—Anon.—WCL 
Sorrowful Tale of a Hired [or Servant] Girl.—J: Quill.— 
BeR—CS 11 

Sorrows Humanize Our Race.—Jean Ingelow.—HDL 
Sorrows of Werther], The].—W: M. Thackeray.—BNL 
—FEP—GP—HPE—NA—THP—VA 
Sorrow-song.—Sam Rowley.—CEL 
Sorting the Mail. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Sospetto d’Herode, Sel. fr. (Satan— -sel. fr. Bk. I.)— 
R: Crashaw.—EPs 
Sospiri di Roma, Sels. fr. —W: Sharp. 

Red Poppies in the Sabine Valleys near Rome.—VA 
Susurro.—VA 
White Peacock, The.—VA 
Sotto Voce.—Harold M. Bowman.—CG 2 
Soubrette’s Revenge, The.—H. S. Hewitt.—SR 6 
Soul, The.—Jos. Addison. See Cato. 

Soul, The.—Madison Cawein.—AA 
Soul, The.—R: H: Dana.—BNL 
Soul and Body.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—ELP (CXLVI—C.)—FEP—OB (XX.) 
Soul and Body.—Algernon C: Swinburne. See At- 
alanta in Calydon. 

Soul and Body.—S: Waddington.—VA 
Soul and Country.—Jas. C. Mangan.—VA 
Soul and Sense.—-Hannah P. Kimball.—AA 
Soul Compared to a River, The.—Sir J: Davies. See 
Nosce Teipsum. 

Soul Compared to a Virgin Wooed in Marriage, The.— 
Sir J: Davies. See Nosce Teipsum. 

Soul Culture.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Soul in Grass and Flowers, A.— Jas. R. Lowell. See 
Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 

Soul in the Body, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Soul of Adventure, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Soul of Lilith, The, Sel. fr. (Story of the Priest Phile¬ 
mon, The.)—Marie Corelli.—VSG 
Soul of Man, The.—Dora R. Goodale.—A A 
Soul of the Violin, The.—Marg. M. Merrill.—BS 22— 
HBR—PFP 

Soul of the World, The.—Ernest Crosby.—A A 
Soul Sculpture.—Anon.—LLC 
(Discipline.)—CS 23 
Soul Shadow.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 1 
Soul Stithy, The.—Jas. C. Woods.—VA 
Soul that Passed in the Night, A.—Howell L. Piner.— 
WR 23 

Soul unto Soul Glooms Darkling. (Fr. The Book of 
Day-dreams.)—C: L. Moore.—AA 
Soul, Wherefore Fret Thee?—Gertrude Bloede.—AA 
Soul-building, Br. sels. fr. —H: W. Beecher. 

“ Work proceeds without intermission, The.” GG 
“ You think that one hour buries another.”—GG 
Soul’s Answer, The. (Abide in me, and I in you: The 
Soul’s Answer— C .)—Harriet B. Stowe. — TAS 
Soul’s Beauty. ( C .—The House of Life, Sonnet 
LXXVII.)—Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
(Sibylla Palmifera.)—WEP 4 
Soul’s Cry, The.-—Ray Palmer.—BNL 
•‘Soul’s dark cottage, battered and decayed, The.”— 
Edmund Waller.—GG 


313 





Souls 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Soul’s Defiance, The.—Lavinia Stoddard.—AA—FEP 
—HBP 

Soul’s Errand, The.—Sir Walter Raleigh.—BNL— 
CEL—EPs 

(Lie, The—C.)—FEP—PHS—WEP 1 
Soul’s Home, The.—W: A. Muhlenberg.—TAS 
Soul’s Kiss, The.—Maud Thompson.—CG 2 
Souls, not Stations.—Anon.—BLP 
(As Pebbles in the Sea.)—HP 
(How a Man Should be Judged.)—CS 2 
Souls of Books, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—LBB— 
MBB 

Souls of Men why Will Ye Scatter. (SI. abr .)—Frd’k 
W. Faber.—HDL 
Sound Advice.—Anon.—FAS 
Sound Money.—Alice Washburn.—SR 13 
Sound the Reveille.—I. E. Jones.—CS 27 
Sound, Sound the Clarion. (Motto fr. Old Mortality, 
Ch. XXXIV.)—Walter Scott.—YBF 
(Answer.)—OB 

Sound the Loud Timbrel. (C.)—T: Moore.—OS 1 
(Miriam’s Song.)—BS 16—FEP 
Sounds.—H: D. Thoreau. See Walden. 

Sounds of Nature. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Sounds of the Sabbath Bells, The.—Anon.—FR 
Sour Grapes.—Anon.—KJ—PP—YFR 
Source of my Life.—Anna L. Waring.—HDL 
South.—Anon.—CP 

South and her Problems, The. (Sel .)—H: W. Grady. 
—NC—SC (ptly. diff.) 

(Future of the South, The— ptly. like SC.)—SSD 
(New South, The— ptly. like NC, etc.)—TMR 
(Scene on the Battlefield, A.)—PFP 
South Carolina.—Rob’t Y. Hayne. See On Mr. Foot’s 
Resolution, etc. 

South Carolina and Massachusetts, 1830.—Dan’l Web¬ 
ster. See Reply to Hayne, The. 

South Carolina and the Union.—Rob’t Y. Hayne. See 
On Mr. Foot’s Resolution, etc. 

South Carolina Bourbon, A.—Yates Snowden.—TAV 
South Carolina in the Revolution.—Rob’t Y. Hayne. 

See On Mr. Foot’s Resolution, etc. 

South during the Revolution, The.—Rob’t Y. Hayne. 

See On Mr. Foot’s Resolution, etc. 

South During the War of 1812, The.—Rob’t Hayne. 

See On Mr. Foot’s Resolution. 

South Fork.—Stockton Bates.-—CS 30 
Sout h in the Revolution.—Rob’t Y. Hayne. See On 
Mr. Foot’s Resolution. 

South Wind.—G: P. Lathrop.—AA 
South Wind, The.—H: W. Longfellow. See Song of 
Hiawatha, The. 

South Wind and the Sun, The.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
CR (si. abr .)—ItCR 
Southern Girl, A.—S: M. Peck.—AA 
Southern Negro, The.—H: W. Grady. See At the 
Boston Banquet. 

Southern Scene, A.—Anon.—MR 
Southern Snow-bird, The.—W: H. Hayne.—AA 
Southern Soldier, The.—H: W. Grady. See New 
South, The. 

Southland.—Lizzie Y. Case.—BS 5 
Souvenir, A.—Anon.—CS 37 

Souvenirs du Peuple (Popular Recollections of Bona¬ 
parte).—Pierre J. de Bdranger (tr. by Fs. 
Mahony).—BNL—EDY 

Sovereign Moments.—Matthew R. Knight.—TCV 
Sovereigns, The.—Lloyd Mifflin.—AA 
Sovereignty of the People, The.—E: J: Phelps.—TMD 
Sovereignty of the United States, The.—Anon.—CP 
“Sow, and look onward, upward.” (Household 
Words .)—HSS 3 
Sower, The.—Anon.—YBT 

Sower, The. (Fr. The New Day.)—R: W. Gilder.— 
TAS 

Sower, The.—Jas. Montgomery.—FHS (si. abr.) 

(Field of the World, The—C.)—HBP 
Sower, The.—Antoinette V. H. Wakeman.—SR 9 
Sower and his Seed, The.—W. E. H. Lecky.—TIP 
Sowers, The.—Anon.—CS 37 
Sower’s Song, The.—T: Carlyle.—V’A 
Sowing.—Adelaide A. Procter. See Sowing and Reap- 
ing. _ . 

Sowing and Harvesting.—Emily S. Oakey.—CS 7 (si. 
abr .)—SM 

Sowing and Reaping. (Nat’l Preceptor.) — LLC (si. 
abr.) 

(Might Makes Right.)—BLP 
Sowing and Reaping.—Adelaide Procter.—HSS 3— 

sss 

(Sowing.)—LLC 

“ ’Specially Jim.”—Bessie Morgan.—AWH—BS 18— 
CRR —HBR — HP —SDR —TAV —WR 15 


Spacious Firmament on High, The.—Jos. Addison. 
See Spectator, The. 

Spaewife, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—VA 
Spain’s Hour of Doom.—Albert R. Haven.—EDY— 
PAPm 

Spain’s Last Armada.—Wallace Rice.—BAB—EDY— 
HBR 

Spaniard Answered, The.—R. C. Rogers.—PAPm 
Spaniards in Peru, The.—Kotzebue (tr. by R: B. Sheri¬ 
dan). See Pizarro. 

Spanish American War, The.—J: P. Chidwick.—MRS 
Spanish Armada, The.—T: B. Macaulay.—BS 2— 
CGd 

(Armada, The—C.)—A VP—BPB—CEL— EDY— 
EHT—GN—HB—WR 1 (si. abr.) 

Spanish Curate, The, Sel. fr. (Serenade— fr. ActlL, 
Sc. V.)—J: Fletcher.—ES 
(Speak, Love!)—HBP 
Spanish Gypsy, The, Sets. fr. —G: Eliot. 

Dark, The. (Song fr. Bk. I.)—VA 
Day is Dying. (Song fr. Bk. I.)—BNL—GP 
Hermit, The. (Song fr. Bk. II.)—OS 2 
I am Lonely. (Song fr. Bk. II.)—GN 
Scene from “The Spanish Gypsy.” (Dial. fr. Bk. 
I.)—MPD 

Song of the Zincali. (Song fr. Bk. III.)—VA 
Spanish Gypsy, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. I.)—DR 
Spring Song. (Song fr. Bk. I. abr.) —PoR 
Spanish Lady’s Love, The. (In Percy’s Reliques.)— 
Anon—CGd—HBP 

Spanish Mother, The.—Sir Fs. H. Doyle.—NPS — 
PFP (si. abr. )—PR—VSG—YP 
Spanish Point.—Sir Aubrey De Yere.—TIP 
Spanish Student, The, Sels. fr. —H: W. Longfellow. 
Serenade. (Fr. Act I., Sc. 3.)—AA—ASL—LC— 
PYO 

Spanish Student, The, Sel. fr. (Sel. fr. I., 3.)— 
BIL 

Spanish Valet and the Waiting Maid, The. (Duologue 
fr. “The Wonder.”)—Anon.—BC 

Spare the Trees.—Madame -Michelet.—AD 

Spare the Youth.—Letitia W. Brosius.—WR 18 
Sparkling and Bright.—C: F. Hoffman.—AA—ASL— 
HBP—TAV 

Sparkling Bowl, The.—J: Pierpont.—PP—YFR 
Sparrow Must Go, The.—J: P. St. John.—TS 
Sparrows, The.—Anon.—POS 
Sparrows, The, Sel. fr. —W: Kirby.—TCV 
Sparrows, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Sparrows.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—PEO 
Sparrow’s Nest, The.—Mary Howitt.—NV 
Spartacus and Jovius.—Rob’t M. (7) Bird.—PS 
Spartacus to the Gladiators [at Capua],—Elijah Kel¬ 
logg.—BS 1—FTR — LLC — OM — OS 3 — 
PPS—PS—SC—SE (br. sel.) —SO—SS—WRD 
(SI. abr. )—CS 1—KNE—WCLG 2 
Spartacus to the Roman Envoys [in Etruria],—Epes 
Sargent.—CS 2—LLC—OM—PS—SC—SS 
Spartan Boy, The.—Mary Lamb.—PC 
Spartans and the Pilgrims, The.—Rufus Choate. See 
Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our 
History, The. 

Spartans’ March, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—SS— 
TMR 

Speak! (Misc. Sonnets, Pt. III., 25.)—W: Words¬ 
worth.—OB 

(To a Distant Friend.)—PGT 1 
Speak Gently.—Anon.—FP 
(Kindly Words— sel.) —TFS 
Speak Gently. — David Bates. — CS 29 — TAV — 
TFS (sel. — at. to Hangford.) 

(.4 hr. )—LLC (at. to Wallace)—OS 1—YBT (diff. 
abr.) 

Speak Gently to the Erring.—Mary E. (?)Lee.—SM 
"Speak gently to the herring, and kindly to the calf.” 
—J. Ashby-Sterry.—BVC (abr.) 

(Kindness to Animals.)—NA 
Speak, Love!—J: Fletcher. See Spanish Curate, The. 
Speak Nae Ill.—Anon.—CD 
Speak the Truth.—Anon.—HSS 2 
(.1 br.) —PP—YFR 

“Speak to the children, little book”.—Mary I. Love- 
joy.—NV 

Spears of Kan-Mar, The.—Theodore Roberts.—TCV 
Specialist, A.—F. T. Easton.—CG 1 
Specimen of the Laconic.—Gotthold E. Lessing.— 
HPE 

Speckled Hen, The.—E. W. Denison.—PPSr—PR— 
YA 

Spectacles, or Helps to Read. (Sel. fr. Verses Spoken 
on the same Occasion with the Preceding [at 
the Breaking up of the Free Gramma - School 
in Manchester].)—J: Byrom.—SCS 


314 





TITLE INDEX 


Speech 


Spectator, The, Sels. fr. —Jos. Addison. 

Fan Drill, The. (Exercise of the Fan— C. — sel. fr. 
No. 102.)—OS 2 

Hymn: "When rising from the bed of death.” (Fr 
No. 513.) HBP 

Mountain of Miseries, The. (Nos. 558, 559—En¬ 
deavors of Mankind to Get Rid of Their Bur¬ 
dens— C.)—WCLG 1 

Psalm XXIII. A Pastoral Hymn. (C. — fr. 
No. 441.) 

(Paraphrase of Psalm XXIII.)—FEP 

(Translation of the Twenty-third Psalm.)—CEL 
Reflections in [itr. on] Westminster Abbey. (No. 

26.)—AE (abr .)—MRS 
Sir Roger de Coverley Papers, Sels. fr. 

Club, The. (The Spectator, No. 2—Of The Club, 
etc.)—MBL 

Coverley Household, The. (No. 107 —by R: 
Steele.)—MBL 

Death of Sir Roger de Coverley. (No. 517.)— 
MBL 

Sir Roger at his Country House. (No. 106— 
Coverley Hall, or, A Visit to Sir Roger de Cover- 
ley’s Country Seat.)—MBL 

Sir Roger de Coverley’s Sunday.—(No. 112— 
Sunday with Sir Roger, or, A Sunday in the 
Country.)—ESs 

Spectator’s Account of Himself, The. (No. 1— 
The Spectator.)—MBL 

Will Wimble. (No. 108—Character of Will Wim¬ 
ble.)—MBL 

Spacious Firmanent [on High], The. (Fr. No. 465.) 
—BNL—EPs— GN — LLC — OS 1 —POS— 
PYO — SM—WCLG 2—YBF 

(Hvmn.)—OB 

(Ode, An.)—FEP—HBP 
Vision of Mirza, The. (No. 159.)—WCLG 1 

(SI. abr .)—CS 16—SA 

Spectator ab Extra.—Arthur H. Clough. See Dipsy- 
chus. 

Spectator’s Account of Himself. The.—Jos. Addison. 
See Spectator, The. 

Spectre of the Past, The.—Arthur O’Shaughnessv.— 
PGT 2 

Spectre of the Rose, The.—Theophile Gautier.—WR 8 
Spectrum, The.—Cosmo Monkhouse.—VA 
Speculation, A.—T: Moore.—FEP—HPE 
Speculative.—Rob’t Browning.—OH 
Speculators, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—HPE 
Speech: “My pa and ma will be surprised.”—Mrs. 
Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 

Speech: “My pappy asked me if I’d say.”—Mrs. Rus¬ 
sell Kavanaugh.—KJ 

Speech: “None but a school-boy knows how hard.”— 
Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Speech against the Stamp Act.—Lydia M. Child (at. 
to Jas. Otis). See Supposed Speech of Jas. 
Otis. 

Speech at Birmingham Nov. 12, 1851, Sel. fr. (Hero¬ 
ism of the Hungarian People.)—Louis Kos¬ 
suth.—SR 8—SS—SSD 

Speech at Bristol, Previous to the Election, 1780, Sels. 
fr .—Edmund Burke. 

John Howard.—SE 
To the Electors of Bristol.—PS—SS 
Wisdom Dearly Purchased.—BS 16—FTR 
Speech at Hamburg, July 4.—Ulysses S. Grant.— 
FD 1 

(What Saved the Union.)—PS 
Speech at Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 21, 1876, Sel. fr. 
(Col. Ingersoll’s Remarkable Vision.)—Rob’t 
G. Ingersoll.—FS 
(Vision of War, The.)—SC 

Speech at Manchester. Nov. 11, 1851, Sel. fr. (Con¬ 
tentment of Europe, The.)—Louis Kossuth.— 
SS 

Speech at Taunton in 1831 on the Reform Bill not 
being Passed, Sel. fr. (Rejection of the Re¬ 
form Bill.)—Sydney Smith.—SS 
Speech at the Barbecue at Lexington in Honor of Mr. 
Clay, Sel. fr. (Ambition of a Statesman.)— 
H: Clay.—FTR—OM—WR 26 
(My Ambition.)—SO 

Speech at the Dedication of the National Cemetery at 
Gettysburg.—Abraham Lincoln. See Address 
at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettys¬ 
burg. 

Speech at the Dinner of the New England Society of 
New York, Dec. 23, 1878, Sel. fr. (New Eng¬ 
land Character.)-—Jas. G. Blaine.—SC 
Speech at Union Square, N. Y., April 20th, 1861, Sel. 
fr.— E: D. Baker—CS 1 
(To Young Men of New York in 1861.)—SC 


Speech at Union Square, N. Y., April 20th, 1861, Sel. 

fr. —Dan’l S. Dickenson.—CS 1 
Speech before the Republican State Convention of 
Massachusetts, Mar. 27, 1896, Sel. fr. (What 
the Flag Means.)—H: C. Lodge.—SC 
Speech before the Virginia Convention.—Patrick 
Henry. See Speech in the Virginia Convention. 
Speech by Billy Higgins on the Destruction of his 
Rambo Apple Tree.—Anon.—MCS 
Speech by Obadiah Partington Swipes.—Anon.—CS 7 
Speech Delivered at a Dinner of the New England So¬ 
ciety of New York, Dec. 22, 1884, Sel. fr. 
(True Americanism.)—H: C. Lodge.—SC 
Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on the 
5th of July, 1831, Sel. fr. (Reform Bill a Sec¬ 
ond Bill of Rights.)—T: B. Macaulay.—SS 
Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on the 
2nd of March, 1831, Sel. fr. (Reform Bill, 
The.)—T: B. Macaulay.—CR 
(Reform that you may Preserve-— sel.) —SS 
Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on the 
16th of December, 1831, Sel. fr. (Reform 
Irresistible.)—T: B. Macaulay.—SS 
Speech for a Boy. (2)—Anon. KNS 
Speech for a Boy Four or Five Years Old.—Mrs. Rus¬ 
sell Kavanaugh.—KJ 

Speech for a Boy of Eight or Nine.—Mrs. Russell Kav¬ 
anaugh.—KJ 

Speech for a Boy of Four or Five.—Mrs. Russell Kav¬ 
anaugh.—KJ 

Speech for a Girl Five Years Old.—Mrs. Russell Kav¬ 
anaugh.—KJ 

(I’m Little but I’m Spunky.)—KER 
Speech, for a Little Boy.—Anon.—DJS 
Speech for a Little Boy.—Anon.—KER 
(Little Things, The.)—TFS 
Speech for a Little Boy.—Sylvia Manning.—DLS 
Speech for a School Exhibition.—Anon.—KNS 
Speech for a Six-year-old.—Anon. See School. 

Speech for a Small Boy. Anon.—DLS 

(Opening Speech for a Small Boy.)—DLF 
Speech for a Small Boy. (3)—Anon.—KNS 
Speech for a Si,.all Boy.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

Speech for a Small Girl.—Anon.—KJ 
(First Speech, A.)—TT 

Speech for a Ten-year-old Boy.—Anon.—DLF 
Speech for a Tiny Little Girl.—Anon.—KNS 
Speech for a Very Little Boy. (2)—Anon.—KNS 
Speech for a Very Little Boy.—Anon.—UPS—PP 
Speech for a Very Little Girl.—Anon.—KNS 
Speech for a Very Small Child.—Anon.—DLS 
Speech for a Very Small Child.—Anon.—KNS 
Speech for a Very Small Girl.—Mrs. Russell Kavan¬ 
augh.—KJ 

Speech for a Young Girl.—Anon.—DLS 
Speech for Decoration Day. (Ingersoll's Dream of the 
War— C.)— Rob’t G. Ingersoll.—DFR 
Speech in Behalf of Marcus Claudius Marcellus, Sel. fr. 

(Panegyric on Julius Caesar.)—Cicero. 

Speech in his Own Defence.—Rob’t Emmet. See 
On being Found Guilty of High Treason. 
Speech in the Convention at the Conclusion of its De¬ 
liberations, 1787. (C.)—B: Franklin. 

(Federal Constitution, The— abr.) —SS 
Speech in the Virginia Convention, 1775.—Patrick 
Henry.—FTR 

(Appeal to Arms, An— sel.) —SO 
(Call to Arms. The.)—PPS 
(Freedom or Slavery.)—SSD—TMD 
(Liberty or Death.)—SO (sel.) —WCLG 1 
(On the Resolution to Put the Commonwealth into 
a State of Defence.)—EAO 
(Resistance to British Aggression— sel.) —OM—PS 
—SS 

(Speech before the Virginia Convention.)—KNE 
(Speech of Patrick Henry.)—CS 25—SR 5 
(War Inevitable, The.)—LLC 

(Sel.) — OM — OS 2 — PP — PS — PTS — SE — 
SS—YFR 

Speech in Wall Street, 1840, Sel. fr. (Sanctity of State 
Obligations.)—Dan’l Webster.—SS 
Speech is Silver; Silence, Golden.—Mrs. E. J. H. Good- 
fellow.—TT 

Speech of Black Hawk.—Black Hawk.—SR 12 

(Address of Black Hawk to Gen. Street— cond.) — 
PS—SS 

Speech of Caius Gracchus. — Jas. S. Knowles. See 
Caius Gracchus Cited before the Censors, 
Appeals to the People. 

Speech of Cassius, Instigating Brutus to Join the Con¬ 
spiracy against Csesar.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Julius Csesar. 


315 






Speech AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Speech of Emer, The.—W: Larminie. See Fand. 

Speech of Galgacus.—Tacitus. See Galgacus to the 
Caledonians. 

Speech of Henry V.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
Henry V. 

Speech of Leonidas.—Leonidas ( tr. by Pichat). See 
Leonidas to his Three Hundred. 

Speech of M. Hector De Longuebeau. — Litchfield 
Mosely.—OM 

(After-dinner Speech by a Frenchman — sel.) — 

BS 13—HSS 3—SE 
(Charity Dinner, The.)—BeR—CS 16 
(Frenchman Proposes the Ladies, A —longer sel .)— 
VSG 

Speech of Patrick Henry.—Patrick Henry. See Speech 
in the Virginia Convention. 

Speech of Pericles.—Thucydides. See History of the 
Peloponnesian War. 

Speech of Prospero.—W: Shakespeare. See Tempest, 
The. 

Speech of Red Jacket. Red Jacket (Sa-go-ye-wat-ha). 

—NPS—WR 10—YP 

Speech of Regulus — Epes Sargent. See Regulus to 
the Roman Senate. 

Speech of Rolla to the Peruvian Army, The.—Kotze¬ 
bue (tr. by R: B. Sheridan). See Pizarro. 

Speech of Sempronius [for War].—Jos. Addison. See 
Cato. 

Speech of Sergeant Buzfuz in the Case of Bardell 
against Pickwick.—C: Dickens. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Speech of the Dauphin.—W: Shakespeare. See King 
John. 

Speech of the Erdgeist in “Faust.”—T: Carlyle. See 
Faust. 

Speech of the Grand Rabbi, Moses-Ben-Habib, to Fer¬ 
dinand and Isabella. (Sel. fr. Torquemada, 

Pt. II., Act II., Sc. 3.)—Victor Hugo.—MRS 
Speech of the Hon. Perverse Peabody on the Acquisi¬ 
tion of Cuba.—Anon.—SR 7 
Speech of Titus Quintius.;—Livy. See History of 
Rome (Titus Quintius against Quarrels be¬ 
tween the Senate and the People). 

Speech of Vindication.—Rob’t Emmet. See On being 
Found Guilty of High Treason. 

Speech on a Motion for an Address to the Throne.—W: 

Pitt, Earl of Chatham.—PPS 
Speech on American Taxation, Sel. fr. (American Tax¬ 
ation.)—Edmund Burke.—PPS 
(On American Taxation— sel .)—SS 
Speech on Boils.—Anon.—DE 

Speech on Conciliation with America.—Edmund Burke. 

See Speech on Moving his Resolutions, etc. 

Speech on Happiness. Anon.—;DE 
Speech on Moving his Resolutions for Conciliation 
with America, Sels. fr .—Edmund Burke. 

England and her Colonies.—TMR 
Enterprise of American Colonists.—PS—SS 
Magnanimity in Politics.—OS 3—SS 
Speech on Temperance, A .Sel.fr .—Schuyler Colfax.— 

CS 5—TS 

Speech on the American War.—W: Pitt, Earl of 
Chatham. See American War, The. 

Speech on the Babies. (C.)—S: L. Clemens. 

(Babies, The— si. abr .)—CS 18—SR 1 
Speech on the Compromises of the Constitution, Sel. fr. 

(On the Federal Constitution.)— Alex. Hamil¬ 
ton.—EAO 

(American Constitution, The— sel.) —BLP—PEO 
(Constitution of the United States— si. diff.) —SS 
(General Government and the States, The —- sel .)— 
PS—SS 

Speech on the Death of President Lincoln, Se. frl .— 
Park Godwin.—CS 1 
(Death of Lincoln, The.)—PRR 
Speech on the Internal Improvement Bill.—J: C. Cal¬ 
houn.—EAO 

Speech on the Senate of the United States, Sel. fr. 
(American Constitution, The.)—Alex. Hamil¬ 
ton.—BLP—PEO 

(Constitution of the United States— si. diff.) —SS 
Speech on the War of 1812. (Sel. fr. Mr. Clay and the 
War of 1812.)—Henry Clay.—PPS 
(In Favor of Prosecuting the War— ptly. same .)—SS 
Speech on the Weather. (C.) —S: L. Clemens. 

(Mark Twain on the Weather.)—CS 13 
(New England Weather.)—SA—WCLG 2 (si. abr.) 
Speech on Woman’s Rights.—Anon.—DE (si. abr.) 
(Woman’s Rights, by Mistress Tabitha Primrose.) 

—BS 1 (si. abr .)—CS 9 

Speech to Robt. E. Lee Camp Confederate Veterans, 

Sel. fr. (Blue and the Gray, The.)—H: C. 
Lodge.—NC—SC (abr.) 

316 


Speech to the Army at Tilbury.—Queen Elizabeth. — 
OS 3 

Speeches at Prince Henry’s Barriers, Br. sel. fr. (Chiv¬ 
alry.)—Ben Jonson.—EPs 
Speeches for Tots.—Anon. 

Speech for a Very Little Child.—DLS 
Speech for a Very Small Child.—DLS 
Speeches in the Impeachment of Warren Hastings.— 
Edmund Burke. See Impeachment of Warren 
Hastings. 

Speeches of Zenobia and her Council in Reference to 
the Anticipated War with Rome.—W: Ware. 
See Zenobia. 

Speech-making.—Anon.—MHR 
Speed. (Trinity Tablet.) —CG 2 
Speed Away.—I. B. Woodberry.—LLC 
“Speed, Ringbolt, to your leader, speed!”—T: B. (?) 
Read.—AE 

Spell of Ashtaroth, The, Sel. fr. (Fall of Jericho, The.) 

—Duffield Osborne.—CS 28 
Spell of Rhyme, A.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Spell of the Laurel-rose, The.—T: L. Peacock. Set 
Rhododaphne. 

Spellin’ School, A.—D: K. Buchanan.—CS 36 
Spelling Bee at Angels, The.—Fs. Bret Harte.—BS 24 
—CS 16 

Spelling Class, The.—D. R. Brubaker.—SDD 
Spelling Class, The. (Hard Words to Spell.) — E. P. 
Dyer.—CS 16 

Spelling Down.—Will Gifford.—CS 13 
Spelling in the Nursery.—Earl Marble.—CPL—DLS— 
WR 24 

Spelling "Kitten.”—Anon.—DCP 
Spelling Lesson, The.—Anon.—WR 4 
Spelling-match at Grande Pointe, The. (Sel. fr. Bona- 
venture, Chs. X. and XI.)—G: W. Cable.— 
WR 25 

Spendthrift Doll, The.—Sarah O. Sweet.—KJ 
Spenser.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 

Spenser at Court. (Sel. fr. Prosopopoia; or, Mother 
Hubberd’s Tale.)—Edmund Spenser.—EPs 
(At Court.)—OS 3 

Sphinx, The.—H: H. Brownell.—AA 
Sphinx, The, Br. sel. fr. (Fate of the Man-chiid, 
The.)—Ralph W. Emerson.—HBP 

Sphinx.-Lowell.—LLC 

Sphinx of the Tuileries, The.—J: Hay.—EDY 
Sphinx Speaks, The.—Fs. S. Saltus.—AA 
Sphynx, The. (Fr. Eothen, Ch. XX.)—Alfred W. King- 
lake.—VSG 

Spice-tree, The.—J: Sterling.—AD (sel.) —BNL—HBP 
Spider, The.—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
Spider and Fly.—Alice Cary.-—BLF 
Spider and the Bee, The.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Spider and the Fly, The.—Anon.—WR 18 
Spider and the Fly, The. — Marv Howitt.—BVC (si. 
abr.)— FEB — LLC — NV — OS 1 — PPSr 
—WCL 

Spider’s Parlor, The.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Spike that Gun.—Anon.—CS 14 
Spinner, The.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
Spinning. (C .)—Helen H. Jackson.— FP — HBP — 
HDL—TAS 

(Blind Spinner, The.)—HSS 3 
Spinning Song, A.—J: F. O’Donnell.—TIP 
Spinning Top.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Spinning Wheel, The.—Felix Carmen.—TL 
Spinning-wheel, The.—J: F. Waller. See following. 
Spinning-wheel Song, A [or The],— J: F. Waller.— 
AE — BNL — BR ( w. music)— CS 20 — HBP 
—VA 

(Spinning-wheel, The.)—TIP 
Spinster Thurber’s Carpet.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 20 
Spinster’s Stint, A.—Alice Cary.—BNL 
Spirit, The.—Jones Very.—TAS 

"Spirit in our hearts, The.”—H: U. Onderdonk.— 
FEP 

Spirit Land, The.—Jones Very.—BNL—HBP 
Spirit of Conquest, The.—T: Corwin.—NC 
(Danger of the Spirit of Conquest.)—t)M 
(Unjust National Acquisition-— si. diff.) —CS 1— 
WRD 

Spirit of Delight, The. — Percy B. Shelley. See Song: 
“ Rarely, rarely,” etc. 

“Spirit of free thought may be seen in every depart¬ 
ment of active life, The.”—H: C. Minton.—GG 
Spirit of Homer, The.—G: Chapman. See Tears of 
Peace, The. 

Spirit of Human Liberty.—Dan’l Webster. See Char¬ 
acter of Washington, The. 

Spirit of liberty, The. (Dial.) —Mrs. S. L. Ober- 
holtzer.—CDs 

Spirit of Poetry, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—AD 




TITLE INDEX 


Spring 


Spirit of Puritanism, The.—G: W. Curtis. See Major- 
General John Sedgwick. 

Spirit of ’76. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 4—TCP 

Spirit of ’76, Sel. fr. (Romance of the War, A — ad. 

as dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Spirit of Shakespeare, The.—G: Meredith.—VA 
Spirit of Summer, The.—S. C. Kenyon.— CG 3 
Spirit of the Age Adverse to War, The.—G. C. Beck¬ 
with.—SS 

Spirit of the Cape, The.—Luis de Camoens. See 
Lusiad, The. 

Spirit of the Fall, The.—Danske Dandridge.—AA 
Spirit of the House, The.—Archibald Lampman.— 
TFY 

Spirit of the Maine, The.—Tudor Jenks.—AA—EDY— 
PAPm 

Spirit of the Pine, The. (Metempsychosis of the Pine. 

— C.) —Bayard Taylor.—AD (abr.) 

Spirit of the Sunset, The.—Anon.—NV 

Spirit of the Wheat. The.—E. A. U. Valentine.—AA 

Spirit that Should Animate, The.—Anon.—CP 

Spirited Object Lesson, A.—Anon.—CS 28 

Spirits. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Spirits.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB 

Spirit’s Birth, The.—Anon.—CS 18 

Spirit’s Call, The.—Anon.—SSS 

Spirits of Fire, The. (Fr. A Bachelor’s Wedding Trip.) 
—C: P. Sherman.—BS 18 

“Spirits of Fire, that brood,” etc.—T: Moore. See 
Lalla Rookh. 

Spirit’s Song to Sabrina.—J: Milton. See Comus. 
Spirit-shepherd, The.—J: Milton. See Comus. 
Spiritual Body, The.—Milan C. Ayres.—SR 5 
Spiritual Communions.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Spiritual Companionship.—Alfred Tennyson. See In 
Memoriam. 

Spiritual Conferences, Sel. fr. (“Kind words are the 
music of the world” — br. sel.fr. Ch. III.)— 
Frd’k W. Faber.—FHS 
Spiritual Freedom, Sels. fr. —W: E. Channing. 

Great Distinction of a Nation, The.—SS 
(Liberty— br. sel.) —SE 

(National Distinction Depends upon Virtue.)— 
SR 8 

Spiritual Freedom.—HSS 2 
Spiritual Temple, The.—Anon.—CS 8 
Spiritual Trimmers.—S: Butler. See Hudibras. 
Spiritus Intactus.—Rob’t G. Cole.—CG 3 
Spirk Troll—Derisive.—Jas. W. Riley.—NA 
Spleen, The, Sel. fr. —Matthew Green.—WEP 3 

(Voyage of Life, The— sel.) —BNL 
Splendid Beau, A.—Anon.—DCD 
Splendid Shilling, The.—J: Philips.—BNL 
Splendid Spur, The.—A. T. Quiller-Couch.—VA 
Splendidis Longum Valedico Nugis.—Sir Philip Sidney. 
See Astrophel and Stella. 

Splendor of Lilies, The. (C.)—Marg. E. Sangster. 

(Eastertide.)—SR 13 

“Splendour falls on castle walls. The.”—Alfred Tenny¬ 
son. See Princess, The. 

Spoiled Child, The.—Anon.—FDY 
Spoiled Child, A.—R: H. Home.—WR 20 
Spoiled Face, The.—W. O. C.—SD 
Spoils of Time, The. (Sonnets C., CVIII., LIX., LX., 
LXIV., LXV.)—W: Shakespeare.—FP 
Spool of Thread, A.—Sophie E. Eastman.—PRR— 
WR 10 

Spoopendyke Stops Smoking. (Bri oklyn Eagle.) — 
CH 

(Swearing off Smoking.)—W'R 20 
Spoopendykes, The.—Anon.—DS—NPS—YP 
Spoopendyke’s Burglars.—Stanley Huntley.—CS 19 

(Mr. Spoopendyke Hears Burglars.)—DCR 
Spoopendyke’s Private Theatricals.—Anon.—WR 20 
Sport.—Duncan Anderson.—TCV 

Sport. (Sel. fr. Boy Life on the Prairie.)—Hamlin 
Garland.—SO 

Sport.—H. C. Southwick.—CG 1 

Sport Royal. Sel. fr. (How they Stopped the Run.)— 
Anthony Hope.—BS 26 

Sporus,—Lord Hervey.—Alex. Pope. See Epistle to 
Dr. Arbuthnot. 

S’posen a Case.—Anon.—CS 27 
S’posin.—Anon.—CS 23 
Spotty.—Anon.—TT 

Spray of Honeysuckle, A.—Mary E. Bradley.—AA 
Spray Sprite, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Spread Eagle Oratory'.—Anon.—DSS 
Spring. ( H . music.) —Anon.—AD 
Spring. (Ode XLVI.)—Anacreon (tr. by T: Moore).— 
BNL—HBP 

Spring.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See Valentinian. 


Spring.^-W: C. Bryant.—HNS (abr.) 

(Gladness of Nature, The— C.) — AD — POS — SM 
—SN—WCL—WCLG 1 
(Summer— br. sel., —SE 
Spring.—T: Carew.—GN—LC 
Spring.—Charles of Orleans.—BNL 
Spring.—Annie Chase.—TT 

(Recitation for a Very Little Girl.)—KC 
Spring—Willis G. Clark.—HSS 1 
Spring, The.—Abraham Cowley. See Mistress, The. 
Spring.—Mary M. Dodge.—AD 
(Nearly Ready.)—PoR 

Spring.—Gawain Douglas. See Prologues to the /Eneid. 
Spring.—Ebenezer Elliott.—BNL 
Spring.—T: Gray.—BNL 

(Ode: On the Spring — C.) — FEP — PGT 1 — 
WEP 3 

Spring.—T: Gray. See also Ode on the Pleasure 
arising from Vicissitude. 

Spring, Sel. fr. (April, ever Frail and Fair.)—Oliver 
W. Holmes—POS 

Spring[, The]. — Mary Howitt. See "Spring, she is a 
blessed thing, The.” 

Spring.—Andrew Lang.—POS 

Spring.—H: W. Longfellow. See Hyperion. 

Spring.—Rob’t Loveman.—AA 

Spring.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow Papers. 

Spring, The.—J: Lyly. See Alexander and Campaspe. 
Spring. (Fr. Summer’s Last Will and Testament.)— 
T: Nashe. — BPB — CEL — CGd — FEP — 
LC — OB — OEL — PGT 1 — YBF 
(Birds in Spring.)—PoR 

(Spring, the Sweet Spring.)—BNL—ELP—EP 
Spring.—W. O. B. Peabody.—HSS 1 
Spring.—Jas. W. Riley.—SR 1 

(When the Green Gits Back in the Trees— C.) —AD 
Spring.—W: Shakespeare. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 
Spring.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 

Spring.—Celia Thaxter.— AD — CSS — PHS — PoR 
SAP—YBT 

Spring.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Spring.—H: D. Thoreau. See Walden. 

Spring.—Ludwig Tieck.—POS 

Spring.—H: Timrod. See Spring in South Carolina. 

Spring.—Marg. Veley.—HS 

Spring.—J: G. Whittier. See Mogg Megone. 

Spring: A New Version.—T: Hood.—HPE 
Spring, a Skeleton Essay.—S. A. Frost.—DFR 
Spring and Autumn.—W: J. Linton.—VA 
Spring and Melancholy.—T: Lodge. See Scylla’s Meta¬ 
morphosis. 

Spring and Summer.—Anon.—AD (si. abr.) —OS 1— 
PoR 

(Spring is Growing up— br. sel.) —TT 
Spring and Winter.—W: Shakespeare. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost. 

Spring at the Capital.—Eliz. A. Allen.—PAPm 
(In April— sel.) —PoR—POS 
Spring Beauties, The.—Helen G. Cone.—AA 
Spring Bereaved, I. (Br. sel. fr. Song.)—W: Drum¬ 
mond.—OB 

Spring Bereaved, II.—W: Drummond.—OB 
(Sonnet: Spring.)—ELP 
(To Spring— 1st son.) —FEP 
Spring Bereaved, III.—W: Drummond.—OB 

(Sonnet: “Alexis, here she stay’d,” etc.)—FEP— 
WEP 2 

Spring Comes.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Spring Flowers.—Anon.—AD 
Spring Flowers.—Anon.—YBT 

Spring Flowers, Sel. fr. (“I know not which I love the 
most.”)—Phoebe Cary.—AD 
Spring Flowers from Ireland.—Denis F. McCarthy.—TIP 
Spring Garlands: Drill of ve Olden Tyme.—Anon.— 
WDM 

Spring Harbingers.—Anon.—NV 

Spring has Come. The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—WR 17 
Spring Holiday, A.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Spring House-cleaning.—Anon.—CS 23—DS 
Spring Idyll, A.—Sir H: Wotton.—CEL 

(“On a bank as I sat a-fishing”— F .)—EP 
Spring in Carolina.—H: Timrod.—BNL—GP 
(Spring.)—AD—FEP 

Spring in New England, Br. sel. fr. (Bluebird, The.)— 
T: B. Aldrich.—SN 
Spring is Coming.—Anon.—AD 
Spring is Coming.—Anon.—WR 17 
Spring is Coming. (Song of Solomon, Ch. II., 11, 12.) 
— -Bible. —AD 

Spring is Coming.—Mary Howitt.—HSS 1 
Spring is Growing Up.—Anon. See Spring and Sum¬ 
mer. 

Spring Journey The.—Reginald Heber.—CEL—HSS 3 


317 




Spring 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Spring Lament, A.—Louis J. Magee.—CG 2 * 

Spring Lilt, A.—Anon.—BFV 
Spring Maiden, A.—E. L. Liddell.—BS 24 
Spring Meeting, A. ( Harper’s Young People.) —NV 
Spring Morning, A.—Lady Flora Hastings.—PTS 
Spring Morning.—David M. (?) Moir.—AD 
Spring of the Year, The.—Allan Cunningham.—OB 
Spring on the Heights.—M. H. C.—CG 3 
Spring Planting-time.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Spring Poet, The.—Anon.—BS 13 
Spring Poet, The.—Hal Berte.—DES 
Spring Pointing to God.—Michael Bruce. See Elegy 
—Written in Spring. 

Spring Rondeau, A.—R. R. K(irk).—CG 3 
“Spring, she is a blessed thing, The.” (C.) — Mary 
Howitt. 

(Springf, The].)—AE (sel.)— LLC—PEO (*/. abr.) 
Spring Song, A. (With music.) —Anon.—AD 
Spring Song.—Anon.—NV 
Spring Song.—Bliss Carman.—VA 
Spring Song, A. ( Children's Friend and Kindergar¬ 
ten.)— NV 

Spring Song, A.—Jas. F. Clarke.—POS 
Spring Song.—G: Eliot.— See Spanish Gypsy, The. 
Spring Song.—Kate Hawthorn.—AD 
Spring Song.—Jessie Norton.—AD 
Spring Song in the City.—Rob’t Buchanan.—SN— 
VA 

Spring Song of the Birds.—King James 1. of Scotland. 
—OB 

Spring, the Sweet Spring.—T: Nashe. Nee Spring. 
Spring Twilight.—E: R. Sill.—HBR 
Spring Voices.—Anon.—PS 
Spring Whistles.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Spring’s Coming.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Spring’s Immortality.—Mackenzie Bell.—VA 
Spring’s Welcome.—J: Lyly. See. Alexander and Cam- 
paspe. 

Spring-tide.—Anon.—OB 
Spring-time. ( With music.) —Anon.—AD 
Spring-time.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Spring-time.—li. P. Graham.—AD 
(’Tis Spring-time.)—LPS—PP 
Springtime.—B. F. Griffin.—CG 3 
Spring-time, The. ( Class rec.) —Lilv Rutherford. — 
AD 

Spring-time and Love.—J: Fletcher. See Valentinian. 
Spring-time Flowers.—Lina Dutcher.—DCP 
Spring-time is Coming.—Anon.—AD 
Spurgeon’s Advice.—C: H. Spurgeon.—KNE 
Squarest un among 'Em. The. ( Detroit Free Press.) — 
BS 18 

Squeers’ School.—C: Dickens. See Nicholas Nickleby. 
Squeeze in the Dark, A.— Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Squire Billings’ Pickerel.—Anon.—DFY 
Squire Thornhill’s Argument.—Anon. —PTS 
Squire’s Bargain, The.—E. M. Traquair.—BS 15 
Squire’s Pew, The.—Jane Taylor.—FEP 
Squire’s Pledge, The.—Anon.—CS 15 
Squire’s Rooster, The.—W. H. Neall.—CS 33 
Squirrel, The.—Mary Howitt.—POS 
Squirrel’s Arithmetic, The.—Anon.—NV 
Squirrel’s Lesson, The.—Anon.—DS—-PP—YA—YFR 
(Time Enough.)—NV 

Squirtgun Uncle Maked Me, The.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
RCR 

Stab, The.—Will W. Harney.—AA—CS 7 
Stabat Mater Dolorosa.—Fra Jacopone. ( Orig. and 
tr. by Abraham Coles.)—BNL 
Stability of our Government, The.—C. Sprague.— 
KNE—PFP 

(Individual Puritv the Hope of the State.)—BLP 
Stability of Virtue, The.—T. Marshall.—FTR 

(Sturdy Rock, for all his Strength, The.)—HBP 
“Stack Arms.”—Jos. B. Alston.—EDY 
Staff and Scrip, The. (Abr.) —Dante G. Rossetti.— 
WR 8 

Stag Hunt, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Stag Hunt, The.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Stage, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.)— BNL 
Stage Adventures, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See 
Stage Land. 

Stage Detective and Peasants, The.—Jerome K. Je¬ 
rome. See Stage Land. 

Stage Hero, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage 
Land. 

Stage Heroine, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage 
Land. 

Stage Land, Sels. fr. —Jerome K. Jerome. 

Child, The. (Cond.)— VSG 
Comic Lovers, The. (Cond.) —VSG 
Comic Man, The. (Cond.) —VSG 


Stage Land (continued). 

Good Old Man, The. (Cond.) —VSG 
Hero, The. ( C. — cond. )—VSG 

(Stage Hero, The— diff. cond.) —WR 9 
Irishman, The. (Cond.) —VSG 
Lawyer, The. (Cond.) —VSG 
Sailor, The. (Cond.) —VSG 

Stage Adventures, The. (Adventures, The— C.) — 
WR 8 (cond.) 

Stage Detective and Peasants, The. (Cond.) — 
WR 8 

(Detective, The— C. — diff. cond.) —VSG 
(Peasants, The— C. — diff. cond.) —VSG 
Stage Heroine, The. (Heroine, The— C. — si. cond.) 

WR 8 

Villain, The. (Cond. )—VSG 
Stage of Destiny. The.—Beaumont Claxton.—CS 36 
Stage-driver’s Story, The.—Anon.—CS 21—DS—NPS 
—PR—WR 19—YP 

Stage-struck. (Play.) —Anon.—BS 8—HD 
Stage-struck Blacksmith, The. — H. E. McBride.— 
MCD 

Stage-struck Clerk.—Anon.—SED 
Stage-struck Darkey, The. (Farce.) — Anon.—DE 
(Widow’s Victim, The.)—BC 

Stage-struck Darkey. The. (Dial.) — --White.—BC 

Stage-struck Hero, The.—Anon.—BC 
Stage-struck Hero, The.—Anon.—BS 24—CS 35 
Stagnant. The. (St. Nicholas.) —LPS—PP 
Stained by the Blood of Heroes.—Anon.—PRR 
Stammering Wife, The. (C.) —J: G. Saxe.—THP 
(Stuttering Lass, The.)—AWH—HR—MR 
Stamp Act, The.—W: Grimshaw.—WR 10 
Stamp Officers’ Salaries, el. fr. (Reply to Threats of 
Violence.)—J: P. Curran.—PS—SS 
Stampede, The.—Jas. F. Cooper. See Prairie, The. 
Stand by the Flag.—Jos. Holt.—CS 2 
Stand by the Flag!—J: N. Wilder.—GN (si. abr.) — 
LC—OS 2—PRR (br. sel. w. anon, add.) 

Stand lor Liberty, A.—Anon.—DSS 
Stand! the Ground’s your Own.—J: Pierpont.—W T R 5 
See Warren’s Address at the Battle of Bunker 
Hill. 

Standard of the Constitution, The.—Dan’l Webster.— 
SS 

Standing on Tiptoe.—G. F. Cameron.—VA 
(On Tiptoe.)—TCV 

Stanza for Thomson’s Castle of Indolence.—G:, Lord 
Lyttelton.—BNL 

Stanza from an Early Poem.—Christopher P. Cranch. 
—A A 

Stanza on Freedom, A.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Stanzas 
on Freedom. 

Stanzas: “Often rebuked, yet always back,” etc.— 
Emily Bronte.—VA—WEP 4 
Stanzas: “And thou art dead,” etc.—Lord Byron.— 
FEP 

(“And thou art dead, as young and fair”— C.) — 
WEP 4 

(Elegy on Thyrza.)—PGT 1 
Stanzas: “Could love forever.” (C. — sel.) —Lord 
Bvron.—WEP 4 

(“Could love forever run like a river.”)—BPB 
Stanzas: “Oh, talk not to me,” etc.—Lord Byron. See 
Stanzas Written on the Road between Flor¬ 
ence and Pisa. 

Stanzas: “Though the day of my destiny’s over.”— 
Lord Byron. See Stanzas to Augusta. 

Stanzas t C.): “She was a queen of noble Nature’s crown¬ 
ing.”—Hartley Coleridge.—WEP 4 
(Solitary-hearted, The.)—OB 
Stanzas.—Christopher P. Cranch.—ASL—FEP—HBP 
—TAV 

(Gnosis.)—TAS 
(Knowing.)—LLC 
(Thought,)—BNL—GP 

(“Thought is deeper than all speech”— br. sel.) — 
CS 1 

Stanzas (C.). “Farewell, Life,” etc.—T: Hood.—FEP 
—VA 

(Farewell. Life.)—BNL 

Stanzas:—“In a drear-nighted December.”—J: Keats. 
-OB 

(December.)—GN 

Happy Insensibility.)—OH—PGT 1 
Winter.)—BPB 
Stanzas (C.): “My life,”etc.—R: H. Wilde.—AA—HBP 
(Life.)—BNL 

(“My life is like the summer rose.”)—ASL—FEP 
—YBF 

Stanzas—April, 1814. (C.) —Percy B. Shelley.— 
WEP 4 

(Remorse.)—OB 


318 








TITLE INDEX 


Steam-threshing 


Stanzas for Music. (C.) —Lord Byron.—CEL—FEP 
—HBP—WEP 4—YBF 
(For Music.)—OB 
(Nature’s Daughter.)—MR 

("There be none of Beauty’s daughters.”)—PGT 1 
Stanzas for Music: "There’s not a joy,” etc.—Lord 
Byron.—WEP 4 

(“There’s not a joy the world can give.”)—FEP 
(Youth and Age.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Stanzas for Music :“They say that Hope,” etc.—Lord 
Byron.—WEP 4 

Stanzas for Music. (C.— fr. an unfinished drama.)— 
Edmund C. Stedman.—AA 
Stanzas for the Sentimental. (Punch.) 

I. On a Tear which Angelina Observed Trickling 
down my Nose at Dinner Time.—HPE 

II. On my Refusing Angelina a Kiss under the 
Mistletoe.—HPE 

III. On my Finding Angelina Stop Suddenly in a 
Rapid After-supper Polka at Mrs. Tompkins’s 
Ball.—HPE 

Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse.—Matthew Ar¬ 
nold—AVP 

Stanzas from “Wine of Cyprus.” (Scl.) — Eliz. B. 
Browning.—CEL 

Stanzas in Memory of the Author of “Obermann.”— 
Matthew Arnold.—AVP 

Stanzas on Freedom.—Jas. R. Lowell.—GN ( sel.) 
(Freedom.)—BLP (si. abr.) —PEO (abr.) 

(Stanza on Freedom, A— br. sel.)j -AA 

(“They are slaves who fear to speak.”)—FHS 
Stanzas on Seeing the Speaker Asleep. (C.)—Win- 
throp M. Praed. 

(Verses on Seeing the Speaker Asleep in his Chair.)— 
AVP 

Stanzas on the Death of a Friend. (At the Funeral— 
C.) —Reginald Heber.—FEP 
(“Thou art gone to the grave.”)—HBP 
Stanzas on the Death of Thomas Gray.—Anon.—EDY 
Stanzas on Woman.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Vicar of 
Wakefield, The. 

Stanzas to an Egg. (Punch.) HPE 
Stanzas to Augusta. (C.) —Lord Byron.—HBP— 
WEP 4 

(Stanzas: “Though the day,” etc.)—EPs 
Stanzas to Eternity.—Elsie M. Wilbor.—DR 
Stanzas to my Nose.—Anon.—WR 9 
Stanzas to Pale Ale. (Punch.) —HPE 
Stanzas to the Memory of Thomas Hood.—Bartholo¬ 
mew Simmons.—EDY—VA 
(To the Memory of Thomas Hood.)—BNL (sel .)— 
HBP 

Stanzas Written in Dejection near Naples. (C.)— 
Percy B. Shelley.—WEP 4 
(“Sun is warm, the sky is clear, The”— si. abr.) — 
BNL 

Stanzas Written in his Library. (Occasional Pieces, 
XVIII.)—Rob’t Southey.—WEP 4 
(Books.)—BNL 
(His Books.)—OB 
(Library, The.)—LBB—MBB 

(“Mv days among the dead [are passed].”)—FEP 
—HBP—YBF 
(Scholar, The.)—PGT 1 

Stanzas Written in the Churchyard of Richmond, York¬ 
shire.—Herbert Knowles.—EPs 
(Lines Written in a Churchyard.)—CS 9 
(Lines Written in Richmond Churchyard, York¬ 
shire.)—FEP—H BP 

Stanzas Written on the Road between Florence and 
Pisa. (C.) —Lord Byron.—BPB—WEP 4 
(All for Love.)—PGT 1—YBF 

(“Oh, talk not to me of a name great in story.”) 
_PEP 

(Stanzas.)—HBP 

Star, The.—Jane Taylor.—BVC (si. abr.) 

(Twinkle, Twinkle— abr.) —TFS 
(Twinkle, twinkle, little star.)—SM 
(Abr. )—N V—PC 

Star at Dawn, The.—Sophie W. Weitzel.—TAS 

Star Exercise.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—SSE 

Star in the West, The.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—PEO 

Star in the West, A.—Eliza Cook.—BLP 

Star of Bethlehem, The. (Si. abr.) —W: C. Bryant.— 

T\s 

Star of Bethlehem, The.—H: Kirke White.—FEP 
Star of Calvary, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne.—AA 
Star of Democracy, The. (Speech on the occasion of 
the nomination of Gen. S. B. Buckner as Gov¬ 
ernor of Kentucky.)—H: Watterson.—DES 
“Star of love now shines above, The.”—G: Morris.— 
BNL 

Star-gazing.—Anon.—CS 30 


Starless Crown, The.—Anon.—BS 17—CS 30 
Starlight.—J: W. Chadwick.—AA—OH 
Starlight.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
Starling, The.—Rob’t Buchanan.—HR—MMR 
Starry Flag, The.—Stockton Bates.—CS 29—PRR 
Starry Host, The.—J: L. Spalding. See God and the 
Soul. 

Stars.—Anon.—OS 1 

Stars, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Stars, The.—W: C. Bryant. See Song of the Stars, 
The. 

Stars.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Stars, The.—Mary M. Dodge.—AA 
Stars.—Frances R. Havergal.—YBT 
Stars, The.—E. Murray.—KC 
Stars. (Abr.) —Bryan W. Procter.—CGd—OS 1 
Stars and Stripes, The.—Anon.—PEO 
Stars and Stripes, The. (Br. sel. fr. The Battle of 
Lexington.)—E: Everett.—CP 
(Flag. The.)—SO 

(National Banner, The.)—CS 6—KNE 
(Our National Banner.)—LLC 
Stars and Stripes, The.—Jas. T. Fields.—AWB 
Stars and Stripes. The.—Lucretia G. Noble.—HS 
Stars and the Flowers, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
GMS 

(Flowers—C.)—AD—BS 22—HBP—HSS 1— SE 
Stars are Coming, The.—Anon.—NV 
Stars’ Ball, The. (Ladies Home Journal.) —NV 
Stais Begin to Fall.—Anon.—AA 
Stars in my Country’s Sky.—LHS—WRD 
Star’s Monument, The. Br. sels. fr. —Jean Ingelow. 
Gone.—HDL 

“If there be memory in the world to come.”—GG 
Star-song, Ther: A Caroll to the King, Sung at White¬ 
hall— (Abr.) —Rob’t Herrick.—EPs—GN 
Star-spangled Banner, The.—Fs. S. Key.— AA —AWB 
— BNL — CP — CS 4 — EA — EDY — FEP 
— GP — HBP — LLC — OS 1 — PAP — 
PAPm—PYO—TAV—WCLG 1 
(SI. abr.)— BLP—SM 

Star-spangled Banner, The. (Rec. including song.) — 
Jessie F. O’Donnell.—DR 
Start True.—Mrs. H. C. Blakeslee.—HSS 2 
Starting in Life.—Anon.—FDY 
Startling Revelations. (Boston Globe.) —SR 5 
(Freckle-faced Girl, The.)—BS 11—CRR 
(What the Little Girl Said.) — CS 24 — DS — NPS 
— YP 

State of Maine, The.—W: P. Frye.—SC 
State-craft. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Stately Minuet, The.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—DR 
States, The.—Fitzhugh Lee.—FD 2 
Station-agent’s Story, The.—Rose H. Thorpe.—CS 18 
Station-master’s Story, The.—G: R. Sims.—CS 24 
(In the Signal Box.)—BS 13—PR (*I. abr.) 
Statuary. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 13 
Statuary Vivants.—Anon.—TCP 
Statue, The.—Anon.—LLC 

Statue and the Bust, The. (Abr.) —Rob’t Browning. 
—WR 8 

Statue Bride, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Statue in Clay, The.—Anon.—BR—BS 8—CS 12 
Statue of Liberty Unveiled.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 27 
Statue of Lorenzo De’ Medici, The.—Jas. E. Nesmith. 
_ \\ 

Statue of Victor Hugo, The, Sel. fr. (Victor Hugo.)— 
Aleernon C. Swinburne.—EDY 
Statue of Webster, The.—Mellen Chamberlain.—FD 2 
Statue’s Story, The.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Stavoren.—Helen S. Conant.—TMD 
“Stay, Phoebus], stay]!” — Edmund Waller.— ES — 
OEL 

“Stay-at-Home’s” Paean, The.—G: A. Baker, Jr.— 
PLD 

“Stay-at-Home’s” Plaint, The.—G: A. Baker, Jr.— 
PLD 

Steadfast Shepherd, The.—G: Wither.—FEP 
Steak, The. (The Poetical Cookery-book.— Punch.) — 
HPE 

Stealing Apples.—J. D. Vinton.—SD 
Stealing Roses.—Mrs. Mary L. Gaddess.—WR 12 
Steam Chair, A.—W: L. Alden. See Adventures of 
Jimmy Brown, The. 

Steamboat, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—HBP 
Steamboat Race, The.—S: L. Clemens. See Gilded 
Age, The. 

Steamboats, Viaducts and Railways. (Poems Com¬ 
posed or Suggested during a Tour in the 
Summer of 1833, Sonnet XLlI.)—W: Words¬ 
worth.—EPs 

Steam-threshing Machine, The.—C: Tennyson-Turner. 
—PGT 2 


319 




Steel 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Steel Glass, The, Sels. fr. —G: Gascoigne. 

Epilogues.—WEP 1 
Piers Ploughman.—WEP 1 
Steering Home.—Timothy D. Sullivan.—TIP 
Stella.—C: H. Crandall.—AA 

Stella and Mira. (Piscatory Eclogues, VII.: The Prize, 
sts. 22-27.)—Phineas Fletcher.—EP 
Stella Lookt on.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

“Stella, the only planet of my light.”—Sir Philip 
Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 

"Step to the Captain’s Office and Settle.”—G. B. 
Cheever.—FAS 

Stepping in Father’s Tracks.—Louise S. Upham.—TS 
Stepping Westward.—W: Wordsworth.—MBL 
Stevenson’s Birthday.—Kathe. Miller.—AA—EDY 
Stewart Holland.—Walter K. Fobes.—FR 
Stewed Duck and Peas. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery- 
book.— Punch .')—HPE 

Stewed Steak. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery-book.) 
(Punch .)—HPE 

Stick to Your Bush.—J. W. Watson.—NPS—YP 
Stickit Minister, The.—S. R. Crockett.—WR 21 
Sticky. (Punch. —HPE 
Stigma, The.—F. De H. Janvier.—CS 12 
Still Day in Autumn, A.—Sarah H. Whitman.—HBP 
(Abr.) —BNL—POS 

“Still in Thy love I trust.”—A. A. Fields.—ASL—HDL 
Still Small Voice, The.—Alex. Smart.—PoR 
Still Small Voice, A.—R. Walter Wright.—TCV 
Still, Still, Kiss.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Still, Still, with Thee.—Harriet B. Stowe.—LLC (sel.) 
(When I awake I am still with Thee— C.) — TAS 
(si. abr.) 

Still though the One I sing.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
Still True. (St. James Gazette .)—GH 
Still Waters.—W. C. Richards.—CS 23 
Still Waters Run Deep, Scene from. (Dial.) -Tay¬ 

lor.— MPD 

Stingy Friend, The.—Martial.—LBB 
Stirring up of Billy Williams, The.—Harry S. Edwards. 
—NP 

Stirrup-cup, The.—J: Hay.—AA 
Stirrup-cuo, The.—Sidney Lanier.—AA—OS 3 
Stitch in Time Saves Nine, A.—Anon.—HVD 
Stockade. (Charade.) —Anon.—FAD 
Stock-broker, The.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Stoddards, The.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Stolen Bird’s Nest, The. (Tab.)— Anon.—BS 14— 
TCP 

Stolen Child, The.—W: B. Yeats.—AVP 
Stolen Custard, The.—Anon.— DS — PP — YA — 
YFR 

Stolen Kiss, A.—G: Wither.—FEP 
(Upon a Stolen Kiss.)—BNL 
Stolen Pets, The.—Anon.—HVD 

Stone the Woman, Let the Man Go Free.—Anon.—LIP 
Stone Walls.—Julie M. Lippmann.—AA 
Stone-cutter, The.—Eliz. A. Allen.-—DES 
Stone-cutter, The.—Bayard Taylor.—MYF 
Stones of Venice, The, Sels. fr. —J: Ruskin. 

Education. (Sel. fr. Vol. III., Appendix, Div. 7— 
Modern Education.)—TMR 
Love of Change. (Sel. fr. Vol. II., Second, or 
Gothic, Period, Ch. VI.—The Nature of 
Gothic.)—AE 

Man of Genius, The. (Sel. fr. Vol. TIL, Third, or 
Renaissance, Period, Ch. II.—Roman Renais¬ 
sance.)—AE 

Sermons. (Sel. fr. Vol. II., First, or Byzantine, 
Period, Ch. II.—Torcello.)—BS 19 
Sky, The. (Sel. >r. Vol. I., Ch. XXL, w. add. fr. 

Modern Painters.)—BS 10—OM 
Tyre, Venice, and England. (S l. fr. Vol. I., Ch I.) 
—TMD 

Stonewall Jackson.—Harry L. Flash.—AA 

(Death of Stonewall Jackson, The.)—AWB—EDY 
Stonewall Jackson.—Herman Melville.—AWB—EDY 
Stonewall Jackson’s Death.—Paul M. Russell.—WR 10 
Stonewall Jackson’s Way.—J: W. Palmer.—AA—AWB 
—EDY— FEP—GP— HB 

Stop, Stop, Pretty Water.—Mrs Follen.—NV—TFS— 
WCL 

Stop yer Kickin’!—-Anon.-—BS 25 
Stork, The.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Storm, The. ( Dial.) —Anon.—MFD 
Storm, The. ( Tab.)■ —Anon.—TCP 
Storm, The.—Lord Bvron. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Storm, The.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FEP 

Storm, The.—G: A. Stevens.—BNL 

Storm at Sea.—C: Dickens. See Martin Chuzzlewit. 


Storm in Harvest.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 
Storm in the Distance, A.—Paul H. Hayne. AA 
Storm in the Forest, The.—Hannah F. Gould.—AD 
Storm in Venice, A. (Br. sel. fr. The Ideal and the 
Real.)-—Joaquin Miller.—POS 
Storm of Delphi, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—BS 23 
Storm on the East Coast, A.—G: Crabbe. See Bor¬ 
ough, The. 

Storm Song.—Bayard Taylor.—HBP 
Storm the King.—Fs. M. Finch.—WR 5 
Storming of Corinth, The.—Lord Byron. See Siege of 
Corinth, The. 

Storming of Mission Ridge, The. (Sel.) —B: F. Taylor. 
—NC—PFP—SC 

(Battle of Mission Ridge, The— rtly. same sel.) —SR 4 
Storming of Monterey, The.-—C: F. Hoffman.—BLP 
(Monterey.)— A A — AWB — BAB — BNL — 
EDY — FEP — HB — HBP — OS 1 — PAP 
—PAPm—PPSr—TAV 

Storming of the Castle, The.—Walter Scott. See 
Ivanhoe. 

Storms and Shipwreck. (Frags, fr. various authors.) 
—BNL 

Stormy Petrel, The.—Anon.—POS 

(Lines to the Stormy Petrel.)—BNL 
Stormy Petrel, The.—Park Benjamin.—POS 
Stormy Petrel, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—BNL—FEP 
—HBP—PHS—SN—VA 
Story, A.—Anon.—CPL 
Story, The. (Dial.) —Anon—HVD 
Story by the Fire, A.—Dora Greenwell.—PC—WCL 
Story for a Child, A. (C .)—Bayard Taylor. 

(Night with a Wolf, A.)—GN—PHS—WCL 
Story Katie Told, The.—A. C. H. S.—BS 14 
Story of a Bedstead, The.—Anon.—CS 27 
Story of a Blackbird.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
Story of a Cent, The.—Kate Lawrence.—CPL 
Story of a Governess, The, Sel. fr. (Mrs. Harwood’s 
Secret—ad.)—M. O. W. Oliphant.—NDP 
Story of a Great Artist, The.—Eliz. P. Allen.—CS 36 
Story of a Leaf, The.—Rebecca D. Rickoff.—AD 
Story of a Little Red Hen, The.—S. E. Eastman.— 
WR 24 

Story of a New Hat.—Anon.—CS 18 
Story of a Picture.—Anon.—Y’BT 

Story of a Picture, The. (“Breaking Home Ties.”)— 
Frances Forrester.—BS 22 

Story of a Short Life, The, Sels. ] r .—Juliana H. Ewing. 
Leonard and the V. C. (Chs. VI. and VII.— abr.) 
—WR 14 

Story of a Short Life, The. (Ch. XI.— si. cond.) — 
WR 9 

Story of a Stowaway, The.—Clement Scott.—CS 35— 
DS (abr.) —FR (si. cond.) 

(Stowaway, The.)—VSG 

Story of a Summer Day, The.—Alex. Hume.—BNL— 
CEL 

(Summer Day, A— si. abr.) —OB 
Story of an Ambuscade, The.—Paul H. Hayne.—WR 5 
Story of an Apple, A.—Sydney Dyer.—BS 15 
Story of Bishop Potts, The.—Max Adeler. See Out 
of the Hurly Burly. 

Story of Chinese Love, A. (Los Angeles Express.) — 
BS 12—CS 19—DS—SDR—YA 
Story of Constance, The.—J: Gower. See Confessio 
Amantis, The. 

Story of Cruel Psamtek, The.—Anon.—NA 
Story of Deacon Brown, The.—Anon.—CS 16 
Story of Dick, The.—Frank L. Stanton.—WR 19 
Story of Echo, The.—Anon.—WR 5 
Story of Faith, The. (Gospel Expositor.) —CS 29 
(Little Maid’s “Amen,”A.)—SSS 
Story of Fifty-two Prayer-meetings.—Anon.—WR 9 
Story of George Lee. (SI. abr. )—Hamilton Aid* 5 .— 
DS. 

(George Lee— C .)—CS 26 

Story of Good Little Vincent.—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 33 
Story of Guggle.—T: Speed.—DR 
Story of Hard Times, A.—Pauline Phelps.—WR 21 
Story of “Hiawatha,” The.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Song of Hiawatha, The. 

Story of his Life.—Eugene Field.—EF 
Story of John Maynard.—J: B. Gough.—BS 17 
(John Maynard, the Hero-pilot.)—FTR 
(Pilot, The.)—CS 23—CSS—MMR—WRD 
Story of Life, A.—Jean Ingelow.-—CS 21 
(Sweet is Childhood.)—VS 
Story of Life, The. (C.) —J:G. Saxe. 

(Life’s Story.)—BS 21 

Story of Little Moses, The.—Eugene J. Hall.—CS 28 
Story of Little Suck-a-Thumb, The. — Heinrich Hoff¬ 
mann.—BVC 

Story of Omar, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 

320 




TITLE INDEX 


Stripes 


Story of Prince Agib, The.—W: S. Gilbert.—NA 
Story of Pyramid Thothmes, The.—Anon.—NA 
Story of Rebekah, The.—T: M. Armstrong.—CS 28 
Story of Rimini, The, Sel. fr. (Garden and Summer 
House, A.)—Leigh Hunt.—WEP 4 
Story of Rosina, The. ( Abr.) — Austin Dobson.— 
WR 9 

Story of Ruth Bonython, The.-—J: G. Whittier. See 
Mogg Megone. 

Story of St. Ursula, The. — J: Ruskin. See Saint 
Ursula. 

Story of Santa Claus, A.—Harriet A. Glazebrook.—TS 
Story of Seven Devils, A. (C. Dusky Philosophy— 
First Exposition.)—Frank R. Stockton. 

(Uncle Peter’s Masterly Argument.)—WR 15 
Story of Seventy-six, The. (Seventy-six-*-C.)—W: C. 
Bryant.—PRR 

Story of Sigurd the Volsung, The, Sels. fr.- —W: Morris. 

Of the Passing Away of Brynhild. (Sel. fr. Bk. 111.) 
—VA 

Slaying of the Niblungs, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. IV.)—LH 
Story of Some Bells, The.—Anon.—CS 24 
Story of Thanksgiving, The.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—HE 
Story of the Bad Little Boy. (C.)—S: L. Clemens. 

(Mark Twain’s Story of the Bad Little Boy.)—CS 9 
Story of the Barefoot Boy, A.—J: T. Trowbridge.— 
TMD 

Story of the Days, The. (Play.) —Anon.—EuE 
Story of the Divine Comedy, The.—Kate M. Rabb.— 
NE 

Story of the Faithful Soul, The.—Adelaide A. Procter. 

—BeR—CS 18—FMR— MR—SO—VSG 
Story of the Gate.—Harrison Robertson.—HP 
Story of the Gentians, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Story of the Good Little Boy. (C.)—S: L. Clemens. 

(Mark Twain’s Story of the “Good Little Boy.”)— 
CS 11 

Story of the Kinkankee, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavan- 
augh.—KC 

Story of the Little Rid Hin[, The].—Mrs. L. D. Whit¬ 
ney.—CS 12—DS 

(Verse vers. at. to Riverside Mag.) —MYF 
Story of the Man who Didn’t Know Much, The, Sel. fr. 

(Honor of the Woods, The—Ch. VII.— cond.) 
—W: H. H. Murray—NP 

Story of the Monk Felix, The.—H: W. Longfellow. 
See ChristuS: a Mystery. 

Story of the Morning-glory Seed, The.—Marg. Eytinge. 
—AD 

Story of the Nibelungen Lied, The.—Kate M. Rabb.— 
NE 

Story of the Old Arm-chair. The.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Story of the Priest Philemon, The. (Sel. fr. The Soul 
of Lilith.)—Marie Corelli.—VSG 
Story of the “Star Spangled Banner.”—Anon.—DFR 
Story of the Swords, The.—Adelaide C. Waldron.— 
WR 10 

Story of the Wild Huntsman, The. — Heinrich Hoff¬ 
mann.—NA 

Story of the Yorkshire Coast, A.—Anon.—WR 21 

(Tale of the Yorkshire Coast, A— si. abr.) —BS 8 
Story of Two Little Shoes, The.—Jeannie P. Ewing.— 
CS 34 

Story the Doctor Told, The.—Harrydele Hallmark.— 
BS 26 

Story which the Ledger Told, The.—Luella D. Smith. 
_ qq 25 

Story-book Boy, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Story-teller, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Stowaway, The.—Arthur (?) Matthison.—NPS—YP 

(Little Hero, The.)—CS 13—FR—MYF 

(Little Stowaway. The— prose vers.) —CS 14—LLC 
(SI. abr.) —BRR—CSS—EA 
Stowaway, The.—Clement Scott. See Story of a 
Stowaway, The. 

Strafford, Sel. fr. (Sels. fr. Act I., Sc. 1, and V., 2.)— 
Rob’t, Browning.—EHT 

Strafford’s Defence against the Charge of High Treason, 
Sel. fr. —T: Wentworth, Earl of Strafford.— 
OS 3 

(Earl of Strafford’s Defence— ptly. same.) —SS 
Straight Road, The.—Anon.—CS 19 
Stranded Bugle, The.—L. E. Mosher.-—BS 21 
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The, Sel. fr. 

(Dr. Lanyon’s Narrative— C. — cond.) —Rob’t 
L. Stevenson.—BS 25 

(Dr. Lanyon’s Story— si. diff. cond.) —WR 16 
Strange Child’s Christmas, The.—Anon.—PC 
Strange Experience, A.—Josephine Pollard.—BS 15 — 
PEO 

Strange Fortunes of Two Excellent Princes. The, Sel. 
fr. (I Would thou Wert not Fair.)—Nicho¬ 
las Breton.—ELP 


Strange Harvest, The.—Rob't C. V. Meyers.—CS 25 
Strange Land, The.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 5 
Strange Lands.—Laurence Alma-Tadema.—PoR 
Strange Little Boy, The.—Anon.—PC 
Strange Passion of a Lover, A.—G: Gascoigne.—ES— 
WEP 1 

Strange Request, The.—Annie R. Johnson.-—CS 28 
Strange Sea Story, A, Sel. fr. (Billy’s First and Last 
Drink of Lager.)—Anon.—CS 16—PTS 
Strange Vessel, The.—Ezra H. Stafford.—TCV 
Strange Wild Song, A. (The Gardener’s Song— C .— 
in Sylvie and Bruno.)—Lewis Carroll.—BVC 
(Some Hallucinations— sel.) —THP 
Strangely Related.—Anon.—SR 4 (si. abr.) 

(Mixed Relationship, A.)—CS 24 
Stranger, A.—J. M. L.—CPL 
Stranger, The.—Philander Johnson.—COS—PP 
Stranger and his Friend, The.—Jas. Montgomery.— 
CS 36— FEP—HBP—PPSr 
Stranger in the Pew, A.—Mary E. Dodge.—CS 12 
Stranger on the Sill, The.—T: B. Read.—FEP—HSS 3 
Stranger on the Stand, The.—E. A. Blount, Jr.—CS 31 
Strangers, The.—Jones Very.—EPs 
Stranger’s Alms, The.—H: Abbey. See Singer’s Alms, 
The. 

Strangers Yet. — R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.— 
FLS (afcr.)-PGT 2 
Strategy.—C: K. Field.—CG 2 
Strategy.—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Strategy of Dave, The.—Julia T. Bishop.—SR l3 
Stratford Fountain. (Poem for the Dedication of the 
Fountain at Stratford-on-Avon, etc.— C.) — 
Oliver W. Holmes.—BS 16 
Strauss’ Boedry.—C: F. Adams.—CS 29 
Strawberry Woman, The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Strav Child, A.—Eliza S. Turner.—CS 10—NPS—YP 
(Little Goose, A.)—OS 1—PC—WCL 
(Lost— abr.and si. diff.) —DR—PTS 

Stray Parrot, A.--Paul.—SCS 

Stray Sunbeam, A.—Frank M. Gilbert.—CS 27 
Strayed Reveller, The.—Matthew Arnold.—WEP 4 
Stream of Life, The. — Arthur H. Clough. — CEL — 
FEP—-WEP 4 

Stream of Life, The.—Reginald Heber.—LLC 
Stream of Life, The.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 
Street Cries.—E: Eggleston.—CS 20—GH — SR 10— 
WR 3 

Street Crowd, A.—Anon.—CS 22 

Street Gamin’s Story of the Play, A.—Anon.—CD— 
CS 23 

Street Incident, A.—Anon.—DJS 

Street Musicians, The.—G: L. Catlin.—CS 16—PPSr 

Street of By-and-bye, The.—Mrs.-Abdy.—PPSr 

(In the Street of By-and-by.)—CS 17 
Street Tumblers, The.—G: R. Sims.—CS 28 
Street-car Romance, A.—W: Ames.—CG 2 
Streets of London, The.— Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.— 
WR 1 

"Strength for the day: at early dawn I stand.” (Scrib¬ 
ners’ Magazine.) —GG 

Strength of the American Government, The.—J: 
Bright.—SSD 

(American Government, The— abr.) —LLC 
Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union Soldiers, Sels. 
fr. —Jas. A. Garfield. 

Arlington.—TMR 

Decoration Day Address. (Ptly. like TMR.)—SSD 
(Arlington Heights Oration— sel.) —GG 
Decoration Day Address at Arlington. (Ptly. like 
Graves, etc.)—TMD 

Graves of Union Soldiers at Arlington, The.—NC 
Immortality of True Patriotism. (Ptly. like TMR.) 
—NC 

Inspiration of Sacrifice, The. (Ptly. like TMR.)— 
TMD 

Strife, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 
Strife and Peace, Sel. fr. (Little Brawl, A— sel. fr. 

The Last Strife.)—Frederika Bremer.—OS 1 
Strike among the Flowers, A.—Mrs. Russell Kava- 
naugh.—KJ 

Strike at Colchester, The.—T. B. Exeter.—BS 24 
Strike for Prohibition.—Anon.—TS 
Strike the Blow.—F. McK.—PAPm 
Strikes.—Anon.—CPL—HSS 3 
Striking Expression.-—Anon.—DSS 
Striking Oil.—H. E. McBride.—CS 26 
Striking the Blow.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
String, The. (Piece of String, The.)—Guy de Mau¬ 
passant.—W GS 

Strip of Blue, A. — Lucy Larcom. — A A — FP — 
GP (abr.) — SN — TAV 

Stripes and the Stars. The.—Edna D. Proctor.—AWB 
—PAPm 


321 







Strive 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


"Strive to live well; tread in the upright ways.”— 
Anon.—HSS 3 

Strive, Wait and Pray.—Adelaide A. Procter.—FP— 
LLC 

Strolling Players.—G: Crabbe. See Borough, The. 
Strong, The.—J: V. Cheney.—AA 
“Strong are the mountains, Lord, but stronger Thou!” 
—Anon.—GG 

Strong as Death.—H: C. Bunner.—ASL 
Strong Drink.—J. A. Seiss.—CS 8 
Strong Heart, The.—E. H. Chapin.—HSS 3 
(Good Strong Heart, A.)—LLC 
Strong, Heroic Line, The. (Sel. fr. Poem Read at the 
Dinner Given to the Author by the Medical 
Profession, etc.)—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA 
"Strong men have strong convictions.” ( Br. sel. fr. 

Oliver P. Morton.)—Jas. A. Garfield.—GG 
Strong Son of God, Immortal Love.—Alfred Tennyson 
See In Memoriam. 

Strong Temptation, A.—Anon.—CS 16 
Strongest Government, The.—T: Jefferson. See In¬ 
auguration Address, March 4, 1801. (Republic 
the Strongest Government, A). 

Struggle, The.—D. C. Dandridge.—TAS 
Struggle on the Pass, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Struggle with a Stove-pipe, A. (C. — in Life in Dan¬ 
bury.)—Jas. M. Bailey.—CS 7 
Stubborn Boot, The. ( Hearth and Home.) —MYF 
(Boy and the Boot, The— si. abr.) —TFS 
“Stuck.” ( Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 

Student, The.—Anon.— CS 1 — LLC (si. abr.) — PPSr 
Student and his Neighbors, The. (Play.) —N. A. 
Woodward.—CS 4 

Student-heroes of our War, The.—C: W. Eliot.— 
WR 22 

Student’s Frolic, The.—T. S. Robinson.—DT 
Studies.—Fs. Bacon.—OS 3 (si. abr.) 

Books— si. abr.) —CR 
Of Studies—f.)—LLC (si. abr.) —MBL 
Studious Girl, A.—Minnie W. Gates.—WR 24 
Study in Dialect, A.—Marietta Holley. See Josiah 
Allen’s Wife as a P. A. and P. I. 

Study in Nerves, A.—Anon.—CR 
Study of Astronomy, The.—O. M. Mitchell.—BS 23 
Study of Elocution, The.—Matthew Simpson.—CS 19 
Study of Eloquence, The. (De Oratore, Bk. I., Sec. 

VIII.— si. abr.)— Cicero.—CS 21 
Study of Latin and Greek. (Sel. fr. Professional Edu¬ 
cation.)—Sydney Smith.—LLC 
Study of Trees and Flowers, The.—Rob’t Chambers.— 
HSS 1 

Studying for the Contest.—Anon.—SR 12 

Stump Orator, The, Sel. fr. (Nature a Hard Creditor.) 

—T: Carlyle.—KNE—SO—SS 
Stump Speech, A.—Anon.—MCS 
Stump Speech.—-Anon.—SCS 
Stupid Grown Ups, The.—Susan Grant.—CG 3 
Stupid Lover, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Sturdy Rock, for All his Strength, The.—T: Marshall. 

See Stability of Virtue, The. 

Stuttering Lass, The.—J: G. Saxe. See Stammering 
Wife, The. 

Subject for Dissection, A.—Anon.—HR 
Sublime Tobacco.—Lord Byron. See Island, The. 
Sublimity of the Bible.—L. J. Halsey.—CS 11 
Submission.—Lyman W. Allen.—HDL 
Sub-mistletoe. (Lehigh Burr.) —CG 2 
Subscribing to Missionary Fund.—Anon.—MFD 
Subscription List, The.—S: Lover.—CR (abr.) 

(Father Blake’s Collection.)—HR 
(Father Phil’s Collection.)—BS 6—CS 10—MHR 
SI. abr.) —BRR—HI 
A br. )—CD V—SDR 
Substitute, The.—M. N. Baskett.—CS 23 
Substitution.—Eliz. B. Browning.—HDL 
Subtlety.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Success.—H: W. Longfellow. See Hyperion. 

Success.—B: F. Taylor.—CS 13 

Success.-Thomson.—KNE 

Success and Failure.—Anon.—LLC 
Success in Life.—Anon.—CP 
Success in Life.—G: W. Childs.—BLP 
Success in Life.—Jas. A. Garfield.— NPS — PP — PS 
—YFR—YP 

Successful Politician, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—A VP 
Succession, The.—Frances L. Mace.—AA 
Succession of the Four [Foure—C.] Sweet Months, The. 

—Rob’t Herrick.—LC 
Succory, The.—Marg. Deland.—OS 1 
Such a Duck.—Anon.—HP 

"Such a starved bank of moss.” — Rob’t Browning. 

See Two Poets of Croisic, The. 

Such is Life.—C: T. Brooks.—TAS 


“Such is my name, and such my tale.”—Lord Byron. 
See Giaour, The. 

Such is the Death the Soldier Dies.—Rob’t B. Wilson. 
_AA 

“Such Stuff as Dreams are Made of.”—T: W. Higgin- 
son.—AA 

Sudbury Fight, The.—Wallace Rice.—EDY 
Sudden Arrival, A.—Frd’k Hay.—DT 
Sudden Blow, A.—Anon.—MFD 
Sudden Change of Mind, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Sudden Fortune, A. (Money, Act II. — abr.) — E: 
Bulwer-Lytton.—VSG 

Sudden Light.—Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2—VA—VS 
Sudden Revulsion.—Anon.—KNS 
Sudden Shower, A.—Jas. W. Riley.—PoR—RCR 
Sudden Transformation from Winter to Summer. (Sel. 

fr. Tent Life in Siberia, Ch. XXXI.)—VSG 
Sue an’ Me.—D: Belasco.—DR 

Sue Waters’s Housekeeping.—Theodore Whiting.— 
WR 26 

Suffering.—R: C. Trench.—HDL 

(“O life, O death, O world, O time.”)—PGT 2 
Suffering and Sympathy.—W: Shenstone. See School¬ 
mistress, The. 

Suffering of Nehu’shta, The. — Fs. Marion Crawford. 
See Zoroaster. 

Sufferings and Destiny of the Pilgrims. — E: Everett. 

See First Settlement of New England, The. 
Sufferings of the Pilgrims.—E: Everett. See First 
Settlement of New England, The. 

Sufficiency.—Gleeson White.—VA 
Suffolk Miracle, The.—Anon.—CGd 
Suffrage Question, The.—Anon.—PD 
Sugar-plum Tree, The. (C.) —Eugene Field.—DLF— 
EF—WTD 

(That Sugar-plum Tree.)—BS 21 
Suggested by Plato’s Bust in the Logic Room.—Mary 
A. Molloy.—CG 3 

Suggested Subjects for Debate.—Anon.—PS 
Suggestion. (The Jest Book.) —MRS 
Suggestion for a Happy New Year. A.—Mary M. Dodge. 
—YBT 

Suicidal Cat, The.—Anon.—CS 9—DS—HR 
Suicide. ( rag-', fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Suicide; or, the Sin of Self-destruction.—T. DeW. 

Talmage.—BS 23 
Suing for Damages.—Anon.—DSS 

Suit that Does not Prosper, A. (Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

Sully the Rooster.—Anon.—SR 9 
Sultan and the Potter, The.—Sir Edwin Arnold.—WR 1 
Sultan of my Books, The.—Edmund Gosse.—LBB— 
MBB 

Sum of Life, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Sum of Life, The.—Ben King. See Pessimist, The. 
Summer.—Anon.—ELP 

Summer, (Sel. fr. The Gladness of Nature.)—W: C. 
Bryant.—SE 

Summer.—Marietta Holley.— 1 BIL 
Summer.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Vision of Sir Launfal, 
The. 

Summer (The Fields of Dawn, XV.)—Lloyd Mifflin.— 
SN 

Summer, The.—T: B. Read.—CGd 
Summer. — Christina G. Rossetti. See Summer Days. 
Summer.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Summer.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Summer.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Summer.—E: Hovel. Lord Thurlow.—FEP 
Summer.—J: T. Trowbridge.—GP 

(Midsummer — C.) — AA — FEP — HBP — POS 
—SC (sel.) —TAS 
(Abr.) —AD—BS 15 

Summer and Winter. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Summer and Winter.—Percy B. Shelley.—POS 
Summer Boarder, The.—Anon.—SR 9 
Summer Campaign, A.—J. H. Scranton.—CG 2 
Summer Changes.—Philip B. Marston.—OS 1 
Summer Dawn.—W: Morris.—OB 
Summer Day, A.—Anon.—HSS 1 (si. abr.) —NV 
Summer Day, A.—Anon.—PEO 
Summer Day, A.—H: C. Beeching.—VA 
Summer Day, A.—Alex. Hume. See Story of a Sum¬ 
mer Day, The. 

Summer Days.—Wathen M. W. Call.—BNL—HBP— 
VA 

Summer Days (Summer— C.). —Christina G. Rossetti.— 
PoR 

Summer Deceit, A.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Summer Drought.—J. P. Irvine.—SN 
Summer Eve.—W: Whitehead.—CS 19 
Summer Evening, The.—J: Clare.—PHS 
Summer Evening, A.—I: Watts.—BNL 

322 






TITLE INDEX 


Sunset 


Summer Evening, A. (Description of a Summer’s 
Eve— C.)— H: Kirke White—BVC (si. abr.) 
Summer Evening’s Meditation, A.—Anna L. Barbauld 
—BNL 

Summer Friends. (Frags, fr. t'arious authors.) —BNL 
Summer Friends.—J: Brougham.—BS 5 
Summer Games.—G: Cooper.—COS—PP 
Summer Girl, The.—Anon.—CG 1 
Summer Girl, The —Edwin O. Grover.—CG 2 
Summer Girl, The. (Yale Record.) —CG 2 
Summer Idyl, The.—Philip Morse.—SR 13 
Summer Idyl, A.—F. M. Waithman.—WR 13 
Summer Invocation. (C.) —W: C. Bennett. 

(Invocation to Rain in Summer.)—BNL—GN— 
HBP 

(Rain in Summer.)—NV 
Summer is Coming.—Anon.—PS 
Summer is Coming.—Alfred Tennyson.—OH 
(Throstle, The—C.)—OH 

Summer is Ended, The.—Christina G. Rossetti.— 
PGT 2 

Summer Longing, A.—G: Arnold.—AD—POS 
Summer Longings.—Denis F. MacCarthy.—BNL— 
FEP—HBP 

Summer Lullaby, A.—E. S. Bumstead.—NV 

Summer Moods.—J: Clare.—BNL 

Summer Moon.—Rob’t Buchanan.—OS 2 

Summer Morn, A.—Jas. Beattie. See Minstrel, The. 

Summer Morning.—G: H. Boker.—TAS 

Summer Night, A.—Matthew Arnold.—A VP—PGT 2 

Summer Night, A.—E: J. Chapman.—TCV 

Summer Night, A.-—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 

Summer Night.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, The. 

Summer Nights at Grandpa’s.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 

Summer Noon, A.—W: Howitt.—BNL 

Summer Picture, A.—Anon.—HP 

Summer Pool, The (Pastoral Pictures—C.).—Rob’t 
Buchanan.—VA 

Summer Rain.—H: W. Beecher.—WCLG 2 
Summer Rain.—Hartley Coleridge.—WEP 4 
Summer Rain.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Summer Storm. 
Summer Rain, The. (Verses fr. A Week on the Con¬ 
cord and Merrimac Rivers: Thursday.)—H: 
D. Thoreau.—ASL 

Summer Reminiscence, A.—Nathaniel G. Shepherd. 
—HBP 

(“I sit before my fire alone”— br. sel.) —HSS 3 
Summer Sanctuary, A.—J: H. Ingham.—AA 
Summer Shower, A.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Summer Shower.—Emily Dickinson.—NV 
Summer Shower, The.—T: B. Read.—CGd—FP— 
TAV 

Summer Solstice, The.—Edith Thomas. See Solstice. 
Summer Song.—Anon.—DST 

Summer Storm.—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL—PEO (sel.) 
(Summer Rain— sel.) —SE 

Summer Storm.—W: Morris. See Life and Death of 
Jason, The. 

Summer Story, A, Sel. fr. (Angler, The— br. sel. fr. Pt. 
1.)—T: B. Read.—BNL 

Summer Sun.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV—YBT 
Summer Time.-—Anon.—NV 
Summer Vacation.—Mrs. H. E. Kimball.—KNS 
Summer Winds.—G: Darley. See Song of t. e Summer 
Winds. 

Summer Woods.—Mary Howitt.—LC—NV (sel.) 
Summer’s Day, A.—R. Pier.—CG 3 
Summer’s Day, A.—Abba G. Woolson.—POS 
Summer’s Last Will and Testament, Sel. fr. —T: 
Nashe. See Spring. 

Summerset Folks, The.—Willis B. Hawkins.—BS 19 
Summer-sweet.—Katha. Tynan-Hinkson.—TIP 
Summons, The.—Walter Scott. See Pibroch of 
Donuil Dhu. 

Summons to Love.—W: Drummond. See Song: 
“Phoebus, arise.” 

Summum Bonum.—Rob’t Browning.—OH—YBF 
Summum Bonum.—Louise I. Guiney.—TAS 
Sumner’s Tribute to William Penn. — C: Sumner. 

See True Grandeur of Nations, The. 

Sumter. (C.) —Edmund C. Stedman.—EDY 
(Twelfth of April, The.)—AWB 
Sun, The.—J. Davis.—NA 
Sun.—H: Rowe.—OB 

Sun and his Satellites, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—KNS 
Sun and Rain.—Anon.—OH 

Sun and the Violet, The.—Amelie V. Petit.—WR 17 
Sun Cup, The.—Archibald Lampman.—TCV 
Sun Descending, The.—W: Blake. See Night. 

Sun God, The.—Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 

Sun is Warm, the Sky is Clear, The.—Percy B. Shelley. 

See Stanzas Written in Dejection near Naples. 
Sun of Liberty, The.—Victor Hugo.—NC 


Sun of my Soul.—J: Keble. See Evening. 

Sun Rises Bright in France, The.—Allan Cunningham. 
See My Ain Countree. 

Sun upon the Lake, The. (C.— fr. The Doom of De- 
vorgoil.)—Walter Scott. 

Datur Hora Quieti.)—PGT 1 
Evening.)—BPB 
(Leonard Tarries Long.)—YBF 
Sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill, The. — WalterflScott.— 
BPB 

Sunbeam, The.—Anon.—NA 

Sunbeam, The.—Anon. See Little Sunbeam, The. 
Sunbeam, The.—Anon. (Incl. in April Day, An.)— 
WR 9 

Sunbeam, The. (Abr .)—Felicia D. Hemans.—AD 

Sunbeam, The.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 

Sunbeam and Dewdrop.—Frances R. Havergal.—YBT 

Sunbeam Fairies.—Anon.—DLF 

Sunbeams.—Anon.—NV—TFS 

Sunbeams, The.—Emilie Poulsson.—DCP (abr .)—NV 
Sunbeam’s Mission, The.—I. E. Jones.—CS 31 
Sunday. (C.)— G: Herbert.—FEP (abr.) 

(Sel. )—CEL—PHS—YBF (longer) 

("Sundays the pillars are”— br. sel .)—GG 
Sunday Afternoons.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Sunday at Hampstead, Sel. fr. (X. In the Train.)— 
Jas. Thomson.—OB 

Sunday Fishin’.—Harrison Robertson.—CS 23—DS 
(Abr .)—BS 11—CDV—SDR 
Sunday Hymn, A.—Oliver W. Holmes.—TAS 
Sunday in the Country, A.—Jos. Addison. See Spec¬ 
tator, The. 

Sunday Morning.—Johann P. Hebei.—WCL 
Sunday Newspaper, The.—Herrick Johnson.—NC 
Sunday Question, The. (Open Question, An— C.) — 
T: Hood.—HPE 

Sunday Question of To-day, The.—Edwin K. Hart.— 
CS 34 

Sunday Talk in the Horse Sheds.—Rob’t J. Burdette. 
—PR—WR 12—YA 

Sunday up the River, Sels. fr. —Jas. Thomson. 

Gifts. (XV.)—OB 
Sunday up the River. (XII.)—OB 
“Sundays the pillars are.”—G: Herbert. See Sunday. 
Sunday-school Acrostic.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—SSE 
Sunday-school Picnic, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Sundered.—Sidney H. Morse.—EPs 
Sun-dial, The.—Austin Dobson.—BNL—WR 12 
Sun-dial. (Dial, The — C.) — Jas. Montgomery.— 
EPs (abr.) 

Sunflower, The. (In Songs of Experience.)—W: 
Blake.—EPs 

(Ah, Sunflower— C.) —WEP 3 
Sunflower, The.—Jas. Montgomery.—POS 
Sunflower to the Sun. The.—Mary E. (Hewitt) Steb- 
bins.—AA 

Sun-gold.—Helen M. Merrill.—TCV 

Sunken City, The.—Wilhelm Mueller (tr. by Jas. C. 

Mangan).—BNL—HBP 
Sunken Gold.—Eugene I.ee-Hamilton.—VA 
Sunken Treasure, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne. See 
Grandfather’s Chair. 

Sunlight and Starlight.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—TAS 
Sunnit to the Big Ox, A.—Anon.—CS 7—HPE 
Sunny Shaft did I Behold, A. — S: T. Coleridge. See 
Zapolya, 

Sunny Side, Sel. fr. (Voices of the Flowers.)—Anon. 
—DFR 

Sunny-day Sermons.—Anon.—YBT 
Sunrise.—E: Everett. See Uses of Astronomy, The. 
Sunrise. (Hymns of the Marshes, T.)—Sidney Lanier. 
—AA 

Sunrise.—Percy B. Shelley. See Prometheus Unbound. 
Sunrise.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Sunrise, The.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, The. 
Sunrise among the Hills.—Dinah M. Craik.—CS 26 
Sunrise Comes To-morrow.—Anon.—HBP 
Sunrise in the Hills of Satsuma.—Mary McN. Fenol- 
losa.—AA 

Sunrise never Failed us Yet, The.—Celia Thaxter.— 
H B P—H D L— P EO—T AS 
Sunrise of the Poor, The.—Rob’t B. Wilson.—AA 
Sunrise on the Hills.—H: W. Longfellow.—AD 
Sunrise on the Tusket.—R: Huntington.—TCV 
Sun’s Darling. The, Sels. fr. —T: Dekker. 

Country Glee.—EP 

(Rustic Song.)—LC—WEP 2 
Invitation, The.—ES—OEL 
Sun’s Shame, The. (The House of Life, Sonnet XCII.) 

—Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Sun’s Travels, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV— 
DLS 

Sunset.—L. F. B.—CG 3 


323 




Sunset 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Sunset.—Herbert Bashford.—AA 
Sunset, A.—J: H: Brown.—TCV 

Sunset.—Lord Byron. SeeChilde Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Sunset.-—Phoebe Cary.—TAS 

Sunset, A.—Rob’t Loveman.—A A 

Sunset.—Percy B. Shelley. See Queen Mab. 

Sunset. ( Sel. fr. Inscription to the Mistress of Cedar- 
croft.)—Bayard Taylor.—AD 
Sunset.—Dwight Williams.—CS 25 
Sunset, The.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, The. 
Sunset City, The.—H: S. Cornwell.-—BNL 
Sunset in the Mountains.—Walter Scott. See Lady 
of the Lake, The. 

Sunset in the Orchard.—Kate P. Osgood.—DS 
Sunset Land.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Sunset on Lake Leman.—H: S. Washburn.—POS 
Sunset on the Cunimbla Valley, Blue Mountains.— 
Douglas B. W. Sladen.—VA 
Sunset Wings.—D. G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Sunset with its Rosy Feet.—Anon.—POS 
Sunshine.—Anon.—AD 
Sunshine.—Jean F. C. Delavigne.—OS 1 
Sunshine.—Sydney Dayre.—NV—YBT 
Sunshine in the House.-—Clara L. Burnham.—YBT 
Sunshine Johnson.—Anon.—WR 22 
Sunshine Land.—Edith M. Thomas.—POS 
Sunshine of the Gods, The, Sel. fr. —Bayard Taylor.— 
AA 

Sunshine of thine Eyes, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—AA 
Sunshine or Shower. (Tab.) —Anon.—COS — DS— 
NPS—PP—YA—YP 
Sunshine Song.—Anon.—YBT 
Sunshine’s Caress, The.—Anon.—NV 
Sunthin’ in a Pastoral Line.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Big¬ 
low Papers, The. 

Superfluous Man, The.—-J: G. Saxe.—SR 1 
Superior Boys, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Superior Nonsense Verses.—Anon.—NA 
Superiority of Machinery, The.—T: Hood.—HPE 
Superiority of Washington.—Chauncey M. Depew.— 
FD 2 

(Tribute to Washington.)—SSD 
“Supernatural in this Jesus is the best hope of the 
world, The.”—D: Swing.—GG 
“Supers.”—H. C. Newton—CS 27 
Super’s Story, The.—Edwin Drew.—CS 5 
Superscription, A. (C.—The House of Life, Sonnet 
XCVII.)—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 
(Nevermore, The.)—BNL 
Superstition.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Supper, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Supper at the Mill, Sel. fr. (Song of the Old Love.)— 
Jean Ingelow.—PGT 2 

(“We shall walk no more through the sodden grass” 
— sel .)—BNL 

(When Sparrows Build— si. abr .)—WR 16 
Supplication, A. (Song fr. The Davideis, Bk. III.)— 
Abraham Cowley.—EPs—FEP—PGT 1 
(Invocation.)—BNL 
(Lover to his Lyre, The.)—CEL 
Supplication.—C: Mackay. See Maclaine’s Child. 
Supplication.—Anna L. Waring.—YBF (abr.) 

(Thy Will be Done. —FEP 
Supplication, A.—T: Wyatt.—PGT 1—PHS 
(Appeal, AnD—CEL 
(Forget not Yet.)—ELP—OB 

(Lover Beseecheth his Mistress not to Forget, The 
—C.)—WEP 1 

Supporting the Guns. (Detroit Free Press .)—CS 25— 
EA (abr.) 

(Battery in Hot Action, A.)—PFP—PR 
Suppose.—Alice Cary.—BLF—HSS 2—NV 
Suppose. (C.) —Phcebe Cary.—BLF—PHS—PR— 
YA 

( Abr. )—PP—TFS—YFR 

(“Suppose, my little lady” — abr.) — GM — 
HSS 2 (sel .)—SM 

(" Suppose your task, my little man”— sel .—HSS 2 
(Wisest Plan, The.)—PS 
Suppose. (Our Little Men and Women .)—CPL 
Suppose.—T. H. Robertson.—WR 3 
Suppose. — Epes Sargent. — GMS — NV — SM — 
TFS (sel.) 

(Deeds of Kindness.)—BLP 
(.Lines for a Little Lassie— si. abr .)—YBT 
(Little Cowslip, The— sel .)—TFS 
(.Little Things— sel .)—DLF 
“Suppose, my little lady.”—Ph®be Cary. See Suppose. 
“Suppose your task, my little man.” — Phcebe Cary. 
Se-> Suppose. 

Supposed Speech against the Declaration of Inde¬ 
pendence.—Dan’l Webster. See Adams and 
Jefferson. 


Supposed Speech of a Chief of the Pocomtuc Indians. 

—E: Everett. See Indian, The. 

Supposed Speech of James Otis. (Fr. The Rebels of 
Boston before the Revolution.)—Lydia M. 
Child—OS 2—SC—SS 
(Freedom Must Triumph.)—SR 8 
(Speech against the Stamp Act— abr.) —BS 15 
Supposed Speech of John Adams [for or in favor of or] 
on the Declaration of Independence.—Dan’l 
Webster. See Adams and Jefferson. 

Supposed Speech of John Adams [in Support of Ameri¬ 
can Independence].—Dan’l Webster. See 

Adams and Jefferson. 

Supposed Speech of Regulus.—Elijah Kellogg. See 
Regulus to the Carthaginians. 

Supposin’.—Eva W. McGlasson.—WR 7 
Supposing.—Mary N. Prescott.—HSS 2 
Suppressed Repudiation. (Sel. fr. Past Perils and the 
Perils of To-day.)-—H : W. Beecher.—NC 
Supremacy of Conscience, The.—R: S. Storrs.—BLP 
Supreme Court and the Constitution, The.-—H: Hitch¬ 
cock.—-TMD 

Supreme Court of the United States, The.—Horace 
Binney.—SS 

Sur l’Eau, Sel. fr. (Government by Epigrams.)—Guy 
de Maupassant.—OS 2 
Sure Witness, The.—Alice Cary.—TAS 
Surf.—Edmund C. Stedman.—POS 
Surf Along the Shore, The.-—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Surgeon’s Child, The.—F: E. Weatherly.—VSG—WR16 
Surgeon’s Tale, The.—Barry Cornwall.—CS 13—DS 
(Doctor’s Story, The.)—VSG 
Surly Tim’s Trouble. (Abr.) —Frances H. Burnett.— 
BS 7 

(Sel.)— BRR— CS 19 
Surprise, The.—W: Barnes.—PGT 2 
Surprise, The. (Dial.) —Ida Fay.—WR 17 
Surprise, The.—T: Moore.—HPE 

Surprise at [or of] Ticonderoga, The.—Mary A. P. 

Stansbury.—BAB—EDY 
Surprise Party, A.—Anon.—MFD 
Surprise Party, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Surrender, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.—TDT 
Surrender, The.—Mrs. S. M. I. Henry.—TS 
Surrender, The. ( C.) —H: King. 

(Renunciation, A— si. abr.) —OB 
(Surrender— sel.) —YBF 
Surrender of Spain, The.—J: Hay.—AA 
Sursum Corda.—Eliz. B. Browning. See Casa Guidi 
Windows. 

Survival.—Florence E. Coates.—AA 
Survival of the Fittest, The.—(A Medley, arr. by) 
Daisy N. Ives.—BS 20 

Survival of the Fittest in Literature, The.—Anon.—CP 
Susan.—Anon.—N A 

Susan: a Poem of Degrees, Sel. fr. (Sweet Nature’s 
Voice.)—Arthur J. Munby.—VA 
Susan Van Doozen.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Susan’s Escort. (Cond.) —E: E. Hale.—WR 5 
Susceptible Parson, The.—Anon.—CS 33—DS 
Susette.—Walter K. Fobes.—FMR 
Susie’s Lesson.—S. Jennie Smith.—DLD 
Suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act.—J: Bright.— 
PPS 

Suspicion.—W: Shakespeare. See Julius Caesar. 
Susurro.—W: Sharp. See Sospiri di Roma. 

Sut Lovingood’s Shirt. (Fr. Sut Lovingood’s Yarns.) 
—Anon.—DFY 

Svend Vonved.— (Tr. by) G: Borrow.—EPs 
Swackhamer’s Ball.—Anon.—DRR 
Swallow, The.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Swallow, The.—T: Aird.—VA 

Swallow, The. (Fr. Anacreontiques.)—Anacreon (tr. 

by Abraham Cowley).—OB (sel.) —WEP 2 
Swallow, The.—Charlotte Smith.—BNL 

(First Swallow, The.)—CGd—LLC (si. abr.) 
Swallowed Frog, The.-—Anon.—CS 28 
Swallowing a Fly.—T. De Witt Talmage.—BS 5 
Swallow's, The.—Edwin Arnold.—PoR 
Swallows, The. (Epigram.) —R: B. Sheridan.—HPE 
Swallow’s Nest, The.—Edwin Arnold —PoR 
Swamp Fox, The.—W: G. Simms.—AA 
Swan Song, The.—Katha. R. Brooks.—BS 16 
Swan Song of Parson Avery, The.—J: G. Whittier.— 
AA 

Swearing off Smoking. (Brooklyn Eagle.) See Spoop- 
endyke Stops Smoking. 

Swedish Battle-song.—Michael Altenburg.—OS 2 

(Battle Hymn— at. to Gustavus Adolphus.)—HDL 
(Battle Song of Gustavus Adolphus.)—BNL 
Swedish Mother’s Hymn.—Frederika Bremer.—YBT 
(Heavenly Dove, The.)—OS 1 
(Mother’s Hymn.)—WCL 


324 




TITLE INDEX 


Sword 


Swedish Poem, A.—Anon.—PEO 
(What Does It Matter?)—CS 5 
Sweeping the Floor.—Anon.—PPSr 
Sweeping Women of Munich. {Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Sweet Afton. (C.) —-Rob’t Burns. 

(Afton Water.)—BNL—GP—SN—YBF 
(Flow Gently, Sweet Afton.)—FEP—IR—LLC— 
MBL—SO—WCLG 1 

Sweet and Bitter.—Edmund Spenser. See Amoretti 
and Epithalamion. 

Sweet and Low.—Alfred Tennvson. See Princess, 
The. 

Sweet and Twenty.—W: Shakespeare. See Twelfth 
Night. 

Sweet Answer, A.—Anon.—WR 17 
Sweet are the Banks.—Rob’t Burns. See Banks o’ 
Doon, The. 

Sweet are the Charms.—Barton Booth.—FEP 
“Sweet are the uses of adversity.”—W: Shakespeare. 
See As You Like It. 

Sweet Baby, Sleep (Rocking Hymn, A).-—G: Wither.— 
FEP 

Sweet, Be Not Proud.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL 

(To Dianemes—C.)—BFV—ELP—FEP—FTA— 
OB—PGT 1—TFY—YBF 

Sweet Cicely, Sel. fr. (Buying a Feller — sel.fr. Ch. 
XI11.)—Marietta Holley.—WR 15 
(For a’ that; or. Selling a Feller— abr.) —BS 20 
Sweet Content.—T: Dekker. See Pleasant Comedy of 
Patient Grissell, The. 

Sweet Content.—Rob’t Greene.— See Farewell to Fol- 
lie. 

“Sweet hand that held in mine.” ( Frazier’s Maga¬ 
zine.) —GG 

Sweet Home.—J: H. Payne. See Home, Sweet Home. 
Sweet Innisfallen.—T: Moore.—FEP 
Sweet is Childhood.—Jean Ingelow. See Story of 
Life, A. 

“Sweet is our youth.”—Aubrey De Vere. See Sonnet: 
“ Sad is our youth,” etc. 

"Sweet is the lore which nature brings.”—W: Words¬ 
worth. See Tables Turned, The. 

Sweet is the Pleasure.—Johann W. von Goethe (tr. by 
J: S. Dwight).—HBP 
(Rest— sel.) —PHS 
(True Rest.)—BNL—YBF (abr.) 

“Sweet is the rose [,but grows upon a brere].”—Edmund 
Spenser. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 
Sweet Lamenting.—Anon.—ELP 

“Sweet letters of the angel tongue.” — M. M. Ballou. 
—AD 

Sweet Lullaby, A.—Nicholas Breton (?). (Fr. The 
Arbor of Amourous Devises.)—ELP—-PGT 1— 
WEP 1 

(Cradle Song, A.)—OB 

Sweet Meeting of Desires.—Coventry Patmore. See 
Angel in the House, The. 

Sweet Nature’s Voice. (Fr. Susan: A Poem of De¬ 
grees.)—Arthur J. Munby.—VA 
Sweet Neglect, The.—Ben Jonson. See Simplex Mun- 
ditiis. 

Sweet Pastoral, A.—Nicholas Breton.—EP—HBP (si. 
abr.) 

Sweet Peace is Born.—C: C. Hahn.—BS 19 
Sweet Peas.—Anon.—PEO 

Sweet Peas.—J: Keats. See “I stood tiptoe upon a 
little hill.” 

Sweet Peas.—Lilian Payson.—PP—YFR 
Sweet Peril (Pity of It, The— C.). —G: Macdonald.— 
CEL 

Sweet Red. Rose, The.—Joel Stacy.—AD 
Sweet Remembrances.—T: Moore. See “Farewell!— 
but whenever you welcome khe hour.” 

Sweet Sabbath Bells.—Anon.—YBT 

Sweet September.—G: Arnold. See September Days. 

Sweet Sixteen.—H. W. Banks.—CG 1 

Sweet Smoking Pipe.—Anon.—PPh 

Sweet Song of Songs, A.—Gerald Massey.—YBT 

Sweet Star, The.—W: D. Lighthall.—TCV 

Sweet Stream, that Winds.—W: Cowper.—BNL 

(Comparison, A. Addressed to a Young Lady — 
C.)—WEP 3 

(To a Young Lady.)—PGT 1 
Sweet Suffolk Owl.—T: Vautor (?).—ELP—LC 
Sweet William’s Farewell to Black-eyed-Susan. (C.) — 
J: Gay.—FEP—HBP 

(Black-eyed Susan.)—BNL—-PGT 1—WEP 3 
(SI. abr.)— CEL—PC 

Sweet William’s Ghost. (C. — in Percy’s Reliques.)— 
Anon.—BB—CGd 
(William and Marjorie.)—PEB 1 
(3 diff. versions.) 

Sweetbrier, The.-—J: G. C. Brainard.—POS 


Sweetbrier.—Leigh Hunt. See Songs and Chorus of 
the Flowers. 

Sweete Cruell Shot.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astro- 
phel and Stella. 

Sweetest Flower that Blows, The.—Frd’k Peterson.— 
BIL—FTA 

Sweetest Melancholy. (Song fr. The Nice Valour, Act 
III., Sc. 3.)—ELP 

“Hence, all ye [or you] vain delights.”)—BNL— 
HBP 

(Melanc[h]olia.)—CEL—FEP 

(Melancholy.)—OB—PGT 1—YBF 

(Poet’s Mood.)—EPs 

(Song.)—WEP 2 

Sweetest Picture, The.—Alice Cary.—BS 14 

(Among the Beautiful Pictures.)—FP—HBP 

(Little Brother, The.)—WCL 

(Pictures of Memory— C.) —BNL—CR—CS 4— 
FTR — GP — HNS — SAE (br. sel.) — SM — 
SPE 

Sweetest Place, The.—Mrs. M. F. Butts.—COS—PP 
Sweetheart.—-Hamilton Aide.—FLS 
Sweetheart.—A: Greville.—FLS 
Sweetheart Gate, Th’.—Edwin Waugh.—VA 
Sweetheart, Good-by!—Ruthven Jenkyns (also at. to 
T: Moore). See Sailor’s Farewell, The. 
"Sweetheart, good-bye! that flut’ring sail.”—Ruthven 
Jenkyns. See Sailor’s Farewell, The. 

Sweetly Breathing, Vernal Air. (Sel fr. Upon Master 
W. Montague, his Return from Travel.)—T: 
Carew.—BNL 

(Airs of Spring, The.)—FEP—HBP 
Sweetness and Light, Sel. fr. (Duties of the Scholar.) 

—Matthew Arnold.—OS 3 
Sweets of Liberty. The.—Anon.—MYF 
Sweets of Love, The (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Sweets that Die.—Langdon E. Mitchell.—AA 
Swell [in a Horse-car], The.—G: W. Kvle.—BRR— 
CS 29—FTR 

(Delancey Stu vessnt and the Horse-car.) — WR 3 
“Swell’s” Homage to Mrs. Stowe, A. (Punch.) —HPE 
Swell’s Soliloquv [on the War], A [or The].—Anon.— 
BNL—BS 5—CS 4 
Swift.—Hartley Coleridge.—EDY 
Swiftness of Time, The, Br. sel. fr. —G: Gascoigne. 
Swimming. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Swimming. ( r. sel. fr, The Two Foscari, Act I., Sc. 

1.)—Lord Byron.—BNL—EPs—GN 
Swimming. (Br. sel. fr. Tristram of Lyonesse, Pt. 

VIII.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—GN 
Swing, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV—HSS 2 
Swing Away.—Lucy Larcom.'—LCS 
Swing High and Swing Low.—Eugene Field.—LS 
Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.—Anon.—-AA 
Swing Song and Drill.—Marguerite W. Morton.—ID 
Swinging ’neath the Old Apple-tree.—O. R. Barrows.— 
LLC 

(“Oh! the snorts of childhood”— w. mus.) —AD 
Swinging on a Birch-tree.—Lucy Larcom.-—LCS 
Swinging on the Gate.—Anon.—MC 
Swipe’s Dinner.—Anon.—CS 32 

Swipesy’s Christmas Dinner.—Anon.—BS 19—SR 12 
Swiss Air. (Songs without Sense, III.)—Fs. Bret 
Harte.—NA 

Swiss Mercenaries, The.—Victor Hugo. 

(Hireling Swiss Regiment, The.)—MMR 
Switchman’s Story, The.—B. A. R. Ottolengui.—CS 25 
Switzerland. (Frags. fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Switzerland.—Jas. S. Knowles. See William Tell. 
Sword, The.—Michael J Barry.—TIP 
Sword, The. (Play.) —Armand Berquin.—NDP 
Sword, The.—Helen Booth.—CS 30 
Sword, The.—Isabella V. Crawford.—TCV 
Sword, The.—T. S. Grimke.—FD 1—SS (si. longer.) 
“Sword! a name of dread, The.”—J: Pierpont.—GG 
Sword and a Nation’s Rights, The.—T. F. Meagher.— 
FD 1 

Sword Drill, The.—Anna B. Webb.—DR 
Sword Drill and March.—Marguerite W. Morton.—ID 
Sword Exercise, The. (Far from the Madding Crowd, 
Ch. XXVIII.)—T: Hardy—WR 13 
Sword of Bunker Hill, The.—W: R. Wallace.—SR 8 
Sword of Castruccio Castracani, The, Br. sel. fr. (“O 
Victor Emmanuel the King.”)—Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing.—BNL 

Sword of Damocles, The.— T. S. Denison. See Man 
Behind, The. 

Sword of Damocles, The, Sel. fr. (Defence of the 
Bride, The.)—Anna K. G. Rohlfs.—BS 18— 
WR 4 

Sword of Tethra, The. (Fr. Moytura.)—W: Larminie. 
—TIP 


325 




Sword 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Sword Song[, The].—Carl T. Korner (tr. by C: T. 
Brooks).—BNL—MRS 
(Song of the Sword— diff. tr.) —HB 
Sword-bearer, The.—G: H. Boker.—AWB 
"Swore Off.”—J: N. Fort [or Foot].—CS 30—PFP 
Sycophantic Fox and the Gullible Raven, The.—Guy 
W. Carryl.—AA 

Sydney Carton’s Death.—C: Dickens. See Tale of 
Two Cities, A. 

Syke’s Predicament. [Farce.) —Anon.—DDM 
Sylvia.—G: Darley. See Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 
Sylvia.—W: Shakespeare. See Two Gentlemen of 
Verona, The. 

Sylvia; or. The May Queen, Sets. fr. —G: Darley. 

Call, The. [Fr. Act IV., Sc. 1.)—FEP 
(Morning Song.)—VA 
(Serenade.)—VS 
Chorus of Spirits.—VA 
May Day. [Fr. Ill., 2.)—VS 
(Peasants’ Chorus, The.)—EP 
Nephon’s Song.—VA 
Osm^’s Song.—EP 
Romanzo to Sylvia.—VA 
(Sylvia.)—HBP 
Sylvia’s Song. (?)—VS 

Sylvia’s Song.—G: Darley. See Sylvia; or. The May 
Queen. 

Sylvie and Bruno. C: L. Dodgson.—NA 
Symbol, A. (C.)—Johann W. von Goethe. 

(“Future hides in it, The.”)—GG 
Symbolism.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Symbolisms. (C.)—R: Realf. 

(“O earth! thou hast not any wind that blows”— 
a&r.)—HSS 3 
(Word, The— sel.) —A A 
Symbols.—Vance Thompson.—AA 
Symbols of the Republic.-—Edwin H. Chapin.—FD 1 
Symon’s Lesson of Wisdom for all Manner of Children. 

—Symon (C: Simeon?).—BVC 
Sympathy.—Fanny B. Bates.—YBT 
Sympathy.—Althea Gyles.—TIP 
Sympathy.—Anna E. Hamilton.—HDL 
Sympathy.—Reginald Heber.—BS 10—CS 25—FEP— 
PS—THP 

Sympathy. Sir T: N. Talfourd. See Ion. 

Sympathy.—C. W. Thomson.—CS 19 
Sympathy. (Verses fr. A Week on the Concord and 
Merrimack Rivers: Wednesday.)—H: D. 
Thoreau.—EPs 

Sympathy and Scorn. [Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Sympathy with South American Republicanism. [Sel. 
fr. The Manama Mission. —Dan’l Webster.— 
PS—SS 

Sympathy with the Greeks.—H: Clay. See On the 
Greek Revolution. 

Symphony in Smoke, A. [Harper's Bazar.) —PPh 

Syr Cauline.—Anon.—HBP 

Syria.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 

Syrinx.—J: Lyly. See Midas. 

System.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.-—CGV 


T 

T. A. H. Ambrose Bierce.—AA 
Ta! Ta!—Anon.—KNS 
Tabby’s Tea-fight.—Anon.—WR 14 
Table Rules for Little Folks.—Anon.—OS 1 
Table Talk, Sels. fr. —W: Cowper. 

Lord Chatham. [Br. sel.) —EDY 
Past and Future of Poetry, The.—WEP 3 
Table Talk, Sel. fr. (Genius and Common Sense.)— 

W: Hazlitt—MRS 

Tableaux from Hiawatha.—H: W. Longfellow. See 
Song of Hiawatha. 

Tableaux of “The Ten Virgins.”—Anon.—WR 23 
Tableaux Vivants.—J: Ford.—WR 17 
Tables Turned, The.—Anon.—KNS 
Tables Turned', The.—W: Wordsworth.—HBP—LLC 
WEP 4—YBF 

(“Sweet is the lore which nature brings”— br. sel .)— 
HSS 3 

(“Up! up! my friend, and quit your books.”)—SN 
Tacita.—Jas. B. Kenyon.—AA 

Tacking Ship off Shore.—Walter F. Mitchell.—AA— 
BNL—EPs—FEP—GN—HBP 
Tact and Talent. [London Atlas.) —PPS [si. abr.) — 

SE [br. sel.) —SPE—WCLG 2 
(Contrast of Tact and Talent.)—SE 
Tahawus.—Georgiana Mendum.—SO 

326 


Taill of the Lyoun and theJMous, The.—Rob’t Henry- 
son.—WEP 1 

Tailor of Tipperary, The.—Anon.—SED 
Tailor’s Thimble, The.—Dion Boucicault. See Shau- 
graun. The. • 

Take Back your Words.—Lloyd Mifflin.—FTA 
Take Care.—Alice Cary.—BLF—GMS—TFS [si. abr.) 
Take Care of the Minutes.—Anon.—PS 
Take Care of the Minutes.—Anon.—SM 
(Minutes, The.)—TFS 

(What the Minutes Say— si. abr.) —PP—YFR 
Take Courage.—Anon.—WR 17 
Take.er Tatah en Wait.—Anon.—CS 37 
“Take Good Care of Baby.”— (St. Nicholas.) —SR 9 
(How Persimmons Took Cah ob der Baby.)—CS 13 
—WR 26 

Take Heart.—Edna D. Procter.—GP 
Take it Like a Man.—C. F. Lester.—BS 26 
Take me. Mother Earth.—Anna Jameson.—VA 
Take, oh! take those lips Away.—W: Shakespeare and 
John Fletcher. See Bloody Brother, The, and 
Measure for Measure. 

Take the World as It Is.—C: Swain.—VA 
Take thy Old Cloak about Thee. (C .—in Percy’s 
Reliques.)—Anon.—FEP—HBP—HPE 
(Old Cloak, The.)—OB 

Take up the Collection.—Anon.—PR—SSS—YA 
Taken on Trial.—Fanny Barlow.—GH 
(Wedding-march on Trial, A.)—MYF 
“Takin’ Boarders.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Taking Aim.—Anon.—CPL 
Taking Care of Him Nights.—Anon.—DLF 
Taking Dolly’s Picture.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.— 
PS—TT 

Taking of Sebastopol, The.—T. W. Parsons,—EDY 
Taking the Census. [Dial.) —Anon.—FAD 
Taking the Census. (Dial.) —Anon.—MFD 

Taking the Census. (Dial.) — Dr.-Valentine.— 

CPL—M PD 

Taking the Cream. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Taking the Veil.—Tom Masson.—WR 7 
Taking the Veil.—( Punch Bowl.) —CG 3 
Taking Toll.—Anon.—FS 
Taking up Carpets.—Anon.—CS 14 
Tale, A.—Rob’t Browning. See Two Poets of Croisic, 
The. 

Tale of a Cigarette, The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Tale of a Dog, The.—Albert B. Paine.—GH 
(Five Chapter of Real Life.)—PS 
Tale of a Dog and a Bee.—Anon.—TFS 
Tale of a Leg, A.—T: Miller.—BeR 
Tale of a Nose, A.—C: F. Adams.—AWH—CS 18 
Tale of a Pony.—Anon.—TT 
Tale of a Tadpole, The.—Anon.—CS 25 
Tale of a Temptation.—Alice Horton.—CS 15 
Tale of a Tramp, The.—Anon.—CS 18 
Tale of a Trumpet, Sel. fr. T: Hood.—SE 

(Peddler and his Trumpet, The— ptly diff.) —WR 1 
Tale of a Tub, A, sel. fr. (Relations of Booksellers 
and Authors.The—Sec. X.)—Jonathan Swift.— 
ESs 

Tale of Christmas Eve, A. (Designer.) —WR 26 
Tale of Drury Lane, A.—Horace Smith.—BNL (abr.) 
—FEP—HPE 

Tale of Hard Times, A.—Anon.—BS 24 
Tale of Providence, A.—I: W. Pennypacker.—FMR 
Tale of Sweethearts, A.—G: R. Sims.—BS 20—PFP 
Tale of the Atlantic Coast, A.—G: Zeagles.—CS 15 — 
NPS—YP 

Tale of the Big Snow, A.—“Bizarre.”—CS 17 
Tale of the Crimean War, A.—Frd’k G. Webb.—WR 2 
Tale of the East (Side), A.—J: Albro.—GH 
Tale of the Fishwife and its Sad Fate.—S: L. Clemens. 
Set Tramp Abroad, A. 

Tale of the Kennebec Mariner.—Holman F. Day.— 
THP 

Tale of the Man of Lawe, The.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See 
Canterbury Tales, The. 

Tale of the Terrible Fire.—Anon.—WR 6 

Tale of the Yorkshire Coast, A.—Anon.—BS8 (si. abr.) 

(Story of the Yorkshire Coast, A.)—WR 21 
Tale of Two Cities, A, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Death of Madame Defarge, The. (Bk. III., Ch. 

XIV. , abr.)— MRS 

Execution of Sydney Carton. The. (Bk. III., Chs. 
XIII. and XV.— cond.) —BS 23 (si.) —MRS (fr. 

XV. )—WR 8 

(Sydney Carton’s Death— si. diff. cond. fr. Ch. 
XV.)—NC 

Guillotine, The. (Sel. fr. Bk. III., Ch. IV.)— 
OS 3 

Tale the Titles Told, The.—Kate A. Davis.—CS 36 
Talented Man, The.—Winthrop M. Praed.—WR 9 





TITLE INDEX 


Teachings 


Tales of a Wayside Inn.—H: W. Longfellow. See: 
Ballad of Carmilhan, The. 

Bell of Atri, The. 

Birds of Killingworth, The. 

Emma and Eginhard. 

King Robert of Sicily. 

Lady Wentworth. 

Legend Beautiful, The. 

Legend of Rabbi Ben Levi, The. 

Paul Revere’s Ride. 

Saga of King Olaf, The. 

Tales of the Hall, Sels. fr. —G: Crabbe. 

Approach of Age, Tne. (Sel. fr. Bk. X.)—BNL 
Entanglement, An. (Sel. fr. Bk. XIII.)—WEP 3 
Meeting. (Sony fr. Bk. VII.)—OB 
Taliesin: A Masque, Sel. fr. —R: Hovey.—AA 
Talisman, A.—Louise I. Guiney.—TAS 
Talisman, The, Scls. fr .—Walter Scott. 

Nubian, The. (.Sel. fr. Ch. XX.)—WCLG 1 
Richard to the Princes of the Crusade. (Sel. fr. 
XIX )_ss 

Talk to an Art Union.—Walt Whitman.—SO 
Talking in their Sleep.—Edith M. Thomas.—AD— 
PEO—YBT 

Talking Latin.-Haliburton.—DDR—SCS 

Talking Oak, The, Sel. fr. (Olivia.)—Alfred Tennyson. 
—GN 

Talking to Dolly.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Talking Tots.—Anon.—DLD 

(Midgets’ Greeting, The.)—KER 
Talks on Trees.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Autocrat of 
the Breakfast-table, The. 

Tam Glen.—Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 
Tam O’Shanter.—Rob’t Burns.—BNL—EPs—FEP— 
HBP—THP—WEP 3—WR 18 
Tamar and the Nymph.—Walter S. Landor. See 
Gebir. 

Tamberlaine the Great, Sel. fr. (Ambition— br. sel. fr. 

Pt. I., Act II., Sc. 7.)—Christopher Marlowe.— 
KNE 

Tambo a Ladies’ Man.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo and his Mother-in-Law.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Babies.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Chess.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Ciphering.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Entomology.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Kisses.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Matrimony.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Natural History.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on Preaching.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo on the English Language.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo’s Bet with Mr. Johnson.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo’s Dog.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo’s Hat.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambo’s Postage Stamp Gag.—Anon.—DSS 
Tambourine Drill.—A. E. Hurst.—ID 
Tambourine Drills.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Tame Hares.—W: Cowper.—FTR 
Taming a Wife.—J: Tobin. See Honeymoon, The. 
Taming an Alligator.—Anon.—WR 2 
Taming of the Shrew, Br. sel. fr. (Fr. Act I., Sc. 1.) 
—W: Shakespeare.—BNL 

Tamlane. (Sel. fr. Tne Young Tamlane —in Border 
Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—BB 

(Young Tam Lin, The— diff. and longer vers .)— 
PEB 1 

Tammy’s Prize.—Anon.—BS 10—CS 20 
Tampa Romance, A.—Dollie L. Rogers.—CS 37 
Tancred, Sel. fr. (Jerusalem by Moonlight— sel. fr. 

Bk III., Ch. I.)—B: Disraeli, Earl of Beacons- 
field—CS 6—SR 5—TMD 
Tangled Skein, A.—Josephine Pollard.—SSS 
Tannhauser.-—W: M. Payne.—AA 
Tantalizing.—H: M. Stone.—CG 2 
Tantalus: Texas.—Joaquin Miller.—CS 20 
Taper March and Drill.—Marguerite W. Morton.— 


ID 

Tapestry Weavers, The.—Anson G. Chester.—HDL 
Tar for all Weathers, The.—C: Dibdin.—CGd 
Tardy George.—Anon.—AWB 
Tardy Spring.—G: Meredith.—OB 
Tariff Reform.—W: L. Willson.—TMR 
Tarpeia.—Louise I. Guiney.—WR 22 
Tarquin and the Augur.—W: Aytoun. See Puffs Poet¬ 
ical. , , . 

Tarry thou Till I Come; or, Salathiel, the Wandering 
Jew, Sel. fr. (Constantius and the Lion—sel. 
fr. Bk. I., Ch. XXI.)—G: Croly.—BS 24—PFP 
(Thrilling Sketch.)—CS 8 
Tarrvtown Romance, A. (Good Cheer.) BS 1- 
Tartar, The (Poor Tartar: A Hungarian Legend— C.). 

—J: G. Saxe.—KNE 
Tartary.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 


Task, The, Sels. fr .—W: Cowper. 

Bk. I. The Sofa, Sels. fr. 

Crazy Kate, The Gipsies.—WEP 3 
Relish of Fair Prospect.—WEP 3 
Task, The, Bk. I., Br. sel. fr. —BNL 
Bk. II. The Time-piece, Sels. fr. 

Affectation in the Pulpit.—CS 5—SS 
England.—BNL (abr.) —WEP 3 

("England, with all thy faults I love thee 
still.”)—EHT 
Slavery.—BNL 

(Love of Liberty— si. abr.) —GP 
Bk. III. The Garden, rels. fr. 

Autobiographical.—WEP 3 
(Sum of Life, The.)—BNL 
Truth. (Br. sel.) —CS 11 
Bk. IV. The Winter Evening, Sels. fr. 

Early Love of the Country and of Poetry.— 
WEP 3 

Post, The. The Fireside in Winter.—WEP 3 
( W inter— sel. )—GP 

(Winter Evening at Home, A— br. sel., ptly. 
diff .)—GP 

(Task, The— ptly. same.) —BNL 
Snow.—WEP 3 

Bk. V. The Winter Morning Walk, Sels. fr. 
Freeman, The.—BNL 
Ice Palace, The.—EPs 
Patriots and Martyrs.—BLP 

("Patriots have toiled and in their country’s 
cause”— br. sel.) —-HBP 
Winter Morning.—BNL 
Bk. VI. The Winter Walk at Noon, Sels. fr. 
Happiness of Animals.—FTR 

(Poet in the Woods, The— sel.) —WEP 3 
(Woodland in Spring— si. abr.) —AD 
Happy Man, The.—BNL 
Humanity.—BNL—CS 15 
Meditation in Winter.—WEP 3 
(Winter Noon— abr.) —BNL 
(Knowledge and Wisdom — sel.) — FP (br.) — 
FTR 

Tasso.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 

Tasso.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Taste.—Jas. W. Riley.—BS 18—CRR 
Taste, an Epistle to a Young Critic, Sel. fr. —J: Arm¬ 
strong.—WEP 3 

Taste and Genius. (Sel. fr. Difference between Taste 
and Genius.)—Hugh Blair.—AE 
Taste it not.—Anon.—CS 26 
Tastes of Yesterday, The.—R. K. K.—CG 3 
Tatler, The. (Commonwealth of Lunatics, The—No. 
125.)—R: Steele.—ESs 

Tattered Ensign, The.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Old 
Ironsides. 

Tauler.—J: G. Whittier.—LLC 
Taxation of America.—P: St. John.—AWB 
Taxesf, the Price of Glory]. (Sel. fr. America.)— 
Sydney Smith.—SS—SSD 
Tax-gatherer, The.—J: B. Tabb.—GN 
“Tchasson Ouglou is on!” (Br. sel. fr. Ouglou’s On¬ 
slaught.)—W: Motherwell.—AE 
Te Marty rum Candidatus.—Lionel Johnson.—TIP 
Tea Parties in Old Times.—Washington Irving. See 
Knickerbocker History of New York. 

Tea Party, The.—Anon.—FAD 

“Teach me to live! ’Tis easier far to die.”-—Anon.—GG 
Teach us to Die.—Arthur P. Stanley.—VA 
Teach us to Wait. ({ .) Phoebe Cary. 

(“ Why are we so impatient of delay.”)—GG 
Teacher the Hope of America, The.—-S: Eells.—KNE 
—PFP 

"Teacher Wanted.”—Frank Crosby.—CS 10—ED 
Teacher’s Diadem, The.—Anon.—BS 22 
Teacher’s Dream, The.—W. H. Venable.—CS 12—FEP 
—FS—LLC—PPSr 

Teachers of Mankind, The.—H :, Lord Brougham.— 
LLC 

Teaching a Lesson.—Alice I,. Richards.—SL 
Teaching a Sunday-school Class.—J. P. Lyons.—BS 22 
Teaching Dolly. (Youth’s Companion.) —PS 
(Dolly’s Lesson.)—TT 
Teaching Dolly to Walk.—Anon.—WR 17 
Teaching Him the Business.—Anon.—BDD—CS 23 
(Vay Rube Hoffestein Sells, The.)—DRR 
Teaching of the Colleges, The. (Sel. fr. Address de¬ 
livered before the New England Society in New 
York City, Dec. 22. 1892.)-—Seth Low.— TMR 
Teaching Public School.—Anon.—CS 5 
Teachings of Nature.—Sarah J. (7) Hale.—KNE 
Teachings of the American Revolution.—Jared Sparks. 
—PFP 

(Lesson of the Revolution.)—BLP 


327 






Teacups 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Teacups. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Tea-gown, The.—Eugene Field.—TAV 
Tea-kettle and the Cricket, The. (Sel. fr. The Cricket 
on the Hearth, Chirp the First.)—C: Dickens.— 
PR 

“Teamster Jim.”—Rob’t J. Burdette.—CD 
Tear, A.—S: Rogers.—BNL 
(On a Tear— C.) —FP 
Tear and the Smile, The.—C. W. F.—DCP 
(Running a Race.)—PR—WR 12 
Tear of Repentance, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Teares of the Muses, The, ‘ el. fr. (Complaint of Thalia.) 

—Edmund Spenser.—WEP 1 
Tears.—Anon.—OB 
(Lullaby.)—ELP 

(Sleep— at. to J: Dowland.)—BNL—HBP 
(Song for Music, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Tears.—J: V. Cheney.—TAS 
Tears.—Clarence N. Ousley.—BS 21—HBR 
Tears.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 

Tears at the Grave of Sir Albertus Morton Wept by 
Sir H. Wotton. (C.)—Sir H: Wotton. 

(Tears Wept at the Grave, etc.)—FEP 
Tears, Idle Tears.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, 
The. 

Tears in Spring—(Lament for Thoreau).—W: E. Chan- 
ning.—AA 

Tears of Peace, The, .‘■els. fr. —G: Chapman. 

Procession of Time, The. (Sel. fr. Conclusion.) — 
WEP 1 

Spirit of Homer, The. (Br. sel. fr. Inductio.)— 
WEP 1 

Tears of Scotland, The.—Tobias Smollett.—FEP 
Tears of the Poplars, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Tears of Tullia, The.—Edgar Fawcett.—WR 16 
Tears Wept at the Grave, etc.—Sir H: Wotton. See 
Tears at the Grave, etc. 

Technique.—Langdon E. Mitchell.—See To a Writer 
of the Day. 

Tecumseh: a Drama, Sels fr. —C: Mair. 

Buffalo Herds, The.—VA 
Iena’s Song.—VA 
Lefroy in the Forest.—VA 

Teddy McGuire and Paddy O’Flynn.—Amanda T. 
Jones.—BS 12 

Teddy O’Rourke.—Malcolm Douglas.—WR 4 
Teddy O’Toole’s Six Bulls.—Anon.—DI 
Teeny-Weeny.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
Teetotaler’s Story, A.—Delia A. Haywood.—CS 30 
Telegram, The. ( Good Housekeeping.) —NPS—SR 5— 
YP 

(Message for Mamma in Heaven, A.)—CS 37 
Telegraph Clerk, The.—Anon.—HP 
Telegraphic Signal, The.—C: Barnard.—CS 21 
Telemachus. G. M. Sheldon.—WR 6 
Telemachus to the Allied Chiefs. (Sel. fr. The Adven¬ 
tures of Telemachus, Bk. XV.)—Francois de 
S. de La M. Fdnelon.— SS 
Telepathy.—Jas. R. Lowell.—FTA—OH 
Telephone at Home, The.—Anon.—WR 7 
Telephone Conversation, A.—Helen A. Gregg.—-WR 12 
Telephone Message, A.—Anon.—PEO 
Telephone Message, A.—Sydney Dayre.—DCP 
(Message, A.)—BS 18 

Telephonic Conversation, A.—S: L. Clemens.—BS 11 
Telesilla.—Anon.—FMR 
Tell Her So.—Anon.—WR 2 
Tell Me. (C.)—G: Macdonald. 

(Over the Hill.)—HSS 3 

(SI. abr. )—BS 1—CEL—LLC 
Tell Me.—Edith M. Thomas. See Inverted Torch, The. 
Tell Me how to Woo Thee.—Rob’t Graham of Gartmore. 
—FEP 

(If Doughty Deeds [my Ladv Please].)—BNL—OB 
—PGT 1 

(To his Lady.)—LH 

Tell me, my Heart[, if this be Love]. (Song—- C .)— 
G:, Lord Lyttleton.—BNL—HBP—OB 
Tell Me not of Morrows, Sweet. (In Songs from 
Dramas.)—Augusta Webster.—VA 
Tell Me where is Fancy Bred.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Merchant of Venice, The. 

Tell Me, ye Winged Winds.—C: Mackay.—BNL—VA 
(Inquiry, The.)—BS 3—CS 2—CSS—PPSr—S A— 
SE (br. sel.) 

(SI. abr. )—HSS 2—PEO 

Tell on His Native Hills.—Jas. S. Knowles. See Wil¬ 
liam Tell. 

Tell on Switzerland.—Jas. S. Knowles. See William 
Tell. 

Telling Fortunes.—Alice Cary.—BLF 


Telling Fortunes.-—G: H. Jessop.—WR 4 
Telling Tales.—Ana Barnard.—WR 21 
Telling the Bees. ( Paraphrase .)—Andrew Lang.— 
VA 

Telling the Bees.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
Telling the Bees.—J: G. Whittier.— BFV—EPs— 
PHS 

Tell’s Address to the Alps.—Jas. S. Knowles. See Wil¬ 
liam Tell. 

Tell’s Address to the Mountains.—Jas. S. Knowles. See 
William Tell. 

Telltale, The. (Aldine.) —BNL—PR—TMR—YA 
(Bobolink, The.)—BS 11—HNS 
(Abr. )—AD—CSS—PPSr 
(Little Telltale, The.)—FTR 
Tell-tale Flowers.—J: Clare.—PGT 2 
Tell-tale Heart, The. ( C .— cond.) —Edgar A. Poe.— 
BS 16 

(Murderer’s Confession, A.)—PFP 
Tellus.—W: R. Huntington.—AA 

Temper and Aim of the Scholar, The.—W: E. Glad¬ 
stone.—TMD 
Temperance.—Anon.—TS 

Temperance. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Temperance, Sel. fr. (Vice of Intemperance, The.)— 
E: Everett. WR 18 
Temperance.—J: Ireland.—BS 12—FS 
Temperance. (Sel. arr. fr. The Maine Liquor Law.)— 
Wendell Phillips—CS 20—TS 
(Enforcement of the Liquor Law, The.)—MRS 
(Temperance Question, The.)—BS 8—PS (abr.) 
Temperance Address.—Anon.—DLS—KNS 
(What I Think.)—LPS—PP 
(What to Drink.)—DST—PS—SS—TT 
Temperance Alphabet.—Anon.—WR 17 
Temperance Alphabet.—Anon.—WR 18 
Temperance Alphabet, A.—Eliz. Lloyd.—SSE 
Temperance Boy, The. (S. S. Advocate.) —COS—PP 
Temperance Dialogue.—E. Murray.—CS 11 
Temperance Echo, The.—E: Carswell.—CS 22 
Temperance Enlightening the World.—G: L. Taylor.— 
WR 18 

Temperance Meeting, A.—H. E. McBride.—MTD 
Temperance; or, The Cheap Physician. (In Praise of 
Lessius, his Rule of Health— C.) —R: Crashaw. 
—HBP 

(Cheap Physician, The.)—BNL 
Temperance Pearls from Many Authors.—Anon.— 
CS 13 

Temperance Pledge, The. — T: F. Marshall. — 
CS 17 (ptly. diff.) —PEO—WR 18 
Temperance Question, The.—Josiah G. Holland. 

(Tramp, Tramp, Tramp— si. abr .)—BS 5—CS 14 
Temperance Question, The.—Wendell Phillips. See 
Temperance. 

Temperance Rhyme-ation.—Anon.—CS 12 
Temperance, 1776-1876.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 9 
Temperance Ship, The. ( Banner , The .)—CS 36 
Terhperance Song. (Punch .)—HPE 
Temperance Song Recital. (Dial.) —Mrs. P. D. Brown. 
—SR 4 

Temperance Speech. (2)—Anon.—DLS 
Temperance Speech.—Gus Williams.—BDD 

(Burlesque Temperance Speech— si. abr .)—DSS 
Temperance Star, The.—-Anon.—TS 
Tempered.—Sarah C. Woolsey.—TMR 
Tempest, The.—C: Dickens. See David Copperfield. 
Tempest, The.'—Jas. T. Fields.—BNL—FP—GP— 
TAV—WCLG 1 

(Ballad of the Tempest—C.)—CS 19—FEP—HBP 
—LC 

(Captain’s Daughter, The.)—CSS—DJS(sZ. abr .)— 
PPSr—WCL 

(“Isn’t God upon the ocean,” etc.— abr .)—TFS 
(On the Ocean-— abr .)—YBT 
Tempest, The.—Epes Sargent.—KNE 
Tempest, The, Sels. fr .—W : Shakespeare. 

Ariel’s Song[s]. (Son'ifr. Act V., Sc. 1.) BFV (I.) 
— EPs— GN (II.) HBP (III.) — LC (1.) — 
OEL (I.)—OS 1—PHS (III.)—WEP 1 
(Fairy Land, IV.)—OB 
(Fairy Life, The, I.)—PGT 1 
(Fairy Song«, l.)—YBF 
(Tempest, The, Sel. fr.)— BNL—ELP 
(“ Where the bee sucks, thpre suck I.”) BPB— 
FEP 

Insubstantial Pageant, An. (Sel. fr. IV., 1.) — EP 
Love and Marriage of Ferdinand and Miranda. The. 
(Sel. fr. I„ 2; III., 1; sels. fr. IV., 1, and V., 1.) 
—VSC. 

Airv Nothings. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 1.) — BNL— 
‘CS 14 

(Human Life.)—EPs 


328 




TITLE INDEX 


Thankfulness 


Tempest, The ( continued). 

Ariel’s Songs. ( Sony fr. I., 2.)—BFV (II.)— 
GN (I.)—HBP (I.) — LC (II.)—OEL (II.)— 
PHS (I.) 

(“ Come unto these yellow sands.”)—FEP 
(Fairy Land, III.)—OB 
(Fairy Life, The, II.)—PGT 1 
(Fairy Songs, II.)—YBF 
(Song of Ariel.)—CGd 
(Tempest, The, Sel. fr.) BNL 
Ariel’s Songs. ( Song fr. I., 2.)—GN (III.) — 
HBP (II.) LC (III.) — OEL (III.) — 
PHS (II.) 

(Fairy Land, V.)—OB 

(“Full fathom five thy father lies.”)— EPs— 
FEP 

(Sea Dirge. A.) — BFV — BPB—CGd—PGT 1 
—WEP 1—YBF 

(Tempest, The, Sel. fr.)— BNL—ELP 
Speech of Prospero, A. ( Sel. fr. V., 1.)—MRS 
Tempest, The, Br. sel. fr. (rr. II.. 1.)—BNL 
Tempest Stilled, The.—J. G. Lyons.—SS 
Temple of Clitumnus.—Lord Byron. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

Temple of Fame, The. ( Entertainment .)—Anon.—EuE 
Temple of Human Liberty, The.—J.S. Holmes.—FD 1 
Temple of Living Masons, The.—Lawrence M. Green- 
leaf.—CS 30 

Temple to Friendship, A.—T: Moore.—BNL 
Tempora Acta. (Sel. fr. Babylonia.)—Rob’t, Earl of 
Lytton.—VA 

Temptation. (Pt. IV.)—R: W. Gilder.—TAS 
Temptation. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Temptation of Hassan Ben Khaled, The, Sel. fr. (Rose, 
The.)—Bayard Taylor.—BNL 
Temptation of the Vision of the Kingdoms of the 
Earth, The.—J: Milton. See Paradise Re¬ 
gained. 

Temptation Resisted. (Dial.) —Anon.—FAD 
Temptation Resisted. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Temptations of St. Anthony. (Bentley’s Miscellany.) 
—CS 11 

Tempted, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Tempted.—E: R. Sill.—AA 

Ten Commandments, The. (.4rr.)—Anon.—FTT 
Ten Commandments, The. Bible. See Exodus. 

Ten Commandments, The. (Dial.) —Lizzie M. Had¬ 
ley.—SSE 

Ten Famous Women. (Dial.) —Eliz. Lloyd.—CDs 
Ten Hour Bill, The. Sels. fr.— T: B. Macaulay. 

Labor Hours Have Limits.—BLP 

(On Limiting the Hours of Labor.)—PS—SS 
Ten Hour Bill, The.—WR 22 
Ten Little Fingers. (Dial.) —Anon.—ASD 
Ten Little Songsters, The.—Anon.—WR 7 
Ten Little Toes.—Anon.—TFS 

Ten Nights in a Barroom, .'■el. fr. (Drunkard’s Re¬ 
pentance, A —fr. Night the Third.)—Timothy 
S. Arthur (arr. by W: W. Pratt).—WR 18 
Ten Pound Ten.—G: W. Bungay.—CS 26 
Ten Robber Toes.—Lillie E. Barr.—DR 
Ten Thousand a Year. — Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KC 

Ten Thousand a Year, Sel. fr. (Tittlebat Titmouse’s 
Experiment — sel. fr. Chs. V. and VI.)-—S: 
Warren.—WR 8 

Ten True Friends.—Anon.—COS—PP 
(Abr. )—HSS 2—TFS 

Ten Virgins, The, Tabs. of. —Anon.—WR 23 
Ten Years Ago.—Alaric A. Watts.—FP 
Tendencies of Self-government, The. (Sel. fr. The 
Place of the Individual in American Society.) 
—Lyman Abbott.—TMR 

Tender Affection. (Frags, fr. various authors ) —BNL 
Tender and True. (Abr.) —Jas. R. Lowell.—FTA 
(Love— C.)—BIL—BNL (br. sel.) —TFY 
Tender Heart, The.—Helen G. Cone.—BS 14 
Tender Husband, The.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Tender Mercies.-—Anna L. Waring.—FHS 
Tender Shepherd, The.—Mary L. Duncan.—TFS 

(Child’s Evening Prayer[, A].—COS—DLS—PP— 

_sss 

(Evening Hymn.)—YBT 

Tender-heartedness. (SI. diff. fr. Works.)—D. 
Streamer.—N A 

Tenement House Guest, A.—Gertrude Garrison.— 
CS 37 

Tennessee.—-Fs. Brooks.—AA 
Tennis Drill.—A. E. Hurst.—ID 
Tennis Drill.—Mary D. Wilson.—WR 6 
Tennyson.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Tennyson.—Florence E. Coates.—AA 
Tennyson.—T: H. Huxley.—EDY—VA 


Tennyson.—H: Van Dyke.—AA 
Tenor, The.—H: C. Bunner.-—WR 8 
Tent Life in Siberia, Sel. fr. (Sudden Transformation 
from Winter to Summer— sel. fr. Ch. XXXI.) 
—G: Kennan.—VSG 

Tent on the Beach, The, Sels. fr. —J: G. Whittier. See. 
Abraham Davenport. 

Brother of Mercy, The. 

To her Absent Sailor. • 

Worship of Nature, The. 

Wreck of Rivermouth, The. 

Tenth of Januarv, The, Sel. fr. (Fall of [the] Pember¬ 
ton Mill, The.) — Eliz. S. Phelps.—BRR — 
BS 12 (abr.) —CS 15 

Tenth Song, Absence.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astro- 
phel and Stella. 

Ter’ble Sperience, A.—Plato Johnson.—BS 12 
Terence’s Farewell.—Lady Dufferin.—TIP 
Term of Death, The.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA 
Terminus.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA 
Ternarie of Littles, upon a Pipkin of Jellie Sent to a 
Lady, A.—Rob’t Herrick.-—BVC 
Terpsichore in the Flat Creek Quarters.—J: A. Macon. 
—BS 9 

(Dancing in the Flat Creek Quarters.)—WR 7 
Terrible Example, A.—Layton Brewer.-—TL 
Terrible Infant, A. (C.) —Frd’k I.ocker-Lampson. 

(Earliest Recollection.)—DCP 
Terrible Race, A.—Campbell Rae-Brown.—WR 13 
Terrible Secret, A.—J. S. Coyne.—DT 
Terrible Threat, A. (Dial.) —Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Terrible Time, A.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Terror.—W : Shakespeare. See King Richard III. 
Terror of Death, The. (Sonnet: “ When I have fears,” 
etc.— C.) —J: Keats.—PGT 1 
(Fear of Death, The.)—YBF 
(Sonnet Written in January, 1818.)—WEP 4 
(“When I have fears that I may cease to be.”)—OB 
Test, The.—Anon.—ELP 
Test, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA 
Test, The. (Poems and Epigrams, LIV.)—Walter S. 
Landor.—VA 

Test*, The. (Dial.) —H. E. McBride—SD 
Test of Patience.—Anon.—KNE 
Test of Sight, The.—Christopher P. Cranch.—MYF 
Test; or, Maud May’s Lovers, The. (Dial.) —Mrs. 
Russell Kavanaugh.—KH 

Testament and Complayntof the Papingo, The, Sel. fr. 

—Sir D: Lyndesay.—WEP 1 
Testimony of Experience, The.—Anon.—TS 
Testing the Suitors. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Tcte-a-tote.—J: W. Chadwick.—HP—OH 
Tete-a-tete with Phyllis.—G. C. Smith.—CG 1 
Texas Centennial Oration.—R. B. Hubbard.—CS 17 
Texas Cow, The. (Texas Siftings.) —PS 
Texas Story, A.—J. W. Donovan.—CS 17 
Text without a Sermon, A. (Harper’s Magazine.) — 
CD—SDR 

Thackeray’s Birthday.—Rob’t C. Rogers.—EDY 
Thaddeus Stevens.—Phoebe Cary.—EDY 
Thae Auld Laird’s Secret.—Findley Braden. — WR 21 
Thaisa’s Dirge.—Herman C. Merivale.—VA 
Thalaba the Destroyer, > els. fr. —Rob’t Southey. 

Night [in the Desert].—(Bk. I., St. 1.)—CEL—FP 
—GN 

(Thalaba, Sel. fr.)— BNL 

Thalaba, Sel. fr. (Bk. VIII., Sts. 23, 26-29.)— 
WEP 4 

Thalatta! [Thalatta!] [or Thalassa! Thalassa].—Jos. B. 

Brown.—AA—ASL—PYO—TAS—YBF 
Thales’ Reasons for Leaving London. (Sel. fr. Lon¬ 
don.)—S: Johnson.—WEP 3 
Thalia.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 

Thames, The. (Br. sel. fr. Ovid’s Banquet of Sense 
—Narratio.)—G: Chapman.—WEP 1 
Thanatopsis.-—W: C. Brvant.—AA—BNL—BS 6—CR 
—CS 1 — FEP —FTR—GMS —HBP —LLC 
— MAL — OM — OS 3 — PYO — SE — SM 
— TAS — TAV — VSG — WCLG 2 — WRD 
(Abr.)— EPs—SO—'TMR 
(Br. sels.) —AD—HDL 
(How to Live— br. sel.) —FP 

("So live that when thv summons comes to 
join.”)—AE—GG 

Thank God, there’s Still a Vanguard. — Mrs. H. E. G. 
Arey—HSS 3 

Thank You, Pretty Cow.—Jane Taylor.—PoR 
(Pretty Cow.)—PC 

Thankful Children.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 

Thankful Hearts.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

Thankful Parson, A.—Anon.—CS 30 

Thankful Soul, A.—Frank I,. Stanton.—BS 24—WR 21 

Thankfulness.—G: Cooper.—YBT 


329 





Thanks 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Thanks to the human heart by which we live.”— 
W: Wordsworth. See Ode: Intimations of 
Immortality. 

Thanksgivin’ Pumpkin Pies.—Marg. E. Sangster.— 
DR 

Thanksgiving.—Anon.—PEO 
Thanksgiving.—Amelia E. Barr.—YBT 
Thanksgiving, A.—Rose T. Cooke.—TAS 
Thanksgiving. ( SI. ■ abr.) —Frances R. Havergal.— 
HS 

Thanksgiving[, A]. (C.) —W: D. Howells.—HDL— 
TAS 

(Our Thanksgiving Accept.)—PEO 
Thanksgiving.—T. G. La Moille.—FS 
Thanksgiving, A.—Lucy Larcom.—BS 6—CS 9 
Thanksgiving.—H. E. McBride.—SD 
Thanksgiving, A.—J. H. Newman.—CEL 
Thanksgiving.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—SSE 
Thanksgiving among the Greeks.—Anon.—PEO 
Thanksgiving among the Jews.—Anon.—PEO 
Thanksgiving at Grandma’s.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Thanksgiving Day.—Anon.—DFR 
Thanksgiving Day.—Anon.—PEO 
Thanksgiving Day. — H: Alford. See Thanksgiving 
Hymn. 

Thanksgiving Day. (Sel. Jr. The Family as an Ameri¬ 
can Institution.)—H: W. Beecher.—OS 3 
(Day of Thanksgiving, The— sel.) —PEO 
Thanksgiving Day.—Lydia M. Child.—NV—OS 1— 
PoR—WCL 

Thanksgiving Day.—Rose H. Thorpe.—BS 22 
Thanksgiving Dinner, A.-—Lesbia Bryant.—PR—YA 
Thanksgiving Dinner, A.—Ann S. Stephens.—MMR 
Thanksgiving Dream. A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Thanksgiving Dream, A.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Thanksgiving Elopement, A.—N. S. Emerson.—DR 
Thanksgiving Eve.—Anon.—WR 6 
Thanksgiving Exercise.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—DFR 
Thanksgiving Fable, A.—Oliver Herford.—PoR 
Thanksgiving for His House.—Rob’t Herrick. See 
Thanksgiving to God for His House. A. 
Thanksgiving Guest, The.—Mary H. Grosvenor.— 
BS 26 

Thanksgiving Hymn.—Anon.—PEO 
Thanksgiving Hymn. (Sel. fr. Harvest Home.)—H: 
Alford—FEP 

(Thanksgiving Day— ptly. same.) —OS 1 
Thanksgiving in Boston Harbor, The.—Hezekiah But- 
terworth.—AA—BS 16 

(First Boston Thanksgiving, The— abr.) —PEO 
Thanksgiving Ode, A.—Josiah G. Holland. See Bitter¬ 
sweet. 

Thanksgiving Ode. (Autumn Festival, An— C.) —J: 
G. Whittier.—PEO (abr.) 

(Harvest Hymn— sel.) —PEO 
Thanksgiving of Old.—E. A. Smuller.—PEO 
Thanksgiving Prayer, A.—Anon.—PEO 
Thanksgiving Prayer, A.—May R. Smith.—HDL 
Thanksgiving Sermon, A.—Anon.—CS 4 
Thanksgiving Song.—Anon.—CP 
Thanksgiving Speech, A.—Anon.—CP 
Thanksgiving Story, A.—Anon.-—PP—YPS 
Thanksgiving to God, A.—Rob’t Herrick. See fol¬ 
lowing. 

Thanksgiving to God for His House, A. (C.)—Rob’t 
Herrick.—FEP 

(Thanksgiving for His House— abr.) —PEO 
(Thanksgiving to God, A.)—OS 3—WEP 2 
Thanksgiving Turkey.—Jean Havez.—SR 12 
Thanksgiving Turkey.—Z. F. Riley.—TT 
Thar was Jim.—J. Crawford.—BS 21 
"That a man stand and speak of spiritual things to 
men!”—T: Carlyle.—GG 

That Amateur Flute. (Parody on Poe’s The Bells.)— 
Anon.—HP 

Amateur Flute-player, The.)—CH 
That Autograph Sale.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 29 
That Awful Girl!—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KH 
That Baby in Tuscaloo.—Bartley T. Campbell.—CS 11 
That Boy.—Anon.—HP 
That Boy Jim.—Frank L. Stanton.—WR 7 
That Boy John!—Fannie M. P. Deas.—WR 24 
That Calf.—Phcebe Cary—DS—PP—WR 15—YFR 
That Day You Came.—Lizette W. Reese.—ASL 
That Dog of Jim Smiley’s.—S: L. Clemens.—See Jump¬ 
ing Frog, The. 

That Each Thing is Hurt of Itself.—Anon.—EPs— 
PHS 

That Echo. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
That “Fellow” who Came on Sundays.—H. C. Dodge. 
—BS 26 

That Fire at the Nolan’s. (Life.)— CS 28—DCR— 
—WR21 


That Freckle-faced Girl.—Anon.—DCR 
That Gentle Man from Boston Town.—Joaquin Miller. 
—THP 

That Giggle.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
That Hired Girl. (Detroit Free Press.) —BS 7—CRR 
—CS 13—CSS 

That Holy Thing. (Verses fr. Paul Faber, Surgeon, 
Ch. XL1X.)—G: Macdonald.—OB—YBF 
That Kiss of Marthy’s.-—Eben E. Rexford.;—WR 15 
That Lass o’ Lowries, Sel. fr. (In the Pit— abr. and 
ad. fr. Ch. XXXV.)—Frances H. Burnett.— 
WR 14 

“That law and system, self caused and self directed.”— 
Anon.—GG 

That Light. (Br. sel. fr. Moon-struck.)—Dinah M 
Craik.—HDL 

That Line Fence.—Anon.—CS 8 
That Little—W. M. L. Jay.—YBT 
“That Little Dog.”-—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
That Little Girl of Mine.-—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
That Little Wretch.—Anthony Hope. See Dolly 
Dialogues, The. 

That Littul Orfun Brat.—Joe Kerr.—GH 
“That motionless shaft will be the most powerful of 
speakers.”—Dan’l Webster. See Bunker Hill 
Monument, The. 

That Old Book.—Anon.—BS 12 

That Other Baby at Rudder Grange.—Frank R. Stock- 
ton. See Rudder Grange. 

“That Other Fourth.”—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
That Starry Flag of Ours.—Anon.—PRR 
That Such Have Died.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
That Sugar-plum Tree.—Eugene Field.—BS 21 

(Sugar-plum Tree, The— C.) —DLF—EF—WTD 
That Sweet Girl Graduate. (Harvard Lampoon.) — 
CG 2 

That Telephone.-—Jerome K. Jerome.—VSG 
That Ten Dollars.—Anon.—MYF 
“That They All May be One.”—Roden Noel.—VA 
That Things are no Worse, Sire.—Helen H. Jackson.— 
PEO 

That Time and Absence Proves rather Helps than 
Hurts to Loves.—J: Donne.—OB 
(Absence— abr. )—YBF 

(“Absence, hear thou my protestation.”)—ELP 
(Present in Absence— abr.) —PGT 1 
That Time of Year.—W: Shakespeare. See following. 
“That time of year thou may’st in me behold.”—W : 
Shakespeare.—OEL—PGT 1 
(Quatuor Novissima.)—CEL 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—OB (VIII.) 

(Sonnet LXXIII.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
(That Time of Year.)—YBF 
That Waltz of Von Weber.—Nora Perry—BS 16 
That we Should Rise with the Lark (Popular Falla¬ 
cies, No. 14), Sels. fr. —C: Lamb. 

On Rising with the Lark.—LLC 
We Cherish Dreams.-—LLC 

That West-side Dog, or, William Nye in Chicago.— 
B. F. Wilkie.—BeR 

That which we Dare Invoke to Bless. Alfred Tenny¬ 
son. See In Memoriam. 

That Whistle Saved my Life.—Ralph Bingham.— 
CS 36 

“ That you have wronged me doth appear in this.”— 
W: Shakespeare. See Julius Csesar. 

That’s Baby.—Anon.—CS 36—PR—PS—TT 
“That’s Not the Way at Sea.”—Frances R. Havergal. 
—LLC 

That’s What I Thought.—Anon.—DSS 
“That’s You.” (Tab. )—A non.—TCP 
Thea.—J: Keats. See Hyperion. 

Theater, The.—Jas. Smith.—FEP—HPE 
‘Theatre is neither moral nor immoral. The.”—E. C. 
Sweetzer.—GG 

Theatrical Curiosity, A. (Cruikshank’s Omnibus.) — 
HPE 

Thebes.—W: Whitehead.—CS 11 
Thefts of the Morning.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Their First Spat.-— (London Tid-Bits.) —BS 20 
(They never Quarreled.)—WR 20 
Their First Unpleasantness.—Anon.—SR 9 
Their Mother.-—Anon.—DR 
Their Turn.—K. H. A.—TL 

Their Waving Hands. (In A Lover’s Diary.)—H. 
Gilbert Parker.—TCV 

Thekla’s Song.—Friedrich Schiller. See Wallenstein. 
Thelma, Sel. fr. (Crimson Shroud of Olaf Guldmar 
The— sel. fr. Ch. XXXII.) — Marie Corelli — 
PFP 

(Passing of Olaf, The— shorter and si. diff.) —WR 19 
Them Dear Old Garret Things.—Eliz. Carpenter.— 
C S 36 


330 






TITLE INDEX 


There’ll 


Them Oxen.—Anon.—BS 22 

Them Yankee Blankits.—S: W. Small.—DFR—PS 
Then.—Rose T. Cooke.—HBP 
Then Ag’in. (C.)—Sam W. Foss. 

(Jim Bowker.)—BS 26 
Then and Now.—Anon.—CS 26 

(Mr. and Mrs. Popperman.)—DCR—WR 3 
Then and Now.—Anon.—DCP 
Then and Now.—Anon.—WR 7 
Then and Now.—Guy W. Carrvl.—CG 2 
Then and Now.—F. W. Fish.—CS 12—PRR (sel.) 

Then and Now.—C: F. Johnson.—AA 
Then and Now.—Mary M’Guire.—CS 29 
Then and Now.—Rennell Rodd.—VA 
Then and Now.—Viola Valentine.—BS 9 

(Time Turns the Tables.)—CH—SR 2 
Then, Fare Thee Well.—T: Moore.—FTA 
“Then gently scan your brother man.”—Rob’t Burns. 

See Address to the Unco’ Guid. 

“Then hush! oh, hush! for the Father knows what thou 
knowest not.” (Sel. fr. Compensation.)— 
Frances R. Havergal.—FHS 
“Then let the holly red be hung.”—Frank D. Sherman. 
—PoR 

Then Shall We See. (In Book of Day-dreams.)—C: 
L. Moore.—AA 

“Then, too, I love thee.”—M. Lomin.—GG 
Theocritus.—Maurice F. Egan.—TAV 
Theocritus.—Annie Fields.—AA 
Theocritus.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
Theocritus.—C: H. Langhorne.—VA 
Theology. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Theology. (Fr. The New England Primer.)—Anon.— 
BNL 

Theology in Extremis.—Alfred Lyall.—A VP—LH 
Theology in the Quarters.—J: A. Macon.—AWH— 
BS 10—CH 

Theophile Gautier. (Br. sel. fr. Memorial Verses on 
the Death of Theophile Gautier.)—Algernon 
C. Swinburne.—EDY 

Theophilus Thistles Thrusted Thumb.—Chester E. 
Pond.—BS 20 

Theosophic Marriage, A.—H: J. W. Dam.—SR 6 
Therania.—W: Allingham.—TIP 

Therapia. (Names of Good Omen. Therapia on the 
Bosphorus—C.)—Frd’k W. Faber.—AVP 
“There are books which take rank in our life with 
parents and lovers.”—Ralph W. Emerson. See 
Books. 

There are Gains for all our Losses.—R: H: Stoddard. 
—HBP 

(Flight of Youth, The—C.)—AA—ASL—YBF 

(It Never Comes again.)—BNL—LI C—MRS 

(Lost.)—FP 

(Never Again.)—FEP—TAV 
There are in this Loud Stunning Tide.—J: Keble. See 
St. Matthew. 

“There are many phases thorugh which the soul must 
pass.”—Anon.—GG 

There are no Dead.—J. L. McCreery. See There is no 
Death. 

There are None.—I. E. Jones.—CS 23 
“There are parts of our life we do not like to think 
about.”—Jos. Parker.—GG 
“There are recollections as pleasant as they are 
sacred and eternal.”—H: A. Walker.—GG 
There are several sovereignties in this country.—Jas. 
A. Garfield.—GG 

"There are some great troubles that only time can 
heal.”—Anon.—GG 

“There are two angels that attend unseen.”—H: W. 

Longfellow. See Christus: A Mystery. 
“There are who say we are but dust.”—Walter S. Lan- 
dor.—WEP 4 

“There be none of Beauty’s daughters.”—Lord Byron. 
—PGT 1 

(For Music.)—OB 

(Nature’s Daughter.)—MR 

(Stanzas for Music— C.) —CEL—FEP—HBP— 
WEP 4—YBF 

There be Those.—Bernard Barton.—FEP—HBP 
"There can be no prosperity nor virtue nor glory in the 
aggregate.”—Edwin H. (?) Chapin.—GG 
There Come the Boys.—Anon.—CS 11 
There Falls with Every Wedding Chime. (Last fruit 
off an Old Tree—-II.)-—Walter S. Landor.— 
VA 

(Feathers.)—YBF 

There is a Garden in her Face. (Fourth Book of Airs, 
VII.)—T: Campion (urr. at. to R: Alison).— 
BNL—FEP—TFY 

(Cherrv Ripe.) —BPB —ES —GP —OB —OEL— 
PGT 1—PYO—YBF 


“There is a glory in tree and blossom.”—B: S. Parker. 
—FTA 

"There is a grandeur in the soul that dares.”—Sara J. 
Clarke.—GG 

There is a Green Hill[, far away],—Cecil F. Alexander. 
—FEP—LLC—VA 
(Green Hill Far Away, The.)—TFS 
There is a Happy Land.—Andrew Young.—FEP 
There is a Lady [Sweet and Kind],—Anon.—ELP— 
OB (sel.) 

There is a Land of Pure Delight. (Hymn LXVI.)— 
Isaac Watts.—FEP 
(Heavenly Canaan, The.)—HBP 
“There is a river in the ocean.”—M. F. Maury.—GG 
“There is a tide in the affairs of men.”—W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Julius Csesar. • 

There is a Time.—J. C. B.—CG 1 

"There is a time, we know not when. ’—Addison Alex¬ 
ander (?).—GG 

“There is an apostolical succession.”—H: A. Board- 
man.—GG 

"There is an evening twilight of the heart.”—Fitz- 
Greene Halleck. See Twilight. 

“There is, between the whole animal kingdom on the 
one side.”—Max Muller.—GG 
There is no Death.—J. L. McCreery (tor. at. to E: Bul- 
wer-Lytton).—CS 5—GP—LLC—PYO (longer 
and diff. vers .)—SSS 
(There is no Death— si. abr .)—HSS 1 
(“There is no death! the stars go down.”)—GG 
There is no God.—Sophie M. Almon-Hensley.—TCV 
"There is no morrow.” (Sel. fr. Sonnet: One Day.) 
—Marg. J. Preston.—GG 

“There is no roof in all the world, of palace or of cot.”— 
Anon.—GG 

“There is no sadness so unutterable.”—Stopford A. 
Brooke.—GG 

“There is one spot for which my soul will yearn.”— 
Myron B. Benton.—SN 

There is None, O, None but You. (Light Conceits of 
Lovers, XIIT.)—T: Campion.—ELP 
There is Nothing New under the Sun. (In The New 
Day.)—R: W. Gilder.—TAS 
“There is something sustaining in the very agitation.” 

—G: Eliot. See Mill on the Floss, The. 

“There is one thing in the wide universe which is really 
valuable.”—J: Todd.—GG 

There once was a Toper.—Anon.—CS 2—DS—NPS— 
YP 

"There once was a writer named Wright.” (Limerick.) 
—Carolyn Wells.—SO 

“There once was an old man of Lyme.” (Limerick.) — 
Cosmo Monkhouse.—NA 

There Sat the Women Weeping for Thammuz.—W. 
T. Allison.—TCV 

There Shall be no Night There.—W. M. L. Jay.—HDL 
“There, speak in whispers, fold me to thy heart.”— 
Anon.—GG 

There was a Boy. ( C.) —W: Wordsworth.—SN— 
WEP 4 

(Boy-poet, The— abr .)—EPs 
There was a Child Went Forth.—Walt Whitman.—SN 
"There was a Crooked Man.”—W: E. Penney.—CS 31 
—PR—YA 

“There was a gay damsel of Lynn.” (Limerick.) — 
Anon.—NA 

There was a Frog.—Anon.—NA 
There was a Jolly Miller.—I: (?) Bickerstaffe.—PC 
There was a Little Boy.—Anon.—WR 17 
There was a Little Girl.—Anon. (at. to H: W. Longfel¬ 
low).—NA 

(Jemima—2 versions — ptly. same and ptly. like NA.) 
—BVC 

There was a Maid Came out of Kent.—Anon.—PEB 1 

There was a Monkey.—Anon.—-NA 

“There was a time.”—W: Wordsworth. See Ode: 

Intimations of Immortality. 

“There was a young lady of Niger.” (Limerick.) — 
Anon.—NA 

“There was a young maid who said, ‘Why.’ ” (Lim¬ 
erick.) —Anon.—NA 

“There was a young man of Cohoes.” (Limerick - 

in Rhvmes on the Wing.)— Rob’t J. Burdette. 
—NA ” 

"There was a young man who was bitten.” (Lim¬ 
erick.)— Walter Parke.—NA 
“There Were Ninety and Nine.”—R: H. Davis.—HBR 
“There will I ask of Christ the Lord.”—Dante G. Ros¬ 
setti.—BIL 

“There Yet.”—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
There’ll be Room in Heaven.—Anon.—CS 26 
There’ll Never be Peace Till Jamie Comes Hame.— 
Rob’t Burns.—BPB 


331 




There's 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


There’s a Boy in the House.—Anon.—WR 17 
There’s a Silver Lining to Every Cloud.—Eliza Cook.— 
CS 9 

There’s a Tree That Blossoms.—Anon.—CPL 
There’s a Wedding in the Orchard. (C.)—Mary M. 
Dodge.—WCLI 2 

(Blossom Time— si. diff., si. abr. — w. music.) — 
AD 

“There’s a wideness in God’s mercy.” ( Br. sel. }r. 

Come to Jesus.)—Frd’k W. Faber.—GG 
There’s a Woman Like a Dewdrop.—Rob’t Browning. 

See Blot in the ’Scutcheon, A. 

There’s Business for All.—P. S. Pennell.—CS 13 
“There’s always a river to cross.”—Anon.—SM— 
WCLI 1 

There’s but*One Pair of Stockings to Mend To-night.— 
Anon.—CS 2—WRD 

There’s Danger in the Town.—J: M. Yates.—FS 
There’s Life in the Old Land Yet.—Jas. R. Randall.— 
AWB 

‘There’s many a life chained down by circumstances.” 
—Anon.—GG 

There’s nae Luck about the House.— Jean Adam.— 
BS 6—EPs ( at. also to W: J. Mickle)— HBP— 
WEP 3 

(Mariner’s Wife, The.)—FEP 

(Sailor’s Wife, The.)—BFV—BNL—GN—GP— 
LC—PGT 1 

There’s Never any Harm in Good Company.—C. 
Shirley Brooks.—VSG 

There’s No Rose without a Thorn. (Tab.) ( Scrib¬ 
ner’s Monthly.) —BS 8—TCP 
There’s no Such Word as Fail.-—Alice B. Neal.—SSS 
“There’s not a flower that decks the vale.”—Gerald 
Griffin.—HSS 3 
(God’s Love.)—AD—YBT 

There’s not a Joy the World Can Give.—Lord Byron.— 
FEP 

(Stanzas for Music— C.) —WEP 4 
(Youth and Age.)—PGT 1—YBF 
"There’s nothing bright above, below.”—T: Moore. 

See Turf Shall be my Fragrant Shrine, The. 
There’s Nothing Like the Rose.—Christina G. Rossetti. 
—PoR 

Th°re’s Tan in the Street.—A. W. Thaxter.—CS 10 
There’s Work Enough to Do.—Anon.—CS 15 
“These are they who, with the Bible in their hands.”— 
Anon.—GG 

These Dreadful “Hard Times.”—Anon.-—CS 33—DS 
“These eyes, though clear.”—J: Milton. See To 
Cyriack Skinner. 

"These loving eyes may never more behold thee.” 
( Blackwood’8 )—GG 

“These Three.”—Isabella V. Craw-ford—TCV 
Theseus and Ariadne.—Lloyd Mifflin.—A A 
Thesmophoriazusse, The, Sel. fr. (Chorus of Women.) 

—Aristophanes.—WR 20 
Thet Boy ov Ourn.—Jere De Brown.—CD—SR 5 
They are All Gone. (C.)—H: Vaughan.—BNL—FEP 
\ HBP 

(Beyond the Veil.)—ELP—WEP 2 
(Friends Departed.)-—OB 

(Friends in Paradise— abr.) —IIDL—PGT 2—YBF 
They are Always at the Gate.—Anon.—CS 17 
"They are Dear Fish to Me.”—Anon. See “They’re 
Dear Fish to Me.” 

“They are slaves who fear to speak.”—Jas. R. Lowell. 
See Stanzas on Freedom. 

They Ask Me why I am so Bad.—Mrs. Russell Kav- 
anaugh.—KER 

They Come Not Back.—Anon.—LLC 
They Come! the Merry Summer Months. (C.)—W: 
Motherwell—BNL—POS (abr.) 

(Merry Summer Months, The.)—-HBP 
They Didn’t Think. — Phoebe Cary. — BLF — 
HSS 2 (si. abr.) —NV 
(Didn’t Think— sel.) —CPL 
They Don’t Agree.—Anon.—DES 
They Know not My Heart.—T: Moore.—FTA 
They Love indeed who Quake to Say they Love.—Sir 
Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 

“They mav rail at this life.” (Br. sel.)- —T: Moore.— 
HSS 3 

They Met but Once.—T: Moore.—FTA 
They Met in Death. (Detroit Free Press.) —CS 36 
They Never Quarreled. (London Tid-bits.) See Their 
First Spat. 

They Parted.—Jas. R. Planche.—BIL—FTA 
Thev Sang for It.—Anon.—WR 15 
“They Say.”—Anon.—KJ—PR—YA 
They Say. (Dial.) —Anon.—PS 

“They sin who tell us love can die.”—Rob’t Southey. 
See Curse of Keharna, The. 


“They turned to the earth, but she frowns on her child.” 

—Bayard Taylor.—BNL 
They Went A-fishin’.—Anon. See Two Fishers. 

They Went Fishing.—Anon. See Two Fishers. 

“They were living to themselves; self, with its hopes 
and promises and dreams.”—Anon.—GG 
"They who may blame my tenderness.”—Claire 
D’Anduze.—FTA 

“They who the sweetest rest.”—M. E. Townsend.— 
FHS 

They Will Never Do so Again.— Marg. Vandegrift.— 
CS 36—WR 14 
(Culprit, A.)—BS 14—SR 15 
“They’re Dear Fish to Me.”—Anon.—FEP 
(“They are Dear Fish to Me.”)—BNL 
They’ve Cut the Wood Away.—Anon.—AD 
Thief, The. (Abr.) —Abraham Cowley.—ES 
Thief on the Cross, The.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 24—PS 
Thief’s Apology, A.—Rob’t P. St. John.—CG 2 
Thikhed’s New Year’s Call.—Anon.—DCR—WR 3 
Thine Eyes. (In Travel Pictures No. 63.)—Heinrich 
Heine (tr. by J. F. Ballantyne).—FTA—HP 
Thing of Beauty is a Joy Forever, A.—J: Keats.— See 
End ym ion. 

Things a Girl Doesn’t Know.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Things Delightful.—G: Sigerson.—TIP 
Things I Miss, The.—T: W. Higginson.—TAS 

(“Easy thing, O power divine. An”— sel.) —HDL 
Things not Always What They Seem.—Anon.—WR 14 
Things tnat I Do not Like to See.—L. J. Rook.—LPS 
—PP—PS 

Things that Never Die.—C: Dickens.—CS 37—HBR 
Things that Never Die.—E. O. Jewell.—CS 23 
Things to Remember.—Anon.-—PEO 
Think before you Drink.—Anon.—TS 
Think before You Speak.—W: Penn.—PS 
Think it Over.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Think ot Me, Dearest.—C: F. Hoffman.—FTA 
Think of Me Then.—Anon.—CS 7 

“Think on thy wants, on thy faults.”—Frederika 
Bremer.—GG 

Think, Speak and Live Truly.—Anon.—PS 
“Think you to escape.”—T: a Kempis. See Imitation 
of Christ, The. 

Third of November [1861—C.], The. (Sel.) —W: C. 
Bryant.—PEO 

Third Pastor’s Song, The.—N; Breton. See Passion¬ 
ate Shepherd, The. 

Third Sunday in Advent. (Abr.)— J: Keble.—AVP 
Third Sunday in Lent. (In The Christian Year.)—J: 
Keble.—WEP 4 

Thirsis’ Praise of his Mistress.—W: Browne.—EP 
Thirsty Earth Soaks up the Rain, The. (Anacreon- 
tiques, II.)—Anacreon (tr. by Abraham Cow- 
lev).—LC (si. abr.) 

(Drinking—C.)—FEP—HBP—OB—WEP 2 
Thirteen Years Ago. (C .)—Bryan W. Procter. 

(Lost and Found.)—VSG 

Thirteenth Chapter of First Corinthians. Bible. See 
First Corinthians. 

Thirty Years Ago. (C .)—-Bryan W. Procter. 

(Lost and Found.)—VSG 

Thirty Years with a Shrew. (Brooklyn Eagle.) —GH— 
PS 

Thirty-first of May.—Frd’k Tennyson.—VA 
“39.”—T. G. La Moille.—FS 

Thirty-nine Lovers, The. (London Graphic.) —TMR 
(Girl with Thirty-nine Lovers, The.)—WR 18 
“This, after all, we believe, is the tone of true wisdom 
and true virtue.”—Fs., Lord Jeffrey.—GG 
This Age Best. (Present Time Best Pleaseth, The.)— 
Rob’t Herrick.—ELP 

This Army Led by a Delicate and Tend »r Prince.—W: 

Shakespeare. See Hamlet. 

This Canada of Ours.—Jas. D. Edgar.—TCV 
“This century is the grandest of centuries.”—Victor 
Hugo. See Napoleon the Little. 

"This century proclaims the sovereignty of the citizen.” 

—Victor Hugo. See Napoleon the Little. 

This Compost.—Walt Whitman.—SN 
"This dav, two hundred years ago.”—J: G. Whittier. 
—AD 

This is All.—Rose Churchill.—FLS 
This is East, and this is West.—Anon.—TFS 
This is no my Ain Lassie (I see a Form, I see a Face).— 
Rob’t Burns.—WEP 3 

“This is the state of man.”—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry VIII. 

This Life is What We Make It.—Anon.—TP'S 
“This life, which seems so fair.”—W: Drummond.— 
PGT 1 

(Bubble, The.)—YBF 
(Madrigal.)—ELP 


332 





TITLE INDEX 


Threatened 


This Means You, Girls. ( Peck’s Sun.) —CRR 
This Old Country.—Frank L. Stanton.—WR 25 
This Old World of Ours.—-G: W. Bungay.—CS 25 
This One is Wig-ged. (Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
This Side and That.—G: Macdonald.—BS 11 
“This system and order everywhere forms the basis of 
all sciencs ”—H: C. Minton.—GG 
This, too. Will Pans Away.—J: G. Saxe.—IvNE 
This Way.—Anon — LPS—PP 

This World is All a Fleeting Show.—T: Moore.—BNL- 
—GP 

This World’s Joy —Anon.—OB 

This Would I Do.—Constance F. Runcie.—MR 

This Year.—Ethel M. Kelley.—CG 3 

This Year—Next Year.—Anon.—F1P 

Thisbe.—Helen G. Cone.—AA 

Thistle, The.—G: Murray.—TCV 

Thistle and the Rose, The, Sels. fr. —W: Dunbar. 

Dame Nature Crowns the Scottish Lion King of 
Beasts.—LC 

Thrissill and the Rois, The.—WEP 1 
Thistledown.—Clara D. Bates.—AA 
Tho’ Worlds ’quite me, shall I myself Forgive?—Sir 
Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Thomas a Kempis.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
Thomas a Kempis[; De Imitatione Christi].—R: R. 

Bowker.—A A—EDY—FEP— HDL 
Thomas at Chickamauga.—Kate B. Sherwood.—BAB 
Thomas Buchanan Read. Fs. De H. Janvier.—AE 
Thomas Carlyle. (London Punch.) —EDY 
Thomas Chatterton.—Anon.—CP 

Thomas Jefferson and John Adams.—Rob’t C. Win- 
throp. See Centennial Oration. 

Thomas Moore.—R: H. Stoddard.—EDY 
Thomas the Pretender.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Thomas the Rhymer. (Pt. 1 — in Border Minstrelsy.) 

—Anon.—BB—HBP—OB—PEB 2 (abr. and 
sl.diff.) 

Thora. (SI. abr.) —Hjalmar H. Boyesen.—BS 11 
Thoralf and Synnov.—Hjalmar H. Boyesen.—AA 
Thoreau.—Amos B. Alcott.—AA 
Thoreau’s Flute.—Louisa M. Alcott.—AA—EDY 
Thorgerda.—J: Payne.—-VA 
Thorn, A.—Anon.—FLS 
Thorn that Guards. The.—T. G. P.—CG 2 
Thorn-apple, Sel. jr. (Sermon from a Thorn-apple 
Tree, A.)—Emily H. Miller.—AD 
Thornless Roses.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—BIL 
Those Ashes.—R. K. Munkittrick.—PPh 
Those Evening Bells.—T: Moore.—BNL—CS 15— 
FEP—HBP—SO—WCLG 1 
Those Far-off Fields.—Constance Fairbanks.—TCV 
Those Glorious Stars (Conjunction of Jupiter and 
Venus, The— C.). —W: C. Bryant.—LLC 
Those I Love.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Those Other Letters.—Anon.—WR 20 
Those Rebel Flags.—J. H. Jewett.—PA Pm 
Those Thompsons.—Anon.—MND 
Those Violets Blue.—H. W. Banks. —CG 1 
Thou art Gone to the Grave. (At a Funeral— C.) — 
Reginald Heber.—HBP 
(Stanzas on the Death of a Friend.)—FEP 
Thou Art, O God! (C.)—T: Moore.—FEP 

(Glory of God in Creation, The.)—POS 
Thou Canst not Forget.—Anon.—CS 21—FLS (si. 
abr.) 

"Thou canst not frown, O Death.”—S. H. Thayer.— 
GG 

Thou Didst Delight My Eyes.—Rob’t Bridges.—VA 
Thou, God, Seest Me.—Jas. Montgomery.—HBP 
Thou God Unsearchable.—C: Wesley.—HBP 
Thou Hast Sworn by Thy God, My Jeanie.—Allan 
Cunningham.—BNL—EPs—FEP 
(Thou Hast Vowed by thy Faith, my Jeanie.)—HBP 
Thou Hast Vowed by thv Faith* my Jeanie.—Allan 
Cunningham. See foregoinq. 

Thou Knowest Best.—Marianne Farningham.—CS 26 
Thou Lingering Star.—Rob’t Burns. See To Mary in 
Heaven. 

Thou Invest, O Soul! (In Book of Day-dreams.)—C: 
L. Moore.—AA 

“Thou lovest me not, thou lovest me not.” (Last 
Translation, IV.— C. — tr. fr. Lyrical Interlude 
12.)—Heinrich Heine (tr. by Eliz. B. Browning). 
“Thou mayst, thou shalt, 1 will not go with thee.”— 
W: Shakespeare. See King John. 

Thou Wert Lovely on thy Bier.—W: S. Walker.— 
HBP 

(Death’s Alchemy.)—VA 

Thou Wilt Never Grow Old.—E. C. Howarth.—LLC 
Though Cruel Fate.—Rob’t Burns. 

(My Jean.)—BIL—FTA 

"Though He Slay!”—Albion W. Tourgoe.—TMR 


Though Lost to Sight, to Memory Dear. (Sailor’s 
Farewell, The— C.) —Ruthven Jenkyns (wr. at. 
to T: Moore).—CS 13—FTA—HP—PYO 
(Good Bye.)—TFY 
(Sweetheart, Good-by!)—FLS 

(“Sweetheart, good-bye! that flut’ring sail.”)—GG 
Though Oft Deceived.—Anon.—FLS 
“Though scoffers ask, where is your gain?”—T: Knox. 
—GG 

"Though you are young, and I am old."—T: Campion. 
—OEL 

Thought.—Christopher P. Cranch.—BNL—GP 
(Gnosis.)—TAS 
(Knowing.)—LLC 

(Stanzas.)—ASL—FEP—HBP—TAV 
(“Thought is deeper than all speech”— br. sel.) — 
CS 1 

Thought, A.—J: H. Ingham.—EDY 
Thought.—Helen H. Jackson.—ASL—EPs 
Thought, A. (Last Fruit off an Old Tree, X.)—Wal¬ 
ter S. Landor.—V A 
Thought, The.—W: B. Rands.—OB 
Thought, A, Sel. fr. (“Follow me.”)—Abram J. 
Ryan.—GP 

Thought, A.—Jas. K. Stephen.—VA 
Thought , A.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Thought and Language.—Anon.—KNE 
“Thought is deeper than all speech.”—Christopher P. 
Cranch. See Thought. 

Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland. 
(C.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs—WEP 4 
(England and Switzerland, 1802.)—PGT 1—SC— 
YBF 

Thought Suggested by the New Year, A. (C.) —T: 
Campbell. 

(River of Life, The.)—BNL—PGT 1—YBF 
"Thoughtless world to majesty may bow. The.” 

(Lines rejected fr. Elegy Written in a Country 
Churchyard.)—T: Gray.—HP 
Thoughts.—Philip J. (?) Bailey.—FP 
Thoughts, Sels. fr. —Blaise Pascal. 

“Man is but a reed, the weakest in nature.” 
(Br. sel. fr. The Greatness and Littleness of 
Man.)—GG 

Thoughts.—Rose H. Thorpe.—CS 37 

Thoughts.—Mrs. - Whiton.-—YBT 

Thoughts at a Party.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Thoughts lor a New Year.—Theodore Parker.—BS 9 
Thoughts for the New Year. ( Youth’s Companion.) 
—BS 14 

Thoughts for Young Men.—Horace Mann.—BS 23 
Thoughts from Goethe.—Johann W. von Goethe.— 
KNE 

Thoughts in a Garden.— (Tr. by) Andrew Marvell. 
See Garden. The. 

Thoughts in a I.ihrarv.—Anne C. L. Botta.—FEP 
(In the Library.)—MBB 
Thoughts of “Enoch Arden.”—Anon.—CS 5 
Thoughts of Home.—Anon.—SSS 

Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius, Sels. fr. —Marcus Aurelius 
Antoninus. 

Even in a Palace. (Sel. fr. Bk. V., Par. 16.)—OS 2 
Fortitude. (Sel. fr. IV., 49.)—OS 2 
Goodness. (Sel. fr. VII., 15.)—OS 1 
Thoughts on Immortality.—Philip Schaff.—CS 23 
Thoughts on the Commandments.—G: A. Baker, Jr.— 
AA—PLD 

(“Love your neighbor as yourself.”)—BS 4 
Thoughts on the Forest.—Alice B. Neal. See Trees in 
the City. 

Thoughts on the Forest.—J: Neal.—AD 
Thoughts on the Forest.—W: J. Pabodie.—AD 
(Forest, The.)—HSS 1 

Thought s on the Forest.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, 
The. 

Thoughts on the Forest. (Br. sel. fr. A Farewell to the 
Vanities of the World.)—Sir H: Wotton.(?)— 
AD 

Thoughts Suggested the Day Following, on the Banks 
of Nith, Near the Poet’s Residence. — W: 
Wordsworth.—WEP 4 

Thousand a Year, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—MPD 
Thrasymedes and Eunoe.—Walter S. Landor.—BS 20 
(Overture from “Thrasymedes and Eunoe”— br. sel.) 
—VA 

Thread and Song.—J: W. Palmer.—BNL 
Thread of Life, The. (C.)—Christina G. Rossetti.— 
VA 

(Aloof.)—OB 

Threads from the Woof, Sels. fr. —G: H. Galpin. 

Lie for a Life, A.—WR 24 
Rose of Rome, A.—WR 22 
Threatened Visit. The.—Anon.—FND 

&33 




Threatening 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Threatening.—W: Shakespeare. See King John. 

Three Acres of Land.—Anon.—NA 
Three Beggars, The.—Walter Ramal.—SOC 
Three Bells, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BeR—CR—CS 8 
—CSS—NPS—PC—SA—YP 
Three Best Doctors, The.—S. W. Duffield. See Three 
Good Doctors. 

Three Black Crows, The. (Abr.) —J: Byrom.—SCS 
Three Brave Men.—Anon.—DDM 
Three Bright Stars. (With music.) —Anon.—KNS 
Three Bugs. (C.)—Alice Cary.—BLF 
(“Three little bugs in a basket.”)—GMS 
Three Chairs, The.—Anon.— See Three Little Chairs, 
The. 

Three Cheers for the Olden Time.—Fanny Crosby.— 
HSS 1 

Three Cherry-stones, The.—Anon.—CS 26 
Three Children.—Anon.—NA 

Three Companions. (Ahr.) —Dinah M. Craik.—GMS 
Three Counsellors, The.—G: W. Russell.—TIP 
Three Cunning Crabs, The.—Dorothy Wood.—POS 
Three Days.—Jas. R. Gilmore.—BNL 
Three Days in the Life of Columbus.—Jean F. C. Dela- 
vigne.—OM (si. ahr.) —SS—TMR (abr.) 

Three Enigmas.—Anon.—KNS 
Three Fiends, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SR 3 
Three Fishers, The. (Tab. based on Kingsley’s The 
Three Fishers.)—-Anon.—TCP 
Three Fishers, The. (C.)—C: Kingslev.—BNL—BS 3 
— BSP — CGd — CS 10 — FEP — GP — 
HSS 3 — LC —LLC —OS 2 —PYO —VA — 
WCLI 2—WR 26 

(Fishermen, The.)—CSS—HBP—PPSr—YBF 
(Three Fishers Went Sailing.)—VS 
Three Fishers Went Sailing.—C: Kingsley. See fore¬ 
going. 

Three Flowers, The.—S: F. Smith.—POS 

Three Friends, The.—C: Lamb.-—LPC—PC (br. sel.) 

Three Gates.—Anon. See Good Rule, A. 

Three Good Doctors.—S. W. Duffield.—PP—YFR 
(Three Best Doctors, The.)—TFS 
Three Graces, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 13—TCP 
Three Horsemen, The.—Anon.—CS 15—PTS 
Three Hundred Thousand More. — Anon. — AWB — 
EDY—PAPm 

Three Jovial Huntsmen.—Anon.—NA 
(Nursery Rhymes, II.)—CGd 
Three Kings, The.—Eugene Field. See Three Kings 
of Cologne, The. 

Three Kings, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—BS 15 (si. 
abr. )—GN—PP—YPS 

Three Kings of Cologne, The. (C.)— Eugene Field.— 
TAS 

(Three Kings, The.)—GN 

Three Kisses.—Eliz. B. Browning.—B1L—FTA—GP 
(First, Second, Third.)—OH 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese.)—BNL—FEP— 
HBP—VA (XXXVIII.—C.) 

Three Kisses of Farewell.—Agnes E. Glase.—FLS 
Three Leaves from a Boy’s Diarv.—Sue Gregory.— 
BS 14 

Three Liberties. The.—J : Pvm.—OS 3 
Three Little Bugs in a Basket.—Alice Cary. See Three 
Bugs. 

Three Little Chairs, The.—Anon.—CS 13 
(Three Chairs, The— si. abr.) —SR 7 
Three Little Graves.—Anon.—CS 16 
Three Little Kittens.—Anon.—WR 6 
Three Little Kittens.—Alice L. Richards.—SI. 

Three Little Lads.—Ellen T. Sullivan.—DLD 
Three Little Mothers.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Three Little Mushrooms.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Three Little Nest-birds.—Anon.—MYF 
Three Little Pigs, The.—A. S. Scott-Gatty.—BVC 
Three Lovers, The.—Anon.—CH 
Three Loves.—Lucy H. Hooper.—BNL—FEP 
Three Marvs at Castle Howard, in 1812 and 1837, The. 
—E. Elliott.—WEP 4 

Three Meetings.—Dinah M. Craik.—BIL—BS 15 
Three Men in a Boat, els. fr. —Jerome K. lerome. 
Dark Forest of Sorrow, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. X.)— 
CS 30 

(Night— sel.) —BS 25 

Hanging a Picture. (Sel. fr. Ch. III.)—WR 9 

(How Uncle Podger Hung a Picture— si. abr.) — 
BS 19 

(Uncle Podger Hangs a Picture.)—-CS 30 
Herr Slossenn Boschen’s Song. (Sel. fr. Ch. VIII.) 
—WR 9 

Mr. Harris’s Comic Song. (Sel. fr. Ch. VIII.)— 
—WR 9 

Signing of the Magna Charta, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XI.) 
—CS 30 


Three Men in a Boat (continued). 

Trials of the Musical Amateur. (Sel. fr. Ch. XIV.) 
—WR 15 

Unexpected Denouement, An. (Sel. fr. Ch. XVIII.) 
—WR 24 

Victim to One Hundred and Seven Fatal Maladies, 
A. (Sel. fr. Ch. I.)—WR 15 
(Imaginary Invalid, The— abr.) —HBR 
Three Men of Gotham.—T: L. Peacock. See Night¬ 
mare Abbey. 

Three Men’s Song, The.—T: Dekker. See Troll the 
Bowl. 

Three Missions, The.—Loula K. Rogers.—WR 6 
Three Musketeers, The, Sel. fr. (Execution of Lady De 
Winter, The—Vol. II., Ch. XXXVI.)—Alex. 
Dumas.—BS 24 

Three Nazarites, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 25 
Three o’Clock in the Morning. — R. S. Palfrey. — 
LLC (abr.) —NV 

Three Old Carols.—Anon.—BVC 
Three Old Saws. (C.) —Lucy Larcom. 

(Do Something.)—-HP (abr.) —PP—YFR 
(“If the world seems cold to you”— sel.) —HSS 2 
Three Pairs and One. — Friedrich Riickert (tr. by 
Clement L. Smith).—OS 1 

Three Parsons, The.—A Sailor Deacon's Story.—Rob’t 
Overton.—CS 25—SSS 

Three Portraits of Prince Charles.—Andrew Lang.— 
EDY—EHT—VA 

Three Preachers, The.—C: Mackay.—CS 32 
Three Ravens, The.—Anon.—OB—PEB 1 
Three “Rhymes of Ironquill.”—Eugene F. Ware.— 
THP 

Three Roses.—T: B. Aldrich.—GP 
( Destiny— C.) —ASL 
Three Sailor-boys.—Anon.—CG 1 
Three Sailors, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—MHR—PEB 3 
(Little Billee—C.)—BNL—FEP—GP—NA—THP 
Three Scars, The.—G: W. Thornbury.—VA 
Three Seasons.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT 2—VS 
Three Shadows.—Dante G. Rossetti.—VS 
Three Smart Girls.—Anon.—MFD 
Three Sons, The.—J: Moultrie—BNL—CS 15—FEP 
—HBP—PPSr (abr.) 

Three Spectres, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Three Stages.—Anon.—CS 37 
Three Sunbeams.—I. E. Jones.—CS 28 
Three Sundays in a Week. (Cond.) —Edgar A. Poe.— 
WR 5 

Three Topers.—Hyde Parker.—WR 18 
Three Trees.—C: H. Crandall.—HS—NV—PEO 
Three Trees, The.—Ellen Murray.—CS 28 
Three Triolets.—J: A. Hamilton.—CG 1 
Three Troopers, The.—G: W. Thornbury.—EHT— 
FEP—VA—VS 

Three Visitors.—Lucy H. Hooper.—WR 5 
Three Voices, The.—C: C. Hahn.—BS 19 
Three Warnings, The.—Hester T. Piozzi.—BNL— 
CS 12—FEP—MYF 
Three Wishes, The.—Anon.—CS 16 
Three Wishes, The. (Dial.) —E: T. Horn.—StD 
Three Wishes.—M. N. Simon.—CG 3 
Three Women.—Anon.—W'R 15 

Three Women Poets of New England. (Lecture recital 
— with, recitations.) —Grace B. Faxon.—WR 26 
Three Words of Strength.—Friedrich Schiller.—HDL 
(Hope, Faith, [andl Love.)—GP—OS 2 
(Words of Strength.)—BS 9—KNE 
Three W’s,—Work, Watch, Wait, The.—H: B. Car¬ 
rington.—BLP 

Three Years She Grew. (Poems of the Imagination.— 
X.)—W: Wordsworth. —BNL—FEP —GP — 
MBL 

(Education of Nature, The.)—PGT 1 
(Lucv.) — BFV —GN —HBP (II.)—IR (II.) — 
OB (IV.)—PHS—WEP 4 (II.) 

(Set.) —EPs—OS 3 

(“Three years she grew in sun and shower.”!—SN 
“Three years she grew in sun and shower.”—W: W’ords- 
worth. See foregoing. 

"Three’s a Crowd.” ( Fassar Miscellany.) —CG 2 
Threnody.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AA—HBP 
(Abr.)— EDY—TAS (longer.) 

Threnody, A.—G: T. Lanigan.—AA—EDY—NA 
(Ahkoond of Swat, The.)—AWH—THP 
Threnody in Memory of Albert Darasz, A, ' el. fr. —W: 
J. Linton.—VA 

Threnody of the Pines.—W: H. Hayne.—EDY 
Threnos.—Percy B. Shelley.—PGT 1—YBF 

(Lament, A—C.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—WEP 4 
Threshold of the New Year.—Anon.—POS 
Thrift, Sel. fr. (Neglect of Little Things— sel. fr. Ch. IX.) 
—S: Smiles.—VSG 

334 




TITLE INDEX 


Time 


Thrilling Appeal, A.—Anon.—TS 

(Woman’s Plea, A— diff. vers.) —FMR 
Thrilling Incident, A.—Anon.—KNE 
Thrilling Scenes in Dixie. (C.) —C: F. Browne. 
(Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s Line.)—CS 2 
(Mr. Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s Line.)—SCS 
Thrilling Sketch. (Sel. fr. Tarry thou till I Come; or, 
Salathiel, the Wandering Jew, Bk. I., Ch. 
XXI.)—G: Croly—CS 8 
(Constantius and the Lion.)—BS 24—PFP 
Thrissill and the Rois.—W: Dunbar. See Thistle and 
the Rose, The. 

Throes of Science, The.—Fs. Bret Harte.—MHR 

(Society upon the Stanilaus \wr. law]— C .)—A A— 
BNL—FEP—GP—PYO—TH P 
Throne of Death, The. (Poems of the Imagination, 
Miscellaneous Sonnets, Pt. I., XXVIII.)—W: 
Wordsworth.—WEP 4 

Throstle, The. ( C .)-—Alfred Tennyson.—SN 
(Summer is Coming.)—OH 

“Through all history, from the beginning.’’ — G: W. 

Curtis. See Patriotism. 

Through Baltimore.—Bayard Taylor—EDY 
Through Children’s Eyes.—Anon.—YFD 
“Through court, and through mart, and through col¬ 
lege.”—R. R. McNulty.—GG 
Through Death to Life. (C.)—Horatius Bonar. 

(Life from Death.)—CS 6 

Through Death to Life. — H: Harbaugh. — CS 3 — 
PPSr (abr.) 

Through Life. ( Chambers’ Journal.) —HP 
Through Peace to Light.—Adelaide Procter.—SSS 
(Lead me, O Lord— -si. abr.) —SSS 
(Per Pacem ad Lucem— C.) —CS 7—FEP — HDL 
—VA—YBF 

Through the Dark Forest. (Sel. fr. Speech in London, 
May 18, 1890.)—H: M. Stanley.—BS 18 
Through the Darkness.—W: Winter.—FP 
Through the Flood.—J: Watson. See Beside the Bon¬ 
nie Brier Brush. 

Through the Fog.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Through the Looking-glass, Sel. fr. (The Walrus and 
the Carpenter— verses.)- —Lewis Carroll.—[B VC 
—CS 26—GN—NA—THP 
Through the Loopholes.—A. H. Harryman.—SR 3 
Through the Lovely Vale. ( With music.) —H. S. Per¬ 
kins.—AD 

Through the Solitudes.—G. F. Savage-Armstrong.— 
TIP 


“Through the tense clear sky above us.”—W: W. Story. 

See Un Bacio Dato non 6 Mai Perduto. 

Through the Wood, Laddie. (In Tea-table Miscellany.) 

—Allan Ramsay.—WEP 3 
Through Toil.—A. L. Hinds.—HP 

Through Trials.--— Rosegarten.—CS 7 

“Throughout the entire word of God we are taught the 
sacred duty of being happy.”—Arthur P. 
Stanley.—GG 

Throw away Trouble.—Anon. See Trouble Borrow- 
©rs. 

Throwing Kisses.—Anon.—DJS—TFS 
Throwing Kisses.—Anon.—PS 

Thrown Away. — Rudyard Kipling. — HBR — 
WR 19 ( cond.) 

Thrush’s Nest, The.—J: Clare.—CGd—FEP—LC 
Thrush’s Song, The.—W. Macgillivray.—TMR 
Thunder Storm, A.—A. P. Miller.—SR 3 
Thunder Storm, The.—G: D. Prentice.—WCLG 1 
Thunder-storm, The.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, 
The. 

Thunder-storm in the Alps, A.—Lord Byron. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Thursday; or, The Spell.—J: Gay. See Shepherd’s 
W ee k The. 

Thursday Sabbath Day, The. (C.) —Will Carleton. 

(Grand Old Day, The —earlier vers .)—BS 18 
Thus the Mayne Glideth.—Rob’t Browning. See Par- 
acelsus. 

“Thust Only a Dweam.”—J: Bennett.—SR 10 
Thy Braes were Bonny. (Song—The Braes of Yar¬ 
row—C.)-—J: Logan.—BNL (si. abr.) 

(Braes of Yarrow, The.)—EPs (afar.)—FEP—-PGT 1 
(Song— si. abr .)—HBP . 

"Thy glory Thou didst manifest” (Water into Wine, 
The).—E. E. Higbee.—LLC 
Thy Heart.—Anon.—NA 

Thy Joy in Sorrow.—Chauncey H. Townshend.—V A 
“Thy Kingdom Come.”—Lady H: Somerset.-^— W 1! 18 
Thy Name.—C: F. Hoffman.—FTA 
“Thy sacred leaves, fair freedom’s flower.”—Oliver W. 

Holmes .—See Flower of Liberty, The. 

Thy Smiles—C: F. Hoffman.—FTA 
Thy Song.—Frances L. Mace.—TFY 


Thy Voice is Heard [thro’ Rolling Drums].—Alfred 
Tennyson. See Princess, The. 

Thy Way, not Mine.—Horatius Bonar. — FEP—HDL 
—VA 

Thy Will be Done.—Charlotte Elliott.—FEP 
Thy Will be Done.—Anna L. Waring.—-FEP 
(My Times are in Thy Hands.)—HDL 
(Supplication— abr.) —YBF 
Thy Will be Done.—J: G. Whittier.—BNL 
Thy Witching Look.—Anon.—FLS 
Thyme and Rue.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Thyrsis.-—Matthew Arnold. — EPs — HDL (br. sel.) — 
PGT 2—WEP 4 

(Departure of the Cuckoo— br. sel.) —SN 
Thyself.—J: A.Jiymonds.—VA 

Tiamondts on der Prain.—Anon.—BDD—BeR—DFY 
Tibbie Dunbar.—Rob’t Burns.—LC 
Tickled all Oafer.—Anon.—CRR—DCR—DRR 
Ticket o’ Leave.—G: R. Sims.—BS 11—CS 22 
Ticket of Leave, The. (Punch.) —HPE 
Tickle his Hand with a Ten Dollar Bill.—Anon.—KNS 
Ticonderoga.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—PEB 4 
Ticonderoga.—V. B. Wilson.—PAP 
Tide at the Flood, The. (Sel.) —Dinah M. Craik.—FMR 
Tide Rises, the Tide Falls, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
A A—ASL—YBF 

Tide River, The.—C: Kingsley. See Water Babies. 
Tides, The.—Anon.—PR 
Tides, The.—W: C. Bryant.—TAS 
Tides are Rising, The.—Anon.—CS 23 
Tiger, The. (C .— in Songs of Experience.)—W: Blake. 
—BFV—BNL—BVC — EPs — FEP — GN — 
HBP — HSS 2 — OB —PYO—SN—WEP 3— 
YBF 

(SI. abr. )—CEL—PSR 
(Afar.)—CGd—OS 1 
(Beauty of Terror, The.)—LH 
Tiger Bay.—Rob’t Buchanan. See following. 

Tiger Bay: A Stormy Night’s Dream. (C.) —Rob’t 
Buchanan.—VSG 
(Tiger Bay.)—CS 34 
Tiger-lilies.—T: B. Aldrich.—GN—POS 
Tight Little Island. The. (Br. sel. fr. The Snug Little 
Island.)—T: Dibdin.—BNL 
Tight Times.—Anon.—KNS 
Tildy.—Frd’k W. Loring.—WR 21 
(Minding the Hens.)—SR 5 
Tildy in the Choir.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 2 
Tilghman’s RideT from Yorktown to Philadelphia], 
(Afar.)—Howard Pyle.—BS 10—CS 21 (longer.) 
Till Christmas.—Anon.—WR 17 

Till Death us Join.—Arthur P. Stanley. See following. 
“ ‘Till death us part.’ —Arthur P. Stanley.—GG 
(Till Death us Join.)—BS 10 
Tilly Bones.—Eliz. W. Bellamy.—WR 15 
Tim Murphy Makes a Few Remarks.—Anon. See fol¬ 
lowing. 

Tim Murphv’s [Irish] Stew.—Anon.—CD—CDV—DE 
—PS—SDR 

(Tim Murphy Makes a Few Remarks.)—CRR 
Tim Murphy’s Stew.-—Anon. See foregoing. 

Tim Titus.—J. Fox Abrahams.—CS 33 
Tim Tuff.—E: Capern—CS 3—HR 
Tim Turpin.—T: Hood.—THP 
Tim Twinkleton’s Twins.—C: A. Bell.—CS 7 
Timber, The. (Sel.) —H: Vaughan.—OB 
Timber Line.-—Surville J. DeLan.—CS 27 
Tim’s Downfall.—S. Jennie Smith.—CS 32 
Tim’s Madonna.—Eliz. D. Renninger.—WR 25 
Time.—Anon.—PC 

Time. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Time.—Sir J: Beaumont.—KNE 
Time.—Alice Cary.—TAS 
Time.—T: S. Collier.—AA 
Time.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

Time (“Look back on time with kindly eyes.”—C.). 

—Emily Dickinson.—TAS 
Time.—B: Franklin. See Way to Wealth, The. 

Time.—Jasper Mayne.—OB 

(“Time is a feathered thing.”)—HBP 
Time.—Bryan W. Procter. See Petition to Time, A. 
Time.—F. G. Scott.—VA 
Time.—Walter Scott .—See Antiquary, The. 

Time.—E: Young. See Night Thoughts. 

Time and Death.—W: II. Whitworth.—VA 
Time and Eternity.—C: H. Ludors.—TAS 
Time and Eternity.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memo- 
riam. 

Time and Grief.—W: L. Bowles. See To Time. 

Time and its Changes.—Philip James Bailey. SeeFestus. 
Time and Love, I. (Sonnet LXIV.)—W: Shakespeare. 
—PGT 1—PHS—YBF 
(Spoils of Time, The— 5th son .)—FP 


335 





Time 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Time and Love, II. (Sonnet LXV.) — W: Shake¬ 
speare.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Spoils of Time, The— 6th son.) —FP 
Time and the Seasons.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Time Doeth All Things Well.—Jerome Harte.—WR 26 
Time Enough.—Anon.—NV 

(Squirrel’s Lesson, The.)—DS—-PP—YA—Y r FR 
Time Flies.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Time for Prayer, The.—Anon.—CS 10 
Time, Hope and Memory.—T: Hood.—FP 
Time in Absence. {Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
“Time is a feathered thing.”—Jasper Mayne. See Time. 
Time I’ve Lost in Wooing, The.—T: Moore.—FTA— 
WEP 4 

Time Mav Steal the Dewy Bloom. — C: G. Blanden.— 
TFY 

Time not to be Recalled.—Anon.—CS 1 

Time of Clearer Twitterings.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 

Time of Roses.—T: Hood.—OB (abr.) 

(Ballad— C.) —Y’BF {abr.) 

(“It was not in the Winter.”)—YA 
{Abr .)—H B P—VS 

Time of the Barmecides, The.—Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 
Time of the Singing of Birds, The. {With music.) — 
Anon.—AD 

Time Only for Love.—M. A. L.—YBT 

Time Past, Time Passing, Time to Come. {Sel. fr. 

Psalm XC.)—Jas. Montgomery.—HBP 
Time, Real and Imaginary.—S: T. Coleridge.—OB— 
WEP 4 

Time Spent in Dress.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 
Time to be, The, Sel. fr .—Alice Cary.—AD 
Time to be Wise.—Walter S. Landor.—VA—YBF 
Time to Go.—Susan Coolidge.—GN 

(Flowers Know their Time to Go.)—YT3T 
“Time to Me.”—Anon.—HP 
Time to Rise.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Time Turns the Tables.—Viola Valentine. See Then 
and Now. 

Time Vindicated, Sel. fr. (Masques— sel. fr. song.)— 
Ben Jonson.—BNL 

“Time wasteth years, and months, and hours.”—T: 
Watson.—FEP 

Timely Hint, A.—Anon.—CS 29 
Time-piece, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Time’s Cure.—Anon.—HBP 

Times go bv Turns.—Rob’t Southwell.—FEP—OB— 
PHS—WEP 1 

Time’s Midnight Voice. E: Young. See Night 
Thoughts. 

Time’s Revenge.—Anon.—CH 
Time’s Silent Lesson.—Emeline S. Smith.—CS 25 
Time’s Soliloquy.—Anon.—CS 23 
Timid Hortense.—P: Newell.—NA 
Timon of Archimedes.—C. B. Loomis.—NA 
Timon of Athens, lir. sel. fr. {Fr. Act IV., Sc. 3.)— 
W : Shakespeare.—BNL 
Timothy.—W: Wordsworth.—CGd 
(Childless Father, The—C.)—YBF 
Timothy Doolan’s Will.—Anon.—CH 
Timothy Grey.—Alfred H. Miles.—CS 27 
Timothy Horn.—W. W. Fink.—BS 18 
Timothy Titcomb’s Letters, Sel. fr. (Getting the Right 
Start—-Letter I., abr.) —BLP—BS 24—PEO 
Timothy’s Quest, Sel. fr. (Aunt Hitty Taxbox— sel. fr. 

Sc. X.)—Kate D. Wiggin.—MRS 
Tin Peddler, The.—-Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Tinker and Miller’s Daughter, The.—J: (?) Wolcott.— 
BC 

Tinker and the Glazier, The.—Harrison.—BC 
Tintamarre, The.—Julia M. Ryan.—WR 6 
Tintern Abbey.—W: Wordsworth.—BNL 
{Sel. )—EPs—LLC—SN 

(Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, 
etc—C.)—WEP 4 

(Lines Composed near Tintern Abbey.)—FEP 
(On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye.)—HBP 
(Varying Impressions of Nature— sel.) —GP 
Tiny Boy’s Speech, A.—Anon.—DST 
Tiny Little Snowflakes.—Anon.—DLF 
Tiny Quarrel, A. {Dial. — ad. fr. Little Prudy’s Sister 
Susy, Ch. V.)—Sophie May.—NDP 
Tiny Shoe, A.—-Anon.—DCP 
Tipperary.—Mary E. Kelly.—TIP—VA 
Tirade—Explained, A. {Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Tired.—Anon.—HP 

Tired Mothers. (C.)—May R. Smith.—BS 7—CS 8— 
GP—HP—LLC—OS 2 
(To a Tired Mother.)—WR 15 
Tired of Church. {Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Tired of Play.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—OS 1 
(Child Tired of Play.)—WCLI 2 
Tired Old Woman, The.—Anon.—WR 21 


Tired Out. ( Tab.) —Anon.—COS — DS — NPS — PP 
—YA—YP 

Tired Out.—Anon.—HP 
Tired Out. {All the Year Round .)—BS 19 
“Tired! well, and what of that?”—Anon.—GG 
(Sermon in Verse, A.)—KNE 
(What of That?)—HP 
{SI. abr.)—BS 15—PEO 
Tiresome Caller, A.—Anon.—DS—YA 
Tiresome Insects. {New York Times.) —HSS 3 
’Tis a Little Thing.—T: N. (?) Talfourd.—FP 
“ 'Tis a time for memory and for tears.”—G:D. Pren¬ 
tice.—AE 

’Tis but a Little Faded Flower.—Ellen C. Howarth.— 
AA—FTA—TAV 

’Tis Ever Thus.—R. K. Munkittrick.—AWH 
’Tis Five-and-twenty Years.—Anon.—CS 13 
’Tis I, be Not Afraid.—Eliz. Charles.—HDL 
’Tis Midnight.—Anon.—NA 

“ 'Tis not enough the voice be sound and clear.”- 

—Lloyd. See Modulation. 

’Tis not Fine Feathers that Make Fine Birds.—Anon. 
—SS 

’Tis Said that Absence Conquers Love.—Frd’k W. 
Thomas.—FTA 

(Song: “ ’Tis said,” etc.)—AA 
’Tis Sair to Dream.—Rob’t Gilfillan.—VA 
“ ’Tis sorrow builds the shining ladder up.” {Br. sel. 
fr. On the Death of a Friend’s Child.)—Jas. R. 
Lowell.—HDL 

’Tis Spring-time.—R. P. Graham.—LPS—PP 
(Spring-time.)—AD 
’Tis Summer Still.—C: Sangster.—TCV 
** ’Tis sweet in the green spring.” (From the Spanish 
of Villejas— C. — si. abr.) —(Villejas— tr. by) W: 
C. Bryant.—AD 

“ ’Tis sweet to hear the merry lark.” (Song— C .)— 
Hartley Coleridge.—FEP 
(Song: The Lark.)—HBP 
’Tis Sweet to Roam.—Anon.—NA {sel.) 
(Mesopotamia.)—KNE 

’Tis the Last Rose of Summer. (C.)—T: Moore.— 
BNL—PYO 

(Last Rose of Summer, The.)—FEP—HBP—LLC 
—WCLG 2 

'Tis the White Anemone.— Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.— 
POS 

(White Anemone. The— abr.) —GN 
“ ’Tis weary watching wave by wave.”—Gerald (?) 
Massey.—SM 

Tit for Tat.—Anon.—BR—PR—YA 

Tit for Tat.—Anon.—CG 1 

Tit for Tat.—Anon.—MYF 

Tit for Tat.—Anon.—WR 14 

“Tit for Tat.”—Clara J. Denton.—LL 

Tit for Tat.—H. R. Hudson.—TT 

Tit for Tat.—W: Lyle.—CS 37 

Titcomb’s Letters.—Josiah G. Holland. See Timo¬ 
thy Titcomb’s Letters. 

Tithes.—R: L. Sheil. See England’s Misrule of Ire¬ 
land. 

Tithonus.—Alfred Tennyson. — EPs — FEP—HBP— 
WEP 4 

Titmarsh’s Carmen Lilliense.—W: M. Thackeray.— 
HPE 

Titmouse, The.—Ralph W. Emerson.—AP—PoR {br. 

sel.) 

Tito’s Armor.—G: Eliot. See Romola. 

Tittlebat Titmouse’s Experiment.—S: Warren. See 
Ten Thousand a Year. 

Titus Quintius against Quarrels between the Senate 
and the People.—Livy. See History of Rome. 

To-: “Tell me your joy, etc.”—Anon.—FLS 

To-: “I love you—not because,” etc.—G: C. 

Baker.—CG 1 

To-: “What boots it,” etc.—W: H. L. Bulwer, 

Lord Dalling and Bulwer.—FLS 

To-: “’Twas at a ball,” etc.—Denison Eldridge.— 

TL 

To-: “When summer dwells,” etc.—Heinrich 

Heine.—FLS 

To-: “In years to come,” etc. — Owen Innsly.— 

FLS 

To-: “With woman’s form and woman’s tricks.”— 

T: Moore.—HPE 

To-. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley. 

(I Fear thy Kisses.)—FTA—GP 

(“I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden.”)—BNL—PGT 1 

_yop 

To-. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley.—HBP—OB — 

WEP 4 

(“One word is too often profaned.”)—FEP—FTA 
—OH—PGT 1—YBF 


336 















TITLE INDEX 


To a Nightingale 


To-. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley.—WEP 4 

(“Music, when soft voices die.”)—BNL—FEP— 
OB—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 

To-: "The broken moon,” etc.—Alex. Smith.—VA 

To- (C\): “As when with downcast eye,” eto.— 

Alfred Tennyson. 

(Friendship.)—WR 1 

To-: “Her voice is one of command.”—W: B. 

Wheelwright.—CG 3 

To-, in her Seventieth Year. (C.—Misc. Sonnets, 

Pt. III., XVII.)—W: Wordsworth. 

(To Lady Fitzgerald in her Seventieth Year.)— 
WEP 4 

To-[Miss Blackett], on her First Ascent to the 

Summit of Helvellyn.—W: Wordsworth.— 
WEP 4 

To-on her Sister’s Death.—J: Keble.—PGT 2 

To a Bird that Haunted the Waters of Laaken in the 
Winter.—E: Hovel, Lord Thurlow.—BNL— 
FEP 

(Sonnet. To a Bird that, etc.)—HBP 
To a Blockhead.—Alex. Pope.—HPE 
To a Butterfly.—G: H. Clarke.—TCV 
To a Butterfly.—W: Wordsworth. — CGd—LC—PC— 
SN 

To a Capricious Friend.—Jos. Addison.—HPE 
To a Caty-did.—Philip Freneau.—AA—SN 
To a Cherokee Rose.—W: H. Hayne.—AA 
To a Child Embracing his Mother. (C.)—T: Hood.— 
FEP—HBP 

(Child and Mother.;—OS I—WCL 
(Love thy Mother, Little One— abr.) —TFS 
To a Child.—G. E. Montgomery.—AA 
To a Child— Fs. T. Palgrave.—OH 
To a Child.—J: Sterling.—HBP—VA 
To a Child.—Nathaniel P. Willis. See To Laura W—, 

To a Child.—“Yankee.”—SS 

(Truth—Freedom—Virtue.)—CS 19 
To a Child During Sickness.—Leigh Hunt. See To T. 

L. H., Six Years Old, during a Sickness. 

To a Child of Quality[, Five Years Old].—Matthew 
Prior.—BFV—FEP—GN—OB—WEP 3 
To a Child. Written in her Album. (C.)—W: Words¬ 
worth.—BNL 
(In a Child’s Album.)—GN 

(“Small service is true service [while]it lasts]”— si. 
diff .)—CS 1—HSS 2 
To a Christmas Pudding.—Anon.—BS 1 
To a Chrysanthemum.—-J: A. Thompson.—CG 2 
To a Clam. (C.)—J: G. Saxe. 

(Sonnet to a Clam.)—HPE 
To a Cloud.—W: C. Bryant.—POS 
To a Collection of Pastorals.—F. B. Wiley.—CG 1 
To a Conservatory Flower.—A. G. Newcomer.—CG 1 
To a Cricket.—W: C. Bennett.—GN—HBP 
To a Cricket —Eli Shepherd.—POS 
To a Crow.—Rob’t B. Wilson.—AA 
To a Cyclamen.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
To A. D. (C.) —W: E. Henlev. 

(Love Notes.)—BIL—FTA 
(Pleasant Song, A.)—OH 
To a Daisy.—J: Hartley.—;VA 

To a Daughter on her Marriage.—VictorHugo (tr. by S: 
Longfellow).—OH 

To a Dead Bird.—Rob’t J. Kellogg.—CG 1 
To a Dead Woman.—H: C. Bunner.—ASL—FEP 
To a Deaf and Dumb Little Girl.—Hartley Coleridge. 
—WEP 4 

To a Desolate Friend.—W: J. Dawson.—VA 
To a Distant Friend. (Misc. Sonnets, Pt. III., XXV.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—PGT 1 
(Speak)—OB 

To a Dublin Publisher.—T: Sheridan.—HPE 
To a Fair Maiden.—Walter S. Landor.—YBF 
To a Field Mouse.—Rob’t Burns.—PHS 
To a Firefly.—W: C. Bryant.—YBT 
To a Fish.—J: Wolcott.—GP 
To a Fly.—W: Oldys.—LC 

("Busy, curious, thirsty fly.”)—FEP 
(Fly, The.)—CEL—HBP 
(On a Fly Drinking out of his Cup,)—OB 
To a Fly taken out of a Bowl of Punch.—P: Pindar.— 
'HPE 

To a Football.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 1 
To a Friend.—Matthew Arnold.—PGT 2—WEP 4 
To a Friend.—J: G. C. Brainard.—BS 6 
(Epithalamium.)—AA—FEP—HBP 
(I Saw Two Clouds at Morning.)—BNL—GP 
To a Friend.—Dan’l A. Brown.—FP 
To a Friend. (C .—Sonnet I.)—Hartley Coleridge. 

(Friendship.)—OB 
To a Friend.—-J: Gowdy.—CG 2 


To a Friend.—Fitz-Greene Halleck.—GMS (sel.) 

(Green be the Turf.)—LLC 
(Joseph Rodman Drake.)—BNL—EDY—GP 
(On the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake — C.) — 
AA—ASL—FEP—HBP—TAV—WCLG 2 
To a Friend Studying German.—C: G. Leland.— 
BDD 

To a Girl.—Anon.—FTA—OH 
To a Glove.—B: Jonson. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

To a Greek Girl.—Austin Dobson.—VA 
To a Highland Girl (at Inversneyde upon Loch Lo¬ 
mond). (C.) —-W: Wordsworth.—BNL—FEP 
—WEP 4 

(To the Highland Girl of Inversneyde.)—PGT 1 
To a Honey-bee.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
To a Honey-bee.—Philip Freneau.—AA 
To a Humming-bird.-—J: 'V. Cheney.—POS 
To a Humming-bird in a Garden.—G: Murray.—SN— 
VA 

To a Hurt Child.—Grace D. Litchfield.—AA 
To a June Breeze.—H: C. Bunner.—AA 
To a Lady.—T: W. Parsons.—AA 
To a Lady.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
To a Lady.—W: Dunbar.—OB 

To a Lady.—Jonathan Swift. See To Mrs. Houghton, 
etc. 

To a Lady Admiring Herself in a Looking-glass.—T: 
Randolph.—BNL 

To a Lady Asking how Long He Would Love Her.— 
Sir G: Etherege.—OB 

To a Lady before Marriage.—T: Tickell.—BNL 
To a Lady in Retirement.—Edmund Waller.—ELP 
To a Lady OSended by a Sportive Observation that 
Women have no Souls.—S: T. Coleridge.— 
HPE 

To a Lady: She Refusing to Continue a Dispute.— 
Matthew Prior.—WEP 3 

To a Lady, upon a Looking-glass Sent. (C.)—Jas. 
Shirley. 

(Looking-glass, The.)—ES 

To a Ladv, with a Guitar.—Percy B. Shelley.—CEL— 
PGT 1 

(With a Guitar: to Jane—C.)—FEP 
To a Lady, with Some Painted Flowers.—Anna L. Bar- 
bauld.—BNL 

To a Lake Party. (SI. abr .)—Frd’k W. Faber.— 
AVP 

To a Laugh.—Paul Terry.—CG 3 
To a Liar.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
To a Lily.—J. M. LegarA—A A 
To a Little Brook.—Eugene Field.—W T TD 
To a Little Maid.—Anon.—YBT 
To a Living Author.—Anon.—-HPE 
To a Lofty Beauty, from Her Poor Kinsman.—Hartley 
Coleridge. (Sonnet XXXIV.)—WEP 4 
To a Louse.—Rob’t Burns.—BNL 
(We all Have Faults— br. sel.) —PS 
To a Lover. (Song—C.)—Sir J: Suckling.—YBF 
To A. M. Olar. (An Old Man’s Memories.)—Mary K. 
Dallas.—WR 3 

To a Magnolia Flower in the Garden of the Armenian 
Convent at Venice.—S. Weir Mitchell.—AA 
To a Maple Seed.—Lloyd Mifflin.—AA 
To a Missal of the Thirteenth Century.—Austin Dob¬ 
son.—LBB—MBB 

To a Mistress Dying. (Philosopher and the Lover, 
The; to a Mistress Dying—C.)—Sir W: Daven- 
ant.—OB 

To a Modern Girl.—Archibald Douglas.—TL 
To a Mosquito. (C.) —W: C. Bryant.—BNL (si. abr.) 

(Musquito, The.)—HPE 
To a Moth.—C: E. Thomas.—A A 

To a Moth that Drinketh of the Ripe October.—Emily 
Pfeiffer.—VA 

To a Mountain.—H: C. Kendall.—VA 
To a Mountain Daisy.—Rob’t Burns.—AD—BNL— 
EPs—FEP—HBP—MBL-rSN 
(SI. abr.) —HSS 1—PHS—POS—WCLG 1— 

(Abr.) —BVF—GN 

To a Mouse[, on Turning up Her Nest with the Plough], 
(C.) — Rob’t Burns. — BNL—EPs — FEP — 
HSS 3 — MBL — PGT 1 — SN — WCLG 1 — 
WEP 3 

(To a Field Mouse.)—PHS 
To a Mummy.—Horace Smith.—OS 3—SO (abr.) 

(Address to the Mummy at [or in] Belzoni’s Exhi¬ 
bition.)—BNL—CS 6—FEP—HBP 
(Mummy, The— abr.) —PPSr 
To a Nightingale. (In Flowers of Sion.)—W: Drum¬ 
mond.—BNL—FEP 
(Sonnet: Sweet Bird.)—ELP 
(To the Nightingale.)—WEP 2 
(To the Redbreast.)—HBP 

337 











To a Nightingale AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


To a Nightingale.—J: Keats.—FEP 
(Nightingale, The— br. sel.) —EPs 
(Ode to a Nightingale— C.) —BNL—HBP—PGT 1 
—SN—WEP 4 
(SI. abr.)— GP—OB 
To a Picture.—Anon.—CG 1 
To a Picture.—Herbert E. Millholen.—CG 1 
To a Pine-tree.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD (si. abr.)-— POS 
To a Pipe of Tobacco. (Gentleman’s Magazine.) —PPh 
To a Poem.—Frank B. Wade.—CG 3 
To a Poet Breaking Silence.—Fs. Thompson.—VA 
To a Poet who Died of Want.—Ludwig Uhland (tr. by 
L. Filmore).—FP 

To a Portrait.—Arthur Symons.—VA 
To a Portrait of Red Jacket.— Fitz-Greene Halleck.— 
WR 10 (cond.) 

(Red Jacket— C .)—AA 

To a Redbreast. (Abr.) —J: L. Langhorne.—PC 
To a Rich Young Widow. (Punch.) —HPE 
To a River in which a Child was Drowned.—C: and 
Mary Lamb.—LPC 
To a Robin.—Anon.—LLC 
To a Rogue.—Jos. Addison.—HPE 
To a Rose.—W. C. B.—CG 3 
To a Rose.—Seymour H. Ransom.—CG 1 
To a Rose.—Frank D. Sherman.—AA 
To a Sea-bird.—Fs. Bret Harte.—SN 
To a Seabird.—W: Watson.—VA 
To a Sister of Charity.—Edwin G. Alexander.—CG 1 
To a Skeleton.—Anon.—BNL—CS 4—FEP—PR—PS 
—TMR 

Address to a Skeleton.)—WRD 
Lines on a Skeleton.)—HBP—PPSr 
To a Skull.—Anon.—-BS 5 
To a Skull.—T: C. Irwin.—TIP 

To a Skylark. (C .)—Percy B. Shelley.—BFV—BPB 
— FEP — GMS — GN — GP — LLC — GE¬ 
OS 3—PGT 1—PHS—VSG—WEP 4 
(Abr.) —CR—IR 
(Sel.) —EPs—SE 
(Ode to a Skylark.)—WR 7 
(Sky-lark, The—abr.)—HSS 3—WCLG 2 
(To the Skylark.)—BNL—HBP 
To a Skylark ( C .): “Ethereal minstrel,” etc.—W: 
Wordsworth.—FEP—LLC-—MBL (si. abr.) 

(To the Skylark.)—BNL—EPs—PGT 1—YBF 
To a Skylark: “Up with me!” etc.—W: Wordsworth. 

—FEP—LC—SN 

To a Slow Walker and Quick Eater.—Gotthold E. Les¬ 
sing.—HPE 

To a Spider.—T: Whytehead.—AVP 
To a Spider-web.—G. H. Ferris.—CG 1 
To a Swallow Building under our Eaves [or under the 
Eaves at Craigenputtock],—Jane W. Carlyle.— 

OS 3—VA 

To a Thrush Singing in January. (Winter Thrush, The 
— C .— abr.) —J: Keble.—POS 
To a Tired Mother.—May R. Smith. See Tired 
Mothers. 

To a Town Poet.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 
To a Troublesome Fly.—T: MacKellar.—SN 
To a Usurper.—Eugene Field.—EF—WTD 
To a Very Young Lady.—Sir C: Sedley.—BNL—FEP 
(Child and Maiden— abr.) —PGT 1 
(Song from “The Mulberry Garden.”)—WEP 2 
(Song to Chloris.)—CEL 
(To Chloris— abr.) —OB 

To a Waterfowl.—W: C. Brvant.—AA—ASL—BFV— 
BNL — BPB — BS 18 — BSP — CEL — CGd 
— EPs — FEP — GMS — GN — HBP — 
HSS 3 — LLC — MAL — PHS — PYO (si. 
abr.) — SN — SO — TAS — TAV — VSG — 
WCLG 2—YBF—YBT 
(S*l*P —GG—SE 

To a Wild Rose Found in October.—Ednah P. (C.) 
Hayes.—AA 

To a Wind-flower.—Madison Cawein.—AA 
To a Withered Rose.—J: K. Bangs.—AA 
To a Would-be New Woman.—Jas. S. Metcalfe.—TL 
To a Writer of the Day, Sels. fr. —Langdon E. Mitchell. 
Purpose.—AA 
Technique.—AA 

To a Young Child.—Eliza Scudder.—AA 
To a Young Girl Dying.—T: W. Parsons.—AA—ASL 
—TAS 

To a Young Lady.—W: Cowper.—PGT 1 

(Comparison, A. Addressed to a Young Lady— 
C .)—WEP 3 

(Sweet Stream, that Winds.)—BNL 
To Abraham Lincoln.—J: J. Piatt.—AA 
To Absent Friends.—Anon.—CS 36 
To Admiral George Dewey.—V. Vaughan.—PAPm 
*" Age.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 

338 


To Alexander H. Stephens.—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 
To Alfred Tennyson.—Rob’t S. Hawker.—VA 
To Alfred Tennyson.—H: W. Longfellow.—GG 
(W apentake— C .)—AA 
To All in Haven.—Philip B. Marston.—BNL 
To Allie.—Edgar A. Brown.—CG 1 
To Althea.—R: Lovelace. See following. 

To Althea from Prison. (C.) —R: Lovelace.—BNL— 
BPB — CEL — EHT — ELP — ES — FEP — 
GP —HBP —OB —OEL —PGT 1 — PHS — 
PYO — WEP 2—YBF 
(From Prison.)—LH 
(To Althea.)—EPs 

To Amarantha, that She would Dishevel her Hair. 
(Sel.) —R: Lovelace.—OB 
(Her Golden Hair— shorter.) —CEL 
To America.—-Alfred Austin.—GN 
(Britannia to Columbia.)—PAPm 
(Voice, A.)—WCLG 1 
To America.—G: H. Boker.—ASL—YBF 
To America.—R: Garnett.—VA 
To America in 1876.—Martin F. Tupper.—CS 13 
To an Absent Wife.—G: D. Prentice.—FEP 
To an Afflicted Protestant Lady in France, Sel. fr. 

(Path of Sorrow, The.)—W: Cowper.—HDL 
To an Alaskan Glacier.—C: Keeler.—SN 
To an Athlete Dying Young.—A. E. Housman.—YBF 
To an Autumn Leaf.—Albert Mathews.—AA 
To an Early Primrose. (C .)—H: Kirke White.—FEP 
(Early Primrose, The.)—BNL 
To an Elm.—H: T. Tuckerman.—POS 
To an Ill-favored Lady.—Jos. Addison.-—HPE 
To an Imaginary One.-—H: B. Eddy.—CG 2 
To an Imperilled Traveller.—Nathan H. Dole.—AA 
To an Inconstant One.—Sir Rob’t Ayton.—OB 
(Woman’s Inconstancy.)—BNL—FEP—YBF 
To an Insect. (C.) —Oliver W. Holmes.—SN 
(Katvdid.)—BNL (sel.) —BS 1 
(Sel.)— CSS— 1 TFS 
(To the Katydid.)—WCLI 2 
To an “Instructor.”—Harry S. Furbur, Jr.—CG 2 
To an Obscure Poet who Lives on my Hearth.— C. L. 
Hildreth.—AA 

To an Officer in the Army; Intended to Allay the Vio¬ 
lence of Party Spirit. (C.) —J: Byrom. 
(Jacobite Toast.)—FEP 
(Which is Which.)—HPE 
To an Old Pipe.—De Witt Sterry.—PPh 
To an Old Portrait of a Little Girl. (William and 
Mary College Monthly .)—CG 3 
To an Old Venetian Wine-glass.—Lloyd Mifflin.—AA 
To an Oriole.—Edgar Fawcett.—BNL—SN 
To Andrew Jackson.—G: H. Boker.—EDY 
To Angelina. (Fr. The Elder Brother.)—J: Fletcher. 
—ES 

(Beauty Clear and Fair.)—ELP—HBP—OB—OEL 
To Anne.—Clement Marot.—FTA 

To Anthea: “Bid me to live,” etc.—Rob’t Herrick. 

See To Anthea, who may, etc. 

To Anthea: “Now is the time,” etc.— Rob’t Herrick. 
—WEP 2 

To Anthea, who may Command Him Anything. (C.) 
—Rob’t Herrick.—FEP—LH—OB—OEL— 
PGT 1 

(To Anthea.)—ELP—FTA—WEP 2 
To Any Desponding Genius, Sel. fr. (To the Despond¬ 
ing.)—Alice Cary.—BS 14 
To Any Reader.—Rob’t I.. Stevenson.—CGV 
To Ask and to Have.—S: Lover.—WR 20 
(How to Ask and Have— C .)—THP 
To Augusta. (C .)—Lord Byron.—BNL 
(Epistle to Augusta.)—WEP 4 
To Auntie.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
To Aurora.—W: Alexander, Earl of Stirling.—FEP — 
PGT 1 

To Austin Dobson.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
To Austin Dobson.—Arthur Ketchum.—CG 2 
To Autumn. (C.)—J: Keats.—CEL—FEP—HBP— 
OB—WEP 4—YBF 
(Autumn.)—POS 
(Ode to Autumn.)—PGT 1—SN 
To Barbary Land.—Agnes E. Mitchell.—BS 17— 
WR 14 

To Bayard Taylor bevond Us.—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 

To be Kings among Men.—Anon.—CP 

To be no More.—J: Milton . See Paradise Lost. 

To Be or not to Be.—W: Shakespeare. See Hamlet . 

To Beguile the Time.—W: Shakespeare. See Mac¬ 
beth. 

To Ben Jonson.—Rob’t Herrick.—EDY 

(Ode for Ben Jonson, An— -C.) —ELP—WEP 2 
(Ode to Ben Jonson.)—BNL—EPs 
To Ben Jonson.—T: Randolph.-—WEP 2 





TITLE INDEX 


To his Conscience 


To Blossoms.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL—BPB—CEL— 
ELP — EPs — FEP — FP — HBP — OB — 
PGT 1—PHS —SN (si. abr.) —WEP 2—YBF 
To Brainhardy.—Ben Jonson.—HPE 
To Bryant on His Birthday.—G: H. Boker.—EDY 
To C. F. Bradford.—Jas. R. Lowell.—PPh 
To Campbell. ( Br. sel. fr. Verses to the Poet Crabbe’s 
Inkstand.)—T: Moore.—BNL—EPs 
To Carmen Sylva.—Emma Lazarus.—EDY 
To Castara in a Trance.—W: Habington. See Cas- 

To Castara. Of True Delight.—W: Habington. See 
Castara. 

To Castara: The Reward of Innocent Love.—W: 
Habington. 

To Castara, upon the Death of a Lady.—W: Habing¬ 
ton. See Castara. 

To Celia. (The Forest, IX.)—(Phiiostratus — tr. by) 
Ben Jonson. — EPs — ES — FEP — FTA — 
HBP—OB—O EL—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 
(“Drink to me only with thine eyes.”)—BNL 
(Song—To Celia—C.)—ELP—WEP 2 
To Celia.—Sir C: Sedley.—ELP—OB 
( Constancy.)—YBF 

(“Not, Celia, that I juster am.”)—FEP—FTA— 
PGT 1 

To Celia Singing.—T: Carew.—OEL 
(Celia Singing—C.)—ES—WEP 2 
To Celia Thaxter.—Annie Field.—EDY 
To Charles Dickens.—J: Forster.—EDY 
To Charles Dickens.—T: Hood.—EDY 
To Charles Lamb.—R: M. Milnes, Lord Houghton.— 
EDY 

To Charlotte Pulteney.—Ambrose Phillips. See To 
Miss Charlotte Pulteney, etc. 

To Children of Girard, Pa.—J: G. Whittier.—PEO 
To Chloe. (Sel.) —W: Cartwright.—OB 
To Chloe.—J: Wolcott.—BNL—HPE 
To Chloris.—W: Drummond.—ES—WEP 2 
To Chloris. Sir C: Sedley. See To a Very Young 
Lady. 

To Chloris. (Song— C.) —Edmund Waller.—ES 
To Chloris, Singing a Song of his Own Composition.— 
Edmund Waller.—OEL 

To Christina of Sweden.—J: Milton (tr. by W: Cowper). 
—EDY 

To Christina Rossetti.—Dora Greenwell.—VA 
To Ccelia.—C: Cotton.—OB 

To Colin Clout.—Anthony Munday.—EP—WEP 1 
(Beauty Bathing.)—OB 
(Colin.)—PGT 1 

To Constantia—Singing.—Percy B. Shelley.—HBP 
To Corinne. (Br. sel. fr. Corinne at the Capitol.)— 
Felicia D. Hemans.—EPs 
To Critics.—Walter Learned.;—AA 
To Cupid, upon a Dimple in Castara’s Cheek.—W: 

Habington. See Castara. 

To Cynthia.—Ben Jonson. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

To Cyriac [Cyriack—C.] Skinner. (1656.) — J: Milton. 
—OB—PGT 1 

To Cyriack Skinner. ( C .) (1655.)—J: Milton.—FEP 

—HBP 

(On his Own Blindness.)—BNL—YBF 
("These eyes, though clear”— sel .)—HDL 

To D-, Sel. fr. (“In thee I fondly hoped to clasp.”) 

—Lord Byron.—BNL 
To D. H. (C.)—W: E. Henley. 

(Home.)—GN 

To Daffodils. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick.—BPB — CEL — 
CGd — ELP — EPs — FEP — FP — GN — 
HBP —LC —OB —OEL —PGT 1 — PIIS — 
POS—WEP 2—YBF 
(Daffodils.)—BNL—PEO (sel.) 

To Daisies.—Rob’t Herrick. See following. 

To Daisies, not to Shut so Soon. (C.) —Rob’t Her¬ 
rick.—OB—YBF 
(To Daisies.)—OEL 
To Daphne.—Sir Walter Besant.—VA 
To Death.—Johann C. von Gluck.—BNL 
To Death.—Rob’t Herrick.—YBF 
To Death.—Caroline Southey.—OB 
To Delia.—S: Daniel. See Sonnets to Delia. 

To Demeter.—Maybury Fleming.—AA 
To Detraction.—J: Marston.—WEP 1 
To Diana.—T: Heywood.—CEL 
To Diane.—Helen Hay.—AA 

To Dianeme. (C.)—Rob’t Herrick.—BFV—ELP— 
FEP—FTA—OB—PGT 1—TFY—YBF 
(Sweet, be not Proud.)—BNL 
To Doctor Empiric.—Ben Jonson.—HPE 
To Dr. John Brown.—Algernon C. Swinburne. — 
EDY 

To Duffy in Prison.—T: D’A. McGee.—TIP 


To Duty. (Sonnet to Duty— C .)—T: W. Higginson.— 

To Duty.—W: Wordsworth.—LH 
(Duty— sel.) —HDL 

(Ode to Duty—C.)—FEP—HBP —OB —PGT 1 
—PHS—WEP 4 
(Sel.) —BNL—EPs—TMD 

To E. B. B.—Rob’t Browning. See One Word More. 
To E. B. B. 

To E. B. B.—Jas. Thomson.—EDY 
(E. B. B.—C.)—AVP 
To E. N. L.—Stuart Livingston.—TCV 
To Echo.—J: Milton. See Comus. 

To Edgar A. Poe. (Fr. Sonnets on Edgar Allan Poe.) 
—Sarah Whitman.—EDY 
(Sonnet.)—AA 

To Electra. (C.)—Rob’t Herrick.—ELP—FTA—OB 
(Old Rhyme, An.)—HP 
To Elizabeth.—W. T. McIntyre.—CG 3 
To England.—G: H. Boker.-—A A (sel.) —ASL 
To England.—C:L. Moore.—AA 
To Eva.—Ralph W. Emerson.—FEP 
To Evening.—W: Collins.—BPB 
(Evening.)—CEL 

(Ode to Evening—C.)—EPs—FEP—HBP—OB— 
PGT 1—WEP 3 

To Everlasting Oblivion.—J: Marston.—WEP 1 
To F. C., 20th February, 1875.—Mortimer Collins.—VS 
(Snow and Sun.)—TFY 
To F. S. O., Sel. fr. —Edgar A. Poe.—BNL 
To Fanny. (SI. abr.) —T: Moore.—HPE 
To Faustine.—Arthur Colton.—AA 
To February.—Agnes E. Wetherald.—TCV—VA (sel.) 
To Fine Grand.—Ben Jonson.—HPE 
To Flavia.—Edmund Waller.—ES—OEL 
To Florence. (To the Jersey Lily— C.) —Joaquin Mil¬ 
ler.—TFY (longer than Works.) 

To Flush, My Dog.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BPB 
To Fool or Knave.—Ben Jonson.—WEP 2 
To Fortune. (C.) —Jas. Thomson. 

“Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove”— abr .)—PGT 1 
To George Edward Woodberry.—J: Erskine.—CG 3 

To George M-.—T: Miller.—HBP 

To George Peabody.—Oliver W. Holmes.—EP 
To Giulia Grisi.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—AA 
To God and Ireland True.—Ellen O’Leary.—TIP—VA 
To Grandpapa, on His Seventieth Birthday.—Anon.— 
YBT 

To Grown-up Land.—Anon.—CS 37—TFS 
To H. C. (C.)—W: Wordsworth. 

(To Hartley Coleridge.)—HBP 
To H. W. L. (C.)—Jas. R. Lowell. 

(To Henry Wadsworth Longfellow—on his Birth¬ 
day.)—BNL 

To Hafiz.—T: B. Aldrich.—A A 

To Harriett. (Dedication to Harriett— C. — in Mis¬ 
cellaneous Poems and Ballads.)—Rob’t Buch¬ 
anan.—BIL 

To Hartley Coleridge.—W: Wordsworth. See To H. C. 
To Heaven. (The Forest, XV.)—Ben Jonson.—WEP 2 
To Heaven Approached a Sufi Saint.—Dschellaleddin 
Rumi (tr. by W: R. Alger).—BNL 
To Helen.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—ASL—BPB—CEL 
—OB—TAV—YBF 

To Helen in a Huff.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—HPE 
To Helena. (C.)—T: H. Bayly. 

(To my Wife.)—FEP _ 

To Helene, on a Gift-ring Carelessly Lost.—G: Darley. 
—OB 

To Henrietta, on her Departure to Calais. (SI. abr.) — 
T: Hood.—BVC 

To Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.—Jas. R. Lowell. 
See To H. W. L. 

To her Absent Sailor. (Song in The Tent on the 
Beach.)—J: G. Whittier.—BNL 
To her Eyes.—Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.—ES 
To her I Love (Song— C.). —Jas. Thomson.—WEP 3 
To her Sea-faring Lover.—Anon.—OB 
To Himself.—Ben Jonson.—FEP 

(Ode to Himself, [An].)—EPs (si. abr.) —OEL— 
WEP 2 

To Himself and the Harp, Sel. fr. (Harp, The.)— 
Michael Drayton.—EPs 

To his Book. (Two poems.) —Rob’t Herrick.— LBB 
—MBB 

To his Book.—W: W^lsh.—-WEP 3 
To his Book. Of his Lady.—Edmund Spenser. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

To his Books. (Epistles, Bk. I., Epis. 20.)—Horace 
(vnraphrased by Austin Dobson).—LBB— 
MBB 

To his Books.—-H: Vaughan.—LBB—MBB 
To his Conscience.—Rob’t Herrick.—YBF 

339 








To his Countrymen AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


To his Countrymen.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Fable for 
I** Critics, A. 

To his Coy Love.—Michael Drayton.—ES—OB 
To his Coy Mistress.—Andrew Marvell.—OB 
To his Fair Idea.—Michael Drayton.—FEP 
To his Forsaken Mistress.—Sir Rob’t Ayton.—FEP— 
PJ.* OB 

To his Inconstant Mistress. (Song. To my Incon- 
•<* stant Mistress—C.)—T: Carew.—OB 
To his Lady.—Rob’t C. Graham.—LH 
To his Love.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1 (I.)—PHS 
(“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”)— 
OEL—YBF 

(Sonnet.)—FEP—HBP—OB (I.) 

(Sonnet XVIII.—C.)—WEP 1 
To his Love.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1 (II.)—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—HBP—OB (XVI.) 

(Sonnet CVI—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
(“When in the chronicle of wasted time.”)—BNL— 
OEL 

To his Lute.—W: Drummond.—CEL—FEP—PGT 1 
To his Lute.—Sir T: Wyatt.—OB 

(Lover Complaineth of the Unkindness of his Love, 
The—C.)—WEP 1 
(Lover to his Lute, The.)—CEL 
To his Mistress.—J: Wilmot, Earl of Rochester.— 
ELP (sel.) —OB 

To his Mistress (Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia). — 
Sir H: Wotton. See following. 

To his Mistress, Objecting to him, neither Toying or 
Talking.—Rob’t Herrick.—YBF 
To his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia.—Sir H: Wotton 
—FEP 

(Elizabeth of Bohemia.)—BPB—EPs—OB—PGT 1 
—YBF 

(On his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia— C.) —ELP 
—WEP 2 

(To his Mistress, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia.)— 
BNL 

(You Meaner Beauties.)—HBP 
To His Mother.—J: B. Tabb. See Child, The. 

To his Saviour, a Child; a Present by a Child.—Rob’t 
Herrick.—PoR 

To his Sleeping Mistress.—J: Fletcher. See To my 
Mistress’ Eyes. 

To his Supposed Mistress, Sel. fr. (Wishes for the 
Supposed Mistress.)-—R: Crashaw.-—ELP 
To his W’inding-sheet.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs ( abr .) 

(His Winding-sheet— C.) —OB 
To Hope, Br. sel. fr. (“And as in sparkling majesty 
a star.”)—J: Keats.—HP 
To Hope.—Helen M. Williams.—FEP 
To Ianthe. (Poems and Epigrams LVII.—C.)—Wal¬ 
ter S. Landor.—VA 

(“You smiled, you spoke, and I believed.”)—WEP 4 
To Ianthe, Sleeping.—Percy B. Shellev. See Queen 
Mab. 

To Imagination.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
To Imogen.—W: Shakespeare. See Cymbeline. 

To Imperia.—Thomas Burbidge.—VA 
To Inconsistent Husbands.—Anon.—KJ 

(Old Man in the Wood, The— si. diff. vers.) —CS 10 
—PHS 

To J. H.—Leigh Hunt.—HBP 

To James Russell Lowell, Sel. fr. (James R. Lowell.) 

—Oliver W. Holmes.—PEO 
To Jane—The Recollection. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley. 
—WEP 4 (si. abr.) 

(Recollection, The.)—BPB (si. abr.) —PGT 1— 
POS (sel.)— SN 

To Jenny Lind.—Edmund Gosse.—EDY 

To Jessie’s Dancing Feet.;—W: DeL. Ellwanger.—AA 

To Joanna. (C. —Poems on the Naming of Places, Pt. 

II.— abr.) —W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
To John Boyle O’Reilly.—J. B. Bensell.—EDY 
To John C. Fremont. (C.) —J: G. Whittier. 

(John Charles Fremont.)—BNL 
To John Greenleaf Whittier.—Jas. R. Lowell.—PEO 
To John Greenleaf Whittier, on the Death of Lowell.— 
W: H. Ward.—AA 

To John Lathrop. (C.) —B: Franklin. 

(Letter to the Rev. Dr. Lathrop, Boston.)—MAL 
To Julia.—Rob’t Herrick.—OEL 

(Night Piece, The.)—BFV—ELP—ES—WEP 2 
(Night Piece, The: To Julia— C.)— BNL (sel.)— 
EPs—FEP—HBP—OB.—YBF 
To Julia in Shooting Togs.—Owen Seamen.—THP 
To Julia under Lock and Key.—Owen Seaman.—THP 
To June.—Leigh Hunt.—POS 

To Keep a True Lent. (C.)— Rob’t Herrick.—FEP— 
HBP—OS 3 (at. to G: Herbert.) 

(True Lent. A.I—BNL YBF 
To Kentucky.—Anon.—WR 20 


To King Charles and Queen Henrietta. (The Tri¬ 
umph of Peace, Song VI.)—Jas. Shirley.—EHT 
To King Charles and Queen Mary, for the Loss of Their 
First-born. An Epigram Consolatory.—Ben 
Jonson.—EDY 
To Kriss.—Anon.—COS—PP 

To L. E. L., on the Death of Felicia Hemans. (Felicia 
Hemans. To L. E. L.—C.)-—Eliz. B. Browning. 
—A VP 

To La Sanscceur.—W: C. Roscoe.—VA 
To Labor is to Pray.—Frances S. Osgood.—BNL 
Labor.)—FMR—KNE (sel.) 

Labor is Worship.)—CS 7—HSS 3—LLC—PPSr 
—SM— SS—WCLG 2 
(Lahore est Orare.)—BS 5 

To Lady Anne Hamilton.—W: R. Spencer.—FEP— 
HBP 

(Too Late I Stayed.)—BNL—YBF 
To Lady Fitzgerald, in her Seventieth Year. (Misc. 

Sonnets, Pt. III., XVII. To -, in her 

Seventieth Year—C.)—W: Wordsworth.—■ 
WEP 4 

To Lady Margaret. (C.) —S: Daniel. 

(Knowing the Heart of Man.)—EPs 

To Laura W-, Two Years of Age. Sel. fr. (To a 

Child.)—Nathaniel P. Willis.—EPs 
To Lesbia.—T: Campion.—ELP—ES 
To Leuconbe—I. (In Echoes from the Sabine Farm.) 
—Roswell M. Field.—AA 

To Leuconoe—II. (In Echoes from the Sabine 
Farm.)—Eugene Field.—A A 
To Leven Water.—Tobias G. Smollett.—OB (si. abr.) 

(Ode to Leven Water.)—FEP 
To Life’s Pilgrim.—Geoffrey Chaucer.—CEL (abr.) 
Good Counsail.)—FP 

Good Counseil of Chaucer— C.) —FEP—WEP 1 
“ To live in Hell, and Heaven to behold.” — H: Con¬ 
stable.—FEP 
(Pain of Love.)—GP 

To Live Merrily, and to Trust to Good Verses. (C.) — 
Rob’t Herrick.—ELP—EPs 
(His Poets.)—LBB 

To Lord De Tabley.—Austin Dobson.—A VP 
To Louis Frechette.—J: Reade.—TCV 
To Louis Kossuth.—Anon.—EDY 
To Louis Napoleon.—G: H. Boker.—EDY 
To Love.—H: Kirke White.—TFY 
“To love satisfies one-half of our nature.”—A. A. 
Hodge.—GG 

To Love There is No End.—Anon.—FLS 
To Lucy.—Fred. Henderson.—FTA 
To Lucasta[, Going beyond the Seas]. (C.) —R: Love¬ 
lace.— BNL — FEP — HBP — OB — OEL — 
PGT I—YBF 

To Lucasta, going to the Wars.—R; Lovelace. See 
To Lucasta, on Going, etc. 

To Lucasta [,her Reserved Looks C.].—R: Lovelace. 
—WEP 2 

To Lucasta[, on Going to the Wars]. (Song: To Lu¬ 
casta Going to the Warres—C.)—R: Lovelace. 
— BFV — BNL — BPB — CEL — EPs — 
FEP — FTA — HBP — OEL — OH — OS 3 
—PGT 1—PHS—PYO—YBF 
(Going to the Wars.)—ELP—ES—LH—WEP 2 
(To Lucasta Going to the Wars.)—OB 
To Lydia Maria Child, Sel. fr. —J: G. Whittier.—BIL 
To M. T.—Bayard Taylor.—AA 
To Mabel. (Ad.)— R: Jago.—FLS 
(Absence.)—OB 

To Macaulay.—Walter S. Landor.—BNL—HBP 
(Macaulay.)—VA 

To Madame de Stivign(Playing Blind-Man’s Buff.) 

—Montreuil.—BNL 
To Make Mischief.—Anon.—KNE 

To Manon — Comparing Her to a Falcon. (In Love 
Sonnets of Proteus.)—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—VA 
To Manon on Her Lightheartedness. (In Love Son¬ 
nets of Proteus.)—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—VA 
To Manon on His Fortune in Loving her. (In Love 
Sonnets of Proteus.)—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—OB 
To Marguerite.—Matthew Arnold.—OB—WEP 4— 
YBF 

To Marie.—Anon.—NA 

To Mark Mother’s Grave.—Anon.—CS 21 

(Little Phil— poet. vers, by Helen Rich.)—CS 21— 
HP 

To Mary.—S: Bishop.—FEP 
To Mary. (C.) —W: Cowper.—FEP—WEP 3 
(My Mary.)—OB 
(To the Same.)—PGT 1 
To Mary.— C: Wolfe.—BPB—OB—PGT 1 

(“If I had thought thou couldst have died.”)—FEP 
(Lines Written to Music.)—TIP 


310 






TITLE INDEX 


To Perilla 


To Mary in Heaven. (Thou Lingering Star.)—Rob’t 
Burns.—AE (sel.) —BNL—CEL—FEP—HBP 
—HSS 3—MBL—VSG—WEP 3 
To Mary Unwin.—W: Cowper. See To Mrs. Unwin. 

To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, Sel. fr. (On his 
Marriage to Mary Godwin.)—Percy B. Shelley. 
—EDY 

To Master Robbie Miller.—R. H. Moulton.—CG 3 
To Maude’s Guitar.—L. C. Stone.—CG 2 
To Maystress Margaret Hussey.—J: Skelton. See Gar- 
lande of Laurell, The. 

‘‘Tome, fair friend[, you never can be old].”—W: 
Shakespeare.—EPs—PGT 1 

(Sonnet.)—FEP—OB (XV.) 

(Sonnet CIV.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
To Meadows. (To Meddowes— C.) —Rob’t Herrick.— 
ELP—ES — HBP — OB — OEL — WEP 2 
To Miguel de Cervantes Saavadra.—R: K. Munkittrick. 
_ 

To Millicent Abroad.—T. P. Sanborn.—CG 1 
To Milton. (Poems Dedicated to National Indepen¬ 
dence and Liberty, Pt. I. XIV.)—W: Words¬ 
worth— BNL—CEL—EPs—FEP 

( England. )—G P 

(Ideal.)—LH 

(London, 1802—C.)—PGT 1 (II.)—YBF (II.) 

(Milton.)—LLC—WEP 4 

(‘‘Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour”— 
abr.) —GG 

(Sonnet: London, 1802.)—HBP 
To Minnie.—-Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
To Minnie: A Picture-frame for you to Fill. (C.)— 
Rob’t. L. Stevenson. 

(With a Hand-glass.)—OH 
To Miss -.—T: Moore.—HPE 

To Miss Charlotte Pulteney[, in Her Mother’s Arms]. 
—Ambrose Philips.—FEP—WEP 3 

(To Charlotte Pulteney.)—PGT 1 
To Miss Mitford, Authoress of “Our Village.” (C.)— 
C: Kingsley. 

(To the Authoress of "Our Village.”)—EDY 
To Mr. Alexandre, the Ventriloquist. (Lines Ad¬ 
dressed to Monsieur Alexandre, the Celebrated 
Ventriloquist— C.) —Walter Scott.—HPE 
To Mr. Congreve.—Eliz. Toilet.-—EDY 
To Mr. Edward Howard, on his Plays. (C.)—C: 
Sackville, Earl of Dorset. 

(Satire on a Conceited Playwright.)—ESs 
To Mr. Hobbes. (Fr. Pindarique Odes.)—Abraham 
Cowley.— WEP 2 

To Mr. Lawrence.—J: Milton.—OB—PGT 1 
To Mr. Pye. (C.)—S: T. Coleridge. 

(Eternal Poem, An.)—HPE 
To Mrs. Biddy Floyd; or, The Receipt to Form a 
Beauty.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
To Mrs. Houghton of Bourmont, on Praising her Hus¬ 
band to Dr. Swift. (C.)—Jonathan Swift. 

(To a Lady.)—HPE 

To Mistress Isabel Pennell.—-J: Skelton. See Gar- 
lande of Laurell, The. 

To Mistress Margaret Hussey.—J: Skelton. See Gar- 
lande of Laurell, The. 

To Mistress Margery Wentworth.—J: Skelton. See 
Garlande of Laurell, The. 

To Mrs. Unwin. (C.)—W: Cowper.—FEP 

(To Mary Unwin.)—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
To Mollidusta.—Jas. Robinson.—Planch^.—NA 
To Mother Fairie.—Alice Cary.—BLF 
To Music, to Becalm his Fever. ( C .)—Rob’t Herrick. 

FEP—OB 

(Music.)—CEL—WEP 2 

To my Big Sweetheart.—Frd’k S. Cozzens.—AW'H 
To my Books. (Sonnet VIII.)—Caroline Norton.— 
MBB 

To my Books on Parting with Them.—W: Roscoe.— 
LBB—MBB 

(On Parting with his Books.)—FEP 
To my Bookseller. (Epigrams, III.)—Ben Jonson.— 
LBB—MBB 

To my Brothers.—Norman Gale.—VA 
To my Canary Bird.—G: Martin.—TCV 
To my Cat.—Rosamund M. Watson.—VA 
To my Cigar.—Friedrich Marc.—PPh 
To my Cigar.—C: Sprague.—PPh 
To my Companions.—W: E. Channing.—HBP 
To my Daughter[, on her Birthday—C.].—T: Hood.— 
HBP 

To my Dear Friend Aim€e.—G. H. Westley.—FLS 
To my Dear Friend, Mr. Congreve, on his Comedy 
Called “The Double Dealer.” (C.)—J: Dry- 
den. 

(To my Friend, Mr. Congreve.)—WEP 
To my Dear Son.—Lady Dufferin.—A VP 


To my Empty Purse.—Geoffrey Chaucer.—HPE— 
OS 3 

(Compleynte of Chaucer to his Purse— C.) —BNL 
To my Friend, Mr. Congreve.—J: Dryden. See To my 
Dear Friend, etc. 

To my Friend on the Death of her Sister, iSr. sel. fr. 
(Angels of Grief, The.)—J: G. Whittier.— 
HDL 

To my Grandmother.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—A VP 
—CEL—VA 

To my Honoured Kinsman, John Dryden [Driden— 
C.].—J: Dryden.—WEP 2 
To my Horse.—Anon.—FEP 

To my Infant Son. (Domestic Poems, III.)—T: 
Hood—BNL 

(Ode to an Infant Son.)—WRD 
(Ode to my Little Son.)—CS 1—FEP 
(Parental Ode to my Son, Aged Three Years and 
Five Months, A.)—HPE—THP—WEP 4 
To my Lady.—G: H. Boker.—AA 
To my Love.—W. A. Eaton.—CS 25 
To my Love. (C.)—J: G. Saxe. 

(Kiss me Softly.)—BIL—FTA—GP 
To my Meerschaum.—P. D. R.—CG 1—PPh 
To my Mere English Censurer. (Epigrams, XVIII.)— 
Ben Jonson.—WEP 2 

To my Mistress.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—VA 
To my Mistress.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
To my Mistress’s Eyes. (Song fr. Women Pleased, 
Act III., Sc. 4.)—J: Fletcher.—ES 
(To his Sleeping Mistress.)—ELP 
To my Mother. (C.)—W’: E. Henley. 

(I Met a Maiden To-day.)—FTA 
To my Mother. (Sonnet to my Mother— C.) —H 
Kirke White.—PC 

To my Mother.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
To my Mother.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
To my Name-child.-—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
To my Nose.—Alfred A. Forrester.—BNL—HPE 
To my Picture.—T: Randolph.—FEP 
To my Poland Rooster.—F. S. Cozzens.—AWH 
To my Promised Wife.-—J: Walsh.—TIP 
To my Readers, Sel. fr. (“Deal gently with us, ye who 
read.”)—Oliver W. Holmes.—GG 
To my Shadow.—T: W. Higginson.—TAS 
To my Sister.—J: G. Whittier.—HBP 
To my Sister.—W: Wordsworth.—SN 
To my Soul.—Paul Fleming.—OS 1 
To my Soul.—Albert Laighton.—TAS 
To my Tortoise Chronos.—Eugene Lee-Hamilton.— 
VA 

To my Totem.—H: C. Beeching.—VA 
To my Wife.—T: H. Bayly. See To Helena. 

To my Wife, Mildred.—R: Le Gallienne.—A VP 
To N. V. de G. S.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—VA 
To Narcissa.—E. P. Train.—TL 
To Night.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA 
To Night. (C.)—Percy B. Shelley.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP—WEP 4—YBF 
(Night.)—BSP—GP—OB 
(To the Nignt.)— BFV—PGT 1—PHS 
To Night.—Jos. B. White.—FEP—HBP—OS 3—YBF 
(Night.)—BNL—PYO 
(Night and Neath.)—BSP—EPs—GP—SN 
(Sonnet to Night.)—POS 
To O. S. C.—Annie E. Trumbull.—AA 
To O. W. Holmes.—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 
To (Enone.—Rob’t Herrick.—OB 
To One Being Old.—Langdon E. Mitchell.—AA 
To One Excusing his Poverty. (In Love Sonnets of 
Proteus.)—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—HBP 
To One in Paradise.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—ASL— 
BPB—YBF 

To One Persuading a Lady to Marriage.—Kathe. 
Philips.—OB 

To One Saying She was Old.—Jas. Shirley. See follow¬ 


ing. 

To One that Said i is Mistress was Old. (C.) —Jas. 
Shirley. 

(To One Saying she was Old.)—ES—OEL 
“To one who has been long in city pent.”—J: Keats. 
—FEP—PGT 1 
(In the Country.)—POS 

To One who Would Make a Confession. (In Love 
Sonnets of Proteus.) — Wilfrid S. Blunt.— 
HBP 


To One who Wrote against a Fair Lady. (In Answer 
to One who Writ a Libel against the Countess 
of Carlisle—C.)—Edmund Waller.—WEP 2 
To Our Baby.—Anon.—TFS 

To Pan.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful Shepherdess, The. 

To Peggy.—C: G. Loring, Jr.—CG 3 

To Perilla.—Rob’t Herrick.—HBP—WEP 2—YBF 


341 





To Philip 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


To Philip Massinger, “a Stranger.”—C: E. Russell.— 
EDY 

To Phillis.—Rob’t Herrick. See To Phillis, to Love 
and Live With Him. 

To Phillis, the Fair Shepherdess.—T: Lodge (at. also 
to Sir E: Dyer).—ES—WEP 1 
(Phillis.)—EP—OB (I.— abr.) 

To Phillis, to Love and Live with Him. (C.) —Rob’t 
Herrick. 

(To Phillis.)—WEP 2 
(To Phyllis.)—EP 
To Phoebe.—W: S. Gilbert.— 1 THP 
To Phyllis.—Rob’t Herrick. See To Phillis, to Love 
and Live with Him. 

To Phyllis. (Fr. The Fair Maid of the Exchange.)— 
T: Heywood.—ES—OEL 
(Go, Pretty Birds.)—FEP 
(Message, The.)—OB 
(Phillis.)—EP 

(“Ye little birds that sit and sing.”)—ELP 
To Phyllis.—Albert P. Terhune.—CG 2 
To Phyllis Returned to Town.—MacGregor Jenkins.— 
TL 

To Primroses Filled [Fill’d—C.] with Morning Dew.— 
Rob’t Herrick—FEP—HBP—WEP 2—YBF 
To Prince Henry.—Jas. I. of England.—FEP 
To Professor Airey.—Sidney Smith.—HPE 
To Prue.—A. B. Houghton.—CG 1 
To Q. H. F.—Austin Dobson.—FEP 
To Robert Browning. (C.)—Walter S. Landor.—EDY 
(Robert Browning.)—VA 

To Robert Louis Stevenson.—Herman K. Viele.—EDY 
To Robin Red Breast.—Rob’t Herrick.—WEP 2 
To Romance, Br. sel. fr. (Romance.)—Lord Byron.— 
HSS 3 

To Roses in the Bosom of Castara.—W: Habington.— 
See Castara. 

To Rosina Pico.-—W: W. Lord.—AA 
To Ruby Lips.—H. A. Richmond.—CG 2 
To Russia.—Joaquin Miller.—AA 
To S. R. Crockett. (C.) —Rob’t L. Stevenson. 

(Whaups, The.)—YA 
To St. Mary Magdalen.—B: D. Hill.—AA 
To St. Valentine.—Madeleine Reese.—TL 
To Sally.—J: Q. Adams.—AA 

To Samuel Bindon, Esq., Sel. fr. (Moll.)—Jonathan 
Swift—HPE 

To Samuel Rogers, Esq. (Lines Written on a Blank 
Leaf of "The Pleasures of Memory”—C.)— 
Lord Byron.—EDY 

To Sea! [To Sea!]—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s Jest 
Book. 

To See her Pipe Awry.—C. F.—PPh 
To Seneca Lake. (C.) —Jas. G. Percival.—FEP—GP— 
HBP—SN 

(Seneca Lake.)—BNL 

To Shakespeare. (C. —Sonnet XXVIII.) — Hartley 
Coleridge.—VA 
(Shakespeare.)—BNL 
To Shakespeare.—R: E. Day.—AA 
To Shelley.—J: B. Tabb.—AA 

To Sigh, yet Feel No Pain. (Song fr. M. P.; or, The 
Blue Stocking.)—T: Moore.-—FEP—FLS 
To Silvia.—Rob’t Herrick.—EPs 

To Sir Annual Filter [Tilter—C.].—Ben Jonson.—HPE 
To Sir Henry Goodyere.—Ben Jonson.—LBB—MBB 
To Sir Henry Vane (the Younger)— C. —J: Milton. 

(Sonnet : To Sir Henry Vane.)—EPs 
To Sir Hudson Lowe.—T: Moore.—HPE 
To Sleep.—Maybury Fleming.—AA 
To Sleep.—J: Keats.—OB 

To Sleep. (Poems and Epigrams, CLXXXII.)—Wal¬ 
ter S. Landor.—VA 
To Sleep.—Frances S. Osgood.—AA 
To Sleep.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

To Sleep. (Poems of the Imagination, Pt. I., Misc. 
Sonnets, XIV.)—W: Wordsworth. — FEP — 
HBR—MBL—PGT 1—PYO—YBF 
(Sleeplessness.}—BNL 

To Song-birds on a Sunday. (Punch .)—HPE 
To Spain—a Last Word.—Edith M. Thomas.—EDY 
—PA Pm 

To Spring.—W: Blake.—OB 
To Spring. (2 sons.) —W: Drummond.—FEP 
(Sonnet: Spring—-1st son. of FEP.)—ELP 
(Spring Bereaved, II.)—OB 
To Stella.—Sir Philip Sidney.-—YBF 
To Sylvia.—W: Shakespeare. See Two Gentlemen of 
Verona, The: 

To T. L. H., Six Years Old, during a Sickness. (C.) 
—Leigh Hunt.—FEP 

(To a Child during Sickness.)—BNL—HBP 


To Tactea. (Poems and Epigrams, LXXIII.)—Wal¬ 
ter S. Landor.—WEP 4 
To the Adventurous.—J: Keats.—LH 

(On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer— C.) 

— BFV — BNL (br. sel.) — BPB — BSP — 
CEL — EPs —FEP — GN — HBP — LLC — 
OB—PGT 1—WEP 4—YBF 
(Sonnet: on First Looking, etc.)—OS 3 
To the American Poet.—F: L. Knowles.—PAPm 
To the American Troops before the Battle of Long 
Island, 1774.—G: Washington.—SS—SSD 
(Address to his Troops.)—OS 2 
(Washington to his Soldiers.)—PS 
(Washington’s Address to his Troops.)—BS 24 
To the Army before Quebec, 1759.—Jas. Wolfe.—PS— 
SS 

(Address of General Wolfe before Quebec.)—BLP 
To the Army of Italy, May 15, 1796.—-Napoleon Bona¬ 
parte.—PS—SS—SSD 

(Proclamation to the Armv of Italy— si. same.) — 
OSS 

(Bonaparte to his Army in Italy— diff. tr.) —BLP 
To the Author of a Sonnet Beginning “Sad is my 
verse, you say, ‘and yet no tear.’ ”—Lord 
Byron.—HPE 

To the Authoress of “Our Village.”—C: Kingsley. See 
To Miss Mitford, Authoress, etc. 

To the Blest Evanthe. (Song fr. A Wife for a Month, 
Act I., Sc. 2.)—J: Fletcher.—ES 
To the Boy who goes Daily Past my Windows Sing¬ 
ing.—Eliz. C. Kinney.—AA 
To the Boys.—H: Downton.—FAS 
(Advice to Boys.)—KNS 
(Brave and True.)—DS—PP—YA—YFR 
To the Butterfly.—S: Rogers.—FEP 
To the Cambro-Britons and their Harp: His Ballad of 
Agincourt.—Michael Drayton.—ELF—WEP 1 
(Agincourt.)—HB—LH (w. Shakespeare)—OB 
(Ballad of Agincourt[, The].)—BNL—BPB—EDY 
—FEP—HB—HBP—HSS 1—PSR 
(Battle of Agincourt, The— C.) — BFV—CEL— 
EHT—GN—OS 3 
To the Cat-bird.—Anon.—SN 
To the Child Julia.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
To the Children.—Phoebe Cary.—BLF—YBT (abr.) 
(“May you never say of a brother dear”— br. sel.) 
—FHS 

To the Christ.—J: B. Tabb.—TAS 
To the Chrysanthemum.—W: C. Bennett.—POS 
To the Cigarette Girl.—H. F. H.—CG 2 
To the College Idol.—Addison H. Hinman.—CG 3 
To the Comtesse de Molande about to Marry the Due 
de Luxembourg. (C .)—Walter S. Landor. 
(“Say ve, that years roll on and ne’er return?”)— 
WEP 4 

To the Countess of Cumberland.—S: Daniel. See To 
the Lady Margaret, Countess, etc. 

To the Countess of Rutland (Sel. fr. The Forest, XII. 
—Epistle To Elizabeth, Countess of Rutland.) 
—Ben Jonson.—EPs 

To the Critic. (Sel. fr. The Poet’s Mind.)—Alfred Ten¬ 
nyson.—EPs 

To the Cuckoo. (C.)—J: Logan.—BNL—FEP—HBP 
—OB—PYO (abr.) —SN 
(Cuckoo, The.)—WCL 
(Messenger of Spring, The.)—POS 
(Ode to the Cuckoo— at. to Michael Bruce.)—CEL 
—CGd 

To the Cuckoo.—W: Wordsworth.— BNL — BPB — 
CEL — FEP — GP — HBP — LC — MBL — 
PGT 1—SN—WEP 4—YBF 
To the Daisy.— W: Wordsworth.—FEP 
To the Daisy. (Diff. ro m.) —W: Wordsworth.— 
BNL (br. sel.) —CEL-—FEP—MBL—PGT 1 
To the Dandelion.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD—ASL— 
HBP—PYO (abr.) —SN—TAV 
(Longer vers, than In Works.)—LLC—PEO 
(Br. sel.)— BNL—GN 
To the Dead.—W: B. Scott.—VA 
To the Departed.—Anon.—SSS 

To the Desponding.—Alice Cary. See To any De¬ 
sponding Genius. 

To the Devil.—Rob’t Bums. See Address to the Deil. 
To the Discouraged.—G: W. Crofts.—HDL 
To the Duke de Noalles (Epigram Written to the 
Duke de Noalles, An— C .).—Matthew Prior.— 
HPE 

To the Duke of York. (Poet’s Good Wishes for the 
Most Hopeful and Handsome Prince, the Duke 
of Yorke, The—C.)—Rob’t Herrick.—WEP 2 
To the Dykes.—T. De Witt Talmage.—CS 32—DS 
To the Earl of Warwick, on the Death of Addison.— 
T: Tickell. See following. 


342 




TITLE INDEX 


To the Palace 


To the Earl of Warwick, on the Death of Mr. Addi¬ 
son. (C.)—T: Tickell.—W r EP 3 (abr.) 

(On the Death of Mr. Addison.)—FEP 
(To the Earl of Warwick, on the Death of Addi¬ 
son.)—BNL 

To the Electors of Bristol.—Edmund Burke. See 
Speech at Bristol, Previous to the Election, 
1780. 

To the End. ( Sel .)—Christina G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
To the Evening Star.—W: Blake.—WEP 3 
To the Evening Star.—T: Campbell.—FEP—HBP 
(Evening Star, The.)—BNL 

(Song: to the Evening Star— C .)—-PGT 1—YBF 
To the Evening Star. (Caroline, Pt. II.)—T: Camp¬ 
bell.—PGT 1 

To the Evening Star.—J: Leyden.—FEP 
To the Evening Star.—G. M. Perkins.—CG 3 
To the Evening Wind.—W: C. Bryant.—PHS 
(Evening Wind, The—C.)—LLC 

(IT. add. st.)— AA—BNL—C.P—HBP 
To the Faculty.—H. K. Webster.—CG 2 
To the First Robin.—H: S. Washburn.—POS 
To the Fir-tree. (TV. by) Blanche W. Bellamy and 
Maud W. Goodwin.—OS 1 
To the Flying Squadron.—Anon.—PAPm 
To the Forgotten Dead.—Margaret L. Woods.—VA 
To the Fountain of Bandusia. (Fr. Echoes from the 
Sabine Farm.)—Eugene Field.—AA 
To the French People, 1792.—Pierre V. Vergniaud.— 

PS—ss 

To the Fringed Gentian.—W: C. Bryant.-—AA—ASL 
— BNL — EPs — FEP — GN — HBP — LC 
—LLC—OS 2—POS—YBF 
To the Glowworm.—J: Clare.—FEP 
To the Gossamer-light.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—VA 
To the Grand Army of the Republic.—T: B. Reed.— 
SC 

To the Grasshopper and [the] Cricket.—Leigh Hunt.— 
BNL -FEP GN—POS—WEP 4 
(Grasshopper and [the] Cricket, The.)—CEL — 
HBP—LC—OS 2 

To the Guardian Angel, Sabine.—C. A. V. Tastu.— 
OS 1 

To the Guidwife of Wauchope House, Sel. fr. (Epistle 
to Mrs. Scott of Wauchope.)—Rob’t Burns.— 
WEP 3 

(Scotland— hr. sel .)—EPs 

To the Harvest Moon.—H: Kirke White.—BNL ( abr .) 
—HBP 

To the Herald Honeysuckle.—Emily Pfeiffer.—VA 
To the Herb Rosemary.-—H: Kirke White.—EPs 
To the Highland Girl of Inversneyde.—W: Words¬ 
worth. See To a Highland Girl. 

To the Hon. Charles Montague. (Abr. fr. Variations 
from a Copy Printed 1692.)—Matthew- Prior.— 
BNL 

To the Housatonic at Stockbridge.—Rob’t U. John¬ 
son.—SN 

To the House of Lords.—Edmund Burke. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 

To the Humblebee. (C.)—Ralph W. Emerson.—BNL 
(Humble-bee, The.— C) ■— AA — ASL — BFV — 
FEP—GN—HBP—LC—SN—TAV 
To the Humming-bird.—Jones Very.—LC 
To the Immortal Memory and Friendship of that Noble 
Pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir Henry Morrison, 
Sel. fr. (Part of an Ode to the Immortal Mem¬ 
ory, etc.)—Ben Jonson.—GB 
(Good Life, Long Life— br. sel.) —BNL—FEP 
(Honor in Bud— abr. )—LH 
(Measure of the Perfect Life, The.)—ELP 
(Noble Nature, The.)—CGd—CS 15—FP—GN— 
LC—OS 1—PGT 1—YBF 
(Perfect Life, The.)—CEL 
To the Jersey Lily. (C.)—Joaquin Miller. 

(To Florence— longer vers .)—TFY 
To the Katydid.—Oliver W. Holmes. See To an In¬ 
sect. 

To the King.—“Junius.” See To the Printer, etc. 

To the King on his Birthday[, Nov. 19, 1632—C.].— 
Ben Jonson.—EDY 

To the Lady in the Chemisette with Black Buttons.— 
Nathaniel P. Willis.—HPE 

To the Ladv Margaret, Countess of Cumberland.—S: 
Daniel.—FEP—HBP—WEP 1 (abr.) 
(Knowing the Heart of Man— br. sel .)—EPs 
(To the Countess of Cumberland— br. sel .)—BNL 
To the Lady Margaret Ley.—J: Milton.—FEP—HBP 
—OB—PGT 1 

To the Lady-bird.—Caroline B. Southey.—PHS 
(Ladybird, Ladybird.)—NV—OS 1 
(Littie Lady Bird, The.)—WR 12 
To the Lakes.—W. W. Campbell.—VA 


To the Lapland Longspur.—J: Burroughs.—SN 
To the Lark.—Rob’t Herrick.—CEL—WEP 2 
To the Leading Periodical. (Punch.) —HPE 
To the Leanan Sidhe.—T: Boyd.—TIP 
To the Lion of St. Mark. (Sel. fr. Venice.)—Joaquin 
Miller.—OS 3 

To the Little Readers.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
To the Lord General.—J: Milton. See following. 

To the Lord General [Cromwell],—J: Milton.—BNL— 
EHT—FEP—LH—OS 3—WEP 2—YBF 
(Sonnet. To the Lord General Cromwell, etc.— C.) 
—HBP 

To the Lord of Potsdam.—Owen Seaman.—THP 
To the Man-of-war-bird.—Walt Whitman.—AA 
To the Memory of Ben Jonson.—J: Cleveland.—BNL 
To the Memory of Channing.—Anne C. Lynch.—EDY 
To the Memory of Fletcher Harper (Honest Man, An 
—C.).—Dinah M. Craik.—BNL 
To the Memory of my Beloved Master, William Shake- 
spearef, and what he Hath Left Us], See fol- 
loiving. 

To the Memory of my Beloved Mr. William Shakes¬ 
peare, and what he hath Left us. (C.) —Ben 
Jonson. 

(To the Memory of my Beloved Master, William 
Shakespeare, and what he hath Left us.)— 
WEP 2 

(To the Memory of my Beloved, the Author. Mr. 

William Shakespeare, etc.)—FEP 
( To the Memory of S lakespeare.)—BNL 
To the Memory of my Beloved, the Author, Mr. Wil¬ 
liam Shakespeare, and What he hath Left us. 
-—Ben Jonson. See foregoing. 

To the Memory of Pietro d’Alessandro. — H: Lush- 
ington.—A VP 

To the Memory of Prince Albert".—Alfred Tennyson. 
See Idylls of the King. 

To the Memory of Shakespeare. — Ben Jonson. See 
To the Memory of my Beloved Mr. William 
Shakespeare, etc. 

To the Memory of Sydney Dobell.—J: S. Blackie.— 
EDY 

To the Memory of the Americans Who Fell at Eutaw. 
—Philip Freneau.—PAP 
(Eutaw Springs.)—AA—-AWB—EDY 
To the Memory of the Late Brigham Young.—Anon.— 
SR 1 

To the Memory of Thomas Hood.—Bartholomew Sim¬ 
mons.—BNL (sel.) —HBP 
(Stanzas to the Memory of Thomas Hood.)—EDY 
—VA 

To the Milkweed.—-Lloyd Mifflin.—AA 
To the Mocking-bird.—Albert Pike.—AA 
To the Mocking-bird.—R: H. Wilde.—AA—FEP— 
SN 

To the Moment Last Past.—W: Habington. See Cas- 
tara. 

To the Month of September. (Hymns of Astrea, 
Hymn X.)—Sir J: Davies.—-WEP 1 
To the Moon. (C.) —Percy B. Shelley.—CEL 
(SI. abr.)— FEP—PGT 1—YBF 
(Moon, The, II.— sl. abr.) —OB 
To the Moon.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

To the Moon.—E: Hovel, Lord Thurlow.—FEP 
To the Moonflower.—Craven L. Betts.-—AA 
To the Muses.—W: Blake. — CEL — FEP — OB — 
PGT 1—WEP 3 

To the Nautilus.—Hartley Coleridge.—VA 
To the Neapolitans. (Lines on the entry of the 
Austrians into Naples— C.) — T: Moore.— 
OS 2 (abr.) 

(Lines on Naples.)—CSS 

(Occupation of Naples by the Austrians —EDY 
To the Night.—Percy B. Shelley. See To Night. 

To the Nightingale.—R: Barnfield. See Cynthia. 

To the Nightingale. (Hymns of Astrea, VI.)—Sir J: 
Davies.—WEP 1 

To the Nightingale.—W: Drummond.—FEP 
(Sonnet: To the Nightingale.)—ELP 
To the Nightingale.—W: Drummond. See also To a 
Nightingale. 

To the Nightingale.-—J: Milton.—BNL (br. sel.) —FEP 
—HBP—YBF 

(Sonnet : To the Nightingale— C.) —ELP 
To the Nightingale.—Anne Finch, Lady Winchelsea.— 
WEP 3 

To the Ocean.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

To the Ocean now I Fly.—J: Milton. See Comus. 

To the Old and the New Year.—Laura F. Armitage.— 
YBT 

To the Palace of the King.—S. J. Smith.—CS 33 

343 




To the Past 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


To the Past. (C.)—W: C. Bryant.—ASL 
(Past, The.)—AA—LLC 

To the Pious Memory of the Accomplished Young 
Lady, Mrs. Anne Killigrew. (C.) —J: Dryden. 

WEP 2 

(Ode to the Pious Memory, etc.— si. abr.) —OB 
To the Pliocene Skull.—Fs. Bret Harte.—AWH—BNL 
—THP 

To the Poets.—J: Keats.—FEP 

(Bards of Passion and of Mirth.)—OB 
(Ode: “Bards of passion,” etc.)—HBP—WEP 4 
(Ode on the Poets.)—PGT 1—PHS 
To the Portrait of “A Gentleman.”—Oliver W. Holmes. 
—HPE 

To the Portrait of One “Gone Before.”—Mrs. A. M. 
Butterfield.—FP 

To the Princess Alice. (Dedicatory Poem to the Prin¬ 
cess Alice—C.)—Alfred Tennyson.—EDY 
To the Printer of the Public Advertiser. (C.—Letter 
XXXV.)—“Junius.” 

(To the King.)—ESs 

“To the pure mind alone hath solitude its charms.”— 
Anon.—GG 

To the Queen.—Alfred Tennyson.—EDY—EHT 
To the Rainbow. (C.)—T: Campbell.—FEP—SS 
(SI. abr.)— EPs—SN 
(Rainbow, The— abr.) —-POS 
To the Redbreast.—G: Cornish.—AVP 
To the Redbreast.—W: Drummond. See To a Night¬ 
ingale. 

To the Rescue.—Anon.—CS 14 

To the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth. (C.)—W: Wordsworth. 

(Christmas Carol, The— abr.) —EPs—OS 3 
To the Rev. F. D. Maurice.—Alfred Tennyson.—GP 
To the Rev. Mr. Newton.—W: Cowper. See To the 
Rev. Mr. Newton, Rector, etc. 

To the Rev. Mr. Newton, on His Return from Rams¬ 
gate.—W: Cowper.—WEP 3 
To the Rev. Mr. Newton, Rector of St. Mary, Wool- 
worth. (C.) —W: Cowper. 

(To the Rev. Mr. Newton.)—PPh 
To the Revolutionary Veterans.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Bunker Hill Monument , The. 

To the Right Hon. Mr. Dodington. (Love of Fame 
the Universal Passion, Satire III.— abr.) —E: 
Young.—ESs 

To the Right Hon. the Earl of Burlington. (C.)—J: 
Gay. 

(Journey to Exeter, A— si. abr.) —OES 
To the Right Hon. the Earl of Chesterfield. (C.)— 
S: Johnson. 

(Letter to Lord Chesterfield.)—OS 3 
(Letter to the Earl of Chesterfield.)—ESs 
To the River Ankor. (C. —Ideas XXXII.)—Michael 
Drayton. 

(Rivers of England, The.)—FEP 
To the River Charles. ( C.) —H: W. Longfellow 
(To the Silent River.)—LLC 
To the River Lodon. (C.) —T: Wart on.—WEP 3 
(On Revisiting the River Lodon.)—FEP 
To the Robin, Sel. fr. (Robin. The— w. mus.) —Eliza 
Cook.—AD 

To the Rose. (Hymns of Astrea, VII.)—Sir .J - Davies. 
—ELP 

To the Rose[: a Song—C.].—Rob’t Herrick.—ELP— 
ES—OEL—WEP 2—YBF 
(Go, Happy Rose!)—CEL 
(Rose, The.)—EPs 

To the Royal Society, Sel. fr. (Ode to the Royal So¬ 
ciety.)—Abraham Cowley.—WEP 2 
To the Sacred Poets of America.—R: Wilton.—TAS 
“To the school and the college attaches vast respon¬ 
sibility.”—Merrill E. Gates.—DFR 
To the Secretary of War. 1824.—Pushmataha.—PS— 
SS 

To the “Sextant.”—Arabella M. Willson. — BNL — 
MHR 

(Appeal to the “Sextant” for Air. An.)—BS 4 (at. 

to “A. Gasper.”)-—CS 4 
(To the Sexton.)—PI'S 

To the Sexton.—Arabella M. Willson. See foregoing. 
To the Silent One.—Emanuel Geibel.—FTA 
To the Silent River.—H: W. Longfellow. See To the 
River Charles. 

To the Sister of “Elia.”—Walter S. Landor.—EDY— 
FEP 

To the Skylark.—Percy B. Shelley. See To a Sky¬ 
lark. 

To the Skylark.—W: Wordsworth. See To a Skylark. 
To the Small Celandine.—W: Wordsworth—HBP — 
PHS—POS (sel.) —SN 

To the Spirit of Abraham Lincoln.—R: W. Gilder — 
EDY 


To the Spirit of Poetry.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
To the Spring. (Hymns of Astrea, III.)—Sir J: 
Davies.—WEP 1 

To the Stars and the Stripes from Abroad.—Adair 
Welcker.—SR 9 

To the Supreme Being. (Includes also At Florence.) 

Michelangelo (tr. by W: Wordsworth).—FTR 
To the Survivors of the Battle of Bunker Hill.—Dan’l 
Webster. See Bunker Hill Monument, The. 
To the Terrestrial Globe.—W: S. Gilbert.—BNL—CS 8 
—MHR—OS 2—SO 

To the Tobacco Pipe. (The Meteors.) —PPh 
To the Unco Guid[; or, The Rigidly Righteous].—Rob’t 
Burns.—B NL—EPs 

(Address to the Unco Guid, or the Rigidly Right¬ 
eous— C. )—ESs 

To the Virginian Voyage.—Michael Drayton.—OB 
To the Virgins[, to make much of Time]. (C.) —Rob’t 
Herrick. — BNL — CEL — ELP — ES — FTA 
—OB—OEL—OH—WEP 2 
(Counsel to Girls.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(Counsel to Virgins.)—PYO 
("Gather ye rosebuds as ye may.”)—HBP 
(To Virgins, to make much of Time.)—FEP 
To the Western Wind.—Rob’t Herrick.—OB 
To the Willow-tree.—Rob’t Herrick.—OB 
To the World. (C. —The Forest, IV.)— Ben Jonson. 

(Farewell to the World, A.)—OB 
To Thee, O Country!—Anna P. Eichberg.—BLP 
To Theocritus, in Winter. (Ballade to Theocritus in 
Winter— C.) —Andrew Lang.—VA 
To Thine Own Self be True.—Pakenham Beatty.—HP 
—PYO 

To Thomas Moore. (C.) —Lord Byron.—BNL—GP— 
HBP—YBF 
(Friendship.)—LH 

(“My boat is on the shore.”)—PYO 
To Those about to Marry.—Anon.—CS 6 
To Those who Fail.—Nellie Barlow.—NPS—YP 
“To Thy temple I repair.” (Day in the Lord’s Courts, 
A— C.) —Jas. Montgomery.—FEP 
To Time. (C.) —W: L. Bowles. 

(Influence of Time on Grief.)—FEP—WEP 4 
(Time and Grief.)—OB 
To Tobacco.—C: S. Calverley—BNL 
(Ode to Tobacco—C.)—PPh—THP 
To Toussaint L’Ouverture. (C.) —W: Wordsworth.— 
BNL—EDY 

(Sonnet to Toussaint L’Ouverture.)—HBP 
(Toussaint L’Ouverture.)—SO—WR 1 
To Two Bereaved.—T: Ashe.—OB 
To Venus.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See Mad Lover, 
The. 

To Vernon Lee.—Amy Levy.—VA 
To Victor Hugo.—-Alfred Tennyson.—BNL—GP 
To Vincent Corbet, my Son.—R: R. Corbet.—FEP 
(Father’s Blessing, A.)—YBF 
To Violets. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick. — ELP—HBP— 
LC—OB—OS 1 
(Violets.)—BNL—GP 

To Virgil.—Alfred Tennyson.—EDY—WEP 4 
To Virgins, to make much of Time.—Rob’t Herrick. 
See To the Virgins, etc. 

To Vittoria Colonna. (Misc. Sons., XXIV.)—Michel¬ 
angelo (tr. by W: Wordsworth). 

To W. L. Garrison. (C.) —Jas. R. Lowell. 

(William Lloyd Garrison.)—BNL 
To Waltz with Thee.—G: B. Zug.—CG 2 
To Whom Honor Be Due.—Anon. 

To Whom Shall We Give Thanks?—Mrs. Levi Wade. 

—BS 1—FTR—MYF—PPSr—YBT 
To William Cullen Bryant.— Fitz-Greene Halleck.— 
PEO 

To William H. Seward.—J: G. Whittier.—EDY 
To William Sidney on his Birthday. (Sel. fr. Ode to 
Sir William Sidney on his Birthday.) — Ben 
Jonson.—EPs 

To William Simpson, Br. sel. fr. (Inspiration.)—Rob’t 
Burns.—EPs 

To Willie and Henrietta.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
To Wordsworth.—O. F. Emerson.—AD 
To Wordsworth, Br. </. fr. (Wordsworth.)—Felicia 
D. Hemans.—BNL 

To Young Men of New York in 1861.—E: D. Baker. 
See Speech at Union Square, N. Y., April 20th, 
1861. 

To Youth.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
To Zepheria.—Anon.—ELP 
Toad, A.—Edgar Fawcett.—SN—TAV 
Toad, The.—Lucv S. Ruggles.—TFS 
Toad’s Journal, The.—-Jane Taylor.—BNL 
Toadstool, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—POS 
Toast, The.—Mary K. Dallas.—CS 16—TS—WR 18 

344 






TITLE INDEX 


Too 


Toast, A.—A. K. Lane.—CG 2 
Toast, The.—-C: C. Marsh.—CG 1 
Toast, The.—Winthrop M. Praed.—FP 
Toast, A.—H: M. Stone.—CG 2 
Toast, A—-“Peace and Plenty.”—Anon.—CS 15 
Toast to Omar Khayyam.—Theodore Watts-Dunton.— 
VA 

Toast—To the Ladies, A.—J: L. Oswald.—SR 13 
Toast to the Lovers and Husbands of the Shakespeare 
Club.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Toast-master, The.—Anon.—WR 18 
Toasts and Sentiments.—Anon.—KNE 
Tobacco.—T: Jones.—PPh 
Tobacco.—G: Wither.—PPh 
(Pipe and Can— si. abr.) —OB 
Tobacco is an Indian Weed.—Anon.—PPh 
Tobacco Pledge, The. (Dial.) —Eliz. E. Ralston.—SDD 
Tobe’s Monument.—Eliz. Kilham.—BS 18—WR 26 
Tobias Turnitop in General Court. (Dial.)-— Anon. 

( Su'ijpct fr. Haliburton.)—MPD 
Toboggan Slide, The.—-“Clara Augusta.”—BS 19 
(Miss Splicer on the Toboggan Slide.)—SR 6 
Toby Tosspot. (Sel. fr. The Elder Brother.)—G: Col- 
man, the 'outlier. —BNL—CS 15—SCS 
Toccata of Galuppi’s, A.—Rob’t Browning.—PGT 2 
Toccoa, the Beautiful.—Loula K. Rogers.—WR 4 
To-day.—T: Carlyle.—AVP—GN—OS 1—PYO 
“To-day.”—J: Ruskin.—HDL—HSS 2 
To-day and To-morrow.—Gerald Massey.-—LLC—HR 
(Promised Land To-morrow, The— si. diff. vers.)— 
CS 23 

“To-day the great question that is stirring men’s 
hearts.”—Jos. Parker.—GG 
Together.—G: Barlow.—BIL 
Toil.—Anon.—PEO 

Toil of the Trail, The.—Hamlin Garland.—SN 
Toilers, The.—Caroline F. Orne.—HSS 3 
Toilers of the Sea, The, Sel. fr. (Combat with the 
Octopus, The—Bk. IV., Chs. I.-III. cond.) — 
Victor Hugo.—WCLG 2 

Toilet, The.—Alex. Pope. See Rape of the Lock, The. 
Toinette’s Philip, Sels. fr. —Mrs. C. V. Jamison. 

Mouse, The. (Dial. ad. fr. Chs. XXI. and XXII.) 
—NDP 

Selling the Image. (Dial. ad. fr. Chs. III. and IV.) 
—NDP 

Token, The. (Abr.) —Jas. R. Lowell.—LLC 
Tola of Mustard Seed, The.—Sir Edwin Arnold. See 
Light of Asia, The. 

Told at “The Falcon.”—Edwin Coller.—-CS 33 
Told at the Tavern.—Theo. F. Havens.—HP 
Told by the Hospital Nurse.—S. B. McBeath.—WR 4 
Told by "The Noted Traveler.” (C.)—Jas. W. Riley. 
—CW 

(Traveler’s Story, The.)—SC 
Told in the Stalls.—J. H. Trucker.—WR 13 
Told in the Twilight.—J. G. F. Nicholson.—FTA 
Tom.—Constance F. Woolson.—BS 6—-CS 13—FR— 
KNE—NV 

(Tom, the Hero.)—DS 

Tom and Roxy. (Sels. fr. “Pudd’nhead Wilson.” Chs. 

VIII. and IX., ad. as dial.) —S: L. Clemens.— 
NDP 

Tom and Sally. (Dial.) —Anon.—MND 
Tom Bowling.—C: Dibdin.— BNL—BPB—FEP—- 
HBP—PC—YBF 
(Perfect Sailor, The.)—LH 

Tom Brown at Oxford, Sel. (Boat Race, The— sel. fr. 

Ch. XIII.)—T: Hughes.—NC—PFP 
Tom Brown at Rugby.—T: Hughes. See Torn Brown’s 
School Days at Rugby. 

Tom Brown Starting for Rugby.—T: Hughes. See 
Tom Brown’s School Days at Rugby. 

Tom Brown’s School Days at Rugby. Sels. f -.—T: 
Hughes. 

At Rugby. (Sel. fr. Pt. I., Ch. V.,)—WCLI 2 
Egg Hunting. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., IV.)—WCLI 2 
Fighting. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., V.)—OS 1 
Hare and Hounds. (Sel. fr. Pt. VII.)—WCLI 2 

Keeper, The. (Sel. fr. I., IX.)—WCLI 2 
Morning and Afternoon Chapel. (Sel. fr. Pt. I., 
VII.)—MRS 

(“We listened as all boys in their better moods” 
— sel.) —FHS 

New Boy, The. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., I.)—WCLI 2 
(Tom Brown at Rugby— sel.) —-OS 2 
Tom Brown Starting for Rugby. (Sels. fr. Pt. I., 
Chs. III. and IV.)—LLC 
(Away to School— fr. IV.)—WCLI 2 
Tom Dunstan; or, the Politician. ( C.) —Rob’t Bu¬ 
chanan.—FEP 
(Freedom’s Ahead.)—SAE 
(Old Politician. The.)—HBP 


Tom Moody.—Anon.—BVC 

Tom O’Connor’s Cat.—Anon.—DDR 

Tom Sawyer, Sels. fr. —S: L. Clemens. 

How Tom Sawyer Whitewashed his Fence. (Sel. 
fr. Ch. II.)—BS 7 

(How Tom Sawyer Got his Fence Whitewashed— 
si. abr.)— CS 15—MYF 

Tom Sawyer Treated for Lovesickness. (Sel. fr. Ch. 
XII.)—CH 

Tom Sawyer’s Love Affair. (Sels. fr. Chs. VI. and 
VII.)—BS 3 

Tom Sawyer Treated for Lovesickness.—S: L. Clemens. 
See Tom Sawyer. 

Tom Sawyer’s Love Affair.—S: L. Clemens. See Tom 
Sawyer. 

Tom, the Drummer-boy.—Anon.—CS 15 
Tom, the Hero.—Constance F. Woolson. See Tom. 
Tom Tom. (Fr. Ascutney Charades.)—Julia A. Sabine. 
—TCP 

Tom Twist.—-Anon.-—WR 20 
Tomb, The.—T: Stanley.—HBP—WEP 2 
Tomb in Ghent, A. (Abr.) —Adelaide A. Procter.— 
DR 

Tomb in the Church of Brou, The.—Matthew Arnold. 
See Church of Brou, The. 

Tomb of Charlemagne, The.—Bayard Taylor.—WR 2 
Tomb of Washington, The.—J. W. Savage.—CS 5 
Tombola, The. (Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Tommie’s Composition on “Authors.”—Anon.—CPL 
Tommy and the Crocodile.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 
CS 35 

Tommy Brown. (Common School Education.) —TS 
Tommy Brown.—L. C. Hardy.—WR 21 
Tommy Linn.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Tommy Taft.—H: W. Beecher. See Norwood. 
Tommy’s Army.—F: E. Weatherly.—COS—PP 
Tommy’s Dead. — Sidney Dobell. — BS 23 — FEP — 
' HBP—VA 

Tommy’s Death-bed.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
Tommy’s Essay on Breath.—Anon.—WR 17 
Tommy’s First Love. (Gemini and Virgo— C.) —C: S. 
Calverly.—CS 24 

Tommy’s Prayer.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 25 
Tommy’s Twials.—Anon.—-CD 
To-morrow.—Anon.—CS 28 
To-morrow.—Anon.—HP 
T o-morrow. —-Anon.—H R—LLC 
(What is To-morrow?)—WR 6 
To-morrow.—Florence E. Coates.—AA 
To-morrow.—-J: Collins.—PGT 1—YBF 
(In the Downhill of Life.)—FEP 
To-morrow.—Nathaniel Cotton.—BLP—SS 
To-morrow.—W. F. Fox.—CS 15 

To-morrow. (Br. sel fr. Irene, Act III., Sc. 2.)—S: 
Johnson.—BNL 

To-morrow.—Wilbur D. Spencer.—CG 2 
To-morrow. (Abr.) —Alfred Tennyson.—WR 16 
“To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See Macbeth. 

To-morrow at Ten.—Nora Perry.—SR 9 
To-morrow is Another Day.—I: B. Choate.—CG 3 
To-morrow’s News.—G: Klingle.—HDL—TAV 
Tom’s Come Home.—J: T. Trowbridge.—-MYF 
Tom’s Eyes and Mine. (Popular Educator.) —DLS 
Tom’s Little Star.—Fanny Foster. — BS 7—CS 18— 
CSS—FTR—SR 5 

Tom’s Philosophy. (Harvard Lampoon.) —CG 2 
Tom’s Practical Joke. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Tom’s Proposal. (Dial.) —Anon.—DDM 
Tom’s Thanksgiving.—G: M. Vickers.—CS 35—PS 
Tone of the Voice, The.—Anon.—CS 32 (sel.) 

(Words and Tones.)—HSS 2 
Tongue, The.— Bible. See St. James. 

Tongue, The. (Br. sel. fr. Euphues: of the Education 
of Youth— paraphrased fr. Plutarch.)—J:Lyly. 

—OS 1 

Tongue, The.—Philip B. Strong.—YBT 
Tongues in Trees.—W: Shakespeare. See As You Like 
It. 

Tonis ad Resto Mare.—Anon. (at. to Jonathan Swift). 
—BNL—HPE 

Too Bad (also railed The Sum of Life).—Ben King.— 
PR—YA 

(Pessimist, The— C.) —NA 
Too Bad to Mend. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Too Big to be Rocked.—Ella W. Wilcox.—WR 17 
Too Clever by Half.—-Anon.—DDM 
Too Dear for the Whistle. (Sel. fr. The Whistle.)— 
B: Franklin.—-LLC 

(Don’t Give too much for the Whistle— si. abr.) — 
BLP 

(Whistle, The.)—WCLI 2 


345 




Too 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Too Fine and Too Plain.—Anon.—FND 
Too Good to Attend Common School.—Eliza Doolit¬ 
tle—SDD 

Too Great a Sacrifice.—Anon.—AWH—HP—PPh— 
THP 

“Too hard to bear! Why did they take me thence?”— 
Alfred Tennyson. See Enoch Arden. 

Too Hot. (Tab.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Too Late.—Gustave Becquer.—-FLS 
Too Late. (C.)—Dinah M. Craik.—FEP—FTA—HBP 
—VA—VS—YBF 

(Douglas; [Douglas,] Tender and True.)—BNL—FP 
—LLC—PYO 

Too Late.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 

Too Late!—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 

Too Late.—W: J. Linton.—VA 

Too Late.—Fitz-Hugh Ludlow.—BNL—CS 13—OS 3 
Too Late. (Song fr. The Prince’s Progress.)—Chris¬ 
tina G. Rossetti.—AVP 
(Bride Song.)—OB 

“Too late, alas! I must confess.” (Song—in Imita¬ 
tion of Sir John Eaton, A— C.) —J: Wilmot, 
Earl of Rochester.—BNL—FEP 
Too Late for the Train.—Anon.—CS 14—DS—FTR— 
PS 

Too Late I Stayed.—W: R. Spencer. See To Lady 
Anne Hamilton. 

Too Late We Met.—G. H. Westley.—FLS 

Too Many Books.—Rob’t Leighton.—MBB 

“Too Many Chillun, Pa?”—Anon.—WR 16 

Too Many Daughters.—-Anon.—DSS 

“Too Many of We.”—Anon.—CS 27 

Too Much Nose.—-Anon.—CS 19 

Too Much of a Good Thing.—Anon.—PS—TT 

Too Much of It.—G: Birdseye.—AWH 

Too Old for Father’s Kisses.—C: D. Bingham.—WR 25 

Too Progressive for Him.—Lurana W. Sheldon.— 

C3 32_PR_YA 

(No Science for Him.)—WR 21 
“Too solemn for day, too sweet for night.”—W: S. 
Walker.—OB 

Too Utterly Utter.— (Albany Chronicle.) —CS 21 
(Fashionable School Girl, The.)—CSS 
(Intensely Utter.)—CRR—SR 4 
Too Zealous by Half.—Anon.—CS 23 
Took Johnny to the Show.—Will Carleton.—CS 37 
“Took Nodice.”—Anon.—-BS 17—SDR 
Toot Makes a Match.—Bessie G. Hart.—WR 20 
Tootle, Tootle, Too.—Alfred B. Sedgwick.—DSS 
Too-too Serenade, A.—-Anon.—WR 2 
Top Landing, The. (Dial.) —Rob’t C. V. Meyers.— 
CS 18 

Topic Social, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Topsey and Eva. (Tab.)—' Tony Denier.—TDT 
Topsy.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 
Topsy’s First Lesson.—Harriet B. Stowe. See Uncle 
Tom’s Cabin. 

Topsy-turvy World.—W: B. Rands.—VA 
(Abr.) —OS 1—WCL 

Torch Bearers, The, Sel. fr. (America.)—Arlo Bates. 

_ W 

Torch of Liberty, The.—T: Moore.—BLP—SS 
Torch Race, The.—Helen G. Cone.—TAS 
Torch Light in Autumn.—J; j. Piatt.—AA 
“Torment of hell is bred of these two things, The.”— 
W. H. H. Murray.—GG 

Torn Hat, The. (C .)—Nathaniel P. Willis.—A A 
(Boy, A.)—CS 11—LLC 
Torpedo-boat, The.—J. Barnes.—PAPm 
Torquemada, Sel. fr. (Speech of the Grand Rabbi, 
Moses-Ben-Habib to Ferdinand and Isabella 
— sel. fr. Pt. II., Act II., Sc. 3.)—Victor Hugo. 
—MRS 

Torrismond, Sels. fr. —T: L. Beddoes. 

How Many Times. (Song fr. Sc. 3.)—FEP—FTA 
—GP—OH—TFY 
(Song.)—OB—V A—YBF 
(Song from Torrismond.)—VS—WEP 4 
In a Garden by Moonlight. (Br. sel. fr. Sc. 3.)— 
VA 

Total Annihilation.—Mary D. Brine.—BR—BS 12— 
CRR—CS 21—TFS 

Tottie’s Tree-talk.—Maria B. Butler.—DCP 
Tot’s Correspondence.—Anon.—DCP 
“Touch, a tender word, no more, A.”—Anon.—FHS 
Touch it Never.—Anon.—HSS 2 (sel.)— LPS—PP 
Touch it not.—W. A. Eaton.—TS 
Touch of Nature, A.—T: B. Aldrich.—SN 
Touch of Nature, A.—W: H. Bushnell.—CS 34 
Touch Snuff Story, The.—Howard Paul.—MHR 
Touching Appeal, A.—Nathan Blinkerhausen.—BDD 
—DE 

Touching Incident, A.—Anon.—KNS 


Touching Relic of Pompeii, A.—Anon.—KNE 
Touchstone, The. (SI. abr.) —W: Allingham.— FEP 
—LLC 

(SI. diff.)— BNL—EPs 

Touiours Amour.—Edmund C. Stedman.—ASL—FEP 
—FTA—OH—TAV—YBF 
Toussaint L’Ouverture, Sels. fr. —Wendell Phillips. 
Napoleon Bonaparte and Toussaint L’Ouverture.— 
BS 25—NC 

Toussaint L’Ouverture.—BS 16—CR (2— abr. and 
sel.) —CS 18—FTR—HNS—IR—PS—SC—SO 
—WCLG 2 

(SI. diff.)— FD 1—TMD 

(Toussaint L’Ouverture’s Place among Great 
Men— ptly. diff.) —NC 

Toussaint L’Ouverture.—W: Wordsworth. See To 
Toussaint L’Ouverture. 

Toussaint L’Ouverture’s Place among Great Men.— 
Wendell Phillips. See Toussaint L’Ouverture. 
Toward Emmaus.— S. T. Clark.—HDL 
Tower of Flame, The.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
Tower of St. Maur, The.—A. M. F. Robinson.—PEB 4 
Town and Country.—Anon.—TFS 
Town and Country.—W; F. Collins.—CG 1 
Town Meeting, The.—Anon.—PD 
Town of Concord, Mass., The.—G: D. Robinson.— 
FD 2 

Town of Hay, The.—S: W. Foss.—AA 
Town Pump, The.—-G: W. Bungay.—CS 26 
Toy Cross, The.—Roden Noel.—VA 
Toy of the Giant’s Child, The.—Adelbert von Cha- 
misso.—WCL 

Toys, The. (In The Unknown Eros.)—Coventry Pat¬ 
more.—HDL—OB—OH—PGT 2—VA—YBF 
Traced.—Layton Brewer.—TL 
Trades Display, The. ( Ent .)—Anon.—EuE 
Tradition. (Sel. fr. Religio Laid.) —J: Dryden.— 
WEP 2 

Tradition of Conquest.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA 
Traditions of Massachusetts, The.—H; C. Lodge.—NC 

_gQ 

Trafalgar Day.—E. Nesbit.—EDY 
Trafalgar Square.—Laurence Binyon.—AVP 
Traffic in Ardent Spirits.—Lyman Beecher.—CS 19— 
SR 2—TS 

Tragedy, The.—T: B. Aldrich.—BS 10 
Tragedy, A.—J. A. Knox.—GH 

Tragedy, A.—T. De Witt Talmage.—BS 1—PS—SR 2 
Tragedy.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 

Tragedy at Dodd’s Place, The.—Mary K. Dallas.— 
WR 3 

Tragedv in the Sunshine, A. (Detroit Free Press.) — 
BS 19—CS 32 

Tragedy of Blind Margaret, The.—Bertha M. Wilson. 
—MN 

Tragedy of Darious, The, Sel. fr. —Sir W: Alexander.— 
WEP 2 

Tragedy of King John, The.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King John. 

Tragedy of Sedan, A.—Anna K. G. Rohlfs.—DR 
Tragedy of the North Sea, A.—Jos. C. Powell.—TMR 
Tragedy of the Ten Little Boys, The. (Dial.) —Anon. 
—DS—YA 

Tragedy on Past Participles, A.—C. A. S. (at. also to 
Phcehe Cary).—BS 15 
(Lovers, The.)—BNL—GP 
Tragic Parting, A.— (Detroit Tribune.) —CS 37 
Trail of Gold, The.—Frank L. Pollock.—TCV 
Trailed Banner, The.—Abram J. Ryan.—HSS 1 

(Conquered Banner, The — C.) — AA — AWB — 
EDY—FEP—WRD 

Trailing Arbutus.—H: Abbey.—HP—SN 
Trailing Arbutus, The.—Rose T. Cooke.—AD—HBP 
—OS 2 

Trailing Arbutus, The.—Sarah H. Whitman.—POS 
Trailing Arbutus, The.—- J: G. Whittier.—AD—PEO 
Train among the Hills, The.—C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Train to Mauro, The. (Dial.) —S. A. Frost.—FHE— 
HD—NPS—YP 

Traitor, A.—F. Fertiault.—LBB 
Traitor Sea, The.—C. J. Corrie.—CS 27 
Traitor’s Deathbed, The.—G: Lippard. See Benedict 
Arnold. 

Tramp, The.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Tramp, The.—Donald McCaig.—TCV 
Tramp Abroad, A, Sels. fr. —S: L. Clemens. 

American Specimen, An. (Sel. fr. Pt. II., Ch. IX.) 
—BS 8 

Critical Situation, A. (Sel. fr. Pt. I., Ch. II.)—CR 
(Guessing Nationalities.)—BS 15—SR 9 
(Trying Situation, A.)—WR 15 
French Duel, The. (Pt. I., Ch. VIII., abr. and arr. 
as play.) —-NDP 


346 




TITLE INDEX 


Tribute 


Tramp Abroad, A (continued). 

Tale of the Fishwife and its Sad Fate. ( Story fr. 
Appendix D: The Awful German Language.) 
—SR 10 

Tramp Abroad, A. ( Sel. fr. Pt. II., Ch. II.)—EA 
Tramp and a Vagabond, A.—Anon.—CS 19 
Tramp, Tramp, Tramp.—Josiah G. Holland. See 
Temperance Question, .The. 

Tramp, Tramp, Tramp.—G: F. Root.—AWB—PAPm 
Tramp’s Philosophy, A. ( Merchant Traveler .)—CD 
Tramp’s Story, The.—C. E. Richmond.—CS 22 
Trance of Time, The. ( Abr .)—J: H: Newman.—PGT 2 
Transcendentalism. ( Times of India.) —NA 
Transferred Ghost, The. ( Cond .)—Frank R: Stock- 
ton.—WR 5 

Transfiguration.—Louisa M. Alcott.—TAS 
Transfiguration.—J: J. Piatt.—TAS 
Transfigured.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA 
Transformation.—G: A. Dennison.-—FTA 
Transient Beauty.—Lord Byron. See Giaour, The. 
Translation from Heine. (Lyrical Interludes, XII.)— 
Merle St. C. Wright.—FTA 

Translation from Propertius. (Bk. V., Elegy XI.)— 
Sir Edmund Head.—A VP 

Translation of the Twenty-third Psalm.—Jos. Addison. 

See Spectator, The. 

T ransposed.—Anon.—KN S 
Transpositions.—W. F. Fox.—SR 7 
Trapped. (Dial.) —C: S. Wayne.—CDs 
Trapper’s Last Trail, The.—Madge Morris.—CD 
Trapper’s Story, A.—C: F. Adams.—CS 13. 

Trapping a Witness.—Anon.—KNE 
Travel.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Travel in England.—Anon.—SR 13 
Traveller, The. (Dial.) —Anon—FAD—FDY 
Traveller and the Temple of Knowledge, The. (Ships 
that Pass in the Night, Ch. VI.)—Beatrice Har- 
raden.—BS 22 

Traveller at the Source of the Nile, The.—Felicia 
Hemans.—EDY 

Traveller, The; or, A Prospect of Society.—Oliver 
Goldsmith.—FEP—HBP 

Better Country, The. (Br. sel.) —GP 

(First, Best Country, The— si. diff.) —GN 
(Home.)—BNL 

Traveller, The. (Br. sels.) —BNL 
Travellers.—Percy Addleshaw.—VA 
Travellers, The.—Mark A. DeW. Howe.—AA 
Traveller’s Return, The.—Rob’t Southey.—PC 
Traveller’s Story, The.—Jas. W. Riley. See Told by 
“The Noted Traveler.” 

Travelling Magician. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Travelling under the Care of a Gentleman.—Gail Ham¬ 
ilton.—MHR 

Travels of Baron Munchausen, Sels. fr. —Rudolph E. 
Raspe. 

Adventure of Baron Munchausen in a Fight with 
the Turks.—OS 2 

Adventure of Baron Munchausen with his Horse.— 
OS 2 

Tray.—Rob’t Browning.—BS 19 
Tray’s Epitaph.—J: Wolcott.—HPE 
Treadwater Jim.—S: W. Small.—CS 21—NPS—YP 
Treason. (The Jest Book.) —MRS 
Treason of Benedict Arnold.—Anon.—CP 
Treason's Last Device. — Edmund C. Stedman.— 
AWB 

Treasure of the Wise Man, The.—Jas. W. Riley.— 
BJC 

Treasures.—Katie H. Ka\*anagh.—WR 7 
Treasures of the Deep, The.—Felicia Hemans.—BNL 
—FEP 

Treatment of his Hares, The.—W: Cowper.—MBL 
Tree, The.—Bjornstjerne Bjomsen.—AD—HSS 1— 

NV—PC—PoR—WCL 

Tree, The.—Jones Very.—AD—GN—HS—NV 
Tree, The.—Anne Fincn, Lady Winchelsea.—WEP 3 

(Fair Tree!— sel.) —AD 

Tree Assembly, The.— (Arr. by) Clara J. Denton.— 
SSD 

Tree Burial. (Sel.) —W: C. Bryant.—AD 
Tree of Liberty, The. (C.) —Rob’t Burns. 

(Heard Ye o’ the Tree of Liberty?)—HS 
Tree of Life, The. (Genesis, Ch. II., 8-25, Ch. III.) 
Bible. —WR 11 

Tiee of Spiritual Blessings, The.—Mrs. M. E. Cornell.— 
SSE 

Tree of State, The.—Mrs. B. C. Rude.—AD 
Tree Planting.—M. F. Butts.—AD—CP—LLC 
Tree Planting.—Joel T. Headley.—AD—DFR (abr.) 
Tree Planting.—S: F. Smith.—POS 

(Trees— si. abr.) —YBT 
Tree that Tried to Grow, The.—Fs. Lee.—AD 


Trees. (Class exercise.) —Anon.—AD 
Trees. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Trees.—S: F. Smith. See Tree Planting. 

Trees.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Trees.—T: W. (?) Wilson.—AD 
Trees, a Skeleton Essay.—S. A. Frost.—DFR 
Trees and the Master, The. (Ballad of Trees and the 
Master, A—C.).—Sidney Lanier.—LLC 
(Ballade of Trees and the Master, A.)—AA—TAS— 
TAV 

Trees’ Choice, The.—Grace R. Carter.—PEG 
Trees, Flowers, and Birds.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See 
Parlement of Foules, The. 

Trees in the City.—Alice B. Neal.—AD 
(Thoughts on the Forest— sel.) —AD 
Trees of Corn. (Good Cheer.) —AD 
Trees of History and Mythology.—F. L. Sheldon.— 
AD 

Trees of the Bible.-—W. H. Groser.—AD 
Trees of the Bible, The.—M. B. C. Slade.—CS 11 
Tree’s Record of its Life, A. (Vick’s Magazine.) —AD 
Trees They are so High, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Tree-tise on Nature, A.—L: H. Levin.—WR 6 
Tree-toad on the Limb, The.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Trenton’s Cheer to the Caliope, The.—Anon.—TMD 
Trial at Elocution, A.—W; H. Head.—SR 11 
Trial of Ben Thomas, The. (De Valley an’ de Shadder, 
Ch. IV.)—Harry S. Edwards.—CR 
(General’s Client, The— abr. and ad.) —NC 
(Not Guilty— ad.)— PFP—SC 
Trial of Fing Wing. (Dial.) —Gertie F. Bunnell.— 
BS 11—HD 

Trial of Queen Katherine.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry VIII. 

Trial of Rebecca, The.—Walter Scott. See Ivanhoe. 
Trial of Warren Hastings[, The]. (Sel. fr. Warren 
Hastings.)—T: B. Macaulay.—HSS 2 (cond.) 
—WCLG 2 

(Opening Scene at the Trial of Warren Hastings— 
sel.)— VSG 

Trial Scene, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of 
Venice. The. 

Trial Scene of Queen Catherine.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry VIII. 

Trials.—Bessie B. McClure.—TT 
Trials of a Columbian Guard.—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
Trials of a School Teacher. (New York Sun.) See 
following. 

Trials of a Schoolmaster, The. (New York Sun.) — 
CH 

(Johnny and the Teacher.)—CS 33 
(Mental Arithmetic.)—DES 
(Trials of a School Teacher.)—ASD 
Trials of a Twin.-—H: S. Leigh. See Twins, The. 

Trials of the Musical Amateur.—Jerome K. Jerome. 

See Three Men in a Boat. 

Trials that Jar.—L. E. O.—CG 3 
Triangular Tragedy, A.—Anon.—SR 7 
Tribes of the Dead, The.—Gawain Douglas. See 
,Eneid, The. 

Tribulations of Biddy Malone, The.—G: M. Vickers.— 
CD—CS 24 

Tribute, A. (Sel.) —Josiah G. Holland.—BIL 
Tribute, The.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the 
House. The. 

Tribute - f Gi ldwin Smith [to Abraham Lincoln]. — 
Goldwin Smith.—LLC 

Tribute of Grasses, A.—Hamlin Garland,—AA 
Tribute to an Old Shoe, A.—Anon.—TFS 
Tribute to Columbus, A.-—Joaquin Miller.-—PR 

(Columbus—C.)—AA—CR—EDY—GN—WR 10 
(Columbus—Westward.)—GMS 
(Port of Ships, The— si. abr.) —ASL—-YBF 
Tribute to East Tennessee, A.—Landon C. Haynes.— 
BS 6 

Tribute to Gen. Sherman, A.—Horace Porter.—SC 
Tribute to Grant, A.—H. D. Jenkins.—SR 4 
Tribute to Grant, A. (“Let us have Peace”— C.) —H: 
Watterson.—CS 31 (abr.) 

(“Let us have Peace”-— diff. abr.) —SC 
Tribute to Lincoln.—Emilio Castelar.—FD 1—SO 
(Abraham Lincoln.)—MRS—TMD 
Tribute to Logan.—-E. B. Sherman.—SR 6 
Tribute to Longfellow. A.—F. N. Zabriskie.—BS 13— 
SR 4 

(Poet’s Funeral. The.)—CS 23 
Tribute to Massachusetts, A.—H: C. Lodge.—NC 
(Massachusetts.)—SC 

Tribute to Massachusetts.—Dan’l Webster. See Re¬ 
ply to Hayne, The. 

Tribute to Motherhood, A.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Princess, The. 

Tribute to Nature.—Mary A. Heermans.—DA 

347 





Tribute 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Tribute to our Honored Dead, A.—H: W. Beecher.— 
BS 24—CS 2—DFR—HR 
(Honored Dead, The.)—BLP(sZ. diff.) —HSS 1 (sel.) 
—SPE 

(Invisible Heroes, The.)—TMD 
(Our Honored Dead.)—FD 1—LLC—WCLG 1 
Tribute to Sir Walter Scott, A.—C: Swain. — 
BS 11 (sel.) 

(Dryburgh Abbey.)—FEP 

Tribute to the Men of the Maine, A.—Rob’t G. Cousins. 
—SC 

(Heroes of the “Maine Disaster.”)—CP 
Tribute to the Supreme Court.—Reverdy Johnson— 
SSD 

Tribute to Washington.—Eliza Cook.—BS 4 (abr.) 
(Washington.)—SR 10—TMR 
(SI. abr.) —HS—MYF 

Tribute to Washington.—Chauncey M. Depew.—SSD 
(Superiority of Washington.)—FD 2 
Tribute to Washington.—-W. H. Harrison.—LLC 
Tribute to Washington.—J. A. Price.—BS 9 
Tribute to Water, A.—J: B. Gough (at. also to A. W. 
Arrington and to Paul Denton).—PP—YFR 
(Apostrophe to Cold Water.)—SA 
(Apostrophe to Water.)—LLC—SSD 
(Glass of Cold Water, A.).—CS 2—HSS 3—SR 2— 
WRD 

(SI. diff. versions.) 

Tribute to William Penn.— C: Sumner. See True 
Grandeur of Nations, The. 

Tribute to Woman, A.—Eliz. B. Browning. .See 
Drama of Exile, A. 

Trick vs. Trick.—J. S. Wood.—SR 12 
Tricksey’s Ring.—Alice Cary.—WR 16 
Tri-colors, The.—Emma Fields.—-SDD 
Tried.—Lulah Ragsdale.—WR 3 
Tried to Tell his Wife.—Anon.—CS 32 
Trifle. (Fr. The Poetical Cookery-Book.) (Punch.) — 
HPE 

Trifles. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 

Trifles.—J. Colesworthy.—-NV 

Trifles.—May R. Smith.—SSS 

Trilby.—Alice Brown.—-AA 

Trinity Sunday. (C.)—Reginald Heber. 

(“Holy, holy, holy!” [Trisagion].)—LLC 
(Hymn for Trinity.)—FEP 
Triolet.—Anne V. Culbertson.—BS 25 
Triolet.—F. W. C. Hersey.—CG 3 

Triolet: “He kissed me ’neath the mistletoe.”—Ger¬ 
trude Craven.—CG 2 

Triolet to her Husband.—F. Fertiault.—MBB 
Triolets: To her whom I call Rose.—Elliot Gray.— 
CG 1 

Trip to Blankville, A.—Anon.—DDM 
Trip to the Stars, A.—Horace B. Durant.—CS 33 
Triple Flag Drill.—Alice C. Fuller.—ID 
Triple Tie, The.—H: G. Perry.—CS 18 
Tripping Down the Field-path.—C: Swain.—-VA 
Trisagion.—Reginald Heber. See Trinity Sunday. 
Tristram and Iseult. (Abr.) —Matthew Arnold.— 
AVP 

(Iseult’s Children— sel. fr. Pt. I.) 

Tristram of Lyonesse, Sel. fr. (Swimming— br. sel. fr. 

Pt. VIII.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—GN 
Tristram’s Song.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the 
King. 

Triumph.—H: C. Bunner.—ASL 
Triumph.—Helen H. Jackson.—KNE 
Triumph, The.—Ben Jonson. See Celebration of 
Char is, A. 

Triumph, A.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Triumph Now. (Masque at the Marriage of the Lord 
Hayes, Song IV.)—T: Campion.—EHT 
Triumph of Beauty, The, Sel. fr. (Lullaby, A.)—Jas. 
Shirley— ES—WEP 2 

Triumph of Charis.—Ben Jonson. See Celebration of 
Charis, A. 

Triumph of Cupid, The.—Geraldine Meyrick.—TL 
Triumph of Death, The.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1 
(Sonnet.)—ELP (LXXI— C.)—FEP 
Triumph of Faith.—J. S. Buckminster.—CS 4 
Triumph of Hector, The.—Homer. See Iliad, The. 
Triumph of Isis, The, Sel. fr. —T: Warton.—WEP 3 
Triumph of Joseph, The. C: J. Wells. See Joseph and 
his Brethren. 

Triumph of Order, A.-—J: Hay.—CS 7 
Triumph of Peace, The.—E. H. Chapin.—SC 
Triumph of Peace, The, Sel. fr. —Jas. Shirley. See To 
King Charles and Queen Henrietta. 

Triumph of the Ricci, The.—Edith Wordsworth.— 
CS 33 

Triumph of Time. The, Sel. fr. (Disappointed Lover, 
The.)—Alcernon C. Swinburne.—BNL 


Triumph of Truth, The.—Jas. De Mille.—SSS 
Triumph of Truth.—C: Mackay.—PS 
Triumph through Faith.—Fanny E. Newberry.—CS 37 
Triumphs of the English Language.—J. G. Lyons.— 
CS 10—SS 

"Triumphs of the warrior are bounded by the narrow 
theatre of his own age. The.” (Br. sel. fr. Sir 
W'alter Scott.)—W: H. Prescott.—HSS 1 
Trodden Flowers.—-Anon.—FLS 
Troilus and Cressida, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Foresight. (Br. sel. fr. Act III., Sc. 3.)—EPs 
Good Deeds Past. (Sel. fr. III., 3.)—LLC 
(One Touch of Nature— sel.) —PYO 
(Ruthless Time— sel.) —PYO 
(Troilus and Cressida— br. sel.) —BNL 
(Ulysses and Achilles.)—EPs 
Nestor to Hector. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 5.)—EPs 
Oracle: “There is a mystery in the soul of state.” 
(Br. sel. fr. III., 3.)—EPs 
Troilus and Criseyde, Sels. fr. —Geoffrey Chaucer. 
Troylus and Criseyde. (Sels.fr. Bks. I.-V.)—WEP 1 
(Love Unfeigned, The— br. sel. fr. Bk. V.)—OB 
Troll the Bowl! (Shoemaker’s Holiday, The; or, Three 
Men’s Song, The— C.) —T: Dekker.—ELP 
Trolley La La!—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Trolley on the Nile, The.—Anon.—CS 37 
Troll-man, The.—Caroline M. Hewins.—CS 28 
Trooper to his Mare, The.—C: G. Halpine.—FEP 
Trooper’s Death, The.— (Tr. by) R. W. Raymond.— 
BNL 

Trooper’s Dirge, The.—Anon.—HSS 1 
Troop-ship Sails, The.—Rob’t W. Chambers.—PAPm 
Tropical Morning at Sea, A.—E: R. Sill.—ASL 
Tropical Scene.—Alfred Tennyson. See Enoch Arden. 
Tropics, The.—Douglas B. W. Sladen.—VA 
Trosachs, The.—Walter Scott. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

Trosachs, The.—W: Wordsworth.—OB—PGT 1 
Trot’s Wedding Journey.—Eliz. S. Phelps. See 

Trotty’s Wedding Tour. 

Trotty’s Wedding Tour [t or. Trot’s Wedding Journey], 
Sel. fr. (Day of Judgment, The—Ch. XIII., 
cond.) —Eliz. S. Phelps.—BS 16 
Troubadour to the Captive Richard, Cceur de Lion, 
The.—J: Breakenridge.—TCV 
Troubadour’s Song.—Marguerite Fellows.—CG 3 
Trouble about Miss Prettyman. (Caudle Lectures, 
XVIII.—Caudle whilst Walking with his Wife, 
has been Bowed to, etc.— arr. as dial.) —Doug¬ 
las Jerrold.—MPD 

Trouble Borrowers.—Anon.—CS 24—NPS—YP 
(Throw away Trouble— sel.) —SM 
Trouble in a Mormon Familv. (Dial.) —H. E. Mc¬ 
Bride.— MCD 

Trouble in the “Amen Corner.”—T. C. Harbaugh.— 
CS 22 

Trouble in the Choir.—A. T. Worden.—CS 14—SR 6 
Trouble with the Steward, The.—Anon.—CS 24—SR 10 
Trouble your Head with your Own Affairs.—Eliza 
Cook.—CS 10 

Troubles of a Wife.—Kitty Lincoln.—CS 11—DS 
Troublesome Caller, A.—Anon.—WR 17 
Troublesome Investment, The.—A. F. Bradley.—PD 
Troublesome Tooth, The. (Tab.) —Tony Denier.— 
TDT 

Troublesome Visitor, A.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
Troublesome Wife, The.—Anon.—CS 36 
Trout-brook, The.—Carl Waring.—HP 
Trouting.—J: T. Trowbridge.—SN 
Troylus and Criseyde.— Geoffrey Chaucer. See Troi¬ 
lus and Criseyde. 

Truant.—S. A. Hudson.—NV 
Truant Boys, The.—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BVC 
True Americanism. (Sel. fr. speech delivered at a 
dinner of the New England society in New 
York City, 1884.)—H: C. Lodge.—SC 
True Americanism, Sel. fr. (Americanism.) — Theo¬ 
dore Roosevelt.—TMR 
True and False Glory.—D. C. Eddy.—CS 10 

True Aristocrat, The.-Stewart.—FP 

True Artist, The. (Boston Pilot.) —YBT 
(Legend, A.)—CS 24 
(Monk’s Vision, The.)—BS 19—PEO 
True Aspiration of Youth, The.—Jas. Montgomery.— 
BLP 

True Balm. (Ode, An— C.) —Ben Jonson.—LH 
(Noble Balm, The.)—OB 

True Beautie Vertue Is.—Sir Philip Sidney. See As- 
trophel and Stella. 

True Beautyf, The].—T: Carew. See Disdain Returned. 
True Beauty.—J: G. Whittier. See Beautiful, The. 
True Bostonian [at Heaven’s Gate]. A. (Somerville 
Journal A —BS 19—CS 32—WR 9 


34S 





TITLE INDEX 


Trust 


True Bravery.—Anon.—PS 
True Charity. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
True Charity. (Dial.) —Stephanie F. D. de Saint- 
Aubin, Comtesse de Genlis.—FDY 
True Contentment.—H: S. Kent.—CS 34 
True Contentment.—J: Ruskin. See Modern Painters. 
True Courage.—Anon.—PFP 

True Courage in Life.—W: E. Channing.—BS 21 (si. 
abr.) 

(Courage.)—WR 5 

True Dignity. (Sel. jr. Lines Left upon a Seat in a 
Yew-tree, etc.)—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 
True Eloquence.—Dan’l Webster. See Adams and 
Jefferson 

True Faith, The.—-W: H. Burleigh.—SSS 
True Faith.—B: P. Shillaber.—CS 11—KNE 
True Gentleman, The.—J: H. Newman.—FS 
True Glory.—J: Milton. See Paradise Regained. 

True Grandeur of Nations, The, Sels. jr. —C: Sumner. 
Law of Love as a Rule of Conduct, The.—HSS 1 
(Sumner’s Tribute to William Penn.)—CS 12 
Peace.—TMR 

(True Grandeur of Nations, The— ptly. same.) — 
BI.P 

(Victories of Peace, The— ptly. same.) —TMD 
“True honor of a nation is to be found only in deeds 
of justice, The.” (Br. sel.) —HSS 1 
True Greatness. (Sel. jr. Mariam, the Fair Queen of 
Jewry, Act IV.)—Lady Eliz. Carew.—YBF 
(Revenge of Injuries.)—BNL 
True Greatness.—T: S. King.—SE 
True Greatness of our Country, The, Sel. jr. (America’s 
True Greatness.)—W : H. Seward.—SR 8 
(Home and School the Bulwark of our Country.)— 
FD 2 

True Happiness.—Anon.—KNS 

True Heart, A. (Youth’s Companion.) —SSS 

True Hero, A.—Russell H. Conwell.—FR (si. abr.) 

(Fireman’s Prayer, The.)—CS 19—PS 
True Heroism.—J. Hamilton Charters (?)—CS 10 — 
KNE—NPS—PEO—SSS—YP 
True Honor of a Nation, The.—W. R. Prince.—SR 8 
“True honor of a nation is to be found only in deeds 
of justice, The.”—C: Sumner. See True Gran¬ 
deur of Nations, The. 

True Immortality, The.—Emily H. Miller.—BS 24 
True Incident of the War, A.—Emily D. Irwin.—SR 9 
True King, The.—Seneca.—OS 2—SS 
True Kings of the Earth, The.—J: Ruskin.—OM 
(Power.)—OS 3 

True Knight, The.—Stephen Hawes. See Pastime of 
Pleasure, The. 

True Lent, A.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL—YBF 

(To Keep a True Lent — C.) — FEP—HBP — 
OS 3 (at. to G: Herbert.) 

True Leucothoe, The.—Anon.—PPh 

True Liberty. (Br. sel. jr. Characters: Of Judgments.) 

—Jean de la Bruyere.—BLP 
True Liberty.—Frd'k W. Robertson.—BLP—PEO 
(Rights and Duties— longer and ptly. difj.) —NC 
True Life.—Mrs. G. H. Gildersleeve.—SR 1 
Tru : Love. (Frags, jr. various authors.) —BNL 
True Love.—Phoebe Cary.—BIL—FTA—TFY 
True Love, A.—N: Grimald.—OB 
True Love.—W: Shakespeare. — BIL—FTA—GP— 
OH—PGT 1—PHS 

(“Let me not to the marriage of true minds.”)— 
OEL 

(Love.)—LLC 

(Sonnet.) — BNL — EPs — FEP — HBP — 
OB (XVIII.) 

(Sonnet CXVI.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
True Love.—W: Shakespeare. See also All’s Well that 
End’s Well. 

True Love (Song— C .)—Sir J: Suckling.—ES 
True Loveliness.—G: Darley.—TIP 

(“It is not beauty I demand.”)—AVP 
(Loveliness of Love, The.)—BNL—FEP 
True Love’s Dirge.—W: Motherwell.—WEP 4 
True Manhood t he Nation’s Only Safety.—H. M. Soper. 
—SR 8 

True Manliness.—Anon.—WR 17 
True Manliness.—D. C. Eddy.—HSS 3—LLC 
True Manliness. (Dial.) —M. L. R.-—SDD 
True Measure of Life, The.—Philip J. Bailey. See 
Festus. 

True Men. (Wanted— C.) —J. G. Holland.—SR 7 
(Give us Men.)—CS 26 
True Nobility.—Anon.—CP 
True Nobility.—Anon.—CS 13 
True Nobility.—C: Swain.—BLP 

True Nobility. (Epigram. )—Gotthold E. Lessing.— 
HPE 


True Nobleman, A. (Br. sel. jr. Forest Trees in Brace- 
bridge Hall.)—Washington Irving.—HSS 1 
(Forest Trees— ptly. same .)—AD 
True Objects of Desire, The.—S: Johnson. See Van¬ 
ity of Human Wishes, The. 

True Patriotism.—Fisher Ames.—PR 
(What is Patriotism?)—SR 8 
True Patriotism.—H: Clay. See On the Bank Veto. 
True Patriotism is Unselfish.—G: W. Curtis. See Pat¬ 
riotism. 

True Politeness.—Anon.—KNE 
True Power of a Nation, The.—E. H. Chapin.—SC 
True Prayer.—Anon.—YBT 
True Repentance.—Fs. Quarles.—KNE 
True Rest. — Johann W. von Goethe (tr. by J: S. 
Dwight).—BNL—YBF (abr.) 

(Rest— sel .)—PHS 
(Sweet is the Pleasure.)—HBP 
True Science and Religion.—E: Hitchcock.—LLC 
(True Science Ought to be Religious.)—SS 
True Science Ought to be Religious.—E: Hitchcock. 
See foregoing. 

True Socialism, The.—Fred E. Morgan.—SR 11 
True Soldier, The. (Frags, jr. various authors .)—BNL 
True Source of Contentment.—Anon.—CS 9 
(Be Content.)—CSS (abr.)— PPSr 
(Carriage and Couple, The.)—MYF 
True Source of Reform, The.—E. H. Chapin.—CS 8— 
SS 

True Story, A.—Abbie Kinne.—BS 24 
(Child’s Mirror, The.)—CS 32 
True Story of a Brie Cheese, The.—W. E. P. French. 
—CS 30 

True Story of Abraham Lincoln.—Anon.—WR 10 
True Storv of Littie Boy Blue. The.—Carlotta Perry. 
—BS 10—DS—PR—YA 

True Story of Young Lochinvar in Blank Verse, The. 

(Parody on Lochinvar.)—J. J. Fay.—WR 13 
True Teaching.—Horatius Bonar.—CS 19 
(Be True.)—CSS—GN—SSS 
True Temple, The.—Anon.—CS 13 
True to Life.—Anna F. Burnham.—WR 5 
True to Poll.—FrankJC. Burnand.—THP 
“True to the promise of thy far-off youth.” (All the 
Year Round .)—GG 

True To-day, The.—H. Withington.—SS 
True Until Death. (“It was a’ for our rightfu’ King.” 
— C.) —Rob’t Burns.—LH 
(Farewell, The.)—BFV—BPB—OB 
True Use of Music, The.—C: Wesley.—HBP 
True Victory. —M. A. Maitland.—TS 
(Fought and Won.)—WR 18 
True War Spirit, The. (Fr. a speech in the U. S. Sen¬ 
ate, April 14, 1898.)—G: F. Hoar.—SC 
True Wisdom. Bible. See Job. 

True Worth.—Anon.—CS 34 

True Worth.—Alice Cary. See Nobility. 

“True worth is in being, not seeming.”—Alice Cary. 
See Nobility. 

True-born Englishman, The, Sel. fr. (Introduction.) 

—Dan’l Defoe.—ESs 
True-hearted Ben.—Anon.—HBP 
Truest Wisdom.—Anon.—PPSr 
Trumpet , The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—FP 
Trumpet Sermon, A.—Anon.—MCS 
Trumpeter’s Betrothed, The.—Lucy H. Hooper.— 
DR 

Trumpet’s Loud Clangor, The.—J: Dryden. See Song 
for St. Cecilia’s Day, A. 

Trumpets of Doolkarnein. The.—Leigh Hunt.—BNL 
Trundle-bed Theology.—L. G. Brown.—WR 15 
Trundle-bed Treasures.—Mrs. Hattie F. Bell.—CS 24 
Trust.—Anon.—HDI. 

Trust— H: Alford.—HSS 3—SPE 
(Contentment.)—BS 4 

(“I know not of the dark or bright.”)—GG 
(Life’s Answer.)—HDL 
Trust.—W: H. Burleigh.—TAS 
Trust.—Mary F. Butts.—HDL—TAS 
Trust.—Frances A. Kemble.—CS 19 
Trust.—A. I. M.—HP 

(On the Hillside.)—YBT 
Trust.—Lizette W. Reese.—AA 

Trust.—Christina Rossetti. See Monna Innominata. 
Trust. (C.) —J: G. Whittier.—HDL 

(“Same old baffling questions, The.”)—GG 
Trust.—W: Wordsworth.—EPs 

Trust in God. (St. Matthew, Ch. VI., 26-34.)— Bible. 
—BS 3 

Trust in God.—Norman Macleod.—CSS—PPSr 
(Rhymes for Hard Times— si. abr.) —PR 
Trust in God.—I: Williams.—YBT 
Trust in Providence.—Helen M. Williams.—HBP 


349 




Trust 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Trust in Women.—Anon.—NA 

“Trust not, sweet soul! those curled waves of gold.”— 
W: Drummond.—OEL 
(Beauty Fades.)—FEP 
Trust not to Appearances.—Anon.—PS 
Trust Thou Thy Love.—J: Ruskin.—OB—VA 
Trusting.—Harriet McE. Kimball.—YBT 
(Flight of the Birds, The.)—HDL—POS 
Trusting too far; or, Learning by Experience.—H. M. 
Garrett.—PD 

Trusty and True. (Dial.) —Mrs. Clara A. Sylvester.— 
CS 5—StD 

Truth.—Anon.—DLS 
Truth.—Anon.—F AS 

Truth. (Frags, fr. various authors .)—BNL 
Truth. (Sel. fr. Of Truth— Essay I.)—Fs. Bacon.— 
OS 2 

Truth.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Truth. (Sel. fr. Hymenaei; or, The Solemnities of 
Masque and Barriers at the Marriage of the 
Earl of Essex, 1606.)—BenJonson.—WEP 2 
Truth.—J: Milton.—OS 3 
Truth.—Eliza Scudder.—TAS 
Truth.—Martin F. Tupper.—MYF 
Truth about Horace, The.—Eugene Field.—AWH— 
THP 

Truth and Falsehood.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KJ 

Truth and Falsehood.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Truth and Integrity. (Advantages of Truth and Sin¬ 
cerity— C.) —J: Tillotson.—KNE (in 2 pts.) 
Truth and Victory.—D. C. Scoville.—PFP 
“Truth, as humanity knows it, is not what the school¬ 
men call it.” (Br. sel. fr. Caxtoniana, Essay 
XXIL, Motive Power.)—E: Bulwer-Lvtton.— 
GG 

Truth at Last.—E: R. Sill.—HBR 
Truth — Freedom — Virtue. — “Yankee.” See To a 
Child. 

Truth in Love. (Sonnet — C .)—Sir J: Suckling.— 
WEP 2 

Truth in Parentheses lor Parenthesis]. (Domestic 
Asides; or, Truth in Parentheses— C.) —T: 
Hood.—CS 4—HSS 3—MHR—OM 
Truth, in the Ship’s Log.—Anon.—CS 31 
Truth is Great.—Coventry Patmore.—YBF 
(Magna est Veritas— C.) —PGT 2 
Truth of the Gospel, The.—Alex. McKenzie.—MRS 
Truth of Truths, The.—J: Ruskin.—BS 9 
Truth the Object of All Studies.—Frayssinous.—KNE 
—SS 

“Truths half drawn from Nature’s breast.”—Anon.— 
HSS 3 

Truth’s Integrity.—Anon.—HBP 

Great Adventurer, The— sel.) —ELP—PGT 1 
Love will Find out the Way— stl. — C. — in Percy’s 
Reliqups.)—FEP—GN (br.) —OB (longest.) 
Truths of the Bible.—Anon.—LLC 
Truth-seekers, The.—Fs. C. McDonald.—CG 2 
Truth-speaker, The. (Dial.) —Anon. (Ad.)—MPD 
Truxton's Victory.—Anon.—AWB 
Try.—Anon.—TFS 
Try Again. (C.) —Eliza Cook. 

(Robert Bruce and the Spider.)—YBT 
“Try” Boys, The.—Anon.—DJS 
Try, Try Again.—Anon.—SM 
Trying Hard.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Trying Situation, A.—S; L. Clemens. See Tramp 
Abroad, A. 

Trying the "Rose Act.”—Marietta Holley.—WR 22 
Trying to be Literary. (Play.) —Anon.—BS 12 
Trying to Keep up the Appearance of a Gentleman.— 
H. M. Garrett.—ED 

Trvst of the Night, The.—Mary C. G. Byron.—VA 
Trusting.—F. W. Hart.—CG 1 
Trysting-place, The.—M. E. H. Everette.—CG 1 
Tsar Oleg.—J. J. Kenealy.—CS 29—NPS—YP 
Tsigane’s Canzonet, The.—E: King.—AA 
Tu Quoque. (C. — dial.) —Austin Dobson.—MR 
(Lover’s Quarrel, A.)—PYO 
Tubal Cain.—C: Mackav.—BLP (abr.) —BNL—CS 2 
(Old Tubal Cain.)—LLC—PPSr- 
Tuberose.—L: J. Block.—AA 
Tucked oup in Ped.—C: F. Adams—GH 
(Mine. Schildhood— C.) —BS 12—CS 22 
Tuesday; or the Ditty.—J: Gay. Sec Shepherd’s 

ggT'h© 

Tulip Tree, The.—Bayard Taylor.—AD 
Tulkinghorn, the Lawyer, and Mademoiselle Hortense. 

—C: Dickens. See Bleak House. 
Tullochgorum.—J: Skinner.—WEP 3 
Tumbler of Claret, A.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 36 
Tunkuntel, The.—Anon.—WR 5 


Turf Shall be my Fragrant Shrine, The, Sel. fr. 
(“There’s nothing bright above, below.”)—T; 
Moore.—HDL 

“Turk”-ey Drill.—Anon.—WDM 
Turkish Legend, A.—T: B. Aldrich.—GN—OS 1 
Turkish Refrain.—A. G. Newcomer.—CG 1 
Turkish Tradition, A.—Anon.—PEO 
Turn about’s Fair Play.—Hattie Herbert.—StD 
Turn, Fortune[, Turn Thy Wheel]!—Alfred Tennyson. 

. See Idylls of the King. 

Turn of the Tide, The.—Rose Kavanaugh.—WR 6 
Turn the Carpet; or, The Two Weavers. (C.) —Han¬ 
nah More. 

(Two Weavers, The.)—CS 24—MYF 
Turned out for Rent.—M. L. S. Burke.—HP 
Turner.—J. J. G. Wilkinson.—EPs 
Turning.—Carrie E. Bronson.—CS 35 
Turning Around. (Dial.) —Anon.—MND 
Turning Over the New Leaf.—Anon.—HP 
Turning the Grindstone.-—B: Franklin.—OS 2 
Turning the Points.—Rob’t Overton.—CS 27 
Turinng the Tables. (Dial.) —Anon.—FND 
Turning the Tables. (Dial. ) —G: C. Graham.—GS 
Turning the Tables. (Dial.) —S. Jennie Smith.—CS 36 
Turtle and Flamingo, The. (€.)■ —Jas. T. Fields. 

(Song of the Turtle and Flamingo— abr.) —GN 
Turtle Dove’s Nest, The.—"Aunt Effie.”—PC 
Turtles, The. (Abr.) —T: Hood.—WR 1 
Turvey Top.—Anon.—NA 

“Tuscan Cypress,” Sel. fr. — A. Mary F. R. Darmes- 
tctcr — 

Tutelage, The.—Rob’t M. Bell.—AA 
Tuxedo Romance, A.—Albert Hardy.—PR—YA 
Twa Brothers, The.—Anon.—CEL—HBP—PEB 2 (sel. 
— diff. vers.) 

(See also Edward, Edward.) 

Twa Corbies, The. (In Border Minstrelsv.)—Anon.— 
BB—BPB—CEL—LH—OB—OEB—PEB 2— 
PGT 1—WEP 1—YBF 
(SI. diff. vers.) —FEP—HBP 
Twa Courtins, The.—D: Kennedy.—HBR 
Twa Magicians, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Twa Sisters, The.—Anon.—CEL—PEB 1 
(Binnorie— si. abr.) —OB 
(Cruel Sister, The.)—FEP—HBP 
(Twa Sisters o’ Binnorie. The— sel.) —BB—WR 9 
Twa Sisters o’ Binnorie, The.—Anon. See foregoing. 
T’ward Arcadie.—Egan New.—DR 
’Twas at Manhattan Beach.—Anon.—DCR 
(At the Restaurant.)—WR 7 
“’Twas ever thus!—Each hour that came.”—W: G. 
Simms.—BNL 

’Twas just before the Hay was Mown.—C: Swain.—VA 
’Twas off the Blue Canaries.—Jos. W. Fabens.—PPh 
’Twas when the Seas were Roaring. (Ballad fr. “The 
What d’ye Call it,” Act II., Sc. 8.)—J: Gay.— 
FEP 

(Ballad from "The What d’ye Call it.” A.)—W r EP 3 
Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee.—Anon.—NA 
’Tween Earth and Sky. (In Songs from Dramas.)— 
Augusta Webster.—VA 

Twelfth Day: or. The Epiphany.—G: Wither.— HBP 
Twelfth Night; or. What you Will, Sels. fr. —W; Shake¬ 
speare. 

Carpe Diem. (Song fr. Act II., Sc. 3.)—PGT 1 
(O [or Oh] Mistress Mine.)—BNL—ES—TFY— 

, YBF 

(“O mistress mine, where are you roaming.”)— 
OEL 

(Sweet and Twenty.)—FEP—OB—OS 3 
(Twelfth Night, Sel. fr.)-- ELP 
“Come away, come away. Death.” (Song fr. II., 4.) 
—EPs—FEP—OEL 
(Come away. Death.)—HBP 
(Dirge.)—OB 
(Dirge of Love.)—PGT 1 
(Lover’s Lament., A.)-»-WEP 1 
(Twelfth Night, Sel. fr.)— ELP 
Olivia. (Br. sel. fr. I., 5.)—BNL 
Twelfth Night. (Br. sets. fr. I., 1; II., 4; V., 1.)— 
BNL 

Viola Disguised, and the Duke. (Sel. fr. II., 4 )— 
EPs 

(Unrequited Love— sel.) —BNL 
Twelfth of April, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AWB 
(Sumter— C.) —EDY 

Twelfth of December, The.—R: W. Gilder.—EDY 
Twelve Articles.—Jonathan Swift.—HPE 
Twelve Causes of Dishonesty, Sel. fr. (Public Dishon¬ 
esty.)—H: W. Beecher.—PS 
Twelve Golden Rules for Boys.—Anon.—TFS 
Twelve Little Brothers, The.—N. G. Cone.—FS 
Twelve Months, The. (Dial.) —H: H. Johnson.—SDD 

350 





TITLE INDEX 


Two 


Twelve Months’ Carnival, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Twentieth Century, The.—Merrill E. Gates.—BLP 
Twentieth Sunday after Trinity.—J: Keble.—AVP 
Twenty Frogs at School.—Anon.—TFS 
(Frogs at School.)—CSS—FAS—PPSr 
Twenty Years Ago. — Anon. — CS 3 — FEP — 
HSS 3 (si. abr. )—LLC 

(Forty Years Ago.)—BS 1—FTR—KNE (si. abr.) 
Twenty Years Hence.—Walter S. Landor. See follow¬ 
ing. 

“Twenty years hence my eyes may grow.”—Walter S. 
Landor.—WEP 4 
(Twenty Years Hence.)—OB 
Twenty-eight and Twenty-nine. (SI. diff. fr. Works.) 

—Winthrop M. Praed.—EDY—HBP 
Twenty-first Sunday after Trinity.—J: Keble.—AVP 
Twenty-five Years of Peace.—E: Everett.—PS 
Twenty-old and Seven-wild.—Annie C. Huestis.—TCV 
Twenty-one.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—FEP—SSS 
Twenty-one To-day.—Elmer R. Coates.—CS 28 
Twenty-second of December, The.—W: C. Bryant.— 
GN 

Twenty-second of December, 1620, The.—Sir H: Bul- 
wer.—SS 

Twenty-second of February, The.—W: C. Bryant.— 
BS 14—EDY—PEO 

Twenty-second of February, The.—Dan’l Webster.— 
PS 

(Washington’s Birthday.)—SE 
Twenty-second Sunday after Trinity. (C.) —Reginald 
Heber. 

(Forgive.)—SS 

Twenty-six of Them.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Twenty-third Psalm, The.—H: W. Beecher.—BS 2 
Twenty-third Psalm. (Bible.) See Psalms of David. 
Twice.—Christina G. Rossetti.—OB 
Twice Told Tales, Sel. fr. (Gray Champion, The— 
sel. fr. Ch. I.)—-Nathaniel Hawthorne.—BS 15 
Twickenham Ferry.—Theophile Marzials.—VA 
(TV. mus.) —DS—NPS—YP 
Twig that Became a Tree, The.—Anon.—AD 
Twilight.—Grace Blackburn.—WR 25 
Twilight. (Parisina, St. I.)—Lord Byron.—CEL 
(Parisina, Sel. fr.) —WEP 4 
Twilight.—Lord Byron. See also Don Juan. 

Twilight.—Olive Custance.—VA 
Twilight.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Twilight.—C: Heavysege.—VA 
Twilight—H: W. Longfellow.—BFV—HBP—LC 
Twilight at Nazareth.—Joaquin Miller.—BS 19 
Twilight at Sea.—Amelia B. Welby.—AA—BNL — 
FEP—POS 

Twilight at the Heights [Hights — C.]. — Joaquin 
Miller.—AA 

Twilight Dreams. (Chambers’ Journal.)— HP 
Twilight Fancy, A.—Dora R. Goodale.—BNL 
Twilight Idyll, A.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—CS 17 
Twilight of Thanksgiving, The.—W: D. Kelly.—HS 
“Twilight of the Poets, The.” (Fr. Song and Science.) 
—Milicent W. Shinn.—AA 

Twilight on Sumter.—R: H. Stoddard.—EDY—PAP 

Twilight Pastoral, A.—Anon.—WR 3 

Twilight Reverie, A.—Anon.—HP 

Twilight Song.—J: Hunter-Duvar. See De Roberval. 

Twilight’s Hour.—W. F. E. I.—HP 

’Twill Not be Long.—Anon.—CS 11 

Twin Ballots, The.—Anon.—CS 36 

Twin Jewels.—Anon.—CG 1 

Twin Peaks of the Valley.—W: Wordsworth. See Ex¬ 
cursion, The. 

Twin Stars Aloft. (Hope, A— C.) —C: Kingsley.— 
FTA 

Twinkle, Twinkle. — Jane Taylor. See Twinkle, 
Twinkle, Little Star. 

“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.”—Anon.—WR 4 
Twinkle. Twinkle, Little Star.—Jane Taylor.—SM 
(Abr.)— NV—PC 
(Star, The— si. abr.)— BVC 
(Twinkle, Twinkle— abr.) —TFS 
Twinkles, Sel. fr. (Washington.)—J: P. Bocock.— 
TMR 

Twins.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Twins, The.—H: S. Leigh—FEP—MHR—PPSr — 
THP 

(Trials of a Twin.)—CRR—CS 9—DS 
Twins, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Twins in the Turret, The.—J. P. Bocock.—PAPm 
Twist Me a Crown.—Christina G. Rossetti.—LC—VA 
Twist ye, Twine ye.—Walter Scott.— See Guy Manner- 
ing. 

Two.—Anon.—CS 23—FMR 
Two.—Anon.—HP 

Two. (Abr. and arr.) —Caroline L. Field.—BS 20 


Two.—Mary A. Townsend.—WR 24 
Two Absent-minded Men, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Two Anchors, The.—R: H. Stoddard.—BIL—CS 10 
Two and One.—Friedrich Riickert. — NV—YBT (diff. 
m <r.) 

Two Angels, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— EDY — 
HDL (sel.) 

Two Angels, The.—J: Macfarlane.—TCV 
Two Angels, The.—J: G. Whittier.—AA 
Two Answers, The.—G: P. Wheeler.—CG 1 
Two April Mornings, The.—W: Wordsworth.—BPB— 
PGT 1—WEP 4 

Two Argosies.—Wallace Bruce.—AA 
Two Armies, The.—E. A. Hughes.—WR 18 
Two Banners of America, The.—Herrick Johnson.— 
SR 8—SSS—WR 10 
Two Beggars, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Two Bells—J. W. Sanborn.—DES 
Two Bills, The.—Anon.—PP—PS—YPS 
Two Blacksmiths, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Two Blind Beggars. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 10—TCP 
Two Boot-blacks.—Anon.—CS 14—HNS—SR 10 
Two Brothers, The.—Talmud.—DS—WR 6—YA 
Two Captains, The.—W: Cory.—LH 
(Ballad for a Boy, A.)—PEB 3 
Two Champions, The.—Anon.—CS 25 
Two Chimneys, The.—Philip B. Strong.—CS 30—WR 6 
Two Christmas Eves.—N. S. Emerson.—SR 1 
Two Christmas Eves.—E. Nesbit.—BS 18—WR 15 (abr.) 
Two Church-builders, The.—J: G. Saxe.—BS 19—CSS 
—MYF 

Two Cities.—Anon.—CS 26 
Two Colors. (Springfield Republican.) —TMR 
(Blue and Gray.)—CPL 
(United at Last.)—CS 20 
Two Commands, The.—Anon.—PP—PS—YFR 
Two Deserts, The.—Coventry Patmore.—PGT 2— 
VA 

Two Dolls, The.—Louise E. V. Boyd.—StD 
Two Drowned Lovers. (Sel. fr. Lake Champlain and 
its Shores, Pt. III.)—W: H. H. Murray.—BS 19 
Two Dutiful Daughters. (Dial.) —Grace D. Litch¬ 
field.—BS 15—HD 

Two Enigmas.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Two Epitaphs.—Anon.—PEO 
Two Epochs.—Paul H. Hayne —BIL 
Two Families in One Room. (Play.) —Anon.—SED 
Two Faults.—Alice A. Coale.—SD 
Two Fishers.—Anon.—AWH—THP 
(Fishing.)—FAS—PTS 
(They Went a-Fishin’.)—CS 23 
(They Went Fishing.)—HBR 
Two Foscari, The, Sel. fr. (Swimming— hr. sel. fr. Act 
I., Sc. 1.)—Lord Byron.—BNL—EPs—GN 
Two Friends, The. (Dial.) America Atkeson.—SD 
Two Friends, The.—C: G. Leland.—AA 
Two Friends, The.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Two Frogs, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Two Gardens.—Mollie W. Anderson.—YBT 
Two Gardens, The.—Ann and Jane Taylor.—BVC 
Two Gates, The.—S. S. Conant.—HSS 2 
Two Gentlemen of Kentucky, The. (Sel.) —Jas. L. 
Allen.—BS 21 

Two Gentlemen of Verona, Sels. fr. —W: Shakespeare. 
Love Complaining. (Br. sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 4.)—AE 
Silvia [or Sylvia], ( Song fr. IV , 2.)—OB—OEL— 
WEP 1 

(To Sylvia.)—ES 

(Two Gent lemen of Verona, Sel. fr.) —ELP 
(Who is Silvia for Sylvia]?)—EP—FEP—GN— 
HBP—LC—YBF 

(“Who is Silvia? What is she?”)-—BPB 
Two Gentlemen of Verona, Br. sels. fr. (Fr. II., 4 
and II., 7.)—BNL 
Two Girls of 1812.—Anon.—WR 7 
Two Glasses, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—BS 3—CS 15— 
PEO (at. to C. B. A.)—WR 18 
Two Goslings.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Two Gray Wolves.—Mary A. Fanton.—WR 22 
Two Heavens. (Sel. fr. A Heaven upon Earth.)— 
Leigh Hunt.—GN 

(“For there are two heavens, sweet.”)—BIL 
Two Helpers.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Two Highwaymen, The. (In Love Songs of Proteus.) 

—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—OB 
Two Homes, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—SS 
Two Hundred Years.—J: Pierpont.—FP 
Two in One.—Anon.—ELP 

Two in the Campagna.—Rob’t Browning.—PGT 2 — 
WEP 4 

Two Infinities.—E: Dowden.—VA 
Two Interpreters of Dreams, The. (Dial.) —Hattie 
Herbert.—SDD 


351 





Two 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Two Irish Peasant Songs. ( C .)—Louise I. Guiney. 

(In Leinster—1st song.) —-AA 
(Song. In Leinster.)—ASL 
Two Kinds of Fun. {Dial.) —Clara J. Denton.—LPD 
Two Kings.—Andrew Marvell.—LH 

(Cromwell and King Charles— sel.) —EPs 
(Death of Charles First— sel.) —EHT 
(Execution of Charles First— sel.) —EDY 
(Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ire¬ 
land, A—C.)— FEP—HBP—OB—PGT 1 — 
WEP 2 

Two Kings.—J: J. Piatt.—-TFS 
Two Kisses.—R: S. Powell.—TL 
Two Kittens.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.—TT 
Two Left.—Anon.—DE 

Two Lessons, The.—T: W. Higginson.—TAV 

Two Letters and Two Telegrams.—Clyde Fitch.—SR 12 

Two Little Bears. ( Our Little Ones.) —-LPS—PP 

Two Little Boys.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 

Two Little Eyes.—-Anon.—YBT 

Two Little Feet.—Anon.-—TFS 

Two Little Girls 1 Know. {Youth’s Companion.) — 
DJS—HSS 2 
(At Bedtime.)—WR 17 
Two Little Hands.—Anon.—GMS 
Two Little Kittens.—Anon.—PS 
(Little Kittens, The.)—NV 
(Quarrelsome Kittens, The.)—DST 
Two Little Magoies Sat on a Wall.—Anon.—TFS 
Two Little Old Dames.—-Anon.—COS'—PP 
Two Little Rogues.—Abby M. Diaz.—CS 16 
(IF. mus.) —DS—NPS—YP 
Two Little Roses.—Julia P. Ballard.—AD 
Two Little Stockings, The.—Sara K. Hunt.—CS 36— 
LPS—PP 

Two Lives, The.—Anon.—BS 24 

Two Lives. {Dial.) —G: M. Vickers.—CS 8 

Two Locks of Hair, The.—Gustav P. Fizer {tr. by H: 

W. Longfellow).—BIL 
Two Lovers.—-G: Eliot.—BIL—OH—PYO 
Two Loves, The.-*-.!: G. Whittier.—BIL 
Two Loves and a Life.—W: Sawyer.—-CS 10—NPS— 
YP 

Two Maidens.—Gertrude M. Cannon.—YBT 
Two Marys, The.—Jean Blewett.—TCV 
Two Masks, The.—G: Meredith.—VA 
Two Men.—C: N. Gregory.—CS 33 
Two Men I Know.—Anon.—HP 
Two Minute Charade.—Anon.—EuE 
Two Monks and the Pilgrim, The.—Anon.—DLS 
Two Mysteries, The.—Mary M. Dodge.—AA-—BNL— 
‘ BS 19—GP—HDL—OS 2—TAS 
Two Mystics.—Anon.—CG 1 
Two Napoleons, The.—Victor Hugo.—PS—SS 
Two Noble Kinsmen, The, Sets. fr. — Shakespeare and 
Fletcher 

Bridal SongL A], {Fr. Act I., Sc. 1.)—CEL—ES 
—FEP—OB—YBF 
(Marriage Hymn.)—ELP 

(Song from “The Two Noble Kinsmen.”)—WEP 2 
Dirge of the Three Queens. {Fr. I., 5.)—OB 
Two Oceans, The.—J: Sterling.—HBP 
Two of a Kind.—Anon.—WR 24 
Two of a Kind.—Walter T. Arndt.—CG 2 
Two of a Kind.—H. W. Banks.—CG 1 
Two of a Trade.—S. W. Duffield.—AA—NV 
Two of Dickens’ Villains.—Julien M. Elliott.—NC 
Two of Them.—Anon.—CS 19 
Two Old Crows.—Anon.—SR lb 

Two Old Kings, The.—J: B. L. W r arren, Lord De Tab- 
ley.—VA 

Two Old Soldiers, The.—J. C. Macy.—WR 12 
Two Opinions.—Eugene Field.—BS 21—WR 15 
(Our Two Opinions—C.)—AA—EF—OH 
Two Opinions of One House.—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
Two Orphans, The. (Didn’t W’e, Jim?— C .)—Ben 
King.—WR 14 

Two Other Hearts. {London Tobacco.) —PPh 
Two Paths.—J. C. R. Dorr.—A A 

Two Paths on Art, Sel. fr. (Great Art— br. sel. fr. 

Lecture I.)—J: Ruskin.—SO 
Two Pennies, The.—Anon.—CS 32 
Two Pictures, The.—Anon.—BS 16 
Two Pictures.—Anon.—HP 
Two Pictures.—Annie D. Green.—BNL—WR 5 
Two Pictures.—G: W. Hoss.—BS 26 
Two Pictures from Life.—Anon.—SSS 
Two Pilgrims.—Anon.—PP—YPS 
Two Poets of Croisic, The, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Browning. 
Bard and the Cricket, The.—WR 8 
(Tale, A.)—HBR 

Such a Starved Bank of Moss. (Br. sel.) —YBF 
Two Points of View.—Hannah P. Kimball.—TAS 


Two Professions.—G. E. Throop.—WR 12 
Two Promises.—Anon. 

Candlemas.—BVC 
St. Swithin.—BVC 

Two Queens.—Franklin Addington.—NC 
Two Queens in Westminster.—H: Morford.—BS 16 
Two Rabbis [Rabbins—-C.], The.—J: G. Whittier.—AP 
Two Rag Men.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
Two Revolutions. (Sel. fr. Address before the Spring- 
field Washingtonian Temperance Society, 
1842.)—Abraham Lincoln.—TS 
Two Riddles.—Matthew Prior.—HPE 
Two Rivers.—Anon.—OB 
Two Roads, The.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
Two Roads, The.—Jean-Paul Richter. — CS 1—CSS— 
DS—SPE—SR 1—WCLG 2—WRD 
(New Year’s Dream, A— diff. tr. and cond.)- —OS 3 
Two Robbers.—Fs. W. Bourdillon.—HP 
Two Robin Redbreasts.—Anon.—DLF 
Two Runaways, The. (Sel.fr. Ch. V.)—Harry S. Ed¬ 
wards.—BS 15—CR 

(Mass’ Crawford, Isam, and the Deer— abr. and arr. 
by Kate W. Dallas.)—W r R 21 
Two Runaways, The. (Dial.) — Mary Edwards. — 
WR 17- 

Two Schools of Eloquence.—Rufus Choate.—FD 2 
Two Seasons.—Clarence B. Burleigh.—CG 1 
Two Ships, The.—Fs. Bret Harte.—TAS 
Two Sinners.—Ella W. Wilcox.—MR 
Two Simple Little Ostriches.—Juliet W. Tompkins.— 
CG 2—WR 22 

Two Songs, The, Sel. fr. (I Heard an Angel.)—W: 
Blake.—PC 

Two Songs.—J: Milton. See Arcades. 

Two Songs from the Persian, II. ( C .)—T: B. Aldrich. 
(“Oh [Ah—C.], sad are they who know not love” 
— abr.) —FT A 

(Sad are they who Know not Love— abr .)—TFY 
(Who Know not Love.)—OH 
Two Sonnet-songs.—Frank T. Marzials.—VA 
I. The Sirens Sing. 

II. Orpheus and the Mariners Make Answer. 

Two Sons.—Rob’t Buchanan.—VA 
Two Spies, Andrd and Hale, The.—Chauncey M. De¬ 
pew.—SR 12—TMD 

(Andrt? and Hale.)—CS 36—NC (si. abr .)—PR 
(Captain Hale and Major Andi<?.)-—FD 2 
Two Spirits, The.—J. B. Kenyon.—AA 
Two Squirrels, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Two Stammerers, The.—Anon.—BS 13 (si. abr .)— 
CS 16 

Two Streams, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—OS 3—PEO 
Two Streams of History, The.—C: L. Thompson.— 
TMD 

Two Teachers, The. (Dial .)—Hattie Herbert.— SDD 
Two Temples, The.—C. T. Corlis.—CS 13 
Two Thanksgiving Dances. (IF. music .)—Emma D. 
Banks.—BR 

“Two Tollar?” (Detroit Free Press .)—BDD 

(How the Insurance Agent was Squelched.)—SDR 
Two Trees, The.—W: B. Yeats.—TIP 
Two Truths.—Helen H. Jackson.—BIL—FLS—OH— 
TAV—TFY 

Two Valentines.—May R. Smith.—DES 
Two Verses.—R: S. Powell.—TL 

Two Veterans. (Dirge for Two Veterans— C.) —Walt 
Whitman. —G N—LH 

Two Victories.—W: Wordsworth. See Song at the 
Feast of Brougham Castle. 

Two Views of Christmas.—C: Dickens. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Two Views of War.—H: R. Palmer.—TAV 
Two Villages, The.—Rose T. Cooke.—CS 7—HBR 
Two Visits.—N. E. M. Hathaway.—NPS—YP 
Two Voices.—D: J. Brewer.—TMR 
Two Voices, The, Sel. fr. (Dragon-fly, The.)—Alfred 
Tennyson.—SN 

Two Voyagers, The. (Voyages, The — C.) —T: W. 
Higginson.—TAS 

Two Waitings, The.—J: W. Chadwick.—BNL 
Two Ways of Doing Good.—Mrs. J. E. McConaughy. 
—MD 

Two Ways of Life.—H. C. H.—SDD 
Two Ways of Looking at It.—Leonine Waterman.—FS 
Two Ways of Spending “The Fourth.” (Dial .)—Clara 
Denton.—LPD 

Two Ways of Telling the Same Thing. (Dial.) —Mrs. 
E. B. Duffey.—StD 

Two Weavers, The.—Hannah More. See Turn the 
Carpet, etc. 

Two Went up into the Temple to pray.—R: Crashaw. 

—BNL—ELP—EPs 
Two W 7 ise Ow’ls.—Anon.—NV 


352 




TITLE INDEX 


Uncle 


Two Wives, The.—W: D. Howells.—AA 
Two Worlds.—Mortimer Collins.—GP 
Tying her Bonnet under her Chin.—Nora Perry.—BIL 
Typewriter Tune, The.—Anon.—-WS 15 
Typical Dutchman, The.—H. J. Van Dyke.—TMD 
Tyrannic Love, Sel. fr. (Ah, how Sweet it is to Love 
— fr. Act IV., Sc. 1.)—J: Dryden.—BNL — 
°B 

Tyrant’s Plea, The. (Frags, fr. various au/liors.) — 
BNL 

Tyre, Venice, and England.—J: Ruskin. See Stones 
of Venice, The. 


u 


U. S. Spells “Us.”—May N. Bradford.—WR 24 
Ubique. ( Hamilton Literary Monthly.) —CG 2 
Ubique.—Joshua Sylvester.—OB 

(Love’s Omnipresence.) — FEP — FTA — OH — 
PGT 1—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—WEP 1 

(“Were I as base as is the lowly plain.”)—BNL 
Uffia.—Harriet R. White.—NA 

Ugliest of Seven, The.— (Ad. fr. the German by) M. G. 
Townsend.—CS 2 

Ugo Bassi’s Sermon in a Hospital, Sel. fr. —H. E. H. 
King.—HDL 

Uhland.—W: A. Butler.—HBP 
Ulalume.—Edgar A. Poe.—AA—BPB 
Ulf in Ireland.—C: De Kay.—AA—MR 
Ulric Dahlgren.—Kate B. Sherwood.—BAB—EDY 
Ultima Veritas.—Washington Gladden.—TAS—TMD 
Ulvsses.—Alfred Tennyson.—AVP—- BS 14—EPs — 
FEP—HBP—LtC—OS 3—VA—WEP 4 
Ulysses and Achilles.—W: Shakespeare.— See Troi- 
lus and Cressida. 

Ulysses and the Siren.—S: Daniel.—OB 
Ulysses S. Grant.—T: W. Higginson.—MRS 
Ulysses S. Grant.—G: D. Robinson.-—ED 1 
Umbrella March.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Umbrella on the Beach, The. ( Harper’s Bazar.) —CH 
Umbrellas to Mend.—-W: M. Gill.—WR 20 
Umpires.—Mary M. Dodge.—OH 

Un Bacio Dato non e Mai Perduto.—W: W. Story.— 
OH 

(“'Through the tense, clear sky above us.”— abr .)— 
FTA 

Un Potpourri d’Elocution.— (Arr. by) Claudius Rosaire. 
—SR 6 

“Una.'—Anon.—CP 

Una and the Lion.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Una and the Red Crosse Knight. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Unaccountable Mystery, An.—Paul Denton.—CS 22 
Unanswered.—Martha G. Dickinson.—AA 
Unappreciated Genius.—Millie M. Olcott.—StD 
Una’s Marriage.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queen, 
The. 

Unattainable, The.—Anon.—FAS 
Unawares.—Joe Kerr.—GH 
Unbelief.—Phoebe Cary.—TAS 

Unbeliever, The.—T: Chalmers. — CS 4—HR—LLC— 
PS 

Unbidden Guest, The.—Carlotta Perry.—HSS 2 
Unbidden Guest, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Unbolted Door, The.—E: Garrett.—CS 10—PS 
Unborn, The.—Julia N. Finch.—AA 
Unburied Woman, The. (Dial.) —Anon. ; —NDP 
Uncertain Pledge, An. (Yale Record.) —BS 21 
(His Oath.)—WR 7 

Unchangeable, The.—W: Shakespeare.—FTA—PGT 1 
.(Sonnet.)—ELP (CIX.—C.)—HBP—OB (XVII.) 
Uncle, The.—H. G. Bell.—BS 16—CS 9—SR 7 
Uncle Abel and Little Edward. (Little Edward— C.) 

—Harriet B. Stowe.—WCLI 2 
“Uncle Ben.”—Mary Bradley.—BS 13 
Uncle Billy’s Disaster.—Anon.—DCR 
Uncle Bob’s Story of Daniel.—Anon.—WR 12 
Uncle Brightens up.—Jas. W. Riley. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A. 

Uncle Cephas’ Yarn. (Century Magazine.) —CH—CRR 
Uncle Daniel’s Apparition and Prayer.—S: L. Clemens 
and C: D. Warner. See Gilded Age, The. 
Uncle Daniel's Introduction to a Mississippi Steamer. 

—S: L. Clemens and C: D. Warner. See 
Gilded Age, The. 

Uncle Dan’l’s Apparition [and Prayer],—S: L. Clemens 
and C: D. Warner. See Gilded Age, The. 


Uncle Dan’l’s Prayer.—S: L. Clemens and C: D. War¬ 
ner. See Gilded Age, The. 

Uncle Deal’s Lecture.—Alice A. Coale.—StD 
Uncle Dick’s Version.—Anon.—-WR 2 
Uncle Eben’s Opinion.—Anon.—SR 12 
Uncle Edom and the Flurridy Nigger.—E. F. Andrews. 
—CS 31 

Uncle Edom and the Yankee Book-agent,^E. F. An¬ 
drews.—CS 30 

Uncle Eph’s Heaven.—Fred E. Brooks.—WR 16 
Uncle Esek’s Wisdom. (Century Magazine.) —DSS 
Uncle Ethan Ripley. (C.)—Hamlin Garland. 

(Uncle Ethan Ripley’s Speculation— cond.) —WR22 
Uncle Ethan Ripley’s Speculation.—Hamlin Garland. 
See foregoing. 

Uncle Gabe at the Corn-shucking.—J. A. Macon.—CD 
Uncle Gabe on Church Matters.—J. A. Macon.—CD 
Uncle Gabe’s White Folks.—T: N. Page.—AA—HBR 
Uncle George was There.—Anon.—DSS 
Uncle Ike’s Roosters.—Aaron W. Fredericks.—CS 23 
Uncle Isrul’s Call.—Caroline F. Stanley.—WR 21 
Uncle Jacob’s Money.—H. E. McBride.—CS 24 
Uncle Jo.—Anon.—CS 6 

Uncle Joel on Peddlers. (Albany Argus.) —CRR 
Uncle John.—Anon.—MC 

“Uncle John” Writes to his City Cousin.—D: K. Bu¬ 
chanan.—CS 32 

Uncle Jotham’s Boarder.—Annie T. Slosson.—CS 35 
Uncle Mart’s Poem.—Jas. W. Riley.—CW 
Uncle Mellick Dines with his Master.—J. R. Eggleston. 
—DCR 

Uncle Morton’s Gift. (Dial.) —Lilian F. Wells.—CDs 
Uncle Nate’s Funeral.—Anon.—SR 13 
Uncle Nathan’s Creed.—Anon.—DSS 
Uncle Nathan’s Indian.—A. H. Widney.—MD 
Uncle Ned’s Banjo Song.—Anon.—CD 
Uncle Newton—a Pinchtown Pauper.—Armistead C. 
Gordon.—WR 14 

Uncle Noah’s Ghost.—Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.—BS 20 
Uncle; or, “Comparisons are Odious,” The.—Ellen 
Pickering.—DDD 
Uncle Pete.—Anon.—DE—PS 

Uncle Pete and Marse George.—Anon.—CD—CDV— 
SDR 

Uncle Peter and the Trolley Car.—W. H. Neall.—CS 34 
Uncle Peter at the “Big House.”—W. H. Neall.—CS 35 
Uncle Peter’s Masterly Argument. (Dusky Philoso¬ 
phy, I. A Story of Seven Devils— C.) —Frank 
R. Stockton.—WR 15 (cond.) 

Uncle Pete’s Counsel to the Newly Married.—"Ed¬ 
mund Kirke.”—BS 1 

(Darky’s Counsel to the Newly Married, A.)—CS 5 
Uncle Pete’s Plea.—Jos. Allgood.—CS 32 
Uncle Pete’s Sermon.—Irwin Russell.—DE—PS 

(Half-way Doin’s—C.)—CDV—CS 19—SDR 
Uncle Podger Hangs a Picture.—Jerome K. Jerome. 
See Three Men in a Boat. 

Uncle Remus and his Friends—His Songs and Ballads, 
I. (Plough-hands’ Song, The.)—Joel C. Har¬ 
ris.—AA 

Uncle Remus, his Songs and his Sayings, Sels. fr. — 
Joel C. Harris. 

Revival Hymn.—AWH—THP 

(Uncle Remus’s Revival Hymn.)—CS 14 

Wonderful Tar Baby Story, The.—WR 26 
(Uncle Remus’ Tar-baby.)—DCR 
(Wonderful Tar-baby, The— si. abr. and ind. 
How Mr. Rabbit was too Sharp for Mr. Fox, 
abr.) —NP 

Uncle Remus’Tar-baby.—Joel C. Harris. See Uncle 
Remus, his Songs and his Sayings. 

Uncle Remus’s Revival Hymn.—Joel C. Harris. See 
Uncle Remus, his Songs and his Sayings. 
Uncle Reuben’s Baptism.—Anon.—CS 12—DCR 
Uncle Reuben’s Tale. (Atlantic Monthly.) —SCS 
Uncle Sammy.—Will Carleton.—AWH 
Uncle Sam’s a Hundred. (New York Evening Post.) — 
CS 12 

Uncle Sam’s Birthday.—Clara J. Denton.'—LL 
Uncle Sam’s Great Bullfight.—Eliot White.—SO 
Uncle Sam’s Spring Cleaning.—S. W. Foss.—PAPm 
Uncle Sam’s Wars.—H. E. McBride.—MHD 
"Uncle Schneider” Visits the Side-shows.—Anon.— 
DRR 

Uncle Simon and Uncle Jim.—Artemus Ward.—NA 
Uncle Tascus and the Deed.—Holman F. Day.— 
THP 

"Uncle Todd.”—Isabel A. Mallon.—TMR 
Uncle Tom. (Tab. — based on Uncle Tom’s Cabin.)— 
Tony Denier.—TDT 

Uncle Tom and the Hornets. (Detroit Free Press.) — 
CH—CS 20 

Uncle Tommy’s Philosophy.—G: B. Hynson.—BS 24 


353 




Uncle 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Sels. fr. —Harriet B. Stowe. 

Cassy. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXIII.)—WR 10 
Cruelty of Legree, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXIII.)— 
NP 

Death of Uncle Tom, The. (Sels. fr. Chs. XL. and 
XLI.)—WR 16 

Escape, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. VII.)—NP 
Eva’s Death. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXVI.)—BS 2—CS 9 
Freeman’s Defence, The. (Ch. XVII.— cond.) — 
WR 10 

Little Eva. (Sel. fr. Ch. XIV.)—LLC 
Little Evangelist, The. (Ch. XXV.)—CS 10 
Topsy and Eva. (Tab. — arr. by Tony Denier.)— 
TDT 

Topsy’s First Lesson. (Sels. fr. Chs. XX. and 
XXV.)—BS 16—MHR (abr.) 

(Topsy— ptly. diff. sel. fr. Ch. XX.) 

Uncle Tom’s Testament. (Sel. fr. Ch. XIV.)—LLC 
Uncle Tom’s Testament.—Harriet B. Stowe. See 
Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Uncle Turner’s Last Words. (Detroit Free Press.) — 
CDV—SDR 

Uncle Zeke’s Opinion.—W. H. Sabean.—SDD 
Uncle’s Reception, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—MAD 
Uncomfortable Call, An. (Dial.) —Anon.—CS 36 
Uncomfortable Predicament, An. (Dial.) —Anon. — 
MND 

Unconscious Greatness of Stonewall Jackson, The.— 
Moses D. Hoge.—NC—PEO 
Uncover to the Flag.—E: C. Cheverton.—PAPm 
Uncut Diamond, An.—Anon.—CS 33 
Undaunted Mary.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Under an Umbrella.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 17 
Under Canvas.—Rob’t, Lord Lytton. See Lucile. 
Under False Colours.—R. A. L.—CG 3 
Under Laurels and Maples. (C.) —E: E. Hale. 
(Omnipresence.)—HDL 

Under Mr. Milton’s Picture.—J: Dryden. See Under 
the Portrait of Milton. 

Under my Window.—T: Westwood. — BNL—HBP— 
LC—OS 1—WCL 

Under the Apple-tree.—Eliz. A. Allen.—AD 
Under the Blue.—Fs. F. Browne.—AA 
Under the Cloud.—C: G. Ames.—TAS 
Under the Cross.—W: C. Richards.—HDL 
Under the Daisies.—Hattie T. Griswold.—GP 
Under the Greenwood Tree. — W: Shakespeare. See 
As You Like It. 

Under the Holly Bough.—C: Mackay.—OS 2—PP— 
PTS (arr. as dial.)— YPS 
Under the Lamplight.—Annie R. Blount.—CS 3 
Under the Leaves.—Anon.—POS ■ 

Under the Leaves.—Albert Laighton.—SN 
Under the Light-house.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Under the Lindens.—Walter S. Landor.—VS—YBF 
Under the Old Elm.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD (sels. fr. 
Pts. I. and III.)—AP 

(Washington.)—BNL (sels. fr. Pts. III., V., and 
VI.)—GN (Pt. V., St. 3.) 

Under the Old Oak Tree—a Garland.—Harriet E. Dur- 
fee.—CS 35 

Under the Palms. (Nile Notes of a Howadji, Ch.XXII., 
cond.) —G: W. Curtis.—AD 
Under the Pine.—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 
Under the Portrait of Milton. [Prefixed to “Paradise 
Lost.”]—J: Dryden.—EPs—OS 3 
(Lines Printed under the Engraved Portrait of 
Milton.—C.)—WEP 2 

(Lines Written under the Portrait of John Milton.) 
—BNL 

(Under Mr. Milton’s Picture.)—FEP 
Under the Purple and Motley.—Rob’t J. Burdette.— 
CS 34 

Under the Red Cross.—C. Hickox.—AA 
"Under the reign of the Moorish caliphs.”—Anon.—AD 
Under the Rod.—Mary B. Dana.—SAE 
(Passing under the Rod.)—CS 13 
Under the Rose.—Catherine Y. Glen.—CG 2 
Under the Rose.—R: H. Stoddard.—BIL—FTA 
Under the Shade of the Trees (Shade of the Trees, The 
— C.). —Marg. J. Preston.—AWB—EDY— 
LLC (si. abr. and si. diff.) 

Under the Snow. (Christmas in the Snow.)—Anon.— 
MMR 

Under the Snow.—Rob’t Collyer.— AA — CS 36 — 
HS (abr.) —PPSr 

Under the Snow.—Fay Hempstead.—POS 
Under the Snows.—Kathe. L. Bates.—TAS 
Under the Stars.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—TAS 
Under the Stars.—Wallace Rice.—AA 
Under the Stars and Stripes.—Madison Cawein.— 
PAPm 

Under the Violets.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA—ASL 


Under the Violets.—E: Young.—AA 
Under the Wagon.—Anon.—MYF 
Under the Washington Elm, Cambridge.—Oliver W. 
Holmes.—AD—PEO 

Under the Wheels. (SI. abr.) —Will Carleton.—CS 32 
Under the Willows.—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD (abr.) —AP 
Under Two Flags, Sels. fr. —-Louise de la Ram6e. 
Battle of Zaraila, The. (Ch. XXVI., cond.) —BS 24 
—PFP 

Forest King’s Race. (Sel. fr. Ch. III.)—WR 19 
(Military Steeple-chase, The—abr.)—CS 33 
Under Two Flags.—Juliet W. Tompkins.—CG 2 
Under-current, The.—S. F. Fiester.—BS 26 
Underground Jottings.—E: F. Turner.—VSG 
Under-prefect, The.—Anon.—WR 25 
Undersong, The.—Ralph W. Emerson. See Wood- 
notes. 

Undertaking, The.—J: Donne.—ELP—EPs 
Under-tow, The.—Anon.—GH 
Undertow, The.—Carrie B. Morgan.—CS 33 
Undeveloped Lives, The.—W: E. H. Lecky.—TIP 
Undine. (Tab.) (Scribner’s Monthly.) —BS 8—TCP 
Undiscovered Country, The. (Sonnet XXIV.)—T: B. 
Aldrich.—AA 

Undiscovered Country, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.— 
KNE—TAS 

Undowered.—Harriet McE. Kimball.—HP 
Undressing Little Ned.—Anon.—TS 
Une Robe Angelique.—Willis Merritt.—SR 5 
Unequal Game, An.—Anon.—FLS 
Unequal Partnership, An.—Louise S. Upham.—CS 34 
Unexpected, The.—Will J. Lampton.—BS 21 
(Once.)—WR 15 

Unexpected Company.—Anon.—DDM 

Unexpected Denouement, An.—Jerome K. Jerome. 

See Three Men in a Boat. 

Unexpected Greeting, An.—Anon.—WR 20 
Unexpected Son, The.—Anon.—CSS 
Unfading Beauty, The.—T: Carew.—OB (abr.) 

(Disdain Returned— C.) —FEP—HBP 
(SI. abr.)— ELP—ES—WEP 2 
(Abr.)— EPs—OEL 

(“He that loves a rosy cheek”— abr.) —BNL 
(Proper Woman, A— abr.) —CEL 
(True Beauty[, The]— abr.)— BFV—FTA—PGT 1 
—YBF 

Unfading Evergreen, The.—Anon.—AD 
Unfailing Cruise, The.—Eliz. Charles.—HDL 
(Cruse that Faileth not, The.)—SSS 
(“Is thy cruse of comfort failing?”— sel.) —GG 
Unfaithful Shepherdess, The.—Anon.—PGT 1 
(Faithless Shepherdess, The.)—OB 
Unfaithfulness.—H. E. McBride.—CS 26 
Unfaltering Trust.—Ray Palmer.—TAS 
Unfinished Manuscript, The.—Anon.—CS 25—SR 12 
Unfinished Prayer, The.—Anon.—HP 
(Abr.)—MYF—SR 7 

(Included, also, in Now I Lay Me in CS 5) 
Unfinished Prophecy, An.—C: E. Jakeway.—TCV 
Unfinished Still—Anon.—CS 12—HP—SR 1 
Unfolding the Flocks.—J: Fletcher. See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The. 

Unfortunate Likeness, An.—W: S. Gilbert.—CS 7 
Unfortunate Phrase, An.—F. S.—CG 2 
Unfortunate Scholar, The.—Anon.—FDY 
Unfulfilment.—F. L. Bushnell.—AA 
Ungrateful Beauty.—T: Carew. See following. 
Ungrateful Beauty.—T: Carew.—ES 

(Ingrateful Beauty Threatened— C .)—OB 
Ungrateful Cupid, The. (Ode III.)—Anacreon (tr. 
by J: Hughes).—CGd 

(Cheat of Cupid, The— tr. by Rob’t Herrick.) — 
HBP 

Unguarded Gates.—T: B. Aldrich.—AA 
Unhappy Lot of Mr. Knott, The. (Sel. fr. New House, 
The.)—Jas. R. Lowell.—AWH 
“Unillumined Verge, The.”—Rob’t Bridges.—AA 
Uninscribed Monument on One of the Battle-fields of 
the Wilderness, An.—Herman Melville.—AA.— 
EDY 

Union, The.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Brother Jona¬ 
than’s Lament for Sister Caroline. 

Union, The.—Fs. DeH. Janvier.—BS 4 
Union, A.—Kathe. E. Junkermann.—WR 25 
Union, The, Sel. fr. 1799. (Irish Parliament, The.)— 
W: Conyngham, Lord Plunket.—CR 
Union and its Government, The.—W: G. Simms.—SS 
Union and Liberty.—Oliver W. Holmes.— CS 2 — SO 
_WCLG 2 

Union Forever, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 13—TCP 
Union Linked with Liberty.—Andrew Jackson.—CS 7 
—SS 

Union of Blue and Gray.—Paul H. Hayne.—PRR 


354 




TITLE INDEX 


Upon 


Union of Church and State, The.—Gabriel Honors 
de Mirabeau.—PS 

Union of North and South, The.—Frances E. Willard. 
—WR 18 

Union of the States, The.—Edmund Randolph.—SR 8 
(Extent of Country no Bar to Union— ptly. same.) 
—SS 

Union of the States, The.—Dan’l Webster. See Char¬ 
acter of Washington, The. 

Union with Great Britain. (Sel. fr. Anti-Union 
Speeches.)—H: Grattan.—OM 
Unit, A.-—Eliz. Stoddard.—BS 19 
United.—Helen F. O’Neill.—AD 
United at Last.—H. E. McBride.—MCD 
United at Last. ( Springfield Republican.) —CS 20 
(Blue and Gray.)—CPL 
(Two Colors.)—TMR 
United Country, A.—G: F. Hoar.—TMD 
United in Death.—Anon.—SO 

(Foes United in Death.)—CS 3—KNE—SR 12 
United Order of Half-shells, The. ( Detroit Free Press.) 
—DCR 

(Initiated as a Member of the United Order, etc.)— 
BDD 

United States. (In Lyra Apostolica.)—J: Keble.— 
WEP 4 

"United States,” and "Macedonian,” The. (I.)—Anon. 
—AWB 

“United States” and “Macedonian,” The. (II.)— 
Anon.—AWB—EDY 

United States National Anthem.—W: R. Wallace.— 
CS 2 

(Psalm of the Union, A— longer and si. diff. vers.) 
—WRD 

United States of Europe, The. (Fr. Addresses at the 
Peace Congress, 1849.)—Victor Hugo.—SS— 
SSD 

United Workmen, The.—Anon.—YFD 
Unity of the Catholic Church, The.—J: Dryden. See 
Hind and the Panther, The. 

Universal Education. (Sel. jr. The Hundredth Anni¬ 
versary of the Surrender of Lord Cornwallis.) 
—Rob’t C. Winthrop.—FD 1—SR 5 
Universal Hymn of Nature, The.—Jas. Thomson. See 
Seasons, The. 

Universal Prayer, The.—Alex. Pope.— BNL — CS 33 
—FEP—HBP—LLC—OS 3 
Universal Religious Liberty.—Dan’l O’Connell.—SS 
Universal Suffrage, May 20th, 1850.—Victor Hugo.— 
SS 

Universal Worship.—J: Pierpont.—TAS 
University and True Patriotism, The.—Anon.—CP 
University of Gottingen, The.—G: Canning.—MHR— 
OS 2 

(Song by Rogero[, the Captive].)—ESs—FEP 
(Song of One Eleven Years in Prison.)—HBP— 
THP 

(Song Sung by Rogero, etc.)—HPE 
University the Training Camp of the Future, The.— 
H: W. Grady. See Against Centralization.. 
Unjust National Acquisition. (SI. diff.) —T: Corwin. 
—CS 1—WRD 

(Danger of the Spirit of Conquest.)—OM 
(Spirit of Conquest, The.)—NC 
Unjust Suspicion. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. Rook.— 
YFE 

Unkind Words.—Marg. E. Sangster.—OH 

(Our Own— C.) — BIL — BS 4 (at. to S. H. T.)— 
CS 13*—FT A—HP—LLC—TAV 
Unkinde Guest, The.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astro- 
phel and Stella. 

Unknown.—W: H. Gardner.—SSS 
Unknown Country, The.—Dinah M. Craik.—HSS 3 
Unknown Eros, The, Sets. fr. —Coventry Patmore. See: 
Farewell, A. 

Magna est Veritas. 

Toys, The. 

Two Deserts, The. 

Unknown Hero, An.—E. L. Bogart.—TMR 
Unknown Hero, An.—W: G. McCabe.—BAB 
Unknown Poets.—W: Wordsworth. See Excursion, 
The. 

Unknown Rider, The [or An].—G: Lippard. See Bene¬ 
dict Arnold. 

Unknown Speaker, The. — G: Lippard. See Fourth 
of July, 1776, The. 

Unless. Eliz. B. Browning. See Woman’s Short¬ 
comings, A. 

Unless.—Ella D. Glynes.—AA 
Unlocked.—W: C. Fitch.—CG 1 
Unmanifest Destiny.—R:Hovey.—AA 
Unnoticed and Unhonored Heroes.—W: E. Chanmng. 
—BS 9 


Unnoticed Bound, The.—Anon.—CS 14 
Unofficial.—E. Nesbit.—WR 13 

Unpaid Seamstress, The.—A Note of Warning.—Anon. 
—CS 14—DS 

Unpardonable Sin, The.—Anon.—CS 29 
Unpraised Picture, An.—R: Burton.—AA 
Unquiet Grave, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Unregistered Record, An.—W. C. Cherry.—BS 21 
Unrequited Love.—W: Shakespeare. See Twelfth 
Night. 

Unrest.—H: S. Cornwell.—TAV 
Unrest in Paradise.—Anon.—WR 16 
Unreturning.—Eliz. Stoddard.—AA 
Unreturning Brave, The.—Lord Byron. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Unreturning Brave, The.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Ode 
Recited at the Harvard Commemoration. 
Unsatisfactory.—Frd’k W. H. Myers.—BNL—FLS 
Unseen.—C: G. Ames.—TAS 
Unseen Angel, An.—Nancy P. McLean.—CS 31 
Unseen Battle-field, The.—Anon.—SSS 
Unseen Depths, The.—W. C. Langdon, Jr.—CG 1 
Unseen, not Unknown.—Ray Palmer.—TAS 
Unseen Playmate, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Unseen Spirits.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—AA—BNL— 
FP 

Unseen World—at Home, The.—Christina G. Rossetti. 
_FEP 

(At Home.— C.) —VA 
Unseen yet Unseen.—Anon.—WR 6 
Unselfishness of Washington, The.—Rob’t T. Paine.— 
BLP—PEO 

Unsophisticated.—Emile Pickhardt.—CS 34 

Unspoken.—Anon.—CS 26 

Unspoken.—A. St. John Adcock.—FLS 

Unspoken Question, The.—Anon.—FLS 

Unspoken Words.—Anon.—HP 

Unsuccessful Advance, An.—Anon.—MND 

Unsuccessful Attempt to Raise the Wind, An.—C: 

Dickens. See Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Unsuccessful Plan, The.—Anon.—WR 15 

(Country Squire, The— shorter and diff. vers.) — 
MHR 

Unsuspected Fact, An.—E: Cannon.—BVC—NA 
Untamed.—C: Mair.—TCV 
Unter den Linden.—Emma H. Nason.—SC 
Unter den Linden.—Harry T. Peck.—EDY 
Until Death.—Anon.—FLS 
Untimely Call, An. (N. Y. Sun.) —SR 4 
Untimely Thought, An.—T: B. Aldrich.—PYO 
Untimely Trumpet, The. (Harper’s Monthly.) —SDR 
Unto the Least of These Little Ones.—Amalie Rives. 
—TAS 

Unto the Perfect Day.—Willis B. Allen.—TAS 
Unto Thee.—Horatius Bonar.—SSS 
Unwelcome Guest, The.—H. E. McBride.—StD 
Unwelcome Intrusion, An.—Anon.—DCD 
Unwilling Muse, The.—Guy W. Carryl.—CG 2 
Unwilling Witness, The.—Anon.—FHE 
Unwise Choice, The.—Alice Cary.—BIL 
Unwritten Music, Sel. fr. —Nathaniel P. Willis.—AE 
Unwritten Poems.—Anon.-—CS 24—SR 5 
Unwritten Poems.—W: Winter.—AA 
Up Above and Down Below.—W: A. Alexander.— 
PPSr 

Up and Doing.—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
Up at a Villa—Down in the City.—Rob’t Browning.— 
WEP 4—WR 14 (si. abr.) 

Up Higher.—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 31 
Up in a Wild.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—POS 
Up in the Loft.—Will Carleton.—CS 37 
Up in the Morning Early.—Rob’t Burns.—LC 
Up in the Tree.—G: Macdonald. See At the Back of 
the North Wind. _ • 

"Up, quit thy bower.”—Joanna Baillie. See Beacon, 
The. 

Up Thar Behind the Sky!—J. M. Munyon.—CS 29 
Up the Nile, Sel. fr. —Joaquin Miller. See Ship in the 
Desert, The (Dreamers). 

"Up! Up! My friend, and quit your books.”—W: 
W ordsworth.—SN 

("Sweet is the lore which nature brings ”— br. sel.) 
—HSS 3 

(Tables Turned, The—C.)—HBP—LLC—WEP 4 
—YBF 

Upas-tree, The.—Lydia H. Sigourney.—WR 18 
Uphill.—Christina G. Rossetti.—AVP—BNL—CEL— 
CS 17—FEP—GP—OB—PGT 2—PYO — VA 
—YBF 

Upon a Child. ( C.) —Rob’t Herrick.—ELP 

(Epitaph upon a Child that Died.)—OB—YBF 
Upon a Child that Died. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick.—ELP 
(Epitaph upon a Child that Died.)—OB 


355 




Upon 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Upon a Stolen Kiss.—G: Wither.—BNL 
(Stolen Kiss, A.)—FEP 

Upon an Honest Man’s Fortuhe. (C.) —J: Fletcher. 
(Honest Man’s Fortune, An.)—EPs 
(Our Acts our Angels Are— br. sel.) —OS 2 
Upon being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party (Im¬ 
promptu: Upon being Obliged, etc.—C.).—THP 
(On being Obliged, etc.)—HPE 
Upon Combing her Hair.—E: Herbert, Lord Herbert 
of Cherbury.—WEP 2 
Upon her Feet.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL 
Upon her Lips. ( Yale Record.) —CG 3 
Upon Himself. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick. 

(Lines upon Himself.)—EDY 
Upon Julia’s Clothes. (C.) —Rob’t Herrick.—ELP— 
OB—OH—WEP 2 
(Poetry of Dress, The, II.)—PGT 1 
(Whenas in Silks.)—YBF 
(“Whenas in silks my Julia goes.”)—BNL 
Upon Master W. Montague, his Return from Travel, 
Sel. fr. (Airs of Spring, The.)—T: Carew.—FEP 
—HBP 

(Sweetly Breathing, Vernal Air.)—BNL 
‘‘Upon my lap my sovereign sits.”—R: Rowlands.— 
PGT 1 

(Lullaby[, A].)—OB—YBF 
Upon Pope’s Translation of Homer.—Anon.—HPE 
Upon Sappho [Sapho] Sweetly Playing and Sweetly 
Singing.—Rob’t Herrick.—ES 
Upon the Beach.—H: D. Thoreau.—GP 
(Fisher’s Boy, The.)—AA 

Upon the Book and Picture of the Seraphical Saint 
Teresa.—R: Crashaw.—OB (si. abr.) 

(Flaming Heart, The.)—ELP—WEP 2 (si. abr.) 
Upon the Death of King Charles I.—Jas., Marquis of 
Montrose.—EDY 

Upon the Death of Sir Albertfus] Morton’s Wife.— Sir 
H: Wotton.—FEP—OB—WEP 2 
Upon the Hill before Centreville.—G: H. Boker.—AWB 
Upon the Loss of his Mistresses.—Rob’t Herrick.—ELP 
Upon the Shore.—Rob’t Bridges.—VA 
Upon the Sudden Restraint of the Earl of Somerset, 
then Falling from Favor.—Sir H: Wotton.— 
FEP 

Upon the Threshold.—G. E.—HP 

Upon the Weakness and Misery of Man. (Sel. fr. Sa¬ 
tire upon the Weakness and Misery of Man.)— 
S: Butler.—WEP 2 

Upon Westminster Bridget, Sept. 3,1802],—W: Words¬ 
worth—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
(Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 1802 
—C.)—WEP 4 

(‘‘Earth has not anything to show more fair.”)— 
HBR 

(Morning in London.)—HBP—OS 3 

(Sonnet Composed upon Westmister Bridge, 1802.) 

—BNL—FEP—MBL 
(Westminster Bridge.)—LLC—WR 1 
Upper Chamber, An.—Frances Bannerman.—OB 
Upright Man, The. (A Book of Airs, Pt. I., XVIII.) 
—T: Campion.—YBF 
(Integer Vitae.)—OB 

(Man of Life Upright, The.)—ELP—OEL—PGT 1 
Uprising See the Fitful Lark.—Anon.—NA 
Upside Down.—G: Cooper.—HSS 2—TFS 
Upward and Onward.—Paul H. Hayne.—BS 17 
(Lyric of Action.)—BS 22 
Urania. (C.) —Matthew Arnold. 

(Excuse.)—HBP—OH 
Urania, I. (C.) —W: Drummond. 

(Change.)—LLC 

(Sonnet: “Triumphing chariots,” etc.)—HBP 
Urania.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Rhymed Lesson, A. 
Urceus Exit.—Austin Dobson. See Rose-leaves. 
Urchins’ Dance, The. (Song fr. The Maydes Meta¬ 
morphosis, Act II., Sc. 2.)—J: Lyly.—ELP 
(Song of the Fairies.)—FEP 
Uriel.—Ralph W. Emerson.—OB 

Ursus and the Aurochs.—Henryk Sienkiewicz. See 
Quo Vadis. 

Urvasi.—Helen B. Bostwick.—BIL 
Us Boys.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Us Two.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Use and Abuse of Property, The.—Theodore Roose¬ 
velt.—MRS—SR 13 

Use and Worth of Knowledge.—Fs. Bacon. See 
Worth of Knowledge, The. 

Use for Boys, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Use of Arbor Day, The. (Garden and Forest.) —AD 
Use of Flowers, The.—Mary Howitt. — AD—FEP— 
HSS 1—LLC—NV—PC—PHS—YBT (si. abr.) 

(Abr.) —BNL—PPSr 
(Uses of the Flowers, The— sel.) —TFS 


Use Plain Language.—Anon.—KNE 
Use Precepts for Girls.—Anon.—CS 24 
Used-to-be, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—BS 23 
Useful Life, The, Br.sel. fr. (Perseverance.)—Horatius 
Bonar.—HDL 

Useful Little Words.—Anon.—TFS 
Useful Plough, The.—Anon.— BNL—BVC—CGd—LC 
Useful Possession, A.—Anon.—DLF 
Uses of Adversity, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.)— 
BNL 

Uses of Astronomy, The, Sels. fr. —E: Everett. 

Eternal Clockwork of the Skies. (Br. sel.) —SPE 
Galileo Galilei.—FD 1—OM (si. cond.) 

(Discoveries of Galileo— abr.) —CS 1—DS—PTS 
—SM—WCLG 2 
(Galileo.)—OS 2 (sel.) —SO 
Sunrise.—SAE 

(Morning— sel.) —BS 5—CS 16—CSS—SA 
(Wonders of the Dawn, The— si. abr.) —PPS— 
TMD 

Uses of History, The.—Washington Irving. See Knick¬ 
erbocker History of New York. 

Uses of Life, The.—Anon.—SSS 
Uses of Poetry and Art.—J: S. Mill.—LLC 
Uses of the Flowers.—Mary Howitt. See Use of Flow¬ 
ers, The. 

Usual Way, The.—F: E. Weatherly—BS 17 —HBR 
—THP—WR 15 
Usurper, A.—Anon.—TL 
Ute Lover, The.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 
Utility of Booing, The. (Fr. The Man of the World.) 
—C: Macklin.—CR 

Utility of History.—Louis Philippe, Comte de Segur.— 
SS 

Utility of the Beautiful, The.—J: Ruskin. See Mod¬ 
ern Painters. 

Utilizing our Failures.—Lyman Abbott.—SAE 
Utmost, The.—^Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—VA 
Utopia.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
(What. Will We Do?)—AWH 
Utterance.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 


V 

Vacant Cage, The.—C: Tennyson-Turner.—VA 
Vacant Chair, The.—Anon.—CS 22 
Vacant Places. (Friends' Intelligencer.) —SSS 
Vacation.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Vacation.—Lizzie M. Hadley.—KC 
Vacation.—Z. F. Riley.—BS 20 
Vacation Days.—Marg. Sidney.—YBT 
Vacation Fragment, A.—Susan Hall.—CS 29 
Vacation Hymn, A.—Anon.—CS 11 
Vacation Song.—Katha. L. Bates.—POS 
(Schoolroom I Love Best, The.)—WR 17 
Vacation Song.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Vacation Time.—Anon.—DJS 
Vagabond Song, A.—Bliss Carman.—GN 
Vagabonds, The.—E. P. Johnson.—VA 
Vagabonds, The.—J: A. Macy.—CG 3 
Vagabonds, The.—J: T. Trowbridge. — AA—AE (sel.) 
— BNL — BS 3 — CR — CS 1 — FEP—FTR 
—HNS—MMR—SA—SC—W’RD 
Vagabonds. (Wesleyan Literary Monthly.) —CG 3 
Vagrant, A.—Josephine Pollard.—HP 
Vagrant Pansies.—Ellen M. H. Cortissoz.—PHS 
Vain Desire, A.—Theodore Wratislaw.VA 
Vain Wish, A.—Philip B. Marston.—VA 
Vale!—Anon.—FLS 

Vale. (Written on the Night of his Suicide— C.) —R: 
Realf.—GP 

(“When for me the end has come,” etc.— br. sel.) — 
GG 

Vale of Avoca, The.—T: Moore.—BNL 
(Meeting of the Waters, The— C.) —FEP 
Vale of Cashmere, The.—T: Moore. See Lalla Rookh. 
Vale of Estabelle.—J: S. Thomson.—TCV 
Valediction Forbidding Mourning, A.—J: Donne.— 
BNL (sel.) —ELP—FEP—WEP 1 
Valedictory.—Anon.—DLF 
Valedictory.—Anon.—MCS 
Valedictory, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Valedictory.—Adam L. Gordon.—VA 
(Lay me Low.)—-IIP 

Valedjctory. (2)—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
Valedictory.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Valedictory[, A],—A. F. Shoals.—DLS—LPS—NPS 
—PP—YP 

Valedictory.—G: Thatcher.—TK 

Valedictory Address to the Senate. (Sel.) —H: Clay. 
—MRS 


356 




TITLE INDEX 


Verdict 


Valedictory for a Small Boy.—Anon.—DST—KJ 
Valedictory Sonnet to the River Duddon.—W: Words¬ 
worth.—OB 

(After-thought— C .)—WEP 4 
Valentine, A.—Anon.—CG 1 
Valentine, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Valentine, A.—Anon.—PPh 
Valentine, The.—Mary D. Brine.—-CS 4 
Valentine, A.—Eugene Field.—I.S 
Valentine, A.—Jeannette B. Gillespy.—AA—CG 3 
Valentine, A.—R. M. Green.—CG 3 
Valentine, A.—Ethel Hobart.—CG 3 
Valentine, A.—H. W. Holmes.—CG 3 
Valentine, A.—S. J. McM.—CG 3 
Valentine, A.—Mary T. Reiley.—FLS 
Valentine, A.—Laura E. Richards.—AA 
Valentine, A.—Frank D. Sherman.—EDY 
Valentine, A.—-G: R. Sims.—BR (si. abr.) —CS 26 
Valentine to a Flirt.—Felix Carmen.—TL 
Valentine to a Man of Worth.—E: A. Church.—HS 
Valentine Verses. ( l erses fr. Billington’s Valentine.) 

—T: N. Page.—EDY 
Valentine’s Day.—C: Lamb.—HS 
Valentinian, Sels. fr .—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Care-charming Sleep. (Song fr. Act V., Sc. 2.)— 
YBF 

(Invocation to Sleep.)—ELP—OEL—WEP 2 
(Slumber-song.)—CEL 
(Song from “Valentinian.”)—FEP 
God Lyseus. (Song fr.Y ., 8.)—OB 
(Song to Bacchus.)—ELP—WEP 2 
Spring-time and Love. (Song .and '2nd song fr. 
II., 5.)—ES 

Love’s Emblems, (1st sonj.) —ELP—OB 
(Spring.)—HBP—YBF 
Hear, ye Ladies. (~n r l Song.) —OB—YBF 
(Power of Love.)—FEP 
(Song from “Valentinian.”)—WEP 2 
Valentinian (ad. of Fletcher’s), Sel. fr. (Song: “In¬ 
jurious charmer.” etc.)—J: Wilmot, Earl of 
Rochester.—WEP 2 

Valley Brook, The.—J: H. Bryant.-—BNL 
Valley Forge.—H: A. Brown. See Centennial Address 
Delivered at Valley Forge, June 19, 1878. 
Valley of Shanganagh, The.—J: Martley.—TIP 
Valley of the Loire, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—APr 
Valley of Unrest, The.—Edgar A. Poe.—ASL—BPB— 
YBF 

Valse Jeune.—Louise I. Guiney.—AA 
Value of Amusements.—Anon.—KNE 
Value of Character.—D: W. Wood.—FAS 
Value of Education, The. (Boston Transcript .)—CS 35 
Value of Literature, The.—Hamilton W. Mabie.—BS|24 
Value of Literature to the Union.—Rufus Choate.— 
FD 1 

Value of Little Things, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Value of Reputation.—C: Phillips.—BS 23—CS 5— 
FTR—KNE 

Value of Science. (Sel. fr. Address, 1879.)—Peter 
Cooper.—FS 

Value of the Union, 1847, The.—S. S. Prentiss.—PS 
Van Artevelde to the Men of Ghent.—Sir H: Taylor. 
See Philip van Artevelde. 

Van Artevelde’s Defence of his Rebellion.—Sir H: 

Taylor. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Van Bibber’s Rock.—Emma D. Banks.—BR 
Van den Bosch and Artevelde.—H: Taylor. See Philip 
van Artevelde. 

Vane on the Spire, The.—B: F. Taylor.—BS 17 
Van Elsen.—Frd’kG. Scott.—TCV—VA 
Vanessa.—Howell L. Piner.—WR 23 
Vanished.—Emily Dickinson.—AA—TAS 
Vanished Village, A.—-R: Wilton.—PGT 2 
Vanishers, The.—J: G. Whittier.—AA 
Vanishings.—W: T. Allison.—TCV 
Vanitas Vanitatum.—W: M. Thackeray.—HBP 
Vanitas Vanitatum. (Fr. The Devil’s Law-case.)—J: 

Webster—ELP—OB—YBF 
Vanity.—Alice Cary.— BNL (at. to H. P. Spofford) — 
BS 15 

Vanity Fair.—Anon.—TL 

Vanity Fair, Sels. fr. —W: M. Thackeray. 

How to Live Well upon Nothing a Year. (Sel. fr. 
Ch. XXXVII.)—VSG 

Miss Pinkerton’s Academy for Young Ladies. (Sel. 
fr. Ch. I.)—WR 1 

Rose upon my Balcony, The. (Verses fr. Ch. LI.) 
—LC—OS 1 

Vanity of Human Wishes, The.—S: Johnson.—ESs— 
FEP—HBP 

Charles XII. (Sel .)—BNL 

(Charles XII. of Sweden.)—EDY—GP 
(Fate of Charles the Twelfth.)—SS 


Vanity of Human Wishes, The (continued). 

Rise and Fall of Wolsey, The. (Sel .)—WEP 3 

True Objects of Desire, The. (Sel .)—WEP 3 
(Wise Man’s Prayer, The— si. abr .)—SS 
Vanity of the Beautiful, The.—G: Gascoigne.—BNL 
Vanity of the World, The.—Fs. Quarles.—BNL—FEP 
“Vanity of Vanities.”—I. E. Jones.—CS 33 
Vanity Vanquished. (Dramatic.) —H. E. McBride.— 
CS 6 

Vanquished.—Fs. F. Browne.—AA—EDY—HP 
Vaquero.—Joaquin Miller.—AA 
Varied Misery. (Frags, fr. various a> tl.ors.) —BNL 
Yarium et Mutabile.—J. P. Sawyer.—CG 2 
“Varuna,” The.—G: H. Boker.-—AWB—EDY 
Varying Impressions from Nature.—W: Wordsworth. 
See Lines Composed a few Miles above Tintern 
Abbey. 

Vas Bender Henspecked.—Acland Von Boyle.—BDD 
—CRR—CS 14—DFY—FAS 
“Vas Marriage a Failure?”—C: F. Adams.—AWH— 
CS 29—DSS 

V-A-S-E, The—Jas. J. Roche.—BNL—BS 13—HBR 
—SR 4—THP 

Vashti.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—BS 8—CS 20 
Vastness.—Alfred Tennyson.—VA 
Vat Have I Got to Pay?—W. H. Freeman.—CS 6 
Vat You Please.—Jas. R. PlanchA—DDR—DFY— 
MDD—THP 

(Cond. and si. diff. vers.—at. to W: B. Fowle.)— 
CS 2—SR 3 

Vaudois Missionary, The.—J: G. Whittier. See following. 
Vaudois Teacher, The. (C.) —J: G. Whittier.—CS 14 
—YBT 

(Vaudois Missionary, The.)—BS 5 
Vay Rube Hoffenstein Sells, The.—Anon.—DRR 

(Teaching him the Business.)—BDD—CS 23 
Veery, The.—H : Van Dyke.—AA—ASL 
Veery-thrush, The.—Jos. R. Taylor.—AA 
Vegetable Convention, A.—G: W. Bungay.-—CS 12 
Veiled Picture, The.—Anon.—CS 12—CSS—MMR 
Veiled Presence, The.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
Veiled Prieste s, The. (Dial.) —Laura U. Case.—CS 8 
Veiled Statue at Sais, The.—Friedrich Schiller (tr. by 
Theodore Martin).—-BS 19 
Velvet Coat of the Last Century, A.—Anon.—CS 31 
Venality the Ruin of Greece.-—Demosthenes. See 
Philippics. 

Venetian Pastoral, A. (For a Venetian Pastoral— C.) 
—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 

Venetian Serenade, The.—II: M. Milnes, Lord Hough¬ 
ton.—VS 

Venetian Song. (Song fr. Volpone; or, The Fox, Act 
III., Sc. 5.)—Ben Jonson.—ES—-WEP 2 
Venezuela Question, The.—H: C. Lodge.—NC 
Vengeance of Bacchus, The.—T: L. Peacock. See 
Rhododaphne. 

Vengeance of the Flag, The.—H: D. Esterbrooke.—NC 
Veni Creator [Spiritus ].—(In Latin, also paraphrased 
by) J: Dryden.— BNL — FEP — HBP — 
WEP 2 

(Shorter paraphrase —-Anon.)—FEP 

(Or ginal La in vers. at. to St. Ambrose, to St. 
Gregory, and to Charlemagne.) 

Veni Sancte Spiritus.—Rob’t II. of France.— (InLatin, 
also tr. by) Catharine Winkworth.—BNL 
Venice.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Venice. (Sel. fr. To the Lion of St. Mark.)—Joaquin 
Miller—OS 3 

Venice. (In Italy.)—S: Rogers.—BNL (cond.) 

Venice.—Alan Sullivan.—TCV 
Venice.—J: A. Symonds.—VA 
Venice.—W: Wordsworth.—LH 

(On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic — C.) 
—FEP—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
Venice of the Aztecs, The.—W: H. Prescott. See 
History of the Conquest of Mexico. 

Venice Preserved, Sels. fr. —T: Otway. 

Jaflier Parting with Belvidera. (Br. sel. fr. Act V., 
Sc. 2.)—BNL 

Priuli and Jaflier. (Sel. fr. I., 1.)—SS 

Venice Preserved, Br. sel. fr. (Fr. I., 1.)—BNL 
Ventriloquist on a Stage-coach, A.—H: Cockton.— 
CS 12—MHR 

Venturesome Buds, The.—A. C.-—NV 
Venus and Adonis, Sel. fr. —W: Shakespeare.—WEP 1 
Venus of the Louvre.—Emma Lazarus.—-AA 
Venus of the Needle.—W: Allingham.—HPE 
Venus’ Runaway. (Sel. fr. The Hue and Cry after 
Cupid.)—Ben Jonson.—YBF 
Veny Raynor’s Bear Story.—W: P. (?) Hawes.—MDD 
Vera Victoria.—H. M. Soper.—SR 2 
Verbatim from Boileau, Sel. fr. —Alex. Pope.—BNL 
Verdict, The.—Mrs. J. P. Ballard.—WR 18 


i 






Verlaine 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Verlaine.—Bliss Carman.—EDY 

Vermont, Sel. fr. (Hills were Made for Freedom, 
The.)—W: G. Brown.—GP 
Vernal Solace—W: H. Hayne.—FHS 
Vernal Tree, A. ( Ent.) —Anon.—EuE 
Veronica.—Dinah M. Craik.—WR 1 
Verres Denounced. ( Sels. fr. First Oration against 
Verres, Sec. I., and fr. Sixth Oration against 
Verres, Secs. LXI.-LIll)—Cicero.— CS 4 — 
KNE—PS—SS 

(Against Caius Verres— longer.) —SR 8 
(Cicero against Verres— ptly same sel. fr. LVIII., 
LXI.-LXIII.)—OM 

Vers Nonsensiques. (In French.) —G: du Maurier.—NA 

Versailles.—Stopford A. Brooke —VA 

Verse: “Westward the star of empire.”—G: Berkeley. 

See Westward the Course of Empire. 

Verse: “He swore he loved her.” (Cornell Widow.) — 
CG 3 

Verse: “A Melancholy Prussian,” etc.—O. L.—CG 3 
Verse: "Happy, O so Happy.” (Mount Holyoke.) — 
CG 3 

Verse: “Past ruin’d Ilion Helen lives.”—Walter S. 
Landor.—OB 

Verses: "Heart hunger is for,” etc.—Edwin F. Pifer. 
—CG 3 

Verses: “O fair! O sweet! when I do look.” (C. — fr. 
Pansies from Penshurst and Wilton.)—Sir 
Philip Sidney. 

(Heart and Soul.)—OEL 

Verses: “What must -be, must be,” etc.—Forsyth 
Wickes.—CG 2 

Verses Found in his Bible in the Gate-house at West¬ 
minster. (C.) —Sir Walter Raleigh.—WEP 1 
Conclusion, The.—OB 
Death of Sir Walter Raleigh.—EDY 
Even Such is Time.—EHT—ELP 
Last Lines.—CEL 
Lines Found in his Bible.—BNL 
Lines Written the Night before his Execution.— 
FEP—YBF 

Verses from the Shepherd’s Hymn.—R: Crashaw. See 
Hymn of the Nativity, A. 

Verses in Praise of Angling.—Sir H: Wotton.—FEP— 
HBP 

(Description of the Country’s Recreations, A.)—EP 
(in Praise of Angling.)—BNL 
Verses on Seeing the Speaker Asleep in his Chair. 
(Stanzas on Seeing the Speaker Asleep.— C.) — 
Winthrop M. Praed.—A VP 

Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift (On the Death of 
Dr. Swift—C.), Sel. fr. —Jonathan Swift.— 
WEP 3 

Verses Spoken on the same Occasion with the Preced¬ 
ing [at the Breaking up of the Free Grammar 
School in Manchester], Sel fr. (Spectacles; or, 
Helps to Read.)—J: Byrom.—SCS 
Verses, Supposed to be Written by Alexander Selkirk. 
(C.)—W: Cowper — BNL — CGd — FEP — 
HBP—MBL—WCLG 2 
(Alexander Selkirk.)—OS 2 

(Solitude of Alexander Selkirk, The.)—BPB (sel.) — 
PGT 1—PSR 

Verses to a Robin Red-breast who Visits the Window 
of my Prison every Day, Sel. fr. (Prisoner to 
a Robin who Came to his Window, The.)—Jas. 
Montgomery.—PC (w. add. st.) 

Verses to Her Royal Highness the Duchess.—J: Dryden. 
—WEP 2 

Verses to Sir Henry Wootton, Sel. fr. (Fr. Letters to 
Several Personages: To Sir Henry Wootton.) 
—J: Donne.—WEP 1 

Verses to the Poet Crabbe’s Inkstand, Br. sel. fr. (To 
Campbell.)—T: Moore.—BNL—EPs 
Verses upon his Divine Poesy.—Edmund Waller. See 
On the Foregoing Divine Poems. 

Verses Why Burnt.—Walter S. Landor.—VA 
Verses Written in an Album. (Written in the Blank 
Leaf of a Lady’s Commonplace Book.— C.) — 
T: Moore.—BNL 

Vertue.—G: Herbert. See Virtue. 

Very Bad Case, A.—F. H. Stauffer.—DES 
Very Bashful. (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Very Dark.—Anon.—CS 3 
Very Far Away.—W: Alexander.—TIP 
Very Humane.—Malcolm Douglas.—FAS 
Very Little Boy, A.—Anon.—WR 17 
Very Little Ones are We.—Anon.—SD 
Very Mournful Ballad on the Siege and Conquest of 
Alhama, A. (C.) — (Tr. by) Lord Byron.— 
FEP—HBP 
(Alhama.)—LH 

(Siege and Conquest of Alhama— Sel.) —EPs 


Very Much Astonished. (Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
Very Provoking.—Marg. Eytinge.—SR 7 
Vesper Bell, The.—Eugene Davis.—WR 6 
Vesper Hymn.—S: Longfellow.—TAS 
Vesper Hymn.—Eliza Scudder.—TAS 
Vesper Sparrow, The.—Edith M. Thomas.—SN 
Vespers.—Charlotte M. Packard.—TAS 
Vespers of Palermo, The, Sel. fr. (Raimond Released 
—Act V., Sc. 3, abr.) —Felicia D. Hemans.— 
NDP 

Vesta.—J: G. Whittier.—OB 
Vestal Virgins; Drill.—Anon.—WDM 
Vestis Angelica.—T: W. Higginson.—TAS 
Vesuvius and the Egyptian.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See 
Last Days of Pompeii, The. 

Veteran, A.—Minna Irving.—WR 24 
Veteran, A.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 34 
Veteran and Recruit.—E: W. Hazewell.—HBP 
Veterans, The.—W: T. Sherman.—PS 
(Sherman on the Veterans.)—DFR 
Via Amoris.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Vicar, The. (Everv-day Characters, I.)—Winthrop M. 
Praed. — FEP—HBP—HPE—THP—VA — 
WEP 4 

Vicar of Bray, The.—Anon. — BNL—FEP—HBP— 
OS 3 

Vicar of Wakefield, The, Sels. fr. —Oliver Goldsmith. 
Elegv on the Death of a Mad Dog. (Verses fr. Ch. 
XVII.) — BNL — BPB — BVC — CGd — 
CSS — FEP — GN — GP — HBP — NA — 
OM—OS 1—PEB 3—PHS—PPSr—THP 
(Death of a Mad Doji.)—FTR 
Hermit, The[; or, Edwin and Angelina]. (Ballad, A 
—C.—fr. Ch. VII.— w. add. st.) —BNL—FEP 
—HBP—PEB 3 
(Edwin and Angelina.)—FTR 
Innocence Rewarded. (Dial. arr. fr. Chs. XXVIII., 
XXX., XXXI.)—NDP 

On Woman. (Song fr. Ch. XXIV.)—BNL—YBF 
(Stanzas on Woman.)—FEP—WEP 3 
(“When lovely woman stoops to folly.”)—PGT 1 
(Woman.)—OB 

Vicar’s Sermon, The.—C: Mackay.—SM (abr.) 

(Be as Thorough as You Can.)—BS 10 
(Bit of a Sermon, A— abr .)—YBT 
Vice of Intemperance,The. (Sel. fr. Temperance.)—E: 
Everett.—WR 18 

Vice Versa. (Play.) —Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow.— 
EE 

Vicksburg.—Paul H. Hayne.—AA—WR 10 
Victim, The.—Anon.—LLC 

Victim, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—CS 12—OS 2—SO 
Victim of Charity, A.—Anon.—CH 
Victim of Reform, The. (Blackwood’s Mag .)—SS 
Victim to One Hundred and Seven Fatal Maladies, A. 
—Jerome K. Jerome. See Three Men in a 
Boat. 

Victims and Victimizers. (Sel .)—Dinah M. Craik.— 
FMR 

Victor, The.—Anon.—DLF 

Victor and Vanquished.—Harry T. Peck.— CS 36 
Victor Hugo. (Sel. fr. Th'e Statue of Victor Hugo.)— 
Algernon C. Swinburne.—EDY 
Victor of Marengo, The.—Anon.—BS 14—CR—SC— 
SR 6 

(Abr .)—N C—TM D 
Victoria.—Alfred Austin.—TMR 
Victoria Grey.—Eugene J. Hall.—WR 15 
Victories of Peace, The.—C: Sumner. See True Gran¬ 
deur of Nations. The. 

Victorious Men of Earth. (Ode fr. Cupid and Death.) 
—Jas. Shirley.—HBP . 

(Last Conqueror, The.)—FEP—PGT 1—YBF 
(Might of Death, The.)—WEP 2 
Victory Deferred. (Dial.) —J. W. Scott.—MD 
Victory for the Dentist.—Anon.—WR 20 
Victory of Hector, The.—Homer. See Iliad, The. 
Victory of Perry, The.—Alice Cary.—CS 19 
Victory of the "Bonhomme Richard” over the "Sera- 
pis.”—Philip Freneau.—EDY 
Vjctuals and Drink.—Anon.—MCS 
Victuals and Drink. (In Mother Goose for Grown 
Folks.)—Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.—BeR—BS 17 
—MHR 

View across the Roman Campagna, A.—Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing.—BNL 

View from Fox How, The. (Poems of the Imagina¬ 
tion, Misc. Sons., XLII.)—W: Wordsworth.— 
AVP 

(Past Years of Home.)—WEP 4 
View from Lookout Mountian, The.—E: L. Pierce.— 
FD 2 


358 






TITLE INDEX 


Vision 


/ 


View from the Euganean Hills, North Italy. (Lines 
Written among the Euganean Hills— C .)— 
Percy B. Shelley.—BNL (abr.) 

(Written among the Euganean Hills— abr.) —PGT 1 
View of London from Cooper’s Hill.—Sir J: Denham. 
See Cooper’s Hill. 

Views of Farmer Brown.—Kathe. H. Terry.—CS 30 
Vigil, The. ( London Punch.) —EDY 
Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field [one Night—C.].— 
Walt Whitman.—HBP 
Vigilants, The.—I. E. Jones.—CS 26 
Vigor of Democratic Governments. (Sel. jr. Mr. Grey’s 
Motion for a Reform in Parliament.)—C: J. 
Fox—SS 

Village, The, Sel. fr. (Village as it is, The — sel. fr. 

Bk. I.)—G: Crabbe.—WEP 3 
Village as it is, The.—G: Crabbe. See foregoing. 
Village Bell, The.—Anon—CS 17 
Village Blacksmith, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—AA— 
BFV—BNL—BPB—BS 7 — FEP—GMS—LC 
—PPSr—WCLI 2 
(SI. abr.)— ASL—HBP 
Village Choir, The. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 10 
Village Coquettes, The, Sels. fr. —C: Dickens. 

Merry Autumn Days.—WR 17 
(Round—C.)—TMR 
Song (Lucy’s Song— C.). —BIL—FTA 
(Love— sel.) —FLS 

Village Dance, The. (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Village Meddler, The.—Anon.—MFD 
Village Oracle, The.—Joe Lincoln.-—CCB 
Village Patriarch, The. Sel. fr. (Excursion to the 
Mountains, An.)—Ebenezer Elliott.—WEP 4 
Village Post-office, The. (Tab.) —Anon. — BS 15 — 
TCP 

Village Preacher, The.—Oliver Goldsmith. See De¬ 
serted Village, The. 

Village Scare, The.—S. Jennie Smith.—CS 28 
Village Schoolmaster, The.—Oliver Goldsmith. See 
Deserted Village, The. 

Village Schoolmistress, The.—W: Shenstone. See 
Schoolmistress, The. 

Village Sewing-'ociety, The.—Anon.—CS 13 
Villain, The.—Jerome K. Jerome. See Stage Land. 
Villanelle.—Philip S. Allen.—CG 1 
Villanelle.—Mrs. S. F. Harrison.—TCV 
Villon. (Cornell Widow.) —CG 3 
Villon to His Mistress.—F. B. W.—CG 1 
Villon’s Straight Tip to all Cross Coves.—W: E. Henley. 
—NA 

Vindication.—Arthur M. Smith.—CG 2 
Vindication of Mr. Pitt.—G: Canning. See Defence of 
Pitt. 

Vindication of Virginius.—Elijah Kellogg.—BLP 
Vine, The.—Jas. Thomson.—OB 
Vine and the Oak, The.—Anon.—AD 
Vines of Memory.—Grace D. Boylan.—SR 12 
Vingtaine, Sels. fr. —Alice L. Butler. 

Immutabilis.—AA 
Separation.—AA 

Viola Disguised and the Duke.—W: Shakespeare. See 
Twelfth Night.—EPs 
Viola’s Answer.—H. E. McBride.—HD 
Violation of English Promises.—Dan’l O’Connell.— 
PS 

Violet, The. Jas. Beatty. See Violet, The.—Jane 
Taylor. 

Violet, The.—-W: C. Bryant. See Yellow Violet, The. 
Violet, The, Br. sel. fr. (“Violets! deep-blue violets!”) 
—Letitia E. Landon.—AD 

Violet, The. (Song—C.)—Jas. R. Lowell.—AD (si. 
abr.) 

Violet, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—NV 
Violet, The.—Walter Scott.—WEP 4 
Violet, The.—W: W. Story.—BNL—FEP—GP—HBP 
Violet, The.—Jane Taylor. — NV—PC—PoR—PTS— 
TFS—WCL—YBT 

(Ptly. diff. — w. mus.—at. to James Beatty.)—AD 
Violet, The.—Adeline D. T. Whitney.—BIL 
Violet and the Rose, The.—Jos. Skipsey.—VS 
Violet Bank, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream, A. 

Violet in Her Hair, A.—C: Swain.—BNL 
Violets—Dinah M. Craik.—HSS 1—HSS 2—PoR— 
YBT 

Violets, The.—Stephen Crane.—AA 
Violets.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL—GP 

(To Violets—C.)—ELP—HBP—LC—OB—OS 1 
Violets.—Leigh Hunt. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers. 

Violets.—J: Moultrie.—CGd—LC-—OS 1 
(Dear Little Violets.)—PoR 
Violets at Home.—Mortimer Collins.—VS 


"Violets! deep-blue violets!”—-Letitia E. Landon. See 
Violet, The. 

Violet’s Grave, The.-Vicortari.—HP 

Violet’s Prayer, The.—E. J. Richmond.—YBT 
Violet’s Victory.—Dixie Wolcott.—WR 17 
Violin Fantasy, A.—G. C. Fletcher.-—WR 12 
Violinist, A.—Fs. *W. Bourdillon.—VA 
Violiniste.—Wilder D. Quint.—CG 1 
Violin’s Complaint, The.—W: R. Thayer.—A A 
Virgil’s Tomb.—Rob’t C. Rogers.—AA 
Virgin Mary’s Bank, The.—J. J. Callanan.—PEB 4 
Virgin Most Pure, A.—Anon.—BVC 
Virgin with the Bells, The. (SI. abr.) —Austin Dobson. 
—W116 

Virginia.—Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury Tales. 
The. 

Virginia [: a Lay of Ancient Rome],—T: B. Macaulay. 
—CR (abr.) —HB (si. abr.) 

(Sel.) —FTR—VSG 
(Fate of Virginia, The— sel.) —LLC 
(SI. abr .)—CS 3—SS 
(Icilius on Virginia’s Seizure— sel.) —SS 
(Roman Father’s Sacrifice, The— sel.) —BNL 
(Virginius— sel. )—FR 
Virginia Mummy, The.—C. White.—DE 
Virginia Tobacco.— (At. to) J: S. Gregson.—PPh 
Virginia’s Hand.Seh fr. (Hidden Rose-tree, A.)—Mar¬ 
guerite A. Power.—TIP 
Virginia’s Kingly Plant.—Anon.—PPh 
Virginians of the Valley, The.—Fs. O. Tieknor.—AA 
Virginius, Sel. fr. —Jas. S. Knowles.—FTR (Act I., 
Sc. 2; II., 2—abr.; IV., 2—abr.) —MPD (Act 
III., Sc. 5— abr.) 

Virginiufe, as Tribune, Refuses the Appeal of Appius 
Claudius.—Livy. See History of Rome. 
Virtue. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Virtue. (C.)—G: Herbert. — ELP—EPs — HBP— 
LC—LLC—OB—OS 2—PHS 
(Vertue.)—FEP—FP—GP 
(Virtue Immortal.)—BNL—PYO—YBF 
(Virtuous Soul, The.)—CEL 
Virtue Immortal.—G: Herbert. See foregoing. 

Virtue Uncorrupted by Fortune.—Quintus Curtius.— 
BLP 

Virtuosa.—Mary A. Townsend.—AA 
Virtuoso, The. (Sel.) —Mark Akenside.—BNL 
Virtuoso, A.—Austin Dobson.—FEP 
Virtuous Soul, The.—G: Herbert. See Virtue. 

Vision, A.—Anon.—CP 

Vision, The. (As I Stood by yon Roofless Tower— 
C.) —Rob’t Burns.—EPs (si. abr.) 

Vision, The.—Rob’t Burns.—HBP 

Vision, A.—Jessie T. Craig.—CS 33 

Vision, A. —A. M. E—FP 

Vision, A.—Mrs. E. M. H. Gates.—CS 22 

Vision.—W: D. Howells.—AA 

Vision, A.—H: Vaughan. See World, The. 

Vision of Battle, A.—Sydney Dobell.—MMR 
Vision of Beauty, A. (Song fr. The New Inn, Act IV., 
Sc. 3.)—Ben Jonson.—BNL 
(Perfect Beauty.)—ES—YBF 
Vision of Belshazzar. (C. — in Hebrew Melodies.)— 
Lord Byron.—EPs—GN 
(Jerusalem Avenged.)—BLP 
Vision of Children, A.—T: Ashe.—VA 
Vision of Connaught in the Thirteenth Century, A.— 
Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 

Vision of Delight, The, Sels. fr. —Ben Jonson. 
Fantasy. (Song.) —BNL—EPs 
May.—EPs 

Vision of Future Bliss, A.—R: Baxter.—CS 4 
Vision of Handel, The.—P. L. Blatchford.—WR 6 
Vision of Immortality, The.—E. P. Weston.—AE (sel.) 
—CS 5 

Vision of Judgment, The. (Sel.) —Lord Byron.—ESs 
Vision of Liberty, The.—-H: Ware, Jr.—WR 10 
Vision of Mist-splendours, A.—W: Wordsworth. See 
Excursion, The. 

Vision of Mirza, The.—Jos. Addison. See Spectator, 
The. 

Vision of Monk Gabriel, The.—Eleanor C. Donnelly.— 
CS 6 

Vision of Piers [thel Plowman, The, Sels. fr. —W: Lang- 
land. 

Pilgrimage in Search of Do-well. (8th Passus of 
Piers, etc., and 1st of Do-wel!.)—ESs 
Vision of Piers the Plowman. (Passus XXI.) — 
WEP 1 

Vision of Poets, A, Sels. fr. — Eliz. B. Browning.— 
A VP (br.)— WR 1 

(Children Gathering Palms— sel. fr. Conclusion.)— 
LC 

Vision of Repentance, A.—C: and Mary Lamb.—LPC 


359 





Vision 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


\ 


Vision of St. Dominic, The.—Anon.—WR 6 
Vision of Sir Launfal, The. — Jas. R. Lowell. 
AE (Preludes I. and ll.— abr.) —AP—MAL— 
WR 5 (Preludes omitted.) 

June. (Prel., Pt. I., abr. )—BNL—GP—PYO (6r. 
sel .)—SO (sel.) 

(Abr.) —ASL—BS 14—FMg 
(“At the devil’s booth all things are sold”— hr. 

sel.)— WCLI1 
(June Weather— abr.) —GN 
(Soul in Grass and Flowers, A— abr.) —AD 
(Summer— hr. sel.) —SE 
(Vision of Sir Launfal— abr.) —-AA—LLC 
Sir Launfal and the Leper. (Sel. fr. Pt. I.)—GN 
(Vision of Sir Launfal. The—-.r. sel.) —AE 
Winter Morning, A. (Br. sel. fr. Pt. II.)—GN 
(January.)—POS 

Winter Pictures. (Prel., Pt. II. and br. sel. fr. Pt. 
II.)—BNL 

(Brook in Winter, The— abr.) —GN 
Vision of the Fawn, The.—Petrarch.—WR 1 
Vision of the Rose.—W: Browne.—ELP 
(Rose, The.)—OB 

Vision of the Snow, The.—-Marg. J. Preston.—AA 
Vision of War, The. (Sel. fr. Speech at Indianapolis, 
Sept. 21, 1876.)—Rob’t G. Ingersoll.—-SC 
(Col. Ingersoll’s Remarkable Vision.)—SC 
Vision upon the Faerie Queene, A.—Sir Walter Ral¬ 
eigh. See following. 

Vision upon this Conceit of the Faerie [or Fairy] 
Queen, A.—Sir Walter Raleigh.—FEP—WEP1 
(Vision upon the Faerie Queene, A.)—CEL 
Visions.—D. L. Maulsby.—CG 1 

Visit from St. Nicholas, A.—Clement C. Moore.—AA—- 
BNL — EDY — HBP — OS 1 — PC — PoR 
—SM—WCL—WCLI 1 
(Christmas Times.)—PHS 

(Night before Christmas, The.) — BS 7 — CS 16 
—FEP—PPSr 

(St. Nicholas’ Dashing Ride.)—SR 3 
Visit from the Sea, A.—Rob't L. Stevenson.—GN— 
OS 1 

Visit from the Smiths, A.—Anon.—MAD 
Visit of Santa Claus. (Dial.)- —Anon.—HVD 
Visit of the Prince of Wales to Laura Secord.—Sarah 
A. Curzon.—TCV 

Visit to Belle Yard, A.—C: Dickens. See Bleak House. 
Visit to Hades, A.—Stockton Bates.—CS 28 
Visit to Niagara, A. (C.)—S: L. Clemens. 

(Day at Niagara, A.)—BS 6—SA^ 

(Mark Twain Visits Niagara.)—CS 16 
Visit to Sir Roger de Coverley’s Country Seat, A.— 
Jos. Addison. See Spectator. The. 

Visit to the Oil Regions, A.—Anon.—MND 
Visit to the Sea, A.—J: Troland.—CS 36 
Visit to Thompkinsville University, A.—Anon.—CS 7 
Visitation.—H: W. Palmer.—CG 3 
Visiting Laura Belle.—S: E. Kiser.—WR 24 
Visitors from Story Land. (Dial.) —E. C. and L. J. 
Rook—YFE 

Visitors from the City.—Anon.—MFD 
Vita Benefica.—Alice W. Rollins.—AA 
Vita Nuova, Sets. fr. —Dante. 

Her Helpfulness.—OH 

His Lady’s Praise. (XXI.—D. G. Rossetti’s tr .)— 
OH 

Vita Nuova.—E: H. Plumptre. See Dedication to 
Dante’s Divine Comedy. 

Viva l’America.—Anon.—DFR 
Viv^rols.—D: S. Jordan.—AA 

Vivid Description of a Midnight Murder.—Anon.— 
SR 10 

(Bombastic Description of a Midnight Murder.)— 
CS 1 

Vivien.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the King. 
Vivien’s Song.—Alfred Tennyson. See Idylls of the 
King. 

Vixi Puellis Nuper Idoneus.—Sir T: W T yatt.—OB 
(Lover Showeth how he is Forsaken, The.— C.) — 
ELP 

Vobiscum est lope. (A Book of Airs, XX.)—T: Cam¬ 
pion.—OB 

(O Crudelis Amor.)—ELP 
(When thou must Home.)—ELP 
Voice, The.—Anon.—WR 17 
Voice, A.—Alfred Austin.—WCLG 1 
(Britannia to Columbia.)—PAPm 
(To America.)—GN 

Voice. (In Song Time. Pt. II.)—Harriet P. Spofford. 
—AA 

Voice, The.—-Forceythe Willson.—MMR 
Voice, and Nothing Else, A. (Punch.) —BNL—HPE 
(Epigram: Vox et praeterea Nihil.)—FEP 


Voice from Afar, A. (C.) —J: H. Newman. 
(Knowledge.)—A VP 

Voice from Galilee, The. (C.)—Horatius Bonar.—VA 
(“Come unto Me.”)—FEP 

Voice from the Old Boys Left Behind.—J. H. Jewett. 
—PAPm 

Voice in the Air, Singing, A.—Percy B. Shelley. See 
Prometheus Unbound. 

Voice in the Twilight, The.—Mrs. Herrick Johnson.— 
BS 7—CS 20—SPE 

Voice in the Wild Oak, The.—H: C. Kendall.—VA 
Voice in the Wilderness, The.— Bible. See Isaiah. 
Voice of a Leaf, The.—I. M. Chambers.—YBT 
Voice of an Alumnus, The.—S. N. Whitney.—CG 3 
Voice of Calm, The. (Sel. fr. The Brewing of Soma.) 

—J: G. Whittier.—TAS 
Voice of D. G. R., The.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
Voice of Despair, The.—-J. J. Talbot.—TS 
Voice of Music, The, Br. sel. fr. (To Music.) — Felicia 
D. Ilemans.—EPs 

Voice of Spring, The. — Felicia D. Hemans. — 
HNS (abr.) 

(Sel.) — AD — HSS 1 — LLC — PEO — POS — 
SM 

(Br. sel.)— SAE—SE 

Voice of Spring, The.—Mary Howitt.—PoR 
Voice of the Dove, The.—Joaquin Miller.—AA 
Voice of the Flag, The.—Anon.—CP 
Voice of the Grass, The.—Sarah II. Boyle.—AA—AD 
—BNL—HBP—SN—WR 17 (br. sel.) 

(SI. abr.)— HSS 1— NV—PoR 
(Song of the Grass, The— sl. abr.) —YBT 
Voice of the Oregon, The.—H. J. D. Browne.—EDY— 
PAPm 

Voice of the People, The.—Jas. G. Clark.—DES 
Voice of the Pine, The. (The Celestial Passion, Pt. 

III., No. 4.)—R: W. Gilder.—SN 
Voice of the Pines, The.—C: Mair.—TCV 
Voice of the Poor, The.—Jane F. Speranza, Lady 
Wilde.—GP—VA 

Voice of the Reader, The. (Sel. fr. The Demon of the 
Study.)—J: G. Whittier.—LLC 
Voice of the Sea, The.—T: B. Aldrich.—BFV—LC 
Voice of the Void, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—AA 
Voice of the West Wind, The.—Rob’t P. Utter.—CG 2 
Voice of the Wind, The.—Rosaline E. Jones.—BS 21 
Voice of the Wind.—H: Taylor. See Edwin the Fair. 
Voice of Webster, The, Sel.fr. —Rob’t U. Johnson.—A A 
Voice Within, The.—Fannie Fagan.—YBT 
Voiceless, The.—Oliver W. Holmes.—AA—FEP— 
HBP 

Voiceless Chimes, The.—Annie Fox.—CS 28 
Voices, The. Br. sel. fr. (“Self-ease is pain; thy only 
rest.”)—.!: G. Whittier—GG 
Voices at the Throne, The.—T: Westwood.—CR— 
CS 7—FMR—HR—MMR 

Voices at the Window.—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astro- 
phel and Stella. 

Voices of the Dead.—J: Gumming.—CS 6 
(Influence after Death— -el.) —BS 21 
Voices of the Dead, The.-—Orville Dewey.—HSS 1—SE 
Voices of the Flowers. (Fr. Sunny Side.)—-Anon.— 
DFR 

Voices of the Forest.—H: W. Longfellow. See Masque 
of Pandora, The. 

Voices of the Night.—Joe Kerr.—GH 
Voices of the Night. (Sel.) —II: W. Longfellow.—AD 
Voices of the Trees.— (Arr. by) W. H. Benedict. — 
DFR 

Voices of the Wildwood.—Ella S. Cummins.—DR 
Void Between, The.—J: L. Spalding. See God and the 
Soul. 

Volpone; or, The Fox, Sel. fr. (Venetian Song— fr. 

Act III., Sc. 5.)—Ben Jonson.—ES—WEP 2 
Voltaire and Wilberforce.—W: B. Sprague.—CS 19 
Voluntaries, III., Sel. fr. (Duty.)—Ralph W. Emer¬ 
son.—GN—OS 1 

(“So nigh is grandeur to our dust.”)—HSS 3 
Volunteer, The. — Elbridge J. Cutler.—AA — HS — 
PAPm 

Volunteer, The.—Frank L. Stanton.—PAPm 
Volunteer Organist, The.—Sam W. Foss.—BS 18— 
CS 30—DR—PFP—SR 11 
Volunteer Soldiers of the Union, The.—Anon.—SR 2 
Volunteers of ’85, The.—Stuart Livingston.—TCV 
Volunteer’s Wife, The.—-Mary A. Dennison.—CR— 
MMR 

(Irish Woman’s Lament , The.)—PR 
(Irishwoman’s Letter, The.)—CS 3—LLC—SA 
(Mary O’Connor, the Volunteer’s W r ife.) — CD 
(Versions vary sl.) 

Vote the Traffic Down.—J: P. St. John.—WR 18 
Voter’s Responsibility, The.—W. J. Demorest.—WR 18 


360 




TITLE INDEX 


Waly 


Votive Song.—E: C. Pinkney.—AA 
Vow, The.—-Meleager ( tr. by J: H. Merivale).—BNL 
Vow of Washington, The.—J: G. Whittier.—BS 17— 
SR 8 

Vox Ultima Crucis.—J: Lydgate.—OB 
Voyage, A, Br. sel. fr. (“From that titne until the 
period of arrival.”)—Washington Irving.—SO 
Voyage and a Haven, A.—Fs. C. Hoey.—NPS—YP 
Voyage in the Arm-chair, A.—Anon.—DLF 
Voyage of Arabella, The.—Ellen D. Deland.—DCP 
Voyage of Captain Popanilla, The, Sel. fr. (Popanilla 
on Man, Ch. IV.)—B: Disraeli.—ESs 
Voyage of Life, The.—Matthew Green. See Spleen, 
The. 

Voyage of Life, The, Sels. fr. —F. De H. Janvier.—AE 
Voyage of Life, The.—Fs. Quarles.—CEL 
Voyage of Maeldune, The. (Abr.) —Alfred Tennyson. 
—WR 12 

Voyage of Sleep, The.—Arthur W. H. Eaton.—BNL 
Voyage of the “Fram,” The.—Arthur P. Hunt.—NC 
Voyage with the Nautilus, The.—Mary Howitt.—PEB 3 
Voyages, The. (C.)—T: W. Higginson. 

(Two Voyagers.)—TAS 
Voyageur Song.—Arthur Weir.—TCV 
Vulgar Little Lady, The.—Ann and Jane Taylor.— 
BVC 

Vulture of the Alps, The.—Anon.—CS 10—NPS—YP 


w 


Waban Ripple, A.—Anon.—AWH—CG 1 

Wabash Violets.—Earl Marble.—HP 

Wae’s Me for Prince Charlie.—W: Glen.—FEP—HBP 

Wages.—Alfred Tennyson.—LLC—PGT 2 

Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The, Sels. fr. —T: B. Read. 

Brave at Home, The.— BLP ,— BNL — BS 5 — 
CS 2—LLC—PAP—PAPm—TAV—YBF 
(“Mother who conceals her grief. The— br. sel.) — 
BNL 

(Patriotism of American Women.)—PRR 

Revolutionary' Rising. The. (Rising, The— C.) — 
BS 1 — CR — CS 2 - SA—SC—SO (si. abr.)— 
SPE—SR 1 

(Rising in [or of] 1776, The.)—FR—FTR—HNS 
—TMR (abr.) 

Song of the Mountaineers. (Pt. I.)—BS 16 

(Song from “The Wild Wagoner of the Alle¬ 
ghanies.”)—AE 

Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The, Br. sel. fr. —AE 
Waif. (Crimson Throne, The— C.) —G: Macdonald.— 
BS 1 

Waif, The.—A. C. Smith.—VA 
Wail of a Disappointed Candidate.—Anon.—CS 14 
Wail of Jugurtha, The.—-C: Wolfe.—BLP 
Wail of the Cornish Mother, The.—R. S. Hawker.— 
PGT 2 

Wainamoinen’s Sowing. — (Tr. by) J: A. Porter. See 
Kalevala, The. 

Wait.—Dora R. Goodale.—YBT 
Wait!—Ward Steele.—CPL 
Wait.—Bayard Taylor (?).—'TAS 
Wait On.—C: C. Hahn.—BS 20 
Wait upon the Lord.—S. E. Adams.—HDL 
Waiter, The. (Punch .)—HPE 
Waiter Drill.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—DM 
Waiter Girl.—Anon.—MR 
Waiter’s Trials, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—DCR 
Waitin’ fer the Cat to Die.-—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR— 
WR 2 

Waiting.—Anon.—DLF 
Waiting.—Anon.—HP 
Waiting.—Anon.—TFS 

Waiting. (In The Light of Dav.)—J: Burroughs.—GP 
—HP 


(SI. abr. )—AA—TAS 
Waiting.—Eli G. Coe.—HDL 
Waiting.—C: H. Crandall.—HDL—TAS 
Waiting.—L. D. S.—HDL 
Waiting.—Katha. Tvnan-Hinkson.—TIP 
Waiting, The.—J: G." Whittier.—PYO 
Waiting—at the Church Door.—Mrs. Alex. McV. 
Miller.—CS 30 

Waiting bv the Gate.—W: C. Bryant.—CS 10—FMR 
HBP—WCLG 1 

Waiting Chords, The.—S. H. Thayer.—A A 
Waiting for an Interview. (Dial.) —Colman.—MPD 
Waiting for Easter.—Edna D. Proctor.—SSS 
Waiting for Something to Turn Up. (C .)—Alice Carv. 


—BLF 

(“World owes me a living. 


The”— sel .)—HSS 3 


Waiting for the Armada.—C: Kingsley. See West¬ 
ward Ho! 

Waiting for the Bugle.—Anon.—SR 5 
Waiting for the Children.—Anon.—BS 3—SA 
Waiting for the Galleon.—R: E. White.—CS 28 
Waiting for the Grapes.—W: Maginn.—BNL 
Waiting for the May.—Anon.—AD—LLC 
Waiting for the Morning. (C.)—J: H. Newman. 
(Rest.)—A VP 

Waiting for the Stage. (Dial.) —F. Crosby.—PD 
Waiting Juliet, The.—Arthur Quiller-Couch.—WR 12 
Waiting on God.—Saxe Holm.-—SSS 
(Hymn, A.)—TAS 

(“I cannot think but God must know.”)—BIL 
Waiting on the Lord.—Oliver Crane.—CS 22 
Waiting to Grow. — Frank French. — AD — LLC— 
NV (abr .)—YBT 

Waiting to See Him Off.—-Anon.—SDD 
Wake, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—WEP 2 
Wake, Gently Wake.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See 
Wit at Several Weapons. 

Wake Now, my Love.—Edmund Spenser. See Epitha- 
lamion. 

Wake of the Absent, The.—Gerald Griffin.—TIP 
Wake of Tim O’Hara, The.—Rob’t Buchanan. — CD 
—DI—VA 

Wake of William Orr, The.—W: Drennan.—TIP 
Wake Robin, Sel. fr. (Bluebird.)—J: Burroughs.— 
AD (sel.) 

Wake up. Little Daisy.—Anon.—NV 
Wakeful Birds, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Waken, Lords and Ladies Gay.—Walter Scott. — 
BNL 

(Hunting Song— C.) —AE (sel.) —BFV—BPB— 
BS 21—CEL—GN—LC—OS 2—PGT 1—YBF 
Wakening, The.—Anon.—OB 

Wakin’ the Young Uns.—J: Boss.—BS 18—CS 32— 
PR—YA 

Waking.—Caroline Mason.—MYF 
Waking of Spring, The.—Olive Custance.—VA 
Waking of the Lark, The.—Eric Mackay.—VA 
Waking Year, The.—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
Waldeinsamkeit.—R.alph W. Emerson.—SN 
Walden, Sels. fr.— H: D. Thoreau. 

Smoke. (Verses fr. Ch. XIII.)—AA—BNL — EPs 
—SN 

Sounds. (Sel. fr. Ch. VI.)—APr 
Spring. (Sel. fr. Ch. XVII.)—HS 
Walk among Trees. A. (€'.)— H: W. Beecher. 
(Discourse on Trees, A.)—AD 

(“First in our regard,” etc.— sel.) —HSS 1 
(Love of Trees— sel.)- —HSS 1 
(Motion of the Leaves, The— sel.) —HSS 1 
Walk in Spring, A. (Sel.)— Jas. Montgomery.—AD 
Walk in Spring, A.—M. A. Stoddart.—NV—YBT 
Walker of the Snow, The.—C: D. Shanly.—TCV— 
VA 

Walking Encyclopedia. The.—Anon—FND 
Walking with God.—W: Cowper.—FEP—HBP (abr.) 
Wallenstein, Sels. fr .—Friedrich Schiller (tr. by S: T. 
Coleridge). 

Death of Wallenstein, The, Sels. fr. 

Dirge: “He is gone—is dust!” (Br. sel. fr. Act 
V., Sc. 1.)—EPs 

(Grief of Bereavement, The.)—SS 
Wallenstein’s Soliloquy. (I., 4— abr .)—SS 
Piccolomini, The, Sels. fr. 

Astrological Tower, The. (Sel. fr. III., 5.)—FTR 
Belief in Astrology, The. (Sel. fr. III., 4.)—SS 
(Mythology.)—EPs—LLC 
Heroism. (Br. sel. fr. IV., 7.)—EPs 
Thekla’s Song. (Sel. fr. III., 7.)—EPs 
Wallenstein’s Death.—Rob’t, Earl of Lvtton.—EDY 
Wallenstein’s Soliloquy.—Friedrich Schiller. See Wal¬ 
lenstein. 

Walloping Window-blind, The.—C: E. Carryl.—NA 
Walpole’s Attack on Pitt.—Rob’t Walpole.—BS 17— 
FTR 

(Against Mr. Pitt.)—PS—SS 
(Against William Pitt.)—SSD 
(Sir Robert Walpole against Mr. Pitt.)—KNE 
Walrus and the Carpenter, The. (In Through the 
Looking-glass.)—Lewis Carroll.—BVC—CS 26 
—GN—NA—THP 

Walt Whitman.—Harrison S. Morris.—AA 
Walt Whitman.—Walt Whitman. See Song of Myself. 
Walt Whitman.—Fs. H. Williams.—AA 
Walter’s First Speech.—Eliza Doolittle.—SD 
Walton’s Book of Lives. (Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Pt. 

III., Son. V.)—W: Wordsworth.—BNL 
Waltz, The.—Lord Byron.—ESs 
Waltz-quadrille, A.—Ella W. Wilcox.—WR 26. 

Waly, Waly.—Anon. See following. 


3(51 





Waly 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Waly, Waly, [but] Love be Bonny. (C. — in Percy’s 
Reliques.) — Anon. — BNL — EPs— FEP — 
GP (sel.)— HBP—OEB—PEB 1 
(Forsaken.)—PGT 1 

(Waly, Waly.)—BB—ELP—OB—WEP 1 
Wanderer, The.—Austin Dobson.—FTA—HBP—YBF 
Wanderer, The.—Eugene Field.—EDY—EF—HP 
Wanderer, The. ( Littell’s Living Age.) —HP 
Wanderer, The, Sel. fr. (Retrospections— C.) —Rob’t, 
Earl of Lytton.—A VP 

Wanderer, The, Sets. fr. —Rob’t, Earl of Lytton. 

Night in Italy, A. (Prologue, Pt. I., abr.) —OB 
Palingenesis. ( Sels. fr. Bk. VI.)—WR 23 
Song: “We must love and unlove, and, it may be.” 
(.Sel. ad. fr. Song in Bk. II.)—FLS 
Wanderer, The, Sel. fr. —Alex. C: Stewart.—TCV 
Wanderers, The.—Rob’t Browning. See Paracelsus. 
Wanderers.—Charles Stuart Calverley.—THP 
Wanderer’s Bell, The.—Marg. J. Preston.—SR 3 
Wanderer’s Night-song, The, Sel. fr. —Johann W. von 
Goethe (in German, also tr. by T. C. Porter).— 
TMR 

(Sleep— diff. tr.) —HDL 
Wandering Jew, The.—Anon.—CS 35 
Wandering Jew, The. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—FEP 

Wandering Knight’s Song, The.— (Tr. by) J: G. Lock¬ 
hart.— BFV 

Wandering Willie.—Rob’t Burns.—MBL 
Wandering Wind, The.—-Felicia D. Hemans.—HBP 
Wanderings of Cain, The, Sel. fr. Prefatory Note to. 
(Child in the Wilderness, The.)—S: T. Cole¬ 
ridge.—LC 

Wanderings of Oisin, The, <Seh fr. (Island of Sleep, The— 
Pt, III.)—W: B. Yeats—TIP 
Wanderings of the Birds, The.—Anon.—NV 
Wander-lovers, The.—R: Hovey.—AA 
Waning Moon, The. (C.) —Percy B. Shelley. 

(Moon, The. I.)—OB 

Waning Moon, The.—-Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Waning Spirit,—Philip J. Bailey. See Festus. 

Want.—Rob’t, Earl of Lytton.—FLS 
Wanted.—Anson G. Chester.—CS 13 
Wanted. (C.) —Josiah G. Holland. 

(Give us Men.)—CS 26 
(True Men.)—SR 7 
Wanted.—Walter A. Ratcliffe.—TCV 
Wanted—ra Governess.—Anon.—MDD 
Wanted—a Little Girl. (C.) —Ella W. Wilcox. 

(Little Girl, A.)—TFS 

Wanted—a Man.—Edmund C. Stedman.—AWB 
Wanted, a Minister’s Wife.—Anon.—CRR 
Wanted—a Nurse.—Gustav Kobb4.—DDD 
Wanted—a Pastor.—Anon.—CS 8 
Wanted—a Valet.—B. L. C. Griffith.—SPC 
“Wanted, a Young Lady.”—W. E. Suter.—DT 
Wanted—-Saint Patrick.—Fitz-James O’Brien.—EDY 
Wanted to See his Old Home. (New York Sun.) — 
BS 18 

Wanting is—What?—Rob’t Browning.—YBF 
Wants of Man, The.—J: Q. Adams.—BNL—CS 6— 
EPs—WCLG 1 

(“Man wants but little here below.”)—BS 5 
Wapentake. (C.) —To Alfred Tennyson.—H: W. 
Longfellow.—AA 
(To Alfred Tennyson.)—GG 
War.—Binney. See Responsibilities of a Recommen¬ 
dation of War. 

War.—Sam W. Foss.—PAPm 

War.—Percy B. Shelley. See Queen Mab. 

War.—Grace E. C. Stetson.—AA 

War.—C: Sumner. See War System of the Common¬ 
wealth of Nations. 

War and Peace, Sels. fr. — Frd’k W. Robertson. — 
NC (sel.) —OS 2 

War and Washington.—Jonathan M. Seward.—AWB 
War Deprecated.—Stephen A. Douglas.—SSD 
War for the sake of Peace.—Jas. Thomson. See Brit¬ 
annia. 

War for the Union, The. (Sel. fr. Inevitable Trial, 
The.)—Oliver W. Holmes.—SSD 
War for the Union, The, Br. sel. fr. (“I will not speak of 
war in itself.”)—Wendell Phillips.—HSS 1 
War Hymn.—B. R. Stevens.—PAPm 
War Inevitable, The. March, 1775.—Patrick Henry. 
—LLC 

(Sel.) OM—OS 2—PP—PS—PTS—SE—SS— 
YFR 

(Appeal to Arms, An— sel.) —SO 
(Freedom or Slavery.)—SSD—TMD 
(Liberty or Death.)—SO (sel.) —WCLG 1 
(Resistance to British Aggression— sel.) —OM—PS 
—SS 


War Inevitable, The (continued). 

(Speech before the Virginia Convention.)—KNE 
(Speech in the Virginia Convention, 1775.)—FTR 
(Speech of Patrick Henry.)—CS 25—SR 5 
“War is dread when battle shock and fierce affray.”— 
Frailk Birch.—GG 

“War must go on, The.”—Dan’l Webster. See Adams 
and Jefferson. 

War of the Months, The.—“Bob o’Link.”—DLD 
War or Peace?—Abraham Lincoln. See First Inau¬ 
gural Address. 

War Poem.—R: Le Gallienne.—PAPm 
War Prayer.—M. J. H.—PAPm 

War System of the Commonwealth of Nations, Sel. fr. 
(War.)—C: Sumner.—MRS—SR 8 
(Horrors of War— sel.) —HSS 1 
"War! War! No peace! Peace is to me a war.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See King John. 

War with Alcohol, The.—W. E. Williams.—SR 2 
War with America, The.—W: Pitt, Lord Chatham. 
See American War, The, 

War with France.—G: Canning. See Fruits of the War 
with France. 

War with Spain, The, Sel. fr. (Fight off Santiago, The— 
sel. fr. Ch. VII.)—H: C. Lodge.—SC 
Warble for Lilac-time.—Walt Whitman.—PYO 
Warble thy Lays to me.—Pamelia V. Yule.—TCV 
Warden, Keep a Place for Me.—D: L. Proudfit.—CS 16 
Warden of the Cinque Ports, The.—H: W. Longfellow. 

—AA—EDY—EPs—HBP—OS 2 
Warfare. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
War-horn of the Elkings, The. (Sel. fr. The House of 
the Wolfings, Ch. II.)—W: Morris—BS 19 
Warning, A.—Anon.—DJS 
Warning, A.—Anon.—KNS 
Warning, A.—J: Gay.—BVC 

Warning, A.—C: Lamb. See Warning to the Intem¬ 
perate. 

Warning, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—VSG 
Warning, A.—Arthur Lovell.—PPh 
Warning.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Warning against Wine, A.—Dwight L. Moody.—TS 
Warning and Reply.—Emily Bronte.—VA 
Warning to the Intemperate. (Sel. fr. Confessions of a 
Drunkard.)—C: Lamb.—CS 11 
(Cry from the Depths, A.)—TS 
(Warning, A.)—CPL 
Warning to Woman.—Anon.—DCR 
Warnings. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Warrantee Deed, The.—Anon.—SCS 
Warren Hastings, Sel. fr. —T: B. Macaulay. 

Trial of Warren Hastings [, The].—HSS 2 (cond.) 
v —WCLG 2 

(Opening Scene at the Trial of Warren Hastings, 
The— sel.) —VSG 

Warren’s Address.—J: Pierpont.—AWB—BNL—CR 
—CS 8 — CSS — EDY — FEP — GN —GP — 
OS 1 — PAP — PAPm — PS — SM — TMD — 
WCLG 2 

(General Joseph Warren’s Address.)—SR 8 
(General Warren to his Troops at the Battle of 
Bunker Hill.)—HSS 1 
(Stand! The Ground’s your Own.)—WR 5 
(Warren’s Address at [or before] the Battle of 
Bunker[’s] Hill.)—PPSr—PSR 
(Warren’s Address to the American Soldiers.)—AA 
(Warren’s Supposed Address at Bunker Hill.)— 
BLP 

Warren’s Address at the Battle of Bunker Hill.—J: 

Pierpont. See Warren’s Address. 

Warren’s Aodress before the Battle of Bunker’s Hill. 

—J: Pierpont. See Warren’s Address. 
Warren’s Address to the American Soldiers.—J: Pier¬ 
pont. See Warren’s Address. 

Warren’s Supposed Address at Bunker Hill.—J: Pier¬ 
pont. See Warren’s Address. 

Warrior’s Wreath, The. (National Preceptor, 1835.)— 
BLP 

War’s End.—A. M. Bell.—MMR 
War’s Sacrifice.—V. S. Mosby.—WR 3 
(After the Battle.)—CS 29—NPS—YP 
War-ship Dixie, The.—Frank L. Stanton.—PAPm 
War-ship of 1812, The. (Philadelphia Record.) — 
PAPm 

War-song of Dinas Vawr, The. (Song fr. The Misfor¬ 
tunes of Elphin, Ch. XI.)—T: L. Peacock.— 
BPB — BVC — CEL — HBP — PEB 3—VA 
—WEP 4 

Warwick, the King-maker.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See 
Last of the Barons, The. 

Wary Trout, The.—Anon.—PC 

Was I to Blame.—Dudley L. Bonde.—BS 18 

Was it Right. (Texas Siftings.) —PS 


362 




TITLE INDEX 


Water 


"Was James A. Garfield great? Ask those early 
years.”—D: Swing.—GG 
Was there another Spring?—Helen Hay.—AA 
Wash Day.—Anon.—PS—TT 
Wash Day at Zofflecoffer’s.—Anon.—MC 
"Wash Dolly up Like that.” — Eleanor K. Ames.— 
PEO—PR—YA 

Washers of the Shroud, The.—Jas. R. Lowell.—EPs— 
PAP 

Washerwoman’s Friend, The.—Eugene F. Ware. See 
following. 

Washerwoman’s Song, The. (C.) —Eugene F. Ware. 
(Constant Friend, The— br. sel.) —HP 
(Washerwoman’s Friend, The.)—CS 26 
Washing.—Anon. See following. 

Washing Dishes.—Carrie E. Ellis.—TFS 
Washing Dolly’s Clothes.—Anon.—PS 
(Washing.)—TT 

Washing-day. ( Hearth and Home .)—HP 
Washington. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 6—TCP 
Washington.—Anon.—DLF 

Washington. (Fr. Twinkles.)—J: P. Bocock.—TMR 
Washington.—Hezekiah Butterworth.—CS 35 ( abr.) 

(Crown our Washington.)—BLP—PEO 
Washington. (Br. sel. fr. Ode to Napoleon Bona¬ 
parte.)—Lord Byron.—EDY 
Washington.—W. W. Caldwell.—WR 17 
Washington. (C.) —Eliza Cook.—SR 10—TMR 
(SI. abr.) —HS—MYF 
(Tribute to Washington— abr.) —BS 4 
Washington.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Under the Old 
Elm. 

Washington.—Harriet Monroe. See Commemoration 
Ode. 

Washington.—C: Phillips.—PS 
(Abr.)— LLC—PR 

(Character of Washington— abr.) —OM—SE 
Washington.—W. H. Spence.—NP 
Washington.—Dan’l Webster. See Addition to the 
Capitol, The. 

Washington.—Dan’l Webster. See also Character of 
Washington, The. 

Washington a Model for Youth.—Timothy Dwight.— 
BLP—PEO 

Washington Acrostic.—Anon.—WR 26 
Washington and Franklin.—W. S. Landor. See Imag¬ 
inary Conversations. 

Washington and Our Schools and Colleges.—C: W. 
Eliot.—FD 2 

(Schools and Colleges of our Country, The— si. abr.) 
—SC—TMD 

Washington and the Constitution.—J: M. Harlan.— 
FD 2 

Washington and the Nation.—J: W. Daniel.—TMD 
Washington and the Nation. (Address delivered at 
the dedication of the Washington Monument 
at Philadelphia, May 15,1897.)—W: McKinley. 
—TMR 

Washington and the Union.—Dan’l Webster. See 
Character of Washington, The. 

Washington Arch in New York, The.—G: W. Curtis. 

See Washington Memorial Arch, The. 
Washington as a Civilian.—Fisher Ames.—BS 2 
Washington as a Leader.—J: Pierpont.—BLP 
Washington as a Soldier.—H: B. Carrington.—BLP 
Washington at Valiev Forge.—Theodore Parker.— 
WR 10 

Washington Hawkins Dines with Colonel Sellers.— 
Clemens and Warner. See Gilded Age, The. 
Washington Memorial Arch, The, Sel. fr. (Washing¬ 
ton Arch in New York, The.)—G: W. Curtis. 
—FD 2 

Washington Monument. (Sel. fr. National Monument 
to Washington.)—Rob’t C. Winthrop.—FD 1 
—PEO—TMD 

(National Monument to Washington.)—BS 3— 
CS 2 

Washington Monument Completed, The.—Rob’t C. 
Winthrop. See Completion of the National 
Monument to Washington. 

Washington Needle, The.—Rob’t C. Winthrop. See 
Completion of the National Monument to 
Washington. 

Washington Sequoia, The, Sel. fr. (Yosemite.)— 

Milicent W. Shinn.—AA 

Washington to His Soldiers.—G: Washington.—PS 
(Address to his Troops.)—BS 24—OS 2 
(To the American Troops before the Battle of 
Long Island.)—SS—SSD 

Washington’s Address to His Troops.—G: Washing¬ 
ton. See Washington to his Soldiers. 
Washington’s Birthday.—Anon.—CP 
Washington’s Birthday.—Anon.—DST 


Washington’s Birthday. — Rufus Choate. — DFR — 
PS (sel.) 

(Birthday of Washington, The.)—CS 1—FD 2— 
HS—PEO—PS—SE—SR 8—SS 
Washington’s Birthday.-—H: Lee. See Funeral Ora¬ 
tion on the Death of General Washington. 
Washington’s Birthday.—Marg. E. Sangster.—PEO— 
TMR 

Washington’s Birthday.—Dan’l Webster.—SE 
(Twenty-second of February, The.)—PS 
Washington’s Birthday Address.—Anon.—CP 
Washington’s Birthday Oration.—Anon.—CP 
Washington’s Characterization.—Sam’l Eliot.—FD 2 
Washington’s Fame.-—Asher Robbins.—PEO 
Washington’s Farewell to his Army.-—Anon.—WR 10 
Washington’s Foreign Policy.—W: McKinley.—SO 
Washington’s Inaugural Address. — G: Washington. 

See Washington’s Inaugurals, April 30, 1789. 
Washington’s Inaugurals, Apr. 30, 1789.—G: Washing¬ 
ton.—AI 

(First Inaugural Address.)—EAO 
(Maxims of George Washington— incl. br. sel. fr. 
this.) —DFR 

(Washington’s Inaugural Address— sel.) —OS 3 
Washington’s Inaugurals, Dec. 3, 1793.—G: Washing¬ 
ton.—AI 

Washington’s Inauguration. (Abr.) —Chauncey M. 
Depew.—MRS 

(Centennial Speech— diff. abr.) —SR 8 
Washington’s Kiss.—Annie S. Downs.—-HS—WR 25 
Washington’s Life. (Concert rec.) —M. A. Brvant.— 
DFR 

(George Washington.)—DLS—PP—PS—YPS 
Washington’s Name.—Jas. G. Percival.—PRR 
Washington’s Proclamation.—Anon.—PEO 
Washington’s Statue.—H: T. Tuckerman.—AA 
Washington’s Sword and Franklin’s Staff.—J: Q. 

Adams—CS 2—FD 1—PS—SR 8—SS 
Washington’s Training.—C: W. Upham.—BLP—PEO 
Washington’s Vision. (Tab.) —Amanda P. Selkrig.— 
StD 

Wasp and the Bee, The.—Anon.—DCP 
Wasp’s Frolic, The.—Anon.—AWB—EDY 
Wassail Chorus at the Mermaid Tavern.—Theodore 
Watts-Dunton.—OB 
Waste Not, Want Not.—Anon.—CS 18 
(Hans’ Midnight Excuses.)—BDD 
Wasted.—J. F. Norton.—BS 16 
Wasted Energy.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Wasted Sympathy, A.—Winifred Howells.—AA 
Wat Tvler, Sels. fr. —Rob’t Southey. 

Wat Tyler. (Sets. fr. Act I., Sc. 2; II., 1 and 2; 
III., 2.)—EHT 

Wat Tyler’s Address to the King. (Sel. fr. II., 3.) 
—PS—SS 

Wat Tyler’s Address to the King.—Rob’t Southey. 

See Wat Tyler. 

Watch.—Anon.—SSS 
Watch and Pray.—Anon.—DJS 
Watch by Night, The.—J: Keble.—HDL 
Watch Night.—Horatius Bonar.—BS 15 
Watch of a Swan, The.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA 
Watch on the Rhine, The.—Max Schneckenburger.— 
OS 2 

(Abr.) — LLC (wr. at. to Carl Wilhelm.) — 
WCLG 1 

(Guard on the Rhine, The— tr. by G. F. Dunning ) 
—HSS 1—SM 

Watch Your Words.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Watcher, The.—Sarah J. Hale.—AA 
Watchers, The.—Arlo Bates.—AA 
Watchers, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
W atching.—Anon.—KN S 

Watching.—Emily C. Judson.—AA— BNL-—HBP 
Watching Angel, The (Dans l’Alcove Sombre).— 
Victor Hugo. 

(L’Ange qui Veille.)—WR 25 
Watching for Crumbs.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
Watching for Papa.—Anon.—HP 

Watching for Santa Claus.—Clara J. Denton.—LL— 
LPD 

Watching for Santa Claus. (Dial.) —Clara Denton.— 
LPD 

Watchman, Tell us of the Night.—J: Bowring. See 
Watchman’s Report, The. 

Watchman’s Report, The.—J: Bowring.—HBP 
(Watchman, Tell us of the Night.)—FEP 
(What of the Night?)—VA 
Watchman’s Story, The.—J: F. Nicholls.—CS 27 
Water.—Anon.—PEO 

Water. (Frags.fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Water.—Eliza Cook.—CS 35 

Water.—Paul Denton. See Apostrophe to Water. 


363 




Water 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Water.—J: Ruskin. See Modern Painters. 

Water and Rum.—J: B. Gough.—BS 16—CS 32—PS 
—SAE {br. sel.) 

Water and the Flower, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Water Babies, The, Sels, fr. —C: Kingsley. 

Clear and Cool. (Tide River, The— C. — fr. Ch. I.) 
—GN 

(Song of the River.)—BNL—MMR—SN 
Lost Doll, The. (My Little Doll— C. — fr. Ch. V.) 
—OS 1—PoR 

(My Childhood’s Love.)—WR 22 

(Old Love, The.)—GMS 

(Song of Madame Do-as-you-would-be-done-by, 
The.)—WEP 4 

“Old, Old Song, The.” (Young and Old— C. — fr. 
Ch. II.)—BFV—LC—PGT 2—WEP 4—YBF 

(“When all the world is young[, lad].”)—BS 25 
—LLC 

(“Wild Oats.”)—GP—WR 2 

(Youth and Age.)—CEL 
Water Color, A.—Anon.—WR 26 
Water Fay, The v (In Pictures of Travel: The Return 
Home, XIV.)—Heinrich Heine {tr. by C: G. 
Leland).—HBP 

Water for Me.—E: Johnson. See Water-drinker, The. 
Water in Landscape. {Sel. fr. My Farm of Edge- 
wood, Ch. I.)—Donald G. Mitchell.—LLC 
Water into Wine, The. (“Thy glory Thou didst man¬ 
ifest.”)—E. E. Higbee.—LLC 
Water Lady, The.—T: Hood.—HBP—VA 
Water Lily, The.—Mary F. Butts.—BS 16—HP 
Water Lily, The, Sel. fr. —Fs. L. D. Waters.—TCV 
Water Lily. See also Water-lily. 

“Water! look at it, ye thirsty ones.”—A. W. Arring¬ 
ton. See Apostrophe to Water. 

Water that has Passed, The.—Sarah Doudney. See 
Water-mill, The. 

Water! The Water, /The.—W: Motherwell.—HBP— 
PoR {sel.) 

Water Witch, The, Sel. fr. (My Brigantine— song fr. 

Ch. XV.)—Jas. F. Cooper.—AA—BNL 
Water-bloom, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Water-cure, The.—Austin Dobson.—VSG 
Water-drinker, The.—E: Johnson.—SS 

(.46r.)—BNL—WIl 18 
(Water for me— sel.) —PS 
Waterfall, The, Sel. fr. —J: Keble.—CEL—WEP 4 
Waterfall, The.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL—PoR 
Watering the Horses. {Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Water-lily, The.—J: B. Tabb.—AA—SN 
Water-lily. See also Water Lily. 

Waterloo.—Lord Byron. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrim¬ 
age. 

Waterloo.—Joel T. Headley. See Napoleon and his 
Marshals. 

Waterloo.—Victor Hugo. See Les MistTables. 
Waterloo.—Douglas Sladen.—WR 7 
Waterloo Ballad, A.—T: Hood.—HSS 3 
Watermelon Pickles. {Detroit Free Press.) —FAS 
Watermelon Season, The.—E. N. Baldwin.—WR 21 
Watermelon Talk.—Anon—DSS 

Water-mill, The.—“Aunt Effie.”—BVC—WCL {si. 
abr.) 

Water-mill, The. {Fr. The Man o’ Airlie.)—Sarah 
Doudney.—HP—SM {si. abr.) 

{At. to Dan’l C. McCallum — si. diff. vers.) — 
BRR—CS 14—DS—FMR 
(Water that has Passed, The.)—GP—SR 1 
Watermillion, The.-—Anon.—CS 31—PR—TFS—YA 
Water-nymph and the Boy, The.—Roden B. Noel. 
—OB 

Waters of Carr, The.—Arthur J. Lockhart.—TCV 
Wave, The.—Christoph A. Tiedge.—BS 12 
Waverley, Sels. fr. —Walter Scott. 

Davie Gellatley’s Song. {Fr. Ch. IX.)—PEB 3 
Hie Away. {Sona fr. Ch. XII.)—OS 1—PoR 
Waves. {Sels. fr. Fragments on Nature and Life.)— 
Ralph W. Emerson.—AA 
Wax Figures, The. {Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Wax Work.—Anon.—BS 3—CS 10—MHR 
Way, The.—W: S. Shurtleff.—WR 6 
“Way at times may dark and dreary seem, The.” {Br. 
sel. fr. Rifts in the Cloud.)—Will Carleton.— 
FHS 

’Way Down in Ole Virginy.—W: H. Head.—SR 11 
’Way Down Souf in Georgy. — Howell L. Piner. — 
WR 23 

Wav for Billy and Me, The.—Jas. Hogg.—OS 1 

(Boy’s Song[, A].)—BFV—BPB—BVC {abr.)— 
CEL—LC—NV—OB—PoR—WEP 4 
Way it is Said, The.—Anon.—FS 
Way of It, The.—J: V. Cheney,—TAV 
Way of It. The. {Yale Record.) —CG 2 


Way of the Cross, The.—Ellen C. Howarth.—HDL 
Way of the World, The.—Anon.—CS 26 
Way of the World, The.—Aristine Anderson.— W li 20 
Way the Baby Slept, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA 
Way the Baby Woke, The.—Jas. W. Riley.—AA 
Way, the Truth, and the Life, The.—Theodore Parker. 
•-BNL—GP 

(“O Thou great Friend to all the sons of men!”)— 
GG 

Way They Pop in Boston, The.—Anon.—WR 14 
Way to Arcady, The.—H: C. Bunner.—AA—ASL 
Way to be Brave, The.—Anon.—SSS 
Way to be Happy, The.—Anon.—FTT—HSS 2 

{Abr. )—PPSr—PS 

Way to be Happy.—Jane Taylor.—PC 
Way to Conquer, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—WR 24 
Way to Do It, The. (C.)—Mary M. Dodge.—PP— 
YFR 

(Way to Speak a Piece, The— si. abr.) —WR 17 
Way to Freedom, The. {Dial.) —S. Jennie Smith.—CS 34 
Way to Heaven, The.—Josiah G. Holland.—LLC— 
OS 2—SM 

(Gradatim—C.)—BS 6—CS 6—GMS—GP—SO {si. 
abr .) 

(Gradation— si. abr.) —KNE 
Way to Heaven, The.—C. G. Whiting.—AA 
Way to Make Money Plenty in Every Man’s Pocket, 
The, Br. sel. fr. (Honesty and Economy.)— 
B: Franklin—HSS 3 
Way to Sing, The.—Anon.—HSS 2 
Way to Speak a Piece, The.—Mary M. Dodge. See 
Way to Do It, The. 

Way to Spend Christmas, The. {Dial.) —Annie Chase. 
—DLD 

Way to Wealth, The[: being a Summary of the Maxims 
and Proverbs in Poor Richard’s Almanac—C.]. 
—B: Franklin.—WCL1 2 {abr.) 

(Poor Richard’s Almanac.)—MAL 

(Time— sel.) —OS 1 

Wayback Temperance Lecture.—C: R. Risley.—CS 35 
Wayfarer, The.—Stephen Crane.—AA 
Wayfarers.—-E. S. H.—EPs 

Waylaid. {Pantomime char.) — E. C. and L. J. Rook. 
—YFE 

Ways and Means (‘ ‘ I’ll tell thee everything I can ”— C.). 
—Lewis Carroll.—NA 

Ways of Love, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—FTA—OH 

(How do I Love thee?)—GP—TFY 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese.)—BNL—FEP— 
HBP—YBF 

(Sonnets from the Portuguese, XLIII.—C.)—VA 
—WEP 4 

Ways of Some Girls at the Play, The.—-Anon.—DCR 
Ways of War.—Lionel Johnson.—TIP 
Wayside, The.—J: H. Morse.—AA 
Wayside Calvary, A.—Anne R. Aldrich.—TAS 
Wayside Inn, The.—Adelaide A.- Procter.—BS 10 
Wayside Inn—an Apple-tree, The.—Anon.—AD— 
HSS 1 

Wayside Virgin, The: France.—Langdon E. Mitchell.— 
A A Sic 

Wayside Well, The.—Walter Learned.—TAV FlSs 

“We all complain of the shortness of time.” {Br. sel. 

fr. Morals, Ch. XIX.) Seneca.—WCLI 1 
We all have Faults.—Rob’t Burns. See To a Louse. 

We all know Her.—Tom Masson.—CS 31—PR—SR 10 
—YA 

“We all like Sheep.”—Anon.—CS 29—TFS 
“We All Wishes You was up Here.”—Howell L. Piner. 
—WR 23 

“We Americans make a God of our common-school 
system.” {Scribner’s Monthly.) —GG 
We are Brethren A’.—Rob’t Nicoll.—BNL—FEP 
“We are Builders, and each one.”—Anon.—GG 
We are but Little Folks, you See.—Marie E. Kunkler.— 
KC 

(But Little Folks— sel.) —TT 
We are Children. (Cornisken Sonnets, III.)—Rob’t 
Buchanan.—VA 

“We are ever taking leave of something that will not 
come back again.” {Br. sel. fr. The Last 
Utterances of Christ.)—Frd’k W. Robertson.— 
GG 

We are Four.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
We are Free (Song— C .).—Alfred Tennyson.—SAE 
We are Seven.—W: Wordsworth.—BNL—FEP—FMR 
—C. M S—G N—G P—H B P—M B L—M R—PC— 
PHS—VSG—WCL 

{SI. abr.)— CSS—OS 1—PPSr 
“We are what the past has made us.”—Frd’k W. Robert¬ 
son.—GG 

We Can Do So Little.—G: Du Maurier.—WR 17 
“We cannot despair of success.”—R. W. Dale.—GG 


364 






TITLE INDEX 


W eight 


We Cannot Kindle when We Will.—Matthew Arnold. 
See Morality. 

We Cannot Love too Much. (Sel. fr. Message of an 
.Fob an Harp.)—Frances R. Havergal.—B1L 
“We cannot say to any young man: ‘Do not play bil¬ 
liards.’”—J: Tulloch.—GG 

We Cherish Dreams—C: Lamb. See That we should 
Rise with the Lark. 

We Conquer God.—Maurice F. Egan.—TAS 
“We do not get our best vision of heaven.”—R. S. 
Storrs.—GG 

We do not Stop to Think.—Anon.—SR 2 
We Greet Thee, Merry Spring Time. {With music.) — 
Anon.—AD 

“We grow wrong; we allow ourselves to crystallize in 
habits.”—Jos. Cook.—GG 

We Have Been Friends Together.—Caroline E. S. 

Norton.—BNL—GP—HBP—V A 
We Have Seen Thee, O Love.—Algernon C. Swinburne. 
See Atalanta in Calydon. 

We Kissed again with Tears.—Alfred Tennyson. See 
Princess, The. 

“We know what would be the effect of abating faith.”— 
Anon.—GG 

We Lay us down to Sleep.—Louise C. Moulton.—AA— 
HDL 

"We Lead Two Lives, the outward seeming fair.”— 
Anon.—GG 

We Lift our Tuneful Voices. {With music.) —Anon.— 
AD 

“We listened, as all boys in their better moods will 
listen.”—T: Hughes. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days. 

We Little Boys. ( Concert piece.) —COS—DJS—DLS 
—PP—TT 

“We live in the world’s crisis.”—Anon.—GG 
We Love but Few.—Anon.—BIL—FLS—FTA—HP 
“We may hope that the growing influence of enlight¬ 
ened sentiments.”—Dan’l Webster.—HSS 1 
“We may nofr stand content; it is our part.”—J: J. 
Piatt.—GG 

We Meet upon the Level and We Part upon the Square. 

—Rob’t Morris—CS 2 
We Met.—T: H. Bavly.—FP 
We Must All Scratch.—Anon.—PP—YFR 
(Chickens, The.)—DS—NPS—TFS—YA 
(Five Little Chickens.)—DES 
“We must fight this temperance battle out.”—J: B. 
Gough.—GG 

We Parted in Sadness.—C: F. Hoffman.—FTA 
W T e Parted in Silence.—Julia Crawford.—BNL—GP— 
HBP 

We Plough the Fields.—Matthias Claudius.—YBT 
We Saw, and Woo’d Each Other’s Eyes.—W: Habing- 
ton. See Castara. 

We Shall be Satisfied.—S. K. Phillips.—HP 
We Shall Know.—Annie Herbert.—CS 9—TFS {set.) 

(When the Mists have Rolled away— abr.) —LLC 
We Shall Meet and Rest.—Horatius Bonar.—LLC {abr.) 

(Meeting-place, The— C.) —CS 2 
"We shall walk no more through the sodden plain.”— 
Jean Ingelow. See When Sparrows Build. 
“We shape ourselves the joy or fear.”—J: G. Whittier. 
See Raphael. 

W T e Thank Thee.—Marv M. Dodge—YBT 
We Thank Thee.—Ralph W. Emerson! ?).—NV 
{Set.) AD—NV—YBT 
We Twain.—Amanda T. Jones.—GP 
We Two. ( Harper’s Bazar.) —CS 15 
We Two.—Sarah M. B. Piatt—TAS 
We Two.—Marg. J. Preston.—BIL 
“We walk alone through all life’s various ways.”— 
Eleanor Gray.—GG 

We Walked among the Whispering Pines.—J. H. 
Boner.—AA 

We Were Boys Together.—G: P. Morris.—AA—BLP 
“We will grieve not.”—W: Wordsworth. See Ode: 

Intimations of Immortality, etc. 

Weakness. {Fr. Abuses Stript and Whipt.)—G: 

Wither.—WEP 2 
Wealth.—Anna H. Branch.—CG 2 

Wealth.— {In Conduct of Life.)—Ralph W. Emerson.— 
SE {sel.) 

Wealth and Progress.—Anon.—CP 

Wealth and Work.—Anon.—NPS—YP 

Wealth is not happiness.—Caroline E. S. Norton.—FP 

“Weapon that comes down as still, A.”—J: Pierpont. 

See Word from a Petitioner, A. 

Wearin’ o’ the Green, The.—Anon.—TIP 
Weary Coble o’Cargill, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Weary in Well-doing.—Christina G. Rossetti.—FEP 
“ 'Weary lot is thine[, fair maid]. A.’ ”—Walter Scott.— 
See Rokeby. 


Weary Soul, The.—Anon.—CS 11 
Wearyin’ for You.—Frank L. Stanton.—BS 21 
Weather, The.—Anon.—CPL 
(W eat her-song.)—SSS 
Weather Bureau, The.—Anon.—WR 25 
Weather in Verse, The.—Vandyke Brown.—CS 26 
Weather Receipt, A.—Anon.—YBT 
Weather Rule, A.—Anon.—BVC 

W’eathercock, The. (C.) — J. T. Allingham. — 
CS 19 {abr.)— SS {abr.) 

(Jack of all Trades—ad.)—DT 
Weather-cock’s Complaint, The.—Anon.—NV 
Weather-song.—Anon. See Weather, The. 

Weaver, The.—Anon.—YBT 
Weaver, The.—W: H. Burleigh.—CS 7 
Weaving the Web.—Julia C. R. Dorr.—SR 1 
Web of Life, The.—Clara J. Moore.—FEP 
Webster —Epes Sargent.—EDY 

Webster: An Ode, Sel. fr. (At Marshfield.)—W. C. 
Wilkinson.—AA 

Webster as an Orator and Statesman.—S: C. Bartlett. 
—FD 2 

Webster Statue at Concord, N. H., The.—G: D. Rob¬ 
inson.—FD 2 

Webster the Successor of Washington.—J: A. Bing¬ 
ham.—FD 2 

We’d All Like to Stop There.—Anon.—SR 13 
Wedded.—Anon.—HP 
Wedded.—Jas. V. Blake.—BIL—TFY 
Wedded Bliss.—Charlotte P. (S.) Gilman.—AWH— 
THP 

Wedding, The.—Rob’t Southey.—BS 20 
Wedding Bells.—Charlotte M. Griffiths.—PR 
Wedding Bells, The.—Edgar A. Poe. See Bells, The. 
Wedding Day. See also Wedding-day. 

Wedding Day, The; or, “Better Late than Never.” 

(Dial.) —Ellen Pickering.—DDD 
Wedding Fee, The.—R. M. Streeter.—CS 12 

{Also included in Parson’s Fee, The— tab.) —BS 11 
—TCP 

Wedding Gift, The.—(TV. by) Leonard C. Foster.— 
CS 37 

Wedding Gifts.—Martin F. (?) Tupper.—FP 
Wedding Hymn.—Sidney Lanier.—TAS 
Wedding of Pale Bronwen, The.—Ernest Rhys.— 
PEB 4 

Wedding of Shon Maclean, The. {Sel.) —Rob’t 
Buchanan.—BS 11 

Wedding of the Clans, The.—Aubrey De Vere.—TIP 
Wedding of the Moon, The.—G: P. Lathrop.—BS 19 
Wedding Song.—Beaumont and Fletcher. See Maid’s 
Tragedy, The. 

Wedding Song, A.—J: W. Chadwick.—AA—OH 
Wedding Song. A.—J: Savarv.—OH 
Wedding Veil, The.—Eliz. Whittier.—BIL 
Wedding-day, The.—Anon.—WR 13 
W r edding-day, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.—TAV 
Wedding-day, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See In Memo- 
riam. 

Wedding-day. See also Wedding Day. 

Wedding-gown, The.—Etta W. Pierce.—DR 
Wedding-march on Trial, A.—Fanny Barlow.—MYF 
(Taken on Trial.)—GH 

Wedlock Hymn, A.—W: Shakespeare. See As You 
Like It. 

Wednesday before Easter. (C.) —J: Keble. 
(Resignation.)—CEL 

Wee, Wee Bairnie, The.—Anon.—CD—SR 4 
Wee, Wee Man, The.—Anon.—HBP—PEB 1 {si. diff.) 
Wee Willie Winkie. (Sel.) —Rudyard Kipling.—WR 9 
Weed and the Boy, The.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
Weed’s Mission, The.—Marg. Eytinge.—YBT 
Weehawken and the New York Bay.—Fitz-Greene 
Halleck. See Fanny. 

Week of Work, A.—Anon.—DLF 

Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, A, 
Verses fr. —H: D. Thoreau. 

Haze. (Fr. Tuesday.)—EPs 
Mist. (Fr. Tuesday.)—AA—BNL—EPs—SN 
Summer Rain, The. (Fr. Thursday.)—ASL 
Sympathy. (Fr. Wednesday.)—EPs 
Week’s Work, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Weep no More.—J: Fletcher. See Queen of Corinth, 
The. 

Weep not.—Johann Hofei.—HDL 

Weep not, my Wanton.—Rob’t Greene. See Mena- 
phon. 

Weep not! Sigh not!—W: J. Linton.—VA 
Weeper, The.—R: Crashaw.—OB 
Weeping Mary.—J: Newton.—HBP 
Wee-waw Land, The.—H. T. Hollands.—WR 17 
Weighing Social, A.—Anon.—EuE 
Weight of a Word. The.—Anon.—PR 


365 




Weird 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Weird Lady, The.—C: Kingsley.—PEB 3 
Weird Warble, A.—H. C. Newton.—CS 35 
W elcome.—Anon.—DCP 
Welcome.—Anon.—DST 

Welcome. ( Concert piece.) —Anon.—PS—TT 
Welcome!, A or The].—W: Browne.—ELP—FEP— 
OB 

(Song.)—CEL—ES—WEP 2 
(Welcome, welcome.)—HBP—YBF 
(“Welcome, welcome, do I sing”— abr.) —BNL 
Welcome, The.—T: Davis.—BNL—CS 10—FEP— 
FLS (br. sel. )—H B P—VA - 
Welcome, A.—C: Kingsley.—LH 

(Ode to the North-east Wind—C.)—GN—PHS— 
VSG 

Welcome, Bonny Brid!—S: Laycock.—VA 
Welcome for School Entertainment.—Ida M. Hedrich. 
—DS—YA 

Welcome Home.—Annie R. Christie.—TCV 
Welcome, Little Stranger.—C: F. Adams.—HP 

(Charley’s Opinion of the Baby.—Anon.— variation 
on HP.)—PR—PS 
(Nose out of Joint.)—DLS 
Welcome Spring, The. ( W. music.) —E. R. Latta.— 
AD 

Welcome to Alexandra (C.)[, (Princess of Wales)] A.— 
Alfred Tennyson.—EDY—SO 
(Alexandra— sel. )—SE 

Welcome to “Boz,” A. (On His First Visit to the 
West.)—W. H. Venable.—BNL 
Welcome to Gen. La Fayette.—E: Everett.—SR 8 
Welcome to Her Royal Highness, Marie Alexandrovna, 
Duchess of Edinburgh. (C.)—Alfred Ten¬ 
nyson. 

(Welcome to the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, 
A.)—EDY 

Welcome to Louis Kossuth. (Sel.) —W: H. Seward. 
—NC 

Welcome to May.—Anon.—AD 
Welcome to Summer, A.—Anon.—BS 3 
Welcome to the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, A.— 
Alfred Tennyson. See Welcome to Her 
Royal Highness, etc., A. 

Welcome to the Forest. (IF. music.) —Anon.—AD 
Welcome to the Nations.—Oliver W. Holmes.—CS 19 
Welcome to the Nations.—Levi P. Morton.—BLP 
Welcome, Welcome.—W: Browne. See Welcome. 
Welcome, Welcome, Do I Sing.—W: Browne. See 
Welcome. 

We’ll a’ Go’ Pu’ the Heather.—Rob’t Nicoll.—VA 
“Well, Dinah Might.”—S. G. Tenney.—CG 1 
We’ll Go no More a-Roving.—Lord Byron.—OB 

(“So, we’ll go no more a-roving”— C.) —BPB— 
WEP 4 

“Well I know thy trouble.”—J: M. Neale.—HDL 
Well of Death, The.—Anon.—SED 
Well of St. Kevne, The.—Rob’t Southey.—BNL— 
CS 4—FEP—PEB 3—WR 25 
Well Spent.—G: Eliot.—YBT 

“Well, Then, I’m Yourn.”—Jos. B. Smiley.—CS 33 
Wellesley in Autumn.—M. B. Wood.—CG 3 
Wellington.—B: Disraeli, Lord Beaconsfield.—EDY— 
VA 

Wellington’s Nose.—Anon.—HPE 
“Well-nerved and stout be the arm that smiteth 
wrong.”—W. H. H. Murray.—GG 
Well-spent Sunday, The.—Matthew Hale.—DLS 
Welsh Classic, A.—Harlan H. Ballard.—CS 23—SPE 
—SR 11 

W’en Bill Smith Gits His ’Cordeen Out.—Anon.—CS 34 
W’en de Darky am a-Whistlin’ in de Co’n.—S. Q. 
Lapius.—BS 23 

Wendell Phillips.—Amos B. Alcott.—AA 
Wendell Phillips.—H: W. Beecher.—NC 
Wendell Phillips.—G: W: Curtis. See Wendell Phil¬ 
lips. A Eulogy, etc. 

Wendell Phillips, Sel. fr. (Oratory of Wendell Phil¬ 
lips. The.)—T: W. Higginson.—FD 2 
Wendell Phillips. (Sonnet XXIII.)—Jas. R. Lo-well. 
—PEO 

Wendell Phillips.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AA (sel.) —BS 12 
Wendell Phillips. A Eulogy Delivered before the 
Municipal Authorities of Boston, Mass., April 
18, 1884, Sets. fr. —G: W. Curtis. 

Eulogy of Wendell Phillips.—FD 2 
Eulogv on Wendell Phillips. (Ptly. like others.) — 
CR 

Wendell Phillips.—FS 
Wendell Phillips as an Orator.—FD 2 
(Eulogy on Wendell Phillips— abr.) —AE 
Wendell Phillips at Faneuil Hall.—FD 2 
Wendell Phillips as an Orator.—G: W. Curtis. See 
Wendell Phillips. A Eulogy, etc. 


Wendell Phillips at Faneuil Hall.—G: W. Curtis. See 
Wendell Phillips. A Eulogy, etc. _ 

Wer wenig Sucht, der Findet Viel.—Friedrich Riickert 
(tr. by Lilian Clarke).—OH 

“We’re Building Two a Day!”—Alfred J. Hough.— 
CS 25 . 

Were but My Spirit Loosed upon the Air.—Louise C. 
Moulton.—AA—ASL 

“Were half the power that fills the world with terror.” 
—H: W. Longfellow. See Arsenal at Spring- 
field, The. 

Were I as Base as is the Lowly Plain.—Joshua Sylves¬ 
ter.—BNL 

(Love’s Omnipresence.)—FEP—FTA—OH—PGT1 
—YBF 

(Sonnet.)—WEP 1 
(Ubique.)—OB 

Were I but his Own Wife.—Ellen M. P. Downing.— 
HBP—VA 

“Were I so tall to reach the pole.”—Anon.—HSS 2 
Were I the Sun.—Anon.—DLF 
Were I Thy Bride.—Anon.—FLS 
Were I You, Little Lad.—Belle K. Towne.—HSS 2 
Were it Only Now.—A. W. Bell.—CG 2 
We’re Only Little Children.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
“Were there no night, we could not read the stars.”— 
H: Burton.—GG 

Werena my Heart’s Licht I wad dee.—Lady Grisel 
Baillie.—OB 

Were-wolf.—Julian Hawthorne.—A A 
Were-wolves, The.—W. W. Campbell.—VA 
West.—Anon.—CP 

West Indies, Sel. fr. (Home— fr. Pt. III.)—Jas. 
Montgomery.—WRD 
(Sel.) —FP—WCLG 2 

(Love of Country and Home.)—PPSr (br. sel.) — 
SS (abr.) 

(My Country— abr.) —BNL—SM 
West Point.—L. C. Strong.—FEP—HBP 
West Wind, The.—W: C. Bryant.—POJ! 

West Wind.—Carmen Sylva.—HS 

Western Artist’s Accomplishments, A.—Anon.—CS26 
—DCR 

Western Lawyer’s Plea against the Fact, A.—Anon. 
—BC 

Westminster Abbey, Sels. fr. (In The Sketch Book.) 
—Washington Irving. 

Organ, The.—SE 

(Sketch-book, The, Sel. fr.) —AE 
(Westminster Abbey.)—SAE 
Reflections on Westminster Abbey.—BS 7 
Westminster Abbey:—TMD 
Westminster Bridge.—W: Wordsworth.-—LLC—WR 1 
(Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 
1802—C.)—WEP 4 

(“Earth has not anything to show more fair.”)— 
HBR 

(Morning in London.)—HBP—OS 3 
(Sonnet Composed upon Westminster Bridge, 
1802.)—BNL—FEP—MBL 
(Upon Westminster Bridge.)—OB—PGT 1—YBF 
Westward.—Douglass B. Douglass.—CG 3 
Westward Ho!, Sels. fr. —C: Kingsley. 

Sea Fight, The. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXXI.)—VSG 
Waiting for the Armada. (Sel. fr. Ch. XXX.)— 
WCI.G 1 

(Sir Francis Drake— sel.) —OS 2 
Westward Ho!—Joaquin Miller.—AA 
Westward the Course of Empire.—G: Berkeley.— 
GP (abr.) 

(America.)—SS 
(American Destiny.)—BLP 
(Old World and the New, The.)—FP 
(On the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning 
in America.)—BNL—FEP—HBP—YBF 
(Verse: Westward the Star of Empire — br. sel.) — 
EPs 

Wet and Dry.—Clark Jillson.—CS 13—DS—YA 
Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea, A.—Allan Cunningham. 
—BNL — BVC — FEP — HBP — LC — OS 2 
—PC—PGT 1—YBF 

Wet Weather Talk. (SI. abr.) —Jas. W. Riley.—CD 
We’ve always been Provided for.—Anon.—CS 21 
Wexford Massacre, The.-—M. J. Barry.—EDY 
Wha’ll be King but Charlie?—Caroline Oliphant, Lady 
Nairn.—EDY—EHT (abr.)— WEP 3 
Whango Tree, The.—Anon.—NA 

“Whar’s de Kerridge?” (Virginia City Chronicle.) — 
CDV—CRR—SDR 
What?—Kate P. Osgood.—WCL 
What a Bird Taught.—Alice Carv.—BLF 
What a Boy Can Do.—Anon.—WR 15 
What a Christmas Carol Did.—T. A. Harcourt.—CS 21 

366 




TITLE INDEX 


What 


What a Common Man May Say; or. What I Have to 
be Thankful for.—Anon.—PS 
“ ‘What a fool you are, Paley,’ said a young man in a 
British university.”—Albert Barnes.—GG 
What a Little Boy is Worth.—Anon.—FAS 
What a Little Boy Thinks about Things.—J: Paul.— 
CS 19 

What a Little Girl Can Do.—Anon.—WR 17 
What a Little Leaf Said.—H; W. Beecher. See 
Norwood. 

‘‘What a noble gift to man are the forests!”—Susan 
F. Cooper.—AD 

What a Small Boy Can Do.—Anon.—FAS 
What a Thirty-ton Hammer Can Do.—Anon.—CS 25 
What Adam Missed.—Anon.—CS 21—DS—NPS— 
YA—YP 

What Ailed the Pudding.—Josephine Pollard.—DR 
What Ailed “Ugly Sam.”—Anon—CS 12 
What Ails This Heart o’ Mine?—Susanna Blamire.— 
BNL—FEP 

What Arbor Day Has Already Done.—Warren Higley. 
—DFR 


(Arbor Day.)—AD 

What are Little Boys Good for. (Dial.) —Anon.— 
HVD 

“What are the Flowers of Scotland.”—Jas. Hogg.— 
AD 

What are the Wild Waves Saying? (Tab.) —Anon.— 
TCP 

What are these in Bright Array (Song of the Hundred 
and Forty and Four Thousand, The— C .).— 
Jas. Montgomery.—FEP 

What are You Good for?—Emily H. Miller.—OS 1 
(My Good-for-Nothing.)—PC—PS—WCL 
(What Boys are Good for— abr.) —TFS 
What Became of a Lie.—Mrs. M. A. Kidder.—PP— 
YPS * 

What Became of the Kitten.—Anon.—SR 11 
What Bessie Saw.—Carrie W. Bronson.—CPL—PP— 
YPS 

What Biddy Said in the Police Court.—E. T. Corbett. 

_(jg jg 

What Boots the Quest? (C .—Poems Dedicated to 
National Independence and Liberty, Pt. I., 
XII.)—W: Wordsworth.—LLC 
( Sonnet.)—EPs 

What Boys are Good for.—Mrs. E. J. H. Goodfellow. 
—PS—TT 

What Bovs are Good for.—Emily H. Miller. See 
What are you Good for? 

“What can an old man do but die?”—T: Hood.— 
BNL 


(Ballad—C.)—VA 

What Came from a Ride.—Anon.—WR 19 
What Constitutes a State.—Sir W r : Jones.—BNL— 
GG—GP—SE (sel.) 

( A br.) —LLC—SM—WCLG 2 
(Ode: “What constitutes,” etc.)—HBP 
(Ode in Imitation of AIcebus, An.)—FEP 
(Our Country’s Needs—Finch— includes this.) —SSS 
What Constitutes Successful Management.—G: 
Thatcher.—TK 

“What cordial welcome greets the guest.”—W: C. 

Bryant. See “Oh, Mother of a Mighty 
Race.” 

What Do They Say?— Anon.—YBT 
What do we Plant— C. [when we Plant the Tree] ? 
—H: Abbey.—AD;—PEO 
(Dedicatory Exercises include this.) —DFR 
(Have you Planted a Tree?)—WR 17 
(Planting the Tree.)—YBT 
What Does It Matter.—Anon.—CS 5 


(Swedish Poem, A.)—PEO 

What does Little Birdie Say? (Fr. Sea Dreams.)— 
Alfred Tennyson. — BNL — PHS — PoR 
TFS (sel.) 

(Bird and the Baby, The.)—PP—PPSr—\ FR 
(Birdie and Babv.)—DCP 
(Cradle Song.)—LC—PGT 2—PS 
, (Little Birdie.)—OS 1—PC—W’CL 

(Morning Song.)—GMS ~ 

(What the Birdie and the Baby Say.)—HSS 2 
What Dooley Says.—Finley P. Dunne.—W P.21 
What Drove me into a Lunatic Asylum.—Eli Perkins. 


What d’ ve Call It, The, Sel. fr. (Ballad, A —fr. Act 
II.. Sc. 8.)—J: Gay.—WEP 3 
(“’Twas when the seas were roaring. )—FEI 
What Echo Said.—Anon.—WR 6 
What Else?—Kate P. Osgood.—FT A—OH 
What Else Could He Do?—Anon.—BS 21 
(Explanation, An.)—HP 
(In Explanation.)—HP 


What Farmer Green Said.—J. W. Watson.—SR 3 
What Girls Love to Do. (Dial.) —Anon.—PS—TT 
What Good is a Brother?—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
What Good will the Monument Do? (Sel. fr. The 
Bunker Hill Monument.)—E: Everett.—SS 
What Grandma Foretold.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
What Grandma Says.—G: Cooper.—WR 15 
What Grandma Thinks.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

What Grandmother Says.—Anon.—YBT 
“What Happened.”—Rudyard Kipling.—AVP 
What has been Done may be Done again.—Mrs. 

Russell Kavanaugh.—KER 
What Hast Thou Done To-day.—Katie B. Wichmann 

_Qg gy 

What Have I Done?—Lillian B. Fearing.—HP 
What He Called It. (Somerville Journal.) —GH 
(Educational Courtship.)—CS 25—DS 
What He Has.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
What He Would Give Up.—Anon.—DLF—WR 3 
What House to Like.—Anon.—HP 
What I Can Do.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
What I Don’t Like.—Anon.—PS 
What I Know.—Anon.—DST 
What I Like.—Eliza Doolittle.—SD 
What I Like.—H. L.—PPh 

What I Live for. — G. L. Banks.—CS 23 — 
HSS 2 (abr.)— SSS 

(“I live for those that love me”— br. sets.) —GG 
—SM 

(My Aim.)—HP 

What I Said.—Ellen Murray.—CS 28 

What I Saw.—J. M. Akers.—CS 13 

What I Saw in Washington.—G: Thatcher.—TK 

What I Think.—Anon. See What to Drink. 

What I was Made for.—Anon.—YBT 
What I would Be.—D. A. Heywood.—WR 17 
“What if God should place in your hand a diamond.” 
—E: (?) Payson.—GG 

What Intemperance Does.—Anon.—CS 18—SM 
What Intemperance Does. — H. M. Scudder. — 
WR 18 (si. diff.) 

(Destroyer, The.)—CS 17—TS 
What is a Baby Good for? (St. Nicholas.) —HSS 3 
(Little Dora’s Soliloquy.)—BS 10—CPL—PR—YA 
What is a Boy?—Mary A. Denison.—FS 
What is a Gentleman.—Anon.—NPS—YP 
What is a Gentleman? (Dial.) —Clara J. Denton.— 
FTT 

What is a Hedgehog?—-Anon.—W T R 14 
What is a Minority?—J: B. Gough.—FD 1—PR— 
WCLG 1 

(SI. abr.)— BS 17—CS 13—PS—SR 6—TMR 
What is Ambition? (Sel. fr. Extracts from a Poem 
Delivered at Brown University in 1830.)— 
Nathaniel P. Willis.—BLP—SR 3 (longer) 
What is Christmas?—-Clara Denton.—LPD 
“What is commonly called musial criticism is a mis¬ 
nomer.”—Jonathan Edwards.—GG 
What is Fame?—J. H. Stedman.—WR 4 
What is Flirtation?—Anon.—BS 21 
What is Good? (C.)— J: B. O’Reilly - DLF 
(Good, The.)—BS 18—CS 30 
(“What is the real good?”)—YBT 
What is Heaven?—Anon.—CS 24 

“What is hell but an expression of God’s infinite 
abhorrence of sin.”—Lyman Beecher.—GG 
What is his Creed?—Anon. See What was his Creed? 
What is Home?—Anon.—CS 28 
What is it to Die.—Anon.—CS 21 
What is It to Me?—B: P. Shillaber.—SR 1 
What is Life?—Anon.—SR 1 
What is Life? (Blackwood’s Magazine.) —HPE 
What is Life? (C.)— S: T. Coleridge. 

(“Resembles life that once was held of light.”)— 
HP 

What is Love? (Sel. fr. The Longing of a Blessed 
Heart.)—N: Breton.—ELP 
What is Love?—A. J. T.—CG 3 
What is Man?—Simon Wastell. See Microbiblion. 
“What is ministerial success?” (Br. sel. fr. Elijah.) 

—Frd’k W. Robertson.—GG 
What is my Work To-day?—Anon.—SSS 
What is Patriotism?—Fisher Ames.—SR 8 
(True Patriotism.)—PR 

What is Prayer?—Jas. Montgomery.—FEP—HBP 
What is Temperance.—L. B. Coles.—WR 18 
What is That, Mother?—G: W. Doane.—WRD 
(Eagle, The— sel.) —TFS 

What is that to Thee?—T: D. James.—CS 9—NPS 
—YP 

What is the Real Good?—J: B. O’Reilly. See What 
is Good? 


367 






What 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


What is the Song the Swallows Sing?—Harry B. 
Smith.—AD 

What is the Use?, Sel. fr. —E. W. Ellsworth.—AA 
What is the Use of Latin.—Anon.—PTS 
What is Time?—W: Marsden.—BNL—VSG (si. diff.) 
—WRD 

What is To-morrow?—Anon.—WR 6 
(To-morrow.)—HR—LLC 
What is Worth While.—Mrs. S: Lindsay.—TMR 
What is your Culture to me?, Sel. fr. (Young 
Scholar, The.)—C: D. Warner.—BS 2—CS 22 
—DS—LLC 

What It is to Love. (Song I.— si. abr.) —Anna L. 
Barbauld.—F LS 

What Janie Thinks.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
What Lack We Yet? (C.)—Rob’t J. Burdette.—SYS 
(When Washington was President.)—WR 6 
What License Legalizes.—Anon.—TS 
What Life Hath.—Sarah Doudney.—HP 
What Little Dick Would Do.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
What Little Folds Can Do.—Lucy Moore.—KC 
What Lottie Saw.—E. L. Brown.—WR 6 
What Love is Like.—T: Middleton.—FEP 
What Ma Kin Do.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
What Makes a Hero.—H: Taylor.—PS—SS 
(Hero, The.)—VA 

What Makes the Sky Blue?—Anon.—CP 
What Makes the Summer?—Marietta Holley.—YBT 
What Man is There of You?—G: Macdonald.—HDL 
What March Does. (March—C.)—May R. Smith. — 
YBT (si. diff. vers. fr. Poems.) 

What Matters It?—G: F. Cameron.—TCV—VA 
What May Happen to a Thimble.—“B.”—PoR 
What Men Have not Fought for. — Rob’t J. Bur¬ 
dette.—BS 17—CS 27 

What Might Be Done.—C: Mackay.—BLP—HBP— 
SM—VA 

What Might Happen.—Eva L. Carson.—CS 31—PR 
What Might Have Been?—Anon.—CS 8 
What Miss Edith Saw from Her Window.—Fs. Bret 
Harte—BS 23 

What Mr. Robinson Thinks.—Jas. R. Lowell. See 
Biglow Papers, The. 

What Mother Says.—Anon.—HSS 2 
What Mother Says.—Anon.—TFS 
What My Lover Said.—Homer Greene.—AA—CS 20 
—HBR—HP 

What not to Do.—Anon.—KNS 

“What note of sorrow wounds the joyous May?”— 
Sarah D. Hobart.—HSS 1 

“What now, Sir Foole!”—Sir Philip Sidney. See 
Astrophel and Stella. 

What o’Clock.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
What of That?—Anon.—HP 
(SI. abr.) —BS 15—PEO 
(Sermon in Verse, A.)—KNE 
(“Tired! well, and what of that?”)—GG 
What of the Night?—Sir J: Bowring. See Watchman’s 
Report, The. 

What Old Mrs. Ember Said.—-Mary K. Dallas.—WR 2 
What One Bov Thinks.—Harriet P. Spofford.—CS 29 
What Robin Said.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
What Robin Told.—G: Cooper.—AD 
What Sambo Says.—Anon.—CRR 
What Saved the Union.—Ulysses S. Grant.—PS 
(Speech at Hamburg.)—FD 1 
What Sequel?—Alfred Tennyson. See Love and Duty. 
What Shall I Do for My Love?—Lewis Morris.—BIL— 
FTA—TFY 

“‘What shall I do’? My boy, don’t stand asking.”— 
Frances D. B. (?) Gage.—GG 
What Shall It Profit?—W: D. Howells.—AA—TAS 
What Shall We Wrap the Babv in?—Lucy Larcom.— 
YBT 

What She Said.—Sarah De W. Gamwell.—BS 16— 
CS 32—DST 

What Should a Young Maid Do?—Byron W. King.— 
WR 2 

What Some One Said.—Anon.—FLS 
What the April Breeze Said to the Trees.—Keith St. 
John—YBT 

What the Bells Said.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
What the Birdie and the Baby Say.—Alfred Tennyson. 

See What Does Little Birdie Say? 

What the Birds Said.—J: G. Whittier.—EPs 
What the Bullet Sang.—Fs. Bret Harte.—AA—LH— 
OB 

What the Burdock was Good For.—Anon.—NV—YBT 
What the Chimney Sang. (C.)—Fs. Bret Harte. 

(Chimney’s Melody, The.)—BS 10 
What the Choir Sang about the New Bonnet.—M. T. 
Morrison.—CH 

(Foolish Little Maiden, A.)—CS 26 


What the Clock Says.—Anon.—WR 17 
What the Coal Says.—Anon.—NV 
What the Crickets Said.-—Mary K. Dallas.—WR 3 
What the Daisy Said.—Anon.— See Daisy and Snow¬ 
drop. 

What the Diver Saw.—Horace B. Durant.—CS 28 
What the Drums Say.—Fs. Bret Harte.—BS 25 

(ReveilR, The—C.) — AWB — EDY—GN—LH— 
PAPm 

What the Flag Means. (Fr. a speech before the Repub¬ 
lican State Convention of Massachusetts, 
March 27, 1896.)—H: C. Lodge.—SC 
What the Frogs Sing.—Phcebe Cary.—BLF 
What the Lambs Say.—Edith M. Thomas.—COS— 
PP 

What the Little Girl Said. (Boston Globe.) —CS 24— 
DS—NPS—YP 

(Freckled-faced Girl, The.)—BS 11—CRR 
(Startling Revelations.)—SR 5 
What the Little Maiden Saw.—Anon.—HSS 2 
What the Little Shoes Said.—Anon.—PS—TT 
What the Little Things Said.—Fanny J. Crosby.— 
AD (w. mus.) —YBT 

What the Lord Had Done for Him.—Mrs. Findley 
Braden.—WR 7 

What the Lord High Chamberlain Said.—Virginia W. 
Cloud.—WR 20 

What the Minutes Say.—Anon. See Take Care of the 
Minutes. 

What the Mother Heard.—Mrs. Carter [or Mrs. J. 
Morrison],—PPSr 
(Nursery Song.)—NV—PC—PHS 
(Recitation for Three Little Girls.) — LPS — PP — 
What the Old Man Said.—Alice Robbins.—BS 4—CS 5 
—FR—KNE 

What the Prince of I Dreamt.—H. Cholmondeley- 
Pennell.—NA 

What the Quail Says.—Clara D. Bates.—YBT 
What the Robin Can Tell.—Anon.—SR 4 
What the Rose Saw.—Philip B. Marston.—BIL 
What the Snow-birds Said.—Anon.—NV 
What the Snow-drop Said.—Anon.—TFS 
What the Sonnet is.—Eugene Lee-Hamilton.—VA 
What the Temperance Cause has Done for John and Me. 
—J: F. Coles.—CS 14 

What the Train Ran Over.—Lucy Larcom.—LCS 
What the Trumpeter Said.—Sebastian Evans.—VA 
What the Wild Waves Said. (University Herald.) — 
CG 2 

What the Winds Bring. (C.) —Edmund C. Stedman.— 
BNL — FAS — HSS 2 — KC — NV — PC — 
PoR—PP—SN—TFS—YFR 
(Wind, The.)—PTS 

What the Wolf Really Said to Little Red Riding-Hood. 

—-Fs. Bret Harte.—TFY 
What Thev Dreamed and Said.—M. E.—HP 
What They Knew.—S. J. Smith.—DLD 
What They Said.—E. C. and L. J. Rook.—YFE 
What They Say about Cupid.—Anon.—PPSr 
What They Wanted.—Anon.—CS 37 
What They Will Do.—Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
What though the Green Leaf Grow?—Maybury Flem¬ 
ing.—AA 

What Three Women Said.—Anon.—CS 35 
What Time is It?—Anon.—CS 20—KNE 
What to Do. (Popular Educator.) —DJS 
(Life’s Maxims.)—DLS 
What to Drink.—Anon.—DST—PS—TT 
(Temperance Address.)—DLS—KNS 
(What I Think.)—LPS—PP 
What to Drink.—G: S. Burleigh.—TS 
What to Read.—W: Cowper. See Retirement. 

What Tommy Dislikes.—Anon.—WR 17 
What Tommy Found.—Anon.—HVD 
What Vacation is.—H. C. Dodge.—WR 24 
What Waked the World.—Albion W. Tourg^e.—WR 10 
What Was his Creed?—Anon.—SR 2 
(What is his Creed?)—HP 
What was It?—Sidney Dayre.—DJS—DR 
What Was My Dream?—Jos. O’Connor.—AA 
What We Did with the Cow.—N. P. Ufford.—BS 14 
What We Learn at School.—Anon.—FAS 
What We Love.—Eliza H. Morton.—DLD 
What We Owe the Pilgrims. (Sel. fr. The Pilgrims.)— 
Wendell Phillips.—NC 

What Whiskey Did for Me.—E: Carswell.—CS 17 
What Will Become of the Children?—Jennie June.— 
MMR 

What Will We Do?—Rob’t J. Burdette.—AWH 
(Utopia— C.—sl. diff.)— SYS 
What Will You Do, Love?—S: Lover.—VS 
What Wondrous Life is This I Lead?—Andrew Marvell. 
See Garden, The. 

368 





TITLE INDEX 


When 


What Would You See?—G: Macdonald. See At the 
Back of the North Wind. 

What Would You Think?—Anon.—FAS 
‘‘Whatever I have tried to do in my life, I have tried 
with all my heart to do well.”—C: Dickens. 
See David Copperfield. 

What’s a’ the Steer, Kimmer. (Jacobite Song.)— 
Anon.—OS 3 

What’s Hallowed Ground?—T: Campbell. See Hal¬ 
lowed Ground. 

What’s in a Name?—Anon.—SR 13 
What’s in a Name?—Ellerton Gay.—WR 26 
What’s in a Name?—R: K. Munkittrick.—AWH 
What’s My Thought Like?—T: Moore.—HPE 
What’s the Difference?—O. F. Pearre.—BS 25—HBR 
—WR 7 

What’s the Good.—Harry C. Webber.—WR 24 
“What’s the Lesson for To-day?”—Anon.—PEO 
What’s the Matter?—H. K. P.—PP—YFR 
“What’s the News, Grandpa?” ( Tab .)—Anon.—TCP 
Whaups, The.—To S. R. C. (To S. R. Crockett— C.) — 
Rob’t L. Stevenson.—VA 
Wheel and I, The.—Anon.—CS 35 
When.—C. C. Bingham.—DCP 
“When?”—E. A. Blount, Jr.—CG 2 
When?—Alfred Tennyson.—LC 
When.—Sarah Woolsey.—BNL—CS 6—GP 
When a Feller’s a Boy.—Alice L. Richards.—-WN 
When all the World, is Young[, Lad].—C: Kingsley. 
See Water Babies, The. 

When all Thy Mercies, O my God.—Jos. Addison.— 
FEP 

(Hymn, A.)—AE (hr. sel .)—HBP 
When Almonds Bloom.—Milicent W. Shinn.—AA 
When Angry, Count a Hundred.—E. Cavazza.—-HBR 
—MRS 

When Banners are Waving.—Anon.—GN—HBP 
When Bess Goes Out.—W. T. McIntyre.—CG 3 
When Brother was a Sister.—Alice L. Richards.-—-SL 
“When builders start a house to build.”—Anon.— 
DJS 

When Coldness Wraps this Suffering Clay. {In 
Hebrew Melodies.)—Lord Byron.—FEP 
(Immortal Mind, The.)—EPs 
“When daisies pied and violets blue.” — W: Shake¬ 
speare. See Love's Labour’s Lost. 

When Daylight Dies.—Bertha C. Lovell.—CG 3 
When de Co’n Pone’s Hot.—Paul L. Dunbar.—BS 26— 
TMD 

When, Dearest, I but Think of thee [Song— C.). —Sir J: 
Suckling.—OB 

When Death to Either shall come.—Rob’t Bridges.— 
OB 

When Dolly was Sick.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
‘When doomed to feel that youth is o’er.”—Anon.— 
GG 

When Dora Died.—Amos H. Chandler.—TCV 
When Duty Begins.—C: Dickens.— See Martin Chuz- 
zlewit. 

When Even Cometh On.—Lucy E. Tilley.—AA 
When Father Carves the Duck.—E. V. Wright.—SR 9 
—WR 4 

(How Father Carves the Duck.)—PR—YA 
When First I Saw Her. {In Wild Eden.)—G: E. 
W oodberrv.—AA 

When Flora had O’erfret the Firth.—Anon.—OB 
“When for me the end has come and I am dead.”— 
R: Realf. See Written on the Night of his 
Suicide. 

When Gathering Clouds Around I View.—Sir Rob’t 
Grant.—FEP 
(Hymn.)—HBP 

When George was King.—Theodosia Pickering.—WR 
22 

When Girls Wore Calico.—Hattie Whitney.—CRR 
When Gladys Plays.—Ferris Greenslet.—;-CG 2 
“When Goethe’s death was told, we said.”—Matthew 
Arnold. See Memorial Verses. 

When Grandfather W r ent to Town.—Rob’t C. V. 
Meyers—CS 32 

When Grandpa was a Boy.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
When Grandpa Was a Little Boy.—Malcolm Douglas. 
—PEO 

When Grandpa was Little.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
When Greek Meets Greek.—Anon.—AWH 
When Greek Meets Greek.—Anon. See also following. 
When Greek Met Greek.—Anon.—CS 26 
(When Greek Meets Greek.)—CD _ 

“When he shall hear she died upon his word.”—W: 

Shakespeare. See Much Ado about Nothing. 
When he, who Adores thee. (C.)—T: Moore.—EDV 
FTA—TIP—WEP 4 
(Pro Patria Mori.)—PGT I 


When He would have His Verses Read.—Rob’t Her¬ 
rick—WEP 2 

“When Helen first saw wrinkles in her face.”—Walter 
S. Landor. See Wrinkles. 

When I am a Man.—Anon.—COS—PP 
When I am a Man.—Nelly R. Cramer.—WR 17 
When I am a Man.—Emily H. Miller.—SD—WR 17 
When I am a Woman.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
“When I am Big.”—Anon.—TFS 
When I am Dead.—Anon.—CS 32 
When I am Dead —Emma A. Browne.—FP 
“When I am Dead.”—Renneil Rodd.—VA 
* ‘When I am dead and buried.” {Scribner’s.) —GG 
When I am Married.—Anon.—WR 2 
When I am Old.—Caroline A. Briggs.—FMR—FP 
When I am Weak then I am Strong.—Mary Sherman. 
—BS 19 

When I Awake I am Still with Thee. (C.)—Harriet B. 
Stowe.—TAS {si. abr.) 

(Still, Still with thee— sel.) —LLC 
When I beneath the Cold, Red Earth am Sleeping.— W : 

Motherwell.—EDY—HBP 
When I Dit Drowed.—Anon.—DLF 
“When I have borne in memory what has tamed.” 
(Poems Dedicated to National Independence 
and Liberty, Pt. L, XVII.)—W: Wordsworth. 
—PGT 1 

(Motherland, The.)—LH 

When I Have Fears that I May Cease to Be. (Sonnet: 
“When I have fears,” etc.— C.) —J: Keats.— 
OB 

(Fear of Death, The.)—YBF 
(Sonnet Written in January, 1818.)—WEP 4 
(Terror of Death, The.)—PGT 1 
When I Have Time.—-Anon.—YBT 
‘ ‘ When I look around me and see how few of the com¬ 
panions of earlier years.”—Johann W. von 
Goethe.—GG 

When I Mean to Marry.—-J: G. Saxe.—BS 17 
“When I remember.”—T: Moore. See Oft in the 
Stilly Night. 

“When I think on the happy days.”—Anon. {at. to 
Rob’t Burns).—BNL 
(Absence.)—FTA—GP—PGT 1—YBF 
When I was a Baby.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
When I was a Baker.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
When I was a Boy.—Eugene Field.—BS 2.3—LS 
When I was a Girl.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
“When I was little.”—Anon.—FAS 
When I was One and Twenty.—A. E. Housman.— 
YBF 

When I Was Ten and she was Fifteen.—Anon.—CRR 

When I was Young.—Anon.—BS 17 

When Icicles Hang by the Wall.—W: Shakespeare. 

See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

When I’m a Big Girl.—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
When I'm a Man.—Anon.—DST 
When I’m Growed up Big.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
When in Disgrace.—W: Shakespeare.—BS 25—PYO— 
WR 23 

(Amor Omnia Vincit.)—FTA—OH 
(Consolation, A.)—PGT 1—PHS 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—HBP—OB (II.) 

(Sonnet XXIX.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
When in the Chronicle of Wasted Time.—W: Shake¬ 
speare.—BNL—OEL 
(Sonnet.)—FEP—HBP—OB (XVI.) 

(Sonnet CVL—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
When in the First Great Hour.—Edith M. Thomas. 
See Inverted Torch, The. 

When in the Night We Wake and Hear the Rain.— 
Rob’t B. Wilson.—SN 
When It Rains.—Anon.—YBT 

When Jimmy Comes from School.—Jas. N. Matthews. 
—WR 17 

“When loss of property and loss of repute are come.”— 
R. S. Storrs.—GG 

When Love Comes Knocking.—W: H. Gardner.—AA 
When Love Most Secret Is.—Rob’t Jones.—FTA—OH 
When Love Shall Come.—Anon.—FLS 
“When lovely woman stoops to folly.”—Oliver Gold 
smith. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 

When Ma begins to Clean.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
When Ma was Near.—Anon.—DJS 
When Mabel Smiles.—S: Minturn Peck.—TL 
When Maggy Gangs Away.—Jas. Hogg.—FEP 
When Malindy Sings.—Paul L. Dunbar.—HBR 
When Mamma was a Little Girl.—Grace F. Cooliage.— 
DS—TFS—WR 17—YA 

When Mandy Brings the Kids.—A. T. Worden.—CS 33 
When Margaret Laughs.—G: B. Kilbourne.—CG 2 
When Marv was a Lassie.—Anon.—CS 10 — CSS— 
MMR—PPSr 


369 




When 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


‘‘When midnight o’er the moonless skies.”-—W: R. 
Spencer.—FEP 

When ’midst the Gay I Meet.—T: Moore.—FTA 
When Moonlike are the Hazure Seas.—W: M. Thack¬ 
eray.—NA 

When Morning Breaks.—E: A. Raleigh.—CG 2 
When My Cousin Comes to Town.—W. P. Bourke.—TL 
When My Doily Went to School.—-Alice L. Richards.— 

SL 

When My Kitty was a Kitten.—Alice L. Richards.— 

SL 

When mv Mother Tucked Me In.—Bettie Garland.— 

SR 13 

When my Ship Comes In.—Rob’t J. Burdette.—HP 
When Nathan Led the Choir.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
When Nature hath Betrayed the Heart that Loved her. 

—Sophie Jewett.—A A 

When Nelly Hangs her Stocking Up.—Earle H. Eatqn. 

—TL 

When not to Keep Books.—Anon.—SR 13 
When Old Jack Died.—Jas. W. Riley.—WR 6 
“When other friends are round thee.”—G: P. Morris.— 
FTA 

“When our eyes are weary—weary.”—Anon.—HSS 1 
When our Heads are Bowed with Woe.—H: H. Milman. 
—FEP 

(Hymn for the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity.)— 

VA 

When Pa Begins to Shave.—Harry D. Robins.—BS 26 
When Pa Takes Care of Me.—Fs. C. Williams.—-WR 26 
When Papa Puts His Great Coat on.—May R. McNabb. 
—PS 

When Papa’s Sick.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
When Samwel led the Singin’. ( Boston Globe.) —CS 32 
—PR—YA 

When Santa Claus Comes.—Anon.—DLS 
‘When Saw We Thee?’—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—TAS 
When Shall We All Meet Again?—Anon. See When Shall 
We Three Meet Again? 

When Shall We Meet Again.—Anon.—LLC 
“When Shall We Meet Again?”—Jas. F. Clarke.—FTA 
When Shall We Three Meet Again?—Anon.—CS 15— 
HBP ( abr.) 

(When Shall We All Meet Again— abr.)— SM 
When she Comes.—G. H. Westley.—FLS 
When she Comes Home. (C.)—Jas. W. Riley.—AA—' 
FTA—OH—TAV—TFY 
(When she Comes Home again.)—FEP 
When she Comes Home Again.—Jas. W. Riley. See 
foregoing. 

When Should a Girl Marry?—J. R. Parke.—BS 21 
When Sparrows Build. ( Song fr. Supper at the Mill.)— 
Jean Ingelow.—WR 16 {si. abr.) 

Song of the Old Love.)—PGT 2 
“W r e shall walk no more through the sodden plain” 

— sel.) —BNL 

When Stars are in the Quiet Skies. (Night and Love 
— C. — song fr. Ernest Maltravers, Bk. III., Ch. 

I.)—E: Bulwer-Lytton.—FEP—FTA—VA 
(Song.)—CR—FLS(6r. sel.) 

When Summer Says Good-bye.—Frank L. Stanton.— 

BS 24 

‘‘When Sylvia Sings.”—S: P. Duffield.—CG 1 
“When that Seint George hadde sleyne ye draggon.” 

{Limerick.) —Anon.—NA 
When the Apple Blossoms Stir.—Anon.—AD 
When the Assault was Intended to the City. ( C .)— 

J: Milton. — EDY—EPs—FEP—HBP— 
PGT 1 

(Arms and the Muse.)—LH 
When the Baby Died.-—Helen H. Jackson.—TAV 
When the Bloom is on the Heather.—P: Grant.—TMR 
When the Cat’s away the Mice Will Play.—Anon.— 
FHE 

When the Circuit Rider Came.—Jas. B. Adams.— 

SR 13 

When the Cork Goes Down.—Rob’t McIntyre.—SR 13 
When the Cows Come Home.—Agnes E. Mitchell.— 

CS 16 — PPSr — SA {sel.) — SE {br. sel.)— 
TMR {abr.) 

{SI. abr.)— HP—IR 

When the Fairies Lived Here.—Anon.-—-PS—TT 
When the Frost is on the Punkin. {Abr.) —Jas. W. 

Riley.—FAS—HP—PP—YFR 
“When the Golden day is done.”—Rob’t L. Steven¬ 
son. See Night and Day. 

When the GrassShall Grow Again.—Anon.—GP—HBP 
When the Great Grey Ships Come In.—Guy W. Car- 
ryl.—AA—EDY 

When the Green Gits Back in the Trees. (C.) —Jas. 

W. Riley.—AD 
(Spring.)—SR 1 

When the Hammock Swings.—E: A. Oldham.—WR 4 

37C 


When the Hounds of Spring.—Algernon C. Swin¬ 
burne. See Atalanta in Calydon. 

“When the hours of day are numbered.”—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow. See Footsteps of Angels. 

When the House is Alone by Itself.—Mary K. Dallas. 
—CS 24 

When the Kye Come[s] Hame.—Jas. Hogg.—BNL—CR 
—FEP 

When the Lamp is Shattered.—Percy B. Shelley.— 
BNL 

(Flight of Love, The.)—PGT 1—YBT 
. (Lines—C.)—OB—WEP 4 
When the Light Goes Out.—Harry S. Chester.—BS 23 
—CS 34 

When the Little Boy Ran Away.—Anon.—TAV 
When the Minister Comes to Tea.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
When the Mists Have Rolled Away.—Annie Herbert. 
—LLC {abr.) 

(We Shall Know.)—CS 9—TFS {sel.) 

When the Most is Said.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
When the Grass Shall Cover Me.—Ina Coolbrith.—AA 
—GP—HBP—TAV 

“When the pale wreath is laid upon the tomb.” — 
Anon.—GG 

“When the rough battle of the day is done.”—Jas. A. 
Garfield. See Memory. 

When the Ship Comes in.—-Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
“When the Sleeper Wakes.” {Yale Record.) —CG 3 
When the Stone was Rolled Away.—Clara J. Denton. 
—LL 

When the Sultan Goes to Ispahan.—T: B. Aldrich.— 
AA—ASL 

When the Summer Boarders Come.—Nixon Waterman. 
—BS 26 

When the Swallows.—J: H. Gordon.—LLC 
When the Teacher Gets Cross.—Anon.—CS 37—WR21 
When the Tide Goes Out.—Anon.—CS 10 
When the Tide Goes Out.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
When the Train Comes In.—Nixon Waterman.—BS 26 
When the Wind Goes thro’ the Maples.—Ella M. Trues- 
dell.—WR 26 

When the World is Burning.—Ebenezer Jones.—OB 
When this Cruel War is Over.—C. C. Sawyer.—AWB 
—PAPm 

When Thou Art Near.—F. B. Doveton.—FLS 
When Thou Art Near Me.—Lady J: Scott.—FTA— 
HBP 

When Thou Art Nigh.—T: Moore.—FTA 
When Thou Must Home. (A Book of Airs, Pt. I., 
XX.)—T: Campion.—ELP 
(O Crudelis Amor.)—-PGT 1 
(Vobiscum est lope.)—OB 
When Time Hath Bereft Thee.—Anon.—FLS 
When to Make Haste.—Anon.—YBT 
“When to the sessions of sweet, silent thought.”—W: 
Shakespeare.—-BNL 
(Friendship.)—TFY 
(Memory.)—PGT 1—YBF 
(Sonnet'.)—FEP—HBP—OB (III.) 

(Sonnet XXX.—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
When to Worship.—Anon.—CS 15 
When Twilight Dews.—T: Moore.—FTA 
“When vanished in this vapor we call life.”—A. T. L. 
—GG 

When Washington was President.—Bob’t J. Burdette. 
See What Lack we Yet? 

When we are All Asleep. (Cornisken Sonnets, IV.)— 
Rob’t Buchanan.—VA 

When we are Parted.—Hamilton Ai'dA—FLS—VA 
When we are upon the Seas.—G: Wither. See Halle¬ 
lujah. 

.When we First Played “Show.”—Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
When We Go Home.—J. L. Scott.—HDL 
When We Grow Big. ( Concert piece.) —Lizzie J. Rook. 
—TT 

“When we in our viciousness grow hard.”—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See Antony and Cleopatra. 

When we Plant a Tree. {Sel. fr. a letter.) —Oliver W. 
Holmes.—LLC 

When We Two Parted.—Lord Byron.—BNL {br. sel.) 

—FEP—HBP—OB—PGT 1—WEP 4—YBF 
When Will Love Come?—Pakenham Beatty.— FLS— 
HP 

When will You Come Home Again?—Anon.—CS 19 
(At Christmas-time.)-—HS 

When Witherspoon was President.—D: Potter.—CG 2 
When Women have their Rights.—Anon.—MND 
When Work and Me Fell Out.—Alice L. Richards.— 
WN 

“When you are Old.”—W: Henley.—OH 
When you are Old.—W: B. Yeats.—OB—TIP 
When Your Beauty Appears.—T: Parnell.—BNL 
(Song: “When thy beauty appears.”)—OB 




TITLE INDEX 


Whistle 


“Whenas in Silks.” ( Brunonian .)—CG 3 
Whenas in Silks.—Rob’t Herrick. See following. 
Whenas in Silks My Julia Goes.—Rob’t Herrick.—BNL 
(Poetry oi Dress, The, II.)—PGT 1 
(Upon Julia’s Clothes— C.) —ELP — OB — OH — 
WEP 2 

(Whenas in Silks.)—YBF 

“ ‘Whence all these verses?’ you ask me.”—Anon.— 

CG 2 

“Whence and what art thou, execrable shape.”—J: 

Milton. See Paradise Lost. 

“When’er a noble deed is wrought.”—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow. See Santa Filomena. 

Whenever a Little Child is Born.—Agnes C. Mason — 
AA—GMS 

Where are Sighs?—Walter S. Landor.—YBF 
Where are the Dead?—Anon.—PS 
Where are the Men?—Talhaiarn (tr. by T: Oliphant). 
—BNL 

Where are Wicked Folks Buried? ( Truth Seeker.) — 
CS 21—SR 4 

Where are You Going[, My Pretty Maidl?—Anon.— 
BNL—FEP—TCP (w. tab.) 

(Pantomime baaed on voem—by Agnes Crawford.) 
—WR 20 

Where are You Sleeping, Lady Fair?—R. R. Kirk.— 
CG 3 

Where are Your Treasures?—Horace B. Durant.— 


CS 32 

Where Avalanches Wail.—Anon.—NA 
Where Columbia Stands.—A. H. Hall.—PAPm 
Where Cupid Dwells.—Rob’t L. Munger.—CG 2 
Where Did It Go?—W: C. Gannett.—TAS 
Where Did They Go? ( Our Little Ones.) —KNS 
Where did You Come from[, Baby]?—G: Macdonald. 

See At the Back of the North Wind. 

Where Do Babies Go?—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Where Do You Live?—Anon.-—WR 14 

(Grumble Corner and Thanksgiving Street.)—CS 30 
—DST 


Where Does the Water Spring?—Anon.—HSS 3 
Where Go the Boats?—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV — 
PoR 

WTiere He Struck It.—-Anon.-—DSS 
Where Heaven Is.—Anon.—PS 
Where Helen Comes.—J. J. Rooney.-—AA 
Where Helen Sits.—Laura E. Richards.—AA 
Where Honeysuckles Grow.—May R. McNabb.—PS 
Where Hudson’s Wave.—G: P. Morris.—AA 
W’here Ignorance is Bliss.—-Anon.—HP 
Where is He?—H: Neele.—SS 

Where is Mary Alice Smith? ( C.) —Jas. W. Riley. 

(Mary Alice Smith— abr.) —BS 19 
Where is Mother?—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Where is my Hat?—A. F. Owens.—SR 7 
Where is Papa To-night?—Cora M. Eager.—BS 5 
Where Lies the Land?—Arthur H. Clough. See Songs 
in Absence. 

Where Love is, there God is also. (C.)—Leo Tolstoi. 
(Heavenly Guest, The— metrical vers. — tr. by Celia 
Thaxter.)—BS 17 

Where Man should Die.—Michael J. Barry.—CS 6 
Where my Books Go.—W: B. Yeats.—OB 
Where Runs the River.—Fs. Bourdillon.—A VP 
Where Shall the Baby’s Dimple Be? (C.)—Josiah G. 
Holland.—BS 2 
CLullabv.)—GMS 

“Where shall the lover rest?”—Walter Scott. See 
Marmion. 

Where Shall We Find God?—Edith W. Linn.—SSE 
“Where she her sacred bower adorns.” (Light con¬ 
ceits of Lovers, V.)—T: Campion.—OEL 
"Where the bee sucks, there suck I.”—W: Shakespeare. 
See Tempest, The. 

“Where the Lilies Bloom.”—Howell L. Piner.—W’R 23 
Where the Lion Roareth, and the Wang-Doodle 
Mourneth.—Anon.—-DE 
(Hard-shell Sermon, A.)—PS 
Where the Mince Pie Grows.—Anon.—PR 
Where the Smiles are Kept.—Anon. See If I Knew. 
Where there’s a Will there’s a Way. (Dial.) —Anon.— 


MPD 

Where there’s a Will there’s a Way.—Eliza Cook.— 
KNE 


Where there’s a Will there’s a Way.—Mrs. Russell Kav- 
anaugh.—KER 

Where there’s a Will There’s a Way. (Dial .)—Sophie 
May.—StD 

Where there’s a Will there’s a Way, Sel. fr. (Will and 
the Way, The.)—J: G. Saxe.—HSS 3 
Where They Grow.—Anon.—COS—PP 
Where They Never Feel the Cold.—Anon.—PP—-PS— 


YPS 


Where Thou Goest I Will Go.—Howell L. Piner.— 
WR 23 

Where was I?—B. L. C. Griffith.—MN 
“Where we love is home.”—Oliver W. Holmes. See 
Poet at the Breakfast-table, The. 

Where Winds Abound.—Michael Field.—VS 
“Where’er a noble deed is wrought.”—H: W. Long¬ 
fellow. See Santa Filomena. 

Where’s Annette?—Aden.—BS 11 
Where’s My Baby?—Anon.—OS 1 
“Where’s My Hat?”—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Where’s My Hat?—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 4 
“Wherever, O man, God’s sun first beamed upon thee.” 
—M. E. Arndt.—AE 

“Wherever party spirit shall strain the ancient guar¬ 
antees of freedom.”—G: W. Curtis. See Cen¬ 
tennial Celebration of Concord Fight. 

Which?—Anon.—BS 24 

Which?—Ethel L. Beers. See Which Shall it Be? 
Which?—W. C. Nichols—CG 2 

Which Could I Spare?—Frances B. M. Brotherson.— 
CS 4 

Which General?—Kate W. Hamilton.—WR 25 
Which is Best? (Dial.) —Anon.—DST 
Which is Best? (Dial .)—Annie L. Hannah.—PS— 
TT 

Which is Best?—Laura C. Redden.—BIL 
W’hich is the Best? (Dial.) —Anon.-—HVD 
Which is Which (To an Officer in the Army, etc.— 
C.).—J: Byrom.—HPE 
fjacobite Toast.)—FEP 

Which Loved Best?—Joy Allison.—DLS—NPS—YBT 
—YP 

(I Love you, Mother.)—HSS 2 
Which One?—I: H. Brown.—BS 25 
Which One was Kept?—Lizzie M. Hadley.—DCP— 
SR 9 

(Kittens and Babies.)—BR (si. abr .)—CS 28—PR 
—YA 

Which Path?—E. J. Goodfellow.—SSE 
Which Road?—Anon.—CS 30 

Which Shall It Be?—Ethel L. Beers.—CS 3—FEP— 
LLC—OS 1—PPSr 
(Not One to Spare.)—BNL—GP 
(Which?)—OH 

Which Shall It Be?—“Bob o’Link.”—DLD 
Which Side are you On? (Our Youth .)—SSS 
Which was the Hero?—G: C. Graham.—GS 
Which Would You Rather? (Dial.) —Anon.—DSS 
Which Would You Rather Be? (Dial.) —Anon.—KNS 
While Shepherds Watched.—Clara J. Denton.—SSE 
While Shepherds Watched.—Nahum Tate. See While 
Shepherds Watched their Flocks by Night. 
"While Shepherds Watched their Flocks by Night.”— 
Marg. Deland.—GN—YBT 

While Shepherds Watched [their Flocks by Night].— 
Nahum Tate.—GN—LLC—OS 1 
(Christmas.)—FEP 

While the Joy Goes On.—Clara J. Denton.—WLO 
While We May.—Susan Coolidge.—BS 16—HP 
While We Shed a Tear.—Jos. Addison.—HSS 1 
Whilst as Fickle Fortune Smiled.—R: Barnfield.— 
FEP 

Whilst it is Prime.-—Edmund Spenser. See Amoretti 
and Epithalamion. 

Whilst Thee I Seek.—Helen M. Williams.—FEP 
Whilst Youthful Sports are Lasting. (Sel. fr. Life of 
Robert, Second Duke of Normandy.)—T: 
Lodge.—ELP 

Whims.—A. V. Bower.—CS 24 
Whip-poor-Will.—Clarence Bennett.—WR 4 
Whip-poor-will, The.—E: B. Brownlow.—TCV 
Whip-poor-will.—Mary M. Dodge.—POS 
Whip-poof-will.—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
Whip-poor-will, The.—H: Van Dyke.—ASL 
Whirling Wheel, The.—Tudor Jenks.—BS 23 
Whirlwind Road, The.—Edwin Markham.—AA 
Whiskers, The.—S: Woodworth.—CS 5—FEP 
Whisper!—Frances Wynne.—FEP 
Whisperin’ Bill.—Irving Bacheller.—CS 30—PR— 
WR 2 (si. abr.) 

Whispering Gallery, The.—Jas. T. McKay.—OH 
Whispers of Heavenly Death.—Walt Whitman.—TAS 
Whistle, The.—Rob’t Burns.—PEB 3 
Whistle, The (a letter written to Madame Brillon, Nov. 

10. 1779). Sel. fr. (Too Dear for the Whistle.) 
—B: Franklin.—LLC 

(Don’t Give too much for the Whistle— si. abr .)— 
BLP 

(Whistle, The.)—WCLI 2 

Whistle, The.—Rob’t Story.—BNL—MHR—MR—PP 
—YPS 

(Whistler, The.)—CS 9 


371 






Whistle 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Whistle, and I’ll Come to [Ye or] You, My Lad.—Rob’t 
Burns—BNL—WEP 3 

Whistler, The.—Rob’t Story. See Whistler, The. 
Whistling: a Yankee Portrait.—J: Pierpont.—HSS 3 
Whistling in Heaven. ( Harper’s Magazine.) —CS 14 
Whistling Marmot, The.—Hamlin Garland.—SN 
Whistling Regiment, The.—Jas. C. Harvey.—BS 18— 
CS 30—PFP 

White Alder, The. ( Trinity Tablet.) —CG 3 
White Anemone, The. — Rob’t, E&rl of Lytton.— 
GN (o 6 r.) 

(’Tis the White Anemone.)—POS 
White Azaleas.—Harriet McE. Kimball.—AA 
White Birds, The.—W: B. Yeats.—VA 
White Blossom, The.—Anon.—YBT 
White Blossom’s off the Bog, The.—Alfred P. Graves. 
—VA 

White Butterflies. (Envoi— C. — abr. — in A Century 
of Roundels.)—Algernon C. Swinburne.—LC— 
PoR 

White Camellia, A.—Edgar Fawcett.—SN 
White Canoe, The.—Alan Sullivan.—TCV 
White Chip Hat, The.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—HPE 
White Devil, The, Sel. fr. (Dirge, A.)—J: Webster.— 
ELP—FEP—OB 
(Land Dirge, A.)—PGT 1—YBF 
White Gull, The.—Bliss Carman.—TCV 
White Hearse, The.—Anon.—-WR 6 
White Horse of the Peppers, The, Sel. fr. (Disgusted 
Dutchman, The—Act II., Sc. 3— abr.) —S: 
Lover.—-SCS 

White Island[; or. Place of the Blest], The.—Rob’t 
Herrick.—EPs—HBP—WEP 2—YBF 
White Jessamine, The.—J: B. Tabb.—ASL 
White Kitten, The.—Marian Douglas.—WR 17 
White Lies.—Anon.—FDY 
White Lily, A.—Mary L. Wright.—CS 35—PR 
White Man’s Burden, The. — Rudyard Kipling.— 
WR 26 

“White Morning, A.”—Grace W. Leach.—CG 2 
White Moth, The.—Arthur T. Quiller-Coueh.-—VA 
White Opal, The—R. K. K.—CG 3 
White Pacha, The.—Andrew Lang.—LH 
White Paternoster, The.—Anon.—BVC 
White Peacock, The.—W: Sharp. See Sospiri di 
Roma. 

White Pilgrim, The, Sel. fr. —Herman Merivale.—AVP 
White Ribbon, The.—Hattie F. Crocker.—WR 18 
White Rose, The.—Jos. O’Connor.—AWB 
White Rose, A.—J: B. O’Reilly.—AA—OB 
White Rose, The. (lstst. fr. Somerville’s Presenting 
to a Lady a White Rose and a Red, etc.)—W: 
Somerville and W: Congreve.—BNL—FEP— 
HBP—OS 2—YBF 

White Rose and the Poppy, The.—-Annie L. Hannah. 
_ 0 g 32 _DS_YA 

White Rose over the Water, The.—G: W T . Thombury. 
—VA 

White Roses.—Cora Fabbri.—AA 
White Roses.—Ernest Rhys.—VA 
White Seal, The, Verse preceding. (Seal Lullaby.)— 
Rudyard Kipling.—PoR 

White Ship, The. — Dante G. Rossetti. — EHT — 
WR 1 ( cond.) 

White Squall, The.—Bryan W. Procter.—BNL 
White Squall, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—BS 9—CR— 
CS 19—HBP—MR—SAE (.sel.) —THP 
(After the Storm— sel.) —LC—PoR 
Whitethroat, The.—Theodore H. Rand.—TCV 
White-throated Sparrow, The.—A. West.—SN 
Whither.—J: V. Cheney.—AA 
Whither? (Sonnet VIII.)—Hartley Coleridge.—VA 
Whither.—Philip B. Goetz.—AA 

Whiting and the Snail, The. (C.— song fr. Alice’s Ad¬ 
ventures in Wonderland, Ch. X.) — Lewis Car- 
roll. 

(Lobster Quadrille, A.)—PoR 
Whittier.—Marg. E. Sangster.—AA 
Whittier Alphabet, A. (Comp, fr.) J: G. Whittier.— 
PEO 

Whittier, Extract Concerning.—John Bright.—PEO 
Whittier, Extract Concerning.—Horace E. Scudder.— 
PEO 

Whittier, Extract Concerning.—R: H. Stoddard.—PEO 
Whittier, Extract Concerning. — Frances H. Under¬ 
wood.—PEO 

Whittier, Extract Concerning.—David A. Wasson.— 
PEO 

Whittling.—J: Pierpont.—BNL—GN—PPSr—SM — 

WCLI 2 

(Whittling—a Yankee Portrait.)—HSS 3—SS 
(Whittling Typical of Young America.)—BLP 
(Yankee Boy, The.)—CS 35 


Whittling — a Yankee Portrait.— J: Pierpont. See 
foregoing. 

Whittling Typical of Young America.—J: Pierpont. 
See Whittling. 

Who am de Mudder.—Anon.—DSS 

Who and What are Great Men?— Rob’t C. Winthrop. 

See Centennial Oration. 

Who are Really Honored.—Edwin H. Chapin.—FD 2 
Who are Responsible?—W: L. Garrison.—SSD 
Who are the Free?—J: G. Prince.—CS 15 
“Who art thou, shadowy passer-by?’’—Victor Hugo.— 

GG 

Who Bides His Time.—Anon.—DST 
Who but Thee.—Eliza Scudder.—TAS 
“Who comes dancing over the snow.”—Dinah M. 
Mulock.—PoR 

Who Did It? (Boston Post.) —SR 11 
Who Did It?—-Kate Lawrence.—YBT 
“Who ever sees a hawthorne or a sweet-brier.”— 
Anon.—HSS 1 

Who Gather Gold.—Andrew B. Saxton.—HP 
“Who has not looked upon her brow.”—Pierre Rogers 
(tr. by Costello).—FTA 
Who is It?—Anon.—-PEO (si. abr.) 

(Jack Frost.)—NV 
Who is It?—Anon.—TFS 
Who Is It?—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Who is my Neighbor?—Anon.—SSS 
Who is She?—Marian Douglas.—CSS 
(Cheerfulness— abr.)—- YBT 
Who is She?—Julie M. Lippmann.—TT 
“Who is Silvia [or SylviaJ ? [What is She?]” — W: 
Shakespeare. See Two Gentlemen of Verona, 
The. 

Who is the Poet?—Kate Woodland.—StD 
Who is This Wonderful Prophet?—-Anon.—CS 19 
Who is to Blame?—Anon.—CS 14 

Who Know not Love. (Two Songs from the Persian, 
II.—C.)—T: B. Aldrich.—OH 
("Oh [Ah—C.], sad are they who know not love.”) 
—FTA 

(Sad are they who Know not Love— abr.) —TFY 
Who Knows?—Jessie V. Kerr.—CG 2 
Who Knows.—Jas. H. Morse.—TAV 
Who Knows?—Nora Perry.—AA 

Who Knows the Most?—Nellie G. Bronson.—PS—TT 
Who Likes the Rain?—Clara D. Bates.—NV—TT (abr.) 
“Who liveth so merry.”—T: Ravenscroft.—OES 
Who Made the Speech.—Anon.—PS—WR 17—YFE 
Who Made Them?—Anon.—TFS 

Who ne’er his Bread in Sorrow Ate.—Johann W. von 
Goethe. See Wilhelm Meister’s Apprentice¬ 
ship. 

Who Plants a Tree.—Lucy Larcom.—TMR (abr.) 

(“He who plants a tree”— br. sel.) —HSS 1 
(Plant a Tree.)—AD—DCP (br. sel.) —LLC—PEO 
Who Rules the Household?—Anon.—CS 26 
(Eggs and the Horses.)—BNL 
Who Runs may Read. (Septuagesima Sunday— C.) 
—J: Keble.—VA 

(Elder Scripture, The— sel.) —HBP 
Who Santy-Claus Wuz.—Jas. W. Riley.—GH—RCR 
Who Shall be Queen of May?—Marion Wayland.— 
SR 9 

Who Should Wipe the Dishes?—Mary Kelly.—WR 24 
Who Stole the Bird’s Nest?—Lydia M. Child.—GMS— 
—NV- 

(W. refrain .)—LLC—PoR—PPSr—WCL 
“Who struggles with his baser part.”—Anon.—HSS 1 
Who Was he? Sel. fr. (Race with the Flames, The— 
Pt. I., abr.; sel. fr. Pt. II.)—W: H. H. Murray. 
—HBR 

Who Was She?—Anon.—COS—HSS 2 (sel.) —NV— 
PP 

Who was the Minute-man?-—G: W. Curtis. See Cen¬ 
tennial Celebration of Concord Fight. 

Who Wears the Breeches?—H. E. McBride.—DDD 
Who Will Take Care of Me?—Frances R. Havergal.— 
—YBT 

Who Works the Hardest?—Anon.—DFY 
Who Would be a Boy Again?—Anon.—CS 7 
“Whoe’er she be.”—R: Crashaw.—OEL (abr.) 

(Wishes for the Supposed Mistress.)—FEP (si. abr.) 
—PGT 1 (abr.) 

(Wishes to his Supposed Mistress— C.) —BNL (abr.) 
—OB (si. abr.) 

(Sels.)— ELP—WEP 2 

Whole Duty of Children.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—BVC 
—CGV—DLS 
(Good Manners.)—HSS 2 

Who’ll be the Drunkards Then?—T: R. Thompson.— 
TS 

Who’ll Buy my Love-knots?—T: Moore.—WR 11 


372 




TITLE INDEX 


Wife 


Who’ll Tend Baby?—E. E.—HP 
“Whom the Gods Love.”—Mark A. D. Howe.—AA 
Whom Wilt Thou Live for.—Anon.—CS 15 
Who’s Afraid in the Dark.—Anon.—DJS 
Whose Girl?—Anon.—DS—YA 
Why.—Anon.—WR 4 
Why?—S. P. B.—SR 2 
Why.—Bliss Carman.—OB 
Why?—Stephen Crane.—AA 
Why? ( Good Words for the Young.) —KER 
Why?—Maud Moore.—HP 
Why?—C. H. Patterson.—CG 1 
Why?—Alice L. Richards.—SL 
Why?—Marv L. Ritter—BNL—TFY 
Why ?—“ Viola. ”—FLS 
Why, and Because.—Anon.—LPS—PP 
“Why are we so impatient of delay” (Teach us to 
Wait— C .).—Phoebe Cary.—GG 
W T hy Ben Schneider Decides for Prohibition.—Vira 
Hopkins.—CD—CS 26 

Why Biddv and Pat Married.—R: H. Stoddard.—BS 5 
—CS 14—DS 

Why Destroy this Government?—T: A. R. Nelson.— 
SSD 

W T hv do Bells of Christmas Ring?—Eugene Field.— 
PoR 

Why Do they Ever Begin?—Anon.—WR 17 
W'hv Don’t You Tell Me Yes?—Mrs. G: Archibald.— 
WR 2 

Why Drink Wine.—H: Aldrich.—HP 

(Reasons for Drinking— diff. vers .)-—THP 
Why he Waited to Laugh. (Detroit Free Press .)— 
CH—SR 10 

Why he Wouldn’t Sell the Farm.—A. A. Dayton.-—BS 1 
Why I Love Thee. (Lover to his Mistress, The— C.) 
—Hamilton Aide.—FLS 

Why I Object to High License.—J. R. Turner.—WR 18 
Why I Sing.—Anon.—SSS 
Why is It?—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Why is It So?—-Anon.—HP 

Why it was Cold in May.—Henrietta R. Eliot.—AA— 

SR 6 

Why Jim Forsook the Ministry.—Clarence H. Pierson. 

—GH 

Why Liab and I Parted.—N. S. Emerson.—WR 24 
(How' Liab and I Parted.)—SR 1 
Why, Lovely Charmer? ( Fr. The Hive.)—Anon.— 
BNL 

Why Mother is Proud.—G: Klingle.—TAV 
Why my Father Left the Army.—-C: Lever (arr. by J: 

A. McCabe).—DR 

Why no Scotchmen Go to Heaven.—Anon.—SDR 
Why not, if he Paid the Shot?—Anon.—DRR 
Why One Excelled the Other.—Anon.—FAS 
Why Sammy Left the Farm.—-Albert B. Paine.—AWH 
Whv Should I Sign the Pledge?—Mrs. S. M. I. Henry.— 
WR 18 

“Why shouldst thou fill to-day with sorrow.”—Paul 
Fleming.—GG 

Why so Pale?—-Sir J: Suckling. See following. 

Why so Pale and Wan? (Fr. Aglaura.)—Sir J: Suck¬ 
ling.—BNL—OB—PYO 
(Encouragements to a Lover.)—PGT 1 
(Orsames’ Song [in “Aglaura”].)—ELP—ES— 
WEP 2 

(Song—C.)—HBP 
(To a Lover.)—YBF 
(Why so Pale?)—FEP 

(“Why so pale and wan, fond lover?”)—GP—OEL 
"Why so pale and wan. fond lover?”—Sir J: Suckling. 

See foregoing. 

Why the Cows Came Late.—J: Hoynton.—WR 4 
Why the Robin’s Breast is [or was] Red.—Jas. R. 

Randall.—AA—WR 6 
Why They Didn’t Bow.—Anon.—WR 7 
Why they Twinkle. (Album Verses— C.) —Oliver W. 
Holmes.—DCP—SAE 

Why Thus Longing?—Harriet W. Sewall.—AA—BNL 
—FEP—HBP 

Why Truth Goes Naked.—Anon.—HP 
Why Uncle Ben Back-slid.-—-Ralph Bingham.—CS 34 
“Why, why repine, my pensive friend.” (Poems and 
Epigrams, C.— C .)—-Walter S. Landor.—HP— 
WEP 4 

(Resignation.)—OB 

Whv Will Ye Call It Death’s Dark Night?—C. M. Noel. 

—HDL 

Why Woman Wants the Ballot.—Marie C. Brehm.— 
WR 18 

Why ye Blossome Cometh before Ye Leafe.—Oliver 
Herford.—AA 

Wicklow.—G: F. Savage-Armstrong.—TIP 
Wicklow Scene, A.—G: F. Savage-Armstrong.—TIP 

373 


Wicliffe. (C.—Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Pt. II., XVII.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
(John Wickliffe— sel.) —BNL 
Widder Budd.—Anon.—CS 21—NPS—YP 
“Widder Clark, The.”—Joe Lincoln— CCB 
Widder Doodle.—Marietta Holley. See Josiah Allen’s 
Wife as a P. A. and P. I. 

Widder Green’s Last Words.—Anon.—CS 13 
(Last Words.)—DS 
Widdicombe Fair.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Widdowes Teares; or, Dirge of Dorcas, The.—Rob’t 
Herrick. 

(Dirge for Dorcas— abr.) —-EPs 
Widening Horizon, The.—-Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
Widow, The.—Anon.—CDV 

(“Bevare of the Vidders.”)—CD 
(Shacob’s Lament.)—CS 25—PR—YA 
Widow, The.—C. F. Gellert ( tr. by C. T. Brooks). — 
CS 17—MHR 

Widow, The.—W: B. Wheelwright.—CG 3 
Widow and Child, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Prin¬ 
cess, The. 

Widow and Her Son, The. (In Sketch Book— abr.) — 
Washington Irving.—BS 9—FTR 
Widow at Windsor, The. (C.) —Rudyard Kipling. 

(Sons of the Widow, The.)—WR 21 
Widow Bedott Papers, The, Sels. fr. —Frances M. 
Whitcher. 

Heze'iah Bedott. (Ch. I.)—BS 2—CS 3—MHR— 

scs 

Recipe for Potato Pudding. (Dial. ad. fr. Ch. 

XXIX.)—M PD—NPS—YP 
Widow Bedott’s Letter to Elder Sniffles, The. (Ch. 
XIII., abr.) —BeR 

(Widow Bedott to Elder Sniffles, The— verses fr. 
Ch. XIII., si. abr.) —AWH—BNL—THP— 
WRD 

Widow Bedott’s Poetry, The. (Ch. II.)—CS 4— 
MHR 

Widow’s Mistake, The. (Chs. VII. and VIII., abr. 
and ad. as dial.) —SCS 

Widow Bedott to Elder Sniffles.—Frances M. W’hitcher. 

See Widow Bedott Papers, The. 

Widow Bedott’s Letter to Elder Sniffles, The.—Frances 
M. Whitcher. See Widow Bedott Papers, The. 
Widow Bedott’s Poetry, The.—Frances M. Whitcher. 

See Widow Bedott Papers, The. 

Widow Bird, A [or The]. (Song fr. Charles the First, 
Sc. V.—abr.)— Percy B. Shelley.—CGd—LC— 
YBF 

Widow Brown’s Christmas.—J: T. Trowbridge.—BS 7 
—WR 2 (sel.) 

Widow Cummiskey, The.—Anon.—BS 14—DI 
Widow Machree.—S: Lover.—BNL—HBP—TIP—VA 
Widow MacShane.—Rob’t Id. Newell.—THP 
Widow Malone.—C: Lever.—BNL—CR—CS 19—PYO 
—SAE (br. sel.) —SDR—THP—TIP 
Widow Muggins—Her Opinions of Cooks, Suitors and 
Husbands, The.—J. W. Bonfield.—SD 
Widow Mysie, The. ( Cond .)—Rob’t Buchanan.—BS 
25 

Widow O’Brien’s Toast.—Anon.—DE 
Widow of Glencoe, The. (In Lays of the Scottish 
Cavaliers.)—W: E. Aytoun.—EDY (sel.) 
Widow of Main, The. (Abr.) —Nathaniel P. Willis.— 
SO 

Widow O’Shane’s Rint, The.—Anon.—CD—NPS—YP 
Widowed Heart, The.—Albert Pike.—AA 
Widower’s Speech, The.—Anon.—DE 
(Bereaved Editor’s Speech, The.)—PS 
Widow’s Hymn, A.—G: Wither.—OB (sel.) 

(For a Widower or Widow.)—HBP 
Widow’s Light, The.—Augusta Moore.—CS 18—NPS 
—YP 

Widow’s Mistake, The.—Frances M. Whitcher. See 
Widow Bedott Papers, The. 

Widow’s Mite, The. (Columbia Spectator.) —CG 2 
Widow’s Mite, The.—Frd’k Locker-Lampson.—BNL— 
VA—YBF 

Widow’s Son Restored to Life, The.—Wesley Stretch. 
—CS 23—DS 

Widow’s Victim, The. (Farce.) —Anon.—BC 
(Stage Struck Darkey, The.)—DE 
Wife, The. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Wife, A.—W: Allingham.—FEP 
Wife, The—Phoebe Cary.—THP 
Wife, The.—Anna P. Dinnies.—AA 
Wife, The, Sel. fr. (St. Pierre to Ferrardo—Act IV., Sc. 

3.)—Jas. S. Knowles.—CS 4—FR—SS 
Wife, A.—( Imvromntu in Ana.) R: B. Sheridan.—THP 
Wife, A.—Sir H: Taylor. See Philip van Artevelde. 
Wife, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Among the Hills. 

Wife a-lost, The.—W: Barnes.—OB 




Wife 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Wife and a Home, A. (Dial.) —Anon.—NDP 
Wife, Children and Friends.—W: R. Spencer.— 
BNL—CS 11 (si. abr.) —TFY 
Wife for a Month, A, Sel. fr. (To the Blest Evanthe— 
song fr. Act I., Sc. 2.)—J: Fletcher.—ES 
Wife of Loki, The.—Lady Charlotte Elliot.—VA 
Wife of Usher’s Well, The. (In Border Minstrelsy.)— 
Anon.—BB—OB (si. abr.) 

(Abr.)— BPB—CEL—PEB 2—WEP 1 
Wife to her Husband, The.—Anon.—BNL—TFY 
Wife to Husband. (In The Unseen World.)—Chris¬ 
tina G. Rossetti.—VA 

Wife-hunting Deacon, The.—L.D. A. Stuttle [or Suttle]. 
—NPS—YP 

(Deacon’s Courtship, The.)—CS 22 
Wife’s Appeal, The.—W. C. Bennett.—CS 11 
Wife’s Appeal, The.—Sarah J. Lippincott.—CS 24 
Wife’s Confession, A.—Violet Fane.—WR 7 
Wife’s Lament, A.—Will H. Cadmus.—DR 
Wife’s Prayer, The.—Annie De G. Van Sickle.—CS 36 
Wife’s Tale, The.—-Geoffrey Chaucer. See Canterbury 

Tales The 

Wild Apples.—H: D. Thoreau.—MAL 

Wild Flowers.—Sarah Doudney.—HS 

Wild Flowers.—P: Newell.—NA 

Wild Geese, The.—J. H. Morse.—AA 

Wild Geese.—Celia Thaxter.—PoR—SAP—SN 

Wild Grapes.—Anon.—CS 22 

Wild Honeysuckle, The.—Philip Freneau.—AA—ASL 
Wild Huntsman, The. (C.) —G. A. Burger (tr. by 
Walter Scott).—CGd (abr.)— EPs 

(Chase, The.)—BS 13 

Wild Huntsmen, The.—Philip G. Hamerton.—VA 
Wild Night at Sea, A.—C: Dickens. See Martin Chuz- 
zlewit. 

Wild Oats.—C: Kingsley. See Water Babies, The. 

Wild Prairie Fire, A. (Detroit Free Press.) —CS 30 
Wild Rabbits, The.—Anon.—NV 

“Wild raged the tempest.”—Annie L. Matthews.—GG 
Wild Ride, The.—Louise I. Guiney.—AA (abr.) —BNL 
Wild Rose. (Abr.) —W: Allingham.—GN 
Wild Rose, A.—Alfred Austin.—FTA 
Wild Rose in September, A.—Helen H. Jackson.—POS 
Wild Roses. (In Flower Songs.)—Mary G. Crocker.— 
Cpl 

Wild Roses.—Edgar Fawcett.—POS—TAV 
Wild Thorn Blossoms.—Julian S. Cutler.—AD—HSS 1 
Wild Violet, The.—Hannah F. Gould.—AD—HSS 1— 
PEO 

Wild Winds.—Mary F. Butts.—PoR 
Wilderness Transformed, The.—Philip Doddridge.— 
HBP 

(“Amazing, beauteous change!”)—BNL 
Wilford’s Piece.—-Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Wilfred Denver’s Dream. (Fr. The Silver King.)— 
Anon.—WR 13 

Wilfrid Cumbermede, Sel. fr. (Song: ‘‘I dreamed that 
I woke from a dream”— fr. Ch. LVI.)—G: 
Macdonald.—VA 

Wilful Little Mouse, The.—Anon.—W R 17 
Wilhelm I., Emperor of Germany.—H: C. Bunner.— 
EDY 

Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, Sels. fr. —Johann W. 
von Goethe. 

Mignon Aspiring to Heaven. (Sel. fr. Bk. VIII., 
Ch. I.)—FP 

Mignon’s Song [from “Wilhelm Meister.”] (Fr. Bk. 
III., Ch. I.)—BNL (tr. by Hemans)—PYO (diff. 
tr.) 

Minstrel, The. (Ferscs fr. Bk. II, Ch. XI.— tr. by. 
J. C. Mangan.)—HBP 

“Who ne’er his bread in sorrow ate.” (Sel. fr. song 
in Bk. II., Ch. XIII.)—GG—C.P 
Wilkins Family, The.—J: Quill.—MDD 
Will, The.—Anon.—CP 

Will, The—J: Donne.—BNL—HBP—WEP 1 
Will, The. (Dial )—W. B. Fowle.—MPD 

(Reading the Will— at. to Epes Sargent.)—PS 
Will, The.—Ellen Pickering.—DDD 
Will. (Abr.) —Ella W. Wilcox.—WR 17 
Will and the Way, The. (Sel. fr. Where there’s a Will 
there’s a Way.)—J: G. Saxe.—HSS 3 
“Will Frank Buchanan Write?”—Clement Scott. — 
WR 13 

Will it be so?—Edith M. Thomas. See Inverted Torch, 
The. 

Will it Pay?—Mrs. Mary T. Lathrap.—WR 18 
“Will My Soul Pass through Ireland?”—Dennis O’Sul¬ 
livan.—WR 6 

Will of God, The. — Frd’k W. Faber. — FEP — 
HDL (sel.) —VA 

Will the New Year Come To-night[, Mamma]?—Cora 
M. Eager [or Mrs. J. M. Winton],—BS 1—CS 2 


Will Wimble. — Jos. Addison. See Spectator, The: 

Sir Roger de Coverley Papers. 

Will You Advertise?—Anon.—FHE 
Will You Love Me when I’m Bald?—H: Firth Wood.— 
GH 

William and Margaret.—D: Mallet.—FEP 
William and Marjorie. (In Percy’s Reliques.)—Anon. 
—PEB 1 

(Sweet William’s Ghost— C.) —BB—CGd 
(3 diff. versions.) 

William Blake.—Edmund Gosse.—EDY 
William Brown of Oregon. (SI. abr.) —Joaquin Miller. 
_£g 22 

William Did.—Anon.—WR 14 

(Billet-doux, A [or The].)—CS 26—DCD 
William E. Gladstone. (London Punch.) —EDY 
William Ewart Gladstone.—Agnes M. Machar.—TCV 
William Goetz.—H: Reeves.—BS 9 
William Lloyd Garrison (To William Lloyd Garrison— 
C.). —Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 
William Lloyd Garrison. (Sel.) —Wendell Phillips.— 
NC 

William of Cloudesle.—Anon.—EPs 
William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, Sel. fr. (Lord Chatham’s 
Eloquence.)—T: B. Macaulay.—IR 
William Shakespeare. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

William Shakespeare, Sel. fr. (Monument to Shake¬ 
speare, A — Third Pt., Conclusion, Sec. V.) 
—Victor Hugo.—MRS 
William Tell.—W: Baine.—BS 1—CS 7—FR 
William Tell, Sels. fr. —Jas. S. Knowles. 

William Tell among the Moutains. (Sels. fr. Act 
I., Sc. 2 and Act II., Sc. 1.)—CR 
(William Tell’s Address to his Native Hills.)—FR 
William Tell among the Mountains. (Fr. I., 2.)— 
OM—SO—SS 

(Tell on his Native Hills— abr.) —SAE 
(Tell’s Address to the Alps— abr.) —HNS 
(Tell’s Address to the Mountains— abr.) —PS 
(“Ye crags and peaks, I’m with you once again” 
— br. sel.)— CS 1 

William Tell on Switzerland. (Fr. II., 1.)—OM— 
SS 

(Switzerland— sel.) —BNL 

(“Oh, with what pride I used,” etc.— si. abr.) — 
SPE 

(Tell on his Native Hills— si. abr.) —BS 3—LLC 
—SA—SR 8 

(Tell on Switzerland.)—CS 1 
William Tell, Sels. fr. —Friedrich Schiller (tr.' by S: T. 
Coleridge). 

Address to the Swiss. (Sel. fr. Act II., Sc. 2.)—SS 
Alpine Minstrelsy. (Sel. fr. I., 1.)—FTR 
Das Licht des Auges. (Sel. fr. I., 4.)—TMD 
William Tell Describes his Escape. (Sel. fr. IV., 1.) 
—SS 

William Tell in Wait for Gessler. (Sel. fr. IV., 3.)— 
SS 

William Tell among the Mountains.—Jas. S. Knowles. 
See William Tell. 

William Tell and His Son.—Martha J. Nott.—WR 6 
William Tell Describes His Escape.—Friedrich Schiller. 
See William Tell. 

William Tell in Wait for Gessler.—Friedrich Schiller. 
See William Tell. 

William Tell oh Switzerland.—Jas. S. Knowles. See 
William Tell. 

William Tell’s Address to his Native Hills.—Jas. S. 

Knowles. See William Tell. 

William the Conqueror.—E: A. Freeman.—WR 9 
William the Conqueror.—C: Mackay.—CS 4 
William the Testy.—Washington Irving. See Knicker¬ 
bocker History of New York. 

William the Third. (Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Pt. III., 
Son. IX.)—W: Wordsworth.—EDY 
William Wordsworth.—Fs. T. Palgrave.—VA 
Willie and Helen.—Hew Ainslie. See Willy and Helen. 
Willie and his Esmeralda.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Willie and May Margaret; or. The Water of Clyde.— 
Anon.—BB 

(Drowned Lovers, The—2 diff. versions.) —EPs (si. 
abr.) —PEB 2 (a&r.) 

Willie Clark.—T: E. Garrett.—CS 26 
Willie Drowned in Yarrow.—Anon. See Willy 
Drowned in Yarrow. 

Willie Winkie.—W: Miller.—BNL—FEP—GP—HBP 
—OS 1—PHS—WCL—YBF 
(SI. abr.)— LC—VA 

Willie’s Breeches. — Etta G. Salsbury. — PP — 
WR 17 (sel.) —YFR 
Willie’s Signal for Jesus.—Anon.—CS 23 
Willie’s Speech.—Anon.—LPS—PP—PS 

374 




TITLE INDEX 


Winter 


Willie’s Speech.—Elia Doolitt le.—SD 

Willie’s Tears.—Anon.—DLS 

Willie’s Visit to Melville Castle.—Anon.—HBP 

Willis, The.—D: L. Proudfit.—A A 

Willow, The—Eliz. A. Allen—HSS 1 ( br. sel.) —OS 3 

Willow Song[, The—C.].—Felicia D. Hemans.—HBP 

Willow-tree, The. (Br. sel.) —Eliza Cook.—AD 

Willow-tree, The.—W: M. Thackeray.—WR 4 

Willowwood. (I.—The House of Life, Sonnet XLIX.) 

—Dante G. Rossetti.—PGT 2 
Will’s Desire.—Mary P. Thomas.—WR 17 
Will’s Dollar Bill.—Alice L. Richards.—WN 
Willy and Helen.—Hew Ainslie.—PEB 3 
(Willie and Helen— abr.) —OB 
Willy Drowned in Yarrow.—Anon. -PGT 1 
( Willie Drowned in Yarrow— si. abr.) —BPB 
Willy Reilly.—Anon.—TIP 
Willy’s Grave.—Edwin Waugh.-- CS 10 
W’illy’s Lady. (In Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—BB 
—PEB 2 (si. diff. vers.) 

Willy’s Walk.—Anon.—HVD 
Wilt Thou be Long?—E. Matheson.—FLS 
Wiltshire Wedding, The.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Wily Bee. The.—Ed. H. Cahill.—DCR 
Wimmen’s Speah.—Marietta Holley. See My Opin¬ 
ions and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Wind, The.—Letitia E. Landon.—PoR—POS 
Wind, The. (Mother Truth's Melodies.) —-NV 
Wind, The.—Adelaide A. Procter.—POS 
Wind, The.—Edmund C. Stedman. See What the 
Winds Bring. 

Wind, The.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV—GMS—GN 
—HSS 2—TFS 

Wind and Sea.—Bayard Taylor. See Wind and the 
Sea, The. 

Wind and the Leaves, The.—G: Cooper.—SM 
(Autumn Leaves.)—GMS (abr.) —NV 
(Leaves and th° Wind, The.)—TA V 
Wind and the Moon, The.— G: Macdonald.— BeR— 
BS 22—CS 22—EA—PHS—VSG (abr.) 

Wind and the Sea, The (Wind and Sea— C.). —Bayard 
Taylor—POS 

W T ind and the Sun, The.—TCsop.—OS 1 
Wind and Wave.—C: W. Stoddard.—AA 
“Wind, be still, ’tis Spring!”—Anon.—HSS 1 
Wind in a Frolic, The.— W: Howitt.—BVC 
(Abr.) —FMR—PC—PHS—PoR—POS 
Wind in the Pines, The.—Madison Cawein.—AA 
Wind in the Pines, The.—Sir H: Taylor. See Edwin 
the Fair 

Wind of Death, The.—Ethelwyn Wetherald.—VA 
Wind of Summer.—Michael Field.—VA 
Wind of the Sea.—-Jas. W. Riley.—BJC 
Wind of the Southland.—Douglass B. Douglass.—CG 3 
Wind on the Hills, The.—Dora Sigerson.—TIP 
Windflower, A.—Bliss Carman.—VA 
Winding Banks of Erne; or. The Emigrant’s Adieu to 
Ballyshannon, The.—W: Allingham.—TIP 
Winding my Watch. : —Anon.—LLC 
Windlass Song.—W: Allingham.—GN 
Windmill, The.—Anon.—DLF 
Windmill, The.—H: W. Longfellow.—BVC 
Window, The. (C.) —Alfred Tennyson. 

(Winter.)—LC 

Window in Thrums, A, Sel. fr. (How Gavin Birse Put it 
to Mag Lownie—Ch. XV.)—Jas. M. Barrie.— 
WGS—WR 13 

Window Song, A.—-T: C. Irwin.—TIP 
Winds, The.—W: C. Bryant—HSS 3—SE 
Winds, The. (Co-nell Widow.) —CG 3 
Winds, The, Sel. fr— H. F. Gould.—AE 
Winds and Waves. (Frags, fr. various authors.) — 
BNL 

Winds of the Prairie, The.—Caroline F. Candy.—KNS 
Winds of the Winter, The.—Paul H. Hayne.—POS 
Wind’s Song, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Winds To-day are Large and Free.—Michael Field.— 
VS 

Wind’s Voices, The.—Susan Warner.—MR 
Windsor Forest, Br. sel. fr. (Angling.)—Alex. Pope.— 
BNL 

Windsor Poetics.—Lord Byron.—HPE 
Wind-swept Wheat, The.—Mary A. De Vere.—AA 
Windy Night, The.—T: B. Read.—-GN—HBP 
Windy Nights.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—BVC—CGV—- 
PoR 

Wine.—J: Gay.—HPE 

Wine and Dew. (“You mav drink to your leman in 
gold”— C.) —R: H: Stoddard.—AA 
Wine and Water.—Nettie Mackey.—KC 
Wine Cup, The.—Anon.—CS 13—KNE 
Wine of Cyprus, Sel. fr. (Stanzas.)—Eliz. B. Browning. 
—CEL 


Wing Tee Wee.—J. P. Denison.—CG 1 
Winged Seeds.—Helen G. Cone.—NV 
Winged Worshippers, The.—C: Sprague.—AA—BNL 
—FEP—SN—TAS—YBT 
Wings.—Danske C. Dandridge.—TAS 
Wings.—Mary L. Ritter.—BNL 
Winifred Waters.—Anon.—WR 17 
Winifreda. (In Percy’s Reiiques.) — Anon.— FEP— 
FTR—GP—HBP 

Wink.—Mrs. E. D. Kendall.—HSS 2—MYF 
Winners by their Own Lengths. (Sel. ad. fr. Black 
Rock, Ch. II.)—Ralph Connor.—NP 
Winnie’s Welcome.—Will Emmett.—BS 21 
(SI. abr.) —CD—SR 5 

Winnifred, Walter and the W’s.—Anon.—DES 
Winning a Wager.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Winning and Losing. (Verses heading Christian’s Mis¬ 
take, Ch. XIII.)—Dinah M. Craik (?).—OS 1 
Winning Company, A.—Anon.—CRR 
Winning Cup’s Race.—Campbell Rae-Brown.—WR 14 
(Kissing Cup’s Race.)—CS 32 
Winning the Prize.—Anon.—FDY 
Winsome Wee Thing, The.—Rob’t Burns.—FEP-—LC 
(My Wife’s a Winsome Wee Thing— C.)- —BNL— 
HBP—TFY—YBF 

Winstanley. (Without the Apology.)—Jean Ingelow. 

—EPs—LLC (abr.)— PC (si. abr.) 

Winter.-—Anon.—HP 

Winter.—Anon.—POS—SM—WCL 

Winter.—Anon.—COS—PP 

Winter.—J: H. Bryant.—BNL 

Winter.—W: C. Bryant, See Winter Piece, A. 

Winter.—Rob’t Burns. See Winter: a Dirge. 

Winter. (Chambers’ Journal.) —HP 
Winter.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Winter.—Dora R. Goodale.—POS 
Winter.—J: Keats.—BPB 
(December.)—GN 

(Happy Insensibility.)—OH—PGT 1 
(Stanzas—C.)—OB 

Winter. (In The Unknown Eros.)—Coventry Pat¬ 
more.—PGT 2 (abr.) 

Winter.—W: Shakespeare. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 
Winter. (Sonnet XV.)—Rob’t Southey.—PEO 
Winter.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Winter.—Alfred Tennyson. See Window, The. 

Winter.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 

Winter!: a Dirge— C.]. —Rob’t Burns.—EPs—POS 
Winter and Summer.—Anon.—GMS 
Winter Apples.—Hattie Whitney.—NV 
Winter Being Over, The.—Ann[e] Collins.—BNL— 
HBP 

Winter Birds.—G: Cooper.—POS 
Winter Dawn.—M. A. P.—CG 3 
Winter Days.—H: Abbey.—AA—SN 
Winter Evening.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Winter Evening.—Katha. Tynan-Hinkson.—TIP 
Winter Evening at Home, A.—W: Cowper. See Task, 
The. 

Winter Evening Hymn to My Fire, A.—Jas. R. Lowell. 
—BNL—PPh (sel.) 

Winter Fancies.—Jas. W. Riley.—RCR 
Winter Flowers.—Blanche Bishop.—TCV 
Winter Gloaming.—Faith Lincoln.—SSS 
Winter Hymn, A.—Amelie Rives.—TAS 
Winter in the Lap of Spring. (Tab.) —Anon.—BS 11 
—TCP 

Winter Jewels.—Mary F. Butts.—COS—CPL—DLS— 
PP 

(Dewdrops.)—AD 

(Million Little Diamonds, A—C.)—AA—GMS— 
HSS 2 

Winter Leaves.—Anon.—CP 

Winter Morning.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Winter Morning, A.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Vision of Sir 
Launfal, The. 

Winter Morning Walk, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, 
The. 

Winter Night, A. (SI. abr.) —Rob’t Burns.— EPs — 
POS 

Winter Night.—Mary F. Butts.—PoR 
Winter Night, A.—Melville LI. Cane.—CG 3 
Winter Nightfall.—Rob’t Bridges.—OB 
Winter Nights. (Third Book of Airs, XII.)—T: Cam- 
nion.—ELP—OB 

Winter Nights at Home, The.—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 
Winter Noon.—W: Cowper. See Task, The. 

Winter Pictures.—Jas. R. Lowell. See Vision of Sir 
Launfal, The. 

Winter Piece, A, Sel. fr. (Winter.)—W: C. Bryant.— 
POS 

Winter Rain.—Christina Rossetti.-—HSS 2 
Winter Scenes.—Jas. Thomson. See Seasons, The. 


375 





Winter 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Winter Sketch, A.—J: B. L. Warren, Lord De Tabley. 
—VS 

Winter Sleep.—Edith M. Thomas.—AA 
Winter Solstice, The.—Edith Thomas. See Solstice. 
Winter Song, A.—W: C. Bennett—POS 
Winter Song, A.—Susan Hartley.—FS—PEO 
Winter Song.—Ludwig Holty (tr. by C: T. Brooks).— 
BNL 

(Winter’s Snows.)—TFS 

Winter Song, A.—W: Shakespeare. See Love's Labour’s 
Lost. 

Winter Song for Pan.—J: Erskine.—CG 3 
Winter Starlight.—Frank D. Sherman.—TAV 
Winter Sunshine.—Anon.—FTA 
Winter Thrush, The. (C.)—J: Keble. 

(To a Thrush Singing in January— abr.) —POS 
Winter Twilight, A—Arlo Bates.—AA 
Winter Twilight.—G: T. Elliot.—AA 
Winter Walk at Noon, The.—W: Cowper. See Task, 
The. 

Winter Wish, A.—Rob’t H. Messinger.—AA—HBP 
(Give me the Old.)—BNL—EPs—FEP—TAV 
Winter’s Acrobats.—-Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Winter’s Snows.—Ludwig Holty. See Winter Song. 
Winter's Tale, The, SeLs. fr. —W: Shakespeare 

Art and Nature. ( Br. sel. fr. Act IV., Sc. 4.)—EPs 
Court Scene from “The Winter’s Tale.” (Sel. fr. 
III., 2.)—WR 14 

Sheep-shearing, A. (Sel. fr. IV., 4.)—EP 
(Flowers— br. sel.) —EPs—SN 
(Winter’s Tale— si. abr.) —BNL 
Song of Autolycus. (Song fr. IV., 3.)—OEL— 
WEP 1 

(Jog on. Jog on— sel. w. 2 add. sts.) —GN 
(“Jog on, jog on the footpath way”— sel.) — 
HP 

Winter’s Tale, The, Br. sel. fr. (Fr. II., 3.)—BNL 
Winter’s Work.—Anon.—DJS 
Winter-time.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV 
Wiped Out. (Detroit Free Press.) —CS 23—DS 
Wisdom.—Coventry Patmore. See Angel in the 
House, The. 

Wisdom.—C: F. Richardson.—TAS. 

Wisdom and Goodness of God, The—J: Milton. See 
Paradise Lost. 

Wisdom and Wealth.—Ivan I. Khnemnitzer.—BLP 
Wisdom Dearly Purchased.—Edmund Burke. See 
Speech at Bristol, Previous to th) Election, etc. 
Wisdom of Krishna. (Notes and Queries. —CS 36 
Wisdom of the Ages.—Anon.—LLC 
Wisdom’s Treasures.—Mrs. E. J. Goodfellow.—SSE 
Wise Child, The.—Gotthold E. Lessing.—HPE 
Wise Fairy, The.—Alice Carv.—BLF 
“WTse man always shows himself on the side of his 
assailants. The.”-—Ralph W. Emerson. See 
Compensation. 

Wise Man’s Prayer, The.—S: Johnson. See Vanity of 
Human Wishes, The. 

Wise Men of Gotham, The.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Wise Resolution, A.—E. C. A. Allen.—TS 
Wise Selection, A.—Anon.—MC 

Wise Women of Inverness, The, Sel. fr. (Adam O’Fin- 
try.)—W: Black—VSG 
Wisest Fool, The.—Eva Lovett.—TMR 
Wisest Plan, The.—Phoebe Cary.—PS 

(Suppose—C.)—BLF—PHS—PR—YA 
(A br. )—P P—T FS—YFR 

(“Suppose, my little lady ’’— abr. )—GMS—HSS 2 
(sel.) —SM 

Wish, A.—A.—CG 2 
Wish, A.—Matthew Arnold.—HBP 
Wish, A.—Rose Terry Cooke.—WCL 
(Give me a Wish.)—PC 
Wish, A.—Abraham Cowley.-—CEL—WEP 2 
(Of Myself—C.)—BNL— FEP 
Wish, The.—Abraham Cowley. See Mistress, The. 
Wish, A.—Henrietta R. Eliot.—SR 6 
Wish, A.—Rob’t Devereux, Earl of Essex.—PGT 1 — 
YBF 

(Passion of my,Lord of Essex, A.)—ELP 
Wish, A.—Hamlin Garland.—AA 

Wish, A.—Ben Jonson. See Masque of the Metamor¬ 
phosed Gipsies, A. 

Wish, A.—S: Rogers—BNL—CEL—FEP—HBP— 
PGT 1—YBF 

W’sh Dearer than the Crown. The.—Nettie V. Braiden. 
—CS 34 

Wish-bone, The.—Leon Mead.—DR 
Wishes, The.—Anon.—YFD 
Wishes.—H. W. Banks.—CG 1 
Wishes.—H: Halloran.—FLS 

Wishes for the Supposed Mistress.—R: Crashaw. See 
following. 


Wishes: to His Supposed Mistress. (C.) —R: Cra¬ 
shaw.—BNL (abr.) —OB (si. abr.) 

(Sel.) ELP—WEP 2 
(Whoe’er She be— abr.) —OEL 

(Wishes for the Supposed Mistress.)—FEP (si. abr.) 
—PGT 1 (abr.) 

Wishing.—W: Allingham.—NV—OS 1—PC—PHS— 
PoR—WCL 

Wishing and Having, Br. sel. fr. (“Perhaps it will all 
come right at last.”)—R: H: Stoddard.—BIL 
Wishmakers’ Town, Sels. fr. —W: Young. 

Bells, The.—AA 
Bridal Pair, The.—AA 
Conscience-keeper, The.—AA 
Flower-seller, The.—AA 
Pawns, The.—AA 

Wissahikon, The, Sel. fr. (In Washington and his Gen¬ 
erals.)—G: Lippard. 

Hero Woman, The. (Ch. VI.— abr.) —CS 25 
Wistful.—Anon.—FLS 

Wistful Days, The.—Rob’t U. Johnson.—AA—SN 
Wit at Several Weapons, Sel. fr. (Song— C .— fr. Act 
III., Sc. 1.)—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

(Wake, Gently Wake.)—ES 
Witch, A.—W: Barnes.—CGd 
Witch, The.—Virginia W. Cloud.—WR 22 
Witch in the Glass, The.—Sarah M. B. Piatt.—AA— 
BNL—TAV 

Witch of Fife, The.—Jas. Hogg. See Queen’s W T ake, 
The. 

Witch of Vesuvius, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Last 
Days of Pompeii, The. 

Witch-bride, The.—W: Allingham.—PEB 4 
Witches. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Witches’ Frolic, The. (Abr.) —R: H. Barham—WR 1 
Witches’ March.—Anon.—WDM 

Witches’ Meeting, The.—W: Shakespeare. See Mac¬ 
beth. 

Witches’ Town. (Bowdoin Quill.) —CG 3 
Witch-mother, The.—Algernon C. Swinburne.—PEB 4 
Witch’s Ballad, The—W: B. Scott.—OB 
Witch’s Cavern, The.—E: Bulwer-Lytton. See Last 
Days of Pompeii, The. 

Witch’s Daughter, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Mabel 
Martin. 

Witch’s Whelp, The.—R: H: Stoddard.—AA 
With a Copy of Herrick.—Edmund Gosse.—VA 
With a Copy of Keats.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 2 
With a Golfer’s Apologies to Tennyson. (Punch Bowl.) 
—CG 3 

With a Guitar, to Jane. (C.) —Percy B. Shelley.— 
FEP 

(To a Lady, with a Guitar.)—CEL—PGT 1 
With a Hand-glass (To Minnie: A Picture-frame for 
you to Fill— C.). —Rob’t L. Stevenson.—OH 
“With a hey! and a hi! and a hey-ho rhyme!”—Jas. 
W. Riley— BJC 

With a Nantucket Shell.—C: H. Webb.—AA 
With a Prayer-book.—Oscar F. Adams.—TAS 
With a Rose from Conway Castle.—Julia C. R. Dorr.— 
AA 

With a Sprav of Apple Blossoms.—Walter Learned.— 
AA 

“With broken heart and contrite sigh.”—Cornelius 
Elven—FEP 

With Clearer Vision.—Carlotta Perry.—WR 7 
With Esther.—Wilfrid S. Blunt.—OB 
With Flowers. (Life, XXV.)—Emily Dickinson.—AA 
“With gentle looks and hearts made calm by sorrow.” 
—J. N. Tarbox.—GG 

With Gleaming Sail.-—Evelyn G. Gardiner.-—CG 3 
“With his gnarled old arms and his iron form.”—H: 

R. Jackson. See Live Oak, The. 

“With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb’st the skies.” 

—Sir Philip Sidney. See Astrophel and Stella. 
With Lilacs.—C. H. Crandall.—AA 
With Malice towards none, with Charity for all.— 
Abraham Lincoln. See Second Inaugural 
Address. 

With my Cigar.—J: C. Anthony.—CG 2 

“With my love this knowledge too was given.”—Jas. 

R. Lowell. See Sonnet: “My love, I have no 
fear 11 ©tc. 

With No One to Love Us.—E: Ball.—FLS 
With Pipe and Book.—R: Le Gallienne.—PPh 
“With Pipe and Flute.”—Austin Dobson.—VA 
With Roses.—Beatrix D. Lloyd.—AA 
With Roses.—Sheffield Phelps.—CG 1 
With Sa’di in the Garden ; or, The Book of Love, Sels. fr. 
—Edwin Arnold. 

Book of Love. (Br. sel.) —BIL 
Lover with his Loved One Sailed the Sea, A. (Song.) 
—BIL 


376 




TITLE INDEX 


Woman’s 


With Sa’di in the Garden; or, The Book of Love ( con¬ 
tinued ]). 

Mahmud and Ayaz.—VA 

“Naught is the same ‘as if love had not been.’” 
(Br. sel.) —BIL 

Queen Arjamand’s Dagger.—SAE 
Song without a Sound.—VA 
With Strawberries.—W: E. Henley.—OH 
“With the results of Christianity before him and in 
him.”—Josiah G.(?) Holland.—GG 
With the Tide.—Anon.—HP 
With Thee.—Mary C. Clarke.—FLS 
“With thee, sweet Hope, resides the heavenly light.”— 
T: Campbell. See Pleasures of Hope, The. 
With Trembling Fingers Did We Weave.—Alfred 
Tennyson. See In Memoriam. 

With Trumpet and Drum.—Eugene Field.—WTD 
With Walker in Nicaragua, Sel. fr. (At the Grave of 
Walker.)—AA—EDY 

“With white wings spread she bounded o’er the deep.” 

—Mary A. Livermore.—GG 
With whom is no Variableness[, neither Shadow of 
Turning].—Arthur H. Clough.—HDL—WEP 4 
(Changeless, The.)—YBF 
With Wordsworth at Rydal.—Jas. T. Fields.—AA 
‘With you Alway.’—-Willis B. Allen.—TAS 
“Within a few years past it has become the fashion.” 
—( Th" Nation.) —GG 

Within King’s College Chapel, Cambridge. (Ecclesias¬ 
tical Sonnets, Pt. II.,XLIII.—Inside of King’s 
College Chapel, Cambridge— C.) —W: Words¬ 
worth.—PGT 1 

(Ecclesiastical Sonnets, Sel. fr.) —BNL ( br. sel.) 
Within the Fold.—Anon.—CS 35 
Within the Gates.—Clay Clement.—WR 2 
“Within the master’s desk is seen.”—J: G. Whittier. 
See In School Days. 

Without and Within. (Sel. fr. The Change.)—Abra¬ 
ham Cowley.—YBF 
(Fragment, A.)—-FEP 
(Love in her Sunny Eyes.)—ES 
Without and Within. (SI. abr.) —Jas. R. Lowell.— 
FEP—HBP—THP 

Without and Within.—Pierre A. D. B. Metastosio.— 
BNL 

Without and Within.—R: H. Stoddard.—FEP 
Without Her. (The House of Life, Sonnet LIII.)— 
Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 
Without Him.—Edith Rutter.-—FEP 
Without the Children.—Anon.—BeR 
Witness, The.—Anon.—PR 

(Guileless Witness, The.)—KNE 
(Hard Witness, The.)—DCR 
Witnesses.—Harriet P. Spofford.—TAS 
Wit’s Epitaph, A.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Witticisms and Funny Sayings.—Anon.—CS t> 

Witty Retort, A.—Anon.—DLF—KJ 
Wives in a Social Game.—Anon.—MRS 
Wives of Brixham, The.— Anon. — CS 8 — MYF — 
PC (abr.) 

Wives of Great Men.—Anon.—PS 
Wizard Frost.—Frank D. Sherman.—LFL 
Wizard of the Nile, The, Sel. fr. (My Angeline.)—Harry 
B. Smith.—THP 

Wizard of Valley Forge, The.—H. S. Kent.—ED 
Wizard’s Spell, The.—L. V. Douglas.—CS 30 
Wizard’s Warning, The. (Dial.) —-T: Campbell.—SED 
(Lochiel’s Warning— C.) —AE (br. sel.) —BNL— 
BS 7 — CDD —CS 10—EPs — FEP — FTR — 
HBP—PS—SS—WRD 
Wo-begone Lover, A.—Anon.—CS 19 
Woe follows Wickedness. Bible. See Isaiah. 

Wofle New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, The. 

—-W: M. Thackeray.—HPE 
Woful Tale of Jotham Brown, The.—Jennie E. T. 
Dowe.—FS 

Wolf and Shepherds, The, Br. fel. fr. (Law.)—Jas. 
Beattie.—CS 15 

(Lawyers and the Laws.)—BNL 
Wolf and the Bear, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.— 
KER 

Wolf and the Kid, The.—Anon.—PPSr 
Wolfe at Quebec.—Frank D. Budlong.—NC—PFP 
Wolfram’s Dirge.—T: L. Beddoes. See Death’s Jest 
Book. 

Wolfram’s Song.—T; L. Beddoes. See Death’s Jest 
Book. 

Wolsey’s Advice to Cromwell.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry VIII. 

Wolsey’s Fall.—W: - Shakespeare. See King Henry 
VIII , 

Wolsey’s Farewell [Address] to Cromwell.—W: Shakes¬ 
peare. See King Henry VIII. 


Wolsey’s Soliloquy.—W; Shakespeare. See King 
Henry VIII. 

Wolves, The.—J: T. Trowbridge.—MMR 
Woman.—Anon.—BNL 
W oman.—Anon.—CP 

Woman. (Frags, fr. various authors.)— BNL 
Woman.—Eaton S. Barrett.—GP 

Woman.—Calidasa (tr. by Horace H. Wilson).—BNL— 
EPs 

Woman.—Oliver Goldsmith. See Vicar of Wakefield, 
The. 

Woman.—Joaquin Miller.—FAS 
Woman.—Osborne.—MDD 

Woman.—Alfred Tennyson. See Princess, The. 
Woman.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 31 
Woman and the Weed.—Andrew Lang.—VSG 
Woman as Friend.—J: Lord.—TMR 
Woman Contemplating a Household God, A. (C.) —G: 
Croly. 

(Domestic Love.)—FP 

Woman Healed, The.—Jessie F. Houser.—CS 31— 

sss 

Woman in Politics.—J. Ellen Foster.—TMR 
Woman in Temperance.—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
Woman Next Door, The.—Anon.—-NPS—YP 
Woman of Mind, The.—Anon.—BC 

(My Wife is a Woman of Mind.)—BS 17 
Woman of no Importance, A, Sel. fr. (Gerald and his 
Mother.)—Oscar Wilde.—VSG 
Woman of the War, A.—Rossiter Johnson.—AWB 
Woman of Three Cows, The.—Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 
Woman who Lingers, The.—Anon.—CS 20 
Woman-hater, The, Sel. fr. (Song— C.—fr. Act III., 
Sp 1 )— I ■ Flptrhpr 
(Invocation to Sleep.)—BNL—CEL 
(Sleep.)—OB 

Womanhood.—Lizzie J. Rook.—TT 
Woman’s Answer, A.—Adelaide A. Procter.—BNL— 
FEP—FTA (abr.) —OH 
Woman’s Answer, A.—Lydia M. Wood.—FLS 
Woman’s Answer on Being Accused of being a Maniac 
on the Subject of Temperance, A.—Anon.— 
PPSr 

(Go, Feel what I have Felt.)—BNL—PS—SM 
(Hate of the Bowl.)—CS 2—HNS 
Woman’s Career.— (Life.) —BS 21 

Woman’s Cause, The.—Alfred Tennyson. See Prin¬ 
cess, The. 

Woman’s Complaint, A. (Advance.) —FLS (si. abr.) — 
HP 

(Famished Heart, A.)—BS 18 
Woman’s Conclusions, A.—Phoebe Cary.—HDL 
Woman’s Curiosity.—Anon.—PP—-YPS 
Woman’s Day.—Anon.—TFS 

Woman’s Death-wound, A.—Helen H. Jackson.— 
BIL 

Woman’s Description of a Play, A.—Zenas Dane.— 
DCR 

Woman’s Execution, A.—E: King.—AA 
Woman’s Face, A.—Jas. K. Stephen.—HBR 
Woman’s Four Seasons.—Philip J. (?) Bailey.—FP 
Woman’s Gifts, A.—Mary A. De Vere.—TFY 
Woman’s Half-profits, The. (Cond.) —R: Le Gallienne. 
—WR 19 

Woman’s Hand, A. (In A Lover’s Diary.)—Gilbert 
Parker.—VA 

Woman’s Hate, A.—Anon.—WR 7 
Woman’s Inconstancy.—Sir Rob’t Ayton.—BNL— 
FEP—YBF 

(To an Inconstant One.)—OB 
Woman’s Love.—Anon.—CS 37 
(Conflict of Trains, A.)—CS 15 
Woman’s Love.—Anon.—FP 
Woman’s Love.—-Anon.-—WR 14 
Woman’s Love, A.—J: Hay.—BNL—GP 
Woman’s “No,” A.—Arthur Graham.—CH 
Woman’s Part, The.—Annie R. Christie.—TCV 
Woman’s Plea, A.—Anon.—FMR 

(Thrilling Appeal, A— diff. vers.) —TS 
Woman’s Pocket, A. (In Danburv News.) —Jas. M. 

Bailey.—CS 22—NPS—YP 
Woman’s Power.—Marietta F. Cloud.—BS 14 
Woman’s Praise, A.—Anon.—DCP 
Woman’s Pride. A.—Helen Hay.—A A 
Woman’s Question, A.—I ena I nthrop (nr, at. to Eliz. 
B. Browning).—CS 13—MR—-WCI.G 2 
(Her Reply.)—SR 7 

Woman’s Question, A.—Adelaide A. Procter.—BNL— 
CS 6—FEP—FLS—GP—VA 
Woman’s Rights.—Anon.—MAD 
Woman’s Rights. (Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Wo man's Rights.—G: W: Curtis. See Fair Play for 

\Y omen , 


377 




Woman’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Woman’s Rights.—Marietta Holley. See My Opinions 
and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Woman’s Rights [by Miss Tabitha Primrose].—Anon.— 
BS 1 {si. abr .)—CS 9 

(Speech on Woman’s Rights— si. abr.) —DE 
Woman’s Shortcomings, A.—Eliz. B. Browning.—BIL 
(Oh, Fear to Call it Loving— sel .)—FTA 
(Unless.)—FLS 

Woman’s Song, A.—Clement Scott.—CS 28 
Woman’s Thought, A.—R: W. Gilder.—ASL—BIL— 
FTA 

Woman’s Trust, Br. sel. fr. (“Angel face—its sunny 
wealth of hair, An.”)—Frances S. Osgood.— 
BNL 

Woman’s Voice.—Edwin Arnold.—BNL {br. sel .)— 
HBP 

Woman’s War Mission.—Anon.—AWB 
Woman’s Watch, A.—Anon.—PR—YA 
Woman’s Way.—Anon.—WR 2 
Woman’s Way, A.—Anon.—WR 4 
Woman’s Wiles.—H: S. Chapman.-—CG 1 
Woman’s Will {An Epigram.) —J: G. Saxe.—BNL— 
HPE—THP 

Woman’s Wish, A.—Mary A. Townsend.—HP 
Women. {In Miscellaneous Thoughts.)—S: Butler.— 
HPE 

Women and Temperance Work.—Frances E. Willard. 
—TS 

Women and their Ways.—Anon.—SR 4 
Women Fo’k, The.—jas. Hogg.—BNL 
Women of Marblehead, The.—E. N. Gunnison.— 
FR (abr.) 

(Old Huldah.)—CS 14 

■Vomen of Mumbles Head, The.—Clement Scott.— 
CS 25—FMR—VSG 

Aomen of Sego, The.—Mungo Park.—FMR 
Aomen of the Revolution.—Mary E. Blake.—WR 10 
A’omen of the War.—Annie Thomas.—DES 
Aomen Pleased, Sel. fr. (To his Sleeping Mistress— song 
fr. Act III., Sc. 4.)-—J: Fletcher.—ELP 
(To my Mistress’s Eyes.)—ES 
Women’s Dispositions.—T. De Witt Talmage.—BS 18 
Women’s Rights.—Anon.-—WR 12 
Women’s Rights.—Emma Zeliff.—SDD 
Won by Strategv. {Farce.) —Anon.—DCD 
Won the Pot.—J. R.—CG 1 

Wonder, The, Sel. fr. (Spanish Valet and the Waiting 
Maid, The— d'loiogae.) —Anon.—BC 
"Wonder of all-ruling Providence, The.”—J: Keats.— 
BNL 

Wonder Story, A.—Helen C. Bacon.—TT 
Wonder-child, The.—R: Le Gallienne.—VA 
Wonderfu’ Wean, The.—W: Miller.—FEP 
Wonderful.—Julian S. Cutler.—POS 
Wonderful Country, The.—J: B. O’Reilly.—BS 16 
Wonderful Dog Story. A.—E. J. Wheeler.—WR 25 
Wonderful Dream. {Dial.) —Christy.—BC 
Wonderful Duel, A. {Harper’s Weekly.) —FS {si. abr.) 
(Duel between Mr. Shott and Mr. Nott, The.)—CH 
(Mysterious Duel, A.)—CS 20—SR 5 
Wonderful Lamp, The.—Anon.—DDM 
Wonderful Mosquitoes.—Anon.—KNE 
(Clerical Wit.)—CS 4—SCS 
Wonderful Old Man, The.—Anon.—NA 
Wonderful "One-hoss Shay,” The.—Oliver W. Holmes. 
—AD {sel.) —CS 2 

(Deacon’s Masterpiece, The; or, etc.— C.) —AWH— 
EPs—FEP—THP 

(One-hoss Shay, The; or, etc.)—BNL—CR-—MHR 
—SE(se(.) 

Wonderful Sack, The.-—J: T. Trowbridge.—MYF 
Wonderful Scholar, The. {Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Wonderful Tar-baby [Story], The.—Joel C. Harris. 

See Uncle Remus, his Songs and his Sayings. 
Wonderful Tree, The.—-Anon.—AD 

Wonderful Weaver, The.- Cooper.—DLS—PP— 

TMR—YPS 

Wonderful W T halers, The.—Anon.—MDD 
Wonderful World, The. (Great, Wide, Beautiful, Won¬ 
derful World— C.) —W: B. Rands (ter. at. to 
M. Browne).—GMS—PoR 
(Child’s World, The.)—POS {si. diff. vers.)— SM— 
WCL—YBT 
(World, The.)—OS 1 
Wonderland.—Harry T. Peck.—AA 
Wonders, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BAT) 

Wonders of an Atom, The.—Rob’t Hunt. See Poetry 
of Science. 

Wonders of Genealogy, The. ( Yale Record.) —BS 11 
Wonders of the Dawn, The.—E: Everett. See Uses of 
Astronomy, The. 

Wonders of the Victorian Age. {Punch.) —HPE 
Won’t and Will.—Anon.—LPS—PP 


Won’t You?—T: H. Bayly.—BIL—FTA—TFY 
Won’t you Follow Me (Lanty Leary— C.). —S: Lover.— 
CS 36 

(Old Ballad, An.)—WR 14 

Woo’d and Married and A’.—Joanna Baillie. See Song: 
Woo’d and Married and A’. 

Wood of Chancellorsville, The.—Delia R. German.— 
CS 1—WR 10 

Wood Orchid, The. {College Folio.) —CG 2 
Woodbine.—W: Shakespeare. See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream. 

Woodbines in October.-—-Charlotte F. Bates.—AA 
Woodchucks.—Anon.—CS 19 

Wooden Doll and the Wax Doll, The.—Jane Taylor. 
—OS 1 

Wooden Leg, The.—Max Adeler.—WR 2 
Wooden Legs.—Anon.—OS 1 
Wood-fire, The.—E. S. H.—EPs 

Woodland Grave, A.—J; B. L. Warren, Lord De Tab- 
ley.—VA 

Woodland Hymn, A.—Phebe A. Holder.—AD 
Woodland in Spring, The.—W; Cowper. See Task, 
The. 

Woodland Lesson, The.—Eliz. Bouton.—CS 18 
Woodland Tragedy, A.—Arlo Bates.—TAV 
Woodland Walks. (Poems of the Imagination, Misc. 

Sonnets, Pt. II., 2.)—W: Wordsworth.—WR 1 
“Woodman, Spare that Tree.” {History of the poem.) 
—Anon.—AD 

Woodman, Spare that Tree.—G: P. Morris.—AA— 
AD {w. toms.) — BLP — BNL — FEP —GP— 
HSS 1 — LLC — POS — PS — SM — TAV — 
WCLG 1 

Wood-notes, Sets. fr. —Ralph W. Emerson. 

Heart of all the Scene, The. (Pt. I., 4.)—AA 
Wood-notes. (Pt. II.)—HBP 
(Mighty Heart, The— sel.) —AA 
(Undersong, The— sel.) —A A 
Wood-nymphs. {Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Woodpecker and the Dove, The.—(TV. by) Blanche W. 

Bellamy and Maud W. Goodwin.—OS 1 
Woodruffe, The.—Isa C. Knox.-—VA 
Woods in Winter.—H: W. Longfellow.—HBP 
“Woods that Bring the Sunset Near, The.”—R: W. 

Gilder.—ASL—TAV 
Wood-song.—J. P. Peabody.—AA 
Woodspurge, The.—Dante G. Rossetti.—VA 
Wooing.—J: B. L. Soule.—GP 

Wooing of Amoret.—Edmund Spenser. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Wooing of the French Princess.—W: Shakespeare. See 
King Henry V. 

Wooing of the Lady Amabel.—F. Anstey.—CS 29 
Wooing of the Maid of Beauty.—Anon. See Kale- 
vala, The. 

Wooing Song. {Fr. The Sorceress of Vain Delight.)— 
Giles Fletcher.—OB 

(Panglory’s Wooing Song.)—FEP—HBP 
Woolen Doll, The.—G: W. Hows.—BeR 
Woone Smile Mwore.—W: Barnes.—VA 
Wopsenonic.—Louise E. V. Boyd.—CS 35 
Word, The.—R: Realf. See Symbolisms. 

Word for Cranks, A.— {Burlington Hau-keye.) —CS 26 
Word for each Month, A.—Clark Jilson.—CS 13 
Word from a Petitioner, A, Br. sel. fr. (6 lines.) —J: 
Pierpont.—BNL 
(Ballot, The—4 lines.) —A A 

(“Weapon that comes down as still, A”— H lines.) 
—GG 

Word of God to Leyden Came, The.—Jeremiah E. 
Rankin.—A A 

Word of Warning, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Word to the Wise, A.—Caroline Duer.—AA 
Word to the Wise, A, Sel. fr. (Prologue.)—S: John¬ 
son.—WEP 3 

Word to Young Men, A.—J: B. Gough.—TS 
Word with a Skylark, A.—Sarah Piatt.—SN 
Words.—Anon.—YBT 

Words. (Riddle—C.)—Anna L. Barbauld.—LLC 
Words. {Abr.) —Josiah G. Holland.—YBT 
Words.-Howell.—KNE 

Words and Their Uses.—Frank Olive.—CS 17—SR 1 
Words and Tones.—Anon.—HSS 2 

(Tone of the Voice, The— sel.) —CS 32 
Words for Parting.—Mary Clemmer.—BIL—FTA 
Words from the Tree. {Sel. fr. letter.) —Moncure D. 
Conway.—AD 

Words of Cheer.—T: H. Barker.—PEO 
Words of Rosalind’s Scroll, The, Sel. fr. (Rosalind’s 
Scroll.)—Eliz. B. Browning.—-OB 
Words of Strength.—Friedrich Schiller.—BS 9—KNE 
(Hope, Faith, [and] Love.)—GP—OS 2 
(Three Words of Strength.)—HDL 


378 






TITLE INDEX 


Wreck 


Words of Welcome.—Anon. See Lines for an Exhi¬ 
bition. 

Words on Language.—Oliver W. Holmes. See Rhymed 
Lesson, A. 

Wordsworth.—Craven L. Betts.—EDY 
Wordsworth.—Lord Byron. See English Bards and 
Scotch Reviewers. 

Wordsworth. (Br. sel. fr. To Wordsworth.)—Felicia 
D. Hemans.—BNL 

Wordsworth.—W: W. Lord. See Ode to England, An. 
Wordsworth.—-J: G. Whittier.—LLC 
Wordsworth on Poetry. See Poetry. Wordsworth. 
“Wordsworth’s Grave,” Sel. fr. W: Watson. (II.)— 
BNL 

Work.—Anon.—AD 

Work .—(All the Year Round .)—HP 

Work.—L: J. Block.—AA 

Work.—T: Carlyle. See Past and Present. 

Work.—Alice Cary.—HSS 3—NV 

Work.—Sidney Dyer. See Work, for the Night is 
Coming. 

Work.—C: Lamb.—WEP 4 
Work.—Martha P. Lowe.—TAS 
Work.—Mary N. Prescott.—YBT 
Work and Play.—Anon.—COS—PP 
(Bee and the Butterfly, The.)—TFS 
Wqrk and Play.—Anon.—WR 17 
Work and Play. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Work and Play.—M. A. Stoddart.—TFS 
(One Thing at a Time.)—LPS—PP 
Work and Song. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Work and Wait.—Annie R. White.—CPL 
Work Away.—Anon.—HSS 3 

Work, for the Night is Coming.—Sidney Dyer.—LLC 
(W ork— sel .)—TFS 
Work on Earth.—J: Wilson.-—HDL 
Work or Play. (Dial.) —Anon.—HVD 
“Work proceeds without intermission, The.”—H: W. 

Beecher. See Soul-building. 

Work that is Best, The.—Carlotta Perry.—CS 36—- 
WR 6 

Work without Hope.—S: T. Coleridge.—OB—YBF 
Work, Work Away.—Virgil A. Pinkley.—BS 22 
Work, Work, My Boy.—Anon.—HSS 3 
Working Man’s Song, The.—J: S. Blackie.—VA 
Works and Days, Br. sel. fr. —Ralph W. Emerson.— 
PEO 

Works of God, The.—Jane Taylor.—NV 
(God Made All Things.)—TFS 
Work-shop and thp Camp, The.—Anon—-SS 
World, The.—Fs. Bacon.—BNL—ELP 
(Life.)—FEP 

World, The.—G: Herbert.—WEP 2 
World, The.—W: B. Rands. See Wonderful World, 
The. 

World, The. (Parables and Riddles, IV.)—Friedrich 
Schiller.—OS 1 

World, The. (C.) —H: Vaughan.—ELP (br. sel .)— 
WEP 2 

(Vision, A— br. sel .)—PGT 1—YBF 
World, The.—Jones Very.—HBP 
World, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—CS 29 
World, The.—W: Wordsworth. See World is too 
much with us, The. 

World and I, The.—Nelly M. Hutchinson.—HP 
World and Soul.—G: Macdonald.—VA 
World and the Quietist, The.—Matthew Arnold.—VA 
World as it Is, The.—Ella W. Wilcox.—FS 

(Laugh and the World Laughs with you.)—TMD 
(Solitude—C.)—TAV 

World Beautiful, The.—J: Milton. See Paradise Lost. 
World Beyond, A.—Nathaniel I. Bowditch.-—AA 
World for Sale, The.—Ralph Hoyt.—CS 10—WCLG 2 
World I am Passing Through, The.—Lydia M. Child. 
—A A 

World is Mine, The.—Florence E. Coates.—AA 
World is too Much with us, The. (Poems of the 
Imagination, Misc. Sonnets, Pt. L, XXXIII.) 
—W: Wordsworth.—BNL—GP—HBP— HBR 
—LLC—PYO—SN—YBF 
(Sonnet.)—FEP 
(World, The.)—OB 

(“World is too much with us, late and soon. The. ) 
—BSP—PGT 1 

(World’s Ravages, The.)—WEP 4 
“World is too much with us, late and soon, The. —W : 

Wordsworth.—See foregoing. 

World Music.—F. L. Bushnell.—AA 
"World Owes Me a Living, The.”—Anon.—PS 
“World Owes Me a Living, The.”—Alice Cary. See 
Waiting for Something to Turn LTp. 

World to Come, The, Sel. fr. (Silence is Golden.) 
i— (Chautauquan .)—AD 


World Transformed, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Snow¬ 
bound. 

World We Live In, The.-—T. De Witt Talmage.—BS 15 
—CS 18—PS 

World Well Lost, The.—Edmund C. Stedman.— 
A A 

World Without and Within, The.—T: N. Talfourd.— 
SS 

World Would be Better for It, The.—M. H. Oobb.— 
BLP—HSS 3 (abr.) 

Worldly Place. (C.)—Matthew Arnold. 

(Even in a Palace.)—OS 2 
Worldly Treasures.—Philip J. (?) Bailey.—FP 
World’s Death-night, The.—Jas. C. Woods.—VA 
“World’s history is a divine poem, The.” (Br. sel. fr. 

The Province of History.)—Jas. A. Gar¬ 
field.—GG 

World’s Music, The.—Gabriel Setoun.—BVC (abr.) — 
PoR 

World’s Problem, The. — Mrs. Mary C. Leavitt.— 
WR 18 

World’s Ravages, The.—W: Wordsworth. See World 
is too much with us. The. 

World’s Verdict, The.—Flavel S. Mines.—BS 21 
World’s Wanderers, The.—Percy B. Shelley.—CEL— 
FP—POS 

World’s Way, The.—W: Shakespeare.—PGT 1 
(Sonnet.)—FEP 

(Sonnet LXVI—C.)—ELP—WEP 1 
World-weariness. (Frags, fr various authors .)—BNL 
Worm, The.—Eliz. Turner.—BVC 
Worn Wedding-ring, The.—W: C. Bennett.—BNL— 
TFY 

Worn-out Parties, The.-—Frances E. Willard.—WR 18 
Worried about Catherine. (Dial .)—Will Carleton.— 
SR 10 

Worse than Marriage. (Boston Courier .)—BS 21 
Worship, Sel. fr. (All Great Ages have been Ages of 
Belief.)—Ralph W. Emerson. 

Worship, Sel. fr. —W: W. Lord.—A A 
Worship. (Br. sel.)— J: G. Whittier.—YBT 
Worship in the Wild-wood.—E. Youl.—HSS 1 
Worship of Nature, The.—J: G. Whittier. See Tent 
on the Beach, The. 

Worsted Stocking, The.-—Anon.—MYF 
(Building the Chimney.)—CS 11 
Worth before Show.—Pauline Butler.—MD 
Worth of Eloquence, The.—Anon.—CS 5 
Worth of Eloquence, The.—Anon.-—KNE 
Worth of Fame, The. (Sel. fr. The Legend of Chris¬ 
topher Columbus.) — Joanna Baillie.— 

BLP (abr .)—SS 

Worth of Knowledge. (Sel. fr. The Advancement of 
Learning. Bk. 1.)—Fs. Bacon.—LLC 
W T orth of Present Popularity.—W: Murray, Lord Mans¬ 
field.—SS 

Would You be Young Again?—Carolina, Lady Nairne. 
—A VP—HBP 

Wouldn’t You?—Anon.—WR 24 
W ounded.—Anon.—DS 
Wounded.—W: E. Miller.-—CS 1 

(Abr. and with 2 sts. fr. Watson’s The Wounded 
Soldier.)—FTR—HNS 
(Mustered Out.)—HSS 1 

Wounded.—J: W. Watson. See Wounded Soldier, 
The. 

Wounded Cupid, The.—Rob’t Herrick.—WR 14 
Wounded Curlew, The.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Wounded Daisy, The.—Anon.—OS 1 
Wounded in the Corners.—Anon.—DE 
Wounded Soldier, The.—J: W. Watson.—BS 7-—CS 5 
—FR—PFP—SAE (hr. sel.) 

(Wounded.)—MMR—SR 2—TMD 
(Wounded to Death.)—BNL 
Wounded to Death.—J: W. Watson. See foregoing. 
Wouter Van Twiller.—Washington Irving. See Knick¬ 
erbocker History of New York. 

Wrangling Pair, The.-Valentine.-—SCS 

Wrath of Cupid, The.—Anon.—TL 
Wreath of Flowers, A.—Clara Denton.—LPD 
Wreathe the Bowl.—T: Moore.—HBP 
Wreck, The.-—C: Dickens. See David Copperfield. 
Wreck, The.—Felicia D. Hemans.—FP 
Wreck, The.—J: Ruskin.—VA 
Wreck, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—PGT 2 
Wreck of an Ocean Steamship, The.-—H: Davenport. 
—PR 

Wreck of Rivermouth, The, Sel. fr. —J: G. Whittier.— 
AE 

Wreck of the Aideen, The.—Alfred P. Graves.— 
A VP 

Wreck of “The Grace of Sunderland.”—Jean Ingelow. 
See Brothers and a Sermon. 


379 





Wreck 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Wreck of the Hesperus, The.—H: W. Longfellow.— 
ASL — BFV — BPB — CGd — CR — FEP — 
FP — FTR — GN — HBP — LLC — MR — 
MYF (abr.) —OM—PHS—SA—TAV—WRD 
W T reck of the Huron.—T. De Witt Talmage.—CS 15— 
CSS—SA 

Wreck of the “Julie Plante,” The.—W: H. Drummond. 
—NA 

Wreck of the “Mary Wiley,” The.—E. S. Jackson.— 
CS 30 

Wreck of the “Northern Belle,” The. (SI. abr.) — 
Edwin Arnold.—BS 23 

Wreck of the Scotch Express, The.—C. C. Mott.— 
WR 13 

Wreck of the Solent, The.—F: Lyster.—WR 6 
Wreck of the Steamship “Puffin,” The.—F. Anstey.— 
BVC 

Wrecker of Priest’s Cove, The.—Graham R. Tomson.— 
SO 

Wreck off Mizen-Head, The.—G: F. Savage-Armstrong. 
—PEB 4 

Wrecker’s Bell, The.—W: Winter.—MRS 
Wrecker’s Oath on Barnegat, The.—H: Morford.— 
CS 17 

Wren’s Nest, The.—Lucy R. Fleming.—YBT 
Wren’s Nest, A.—W: Wordsworth.-—CGd 
Wrestler, The.—C: G. D. Roberts.—TCV 
Wrestling Jacob.—C: Wesley.-—FEP—WEP 3 

(SI. abr.) —BNL—HBP 

Wretch, Condemned with Life to Part, The.—Oliver 
Goldsmith. See Captivity, The. 

Wrinkles. (Poems and Epigrams, LXXXVII.)— 
Walter S. Landor.—VA 

(“When Helen first saw wrinkles in her face.”)— 
WEP 4 

“Write a Poem for the 'Lit.’ ”—C. W. Yeomans.—CG 1 
Write It.—Anon.—-SR 13 

Write Them a Letter To-night.—Anon.—BS 23 
Writing a Book.— (Dial.) —Clara J. Denton.—FTT 
Writing a Letter. (Dial.) —Anon.—FDY 
Writing a Tragedy.— (Dial.) —Anon.—FHE 
Written on the Image, The.—W: Morris. See Earthly 
Pdrirl iqp I np 

Writing to Grandma.—Anon.—COS—PP—PS 
Writing Verses.—Rob’t Burns. See Epistle to James 
Smith. 

Written after Swimming from Sestos to Abydos.— 
Lord Byron.—HPE 

Written among the Euganean Hills. (Lines Written 
among the Euganean Hills— C.) —Percy B. 
Shelley.—PGT 1 (abr.) 

(View from the Euganean Hills— abr.) —BNL 
Written at an Inn at Henley.—W: Shenstone.—HBP 
Written at Florence. (In Love Sonnets of Proteus.)— 
Wilfrid S. Blunt.—OB 
Written at Killarney.—Mary Tighe.—FEP 
Written at Ostend.—W: L. Bowles.—WEP 4 
Written at the End of a Book.—Langdon E. Mitchell. 
—AA 

Written beneath a Crucifix.—Anne R. Aldrich.—TAS 
Written immediately after Reading the Speech of Rob¬ 
ert Emmet. (C.) —Rob’t Southey. 

(Emmet’s Epitaph.)—BNL 
Written in a Nunnery Chapel.—Jas. C. Mangan.—TIP 
Written in a Young Lady’s Commonplace Book.—T: 
Moore.—HPE 

Written in Conway Castle.—Frd’k W. Faber.—AVP 
Written in Early Spring.—W: Wordsworth.—PGT 1— 
YBF 

(Lines Written in Early Spring— C.) —FEP—SN— 
WEP 4 

Written in Edinburgh.—Arthur H. Hallam.—VA 
Written in Emerson’s Essays.—Matthew Arnold.—VA 
Written in London, September, 1802. (C.) —W: 

Wordsworth. 

(England, 1802.)—OB 

(London, 1802—I.)—PGT 1—YBF 
Written in March. (C.) —W: Wordsworth.—AE — 
CGd—LC 

(After Rain.)—CEL 
In March.)—PC 

March.)—BFV—HBP—OS 1—PHS—PoR 
Written in Northampton County Asylum.—J: Clare.— 
OB 

His Last Verses.)—FEP 
I am! Yet what I Am.)—EDY 

(Lasciate Oghi Speranza.)—PGT 2 
Written in the Blank Leaf of a Lady’s Commonplace 
Book. (C.) —T: Moore. 

(Verses Written in an Album.)—BNL 
Written in the Churchyard of Richmond, Yorkshire.— 
Herbert Knowles See Lines Written in Rich¬ 
mond Churchyard, Yorkshire. 


Written in the First Leaf of a Child’s Memorandum 
Book.—C: and Mary Lamb.-—LPC 
Written in the Visitors’ Book at the Birthplace of Rob¬ 
ert Bums.—G: W. Cable.—AA 
Written Lesson, A.—S. W. Chamberlain.—CG 2 
Written on a Fly-leaf of Theocritus.—Maurice Thomp¬ 
son.—AA 

Written on the Night of his Suicide. (C.)—R: Realf. 
(“He was a-weary, but he fought his fight”— br. 

eel .)—GG 
(Vale.)—GP 

(“When for me the end has come,” etc.— br. sel.) 
—GG 

Written Under Difficulties.—G: Thatcher.—TK 
Wrong Man, The.—Anon.—CS 19 
Wrong Man, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—DDM 
Wrong Road, The.—H. W. Adams.—-CS 24 
Wrong Train, The.—C: B. Lewis.—PR—YA 
Wrongs of Ireland.—H: Grattan. See Declaration of 
Irish Rights. 

Wyatt’s Harangue to the London Crowd.—Alfred Ten¬ 
nyson. See Queen Mary. 

Wynken, Blvnken and Nod. (C.) —Eugene Field.— 
AA — EF — GMS — HBR — PoR — WTD — 
(Dutch Lullaby.)—ASL—BNL—BVC—DCP —DR 
—NV 


X 

Xerxes at the Hellespont.—R: C. Trench.—CS 15— 

NPS—YP 


Y 

Yaba Dam.—Anon.—CS 9 

Yacht Race, The. (New York Herald.) —PFP 

Yacob’s Losing Deal.—Anon.—BDD 

(Dutchman in the Police Court, The.)—DRR 
Yak, The.—Hilaire Belloc.—NA 
Yale, A. D. 2,000. (Yale Record.) —CG 2 
Yale and Princeton.—Anon.—CP 
Yaller Dog, The.—Anon.—DCR 

“Yaller” Dog’s Love for a Nigger, A.—G: Thatcher. 
—TK 

Yankee and the Butter, The.—Anon.—WR 2 
Yankee and the Dutchman’s Dog, The.—Anon. — 
BDD—CS 9—DFY 

Yankee Aunt, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—FND 
Yankee Boy, The.—J: Pierpont.-—CS 35 

(Whittling.)—BNL—GN—PPSr—SM—WCLI 2 
(Whittling—a Yankee Portrait.)—SS 
(Whittling Typical of Young America.)—BLP 
Yankee Fireside, The.—Yankee Hill.—CDV — DFY 
—HR 

Yankee Gypsies, The.—J: G. Whittier.—APr 
Yankee in Love, A.—Alf Burnett.—CS 2—NPS—YP 
(Peter Sorghum in Love.)—CRR—DFY—HR 
Yankee Landlord, The. (Atlantic Monthly.) — DFY 

_gQg 

Yankee Man-of-war, The.—Anon.—AA-—AWB—BAB 
—WR 5 

Yankee Tar’s Return, The. (Dial.) —Anon.—SED 
Yankee Thunders.—Anon.—AWB—PAPm 
Yankee Volunteers, The.—W: M. Thackeray. — HPE 
Yankees in Battle, The.—R. D. Evans.-—PRR 
Yankee’s Stratagem, The; or. Here she Goes—and 
There she Goes.—(Play— ad. by) G. W. Dale. 
—BS 4—HD 

“Yap.”—Joe Lincoln.—CCB 

Yard in December, The.—Arthur D. Ficke.—CG 3 
Yarn, A.—Mary E. Hewitt.—CS 11 
Yarn of the “Nancy Bell,” The.-—W:S. Gilbert.—BeR 
—BNL—BS 2—CS 7—FEP—SO—TCP (w. 
pant.) —THP—VSG 

Yarrow Revisited.—W; Wordsworth.—FEP—HBP 
Yarrow Unvisited.—W: Wordsworth. — BPB—FEP 
—HBP—MBL—PGT 1—WEP 4 
Yarrow Visited.—W: Wordsworth. — BPB—FEP— 
HBP—PGT 1 

Yawcob Strauss.—C: F. Adams.—PS 

(Leedle Yawcob [or Yacob] Strauss.)—AWH—BDD 
—CS 13—CSS—DFY—FTR—HP—THP 
Yawcob’s Dribulations (or Tribulations). — C: F. 

Adams.—BS 19—CS 32 
Ye Baggage Smasher.—Anon.—BS 4 
Ye Ballad of Christmas.—Anon.-—TFS 
Ye Banks and Braes o’ Bonnie Doon. See Banks o’ 
Doon, The. 

Ye Children, be Gay.-—Lucy S. Ruggles.—TFS 
“Ye crags and peaks, I’m with you once again.”—Jas. 
S. Knowles. See William Tell. 


380 




TITLE INDEX 


Young 


Ye Editor’s Perplexities.—-Anon.—CS 8 
Ye Flowery. Banks.—Rob’t Burns. See Banks o’ 
Doon, The. 

Ye Gentlemen of England. — Martyn Parker. — 
FEP (sel .)—HBP 

Ye Golden Lamps of Heaven, Farewell. (C. —in Dod¬ 
dridge’s Character.)—Philip Doddridge.—FEP 
(God the Everlasting Light of the Saints above.) 
—HBP 

Ye Golden-headed Cane.—F: L. Knowles.—CG 2 
Ye Laye of ye Woodpeckore.—H: A. Beers.—NA 
Ye Little Birds that Sit and Sing. ( Fr. The Fair Maid 
of the Exchange.)—T: Hey wood.—ELP 
(Go, Pretty Birds.)—FEP 
(Message, The.)—OB 
(Phillis.)—EP 
(To Phyllis.)—ES—OEL 
“Ye Mariners.”—-T: Campbell. See following. 

Ye Mariners of England.—T: Campbell.—BNL—BPB 
— BVC — CEL — CGd — CR — EHT — EPs 
— FEP — GN — GP — HB — HBP — LC — 
— OB — OS 1 — PGT 1 — PHS — PSR — 
WCLG 2-WEP 4 
(Mariners of England, The.)—BFV 
(“Ye Mariners.”)—LH 

Ye may Drink, if ye List.—Calvin (?) Pease.—PPSr 
Ye Olcle Tyme Tayle of Ye Knighte, Ye Yeomanne, 
and Ye Faire Damosel.—Jack Bennett.—PR 
—YA 

Ye Parliament of England.—Anon.—AWB 
“ ‘Ye shall find the Babe.’ ”—A. R. G.—FHS 
Ye Sleighride Partie.—Jack Stevens.—TL 
Year, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KC 
Year Ago, A.—Percy C. S. Smythe, Viscount Strang- 
ford (tr. fr. Luis de Camoens?).—FLS 
Year in Paradise, A.—Jos. (?) Cross.—CS 25 
Year of Jubilee, The.—Anon.—AWB 
Year of Sorrow; Ireland, 1849, The.—Aubrey De Vere. 
—TIP 

Year that is to Come, The.—Frances D. Gage.—CS 9 
Yearly Miracle of Spring, The.—G: H. Boker.—TAS 
Yearning. (.All the Year Round .)—HP 
Years.—Walter S. Landor.—OB 

Year’s at the Spring, The.—Rob’t Browning. See Pippa 
Passes. 

“Years back of us are full of voices, The.”—W: H. H. 
Murray.—GG 

Year’s Twelve Children, The.—Anon.—CS 24—WR 12 
Year’s Windfalls, A.—Christina G. Rossetti.—PoR 
Year’s Wooing, A.—Anon.—CS 24 
Yeast, Sel. fr. (Rough Rhyme on a Rough Matter, 
A— or Bad Squire, The— verses fr. Ch. XI.)—C: 
Kingsley.—BNL 

Yellow and White.—Ernest McGaffey.—SR 11 
Yellow Jessamine.—Constance F. Woolson.—AA 
Yellow Pansy, A.—Helen G. Cone.—BNL 
Yellow Pocket, The.—Anon.—TFS 
Yellow Roses.—J. H. Hamersley.—WR 15 
Yellow Violet, The.—W: C. Bryant.—POS—YBT 
(Violet, The— hr. sel.) —PEO 
Yellow-bird.—Celia Thaxter.—SAP 
Yellow-hammer’s Nest, The.—J: W. Chadwick.—HP 
(Golden Robin’s Nest, The— C.) —AA 
Yerl o’ Waterydeck, The.—G; Macdonald.—PEB 3 
(Earl o’ Quarterdeck, The — C.) —BNL—EPs— 
HBP—HSS 2 

“Yes!”—R: D. Blackmore.—FTA—HP 
Yes?—H; C. Bunner.—HP 
Yes!—G: H. Jessop.—HP 

“Yes, I shall sleep! Some sunny day.”—W T . A. Ur- 
quhart.—GG 

"Yes, I will sew thy buttons on!” (Punch.) —HPE 
Yes, I’m Guilty.—J. M. Munyon.—CS 27—SR 6 
Yes or No.—Hal Louther.—HBR 
"Yes, sing the song of the orange tree.”—J. K. Hoyt. 


AD 

Yesterday.—Frd’k L. Knowles.—CG 2 
Yesterday.—Edith M. Percy.—WR 15 
Yesterday.—David Swing.—FS 

“Yesterday I dragged wearily along.”—O. F.—FHS 
“Yet nerve thy spirit to the proof.”—W: C. Bryant. 
See Battle-field, The. 

“Yet, no—not words, for they,” etc. (Br. sel. fr. The 
Language of Flowers.)—T: Moore.—AD 
“Yet with hands by evil stained.”—J: G. Whittier. 

See Andrew Rykman’s Prayer. 

Yew, The. (Sel. fr. The Burial Place.)—W: C. Bryant. 


Yew-trees.—W; Wordsworth.—EPs—WEP 4 
“Yield, madman, yield! Thy horse is down.” G: H. 
Boker.—AE 

Ylen’s Song. (Fr. The Birth of Galahad.)—R : Hovey. 


—AA 


Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo, The.—E: Lear.—NA 

Yoppy’s Varder unt hees Drubbles.-Sidell.— 

BDD—DFY—DRR 
Yorkshire Angling.—Anon.—CS 1 
Yorkshire Cobbler, The.—Alfred Tennyson.—BS 9 

(Northern Cobbler, The.)—GP 
Yorkshire Horse-dealer, The.—Anon.—PEP 2 
Yorktown Centennial Lyric.—Paul H. Hayne.—EDY 
Yosemite, The.—Wallace Bruce.—BS 13 
Yosemite.—Jos. Cook.—BS 12 

Yosemite. (Fr. The Washington Sequoia.)—Milicent 
W. Shinn.—AA 
You.—Anon.—FLS 
You and I.—H: Alford.—FLS 
You and I.—C: Mackay.—WCLI 2 
You and I.—Timothy D. Sullivan.—TIP 
You Ask Me for a Pledge, Love.—Alaric A. Watts.— 
FTA 

You Ask Me, Why, Tho’ Ill at Ease.—Alfred Tennyson. 
—WEP 4 

(Land of Lands, The— sel.) —BNL 

(“Land which freemen till, The”— ptly. same sel .)— 
—GG 

You Can’t Find Me. (Tab.)— Anon.-—NPS—PP—YP 
"You Get [or Git] up!”—Joe Kerr—GH—WR 3 
You Kissed Me.—Josephine Hunt.—FLS 
You Know if it was You.—Nathaniel P. Willis.—HPE 
“You may drink to your leman in gold.” (C.) —R: H; 
Stoddard. 

(Wine and Dew.)—AA 

“You may get through the world, but ’twill be very 
slow.” (Washington Capitol.)- —GG 
You Meaner Beauties.—Sir H: Wotton.—HBP 

(Elizabeth of Bohemia.)—BPB—EPs—OB—PGT 1 
—YBF 

(On his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia— C.) —ELP 
—WEP 2 

(To his Mistress, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia.) 
—BNL 

(To his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia.)—FEP 
You Must be Dreaming.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 27 
“You, O man, who with your honey words and your 
tender looks.”—Dinah M. Craik.—GG 
You Put no Flowers on Mv Papa’s Grave.—C. E. L. 

Holmes.—BS 1—CS 5—FTR—PS 
“You say, preach away, tell us something more of this 
fruitless fig tree.”—Alex. B. Jack.—GG 
You Sea!—Walt Whitman. See Song of Myself. 

“You smiled, you spoke and I believed.” (Poems and 
Epigrams, LVII.)—Walter S. Landor—WEP 4 

(To Ianthe.)—VA 

“You think that one hour buries another.”—H: W. 

Beecher. See Soul-building. 

"You who to the rounded prime.”—Jas. W. Riley.— 
BJC 

“You’d scarce expect one of my age.”—D: Everett.— 
SAE (si. abr.) 

(Lines Written for a School Declamation.) — BNL 
You’ll Love me Yet.—Rob’t Browning. See Pippa 
Passes 

Young Airly.—Anon.—FEP—HBP 
Young Akin.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Young America.—Anon.—CS 27—WR 21 
Young America. (Dial.) —Mrs. T. Starr King.—NPS 
—YP 

Young American, The.—Alex. 11. Everett.—BLP 
Young and Old.—C: Kingslev. See Water Babies, The. 
Young Artist, The. (Tab.) —Anon. — COS—DS— 
NPS—PP—YA—YP 
Young Beichan.—Anon. See following. 

Young Beichan [and Susie Pye].—Anon.—BB—HBP— 
PEB 2 (abr. a'd si. diff.) 

(Lord Beichan and Susie Pye— diff. r»rs.)—GN 
Young Boot-black, The.—W. F. Burroughs.—CS 31 
Young Critic, The.—Mrs. Russell Kavanaugh.—KJ 
Young Dandelion.—Dinah M. Mulock.—PoR 

(Sel.)— AD—HSS 1 

Young Debaters, The.—H. E. McBride.—StD 
Young Desperado, The.—T: B. Aldrich.—MMR 
Young Donald.—G: Roy.—WR 2 
Young Fir-wood, A.—Dante G. Rossetti.—GN 
Young Gazelle, The.—Walter Parke.—THP 
Young Grav Head, The.—Caroline B. Southey.—BNL 
—CS 3 (sel.)— MMR (si. abr.) 

Young Hunting.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Young Jessica.—T: Moore.—HPE 
Young John and His True Sweetheart.—Anon.—BB 

(Fause Lover, The— si. longer and si. diff. vers.) — 
OEB—PEB 2 

Young Johnstone.—Anon.—PEB 1 
Young Lochinvar.—Walter Scott. See Marmion. 
Young Lochinvar. (Pantomimic farce.) —Emma E. 
West.—WR 22 


381 





Young 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Young Love.—Andrew Marvell.—WEP 2 
Young Love.—W: Shakespeare. See Merchant of 
Venice. 

Young Lovers, The.—F. R. Torrence. See House of a 
Hundred Lights, The. 

Young Man Waited, The.—J. E. V. Cooke.—CS 37 
Young Man’s Slave, A. {Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Young May Moon, The.—T: Moore.—BFV—BNL— (br. 
sel.) —CEL—OB—WEP 4 

“Young men, let the nobleness of your mind impel you 
to its improvement.”—W. D. Howard.—GG 
“Young men, you are the architects of your own for¬ 
tunes.”—Noah Porter.—GG {si. abr.) 

(Advice to Young Men.)—PS 
Young Monopolist, A. {Tab.) —Anon.—TCP 
Young Mother’s Perplexity, A.—Clara J. Denton.—LL 
Young Musician, The.—Sam W. Foss.—CS 37 
Young Night Thought.—Rob’t L. Stevenson.—CGV— 
DLS 

Young Patriot, Abraham Lincoln, The.—Anon.—PRR 
Young Queen, The.—Eliz. B. Browning.—EDY 
Young Redin. (Earl Richard— in Border Minstrelsy— 
si. diff. vers.) —Anon.—BB 
Young Roger of the Valley.—Anon.—PEB 2 
Young Scholar, The. {Sel. }r. What is your Culture to 
meb—C: D. Warner.—BS 2—CS 22—DS— 
LLC 

Young Schoolma’am’s Solioquy, The.—Anon.—WR 14 
Young Statesman, The. {Dial.) —"Beno.”—SDD 
Young Tam Lin. (Sel. fr. The Young Tamlane — in 
■ Border Minstrelsy.)—Anon.—PEB 1 
(Tamlane— diff. vers. — -si. abr.) —BB 
Young Timothy and the Forget-me-nots.—Estelle 
Thomson.—AD 

Young Tramp, The.—C: F. Adams.—CS 19 
Young Van Dyck, The.—Marg. J. Preston.—OS 2 
Young Waters. (In Percv’s Reliques.)—Anon.—BB 
(SI. abr. )—OEB—PEB 1 
Young Wife’s Lament, The.—Anon.—WR 14 
Young Windebank.—Marg. L. Woods.—VA 
Your Faces.—Anon.—YBT 

Your Mission.—Anon.—BS 1—CS 2—HSS 3—SPE 

Yours.—W.—CG 2 

Yours, Truly.—Anon.—CD 

Yours Truly.—Anon. See also following. 

“Yours Truly, Sir.”—Anon.—TFS 
(Yours Truly:)—KER 
Yourself.—Jones Very.-—-AA 
Youth. (Frags, fr. various authors.) —BNL 
Youth.—Virginia W. Cloud.—AA 
Youth.—C: G. Lodge.—A A 
Youth.—Walter Scott. See Rokeby. 

Youth and Age.—Anon.—CS 6 
Youth and Age.—Lord Byron.—PGT 1—YBF 
(Stanzas for Music— C.) —WEP 4 
(There’s not a Joy the World can Give.)—FEP 
Youth and Age.—S: T. Coleridge.—CEL—FEP—OB 
—PGT 1 

Youth and Age.—C: Kingsley. See Water Babies, 
The. 

Youth and Age.—W: B. Scott.—VA 
Youth and Age. (Sel. fr. The Passionate Pilgrim.)— 
W: Shakespeare.—EP 

(Crabbed Age and Youth.)—FEP—HBP—OB 
(Madrigal, A.)—LC—PGT 1—PHS 
Youth and Age.—F. R. Torrence. See House of a 
Hundred Lights, The. 

Youth and Art.—Rob’t Browning.—VA—WR 16 
Youth and Calm.—Matthew Arnold.—HBP 
Youth, Love, and Death.—Philip J. Bailey. See Fes- 
tus. 


Youth, that Pursuest.—R: M. Milne, Lord Houghton. 
—FP 

Youth who Never Saw a Woman, The. (Dial .)— 
Anon.—SED 

Youth who Played before He Looked, The.— Anon.— 
FS 

(Hopeless Serenade, A.)—SR 6 
(Serenade, The.)—BS 12 
Youthful Dissipation. (Dial.) —Anon.—YFD 
Youthful Experiences.—Anon.—CS 18 
Youthful Piety.—Philip Doddridge.-—TFS 
Youthful Valor.—Tyrt®us.—TMD 
Yuki.—Mary McN. Fenollosa.—AA 
Yule Log, The.-—W: H. Hayne.—AA 
Yuma.—C: H. Phelps.—AA 
Yussouf.—Jas. R. Lowell.—BNL 


z 

Zachariah Popps’ Courtship and Marriage.—Anon.— 
MCS 

Zaire.—(Act II., Scs. 3 and 4.)—Voltaire.—WR 8 
Zal and Rudabeh.—Firdausi. See Shah-Nameh. 
Zamora.—J: Tobin. See Honeymoon, The. 

Zapolya, Sels fr. —S: T. Coleridge. 

Choral Song of Illyrian Peasants. (Fr. Act IV., Sc. 
2.)—CGd—PHS 
(Hunting Song.)—LC—PoR 
Glycine’s Song. (Song by Glycine— C. — fr. II., 1.) 
—OB 

(“Sunny shaft did I behold. A.”)—LC 
Zarafi.—Lamartine.—BS 13—PR 
Zara’s Ear-rings.— (Tr. by) J: G. Lockhart.—BNL— 
CS 20—FEP—HBP—HSS 2 
Ze Daylight Veel Coam.—Anon.—DDM 
Ze Moderne English.—Rob’t C. V. Meyers.—CS 31 
Zekle.-—Jas. R. Lowell. See Biglow Papers, The. 
Zenobia.—Mrs. W. R. Jones.—WR 12 
Zenobia, Sels. fr. —W: Ware. 

Aurelian and Zenobia. (Sel. ad. as play .)—NDP 
Speeches of Zenobia and her Council in Reference 
to the Anticipated War with Rome.—BS 11— 
CDD 

Zenobia’s Defence.—CS 26—HSS 2 (si. abr.) —TMR 
(Zenobia to her People.)—SO 
(Zenobia’s Ambition.)—FMR 
Zenobia to Her People.—W: Ware. See Zenobia. 
Zenobia’s Ambition.—W: Ware. See Zenobia. 
Zenobia’s Defence.—W: Ware. See Zenobia. 

Zeph Higgins’ Confession. (Poganuc People, Ch. XXX. 

— alrr .)—Harriet B. Stowe.—-CS 17 
Zimri.—J: Dryden. See Absalom and Achitophel. 

Zip Johnson’s Return.—Anon.—DSS 
Zoological Romance, A.—C: F. Adams.—CS 17 
Zoology.—Anon.—HP 

Zophiel; or, the Bride of Seven, Sels. fr. —Maria G. 
Brooks. - 

Disappointment.—BNL 
Palace of the Gnomes.—AA 
Respite, The.—AA 

Zoroaster, Sels. fr. —Fs. Marion Crawford. 

Massacre of Zoroaster, The. (Arr. fr. Ch. XIX. by 
Elsie Wilbor.)—DR 

Suffering of Nehushta, The. (Play ad. fr. Chs. 
XVI., XVII., XX.)—NDP 
Zuleika.—Arthur O’Shaughnessy.—PGT 2 
Zummer an’ Winter.—W: Barnes.—PGT 2 
Zwei Konige auf Orkadal.—G: A. Baker. Jr —PLD 
Zwei Lager.—C: F. Adams.—BDD—DFY—PTS 
Zwischen Trinken.—W. S. Ayars.—CG 3 


3812 








AUTHOR INDEX 






AUTHOR INDEX 


A 

A. —Spring and Summer. 

Wish, A. 

“A.”—All Things Love Me. See Little Girl’s Fancies, 
A. 

Child and the Fairies, The. 

Child’s Fancy, A. x See Little Girl’s Fancies, A. 
Deaf and Dumb. 

Little Girl’s Fancies, A. 

Little Things. See Little Girl’s Fancies, A. • 

My Pony. 

New Fern, A. 

A., B.—In Doubt. 

A., C. B.—Two Glasses, The. {Wr. at.) See Wil¬ 
cox, Mrs. Ella [Wheeler], 

A., Mrs. E. R.—Other People’s Children. 

A., F.—Acrostic, An. 

A., F. C.—Nestlings. 

A., K. H.—Their Turn. 

A., L. T.—Song of the Smoke-wreaths. 

A., W. B.—Fall of Corydon, The. 

Abbey, H:—Donald. 

Draw-bridge Keeper, The. 

Faith’s Vista. 

Galley Slave, The. 

Have You Planted a Tree? 

In Memory of General Grant. 

Planting the Tree. See Have You Planted a Tree? 
Ringer’s Vengeance, The. 

Singer’s Alms, The. 

Stranger’s Alms, The. See Singer’s Alms, The. 
Trailing Arbutus. 

What Do We Plant When We Plant the Tree? 

See Have You Planted a Tree? 

Winter Days. 

Abbott, Edgar Wade.—Her Majesty. 

Poppyland Limited Express, The. 

Rapid Transit. See Poppyland Limited Express, 
The. 

Abbott, Lyman.—He Worried about It. ( Wr. at.) 
See Foss, Sam W. 

Lead the Way. 

New Year, The; or, W’hich Way? 

Place of the Individual in American Society. The. 
Tendencies of Self-government, The. See Place of 
the Individual in American Society, The. 
Utilizing Our Failures. 

Abbott, Mary Winchester.—Rose’s Message, The. 
Abbott, S.—Auf Wiedersehen. 

Abdy, Mrs. —In the Street of By and Bye. See Street 
of By-and-bye, The. 

Street of By-and-bye, The. 

Abercrombie, Edith Brainerd.—October Trees. 
Abrahams, J. Fox.—Tim Titus. 

Academy, The. —Light and Love. 

Acta Columbiana. —Similar Case. A. 

Adam, Jean.—Mariner’s Wife. The. {At. also to W T . J. 
Mickle.) 

Sailor’s Wife, The. See Mariner’s Wife, The. 
There’s Nae Luck about the House. See Mariner’s 
W T ife, The 

Adams, C: Follen (“Yawcob Strauss”).—“Ah-Goo!” 
Charley’s Opinion of the Baby. See Nose Out of 
Joint, 

“Cut, Cut Behind.” 

Der Coming Man. 

Der Deutscher’s Maxim. 

Der Drummer. 

Der Oak und der Vine. 

Der Shpider und der Fly. 

Der Vater-mill. 

“Don’t [or Don’d] Feel too Big!” 

Dot Baby off Mine. 

Dot Funny Beetle Baby. 

Dot Lambs vot [or what] Mary Haf Got. 

“Dot Leedle Loweeza.” 

Dot Long-handled Dipper. 

Dutchman’s Family, The. 

Fred Englehart’s Baby. See Dot Funny Leetle 
Baby. 

Fritz und [or and] I. 


Adams, C: Follen ( continued). 

Gets Dhere. 

Hans and Fritz. 

He Gets There. See Gets Dhere. 

Leedle Yawcob [or Yacob] Strauss. 

Little Conqueror, The. 

Mine Katrine. 

Mine Moder-in-law [or Mother-in-law], 

Mine Schildhood. 

Mine Shildren. 

Mine Vamily. See Dutchman’s Family, The. 

Mr. Schmidt’s Mistake. 

Mother-in-law, The. See Mine Moder-in-law. 
Mother’s Doughnuts. 

Nose Out of Joint. 

Pat’s Criticism. 

Puzzled Dutchman, The. 

Schneider’s Tomatoes. 

Shonny Schwartz. 

Strauss’ Boedry. 

Tale of a Nose, A. 

Trapper’s Story, A. 

Tucked oup in Ped. See Mine Schildhood. 

Vas Marriage a Failure? 

Welcome, Little Stranger. See Nose out of Joint. 
Yawcob Strauss. See Leedle Yawcob Strauss. 
Yawcob’s Dribulations [or Tribulations]. 

Young Tramp, The. 

Zoological Romance, A. 

Zwei Lager. 

Adams, C: Fs.—Example of Washington, The. 

Greatest Fruit of the Declaration. 

Adams, Eliz. Kemper.—“In Lighter Vein.” 

“O Modern Girl.” 

Adams, Fred W T .—Innocent Drummer, The. 

Adams, F. W. L.—Dance Song. 

Adams, G:—For Arbor Day. 

Adams, H. W.—Wrong Road, The. 

Adams, Jas. Barton.—-When the Circuit Rider Came. 
Adams, Jean. See Adam, Jean.. 

Adams, J:—American Constitution Tested. The. 

On Behalf of the People of Boston, in Support of 
the Memorial of December 18, 1765. 
Predictions Concerning the Fourth of July. 
Adams, J: Quincy.—Declaration of Independence, The. 
Lip and the Heart. The. 

Man Wants but Little Here Below. See Wants of 
Man, The. 

Mission of America, The. 

Nation Born in a Day, A. See Declaration of 
Independence. The. 

To Sally. 

Wants of Man. The. 

Washington’s Sword and Franklin’s Staff. 

Adams, Josiah R.—Heart never Grows Old, The. 
Adams, Mary Mathews.—Dead Love. 

Acorns, Oscar Fay.—At Lincoln. 

On a Grave in Christ-Church, Hants. 

With a Prayer-book. 

Adams. S. E.—Hymn for Thanksgiving. 

Wait upon the Lord. 

Adams, S. H.—At Eastertide. 

Adams, S:—American Independence. 

American Liberty. 

Necessity of Independence, The. See American 
Independence. 

Adams, Sarah Flower.—Father, Thy Will be Done. 
See Hymn: “He sendeth sun, He sendeth 
shower.” 

Hope. 

Hymn:—“He sendeth sun, He sendeth shower.” 
Love. 

Nearer, My God, to Thee. 

Nearer to Thee. See Nearer, My God, to Thee. 
Adams, T: C.—Columbus. 

Adams, Valentine.—Chief Bread-baker to the King, The. 
Adams, W T . H. Davenport.—Last Voyage of the 
Fairies, The. 

Adams, W: Taylor (“Oliver Optic”).—Demons of the 
Glass, The. 

Peace. 

“Peace to the brave who nobly fell.” See Peace. 
Schoolmaster, The. 


385 




Adcock 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Adcock, A. St. John.—Unspoken. 

Addington, Franklin.—Two Queens. 

Addison. Jos.—Blessings of Liberty, The. See Letter 
from Italy, The. 

Caesar’s Message to Cato. See Cato. 

Campaign, The. 

Cato. 

Cato on Immortality. See Cato. 

Cato on the Immortality of the Soul. See Cato. 
Cato over the Dead Body of His Son. See Cato. 
Cato’s Soliloquy. See Cato. 

Cato’s Soliloquy on Immortality. See Cato. 
Cato’s Soliloquy on the Immortality of the Soul. 
See Cato. 

Character of Will Wimble. See Spectator, The. 
Club, The. See Spectator, The. 

Countess of Manchester, The. See On the Lady 
Manchester. 

Coverley Hall. See Spectator, The. 

Death of Cato. See Cato. 

Death of Sir Roger de Coverley. See Spectator, 
The. 

Endeavours of Mankind to Get Rid of their Mis¬ 
eries. See Spectator, The. 

Exercise of the Fan. .See Spectator, The. 
Fan-drill, The. See Spectator, The. 

“How are thy servants blest, O Lord!” See Ode: 
“How are,” etc. 

Hymn: “How are thy servants blest.” See Ode: 
“How are,” etc. 

Hymn: “The spacious firmament on high.” See 
Spectator, The. 

Hymn, A: “When all thy mercies,” etc. 

Hymn: “When rising from the bed of death.” 
See Spectator, The. 

“I have been always wonderfully delighted with 
fables.” 

Immortal Part, The. See Cato. 

“It must be so, Plato, thou reasonest well.” 
See Cato. 

Letter from Italy, The. 

Marlborough at Blenheim. See Campaign, The. 
Mountain of Miseries, The. See Spectator, The. 
Ode: “How are thy servants blest, O Lord.” 

Ode: “The spacious firmament on high.” See 
Spectator, The. 

On the Lady Manchester. 

Paraphrase of Psalm XXIII. See Spectator, The. 
Psalm XXIII. See Spectator, The. 

Reflections in [or on] Westminster Abbey. See 
Spectator, The. 

Sempronius’s Speech for War. See Cato. 

Sir Roger at His Country House. See Spectator, 
The. 

Sir Roger de Coverley Papers, The. See Spec¬ 
tator, The. 

Sir Roger de Coverley’s Sunday. See Spectator, 
The. 

Spliloquy: on Immortality. See Cato. 

Soul, The. See Cato. 

Spacious Firmament [on High], The. See Spec¬ 
tator, The. 

Spectator’s Account of Himself, The. See Spec¬ 
tator, The. 

Speech of Sempronius. See Cato. 

Speech of Sempronius for War. See Cato. 
Sunday in the Country [or with Sir Roger], A. 

See Spectator, The. 

To a Capricious Friend. 

To a Rogue. 

To an Ill-favored Lady. 

Translation of the Twenty-Third Psalm. See 
Spectator, The. 

Vision of Mirza, The. See Spectator, The. 

Visit to Sir Roger’s Country Seat, A. See Spec¬ 
tator, The. 

When All Thv Mercies, O My God. See Hymn, A: 

“When all,” etc. 

While We Shed a Tear. 

Will Wimble. See Spectator, The. 

Addleshaw, Percy.—Happy Wanderer, The. 

It May Be. 

Travellers. 

"Addums, Mozis.” See Bagby, Dr. G: W: 

Ade, G:—Messenger Boy, The. 

Adee, Alvey A.—Hymn to Santa Rita. 

Adee, D: Graham.—Lone Star of Cuba, The. 

“Adeler, Max.” See Ci.ark, C: Heber. 

Aden,-.—Where’s Annette? 

Advance. The. —Famished Heart, A. See Woman’s 
- Complaint, A. 

Woman’s Complaint, A. 

.Eschines.—Demosthenes Denounced. 

Eschylus.—Battle of Salamis, The. 


Esop.— Country Maid and her Milk Can, The. See 
Fables. 

Fables. 

Farthing Rushlight, The. See Fables. 

Goose with the Golden Eggs, The. See Fables. 
Jupiter and the Bee. See Fables. 

Wind and the Sun, The. See Fables. 

Agave, Jean.—Night before Christmas, The. 

Owl’s Court, The. 

* ‘ Agrikler. ”—Proverbeel Feelossofy. 

Aguilar, Grace.— Battle of Bannockburn, The. See 
Days of Bruce, The. 

Days of Bruce, The. 

"Ah-Mie.”—Nozell and the Organ-grinder. 

Aid6, Hamilton.—Christmas Eve. 

Christmas-eve Redemption, A. See Christmas 
Eve. 

Danube River, The. 

Forsaken, The. 

George Lee. _ 

In the Evening. 

Lost and Found. 

Love, the Pilgrim. 

“Love, without Thee.” 

Lover to His Mistress, The. 

My Love. See “My Love’s Worth all the World.” 
“My Love’s Worth all the World.” 

Nine Days’ Wonder, A. 

Oh, Let Me Dream. See Nine Days’ Wonder, A. 
Remember or Forget. 

Story of George Lee. See George Lee. 
Sweetheart. 

When We are Parted. 

Why I Love Thee. See Lover to His Mistress, 
The. 

Aiken, A. Holcombe.—Slumber Song, A. 

Aiken, J:—Hill of Science, The. 

Ainslie, Douglas.—“St. John of Damascus,” Line 
Prefixed to. 

Ainslie, Hew.—Sir Arthur and Lady Ann. 

Willie [or Willy] and Helen. 

Aird, T:—Swallow, The. 

Akenside, Mark.—Amoret. 

Compensations of the Imagination. *See Pleas¬ 
ures of Imagination, The. 

Complaint, The. 

Delights of Fancy. See Pleasures of Imagination, 
The. 

For a Grotto. 

Inscription for a Statue of Chaucer at Woodstock. 
Mind of Man, The. See Pleasures of Imagination, 
The. 

Nightingale. The. See Ode: To the Evening Star. 
Ode: On a Sermon against Glory. 

Ode: To the Evening Star. 

On a Sermon against Glory. See Ode: On a Ser¬ 
mon against Gloiy. 

On the Winter Solstice. 

Pleasures of Imagination, The. 

“Shape alone let others prize, The.” 

Virtuoso, The. 

Akerman, Lucy Evelina.—Nothing but Leaves. 

Akers, Eliz. See Alpen, Mrs. Eliz. [Akers]. 

Akers, J. Milton.—What I Saw. 

Alarcon, Pedro de.—In Terror of Death. 

Albany Argus. —Uncle Joel on Peddlers. 

Albany Chronicle. —Fashionable School Girl, The. See 
Intensely Utter. 

Intensely Utter. 

Too Utterly Utter. See Intensely Utter. 

Albee, J:—Bos’n Hill. 

Dandelions. 

Landor. 

Music and Memory. 

Soldier’s Grave, A. 

Albertson, Hon. C: C.—Centennial Speech. 

Albro, J'Tale of the East (Side), A. 

Alcorn, Kathe. S.—Little Lizette. 

Alcott, Amos Bronson.—Bad Prayers. 

Bartol. 

Channing. 

Emerson. 

Garrison. 

Hawthorne. 

Margaret Fuller. 

Thoreau. 

Wendell Phillips. 

Alcott, Louisa May.—Address to a Robin. 

Beautiful Old Story, The. 

Children’s Offering. The. 

Enlisting as Army Nurse. 

Little Women. 

Little Women’s Pickwick Club, The. See Little 
Women. 


386 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Alford 


Alcott, Louisa May ( continued). 

My Kingdom. 

Reconciliation, The. See Little Women. 

Sermon, The. 

Song from the Suds, A. See Little Women. 
Thoreau’s Flute. 

Transfiguration. 

Aldaramy, Meskin.—On His Friends. 

Alden, Mrs. Marg. H.—Mother’s World. 

Alden, R: M.—Lost: the Summer. 

May. 

Alden, W: Livingston.—Adventures of Jimmy Brown. 
Freckles. See Adventures of Jimmy Brown. 

Ghost Scene, The. See Adventures of Jimmy 
Brown. 

Jimmy Brown’s Attempt to Produce Freckles. 

See Adventures of Jimmy Brown. 

Jimmy Brown’s Dog. 

Jimmy Brown’s Prompt Obedience. See Adven¬ 
tures of Jimmy Brown. 

Jimmy Brown’s Sister’s Wedding. See Adven¬ 
tures of Jimmy Brown. 

Jimmy Brown’s Steam Chair. See Adventures of 
Jimmy Brown. 

Our New Walk. See Adventures of Jimmy Brown. 
Prompt Obedience. See Adventures of Jimmy 
Brown. 

Steam Chair, A. See Adventures of Jimmy 
Brown. 

Sue’s W T edding. See Adventures of Jimmy 
Brown. 

Aldine, The. —Bobolink, The. , 

Little Telltale, The. See Bobolink, The. 

Telltale, The. See Bobolink, The. 

Aldrich,-.—Our Colors at Fort Sumter. 

Aldrich, Anne Reeve.—April—and Dying. 

Crowned Poet, A. 

Death at Daybreak. ^ 

Eternal Justice, The. 

Fraternity. 

In November. 

Insomnia. 

Little Parable, A. 

Little Story, A. 

Love’s Change. 

Music of Hungary. 

Prayer, A. 

Recollection. 

Separation. 

Song about Singing, A. 

Wayside Calvary, A. 

Written beneath a Crucifix. 

Aldrich, Dr. H:—Reasons for Drinking. 

Why Drink Wine? See Reasons for Drinking. 
Aldrich, Jas.—Death-bed, A. 

Aldrich, T: Bailey.—After the Rain. 

“Ah, sad are they who know not love.” See 
Two Songs from the Persian. 

Alec Yeaton’s Son. 

Andromeda. 

Appreciation. 

Arab Welcome, An. 

Babie Bell. See Baby Bell. 

Baby Bell. 

Ballad of Babie Bell, The. See Baby Bell. 

Before the Rain. 

Bells at Midnight, The. 

Bluebells of New England, The. 

Bluebird, The. See Spring in New' England. 
Circumstance. 

Comedy. 

Crescent and the Cross, The. 

Destiny. 

“Enamoured architect of airy rhyme.” 

Elective Course, An. 

Face against the Pane, The. 

Fredericksburg. 

Guilielmus Rex. 

Heredity. 

Identity. 

In an Atelier. 

Judith. 

Judith and Holofemes. See Judith. 

Knowledge. 

Kriss Kringle. 

Last Caesar, The. 

“Like Crusoe, walking by the lonely strand.” 
Love’s Calendar. 

Lycidas. 

Mabel; or. The Face against the Pane. See Face 
against the Pane, The. 

Maple Leaves. 

Marjorie’s Almanac. 


Aldrich, T: Bailey (continued). 

Masks. 

Memories. 

Memory. 

Miracles. 

Mood, A. 

Nocturne. 

“O babie, dainty Babie Bell.” See Baby Bell. 
Ode on the Unveiling of the Shaw Memorial on 
Boston Common, An. 

“Oh, sad are they who know not love.” See Two 
Songs from the Persian. 

On an Intaglio Head of Minerva. 

On Reading-. 

Our Almanac. See Marjorie’s Almanac. 

Outward Bound. 

Palabras Carinosas. 

Petition, A. 

Poets, The. See Sonnet: “When this young land. 
Prescience. 

Quite Like a Stocking. See Kriss Kringle. 

Quits. 

Reminiscence. 

Sad are They Who Know Not Love. See Two 
Songs from the Persian. 

Sargent’s Portrait of Edwin Booth at “The Play¬ 
ers.” 

Sea Longings. 

Shadow of the Night, A. 

Sleep. 

Snow Flake, A. 

Song: “The chestnuts shine through the cloven 
rind.” 

Sonnet: ‘‘When this young land.” 

Spring in New England. 

Tennyson. 

Thalia. 

Three Roses. See Destiny. 

Tiger-lilies. 

To Hafiz. 

Touch of Nature, A. 

Tragedy, The. 

Turkish Legend, A. 

Two Songs from the Persian. II. 

Undiscovered Country, The. 

Unguarded Gates. 

Untimely Thought, An. 

Voice of the Sea, The. 

When the Sultan Goes to Ispahan. 

Who Know not Love. See Two Songs from the 
Persian. 

Young Desperado, The. 

Alexander, Addison (?).—“There is a time, we know 
not when.” 

Alexander, Mrs. Cecil Frances [Humphrey].—Adora¬ 
tion of the Wise Men, The. 

All Things. See All Things Bright and Beautiful. 
All Things Beautiful. See All Things Bright and 
Beautiful. 

All Things Bright and Beautiful. 

Burial of Moses, The. 

Burial of the Deliverer, The. See Burial of 
Moses, The. 

Dreams. 

Forgiving. 

Green Hill Far Away, The. See There is a Green 
Hill. 

Irish Mother’s Lament, The. 

Siege of Derry, The. 

There is a Green Hill. 

There is a Green Hill Far Away. See There is a 
Green Hill. 

Alexander, Edwin G:—To a Sister of Charity. 
Alexander, H. W.— Poor Fisher Folk, The. ( Tr .) 
Alexander. W:, Bishop of Derry and Raphoe and Pri¬ 
mate of Ireland.- —-Among the Sand-hills. 
Epitaph in Fahan Churchyard. 

Epitaph in the Cathedral of Derry. 

Inscription on the Statue Erected to Captain Boyd. 
Oxford and her Chancellor. 

Oxford in 1845. 

Preface to “The Finding of the Book and Other 
Poems.” 

Up Above and Down Below. 

Very Far Away. 

Alexander, W : See Stirling, Earl of. 

Alford, H:—Baptismal Hymn. 

Be Just, and Fear not. 

Be True. (At. to Rob’t Collyer.) See Be Just, 
and Fear not. 

Bride, The. See “'Rise,’ said the Master, ‘come 
unto the feast,’ ” 

Colonos. 

Contentment. See Trust. 


387 







Alford 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Alford, H: ( continued). 

Filiolse Dulcissimse. 

Harvest Home. See Thanksgiving Hymn. 

“I know not if or dark or bright.” See Trust. 
Lady Mary. 

Life’s Answer. See Trust. 

‘‘‘Rise,’ said the Master, ‘come unto the feast.’” 
Thanksgiving Day. See Thanksgiving Hymn. 
Thanksgiving Hymn. 

Trust. 

You and I. 

Alger, -.—“At the top of his mind, the devout 

man has a holy of holies.” 

Alger, Horatio, Jr.—Carving a Name. 

John Maynard. 

Alger, Rev. W: Rounseville.—Abou El Mahr and His 
Horse. ( Tr.) 

Butterfly’s Revenge, The. 

Masque and the Reality, The. 

To Heaven Approached a Sufi Saint. (Tr.) 

Alison, R:—Cherry Ripe. See Campion, T: 

There is a Garden in her Face. See Campion, T: 
All the Year Round. —Before Sailing. 

Comfort. 

Couldn’t Keep a Secret. 

Flotsam and Jetsam. 

Hawthorn. 

“If there should come a time, as well there may.” 
See Comfort. 

“Leave the young hearts to nature and to God.” 
March. 

My Lost Love. 

Nocturne. 

Tired Out. 

“True to the promise of thy far-off youth.” 

Work. 

Yearning. 

Allen, Mrs. Eliz. Ann [Chase] [Akers]. (“Florence 
Percy.”)—Bird’s Nest, A. 

“Blush, happy maiden, when you feel.” 
Briar-bloom. 

Bringing our Sheaves. 

Bringing our Sheaves with Us. See Bringing 
our Sheaves. 

Brother Antonio. 

Endurance. 

Four Words. 

God is Love. 

In a Garret. 

In April. See Spring at the Capital. 

Last Landlord, The. 

Left Behind. 

Little Feet. 

Loved you Better than you Knew. See Left 
Behind. 

Ministry of Hassan, The. 

Miracle Workers, The. 

“My Dearling.” 

My Ship. 

Old Story, The. 

Pipe of Fan, The. 

Rock me to Sleep. 

Sea-birds. 

Snow. 

Spring at the Capital. 

Stone Cutter, The. 

Under the Apple-tree. 

Willow, The. ' 

Wise Resolution, A. 

Allen, Eliz. P.—Conundrum, A. 

Story of a Great Artist. The. 

Allen, Ethan.—Capture of Ticonderoga, The. 

Allen, F. M.—Sir Walter Raleigh and Queen Eliza¬ 
beth. 

Allen, Grant.—Only an Insect. 

Allen, Mrs. H. E. M.—Jenny’s White Rose. 

Allen, Jas. Lane.—Two Gentlemen of Kentucky, The. 
Allen, Jos. Antisdell.—Daydreams, Sel. fr. 

Allen, L. R.—Song of the Winds, The. 

Allen, Lyman Whitney.—Coming of His Feet, The. 
Submission. 

Allen, Mrs. M. E.—Song Revels. 

Allen, Philip S. —Villanelle. 

Allen, U. S. ( Arr. by). —Moved by a Crank. 

Allen, Willis Boyd.—Unto the Perfect Day. 

‘With You Alway.’ 

Allerton, Ellen P.—Beautiful Things. 

Allgood, Jos.—Uncle Pete’s Plea. 

Allingham, J. Till.—Jack of All Trades. See Weather¬ 
cock, The. 

Weathercock. The. 

Allingham, W:—Abbot of Inisfalen, The. 
iEolian Harp. 

Across the Sea. 


Allingham, W: ( continued). 

Awaking. 

Ban-shee, The. 

Bird, The. 

Blowing Bubbles. See Bubble, The. 

Boy, The. 

' Bubble, The. 

Day and Night Songs. 

Dirty Old Man, The. 

Dream, A. 

Fairies Xhs. 

Fairy Folk, The. See Fairies, The. 

Faithless Knight, The. 

Fields in May, The. 

Gravestone, A.— 

Half-waking. 

Lovely Mary Donnelly. 

Lover and Birds, The. 

Maids of Elfin-mere, The. 

Mary Donnelly. See Lovely Mary Donnelly. 
Milkmaid, The. 

Morning. See Awaking. 

Nobleman’s Wedding, The. 

Outward Bound. 

Pilot’s Daughter, The. 

Robin Redbreast. 

Ruined Chapel, The. 

Sailor, The. 

St. Margaret’s Eve. 

Serenade: — “Oh, hearing sleep, and sleeping 
hear.” 

Song:—“O spirit of the summertime.” 

Therania. 

Touchstone, The. 

Venus of the Needle. 

Wife, A. 

Wild Rose. 

Winding Banks of Erne, The: or, The Emigrant’s 
Adieu to Ballyshannon. 

Windlass Song. 

Wishing. 

Witch-bride. The. 

Allison. Frances Ekin.—Last and Worst. 

“Allison, Joy.” See Cragin, Mary A. 

Allison, R: See Alison, R: 

Allison, W: Talbot.—-Men of the North, The. 

Rum Maniac, The. 

“There sat the Women weeping for Thammuz.’ 
Vanishings. 

Allston, Washington.—America to Great Britain. 
Boyhood. 

On the late S. T. Coleridge. 

Rosalie. 

Allyn, Kate.—Best of the Dollies. 

Doll’s Wedding, The. 

Alma-Tadema, Laurens [or Laurence],—Blessing for 
the Blessed, A. 

“If no one ever marries me.” 

Lambs in the Meadow. 

Snowdrops. 

Strange Lands. 

Almon-Hensley, Mrs. Sophie M.—Content. 

Song: “Joy came in youth as a humming-bird.” 
There is no God. 

Alsop, C: Fi—Our Flag. 

Alston, Jos. B.—“Stack Arms.” 

Alt, Florence May.—Court of the King, The. 
Francesco’s Angel. 

Prophecy. 

Altenburg, Michael.—Battle Hymn. See Battle Song 
of Gustavus Adolphus, The. 

Battle Song of Gustavus Adolphus, The. 

Swedish Battle-song. See Battle Song of Gus¬ 
tavus Adolphus, The. 

Alton, Ralph.—My Delftware Maid. 

Alwaharwany, Ibu Alalof.— 1 On a Cat Killed while At¬ 
tempting to Rob a Dove-cote. 

Ambrose, Jas. Clement.—Deacon’s Sunday-school Ser¬ 
mon, The. 

Ambrose, St.— See St. Ambrose. 

Amcott, Vincent.—Poisoned. 

American Messenger. —“Good-night, Papa.” 

American Queen, The. —Give Thanks for What? 

Ames, C: Gordon.—Athanasia. 

Hidden Life. 

John Jones and I. 

Under the Cloud. 

Unseen. 

Ames, Edith Theodora.—From My Window. 

Ames, Mrs. Eleanor Maria [Easterbrook], (“Eleanor 
Kirk.”)—“Bob White.” 

‘Pardnership.” 

“Wash Dolly Up Like That.” 


388 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Arnold 


Ames, Fisher.—British Treaty, The. 

Monstrous Relations in Newspapers. 

Oration of Washington. 

Sanctity of Treaties. 

True Patriotism. See What is Patriotism? 
Washington as a Civilian. 

What is Patriotism? 

Ames, Mrs. Mary [Clemmer], See Hudson, Mrs. Mart 
[Clemmer] [Ames], 

Ames, W.—Street-car Romance, A. 

Amiel, Henri-Frederic.—Dew-drop, The. 

Amonson, Louis S.—My Country. 

Anacreon.—Cheat of Cupid, The. 

Drinking. 

Epicure, The. 

Gold. 

Grasshopper, The. 

On the Grasshopper. See Grasshopper, The. 
“Once at midnight, just as Arktos.” 

Rose, The. 

Spring. 

Swallow, The 

‘‘Thirsty earth soaks up the rain, The.” See 
Drinking. 

Ungrateful Cupid, The. See Cheat of Cupid, The. 
Andersen, Hans Christian.—Last Dream of the Old 
Oak Tree, The. 

Little Gretchen. See Little Match Girl, The. 
Little Match Girl, The. 

Little Match-seller, The. See Little Match Girl, 
The. 

New Year’s Eve. See Little Match Girl, The. 
Anderson, Alex.—“Bairnies, Cuddle Doon.” 

Cuddle Doon. See “Bairnies, Cuddle Doon.” 
How Little Tom was Saved. 

Jack Chiddy. 

Nottman. See How Little Tom was Saved. 

O. Mither, Sing a Song to the Bairns. 

Anderson, Aristine.—Way of the World, The. 
Anderson, Duncan.—Death of Wolfe, The. 

Sport 

Anderson, E: D.—Baby in the Library. The. 
Anderson. Mrs. May M.—Brother Robin. 

Child Martyr. The. 

Flower Dances. 

“Planting” Wheat. 

Anderson, Mollie W.—Two Gardens. 

Anderson, W. B.—Love Game, A. 

Sic Transit. 

Anderson, Waldron W.—As the Sun Went Down. 
Anderson, W: — Railway Station in the North of 
England, A. 

Andrew, J: Albion.—Our Heroes. 

Andrews, E. F.—Debatin’ S’cietv, The. 

Uncle Edom and the Flurridy Nigger. 

Uncle Edom and the Yankee Book agent. 
Andrews, Maude.—Fad Obsolete, The. 

Andros, R. S. S.—Perseverance. 

Swallow, The. See Perseverance. 

Angelo, Michael. See Buonarotti, Michelangelo. 
Annable, G: G.—-Against License. 

Anster, .1:—Fairy Child, The. 

“Anstey, F.” See Guthrie. Fs. Anstef. 

Anthony, J: Clinton.—Ring from the Rim of the Glass, 
Boys. 

Society Martyr, A. 

With My Cigar. 

Anti-,1 arnbin. Inscription for the Door of the Cell 
in Newgate, where Mrs. Brownrigg was Con¬ 
fined. 

Antipater of Sidon.—Erinna. 

Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius.—Even in a Palace. See 
Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius. 

Fortitude. See Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius. 
Goodness. See Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius. 
Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius. 

Antrobus, .1:—-Cowboy, The. 

Appleget, T: B.—Lost and Found. 

‘Arbory, J See Macfarlane, J: 

Arbuthnot, J:—Epitaph upon Colonel Chartres. 

John Bull and His Law-suit. 

Archer. T: See Brough, J. C., and Archer, T: 
Archibald, Mrs. G:—Army Overcoat, The. 

John’s Pumpkin. 

Law agin It, A. 

Why Don’t You Tell Me Yes? 

Ardagh, Alioe M.—Sic Passim. 

Arey. Mrs. Harriet Ellen [Grannis],—Myself. 

Thank God, there’s Still a Vanguard. 

Argonaut. The. —Origin of Scandal. The 
Argosy, The. —Only. 

Argyll, G: Douglas Campbell, Duke of. —Our Dead. 
Ariosto.—Death of Zerbino, The. See Orlando Furioso. 
Orlando Furioso. 


Aristophanes.—Birds, The. 

Chorus of Women. See Thesmophoriazusse, The. 
Thesmophoriazusae, The. 

Arkansaw Traveller. —Arkansas Traveller, The. 

Boy in a tor the] Dime Museum, A. 

In the Dime Museum. See Boy in a Dime Mu¬ 
seum, A. 

Judge Brown’s Watermelon Story. 

Little Johnnie Visits the Dime Museum. See 
Boy in a Dime Museum, A. 

Mr. Haines’s Able Argument. 

Only Five Minutes to Live. 

“Arkwright, Peleg.” See Proudfit, D: Law. 
Armitage, Laura F.—Bluebird’s Message, The. 

First Pussy Willows, The. 

To the Old and the New Year. 

Armstrong, Edmund J.—Adieu. 

Blind Student. The. 

Fionnuala. 

Lady’s Rock, The. 

Armstrong. G: Fs. Savage. See Savage-Armstrong, 
G: Fs. 

Armstrong. J:—Art of Preserving Health, The. 

Building a Home. See Art of Preserving Health, 
The. 

Taste: an Epistle to a Young Critic. 

Armstrong, T: M.—Story of Rebekah, The. 

Arndt, Ernst Moritz.—Fatherland. 

Arndt. M. E.—“Wherever, Oman, God’s sun first 
beamed upon thee.” 

Arndt. Walter Tallmadge.—Two of a Kind. 

Arnold.-.—Death of Nelson, The. 

Arnold. Alice.—Another Day. 

Arnold. Birch.—Burglar Alarm, The. 

Mrs. Fillisv’s Burglar-alarm. See Burglar Alarm 
The. 

Arnold. Sir Edwin.—A ma Future. 

Adelaide Anne Procter. 

Adulteress, The. 

After Death. See After Death in Arabia. 

After Death in Arabia. 

Almond Blossom. See April. 

April. 

Armageddon. 

At Bethlehem. See Light of the World, The. 
Bazaar Girl, The. 

Book of Love. The. See With Sa’di in the Garden. 
Caliph’s Draught. The. 

Clemency of Salah-ud-Deen. The. See Adulteress, 
The. 

Dancing-girl. The. 

Destiny. 

Egyptian Slippers. 

Good Deeds. 

Great Consummation, The. See Light of the 
World, The. 

Great Journev. The. (TV.) See Maha-Bharata, 
The. 

Great Renunciation, The. See Light of Asia, 
The. 

“He and She.” See She and He. 

He Who Died at Azan. See After Death in 
Arabia. 

In Memoriam. 

Indian Song of Songs, The. 

King Sheddftd’s Paradise. 

Light of Asia, The. 

Light of the World, The. 

Lord Raglan. See In Memoriam. 

Love Song of Henri Quatre, A. 

Lover with His Loved One Sailed the Sea, A. 

See With Sa’di in the Garden. 

Maha-Bharata. (Tr.) 

Mahmud and Ayaz. See With Sa’di in the Gar- 
den. 

Mary at the Sepulchre. See Light of the World, 
The. 

Mary’s Story of the Crucifixion. See Light of the 
World. The. 

Moses and the Angel. 

Musmee The. 

“Naught is the same ‘as if Love had not been.’" 

See With Sa’di in the Garden. 

Oh. if Thou be’st True Lover. 

Nirvana. See Light of Asia, The. 

On a Cyclamen. 

Pontius Pilate. See I.ight of the World The. 
Queen Arjamand’s Dagger. See With Sa’di in the 
Garden. 

Raglan. See In Memoriam. 

Rajput Nurse, A. 

Resurrection, The. See Light of the World. The. 
Resurrection of Abdullah. See After Death in 
Arabia. 


389 




Arnold 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Arnold, Sir Edwin ( continued). 

Savitri; or, Love and Death. (Tr.) See Maha- 
Bharata, The. 

Secret of Death, The. See Light of Asia, The. 
Secret of Death, The. See also She and He. 
Serenade: “Lute! breathe thy lowest.” 

Shadow of the Cross, The. 

She and He. 

Snake and the Baby. The. 

Song of Krishna, A. See Indian Song of Songs, 
The. 

Song of the Devas to Prince Siddartha, The. See 
Light of Asia, The. 

Song without a Sound. See With Sa’di in the 
Garden. 

Sorrow of Buddha, The. See Light of Asia, The. 
Sultan and the Potter, The. 

Swallows, The. 

Swallow’s Nest, The. 

Tola of Mustard Seed, The. See Light of Asia, 
The. 

With Sa’di in the Garden. 

Woman’s Voice. 

Wreck of the “Northern Belle,” The. 

Arnold, Emily Gail.—In April. 

Arnold, G:—Alone by the Hearth. 

Among the Heather. 

Beer. 

Cigars and Beer. See Beer. 

Big Oyster, The. 

Farewell, A. 

Farewell to Summer. 

Golden Fish, The. 

In the Dark. 

Jolly Old Pedagogue, The, 

Jubilate. 

Merry Christmas Time, The. 

September. 

September Days. 

Summer Longing, A. 

Sweet September. See September Days. 

Arnold, Matthew.—Absence. 

“Ah, Love! let us be true.” See Dover Beach. 
Apollo. , See Empedocles on Etna. 

Austerity of Poetry. 

Bacchanalia; or, The New Age. 

Balder Dead. 

Berlin—the Sixteenth of March. 

Better Part, The. 

Buried Life, The. 

Cadmus and Harmonia. See Empedocles on Etna. 
Calais Sands. 

Callicles beneath Etna. See Empedocles on Etna. 
Callicles’ Song. See Empedocles on Etna. 
Callicles’ Song of Apollo. See Empedocles on 
Etna. 

Church of Brou, The. 

Combat, The. Nee Sohrab and Rustum. 
Consolation. 

Death of Goethe. See Memorial Verses. 

Death of Sohrab, The. See Sohrab and Rustum. 
Departure of the Cuckoo, The. See Thyrsis. 
Desire. 

Dover Beach. 

Duties of the Scholar. See Sweetness and Light. 
Empedocles on Etna. 

Euphrosyne. 

Even in a Palace. See Worldly Place. 

Evening. See Bacchanalia; or, The New Age. 
Excuse. See Urania. 

Flee fro’ the Press. See Scholar-Gypsy, The. 
Forsaken Merman, The. 

Future, The. 

Geist’s Grave. 

Growing Old. 

Haworth Churchyard. 

Heine’s Grave. 

Human Life. 

Hunters, The. See Church of Brou, The. 

Hymn of Empedocles. 

Immortality. 

Incremation, The. See Balder Dead. 

Indifference. See Euphrosyne. 

Iseult’s Children. See Tristram and Iseult. 

Last Word, The. 

Lines Written in Kensington Gardens. 

Longing. 

Lovers. See Consolation. 

Memorial Verses. 

Morality. 

Neckan, The. 

Obermann once More. 

On the Death of a Favourite Canary. See Poor 
Matthias. 


Arnold, Matthew ( continued ). 

Oxus. See Sohrab and Rustum. 

Palladium. 

Philomela. 

Poor Matthias. 

Rachel. 

Requiescat. 

Resignation. 

River’s End, The. See Sohrab and Rustum. 

, Rugby Chapel. 

Saint Brandan. 

Scholar-Gypsy, The. 

Self-dependence. 

Shakespeare. 

Sohrab and Rustum. 

Song of Callicles. See Empedocles on Etna. 

Song of Callicles in Sicily. See Empedocles on 
Etna. 

Song of Empedocles, The. See Empedocles on 
Etna. 

Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse. 

Stanzas in Memory of the Author of “Obermann.” 
Strayed Reveller, The. 

Summer Night, A. 

Sweetness and Light. 

Thyrsis. 

To a Friend. 

To Marguerite. 

Tomb in the Church of Brou, The. See Church 
of Brou, The. 

Tristram and Iseult. 

Urania. 

We Cannot Kindle when We Will. See Morality. 
“When Goethe’s death was told, we said.” See 
Memorial Verses. 

Wish, A. 

World and the Quietist, The. 

Worldly Place. 

Written in Emerson’s Essays. 

"Arp, Bill.”— See Smith, C: H. 

Arrington, Alfred W.—Apostrophe to Cold Water. See 
Apostrophe to Water. 

Apostrophe to Water. (At. also to Paul Denton 
and to J: B. Gough.) 

Glass of Cold Water, A. See Apostrophe to 
Water. 

Tribute to Water, A. See Apostrophe to Water. 
Water. See Apostrophe to Water. 

“Water! look at it, ye thirsty ones!” See Apos¬ 
trophe to Water. 

Arthur, Timothy Shay.—Idle Hands. 

Arthur’s Home Magazine. — Little Mission Band, 
The. 

Arvers, Felix.—My Secret. 

Secret. The. See My Secret. 

Ascher, Isidore G.—By the Firelight. 

Ashbury, W:—Father in Heaven. 

Ashby-Sterry, Jos.—Cigarette Rings. 

Daisy’s Dimples. 

Kindness to Animals. 

Little Rebel, The. 

Lover’s Lullaby, A. 

Love’s Punishments. 

Marlow Madrigal, A. 

Portrait, A. 

Regrets. 

“Speak gently to the herring, and kindly to the 
calf.” See Kindness to Animals. 

Ashe, T:—At Altenahr. 

By the Salp^triere. 

Marian. 

Marit. 

Meet we no Angels, Pansie? See At Altenahr. 

No and Yes. 

Old Jane. 

Phantoms. 

Poeta Nascitur. 

To Two Bereaved. 

Vision of Children, A. 

Askewfe], Annfe].—Fight of Faith, The. 

Aspinall, G:—Leap of Curtius, The. 

Atheneum, The. —Ferryman, The. 

Atherstone [w. Atherton], Edwin.—Last Days of Her¬ 
culaneum, The. 

Roman Soldier at the Destruction of Hercu¬ 
laneum, The. See Last Days of Hercu¬ 
laneum, The. 

Atkeson, America.—Two Friends, The. 

Atlanta Constitution. —Baby’s Visitor. 

Atlantic Monthly. —Opening of the Piano, The. 

Uncle Reuben’s Tale. 

Yankee Landlord, The. 

Auber, Harriet.—Holy Spirit, The. 

“Aunt Clara.”—Frog’s Good-bye, The. 


390 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Bailey 


“Aunt Effie.”—Clocking Hen, The. 

Dame Duck’s First Lecture on Education. 
Freddie and the Cherry-tree. 

Pussy-cat. 

Robin Redbreast, The. 

Turtle Dove’s Nest, The. 

Water-mill, The. 

Auringer, Obadiah Cyrus.—April. 

Ballad of Oriskany, The. 

Flight of the War-eagle, The. 

God’s Country. 

Hymn of Our Armies. 

Austen, Sarah.—Passage, The. (TV.) 

Austin, Adam.—For Lack of Gold. 

Austin, Alfred.—Agatha. 

As Dies the Year. 

At His Grave. 

Ave Maria. 

Britannia to Columbia. 

Chorus of Islanders. See Look Seaward, Sentinel. 
Death of Huss, The. 

Grave-digger’s Song. See Prince Lucifer. 
Haymaker’s Song, The. 

In the Month when Sings the Cuckoo. 

Is Life Worth Living? 

Lady Mabel. 

Last Redoubt, The. 

Look Seaward, Sentinel. 

Mother-song. See Prince Lucifer. 

Night in June, A. 

Prince Lucifer. 

Savonarola and Lorenzo. 

To America. See Britannia to Columbia. 

Voice, A. See Britannia to Columbia. 

Wild Rose, A. 

Austin, Arthur W:—Double Sacrifice, The. 

Austin, H: W.—Legend of Crystal Spring. 

Prince’s Hunting, The. 

Austin, J:—Blest be thy Love, Dear Lord. 

Austin. L: F.—-.Juliet. 

Averill, Anna Boynton.—Birch Stream, The. 

Avery, Adeline B.—Contesting for a Prize. 

Ayars, W. S.—Zwischen Trinken. 

Aye-Williams, Ernest.—Mid the Breakers. 

Ayres, Alfred.—Oh, Sir! 

Ayres, Rev. Milan C.—Spiritual Body, The. 

Ayton, Sir Rob’t.—“Forsaken of all comforts but 
these two.” 

I do Confess Thou’rt Sweet. 

On Love. 

To an Inconstant One. 

To His Forsaken Mistress. 

Woman’s Inconstancy. See To an Inconstant 
One. 

Aytoun, W: Edmondstoune.—Battle of the Boulevard, 
The. 

Biter Bit, The. 

Bothwell. 

Burial March of Dundee, The. 

Charles Edward at Versailles. 

Comfort in Affliction. 

Dame Fredegonde. 

Dirge of the Drinker, The. 

Edinburgh after Flodden. 

Empty Bottle, The. 

Execution of Montrose, The. 

Francesca da Rimini. 

Heart of the Bruce, The. 

Husband’s Petition, The. 

Idees Napoldoniennes. 

Island of the Scots, The. 

James IV. at Flodden. See Edinburgh after 
Flodden. 

Killieerankie. See Burial March of Dundee, The. 
Lament of Richard during His Imprisonment. ( Tr .) 
Lay of the Lover’s Friend, The. 

Louis Napoleon’s Address to His Army. 

Massacre of the Macpherson. 

Midnight Meditation, A. 

Murder of Damley, The. See Bothwell. 

Murder of Riccio, The. 

Old Scottish Cavalier, The. 

Paris and Helen. See Puffs Poetical. 

Puffs Poetical. 

Tarquin and the Augur. See Puffs Poetical. 
Widow of Glencoe, The. 


B 

‘B.”—What May Happen to a Thimble. 

B., A. H. —Don’t You Wish You Knew! 

B., E.—Life or Death. 

B., E. G.—Barcarole. 

391 


B., F. R. D.—After the Soiree. 

B., F. W.—Autumn Voices. 

B., H. C.—Autumn Song of a Little Girl. 

B., H. H.—Elm, The. 

B., J.—Epilogue: Suitable for the conclusion of an 
Entertainment. 

B., J. C.—There is a Time. 

B., L.—Biologic Face, The. 

B., L. F.—Sunset. 

B., M.—Contentment. 

B., M. E.—Receipt for a Racket, A. 

Song without Words, A. 

B., M. F.—Changelings. 

Fidelity. 

B., M. K. [or B., M. R.].—Four Sunbeams, The. 

B., P.—Message, A. 

B., R. F.—Golf Fiend, The. 

B., S. L.—My Room-mate. 

B., S. P.—Why? 

B., W. C.—To a Rose. 

B., W. H.—On Receipt of a Rare Pipe. 

Babb, E. C.—“Best thoughts of the day ought to be 
in the daily papers, The.” 

Babcock, N. P.—She Earned Her Half. 

Bache, Anna.—Quilting, The. 

Bachelder, May I.—Choosing a “State Tree.”—The 
Hemlock. 

Bacheller, Irving.—Joe’s Search for Santa Claus. 
Whisperin’ Bill. 

“Bachelor Ben.”—Her Lovers. 

Bachman, N. L. F.—Sergeant Prentiss’ First Plea. 
Bacon, Fs., Baron Verulam and Viscount St. Al¬ 
bans. 

Advancement of Learning, The. 

Books. See Of Studies. 

Goodness and Greatness. 

Life. See World, The. 

Of Masques and Triumphs. 

Of Negotiating. 

Of Studies. 

Of Suspicion. 

Of Travel. 

Of Truth. 

Studies. See Of Studies. 

Truth. See Of Truth. 

World, The. 

Worth of Knowledge. See Advancement of 
Learning, The. 

Bacon, Helen C.—Song of Spring, A. 

Wonder Story, A. 

Bacon, H:—Flowers, The. 

Bacon, Mrs. L. B.—Naming the Chickens. 

Bacon, Mary S.—Promoted. 

Badlam, Anna E.—Human Body Lesson in Rhyme. 
Legend, A. 

Baer, Libbie C.—Little Girl’s Wish, A. 

Long Ago. 

Bagby, Dr. G: W: (“Mozis Addums”).—Hoosier 
Describes Rubenstein’s Playing, A. See How 
“Ruby” Played. 

How “Ruby” Played. 

Bailey, Rev. Ira J.—Island of Home, The. 

Bailey, J. H.—No Smoking Allowed. 

Bailey, Jas. Montgomery (“Danbury News Man”). 
Abused Boy, An. 

Anger and Enumeration. 

Awaking a Boy. 

Babv’s First Tooth, The. See Harbison’s Baby, 
The. 

Button Off, A. 

Calling a Boy in the Morning. See Awaking a 
Boy. 

Coville Convalesces. 

Curtain Fixture, The. 

Domestic Economy. 

First Dog, The. 

Harbison's Baby, The. 

How a Married Man Sews on a Button. See 
Button Off, A. 

How Mr. Coville Counted the Shingles on his 
House. See Mr. Coville Proves Mathematics. 
Mr. Coville on Danbury. See Coville Convalesces. 
Mr. Coville Proves Mathematics. 

Mr. Coville’s Easy Chair. See Coville Convalesces. 
Mr. Perkins at the Dentist’s. 

Mr. Perkins Buys a Dog. 

Mr. Perkins Helps to Move a Stove. 

Mr. Stiver’s Horse. 

Penning a Pig. 

Sewing on a Button. See Button Off, A. 

She Cut His Hair. See Abused Boy, An. 

Struggle with a Stove-pipe, A. 

Bailey, Lansing C.—Eight Volunteers. 





Bailey 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Bailey, Philip Jas.—Aim of Life, The. See Festus. 
Country and Patriotism. See Festus. 

Festus. 

Forecast. See Festus. 

Helen’s Song. See Festus. 

How to Live. See Festus. 

“Let each man think himself an act of God.” 
Lucifer and Elissa. See Festus. 

Poet, The. See Festus. 

Poet of Nature, The. See Festus. 

Sabbath Morning in the Country. See Festus. 
Thoughts. See Festus. 

Time and its Changes. See Festus. 

True Measure of Life, The. See Festus. 

Waning Spirits. See Festus. 

Woman’s Four Seasons. See Festus. 

Worldly Treasures. See Festus. 

Youth, Love and Death. See Festus. 

Baillie, Lady Grisel.—Werena my Heart’s Licht 1 
wad Dee. 

Baillie, Joanna.—Beacon, The. 

Black Cock, The. 

Brave Man, The. 

Chough and [the] Crow, The. See Orra. 

Deceit. See DeMonfort. 

DeMonfort. 

Fisherman’s Song. See Beacon, The. 
Heath-cock, The. See Black Cock, The. 

Jane deMonfort. See DeMonfort. 

Kitten, The. 

Legend of Christopher Columbus, The. 

Morning Songs. See Beacon, The. 

Orra. 

Outlaw’s Song, The. See Orra. 

Patriotism and Freedom. 

Phantom, The. 

Song: “Oh welcome, bat and owlet gray.” See 
Song Written for a Welsh Air Called the “Pur¬ 
suit of Love.” 

Song:—“The bride she is winsome and bonny.” 

See Song: Woo’d and Married, and A’. 

Song:—“They who may tell love’s wistful tale.” 

See Phantom, The. 

Song: Woo’d and Married and A’. 

Song: Written for a Welsh Air Called “The Pur¬ 
suit of Love.” 

“Up, quit thy bower.” See Beacon, The. 

Worth of Fame. The. See Legend of Christopher 
Columbus, The. 

Baillie, Mary.—De Tired Pickaninny's Star Song. 
Bain, G: W.—American Home. The. 

Baine, W:—Nola Kozmo. 

William Tell. 

Baines, M. A.—I Love Thee. 

Baker, Col. E: Dickinson.—Free Press, A. 

Freedom. 

Liberty of the Press. See Free Press, A. 

Speech at Union Square, New York, April 20th, 
1861. 

To Young Men of New York in 1861. See Speech 
at Union Square, New York. 

Baker, G: A:, Jr.—After the German. 

Afterthought, An. 

Auto-da-fe. 

Bachelor Coat, The. See Le Dernier Jour d’un 
Condamn^. 

Both Sides of the Story. See Idyl of the Period, 
An. 

Chinese Lanterns. 

Chivalrie. 

Christmas Greens. 

De Lunatico. 

Dialect Medley. See Pyrotechnic Polyglot. 
Easter Morning. 

Eight Hours. 

Fishing. 

Frost-bitten. 

Idyl of the Period, An. 

In the Record Room,—Surrogate’s Office. 

Jack and Me. 

Lake Mahopac—Saturday Night. 

Language of Love, The. 

Le Dernier Jour d’un Condamne. 

Legend of St. Valentine, A. 

Les Enfants Perdus. 

“Love Your Neighbor as Yourself.” See Thoughts 
on the Commandments. 

Making New Year’s Calls. 

Marriage a la Mode. 

Matinal Musings. 

Mothers of the Sirens, The. 

Next Morning. See Matinal Musings. 

Nocturne. 

Old Photographs. 


Baker, G: A:, Jr. (continued). 

Per Aspera ad Astra. 

Piece of Advice, A. 

Pro Patria et Gloria. 

Pyrotechnic Polyglot. 

Reductio ad Absurdum. 

Reformer, A. 

Retrospection. 

Reverie in Church. See Easter Morning. 
Romance of the Saw-dust, A. 

Rosebud in Lent, A. 

Sleeping Beauty. 

Song, A:—“I shouldn’t like to say, I’m sure.” 
Song, A:—“Spring-time is coming again, my 
dear.” 

“Stay-at-Honie’s” Paean, The. 

“Stay-at-Home’s” Plaint, The. 

Thoughts on the Commandments. 

Zwei Konige auf Orkadal. 

Baker, G: Comstock.—To-: "I love you—not be¬ 

cause,” etc. 

Baker, G: M.—Cruise of the “Monitor,” The. 

Fireman, The. See Red Jacket, The. 

Mother’s Hired Man. 

Red Jacket, The. 

Santa Claus Frolic. 

Sea of Troubles, A. 

Baker, H: W:—“Be near when I am dying.” 

Lord is My Shepherd, The. 

My Shepherd. See Lord is My Shepherd, The. 
Baker, W: Drummond.—Sea-song. 

“Soft is Thy Rest.” 

Bakewell, J:—Hail, Thou Once-despised Jesus. 

Balch, Alfred.—Huldy’s Pumpkin Pies. 

Baleh, G: T.—Public School Teacher in the Republic, 
The. 

Baldwin, Astley H.—Little Brown Bushy-tail. 

New Year, The. See On the Threshold. 

On the Threshold. 

Baldwin, E. N.—Watermelon Season, The. 

Baldwin, H:—-At the Rug Auction. 

Baldwin, Judge J: M.—In Memory of Lincoln. 
Baldwnn, Jos.—Culture of the Moral Virtues. 

Ball, Alice M.—Doctor’s Choice, The. 

Ball. E:—With No One to Love Us. 

Ballam, Anna A. God is Everywhere. 

Ballantyne [it>r. Ballantine], Jas.—Castles in the Air. 

Muckle-mou’d Meg. 

Ballantyne, J: F.—Thine Eyes. ( Tr .) 

Ballard, Harlan Hoge.—-In the Catacombs. 

Welsh Classic, A. 

Ballard, Mrs. Julia [Perkins].—Two Little Roses. 
Verdict, The. 

Ballou, A. L.—Dead in His Bed. 

Ballou, Maturin Murray.—“Sweet letters of the angel 
tongue.” 

Ballou, W: Hosea.—My John. 

Baltimore American. —“Practical way for Christians 
to reform the theatre, The.” 

Sleep Time in Darktown. 

Baltimore Elocutionist. —Fashionable Singing. 

Baltimore Life. —Peace-at-any-priee Man, A. 

Baltimore Methodist. —“No Saloons uo There.” 
Baltimore News. —Chickamauga—1898. 

Phantoms, The. 

Soldier’s Heart, A. 

Song for the Sailor-men, A. 

Song of the Rapid-fires, A. 

Balzac, Honors de.—Passion in the Desert, A. 
Bampfylde, J:—Sonnet: To the Redbreast. 

Bancroft, G:—Acadian Exiles, The. See History of 
the United States. 

Character of the Declaration of Independence. 

See History of the United States. 

Discovery of the Mississippi, The. See History of 
the United States. 

God in History. 

Government of the People, The. 

Great Britain and Her English Colonies. See 
History of the United States. 

Growth of the American Republic. 

History of the United States. 

News from Lexington, The. See History of the 
United States. 

Palmerston and Lincoln. 

“Philosophy has sometimes forgotten God, as a 
great people never did.” 

Revolutionary Alarm, The. See History of the 
United States. 

Bangs, J: Kendrick.—Afternoon in a Hotel Room, An 
Before the Toy Shop Window. 

Little Elf, The. 

May 30, 1893. 

To a Withered Rose. 


392 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Barnes 


Banim, J:—Damon and Pythias. 

Damon to the Syracusans. See Damon and 
Pythias. 

He said that He was not Our Brother. 

Irish Mother in the Penal Days, The. 

Scene from Damon and Pythias. See Damon and 
Pythias. 

Soggarth Aroon. 

Banks, Emma Dunning.—Aline’s Love Song. 

Aunt Rhody’s Dream. 

Battle Cry. 

Bridget’s Mission Jug. 

Diamond Cut Diamond. 

Dot’s Christmas; or, the Sober Hat. 

Flossie Lane’s Marriage. 

Flying Jim’s Last Leap. 

Gipsy Bride, The. 

Grandma Robbins’s Temperance Mission. 

How Congress fought for Sheridan. 

Jacqueminot Rose Sunday, A. 

Laureame: the Marble Dream. 

Legend of Rose Sunday, A. 

Lesson of Obedience, The. 

Man’s Story, A. 

Medley. 

Mein Katrine’s Brudder Hans. 

Memorial Day at the Farm. 

Mother’s Easter Scarf, The. 

Off for Slumber-land. 

Old, Old Story, The. 

One Thanksgiving Day out West. 

Pat and the Yankee. 

Prince Eric’s Christ-maid. 

Princess Imra and the Goatherd. 

Quart of Milk, A. 

Roman Valentine, A. 

Russian Christmas, A. 

Ruthie’s Faith in Prayer. 

St. Valentine’s and St. Patrick’s Day. 

Society Flirtation. 

Soldier’s Joy, The. 

Squeeze in the Dark, A. 

Two Thanksgiving Dances. 

Van Bibber’s Rock. 

Banks, G. Linnaeus.—“I live for those that love me.” 
See My Aim. 

Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Green. 

Mv Aim. 

What I Live For. See My Aim. 

Banks, H. W.—Sweet Sixteen. 

Those Violets Blue. 

Two of a Kind. 

Wishes. 

Banks, Martha Burr.—Flag Day. 

Banner , The. —Temperance Ship, The. 

Bannerman, Frances.—Upper Chamber, An. 

Banning, Kendall.—Quatrain. 

Banta, Mrs. M. E.—Aftermath. 

Barbauld, Anna Lsetitia.—Christ Risen. See Hymn: 
For Easter Sunday. 

Come Unto Me. 

Death of the Virtuous, The. 

Hymn: “Come, said Jesus’ sacred voice.” See 
Come unto Me. 

Hymn: “Praise to God, immortal praise.” See 
Praise to God. 

Hymn:—“Sleep, sleep to-dav, tormenting cares.” 

See Sabbath of the Soul, The. 

Hymn: For Easter Sunday. 

Inconsistent Expectations. 

Life. 

Life and Death. See Life. 

Life: I Know not what Thou Art. See Life. 

“Life! we’ve been long together.” See Life. 

Life’s “Good-morning.” See Life. 

Mouse’s Petition The. 

Ode to Spring. 

Praise to God. 

Riddle. 

Sabbath of the Soul, The. 

Song:—“Come here, fond youth, whoe’er thou be.” 
Summer Evening’s Meditation, A. 

To a Lady, with Some Painted Flowers. 

What it is to Love. See Song:—“Come here, fond 
youth, whoe’er thou be.” 

Words. See Riddle. 

Barber, Jos.—Bell and the Gong, The. 

Mrs. Dove’s Boarding-house. 

Modern Version of the Merchant of Venice, A. 
Barbour, J:—Bruce, The. 

Freedom. See Bruce, The. 

Barbour, Martha E.—Attitudes Illustrated in Verse. 
(Arr.) 

Bard, Rob’t M.—Mendicant, The. 


Barham, R: Harris (“Thomas Ingoldsby”).—As I 
lay a-Thynkynge. 

Bagman’s Dog, The. 

City Bells. See Lay of St. Aloy’s, The. 
Confession, The. 

Eheu Fugaces. 

Execution, The. 

Family Poetry. 

Ghost, The. 

Hon. Mr. Sucklethumbkin’s Story. See Execu¬ 
tion, The. 

I Remember, I Remember. See Nursery Remi¬ 
niscences. 

Jackdaw of Rheims, The. 

Knight and the Lady, The. 

Lady Rohesia, The. 

Lay of St. Aloy’s. The. 

Lay of St. Gengulphus, A. 

Little Vulgar Boy, The. See Misadventures at 
Margate. 

London University, The; or, Stinkomalee Tri- 
umphans. 

Look at the Clock. 

Lurline; or, The Knight’s Visit to the Mermaids. 

See Sir Rupert the Fearless. 

Misadventures at Margate. 

Mr. Barney Maguire’s Account of the Coronation. 
My Letters. 

My Lord Tomnoddy. See Execution, The. 

Netley Abbey. 

New-made Honor. 

Not a Sous Had He Got. 

Nursery Reminiscences. 

On the Windows of King’s College Remaining 
Boarded. 

Poplar, The. 

Raising the Devil. 

Sir Rupert the Fearless. 

Witches’ Frolic, The. 

Barhite, Jared.—Arbor Day Tribute. 

Nature’s Tribute Suggests Ours. See Arbor Day 
Tribute. 

Baring-Gould, Sabine.—Bishop Benno and the Frogs. 
Building of S. Sophia, The. 

Child’s Evening Hymn. 

Day is Over. See Child’s Evening Hymn. 

Now the Day is Over. See Child’s Evening 
Hymn. 

Olive Tree, The. 

Secret of Life, The. 

Barker, Bernard.—On a Tobacco Jar. 

Barker, D:—Make Your Mark. 

Barker, E: D.—Go Sleep, ma Honey. 

Barker, Eliza H.—Shun the Bowl. 

Barker, J. W.—Dead Volunteer, The. 

Barker, J:—As Toll. 

Barker, Johnson.—-House Full of Wine, The. 

Barker, T: H.—Words of Cheer. 

Barlow, Fanny.—Taken on Trial. 

Wedding-march on Trial, A. See Taken on Trial. 
Barlow. G:—Dead Child, The. 

If only Thou art True. 

Life’s Gifts. 

Love on Deck. 

Love’s Final Powers. 

Old Maid, The. 

Together. 

Barlow. Jane.—Curlew's Call, A. 

End of Elfintown, The. 

Flitting of the Fairies, The. See End of Elfintown, 
The. 

Misther Denis’s Return. See Ould Master, Th’. 
Ould Master, Th’. 

Barlow, Joel.—Columbia 
Hasty Pudding, The. 

Barlow, Nellie.—To Those who Fail. 

Barnaby, Goodman.—-Give Me the Hand. 

Hand for Me, The. See Give Me the Hand. 
Barnard, Anna.—Telling Tales. 

Barnard, Lady Anne [Lindsay].—Auld Robin Gray. 
Barnard, C:—French by Lightning. 

He was never Known to Smile. 

Nellie Walsh. 

Put Yourself in Her Place. 

Sarah’s Proposal. 

Telegraphic Signal, The. 

Barnard, R:—My Cigarette. 

Barnefield, R:— See Barnfield, R: 

Barnes, Albert.—“ ‘What a fool you are, Paley,’ said 
a young man in a British university.” 

Barnes, Bamabe.—Ode:—“Behold, out Walking in 
these Valleys. 

Sonnet: “Ah, sweet content; where is thy mild 
abode?” 


393 




Barnes 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Barnes, G. H.—Bricklayers, The. 

Barnes, G. O.—Pyramids not all Egyptian. 

Barnes, .las.—Song of Then and Now, The. 
Torpedo-boat, The. 

Barnes, Lillian Corbett.—Love-message, A. 

Barnes, M. C.—Little Woman, The. 

Barnes, W:—Blackmwore Maidens. 

Broken Heart, The. 

Castle Ruins, The. 

Ellen Brine of Allenburn. 

False Friends-like. 

Girt Woak Tree that’s in the Dell, The. 

Girt Wold House o’ Mossy Stwone, The. 

Heiire, The. 

Jeiine. 

Lullaby. 

Mary-Ann’s Child. 

Mater Dolorosa. See Mother’s Dream, The. 
Mother’s Dream, The. 

Peasant’s Return, The. 

Plorata Veris Lachrymis. 

Readen ov a Head-stwone. 

Surprise, The. 

Wife a-Lost, The. 

Witch, A. 

Woone Smile Mwore. 

Zummer an’ Winter. 

Barnett, Morris.—Monsieur Jacques. 

Barney, W: Grant.—In Junior Year. 

Barnfield [or Barnefield], R:—Address.to the Nightin¬ 
gale. See Cynthia. 

Cynthia. 

Nightingale, The. See Cynthia. 

Ode, An: “As it fell upon a day.” See Cynthia. 
Philomel. See Cynthia. 

Sonnet from Cynthia. See Cynthia. 

Sonnet to His Friend Maister R. L. 

Whilst as Fickle Fortune Smiled. 

Bamum, Mrs. Frances Courtenay [Baylor],—Old Quar¬ 
rel, An. 

Barr, Mrs. Amelia Edith [Huddleston].—Christmas 
Camn on the San Gabr’el, A. 

My Little Brown Pine. 

New-year Ledger, The. 

Thanksgiving. 

Barr, Lillie E.—Little Cloak, The. 

Little Jean. 

Mother’s Answer, A. 

“Nay, I’ll Stay with the Lad.” 

Ten Robber Toes. 

Barr, Mary A.—Bottom Drawer, The. 

Burial of the Old Flag, The. 

Deserter, A. 

Lost Colors, The. 

“Now, soul, be very still and go apart.” 

Petit Jean. 

Poppy. 

Skipper’s Love, The; or, The Tide Will Turn. 
Barr, Matthias.—Dying Street Arab, The. 

Only a Baby [Small]. (At. also to Addie Layton.) 
Organist, The. 

Barr, Rob’t.—Archbishop’s Christmas Gift, The. 
“Gentlemen! The King!” 

BarrG Col. I:—America’s Obligations to England. 

Reply to Lord North. 

Barrett, C: R.—Kindness. 

Purpose. 

Barrett, Eaton Stannard.—Woman. 

Barrett, Eliz. Barrett. See Browning, Mrs. Eliz. Bar¬ 
rett [Barrett], 

Barrie, Jas. Matthew.—Auld Licht Idylls. 

Courting of T’nowhead’s Bell, The. See Auld 
Licht Idylls. 

How Gavin Birse put it to Mag Lownie. See 
Window in Thrums, A. 

Invalid in Lodgings, An. 

Little Minister, The. 

Mending the Clock. 

My Brother Henry. See My Lady Nicotine. 

My Lady Nicotine. 

Nanny Saved from the Poorhouse. See Little 
Minister, The. 

Our New Servant. 

Platonic Friendship, A. 

Race for a Wife, A. 

Rescue of Gavin, The. See Little Minister, 
The. 

Window in Thrums, A. 

Barritt, Mrs. Frances Fuller.—Destiny of the Empress 
Josephine, The. 

Barron, J. M.—Old Grimes’ Hen. 

Barron, W. F.—In Olden Style. 

Barrow, W: (?)—Mental Activity. 

Barrows, Rev. Dr. J: H:—Centennial Speech. 


Barrows, O. R.—Oh, the Sports of Childhood. See 
Swinging ’neath the Old Apple-tree. 

Swinging ’neath the Old Apple-tree. 

Barry, Anne. See Crawford, Mrs. Anne [Barry], 
Barry, H: H.—He Leadeth Me. 

Barry, K. E.—-Caught. 

Barry, Mary A.—Elswitha. 

I Wouldna Gie a Copper Plack. 

Barry, Michael Jos.—Place to Die, The. See Place 
where Man should Die, The. 

Place where Man should Die, The. 

Sword, The. 

Wexford Massacre, The. . 

Where Man should Die. See Place where Man 
should Die, The. 

Barry, R:—Our Country’s Call. 

Bartleson, F. A.—New Year’s Eve. 

Bartlett, D: W.—Lowell, Extract Concerning. 

Bartlett, G: B.—Mignonette. 

Bartlett, Mary C.—Baby’s Skies. 

Bartlett, S: C.—Webster as an Orator and States¬ 
man. 

Bartol, Rev. Cyrus A.—Mountains, The. 

Emerson, Extract Concerning. 

Barton, Bernard (“Quaker Poet”).—At Home. See 
Home. 

British Oak, The. ’* 

Bruce and the Spider. See Robert Bruce and the 
Spider. 

Caractacus. 

Cast Thy Bread upon the Waters. 

Colloquy with Myself, A. 

Evening Prayer, An. 

Home. 

“Hush! ’tis a holy hour! the quiet room.” 

Not Ours the Vows. 

Robert Bruce and the Spider. 

Sea, The. 

There be Those. 

Barton, Clara.—Marmara. 

Bashford, Herbert.—-Along Shore. 

Arid Lands, The. 

By the Pacific. 

Cuba—1897. 

Morning in Camp. 

Mount Rainier. 

Night in Camp, 

Sunset. 

Basket.., Newton M.—Orpheus and Eurydice. 

Substitute, The. 

Basse, W:—Angler’s Song, The. 

Clorus’ Song. 

Batchelder, F. R.—Ballade of College Girls, A. 
Batchelder, S. F.—Critic, The. 

Diva, The. 

Bate, Pres. C: Spence.—Ride. 

Bateham, Minnie D.—Legend of Innisfallen, The. 

One of Many. 

Bateman, H:—Ship on Fire, The. 

Bateman, Newton.—Address to the Graduating Class of 
Knox College, 1877. 

Heroism and History. 

Bates, Arlo.—America. See Torch Bearers, The. 
Cyclamen, The. 

In Paradise. 

In Shadow. 

Kitty’s Laugh. 

Kitty’s “No.” 

Like to a Coin. 

On the Road to Chorrera. 

One. 

Quite a History. 

Shadow Boat, A. 

Sonnets in Shadow. 

Sorrow of Rohab, The. 

Torch Bearers, The. 

Watchers, The. 

Winter Twilight, A. 

Woodland Tragedy, A. 

Bates, Charlotte Fiske.— See Roge, Mrs. Charlotte 
Fiske [Bates], 

Bates, Mrs. Clara [Doty].—Acorn Lesson, An. 

Cat and Canary. 

How the Oak Grew. 

Lilac, The. 

Sad Case, A. 

Thistle-down. 

What the Quail Says. 

Who Likes the Rain? 

Bates, D:—Speak Gently. (At. to G. W. Hangford and 
to W. V. Wallace.) 

Bates, Fanny Beulah.—"Blackbird Snow, A.” 

Robin’s Flight, The. 

Sympathy. 


394 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Beaumont 


Bates, Herbert.—Heavens are our Riddle, The. 

Prairie. 

Bates, Katha. Lee.—Little Knight in Green, The. 

Mine Own Countree. 

Robin’s Secret. 

Schoolroom I Love the Best, The. See Vacation 
Song. 

Song of Riches, A. 

Song of Waking, A. 

Under the Snows. 

Vacation Song. 

Bates, Lewis J.—Some Sweet Day. 

Bates, Rob’t Peck.—Love’s Secret. 

Bates, S: Penniman.—Fruits of Labor, The. 

Bates, Stockton.—Asleep. 

Eureka. 

Fathoming Brains. 

Friend Death. 

Out of the East. 

Saved. 

South Fork. 

Starry Flag, The. 

Visit to Hades, A. 

Bates, Theodora.—After. 

Hall of Sleep, The. 

Rondeau. 

Baxter, R:—Lord, it Belongs not to My Care. See 
Resignation. 

Resignation. 

Sin. (?) 

Vision of Future Bliss, A. 

Bayard, Jas. A.—Judges Should be Free. 

Bayard, T: F.—Character of Webster. 

Bayles, Jas. C.—In the Gloaming. 

Bayley, Anna F.—Our Country. 

Bayley, L. M. Laning.—Grave by the Sorrowful Sea, 
The. 

Baylis, S: Mathewson.—Coureur-de-Bois, The. 

In Matabele Land. 

Bayly, T: Haynes.—Don’t Talk of September. 

Hunting Season, The. See Don’t Talk of Septem¬ 
ber. 

Isle of Beauty. 

Mistletoe Bough, The. 

My Dejeuner h la Fourchette. 

Nightingale’s Song, The. See Round my own 
Pretty Rose. 

Oh! Where do Fairies Hide Their Heads? 

Out. See Out, John! 

Out, John! 

Pilot, The. 

Poppy, The. 

Reading a Tragedy. See Poppy, The. 

“Rose that all are praising, The.” 

Round my own Pretty Rose. 

She Wore a Wreath of Roses. 

To Helena. 

To My Wife. See To Helena. 

We Met. 

Won’t You? 

Baylor, Frances Courtenay. See Barnum, Mrs. 

Frances Courtenay [Bayi.or). 

Beach, H. Prescott.—Hither, Meadow Gossip, Tell 
Me! 

Beach, Seth Curtis.—Inspiration of the Spirit, The. 
Beaconsfield, B: Disraeli, Earl of. —Coningsby. 

Hebrew Race, The. See Coningsby. 

Jerusalem by Moonlight. See Tancred. 

Popanilla on Man. See Voyage of Captain Popa- 
nilla, The. 

Tancred. 

Voyage of Captain Popanilla, The. 

Wellington. 

Beal, W: Jas.—Convention of Michigan Trees, A. 
Bean, Helen Mar.—Pet and Bijou. 

Beard, G: P.—Farmer’s Life, The. 

Beattie, Jas.—Benevolence. (?) 

Epitaph, An. See Epitaph Intended for Him¬ 
self. 

Epitaph Intended for Himself. 

Hermit, The. 

Law. See Wolf and Shepherds, The. 

Lawyers and the Laws. See Wolf and Shepherds, 
The. 

Life beyond the Tomb. See Minstrel, The. 
Minstrel, The: or, The Progress of Genius. 
Morning. See Minstrel, The. 

Nature. See Minstrel, The. 

Night. See Hermit, The. 

Reasons for Humility. See Minstrel, The. 

Summer Morn, A. See Minstrel, The. 

Wolf and Shepherds, The. 

♦Selections generally attributed 


Beattie, W:—Evening Hymn of the Alpine Shepherds. 

Beatty, Jamie.—Violet, The. ( Wr. at.) See Taylor, 
Jane. 

Beatty, Pakenham T:—Charles Lamb. 

Death of Hampden, The. 

To Thine Own Self be True. 

When Will Love Come? 

Beauchamp, Ellen.—Arbor Day March. 

Hymn in Praise of the Natural World, A. 

Song of Dedication. 

Beaufoy, H: (?)—-On Parliamentary Innovations. 

♦Beaumont. Fs.. and Fletcher, J:—Aspatia’s Song. (F.) 
See Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Away, Delights! See Captain, The. 

Beauty Clear and Fair. (F.) See Elder Brother, 

' The. 

Ben Jonson. (B.) See Letter to Ben Jonson. 

Bloody Brother, The. (F.) 

Bonduca. 

Bridal Song. See Little French Lawyer, The. 

Bridal Song. See also Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Bridal Song, A. (F.) See also Two Noble Kins¬ 
men, The. 

Captain, The. 

Care-charming Sleep. (F.) See Valentinian. 

Charm, The. (F.) See Little French Lawyer, The. 

Country Scenes in Old Days. (F.) See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The. 

Daybreak. (F.) See Faithful Shepherdess, The. 

Dirge: “Lay a garland on my hearse.” (F.) See 
Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Dirge of the Three Queens. (F.) See Two Noble 
Kinsmen, The. 

Drink To-day. (F.) Nee Bloody Brother, The. 

Elder Brother, The. 

Elegy on the Death of Ladv Penelope Clifton, An. 

Evening. (F.) Nee Faithful Shepherdess, The. 

Evening Song. (F.) See Faithful Shepherdess’ 
The. 

Faithful Shepherdess, The. (F.) 

False One, The. 

Folding of the Flocks. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The. 

Folding the Flocks. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The. 

God Lyaeus. (F.) See Valentinian. _ 

Hear, ye Ladies. (F.) See Valentinian. 

Hence, All Ye Vain Delights. (F.) See Nice 
Valour, The. 

Honest Man’s Fortune, An. (F.) See Upon an 
Honest Man’s Fortune. 

Hymn to Pan. (F.) See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The. 

In Westminster Abbey. (B.) See On the Tombs 
in Westminster. 

Invocation to Sleep. (F.) See Valentinian. 

Invocation to Sleep. (F.) See also Woman- 
hstcr T'hc 

Joy of Battle, The. IF.) See Mad Lover, The. 

Lady Penelope Clifton. See Elegy on the Death 
of Lady Penelope Clifton, An. 

"Lay a garland on my hearse.” (F.) See Maid’s 
Tragedy, The. 

Letter to Ben Jonson. 

Life of Man, The. (B.— wr. at.) See On the Life 
of Man. 

Lines on the Tombs in Westminster. See On the 
Tombs in Westminster. 

Little French Lawyer, The. 

Look Out, Bright Eyes. See False One, The. 

Love at First Sight. See Philaster. 

Love’s Emblems. (F.) Nee Valentinian. 

Mad Lover, The. 

Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Marriage Hymn. (F.) See Two Noble Kinsmen, 
The. 

Masque of the Gentlemen of Grey’s Inn and the 
Inner Temple, A. 

Melancfhlolia. (F.) See Nice Valour, The. 

Melancholy. (F.) See Nice Valour, The. 

Misfortune. 

Morning. (F.) See Faithful Shepherdess, The. 

Nice Valour, The. (F.) 

On the Life of Man. (B.— wr. at.) 

On the Tombs in Westminster. (B.) 

On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey. (B.) See 
On the Tombs in Westminster. 

Orpheus. ( Sometimes at.) See King Henry VIII. 
W: Shakespeare. 

Our Acts Our Angels Are. (F.) See Upon an 
Honest Man’s Fortune. 

Philaster. 


to Beaumont and Fletcher separately are marked respectively (B.) or (F.). 

395 




Beaumont 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Beaumont, Fs., and Fletcher, J. {continued). 

Poet’s Mood, The. See Nice Valour, The. 

Power of Love, The. (F.) 

Priest’s Evening Song, The. (F.) See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The. 

Priest’s Morning Song, The. (F.) See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The. 

Queen of Corinth, The. (F.) 

River God to Amoret, The. (F.) See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The. 

Satyr, The. (F.) See Faithful Shepherdess, The. 
Satvr’s Service, The. (F.) See Faithful Shep- 
nerdess, The. 

Serenade: “Dearest, do not delay me.” (F.) See 
Spanish Curate, The. 

Sleep. (F.) See Woman-hater, The. 
Slumber-song. (F.) See Valentinian. 

Song: “Do not fear to put thy feet.” (F.) See 
Faithful Shepherdess, The. 

Song:—“Fain would I wake you, sweet, but fear.” 

See Wit at Several Weapons. 

Song: “Hence all you Vain Delights.” See Nice 
Valour, The. 

Song: “Lay a garland on my hearse.” (F.) See 
Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Song: “Shake off your heavy trance.” See Masque 
of the Gentlemen of Grey’s Inn and the Inner 
Temple, A. 

Song from “Valentinian.” (F.) See Valentinian. 
Song in the Wood. See Little French Lawyer, 
The. 

Song of Love Despairing and Prepared to Die. 
See Captain, The. 

Song to Bacchus. (F.) See Valentinian. 

Spanish Curate, The. 

Speak, Love! (F.) See Spanish Curate, The. 
Spring. (F.) See Valentinian. 

Spring-time and Love. (F.) See Valentinian. 
Sweetest Melancholy. (F.) See Nice Valour, The. 
Take, O Take Those Lips Away. (F.) See 
Bloody Brother. The. 

To Angelina. See Elder Brother, The. 

To His Sleeping Mistress. See Women Pleased. 

To My Mistress’s Eyes. See Women Pleased. 

To Pan. (F.) See Faithful Shepherdess, The. 

To the Blest Evanthe. (F.) See Wife for a 
Month, A. 

To Venus. See Mad Lover, The. 

Two Noble Kinsmen, The. (Shakespeare and F.) 
Unfolding the Flocks. (F.) See Valentinian. 
Upon an Honest Man’s Fortune. (F.) 
Valentinian. 

Wake, Gently Wake. See Wit at Several Weapons. 
Wedding Song. See Maid’s Tragedy, The. 

Weeo no More. See Queen of Corinth, The. 

Wife for a Month, A. 

Wit at Several Weapons. 

Woman-hater, The. 

Women Pleased. (?) 

Beaumont. Irwin.—Ride from Ghent to Aix, The. 
(Parody.) 

Beaumont, Sir J:—Of his Dear Son, Gervase. See On 
My Dear Son, Gervase Beaumont. 

On [or of] My Dear Son, Gervase Beaumont. 

Time. 

Becker, Charlotte.—Charlotte Bronte. 

Becket. Gilbert Abbott a.—Holiday Task, A. ( Also 
at. to Barclay Philips.) 

Polka Lyric. See Holiday Task, A. 

Becquer. Gustave.—Too Late. 

Beckwith, Rev. G. C.—Spirit of the Age Adverse Jto 
War, The. 

Beddoes. T: Lovell.—Amala’s Bridal Song. See 
Death’s Jest Book. 

Athulf’s Death Song. See Death’s Jest Book. 
Athulf’s Song. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Ballad of Human Life. 

Bridal Song and Dirge. See Death’s Jest Book. 
Bride’s Tragedy, The. 

Death’s Jest Book. 

Dirge: “If thou wilt ease thine heart.” See Death’s 
Jest Book. 

Dirge for Wolfram. See Death’s Jest Book. 
Dream-pedlary. 

Hesperus Sings. See Bride’s Tragedy, The. 
Hesperus’ Song. See Bride’s Tragedy, The. 

How Many Times. See Torrismond. 

If Thou Wilt Ease Thine Heart. See Death’s Jest 
Book. 

In a Garden by Moonlight. See Torrismond. 
Lo-i'e Goes a-Hawking. See Bride’s Tragedy, The. 
Sailor’s Song. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Sea. The. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Second Brother, The. 


Beddoes, T: Lovell ( continued). 

Second Dirge. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Song: "How many times do I love thee, dear?” 
See Torrismond. 

Song: “My goblet’s golden lips are dry.” • 

Song: “Strewnot earth,” etc. SeeSecond Brother, 
The. 

Song: “Who is the baby, that doth lie.” See 
Bride’s Tragedy, The. 

Song, by Two Voices. See Bride’s Tragedy, The. 
Song from the Ship. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Song of the Stygian Naiades. 

Song from “Torrismond.” See Torrismond. 

To Sea! See Death’s Jest Book. 

To Sea, to Sea! See Death’s Jest Book. 
Torrismond. 

Wolfram’s Dirge. See Death s Jest Book. 
Wolfram’s Song. See Death’s Jest Book. 

Bede, Cuthbert.—-In Immemoriam. 

Bedinger, H.—Eagle’s Flight, An. 

Beebe, Blanche B.—Scandal on the Brain. 

Beecher, H: Ward.—Abraham Lincoln. 

Abraham Lincoln, the Martyr. See Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Address at the Raising of the UnionFlag over Fort 
Sumter. 

Against a Compromise of Principle. 

American Flag, The. See National Flag, The. 
“And while, some books, like steps, are left be¬ 
hind us.” 

Beecher on Eggs. 

’Biah Cathcart’s Proposal. See Norwood. 
Blindness. 

“Book is good company, A.” 

Books. 

Coming and Going. See Norwood. 

Compromise of Principle. See Against a Compro¬ 
mise of Principle. 

“Could I obtain a hearing of the young men and 
young women who thus seek the city.” 

Cynic, The. See Portrait Gallery. 

Day of Thanksgiving, The. See Family as an 
American Institution, The. 

Death of Lincoln, The. See Abraham Lincoln. 
Death of Our Almanac, The. 

Demagogue, The. See Portrait Gallery. 

Discourse on Trees, A. See Walk among Trees, A. 
Dishonest Politician, The. See Portrait Gallery. 
Easter Morning. 

England against War. 

Eulogy on General Grant. 

Family as an American Institution, The. 

Family Government. See Plain and Pleasant 
Talks about Fruits, Flowers, and Farming. 
“First in our regard, as it is first in the whole no¬ 
bility of trees.” See Walk among Trees, A. 
Funeral Oration on Abraham Lincoln. See Abra¬ 
ham Lincoln. 

“Go to Work! Nothing is more salutary to the 
human soul.” 

God the Father. 

God’s Love to Man. 

“Health is nerve and nerve is man.” 

“Hearts more or less, I suppose we have.” 
Honored Dead, The. See Tribute to our Hon¬ 
ored Dead,A. 

Horace Greeley. 

“I cannot endure the thought that Christ’s chil¬ 
dren should be less free.” 

Invisible Heroes, The. See Tribute to our Hon¬ 
ored Dead, A. 

Joys and Sorrows of Eggs. 

Little Leaf, The. See Norwood. 

Loss of the Arctic. 

Love of Trees, The. See Walk among Trees, A. * 
Martyr and the Conqueror, The. See Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Martyr President, The. See Abraham Lincoln. 
Meaning of the Flag, The. See National Flag, The. 
Modern Facilities for Evangelizing the World. 
Month of Apple Blossoms, The. 

Moral Effects of Intemperance. 

Motion of the Leaves, The. See Walk among 
Trees, A. 

National Flag, The. 

National Morality. 

Nation’s Duty to Slavery, The. 

Nature Designed for Our Enjoyment. See Popu¬ 
lar Amusements. 

Nature of Christ, The. 

North and the African, The. See Nation’s Duty 
to Slavery, The. 

Norwood. 

Oratory. 


396 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Bennett 


Beecher, H: Ward ( continued). 

Our Flag. See National Flag, The. 

Our Honored Dead. See Tribute to our Honored 
Dead, A. 

Our National Flag. See National Flag, The. 

Past Perils and the Perils of To-day. 

Plain and Pleasant Talks about Fruits, Flowers, 
and Farming. 

Popular Amusements. 

Portrait Gallery. 

Public Dishonesty. See Twelve Causes of Dis¬ 
honesty. 

Raising the Flag at Sumpter. See Address at the 
Raising of the Union Flag over Fort Sumter. 
Sepulcher in the Garden. The. 

Sermon on the Death of Abraham Lincoln. See 
Abraham Lincoln. 

Soul-building. 

Summer Rain. 

Suppressed Repudiation. See Past Perils and the 
Perils of To-day. 

Thanksgiving Day. See Family as an American 
Institution, The. 

Tommy Taft. See Norwood. 

Tribute to our Honored Dead, A. 

Twelve Causes of Dishonesty. 

Twenty-third Psalm, The. 

Walk among Trees, A. 

Wendell Phillips. 

What a Little Leaf Said. See Norwood. 

“Work oroceeds without intermission, The.” See 
Soul-building. 

“You think that one hour buries another.” See 
Soul-building. 

Beecher, Louise I.—Nature of Man, The. 

Beecher, Lyman.—Appeal to Young Men. 

East and the West One. The. 

Lyman Beecher’s First Home. 

Traffic in Ardent Spirits. 

"What is hell but an expression of God’s infinite 
abhorrence of sin.” 

Beecher, T: K.—Brother Anderson. See Brother An¬ 
derson’s Sermon. 

Brother Anderson’s Sermon. 

Beeching. H: C:—Bicycling Song. 

Boy’s Prayer, A. See Prayers. 

Going Down Hill on a Bicycle. See Bicycling 
Song. 

Knowledge after Death. 

Love Unreturned. 

Prayers. 

Summer Day, A. 

To My Totem. 

Beed. Eve J.—Golden Rod, The. 

Beede, C: Gould.—Maniac, The. 

Beers, Mrs. Ethelinda [Eliot] (“Ethel Lynn”).—All 
Quiet along the Potomac. See Picket Guard, 
The. 

Boys, The. 

Conflicting Claims. 

Doorway of Sleep, The. 

Kept In. 

Not One to Spare. See Which Shall it Be? 
November Good-night, A. 

Old Fashioned Flowers. 

On the Shores of Tennessee. 

Our Folks. 

Picket Guard, The. (Wr. at. to Lamar Fontaine.) 
Return of the Hillside Legion. 

Which. See Which Shall it Be? 

Which Shall it Be? 

Beers, H: Augustin.—-Biftek aux Champignons. 
Carcamon. 

Ecce in Deserto. 

On a Miniature. 

Posthumous. 

Psyche. 

Singer of One Song, The. 

Ye Laye of ye Woodpeckore. 

Begbie. Harold.—Grounds of the Terrible. 

Behn. Mrs. Aphra.—Abdelazer; or. The Moor’s Re¬ 
venge. 

Dream. The. 

Libertine, The. 

On the Death of Waller. 

Song: “Love in Fantastic Triumph sate.” See 
Abdelazer: or, The Moor’s Revenge. 

Behrends, Rev. Adolphus Julius Frd’k.—Place of the 
Imagination in the Art of Expression, The. 
Belasco, David.—Sue an’ Me. 

Belaw, Americus Wellington. See Bella w, Americus 
Wellington. 

Belford,-.—Dread of Death, The. 


Belgravia. —Episode in the Life of Miss Tebitha Tre- 
noodle. 

Belknap, Hon. C. E.—Little Black Phil. 

Bell, A. W.—Were it Only Now. 

“Bell, Acton.”— See Bronte, Anne. 

Bell, Alex. Melville.—Ask Mamma. 

Dutchman in England, A. 

Helpmate, A. 

Orator’s First Speech in Parliament, An. 

War’s End. 

Bell. C: A.—Tim Twinkleton’s Twins 
“Bell, Currer.” See Bronte, Charlotte. 

“Bell, Ellis.” See Bronte, Emily. 

Bell, Mrs. Hattie F.—Trundle-bed Treasures. 

Bell, H: Glasford.—Mary Queen of Scots. 

Uncle, The. 

Bell, Ida Trafford.—Offering for Cuba, An. 

Bell, Mackenzie.—At Stratford-on-Avon. 

At the Grave of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. 

Spring’s Immortality. 

Bell, Maurice.—Alabama, The. 

Men, The. 

Bell, Olive.—Outcast’s Dream, The. 

Bell, Rob’t Mowry.—For Cuba. 

Second Volume, The. 

Tutelage, The. 

Bellamy, Mrs. Blanche [Wilder], and Goodwin, Mrs. 
Maud [Wilder].—Ear of Corn, The. (TV.) 

Idle Magnet, The. (TV.) 

Nine Muses, The. 

Seven Wonders of the World, The. 

To the Fir-tree. (Tr.) ' 

Woodpecker and the Dove, The. (Tr.) 

Bellamy, Eliz. W.—Baby Logic. 

Baby’s Logic. See Baby Logic. 

Tilly Bones. 

Bellaw [wr. Belaw], Americus Wellington.—Christmas 
Eve. 

Christmas-tide. See Christmas Eve. 

Conjugal Conjugations. 

Husking Song. 

Jim. 

Knittin’ at th’ Stockin’. 

Mitten. The. 

Song without Music. 

Belloc, Hilaire.—“Bad Child’s Book of Beasts, The,” 
Introduction to. 

Bison, The. 

Elephant, The. 

Frog, The. 

Lion. The. 

Ode to a Rhinoceros. 

Python, The. 

Yak, The. 

Bellows, H: Whitney.—Public Speech. 

Bryant, Extract Concerning. 

Bellows, Isabel Frances.—Some of the Children. 
Bellows, J. A.—Miss Higginson’s Will. 

Bellows, J. D.—-Aunt Jemima’s Money. 

Benedict, Georgia.—“Queen Anne’s Lace.” 

Benedict, Hester A.—Good-night. 

If Only You Were Here. 

Only a Woman. 

Satisfied. 

Benedict, Prof. W. H. ( Arr .)—Bouquet of Flowers, A. 
Choosing a Tree. 

Dedicatory Exercises. 

Greenwood Greetings. 

Grove of Curious Trees, A. 

Lessons from Nature about Trees. 

Plea of the Trees, The. 

Voices of the Trees. 

Bengough. J: Wilson.—Constitution. 

Sir John A. MacDonald. 

Benham. Ida W.—Little Brown Seed in the Furrow, 
The. 

Benjamin, C: L.—Snow-flakes. 

Benjamin, C: I.., and Sutton, G: D.—Flag that Has 
never Known Defeat, The. 

Benjamin, Park.—Alexander Taming Bucephalus. 
Old Sexton, The. 

Press On. 

Sexton, The. Sec Old Sexton, The. 

Stormy Petrel, The. 

Benners, W: J., Jr.—Gloria Bell. 

Old Letters. 

Bennett, Clarence.—Whip-poor-Will. 

Bennett, H:—St. Patrick was a Gentleman. 

Bennett, H: Holcomb.—Flag Goes By, The. 

Bennett, J: [or Jack].—Dead Pussy-cat, The. 

God Bless You, Dear, To-day! 

Her Answer. 

How the Church was Built at Kehoe’s Bar. 


397 





Bennett 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Bennett J: [or Jack] ( continued ). 

Master Sky-lark. 

Sky-lark’s Song, The. See Master Sky-lark. 

Song of the Hunt, The. See Master Sky-lark. 
“Thust Only a Dweam.” 

Ye Olde Tyme Tayle of Ye Knighte, Ye Yeomanne, 
and Ye Faire Damosel. 

Bennett, Julia M.—Cup of Water, A. 

Bennett, Nathaniel.—Prospects of California, The. 
Bennett, Dr. S. F.—Memorial Day Poem. 

Soldier’s Re-union. 

Bennett, W: Cox.—Baby May. 

Baby’s Shoes. 

Be Mine, and I will Give Thy Name. 

Cradle Songs. (2) 

From India. 

Invocation to Rain in Summer. See Summer 
Invocation. 

My Roses Blossom the Whole Year Round. 

Rain in Summer. See Summer Invocation. 
Summer Invocation. 

To a Cricket. 

To the Chrysanthemum. 

Wile’s Appeal, The. 

Winter Song, A. 

Worn Wedding-ring, The. 

Bennoch, Fs.—My Ain Wife. 

My Books. 

Small Things. 

Beno.—Young Statesman, The. 

Bensel, Jas. Berry.—Ahmed. 

At the Last. 

February. 

Lines to a Friend. 

One Day. 

To John Boyle O’Reilly. 

Benson, Arthur Christopher.—After Construing. 
English Shell, An. 

Knapweed. 

Phoenix, The. 

Realism. 

Benson, L. L.—“Come unto Me.” 

Bentley’s Miscellany. —Death of Dr. Morrison, The 
Temptations of St. Anthony. 

Benton, J. B.—First Snow, The. 

Benton, Joel.—Abraham Lincoln. 

At Chappaqua. 

December. 

Scarlet Tanager, The. 

Benton, Myron B.—Midsummer Invitation. 

Mowers, The. 

“There is One Spot for which My Soul will Yearn.” 
B^ranger, Pierre Jean de.—-King of Yvetot, The. 
Obsequies of David the Painter. 

Popular Recollections of Bonaparte. 

She is So Pretty. 

Song of the Cossack to his Horse,The. 

Bergen, Helen Corinne.—Even in Death. 

Bergengren, Ralph Wilhelm.—Conversion, The. 
Berkeley, Rt. Rev. G:—America. See On the Pros¬ 
pect of Planting Arts and Learning in America. 
American Destiny. See On the Prospect of 
Planting Arts and Learning in America. 
Old World and the New, The. See On the Pros¬ 
pect of Planting Arts and Learning in Amer¬ 
ica. 

On the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learn¬ 
ing in America. 

Verse: “Westward the star of empire.” See On 
the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learn¬ 
ing in America. 

Westward the Course of Empire. See On the 
Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in 
America. 

Berlyn, Alfred.—Avenged! 

Bernard of Cluny, or of Morlaix.—Celestial Country, 
The. See De Contemptu Mundi. 

De Contemptu Mundi. 

Jerusalem the Golden. See De Contemptu Mundi. 
Bernhardt, Sarah.—Christmas Repentance, A. (Re- 
pentir de Noel.) 

Berquin, Arnaud.—Sword, The. 

Berry, Eliz.—Forever. 

Berte, Hal.—Spring Poet, The. 

Besant, Sir Walter.—To Daphne. 

Bessemeres, J.—Joy of Incompleteness, The. 

Best, C:—Sonnet of the Moon, A. 

Best, Eva.—Dog and the Tramp, The, 

Don’t Tell. 

Sorra the Day. 

Best, Susie M.—Decoration Day. 

Herein is Love. 

His Idea of it. 

Hymn for America, A. 


Bethune, G: Washington.—Blessed Name, The. 
Fourth of July. 

Future Empire of Our Language. 

Future of Our Language, The. See Future Em¬ 
pire of Our Language. 

Hymn to Night. 

“1 think a great many professors of religion are 
.just like backgammon boards.” 

It is not Death to Die. 

Bethune, J:—Hymn of the Churchyard. 

Bettersworth,-.—Bill the Engineer. 

Betts, Craven Langstroth.—Bayard Taylor. 

Byron. 

Chaucer. 

Don Quixote. 

Dry den. 

Emerson. 

Hollyhocks, The. 

In Memorian. 

Keats. 

Longfellow. 

Milton. 

Pope. 

Shelley. 

Spenser. 

Tasso. 

To the Moonflower. 

Wordsworth. 

Beveridge, Alfred J.—America’s Mission. 

Bevier, Ella.—Photograph Album, The. 

Beza, Theodore.—Bookworm, The. 

Bible. —Acts of the Apostles. 

Balaam’s Parables. See Numbers. 

Balaam’s Prophecy in Behalf of Isarel. See 
Numbers. 

Be not Deceived. See Galatians. 

Beatitudes, The. See St. Matthew. 

“Bless the Lord, O my soul.” See Psalms of 
David. 

Charity. See First Corinthians. 

David and Goliath. See First Samuel. 

Despoiler Doomed, The. See Isaiah. 
Deuteronomy. 

Ecclesiastes. 

Elijah and the Prophets of Baal. See First 
Kings. 

Exhortation to Praise God. See Psalms of David. 
Exodus. 

First Civil Code. The, See Deuteronomy. 

First Constitution, The. See Exodus. 

First Corinthians. 

First Kings. 

First Samuel. 

First Timothy. 

Galatians. 

Genesis. 

Godliness with Contentment. See First Tim¬ 
othy. 

Golden Whatsoevers. See Philippians. 

Good Tidings. See Saint Luke. 

Great Commandments, The. See Deuteronomy. 
Ho, Every One that Thirsteth. See Isaiah. 

Holy One, The. See Isaiah. 

Isaiah. 

Job. 

Joyful Messenger, The. See Isaiah. 

King of Glory, The. See Psalms of David. 
Knowledge and Wisdom. See Job. 

Nation’s Strength, A. See Psalms of David. 
Numbers. 

“O come, let us sing unto the Lord.” See Psalms 
of David. 

Of Idle Words. See Saint Matthew. 
Omnipotence of Jehovah. See Job. 

Paul at Athens. See Acts of the Apostles. 

Paul before King Agrippa. See Acts of the Apos¬ 
tles. 

Paul’s Defence before Agrippa. See Acts of 
the Apostles. 

Paul’s Defence before Festus and Agrippa. See 
Acts of the Apostles. 

Philippians. 

Power of the Tongue. The. See Saint James. 
Preventive “No”, A. See Proverbs. 

Prodigal Son, The. See Saint Luke. 

Proverbs. 

Psalms of David. 

Recitations from the Bible. See Psalms of 
David. 

Remember now Thy Creator. See Ecclesiastes. 
Revelation, XXII. 

Reverence. See Psalms of David. 

Saint James. 

Saint Luke. 


398 








AUTHOR INDEX 


Blake 


Bible ( continued ). 

Saint Matthew. 

Saul and Jonathan. See Second Samuel. 
Scripture Etchings for Arbor Day. 

Second Samuel. 

Solomon, the Wise King. See Proverbs. 

Song of Israel. See Exodus. 

Song of Moses. See Exodus. 

Song of Praise, A. See Psalms of David. 

Song of Solomon. 

Spring is Coming. See Song of Solomon. 

Ten Commandments, The. See Exodus. 
Thirteenth Chapter of First Corinthians. See 
First Corinthians. 

Tongue, The. See Saint James. 

Tree of Life, The. See Genesis. 

True Wisdom. See Job. 

Trust in God. See Saint Matthew. 

Twenty-third Psalm, The. See Psalms of David. 
Voice in the Wilderness, The. See Isaiah. 

Woe Follows ’Wickedness. See Isaiah. 

Bible, G: P.—Little Dorothy’s Sayings. 

Bice, H. H.—Heart’s Pictures, The. 

Bickerstaffe. I:—There was a Jolly Miller. 

Biddles, Adelaide.—Flight of the Gods, The. 
Bidwell. Marg. J.—How the Revival Came. 

Licensed to Sell; or, Little Blossom. 

Bierce, Ambrose.—Another Way. 

Bride, The. 

Creation. 

Death of Grant, The. 

Montefiore. 

Presentiment. 

T. A. H. 

Bigelow, J:—Bryant, Extract Concerning. 

Bigelow, Walter Storrs.—Poet’s Morn, The. 

Bigg, Louisa.—Child is Father to the Man. The. 
Biggart, Mabelle B.—Erl-Konig, The. (Arr.) .See 
Goethe, Johann W. von. 

"Billings, Josh.” See Shaw, H: 

Bingham, C. Clifton.—When. 

Bingham, C: D.—Building of the Barn, The. 

Too Old for Father’s Kisses. 

Bingham, Mrs. H. B.—Good-morning. 

Bingham, J: A.—Webster the Successor of Washing¬ 
ton. 

Bingham, Ralph.—That Whistle Saved My Life, -r 
Why Uncle Ben Back-slid. 

Binney, Horace.—Responsibilities of a Recommenda¬ 
tion of War. 

Supreme Court of the United States, The. 
Binyon, Laurence.—Invocation to Youth. 

O World, be Nobler. 

Trafalgar Square. 

Birch, Frank.—“War is dread when battle shock and 
fierce affray.” 

Birckhead, W: Hunter.—Aspiration. 

Bird, Rob’t Montgomery.—Fairy Folk, The. 

Spartacus and Jovius. (?) 

Birdseye, G:—Fair Exchange. A. 

Hindoo Died, A. See Hindoo’s Death, The. 
Hindoo’s Death, The. 

Hindoo’s Paradise, The. See Hindoo’s Death, 
The. 

How Tom Saved the Train. 

June 21st. 

Miser’s will. The. 

Old Valentine, An. 

Paradise. See Hindoo’s Death, The. 
Policeman’s Story, The. 

Too Much of It. 

Bisbee, Susan A.—Aristarchus Studies Elocution. 
Bishop, Blanche.—Bride o’ the Sun, The. 

Christmas Morn. 

Winter Flowers. 

Bishop, Julia Truitt.—Robert. 

Strategy of Dave, The. 

Bishop, S:—To Mary. 

Bismarck, Prince Otto von.—Orator, The. 

Bisnham, G. F., Jr.—Realm of Love, The. 

Bittinger, J. B.—“‘Froebelism,’or the Kindergarten 
system of education.” 

“In the Mammoth Cave.” etc. 

“Bizarre.’’ —Tale of the Big Snow, A. 

Bjornson. Bjbrnstjerne.—-Tree, The. 

Black, Frank Swett.—Scholar and the State, The. 
Black, W:—Adam O’Fintry. See Wise Women of 
Inverness, The. 

MacLeod of Dare, Sel. fr. 

Wise Women of Inverness, The. 

Blackadder, E:—Annapolis Royal. 

Blackburn, Grace.—Twilight. 

Blackburn, T;—Easter Hymn, An. 

Blacker, Lt.-Col. Valentine (?).—Oliver’s Advice. 


Black Hawk.—Speech of Black Hawk. 

Blackie, J: Stuart.—Beautiful World. 

Emigrant Lassie, The. 

Lay of the Brave Cameron, The. 

Musical Frogs, The. 

My Bath. 

Royal Saint, The. 

To the Memory of Sydney Dobell. 

Workingman’s Song, The. 

Blackmore, R: Doddridge.—Death of Carver Doone. 
See Lorna Doone. 

Harvest Song, A. See Lorna Doone. 

Lorna Doone. 

October Morning, An. See Lorna Doone. 

Reunited Love. 

Snow-storm, The. See Lorna Doone. 

“Yes.” 

Blackstone, Sir W:—Lawyer’s Farewell to His Muse, 
The. 

Blackwood’s Magazine. —Autumn. 

Dramatic Styles. 

F ragments. 

“Great, indeed is the task assigned to woman.” 

Little Rose. 

Optimism. 

Pessimism. 

Roger and Dolly. 

“These loving eyes may never more behold 
thee.” 

Victim of Reform, The. 

What Is Life? 

Blades and Flowers. —Pigeon House, The. 

Blaikie, J: Arthur.—Absence. 

Love’s Secret Name. 

Soldier, A. 

Song: “In thy white bosom love is laid.” 

Blaine, Jas. Gillespie.—American Shipbuilding. See 
Encouragement to American Ship-building and 
the Revival of American Commerce on the 
Ocean. 

Amnesty of Jefferson Davis, The. See Shall 
Jefferson Davis be Restored to Full Citizen¬ 
ship? 

Can the Country Sustain the Expense of the 
War and Pay the Debt which it will Involve? 

Chinese Immigration [to the Pacific Slope]. 

Death of Garfield. See Memorial Address on the 
Life and Character of James A. Garfield. 

Elements of National Wealth, The. See Can the 
Country Sustain the Expense of the War and 
Pay the Debt which it will Involve? 

Encouragement to American Ship-building and 
the Revival of American Commerce on the 
Ocean. 

Eulogy on Garfield. See Memorial Address on the 
Life and Character of James A. Garfield. 

Eulogy on President Garfield. See Memorial 
Address on the Life and Character of James A. 
Garfield. 

Garfield’s Early Life. See Memorial Address on 
the Life and Character of James A. Garfield. 

Independence Day. 

Memorial Address on the Life and Character of 
James A. Garfield. 

Memorial Services in Honor of General Grant 
in Augusta. Maine, Aug. 8. 1885. 

New England Character. See Speech at the 
Dinner of the New England Society of New 
York. 

Oration on James A. Garfield. See Memorial 
Address on the Life and Character of James A. 
Garfield. 

Permanence of Grant’s Fame, The. See Memo¬ 
rial Services in Honor of General Grant. 

Shall Jefferson Davis be Restored to Full Citizen¬ 
ship’? 

Speech at the Dinner of the New England So¬ 
ciety of New York. 

Blair, Dr. Hugh.—Difference between Taste and 
Genius. 

Taste and Genius. See Difference between Taste 
and Genius. 

Blair, Rob’t.—Grave, The. 

Omnes Eodem Cogimur. See Grave, The. 

Pride. See Grave, The. 

Resurrection. The. See Grave, The. 

Self-murder. See Grave, The. 

Blaisdell, Hosea Q.—Sometime. 

Blake, Emilia Aylmer.—Alice Ayres. 

Glacier-bed, The. 

Juryman’s Story, A. 

Blake, H. G. — Friar’s Christmas, The. 

Blake, J. K.—Flight of Time, The. 

Blake, Jas. Vila.—Wedded. 





Blake 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Blake, Mary Eliz.—-Dawning o’ the Year, The. 
Equinoctial, The. 

Women of the Revolution. 

Blake, Nelson.—Centennial Speech. 

Blake, W:—Ah, Sunflower. 

“And I made a rural pen.” See Introduction 
to “Songs of Innocence.” 

Angel, The. 

Beauty of Terror, The. See Tiger, The. 

Charity Children at St. Paul’s. See Holy Thurs¬ 
day. 

Child and the Piper, The. See Introduction to 
“Songs of Innocence.” 

Chimney-sweeper, The. 

Cradle Song. 

Echoing Green, The. 

Fair Eleanor. 

Garden of Love, The 

Hear the Voice. See Introduction to “Songs of 
Experience.” 

Holy Thursday. 

I Heard an Angel. See Two Songs, The. 

Infant Joy. 

Introduction to “Songs of Experience.” 
Introduction to “Songs of Innocence.” 

Lamb, The. 

Laughing Song[, A]. 

Little Black Boy, The. 

Little»Boy Lost, A. 

Little Lamb. See Lamb, The. 

Little Vagabond, The. 

Love’s Secret. 

Mad Song. 

My Silks and Fine Array. See Song: “My silks,” 
etc. 

Night. 

Nurse’s Song. 

On Another’s Sorrow. 

Orthodoxy. See Little Boy Lost, A. 

Piper, The. 

Piping down the Valleys Wild. See Introduc¬ 
tion to “Songs of Innocence.” 

Reeds of Innocence. See Introduction to “Songs 
of Innocence.” 

Shepherd, The. 

Song: “How sweet I roamed from field to field.” 
Song: “Memory, hither come.” 

Song: “My silks and fine array.” 

Sun Descending, The. See Night. 

Sunflower, The. See Ah, Sunflower. 

Tiger, The. 

To Spring. 

To the Evening Star. 

To the Muses. 

Two Songs, The. 

Blakeslee, Mrs. H. C.—Start True. 

Blamire, Susanna.—Nabob, The. 

Siller Croun, The. 

What Ails this Heart o’ Mine? 

Blanchard, Amy Ella.—Kittyboy’s Christmas. 

Rest. 

Blanchard, Laman.—Art of Book-keeping, The. 
( Another vers. at. to T: Hood.) 

False Love and True Logic. 

Hidden Joys. 

Mother’s Hope, The. 

Nell Gwynne’s Looking-glass. 

Ode to the Human Heart. 

Blanchard, Mary E.—Glance Backward, A. 

Bland, Mrs. Edith [Nesbit] {Mrs. Hubert Bland—“E. 
Nesbit”).—Absolution. 

Baby Seed Song. 

Ballad of a Bridal. 

Ballad of Splendid Silence, The. 

Child’s Song in Spring 
Message of the Dove, The. 

Monk’s Magnificat, The. 

See Singing of the Magnificat, The. 

On the Terrace. 

Singing of the Magnificat, The. 

Sleen, My Treasure. 

Trafalgar Day. 

Two Christmas Eves. 

Unofficial. 

Bland, Rob’t. (7V.) —Home. See Leonidas. 

Blanden, C: Granger.—Afterglow. 

Time May Steal the Dewy Bloom. 

Blatchford, P. L.—Vision of Handel, The. 

Bleakie, Rob’t.—Old Home and the New, The. 

Blew, W: J:—O Lord, Thy Wing Outspread. 

Blewett, Mrs. Jean.—At Quebec. 

Boy of the House, The. 

She just Keeps House for Me. 

Two Marys, The. 


Bleyer, J. Mount.—Death of Poe’s Wife, The. 
Bleyer, Willard Grosvenor.—Banjo Fiend, The. 

Miss Milly O’Naire. 

Blind, Mathilde.—Dead, The. 

Love in Exile, 

Love Trilogy, A. 

Blinkerhausen, Nathan.—Touching Appeal, A. 
Blinn, Mrs. Lucy Marion.—Dream Peddler, The. 
Land of Nod, The. 

Little Mary’s Wish. 

Nutting. 

Poorhouse Nan. 

Rizpah. 

Block, L: Jas.—Fate. 

Garden where there is no Winter, The. 
Tuberose. 

Work. 

Blodgett, Harriet F.—Days and the Year, The. 
Bloede, Gertrude (“Stuart Sterne”).—Angelo. 

My Father’s Child. 

Night after Night. 

Piero De Castiglione, Song from. 

Song of Manila, The. 

Soul, Wherefore Fret Thee? 

Blood, H: Ames.—Comrades. 

Fighting Parson, The. 

Last Visitor, The. 

Pro Mortuis. 

Shakespeare. 

Bloomfield, Rob’t.—Abner and the Widow Jones. 
Fakenham Ghost, The. 

Farmer’s Boy, The. 

Lambs at Play. 

Moonlight in Summer. 

.Soldier’s Return, The. 

Bloomingdale, C:, Jr.—Every-day Case, An. Sec Mr., 
Miss, and Mrs. 

Mr., Miss, and Mrs. 

Blount, Annie R.—Revenge. 

Under the Lamplight. 

Blount, E: A:, Jr.—Crew Poem, A. 

Stranger on the Stand, The. 

“When?” 

Blow, J. H.—Maiden Husking Corn, The. 

Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen.—Desolate City, The. 
Gibraltar. 

Laughter and Death. 

Oasis of Sidi Khaled, The. 

Old Squire, The. 

St. Valentine’s Day. 

Song:—“O fly not, Pleasure, pleasant-hearted 
Pleasure.” 

To Manon, Comparing her to a Falcon. 

To Manon, on his Fortune in Loving her. 

To Manon on Her Lightheartedness. 

To One Excusing his Poverty. 

To One who would Make a Confession. 

Two Highwaymen, The. 

With Esther. • 

Written at Florence. 

Boar, Arthur.—Breeding Lark. 

Boardman, Rev. H: A:—Our Responsibility as a Na¬ 
tion. 

“There is an apostolical succession.” 

“Bob O’Link.”—Almost a Tragedy. 

Brag. 

Caught in Their Own Trap. 

Close Shave, A. 

Epilogues. (3) 

Give and Take. 

Golden Rule, The. 

How to Woo. 

Johnny’s Advice. 

Prologues. (3) 

War of the Months, The. 

Which Shall it Be. 

Boccaccio, Giovanni, di Certaldo. — Decameron, 
The. 

Description of the Golden Age. See Falls of 
Princes. 

Falls of Princes. 

Patient Griselda. See Decameron, The. 

Of Three Girls and their Talk. 

Bocock, J: Paul.—Twinkles. 

Twins in the Turret, The. 

Washington. See Twinkles. 

Bogart, Eliz. (“Estelle”).—Chosen Tree, The. 

He Came too Late. 

Unknown Hero, An. 

Bohne, Mrs. -.—How Do I Look? 

Boker, G: H:—Attack of the Cumberland. See On 
Board the “Cumberland.” 

Ballad of Sir John Franklin, A. 

Battle of Lookout Mountain, The. 


400 







AUTHOR INDEX 


Bourdillon 


Boker, G: H: ( continued ). 

Before Vicksburg. 

Black Regiment, The. 

Count Candespina’s Standard. 

Countess Laura. 

Dirge for a [ter. the] Soldier. 

Elisha Kent Kane. 

Ferry, The. 

Francesca da Rimini. 

Hooker’s Across. 

On Board the “Cumberland.” 

Prince Adeb. 

Sir John Franklin. See Ballad of Sir John Franklin. 
Summer Morning. 

Sword-bearer, The. 

To America. 

To Andrew Jackson. 

To Bryant on His Birthday. 

To England. 

To Louis Napoleon. 

To My Lady. 

Upon the hill before Centreville. 

“Varuna,” The. 

Yearly Miracle of Spring, The. 

“Yield, madman, yield! Thy horse is down.” 
Boleyn, Anne.—Lament of Anne Boleyn on the Eve 
of Her Execution. 

Bolles, Frank.—Oven-bird, The. 

Bolton, C: Knowles.—Charybdis. 

Bolton, Edmund.—Palinode, A. 

Bolton, Rev. H. W.—Lincoln, the Tender-hearted. 
Our Constitution. 

Bolton, Mrs. Sarah [Knowles],—Early Work. 

Her Creed. 

Inevitable, The. 


Look Up. 



One Face. 

Bolton, Mrs. Sarah Tittle [Barritt].—Left on the 
Battle-field. 

News of a [or the] Day[, The]. 

Paddle Your Own Canoe. 

Bonaparte, Napoleon. See Napoleon I. 

Bonar, Horatius.—Abide with Us. 

All’s [wr. All] Well. 

“Bathed in unfallen sunlight.” See New Jeru¬ 
salem, The. 

Be True. 

Beyond the Smiling and the Weeping. See Little 
While, A. 

"Come unto Me.” See Voice from Galilee, The. 
Everlasting Memorial, The. 

Gain of Loss, The. 

God’s Hand. See Master’s Touch, The. 

Good Life, A. See He Liveth Long who Liveth 
Well. 

He Liveth Long who Liveth Well. 

Hold Thou Me. 

How to Live. See He Liveth Long who Liveth 
Well. 

How we Learn. 

Inner Calm, The. 

Life from Death. See Through Death to Life. 
Little While, A. 

Lost but Found. 

Master’s Touch, The. 

Meeting-place, The. 

“More in the garden grows than what is sown.” 
New Jerusalem, The. 

Not Very Far. 

Perseverance. See Useful Life, The. 

Price of Truth, The. See How we Learn. 
Through Death to Life. 

Thy Way, Not Mine. 

True Teaching. See Be True. 

Unto Thee. 

Useful Life, The. 

Voice from Galilee, The. 

Watch Night. 

We Shall Meet and Rest. See Meeting-place, 
The. 

Bonde, Dudley L:—Was I To Blame? 

Boner, J: H:—Light’ood Fire, The. 

Poe’s Cottage at Fordham. 

Remembrance. 

We Walked among the Whispering Pines. 
Bonfield, J. W.—Quackery. 

Widow Muggins—Her Opinions of Cooks, Suitors 
and Husbands, The. 

Bonney, C: Carroll.—“And the newspaper is also the 
great agency of progress in all reforms.” 
“Chief agency in the progress and development 
of the law. The.” 


Bonney, C: Carroll ( continued). 

“Law is more than a great river, rising in the 
far off mountains, The.” 

“Modern newspaper is not merely a private enter¬ 
prise, The.” 

Booth, Barton.—Song: “True as the needle to the pole.” 

Sweet are the Charms. 

Booth, Helen.—After Twenty Years. 

At the “Red Lion.” 

Electric Episode, An. 

Fifty-dollar Milliner’s Bill, A. 

Hostage, The. 

Little Sister of Mercy, The. 

Old Organ, The. 

Renyi. 

Rose of Avondale, The. 

Sword, The. 

Booth, Newton. —Love of Country. 

Borden, Anne.—How Paul Won His Goat. 

Borrow, G: (TV.)—Svend Vonved. 

Boss, J:—Wakin’ the Young Uns. 

Bossuet, Jaques Benigne.—Eulogium upon St. Paul. 
Boston Budget. —Saint Nick. 

Boston Courier. —Climax, The. 

Delsartean Plea, A. 

Rural Remonstrance, A. 

Worse than Marriage. 

Boston Cultivator. —Heart Ventures. See Sad Ventures. 
Sad Ventures. 

Sea Ventures. See Sad Ventures. 

Boston Gazette—" Agar,” The. 

Boston Globe. —Freckled-faced Girl, The. 

One Cent and Costs. 

Startling Revelations. See Freckled-faced Girl, 
The. 

What the Little Girl Said. See Freckled-faced 
Girl, The. 

When Sam’wel led the Singin’. 

Boston Herald.— Bachelor’s Pipe, A. 

Boston Journal. —American to His Mother, An. 

Boston Pilot. —Legend, A. See Monk’s Vision, The. 
Monk’s Vision, The. 

True Artist, The. See Monk’s Vision, The. 

Boston Post. —-Expecting to Get Even. 

Who Did It? 

Boston Transcript. —Bachelor Coat, The. 

Garfield at Chattanooga. 

Grandpa and Baby. 

Jimmie’s Prayer. 

Prayer for the Nation. 

So She Refused Him. 

Value of Education, The. 

Bostwick, Mrs. Helen Louise [Barron].—Drafted. 

How the Gates Came Ajar. (TV.) 

King’s Picture, The. 

Little Dandelion. 

Mrs. Walker’s Betsey. 

Urvasi. 

Botsford, Amelia H.—Little Carl. 

Botta, Mrs. Anne Charlotte [Lynch],—Faith. 

Go forth in Life not Seeking Love. 

Hidden Sweets. 

In the Library. See Thoughts in a Library. 

On a Picture. 

Sonnet: “The honey-bee that wanders all day 
long.” See Hidden Sweets. 

Thoughts in a Library. 

To the Memory of Channing. 

Boucicault, Dion.—Conn’s Description of the Fox 
Hunt. See Shaugraun, The. 

“I’m very happy where I am.” 

Lady'Gay Spanker. See London Assurance. 
London Assurance. 

O’Kelly Cabin, The. See Shaugraun, The. 
"Oolaghaun,” The. See Shaugraun, The. 
Shaugraun, The. 

Tailor’s Thimble, The. See Shaugraun, The. 
Boulmier, Jos.—Old Books, Fresh Flowers. 

Bourchier, M.—Bridget O’Flannagan on Christian 
Science and Cockroaches. 

Bourdillon, Fs. W:—At Sea. 

Eurydice. 

Light. See Night Has a Thousand Eyes, The. 
Lost Legend, A. 

Lost Voice, A. 

Love’s Meinie. 

Night Has a Thousand Eyes, The. 

“O! winter twilight, while the moon.” 

Old and Young. 

Outwards or Homewards. See Patience. 

Patience. 

Two Robbers. 

Violinist, A. 

Where Runs the River. 


401 







Bourke AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Bourke, W. P.—When My Cousin Comes to Town. 
Bourne, Vincent.—Cricket, The. (TV. by W: Cowper.) 
Housekeeper, The. 

Snail, The. 

Bourne, W. O.—Heart’s Fine Gold, The. 

Boutelle, Mary Keeley.—Grandmother Gray. 

Bouton, Eliz.—Woodland Lesson, The. 

Bouv4, T: Tracy.—“Shannon” and the “Chesapeake,” 
The. 

Bowditch, Nathaniel Ingersoll.—World Beyond, A 
Bowdoin Orient. —Rosebuds. 

Bowdoin Quill. —Witches’ Town. 

Bowen, C:, Lord. —Good-night, Good-morning. 

Bowen, E:—Forty Years Ago. 

Shemuel. 

Bowen, J: Eliot.—Man who Rode to Conemaugh, The. 
Bower, A. V.—Whims. 

Bowker, R: Rogers.—Thomas a Kemp is [: De Imita- 
tione Christi]. 

Bowles, Caroline. See Southey, Mrs. Caroline 
[Bowles]. 

Bowles, W: Lisle.—Bereavement. 

Come to These Scenes of Peace. 

Greenwood, The. 

Influence of Time on Grief. See To Time. 
November, 1793. 

On the Funeral of Charles the First[, at Night, in 
St. George’s Chapel, Windsor], 

On the Rhine. 

Time and Grief. See To Time. 

To Time. 

Written at Ostend. 

Bowman, Harold Martin.—Our Scarlet King. 

Sotto Voce. 

Bowman, Isabel B.—Portrait, The. 

Bowne, P. H.—Soft Guitar, The. 

Bowring, Sir J:—From the Recesses [of a Lowly 
Spirit]. 

God. (TV.) 

God is Love. 

"Grateful to Drink Life’s Cup. See Our Duty 
Here. 

In the Cross of Christ I Glory. 

“Look above thee—never eye.” 

Nightingale, The. (TV.) 

Ode to the Deity. See God. 

Our Duty Here. 

Watchman, Tell us of the Night. See Watchman’s 
Report, The. 

Watchman’s Report, The. 

What of the Night? See Watchman’s Report, The. 
Boyd, Mrs. Louise E. V.—Columbus at the Court of 
Spain. 

Fairy Queen’s Decision, The. 

Four Seasons, The. 

Management; or, The Folly of Fashion. 

Memory and Hope. 

Night and Morning. 

Old Heads on Young Shoulders. 

Picture of the Last Supper. 

Rose and a Thorn, A. 

Two Dolls, The. 

Wopsenonic. 

Boyd, Mark Alex.—Sonnet: “Fra bank to bank, fra 
wood to wood I rin.” 

Boyd, T:—King’s Son, The. 

To the Lean;! n Sidhe. 

Boyesen, Hjalmar Hjorth. Brier-rose. 

Calpurnia. 

Earl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve. See Jarl Sigurd’s 
Christmas Eve. 

Gunnar. 

Hilda’s Little Hood. 

IngA the Boy-king. 

Jarl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve. 

Little Sigrid. 

Skee-race, The. See Gunnar. 

Thora. 

Thoralf and Synnov. 

Boylan, -. Don Carlos. ( Tr.) See Schiller, 

Johann Friedrich von. 

Boylan, Mrs. Grace [Duffle].—By and By. 

Vines of Memory. 

Boyle, Mrs. Sarah [Roberts].—Voice of the Grass, The. 

Songof the Grass, The. Sec Voice of the Grass, The. 
Boyne, H. A.—Antonina. 

Boynton, J. H.—Eleanor. 

Boy’s Own Paper, The. —Golden Rules for the Young. 
Bracken, T:—Not Understood. 

Brackett, A. E.—New Theory of Frost; or. The Story 
of the Frost-king. 

Brackett, Anna Callender.—Benedicite. 

In Hades. 

Brackett, J. Q. A.—Pilgrim Monument, The. 


Brackett, S. C.—-Place of Love, The. 

Bradbury, B. W.—Chide Mildly the Erring. 

Bradbury, Mrs. L. A.—Christmas Pastime, A; or. The 
Crying Family. 

Long Ago. 

My Country. 

Seed-time. 

Seeing Santa Claus. 

Bradbury, W: B.—Marching Along. 

Braddock, Emily A.—Burghers of Calais, The. 
Choosing a Building Spot. 

Regulus. * 

Braddon, Mary E.—-After the Battle. 

“Man cannot choose his own life. A.” 

Braden, Mrs. Findley.—Convention of Realistic Read¬ 
ers. 

Fence o’ Scripture Faith, The. 

Thae Auld Laird’s Secret. 

What the Lord Had Done for Him. 

Bradford, E. E.—Love is Forever. 

Bradford, Ellen Knight.—How the Refugees were 
Saved. 

Bradford, May N.—U. S. Spells "Us.” 

Bradley, A.—Cruel Maid, The. 

Bradley, A. F.— Arcadian Club, The; or. Theory versus 
p ractice 

Bridal Wine Cup, The. {Dram.) See Long, F. C. 
Changing the Hundred Dollar Note; or, False Pre¬ 
tensions Rebuked. 

Premature Proposal, The. {Dram.) 

Troublesome Investment, The. 

Bradley, Alice. (“Cousin Alice.”) See Haven, Mrs. 

Alice [Bradley] [Neal], 

Bradley, Kate A.—How the Organ was Paid For. 
King’s Joy-bells, The. 

Bradley, Mrs. Mary Emily [Neeley].—Beyond Recall. 
Boy and Girl. 

Chrysalis, A. 

Frost Work. 

Hearts’-ease. 

In Death. 

Little Christel. 

Pansy. See Hearts’-ease. 

Prince’s Feather. 

Reason Why, The. 

Spray of Honeysuckle, A. 

“Uncle Ben.” 

Bradley, S. F. Kent.—Hands Drop Off,—the Work Goes 
On, The. 

Bradley, W. A.—“Beauty of St. Giles, A.” 

Bradnack, Fowler. See Brannock, Fowler. 

Bradner, Clara H.—Air Castles. 

Bradstreet, Mrs. Anne [Dudley],—Contemplations. 

Four Ages of Man, The. 

Bradt, Edith Virginia.—As Ye Would. 

Brady, N :—See Tate, Nahum. 

Braidon, Nettie V.—Wish Dearer than the Crown, The. 
Brainard, J: Gardiner Calkins.—Captain, The. 

Deep, The. 

Epithalamium. 

Fall of Niagara, The. See Niagara. 

I Saw Two Clouds at Morning. See Epitha¬ 
lamium. 

Mr. Merry’s Lament for “Long Tom.” 

Niagara. 

Sweetbrier, The. 

To a Friend. See Epithalamium. 

Brainard, Mary Gardiner.—God Knoweth. {Wr. at. to 
Mary A. Bridgman.) See Not Knowing. 

Not Knowing. 

Brainerd, Mary Beale.—Her Laddie’s Picture. 

Branch, Anna Hempstead.—Foreign Tongue, A. 
Wealth. 

Branch, J. O.—Personal Influence. 

Branch, Mrs. Mary Lydia [Bolles].-—Petrified Fern, The. 
Brandon Banner. —Coming from the Picnic. 

Brannock, Fowler.—Mysterious Guest, The. 

Branson, G:—Room at the Top. 

Breckenridge, Hugh H:—Revolutionary Sermon, A. 
Breckenridge, J:—Troubadour, to the Captive Richard 
Coeur de Lion, The. 

Breckenridge, W: C. P.—In the Name of God. Amen. 
Brehm, Marie C.—Why Woman Wants the Ballot. 
“Breitmann, Hans.”— See Leland, C: Godfrey. 
Bremer, Frederika.—Heavenly Dove, The. 

Little Brawl, A.— See Strife and Peace. 

Mother’s Hymn. See Heavenly Dove, The. 

“One there is who has silently advanced through 
time from the beginning.” 

Strife and Peace. 

Swedish Mother’s Hymn. See Heavenly Dove, The. 
“Think on thy wants, on thy faults.” 

Brennan [or Brenan], Jos.—Come to Me, Dearest. 

Exile to His Wife, The. See Come to Me, Dearest. 


402 







AUTHOR INDEX 


Brooks 


Breton, N:—Cradle Song, A. 

Hymn:—“When the angels all are singing.’’ 

I Would I were an Excellent Divine. 

I Would Thou Wert not Fair. See Strange For¬ 
tunes of Two Excellent Princes, The. 

Longing of a Blessed Heart, The. 

Lovely Kind, and Kindly Loving. 

Olden Love-making. 

Passionate Shepherd, The. 

Pastoral, A. 

Phillida and Corydon [or Coridon]. 

Phillis the Fair. See Pastoral, A. 

Priest, The. See “I would I were an excellent 
divine.” 

Second Pastor’s Song, The. See Passionate Shep¬ 
herd, The. 

Strange Fortunes of Two Excellent Princes, The. 
Sweet Lullaby, A. See Cradle Song, A. 

Sweet Pastoral. A. 

Third Pastor’s Song, The. See Passionate Shep¬ 
herd, The. 

What is Love? See Longing of a Blessed Heart, 
The. 

Brewer,-.—Little Drops of Water. ( Wr. at.) See 

Carney, Julia A. T. 

Brewer, Dan’l Chauncey.—Discouraging. 

Dreams: On the Hunting-ground. 

Intrusion, An. 

Inviting. 

Softly the Evening Shadows. 

Brewer, D: Josiah.—Two Voices. 

Brewer, Harriet.—Carol, A: Standard of the Cross. 
Counting. 

Brewer, Layton.—Terrible Example, A. 

Traced. 

Brewster, Emma E.—Jane’s Legacy. 

Lost and Found. 

My Sister’s Husband. 

"Bridges, Madeline.” See De Vere, Mary Ainge. 
Bridges, Rob’t (“Droch”).—At the Farragut Statue. 
Diana’s Valentine. 

James McCosh. 

“Unillumined Verge, The.” 

Bridges, Rob’t Seymour.—Absence. 

Asian Birds. 

Awake, My Heart! 

Elegy. 

I Will not Let Thee Go. 

My Delight and Thy Delight. 

Nightingales. 

O Youth whose Hope is High. 

On a Dead Child. 

Passer-by, A. 

Pater Filio. 

Poor Withered Rose. 

So Sweet Love Seemed. 

Spirits. 

Thou Didst Delight My Eyes. 

Upon the Shore. 

When Death to Either shall come. 

Winter Nightfall. 

Bridgman, Mary A.—God Knoweth. (Wr. at.) See 
Brainard, Mary G. 

Briggs, Caroline A. See Mason, Mrs. Caroline Ath¬ 
erton. 

Bright, J:—American Government, The. See Strength 
of the American Government, The. 

Appeal to the People, An. 

Civil War in America, The. 

England’s True Greatness. See Foreign Policy. 
Foreign Policy. 

Greatness Based on Morality. See Foreign Policy. 
Moral Law for Nations. 

National Greatness. See Foreign Policy. 

On the Civil War in America. 

Strength of the American Government, The. 
Suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act. 

Whittier, Extract Concerning. 

Bright, Canon W:—Crowned and Discrowned. 

Brine, Mary D[ow] [Northam],—Christmas Bells. 
Home Concert, The. 

“Prettiest Girl, The.” 

Queer Fish They Caught, The. 

“Right about Face.” 

Total Annihilation. 

Valentine, The. 

Bristol, Mrs. Augusta [Cooper].—Pyxidanthera, The. 
Bristol, Frank Milton.—His Choice and His Destiny. 
Bristol, T: Digby, Earl of. —Elvira. 

Song: “See, O see! how every tree.” See Elvira. 
Brittle, Gath.—“It war Crackit Afore.” 

Brobeck, Jos.—Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Oak. 

Oak, The. See Choosing a “State Tree.” 

Brock, Sallie A. See Putnam, Mrs. Sarah A. [Brock], 


Brodhead, Mrs. Eva Wilder [McGlasson],—Content¬ 
ment. 

Daguerreotype, The. 

In the Spring. 

Ingin Summer. 

Jinny. 

Mirandy. 

Supposin’. 

Brodie, Erasmus H.—Keats. 

Brome, Alex.—Resolve, The. 

Brome, R:—Jovial Crew, A. 

Merry Beggars, The. See Jovial Crew, A. 
Bromley, I: H.—Big Trees and the Yosemite, The. 
Fallen Monarch, The. See Big Trees and the 
Yosemite, The. 

Bronson, Carrie E.—Turning. 

Bronson, Carrie W.—Golden-rod. See Lady Golden- 
rod. 

Lady Golden-rod. 

What Bessie Saw. 

Bronson, Laura M.—Essay on Necks. See Necks—a 
Boy’s Composition. 

Necks—a Boy’s Composition. 

Bronson, Nellie G.—Who Knows the Most? 

Bronte, Anne (“Acton Bell”).—Prayer, A. 

Bronte, Charlotte (“Currer Bell”).—Good Cheer. See 
Life. 

Life. 

“Life appears to me too short to be spent in 
nursing animosity or registering wrongs.” 
Bronte, Emily (“Ellis Bell”).—Death-scene, A. 

Her Last Lines. 

Hymn: “No Coward Soul is Mine.” See Her Last 
Lines. 

Last Lines. See Her Last Lines. 

My Lady’s Grave. See Song: "The linnet in the 
rocky dells.” 

Old Stoic, The. 

Prisoner, The. 

Remembrance. 

Song: “The linnet in the rocky dells.” 

Stanzas: “Often rebuked, yet always back return¬ 
ing.” 

Warning and Reply. 

Brooke, Caris.—Cradle Song. 

Cycle, A. 

Brooke, Fulke Greville, Lord. —Alaham. 

Cselica. 

Cselica and Philocell. See Cselica. 

Chorus of Good and Evil Spirits. t See Alaham. 
Chorus of Priests. See Mustapha. * 

Chorus of Tartars. See Mustapha. 

Elegy on Sir Philip Sidney, An. See On Sir Philip 
Sidney. 

Elizabetha Regina. See Cselica. 

Mustapha. 

Myra. 

Myra’s Fickleness. See Myra. 

On Sir Philip Sidney. 

Seed-time and Harvest. See Cselica. 

Sonnet: “Sion lies waste, and Thy Jerusalem.” 

See Cselica. 

To Her Eyes. 

Brooke, Percy.—God’s Work. 

Brooke, Stopford A:—At Last. 

Earth and Man, The. 

Jungfrau’s Cry, The. 

May and Love. 

Noble Lay of Aillinn, The. 

Prince Riquet’s Song. See Riquet of the Tuft. 
Queen’s Song. See Riquet of the Tuft. 

Riquet of the Tuft. 

“There is no sadness so unutterable.” 

Versailles. 

Brooklyn Ea<jle. —Mutilated Currency Question, The. 
Pat’s Reason. 

Spoopendyke Stops Smoking. 

Swearing off Smoking. See Spoopendyke Stops 
Smoking. 

Thirty Years with a Shrew. 

Brooks,-.—"One with yawning made reply, The.” 

Brooks, Alice.-—Herod. 

Brooks, B. S.—Curly-head. 

Brooks, C: Shirley.—Home They Brought Her Lap- 
dog Dead. 

There’s Never any Harm in Good Company. 
Brooks, C: Timothy.—Alpine Heights. (Tr.) 

Fisher, The. (Tr.) 

Fisherman’s Hut, The. 

God Save the State. 

Good-night. (Tr.) 

Great Voices, The. 

Men and Boys. (Tr.) 

Nobleman and the Pensioner, The. (Tr.) 






Brooks 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Brooks, C: Timothy ( continued ). 

Old Thirteen, The. 

Seeing and not Seeing. (TV.) 

Song of the Sword. (TV.) See Sword Song. 

Such is Life. 

Sword Song. (TV.) 

Widow, The. (TV.) 

Winter Song. (TV.) 

Winter’s Snows. (TV.) See Winter Song. 
Brooks, E:—Be a Woman. 

Commit to Memory. 

Life’s Battle Field. 

New Year’s Address, A. 

Brooks, Elbridge Streeter.—Battle of Shrewsbury, The. 
See Harry of Monmouth. 

Caesar Rodney’s Ride. 

Festival of Mars, The. See Marcus of Rome. 
Harry of Monmouth. 

Marcus of Rome. 

Rodney’s Ride. See Caesar Rodney’s Ride. 
Brooks, Fs.—Down the Little Big Horn. 

On the Plains. 

Tennessee. 

Brooks, Fred Emerson.—Barnyard Melodies. 
California Flea, The. 

Don’t You Think So, Bill? 

Foreign Views of the Statue. 

Foreigners at the Fair. 

Funeral of the Mountains, The. 

Ghost of an Old Continental, The. 

Jealous Wife, The. 

Jennie. 

Miller’s Maid, The. 

Miracle of Cana, The. 

Old Ace. 

Orthod-ox Team, The. 

Paddy Moore. 

Palestine. 

Shall Bess Come Hame? 

Sherman’s March. 

Sheriff of Cerro-Gordo, The. 

Silly Billy. 

Uncle Eph’s Heaven. 

Brooks, Katha. R.—Swan-song, The. 

Brooks, Maria Gowen (“Maria del Occidente”).—Day, 
in Melting Purple Dying. 

Disappointment. See ZophiSl; or, The Bride of 
Seven. 

Farewell to Cuba. 

Palace of* the Gnomes. See Zophiel; or, The 
Bride of Seven. 

Respite, The. See Zophiel; or, The Bride of 
Seven. 

Song: "Day, in melting purple dying.” See Day, 
in Melting Purple Dying. 

Song of Egla. See Day, in Melting Purple 
. Dying. 

Zophiel; or, The Bride of Seven. 

Brooks, Rt. Rev. Phillips.—Abraham Lincoln. 
Autobiography, An. 

Beautiful Island of Ceylon, The. 

Character and Service. 

Child of Bethlehem, The. See O Little Town of 
Bethlehem. 

Christmas Carol, A. 

Easter Angels. 

Graduation. 

Heroic Courage. 

“How silently, how silently.” See O Little Town 
of Bethlehem. 

“I had rather as a forgiven child, with all the 
prospects of the future.” 

“I pity the man who has never, in his best moods.” 
Lincoln, the Shepherd of the People. See Abra¬ 
ham Lincoln. 

O Little Town of Bethlehem. 

Present and Future Faiths. 

Pursuit of Character and Service. 

Shepherd of the People, The. See Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Brooks, Shirley.—Saint Pancras Bell. 

Broome, Barbara.—Choose Your Words. 

Little Gradgrinds, The. 

Broome, W:—Belinda’s Recovery from Sickness. 
Rosebud. The. 

Brosius, Letitia W.—Spare the Youth. 

Brosnan, C. M.—Dying Patriot’s Request, The. 
Brotherson, Frances B. M.—Which Could I Spare? 
Brotherton, Mrs. Alice [Williams].—Blazing Heart, 
The. 

Christmas Day. 

Mv Enemv. 

Plighted, A. D. 1887. 

Sailing of King Olaf, The. 


Brough, Rob’t Barnabas.—My Lord Tomnoddy. 
Brough, J: Cargill, and Archer, T:—Eligible Situ¬ 
ation, An. 

Brougham, H:, Lord. —Fate of the Reformer, The. 
Glory of Washington, The. 

Negro Slavery. 

Orator’s Epitaph, The. 

Parliamentary Reform. 

School-teacher, The. 

Teachers of Mankind, The. 

Brougham, J:—Persevere. 

Summer Friends. 

Broughton, Rhoda.—Sisterly Confidences. 

Brown, Abbie Farwell.—Books I Ought to Read, The. 

In the King’s Garden. 

Brown, Alice.—Candlemas. 

Cloistered. 

Hora Christi, 

In Extremis. 

Life. 

Silent Watch, The. 

Sleep. 

Trilby. 

Brown, Almedia.—Receiving Calls. 

Brown, Anna Robertson.—Common Duties. 

“Letting go the unworthy things that meet us.” 
Brown, C. S., Jr.—My First Singing Lesson. 

Brown, Clara Bell.—“Old Glory” at Pekin. 

Brown, Dan’l A.—To a Friend. 

Brown, E. L.—Little Helpers. 

What Lottie Saw. 

Brown, Edgar Allan.—To Allie. 

Brown [or Browne], Emma Alice.—Baby is Dead, The. 
Measuring the Baby. 

When I am Dead. 

Brown, Mrs. Esther Wilson.—Adventures in the Wrong 
House. 

Seizure, The; or, A Sentimental Maiden’s Mistake. 
Brown, Ford Madox.—For the Picture, “The Last of 
England.” 

O. M. B. 

Brown, Frances (“The Blind Poetess of Donegal”).— 
If that were True! 

Is it Come? 

Losses. 

Oh [or O], the Pleasant Days of Old. 

“Oh, those blessed times of old.” See Oh, the 
Pleasant Days of Old. 

Pleasant Days of Old, The. See Oh, the Pleasant 
Days of Old. 

Rabbi’s Vision, The. 

Brown, Helen E.^-April Day, An. 

Shower, The. 

Brown, H: Armitt.—Centennial Address delivered at 
Valley Forge, June 19, 1878. 

Centennial Oration. 

“My countrymen! the moments are quickly pass¬ 
ing.” See Centennial Oration. 

“My countrymen! this anniversary has gone by 
forever.” See Centennial Oration. 

Valley Forge. See Centennial Address delivered 
at Valiev Forge, June 19, 1878. 

Brown, H: E.—Pipe you Make Yourself, The. 

Brown, H. H.—Old Man’s Ship Comes Home, The. 
Brown, Irene Fowler.—Rear Guard, The. 

Brown, I: Hinton.—American Exile, An. 

Hans Bleimer’s Mool. 

Love of Country. 

Nathan Hale, the Martyr Spy. 

Only a Pin. 

Schake und Agers. 

Scientific Party, A. 

Which One? 

Brown, J. A.—Robinson Crusoe in Verse. 

Brown, Jessie H.—Finding of the Cross, The. 

Brown, Dr. J:—Our Dogs. 

Rab and His Friends. 

Brown, J: H.—Parliament of Man, The. 

Sunset, A. 

Brown, J: T:—Dutchman’s Dog Story, A. 

Brown, Jos. Brownlee.—Thalassa! Thalassa! See “Tha- 
latta.” 

“Thalatta.” 

Thalatta! Thalatta! See “Thalatta.” 

Brown, Kate L.—Cherry Ripe. 

Dandelion. 

Gentian. 

Leaflets, The. 

Brown, L. G.—Trundle-bed Theology. 

Brown, Nellie M.—Plant Song. 

Brown, Oliver Madox.—Before and After. 

Laura’s Song. 

Brown, Mrs. P. D.—Temperance Song Recital. 

Brown, Mrs. Phoebe [Hinsdale],—Private Devotion. 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Browning 


Brown, Theron.—Battle above the Clouds, The. 
Critical Moment, The. 

His Majesty. 

Old Man’s Vigil, The. See Old Wife, The. 

Old Wife, The. 

Brown, T: E:—Dora. 

Jessie. 

My Garden. 

Salve! 

Brown, Tom.—"I’m Glad he Knows.’’ 

"Brown, Vandyke.” See Cook, Marc Eugene. 
Brown, W: Goldsmith.—Hills w T ere Made for Freedom, 
The. See Vermont. 

Hundred Years to Come, A. ( Also at. to C: F. 
Browne.) 

Mother, Home, Heaven. 

Ode to Rum, An. 

Vermont. 

Browne, C: Farrar (“Artemus Ward”).—Artemus 
Ward at the Tomb of Shakespeare. 

Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s Line. See Thrill¬ 
ing Scenes in Dixie. 

Artemus Ward on Woman’s Rights. 

Artemus Ward Visits the Shakers. 

Artemus Ward’s Advice to Husband.-. 

Artemus Ward’s Fourth of July Oration. 

Artemus Ward’s London Lecture. See Artemus 
Ward’s Mormon Lecture. 

Artemus Ward’s Mormon Lecture. 

Artemus Ward’s Panorama—"Among the Mor¬ 
mons.” 

Artemus Ward’s Trip to Richmond. 

Fourth of July Oration. See Artemus Ward’s 
Fourth of July Oration. 

Gloverson the Mormon. See Mormon Romance 
—Reginald Gloverson. 

Hundred Years to Come, A. (Also at. to W: 
Goldsmith Brown.) 

Mr. Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s Line. See 
Thrilling Scenes in Dixie. 

Mormon Romance—Reginald Gloverson. 

Moses, the Sassy; or, The Disguised Duke. 
Thrilling Scenes in Dixie. 

Uncle Simon and Uncle Jim. 

Browne, Charlotte Eliz. See Tonna, Mrs. Charlotte 
Eliz. [Browne], 

Browne, Emma Alice. See Brown, Emma Alice. 
Browne, Frances. See Brown, Frances. 

Browne, Fs. Fisher. Carcassonne. (Tr.) 

Santa Barbara. 

Under the Blue. 

Vanquished. 

Browne. H. J. D.—Voice of the Oregon, The. 

Browne, Irving.—At Shakespeare’s Grave. (Ignatius 
Donnelly Loq.) 

Man’s Pillow. 

My New World. 

Parsifal—at Baireuth. 

Smoke Traveller, The. 

Browne, M. Hedderwick.—My Love of Long Ago. 
Browne, Mary Anne.—Mosses, The. 

Browne, Matthew.—Child’s World, The. (IFr. at.) 
See Rands, W: B. 

Browne, Sir T:—Before Sleep. See Evening Hymn. 
Evening Hymn. 

Browne, W:—Brittannia’s Pastorals. 

Carpe Diem. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Charm, The. See Inner Temple Masque, The. 
Colour Passage, A. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Comparison, A. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Complaint of Pan, The. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Country Danger, A. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Death of Philarete, The. See Shepherd’s Pipe, 
The. 

Description of a Musical Consort of Birds. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Description of Walla, The. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Dirge, A:—“Glide soft, ye silver floods.” See 
Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Edmund Spenser. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Epitaph:—“May! be thou never graced with birds 
that sing.” See In Obitum M. S. X°, Maij, 
1614. 

Epitaph on the Countess of Pembroke. (Also at. 
to Ben Jonson.) 

Hunted Squirrel, The. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
In Obitum M. S. X°, Maij, 1614. 

Inner Temple Masque, The. 

Invitation, An. See Shepherd’s Pipe, The. 
Lament for His Friend, A. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Landscape, A. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 


Browne, W: ( continued ). 

Love’s Reasons. 

Marina and the River-god. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Masque of the Inner Temple, A. See Inner Temple 
Masque, The. 

Memory. 

Metamorphosis, A. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Music Lesson, The. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
My Choice. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 

On the Countess Dowager of Pembroke. See Epi¬ 
taph on the Countess of Pembroke. 

Poet’s Ambition, The. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Praise of Spenser, The. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Praise of Sydney, The. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Riot’s Climbing of a Hill. See Britannia’s Pas¬ 
torals. 

Rose, The. See Vision of the Rose. 

Scented Grove, The. See Britannia's Pastorals. 
Shall I Tell? See Britannia’s Pastorals. 

Shall I Tell You Whom I Love? See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Shepherd’s Pipe, The. 

Sir Philip Sidney. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Shepherdesses’ Garlands, The. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals. 

Sirens’ Song, The. See Inner Temple Masque, 
The. 

Song: “For her gait, if she be walking.” See 
Love’s Reasons. 

Song: “Welcome, welcome do I sing.” 

Song in the Wood, The. See Inner Temple 
Masque, The. 

Song of Celadyne, The. See Britannia’s Pastorals. 
Song of Tavy, The. See Britannia's Pastorals. 
Sonnet: “Fairest, when by the rules of palmistry.” 
Vision of the Rose. 

Welcome [A, or The], See Song: “Welcome, wel¬ 
come, do I sing.” 

Welcome, Welcome. See Song: “Welcome, wel¬ 
come, do I sing.” 

Welcome, Welcome, Do I Sing. See Song: “Wel¬ 
come, welcome, do I sing.” 

Brownell, H: Howard.—Abraham Lincoln. 

“All We Ask is to be Let Alone.” See Let us 
Alone. 

Bay Fight, The. 

Burial of the Dane, The. 

Death of Robespierre, The. See Place de la Re¬ 
volution. 

Eagle of Corinth, The. 

Lawyer’s Invocation to Spring, The. 

Lawyer’s Poem to Spring, A. See Lawyer’s Invo¬ 
cation to Spring, The. 

Let us Alone. 

Night Quarters. 

Ode to Spring. See Lawyer’s Invocation to 
Spring, The. 

Old Cove, The. See Let us Alone. 

Place de la Revolution. 

River Fight, The. 

Sphinx, The. 

Browning, Mrs. Eliz. Barrett [Barrett]. — Achilles 
Tatius. (Tr.) 

Aurora Leigh. 

Aurora’s Home. See Aurora Leigh. 

Beauty of England, The. See Aurora Leigh. 
Bertha in the Lane. 

Best Thing in the World, The. 

Books. See Aurora Leigh. 

“But then the thrushes sang.” See Aurora Leigh. 
“By Solitary Fires.” See Aurora Leigh. 

Casa Guidi Windows. 

Cheerfulness. See Cheerfulness Taught by Rea¬ 
son. 

Cheerfulness Taught by Reason. 

Child and the Watcher, The. 

Children Gathering Palms. See Vision of Poets, A. 
Child’s Thought of God, A. 

Comfort. 

Consolation. 

Court Lady, A. 

Cowper’s Grave. 

Crowned and Buried. 

Crowned and Wedded. 

Cry of the Children, The. 

Curse for a Nation, A. 

De Profundis, 

Dead Rose, A. 

Death of Savonarola. See Casa Guidi Windows. 
Deserted Garden, The. 

Desire, A. See Sonnets to George Sand. 

Drama of Exile, A. 

Dream, The. 


405 




Browning 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Browning, Mrs. Eliz. [Barrett] ( continued). 

Duchess May. See Rhyme of the Duchess May. 
Elizabethan Poets. 

End of the Siege, The. See Rhyme of the Duchess 
May. 

England. See Aurora Leigh. 

False Step, A. 

Far, and Yet Near. See Sonnets from the Portu¬ 
guese. 

Felicia Hemans. To L. E. L. 

Ferment of New Wine, The. See Aurora Leigh. 
First News from Villafranca. 

First, Second, Third. See Sonnets from the Portu¬ 
guese. 

Forced Recruit, The. 

Forced Recruit at Solferino, A. See Forced Re¬ 
cruit, The. 

“From my lips in their defilement.” (TV.) 
Ful[l]ness of Love. See Sonnets from the Portu¬ 
guese. 

Futurity. 

“Get leave to work.” See Aurora Leigh. 

“Go from me. Yet I feel that I shall stand.” 

See Sonnets from the Portuguese. 

Grief. 

He Giveth His Beloved Sleep. See Sleep, The. 
House of Clouds, The. 

How Do I Love Thee? See Sonnets from the 
Portuguese. 

"I tell you hopeless grief is passionless.” See 
Grief. 

“I thought once how Theocritus had sung.” See 
Sonnets from the Portuguese. 

“If I leave all for thee, wilt thou exchange.” See 
Sonnets from the Portuguese. 

“If thou must love Me, let it be for nought.” See 
Sonnets from the Portuguese. 

Irreparableness. 

Journey South. The. See Aurora Leigh. 

Juliet of Nations. See Casa Guidi Windows. 
Lady Geraldine’s Courtship. 

Lady’s “Yes,” The. 

Last Translation, The. (TV.) See "Thou lovest 
me not, thou lovest me not.” 

“Live and Love.” See Drama of Exile, A. 

Lord Walter’s Wife. 

Love for Love’s Sake. See Sonnets from the 
Portuguese. 

Love Letters. See Sonnets from the Portuguese. 
Loved Once. 

Lover’s Letters, A. See Sonnets from the Portu¬ 
guese. 

Marian’s Child. See Aurora Leigh. 

Mother and Poet. 

Motherless. See Aurora Leigh. 

Musical Instrument, A. 

My Heart and I. 

My Kate. 

My Letters. See Sonnets from the Portuguese. 
Napoleon’s Final Return. See Crowned and 
Buried. 

“O Victor Emmanuel the King.” See Sword of 
Castruccio Castracani, The. 

Oh, Fear to Call it Loving. See Woman’s Short¬ 
comings, A. 

On a Portrait of Wordsworth. 

Only a Curl. 

Parting Lovers. 

Pet Name, The. 

Poets, The. See Aurora Leigh. 

Portrait, A. 

Reading. See Aurora Leigh. 

Recognition, A. See Sonnets to George Sand. 
Rhyme of the Duchess May. 

Romance of the Ganges, A. 

Romance of the Swan’s Nest. 

Romaunt of the Page, The. 

Romney and Aurora. See Aurora Leigh. 
Rosalind’s Scroll. See Words of Rosalind’s Scroll, 
The. 

“Say never, ye loved once.” See Loved Once. 
Simile, A. See Aurora Leigh. 

Sleepf, The], 

Song of the Rose. (TV.) See Achilles Tatius. 
Sonnets from the Portuguese. 

Sonnets to George Sand. 

Stanzas from “Wine of Cyprus.” See Wine of 
Cyprus. 

Substitution. 

Sursum Corda. See Casa Guidi Windows. 

Sword of Castruccio Castracani, The. 

“Thou lovest me not, thou lovest me not.” ( Tr.) 
Three Kisses. See Sonnets from the Portu- 
u se. 


Browning, Mrs. Eliz. [Barrett] ( continued ). 

To Flush, My Dog. 

To L. E. L., on the Death of Felicia Hemans. See 
Felicia Hemans. To L. E. L. 

Tribute to Woman, A. See Drama of Exile, A. 
Unless. See Woman’s Shortcomings, A. 

View across the Roman Campagna, A. 

Vision of Poets, A. 

Ways of Love, The. See Sonnets from the Portu¬ 
guese. 

Wine of Cyprus. 

Woman’s Question, A. ( Wr. at.) See Lathrop, 
Lena. 

Woman’s Shortcomings, A. 

Words of Rosalind’s Scroll, The. 

“You who keep account.” 

Young Queen, The. 

Browning, Frd’k G.—Amen. 

“I do not see why God should e’en permit some 
things to be.” See Amen. 

Browning, Ophelia G.—See Burroughs, Ophelia G. 
[Browning]. 

Browning, Rob’t.—Abt Vogler. 

Amphibian. See Fifine at the Fair. 

April in England. See Home Thoughts from 
Abroad. 

Asolando. 

Bard and the Cricket, The. See Two Poets of 
Croisic, The. 

Ben Karshook’s Wisdom. 

Bishop Orders His Tomb [at Saint Praxed’s 
Church], The. 

Blot in the ’Scutcheon, A. 

Boot and Saddle. See Cavalier Tunes. 

Boy and the Angel, The. 

Boy of Ratisbon, The. See Incident of the French 
Camp, An. 

By the Fireside. 

Cavalier Tunes. 

"Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came.” 

Clive. 

Confessions. 

Count Gismond. 

Cristina. 

David Playing before Saul. See Saul. 

David Singing before Saul. See Saul. 

“De Gustibus.” 

Death of Mildred, The. See Blot in the 'Scutcheon, 
A. 

Donald. 

Donald and the Stag. See Donald. 

Earl Mertoun’s Song. See Blot in the ’Scutcheon 
A. 

Epilogue [to Asolando], See Asolando. 

Epitaph on \wr. for] Levi Lincoln Thaxter. 

Evelyn Hope. 

Face, A. 

Fifine at the Fair. 

Flight of the Duchess, The. 

Flower’s Name, The. See Garden Fancies. 

Garden Fancies. 

Give a Rouse. See Cavalier Tunes. 

Glove, The. 

Good Morning. See Pippa Passes. 

Good News. See "How they Brought the Good 
News from Ghent to Aix.” 

Good News from Ghent. See “How they Brought 
the Good News from Ghent to Aix.” 
Grammarian’s Funeral, A. 

Guardian-angel, The. 

Halbret and Hob. 

“Hark, where my blossomed pear tree in the 
hedge.” See Home Thoughts from Abroad. 
Her Perfect Praise. See Blot in the ’Scutcheon, A. 
“I go to prove my soul.” See Paracelsus. 

Herv^ Riel. 

Holy Cross Day. 

Home Thoughts from Abroad. 

Home Thoughts from the Sea. 

Householder, The. See Fifine at the Fair. 

“How they Brought the Good News from Ghent to 
Aix.” 

In a Gondola. 

In a Year. 

In Three Days. 

Incident at Ratisbon, An. See Incident of the 
French Camp, An. 

Incident of the French Camp[, An], 

Instans Tyrannus. 

Ivhn Ivhnovitch. 

King, A. See Pippa Passes. 

King is Cold, The. 

Laboratory, The. 

Last Ride Together, The. 


406 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Bryant 


Browning, Rob’t ( continued). 

Life in a Love. 

Lord Clive. See Clive. 

Lost Leader, The. 

Lost Mistress, The. 

Love among the Ruins. 

Love in a Life. 

Marching Along. See Cavalier Tunes. 

Martin Relph. 

May and Death. 

Meeting. See Meeting at Night. 

Meeting at Night. 

Meeting at Night—Parting at Morning. See 
Meeting at Night. 

Memorabilia. 

Misconcentions. 

Moth’s Kiss First, The. See In a Gondola. 
Muckle-mouth Meg. 

My Last Duchess. 

My Star. 

Never the Time and the Place. 

New Year’s Day at Asolo. See Pippa Passes. 

One Way of Love. 

One Word More[. To E. B. B.]. 

Paracelsus. 

Parting at Morning. 

Pearl—a Girl, A. 

Pheidiopides. 

Pied Piper of Hamelin, The. 

Pippa Passes. 

Pippa’s Song. 

Pope and the Net, The. 

Porphyria’s Lover. 

Potter’s Wheel, The. See Rabbi Ben Ezra. ' 
Prospice. 

“Quoth a young Sadducee.” See Ben Karshook’s 
Wisdom. 

Rabbi Ben Ezra. 

Ratisbon. See Incident of the French Camp, An. 
Respectability. 

Ride from Ghent to Aix, The. See “How they 
Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix. 5 ’ 
Ride to Aix, The. See “How they Brought the 
Good News from Ghent to Aix.” 

Ring and the Book, The. 

Saul. 

Sometime—Somewhere. (Wr. at.) See Bur¬ 

roughs, Airs. Ophelia G. [Browning], 

Song: “Nay but you, who do not love her.” 

Song: “The moth’s kiss first.” See In a Gondola. 
Song from “Paracelsus.” See Paracelsus. 

Song from “Pippa Passes.” See Pippa Passes. 
Speculative. 

Statue and the Bust, The. 

Strafford. 

Such a Starved Bank of Moss. See Two Poets of 
Croisic, The. 

Summum Bonum. 

Tale, A. See Two Poets of Croisic, The. 

There’s a Woman Like a Dewdrop. See Blot in 
the 'Scutcheon, A. 

Thus the Mayne Glideth. See Paracelsus. 

To E. B. B. See One Word More. To E. B. B. 
Toccata of Galuppi’s, A. 

Tray. 

Two in the Campagna. 

Two Poets of Croisic, The. 

Up at a Villa—Down in the City. 

Wanderers, The. See Paracelsus. 

Wanting is—What? 

Year’s at the Spring, The. See Pinpa Passes. 
You’ll Love me Yet. See Pippa Passes. 

Youth and Art. 

Brownjohn, J:—-Fish Story, A. 

How the Celebrated Miltiades Peterkin Paul Got 
the Better of Santa Claus. 

Indian Attack, The. 

Miltiades gets the Best of Santa Claus. See How 
the Celebrated Miltiades Peterkin Paul got the 
Better of Santa Claus. 

Miltiades Peterkin Paul. 

Brownlow, E: Burough.—Sonnet, The. 

Whip-poor-will, The. 

Brubaker, D. R.—Spelling Class, The. 

Bruce, L. H.—Composition Day. 

Bruce, Michael.-—Elegy—Written in Spring. 

Ode to the Cuckoo. {At.) See Logan, J: 
Spring Pointing to God. See Elegy—Written in 
Spring. 

Bruce, R. L.—Prohibition’s Might.J 
• Bruce, Wallace.—Decoration Day. 

“Inasmuch.” 

Old Homestead, The. 

Ole Bull’s Christmas. 


Bruce, Wallace {continued). 

One Word. 

Two Argosies. 

Yosemite, The. 

Brueys, D: Augustin.—Fractious Man, The. 
Brunonian. —Conditioned. 

“Whenas in Silks.” 

Brush, Frank E.—Liberty. 

Bruy&re, Jean de la. See La Bruyere, Jean de. 
Bryan, G: S.—Shakespeare. 

Bryan, J. Stuart.—On Tying Daphne’s Shoe. 

Bryan, Mrs. Mary Edwards.—Dumb Savior, The. 
Bryan, W: Jennings.—Fredericksburg. 

Free Silver Coinage. 

Memorial Day Address. 

Bryant, J: Howard.—Close to Ninety. 

Indian Summer, The. 

Little Cloud, The. 

Valley Brook, The. , 

Winter. 

Bryant, Lesbia.—Thanksgiving Dinner, A. 

Bryant, M. Alice.—George Washington. See Wash¬ 
ington’s Life. 

Washington’s Life. 

Bryant, W: Cullen.—Abraham Lincoln. 

Ages, The. 

America. See Ages. The. 

America. See also “Oh Mother of a Mighty 
Race.” 

Among the Trees. 

Antiquity of Freedom, The. 

At the Old Home Again. See Lines on Revisit¬ 
ing the Country. 

Battle of Bennington, The. 

Battle of Life, The. See Battle-field, The. 
Battle-field, The. 

Be Truthful. See Battle-field, The, 

Bending of the Bow, The. (TV.) See Odyssey, 
The. 

“Blessed are They that Mourn.” 

Bryant Alphabet, A. 

Burial of Love, The. 

Burial Place, The. 

Cervantes. 

Child and the Lily, The. See Innocent Child 
and Snow-white Flower. 

Conjunction of Jupiter and Venus, The. 
Conqueror’s Grave, The. 

Crowded Street, The. 

Damsel of Peru, The. 

Death of Schiller, The. 

Death of Slavery, The. 

Death of the Flowers, The. 

Evening Reverie, An. 

Evening Wind, The. 

Fatima and Raduan. {Tr.) 

Flood of Years, The. 

Forest Hymn, A. 

Fountain, The. 

Freedom. See Antiquity of Freedom, The. 
From the Spanish of Villejas. 

Future Life, The. 

Gladness of Nature, The. 

God’s First Temples. See Forest Hymn, A. 
Green River. 

Groves, The. See Forest Hymn, A. 

Hector’s Farewell to Andromache. {Tr.) See 
Iliad, The. 

Helen at the Scsean Gates. {Tr.) See Tliad, The. 
“How shall T know thee in the sphere.” See Fu¬ 
ture Life, The. 

How to Live. See Thanatopsis. 

Hunter of the Prairies, The. 

Hunter’s Vision, The. 

Hurricane, The. 

Hymn of the City. 

Hymn to the North Star. 

Iliad. The. (Tr.) See Homer. 

In Memory of John Lothrop Motley. 

Indian at the Burial-place of his Fathers, An. 
Indian’s Prophecy, The. See Indian at the Bur¬ 
ial-place of his Fathers, An. 

Innocent Child and Snow-white Flower. 
InscViption for the Entrance to a Wood. 
Invitation to the Country, An. 

June. 

Lines on Revisiting the Country. 

Little People of the Snow, The. 

Living Lost, The. 

Love of God, The. (Tr.) 

March. 

Massacre at Scio, The. 

May Sun Sheds an Amber Light, The. 

Mother’s Hymn, The. 


407 





Bryant 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Bryant, W: Cullen ( continued ). 

Murdered Traveller, The. 

Musquito, The. See To a Mosquito. 

My Autumn Walk. 

“My heart is awed within me when I think.” 

See Forest Hymn, A. 

Night Journey of a River, The. 

No Man Knoweth His Sepulchre. 

Not Yet. 

November. 

O Fairest of the Rural Maids. 

O Mother of a Mighty Race. See “Oh Mother 
of a Mighty Race.” 

October. 

Odyssey, The. (TV.) See Homer. 

“Oh Mother of a Mightv Race.” 

Old Man’s Counsel, The. 

Old Man’s Funeral, The. 

Our Children. 

Our Country. See Not Yet. 

Our Country’s Call. 

Palace of Alcinous, The. ( Tr.) See Odyssey, The. 
Parting of Hector and Andromache, The. (Tr.) 
See Iliad, The. 

Past, The. See To the Past. 

Path, The. 

Planting of the Apple-tree, The. 

Poet, The. 

Retribution. 

Return of the Birds, The. 

Return of Youth, The. 

Rivulet, The. 

Robert of Lincoln. 

Sella. 

Seventy-six. 

Snow-shower, The. 

“So live, that when thy summons comes to join.” 

See Thanatopsis. 

Song of Marion’s Men. 

Song of the Starsf, The— C.]. 

Spring. See Gladness of Nature, The. 

Star of Bethlehem, The. 

Stars, The. See Song of the Stars, The. 

Story of Seventy-six, The._ See Seventy-six. 
Summer. See Gladness of Nature, The. 
Thanatoosis. 

Third of November, The. 

Those Glorious Stars. See Conjunction of Jupiter 
and Venus, The. 

Tides, The. 

“’Tis sweet in the green spring.” See From the 
Spanish of Villejas. 

To a Cloud. 

To a Firefly. 

To a Mosquito. 

To a Water Fowl. 

To the Evening Wind. See Evening Wind, The. 
To the Fringed Gentian. 

To the Past. 

Tree Burial. 

Twenty-second of December, The. 
Twenty-second of February, The. 

Victory of Hector, The. (Tr.) See Iliad, The. 
Violet, The. See Yellow Violet, The. 

Waiting by the Gate. 

West Wind, The. 

“What cordial welcomes greet the guest.” See 
“Oh, Mother of a Mighty Race.” 

Winds, The. 

Winter. See Winter Piece, A. 

Winter Piece, A. 

Yellow Violet, The. 

“Yet nerve thy spirit to the proof.” See Battle¬ 
field, The. 

Yew, The. See Burial Place, The. 

Brydges, Sir S: Egerton.—Echo and Silence. 
Buchanan, D: K.—Spellin’ School. A. 

“Uncle John” Writes to His City Cousin. 
Buchanan, Rob’t.—At the Grindstone; or, a Home 
View of the Battle-field. 

Ballad of Judas Iscariot, The. 

Ballad of the Wayfarer, The. 

Book of Orm, The. 

Churchyard, The. 

Death of Roland, The. 

Dedication to Harriett, in Miscellaneous Poems 
and Ballads. 

Dream of the World without Death, The. See 
Book of Orm, The. 

Faery Foster-mother, The. 

Fra Giacamo. 

Freedom’s Ahead. See Tom Dunstan; or, The 
Politician. 

Green Gnome, The. 


Buchanan, Rob’t (continued). 

Hans Vogel. 

Hermione. 

Hugh Sutherland’s Pansies. 

In the Garden. 

January Wind. 

Langley Lane. 

Legends of the Little Fay. 

Little Fay, The. See Legends of the Little Fay. 
Little Milliner, The. 

Love in Winter. 

Meg Blane. 

Nell. 

“O Mither, Dinna Dee!” See Meg Blane. 

On a Young Poetess’s Grave. 

Old Politician, The. See Tom Dunstan; or, The 
Politician. 

Pastoral Pictures. 

Phil Blood’s Leap. 

Serenade: “Sleep sweet, beloved one, sleep sweet!” 
Song: “O love is like the roses.” See Love in 
Winter. 

Spring Song in the City. 

Starling, The. 

Summer Moon. 

Summer Pool, The. See Pastoral Pictures. 
Tiger Bay[: A Stormy Night’s Dream]. 

To Harriett. See Dedication to Harriett. 

Tom Dunstan; or. The Politician. 

Two Sons. 

Wake of Tim O’Hara, The. 

We are Children. 

When We are All Asleep. 

Wedding of Shon Maclean, The. 

Widow Mysie, The. 

Buck, C: Gurdon.—Idyl, An. 

Buck, R: H:—Kentucky Babe. 

Buckham, Jas.—Child of To-day, A. 

David Shaw, Hero. 

Kitten of the Regiment, The. 

Passed off the Stage. 

Race at Devil’s Elbow, The. 

Rover in Church. 

Smallest of the Drums, The. 

Song in the Night, The. 

Song in the Storm, The. 

Song of the Market-place, The. 

Song of the Pine. The. 

Buckhurst, T: Sackville, Lord. See Dorset, Earl of. 
Buckingham, Emma M.—People Will Talk. 
Buckingham, G: Villiers, Duke of. —Epitaph on Sir 
Thomas Fairfax. 

Buckley, Elton J.—My Pipe and I. 

Buckley, Rev. Jas. Monroe.—“Pulpit plagiarist ruins 
his style, The.” 

Buckminster, Jos. Stevens.—Triumph of Faith. 
Buckstone, J: Baldwin.—Country Cousin, The; or. 
The Rough Diamond, 

Rough Diamond, The. See Country Cousin, The; 
or, The Rough Diamond. 

Budlong, Frank D.—Destruction of Jerusalem, The. 
Wolfe at Quebec. 

Buell, Sarah Josepha. See Hale, Mrs. Sarah J. 
[Buell], 

Bugbee, Mrs. Emily J.—Growth. 

In Memoriam—A. Lincoln. 

Bulfinch, Maria H.—Easter-tide Deliverance, An. 
Bulfinch, Stephen Greenleaf.—Communion of Saints, 
The. 

Bulfinch,T:—Echo and Narcissus. 

Meditation. 

Sabbath Day, The. 

Bull, Jerome C.—Rival Sweetheart, The. 

Bull, Norris.—Good Cigar, A. 

Bull, Philip J.—New Preacher, The. 

Bulwer, Sir H: See Dalling and Bulwer, W; H: 

Lytton Earle Bulwer, Baron. 
Bulwer-Lytton, E: G: Earle, Lord Lytton.— Ab¬ 
sent, yet Present. 

Address of Caradoc the Bard. 

Appeal to the Romans. See Rienzi. 

Athens; its Rise and Fall. 

Bard’s Summons to War, The. 

Battle, The. (Tr.) 

Be in Earnest. 

Caradoc, the Bard of the Cymrians. See Address 
of Caradoc the Bard. 

Cardinal’s Soliloquy, The. See Richelieu; or. 
The Conspiracy. 

Caxtoniana. 

Caxtons, The. 

Chariot Race, The. (Tr.) 

Claude Melnotte to Pauline. See Ladv of Lyons, 
The. 


408 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Burbidge 


Bulwer-Lytton, E: G: Earle, Lord Lytton ( continued ). 

Claude Melnotte’s Apology. See Lady of Lyons, 
The. 

Claude Melnotte’s Apology and Defence. See 
Lady of Lyons, The. 

Consequences of the Reformation. See St. 
Stephen’s. 

Cromwell on the Death of Charles the First. 

Despondent Inventor, The. See Last of the 
Barons, The. 

Destruction of Pompeii. See Last Days of 
Pompeii. 

Ernest Maltravers. 

Fox. 

Glaucus and the Lion. See Last Days of Pom¬ 
peii. 

Glove, The. (TV.) 

Happy Beauty and the Blind Slave, The. See 
Last Days of Pompeii. 

Harold. 

King Harold’s Speech to His Army before the 
Battle of Hastings. See Harold. 

Lady of Lyons, The. 

Last Days of Pompeii. 

Last Night of Pompeii, The. See Last Days 
of Pompeii. 

Last of the Barons, The. 

Last of the Roman Tribunes, The. See Rienzi; 
or. The Last of the Roman Tribunes. 

Last Wish, The. 

London House-tops. See Caxtons, The. 

Lord John Russell. 

Lord Melbourne. 

Lord Ronald’s Bride. 

Love at First Sight. 

Marathon. See Athens; its Rise and Fall. 

Money. 

Narrowness of Specialties, The. 

New Timon, The. 

Night and Love. See Ernest Maltravers. 

Nydia and lone. See Last Days of Pompeii. 

Nydia’s Sacrifice. See Last Days of Pompeii. 

O Near Ones, Dear Ones. 

O’Connell. 

Olympic Crown, The. See Athens; its Rise and 
Fall. 

Orator, The. 

Pen, The. See Pen Mightier than the Sword, 
The. 

Pen Mightier than the Sword, The. 

Pitt. 

Richelieu and France. See Richelieu; or, The 
Conspiracy. 

Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy. 

Richelieu’s Vindication. See Richelieu; or, The 
Conspiracy. 

Rienzi, the Last of the Roman Tribunes. 

St. James’s Street on a Summer Morning. See 
New Timon, The. 

St. Stephen’s. 

Scene from “Richelieu.” See Richelieu; or, The 
Conspiracy. 

Scene from “The Lady of Lyons.” See Lady of 
Lyons, The. 

Sea Captain’s Story, The. 

Search for Harold’s Body, The. See Harold. 

Sir Robert Walpole. 

Song: “When stars are in the quiet skies.” See 
Ernest Maltravers. 

Souls of Books, The. 

Successful Politician, The. 

Sudden Fortune, A. See Money. 

There is no Death. (Wr. at.) See McCreery, 

J. L. 

“Truth, as humanity knows it, is not what the 
schoolmen call it.” See Caxtoniana. 

Vesuvius and the Egyptian. See Last Days of 
Pompeii. 

Warwick—the King-maker. See Last of the 
Barons, The. 

When Stars are in the Quiet Skies. See Ernest 

M 3,ltr3, V6rs 

Witch of Vesuvius, The. See Last Days of 
Pompeii. 

Witch’s Cavern, The. See Last Days of Pompeii. 

Bumstead, Eudora S.—In the Swing. 

Indian Summer. 

Little Pine-tree, The. ( Tr.) 

Margie’s Thanksgiving. 

Summer Lullaby, A. 

Bungay, G: Washington.—Battle of Inkerman, The. 

Battle of Lexington, The. 

Buying Gape-seed. ( At. also to J: B. Gough.) 

See Gape-seed. 

409 


Bungay, G: Washington ( continued). 

Creeds of the Bells, The. 

Earth’s Noblemen. 

For You. 

Gape-seed. 

Heads, Hearts, and Hands. 

Labor. • 

Manliest Man, The. 

Noblest Men, The. See Earth’s Noblemen. 

Old Schoolmaster, The. 

Old Tennant Church. 

Our Ships at Sea. 

Patrick O’Rouke and the Frogs. 

Statue of Liberty Unveiled. 

Temperance, 1776-1876. 

Ten Pound Ten. 

This Old World of Ours. 

Town Pump, The. 

Vegetable Convention, A. 

Bunn, W: M.—My Ships. 

Bunnell, Gertie F.—Trial of Fing Wing. (Ad.) 

Bunner, Alice Learned.—Immutabilis. See Vingtaine. 
Separation. See Vingtaine. 

Vingtaine. 

Bunner, H: Cuyler.—Appeal to Harold, The. 

Behold the Deeds! 

Candor. 

Chaperon, The. 

Deaf. 

Farewell to Salvini. 

Feminine. 

For an Old Poet. 

Grandfather Watts’s Private Fourth. 

Holiday Home. 

J. B. 

Last of the New Year’s Callers, The. 

Les Morts Vont Vite. 

Mr. Copernicus and the Proletariat. 

My Shakspere. 

Nice People, The. 

Nine-cent Girls, The. 

Old Flag, The, 

On Reading a Poet’s First Book. 

“One, Two, Three.” 

Pitcher of Mignonette, A. 

Round-up, A. 

Salute the Flag. See Old Flag, The. 

She was a Beauty. 

Sisterly Scheme, A. 

Strong as Death. 

Tenor, The. 

To a Dead Woman. 

To a June Breeze. 

Triumph. 

Wav to Arcady, The. 

Wilnelm I., Emperor of Germany. 

Yes? 

Bunyan, J:—"Heart when broken, is like sweet gums 
and spices when beaten, The.” 

Land of Beulah, The. See Pilgrim’s Progress. 
Of the Child with the Bird at the Bush. 

Palace Beautiful, The. See Pilgrim’s Progress. 
Pilgrim, The. See Pilgrim’s Progress. 

Pilgrim’s Progress. 

Shenherd Boy Sings in the Valley of Humiliation, 
The. See Pilgrim’s Progress. 

Song: “He that is down need fear no fall.” <See 
Pilgrim’s Progress. 

Buon, Maida.—La Tour d’Auvergne. 

Buonarrotti, Michelangelo.—At Florence. See To the 
Supreme Being. 

Ideal Love. 

“If it be true that any beauteous thing.” See 
Sonnet: “If it be true,” etc. 

In Love’s Own Time. 

Love’s Justification. 

Might, of One Fair Face, The. 

“Might of one fair face sublimes my love, The.” 

See Might of One Fair Face, The. 

Reply to “Lines Found in the Hand of the Statue 
of Night at Florence.” 

Sonnet: “As when, O lady mine,” etc. 

Sonnet: “If it be true,” etc. 

Sonnet: “Yes, hope may with my strong desire 
keep pace.” 

Sonnet: “The prayers I make will then be sweet 
indeed.” 

To the Supreme Being. 

To VittoriaColonna. See Sonnet: “Yes, hope,’’etc. 
Burbidge, T:—Eventide. 

If I Desire. 

If I Desire with Pleasant Songs. See If I Desire. 
Mother’s Love. 

To Imperia. 




Burdette 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Burdette, Jas. S.—Betsey und I Hafe Bust Ub. 

Der Mule. See Der Mule Shtood on der Steam- 
boad Deck. 

Der Mule Shtood on der Steamboad Deck. 
Irishman’s Panorama, The. 

Panorama, The. See Irishman’s Panorama, The. 
Burdette, Rob’t Jones.—Advice to a Young Man. 
After the Battle. 

All Things to All Men. 

Aquarius. 

Archaeological Congress, An. 

Baby Mine. 

Brakeman at Church, The. 

Brakeman Goes to Church, The. See Brakeman 
at Church, The. 

Brakeman’s Sweetheart.The. 

Bravest of the Brave, 

Cataracket, A. 

Comet, The. 

Consequences. 

Countermarch, The. 

Cricket, The. 

Day in the Woods, A. 

Day We Do not Celebrate, The. 

Dogmatic Philosophy. 

Don’t Be Mean, Boys. 

Don’t Fret. 

Emancipation of Man, The. 

Engineers Making Love. 

Evening. 

Festina Lente. 

Finis. 

Froward Duster, The. 

Funny Old Clown, The. 

Get Acquainted with Yourself. 

Getting Even. 

Glory in the Northwest. 

Gray Day, The. 

History of William Penn. 

Hod-fellow, The. 

In Medio Tutissimus Ibis. 

In Time of Peace. 

Inside Track, The. 

James Whitcomb Riley. 

Lines to a Mule. 

Little Foxes. 

Little Hatchet Story, The. 

Main Hatch, The. 

March. 

Margins. 

Master Sleeps, The. 

May Day. 

Mendicant, The. 

Miss Witchazel and Mr. Thistlepod. 

Mr. Middlerib’s Experiment. 

Modern High School Valedictory. 

Monument of William Penn, The. See History 
of William Penn, The. 

Morning. 

Movement Cure for Rheumatism, The. See Mr. 

Middlerib’s Experiment. 

My First Cigar. 

My Fountain Pen. 

New Cure for Rheumatism, A. See Mr. Middle¬ 
rib’s Experiment. 

New Hatchet Story and George Washington, A. 

See Little Hatchet Story, The. 

New Version of a Certain Historical Dialogue, A. 
Odd I See, The. 

Old Wine in New Bottles. 

On the Coast of Man. 

One Touch of Nature. 

Orphan Born. 

Owed to Halifax. 

Penn’s Monument. See History of William Penn. 
Pierian Spring, The. 

Plaint of Jonah, The. 

Postmaster, The. 

Private’s Glory, The. 

Pulmonic Passion. 

Putting His Armor On. 

Putty Man, The. 

Railway Matinee, A. 

Realization. 

Reminiscence of Exhibition Day, A. 

Rime of the Ancient Miller. 

Romance of the Carpet, The. 

Running the Weekly. 

School Ma’am, The. 

School “Takes Up.” 

Schoolboy’s Strike, The. 

Seedsman, The. 

Sermon of Life, A. 

Settling under Difficulties. 


Burdette, Rob’t Jones ( continued ). 

Sic Transit. 

Since She Went Home. 

Sisyphus. 

Soldiers, Rest. 

Songs without Words. 

Spell of Rhyme, A. 

Sunday Talk in the Horse Sheds. 

"Teamster Jim.” 

“There was a young man of Cohoes.” 

Three Fiends, The. 

Tramp, The. 

Trolley La La! 

Two Rag Men. 

Twilight Idyll, A. 

Under the Purple and Motley. 

Utopia. 

What Lack we Yet? 

What Men have not Fought for. 

What Will We Do? See Utopia. 

When My Ship Comes In. 

When Washington was President. See What 
Lack we Yet? 

Burdick, Arthur J.—Keep up with the Times. 

Orphan Billy. 

Biirger, Gottfried August.—Chase, The. See Wild 
Huntsman, The. 

Lenora. 

Wild Huntsman, The. 

Burgess, [Frank] Gelett.—Abstemia. 

Abstrosophy. 

Bohemians of Boston, The. 

“I’d rather have habits than clothes.” 

Invisible Bridge, The. 

Lazy Roof, The. 

My Feet. 

Psycholophon. 

Purple Cow, The. 

Burgon, J: W:—Petra. 

Burk. Edmund J.—Busy. 

Honk! Honk! 

Origin of Shoes, The. 

Burke, Christian.—Peasant Heroine, A. 

Burke, Edmund.—American Taxation. See Speech 
on American Taxation. 

Apostrophe to the Queen of France. See Re¬ 
flections on the French Revolution. 
Arraignment of Ministers. 

Close of Impeachment of Hastings. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 

Despotism Incompatible with Right. 

England and Her Colonies. See Speech on Con¬ 
ciliation with America. 

Enterprise of American Colonists, 1775. See 
Speech on Conciliation with America. 

Hyder Ali. See Nabob of Arcot’s Debt, The. 
Infamous Legislation. 

Impeachment of Hastings Finished. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 
Impeachment of Mr. Hastings. The. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 
Impeachment of Warren Hastings. 

John Howard. See Speech at Bristol, Previous 
to the Election, 1780. 

Magnanimity in Politics. See Speech on Concilia¬ 
tion with America. 

Marie Antoinette. See Reflections on the 
French Revolution. 

Marie Antoinette, Queen of France. See Reflec¬ 
tions on the French Revelution. 

Nabob of Arcot’s Debt, The. 

On American Taxation. See Speech on American 
Taxation. 

Peroration against Warren Hastings. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 

Peroration of Burke’s Speech on the Impeach¬ 
ment of Warren Hastings. See Impeach¬ 
ment of Warren Hastings. 

Queen of France and the Spirit of Chivalry, The. 

See Reflections on the French Revolution. 
Reflections on the French Revolution. 

Right to Tax America, The. 

Speech at Bristol, Previous to the Election, 1780. 
Speech on American Taxation. 

Speech on Conciliation with America. 

Speeches in the Impeachment of Warren Hast¬ 
ings. See Impeachment of Warren Hastings. 
To the Electors of Bristol. See Speech at Bristol, 
Previous to the Election, 1780. 

To the House of Lords. See Impeachment of 
Warren Hastings. 

Wisdom Dearly Purchased. See Speech at Bris¬ 
tol, Previous to the Election, 1780. 

Burke, M. L. S.—Turned Out for Rent. 

410 








AUTHOR INDEX 


Burns 


Burke, Marg. Sullivan.—In Sugar Time. 

Burke, Rev. T: N —Liberator, The. 

National Music of Ireland, The. 

O’Connell. See Liberator, The. 

Power of Music, The. See National Music of 
Ireland, The. 

Burleigh, Clarence B.—Two Seasons. 

Burleigh, G: Shepard.—Conqueror Conquered, The. 
Mother Margery. 

Prayer for Life, A. 

What to Drink. 

Burleigh, W: H:—Blessed are They that Mourn. 
Deborah Lee. 

Gifted for Giving. 

Matins. 

Rum Fiend, The. See Rum Maniac, The.— 
Frank H. Fenno. 

Satan and the Grog-seller. 

Scourge of War, The. 

True Faith, The. 

Trust. 

Weaver, The. 

Burlingame, Anson.—Charles Sumner Attacked in 
the Senate. 

Burlingame, E. W.—St. Valentine’s Eve. 

Burlingame, M. F.—Playing Fourth of July. 
Burlington Hawkeye. —Champion Snorer, The. 
Condensed Telegram, The. 

Driving the Cow. 

Happy Love. 

Load on His Mind, The. 

Mrs. Middlerib’s Letter. 

Romeo and Juliet. The Way it Should be Read 
in 1880. 

Songs in the Night. 

Word for Cranks, A 
“Burn, Minstrel.”—Leader Haughs. 

Burnand, Sir Fs. Cowley.—Oh, My Geraldine. 

True to Poll. 

Burnett, Alf.—Drunken Soliloquy in a Coal Cellar, A. 
Egyptian Debate. 

Peter Sorghum in Love. 

Yankee in Love A. See Peter Sorghum in Love. 
Burnett, Mrs. Frances Eliza [Hodgson].—Fauntleroy 
and the Earl. See Little Lord Fauntleroy. 

In the Pit. See That Lass O’Lowrie’s. 

Little Lord Fauntleroy. 

New Baby, The. 

Surly Tim. 

Surly Tim’s Trouble. See Surly Tim. 

That Lass o’ Lowrie’s. 

Burnett, Mary E.—Did not Pass. 

Burnham, Anna F.—Baby’s Offering. 

First Tangle, The. 

Her Name. 

True to Life. 

Burnham, Mrs. Clara Louise [Root],—All at Sea. (IF. 
others .) 

Sunshine in the House. 

Burnham, Raymond.—Her Answer to His Verses. 
Burns. E: F.—Hobson and His Men. 

King Coal to Uncle Sam. 

Burns, ,L D.—Child Samuel, The. 

Burns. Rob’t.—Absence. (At.) 

Address to a Lady. See O, wert thou in the Cauld 
Blast. 

Address to the Deil. 

Address to the Toothache. 

Address to the Unco Guid, or, the Rigidly Right¬ 
eous. 

Address to the Woodlark. 

Ae Fond Kiss. 

Ae Fond Kiss before We Part. See Ae Fond Kiss. 
Afton Water. See Sweet Afton. 

“Again rejoicing nature sees.” See Composed 
in Spring. 

Answer to Verses Addressed to the Poet by the 
Guidwife of Wauchope House. See To the 
Guidwife of Wauchope House. 

As I Stood by yon Roofless Tower. 

Auld Lang Syne. 

Banks o’ [or of] Doon, The. 

Bannockburn. 

Battle of Bannockburn, The. See Bannockburn. 
Bard’s Epitaph, A. 

Beauties of Nature, The. 

Before Parting. See My Bonny Mary. 

Birks of Aberfeldy, The. 

Blissful Day, The. See Day Returns. The. 

Bonnie Doon. See Banks o’ Doon, The. 

Bonnie Lesley [or Leslie]. 

Bonnie Mary. See My Bonnie Mary. 

Bonnie Wee Thing. 

Bookworms, The. 


Burns, Rob’t ( continued ). 

Bruce to His Men at Bannockburn. See Ban¬ 
nockburn. 

Bruce’s Address. See Bannockburn. 

Bruce’s Address to His Army. See Bannockburn. 
Ca’ the Yowes to the Knowes. ( One vers. at. to 
Isabel Pagan.) 

Captain’s Lady, The. 

Charlie He’s My Darling. (Another vers, by Jas. 
Hogg.) 

Charming Month of May. See It was the Charm¬ 
ing Month. 

Child’s Grace, A. See Selkirk Grace. The. 

Chloe. See It was the Charming Month. 

Cock up your Beaver 
Cornin’ through the Rye. 

Composed in Spring. 

Cotter’s Saturday Night, The. 

Day Returns, The. 

Day Returns, My Bosom Burns, The. See Day 
Returns, The. 

Death and Dying Words of Poor Mailie, The. 
Defiance. See McPherson’s Farewell. 

Dinner at the House of Dugal Stewart, A. 

Duncan Gray. 

Duncan Gray Cam’ Here to Woo. See Duncan Gray. 
Dusty Miller, The. 

Elegy on Captain Matthew Henderson. See On 
Captain Matthew Henderson. 

Epistle to a Young Friend. 

Epistle to Davie. 

Epistle to James Smith. 

Epistle to John Lapraik, An. 

Epistle to Mrs. Scott of Wauchope, The. See To 
the Guidwife of Wauchope House. 

Epitaph on a Celebrated Ruling Elder. 

Epitaph on a Wag in Mauchline. 

Epitaph on Holy Willie. 

Epitaph on W-. See On Wm. Graham of 

Mossknowe. 

Farewell, A. See My Bonnie Mary. 

Farewell, The. See It was a’ forourRightfu’ King. 
Farewell to Nancy. See Ae Fond Kiss. 

Flow Gently, Sweet Afton. See Sweet Afton. 

For a’ That and a’ That. See Is there, for Honest 
Poverty. 

Goal of Life, The. See Auld Lang Syne. 

Good Heart. See Epistle to Davie. 

Green Grow the Rashes [O]! 

Halloween. 

Happy Trio, The. 

Hark! the Mavis. See Ca’ the Yowes to the 
Knowes. 

Heard ye o’ the Tree of Liberty? See Tree of 
Liberty, The. 

“Here haply too, at vernal dawn.” See Humble 
Petition of Bruar Water to the Noble Duke of 
Athole, The. 

Here’s a Health to Ane I Lo’e dear. See Jessy. 
Here’s a Health to Them that’s Awa. 

He’s Gane. See Elegy on Captain Matthew Hen¬ 
derson. 

Hey, the Dusty Miller. See Dusty Miller. The. 
Highland Mary. 

Holy Fair, The. 

Holy Willie’s Prayer. 

Honest Poverty. See Is there, for Honest Poverty. 
Humble Petition of Bruar Water to the Noble 
Duke of Athole, The. 

I Love my Jean. 

I See a Form, I See a Face. 

Inspiration. See To William Simpson. 

Is there, for Honest Poverty. 

It was a’ for our Rightfu’ King. 

It was the Charming Month. 

It was the Charming Month of May. See It was 
the Charming Month. 

Jean. See I Love My Jean. 

Jessy. 

John Anderson. See John Anderson, My Jo. 
Jodn Anderson, My Jo. 

John Barleycorn. 

Kenmore’s on and Awa. 

Lady Mary Ann. 

Lament for Culloden. See Lovely Lass of Inver¬ 
ness, The. 

Lament for Glencairn. See Lament for James, 
Earl of Glencairn. 

Lament for James. Earl of Glencairn. 

Lament of Mary Queen of Scots on the Approach 
of Spring. 

Lass of Ballochmyle. The. 

Last May a Braw Wooer. 

Let not Woman e’er Complain. 


411 




Burns 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Burns, Rob’t ( continued). 

Lines:—“I murder hate by field or flood.” 

Lovely Lass of Inverness, The. 

McPherson’s Farewell. 

Man was Made to Mourn. 

Man’s a Man for a’ That, A. See Is there, for 
Honest Poverty. 

Mary^ Morison. 

Melancholy. See Man was Made to Mourn. 

My Bonnie Mary. 

My Father was a Farmer. 

My Heart’s in the Highlands. 

My Jean. See Though Cruel Fate. 

My Jean. See also I Love my Jean. 

My Nanie. O. 

My Nanie’s Awa. 

My Nannie’s Awa. See My Nanie’s Awa. 

My Wife’s a Winsome Wee Thing: 

O Mally’s Meek, Mally’s Sweet. 

O, My Luve’s Like a Red, Red Rose. See Red, 
Red Rose, A. 

O, Saw Ye Bonnie Lesley? See Bonnie Lesley. 

O Stay, Sweet Warbling Wood-lark. See Address 
to the Woodlark. 

O this is No my Own Lassie. See I See a Form, 
I See a Face. 

O were mv Love yon Lilac Fair. 

O, Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast. 

Of a’ the Airts. See I Love my Jean. 

Of a’ the Airts the Wind can Blaw. See I Love 
my Jean. 

Oh, Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast. See 0, Wert 
Thou in the Cauld Blast. 

On a Celebrated Ruling Elder. See Epitaph on 
a Celebrated Ruling Elder. 

On a Noted Coxcomb. 

On a Scotch Coxcomb. See On a Noted Coxcomb. 
On a Suicide. 

On a Wag in Mauchline. See Epitaph on a Wag 
in Mauchline. 

On Andrew Turner. 

On Caotain Grose’s Peregrinations through Scot¬ 
land. See On the Late Captain Grose’s Pere¬ 
grinations thro’ Scotland. 

On CaDtain Matthew Henderson. 

On Grizzel Grim [Grimme—<?.]. 

On Holy Willie. See Epitaph on Holy Willie. 

On John Dove. 

On Seeing a Wounded Hare Limp by Me. 

On the Late Captain Grose’s Peregrinations thro’ 
Scotland. 

On Wm. Graham of Mossknowe. 

Phyllis [or Phillisl the Fair. 

Poet’s Choice, The. See Lines: “I murder hate 
by field or flood.” 

Prayer in the Prospect of Death, A. 

Red, Red Rose, A. 

River’s SuDolication, The. See Humble Petition of 
Bruar Water to the Noble Duke of Athole, The. 
Scotland. See To the Guidwife of Wauchope 
House. 

Scots Wha Hae. See Bannockburn. 

Selkirk Grace, The. 

Silver Tassie. The. See My Bonnie Mary. 

Sweet Afton. 

Sweet are the Banks. See Banks o’ Doon, The. 
Tam Glen. 

Tam O’Shanter. 

"Then gentlv scan your brother man.” Nee Ad¬ 
dress to Unco Guid, or, the Rigidly Righteous. 
There’ll never be Peace till Jamie Comes Hame. 
This is no my ain Lassie. See I See a Form, I 
See a Face. 

Thou Lingering Star. See To Mary in Heaven. 
Though Cruel Fate. 

Tibbie Dunbar. 

To a Field House. See To a Mouse, on Turning 
up her Nest with a Plough. 

To a Louse. 

To a Mountain Daisy. 

To a Mouse. See To a Mouse, on Turning up 
her Nest with the Plough. 

To a Mouse, on Turning up her Nest with the 
Plough. 

To Mary in Heaven. 

To the Devil. See Address to the Deil. 

To the Guidwife of Wauchope House. 

To the Unco Guid[, or the Rigidly Righteous], 
See Address to the Unco Guid, or the Rigid¬ 
ly Righteous. 

To William Simpson. 

Tree of Liberty, The. 

True Until Death. See It was a’ for our Rightfu’ 
King. 


Burns, Rob’t ( continued ). 

Up in the Morning Early. 

Vision, The. 

Vision, The. See also As I Stood by yon Roof¬ 
less Tower. 

Wandering Willie. 

We^ All Have Faults. See To a Louse. 

“When I think on the happy days.” (At.) See 
Absence. 

Whistle, The. 

Whistle, and I’ll Come to You [or Ye], My Lad. 
Winsome Wee Thing, The. See My Wife’s a 
Winsome Wee Thing. 

Winter. 

Winter Night, A. 

Writing Verses. See Epistle to James Smith. 
“Ye banks and braes o’ bonnie Doon.” See 
Banks o’ Doon, The. 

Ye Flowery Banks. See Banks o’ Doon, The. 
Burr, Amelia.—Battle of Manila, The. 

Burr, Celia M.—Agnes and the Years. 

Burrell, D: Jas.—Shepherd’s Story, The. 

Burrington. -.—Beautiful, The. 

Burritt, Elihu (“ The Learned Blacksmith”).—Ambi¬ 
tious Youth. The. See One Niche the Highest. 
Drunkard’s Wife, The. 

Old Woman’s Railroad Signal, The. 

One Niche the Highest. 

Scene at the Natural Bridge. See One Niche 
the Highest. 

Burroughs, Althea S.—Savannah. 

Burroughs, Ellen. See Jewett, Sophie. 

Burroughs, J:—Blue-bird. The. See Wake Robin. 
Golden Crown Sparrow of Alaska. 

To the Lapland Longspur. 

Waiting. 

Wake Robin. 

Burroughs, Mrs. Ophelia G. [Browning],—Sometime— 
Somewhere. 

Burroughs, W. F.—Young Boot-black, The. 

Burton, H:—Gold of Hope, The. 

I vy , The. 

"Were there no night, we could not read the stars.” 
Burton, J:—Holy Bible, Book Divine. 

Burton, R: Eugene.—Across the Fields to Anne. 
Black Sheep. 

City, The. 

“Extras!” 

First Song, The. 

Forefather, The. 

' God’s Garden. 

In Sleep. 

Love is Strong. 

Masks. 

Mortis Dignitas. 

On a Ferry Boat. 

On the Stair. 

Polar Quest, The. 

Race of the Boomers, The. 

Unpraised Picture, An. 

Burton, Rob’t.—On Melancholy. 

Busbee, C: Manly.—Benefits of the Civil W T ar. 
Bushnell, E:—Reasonable Doubt, A. 

Bushnell, Frances Louisa.—In the Dark. 

Once Upon a Time. 

Unfulfilment. 

World Music. 

Bushnell. W: H.—Touch of Nature, A. 

Butler, Rev. Dr. —Death of Henry Clay. 

Butler, Arthur Grey.—Oh! to See Him Once Again. 
Butler, B: Franklin. Jr.—Fauntleroy. 

Butler, Ellis Parker.—Secret Combination, The. 
Butler, Mrs. Frances Anne [Kemble],—Absence. 

Art Thou Already Weary. 

“Better trust all and be deceived.” See Faith. 
Black Wall-flower. The. 

Description of Holland. 

Evening. 

Faith. 

Lament of a Mocking-bird. 

Trust. See Faith. 

Butler. Marie Barrett.—Tottie’s Tree-talk. 

Butler, Mary R.—My Vesper Song. 

Butler, Pauline.—Worth before Show. 

Butler, S:—Amantium Irae. See Hudibras. 

Apology for Plagiaries, An. See Satire upon 
Plagiaries. 

Argumentative Theology. See Hudibras. 
Authority. 

Bad Writers. 

Character of a Small Poet, The. 

Character of Hudibras, The. See Hudibras. 
Confession. 

Courtiers. 


412 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Byron 


Butler, S: ( continued). 

Critics. 

Description of Holland. 

Distichs and Saws. 

Epigram on a Club of Sots. 

Fear. 

Godly, The. 

Good Writing. 

Holland. See Description of Holland. 

Honour. See Hudibras. 

Hudibras. 

Hudibras’ Sword and Dagger. See Hudibras. 
Hypocrisy. 

Inventions. 

Laborious Writers. 

Language of the Learned. 

Law, The. (3) 

Logic of Hudibras. See Hudibras. 

Logicians. 

Love. 

Marriage. 

Marriage. See also Hudibras. 

Martial Music. See Hudibras. 

Miscellaneous Thoughts. 

Morning. See Hudibras. 

Muse of Doggerel, The. See Hudibras. 

‘New Light.’ See Hudibras. 

Night. See Hudibras. 

On a Club of Sots. See Epigram on a Club of Sots. 
Opinion. 

Opinionative, The. 

Piety. 

Poets. 

Polish. 

Politicians. 

Presbyterians, The. See Hudibras. 

Puffing. 

Puritans. See Hudibras. 

Rabble, The; or. Who Pays. 

Religion of Hudibras, The. See Hudibras. 

Satire upon Plagiaries. 

Satire upon the Weakness and Misery of Man. 
Smatterers. 

Spiritual Trimmers. See Hudibras. 

Upon the Weakness and Misery of Man. See 
Satire upon the Weakness and Misery of Man. 
Women. 

Butler, Sarah. See Wister, Mrs. Sarah [Butler], 
Butler, W: Allen.—All’s Well! 

Cast-off Garments. See Nothing to Wear. 

“I Can’t ” and “I Can.” 

Incognita of Raphael. 

Miss Flora M’Flimsey. See Nothing to Wear. 
Nothing to Wear. 

Uhland. 

Butler, W: Archer.—“It was no relief from temporal 
evils that the Apostle promised.” 

Butt, Geraldine.—After All! 

Butterbaugh, D. S. T.—Nothing and Something. 
Butterfield. Mrs. A. M.—To the Portrait of one "Gone 
Before.” 

Butterworth, Hezekiah.—Banner that Welcomes the 
World, The. 

Crown Our Washington. 

Decoration Day. 

Discovery Day. 

Festal Day Has Come, The. 

First Boston Thanksgiving, The.—July, 1630. 

See Thanksgiving in Boston Harbor,The. 

First Christmas in New England, The. 

First Thanksgiving, The. 

For Christmas Day. 

How Dot Heard “The Messiah.” 

In Bay Chaleur. . 

Lincoln’s Last Dream. 

Nation’s Defenders, The. 

Nix’s Mate. 

Old Flower-beds, The. 

Organ-temoest of Lucerne, The. 

Planting the Oak. 

Salve. 

Snowbird, The. 

Star in the West, The. 

Stately Minuet, The. 

Thanksgiving in Boston Harber, The. 

Washington. See Crown Our Washington. 

Butts. Mrs. Mary Frances [Barber],—Brook’s Song, The. 
Christmas Trees, The. 

Dewdrops. See Million Little Diamonds, A. 

“Here We Are!” 

I Wish I was a Grown-up! 

In Galilee. 

Is it Raining? 

Million Little Diamonds, A. 

413 


Butts, Mrs. Mary Frances [Barber] ( continued). 

Nature’s Thoughtfulness. 

New Year, The. 

Night. 

Preparation. 

Selfish and Lend-a-Hand. 

So the Snow Comes Down. 

Sweetest Place, The. 

Tree Planting. 

Trust. 

Water-lily, The. 

Wild Winds. 

Winter Jewels. See Million Little Diamonds, A. 

Winter Night. 

Butts, T: W.—Santa Claus’ Speech. 

Buxton, Ida M.—Faded Flowers. 

Byers, S: Hawkins Marshall.—Marriage of the 
Flowers, The. 

Sherman’s March to the Sea. 

Byr, Rob’t.—Cipher Despatch, The. 

Love Conquers Revenge. See Cipher Despatch, The. 

Byrd, W:—My Mind to Me a Kingdom is. (At.) 
See Dyer, Sir E: 

Quiet Life, The. 

Song: “What pleasure have great princes.” See 
Quiet Life, The. 

Byrom, Dr. J;—Careless Content. 

Christmas Carol. 

Country Fellows and the Ass, The. 

Countrymen and the Ass, The. See Country Fel¬ 
lows and the Ass, The. 

Desponding Soul’s Wish, The. 

Epigram on Two Monopolists. See On Two Lean 
Millers. 

Jacobite Toast. See To the Same [an Officer in 
the Armv], etc. 

My Spirit Longeth for Thee. See Desponding 
Soul’s Wish, The. 

Nimmers, The. 

On the Origin of Evil. 

On Two Lean Millers 

Pastoral, A. 

Pond, The. 

Saint Philip Neri and the Youth. 

Spectacles; or. Helps to Read. See Verses 
Spoken oh the same Occasion with the Pre¬ 
ceding [at the Breaking up of the Free Gram¬ 
mar School, in Manchester], 

Three Black Crows, The. 

To the Same [an Officer in the Army], Extem¬ 
pore; Intended to Allay the Violence of Party 
Spirit. 

Verses Spoken on the same Occasion with the 
Preceding [at the Breaking up of the Free 
Grammar School, in Manchester]. 

Which is Which. See To the same [an Officer 
in the Army], etc. 

Byron, G: Noel Gordon, Lord .—Address Spoken at 
the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre, Satur¬ 
day, Oct. 10, 1812. 

Address to the Ocean. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Adieu! Adieu! My Native Shore. See Childe’s 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Alhama. See Very Mournful Ballad on the Siege 
and Conquest of Alhama, A. 

All for Love. See Stanzas Written on the Road 
between Florence and Pisa. 

All is Vanity, saith the Preacher. 

Alp’s Decision. See Siege of Corinth, The. 

Ambition. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

And Thou art Dead, as Young and Fair. 

Apostrophe to the Ocean. See Childe Harold's 
Pilgrimage. 

Apparition, The. See Manfred. 

Aspect of Death. See Giaour, The. 

At St. Peter’s at Rome. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Ball at Brussels, the Night before the Battle of 
Waterloo, The. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Battle of Albuera. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Battle of Waterloo, The. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Bepno. 

Bride of Abydos, The. 

Bull Fight, The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Byron’s Last Poem. See On this Day I Complete 
my Thirty-sixth Year. 

Calm and Storm on Lake Leman. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Childe Harold’s Farewell to England. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 







Byron 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Byron, G: Noel Gordon, Lord ( continued). 

Chillon. See Prisoner of Chillon, The. 
Churchill’s Grave. 

Coliseum, The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Coliseum, The. See also Manfred. 

Coliseum by Moonlight. See Manfred. 

Cornelian, The. 

Corsair, The. 

“Could love forever.” See Stanzas: “Could love 
forever.” 

Curse of Marino Faliero, The. See Marino Fali- 
ero, Doge of Venice. 

Daniel Boone. See Don Juan. 

Darkness. 

Dead Heroes. See Siege of Corinth, The. 

Death of General Marceau. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Death of the Princess Charlotte. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

Death Penalty for New Offences, The. 
"Dedication” in Don Juan, The. See Don Juan. 
Defeat of Napoleon. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Deformed Transformed, The. 

Degeneracy of Greece. See Don Juan. 
Destruction of Sennacherib, The. 

Doge’s Sentence, The. See Marino Faliero, Doge 
of Venice. 

Don Juan. 

Donna Julia’s Letter. See Don Juan. 

Dream, The. 

Dream of Darkness. See Darkness. 

Dying Gladiator, The. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Dying Speech of Marino Faliero. See Marino 
Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Elegy. See Oh, Snatched away in Beauty’s Bloom. 
Elegy on Thyrza. See And thou art Dead, as 
Young and Fair. 

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. 

Epistle to Augusta. 

Epitaph for William Pitt. 

Epitaph on John Adams of Southwell, a Carrier, 
who Died of Drunkenness. 

Eternal Spirit of the Chainless Mind. See Pris¬ 
oner of Chillon, The. 

Eve of Quatre Bras. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Eve of Waterloo, The. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Evening. See Don Juan. 

Execution, The. See Parisina. 

Exhortation to the Greeks. 

Fair Greece! Sad Relic of Departed Worth. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Fall of Greece. The. See Giaour, The. 

Fall of Terni, The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Fare Thee Well. 

Farewell, if ever Fondest Prayer. 

Farewell to His Wife. See Fare Thee Well. 
Father-land and Mother-tongue. (At.) 

Field of Waterloo, The. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Filial Love. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

First Love. See Don Juan. 

For Music. See Stanzas for Music. 

Friendshio. See To Thomas Moore. 

Giaour, The. 

Girl of Cadiz, The. 

Gladiator, The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 
Glory That was Greece, The. See Don Juan. 
Greece. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Greece. See also Giaour, The. 

Haidee and Juan. See Don Juan. 

Hail and Farewell. See On this Day I Complete 
my Thirty-sixth Year. 

“Hark, heard ye not those hoofs of dreadful note?” 

See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Harold the Wanderor. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Heroes of Greece. See Siege of Corinth, The. 
Hurts of Time. See Siege of Corinth, The. 

“I do believe though I have found them not.” 

See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Imaginative Sympathy with Nature. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Idleness. See Giaour, The. 

Immortal Mind, The. See When Coldness Wraps 
. this Suffering Clay. 

“Tn thee I fondly hoped to clasp.” See To D—. 
Incantation from Manfred. See Manfred. 
Invocation to the Spirit of Achilles. See De¬ 
formed Transformed, The. 

Island, The. 


Byron, G: Noel Gordon, Lord ( continued ). 

Isles of Greece, The. See Don Juan. 

Jephthah’s Daughter. 

Jerusalem Avenged. See Vision of Belshazzar. 

Kiss, Dear Maid, The. See On Parting. 

Lachin y Gair. 

Lines to Mr. Hodgson. 

Lines Written on a Blank Leaf of “The Pleasures 
of Memory.” 

Lisbon Packet, The. See Lines to Mr. Hodgson. 

Longing. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Love. See Giaour, The. 

Love of England. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Maid of Athens. See Maid of Athens, ere We Part. 

Maid of Athens, ere We Part. 

Manfred. 

Manfred’s Soliloquy. See Manfred. 

Man’s Love. See Don Juan. 

Marathon. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Marino Faliero to the Conspirators. See Marino 
Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Marino Faliero to the Venetian Conspirators. See 
Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Matrons and Maids. See Don Juan. 

Matrons and Maids. See also Beppo. 

Mazeppa. 

Monody on the Death of [the Right Hon. R. B.] 
Sheridan. 

Murat. See Ode from the French. 

My Boat is on the Shore. See To Thomas Moore. 

Napoleon. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Napoleon’s Farewell. 

Nature’s Daughter. See Stanzas for Music. 

Night. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Night and Tempest. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Night before Waterloo, The. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Nevermore. See Don Juan. 

No More. See Don Juan. 

O, Snatched away in Beauty’s Bloom! See 
Oh, Snatched away in Beauty’s Bloom. 

Ocean. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Ode from the French. 

Ode on Venice. 

Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte. 

Oh! Snatched away in Beauty’s Bloom. 

Oh, Talk not to Me of a Name Great in Story. 
See Stanzas Writtten on the Road between 
Florence and Pisa. 

On a Carrier who Died of Drunkenness. See 
Enitaph on John Adams of Southwell, a 
Carrier, who Died of Drunkenness. 

On My Thirty-seventh Birthday. See On this 
Day I Complete my Thirty-sixth Year. 

On Parting. 

On Samuel Rogers. 

On the Castle of Chillon. See Prisoner of Chillon, 
The. 

On the Death of Mr. Fox. 

On the Death of [Richard Brinsley] Sheridan. See 
Monody on the Death of the Right Hon. R. B. 
Sheridan. 

On this Day I Comnlete my Thirty-sixth year. 

Orient, The. See Bride of Abydos, The. 

Outward Bound. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Pantheon, The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Parisina. 

Petrarch’s Tomb. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Picture of Death, A. See Giaour, The. 

Poet’s Impulse, The. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Prayer of Nature, The. 

Prisoner of Chillon, The. 

Procreative Virtue of Great Examples. See 
Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice. 

Prometheus. 

Race with Death, The. See Ode on Venice. 

Rainbow, The. See Don Juan. 

Reonening of the Drury Lane Theatre. See Ad¬ 
dress Spoken at the Opening of Drury Lane 
Theatre. 

Rhine. The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Robert Southey. See English Bards and Scotch 
Reviewers. 

“Roll on, thou deen and dark blue ocean—roll!” 
See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Romance. See To Romance. 

Rome. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Ruins of Rome, The. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

St. Peter’s Church at Rome. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 


414 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Cameron 


Byron, G: Noel Gordon, Lord ( continued ). 

Saul before His Last Battle. See Song of Saul 
before his Last Battle. 

Sea, The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Sea. See also Corsair, The. 

Sea-cave, The. See Island, The. 

Sennacherib. See Destruction of Sennacherib, The. 

“She walks in beauty, like the night.” See She 
Walks in Beauty. 

She Walks in Beauty. 

Shipwreck. See Don Juan. 

Siege and Conquest of Alhama. See Very Mourn¬ 
ful Ballad on the Siege ond Conquest of Al¬ 
hama, A. 

Siege of Corinth, The. 

Sir Walter Scott. See English Bards and Scotch 
Reviewers. 

Skull, The[or A], See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

So, we’ll Go no more a-Roving. 

Soliloquy of Manfred. See Manfred. 

Solitude. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Song of Saul before his Last Battle. 

Song of the Greek Bard See Don Juan. 

Song of the Greek Poet. See Don Juan. 

Song of the Rover. See Corsair, The. 

Sonnet on Chillon. See Prisoner of Chillon, 
The. 

Stanzas:—“Could love forever.” 

Stanzas:—“Oh, talk not to me of a name great in 
story.” See Stanzas Written on the Road be¬ 
tween Florence and Pisa. 

Stanzas: “Though the day of my destiny’s over.” 
See Stanzas to Augusta. 

Stanzas for Music: “There be none,” etc. 

Stanzas for Music: “There’s not a joy,” etc. 

Stanzas for Music: “They say that Hope,” etc. 

Stanzas to Augusta. 

Stanzas Written on the Road between Florence and 
Pisa. 

Stars. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Storm, The. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Storming of Corinth, The. See Siege of Corinth, 
The. 

Sublime Tobacco. See Island, The. 

“Such is my name and such my tale.” See 
Giaour, The. 

Sunset. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Swimming. See Two Foscari, The. 

Tasso. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Temple of Clitumnus. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

“There be none of Beauty’s daughters.” See 
Stanzas for Music. 

There’s not a Joy the World can Give. See Stan¬ 
zas for Music. 

“They never fail who die.” See Marino Faliero, 
Doge of Venice. 

Thunder-storm in the Alps, A. See Childe Har¬ 
old’s Pilgrimage. 

To Augusta. See Epistle to Augusta. 

To D-. 

To Romance. 

To Samuel Rogers, Esq. See Lines Written on a 
Blank Leaf of “The Pleasures of Memory.” 

To the Author of a Sonnet Beginning “Sad is my 
Verse, you say, ‘and yet no Tear.’ ” 

To the Ocean. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

To Thomas Moore. 

Transient Beauty. See Giaour, The. 

Twilight. See Don Juan. 

Twilight. See also Parisina. 

Two Foscari, The. 

Unreturning Brave, The. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage. 

Venice. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

Very Mournful Ballad on the Siege and Conquest 
of Alhama. A. 

Vision of Belshazzar. 

Vision of Judgment, The. 

Waltz, The. 

Washington. See Ode to Nanoleon Buonaparte. 

Waterloo. See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. 

We’ll Go no More A-roving. See So, we’ll Go no 
more a-Roving. 

When Coldness Wraps this Suffering Clay. 

When we Two Parted. 

Windsor Poetics. 

Wordsworth. See English Bards and Scotch 
Reviewers. 

Written after Swimming from Sestos to Abydos. 

Youth and Age. See Stanzas for Music. 

Byron, Mrs. Mary C. [Gillington].—Fairy Thrall, The. 

Intra Muros. 

Tryst of the Night, The. 


c 

C.—Seasonable Sweets. 

C., A.—Venturesome Buds, The. 

C., A. E.—Snow. 

C., A. G.—Be Thou a Bird, My Soul. 

C., E. M. H.—Silent Grand Army, The. 

C., J.—Beauty and Time. 

C., K.—Buttercup, A. 

C., L. A. B.—Annie’s Party. 

C., M. E.—Autumn Song. 

C., M. H.—Spring on the Heights. 

C., R.—Mandolin, The. 

C., T. H.—Hopes and Fears. 

C., W. C.—Fly, Little Letter. 

C., W. O.—Spoiled Face, The. 

Cable, G: Washington.—Bonaventure. 

Dr. Sevier. 

Fall In! 1860. See Dr. Sevier. 

Last Arrival, The. 

Mary’s Night Ride. See Dr. Sevier. 

New Arrival, The. See Last Arrival, The. 
Spelling-match at Grande Pointe.The. See Bona¬ 
venture. 

Written in the Visitors’ Book at the Pirthplace of 
Robert Burns. 

Cadmus, Will H.—Wife’s Lament, A. 

Cahill, Ed. H.—Bric-a-brac. 

Wily Bee, The. 

Caine, Hall.—Bondman, The. 

Cut off from the People. See Deemster, The. 
Deemster, The. 

Father and Son. See Deemster, The. 

Homeless Old Man, The. See Bondman, The. 
Mount of Laws, The. See Bondman, The. 

Caird, J.—Latent Principles of Religion. 

Cake, Lu B.—Mister, Yer Gittin’ Old. 

Caldwell, A. F.—All Ending in “O”. 

Grandmother’s Stitches. 

Caldwell, W: Warner.—Robin’s Come. 

Rose-bush, The. (Tr.) 

Washington. 

Calhoun, J: Caldwell.—Against the Force Bill. 

Force Bill, The. See Against the Force Bill. 
Liberty and Intelligence. See Liberty the Meed 
of Intelligence. 

Liberty the Meed of Intelligence. 

On the Prospect of War. See On the Prospect of 
War with Great Britain. 

On the Prospect of War with Great Britain. 

Purse and the Sword, The. 

Speech on the Internal Improvement Bill. 
Calidasa.—Babe, The. 

Baby, The. Nee Babe, The. 

Woman. 

Call, Wathen Marks Wilks.—People’s Petition, The. 
Summer Days. 

Callanan, Jeremiah Jos.—Convict of Clonmel, The. 
Dirge of O’Sullivan Bear. 

Gougaune Barra. 

Outlaw of Loch Lene, The. 

Virgin Mary’s Bank, The. 

Callistratus.—Harmodius and Aristogeiton. 

Calthrop, S: R.—Where Baby Joy Comes From. 
Calverley, C: Stuart.—Arab, The. 

Auld Wife, The. See Ballad: ‘‘The auld wife sat 
at her ivied door.” 

Ballad: “The auld wife sat at her ivied door.” 
Cock and the Bull, The. 

Companions. 

Disaster. 

First Love. 

Gemini and Virgo. 

“Hie Vir, Hie Est.” 

Lovers, and a Reflection. 

Motherhood. 

Ode to Tobacco. 

On the Brink. 

Sad Memories. 

Schoolmaster Abroad with his Son, The. 

Shelter. 

Tommy’s First Love. See Gemini and Virgo. 
Wanderers. 

Calvert, G: H:—Bunker Hill. 

Campbell, G: Douglas. See Argyll, Duke op. 
Cameron, C. Innes.—New Year, The. 

Cameron. G: Frd’k.—Golden Text, The. 

Is There a God? 

On Tiptoe. 

Standing on Tiptoe. See On Tiptoe. 

What Matters it? 


415 






Camoens 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Camoens, Luis de.—Blighted Love. 

Inez de Castro. See Lusiad, The. 

Lusiad, The. 

Spirit of the Cape, The. See Lusiad, The. 

Camp, Frd’k Stanley.—Anita. 

Flirtation. 

Camp, Pauline Frances.—Cradle Song. 

Campbell, Bartley T.—That Baby in Tuscaloo. 
Campbell, Jane.—Chestnut-tree, The. 

Decoration Day. 

Campbell, Mary Maxwell.—Lament for Glencoe. 
Campbell, T:—Adelgitha. 

Battle of Hohenlinden. See Hohenlinden. 

Battle of Linden, The. See Hohenlinden. 

Battle of Maciejowice, The. See Pleasures of Hope. 
Battle of the Baltic. 

Beech Tree’s Petition, The. 

Caroline. 

Downfall of Poland[, The]. See Pleasures of Hope. 
Earl March Look’d on His Dying Child. See 
Song: “Earl March,” etc. 

Evening Star, The. See Song to the Evening Star. 
Exile of Erin[, The]. 

Fall of Warsaw. 1794. See Pleasures of Hope. 
First Kiss, The. See Song: “How delicious is the 
winning.” 

Gertrude of Wyoming. 

Glenara. 

Hallowed Ground. 

Harper, The. 

Hohenlinden. 

Hope. See Pleasures of Hope. 

Hope of an Hereafter, The. See Pleasures of 
Hope. 

Last Man, The. 

Lochiel’s Warning. 

Lord Ullin’s Daughter. 

Maid’s Remonstrance, The. 

Mariners of England, The. See Ye Mariners of 
England. 

Men of England. 

Napoleon and the [British] Sailor. 

Ode to Winter. 

Oneyda’s Death Song, The. See Gertrude of 
Wyoming. 

Parrot, The.—A True Story. 

Pleasures of Hope. 

Poland. See Pleasures of Hope. 

Poor Dog Tray. See Harper, The. 

Rainbow, The. See To the Rainbow. 

River of Life, The. See Thought Suggested by 
the New Year, A. 

Soldier and Sailor. See Napoleon and the British 
Sailor. 

Soldier’s Dream, The. 

Song: “Earl March look’d on his dying child.” 
Song: “How delicious is the winning.” 

Song: “Withdraw not yet those lips and fingers.” 
Song of the Greeks. 

Song to the Evening Star. 

Thought Suggested by the New Year. A. 

To the Evening Star. See Caroline. 

To the Evening Star. See also Song to the Eve¬ 
ning Star. 

To the Rainbow. 

What’s Hallowed Ground? See Hallowed Ground. 
“With thee, sweet Hope, resides the heavenly 
light.” See Pleasures of Hope. 

Wizard’s Warning, The. See Lochiel’s Warning. 
“Ye Mariners.” See Ye Mariners of England 
Ye Mariners of England. 

Campbell. W: Wilfred.—Canadian Folk-song, A. 

Lake Memory, A. 

To the Lakes. 

Were-wolves. The. 

Campion, Dr. -.—Ninety-eight. 

Campion, Rob’t.—“Peaceful western wind, The.” 
Campion, T:—Advice to a Girl. 

Amaryllis [or Amarillis], 

Basia. 

Charm. The. 

Cherry Ripe. {At. also to R: Alison.) 

Come A wav! 

Day and Night. 

Devotion. (2 poems.) 

Follow Your Saint! See Devotion (2 d poem). 
Fortunati Nimium. 

Give Beauty all her Right. 

Hymn in Praise of Neptune. A. 

In Imagine Pertransit Homo. See Devotion (1st 
poem). 

Integer Vitte. 

Jack and Joan. See Fortunati Nimium. 


Campion, T: {continued). 

Laura. See Observations on the Art of English 
Poesy. 

Love’s Request. See “Shall I come, sweet love, 
to thee?” 

Man of Life Upright. The. See Integer Vitae. 
Masque at the Marriage of the Lord Hayes. 
Measure of Beauty. The. See Give Beauty all her 
Right. 

O Come Quickly! 

O Crudelis Amor. See When Thou must Home. 
Observations on the Art of English Poesy. 

Of Corinna’s Singing. 

Renunciation. A. 

Rose-cheeked Laura. See Observations on the 
Art of English Poesy. 

Rustic Joys. See Fortunati Nimium. 

Shadow, The. See Devotion (1st poem). 

“Shall I come, sweet love, to thee?” 

Sic Transit. See Day and Night. 

Silent Music. See Observations on the Art of 
English Poesy. 

“Sleep, angry beautyf, sleep and fear not me].” 
There is a Garden in her Face. See Cherry Ripe. 
There is None, O, None but You. 

“Though you are young, and I am old.” 

To Lesbia. 

Triumph Now. See Masque at the Marriage of 
the Lord Hayes. 

Upright Man, The. See Integer Vitse. 

Vobiscum est lope. See When Thou must Home. 
When Thou must Home. 

‘‘Where she her sacred bower adorns.” 

Winter Nights. 

Campus. —October Love Song. 

Phantasy, A. 

Candee, Harry Safford.—Auf Wiedersehen. 

Marigold. 

Candy, Mrs. Caroline F.—Old Christmas Forty Years 

Ago! 

Winds of the Prairie, The. 

Cane, Melville H.—Winter Night, A. 

Canfield, Hattie G.—Changing Color. 

Canning, G:—Against Lord John Russell’s Motion. 
Balance of Power, The. 

Bank-notes and Coin. 

Collision of Vices[, A]. 

Defence of Pitt. See Regency Resolutions. 
Elderly Gentleman, The. 

Epitaph for the Tombstone Erected over the 
Marquis of Anglesea’s Leg, Lost at the Battle 
of Waterloo. 

Epitaph on the Tombstone Erected over the Mar¬ 
quis of Anglesea’s Leg. See * ‘ Enitaph for,” etc. 
Friend of Humanity and the Knife-grinder, The. 
Fruits of the War with France. 

“Measures not Men.” 

Knife-grinder, The. See Friend of Humanity and 
the Knife-grinder, The. 

On Mr. Tierney’s Motion, December 11, 1798. 
Reformation of the Knave of Hearts. 

Regency Resolutions. 

Rover, The. 

Song by Rogero the Captive. See Rover, The. 
Song of One Eleven Years in Prison. See Rover, 
The. 

Song. Sung by Rogero in the Burlesque Play of 
“The Rover.” See Rover, The. 

University of Gottingen, The. See Rover, The. 
Canning, Josephine.—Nature’s Secret. 

Cannon, Rev. E:—Unsuspected Fact, An. 

Cannon, Gertrude M.—Two Maidens. 

Canton, W:—Karma. 

Laus Infant.ium. 

New Poet, A. 

Capen, Elmer Hewitt.—John Boyle O’Reilly. 

Situation of a University, The. 

Caoern, E:—Tim Tuff. 

Caopleman, Josie Frazee.—Resurrected Hearts, The. 
Cardwill, -.—Hero, The. 

Carew, Lady Eliz.—Mariam, the Fair Queen of Jewry. 
Revenge of Injuries. See Mariam, the Fair 
Queen of Jewry. 

True Greatness. See Mariam, the Fair Queen of 
Jewry. 

Carew, T:—Airs of Spring, The. See Upon Master W. 
Montague, his Return from Travel. 

‘‘Ask me no more where Jove bestows.” See 
Song: “Ask,” etc. 

Celia Singing. 

Chloris in the Snow. (At.) See On Chloris Walk¬ 
ing in the Snow. 

Compliment, The. 


416 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Carman 


Carew, T: ( continued ). 

Cruel Mistress, The. 

Deposition from Love, A. 

Disdain Returned. , 

Epitaph on Lady Mary Villers. See Epitaph on 
the Lady Mary Villiers. 

Epitaph on the Lady Mary Villiers. (2 poems.) 
Give Me More Love. See Song: Mediocrity in 
Love Rejected. 

Give Me More Love or More Disdain. See Song: 

Mediocrity in Love Rejected. 

“He that loves a rosy cheek.’’ See Disdain 
Returned. 

I Do not Love Thee for that Fair. See Compli¬ 
ment, The. 

In Praise of His Mistress. 

Ingrateful Beauty threatened. 

Lady to her Inconstant Servant, The. 

On Chloris Walking in the Snow. (Af.) 

Pastoral Dialogue, A. 

Persuasions to Joy: a Song. See Song: Persua¬ 
sions to Enjoy. 

Prayer to the Wind, A. 

Primrose, The. (At.) 

Proper Woman, A. See Disdain Returned. 
Protestation, The. 

Rapture, The. 

Red and White Roses. 

Song: “Ask me no more where Jove bestows.” 
Song: “Would you know what’s soft.” (At.) 
Song: Mediocrity in Love Rejected. 

Song: Persuasions to Enjoy. 

Song: To my Inconstant Mistress. 

Spring. 

Sweetly Breathing, Vernal Air. See Upon Master 
W. Montague, his Return from Travel. 

To Celia Singing. See Celia Singing. 

To His Inconstant Mistress. <See Song: To my 
Inconstant Mistress. 

True Beauty, The. See Disdain Returned. 
Unfading Beauty, The. See Disdain Returned. 
Ungrateful Beauty. See Ingrateful Beauty 
Threatened. 

Upon Master W. Montague, his Return from 
Travel. 

Carey, Ellen W.—Down the Stream. 

Carey, H:—Contrivances, The. 

Drinking Song, A. 

Genius for the Stage, A. 

God Save the King. 

Love’s a Riddle. 

Maiden’s Choice, The. See Contrivances, The. 
Maiden’s Ideal of a Husband, A. See Contriv¬ 
ances, The. 

Sally in our Alley. 

Carleton, Ada.—Selling the Baby. 

Carleton, Guy.—Old Clock, The. 

Carleton, Will M.—-Ancient. Miner’s Story, The. 

Baron Grimalkim’s Death. 

Betsy and I are Out. 

Burning of Chicago, The. 

Caliber Fifty-four. 

Christmas Baby, The. 

Cover Them Over. 

Dead Student, The. 

Death-bridge of the Tay, The. 

Difficult Love-making. 

Earthquake-prayer, The. 

Editor’s Guests, The.. 

Elder Lamb’s Donation. 

Farmer and Wheel; or, The New Lochinvar. 
Farmer Stebbins at Football. 

Farmer Stebbins at Ocean Grove. 

Farmer Stebbins’ First and Last Appearance on 
Rollers. See Farmer Stebbins on Rollers. 
Farmer Stebbins on Rollers. 

First Settler’s Story, The. 

Flash—the Fireman’s Story. 

Funeral, The. See Negro Funeral, The. 

Goin’ Home To-day. 

Gone with a Handsomer Man. 

Grand Old Day, The. See Thursday Sabbath Day, 
The. 

How Betsy and I Made Up. 

How Jamie Came Home. 

How We Fought the Fire. 

How We Kept the Day. 

Lightning-rod Dispenser, The. 

Little Black-eyed Rebel, The. 

Little Golden-hair. 

Makin’ an Editor outen o’ him. See Editor’s 
Guests, The. 


Carleton, Will M. ( continued). 

Negro Funeral, The. 

New Church Organ, The. 

Old Reading-class, The. 

Our Traveled Parson. 

Out of the Old House, Nancy. 

Over the Hill from the Poor-house. 

Over the Hill to the Poor-house. 

Prayer, The. See Earthquake-prayer, The. 

Ride of Jennie McNeal, The. 

Rifts in the Cloud. 

School-master’s Guests, The. 

Thursday Sabbath Day, The. 

Took Johnny to the Show. 

Uncle Sammy. 

Under the Wheels. 

Up in the Loft. 

“Way at times may dark and dreary seem.” See 
Rifts in the Cloud. 

Worried about Catherine. 

Carleton, W:—Sigh for Knockmann, A. 

Sir Turlough; or, The Churchyard Bride. 

“Carlino, Don Santiago.”—Soldier Tramp, The. 
“Carlos.”—Papa’s Coming. 

Carlyle, Jane Welsh.—Answer to "Cui Bono,” An. 
Heroism in Housekeeping. 

To a Swallow Building under our Eaves. 

To a Swallow Building under the Eaves at Craig- 
enputtock. See To a Swallow Building under 
our Eaves. 

Carlyle, T:—Adieu. 

Aristocracy. See Past and Present. 

Await the Issue. See Past and Present. 

Charlotte Corday. See French Revolution, The. 
“Cui Bono?” 

Everlasting No, The. See Sartor Resartus. 
Execution of Marie Antoinette, The. See French 
Revolution, The. 

Faust. ( Tr.) See Goethe, Johann W. von. 
French Revolution, The. 

“Give us, O give us, the man who sings at his work.” 
Heard are the Voices. See Past and Present. 
“Heroes have gone out; quacks have come in.” 

See On Heroes and Hero Worship. 

Honor of Labor, The. See Past and Present. 
Honor to the Laborer. See Past and Present 
“I call that, the Book of Job, aside from all 
theories about it.” See On Heroes and Hero 
Worship. 

Justice. See Past and Present. 

Labor. See Past and Present. 

Larch and the Oak, The. 

Marie Antoinette. See French Revolution, The. 
Mohammed. See On Heroes and Hero Worship. 
“Musical! how much lies in that.” See On Heroes 
and Hero Worship. 

Nature. See On Heroes and Hero Worship. 
Nature a Hard Creditor. See Stump Orator, The. 
"O pious mother! kind, good, brave, and truthful.” 
On Heroes and Hero Worship. 

Past and Present. 

“Penalties! quarrel not with the old phraseology, 
good readers.” 

Psalm Forty-six. (Tr.) 

Sacredness of Work, The. See Past and Present. 
Safe Stronghold, A. (Tr.) See Psalm Forty-six. 
Sartor Resartus. 

Sower’s Song, The. 

Speech of the Erdgeist in “Faust.” See Faust. 
Stump Orator, The. 

“That a man stand and speak of spiritual things to 
men!” 

To-day. 

Work. See Past and Present. 

Carman, (W:) Bliss.—Crimson House, The. 
Eavesdropper, The. 

Envoy. 

Golden Rowan. 

Gravedigger, The. 

Hack and Hew. 

Henry George. 

Joys of the Road, The. 

Low Tide on Grand Pr6. 

Marian Drury. 

Mendicants, The. 

More Ancient Mariner, A. 

Phillips Brooks. 

Sea Child, A. 

Song: “Love, by that loosened hair.” 

Spring Song. 

Vagabond Song, A. 

Verlaine. 


417 





Carman 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Carman, (W:) Bliss ( continued). 

White Gull, The. 

Why. 

Windflower, A. 

Carmen, Felix.—Spinning Wheel, The. 

Valentine to a Flirt. 

“Carmen Sylva.” See Eliz. Pauline Attilia, Queen 
of Roumania. 

Carnegie, James. See Southesk, Earl of. 

Carney, Julia A. T.—Little Drops of Water See Little 
Things. 

Little Things. ( Also at. to Frances Sargent Os¬ 
good and to-Brewer.) 

Carpenter, Mrs. Amelia Walstein [Jolls].—Old Flemish 
Lace. 

Recollection. 

Ride to Cherokee, The. 

Carpenter, E:—Smith and the King, The. 

Carpenter, Eliz.—Them Dear Old Garret Things. 
Carpenter, H: Bernard.—Reed, The. 

Carpenter, Jos. E:—Gottingen Barber, The. 

Carpenter, Mabel A.—Lullaby. 

Carpenter, Millie W.—Christmas Carol. 

Carr, Col. Clark E.—Lincoln at Gettysburg. 
Carrington, H: Beebe.—As Thy Day Thy Strength 
Shall Be. 

Exiles in Egypt, The. 

Idleness a Crime. 

Military Training in the Schools 
New Liberty Bell, The. 

Patriotic Prince, The. 

Patriot’s Cry, The. 

“Ring! Ring! of liberty and peace!” 

Seeking a Country. 

Three W’s—Work, Watch, Wait, The. 
Washington as a Soldier. 

Carrington, Kate A.—Scent of a Good Cigar, The. 
Carroll, Jennie.—How the Babies Grow. 

Carroll, Lewis. See Dodgson, C: Lutwidge. 

Carruth, Hayden.—Kindergarten Christmas, A. 
Carryl, C: E:—My Reeollectest Thoughts. 

Robinson Crusoe. 

Song in the Dell, The. 

Walloping Window-blind, The. 

Carryl, Guy Wetmore.—Ballade of Justification, A. 
Captive, The. 

Convert, The. 

Fickle Heart, A. 

Friends. 

L’Amour, 1’Amour. 

Memory, A. 

Pallas. 

Passing Song, A. 

Singular Sangfroid of Baby Bunting, The. 
Sycophantic Fox and the Gullible Raven, The. 
Then and Now. 

When the Great Grey Ships Come In. 

Carson, Eva Lovett.—-What Might Happen. 

Carson, Paul.—Arabella and Sally Ann. 

Carswell, E:—Caw! Caw! Caw! 

Temperance Echo, The. 

What Whiskey Did for Me. 

Carter, Mrs. -.—Nursery Song. {At. also to Mrs. 

J. Morrison.) 

Recitation for Three Little Girls. See Nursery Song. 
What the Mother Heard. See Nursery Song. 
Carter. Agnes L. See Mason, Mrs. Agnes Louisa 
[Carter], 

Carter, Alice P.—Baby’s Correspondence. 

Day before Christmas, The. 

Carter, Consider B.—Rustle of the Wing, The. 

Carter, Grace R.—Trees’ Choice, The. 

Carter, Mary E.—Sing. 

Cartwright, W:—Falsehood. 

New Year’s Gift to Brian Lord Bishop of Sarum, A. 
On a Virtuous Young Gentlewoman that died 
suddenly. 

On His Majesty’s Recovery from the Small-pox. 
On the Queen’s Return from the Low Countries. 
To Chloe. 

Carver, J:—Nightfall. 

Carvie, Alex. Rae.—Phantasy. 

Cary, Alice.—Among the Beautiful Pictures. See 
Pictures of Memory. 

At the Tavern. 

Autumn. 

Balder’s Wife. 

Barbara Blue. 

Bridal Hour, The. 

Buried Gold. 

Burning Prairie, The. 

Child’s Wisdom. A. 

Chopper’s Child, The. 


Cary, Alice (continued). 

Christmas Story, A. 

Dan and Dimple, and how They Quarreled. 
Dream of Home, A. 

Dreams. 

Dying Hymn. 

Faded Leaves. 

Fairy of the Dell, The. 

Fairy-folk. 

Faith and Works. 

Ferry of Galloway, The. 

Field Sweet-brier, The. 

Fisherman’s Wife, The. 

Flower-spider, The. 

Good Rule, A. 

Grateful Swan, The. 

Gray Swan, The. 

Her Last Verses. See Dying Hymn. 

Here and There. 

Hide and Seek. 

Hoe your own row. See Old Maxims. 

I Hear a Dear, Familiar Tone. See Dream of 
Home, A. 

Jenny Dunleath. 

Known by His Works. 

Last and Best. 

Lesson of Mercy, A. 

Life’s Mysteries. 

Light. 

Little Brother, The. See Pictures of Memory. 
Little Children. 

“Love! blessed Love! if we could hang our walls.” 

See Bridal Hour, The. 

“Love’s light is strange to you? Ah, me!” 

Make Believe. 

Might of Love, The. 

Mines of Avondale, The. 

My Creed. 

My Darlings. 

Nobility. 

November. 

Nut Hard to Crack, A. 

“O winds! ye are too rough, too rough!” 

Old Chums. 

Old Maxims. 

Old Story, The. 

Order for a Picture, An. 

Peter Grey. 

Pictures of Memory. 

Pig and the Hen, The. 

Plea for Charity. 

Pretty is that Pretty Does. 

Recipe for an Appetite. 

Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day. 

Sermon for Young Folks, A. 

Sermons in Stones. 

Short Sermon, A. 

Spider and Fly. 

Spinster’s Stint, A. 

Story of a Blackbird. 

Suppose. 

Sure Witness, The. 

Sweetest Picture, The. See Pictures of Memory. 
Take Care. 

Telling Fortunes. 

Three Bugs. 

Three Little Bugs in a Basket. See Three Bugs. 
Time. 

Time to be, The. 

To a Honey-bee. 

To Any Desponding Genius. 

To Mother Fairie. 

To the Desponding. See To Any Desponding Genius. 
Tricksey’s Ring. 

True Worth.. See Nobility. 

“True Worth isin being, not seeming.” See Nobility 
Unwise Choice, The. 

Vanity. 

Victory of Perry, The. 

Waiting for Something to Turn Up. 

What a Bird Taught. 

Wise Fairy, The. 

Work. 

“World Owes Me a laving, The.” See Waiting 
for Something to Turn Up. 

Cary, H: Fs.—Fairest Thing in Mortal Eyes, The. ( Tr .) 
Cary, Lucius. See Falklanp, Lord. 

Cary, Phoebe.—Ajax. 

Answered. 

Baby’s Ring. 

Black Ranald. 

Chicken’s Mistake, The. 

Christmas Sheaf, The. 


418 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Chamberlain 


Cary, Phoebe ( continued ). 

Coming Round. 

Compensation. 

Crow’s Children, The. 

Dappledun. 

Didn’t Think. See They Didn’t Think. 

Do your Best. See Obedience. 

Don’t Give Up. 

Dreams and Realities. 

Easy Lessons. 

Effie’s Reasons. 

Envious Wren, The. 

Feathers. 

Field Preaching. 

Fire by the Sea, The. 

Good Little Sister, The. 

Griselda Goose. 

Happy Little Wife, The. 

Hives and Homes. 

Hunchback, The. 

“I know not which I love the most.” See Spring 
Flowers. 

Kate Ketchem. 

"Keep a Stiff Upper Lip!” 

Landlord of the “Blue Hen,” The. 

Leak in the Dike, The. 

Legend of the Northland, A. 

Little Gottlieb. 

Little Gottlieb’s Christmas. See Little Gottlieb. 
Lovers, The. (At.) See Tragedy on Past Parti¬ 
ciples.—C. A. S. 

“May you never say of a brother dear.” See To 
the Children. 

Nearer Home. 

Neglected Pattern, The. See Our Pattern. 

No Time Like the Present. See Obedience. 
Nora’s Charm. 

Now. 

Obedience. 

Our Heroes. (?) 

Our Homestead. 

Our Pattern. 

Peace. 

Prairie on Fire, The. 

Psalm of Marriage. 

Rain and Sunshine. 

Ready. 

Robin’s Nest, The. 

Spring Flowers. 

Sunset. 

Suppose. 

Suppose, my Little Lady. See Suppose. 

“Suppose your task, my little man.” See Suppose. 
Teach us to Wait. 

Thaddeus Stevens. 

That Calf. 

They Didn’t Think. 

To the Children. 

True Love. 

Unbelief. 

What the Frogs Sing. 

“Why are we so impatient of delay.” See Teach 
us to Wait. 

Wife, The. 

Wisest Plan, The. See Suppose. 

Woman’s Conclusions, A. 

Cary, R: L., Jr.—Fight of Lookout, The. 

New Magdalen, The. 

Case, Laura U.—Fatal Glass, The. 

May Court in Greenwood. 

Veiled Priestess, The. 

Case, Lizzie York.—Empty Nest, The. 

Fairy-land. 

Faith and Reason. 

In de Momin’. 

Southland. 

Case, Mrs. Luella J. B.—Joan of Arc in Prison. 

Case, Phila H.—“Boarding ’Round.” 

Holiday. 

Nobody’s Child. 

Case, Rev. W.—Defeat of Burgoyne, The. 

Casey, J: Keegan.—Maire my Girl. 

Rising of the Moon, The. 

Casimir the Great, King of Poland.—It Kindles All 
My Soul. 

Casket. —Reliance on God. 

Gaskin, Lida P.—Playing School. 

Caslin, Mattie M.—Old Maid’s Warning, An. 

Cass, Lewis.—Eloquence. 

Monroe Doctrine, The. 

On Precedents in Government. 

Cassel, Paul.—“Had the great truths waited until the 
majority voted in their favor.” 


Cassels, Walter R:—Love Took Me Softly by the Hand. 
Cassius, Caius Longinus.—Caesar’s Death Justified. 
Castelar, Emilio.—Abraham Lincoln. See Tribute to 
Lincoln. 

Catacombs, The. 

Freedom of Thought. 

Gladiators, The. 

“Let there be no more accursed races on the earth.” 
Miserere of St. Peter’s Church at Rome. See Old 
Rome and New Italy. 

Old Rome and New Italy. 

Tribute to Lincoln. 

Castilla, Ethel.—Australian Girl, An. 

Castle, Miss H. D.—Courting of Mother Goose, The. 
Castles, Frank.—By Special Request. 

Caswall, E:—My God, I Love Thee. (TV.) 

Catlin, G: L.—Cripple Ben. 

Fire-bell's Story, The. 

Little Mag’s Victory. 

Lookout Mountain!, 1863—Beutelsbach, 1880], 

My Bread on the Waters. 

Postilion of Nagold, The. 

Street Musicians, The. 

Cato, Marcus Portius.—Self-respect. 

Cats, Jacob.—Smoke is the Food of Lovers. 

Catullus, Caius Valerius.—Catullus to His Book. 
Cavazza, E. See Pullen. Mrs . Elizabeth Jones. 
Cawein, Madison Julius.—Comradery. 

Creek-road. The. 

Death. 

Dirge: “What shall her silence keep.” 

Flight. 

Ku Klux. 

"Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin.” 

Opportunity. 

Proem. 

Rain-crow, The. 

Soul, The. 

To a Wind-flower. 

Under the Stars and Stripes. 

Wind in the Pines, The. 

Celano, Thomas a. [or de],—Dies Irae. 

Cennick, John.—Children of the Heavenly King. 
Century Magazine. —Uncle Cephas’ Yarn. 

Uncle Esek’s Wisdom. 

“Ceria.”—Effects of War. 

Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de.—Don Quixote. 

Don Quixote and the Huntress. See Don Quixote. 
Don Quixote and the Windmills. See Don Quixote. 
Sleep. See Don Quixote. 

Chadwick, J: White.—Auld Lang Syne. 

Fate. 

Golden Robin’s Nest, The. 

His Mother’s Joy. 

Hymn Written for my Divinity-school Graduation. 
In an Unknown Tongue. 

Ip June. 

King Edwin’s Feast. 

King's Diary, The. 

Making of Man, The. 

New House: Old Home. 

Oldest Stoiw, The. 

Out of the Heart. (Dedication.) 

Prayer for Unity, A. See Hymn Written for my 
Divinity-school Graduation. 

Recognition. 

Rise of Man, The. 

Starlight. 

Tete-k-Tete. 

Two Waitings, The. 

Wedding Song, A. 

Yellow-hammer’s Nest, The. See Golden Robin’s 
Nest, The. 

Chaffee, Helen.—Early Start, An. 

Chahoon, Mary.—At Boarding-school. 

Chalkhill, J:—Angler, The. 

Coridon’s Song. 

Challen, Jas.—New Year’s Story, A. 

Challiss, Jas. Courtney.—Christmas Letter, A. 
Chalmers, Rev. T:—False Coloring Lenff to War. 

Good Deeds. 

“I care nothing for passing renown.” 
Insignificance of Earths 

"Manhood will come, and old age will come, and 
the dying bed will come.” 

Miseries of War, The. 

“Perhaps it may have been little thought of.” 
Unbeliever, The. 

Chamberlain, Arthur.—On the Devon Coast. 
Chamberlain, H. S., Jr.—Back-work Club, The. 
Chamberlain, General Joshua L.—Dead on the Field 
of Honor. 

Maine at Gettysburg. 


419 





Chamberlain 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Chamberlain, Mellen.—Statue of Webster, The. 
Chamberlain, S. W.—Fashion’s Folly. 

Written Lesson, A. 

Chamberlayne, W:—Chastity. 

Chamberlin, H. H., Jr.—Drifting. 

Chambers, I. Mench.—Voice of a Leaf, The. 

Chambers’ Journal. —Evening. 

Exiles, The. 

Love. 

Love’s Life, A. 

Love’s Transfiguration. 

Rest. 

Through Life. 

Twilight Dreams. 

Winter. 

Chambers, Dr. Rob’t.—Bobby. 

Chambers, Rob’t—-Study of Trees and Flowers, The. 
Chambers, Rob’t W:—Officer Brady. 

Recruit, The. 

Troop-ship Sails, The. 

Chambers, Annie. See Ketchum, Mrs. Annie [Cham¬ 
bers], 

Chamisso, L: C: Adelaide de. ( German —Adelbert von 
Chamisso.)—Toy of the Giant’s Child, The. 
Champney, E. Frere.—Canoe Song. 

Champney, Mrs. Eliz. [Williams],—Daddy Worthless. 
Chandler, Amos H:—When Dora Died. 

Chandler, Alfred T.—Bess. 

Chandler, Bessie.—At School. 

Jacqueminot. 

Lemonade. 

Little Grace. 

Mahmud and the Idol. 

My Rival. 

Problem, A. 

Reminding the Hen. 

Rivals, The. 

Chandler, Eliz. Margaret.—On Returning a Copy of 
Halleck’s Poems. 

Chanler, Mrs. Amalie [Rives], See Troubetskoy, 
Princess. 

Channing, B. M.—Negro Soldier, The. 

Channing, W: Ellery.—Address on Temperance. 
Barren Moors, The. 

Courage. 

Defense of Poetry. See Remarks on the Character 
and Writings of John Milton. 

Earth Spirit, The. 

Edith. 

Flight of the Wild Geese. 

Great Distinction of a Nation, The. See Spiritual 
Freedom. 

Great Ideas. See On the Elevation of the Labour¬ 
ing Classes. 

Hillside Cot, The. 

Hymn of the Earth. 

Intemperance. See Address on Temperance. 
Liberty. See Spiritual Freedom. 

Memory. 

Mountain, The. 

National Distinction Depends upon Virtue. See 
Spiritual Freedom. 

On the Elevation of the Labouring Classes. 

Our Boat to the Waves. See Sea Song. 

Poet’s Hope, A. 

Present Age, The. 

Recitation. 

Remarks on the Character and Writings of John 
Milton. 

Sea Song. 

Spiritual Freedom. 

Sleepy Hollow. 

Tears in Spring. (Lament for Thoreau.) 

To my Companions. 

True Courage in Life. See Courage. 

Unnoticed and Unhonored Heroes. 
Channing-Stetson, Mrs. Grace Ellery.—England. 
Judgment. 

Song of Arno, A. 

War. 

Chanter, Gratiana.—Lady of Sevilla, The. 

Chapin, C: W. E., Jr.—Dead Astronomer, The. 

How Came the Holly Berries Red? 

Rosary, A. 

Chapin, Rev. Edwin Hubbell.—Ballot, The. See 
Ballot-box, The. 

Ballot-box, The. 

“Come, Howard, from the gloom of the prison, 
and the taint of the lazar-house.” 

Dead on the Field of Honor. 

District School, The. 

Good Strong Heart, A. See Strong Heart, The. 
Heroes and Martyrs. 

I.oss of the San Francisco, 185-1. 


Chapin, Rev. Edwin Hubbell ( continued ). 

Moral and Physical Science Friendly to Freedom. 
Our Heroes and Martyrs. 

Printing Press, The. 

"Profaneness is a low, grovelling vice.” 

Strong Heart, The. 

Symbols of the Republic. 

“There can be no prosperity nor virtue nor glory 
in the aggregate.” 

Triumph of Peace, The. 

True Power of a Nation, The. 

True Source of Reform, The. 

Who are Really Honored. 

Chapman, Miss. — Lost and Won. 

Petticoat Government. 

Chapman, E. W.—Flowers for the Brave. 

Flowers for the Fallen Hero. See Flowers for the 
Brave. 

Chapman, E: J.—Columbia. 

Summer Night, A. 

Chapman, G:—Bridal Song. See Hero and Leander. 
Camp at Night, The. (TV.) See Iliad, The. 
Conspiracy of Charles Duke of Byron, The. 
Coronet for his Mistress’ Philosophy, A. 

England’s Parnassus.—Descriptions of Beauty and 
Personage. 

Grief of Achilles for the Slaying of Patroclus, The. 
(TV.) See Iliad, The. 

Helen on the Rampart. (TV.) See Iliad, The. 
Her Coming. See England’s Parnassus, etc. 
Hermes in Calypso’s Island. (TV.) Nee Odyssey,The. 
Hero and Leander. 

Iliad, The. (7V.) See Homer. 

Invective Written by Mr. George Chapman against 
Mr. Ben Jonson, An. 

Master Spirit, The. See Conspiracy of Charles 
Duke of Byron, The. 

Odysseus Reveals himself to his Father. (TV.) 
See Odyssey, The. 

Odysseus’Speech to Nausicaa. (TV.) Nee Odyssey, 

The. 

Odyssey, The. (TV.) Nee Homer. 

Of Circumspection. 

Ovid’s Banquet of Sense. 

Praise of Homer, The. 

Procession of Time, The. See Tears of Peace. 

Song the Sirens Sung, The. (TV.) Nee Odyssey, The. 
Sonnet: “Muses that sing Love’s sensual em- 
pirie.” Nee Coronet for his Mistress’ Philosophy. 
Spirit of Homer, The. See Tears of Peace, The. 
Tears of Peace, The. 

Thames, The. See Ovid’s Banquet of Sense. 
Chapman, H. G.—Lett. 

Chapman, H: S.—Woman’s Wiles. 

Chapman, Marv Berri. See Hansbrotjgh, Mrs. Mary 
[Berri], 

Charlemagne. King of France.—Veni Creator. (At.) 
Charles, Duke of Orleans.—Fairest Thing in Mortal 
Eyes, The. 

Song: “Heaven! ’Tis delight to see how fair.” 
Song: "Wilt thou be mine?” 

Spring. 

Charles, Mrs. Eliz. Rundell.—Child in [or on] the 
Judgment Seat, The. 

Child-judge, The. See Child in the Judgment 
Seat, The. 

Cruse that Faileth not,The. Nee Unfailing Cruse,The 
“Is thy cruse of comfort failing?” See Unfailing 
Cruse, The. 

’Tis I, be Not Afraid. 

Unfailing Cruse, The. 

Charles I. of England.—Majesty in Misery. 

"Charlotte Elizabeth.” See Tonna, Mrs. Charlotte 
Elizabeth. 

Charters, Dr. J. Hamilton.—True Heroism. (?) 

Chase, Annje.—Flock of Birds, A. 

Kitty’s Birds. 

Motion Song—Daisy Fair. 

Recitation. For a Very Little Girl. (2.) 
Recitation. For Six Very Little Girls. 

Spring. Nee Recitation. For a Very Little Girl. (II.) 
Way to Spend Christmas, The. 

Chase, Mrs. M.W.—Growing Old. 

Chateaubriand, Francois Rent: Auguste, Vicomte de.— 
Comparison of Washington and Napoleon. 

Genius of Christianity, The. 

Mysteries of Life, The. See Genius of Christianity, 
The. 

Nature Proclaims a Deity. See Genius of Chris¬ 
tianity, The. 

Chatfield, Sara M.—-Are These God’s Children? 
Children’s Voices. An Easter Ode. 

Children’s Wishes, The. 

Cross Betsy. 


420 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Child 


Chatham, W: Pitt, Earl of .—Against Employing 
Indians in War See American War, The. 
Against Search-warrants for Seamen. 

Against the Stamp Act. 

America Unconquerable. See American War, The. 
American War, The. 

Answer of Pitt to Walpole, The. See Reply of 
Pitt to Walpole. 

Conciliation Preferable to War. 

Conciliation the Best Policy. 

Consequences of the American War. See Amer¬ 
ican War, The. 

Employment of Indians in the American War. 
See American War, The. 

First Step to Reconciliation with America, The. 
Horrors of Savage Warfare. See American War, 
The. 

In Reply to Mr. Grenville. (1766.) 

Lord Chatham against the American War. See 
American War, The. 

Lord North’s Ministry Denounced. 

On Conquering America. See American War, The. 
On the American Revolution. See American War, 
The. 

On the American War. See American War, The. 
Pitt’s Reply to Walpole. See Reply of Pitt to 
W alpole. 

Repeal Claimed by Americans as a Right. 

Reply of Mr. Pitt. See Reply of Pitt to Walpole. 
Reply of Mr. Pitt to Sir Robert Walpole. See 
Reply of Pitt to Walpole. 

Reply of Pitt to Walpole. 

Reply to Sir Robert Walpole. See Reply of Pitt 
to Walpole. 

Reply to Walpole. See Reply of Pitt to Walpole. 
Ruinous Consequences of the American War. 
Speech on a Motion for an Address to the Throne. 
Speech on the American War. See American War, 
The. 

War with America. The. See American War, The. 
Chatterton, T:—Accounts of W. Canynge’s Feast. The. 
.Ella. 

Bristowe Tragedy. 

Eclogue the First. 

Eclogue the Third. 

Excellent Ballad of Charity, An. 

Faith. See Resignation. 

Minstrel’s Marriage Song. See /Ella. 

Minstrel’s Roundelay. See /Ella. 

Minstrel’s Song. See /Ella. 

Minstrel’s Song in Ella. See /Ella. 

My Love is Dead. See .Ella. 

Resignation!. The]. 

Song from /Ella. See .Ella. 

Chaucer, Geoffrev.—Ariadne. See Legend of Good 
Women, The. 

Balade: “Hvd, Absolon, thy gilte tresses elere.” 

See Ballad Sung to Alceste. 

Ballad Sung to Alceste. 

Boke of the Duchesse, The. 

Canterbury Pilgrims, The. See Canterbury Tales, 
The. 

Canterbury Tales, The. 

Clerkes Tale, The. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Compleynte of Chaucer to His Purse, The. 

Court of Love, The. 

Cuckoo and the Nightingale, The. See Cuckow 
and the Nightingale, etc. 

Cuckow and [the] Nightingale; or. The Boke of 
Cupide. God of Love. 

Daisy, The. See Legend of Good Women, The. 
Destiny. See Canterbury Tales, The . 

Dethe of Blaunche, The. 

Duchesse Blanche. See Dethe of Blaunche, The 
Emperor’s Daughter Stands Alone, An. See Can¬ 
terbury Tales, The. 

Flower and the Leaf, The. 

Forecast. See House of Fame, The. 

Fox and Cock. See Canterbury Tales. The. 
Frankeleynes Tale, The. See Canterbury Tales, 
The. 

Gentility. See Canterbury Tales, The. 

Good Counsail. See Good Counseil of Chaucer. 
Good Counseil of Chaucer. 

Griselda. See Canterbury Tales, The. 

Housfe] of Fame, The. 

Knight. The. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Knightes Tale, The. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Legend of Good Women, The. 

Love Unfeigned, The. See Troilus and Criseyde. 
Merciles Beaute. 

Milky Way, The. See House of Fame. The. 

Monk and the Friar, The See Canterbury Tales, 
The. 


Chaucer, Geoffrey ( continued ). 

Morning in May. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Nunnes Preestes Tale, The. See Canterbury Tales, 
The. 

Palamon and Arcite. See Canterbury Tales, 
The. 

Parlement of Foules, The. 

Phisiciens Tale, The. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Poet, The. See House of Fame, The. 

Portraits from the Canterbury Tales. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The. 

Prayer to Apollo. See House of Fame, The. 
Prologue, The. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Prologue to “The Legende of Goode Women.” 

See Legend of Good Women, The. 

Queen Alcestis and the God of Love. See Legend 
of Good Women, The. 

Romaunt of the Rose, The. (.4i.) 

Tale of the Man of Lawe, The. See Canterbury 
Tales, The. 

To Life’s Pilgrim. See Good Counseil of Chaucer. 
To My Empty Purse. See Compleynte of Chaucer 
to his Purse, The. 

Trees, Flowers, and Birds. See Parlement of 
Foules, The. 

Troilus and Criseyde. 

Troylus and Criseyde. See Troilus and Criseyde. 
Virginia. See Canterbury Tales, The. 

Wife’s Tale, The. See Canterbury Tales, The. 
Chautauquan. — Historic Tree of Chicago, The. 

Silence is Golden. See World to Come, The. 
World to Come, The. 

Cheever, G: B.—Avalanches of Jungfrau Alp. See 
Avalanches of the Jungfrau. 

Avalanches of the Jungfrau. 

Deacon Giles’s Distillery. 

“Step to the Captain’s Office and Settle.” 

Chellis, Mary Dwinell.—Out of Shadow. 

Something to be Done. 

Chemnitzer, Ivan Ivanovitch. See Khemnitzer, 
Ivan Ivanovitch. 

Cheney. J: Vance.—After the Cows. 

At the Hearthside. 

Evening Songs. 

Every One to His Own Way. 

Faith. 

Fallen, The. 

Happiest Heart, The. 

Kitchen Clock, The. 

Man with the Hoe—A Reply, The. 

Music of Nature, The. 

Old Braddock. 

Skillful Listener, The. 

Snowflakes. 

Strong, The. 

Tears. 

To a Humming-bird. 

Way of It, The. 

Whither. 

Cherry, Andrew.—Bay of Biscay, The. 

Cherryf, or Merry], J. W.—Shells of Ocean. 

Cherry, W. C.—Unregistered Record, An. 

Chester, Anson G.—Tapestry Weavers, The. 

Wanted. 

Chester, Harry S.—When the Light Goes Out. 
Chester.Vale.—Conjugating German, The. 

Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of. —Aim at 
Perfection. 

On a Full-length Portrait of Beau Marsh. 
Cheverton, E. C.—Uncover to the Flag. 

Cheverton, Rev. E. G.—Decoration Day Oration. 
Chew, Beverly —Old Books are Best. 

Cheyney. Levi.—One Heart’s enough for Me. 

Chicago Herald. —Cold, Hard Cash. 

Chicago Inter-Ocean.- —Congress of Nations, The. 
Chicago Ledger. —Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg. 
Chicago Post. —Boys Wanted. 

Chicago Rambler. —Decorative Mania, The. 

Chicago Record. —Just One Signal. 

Chicago Times. —Me and \or an’] Jim. 

Panther’s Choice, The. 

Chicago Tribune. —Latest Form of Literary Hysterics. 
Personal. 

Chick, M. P.—Pitcher or Jug. 

Chidwick, J: P.—Spanish-American War, The. 

Child, Edith.—Ballade of the Alumna. 

Child, Fs. Jas.—-Overtures from Richmond. 

Child, Mrs. Lydia Maria [Francis],—Birds’ Nests. 
Cloister, The. 

Freedom Must Triumph. See Rebels of Boston 
before the Revolution, The. 

I Love the. Birds. See Birds’ Nests. 

If Ever I See. See Birds’ Nests. 

Little Maiden and the Little Bird, The. 


421 




Child 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Child, Mrs. Lydia Maria [Francis] ( continued). 

Rebels of Boston before the Revolution, The. 
Speech against the Stamp Act. See Rebels of 
Boston before the Revolution, The. 

Supposed Speech of James Otis. See Rebels of 
Boston before the Revolution, The. 
Thanksgiving Day. 

Who Stole the Bird’s Nest? 

World I am Passing Through, The. 

Child Garden. —Bird’s Lawn Party, The. 

Child World. —Once. 

Sorrowful Sea-gull, The. 

Spring Song, A. 

Childe-Pemberton, Harriet L.—Deed of Grace, A. 
“Prince.” 

Childs, G: W.—Success in Life. 

Childs, J. Ward.— I Want to be a Soldier. 

Chinn, G:—Annihilation. 

Chipman, Edgar M.—Jo, the Tramp. 

“Chiquita.” See Harte, Fs. Bret. 

Chisholm, W: B.—“Flag the Train.” 

Choate, I: Bassett.—To-morrow is Another Day. 
Choate, Jos. H.—Address at the Unveiling of the 
Statue of Rufus Choate. 

Choate, Rufus.—Address Delivered in South Danvers, 
at the Dedication of the Peabody Institute, 
Sept. 29, 1854. 

Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our His¬ 
tory, The. 

American Nationality. 

Barbarity of National Hatreds. See Enmity 
toward Great Britain. 

Birthday of Washington, The. 

Consolations of Literature, The. See Address 
Delivered in South Danvers, etc. 

Daniel Webster’s Eloquence. 

Discourse Commemorative of Daniel Webster, A. 
Eloquence of Revolutionary Periods, The. 

Enmity toward Great Britain. 

Eulogy on Webster. See Discourse Commemora¬ 
tive of Daniel Webster, A. 

Heroic Age, The. See Age of the Pilgrims the 
Heroic Period of our History, The. 

Heroism of the Pilgrims, The. See Age of the 
Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History, The. 
Love of Country. See American Nationality. 
National Life. See American Nationality. 
Nationality. See American Nationality. 

New England Climate in Summer, The. 

Old Grudge against England, The. See Enmity 
toward Great Britain. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The. See Age of the Pilgrims 
the Heroic Period of our History, The, 
Pilgrims of New England, The. <Sfee Age of the 
Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History, The. 
Spartans and the Pilgrims, The. See Age of the 
Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History, The. 
Two Schools of Eloquence. 

Value of Literature to the Union. 

Washington’s Birthday. See Birthday of Wash¬ 
ington, The. 

Cholmondely-Pennell, H:—Bloated Biggaboon, The. 
Night Mail North, The. 

Our Traveller. 

What the Prince of I Dreamt. 

Chorley, H: Fothergill.—Brave Old Oak, The. 

Song to the Oak. See Brave Old Oak, The. 
Christian at Work. —Life’s Sunsets. 

Christian Intelligencer. —“Man has interests other than 
those that are material.” 

Christian Observer. —Baby Faith. 

Christian Union. —Coming Woman, The. 

“O mothers whose children are sleeping.” 
Christian Weekly, The. —Ready for a Kiss. 

Christie, Mrs. Annie Rothwell.—After the Battle. 
Mary Jane and I. 

Welcome Home. 

Woman’s Part, The. 

Christy, -.—Wonderful Dream. 

Chrysostom, Saint John. See Saint John Chrysos¬ 
tom. 

Church, E: A.—Valentine to a Man of Worth. 

Church, Mrs. Ella Rodman [Macllvaine].—Mr. Slocum. 
Churchill, C:—Characters of Actors. See Rosciad, The. 
Charles the First. See Gotham. 

Description of Johnson. See Ghost, The. 
Description of His Muse. See Prophecy of Fam¬ 
ine, The. 

Ghost, The. 

Gotham. 

Journev, The. 

Kitty Clive. 

Prophecy of Famine, The. 

Rosciad, The. 


Churchill, Rose.—This is All. 

Cibber, Colley.—Blind Boy, The. 

Contented Blind Boy, The. See Blind Boy, 
The. 

Cicero, Marcus Tullius.—Against Caius Verres. See 
Verres Denounced. 

Against Catiline. See First Oration against Cati¬ 
line. 

Catiline Denounced. See First Oration against 
Catiline. 

Catiline Expelled. See Second Oration against 
Catiline. 

Cicero against Verres. See Verres Denounced. 

De Oratore. 

First Oration against Catiline. 

Law of Virtue, The. 

Oration against Catiline. See First Oration 
against Catiline. 

Panegyric on Julius Caesar. See Speech in Behalf 
of Marcus Claudius Marcellus. 

Second Oration against Catiline. 

Separation from Traitors. See First Oration 
against Catiline. 

Speech in Behalf of Marcus Claudius Marcellus. 
Study of Eloquence, The. See De Oratore. 

Verres Denounced. 

Cigar and Tobacco World. —-Bachelor’s Soliloquy, A. 

Discovery of Tobacco, The. 

Clapp, F. M.—Helen in Argos. 

“Clara Augusta.”—-How they Kept a Secret. 

In Want of a Servant. 

Matrimonial Advertisement, The. 

Miss Splicer Tries the Toboggan. 

Mrs. Bean’s Courtship. 

Mrs. Smart Learns how to Skate. 

Toboggan Slide, The. See Miss Splicer Tries the 
Toboggan. 

Clare, J:—His Last Verses. See Lasciate ogni Speranza. 
I Am! Yet What lam. See Lasciate ogni Spe¬ 
ranza. 

July. 

Laborer, The. 

Lasciate ogni Speranza. 

My Early Home. 

Primrose[, The—C.]. 

Rivals, a Pastoral, The. 

Summer Evening, The. 

Summer Moods. 

Tell-tale Flowers. 

Thrush’s Nest, The. 

’4 To the Glowworm 

Written in Northampton County Asylum. See 
Lasciate ogni Speranza. 

Clart'-tie, Jules.—Boum-boum. 

Clark, Alexander.—“In the whole realm of nature 
there is never found an unanswerable instinct.” 
My Early Home. 

Clark, C: Heber (“Max Adeler”).—Avalanche of Drugs, 
An. See Out of the Hurly Btirly. 

Bill. 

Bill Smith. 

Book Canvasser, The. 

Bridget as a School-teacher. 

Case of Young Bangs, The. 

Catching the Morning Train. See Out of the 
Hurly Burly. 

High Art—Music. 

How to Go to Sleep. 

Judge Pitman on Various Kinds of Weather. See 
Out of the Hurly Burly. 

Major Slott’s Visitor. 

Minister’s Grievances, The. 

Mr. Barker’s Picture. 

Mr. Pott’s Story. 

Mrs. Jones’s Pirate. 

Morning “Argus” Obituary Department, The 
See Out of the Hurly Burly. 

My First Political Speech. See Out of the Hurly 
Burly. 

Out of the Hurly Burly. 

Reaching the Early Train. See Out of the Hurly 
Burly. 

Story of Bishop Potts, The. See Out of the 
Hurly Burly. 

Wooden Leg, The. 

Clark, Clara Savile. See Clarke, Clara Savile. 

Clark, Mrs. Fanny [Foster].—Charlie. 

Derby Day. 

Tom’s Little Star. 

Clark, H. Savile. See Clarke, H. Savile. 

Clark, Helen Whitney.—Grandpa’s Courtship. 

St. Valentine’s Day. 

Clark, J. H.—Game of Choice. 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Clemens 


Clark, Jas. G.—Art Thou Living Yet? 

Dawn of Redemption, The. 

Leona. 

Mountains of Life, The. 

Voice of the People, The. 

Clark, L. C.—Flamingo, The. 

Clark, Luella.—Fir-tree, The. 

Little by Little. 

Clark, Mary Bayard.—Cleopatra’s Soliloquy. 

Clark, Mattie A. W.—At Sunset. 

Clark, S. T.—Toward Emmaus. 

Clark, Rt. Rev. T: March.—Responsibilities of Young 
Men, The. 

Clark, W: M.—Song of the Winter Winds. 

Clark, Willis Gaylord.—Last Prayer of Mary, Queen 
of Scots. 

Remembrance, A. 

Spring. 

Clarke,-.—May. 

Clarke, Clara Savile.—In Love with his Wife. See 
Merely Players. 

Merely Players. 

Clarke, Ednah Proctor. See Hates, Mrs. Ednah Proc¬ 
tor [Clarke], 

Clarke, F. C.—German Favors. 

Clarke, G: Herbert.—Child’s Evening Hymn, A. 
Ecclesiastes. 

Resentment. 

Skater and Wolves. 

To a Butterfly. 

Clarke, H. Savile.—Francesca. 

Romance of the Rood-loft, A. 

Siege of Lucknow, The. 

Clarke, Herbert Edwin.—Age, The. 

Cry, A. 

In the Wood. 

Clarke, Jas. Freeman.—Almighty Love, The. 

Caliph and Satan, The. (TV.) 

Cana. 

Difficulty, The. ( Tr .) 

Grass and Roses. 

Here am I. 

"Love doth to her eyes repair.” (Tr.) 

Rabia. (Tr.) 

Reminiscence, A. 

Spring Song, A. (Tr.) 

“When Shall We Meet Again?” 

Clarke, Jas. G. See Clark, Jas. G. 

Clarke, Jos. Ignatius Constantine.—After the Lecture 
on Spion Kop. 

Fighting Race, The. 

Kinship of the Celt, The. 

Clarke, Lilian.—Wer Wenig Sucht, der Findet Viel. 
(Tr.) 

Clarke, Macdonald.—In the Graveyard. 

Love under the Ledger. 

Clarke, Mrs. Mary Cowden.— See Cowden-Clarke, 
Mrs. Mart. 

Clarke, Medora.—Defiled. 

Clarke, Rebecca Sophia ("Sophie May”). 

Inkstand, The. See Little Prudy. 

Keeping House. 

Killed with Kindness. 

Little Prudy. 

Little Prudy’s Sister Susy. 

Playing “Hookey.” See Little Prudy. 

Tiny Quarrel, A. See Little Prudy’s Sister Susy. 
Where there’s a Will there’s a Way. 

Clarke, Sara Jane. See Lippincott, Mrs. Sara Jane 
[Clarke], 

Clarke, T. L.—Lent. 

Claudius, Matthias.—Hen, The. 

Night Song. 

We Plough the Fields. 

Claxton, Beaumont.—On the Sunset Line. 

Stage of Destiny, The. 

Clay, Cassius Marcellus.—America the Child of Destiny. 

Aspirations for America. 

Clay, F.—Constant Heart, A. 

Clay, H:—Address to Lafayette. 

Ambition of a Statesman. See Speech at the 
Barbecue at Lexington in Honor of Mr. Clay. 
America’s Duty to Greece. See On the Greek 
Revolution. 

Defence of Jefferson. 

Dissolution of the Union. 

Duty of America to Greece. See On the Greek 
Revolution. 

Expunging Resolution, The. See On the Ex¬ 
punging Resolution. 

Greek Revolution. See On the Greek Revolution. 
In Favor of Prosecuting the War. See Mr. Clay 
and the War of 1812. 


Clay, H: (continued). 

Military Insubordination. See On the Seminole 
War. 

Military Supremacy Dangerous. See On the 
Seminole War. 

Military Supremacy Dangerous to Liberty. See 
On the Seminole War. 

Mr. Clay and the War of 1812. 

My Ambition. See Speech at the Barbecue at 
Lexington in Honor of Mr. Clay. 

National Glory. See On the Direct Tax. 

Noblest Public Virtue, The. See On the Bank 
Veto. 

On American Industry. 

On Recognizing the Independence of Greece, 1824. 
See On the Greek Revolution. 

On the Bank Veto. 

On the Direct Tax. 

On the Expunging Resolution, 1837. 

On the Greek Revolution. 

On the Seminole War. 

Patriotism Inculcates Public Virtue. See On the 
Bank Veto. 

Public Virtue. See On the Bank Veto. 

Reply to John Randolph. 

Sacredness of the Union. 

“Sir, an attempt has been made to alarm the 
committee.” 

Speech at the Barbecue at Lexington in Honor 
of Mr. Clay. 

Speech on the War of 1812. See Mr. Clay and 
the War of 1812. 

Sympathy with the Greeks. See On the Greek 
Revolution. 

True Patriotism. See On the Bank Veto. 

Valedictory Address to the Senate. 

Cleaveland, C. L.—November. 

Cleaveland, Mrs. Eliz: H. [Jocelyn].—Hidden Path, The; 
or, The Atlantic Cable. 

No Sects in Heaven. At. also to Mrs. Cecilia J. 
Cleveland. 

Shibboleth. 

Cleland, W:—Hallo, my Fancy. 

Clemens, Jeremiah.—Intervention in the Wars of 
Europe. 

Clemens, S: Langhome (“Mark Twain”).—American 
Specimen, An. See Tramp Abroad, A. 

Aurelia’s Unfortunate Young Man. 

Babies. The. See Speech on the Babies. 

Buck Fanshaw’s Funeral. See Roughing It. 

Capt. Hurricane Jones on the Miracles. 

Celebrated Jumping Frog, The. See Jumping 
Frog, The. 

Concerning Chambermaids. 

Coyote, The. See Roughing It. 

Critical Situation, The. See Tramp Abroad, A. 

Damascus. See Innocents Abroad. 

Day at Niagara, A. See Visit to Niagara, A. 

Encounter with an Interviewer, An. 

Experience of the McWilliamses with Membranous 
Croup. 

Experience with European Guides. See Inno¬ 
cents Abroad. 

Facts in the Case of the Great Beef Contract. 

First Interview with Artemus Ward. 

French Duel, The. See Tramp Abroad, A. 

General Grant’s English. 

Getting under Way. See Innocents Abroad. 

“Great Beef Contract,” The. See Facts in the 
Case of the Great Beef Contract. 

Ghost Story, A. See Golden Arm, The. 

Golden Arm, The. 

Guessing Nationalities. See Tramp Abroad, A. 

How I [once—C.] Edited an Agricultural Paper. 

How I was Sold. See How the Author was Sold 
in Newark. 

How the Author was Sold in Newark. 

How Tom Sawyer got His Fence Whitewashed. 
See Tom Sawyer. 

How Tom Sawyer Whitewashed His Fence. See 
Tom Sawyer. 

Innocents Abroad. 

Introduction, An. See Mark Twain Introduces 
Himself. 

Jim Smiley’s Frog. See Jumping Frog, The. 

Jim Wolfe and the Cats. 

Jumping Frog, The. 

Literary Nightmare, A. 

Mark Twain and a [or the] Reporter. See Encoun¬ 
ter with an Interviewer, An. 

Mark Twain and the Interviewer. See Encounter 
with an Interviewer, An. 

Mark Twain as a Farmer. 


423 





Clemens 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Clemens, S: Langhorne (‘‘MarkTwain”) ( continued). 

Mark Twain Edits an Agricultural Paper. See 
How I once Edited an Agricultural Paper. 

Mark Twain Introduces Himself. 

Mark Twain on Juvenile Pugilists. 

Mark Twain on the Weather. See Speech on the 
Weather. (C.) 

Mark Twain Tells an Anecdote of A. Ward. 

Mark Twain Visits Niagara. See Visit to Niagara, 
A. 

Mark Twain’s Account of “Jim Smiley.” See 
Jumping Frog, The. 

Mark Twain’s Anecdote on A. Ward. See Mark 
Twain Tells an Anecdote of A. Ward. 

Mark Twain’s Description of European Guides. 
See Innocents Abroad. 

Mark Twain’s First Interview with Artemus Ward. 
See First Interview with Artemus Ward. 

Mark Twain’s Great “Beef Contract.” See Facts 
in the Case of the Great Beef Contract, The. 

Mark Twain’s Mining Story. 

Mark Twain’s Opinion of Chambermaids. See 
Concerning Chambermaids. 

Mark Twain’s Story of the “Bad Little Boy.” See 
Story of the Bad Little Boy. 

Mark Twain’s Story of the “Good Little Boy.” 
See Story of the Good Little Boy. 

Mark Twain’s Watch. 

Membranous Croup and the McWilliamses. See 
Experience of the McWilliamses with Mem¬ 
branous Croup. 

Mrs. McWilliams and the Lightning. 

My Editing. See How I once Edited an Agricul¬ 
tural Paper. 

My First Interview with Artemus Ward. See 
First Interview with Artemus Ward. 

New England Weather. See Speech on the 
Weather. 

Nicodemus Dodge. 

On the Sphinx. See Innocents Abroad. 

Our Guide in Genoa and Rome. See Innocents 
Abroaa. 

Our Guides. See Innocents Abroad. 

Pudd’nhead Wilson. 

Roughing It. 

Speech on the Babies. 

Speech on the Weather. 

Story of the Bad Little Boy. 

Story of the Good Little Boy. 

Tale of the Fishwife and its Sad Fate. See Tramp 
Abroad, A. 

Telephonic Conversation, A. 

That Dog of Jim Smiley’s. See Jumping Frog, 
The. 

Tom and Roxy. See Pudd’nhead Wilson. 

Tom Sawyer. 

Tom Sawyer Treated for Lovesickness. See Tom 
Sawyer. 

Tom Sawyer’s Love Affair. See Tom Sawyer. 

Tramp Abroad, A. 

Trying Situation, A. See Tramp Abroad, A. 

Visit to Niagara, A. 

Clemens, S: Langhorne, and Warner, C: Dudley.— 
Gilded Age, The. 

Uncle Daniel’s Introduction to a Mississippi 
Steamer. See Gilded Age, The. 

Uncle Dan’l’s [or Daniel’s] Apparition [and Prayer]. 
See Gilded Age, The. 

Uncle Dan’l’s Praver. See Gilded Age, The. 

Steamboat Race, The. See Gilded Age, The. 

Washington Hawkins Dines with Colonel SelleVs. 
See Gilded Age, The. 

Clement, Clay.—Within the Gates. 

Clement. Ella H.—Christmas Eve Adventure, A. 

Incompatibility: A Charade. 

Justice. 

Rehearsal. The. 

Signing the Pledge. 

Clement, Lewis R.—" ‘Ceptin’ Jim.” 

Clemmer, Mary.—By the Sea. 

“For they alone have need of sorrow.” 

Good-by, Sweetheart. 

Mother Love. 

Nantasket. 

Something Beyond. 

Words for Parting. 

Clemons, W. Harry.—Camp-fire, The. 

Clephane, Eliz. Cecilia.—-Lost Sheep, The. See Ninety 
and Nine, The. 

Ninety and Nine, The. 

Cleveland, -.—Charade for Little Folks. 

Cleveland, Mrs. Cecilia .1.—No Sect in Heaven. Nee 
Ci.e aveland, Mrs. .Eliz. E. J. 


Cleveland, Grover. See Cleveland, (Stephen) Grover. 
Cleveland, J:—On Scotland. 

Scots Apostasie, The. 

To the Memory of Ben Jonson. 

Cleveland, Kate H.—As the Twig is Bent. 

Cleveland, Orestes.—Our Centennial Celebration. 
Cleveland Plain Dealer. —Beneath the Flag. 

Beyond. 

Cleveland, (Stephen) Grover.—Advent of the Ballot 
Reform, The. 

Ballot Reform. See Advent of the Ballot Reform, 
The. 

College and the Nation, The. See Political Duties 
and Responsibilities of University Men. 
Columbian Exposition Opened, The. 

Empire State, The. 

Garfield Statue, The. 

People of tne United States, The. 

Political Duties and Responsibilities of University 
Men. 

Resistance of Mal-administration. 

Self-made Man in American Life, The. 

Clingan, C. J.—Only a Drunkard. 

Clinton, De Witt.—Against Foreign Conquest. 

Clinton. J. E.—Ode on Christmas. 

Clipper.—Bones at a Raffle. 

Clive, Mrs. Archer.—Queen’s Ball, The. 

“Clodia.”—“If Jove would give the leafy bowers.” 
Clothier, Clarkson.—At Last. 

Cloud, Marietta F.—Legend of the True, A. 

Woman’s Power. 

Cloud, Virginia Woodward. — Ballad of Sweet P, 
The. 

Care. 

Mother’s Song, The. 

Old Street, An. 

What the Lord High Chamberlain Said. 

Witch. The. 

Youth. 

Clough, Arthur Hugh.—Ah! Yet Consider It Again. 
Amours de Voyage. 

Atheism. See Dipsychus. 

Bathers, The. See Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, 
The. 

, Bathing. Nee Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, The. 
Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, The. 

Changeless, The. See “With whom is no variable¬ 
ness,” etc. 

Claude to Eustace. See Amours de Voyage. 
Columbus. 

Columbus Crossing the Atlantic. See Columbus. 
Come Back. See Songs in Absence. 

Come Poet, Come! 

Courage. See Say Not the Struggle Nought Avail- 
eth. 

Despondency Rebuked. See Say not the Strug¬ 
gle Nought Availeth. 

Dipsychus. 

Easter Day. 

Elspie and Philip. See Bothie of Tober-na- 
Vuolich, The. 

Epilogue. See Amours de Voyage. 

Green Fields of England. ■ 

Hidden Love, The. 

Highland Stream, The. See Bothie of Tober-na- 
Vuolich, The. 

In a Lecture-room. 

In a London Square, 

In Venice; Dipsychus Speaks. Nee Dipsychus. 
Isolation. See Dipsychus. 

Ite Domum Satune, Venit Hesperus. 

Juxtaposition. See Amours de Voyage. 

Latest Decalogue, The 

“Mighty ocean rolls and raves. The.” See Songs 
in Absence. 

No More. See Song of Autumn, A. 

Perehe Pensa? Pensando s’lnvecchia. 

Peschiera. 

Philip to Adam. See Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, 
The. 

Protest, A. 

Qua Cursum Vent.us. 

Qui Laborat, Orat. 

Say not the Struggle Naught Availeth. 

Shadow, The. 

Sic Itur. 

Sleeping Child. A. 

■ Some Future Day. See Songs in Absence. 

Song of Autumn, A. 

Songs in Absence. 

Spectator ah Extra. See Dipsychus. 

Stream of Life, The. 

Where Lies the Land? See Songs in Absence. 


424 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Coleridge 


Clough, Arthur Hugh ( continued). 

With Whom is no Variableness. See “With whom 
is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.” 
“With whom is no variableness, neither shadow of 
turning.” 

Coale, Alice A.—Daddy Drum. 

“Honest and Honorable.” 

Two Faults. 

Uncle Deal’s Lecture. 

Coan, Rev. Leander S.—Better in the Morning. 

Coan, Titus Munson.—Crystal, The. 

Dream of Flowers, A. 

Nihil Humani Alienum. 

Coates, Elmer Ruan.—Balance Wheel, The. 

Billy K. Simes. 

Bridget and the Matinee. 

Falling in and Falling Out. 

False Faces. 

Genius. 

Giles and Abraham. 

Nothing for Use. 

Sand-man, The. 

That Autograph Sale. 

Twenty-one To-day. 

Coates, Mrs. Florence Van Leer [Earle] [Nicholson],— 
India. 

Man. 

Perdita. 

Song: “For me the jasmine buds unfold.” See 
World is Mine, The. 

Survival. 

Tennyson. 

To-morrow. 

World is Mine, The. 

Coates, Reynell.—Christian Charity. 

Gambler’s Wife, The. 

Cobb, H: N.—“Father, Take my Hand.” See Gracious 
Answer, The. 

Gracious Answer, The. 

Promise, The. See Gracious Answer, The. 

Cobb, Mark Huntington.—World Would Be Better for 
It, The. 

Cobb, Sylvanus, Jr.—Uncle Noah’s Ghost. 

Cobbe,-.—Cobbe’s Prophecies. 

Cobbe, Frances Power.—Rich in the Lord. 

Cobden, R:—American Merchant Vessels. 

Coburn, C. F.—Lesson in Tennis, A 
Cochran, W. Burke.—Decoration Day. 

Cochran, W. Eugene.—Colored Philosophy. 

Cochrane, Hugh.—Ideal. 

Cocke, Zitella.—Greek Mother’s Lullaby. 

M iss Nancy’s Gown. 

Cocker, Prof. William Johnson(?).—“All the rich treas¬ 
ures of the past are appropriated by Chris¬ 
tianity.” 

Cockin, Hereward K.—Death of Burnaby, The. 
Cockton, H:—Night with a Ventriloquist, A. 

Ventriloquist on a Stage-coach, A. 

Coddington, Hannah.—Nature’s Party. 

Coe, Eli G.—Waiting. 

Coe, R:, Jr.—Emblems. 

Life. 

Coffey, Clare Beatrice.—Christmas Angel’s Message,The. 
Coffin, C: Carleton.—Caleb Krinkle. 

How Randa went over the River. See Caleb 
Krinkle. 

Coffin, Rob’t Barry (“Barry Gray”).—Ships at Sea. 
Coffin, Rob’t Stevenson. (TFr.) See foregoing. 
Coggins, Paschal H.—Affection of the Heart, An. 
Coggswell, C. N.—“Estrangement.” 

Coggswell, F. H.—Lawyer’s Lullaby, The. 

Cohen. D. S.—As “Old Giles” Saw it. 

Colcord, Millie.—Life’s Weaving. 

Cole, A. B.—Mr. Jonathan Bangs. 

Cole, Rob’t Jermain.—Jamie’s Word wi’ the Sea. 

Song: “Bud into blossom, flower into fruit ” 
Spiritus Intactus. 

Coleman, C: Washington.—Bit of Human Nature, A. 
Coleman, Mary.—His Name. 

Coleman, Patrick Jas.—Seed-time. 

Coleridge, Hartley.—Address to Certain Gold-fishes. 
Birth of Speech, The. 

Donne. 

Early Death. See Reply. 

First Man, The. See Birth of Speech, The. 
Friendship. See To a Friend. 

Ideality. 

May. 1840. 

“Multum Dilexit.” 

Night. 

November. 

Prayer. 

Reply. 


Coleridge, Hartley ( continued). 

Shakespeare. See To Shakespeare. 

She is not Fair to Outward View. See Song: “She 
is not fair to outward view.” 

Solitary-hearted, The. See Stanzas: "She was a 
queen of noble Nature’s crowning.” 

Song: “She is not fair to outward view ” 

Song: The Lark. 

Sonnet: “Long time a child, and still a child, when 
years.” 

Stanzas: "She was a queen of noble Nature’s 
crowning.” 

Summer Rain. 

Swift. 

’Tis sweet to hear the merry lark.” See Song: 
The Lark. 

To a Deaf and Dumb Little Girl. 

To a Friend. 

To a Lofty Beauty, from Her Poor Kinsman. 

To Shakespeare. 

To the Nautilus. 

Whither. 

Coleridge, S: Taylor.—Alice du Clos. 

Ancient Mariner, The. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The. 

Answer to a Child’s Question. 

Astrological Tower, The. (Tr.) See Wallenstein. 
Avaro. (Tr.) See Epigram: “There comes from old 
Avaro’s grave.” 

Bad Poets. 

Beelzebub and Job.—See Job’s Luck. 

Belief in Astrology, The. (Tr.) See Wallenstein. 
Chamouny. See Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale 
of Chamouni. 

Character. See Good, Great Man, The. 

Child in the Wilderness, The. 

Choral Song of Illyrian Peasants. See Zapolya. 
Chri stabel. 

Christmas Carol, A. 

Cologne. 

Dead Calm at Sea. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The. 

Dejection. An Ode. 

Devil’s Thoughts, The. See Devil’s Walk, The. 
Coleridge and Southey. 

Dirge: He is gone—is dust. (Tr.) See Wallen¬ 
stein. 

Eolian Harp, The. 

Epigram: “Hoarse Msevius,” etc. See On a Reader 
of his Own Verse. 

Epigram: "Sly Beelzebub,” etc. See Job’s Luck. 
Epigram: “Swans sing before they die,” etc. See 
On a Bad Singer. 

Epigram: “There comes from old Avaro’s grave.” 

(Tr.) 

Epigram: Cologne. See Cologne. 

Epigram on a Bad Singer. See On a Bad Singer. 
Epigram on Job and the Devil. See Job’s Luck. 
Epitaph: “Stop, Christian passerby,” etc. 

Epitaph on an Infant 

Epitaph on Himself. See Epitaph: “Stop, Chris¬ 
tian passer-by.” etc. 

Eternal Poem, An. See To Mr. Pye. 

Exchange, The. 

Expectoration. An. See On my Joyful Depart¬ 
ure from the same City [Cologne]. 
Expectoration the Second. See Cologne. 

Fancy in Nubibus; or, The Poet in the Clouds. 
Fears in Solitude. 

France: An Ode. 

Friend, The. 

Frost at Midnight. , 

Genevieve. 

Genevieve. See also Love. 

Glycine’s Song. See Zapolya. 

God in Nature. See Hymn before Sunrise in the 
Vale of Chamouni. 

Good Great Man. The. 

“Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star.” 
See Hymn before Sunrise, in the Vale of Cha¬ 
mouni. 

He Prayeth Best. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The. 

“He prayeth well, who loveth well.” See Rime of 
Ancient Mariner, The. 

Heroism.' (Tr.) See Wallenstein. 

Hunting Song. See Zapolya. 

Hymn. A: “Mv Maker! of thy power the trace.” 
Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni. 
Hymn to Mont Blanc. See Hymn before Sunrise 
in the Vale of Chamouni. 

Job. See Job’s Luck. 

Job’s Luck. 







Coleridge 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Coleridge, S: Taylor ( continued). 

Julia. 

Knight’s Tomb, The 
Kubla Khan. 

Lady’s Chamber, A. See Christabel. 

Lafayette. See Sonnet: “As when far off,” etc. 
Lord Heipeth Man and Beast, The. See Friend, 
The. 

Love. 

Love and Prayer. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The. 

Love’s Flame. See Love. 

Mahomet. 

Metrical Feet. 

Monody on the Death of Chatterton. 

Mont Blanc before Sunrise. See Hymn before 
Sunrise in the Yale of Chamouni. 

Mythology. ( Tr.) See Wallenstein. 

Nightingale, The. 

Ode to Tranquillity. 

On a Bad Singer. 

On a Reader of his Own Verse. 

On my Joyful Departure from the same City 
[Cologne]. 

On the Death of Chatterton. See Monody on the 
Death of Chatterton. 

Phantom Ship, The See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The, 

Praying and Loving. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The. 

Quarrel of Friends, The. See Christabel. 

Raven, The. 

Raven and the Oak, The. See Raven, The. 
Remorse. 

“Resembles life that once was held of •ight.” See 
What is Life? 

Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The. 

Romance. See Kubla Khan. 

Sentimental. 

Song: “Hear, sweet spirit, hear the spell.” See 
Remorse. 

Song, by Glycine. See Zapolya. 

Sonnet: “As when far off the warbled strains are 
heard.” 

Sonnet. Composed on a Journey Homeward. 
Sonnets on Eminent Characters. See Sonnet: “As 
when far off,” etc. 

Sunny Shaft did I Behold, A. See Zapolya. 

Time, Real and Imaginary. 

To a Lady Offended by a Sportive Observation 
that Women have no Souls. 

To Mr. Pye. 

Wallenstein. (Tr.) See Schiller, Johann W. von. 
Wanderings of Cain. See Child in the Wilderness, 
The. 

What is Life? 

Work without Hope. 

Youth and Age. 

Zapolya. 

Coleridge, S: Taylor, and Southey, Rob’t.—Devil’s 
Walk, The. 

Coleridge, Sara.—Child, The 

He Came Unlook’d for. See Phantasmion. 

O Sleep, my Babe. 

One Face Alone. See Phantasmion. 

Phantasmion. 

Coles. Abraham.—Dies Ins. (Tr.) 

Stabat Mater Dolorosa. (Tr.) 

Coles, J: F.—What the Temperance Cause has Done 
for John and Me. 

Coles, L. B.—What is Temperance? 

Colesworthy, Dan’l Clement.—Don’t Kill the Birds. (?) 
“Little word in kindness spoken, A.” 

Trifles. 

Coley, L: B.—Good Name More Desirable than Riches, 
A. 

Colfax, Schuyler.—Education. 

Momentous Question, A. 

Speech on Temperance, A. 

Colfelt, Rev. Lawrence M.—“Increasing exactions of 
the church. The.” 

College Folio. —Wood Orchid, The. 

Coller, Edwin.—Blind Poet’s Wife, The. 

Mrs. Jones’s Lodger. 

Not in the Programme. 

Sal Parker’s Ghost. 

Told at “The Falcon.*’ 

Collester, Clinton H.—Ephraim’s Storm Lullaby. 

Indian Summer. 

Morning Sprite, The. 

Robbie Rockaway. # 

Song of the Trip-hammer. 

Collier, H. Price.—Our Happy Warrior. 


Collier, T: Stephens.—Compensation. 

Disappointment. 

Forgotten Books, The. 

In Summer Time. 

Infallibility. 

Life’s Truth. 

“Look of sympathy, the gentle word, The.” See 
Not Lost. 

Memorial Day. 

Nelly Tells how Baby Came. 

Not Lost. At. also to Sarah Doudney. 

Power. 

Sacrilege. 

Time. 

Collins, Ann[e].—Winter Being Over, The. 

Collins, J: C.—In the Down-hill of Life. 

Tomorrow. See In the Down-hill of Life. 

Collins, Mortimer.—Comfort. 

Conceit, A. 

Darwin. 

First of April, The. 

Game of Chess, A. 

Greek Idyl, A. 

Ivory Gate, The. 

Kate Temple’s Song. 

Multum in Parvo. 

My Thrush. 

Positivists, The. 

Rain in September. 

Salad. 

Shirley Chase. 

Sky-making. 

Snow and Sun. 

To F. C., 20th February, 1875. Nee Snow and Sun. 
Two Worlds. 

Violets at Home. 

Collins, V. Lansing.—Curfew Chimes, The. 

Collins, W:—Captain Molly at Monmouth. 

Dirge in Cymbeline. 

Evening. See Ode to Evening. 

Fidele. See Dirge in Cymbeline. 

How Sleep the Brave. See Ode Written in the 
Beginning of the Year 1746. 

Irish Molly. See Captain Molly at Monmouth. 
Molly Maguire at Monmouth. See Captain Molly 
at Monmouth. 

Ode: “How sleep the brave who sink to rest.” 
See Ode Written in the Beginning of the Year 
1746. 

Ode on the Death of Mr. Thomson. See Ode on 
the Death of Thomson. 

Ode on the Death of Thomson. 

Ode on the Passions. See Passions, The. An Ode 
for Music. 

Ode to Evening. 

Ode to Liberty. 

Ode to Simplicity. 

Ode to the Passions. See Passions, The. An Ode 
for Music. 

Ode to the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands 
of Scotland, An. 

Ode Written in 1746. See Ode Written in the 
Beginning of the Year 1746. 

Ode Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746. 
Passions, The. An Ode for Music. 

Revenge. See Passions, The. An Ode for Music. 
To Evening. See Ode to Evening. 

Collins, W: French.—Conditionally. 

Town and Country. 

Collison, W. B.—Sinking of the Ships, The. 

Collyer, Rob’t.—Be True. (At.) See Be Just, and 
Fear not.—Alford. 

“Now, believe me, God hides some ideal in every 
human soul.” 

Saxon Grit. 

Under the Snow. 

Colman, G:, the younger. —Elder Brother, The. 

Footman Wanted, A. 

Gluggity Glug. See Myrtle and the Vine, The. 
Iron Chest, The. 

Lodgings for Single Gentlemen. 

Myrtle and the Vine, The. 

Newcastle Apothecary, The. 

Prompt Messenger, A. 

Sir Marmaduke. 

Toby Tosspot. See Elder Brother, The. 

Waiting for an Interview. 

Colson, Ethel M.—Babies All are Grown, The. 

Colton, Arthur Willis.—Concerning Tabitha’s Dancing 
the Minuet. 

Song with a Discord, A. 

To Faustine. 

Colton, Delia Louise.—Rain-drops, The. 

426 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Cooley 


Colton, Walter.—-Grandeur of the Ocean. 

Leap for Life, A. {At. also to G. P. Morris.) 
Main Truck, The; or, A Leap for Life. See Leap 
for Life, A. 

New Year, The. 

Columbia Literary Monthly. —Cloudland. 

Columbia Spectator. —After the Game. 

Circe. 

Widow’s Mite, The. 

Columbus Sunday Morning News. —Big Enough Family, 
A. 

Commercial Weekly Times. —Ensign Bearer, The. 
Common School Education. —Tommy Brown. 

Conant, Helen Stevens.—Stavoren. 

Conant, S: Stillman.—Two Gates, The. 
Concordiensis.— Fin de Siccle Girl, A. 

Cone, Helen Gray.—Arraignment. 

Ballad of Calnan’s Christmas, The. 

Contrast, The. 

Dandelions [, The] 

Fair England. 

Greencastle Jenny. 

Invocation in a Library, An. 

Last Cup of Canary, The. 

Resurrection, A. 

Rhyme of Robin Puck, A. 

Ride to the Lady. The. 

Spring Beauties, The. 

Tender Heart, The. 

Thisbe. 

Torch Race, The. 

Winged Seeds. 

Yellow Pansy, A. 

Cone, Joe.—Men of Monomoy, The. 

Nathan Hale. 

Sinking the Merrimac. 

Cone, N. G.—Twelve Little Brothers, The. 

Conger, H: Rutgers.—Lines to a Monkey. 
Congregationalist. —Facilis Descensus. 

Congreve, W:—Amoret. 

Cathedral. 

“False though she be [to me and love].” See 
Song: “False though she be,” etc. 

Hue and Cry after Fair Amoret, A. See Amoret. 
Lesbia. 

Silly Fair. See Lesbia. 

Song: “False though she be to me and love.” 
Congreve, W T :, and Somerville, W:—White Rose, The. 
Conington, J: —^Eneid, The. (TV.) See Virgil. 

Nisus and Euryalus. (Tr.) See rEneid, The. 
Conkling, Roscoe.—Nominating General Grant. 
Connolly, C: M.-—Charge of "De [or the] Dutch 
Brigade,” The. 

Connolly, Dan’l.—Knocked About. 

Connolly, Erskine.—Marv Macneil. 

“Connor, Ralph.” See Gordon, Rev. C: W. 

Conolly, Luke Aylmer.—Enchanted Island, The. 
Conrad. Rob’t Taylor.—Fireman, The. 

On the Death of General Taylor. 

Constable, H:—Damelus’ Song to his Diaphenia. 
Damelus’ Song to his FJock. 

Diaphenia. See Damelus’ Song to his Diaphenia. 
On the Death of Sir Philip Sidney. 

Pain of Love. 

Pastoral Song between Phillis and Amarillis, A. 
Shepherd’s Song of Venus and Adonis, The. 

Sonnet Prefixed to Sidney’s Apology for Poetry. 

See On the Death of Sir Philip Sidney. 

“To live in Hell and Heaven to behold.” See 
Pain of Love. 

Converse, C. C.—Forever and Forever. 

Conway, Kathe. Eleanor.—Christ and the Mourners. 
Heaviest Cross of All, The. 

In Thanksgiving. 

Saturninus. 

Conway, Moncure D.—Words from the Tree. 

Conweil, Russell Herrman.—Fireman’s Prayer, The. 

True Hero, A. .See Fireman’s Prayer, The. 

Cook, Clarence Chatham.—Abram and Zimri. 

On One Who Died in May. 

Cook, Eliza.—Bay, The. 

Bravest Thing, The. See “No!” 

Building upon the Sand. 

Christmas Holly, The. 

Christmas Tide. 

Death of Master Tommy Rook, The. 

Fern and the Moss, The. 

Forest Trees, The. 

Germs of Greatness. 

God in Everything. 

Heart’s Charity, The. 

Holly, The. See Christmas Holly, The. 

Land of My Birth, The. 


Cook, Eliza ( continued ). 

Life-boat is a Gallant Bark, The. 

Nae Star was Glintin’. 

“No!” 

Old Arm Chair, The. 

Old Dobbin. 

Old Pincher. 

Poor Irish Boy, The. 

Quiet Eye, The. 

Robert Bruce and the Spider. See Try Again. 
Robin, The. See To the Robin. 

Sacrilegious Gamesters, The. 

Sea-child, The. 

Song for the New Year. 

Star in the West, A. 

There’s a Silver Lining to Every Cloud. 

To the Robin. 

Tribute to Washington. See Washington. 

Trouble your Head with your own Affairs. 

Try Again. 

Washington. 

Water. 

Where There’s a Will There’s a Way. 

Willow Tree, The. 

Cook, E. Elbert.—Euterpe’s Visit. 

Cook, Jonas.—Solomon Grub. 

Cook, Jos.—“It is not the best way in which to teach 
the truth.” 

Newest Promises and Perils of the Temperance 
Reform. 

Our Duty. See Newest Promises and Perils of the 
Temperance Reform. 

Promises and the Perils of Temperance Reform, 
The. See Newest Promises and Perils of the 
Temperance Reform. 

Sacred Influences. 

“We grow wrong; we allow ourselves to crystal¬ 
lize.” 

Yosemite. 

Cook, Marc Eugene (“Vandyke Brown”). — Clown’s 
Story, The. 

Curious Want, A. 

Little Rocket’s Christmas. 

Nothing under the Sim is New. 

Seaside Incident, A. 

Weather in Verse, The. 

Cook W: Wallace.—Sistah ’Lize. 

Cooke, G: Willis.—-Emerson, Extract Concerning. 
Cooke, Helen M.—Flag at Half-mast, The. 

Cooke, J. Edmund Vance.—Courtin’ Call, A. 

Dat Gawgy Watahmillon. 

Katie an’ Me. 

Morning's Mail, A. 

Other One was Booth, The. 

Young Man Waited, The. 

Cooke, J: Esten.—Band in the Pines, The. 

Cooke, Philip Pendleton.—Florence Vane. 

Life in the Autumn Woods. 

Cooke, Mrs. Rose [Terry].—Arachne. 

Best. 

Beyond. 

Bluebeard’s Closet. 

Deacon’s Week, The. 

Done For. 

Fishing Song[, The], 

Give me a Wish. See Wish, A. 

In Vain. 

“It is More Blessed.” 

Lise. 

Lost on the Prairie. 

Midsummer Day, A. See R£ve du Midi. 

“Pour out thy love like the rush of a river. 

Rest. 

Reve du Midi. 

Saint Symphorien. 

Segovia and Madrid. 

Simon’s Burden. 

Snow-filled Nest, The 
Thanksgiving, A. 

Then. 

Trailing Arbutusf, The]. 

Two Villages, The. 

Wish, A. 

Cooke, W. C.—Jock o’ the Side. 

Coolbrith, Ina Donna.—Frederick III. 

Fruitionless. 

Helen Hunt Jackson. 

In Blossom Time. 

Mariposa Lily, The. 

Meadow-larks. 

Prayer A. 

"When the grass shall cover me.” 

Cooley, Hattie A.—Grandmother’s Bible. 




Coolidge 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Coolidge, Grace F.—When Mamma was a Little Girl. 
Coolidge, R. B —Loss of the College Pump, The. 
Coolidge, Susan.—Flowers Know their Time to Go. 
Time to Go. See Flowers Know their Time to Go. 
While We May. 

Cooper,-.—Wonderful Weaver, The. 

Cooper, F. T.—Capriciousness. 

Coincidence, A. 

Cross-purposes. 

Cooper, G:—All the Good We Can. 

Autumn Leaves. 

Baby-land 
“Bob White.” 

Boy that Laughs, The. 

Boy’s Promise, A 
Calling Them Up. 

Doll-baby Show, The. 

Farmer’s Pipe, The. 

Flowers and Weeds. 

For the Giver. 

Hundreds! 

In the Heart. 

June Fields. 

Laughing Philosopher, A. 

Leaves and the Wind, The. See Autumn Leaves. 
Little Leaves, The. 

Little Seeds, The. 

Merry Christmas and a Glad New Year, A. 

New Year, The. 

October’s Party. 

Only One. See Hundreds! 

Our Mothers. See Hundreds! 

Reason Why, The. 

Round the Year. 

Sand-man, The. 

Serving. 

Summer Games. 

Thankfulness. 

Upside Down. 

What Grandma Says. 

What Robin Told. 

Wind and the Leaves. See Autumn Leaves. 
Winter Birds. 

Cooper, Jas. Fenimore. Capture of the Whale. See 
Pilot, The. 

Death of the Savage, The. See Deerslayer, The. 
Deerslayer, The. 

Last of the Mohicans. The. 

Mv Brigantine. See Water Witch, The. 

Pilot, The. 

Prairie, The. 

Prairie on Fire, The. See Prairie, The. 

Race for Life, A. See Last of the Mohicans, The 
Running the Gauntlet. See Last of the Mohicans, 
The. 

Stampede, The. See Prairie, The. 

Water Witch, The. 

Cooper, M. Truesdell.—Arithmetic in life. 

Cooper, May.—Be Brave. 

Gossip. 

Cooper, P:—Value of Science. 

Cooper, Ruth.—Drunkard’s Wife, The. 

Cooper, Susan Fenimore.—Birds Choose the Maple, The. 
“Of the infinite variety of fruits,” etc. 

“What a noble gift to man are the forests!” 
Cooper, T:—Chartist Song. 

Copeland, Rob’t.—Foot-ball Game, The. 

Cope’s Tobacco Plant. —Another Match. 

Cop pee, Francois Edouard Joachim.—Benediction, The. 
Night-watch, The. 

Shipwrecked. 

Corbet, Rt. Rev. R:—Fairies’ Farewell, The. 

Farewell to the Fairies. See Fairies’ Farewell, The. 
Father’s Blessing, A. See To Vincent Corbet, my 
Son. 

Like to the Thundering Tone. See Nonsence. 
Nonsence. 

To Vincent Corbet, my Son. 

Corbett, Mrs. E. T.—Christening, The. 

Foreclosure of the Mortgage, The. 

Inventor’s Wife, The. 

Lecture, The. 

Miss Minerva’s Disappointment. 

Newsboy, The. 

Old Deacon’s Lament, The. 

What Biddy Said in the Police Court. 

Corelli, Marie.—Crimson Shroud of Olaf Guldmar, The. 
See Thelma. 

Passing of Olaf. The. See Thelma. 

Soul of Lilith, The. 

Story of the Priest Philemon, The. See Soul of 
Lilith, The. 

Thelma. 


Corlis, C. T.—Two Temples, The. 

Cornell, Mrs. M. Ella.—Closing Address. 

Jesus Loves Me. 

New Sunday-school Scholar, The. 

Opening Address. 

Our Anniversary. 

Reward of Earnest Effort, The. 

Tree of Spiritual Blessings, The. 

Cornell Widow.—Autumn Cry, The. 

Box of Cigarettes, A. 

Cigarette and Pipe, A. ' 

Complication, A. 

Conquest. 

Eskimelodrama; or, the Eskapade of an Eskamaid. 
Last Party, The. 

Other Side, The. 

Sonnet: "A low full sweep of instrumental string.” 
Tirade—Explained, A. 

Verse. 

Village Dance, The. , 

Villon. 

Winds, The. 

Cornhill Magazine. —Beyond the Haze. 

Rabbi’s Present, The. 

Cornish, Rev. G:—To the Redbreast. 

Cornwall, Barry. See Procter, Bryan Waller. 
Cornwallis, Kinahan.—Battle of Fredericksburg, The. 
Battle of Lookout Mountain, The. 

Battle of Murfreesboro, The. 

Conquest of Mexico, The. 

Launching of Cortez’ Ships. See Conquest of 
Mexico, The. 

Cornwell, H: Sylvester.—Angel Ferry, The. 

December. 

February. 

January. 

May. 

My Owl. 

Sunset City, The. 

Unrest. 

Corrie. C. J.—Traitor Sea, The. 

Cortissoz, Mrs. Ellen Mackay [Hutchinson].—All the 
Year Round. 

April Fantasie. 

Bride’s Toilette, The. 

Cry from the Shore, A. 

Harvest. 

Her Picture. 

Moth-song. 

On Kingston Bridge. 

Pamela in Town. 

Praise-God Barebones. 

Priscilla. 

Quaker Ladies. 

Sea-way. 

So Wags the World. 

Under the Stars. 

Vagrant Pansies. 

World and I, The. 

Corwin, T:—Cumberland Road, The. 

Danger of the Spirit of Conquest. See Spirit of 
Conquest, The. 

Retributive Justice. 

Spirit of Conquest, The. 

Unjust National Acquisitions. See Spirit of Con¬ 
quest, The. 

Cory, W: (formerly W: Johnson).—Amaturus. 

Ballad for a Boy, A. 

Callimachus. 

Dirge, A. 

Iieracl[e]itus. See Callimachus. 

Invocation, An. 

Mimnermus in Church. 

Poor French Sailor’s Scottish Sweetheart, A. 
School Fencibles. 

Two Captains, The. See Ballad for a Boy, A. 
Costello, Louisa Stuart (?)—Song: "Heaven! ’Tis de¬ 
light to see how fair.” (TV.) 

Song: “Wilt thou be mine?” ( Tr .) 

“Who has not looked upon her brow.” (Tr.) 

Cotes, Mrs. Sara Jeanette [Duncan],—Poet, The. 
Cotterell, G:—Autumn Flitting, An. 

In the Twilight. 

Cotton, Arthur W.—Phyllis and Corydon. 

Cotton, C:—Tkmtentat.ion. 

Invitation to Izaak Walton. 

Ode: Laura Sleeping. 

Retirement, The. 

To Coelia. 

Cotton, Nathaniel.—Fireside, The. 

To-morrow. 

Couch, Arthur T. Quiller. See Quiller-Couch, Ar¬ 
thur T. 


428 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Cowper 


Couch, Mabel Quiller. See Quiller-Cotjch, Mabel. 
Coudert, F: RenA—City of New York, The. 

Faith of Washington, The. 

Nation’s Honor, A. 

Courier, Paul L:—Night of Terror, A. 

Courtenay, W: Ashmead.—Boston, Mass., and Charles¬ 
ton, S. C. 

Courthope, W: J:—-Birdcatcher’s Song. See Paradise 

of Birds. The. 

Chancellor’s Garden, The. 

In Praise of Gilbert White. See Paradise of Birds, 
The. 

Ode—to the Roc. See Paradise of Birds, The. 
Paradise of Birds, The. 

Cousin Alice.” See Haven. Mrs. Alice [Bradley] 
[Neal], 

“Cousin Fannie.”—Secret, The. 

Cousins, Rob’t G.—Heroes of the “Maine Disaster.” 
See Tribute to the Men of the Maine, A. 

Tribute to the Men of the Maine, A. 

Covert, Hon. Jas. W.—“Every Year.” (At. also to 
Albert Pike.) 

Cowan, S: K.—Becalmed. 

Becalmed at Sea. See Becalmed. 

Life. 

Poor Jack. 

Cowden-Clarke, Mrs. Mary [Novello],—With Thee. 
Cowdin, Elliot C.-—Merchants of the Revolution. 

Cowell, Marie S.—Mrs. Christopher Columbus. 

Cowley, Abraham.—Anacreontics. (TV.) 

Brutus. (Tr.) See Pindarique Odes. 

Change, The. 

Chronicle, The. A Ballad. 

Davideis, The. 

Discourses by Way of Essays, The. 

Drinking. (Tr.) See Anacreontics. 

Epicure, The. (Tr.) See Anacreontics. 

Epigram on Francis Drake. 

Fragment, A. See Change, The. 

Garden, The. 

Gold. See Change, The. 

Grasshopper, The. (Tr.) See Anacreontics. 
“Hail, old patrician trees, so great and good!” 

See Of Solitude. 

HymntoLight, The. 

Invocation. See Davideis, The. 

Love in Her Sunny Eyes. See Change, The. 

Lover to His Lyre, The. See Davideis, The. 
Mistress The. 

Ode: On Solitude. See Of Solitude. 

Ode: Of Wit. 

Ode to the Royal Society, The. See To the Royal 
Society. 

Of Myself. 

Of Solitude. 

On Solitude. See Of Solitude. 

On the Death of Mr. Crashaw. 

On the Death of Mr. William Hervey. 

Pain of Love, The. See Change, The. 

Pindarique Odes. (Tr.) 

Spring, The. See Mistress, The. 

Supplication, A. See Davideis, The. 

Swallow, The. (Tr.) See Anacreontics. 

Thief, The. 

Thirsty Earth Soaks up the Rain, The. (Tr.) See 
Anacreontics. 

To Mr. Hobbs. (Tr.) See Pindarique Odes. 

To the Royal Society. 

Wish, A. See Of Myself. 

Wish, The. See Mistress, The. 

Without and Within. See Change, The. 

Cowper, J. F.—Encounter with a Panther, An 
Cowper, W:—Acquiescence of Pure Love, The. 
Affectation in the Pulpit. See Task, The. 
Afternoon Call, An. See Conversation. 

Alexander Selkirk. See Verses Supposed to be 
Written by Alexander Selkirk. 
Autobiographical. See Task, The. 

Beau’s Reply. 

Boadicea. An Ode. 

Castaway, The. 

Characters and Sketches. See Conversation. 
Colubriad, The. 

Comparison, A. Addressed to a Young Lady. 
Contentment. (Tr.) 

Contradiction. See Conversation. 

Conversation. 

Crazy Kate. The Gipsies. See Task, The. 
Cricket, The. (Tr.) 

Dejection and Retirement. The Retired States¬ 
man. See Retirement. 

Dependence. 

Diverting History of John Gilpin, The. 


Cowper, W: (continued). 

Dog and the Water-lily, The. 

Dog (Beau) and the Water-lily, The. See Dog 
and the Water-lily, The. 

Duelling. See Conversation. 

Early Love of the Country and of Poetry. See 

T p air T 1 |i p 

England’. See Task, The. 

England, with all Thy Faults, I Love Thee Still. 
See Task, The. 

Epistle to Joseph Hill[, Esq.], An. 

Epitaph on a Hare. 

Excessive Modesty. See Conversation. 

Exploit of Hector. The. (Tr.) See Iliad, The. 
Facetious Story of John Gilpin, The. See Divert¬ 
ing History of John Gilpin, The. 

Faithful Bird, The. 

Freeman, The. See Task, The. 

Friendship. 

Future Peace and Glory of the Church, The. 
Garden, The. See Task, The. 

God Moves in a Mysterious Way. See Light 
Shining out of Darkness. 

Grace and the World. See Hope. 

Happiness of Animals. See Task, The. 

Happy Man, The. See Task, The. 

Hector Slain by Achilles. (Tr.) See Iliad, The. 
Hector’s Exnloit at the Barriers of the Grecian 
Fleet. (Tr.) See Iliad, The. 

Hector’s Rebuke to Polydamus. (Tr.) See Iliad, 
The. 

Hope. 

Human Frailty. 

Humanity. See Task, The. 

Ice Palace. The. See Task, The. 

Iliad, The. (Tr.) See Homer. 

Jackdaw, The. 

John Gilpin. See Diverting History of John Gilpin, 

The. 

Joy and Peace in Believing. 

Knowledge and Wisdom. See Task, The. 
Law-case, A. See Report of an Adjudged Case. 
Letter to Mr. Johnson (Printer). 

Letter to the Rev. John Newton, Nov. 30, 1783. 
Life before the Flood. See Letter to the Rev. 
John Newton. 

Light Shining out of Darkness. 

Lord Chatham. See Table Talk. 

Love of Liberty. See Task, The. 

Love of the World Reproved, The; or, Hypocrisy 
Detected. 

Lovest Thou Me? , 

Meditation in Winter. See Task, The. 

Mother’s Portrait, A. See On the Receipt of my 
Mother’s Picture. 

“My fugitive years are all hasting away.” See 
Poplar Field, The. 

My Mary. See To Mary. 

My Mother’s Picture. See On the Receipt of my 
Mother’s Picture. 

Nightingale and the Glowworm, The. 

Nose and [the] Eyes [, The]. See Report of an 
Adjudged Case. 

On a Spaniel, called Beau, Killing a Young Bird. 
On Friendship. See Friendship. 

On the Death of Dr. Johnson. 

On the Death of Mrs. Throckmorton’s Bullfinch. 
On the Grasshopper. (Tr.) 

On the Loss of the Royal George. 

On the Receipt of My Mother’s Picture [out of 
Norfolk— 

Pairing Time Anticipated. 

Past and Future of Poetry, The. See Table Talk. 
Path of Sorrow, T ie. See To an Afflicted Protes¬ 
tant Lady in France. 

Patriots and Martyrs. See Task, The. 

"Patriots have toiled, and in their country’s 
cause.” See Task, The. 

Pernicious Weed! See Conversation. 

Pity for Poor Africans. 

Poet in the Woods, The. See Task, The. 

Poplar Field. The. 

Post, The. The Fireside in Winter. See Task, The. 
Praise for the Fountain Opened. 

Preaching versus Practice. See Pity for Poor 
Africans. 

Providence. See Light Shining out of Darkness. 
Relish of Fair Prospect. See Task. The. 

Reply of Achilles to the Envoys of Agamemnon 
Soliciting a Reconciliation. (Tr.) See Iliad, 
The. 

Report of an Adjudged Case. 

Retired Cat, The. 


429 




Cowper 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Cowper, W: ( continued ). 

Retirement. 

Rose, The. 

Royal George, The. See On the Loss of the Royal 
George. 

Shrubbery, The. 

Slavery. See Task, The 
Snow. See Task, The. 

Sofa, The. See Task, The. 

Solitude of Alexander Selkirk, The. See Verses 
Supposed to be Written by Alexander Selkirk. 
“Sometimes a light surprises.” See Joy and Peace 
in Believing. 

Sum of Life, The. See Task, The. 

Sweet Stream, that Winds. See Comparison, A. 

Addressed to a Young Lady. 

Table Talk. 

Tame Hares. 

Task, The. 

Timepiece, The. See Task, The. 

To a Young Lady. See Comparison, A. Ad¬ 
dressed to a Young Lady. 

To an Afflicted Protestant Lady in France. 

To Christina of Sweden. (7V.) 

To Mary. 

To Mary Unwin. See To Mrs. Unwin. 

To Mrs. Unwin. 

To the Rev. Mr. Newton. See To the Rev. Mr. 
Newton, Rector, etc. 

To the Rev. Mr. Newton, on His Return from 
Ramsgate. 

To the Rev. Mr. Newton, Rector of St. Mary, 
Wool worth. 

Treatment of His Hares, The. 

Truth. See Task, The. 

■ Verses Supposed to be Written by Alexander Sel¬ 
kirk. 

Walking with God. 

What to Read. See Retirement. 

Winter. See Task, The. 

Winter Evening. See Task, The. 

Winter Evening at Home, A. See Task, The. 
Winter Morning. See Task, The. 

Winter Morning Walk, The. See Task, The. 
Winter Noon. See Task, The. 

Winter Walk at Noon. See Task, The. 

Woodland in Spring, The. See Task, The. 

Cox, Eugene A.—Broken Chains. 

Cox, Harding.—Mouse, The. 

Cox, Jacob D.—Garfield Memorial at Cleveland, Ohio, 
The. 

Cox, R:—Dying Soldier, The. 

Cox, Rev. S. K.—Knightly Welcome, A. 

Cox, S: Sullivan [“Sunset”].—America. 

Coxe, Rt. Rev. Arthur Cleveland.—Chimes of Old Eng¬ 
land, The. 

Christmas Carol. 

Desire of all Nations, The. 

Iona—A Memorial of St. Columba. 

Heart’s Song, The. 

Oxford Boat-race. 

Coyne, J. Sterling.—Moses at the Fair. 

Terrible Secret, A. 

Cozzens, Frd’k Swartout.—Battle of Bunker[’s] Hill[, 
The], 

Dumb-waiter, The. 

Experience and a Moral, An. 

To My Big Sweetheart. 

To My Poland Rooster. 

Crabbe, G:—Approach of Age, The. See Tales of The 
Hall. 

Borough, The. 

Convict’s Dream, The. See Borough, The. 
Entanglement, An. See Tales of the Hall. 
Evening Sail, The. See Borough, The. 

Founder of the Almshouse, The. See Borough, 
The. 

Hymn: “Pilgrim, burdened with thy sin.” 

Late Wisdom. See Reflections. 

Library, The. 

Man’s Life. See Parting Hour, The. 

Marriage Ring, A. 

Meeting. See Tales of the Hall. 

Parting Hour, The. 

Practical Charity. See Borough, The. 

Quack Medicines. See Borough, The. 

Reflections. 

Storm on the East Coast, A. See Borough, The. 
Strolling Players. See Borough, The. 

Tales of the Hall. 

Village, The. 

Village as it is, The. See Village, The. 

Crafts, Rev. Wilbur F.—Liquor or Liberty? 


Crafts, W:—On the Death of Decatur. 

Cragin, Mary A. (“Joy Allison”).—February Twenty- 
second. 

I Love You, Mother. See Which Loved Best? 
Which Loved Best? 

Craig, Jessie T.—Vision, A. 

Craigmyle, Eliz.—Solway Sands. 

Craik, Mrs. Dinah Maria [Mulock],—Address to the New 
Year. See Psalm for New Year’s Eve, A. 
Angel Faces. 

Autumn’s Processional. See October. 

Boat of My Lover, The. 

Buried To-day. 

By the Alma River. 

Christian’s Mistake. 

Christmas Carol, A. 

Count Ludwig and the Wood-spirit. 

Dead Czar, The. 

Dead Czar Nicholas, The. See Dead Czar, The. 
Don’t be Afraid. 

Douglas[, Douglas], Tender and True. See Too 
Late. 

Four Years. 

God Rest Ye, Merry Gentlemen. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Good of It, The. 

Grandpapa. 

Green Things Growing! 

Guns of Peace. 

Her Likeness. 

Highland Cattle. 

Honest Man, An. 

In Our Boat. 

In Swanage Bay. 

John Halifax, Gentleman. 

Labor and Rest. See Now and Afterwards. 
Lancashire Doxology, A. 

Lettice. 

Little Dead Prince, A. 

Little Jew, The. 

Little Muriel. See John Halifax, Gentleman. 

Love that Asketh Love Again. 

Michael the Archangel. 

Mine. 

Moon-struck. 

New Year’s Gifts, The. See Psalm for New Year’s 
Eve, A. 

Now and Afterwards. 

North Wind. 

“O life, O silent shore.” See Sitting on the Shore. 
October. 

Only a Woman. 

Over the Hills and Far Away. 

Passing By. 

Philip, My King. 

Psalm for New Year’s Eve, A. 

Resigning. 

Respect the Burden. 

Rosicrucian, The. 

September Robin, A. 

Silly Song, A. 

Sitting on the Shore. 

Sunrise among the Hills. 

That Light. See Moon-struck. 

Three Companions. 

Three Meetings. 

Tide at the Flood, The. 

To the Memory of Fletcher Harper. See Honest 
Man, An. 

Too Late. 

Unknown Country, The. 

Veronica. 

Victims and Victimizers. 

Violets. 

“Who comes dancing over the snow?” 

Winning and Losing. See Christian’s Mistake. 
“You, O man! who with your honey words and 
your tender looks.” 

Young Dandelion[, The]. 

Cramer, Nelly R.—When I am a Man. 

Cranch, Christopher Pearse.—Bobolinks, The. 

By the Shore of the River. 

Chinese Story, A. 

Compensation. 

Death of Louis Napoleon. See Louis Napoleon. 
Gnosis. See Thought. 

I in Thee, and Thou in Me. 

Knowing. See Thought. 

Life and Death. 

Lore-lei, The. (Tr.) 

Louis Napoleon. 

M agnoli a-Grandiflora. 

Michael Angelo Buonarrotti. 


430 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Crosby 


Cranch, Christopher Pearse ( continued ). 

Pines and the Sea, The. 

Shelling Peas. 

Stanza from an Early Poem. 

Stanzas: “Thought is deeper than all speech.” 

See Thought. 

Test of Sight, The. 

Thought. 

“Thought is deeper than all speech.” See Thought. 
Cranch, S. P.—Night Picture, A. 

Crandall, C: H:—-Fair Copy-holder, The. 

Human Plan, The. 

Nemesis. 

Stella. 

Three Trees. 

Waiting. 

With Lilacs. 

Crane, Eliz. Green.—Gentian. 

Crane, Oliver.—Waiting on the Lord. 

Crane, Stephen.—Ancestry. 

Black Riders, The. 

Content. 

Escaped. 

I Explain. 

Making an Orator. 

Peaks, The. 

Violets, The. 

Wayfarer, The. 

Why? 

Crane, W. W. —Mr. Sprechelheimer’s Mistake. 

Crane, Walter.—Across the Fields. 

Seat for Three, A. 

Crannell, C. W.—Philosophy. 

Crapsey, E:—“Entombed within a nation’s reverent 
love.” 

Crashaw, R:—At Bethlehem. See Hymn of the Na¬ 
tivity, A. 

Christ Crucified. 

Description of a Religious House [and Condition 
of Life— C.]. 

Epitaph upon Husband and Wife[, An], 

Flaming Heart, The. See Upon the Book and 
Picture of the Seraphical Saint Teresa. 

Hymn of the Nativity, A. 

Hymn to the Name and Honour of the Admirable 
Saint Teresa, A. 

In Praise of Lessius, His Rule of Health. 

Music’s Duel. 

Nightingale’s Song, The. See Music’s Duel. 

On a Prayer-book [Sent to Mrs. M. R.]. 

Out of Italian. A Song. 

Satan. See Sospetto d’Herode. 

Shepherd’s Hymn, The. See Hymn of the Na¬ 
tivity, A. 

Song, A: “To thy lover.” See Out of Italian. 
A Song. 

Sospetto d’Herode. 

Temperance, or the Cheap Physician. See In 
Praise of Lessius, His Rule of Health. 

Two Went up into the Temple to Pray. 

Upon the Book and Picture of the Seraphical 
Saint Teresa. 

Weeper, The. 

“Whoe’er she be.” See Wishes to his Supposed 
Mistress. 

Wishes for the Supposed Mistress. See Wishes to 
His Supposed Mistress. 

Wishes to His Supposed Mistress. 

Craven, Mme. A:—Fleurange. 

Craven, Gertrude.—Triolet: “He kissed me, ’neath the 
mistletoe.” 

Crawford, Agnes.—Pantomime of “Where are You 
Going, My Pretty Maid?” 

Crawford, Mrs. Anne [Barry].—Kathleen Mavourneen 
See Crawford, Mrs. Louise [Macartney]. 
Crawford, Fs. Marion.—Extracting a Secret. 

Massacre of Zoroaster, The. See Zoroaster. 
National Hymn. See New National Hymn, A. 
New National Hymn, A. 

Suffering of Nehushta, The. See Zoroaster. 
Zoroaster. 

Crawford, Isabella Valancey.—Axe, The. 

Axe of the Pioneer, The. See Axe, The. 

Canoe, The. 

Helot, The. 

Master-builder, The. 

Sword, The. 

“These Three.” 

Crawford, J.—Thar was Jim. 

Crawford, Captain Jack. See Crawford, J: Wallace. 
Crawford, J: Martin. (TV.)—Birth of the Harp, The. 
See Kalevala, The. 

Ilmarinen’s Wedding Feast. See Kalevala, The. 


Crawford, J: Martin ( continued ). 

Kalevala, The. 

Kullervo and the Cheat-cake. See Kalevala, The. 
Wooing of the Maid of Beauty. »S'ee Kalevala, 
The. 

Crawford, J: Wallace ("Captain Jack Crawford”). 
Mother’s Prayer. 

Crawford, Julia.—We Parted in Silence. 

Crawford, Mrs. Louise [Macartney].—Kathleen Mavour¬ 
neen. {At. also to Mrs. Anne [Barry] Crawford.) 
Creasy, E: Shepherd.—Demosthenes. 

Crewe, Rob’t Offley Ashburton Crewe-Milnes, Earl of. 
Millet and Zola. 

Crewe-Milnes, Rob’t Offley Ashburton. See Crewe, 
Earl of. 

Crissey, Forrest.—“Ma’s Attic.” 

Crittenden, J: J.—Matt. F. Ward’s Trial for Murder. 

On Government Extravagance. 

“Croakers, The.” See Halleck, Fitz-Greene, and 
Drake, Joseph Rodman. 

Crocker, Harriet Francene.—Hepsy at the State Con¬ 
vention. 

Lumber Camp Romance, A. 

My Old Rag Doll. 

White Ribbon, The. 

Crocker, Mary G.—Blue-bells. See Flower Songs. 
Buttercups. See Flower Songs. 

Daisies. See Flower Songs. 

Dialogue for Bands of Hope. 

Flower Songs. 

Nothing to Wear. 

Wild Roses. See Flower Songs. 

Crockett, S: Rutherford.—Rev. John Smith of Arkland 
Prepares his Sermon, The. 

Stickit Minister, The. 

Croffut, W: Andrews.—Clam-soup. 

Croffut, W: A:—Dirge Concerning the Late Lamented 
King of the Cannibal Islands, A. 

Living Memory, A. 

Croffut, W. F.—Give Thanks for What? 

Crofton, Fs. Blake.—Battle-call of Anti-Christ, The. 
Crofts, Rev. G: W.—Easter Lilies. 

I Love You, Dear. 

To the Discouraged. 

Croker, J: Wilson.—Perils of Parliamentary Reform. 

Reply to Macaulay’s “Reform Irresistible.” 

Croker, T. Crofton.—Last Serpent, The. 

Croly, G :—Belshazzar. 

Bitter Disappointment. See Catiline. 

Catiline. 

Catiline to the Gallic Conspirators. See Catiline. 
Catiline, on Hearing *His Sentence of Banishment. 
See Catiline. 

Catiline to His Friends, after Failing in His Elec¬ 
tion to the Consulship. See Catiline. 

Catiline to the Roman Army. See Catiline. 
Catiline’s Defiance. See Catiline. 

Catiline’s Last Harangue to His Army. See Cati¬ 
line. 

Constantius and the Lion. See Tarry Thou Till I 
Come, etc. 

Crucifixion, The. 

Death of Leonidas, The. 

Dirge, A: “Earth to earth and dust to dust.” 
Domestic Love. See Woman Contemplating a 
Household God, A. 

Dust to Dust. See Dirge: “Earth to earth and 
dust to dust.” 

Effect of Oratory on a Multitude. 

Evening. 

Expulsion of Catiline. See Catiline. 

Genius of Death, The. 

Greek and Turkman, The. 

Leonidas. 

Lily of the Valley, The. 

Pericles. See Pericles and Aspasia. 

Pericles and Aspasia. 

Pride of Ancestry. 

Seventh Plague of Egypt, The. 

Tarry Thou Till I Come; or, Salathiel, the Wander¬ 
ing Jew. 

Thrilling Sketch. See Tarry Thou Till I Come, etc. 
Woman Contemplating a Household God, A. 
Croly, Mrs. Jane [Cunningham] (“Jennie June”).— 
Piano Mania, The. 

What Will Become of the Children? 

Crompton, Rob’t.—Signals of Distress. 

Cronise, Mabel.—Legend of the Fleur-de-lis, The. 
Crosby, Ernest.—Choir Practice. 

Search, The. 

Soul of the World. 

Crosby, Fanny J. See Van Alstyne, Mrs. Frances 
Jane. 


431 





Crosby 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Crosby, Frank.—“All the Comforts of a Home.” 
Hiring Help. 

Hour in School, An. 

Jack at All Trades. 

Latest Sensation in Podunk. 

Patent Medicine. 

Professor, The. 

Puritan’s Dilemma, The. 

Reading Works of Fiction—A Debate. 

Running for Congress. 

"Teacher Wanted.” 

Waiting for the Stage. 

Crosby, Dr. Fred.—Lily and the Linden, The. 

Crosby, Howard.—“If I were called to point out the 
most alarming sins of to-day.” 

Crosby, L.—Salutatory. 

Crosby, Nora E.—Farmer Nick’s Scarecrow. 

Cross, Rev. Dr. Jos. C. (?)—Year in Paradise, A. 

Cross, Adeline E.—Singer and the Child, The. 

Cross, Mrs. Marian [or Mary Ann] [Evans] [Lewes] 
(“ George Eliot”).—Adam Bede. 

Armgart. 

Aunt Pullet’s Bonnet. See Mill on the Floss, The. 
Brother and Sister. 

Choir Invisible, The. See O, May I Join the 
Choir Invisible! 

Dark, The. See Spanish Gypsy, The. 

Day is Dying. See Spanish Gypsy, The. 

Death of Moses, The. 

Discussion at “The Rainbow,” A. See Silas 
Mamer. 

Flood on the Floss, The. See Mill on the Floss, 
The. 

Hermit, The. See Spanish Gypsy, The. 

How Lisa Loved the King. 

I am Lonely. See Spanish Gypsy, The. 
“Imitation of Christ was written by a hand that 
waited, The.” See Mill on the Floss, The. 
Maggie and Thomas 4 Kempis. See Mill on the 
Floss, The. 

Maggie Cuts Her Hair. See Mill on the Floss, The. 
Mill on the Floss, The. 

Mrs. Poyser “Has Her Say Out.” See Adam 
Bede. 

“Nice distinctions are troublesome.” 

O, May I Join the Choir Invisible! 

Ogg, the Son of Beorl. See Mill on the Floss, The. 
Romola. 

Romola and Savonarola. See Romola. 

Romola’s Flight. See Romola. 

Silas Marner. . 

Song of the Zincali. See Spanish Gypsy, The. 
Spanish Gypsy, The. 

Spring Song. See Spanish Gypsy, The. 

“There is something sustaining in the very agita¬ 
tion.” See Mill on the Floss, The. 

Tito’s Armor. See Romola. 

Two Lovers. 

Well Spent. 

Croswell, W:—Clouds, The. 

Song of Faith. 

Crouch, Julia A.—Seeing a Ghost. 

Crowl, Theodore.—My Mule. 

“Crowquill, Alfred.” See Forrester, Alfred A. 
Cruikshank’s Omnibus. —Catalectic Monody, A. 

Theatrical Curiosity, A. 

Culbertson, Anne Virginia.—Gyda of Varsland. 

He Understood. 

My Chillun’s Pictyah. 

Triolet. 

Culbertson, Carey.—At the Junior Promenade. 
Cumming, J:—Influence after Death. See Voices of 
the Dead. 

Voices of the Dead. 

Cummings, Jeremiah W.—American Freedom. See 
Song of the Union. 

Banner of Freedom, The. See Song of the Union. 
Song of the Union. 

Cummins, Ella Sterling.—Fan Brigade, The. 

Mariquita, the Bandit’s Daughter. 

Voices of the Wildwood. 

Cunard, L. M.—Lost. 

Cunningham, Allan.—At Sea. 

Gane were but the Winter Cauld. 

Hame, Hame, Hame! 

It’s Hame, and it’s Hame. See Hame, Hame, 
Hame! 

Lily of Nithsdale, The. See She’s Gane to Dwall 
in Heaven. 

Loyalty. See Hame, Hame, Hame! 

My Ain Countree. 

Night is Nigh Gone. See Night is Near Gone, 
The—Montgomerie. 


Cunningham, Allan ( continued ). 

Poet’s Bridal-day Song, The. 

Sea Song. See At Sea. 

She’s Gane to Dwall in Heaven. 

Song of the Elfin Miller. 

Spring of the Year, The. 

Sun Rises Bright in France, The. See My Ain 
Countree. 

Thou hast Sworn by thy God, my Jeanie. 

Thou hast Vowed by thy Faith, my Jeanie. See 
Thou hast Sworn by thy God, my Jeanie. 

Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea, A. 

Cunningham, F.—Fox and the Cat, The. 

Cunningham, J:—Content. A Pastoral. 

Cory don, a Pastoral. 

Morning. 

Cunninghame-Graham, Rob’t. See Graham, Robert, 
of Gartmore. 

Curley-.—In Mamma’s Days. 

Curr, Allan.— Battle of Bothwell Bridge, The; a Lay 
of the Covenanters. 

Curran, J: Philpot.—Against Religious Distinctions. 
Appeal to Lord Avonmore. 

Defense of Mr. Rowan, 1794. 

Description of Mr. Rowan. See Defense of Mr, 
Rowan. 

Deserter, The. See Deserter’s Meditation, The. 
Deserter’s Meditation, The. 

Habeas Corpus Act, The. 

Liberty of the Press, The. 

Reply to Threats of Violence. See Stamp Officers’ 
Salaries. 

Satire on the Pension System, 1786. 

Stamp Officers’ Salaries. 

Currie, Lady (“Violet Fane”).—Afterwardfs], 
Foreboding, A. 

In Green Old Gardens. 

May Song, A. 

Wife’s Confession, A. 

Currie, J: Allister.—My Mother. 

Currie, Mrs. Marg. Gill.—By the St. John. 

Currier, Ellen Bartlett.—Silent Baby. 

Curry, Lillie S.—Little Graves. 

Curtis, D. W.—Song of an Old Dollar Bill. 

Curtis, Emma Ghent.—Cowboy’s Sermon, The. 

Curtis, F. K.—Between the Galop and the Lanciers. 

Promenading Psychology. 

Curtis, G: W:—Arbor Day. 

Bryant, Extract Concerning. 

Burgoyne’s Surrender. 

Cause of Bunker Hill, The. See Good Fight, The. 
Centennial Celebration of Concord Fight. 

Changes of a Hundred Years. See Centennial 
Celebration of Concord Fight. 

Charles Sumner. 

Duty of the American Scholar. 

Ebb and Flow. 

Egyptian Serenade. 

Element of Justice, The. 

Eulogy on [or of] Wendell Phillips. See Wendell 
Phillips. A Eulogy, etc. 

Fair Play for Women. 

Father of the Revolution, The. See Centennial 
Celebration of Concord Fight. 

General Grant, the Silent Captain. See Major- 
General John Sedgwick. 

Good Fight, The. 

Great Question Settled, The. See Society of the 
Army of the Potomac, The. 

Greatness of the Poet, The. See Robert Bums. 
Heroes of ’76, The. See Centennial Celebration of 
Concord Fight. 

Holmes, Extract Concerning. 

Ideas the Life of a People. See Element of Justice. 
The. 

Leadership of Educated Men, The. 

Longfellow, Extract Concerning. 

Major-General John Sedgwick. 

Minute Men of ’75, The. See Centennial Celebra¬ 
tion of Concord Fight. 

Minute Men of ’76. See Centennial Celebration of 
Concord Fight. 

Nations and Humanity. See Patriotism. 

New Holiday, A. See Arbor Day. 

Nile Notes of a Howadji. 

Our Worst Foes. See Centennial Celebration of 
Concord Fight. 

Patriotism. 

Paul Revere’s Ride. See Centennial Celebration 
of Concord Fight. 

Political Infidelity. 

Power of Free Ideas, The. 

Puritan, The. See Puritan Spirit, The. 


432 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Dana 


Curtis, G: W: ( continued). 

Puritan Spirit, The. 

Robert Burns. 

Rub-a-dub Agitation, A. See Political Infidelity. 

Samuel Adams and the New England Town Meet¬ 
ing. See Centennial Celebration of Concord 
Fight. 

Society of the Army of the Potomac, The. 

Spirit of Puritanism, The. See Major-General John 
Sedgwick. 

"Through all history, from the beginning.” See 
Patriotism. 

True Patriotism is Unselfish. See Patriotism. 

Under the Palms. See Nile Notes of a Howadji. 

Washington Arch in New York, The. See Wash¬ 
ington Memorial Arch, The. 

Washington Memorial Arch, The. 

Wendell Phillips. See Wendell Phillips. A Eulogy, 
etc. 

Wendell Phillips. A Eulogy Delivered before the 
Municipal Authorities of Boston, Mass., April 
18, 1884. 

Wendell Phillips as an Orator. See Wendell Phil¬ 
lips. A Eulogy, etc. 

Wendell Phillips at Faneuil Hall. See Wendell 
Phillips. A Eulogy, etc. 

"Wherever party spirit shall strain the ancient 
guarantees of freedom.” See Centennial Cele¬ 
bration of Concord Fight. 

Who was the Minute-man? See Centennial Cele¬ 
bration of Concord Fight. 

Woman’s Rights. See Fair Play for Women. 

Curtis, Helen B.—May. 

Curtis, Mrs. Howard J.—New Girl’s Logic, The. 

Curtiss, F. R.—Engaged. 

Curtius, Quintus.—Alexander the Great to His Men. 

Darius to His Army. 

Virtue Uncorrupted by Fortune. 

Curzon, Mrs. Sarah Anne.—Invocation to Rain. 

Visit of the Prince of Wales to Laura Secord. 

Cushing, Caleb.—Importance of the Agricultural Inter¬ 
est. 

New England. See New England in the War of 
1812. 


New England in the War of 1812. 

Sectional Services in the Last War. See New 
England in the War of 1812. 

Cushing, Harry H.—Lost Child, The. 

Pair of Lions, A. 

Custance, Olive.—Parting Hour, The. 

Twilight. 

Waking of Spring, The. 

Cutler, Elbridge Jefferson.—Drum-call in 1861, The. 
Regiment’s Return, The. 

Rising of the People, The. See Drum-call in 1861, 
The. 

Volunteer, The. 

Cutler, H. S.—Church Militant, The. 

Cutler, Julian S.—Angel of Dawn, The. 

Eclipse, The. 

Knitting. 

Wild Thorn Blossoms. 

Wonderful. 

Cutter, Eliz. Reeve.—Bread and Wine. 

Gift, A. 

Cutter, G: W.—E Pluribus Unum. 

Miser, The. 

On the Death of General Worth 
Song of Steam, The. 

Song of the Lightning. 

Cutts, J:, Lord. —Song: “Only tell her that I love.” 
Cuyler, Rev. Theodore L.—Boys—and the Bottle. 
Mighty Word, “No,” The. 

Our Platform. 

Our Warfare and Our Duty. 


D 

D., E. T.—Promenading Ontology. 

D., F.—Lay of the Grateful Patient. 

D., G.—Same, The. 

D., G. H.—“And perched the glittering, icy boughs 
among.” 

D., L. M.—Life’s Morning, Noon, and Evening. 

D., M. C.—Charade. 

D., M. M.—Old Hen, An. 

Pussy’s Class. 

D., R.— Last Spring, The. 

D., S.—Rover.— 

“Dagonet.”—Kate Maloney. 

Daily Graphic. —Astronomical. 


"Dakota Bell.”—Following the Advice of a Physician. 
Dale, G. W.— Yankee’s Stratagem, The: or Here She 
Goes—and there She Goes. 

Dale, Rev. Rob’t W:—“We cannot despair of success.” 
Dale, T.—Regulus. 

Dallas, Mary Kyle.—Annie O’Brien. 

At the Altar. 

Aunt Betsey on Marriage. 

Aunt Peggy and High Art. 

Aunty Doleful’s Visit. 

Aurelia’s Valentine. 

Bessie’s Dilemma. 

Brave Love. 

Bridget’s Soliloquy. 

Broken Dreams. 

Charity Grinder and the Postmaster General. 
Corianna’s Wedding. 

Dream, A. 

Dutifuls, The. 

Fashionable Hospitality. 

Fashionable Vacation, A. 

Father Paul. 

Frightened Woman, A. 

Great Man, A. 

He’d Nothing but His Violin. See Brave Love. 
Her First Steam-engine. 

Her Heart was False, and Mine was Broken. 

In Amity of Soul. 

Knitting. 

Love’s Reminiscences. 

Miaouletta. 

Mrs. Pickles Wants to be a Man. 

Mrs. Slowly at the Hotel. 

Mrs. Smith Improves Her Mind. 

Mrs. Tubbs and Political Economy. 

Mrs.Winkle’s Grandson. 

Mothers and Fathers: Two Pictures. 

My Sweetheart’s Baby Brother. 

“N” for Nannie and “B” for Ben. 

Nettie Budd before Her Second Ball. 

Old, Old Story, The. 

Out of the Bottle. 

Paying Her Fare. 

Rebecca’s Revenge. 

Riding on a Rail. 

Scene in a Street Car. 

Simon Solitary’s Ideal Wife. 

Slowlys at the Photographer’s, The. 

Slowlys at the Theatre, The. 

Statue’s Story, The. 

Thoughts at a Party. 

To A. M. Olar. (An Old Man’s Memories.) 

Toast, The. 

Tragedy at Dodd’s Place, The. 

Two Opinions of One House. 

What Old Mrs. Ember Said. 

What the Crickets Said. 

When the House is Alone by Itself. 

Dalling and Bulwer, W: H: Lytton Earle Bulwer, 
Baron. —After-dinner Speech. 

To-. "What boots it that thine eye is bright.” 

Twenty-second of December, 1620, The. 
Dalrymple, Sir D:—Edward, Edward. 

Edward of the Bloody Brand. See Edward, 
Edward. 

Dalton,-.—Barmecide’s Feast, The. 

Daly, Augustin.—Leah, the Forsaken. 

Scene from “Leah.” See Leah, the Forsaken. 
Daly, Eugene Howell.—Alpheus and Arethusa. 

Dam, H: J. W.—Theosophic Marriage, A. 

Dana, C: A.—Democracy. 

Dana, Jas. Dwight.—Geology. 

Dana, Mrs. Julia M.—Alphabet of Summer, The. 

First Snowdrop, The. 

Lost Tommy. 

Dana, Mrs. Mary S. B.—Flee as a Bird. 

Passing under the Rod. 

Under the Rod. See Passing under the Rod. 
Dana, Olive E.—Columbus. 

Dana, P.—Cenotaph, A. 

Dana, R: H:—Buccaneer, The. 

Chanting Cherubs—a Group by Greenough, The. 
Good Son, The. 

Husband and Wife’s Grave, The. 

Immortality. See Husband and Wife’s Grave, The. 
Island, The. See Buccaneer, The. 

Little Beach Bird, The. 

Moss Supplicateth for the Poet, The. 

Ocean, The. 

“Oh! listen, man!” See Husband and W ife’s 
Grave, The. 

Pleasure-boat, The. 

Soul, The. 


433 







Danbury 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Danbury News Man.” See Bailey, Jas. Montgom¬ 
ery. 

Dandridge, Mrs. Danske [Bedinger],—Are You Glad? 
Dead Moon, The. 

May. 

On the Eve of War. 

Singing Heart, The. 

Spirit of the Fall, The. 

Struggle, The. 

Wings. 

D’Anduze, Claire.—“They who may blame my tender¬ 
ness.” 

“Dane, Barry.” See Logan, J: E. 

Dane, Zenas.—Big Bob Simpson. 

Juvenile Inquisitor, A. 

Miss Milligan’s Party. 

Woman’s Description of a Play, A. 

Daniel, J: Warwick.—Washington and the Nation. 
Daniel, S:—“Beauty, sweet love! is like the morning 
dew.” See Sonnets to Delia. 

Beauty, Time and Love. See Sonnets to Delia. 
Care-charmer Sleep. See Sonnets to Delia. 
“Care-charmer Sleep, son of the sable Night.” 

See Sonnets to Delia. 

Complaint of Rosamond, The. 

Concerning the Hono[u]r of Books. 

Death of Talbot, The. See History of the Civil 
War. 

Early Love. See Hymen’s Triumph. 

Eidola. 

Eyes, Hide My Love. See Hymen’s Triumph. 
History of the Civil War. 

Hymen’s Triumph. 

Knowing the Heart of Man. See To the Lady 
Margaret, Countess of Cumberland. 

Love. See Hymen’s Triumph. 

Love is a Sickness. See Hymen’s Triumph. 

Love’s Birth and Becoming. See Hymen’s Tri- 
* umph. 

Ode, An: “Now each creature joys the other.” 
Pastoral, A. 

Sleep. See Sonnets to Delia. 

Song: “Are they shadows that we see?” See 
Eidola. 

Sonnet to Delia. See Sonnets to Delia. 

Sonnets to Delia. 

Sorrow. See Complaint of Rosamond, The. 

To Delia. See Sonnets to Delia. 

To the Countess of Cumberland. See To the Lady 
Margaret, Countess of Cumberland. 

To the Lady Margaret, Countess of Cumberland. 
Ulysses and the Siren. 

Dante Alighieri.—Beatrice. See Divine Comedy, The. 
Beatrice Descending from Heaven. See Divine 
Comedy, The. 

Buonconte di Montefeltro. See Divine Comedy, The. 
Count Ugolino. See Divine Comedy, The. 

Divine Comedy, The. 

Exquisite Beauty of Beatrice. See Divine Com¬ 
edy, The. 

Her Helpfulness. See Vita Nuova. 

His Lady’s Praise. See Vita Nuova. 

Vita Nuova. 

Darby, Eleanore.—Legend of the Aspen-tree, A. 
D’Arey, H. Antoine.—Face on the Floor, The. 

Dare, Ella.—Only One Kind Word. 

Darley, G:—Call, The. See Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 
Chorus of Spirits. See Sylvia; or, the May Queen. 
“Down the dimpled greensward dancing.” .See 
Gambols of Children, The. 

Fallen Star, The. 

Fight of the Forlorn, The. 

Flower of Beauty, The. See Song: "Sweet in her 
green dell,” etc. 

Gambols of Children, The. 

Hymn to the Sun. 

“It is not beauty I demand.” 

I’ve been Roaming. See Lilian of the Vale. 

Lilian of the Vale. 

LoveSong. Sec Song: “Sweet in her green dell,” etc. 
Loveliness of Love, The. See “It is not beauty 
I demand.” 

May Day. See Sylvia; or. The May Queen. 
Morning Song. See Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 
Nepenthe. 

Nephon’s Song. See Sylvia; or. The May Queen. 
Osm^’s Song. See Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 
Peasants’ Chorus, The. See Sylvia; or, The May 
Queen. 

Romanzo to Sylvia. See Sylvia; or, The May 
Queen. 

• Serenade: “Awake thee, my lady-love.” See 
Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 


Darley, G: ( continued). 

Song: “Sweet in her green dell the flower of beauty 
slumbers.” 

Song of the Summer Winds. 

Summer Winds. See Song of the Summer Winds. 
Sylvia. See Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 

Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 

Sylvia’s Song. See Sylvia; or, The May Queen. 
To Helene, on a Gift-ring Carelessly Lost. 

True Loveliness. See" It is not beauty I demand.” 
Darmesteter, Mrs. Agnes Mary Frances [Robinson]. See 
Duclaux, Mme. 

Dartmouth Literary Monthly. —In the Tenth Circle. 
Darwin, Erasmus.—Botanic Garden, The. 

Loves of the Plants. See Botanic Garden, The. 
Song to May. 

Daryl, Sidney.—His First Brief. 

Daudet, Alphonse.—French Ensign, The. 

Last Lesson, The (La Derniere Classe). 

Davenant, Sir W:—Aubade. See Song; “The lark,” 
etc. 

Countess of Anglesey led Captive by the Rebells, 
at the Disforresting of Pewsam.—-Song. 
Dawn-song. See Song: “The lark,” etc. 

Gondibert. 

Morning. See Song: “The lark,” etc. 

On the Captivity of the Countess of Anglesey. See 
Countess of Anglesey led Captive, etc. 
Philosopher and the Lover; to a Mistress Dying, 
The Song. 

Praise and Prayer. See Gondibert. 

Soldier Going to the Field, The. See Song: The 
Soldier Going to the Field. 

Song: “The lark now leaves his watery nest.” 
Song: The Soldier Going, etc. 

To a Mistress Dying. See Philosopher and the 
Lover, The. 

Davenport, H:—Asking Mother. 

Boy’s Poem on Washington, A. 

Grave, The. 

Kris Kringle’s Surprise. 

Lover without Arms, A. 

Old Homestead, The. 

Our Dog. 

Sandy’s Romance. 

Song of the Printing Press, The. 

Wreck of an Ocean Steamship, The. 

Davenport, Rob’t.—King John and Matilda. 

Requiem, A. See King John and Matilda. 
Davenport, Ruth.—How to Speak a Piece. 

Davidson, Harriet Miller.—Song for the Hot Winds, A. 
Davidson, J:—Ballad of Heaven, A. 

Ballad of Hell, A. 

Harvest-home Song. 

Last Rose, The. 

London. 

Song: “The boat is chafing at our long delay.” 
Davidson, Lucretia M.—Auction Extraordinary, The. 
See Bachelor Sale, The. 

“Auctioneer, then in his labor began, The.” See 
Bachelor Sale, The. 

Bachelor Sale, The. 

Charnel Ship, The. 

Davidson, Mrs. Marg. Gilman [George],—Moritura. 
Davidson, T:—Danae. 

Lullaby. See Danae. 

Davies, Acton.—Dimple and Dumpling. 

Davies, Sir J: — Antinous Praises Dancing before 
Queen Penelope. See Orchestra; or, A Poeme 
of Dauncing. 

Dancing of the Air, The. See Orchestra; or, A 
Poeme of Dauncing. 

Dignity of Man, The. 

Hymnes of Astraea, in Acrosticke Verse. 

Man. See Of the Soul of Man, and the Immor¬ 
tality thereof. 

Nosce Teipsum. 

Of the Soul of Man, and the Immortality thereof. 
“Oh! what is man, great Maker of mankind!” 

See Dignity of Man, The. 

Orchestra; or, A Poeme of Dauncing. 

Soul Compared to a River, The. See Nosce 
Teipsum. 

Soul Compared to a Virgin Wooed in Marriage, 
The. See Nosce Teipsum. 

To the Month of September. See Hymnes of 
Astrea in Acrosticke Verse. 

To the Nightingale. See Hymnes of Astraea in 
Acrosticke Verse. 

To the Rose. See Hymnes of Astraea in Acrosticke 
Verse. 

To the Spring. Sec Hymnes of Astraea in Acros¬ 
ticke Verse. 


434 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Demosthenes 


Davin, N: Flood.—Eos. 

Da Vinci, Leonardo. See Vinci, Leonardo da. 

Davis, Addie F.—Sermon in Flowers, A. 

Davis, Albert Sargent.—-I Dream of Flo. • 

Davis, Ben Wood.—After the Opera. 

After the Waltz. 

Barcarolle. 

Childless. 

Columbus. 

Decoration Ode. 

Repartee. 

Schoolmaster’s Sleep, The. 

Davis, Bertha Gerneaux.—My Dolls. 

Davis, Edgar F.—Lizy Ann. 

Davis, Eugene.—Wesper Bell, The. 

Davjs, F. T.—Sailor’s Yarn, A. 

Davis, Fs.—Fisherman’s Song, The. 

Kathleen Ban Adair. 

Davis, J.—Sun, The. 

Davis, Kate A.—Tale the Titles Told, The. 

Davis, Mrs. Mary Evelyn [Moore].—Blind Beggar, The. 
Counsel. 

Going Out and Coming In. 

Davis, Paul B.—Ah Yet’s Christmas. 

Davis, R. M.—Mabel’s May. 

Davis, R: Harding.—Boy Orator of Zepata City, The. 
Cuba in War Time. 

Death of Rodriguez, The. See Cuba in War Time. 
Her First Appearance. 

Mr. Traver’s First Hunt. 

“There Were Ninety and Nine.” 

Davis, T: Osborne.—Battle of Fontenoy [The]. 
Battle-eve of the Brigade. 

Boatman of Kinsale, The. ■ . 

Celts and Saxons. 

Fontenoy. See Battle of Fontenoy, The. 

Girl of Dunbwy, The. 

Lament for the Death of Eoghan Ruadh O’Neill. 
Nationality. 

Sack of Baltimore, The. 

Welcome, The. 

Davis, Winifred.—Nellie’s Decorations. 

Davison, Fs.—Psalm Thirteen. 

Psalm Twenty-three. 

Dawes, Rufus -—Love Unchangeable. 

Dawson, Dan’l Lewis.—Seeker in the Marshes, The. 
Dawson, Jas.—After the Battle See By the Alma. 
By the Alma. 

Dawson, M. Phelps.—After the Fourth of July. 
Dawson, R: Lew.—Ole Settlers’ Meetun. 

Dawson, W: Jas.—Angel at the Ford, The. 

Bird’s Song at Morning. 

Child’s Portrait, A. 

Ideal Memory. 

To a Desolate Friend. 

Day, Beth.—Blind Weaver, The. 

Selling the Farm. 

Day, G. P.—Problem, A. 

Day, Holman F.—Aunt Shaw’s Pet Jug. 

Cure for Homesickness. 

Grampy Sings a Song. 

Tale of the Kennebec Mariner. 

Uncle Tascus and the Deed. 

Day, J: W:—Picket before Bull Run, The. 

Day, Mary E.—Parting Lovers, The. 

Day, R: Edwin.—England. 

To Shakespeare. 

Day, T: Fleming.—Coasters, The. 

Day, Rev. W:—Mount Vernon, the Home of Washing¬ 
ton. 

Dayre, Sydney.—Cherry Time. 

Chickadee, The 
Dorry Learns to Sew. 

Frowns or Smiles. 

Getting Acquainted. 

Good-night. 

Grandma’s Angel. 

How it Came. 

Lesson for Mamma, A. 

Letter to Mother Nature, A. 

Message, A. 

My Sweetheart. 

Sunshine. 

Telephone Message, A. See Message, A. 

What was It? 

Dayton, A. Alphonse.—Why He Wouldn’t Sell the 
Farm. 

Dayton, Fred C.—His Sweetheart’s Song. 

Dazey, C: Turner.—February Rain. 

Deane, Antony C.—-Here is the Tale. 

Deans, C. W.—School Affairs in Riverhead District. 
Deas, Fannie M. P.—-That Boy John. 

De Brown, Jere.—Thet Boy ov Ourn. 


Defoe, Dan’l.—Crusoe’s Fight with Wolves. See Rob¬ 
inson Crusoe. 

Friday’s Frolic with a Bear. See Robinson Crusoe. 
Getting Supplies from the Wreck. See Robinson 
Crusoe. 

Robinson Crusoe. 

True-born Englishman, The. 

DeForest, J. W.—In Louisiana. 

De Kay, C: —Arcana Sylvarum. 

Peace. 

Ulf in Ireland. 

Dekker, T:—Beauty, Arise! See Pleasant Comedy of 
Patient Grissell, The. 

Content. See Pleasant Comedy of Patient Gris¬ 
sell, The. 

Country Glee. See Sun’s Darling, The. 

Gifts of Fortune and Cupid, The. 

Happy Heart, The. See Pleasant Comedy of 
Patient Grissell, The. 

Honest Whore, The. 

Invitation, The. See Sun’s Darling, The. 

Lullaby. See Pleasant Comedy of Patient Grissell, 
The. 

Merry Month of May, The. See Shoemaker’s Hol¬ 
iday, The. 

O, Sweet Content! See Pleasant Comedy of Pa¬ 
tient Grissell, The. 

Old Fortunatus. 

Patient Grissell. See Pleasant Comedy of Patient 
Grissell, The. 

Pleasant Comedy of Patient Grissell [or Grissil], 
The. 

Praise of Fortune, The. See Old Fortunatus. 
Rustic Song. See Sun’s Darling, The. 
Shoemaker’s Holiday, The. 

Sweet Content. See Pleasant Comedy of Patient 
Grissell, The. 

Sun’s Darling, The. 

Trowl the Bowl! See Shoemaker’s Holiday, The. 
DeLan. Surville J.—Timber Line. 

Deland, Ellen Douglas.—Voyage of Arabella, The. 
Deland, Mrs. Marg.Wade [Campbell].—Affaire d’Amour. 
Christmas Silence, The. 

Clover, The. 

Doubt. 

Easter Music. 

Fairies’ Shopping, The. 

Fire, The. See John Ward, Preacher. 

Hymn: “O patient Christ!” 

John Ward, Preacher. 

Love and Death. 

Love’s Wisdom. 

May. 

Rain. 

Sent with a Rose to a Young Lady. 

Succory. The. 

“While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by 
Night.” 

Delano, E: C.—Historic Trees. 

Delano, H. A.—Greatness of His Simplicity. 

Delano, Myra S —Easter with Parepa, An. 

Delavigne, Jean Francois Casimir.—Sunshine. 

Three Days in the Life of Columbus. 

De Leon, T: Cooper.—International Race, The. 

Delisle, Rouget. See Rouget de Lisle, Claude Jos. 
Delke, Jas. A.—Carolina and Mecklenburg. 

Delone, T.—Fair Rosamund. 

DeLong, Heber.—Cuba’s Banner. 

DeLorez, Stella.—Coaching the Rising Star. 

De Leuville, Marquis. See Leuvii.le, Marquis de. 
DeLys, J: W.—Alas the Songs! 

Demarest, Mary L.—My Ain Countrie. 

DeMille, A. B.—Ballad: "Good Christmas bells, I pray 
you.” 

Ice King, The. 

DeMille, Jas.—Behind the Veil. 

Dodge Club, The. See Senator Entangled, A. 
Senator Entangled, A. 

Senator’s Dilemma, The. See Senator Entangled, A. 
Triumph of Truth, The. 

Deming, Mrs. H. A. (compiler). —Curious Life Poem, A. 

Life. See Curious Life Poem, A. 

De Montreuil, Mathieu. See Montreuil, Mathieu de. 
Demorest, D. L.—Phrenology. 

Qemorest, W. Jennings.—Prohibition the True Anti¬ 
poverty Party. 

Voter’s Responsibility, The. 

Demosthenes.—Against Bribery. See Philippics. 
Against Philip. See Philippics. 

Athenian Patriotism. See Oration on the Crown, 
The. 

Close of the Oration on the Crown, The. 
Degeneracy of Athens. See Philippics. 


435 





Demosthenes 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Demosthenes ( continued). 

Democracy Hateful to Philip, A [or The]. See 
Philippics. 

Demosthenes not Vanquished by Philip. See 
Oration on the Crown, The. 

Exordium. See Oration on the Crown, The. 
Fortune of yEschines. See Oration on the Crown, 
The. 

Oration on the Crown, The. 

Philip of Macedon. See Philippics. 

Philippics. 

Public Spirit of [the] Athenians. See Oration on 
the Crown, The. 

Reply to /Eschines. See Oration on the Crown, 
The. 

Venality the Ruin of Greece. See Philippics. 
Denham, Sir JAbraham Cowley. See Mr. Abraham 
Cowley’s Death,and Burial amongst the Ancient 
Poets. 

Against Love. 

Cooper’s Hill. 

Elegy on Cowley. See Mr. Abraham Cowley’s 
Death, and Burial amongst the Ancient Poets. 
Mr. Abraham Cowley’s Death, and Burial amongst 
the Ancient Poets. 

Praise of the Thames. See Cooper’s Hill. 

River Thames, The. See Cooper’s Hill. 

Song from “The Sophy.” See Sophy, The. 

Sophy, The. 

View of London from Cooper’s Hill. See Cooper’s 
Hill. 

Denier, Tony.—Angel, The. 

Artist, The. 

Bottle—Beggary, The. 

Bottle—Brutality, The. 

Bottle—in Debt, The. 

Bottle—its Effects, The. 

Bottle—Madness, The. 

Bottle—Murder, The. 

Bottle—Poverty, The. 

Bottle—the First Glass, The. 

Bouquet, The. 

Brigands, The. 

Brigand’s Death, The. 

Christening, The. 

Condemned King, The. 

Contentment. 

Country Cousins. 

Country Post-office, The. 

David and Saul. 

Drunkard’s Home, The. 

Faith, Hope and Charity. 

Fine Arts, The. 

Fortune Teller, The. 

Fratricide, The. 

General Warren’s Death. 

Ghost Story, The. 

Goddess of Liberty, The. 

Hagar and Ishmael. 

Jealousy. 

King Neptune. 

Love in the Kitchen. 

Major AndrA 
Marriage, The. 

May-day Sports. 

Missionary, The. 

Mountebanks, The. 

Napoleon at St. Helena. 

News from the War. 

Now, Grandpapa. 

Off to the War. 

Onconvanience, An. 

Oracle, The. 

Papa’s Birthday. 

Peddler, The. 

Pocahontas. 

Popping the Question. 

Portraits. 

Prodigal’s Return, The. 

Queen of Flowers, The. 

Rale Convanience, A. 

Reading the Will. 

Rent-day, The. 

Returning from the War. 

Sailor’s Return, The. 

School in an Uproar. 

Sentence, The. 

Seven Ages, The. 

Sister of Mercy, The. 

Soldier’s Dream, The. 

Soldiers in Camp. 

Statue Bride, The. 

Summer and Winter. 


Denier, Tony ( continued). 

Surprise Party, The. 

Surrender, The. 

Tppsey and Eva. 

Troublesome Tooth, The. 

Uncle Tom. 

Denison, C: W.—Drunkard’s Dream, The. 

Rumseller’s Song, The. 

Denison, E. W.—Speckled Hen. The. 

Denison, J. P.—Fancy-dress Ball, The. 

In Jamaica. 

Wing Tee Wee. 

Denison, Mary A.—Christmas Ballad, A. 

Grandfather’s Rose. 

Irish Woman’s Lament, The. See Mary O’Connor, 
the Volunteer’s Wife. 

Irishwoman’s Letter, The. See Mary O’Connor, 
the Volunteer’s Wife. 

Mary O’Connor, the Volunteer’s Wife. 

Volunteer’s Wife, The. See Mary O’Connor, the 
Volunteer’s Wife. 

What is a Boy? 

Denison, T. S.—Birth of the Rainbow, The. 

Blessed are de Peacemakers. 

Death of Little Hacket. See Iron Crown, An. 
Dem Shickens. 

Hasty Opinions. 

How to Read. 

Hymn of the Avenger, The. 

Ideal, An. 

Ike Papson’s Courtship. See Man Behind, The. 
Interview between the School Directors and the 
Janitor, An. See School-ma’am, The. 
Investigate. . 

Iron Crown, An. 

Learn to Labor and to Wait. 

Long Ago. 

Love in High Life. See Pets of Society. 

Madman, The. 

Man Behind, The. 

New Year Calls. 

Palace, The. 

Pets of Society. 

Presentiments. 

School-ma’am, The. 

Selfishness of Society. 

Sword of Damocles, The. See Man Behind, The. 
Denman, Lord —Harmodius and Aristogeiton. (TV.) 
Dennen, Grace Atherton.—Gold-of-Ophir Roses. 
Dennie, Jos.—Jack and Gill—A Criticism. 

Dennison, G: A.—Transformation. 

Denny, Eleanor M.—Model Husband, The. 

Denton, Clara J.—About Dish-washing 
About Fire-crackers 
About Freddie. 

After the Circus. 

Almost a Runaway. 

Appointment, The 
At Christmas Time. 

At Dame Nature’s Feet. 

Backward Glance, A. 

Balky Horse, The. 

Begun at Last. 

Being Thankful. 

Best of All, The. 

Beware! 

Birthday Doll, The. 

Birthday Wish, A. 

Blue Eyes and Brown Eyes. 

Bob and His Sister. 

Brave Little Mary. 

Breaking the Colt. 

Brother Jonathan’s Birthday. 

But Once a Year. 

“Children’s Day” Sendee, A. 

Christmas Good-night, A. 

Christmas Joy. 

Climbing. 

Columbia and Air. “They Say.” 

Columbia and the Boys. 

Coming of Santa Claus, The. 

Crowning the May Queen. 

Difficulties. 

Doom of King Alcohol, The. 

Easter Flowers. 

Easter Joy. 

Easter Service, An. 

Easter Wreath, The. 

Finger Exercise, A. 

First Christmas Night, The. 

First Day of School, The. 

First Week of School, The. 

Five little Tadpoles. 


436 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Denver 


Denton, Clara J. ( continued). 

Flower Service, A. 

Foolish Maid, A. 

For a Birthday Celebration. 

For a Wedding Anniversary. 

For Another’s Sake. 

Four Celebrated Characters. 

Four Judges, The. 

Four Photographs, The. 

Four Winds, The. 

From Captivity to Power. 

Funny Old Man, A. 

Funny Old Woman, A. 

Gay Christmas Ball, A. 

Ghost in the Closet, The 
Gifts for All. 

Going to the Corner. 

Gold Spinner, The. 

Good Country, A. 

Good in All. 

Good-bye, A. 

Grandma Doll, A. 

Great Treasure, A. 

Handkerchief Drill, The. 

Hat Drill, The. 

Help for My Sisters. 

Helping Rule, A. 

Honor Thy Father and Thy Mother. 
How I Saw Santa Claus. 

How Long before the Snow Comes? 
Hunko! 

“If.” 

“If I Were a Flower.” 

If You Want to be Loved. 

“In Memoriam.” 

In Nonsense Land. 

In Santa-Claus-Land. 

In the Morning. 

Inquisitive Prince, The. 

Invitation, The. 

Jack and Jill. 

Joe’s Way of Doing Chores. 
Johnnie’s Gun. 

Jumping the Rope. 

“Just Me.” 

Just ’Sposin’. 

Keep the Holidays. 

Keeping the Birthday. 

King and the Spelling Book, The. 
King Roughbeard and the Princess. 
Last Day of School, The. 

Last Parting, The. 

Laughing Family, The. 

Lazy or Not. 

Leaflets and Lady-bugs. 

Left Alone. 

Lesson from the Sunflowers, A. 

Like a Nettle. 

Like an Indian. 

Like Washington. 

Lines for a Very Little Girl or Boy. 
Little Bird’s Story, A. 

Little Fisherman, The. 

Little Mollie Whimper. 

Little Mother Goose. 

Little Pitcher, A. 

Little Prisoner, The. 

“Lost ” 

Lost Letter, The. 

Lost Opportunity, The. 

Making a Cake. 

“Making an Orator.” 

Medley, A. 

Message for the Children. A. 

Mr. Bunting. 

Morning Chat, A. 

Mother Goose. 

Mouse, A. 

My Pony. 

Nation’s Day of Praise, The. 

Nerves. 

New Christmas, The. 

New Multiplication Table, A 
Not a Bom Orator. 

Not Quite a Bargain. 

Nursery Stove, The. 

Nuts to Crack. 

Obedient Servants, The. 

Oh, What a Sell! 

Old Santa Has Struck. 

One Little Hatchet. 

“Only Cooning.” 

Our Watchwords. 


Denton, Clara J. ( continued). 

Parliamentary Law. 

Parasol Drill, The 
Peacemaker, A. 

Perfect Feast, A. 

Pine Tree’s Choice, The 
Playing “Grown Up.” 

Primary Class, The. 

Prince and His Mistress. 

Professor’s Present, The. 

Puzzle, A. 

Rebellion, The. 

Rebuff, A. 

Record of the Hours, The. 

Royal Tarts, The. 

St. Valentine’s Revenge 
Salutatory. (2) 

Santa Claus Outwitted. 

School is Out. 

School-bell, The. 

Search for the Fairies, A. 

Secret, A. 

Served Him Right. 

Short Missionary Service, A. 

Snarls and Scowls. 

So Glad. 

Some "Arabian Nights” People. 

Some Noted Characters. 

Some Rules. 

Some Suppositions. 

Some Very Famous People. 

Something Better. 

Something to be Thankful For. 

Strawberry Woman, The. 

Sudden Change of Mind, A. 

Tale of a Cigarette The. 

Terrible Threat, A. 

Terrible Time, A. 

Thankful Hearts. 

Thanksgiving Dream, A. 

“That Other Fourth.” 

“There Yet.” 

Things a Girl Doesn’t Know. 

Three Little Mothers. 

Time. 

Time and the Seasons. 

“Tit for Tat.” 

Tree Assembly, The. 

Twenty-six of Them. 

Two Helpers. 

Two Kinds of Fun 

Two Ways of Spending “The Fourth.” 

Uncle Sam’s Birthday. 

Use for Boys, A. 

Vacation. 

Valedictory, A 
Watching for Santa Claus. 

Weed and the Boy, The. 

What Grandma Foretold. 

What He Has. 

What I Can Do. 

What is a Gentleman? 

What is Christmas? 

What Little Dick Would Do. 

What o’Clock. 

What They will Do. 

When Grandpa was a Boy. 

When I am a Woman 
When the Ship Comes in. 

When the Stone was Rolled Away. 

Where is Mother? 

“Where’s My Hat?” 

While Shepherds Watched. 

While the Joy Goes On. 

Who Is It? 

Why is It? 

Wise Men of Gotham, The. 

Word of Warning, A. 

Wreath of Flowers, A 
Writing a Book 
Young Mother’s Perplexity, A 
Denton, Paul.—Apostrophe to Cold Water. See Apos¬ 
trophe to Water. 

Apostrophe to Water. (At. also to A. W. Arrington 
and to J: B. Gough.) 

Glass of Cold Water, A. Sec Apostrophe to Water. 
Harvest of Rum, The. 

Tribute to Water, A See Apostrophe to Water. 
Unaccountable Mystery, An. 

Water. See Apostrophe to Water 
“Water! look at it, ye thirsty ones.” See Apos¬ 
trophe to Water. 

Denver Post .—Patriotism at Squawville. 


437 




Denver 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Denver Tribune. —Interviewing Mrs. Pratt. 

Depew, Chauncey Mitchell.—Andre and Hale. 

Army of the Potomac, The. 

Captain Hale and Major Andre. See Andr£ and 
Hale. 

Capture of Andr4, The. See Capture of Major 
. Andr£, The. 

Capture of Major Andr£, The. 

Centennial Speech. See Washington’s Inaugura¬ 
tion. 

Columbian Oration. 

Columbus. See Columbian Oration. 

Columbus the Discoverer of America. See Co¬ 
lumbian Oration. 

Constitutional Convention of 1787, The. 
Convention of 1787, The. 

Dedication Exercises. See Columbian Oration 
England and the United States. 

General Grant. 

Higher Education for Women. 

Home Rule for Ireland. 

Lawyer and'Free Institutions, The. 

Legacy of Grant, The. 

Our Constitution. 

Our Fallen Heroes. 

Pilgrims, The 

Place of Athletics in College Life, The. 

Problem of Self-government, The. 

Scholar in Public Life, The 
Superiority of Washington. 

Tribute to Washington. See Superiority of Wash¬ 
ington. 

Two Spies, Andr£ and Hale, The- See Andrd and 
Hale. 

Washington’s Inauguration 
De Quincey, T:—Autobiographic Sketches. 

Execution of Joan of Arc. See Joan of Arc. 

In the Nursery. See Autobiographic Sketches. 
Joan of Arc. 

Martyrdom of Joan of Arc, The See Joan of Arc. 
Noble Revenge. 

Shepherd Girl of Domremy See Joan of Arc. 
Derzhavin, Gabriel Romanowitch.—God. 

Ode to the Deity. See God 
Desbordes-Valmore, Madame. —Parted 
DeShon, W: H.-—Human Littleness. 

Napoleon’s Ambition and Shelley’s Doubt. 
Designer. —Tale of Christmas Eve, A. 

Desprez, Frank.—Lasca. 

De Tabley, Lord. —At the Counc'l. 

Circe. 

Fortune’s Wheel. 

Hymn to Aphrodite, A. 

Misrepresentation. 

Nuptial Song. 

Second Madrigal, The. 

Simple Maid, A 

Song of Faith Forsworn. A. 

Two Old Kings, The 
Winter Sketch, A. 

Woodland Grave, A. 

Detroit Free Press. —Aired Her Knowledge. 

“Am Life Wuf de Libin’.” 

Average Boy, The 

Battery in Hot Action, A. See Supporting the 
Guns. 

Beating a Conductor. 

Brother Gardner on de Human Race. 

“Come and Be Shone.” 

Cry in the Darkness—the Sentinel’s Alarm. 

Daddy Benson and the Fairies. 

Dutchman’s Telephone, The. 

Election of the Future, The. 

Fantasy. A. 

Fourth of July, The. 

“He Wasn’t in It.” 

How Mr. Coffin Spelled It. 

How the Insurance Agent was Squelched. See 
_ “Two Tollar?” 

Initiated as a Member of the United Order of 
Half-shells. 

Last Station, The. 

Little Busy Bees, The. 

Man Who Apologized, The. 

Man Who Felt Sad, The. 

Mr. and Mrs. Bowser’s Family Jar. 

Mrs. McDuffy on Baseball. 

Old Daddy Turner. 

Prairie Mirage, The. 

She Meant Business. 

Solemn Book-agent, The. 

Squarest un Among ’Em, The. 

Supporting the Guns. 


Detroit Free Press ( continued ). 

That Hired Girl. 

They Met in Death. 

Tragedy in the Sunshine, A. 

“Two Tollar?” 

Uncle Tom and the Hornets. 

Uncle Turner’s Last Words. 

United Order of Half Shells, The. See Initiated 
as a Member of, etc. 

Watermelon Pickles. 

Why He Waited to Laugh. 

Wild Prairie Fire, A. 

Wiped Out. 

Detroit Tribune. —My Friendly Pipe. 

Tragic Parting, A. 

Devens, C:—Meaning of Victory. The. 

No Conflict Now. 

De Vere, Sir Aubrey.—Children Band, The. 

Gougane Barra. 

Liberty of the Press. 

Passion-flower. 

Rock of Cashel, The. 

Shannon, The. 

Spanish Point, 

De Vere. Aubrey T:—Ballad of Athlone, A; or, How 
They Broke down the Bridge. 

Ballad of “Bonny Portmore,” The; or, The Wicked 
Revenge. 

Ballad of Sarsfield, A; or. The Bursting of the Guns. 
Ballad of the Bier that Conquered, The. 

Bard Ethell, The. 

Cardinal Manning. 

Columbus. 

Dirge of Rory O’Moore. 

Early Friendship. 

Epicurean’s Epitaph. An. 

Evening Melody. 

Flowers I Would Bring. 

Grattan. 

Happy are They Who Kiss Thee. See Sonnet: 

“Happy,” etc. 

Human Life. 

Le Recit d’une Scoeur. 

Little Black Rose. The. 

Love’s Spite. 

Queen’s Vespers, The. 

Sad and Sweet. See Human Life. 

Sad is Our Youth], for it is Ever Going] See 
Human Life. 

Saint Patrick and the Impostor. 

Serenade. 

Song: "Seek not the tree of silkiest bark.” 

Song: “Sing the old song, amid the sounds dispers¬ 
ing.” 

Song: “Softly, O midnight hours!” See Serenade. 
Song: “When I was young, I said to Sorrow.” 
Sonnet: “Happy are they who kiss thee.” 

Sonnet: “Sad is our youth, for it is ever going.” 

See Human Life. 

Sorrow. 

Sun God, The. 

“Sweet is our youth, although it hath bereft us.” 

See Human Life. 

Wedding of the Clans, The. 

Year of Sorrow; Ireland, 1849. The. 

De Vere, Mary Ainge (“Madeline Bridges”).—Breath, 
A. 

Faith Trembling. 

Farewell, A. 

First Snow, The. 

God Keep You. 

Friend and Lover. 

Her Perfect Lover. 

Poet and Lark. 

Spinner, The. 

When the Most is Said. 

Wind-swept Wheat, The. 

Woman’s Gifts, A. 

De Vere, Sir Stephen E.—Death of Cleopatra, The. 
(TV.) 

Devere, W:—’Ceptin’ Ike. 

Devereux, G. H.—Ass and his Master, The. (TV.) 

Eggs, The. (TV.) 

Devereux, Rob’t. See Essex, Earl of. 

Dewart, E: Hartley —On the Ottawa. 

Shadows on the Curtain. 

Dewey, E. H. Graham.—Her Wish. 

Dewey, G: W.—Blind Louise. 

Dewey, Orville.—Ashamed to Toil? See Nobility of 
Labor. 

Freedom and Patriotism. 

Labor. See Nobility of Labor. 

Liberty. (2) 


438 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Dickens 


Dewey, Orville ( continued). 

“Liberty is a solemn thing.’’ See Liberty. 

Life is What We Make It. 

Nobility of Labor. 

Voices of the Dead, The. 

Diaz, Mrs. Abby [Morton],—Bird Dialogue, The. 

John Spicer on Clothes. 

Six Kinds of Manners. 

Two Little Rogues. 

Dibdin, C:—Anchorsmiths, The. 

Anne Hathway. (At ) 

Constancy. 

Heaving of the Lead, The. 

High-mettled Racer, The. 

Jack at the Opera. 

Nongtongpaw. 

Perfect Sailor, The. 

Poor Jack. 

Sailor’s Consolation, The (.4/. also to W: Pitt.) 
Sir Sidney Smith. See Dibdin, Thomas. 

Tar for all Weathers, The 

Tom Bowling. See Perfect Sailor, The. 

Dibdin T:—All’s Well. See British Fleet, The. 

British Fleet, The 
Love and Glory. 

Sir Sidney Smith. (At. also to C: Dibdin.) 

Snug Little Island. The. 

Tight Little Island, The. See Snug Little Island, 
The. 

Dichter, Griswald.—Maine, The. 

Dickens, C:—Address of Sergeant Buzfuz. See Pick¬ 
wick Papers, The. 

“Alas! how few of nature’s faces are left to glad¬ 
den us with their beauty.” 

American Notes. 

Aunt Betsey and Little Davy. See David Cop- 
perfield. 

Bardell and Pickwick. See Pickwick Papers, The. 
Barnaby Rudge. 

Birth of Dombey, The. See Dombey and Son. 
Birth of Little Paul, The. See Dombey and Son. 
Births. Mrs. Meek, of a Son. 

Black Veil. The. 

Bleak House. 

Bob Cratchit’s Dinner. See Christmas Carol, A. 
Burial of Little Nell. See Old Curiosity Shop, The. 
Buzfuz versus Pickwick. See Pickwick Papers, 
The. 

Cheap Jack, The. See Doctor Marigold. 

Cheerful Locksmith, The. See Barnaby Rudge. 
Children, The. (Wr. at.) See Dickinson, C: Mon¬ 
roe. 

Child’s Dream of a Star, A. 

Child’s History of England. 

Child-wife, The. See David Copperfield. 
Christmas at Bob Cratchit’s, A. See Christmas 
Carol, A. 

Christmas at Fezziwig’s Warehouse. See Christ¬ 
mas Carol, A. 

Christmas Carol, A. 

Christmas Goose, The. See Christmas Carol, A. 
Christmas Goose at the Cratchit’s, The. See Christ¬ 
mas Carol, A. 

Christmas Invitation, A. See Christmas Carol, A. 
Christmas Party at Scrooge’s Nephew’s. The See 
Christmas Carol, A. 

Christmas Tree, A. 

Convict’s Death, The. See Sketches by Boz. 
Courtship of Mr. Bumble and Mrs. Corney, The. 

See Oliver Twist. 

Cricket on the Hearth. 

David Copperfield. 

David Copperfield and His Child-wife. See 
David Copperfield. 

Death of Bill Sikes, The. See Oliver Twist. 

Death of Dora. See David Copperfield. 

Death of Harold. See Child’s History of England. 
Death of Little Jo. See Bleak House. 

Death of Little Nell. See Old Curiosity Shop. 
Death of Little Paul [Dombey]. See Dombey and 
Son. 

Death of Mme. Defarge. The. See Tale of Two 
Cities, A. 

Death of Paul Dombey. See Dombey and Son. 
Death of Poor Jo. See Bleak House. 

Death of Steerforth, The. See David Copperfield. 
Dick Swiveller and the Marchioness. See Old 
Curiosity Shop, 

Disastrous Announcement, A. See David Cop¬ 
perfield. 

Doctor Marigold. 

Doctor Marigold and His Dumb Girl. See Doctor 
Marigold. 


Dickens, C: (continued). 

Dombey and Son. 

Drunkard’s Death, The. See Sketches by Boz 

Elder Mr. Weller’s Sentiments on Literary Compo¬ 
sition, The. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Execution of Sydney Carton, The. See Tale of 
Two Cities, A. 

Getting in the Wrong Room. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Goblins, The. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Gradgrind’s Idea of Education. See Hard Times. 

Great Expectations. 

Guillotine, The. See Tale of Two Cities, A 

Hard Times. 

Housekeeping. See David Copperfield. 

Impressions of Niagara. See American Notes. 

Ivy, The. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Ivy Green, The. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Jack Hopkins’ Story. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Job Trotter’s Secret. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Last Hours of Little Paul Dombey, The. See 
Dombey and Son. 

Little Nell’s Funeral. See Old Curiosity Shop, The. 

Love. See Village Coquettes, The. 

Lucy’s Song. See Village Coquettes, The. 

Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Merry Autumn Days. See Village Coquettes, The. 

Miser, The. See Christmas Carol, A. 

Mr. Bumble and Mrs. Corney. See Oliver Twist. 

Mr. Gregsbury and the Deputation. See Nicholas 
Nickleby. 

Mr. Pickwick in a Dilemma. See Pickwick Papers, 
The. 

Mr. Pickwick in the Wrong Room. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Mr. Pickwick’s Adventure with a Middle-aged 
Lady in Yellow Curl-papers. See Pickwick 
Papers, The 

Mr. Pickwick’s Dilemma. See Pickwick Papers, 
The. 

Mr. Pickwick’s Proposal to Mrs. Bardell. See 
Pickwick Papers, The. 

Mr. Weller in Affliction. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Mr. Winkle [Puts] on Skates. See Pickwick 
Papers, The. 

Mr. Winkle’s Adventure. See Pickwick Papers, 
The. 

Mrs. Leo Hunter. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Most_ Extraordinary Calamity that Befell Mr. 
Winkle, A. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Mountain Tragedy, The. See No Thoroughfare. 

Murder of Nancy [Sikes], The. See Oliver Twist. 

Niagara Falls. See American Notes. 

Nicholas Nickleby. 

Nicholas Nickleby Leaving the Yorkshire School. 
See Nicholas Nickleby. 

Nicholas Nickleby Seeking a Situation See Nich¬ 
olas Nickleby 

No Thoroughfare. 

Old Curiosity Shop, The 

Old Fezziwig’s Ball. See Christmas Carol, A. 

Oliver Twist. 

Peroration of Buzfuz. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Pickwick in the Wrong Bedroom. See Pickwick 
Papers, The, 

Pickwick Papers, The. 

Pickwick Trial, The. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Pickwickians on Ice, The. See Pickwick Papers, 
The. 

Pickwickians taken for Informers, but Rescued by 
the Stranger, The. See Pickwick Papers. The, 

Pip’s Fight. See Great Expectations. 

Quarrel of Sairey Gamp and Betsey Prig. See 
Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Recollections of My Christmas Tree. See Christ¬ 
mas Tree, A. 

Rosa Dartle’s Revenge. See David Copperfield. 

Round. See Village Coquettes, The. 

Ruth Pinch’s Housekeeping;—and what Came of 
It. See Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Sam Weller and His Father. See Pickwick Papers, 
The 

Sam Weller’s Valentine. See Pickwick Papers, The. 

Scene at Doctor Blimber’s. See Dombey and Son. 

Schoolmaster Beaten, The. See Nicholas Nick¬ 
leby. 

Scrooge and Marley. See Christmas Carol, A. 

Scrooge Fulfils His Vow. See Christmas Carol, A. 

Scrooge’s Reformation. See Christmas Carol, A 

Seven Poor Travellers, The. 

Signal Man, The. 

Signor Billsmethi’s Dancing Academy See 
Sketches by Boz. 


439 







Dickens 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dickens, C: ( continued ). 

Sketches by Boz. 

Song: “Love is not a feeling to pass away.” See 
Village Coquettes, The. 

Speech of Sergeant Buzfuz in the Case of Bardell 
against Pickwick. See Pickwick Papers, The. 
Squeers’s School. See Nicholas Nickleby. 

Storm at Sea. See Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Sydney Carton’s Death. See Tale of Two Cities, 
A. 

Tale of Two Cities, A. 

Tea-kettle and the Cricket, The. See Cricket on 
the Hearth, The. 

Tempest, The. See David Copperfield. 

Things that Never Die. 

Tulkinghorn and Mademoiselle Hortense. See 
Bleak House. 

Two Views of Christmas. See Christmas Carol, A. 
Unsuccessful Attempt to Raise the Wind, An. 

See Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Village Coquettes, The. 

Visit to Belle Yard, A. See Bleak House. 
“Whatever I have tried to do in my life, I have 
tried with all my heart to do well.” See David 
Copperfield. 

When Duty Begins. See Martin Chuzzlewit. 

Wild Night at Sea, A. See Martin Chuzzlewit. 
Wreck, The. See David Copperfield. 

Dickenson, JPastoral Catch, A. 

Dickie, S:—Citizen and the Saloon Svstem, The. 
Dickinson, Anna Eliz.—Assault on Port Wagner, The 
See Fort Wagner. 

Fort Wagner. 

Dickinson, C: Monroe.—Children, The. 

Morning Miracle, A. 

Dickinson, Dan’l Stevens.—Evils of War, The. 

Give up the Union? See Shall We Give up the 
Union? 

Shall We Give up the Union? 

Speech at Union Square, N. Y., April 20th, 1861. 
Dickinson, Emily.—“Afraid? of whom am I afraid?” 
“At least to pray is left, is left.” 

Autumn. 

Battle-field, The. 

Beclouded. 

Bee, The. 

Book, A. 

Called Back. 

Certainty. See Chartless. 

Chariot, The. 

Chartless. 

Choice. 

Constant. 

Daisy Follows Soft the Sun, The. 

Day, A. 

Dialogue, A. 

Eternity. 

First Lesson, The. 

Fold, The. 

Fringed Gentian. 

Grass, The. 

“Have You Got a Brook in Your Little Heart?” 
Heart, We Will Forget Him. 

“I had no time to hate, because.” 

“I have not told my garden, yet.” 

“If I can stop one heart from breaking.” 

“If You were Coming in the Fall.” 

Indian Summer. 

Life. See “Our share of night to bear.” 

“Look back on time with kindly eyes.” 

Martyrs, The. 

Morning. See Out of the Morning. 

Needless Fear. See “Afraid? of whom am I 
afraid?” 

No Time to Hate. See “I had no time to hate, 
because.” 

Not in Vain. See “If I can stop one heart from 
breaking.” 

“Our share of night to bear.” 

Out of the Morning. 

Parting. 

Poems. XVII. See Chartless. 

Prayer. See “At least to pray is left, is left.” 
Secret, The. See “I have not told my garden yet.” 
Setting Sail. 

Summer Shower. 

That Such Have Died. 

Time. See “Look back on time with kindly eyes.” 

Too Late 

Utterance 

Vanished. 

Waking Year, The. 

With Flowers. 


Dickinson, Martha Gilbert.—Forgiveness Lane. 
Heaven. 

Her Music. 

Priest’s Prayer, A. 

Reality. 

Separation. 

Unanswered. 

Dickinson, Mrs. Mary [Lowe].—“Easter praise may 
falter, The.” 

Edelweiss. 

Hurrah for the Foorth av July. 

Jerry. 

Dickson, D: (?)—Heavenly Jerusalem, The. See New 
Jerusalem, The. 

New Jerusalem, The. 

Diehl, Anna Randall.—Fritz. 

Parson’s Cradle, The. 

Diekenga, I. E.—Building. 

Heavenward. 

Dietz, Ella.—First Snow, The 
Digby, G: See Bristol, Earl of. 

Dike, Norman Staunton.—From June to June. 
Dillmore, R: Casper.—Cupid Peeped in Through the 
Blinds. 

Immortal Washington 

Dillon, Wentworth. See Roscommon, Earl of. 

Dimond,-—Just Retribution, The. See Peasant 

Boy, The. 

Peasant Boy, The. 

Peasant Boy’s Vindication. The. See Peasant Boy, 
The 

Dimond, W:—Mariner’s Dream, The. Nee Sailor-boy’s 
Dream, The. 

Sailor-boy’s Dream, The. 

Dinarchus.—Invective against Demosthenes. 
Dingelstedt, Franz.—Legend of Hesse, A. 

Dinkelspiel, Grace.—As in a Looking-glass. 

Dinnies, Anna Peyre.—Wife, The. 

Dinsmore, Silas.—Churning Song, The. 
Scandal-mongers. 

Disraeli, B:— See Beaconsfield, Earl of. 

D’lsraeli, I:—Lines Imitated from Rantzau. 

Dix, J: Adams.—Christianity as a Political Force. 

Dies Irae. (TV.) See Celano, T: de. 

Dix, W: Chatterton.—Epiphany. 

Dixey, Wolstan.—-Concert Rehearsal, The. 

I Will Help You. 

Mind Your Business. 

Dixon, Fred’k A:—Feather’s Message, A. 

Hinc Illae Lachrymse. 

Dixon, R: Watson.—Humanity. 

Mano: a Poetical History. 

Ode on Conflicting Claims. 

Of a Vision of Hell, which a Monk had. See 
Mano: a Poetical History. 

Of Temperance in Fortune. See Mano: a Poetical 
History. 

Skylark, The. See Mano: a Poetical History. 
Doane, Rt. Rev. G: Washington.—Banner of the Cross, 
The. 

Eagle, The. See What is that, Mother? 

Evening. See Softly now the Light of Day. 
Evening Contemplation. See Softly now the Light 
of Day. 

Gentleman, The. 

God’s Anvil. (TV.) 

I Hold Still. See Life Sculpture. 

Life Sculpture. 

Men to Make a State, The. 

Robin Redbreast. 

Sculptor, The. See Life Sculpture. 

Softly now the Light of Day. 

What is that. Mother? 

Doane, Rt. Rev. W: Croswell.—Ancient of Days 
December. 

Dobell. Sydney —America. 

Balder 

Ballad of Keith of Ravelston, The. 

Basking. See Home, Wounded. 

Chamouni. 

Chanted Calendar, A. 

Common Grave, The. 

Daft Jean. 

Dante, Shakespeare, Milton. See Balder. 

England See Balder. 

Epigram on the Death of Edward Forbes. 
Fragment of a Sleep-song. 

Home in War-time. 

Home, Wounded. 

How’s My Boy? 

Keith of Ravelston. See Ballad of Keith of Rav¬ 
elston, The. 

Laus Deo. 


440 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Dodgson 


Dobell, Sydney ( continued ). 

Milkmaid’s Song, The. 

Monk’s Song. See Roman, The. 

Nuptial Eve, A. 

On the Death of Mrs. Browning. 

Procession of the Flowers, The. See Chanted 
Calendar, A. 

Return! 

Roman, The. 

Sea Ballad. See Balder. 

Tommy’s Dead. 

Vision of Battle. A. 

Dobson, Austin. See Dobson, Henry Austin. 
Dobson, (H:) Austin.—AngelusSong. See “Good-night, 
Babette. ” 

April Pastoral, An. 

Ars Victrix. 

“Au Revoir. ” 

Ballad of “Beau Brocade,” The. 

Ballad of Heroes, A. 

Ballad of the Armada, A. See Ballad to Queen 
Elizabeth, etc. 

Ballad of the Spanish Armada See Ballad to 
Queen Elizabeth, etc. 

Ballad of the Thrush, The. 

Ballad to Queen Elizabeth [of the Spanish Arma¬ 
da], A. 

Before Sedan. 

Book-plate’s Petition, The. 

Child Musician, The. 

Child Violinist, The. See Child Musician, The. 
Cradle, The. 

Cupid’s Alley. 

Curb’s Progress, The. 

Dead Letter, A. 

Dialogue from Plato, A. 

Dora versus Rose. 

Familiar Epistle, A. 

Fancy from Fontenelle, A. 

Final Word, A. 

For a Copy of Theocritus. 

For the Avery “Knickerbocker.” 

Forgotten Grave, The. 

Gage d’Amour, A. 

Garden Song, A. 

“Good-night, Babette!” 

Growing Gray. 

“In After Days.” 

In the Royal Academy. 

Kiss, A. See Rose-leaves. 

Knickerbocker. See For the Avery “Knicker¬ 
bocker. ’ ’ 

Ladies of Saint James’s, The. 

Little Blue Ribbons. 

Lover’s Quarrel, A. See Tu Quoque. 

Milkmaid, The. 

My Books. 

Notes of a Honeymoon. 

“O Fons Bandusiae.” 

“O Navis.” 

Old Sedan Chair, The. 

On a Fan that Belonged to the Marquise de Pom¬ 
padour. 

Paradox of/Time. 

Pompadour’s Fan, The. See On a Fan, etc. 
Romaunt of the Rose, The. 

Rondeau to Ethel, A. 

Rose and the Gardener, The. See Fancy from 
Fontenelle, A. 

“Rose kissed me to-day.” See Rose-leaves. 
Rose-leaves. 

Secrets of the Heart, The. 

Song of Angiola in Heaven. 

Sonnet in Dialogue, A. 

Story of Rosina, The. 

Sundial, The. 

To a Greek Girl. 

To a Missal of the Thirteenth Century. 

To his Books. (Tr.) 

To Lord De Tabley. 

To Q. H. F. 

Tu Quoque. 

Urceus Exit. See Rose-leaves. 

Virgin with the Bells, The. 

Virtuoso, A. 

Wanderer, The. 

Water-cure, The. 

“With Pipe and Flute.” 

“Dr. Puff Stuff.”—Lecture on Patent Medicine, A. 
Doddridge, Philip.—Amazing, Beauteous Change! 

“Awake, my soul, stretch every nerve.” See 
Christian Race, The. 

Christian Life, The. 


Doddridge, Philip ( continued ). 

Christian Race, The. 

Christ’s Love. 

Confirmation Hymn. See Entering into Covenant. 
Entering into Covenant. 

Epigram: Dum Vivimus Vivamus. See Christian 
Life, The. 

Epigram on His Family Arms. See Christian 
Life, The. 

For New-Year’s Day. 

God the Everlasting Light of the Saints above. 

See Ye Golden Lamps of Heaven, Farewell. 
Hark, the Glad Sound. See Savior’s Message. The. 
“I would not for ten thousand worlds be that 
man. ’ ’ 

Savior’s Message, The. 

Wilderness Transformed, The. See Amazing, 
Beauteous Change! 

Ye Golden Lamps of Heaven, Farewell. 

Youthful Piety. 

Dodge, B. C.—Only One Mother. 

Dodge, H. C.—Bait of the Average Fisherman. 
Graduating Essay. 

How Columbus Found America. 

Poet-tree 

Signs of the Times. 

That “Fellow” who came on Sundays. 

What Vacation Is. 

Dodge, Mary Abby (“Gail Hamilton”).—Archie Dean. 
Battle Song for [or of] Freedom, A. 

Both Sides. 

Chickens. 

Fading Leaf, The. 

Making Brownbread Cakes. 

Mouse-hunting. 

Nothing Lost in Nature. 

Travelling under the Care of a Gentleman. 

Dodge, Mrs. Mary Barker [Carter].—Chimney Nest, The. 
Lesson, The. 

Now. 

Dodge, Mary E.—Chrysanthemums. 

Learning to Pray. 

Stranger in the Pew, A. 

Dodge, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth [MapesJ.—Birdies with 
Broken Wings. 

Blossom Time. See There’s a Wedding in the 
Orchard. 

Christmas. 

Christmas Morning. See Christmas 
Emerson. 

God Sees. See Night and Day. 

How Grandma Danced. See Minuet, The. 

It’s Good to Have a Mother. See Birdies with 
Broken Wings. 

Letting the Old Cat Die. 

Little Girl who Wouldn’t eat Crusts, The. 

Little Miss Limberkin. 

March. 

Mayor of Scuttleton, The. 

Minuet, The. 

Miss Limberkin’s Mouse. See Little Miss Lim¬ 
berkin. 

Miss Malony on the Chinese Question. 

My Window Ivy. 

Nearly Ready. See March. 

Nell and Her Bird. 

Night and Day. 

Now the Noisy Winds are Still. 

Offertory, An. 

Once Before. 

Shadow- vidence. 

Snow-flakes. 

Spring. See March. 

Stars, The. 

Suggestion for a Happy New Year, A 
There’s a Wedding in the Orchard. 

Two Mysteries, The. 

Umpires. 

Way to Do It, The. 

Way to Speak a Piece, The. See Way to Do It, 
The. 

We Thank Thee. 

Whippoorwill. 

Dodge, Nathaniel Shatswell.—Convention of Michigan 
Trees. 

Elm, The. See Convention of Michigan Trees. 
Dodington, George Bubb. See Melcombe, Lord. 
Dodgson, C: Lutwidge ("Lewis Carroll”) — Alice’s 
Adventures in Wonderland. 

Baker’s Tale. The. See Hunting of the Snark, 
The. 

Father William. 

Gardener’s Song, The. 


441 




Dodgson 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dodgson, C: Lutwidge ( continued ). 

Hunting of the Snark, The. 

I’ll tell Thee Everything I can. 

Jabberwocky. 

Life is but a Dream. 

Lobster Quadrille, A. See Alice’s Adventures in 
Wonderland. 

Love. 

Of Alice in Wonderland. See Life is but a Dream. 
She’s all My Fancy Painted Him. 

Some Hallucinations. See Gardener’s Song, The. 
Song of Love, A. See Love. 

Strange Wild Song, A. See Gardener’s Song, The. 
Sylvie and Bruno. 

Through the Looking-glass. 

Walrus and the Carpenter, The. See Through the 
Looking-glass. 

Ways and Means See I’ll tell Thee Everything 
I can. 

Whiting and the Snail, The. See Alice’s Adven¬ 
tures in Wonderland. 

Doggett, H. L.—Bacchic Lyric, A. 

Doheny. Michael —Cushla Gal mo Chree, A. 

Dole, Nathan Haskell.—Amateur Photography. 

Close of a Rainy Day, The. 

In the Old Country Church. 

Larks and Nightingales. See Our Native Birds. 
Our Native Birds. 

Russia. 

Russian Fantasy, A. 

To an Imperilled Traveller. 

Dolliver, Clara G.—No Baby in the House. 

Pardon Complete. 

Domett [or Dommet or Dommett], Alfred.—Christ¬ 
mas Chant, A. See Christmas Hymn, A. 
Christmas Hymn, A. 

Glee for Winter, A. 

Kiss, A. 

Nativity, The. See Christmas Hymn, A. 
Dominick, Bayard —Falling Stars. 

Donne, John.—-Absence See That Time and Absence, 
etc. 

"Absence, hear thou my prostestation. ” See 
That Time and Absence, etc. 

Bait, The. 

Blosssom, The. 

Break of Day. 

Character of the Bore, The. 

Daybreak. Nee Break of Day. 

Death. 

Dream, The. 

Eclogue, December 26, 1613. Allophanes Find¬ 
ing Idios in the Country, etc. 

Ecstasy, The. 

Elegy on Mistress Elizabeth Drury. See Of the 
Progress of the Soul. 

Funeral, The. 

Hymn to Christ, A. 

Hymn to God, my God, in my Sickness. 

Hymn to God the Father. 

If Men be Worlds. 

Lecture upon the Shadow, A. 

Love. See Eclogue, Dec 26, 1613, etc. 

Nocturnal upon St. Lucie’s Day, A. 

“O, how feeble is man’s Power.” See Song: 

“Sweetest love,” etc. 

Of the Progress of the Soul, 

Present in Absence. See That Time and Absence, 
etc. 

Recluse Hermit, The. See Eclogue, Dec. 26, 1613. 
Resignation and Despair. 

Song: “Go and catch a falling star.” 

Song: “Sweetest love, I do not go.” 

Sonnet: “Death, be not Proud.” 

That Time and Absence proves Rather Helps than 
Hurts to Loves. 

To Sir Henry Wootton. 

Undertaking, The. 

Valediction Forbidding Mourning, A. 

Verses to Sir Henry Wootton. See To Sir Henry 
Wootton. 

Will, The. 

Donnelly, Eleanor Cecilia.—Contrast, A. 

Fate of Charlotte Russe, The. 

Gualberto’s Victory. 

Old Surgeon’s Story, The. 

Vision of Monk Gabriel, The. 

Donnelly, Ignatius — Possible Consequences of a 
Comet Striking the Earth in the Pre-Glacial 
Period. See Ragnarok. 

Ragnarok. 

Donovan. Dr. —Man’s Mortality. (7Y.) 


Donovan, J. W.—Granger’s Wife, The. 

Land Poor. 

Mill River Ride. 

Texas Story, A. 

Donny, M. H. F.—Model Tea Party, A. 

“Dooley, Mr.” See Dunne, Finley P: 

Doolittle, Eliza.—Alice’s Party. 

Charlie’s Speech. 

Examination Day. 

Exhibition Day. 

Four Year Old. 

Fred’s First Speech. 

Not so Easy. 

Too Good to Attend Common School. 

Walter’s First Speech. 

What I Like. 

Willie’s Speech. 

Dorgan, J: Aylmer.-—Beautiful, The. 

Dead Solomon, The. 

Dorman, S.—Dream of the Spanish Admiral. The. 
Dorr, Mrs. Julia Caroline [Ripley],—Armorer’s Errand 
The. 

Blind’s Bird’s Nest, The. 

Doves at Mendon, The. 

Elsie’s Child. 

Fallow Field, The. 

Foreshadowings. 

Knowing. 

Legend of the Organ-builder, The. 

Martha. 

Not Mine. 

O Earth! Art Thou not Weary? 

“Often I linger where the roses pour.” 

Outgrown. 

Peace. 

Quietness. 

Somewhere. 

Thornless Roses. 

Twenty-one. 

Two Paths. 

Vashti. 

Weaving the Web. 

With a Rose from Conway Castle. 

Dorrie, C. H.—Recompense, The 

Dorset, C: Sackville. Earl of —“Dorinda’s sparkling 
wit and eyes.” See Song: “Dorinda’s,” etc. 
Fire of Love, The. 

Satire on a Conceited Playwright. See To Mr. 

Edward Howard, on His Plays. 

Song: “Dorinda’s sparkling wit and eyes.” 

Song: "Phillis, for shame, let us improve.” 

Song Written at Sea[, in the first Dutch War, 1665, 
the Night before an Engagement].” 

To Mr Edward Howard, on His Plays. 

Dorset, T: Sackville, Lord Buckhurst, Earl of. —Com¬ 
plaint of the Duke of Buckingham. 
Induction, The. 

Sleep. 

Dorsey Mrs. Anna Hanson.—-O’Connell’s Heart. 
Doten Eliz.—Embarkation, The. 

Fate of Sir John Franklin. See Song of the North, A. 
Kingdom, The. 

Song of the North, A. 

Doudney, Sarah.—Cleopatra to Antony. 

“Children’s world is full of sweet surprises. The.” 
Farewell to the Old Year. 

Hardest Time of AH, The. 

“It is thy voice that floats above the din.” 
“Look of sympathy, the gentle word, The.” See 
Not Lost. 

Man o’ Airlie, The. 

Not Lost. 

Pansies. 

Water that Has Passed, The. See Man o’ Airlie, 
The. 

Water-mill, The. (At. also to Dan’l C. McCaUum.) 

See Man o’ Airlie, The. 

What Life Hath. 

Wild Flowers. 

Dougherty, Dan’l. —“Burn and destroy the idols of 
party you have worshiped. ’ ’ 

Oratory and the Press. 

Pulpit Oratory. 

Douglas, Archibald.—To a Modern Girl. 

Douglas, Gawain—iEneid, The. 

Ballade in Commendation of Honour, A. See 
Palice of Honour, The. 

Desert Terrible, A. See Palice of Honour, The. 
Destiny of Rome, The. See ACneid, The. 

Dido’s Hunting. See ASneid, The. 

Fete ChampStre, The. See Palice of Honour, The. 
Ghost of Creusa, The. 

Palice of Honour, The. 


442 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Drummond 


Douglas, Gawain ( continued ). 

Prologues to the .Eneid, 

Scottish Winter Landscape, The. See Prologues 
to the /Eneid. 

Sleep. See ..Eneid, The. 

Spring. See Prologues to the .Eneid. 

Tribes of the Dead. The. See .Eneid, The 
Douglas, Letitia Virginia—Keepers of the Light, 
The. 

Wizard’s Spell. The. 

Douglas, Malcolm.—Family Drum Corps, A. 

Nervous Little Man, The. 

Teddy O’Rourke. 

Very Humane 

When Grandpa Was a Little Boy. 

Douglas, Marian See Robinson, Mrs. Annie Doug¬ 
las [Green], 

Douglas, Stephen A.—Melendy Prize Oration, The. 
Pretext of Rebellion, The. 

War Deprecated. 

Douglas, Wayne.—Going Home'in the Morning. 
Douglas, W oj Fingland. —Annie Laurie. 

Douglass, Douglass Burns—Westward. 

Wind of the Southland. 

Douglass, S. J.—Redwing’s Song. 

Doveton, Fred’k Bazett.—When Thou Art Near. 

Dow, Neal.—Alcoholic and Tobacco Habit. The. 

Dow, Mrs. Sabrina H.—Hundred Louis d’Or, The. 
Dowd, Emma C.—Cicely Croak. 

Magic Buttons. 

Out of the Way. 

Smile and a Frown, A. 

Dowden, E:—Aboard the “Sea^Swallow.” 

In the Cathedral Close. 

Leonardo’s “Monna Lisa.” 

Oasis. 

On the Heights. 

Renunciants. 

Two Infinities. 

Dowie, Jennie E. T.— Little Maid with Lovers Twain. 

Woeful Tale of Jotham Brown, The. 

Dowling, Bartholemew.—Battle of Fontenoy. 

Indian Revelry. See Revel, The. 

Irish Brigade “at Fontenoy,” The. See Battle 
of Fontenoy. 

Our Last Toast. See Revel, The. 

Revel. The. 

Revelry of the Dying. See Revel, The. 

Song of the Dying. The. See Revel, The. 
Downer, W. B.—Children’s Praise Song. 

Downey, Gertrude. M -—Doubting. 

Downing. Andrew.—Belles of Brookline, The. 
Downing, Mrs. Ellen Mary [Patrick] (“Mary of the 
Nation”).—-My Owen. 

Old Church at Lismore. The. 

Were I but His Own Wife. 

“Downing, Jack.” See Smith, Sera. 

Downs. Annie S.—Washington’s Kiss 
Downton, H:—Advice to Boys. See Brave and True. 
Brave and True. 

To the Boys. See Brave and True. 

Doyle, Rev Alex. P.—In Defence of the Christian 
Sunday. 

Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan.—Blind Archer, The. 
Corporal Dick’s Promotion. 

Louis XIV. and His Minister. See Refugees, The. 
Master. 

Refugees, The. 

Doyle, Sir Fs. Hastings.—British Soldier in China The. 
See Private of the Buffs, The. 

Doncaster St. Leger, The. 

Loss of the “Birkenhead,” The. 

Old Cavalier, The. 

Private of the Buffs [;or, the British Soldier in 
China], The. 

Red Thread of Honour, The. 

Spanish Mother. The. 

Drake, Alex. W.—Kensal Green. 

Drake, Gustav V.—Astral Romance, An. 

Drake, Jos. Rodman —American Flag, The. 

Culprit Fay, The. 

Elfin Song. See Culprit Fay, The. 

Evening. . 

Fairy in Armour. A. Nee Culprit Fay, The. 

Fay’s Sentence, The. See Culprit Fay, The. 
First Quest, The. Nee Culprit Fay, The. 

Flag of the Free. See American Flag, The. 
Gathering of the Fairies. The. See Culprit Fay, 
The. 

Man who Frets at Worldly Strife, The. 
Mocking-bird, The , . ... 

Mocking-bird’s Song, The. See Mocking-bird, 
The. 


Drake, Jos. Rodman ( continued ). 

National Paintings, The: Colonel Trumbull’s “The 
Declaration of Independence.” 

Ode to the American Flag. See American Flag, 
The. 

Second Quest, The. See Culprit Fay The. 

Drake’s Magazine .—-Return of the Hoe, The. 

Draper, Andrew Sloan.— New York State Program for 
Arbor Day, 1889. 

Drayton, H: S. Grace Vernon Bussell. 

Drayton, Michael.—-Agincourt. See To the Cambro- 
Britons and their Harps: His Ballad of Agin¬ 
court . 

Arming of Pigwiggen, The. See Nymphidia' The 
Court of Fairy. 

Ballad of Agincourt, The. See To the Cambro- 
Britons and their Harps: His Ballad of Agin¬ 
court. 

Battle of Agincourt, The. See To the Cambro- 
Britons and their Harps: His Ballad of Agin¬ 
court. 

Cassamen and Dowsabel. 

Come, Let Us Kisse and Parte. See Love’s Fare¬ 
well. 

Contest, A. Nee Muses’ Elysium, The. 

Daffodil. See Pastorals. 

Defiance to Love. 

Description of Elizium, The. See Muses’ Elysium, 
The. 

Ferryman, Venus, and Cupid. The. See Muses’ 
Elysium. The. 

Fine Day. A 

Harp. The. See To Himself and the Harp. 

I Give thee Eternity. 

Let us Kiss and Part. See Love’s Farewell. 

Love Banished Heaven. 

Love’s Farewell. 

Muses’ Elysium, The. 

Nymphidia: the Court of Fairy. 

Parting, A [or The]. See Love’s Farewell. 

Pastorals. 

Polyolbion, The. 

Queen Mab’s Visit to Pigwiggen. See Nymphidia: 
the Court of Fairy. 

Queen Margaret to William de la Pool, Duke of 
Suffolk. 

Rivers of England, The. See To the River Ankor. 

Shepherd’s Sirena, The. 

Since there’s no Plelp. See Love’s Farewell. 

Sirena. See Shepherd's Sirena, The. 

Song of Motto and Perkin. 

Sonnet: “Since there’s no help,” etc. See Love’s 
Farewell. 

Sonnet: To the Lady L. S. 

Sonnet: To the River Ankor. 

To Himself and the Harp. 

To His Coy Love. 

To his Fair Idea. 

To the Cambro-Britons and their Harp: His 
Ballad of Agincourt 

To the River Ankor. 

To the Virginian Voyage. 

Drennan, W:—Erin. 

My Father. 

Wake of William Orr, The. 

Drew. Edwin.—Super’s Story. The. 

Dreyfus, Abraham —Oak in a Storm, An. See Ro¬ 
mance. 

Romance. 

Drinker, Mrs. Anna (“Edith May”).—Forest Scene, A. 

Drobisch, Theodor.—Der Letzte Gast. 

Dromgoole, Will Allen.—-Engineer Connor’s Son. 

Heart of Old Hickory, The. 

Sea-weed. 

“Droch. ” See Bridges, Rob’t. 

Drown, Dan’l A.—Rose by the Wayside, The. 

To a Friend. 

Drummond, Hamilton.—Silence of Love, The. 

Drummond, W:, of Hawthornden. —“Alexis, here she 
stay’d, among these pines.” See Spring Be¬ 
reaved, III. 

Angels, The. 

Beauty Fades. See “Trust not, sweet soul! those 
curled waves of gold. ’ ’ 

Bubble, The. Nee Madrigal: “This life,” etc. 

Change. See Urania. 

Change should Breed Change. 

Damon’s Lament. 

“Doth then the world go thus, doth all thus 
move? ’ ’ 

For the Baptist). See Saint John Baptist. 

“Good that never satisfies the mind,” A. See 
Human Frailty. 


443 





Drummond 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Drummond, W of Hawlhomden ( continued ). 

Her Passing. See Madrigal: “The beauty and 
the life. ’ ’ 

Human Frailty 

“I know that all beneath the moon decays.” 
Illusions. See Human Frailty. 

Inexorable. See Madrigal: “My thoughts,” etc. 
Invocation. See “Phoebus, arise!” 

Lament, A. See Madrigal, “My thoughts,” etc. 
Lessons of Nature, The. 

Madrigal: “Like the Idalian Queen.” 

Madrigal: “My thoughts hold mortal strife.” 
Madrigal: “Sweet rose, whence is this hue?” 
Madrigal: “The beauty and the life.” 

Madrigal: “This life which seems so fair.” 
Madrigal: “This world a hunting is.” 

No Trust in Time. 

On Solitude. 

Phillis. 

“Phoebus, arise!” 

Saint John Baptist. 

Saint John the Baptist. See Saint John Baptist. 
Sextain 

Shepherds, The. 

Sleep, Silence, Child. 

Song: “Phoebus, arise!” See “Phoebus, arise!” 
Sonnet: “A good that never satisfies the mind.” 
See Human Frailty. 

Sonnet: “Alexis, here she stay’d among these 
pines.” See Spring Bereaved, III. 

Sonnet: “Dear chorister,” etc. See To the Night¬ 
ingale. 

Sonnet: “I know that all beneath the moon de¬ 
cays.” See “I know that all,” etc. 

Sonnet: “If crost with all mishaps,” etc. 
Sonnet: “In my first years,” etc. 

Sonnet: “Of mortal glory, O soon darkened ray.” 
Sonnet: “Then is she gone,” etc. 

Sonnet: “Thou window, once which served,” etc. 
Sonnet from Flowers of Sion. See No Trust in 
Time. 

Sonnet: Posting Time. See No Trust in Time. 
Sonnet: Repent, Repent! See Saint John Baptist. 
Sonnet: Spring. See Spring Bereaved, II. 

Sonnet: Sweet Bird. 

Sonnet to Sir W. Alexander. 

Sonnet to Sir W. Alexanderf. (Appended to the 
Cypresse Grove.)]. See to Sir William Alex¬ 
ander, with the Author’s Epitaph. 

Sonnet:—To the Nightingale. See To the Nightin¬ 
gale. 

Spring Bereaved (I., II., III.) 

Summons to Love. See “Phoebus, arise!” 

“This life, which seems so fair.” See Madrigal: 
“This life,” etc. 

To a Nightingale. See Sonnet: Sweet Bird. 

To Chloris. 

To His Lute. 

To Sir William Alexander, with the Author’s Epi¬ 
taph. 

To Spring. See Spring Bereaved, II. 

To the Nightingale. 

To the Nightingale. See also Sonnet: Sweet Bird. 
To the Redbreast. See Sonnet: Sweet Bird. 
“Trust not, sweet soul! those curled waves of gold.” 
Urania, I. 

Drummond, W: H:—De Nice Beetle Canadienne. 
Habitant, The: 

Habitant’s Jubilee Ode, The. 

How Bateese Came Home. 

Wreck of the "Julie Plante,” The. 

Drury, H:—Over the Threshold of my Library. (TV.) 
Dryden, J:—Absalom and Achitophel. 

Achitophel. See Absalom and Achitophel. 

Ah, How Sweet. See Tyrannic Love. 

“Ah, how sweet it is to love.” See Tyrannic 
Love. 

Alexander’s Feast[; or, the Power of Music], 
Amboyna; or, The Cruelties of the Dutch to the 
English Merchants. 

Annus Mirabilis, the Year of Wonders. 

Attempt at Berghen, The. See Annus Mirabilis, 
the Year of Wonders. 

Aureng-Zebe; or, The Great Mogul. 

Beautiful Lady of the May, The. 

Buzzard, The. See Hind and the Panther, The. 
Character of the Duke of Monmouth. See Absa¬ 
lom and Achitophel. 

Character of the Earl of Shaftesbury. See Absa¬ 
lom and Achitophel. 

Character of Zimri. Nee Absalom and Achitophel. 
Cymon and Iphigenia. 

Doeg and Og. See Absolom and Achitophel. 


Dryden, J: ( continued ). 

Epistle to the Whigs. See Medal, The. 

Fife and Drum. See Song for St. Cecilia’s Day, A. 

Fire of London, The. See Annus Mirabilis. the 
Year of Wonders. 

Grief. _ . 

Harvest Home. See King Arthur; or, The British 
Worthy. 

Hidden Flame. See Maiden Queen, The. 

Hind and the Panther, The. 

Incantation. See (Edipus. 

Indian Emperor, The. 

King Arthur; or, The British Worthy. 

Lady’s Song, The. See Beautiful Lady of the 
May, The. 

Lines Printed under the Engraved Portrait of 
Milton 

MacFlecknoe. 

Maiden Queen, The. 

Malcontents, The. Zimri. See Absalom and 
Achitophel. 

Medal, The. 

Oak, The. 

Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day. See Song for St. Ce¬ 
cilia’s Day, A. 

Ode on Cecilia’s Day. See Song for St. Cecilia’s 
Day, A. 

Ode to the Pious Memory of the Accomplished 
Young Lady, Mrs. Anne Killigrew. See To the 
Pious Memory of Mrs. Anne Killigrew. 

CEdipus. 

Oliver Cromwell. See Poem upon the Death of 
his Late Highness, etc. 

On the Death of Lord Hastings. 

On the Death of Oliver Cromwell. Nee Poem 
upon the Death of his Late Highness, etc. 

Palamon and Arcite. (TV.) See Canterbury 
Tales.—Geoffrey Chaucer. 

Poem upon the Death of his Late Highness, Oliver, 
Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ire¬ 
land, A. 

Prologue to Aureng-Zebe, or, the Great Mogul. 
See Aureng-Zebe, etc. 

Religio Laici. 

St. Cecilia’s Day. See Song for St. Cecilia’s Day, 
A. 

Satire on the Dutch. See Amboyna, etc. 

Sects, The. Private Judgment. See Hind and 
the Panther, The. 

Shadwell. See MacFlecknoe. 

Song: “Ah, fading joy!” See Indian Emperor, 
The. 

Song for St. Cecilia’s Day, A. 

Song from King Arthur. See King Arthur; or, 
The British Worthy. 

Song to a Fair Young Lady, Going out of the Town 
in the Spring. 

To my Dear Friend, Mr. Congreve, on his Comedy 
Called “The Double Dealer.” 

To My Friend, Mr. Congreve. See To my Dear 
Friend, Mr. Congreve, etc. 

To My Honoured Kinsman, John Dryden. 

To the Pious Memory of Mrs. Anne Killigrew. 

Tradition. See Religio Laici 

Trumpet’s Loud Clangor, The. See Song for St. 
Cecilia’s Day, A. 

Tyrannic Love. 

Under Mr. Milton’s Picture. See Lines Printed 
under the Engraved Portrait of Milton. 

Under the Portrait of Milton. See Lines Printed 
under the Engraved Portrait of Milton. 

Unity of the Catholic Church, The. See Hind and 
the Panther, The. 

Yeni Creator [Spiritus]. (TV.) 

Verses to Her Royal Highness the Duchess. 

Zimri. See Absalom and Achitophel. 

Dschellaleddin Rumi.—To Heaven Approached a Sufi 
Saint. 

Du Bois, F R.— Ballad of the Overconfident Polliwog, 
The. 

Duclaux, Mme. Agnes Mary Frances [Robinson] [Dar- 
mesteter].—Ballad of Orleans, A. 

Captain Gold and French Janet. 

Celia’s Home-coming 

Cockyne Country. 

Dawn-angels. 

Darwinism. 

Fireflies. 

Mowers, The. 

Rosa Rosarum. 

Sir Eldric. 

Tower of St. Maur, The 

“Tuscan Cypress.” 


444 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Eames 


Dudevant. Mme. Amantine Lucille Aurore ("George 
Sand”).—Nights of Venice, The. 

Dudley. E. L.—Mucker’s Love Song, The. 

Duer, Caroline T.—International Episode, An (March 
15, 1889). 

Portrait, A. 

Word to the Wise, A. 

Dufferin, Frd’k Temple Blackwood, Baron. —Black 
Death of Bergen. The. 

Dufferin, Helen Selina [Sheridan], Lady. Kat[ejy’s 
Letter. 

Lament of the Irish Emigrant. 

Terence’s Farewell. 

To My Dear Son. 

Song:—“When another’s voice thou hearest.” 
Duffey, Mrs. Eliza Bisbee.—After a Fashion 
Two Ways of Telling the Same Thing. 

Duffield, S: Pitts.—“For Sale.” 

“When Sylvia Sings.” 

Duffield, S: Willoughby.—Smoke and Chess. 

Three Best Doctors, The See Three Good Doctors. 
Three Good Doctors. 

Two of a Trade. 

Duffy, Sir C: Gavan.—Irish Rapparees, The. 

Muster of the North, The 
Patriot’s Bride, The. 

Duganne, Augustine Jos. Hickey.—Bethel. 

Caractacus. 

Keep it before the People! 

Larrifent of the Widowed Inebriate. 

On to Freedom. 

Duke, R. T. W.—Last Hours. 

Dumas, Alexandre —Bonivard. 

Execution of Lady De Winter, The. See Three 
Musketeers, The. 

Imperial Secret, An. 

On Dogs and Cats. 

Three Musketeers, The. 

Du Maurier, G:—Vers Nonsensiques. 

We Can Do So Little. 

Dunbar, Paul Laurence.—Conscience and Remorse. 
Corn-song, A. 

Death Song, A. 

Discovered. 

Harriet Beecher Stowe. 

How Lucy Backslid. 

Hymn: “O li’l lamb out in de col’.” 

Little Brown Baby. 

Lullaby: “Bedtime’s come fu’ little boys.” 
Lullaby: “Kiver up yo’ haid.” 

Mt. Pisgah’s Christmas ’Possum. 

Negro Lullaby. See Lullaby: “Bedtime’s come fu’ 
little boys. ’ ’ 

01’ Tunes, The. 

On the Road. 

Retort. 

When de Co’n Pone’s Hot. 

When Malindy Sings. 

Dunbar, Wallace.—It’s Vera Weel. 

Dunbar, W:—-All Earthly Joy returns in Pain. 

Dame Nature Crowns the Scottish Lion King of 
Beasts. See Thistle and the Rose, The. 

Dance of the Seven Deadly Sins [or Sevin Deidly 
Synnis], The. 

Goldyn Targe, The. 

In Honor of the City of London. 

Lament for the Makaris quhen He was Seik, The. 

See Lament for the Makers. 

Lament for the Makers. 

On the Nativity of Christ. 

Thistle and the Rose, The. 

Thrissill and the Rois, The. See Thistle and the 
Rose, The. 

To a Lady. 

Dunbar, W: F.—Song for the Hour, A. 

Duncan, E. A.—Old Soldier’s Story, The. 

Duncan, H. A.—Child-philosophy. 

Duncan, Lindsay.—Christmas Guests [.The]. 

Duncan, Mary I.undie.—Child’s Evening Prayer, A. 
Evening Hymn. See Child’s Evening Prayer, A. 
Snow-shower, The. 

Tender Shepherd, The. See Child’s Evening 
Prayer, A. 

Duncan, Sara Jeannette. See Cotes, Mrs. Saba 
Jeannette [Duncan]. 

Duncan, W: Cecil. —“Little David” of Nations, The. 
Duncan, W: J.—Right Building. 

Dunham, H. G.—At the Ball. 

Duniway, Mrs. Abigail Scott.—Men, The. 

Dunlavy, E. W.—Philosophy of Progress. 

Dunlop, J:—Dinna Ask Me. 

Dunn, Dr. E. C.—Rum’s Ruin. 

Dunn, Frank Edwin.—Frances Edwena. 


Dunn, Julia M.—Carmelita. 

Dunne, Finley P: (“Mr. Dooley”).—Mr. Dooley Defines 
a Poet. 

Mr. Dooley in Peace and in War. See Mr. Dooley 
on a Populist Convention. 

Mr. Dooley on a Populist Convention. 

What Dooley Says. 

Dunton, Theodore Watts. See Watts-Dunton, Theo¬ 
dore. 

Durant, Heloise.—Place of Rest, The. 

Durant, Horace B.—Christ Calming the Tempest. 
“Dead! Name Unknown.” 

Hugh Gordon’s Iron Mill. 

Make Room in Heaven. 

Only True Life. The. 

Party Caucus, The. 

Shadow from an Insane Asylum, A. 

Trip to the Stars, A. 

What the Diver Saw. 

Where are Your Treasures? 

Durbin, Eliza W.—Our Washington. 

Durfee, Harriet E.—Four Pictures. 

Under the Old Oak Tree—a Garland. 

D'Urfey, T:—Chloe Divine. 

Come. Sweet Lass. 

Durivage, Fs. Alex.—All. 

Cavalry Charge, The. 

Chez Brabant. 

Christian Maiden and the Lion, The. 

Durke, G. L.—Boy’s Idea of Girls, A. 

Dustin, May E.—Could I Have Borne It? 

Dutcher, Lina.—Spring-time Flowers. 

Dutt, Toru.—Awake. 

Our Casuarina Tree. 

Dutton, Maude Barrows.—Genius to Her Poet. 
Duvar, J: Hunter. See Hunter-Duvar, J: 

Dwight, J: Sullivan.—Landlady’s Daughter, The.(TV.) 
Rest. (TV.) 

Sweet is the Pleasure. (TV.) See Rest. 

True Rest. ( Tr .) See Rest. 

Dwight, Theodore.—On the Death of Washington. 
Dwight, Timothy.—America (God Bless our Native 
Land). 

Beautiful in Creation, The. 

Columbia. 

Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean. See Red, 
White, and Blue, The. 

Glory of Nature, The. 

I Love Thy Kingdom, Lord. (Tr.) 

Love to the Church. See I Love Thy Kingdom, 
Lord. 

Red, White, and Blue, The. (Also at. to D. T. 
Shaw. ) 

Smooth Divine, The. 

Washington a Model for Youth. 

Dyer, E. P.—Hard Words to Spell. See Spelling Class, 
The. 

Spelling Class, The. 

Dyer, Sir E:—Cynthia. 

Good Conscience, A. See My Minde to me a King¬ 
dom is. 

Helen’s Epithalamion. See Sixe Idillia. 

My Minde [or Mind] to me a Kingdom is. (At. 
also to W: Byrd.) 

Peace of Mind. See My Minde to me a Kingdom is. 
Prayer of Theocritus for Syracuse, The. See Sixe 
Idillia. 

Phiilis. (Tr.) (At. also to T: Lodge.) 

Sixe Idillia. (Tr.) 

To Phillis the Fair Shepherdess. (Tr.) See Phillis. 
Dyer. J:—Fleece, The. 

Grongar Hill. 

Dyer, Rev. Ludwig.—Mother’s Angel, The. 

Dyer, Sydney.—Story of an Apple, A. 

Work. See Work, for the Night is Coming. 

Work, for the Night is Coming. 


E 

E.—After Reading Austin Dodson. 

“E., A.” See Russell, G: W: 

E., A. M.—Vision, A. 

E., E.—Who’ll Tend Baby? 

E., G.—Upon the Threshold. 

E., M.—What They Dreamed and Said. 

Eager, Cora M.—-Be Strong. 

Ruined Merchant, The. 

Where is Papa To-night? 

Will the New Year come To-night[, Mamma]? (At. 
also to Mrs. J. M. Winton.) 

Eames, Eliz. J.—Addison. 


445 




Earl 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Earl, Mrs. —On the Death of Mrs. Holland. 

Easter, Marguerite Eliz.—My Laddie’s Hounds. 
Eastman, Barrett.—How We Burned the “Philadel¬ 
phia. ’ ’ 

Joy Enough. 

Richard Somers. 

Eastman, C: Gamage.—Afternoon Nap, The. See 
Picture, A. 

Dirge. 

Farmer Sat in his Easy Chair, The. See Picture, 
A. 

Midsummer Day Scene, A. See Picture, A. 
Picture, A. 

Snow-storm, A. 

Eastman, Mrs. Elaine [Goodale].—Arbutus. 

Ashes of Roses. 

Baby. 

Countryman of Mine, A. 

Golden-rod. 

Mother. 

Easton, Alex. N.—-Mad Anthony’s Charge. 

Easton, Frank Turtellet.—Echo from the 17th, An. 
New Joke, The. 

No Wonder. 

Specialist, A. 

Eastman, Julia A.—Bluebell, The. 

Eastman, S. E.—Story of a Little Red Hen, The. 
Eastman, Sarah E.—My Little Friend. 

Eastman, Sophie E.—Little Teacher, The. 

Spool of Thread, A. 

Eaton, Arthur Wentworth Hamilton.— Deepening the 
Channel. 

Egyptian Lotus, The. 

I Watch the Ships. 

Meadow Lands. The. 

My Purest Longings Spring. 

Phantom Light of the Baie des Chaleurs, The. 
Pray for the Dead. 

Purple Asters. 

Voyage of Sleep, The. 

Eaton, Earle H.—When Nelly Hangs her Stocking Up. 
Eaton, R. L.—-“April sun shines bright above, The.” 
Eaton, W. A.—Bridge Keeper’s Story, The. 

Death of the Reveller, The. 

Fire! Fire! 

Fireman’s Wedding, The. 

Haunted Smithy, The. 

How I Won My Wife. 

My First Recital. 

Paddy’s Courting. 

Slave’s Auction, A. 

To My Love. 

Touch it Not. 

Eberhart, Gilbert F.—Fife, The. 

Ebers, Georg. — Chariot Race in Alexandria. See 
Serapis. 

Hippodrome Racp, The. See Serapis. 

Serapis. 

Eclectic Magazine. —-Joe Sieg. 

"Ecob, Jas. H.—Dreamer and Reaper, The. 

Eddy, Alice M.—All Together. 

Mrs. Pickett’s Missionary Box. 

Eddy, D. C.—True and False Glory. 

True Manliness. 

Eddy, H: B.—To an Imaginary One. 

Eddy, W: Holden.—Fairy Barcarolle, A. 

Edgar, Sir Jas. D:—This Canada of Ours. 

Edgarton, S. C.—Beauty of Piety, The. 

Edlin, FI:—Birthday Greeting, A. 

Edmeston, Jas.—“Lead us, Heavenly Father, lead us. ’ ’ 
See Praver to the Trinity. 

Prayer to the Trinity. 

Edmondson, Miriam R.—Dream-ship, The. 
Edmundston, Jas.—Forgiveness. 

Edwards, Mrs. -.—My Jessie. 

Edwards, Amelia Blandford.—Adventure, An. 

Give Me Three Grains of Corn, Mother. 

Revels of the Ciesars, The. 

Edwards, E. Evans.—-Modern Cain, The. 

Edwards, Harry Stillwell.—Born Inventor, A. 

Charlie and the Possum. 

De Valley an’ de Shadder. 

General’s Client, The. See De Valley an’ de Shad¬ 
der. 

Mammv’s Li’l Boy. 

* Mass’ Crawford, Isam, and the Deer. See Two 
Runaways, The. 

Not Guilty. See De Valley an’ de Shadder: 

Old Canteen, The. 

Stirring up of Billy Williams, The. 

Trial of Ben Thomas, The. See De Valley an’ de 
Shadder. 

Two Runaways, The. 


Edwards, Rev. Jonathan.—“Opera is an experiment, 
bold even to the verge of absurdity, The.” 
"What is commonly called musical criticism is a 
misnomer. ’ ’ 

Edwards, Mary.-—Two Runaways, The. 

Edwards, Matilda Betham.—Child’s Prayer, A. 

Hymn: “God make my life a little light.” See 
Child’s Prayer, A. 

Edwards, Matilda C.—My Mother at the Gate. 
Edwards, R:—Amantium Irse. See Paradyse of Dainty 
Devises, The. 

Paradyse of Dainty Devises, The. 

Edwards, R:—“Let it not be forgotten that patriotism 
is one of the positive lessons. ’ ’ 

Edwards, W: H.—Ben Bolt. See English, T: D. 
Eells, S:—Teacher the Hope of America, The. 

Egan, Maurice Fs.—Chrysalis of a Bookworm, The. 
Columbus, the World-giver. 

Fra Angelico. 

He Made Us Free. 

Maurice de Guerin. 

Old Violin, The. 

Perpetual Youth. 

Question, A. 

Shamrock, The. 

Theocritus. 

We Conquer God. 

Egbert, Alice E.—Charm, The. 

Eggleston, E:—Discourse by the Rev. Mr. Bosan. 
See Hoosier School-master, The. « 

Hoosier School-master, The. 

Street Cries. 

Eggleston, J. R.—Uncle Mellick Dines with his 
Master. 

Eichberg, Anna Philipine. See King, Mrs. Anna P. 
[Eichberg]. 

Eisenbeis, L:—Are You Ready? 

Christmas a Hundred Years to Come. 

Church Fair, The. 

Church in Lucre Hollow, The. 

Church Kitchen, The. 

Deacon, Me and Him, The. 

Joner Swallerin’ a Whale. 

Matildy Goes to Meetin’. 

Meetin’-house is Split, The. 

Our Church Sociable. 

Our Ranks are Getting Thin. 

Parson’s Vacation, The. 

Elders, Anne.—Life’s Unexpressed. 

Eldred, Mrs. L. C.—Single Head of Wheat, A. 

Eldridge, Denison.—To -: “’Twas at a ball. 

In vain I tried. ’ ’ 

Elgee, Jane Francesca. See Wilde, Lady. 

Eliot, C: W:—Holmes, Extract Concerning. 

Schools and Colleges of Our Country, The. See 
Washington and our Schools and Colleges. 
Student-heroes of Our War, The. 

Washington and Our Schools and Colleges. 

Eliot, Ebenezer. See Elliott, Ebenezer. 

Eliot, G:—See Cross, Mrs. Marian [Evans] [Lewes]. 
Eliot, Mrs. Henrietta Robins [Mack],—Hint, A. 

Just Tribute, A. 

Why It was Cold in May. 

Wish, A. 

Eliot, H: W., Jr.—His Sentence. 

Life in the Chem. Lab. 

Eliot, S:—Washington’s Characterization. 

Elizabeth, Queen. —“Golden Speech, The,” of Queen 
Elizabeth. 

Speech to the Armv at Tilbury. 

Elizabeth Pauline Attilia, Queen of Roumania ("Car¬ 
men Sylva”). 

Contented. 

West Wind. 

Ellerton, J.—Grant Us Thy Peace. See Savior, again 
to Thy Dear Name. 

Savior, again to Thy Dear Name. 

Elliot, Lady Charlotte.—Wife of Loki, The. 

Elliot, Ebenezer. See Elliott, Ebenezer. 

Elliot, G: Tracy.—Winter Twilight. 

Elliot, Sir Gilbert.—Amynt.a. 

Elliot, Mrs. Henrietta R. See Eliot, Mrs. Henrietta 
R. 

Elliot, Madge.—Cartwheels. 

Go Slow. 

No Kiss. 

Said Tulip, “That Is So.” 

Elliot, Roberta Kerr.—Chrysanthemums. 

Elliot, S. R.—Burden of Night, The. 

Elliott, Charlotte.—Just as I Am. 

Let Me be with Thee. 

O Thou, the Contrite Sinners’ Friend. 

Thy Will be Done. 


446 





AUTHOR INDEX 


English 


Elliott, Ebenezer.—“And shall the mortal sons of 
God.” 

Battle Song. 

Bramble. See Bramble Flower, The. 

Bramble Flower, The. 

Builders, The. 

Burns. See Poet’s Epitaph, A. 

Corn-law Hymn. 

Elegy on William Cobbett. 

England. 

Excursions to the Mountains, An. See Villiage 
Patriarch, The. 

“Leafless are the trees; their purple branches.” 
Old England. See England. 

Plaint. 

Poet’s Epitaph, A. 

Press, The. 

Song: “Child, is thy father dead?” 

Spring. 

Three Marys at Castle Howard, in 1812 and 1837, 
The. 

Village Patriarch, The. 

Elliott, Jane.—Flowers o’ [or of] the Forest, The. 

Lament for Flodden [Field], A. See Flowers of 
the Forest, The. 

Elliott, Julian M.—Pathos of Thackeray and Dickens, 
The. 

Two of Dickens’ Villains. 

Elliott, Rev. Father Walter.—Liberty. 

Ellis, Mrs. -.—Art of Reading Well, The. 

Ellis, Carrie E.—Washing Dishes. 

Ellis, Sumner.—Man’s Capacity for Education. 

Elliston, Alfred.—Bicycle Girl, The. 

Ellsworth, D. A.—Pa’s Soft Spot. 

Ellsworth, Erastus Wolcott.—Mayflower, The. 

What is the Use? 

Ellsworth, W. W.—Nightfall. 

Ellwanger, W: De Lancey.—To Jessie’s Dancing Feet. 
Elmer, Edith.—Overboard! 

Elmslie, Theodora C.—Little Lady of Lavender, The. 
Miss Eva’s Visit to the Ogre. See Little Lady of 
Lavender, The. 

Elton, E.—Child’s Time Table. 

Elvan, Cornelius.—“With broken heart and contrite 
sigh.” 

Ely, H: S.—Decoramenta. 

Embury, Emma Catharine.—Love Unsought. 

Emerson, E: Bliss.—Last Farewell, The. 

Emerson, G. R.—Baby’s Kiss, The. 

Emerson, N. S.— Deacon Munroe’s Story; or, Church 
Discipline. 

Deacon’s Confession, The. See Deacon Munroe’s 
Story. 

Deacon’s Story, The. See Deacon Munroe’s 
Story. 

How I Jab and I Parted. 

Thanksgiving Elopement, A. 

Two Christmas Eves. 

Why Liab and I Parted. See How Liab and I 
Parted. 

Emerson, O. F.—To Wordsworth. 

Emerson, Ralph Waldo.—Abraham Lincoln. 
Adirondacs, The. 

“All great ages have been ages of belief.” See 
Worship. 

American Scholar, The. 

Amulet, The. 

April. See May-day. 

April and May. See May-day. 

Art. 

Bacchus. 

Beauty. 

Behavior. 

Books. 

Boston. 

Boston Hymn. 

Brahma. 

Celestial Love, The. 

Character. 

Compensation. 

Concord Fight. See Concord Hymn. 

Concord Hymn. 

Concord Monument Hymn. See Concord Hymn. 
Days. _ , 

Death of Lincoln. See Abraham Lincoln. 

Dirge: “Knows he who tills this lonely field.” 
Duty. See Voluntaries. 

Each and All. 

Earth, The. 

Emerson Alphabet, An. 

Eros. 

Fable. 

“Fate of the man-child, The. ” See Sphinx, The. 


Emerson, Ralph Waldo ( continued ). 

Forbearance. 

Forerunners. 

Fragments on Nature and Life. 

Friendship. 

Give All to Love. 

Good-bye. 

"Great man is always willing to be little, A.” 

See Compensation. 

Guy. 

Heart of all the Scene, The. See Woodnotes. 
House, The. 

House of God, The. See Hymn, Sung at the 
Second Church, Boston, etc. 

Humble-bee, The. 

Hymn on the Fight at Concord. See Concord 
Hymn. 

Hymn. (Sung at the Completion of the Concord 
Monument.) See Concord Hymn. 

Hymn, Sung at the Second Church, Boston, at the 
Ordination of Rev. Chandler Robbins. 

“In all our decisions and actions, it would be well 
for us.” See Representative Men: Plato; or, 
The Philosopher. 

“It is the property of the religious spirit to be the 
most refining of all influences. ’ ’ See Boston. 
Letters. 

Manners. 

May-day. 

Merlin. 

Mighty Heart, The. See Woodnotes. 

Monadnoc. 

Mountain and the Squirrel, The. See Fable. 

Ode Sung in the Town Hall, Concord, July 4, 1857. 
Ode to Beauty. 

Problem, The. 

Representative Men: Plato; or, The Philosopher. 
Responses. See Problem, The. 

Rhodora, The. 

Sacrifice. 

Sea, The. See Sea-shore, The. 

Sea-shore, The. 

Snow-storm, The. 

“So nigh is grandeur to our dust.” See Volun¬ 
taries. 

Song of Nature. 

Sphinx, The. 

Terminus. 

Test, The. 

“There are books which take rank in our life with 
parents and lovers. ’ ’ See Books. 

Threnody. 

Titmouse, The. 

To Eva. 

To the Humblebee. See Humble-bee, The. 
Undersong, The. See Woodnotes. 

Uriel. 

Voluntaries, III. 

W aldeinsamkeit. 

Waves. See Fragments on Nature and Life. 

We Thank Thee. 

Wealth. 

“Wise man always shows himself on the s'de of 
his assailants, The.” See Compensation. 
Works and Days. 

Worship. 

Emery, G: D.—Heroic Deed, The. 

Emmet, Rob’t.— Extract from the Last Speech of 
Robert Emmet. See On being Found Guilty 
of High Treason. 

Last Speech. See On being Found Guilty of High 
Treason. 

On being Found Guilty of High Treason. 

Speech in His Own Defence. See On being Found 
Guilty of High Treason. 

Speech of Vindication. See On being Found Guil¬ 
ty of High Treason. 

On being Found Guilty of High Treason. 

Emmett, Will.—Winnie’s Welcome. 

England, Rt. Rev. J:—Duelist’s Honor, The. 

English, Ivy.—Angelic Song, The. 

English, T: Dunn.—Arnold at Stillwater. 

Ballad of the Colors, The. 

Bankrupt’s Visitor, The. 

Battle of New Orleans, The. 

Battle of the Cowpens, The. 

Ben Bolt. 

Betty Zane. 

Browns, The. 

Charge by the Ford, The. 

Come Back. 

Fight, The. See Fight at Lexington, The. 

Fight at Lexington, The. 


447 




English 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


English, T: Dunn ( continued ). 

Flag of the Rainbow. 

Game Knut Played, The. 

Johnny Bartholomew. 

Keep the Mill a-Going. 

King Dollar. 

Legend of Ogre Castle, The. 

Maple. 

Old Mill, The. 

Out in the Streets. 

Quarrel of the Wheels, The. 

Rescue of Albret, The. 

Shoemaker’s Daughter, The. 

Eno, Arthur Llewellyn.—Decision, A. 

Epictetus.—“Little watchfulness over ourselves, A.” 
Erskine, Fs. St. Clair. See Rorslyn, Earl of. 

Erskine, JDe Gustibus. 

"Love that Never Cold Can Be.” 

Song, The. 

To George Edward Woodberry. 

Winter-song for Pan. 

Erskine, T:, Lord. —Freedom of the Press, The. 

French and English. 

Great Minds in Their Relations to Christianity. 
Esprit, Jacques.—Man in the Moon and I, The. 

Essex, Rob’t Devereux, Earl of. —Passion of my 
Lord of Essex, A. 

Wish, A.— -See Passion of my Lord of Essex, A. 
“Estelle.” See Bogart, Eliz. 

Esterbrooke, H: D.—Vengence of the Flag, The. 

Eton Magazine. — “O, were I a cross on thy snowy 
breast ^ 

“Ettrick Shepherd, The.” See Hogg, Jas. 

"Eureka.”—Contentious Community, A. 

Evans, Mrs. -—.—Night in Eden. 

Evans, Caroline.—-Lost Penny, The. 

Evans, Dr. Heber.—Light Shall be at Eventide. 

On Sir John Vanburgh—Poet and Architect. 
Evans, Mary Ann (“George Eliot”). See Cross, Mrs. 
Marian [Evans] [Lewes], 

Evans, Captain Robley Dunglison.—Yankees in Battle, 
The. 

Evans, Sebastian.—Dirge for Summer, A. 

Seven Fiddlers, The. 

What the Trumpeter Said. 

Evarts, W: Maxwell.—Centennial of 1876, The. 

Dignity of Our Nation’s Founders. 

Eve, Maria L.—Conquered at Last. 

Evenus.—Epigram: “Pest of the Muses,” etc. 

Evered, Mary.—Death of Hope. 

Everest, Clare.—Sister Madeleine. 

Everett, Alex. Hill.—Arts and Letters. 

Literary Pursuit and Active Business. 

Young American, The. 

Everett, C: Carroll.—Imagination and Fancy. 

Everett, D:—Lines Written for a School Declamation. 
“You’d scarce expect one of my age.” See Lines 
Written for a School Declamation. 

Everett, E:—Adams and Jefferson. See Eulogy on 
Adams and Jefferson. 

Advantages of Adversity to the Pilgrim Fathers. 

See First Settlement of New England, The. 
Agriculture as Affected by the War. 

American Experiment of Self-government, The. 
See Circumstances Favorable to the Progress 
of Literature in America, The. 

Battle of Bloody Brook, The. 

Battle of Bunker Hill. 

Battle of Lexington, The. 

Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Character of Washington, The. 

Circumstances Favorable to the Progress of Liter¬ 
ature in America, The. 

Civilization of Africa. 

Commerce. 

Death of Copernicus [.The]. 

Death of Daniel Webster, The. 

Dirge of Alaric the Visigoth. 

Discoveries of Galileo. See Uses of Astronomy, 
The. 

Dizzy Activities of the Times, The. See Battle of 
Bunker Hill. 

Eternal Clockwork of the Skies. See Uses of 
Astronomy, The. 

Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson. 

Eulogy on Lafayette. 

Fathers of the Republic, The. See Eulogy on 
Adams and Jefferson. 

First Battles of the Revolutionary War, The. 
First Settlement of New England, The. 

Flag, The. See Battle of Lexington, The. 

Galileo. See Uses of Astronomy, The. 

Galileo Galilei. See Uses of Astronomy, The. 


Everett, E: ( continued ). 

Gettysburg. See National Cemetery at Gettys¬ 
burg. 

Great Issue, The. 

Great Lives Imperishable. See Eulogy on Adams 
and Jefferson. 

Immortals, The. See Eulogy on Adams and Jef¬ 
ferson. 

Imperishability of Great Examples. See Eulogy 
on Adams and Jefferson. 

Indian, The. See Battle of Bloody Brook, The. 

Indian Chief to the White Settler, The. See Bat¬ 
tle of Bloody Brook, The. 

Indian Chieftain, The. See Battle of Bloody 
Brook, The. 

Land of Our Forefathers, The. See First Settle¬ 
ment of New England, The. 

Last Hours of Webster. See Death of Daniel 
Webster, The. 

Mayflower, The. See First Settlement of New 
England, The. 

Memory of Washington, The. See Character of 
Washington, The. 

Men and Deeds of the Revolution, The. See 
Principle of the American Constitutions, The. 

Men Who never Die. See Eulogy on Adams and 
Jefferson. 

Morning. See Uses of Astronomy, The. 

National Banner, The. See Battle of Lexington, 
The. 

National Cemetery at Gettysburg. 

Nature. See Agriculture as Affected by the War. 

On National Character. See First Battles of the 
Revolutionary War, The. 

Oration on Lafayette. See Eulogy on Lafayette. 

Our National Banner. See Battle of Lexington, 
The. 

Our National Character. See First Battles of the 
Revolutionary War, The. 

Our Relations to [or with] England. See First Set¬ 
tlement of New England, The. 

Our Republic. See Circumstances Favorable to 
the Progress of Literature in America, The. 

Peace Congress of the Union, The. See Battle of 
Bunker Hill. 

People Always Conquer, The. 

People Triumphant, The. See People Always 
Conquer, The. 

Plea of the Pocomtuc Chief. See Battle of Bloody 
Brook, The. 

Principle of the American Constitutions, The. 

Prospects of the Republic, The. See Circum¬ 
stances Favorable to the Progress of Litera¬ 
ture in America. The. 

Stars and Stripes, The. See Battle of Lexington, 
The. 

Sufferings and Destiny of the Pilgrims. See First 
Settlement of New England, The. 

Sufferings of the Pilgrims. See First Settlement 
of New England, The. 

Sunrise. See Uses of Astronomy, The. 

Supposed Speech of a Chief of the Pocumtuc In¬ 
dians. See Battle of Bloody Brook, The. 

Temperance. 

Twenty-five Years of Peace. 

Uses of Astronomy, The. 

Vice of Intemperance, The. See Temperance. 

Welcome to General La Fayette. 

What Good will the Monument Do? See Bunker 
Hill Monument, The. 

Wonders of the Dawn, The. See Uses of Astron¬ 
omy, The, 

Everette, M. E. H.—Good-night. 

Mendicants. 

Rebekah. 

Trysting-place, The. 

Every Other Saturday. —Mrs. Brownlow’s Christmas 
Party. 

Ewen, J:—Boatie Rows, The. 

Ewing, Jeannie Pendleton.—How Larry Sang the 
“Agnus.” 

How we Played "King William.” 

Inventor’s Wife, An. 

Ringer of the Chimes, The. 

Story of Two Little Shoes, The. 

Ewing, Mrs. Juliana Horatia.—Burial of the Linnet, 
The. 

Gifts. 

Jackanapes. 

Leonard and the V. C. See Story of a Short Life, 
The. 

Our Garden. 

Story of a Short Life, The. 


448 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Feuillet 


Ewing, Lucy Barbour.—Bresca. 

Miss Agnes. 

Examiner and Chronicle. —Jingles. 

Exeter, T. B.—Strike at Colchester. The. 
Eyster, Mrs. Nellie.—Brave Aunt Ivaty. 
Eytinge, Marg.—Baby Louise. 

Countersign was Mary, The. 

Dog’s Cold Nose, The. 

Indignant Polly Wog. 

Old Roundsman’s Story, An. 

Penitent, A. 

Puzzle, A. 

Story of the Morning-glory Seed, The. 
Weed’s Mission, The. 


F 

F.—Her Present. 

F., A. J.—November. 

F., C.—To See Her Pipe Awry. 

F., C. W.—Running a Race. 

Tear and the Smile, The. See Running a Race. 

F., E. S.—Blood-root. 

F., I. N.—Queen’s Year, The. 

F., M. E.—Birthday Greeting, A. 

F., O.—“Yesterday I dragged wearily along.” 

Fabbri, Cora Randall.—Ladye Maude. 

White Roses. 

Fabens, Jos. Warren.—’Twas off the Blue Canaries. 
Faber, Frd’k W:—Aged Cities. 

Angelic Songs are Swelling. See Pilgrims of the 
Night, The. 

Bamberg. 

Come to Jesus. 

Evening Hymn. 

Flight of the Wild Swans, The. See Prince 
Amadis. 

Genoa. 

God of My Childhood, The. 

Heaven. 

"Kind words are the music of the world.” See 
Spiritual Conferences. 

Land beyond the Sea, The. 

Memory of the Dead, The. 

Names of Good Omen, Therapia on the Bos¬ 
phorus. 

Nearest Friend, The. 

O, How the Thought of God Attracts! 

Paradise. 

Past Friends. 

Pilgrims of the Night, The. 

Preface. 

Prince Amadis. 

Right Must Win, The. 

Shadow of the Rock, The. 

Shore of Eternity, The. 

Songs of Devotion. See Right Must Win, The. 
Souls of Men why Will Ye Scatter. 

Spiritual Conferences. 

Therapia. See Names of Good Omen, Therapia on 
the Bosphorus. 

“There’s a wideness in God’s mercy.” See Come 
to Jesus. 

To a Lake Party. 

Will of God, The. 

Written in Conway Castle. 

Fagan, Fannie.—Voice Within, The. 

Fahy, Fs. A.—Donovans, The. 

Irish Molly O. 

Ould Plaid Shawl, The. 

Fairbanks, Constance.—Halifax. 

Junction, The. 

Those Far-off Fields. 

Fairthorne, Dart.—Early Autumn. 

Falconer, Edmund.—Anne Hathaway. 

Falconer, W:—Shipwreck, The. 

Falkland, Lucius Cary, Lord. — Ben Jonson’s Com¬ 
monplace Book. 

Fane, Violet. See Currie, Lady. 

“Fanny.”—Little Children Love One Another. 
Fanshawe, Catherine M.-—-Imitation of Wordsworth,An. 
Letter H. The. 

Riddle, A. See Letter H , The. 

Fanshawe, Sir R:—Rose, A. 

Fanton, Mary A.—Annunciata. 

Two Gray Wolves. 

Farmer, Airs. Lydia [Hoyt].—Fashions at the Court of 
Queen Flora. 

Farningham, Marianne.—Boy’s Hymn, A. 

Consider the Lilies. 

Daily Task, The. 


Farningham, Marianne ( continued). 

Drowning Singer, The. 

Last Hymn, The. See Drowning Singer, The. 
Morning Psalm, The. 

People’s Holidays, The. 

Thou Knowest Best. 

Farquhar,-.—Courage. 

Farrah, M. J.—Dickens Gallery, The. 

Farrand, Mary Steevens.—Play of Fancy, A. 

Farrar, Dean F: W.—Greatness of Obedience, The. 
Moral Courage. 

Public Opinion. 

Faulds, Lena E.—American Flag, The. 

Fawcett, Edgar.—B. B. Romance, The. 

Baby’s Dreams. 

Bird of Passage. 

Chorus of Anglomaniacs. 

Dead Friend, A. 

Dying Actor, The. 

Grass. 

House on the Hill, The. 

Iceberg, The. 

Memorial Day. 

My Little One. 

Old Beau, The. 

Other Side of the Moon, The. 

Pipes and Beer. 

R ncpo 

Tears of Tullia, The. 

To an Oriole. 

Toad,A. 

White Camellia, A. 

Wild Roses. 

Fawcett, J:—-Blest be the Tie. 

Faxon, Grace B.—Lecture Recital: EllaWheelerWilcox. 
Lecture Recital: Three Women Poets of New 
England. 

Faxton, E.—Light-house May. 

“Fay, Gerda.” See Gemmer, Caroline. 

Fay, Ida.—Surprise. The. 

Fay, J. J.—True Story of Young Lochinvar in Blank 
Verse, The. 

Fay, Theodore Sedgwick.—German Fire-eater, A. 
“Fayet.”—Man’s Material Triumphs. 

Fearing, Lillian B.—What Have I Done? 

Felkin, Mrs. Ellen Thorneycroft [Fowler],—"For Bet¬ 
ter, for Worse.’’ 

Passion and Patience. 

Fellows. Marguerite D.—Troubadour’s Song. 

Ftinelon, Francois de Salignac de la Motte (or la 
Mothe) de, ( Archbishop of Cambray). —Adven¬ 
tures of Telemachus. 

Cicero and Demosthenes Compared. 

Telemachus to the Allied Chiefs. See Adven¬ 
tures of Telemachus. . 

Fenner, Cornelius G:—Gulf-weed. 

Fenno, Frank H.—Rum Maniac, The. 

Fenollosa, Ernest Francisco.^—Golden Age, The. 
Fenollosa, Mrs. Mary [McNeil] (Mary McNeil Scott). 
—Drifting Petal, A. 

Flying Fish. 

Miyoko San. 

Morning Fancy. 

Sunrise in the Hills of Satsuma. 

Yuki. 

Ferdusi. See Firdausi. 

Ferguson, Jas.—Auld Daddy Darkness. 

Ferguson, J:—Gouk’s Errant, and what Cam’ o’t, A. 
Ferguson, Sir S:—Aideen’s Grave. 

Burial of King Cormac, The. 

Cashel of Munster. 

Cean Dubb Deelish. 

Congal. 

Fair Hills of Ireland, The. 

Fairy Thorn, The. 

Forging of the Anchor, The. 

Lament for Thomas Davis. 

Pretty Girl of Loch Dan, The. 

Ferguson, Rob’t.—Braid Claith. 

Caller Water. 

Daft Days, The. 

Ode to the Gowdspink. 

“Fern, Fanny.” See Parton, Mrs. Sarah Payson. 
Ferrabasco, Alfonso.—Fain I Would. 

Ferriar, J:—Bibliomania, The. 

Ferris, G. F.—Chickamauga. 

Ferris, G. H.—To a Spider-web. 

Fertiault, Francois.—Domestic Event, A. 

Traitor, A. 

Triolet to Her Husband. 

Festellis, Kate Neely.—Christmas Time. 

Feuillet, Octave.—Incompleteness. 


449 





Fezandie 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Fezandie, Hector and —. —Cannibal and the Skeleton, 
The. 

Popping the Question. 

Revenge, The. 

Ficke, Arthur D.—My Love and I. 

Yard in December, The. 

Field, Mrs. Caroline Leslie [Whitney],—Two. 

Field, C: Kellogg.—Evening on the Campus. 

Four Valentines. 

God’s Acre. 

Hero, A. 

Ideal Co-ed, The. 

In His Own Country. 

Ladye of the Lab, The. 

Prof.’s Little Girl, The. 

Relapse. 

Strategy. 

Field, Ellen R.—Love’s Garden. 

Field, Eugene.—Armenian Lullaby. 

Armenian Mother, The. 

At Play. 

At the Door. 

Balow, My Bonnie. 

Bambino. 

Beard and Baby. 

Bell-flower Tree, The. 

Bench-legged Fyce, The. 

Bethlehem-to wn. 

Bibliomaniac’s Prayer, The. 

“Booh!” 

Bottle Tree, The. 

Boy, The. 

Brook, The. 

Brook Song, A. 

Buttercup, Poppy, Forget-me-not. 

Child and Mother. 

Christmas Eve. 

Christmas Treasures. 

Cobbler and [the] Stork [,The]. 

Contentment. 

Croodlin’ Doo. 

Cunnin’ Little Thing, The. 

Cyclopeedy, The. 

Dead Babe, The. 

Delectable Ballad of the Waller Lot, The. 
Dibdin’s Ghost. 

Dinkey-bird, The. 

Doll’s Wooing, The. 

Dream-ship, The. 

Drum, The. 

Duel, The. 

Dutch Lullaby. 

Eugene Field to His Children. 

Fairy and Child. 

Father’s Letter. 

Father’s Way. 

Fiddle-dee-dee. 

Fire-hangbird’s Nest. 

Fisherman Jim’s Kids. 

Fly-away Horse, The. 

Ganderfeather’s Gift. 

Garden and Cradle. 

Gold and Love for Dearie. 

Good-children Street. 

Googly-goo. 

Grandma’s Prayer. 

Grandsire, The. 

Happy Household, The. 

Hawthorne Children, The. 

Heigho, My Dearie. 

Hi-spi [or spy], 

Hugo’s “Child at Play.” 

Humming Top, The. 

Hunting Song, A. 

Hushaby, Sweet My Own. 

In the Fire Light. 

Inscription for My Little Son’s Silver Plate. 
Intry-mintry. 

Japanese Lullaby. 

Jest ’fore Christmas. 

Jewish Lullaby. 

Kissing Time. 

Krinken. 

Lady Button-eyes. 

Little All-aloney. 

Little Boy Blue. 

Little Blue Pigeon. See Japanese Lullaby. 

Little Homer’s Slate. 

Little Miss Brag. 

Little Mistress Merciless. 

Little Mistress Sans-merci. 

Little Oh-dear. 

Little Peach, The. 


Field, Eugene ( continued ). 

Lizzie and the Baby. 

“Lollyby, Lolly, Lollyby.” 

Long Ago. 

Lyttel Boy, The. 

Marsh Song—Sunrise. 

Naughty Doll, The. 

Nellie. 

Night Wind, The. 

Nightfall in Dordrecht. 

Norse Lullaby. 

Margaret: a Pearl. 

Medieval Eventide Song. 

Oh, Little Child. 

Old Man, The. 

Our Biggest Fish. 

Our Two Opinions. 

Our Whippings. 

Over the Hills and Far Away. 

Peace of Christmas-time, The. 

Piazza, The. See Piazza Tragedy, A. 

Piazza Tragedy, A. 

Picnic-time. 

Pittypat and Tippytoe. 

Remorseful Cakes, The. 

Ride to Bumpville, The. 

Rock-a-by Lady, The. 

Romance, A. 

Seein’ Things. 

Shuffle-shoon and Amber-locks. 

Shut-eye Train, The. 

Singing in God’s Acre, The. 

Sister’s Cake. 

So, so, Rock-a-by So! 

Some Time. 

Song of Luddy-dud, The. 

Stoddards, The. 

Stork, The. 

Story of his Life. 

Sugar-plum Tree, The. 

Swing High and Swing Low. 

Tea-gown, The. 

Teeny-weeny. 

That Sugar-plum Tree. See Sugar-plum Tree, 
The. 

Three Kings, The. See Three Kings of Cologne, 
' The. 

Three Kings of Cologne, The. 

To a Little Brook. 

To a Usurper. 

To Leuconoe—II. 

To the Fountain of Bandusia. 

Truth about Horace, The. 

Two Opinions. See Our Two Opinions. 
Valentine, A. 

Wanderer, The. 

When I was a Bov. 

Why do Bells of Christmas Ring? 

With Trumpet and Drum. 

Wooing of Miss Woppit, The. 

Wvnken, Blynken, and Nod. See Dutch Lullaby. 
Field, Kate.—Charles Dickens the Reader. See Pen 
Photographs of Dickens’ Readings. 

Fortv to Twenty. See Heads, not Hearts are 
Trumps. 

Heads, not Hearts are Trumps. 

Pen Photographs of Dickens’ Readings. 

Field, Mary H.—Ezra and Me and the Boards. 

Grandfather’s Story. 

Field, Michael.—^Eolian Harp, An. 

Burial of Robert Browning, The. 

Canute the Dane. See Canute the Great. 

Canute the Great. 

Dancers, The. 

Earth to Earth. 

Iris. 

Let us Wreathe the Mighty Cup. 

Lettice. 

Where Winds Abound. 

Wind of Summer. 

Winds To-day are Large and Free. 

Field, Roswell Martin.-—-Morning Bird, The. 

To Leuconoe—I. 

Fielding, H:—A-Hunting We Will Go. See Don 
Quixote in England. 

Author and the Statesman, The. 

Don Quixote in England. 

Grub-street Opera, The. 

Hunting Song, A. See Don Quixote in England. 
"Oh! dear! what can the matter be?” 

Pipe of Tobacco, A. See Grub-street Opera, The. 
Fielding, Hand Loveridge, R:—Roast Beef of Old 
England, The. 


450 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Follansbee 


Fielding, Howard.—She Washed for Him. 

Fields, Mrs. Annie [Adams].—Cedar Mountain. 

Little Guinever. 

On Waking from a dreamless Sleep. 

Return, The. 

“Song, to the Gods, is Sweetest Sacrifice.” 

“Still in Thy Love I Trust.” 

Theocritus. 

To Celia Thaxter. 

Fields, Emma.—Tri-colors, The. 

Fields, Jas. T:—Agassiz. 

Alarmed Skipper, The. 

Atlantic Cable, The. 

Ballad of the Tempest. 

Ballad of the Wicked Nephew. 

Captain’s Daughter, The. See Ballad of the Tem¬ 
pest. 

Common Sense. 

Dirge for a Young Girl. 

In a Strange Land. 

“Isn’t God upon the ocean just the same as on 
the land?” See Ballad of the Tempest. 
Jupiter and Ten. 

Lot Skinner’s Elegy. 

Lucky Horse-shoe, The. 

Masters of the Situation. 

Nantucket Skipper, The. See Alarmed Skipper, 
The. 

On the Ocean. See Ballad of the Tempest. 
Owl-critic. The. 

Patient Mercy Jones. 

Rover’s Petition. 

Song of the Turtle and Flamingo. See Turtle and 
Flamingo, The. 

Stars and Stripes, The. 

Tempest, The. See Ballad of the Tempest. 

Turtle and Flamingo, The. 

With Wordsworth at Rydal. 

Fiester, S. F.—Rarest Pearl, The. 

Under-current, The. 

Filmore, L. (Tr.) —To a Poet who died of Want. 

Finch. Adelaide V.—September. 

Finch, Anne. See Winchelsea, Countess of. 

Finch, Fs. Miles.—Blue and the Gray, The. 

Decoration Day. See Blue and the Gray, The. 
Nathan Hale. 

Patriot Spy, The. See Nathan Hale. 

Smoking Away. 

Storm—the King. 

Finch, J: Bird.—Constitutional Prohibition [the Great 
Remedy]. 

Liquor Traffic Antagonistic to American Liberty. 
New Party Needed, A. 

Our Country’s Needs. 

Finch, Julia Nealy.—Unborn, The. 

Fink, W. W.—Courtship of Larry O’Dee. See Larrie 
O’Dee. 

Hoosier and His Hanner, The. 

Larrie [or Larry] O’Dee. 

“Leadville Jim.” 

Little Tee-hee. 

Marry Me, Darlint, To-night. 

O’Branigan’s Drill. 

Timothy Horn. 

Finley, J:—Bachelor’s Hall. 

Finnegan, Frank X.—Guardsman, The. 

Fish, F. W.—Then and Now. 

Fisk, Gen. Clinton B.—Address Delivered at the In¬ 
dependence Day Celebration, Woodstock, 
Conn., July 4, 1888. 

New Declaration of Independence, A. See Ad¬ 
dress Delivered at the Independence Day Cele¬ 
bration, Woodstock, Conn., July 4, 1888. 
Saloon in Politics, The. 

Fiske, H. G., Vandenhoff. G:, and Burnham, C. L.— 
All at Sea. 

Fiske, J:—Bounding the United States. 

Fitch, Arden S.—Bill and Bell. 

Fitch, [W:] Clyde.—Captain Jinks of the Horse Ma¬ 
rines. 

Determination. 

Di’s Mitten. See Captain Jinks of the Horse 
Marines. 

My Phyllis. 

Perfect Day, A. 

Rondeau for St. Valentine’s Day. 

Two Letters and Two Telegrams. 

Unlocked. . . 

Firdausi [or Ferdusi], Abool-KAsim-Mansoor. Raja of 
India Sends a Chessboard to Nushirvan, The. 
See Shah-Nameh, The. 

Shah-Nameh, The. 

Zal and Rudabeh. See Shah-Nameh, The. 


Fitzgerald, Mrs. E.—Song of the Maple. 

Fitzgerald, E:—And Yet—and Yet! See Rubaiyat of 
Omar KhAyyAm. 

Ballad of Jenny, the Mare, The. See Euphranor. 
Because. 

Euphranor. 

Life and Death. See Rubaiyat of Omar KhAy¬ 
yAm. 

Master-knot, The. See RubaiyAt of Omar KhAy¬ 
yAm. 

Moving Finger Writes, The. See RubaiyAt of 
Omar KhAyyAm. 

Old Song. 

Omar Khayyam. See RubaiyAt of Omar KhAy- 
yAm. 

Overture: “Wake! For the sun,” etc. See Rubai- 
yAt of Omar KhAyyAm. 

Paradise Enow. See RubaiyAt of Omar KhAy¬ 
yAm. 

Phantom Caravan, The. See RubaiyAt of Omar 
KhAyyAm. 

RubaiyAt of Omar KhAyyAm. (Tr.) 

Flaccus, Quintius Horatius. See Horace. 

Flagg, Edmund.—Scotland. 

Flagg, Ellen H.—Blue and the Gray, The. 

Death the Peacemaker. See Blue and the Gray, 
The. 

Flagg, W. D.—Nightmare of a Freshman Sign Swiper. 
Flagg, Wilson.—O’Lincoln Family, The. 

Flammarion, Camille.—Nature. 

Flash, H: Lynden.—Death of Stonewall Jackson. 

Flag, The. 

Stonewall Jackson. See Death of Stonewall Jack- 
son. 

Flatman, T:—Sad Day, The. 

Flaubert, Gustave.—SalAmmbo’s Appeal. 

Fleming, Esther.—From One to Six. 

Six Years Old. See From One to Six. 

Fleming, Lucy Randolph.—Wren’s Nest, The. 
Fleming, Marjorie.—Ephibol on My Dear Love Isa¬ 
bella. 

Sonnet to a Monkey. 

Fleming, Maybury.—To Demeter. 

To Sleep. 

What though the Green Leaf Grow? 

Fleming, Paul.—To My Soul. 

“Why shouldst thou fill to-day with sorrow.” 
Fletcher, G. C.—Violin Fantasy, A. 

Fletcher, Giles.—Christ’s Triumph on Earth. 

Christ’s Victory in Heaven. 

Lady of Vain Delight, The. See Christ’s Triumph 
on Earth. 

Panglory’s Wooing Song. See Sorceress of Vain 
Delight, The. 

Sorceress of Vain Delight, The. 

Wooing Song. See Sorceress of Vain Delight, 
The. 

Fletcher, J. S.—Out at Sea. 

Fletcher, J: See Beaumont and Fletcher, also 
Shakespeare and Fletcher. 

Fletcher, Josiah H.—Little Eloise. 

Fletcher, Mary.—Legend of St. Christopher, The. 
Fletcher. Phineas.—Drop, Drop, Slow Tears. See 
Hymn, An:—“Drop, drop, slow tears.” 

Hymn, An:—“Drop, drop, slow tears.” 

Litany, A. See Hymn, An: Drop, drop, slow 
tears. ’ ’ 

Prize, The. 

Purple Island, The. 

Shepherd’s Life, The. See Purple Island, The. 
Stella and Mira. See Prize, The. 

Florence, Ward M.—Roman Sentinel, The. 

Sneezing Man, The. 

Florian, Jean Pierre Claris de.—Flying-fish, The. 
Flotow, Friedrich von, and St. Georges, Jules Henri.— 
Gipsy’s Warning, The. See Martha. 

Martha. 

Flowerdew, Alice. — Fountain of Mercy! God of 
Love! 

Flowers, Sarah L.—My Daughter Jane. 

Flowers, Sydney.—Fire. 

Floyd, May.—Little Mothers, The. 

Fobes, Walter K.—Agnes Hotot. 

Daughter’s Love and Heroism, A. 

Hans, the Useless. 

Mad Engineer, The. 

Prussian Railway Conductor’s Story. (Ad.) See 
Mad Engineer, The. 

Stewart Holland. 

Susette. 

Foley, Jas., Jr. —’Nough for Me. 

Follansbee, Mitchell D.—Her Thanks. 

Rose at it Again. 


451 


i 




Follen 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Follen, Mrs. Eliza Lee [Cabot].—God is Good. 

Kitty in the Basket. 

New Moon, The. 

Oh, Look at the Moon! 

Stop, Stop, Pretty Water. 

Folsom, Florence.—Linette. 

Fonblanque, Ethel de.—Deserted. 

Fontaine, Lamar.—Picket Guard. The. ( Wr. at.) See 
Beers, Mrs. Ethelinda [Eliot]. 

Foot, J. N. See Fort, J. N. 

Foote, Lucius Harwood.—Derelict, The. 

Don Juan. 

El Vaquero. 

On the Heights. 

Poetry. 

Foran, Jos. Kearney.—Aurora Borealis, The. 

Forbes, Kate E.—Going to be an Orator. 

Forbes, Rixby.—Soliloquy, A. 

Forbush, W: B.—Love’s Day. 

Ford, Anna M.—Fox and Geese. 

Ford, Horatio.—Fringed Gentian. 

Ford, J:—Awakening Song. See Lover’s Melancholy, 
The. 

Broken Heart, The. 

Calantha’s Dirge. See Broken Heart, The. 

Dawn. See Lover’s Melancholy, The. 

Fancies. 

Love and Death. See Broken Heart, The. 
Lover’s Melancholy, The. 

Lutist and the Nightingale, The. See Lover’s 
Melancholy, The. 

Musical Duel, The. See Lover’s Melancholy, 
The. 

Penthea’s Dying Song. See Broken Heart, The. 
Perkin Warbeck. 

Ford, J:—-Tableaux Vivants. 

Ford, Mrs. Mary A.—Hundred Years from Now, A. 
Ford, Rob’t.—Bonniest Bairn in a’ the Warl’, The. 
Ford, S. V. R.—Inasmuch. 

Obstinate Music-box, The. 

Ocean’s Dead, The. 

Shouting Jane. 

Forest [or Forrest], Neil.—Mice at Play. 

Forrester, Alfred A. (“Alfred Crowquill”).—To My 
Nose. 

Forrester, Ellen.—Irish Widow to Her Son, The. 
Forrester, Fleta.—Daisy Time. 

Forrester, Frances.—Story of a Picture, The ("Break¬ 
ing Home Ties”). 

Forster, J:—To Charles Dickens. 

Forsyth, Marv Isabella.—English Sparrow, The. 

Fort [or Foot], J: N.—"Swore Off.” 

Fortunatus, Venantius.—Passion Sunday. 

Fosdick, Harry E.—Autumn Leaf, An. 

Fosdick, W: W.—Maize, The. 

Foss, Sam Walter.—Abraham and Ephraim. 
Agricultural Editor’s Poem, The. 

Art-critic, An. 

Auctioneer’s Gift, The. 

-Awakening of Uncle Sam, The. 

Bangs Family Tell a Story, The. 

Buster, The. 

City Man’s Dream of the Country. See Agricul¬ 
tural Editor’s Poem, The. 

Cosmopolitan Woman, A. 

Country Summer Pastoral, A. See Agricultural 
Editor’s Poem, The. 

1898—and 1.562. 

Fancy Work Maiden, The. 

Fate’s Frustrated Joke. 

Future in Front of Him, A. See Jim’s Future. 
He Didn’t Amount to Shucks. 

He Wanted to Know. 

He Worried about It. (Wr. at. to Lyman Abbott.) 
He’d Had no Show. 

Hullo. 

Ideal Husband to His Wife, The. 

Informal Prayer, An. See Prayer of Cyrus Brown, 
The. 

Is Little Bob Tucked in? 

Jest of Fate, The. See Fate’s Frustrated Joke. 
Jim Bowker. See Then Ag’in. 

Jim’s Future. 

Little Boy Who Went Away, The. 

Meeting of the Clabberhuses, The. 

Modern Martydom, A. 

No Hope for [English—C.] Literature. 

O’Flaherty and John Stubbs. 

Philosopher, A. 

Prayer of Cyrus Brown, The. 

Prince’s Bow and Arrows, The. 

Right Man for the Place, The. 

Seth Peter’s Report of Daniel Webster’s Speech. 


Foss, Sam Walter ( continued ). 

Song of Dewey’s Guns, The. 

Song of the Cannon, The. 

Song that Silus Sung, The. 

Then Ag’in. 

Town of Hay. The. 

Uncle Sam’s Spring Cleaning. 

Volunteer Organist, The. 

War. 

Young Musician, The. 

Fossett, P. C.—Abner’s Second Wife. 

Foster, Ardennes Jones-. See Jones-Foster, Ar¬ 
dennes. 

Foster, Cora Woodward.—Seven Days in a Week. 
Foster, Davis Skatts.—Jack’s Letter to Bob. 

Foster, Fanny. See Clark, Fanny Foster. 

Foster, G: T.—Church Steps, The. 

Foster, Miss H. A.—Christmas Dream, A. 

Christmas Eva. See Christmas Dream, A. 

Foster, H: R:—At the Window. 

Foster, Mrs. Judith Ellen.—Woman in Politics. 

Foster, Leonard C.—Wedding Gift, The. 

Foster, Rt. Rev. Randolph Sinks.—Arraignment of 
Rum, The. 

Arraignment of the Rum Traffic, An. 

Foster, Stephen Collins.—Massa’s in de [tor. the] Cold 
[,Cold] Ground. 

My Old Kentucky Home [,Good-night]. 

O, Boys, Carry Me ’Long. 

Old Folks at Home. 

Old Kentucky Home, The. See My Old Kentucky 
Home. 

Foster, W: Prescott.—April. 

Silence of the Hills, The. 

Fowle, W: B.—^School Committee, The. , 

Yat you Please. (At.) See Planchk, Jas. R. 
Reading the Will. (At. also to Epes Sargent.) See 
Will, The. 

Will, The. 

Fowler, C: H.—-Abraham Lincoln. 

Fowler, Ellen Thorneycroft.— See Felkin, Mrs. Ellen 
T. [Fowler], 

Fowler, G. B. —My Christmas Card. 

Fox, Annie. —Voiceless Chimes, The. 

Fox, C: Jas.—Amendment to the Address of Thanks 
on the King’s Speech at the Opening of the 
Session, Nov. 27, 1781. 

Amendment to the Address on the King’s Speech 
at the Opening of the Session, Nov. 26, 1778. 
Foreign Policy of Washington, The. 

Liberty is Strength. 

Mr. Grey’s Motion for a Reform. 

On Overtures of Peace from Napoleon. See Par¬ 
tition of Poland, The. 

On War with France or America, 1778. See 
Amendment to the Address on the King’s 
Speech at the Opening of the Session, Nov. 26, 
1778. 

Partition of Poland, The. 

Results of the American War. See Amendment 
to the Address of Thanks on the King’s 
Speech at the Opening of the Session, Nov. 27, 
1781. 

Vigor of Democratic Governments See Mr. 
Grey’s Motion for a Reform. 

Fox, G:—County of Mayo, The. 

Fox, Sybil L.—Nights and Days. 

Fox, W. F.—Beneath the Surface. 

Fourth of July, 1876. 

My Love. 

Name, A. 

Our Sweet Unexpressed. 

Psalm of Hope, A. 

Reply to “The Welcome.” 

To-morrow. 

Transpositions. 

Fox, W: Johnson.—Barons Bold, The. 

Life is Love. 

Martyr’s Hymn, The. (TV.) 

Foxwell, Mrs. Mary E.—Reckoning with the Old Year. 
Francis. Lydia Maria. See Child, Mrs. Lydia Maria 
[Francis], 

Francke, H.—Blest Spring Time. 

Frankenstein, Gustavus.—Forest Flowers. 

Frankfort Yeoman. —Court of Berlin, The. 

Franklin, B:—Don’t Give Too Much for the Whistle. 
See Whistle, The. 

Federal Constitution, The. See Speech in the Con¬ 
vention. 

Franklin and the Gout. 

God Governs. See Motion: For Prayers in Conven¬ 
tion. 

Good and Bad Spelling. 


452 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Gale 


Franklin, B: ( continued). 

Honesty and Economy. See Way to Make Money 
Plenty in Every Man’s Pocket, The. 

Letter to Benjamin Webb. 

Letter to Samuel Mather. 

Letter to the Rev. Dr. Lathrop, Boston. See To 
John Lathrop. 

Metaphorical Papers. See Paper. 

Motion: For Prayers in Convention. 

Paper. 

Parable against Persecution, A. 

Poor Richard’s Almanac. See Way to Wealth, 
The. 

Speech in the Convention at the Conclusion of its 
Deliberations, 1787. 

Time. See Way to Wealth, The. 

To John Lathrop. 

Too Dear for the Whistle. See Whistle, The. 
Turning the Grindstone. 

Way to Make Money Plenty in Every Man’s 
Pocket, The. 

Way to Wealth, The. 

Whistle, The. 

Franklin, Nora C.—Fiddle Told, The. 

Fraser, J. A., Jr—Reporter’s Prayer, A. 

Fraser-Tytler, Catherine C. See Liddell, Mrs. 
Catherine C. 

Frayssinous, Denis Luc.—Truth the Object of All 
Studies. 

Frazer, J: D. J.—Song for July 12th, 1843. 

Frazer, W. M.—Come, Sign the Pledge. 

Frazier, A. O.—Breaking Home Ties. ' 

Frazier's Maqazine. —“Sweet hand that held in mine.” 
Frederick. H:—Lines on the Prince of Wales. 
Fredericks, Aaron W.—Uncle Ike’s Roosters. 

Freeland, W:—Nook and a Book, A. 

Freeman, Albert M.—Boating-song. 

Freeman, E: A.—William the Conqueror. 

Freeman, Garnet B.—Four Lives. 

Retrospection. 

Freeman, Mrs. Mary Eleanor [Wilkins],—April Showers. 
Gift that None Could See. The. 

Her Bonnet. 

It Was a Lass. 

Now is the Cherry in Blossom. 

Revolt of “Mother,” The. 

Freeman, W. H.—Death’s Head, The. 

Vat Have I got to Pay? 

Freiligrath, Ferdinand.—Lion’s Ride, The. 
Frelinghuysen, Theodore.—Sabbath, The. 

French, Frank.—Waiting to Grow. 

French, Mrs. L. Virginia [Smith],—Palmetto and the 
Pine. The. 

French, W. E. P.—True Story of a Brie Cheese, The. 
Freneau, Philip.—Ancient Prophecy, An. 

Battle of Lake Champlain, The. 

Capture of the Guerriere by the Constitution, 
The. 

Death’s Epitaph. See House of Night, The. 
Emancipation from British Dependence. 
Epitaph. See Fading Rose, The. 

Eutaw Springs. 

Fading Rose, The. 

Female Frailty. 

House of Night, The. 

Indian Burying-ground, The. 

Lines on the Death of Gen. Joseph Reed. 

May to April. 

On a Travelling Speculator. 

On Captain Barney’s Victory over the Ship Gen¬ 
eral Monk. 

On the Death of Benjamin Franklin. 

On the Death of Captain Nicholas Biddle. 

On the Ruins of a Country Inn. 

Parting Glass, The. 

Plato to Theon. 

Royal Adventurer, The. 

Scurrilous Scribe, The. 

Song of Thyrsis. See Female Frailty. 

To a Caty-did. 

To a Honey Bee. 

To the Memory of the Americans who Fell at 
Eutaw. See Eutaw Springs. 

Victory of the “Bonhomme Richard” over the 
‘‘Serapis. ” 

Wild Honeysuckle, The. 

Frere, J: Hookham.—Monks and the Giants, The. 
Friends’ Intelligencer. —Vacant Places. 

Friends’ Review. —■“ ‘Let us pass over!’ we were far 
astray. ” 

Frisbie, Rev. A. L.—Deacon Kent in Politics. 

John of Mt. Sinai. 

Quousque Tandem, O Catilina? 


Frost, Philip P.-—Morning and Evening. 

Frost, S. A.— Listeners Hear no Good of Themselves. 
Nature versus Education. 

Spring, a Skeleton Essay. 

Train to Mauro, The. 

Trees, a Skeleton Essay. 

Frost, T:—‘‘Attempted Suicide.” 

Frank, the Fireman. 

Going Away. 

Little Tin Cup, The. 

Lydia’s Ride. 

Old Fire-dog, The. 

Frothingham, Ellen.—Opal Ring, The. (Tr.) 

Ring, The. (Tr.) See Opal Ring, The. 
Frothingham, Nathaniel Langdon.—Church, The. 
Communion Hymn. 

Crossed Swords, The. 

Lament, A. 

Song of the Parc®. (Tr.) 

Frothingham, Rev. Octavius B.—Longfellow, Extract 
Concerning. 

Froude, Jas: Anthony.—Coronation of Anne Boleyn, 
The. See History of England. 

Coronation Pageant of Anne Boleyn, The. See 
History of England. 

Death of Mary Stuart. See History of England. 
Execution of Sir Thomas More, The. See His¬ 
tory of England. 

History. See Scientific Method Applied to His¬ 
tory. 

History of England. 

Scientific Method Applied to History. 

Frye, W: Pierce.—Cuba. 

New England Civilization. 

Protection of Americans in Armenia, The. 
State of Maine, The. 

Fudy,-.—Loss, A. 

Fuller,-.—Our Federal Constitution. 

Fuller, Alice C.—Easter Drill. 

Fancy Costume Drill. 

Triple Flag Drill. 

Fuller, C: H.—Green Things Growing. (Arr.) See 
Craik. Mrs. Dinah M. M. 

Fuller, Hon. Frank.—Garfield. 

Fuller, Marg.—Dryad Song. 

Fuller, Melville W.—Grant. 

Fuller, T:—Memory. 

Fuller, Violet.—Christmas Eve. 

New Year, The. 

Old Year, The. 

Ring, Joyful Bells! See New Year, The. 

Fuller, W: H:—Song of the Sea, A. 

Fun and Earnest. —Lily’s Ball. 

Funk, Rev. Dr. I: K.—-Conscience in Politics. 

Go Forward to Victory. 

Furbur, Harry S., Jr.—To an ‘‘Instructor.” 

Furley, Catherine G.—Interlude, An. 

Furlong, Alice.—Dreamer, The. 

Furness, W: H:—Eternal Light. See Nightfall. 
Evening Hymn. See Nightfall. 

Nightfall. 

Remembrance of God. 


G 

G.—On a Summer’s Eve. 

G., A. R.—“ ‘Ye shall find the Babe.’ ” 

G., E. P.—My Mistake. 

G., E. R.—Solitude. 

G., M. E. W.—Old Amontillado 
G., M. H.—Nothing but Leaves. 

G., S. E.—‘‘Bide a Wee, and Dinna Fret.” 

Gaddess, Mrs. Mary L.—Bundle of Loves, A. 
Fortune-teller and Maiden. 

Japanese Parasol and Fan Drill. 

Life’s Day. 

Nursery Rhymes Drill. 

Search for Happiness, The. 

Stealing Roses. 

Gage, Mrs. Frances Dana [Barker].—Ben Fisher. 
Earnest Cry, An. 

Home Picture, A. 

Housekeeper’s Soliloquy, The. 

Mother’s Thoughts, A. • 

Rain upon the Roof, The. 

“ ‘What shall I do?’ My boy, don’t stand ask¬ 
ing.” 

Year that is to Come, The. 

Galaxy. The. —‘‘I asked the sun.” 

Gale, Martha Tyler.—Snow-flakes and Snow-drifts. 






Gale 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Gale, Norman.—Born Dumb. 

Content. 

Country Faith, The. 

Dawn and Dark. 

Dead Friend, A. 

Father Christmas. 

First Kiss, The. 

Lost Friend, The. 

Mustard and Cress. 

Priest, A. 

Song, A: “First the fine, faint dreamy motion. ” 
Song: “This peach is pink, with such a pink.” 
Song: “Wait but a little while.” 

To My Brothers. 

Gall, R:—My Only Jo and Dearie, O. 

Gallagher, W: Davis.—-August. 

Autumn, The. See Autumn in the West. 
Autumn in the West. 

Beautiful are the Mountains. 

Cardinal Bird, The. 

Laborer, The. 

Look up, Laborer! See Laborer, The. 

Galpin, G: H:—Lie for a Life, A. See Threads from 
the Woof. 

Rose of Rome, A. See Threads from the Woof. 
Threads from the Woof. 

Galt. J:—Covenanters and Charles Stuart, The. See 
Ringan Gilhaize. 

Ringan Gilhaize. 

Galvin, F,. I.—American Citizenship, its Privileges, 
Rights and Duties. 

Gambetta, Leon.—New Republic, The. 

Prussian Armistice, The. 

Gamwell, Sarah De Wolf.—What She Said. 

Gannett, W: Channing.—Aunt Phillis’s Guest. 
Consider the Lilies, how They Grow. 

Highway, The. 

In Littles. 

In Twos. 

Mary’s Cradle Song. 

Mary’s Manger-song. See Mary’s Cradle Song. 
Old Love Song, The. 

Secret Place of the Most High, The. 

Where Did It Go? 

Garabrant, Nellie M.—Dandelion. 

Garden and Forest. —Purple Beech, The. 

Use of Arbor Day, The. 

Gardener, Helen H.—Lecture by the New Male Star. 
Gardette, C: D.—Fire-fiend, The. 

Justice and Mercy. 

Gardiner, Celia E.—“But oh! ’twas hard to have him 
go.” 

Gardiner, Evelyn Gail.—With Gleaming Sail. 
Gardiner, Ruth Kimball.—Sloth, The. 

Gardner, J.—Cuba. 

Gardner, W. L.—Princess and the Rabbi, The. ■ 
Gardner, W: H:—Unknowm. 

When Love Comes Knocking. 

Garfield, Jas. Abram.—-Abraham Lincoln. See Memory 
of Abraham Lincoln, The. 

Appeal to Young Men, An. See Democratic Party 
and Public Opinion, The. 

Arlington. See Strewing Flowers on the Graves of 
Union Soldiers. 

Arlington Heights Oration. See Strewing Flowers 
on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 

Decoration Day Address. See Strewing Flowers 
on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 

Decoration Day Address at Arlington. See Strew¬ 
ing Flowers on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 
Democratic Party and Public Opinion, The. 
“Even from this brief review it is manifest that 
the nation is resolutely facing to the front.” 
See Inaugural Address. 

General George H. Thomas: His Life and Char¬ 
acter. 

General Thomas at Chickamauga. See General 
George H. Thomas: His Life and Character. 
Golden Grains. 

Graves of Union Soldiers at Arlington, The. See 
Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union 
Soldiers. 

Honest Money. 

“I am struck with the fact that Bismarck, the 
great statesman of Germany. ’ ’ 

, ”1 have seen the sea lashed into fury and tossed 
into spray.” See Nomination of John Sher¬ 
man. 

Immortality of True Patriotism. See Strewing 
Flowers on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 
Inaugural Address. 

Inspiration of Sacrifice, The. See Strewing Flow¬ 
ers on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 


Garfield, Jas. Abram (continued). 

Macaulay’s Prophecy. See Honest Money. 
Memorial Address on Gen. George H. Thomas. 
See General George H. Thomas: His Life and 
Character. 

Memory. 

Memory of Abraham Lincoln, The. 

Nomination of John Sherman. 

Oliver P. Morton. 

On the Assassination of President Lincoln. See 
Memory of Abraham Lincoln, The. 

Province of History, The. 

Public Opinion the Reliance of Our Government. 

See Revolution in Congress. 

Revolution in Congress. 

Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 
“Strong men have strong convictions.” See 
Oliver P. Morton. 

Success in Life. 

“There are several sovereignties in this country.” 
“When the rough battle of the day is done.” See 
Memory. 

“World’s history is a divine poem, Tb .” See 
Province of History, The. 

Garland, Bettie.—When My Mother Tucked Me In. 
Garland, Hamlin.—Boy Life on the Prairie. 

Do you Fear the Wind? 

Gift of Water, The. 

Gold-seekers, The. 

Greeting of the Roses, The. 

Herald Crane, The. 

In the Grass. 

Line up, Brave Boys. 

Logan at Peach Tree Creek. 

Massasauga, The. 

Meadow Lark, The. 

Pioneers. 

Sport. See Boy Life on the Prairie. 

Toil of the Trail, The. 

Tribute of Grasses, A. 

Uncle Ethan Ripley. 

Uncle Ethan Ripley’s Speculation. See Uncle 
Ethan Ripley. 

Ute Lover. The. 

Whistling Marmot, The. 

Wish, A. 

Garnet, Jasper.—Give me Back My Boy. 

Garnett, Dr. R:—Age. 

Ballad of the Boat, The. 

Didactic Poem, The. 

Fair Circassian, The. 

Highwayman’s Ghost, The. 

Island of Shadows, The. 

Lyrical Poem, The. 

Marigold. 

Mermaid of Padstow, The. 

Nix, The. 

On an Urn. 

To America. 

Garrett, E:—Unbolted Door, The. 

Garrett, H. M.—Country Cousins, The. 

Old Maid, The. 

Trusting too Far; or, Learning by Experience. 
Trying to Keep up the Appearance of a Gentle¬ 
man. 

Garrett, P.—Lesson from “Fruit of the Spirit,” A. 
Garrett, T: E.—Willie Clark. 

Garrick, D:—-On Dr. Hill’s Farce. 

Garrison, Gertrude.—Depot Incident, A. 

Tenement House Guest, A. 

Garrison, Theodosia.-—God Save the King! 

Garrison, Wendell Phillips.—Post-meridian. 

Garrison, W: Lloyd.—Abolitionism. 

“Church of the living God! in vain thy foes.” 
Free Mind, The. 

Freedom for the Mind. See Free Mind, The. 
Keynote of Abolition, The. 

Liberty. See Free Mind, The. 

Liberty for All. 

Sonnet Written in Prison. See Free Mind, 
The. 

Who are Responsible? 

Garth, Sir S:—Dispensary, The. 

Gascoigne, G:—Arraignment of a Lover, The. 
Epilogus. See Steel Glass, The. 

Lover’s Lullaby, A. See Lullaby of a Lover 
„ [.The]. 

Lullaby of a Lover [.The]. 

Piers Ploughman. See Steel Glass, The. 

Steel Glass, The. 

Strange Passion of a Lover, A. 

Swiftness of Time, The. 

Vanity of the Beautiful, The. 


454 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Gilder 


Gaskin, Lida P.—Playing School. 

“Gasper, A. ’ ’ See Willson, Arabella M. 

Gassaway, Frank H.—“Advance.” 

Bay Billy. 

Dandy lUifth, The. 

Day Old Bet was Sold, The. 

Grand Advance, The. See “Advance.” 

Pride of Battery B, The. 

Gaston, W:—-Intemperance of Party. 

Gates, Mrs. Ellen M. [Huntington],—-Beautiful Hands. 
“How many times, as through the rooms I hasten.” 
My Mother’s Hands. See Beautiful Hands. 
Vision, A. 

Gates, Merrill E:—“To the school and the college at¬ 
taches vast responsibility.” 

Twentieth Century, The. 

Gates, Minnie W.—Studious Girl, A. 

Gatty, Alfred S. Scott. See Scott-Gatty, Alfred S. 
Gauss. E. F. L.—Sore Disappointment. (TV.) 

Gautier, Thf'ophile.—Departure of the Swallows. 
Escurial, The. 

Spectre of the Rose, The. 

Gay, Ellerton.—What’s in a Name? 

Gay, J:—Acis and Galatea. 

“At setting day and rising morn.” (Wr. at.) See 
Ramsay, Allan. 

Ballad: “’Twas when the seas were roaring.” See 
What d’ye Call it. The. 

Ballad from “The What d’ye Call it,” A. See 
What d’ye Call it, The. 

Beggar’s Opera. 

Black-eyed Susan. See Sweet William’s Farewell 
to Black-eyed Susan. 

Butterfly and the Snail, The. 

Council of Horses, The. 

Epistle to the Right Hon. the Earl of Burlington. 
Fox at the Point of Death, The. 

Hare with Many Friends, The. 

“How happy could I be with either.” See Beggar’s 
Opera. 

Journey to Exeter, A. See Epistle to the Right 
Hon. the Earl of Burlington. 

Lion and the Cub, The. 

Miser and Plutus, The. 

Monday: or, the Squabble. See Shepherd’s Week, 
The. 

New Song, of New Similes, A. 

On a Lap-dog. 

Painter who Pleased Nobody and Everybody, The. 
Quidnunckis, The. 

Shepherd’s Week, The. 

Song: “O ruddier than the cherry!” See Acis and 
- Galatea. 

Sweet William’s Farewell to Black-eyed Susan. 
Thursday; or, the Spell. See Shepherd’s Week, 
The. 

Tuesday; or, The Ditty. See Shepherd’s Week, The. 
’Twas when the Seas Were Roaring. See What 
d’ye Call it, The. 

Warning, A. 

What d’ye Call it, The. 

Wine. 

Gaylord, Orrie M.—Heavenly Foundations. 

Gaylord, Willis.—Lines Written in an Album. 

Geary, Eugene.—Nathan Hale. 

Geddes, Alex.—Alexander. 

Lewie Gordon. 

Geibel, Emanuel.—To the Silent One, 

Geikie, Cunningham.—David, the Patriotic King. 

New Country Occupied, The. 

People Delivered, A. 

Gellert, Christian Furchtegott.—Amen of the Rocks, 
The. 

Widow, The. 

Gemmer, Caroline (“Gerda Fay”).—Death of Cock 
Robin and Jenny Wren, The. 

Genlis, Stephanie Felicity Ducrest de Saint-Aubin, 
Comtesse de. —True Charity. 

Gentleman’s Magazine. —Choosing a Wife by a Pipe of 
Tobacco. 

Plant Worship. 

To a Pipe of Tobacco. 

Geoghegan, Arthur G:—After Aughrim. 

Battle of Ardnocher, The. 

George, H:—American Republic: its Dangers and Re¬ 
sponsibilities, The. 

Liberty. See American Republic: its Dangers and 
Responsibilities, The. 

George, Marg. Gilman. See Davidson, Mrs. Mars. 
Gilman [George], 

Gerhardt, Paul.—Dying Savior, The. 

Give to the Wind Thy Fears. 

Joy after Sorrow. 


German, Delia R —Wood of Chancellorsville, The. 
Gerome [or Jerome], Nellie G.—Children’s Offering, The. 
Gerould, F. T.—’Mid the Roses. 

Gerry, C: F.—Bluebird, The. 

Gesnard, J. W.—Apostrophe to the Oyster, An. 
Gibbon, E:—Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. 
Description of the Ampitheatre of Titus. See De¬ 
cline and Fall of the Roman Empire. 

Gibbons, Jas., Cardinal. — Great American Republic 
a Christian State, The. See Our Christian Her¬ 
itage. 

Our Christian Heritage. 

Gibbons, Dr. T:—Eternity. 

Gibbs, R. E.—All in the Wind. 

Gibbs, R. M.—Night and Day. 

Gibson, Frances W.—Gowans under her Feet. 

Gifford, Countess of. —Love’s Language. 

Gifford, Will.—-Spelling Down. 

Gilbert, A. H.—My Lady on the Links. 

Gilbert, Mrs. Ann [Taylor],—Boy and the Sheep, 
The. 

Sorrow for Sin. See also Taylor, Ann and Jane. 
Gilbert, Frank M.—My Boy. 

Stray Sunbeam, A. 

Gilbert, Howard Worcester.—Dirge: “Of thy stream, 
Amelete, who reaches the shore.” 

Gilbert, Rosa [Mulholland], Lady. —Love and Death. 
Saint Brigid. 

Sister Mary of the Love of God. 

Song: “The silent bird is hid in the boughs.” 
Gilbert, W: Schwenck.—Annie Protheroe. 

Bumboat Woman’s Story, The. 

Captain Reece. 

Captain Reece of the Mantlepiece. See Captain 
Reece. 

Ellen McJones Aberdeen. 

Etiquette. 

Ferdinando and Elvira; or, The Gentle Pieman. 
General John. 

Gentle Alice Brown. 

Lost Mr. Blake. 

Medical Man, A. 

Mister William. 

Modest Couple, The. 

Perils of Invisibility, The. 

Pygmalion and Galatea. 

Sing for the Garish Eye. 

Story of Prince Agib, The. 

To Phoebe. 

To the Terrestrial Globe. 

Unfortunate Likeness, An. 

Yarn of the “Nancy Bell,” The. 

Gilder, Jos. B.—Parting of the Ways, The. 

Gilder, R: Watson.—“After Sorrow’s Night.” 
After-song. See New Day, The. 

“Ah, be not false.” 

At Four-score. 

At Luther’s Grave, Wittenberg. 

At the President’s Grave. 

Beethoven. 

Birds of Bethlehem, The. 

Celestial Passion, The. 

Cello, The. 

Child, A. 

Christmas H mn, A. 

Comfort of the Trees, The. 

Cradle-song. 

Credo. 

Dawn. See New Day, The. 

Dead Comrade, The. 

Dear Country Mine! 

‘Each Moment Holy Is.’ 

Emma Lazarus. 

Evening in Tyringham Valley. 

Father and Child. 

“Great Nature is an Army Gay.” 

Great Remembrance, The. 

Hast Thou Heard the Nightingale? 

Heroic Age, The. 

Holy Land. See Celestial Passion, The. 

I Count My Time by Times that I Meet Thee. See 
New Day, The. 

John George Ni colay. 

“Love Me not, Love, for that I First Loved Thee. ” 
See New Day, The. 

Madonna of Fra Lippo Lippi, A. 

Midsummer Song, A. 

Morning and Night. See Celestial Passion, The. 
Music and Words. 

My Love for Thee. See New Day, The. 

“My Love for Thee doth March like Armed Men.” 

See New Day, The. 

Napoleon. 


455 




Gilder 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Gilder, R: Watson ( continued). 

New Day, The. 

New Patriotism, The. 

Noel. 

“Not from the whole wide world I chose thee.” 

See New Day, The. 

November Child, A. 

Ode: “I am the spirit of the morning sea.” 

Of Henry George [who Died Fighting against Polit¬ 
ical Tyranny and Corruption], 

Of One who Neither Sees nor Hears. 

Oh, Love is not a Summer Mood. See New Day, 
The. 

On a Portrait of Servetus. 

On the Life-mask of Abraham Lincoln. 

One Country—One Sacrifice. 

Sheridan. 

Sherman. 

Sir Walter Scott. 

Smile of Her I Love, The. See New Day, The. 
Song: “Not from the whole wide world I chose 
thee.” See New Day, The. 

Song: “Years have flown since I knew thee first.” 
See New Day, The. 

Song of a Heathen, The. See Celestial Passion, The. 
Song of Early Autumn, A. 

Sonnet, The. 

Sower, The. See New Day, The. 

Temptation. 

There is Nothing New under the Sun. See New 
Day, The. 

To Austin Dobson. 

To the Spirit of Abraham Lincoln. 

Tower of Flame, The. 

Twelfth of December, The. 

Voice of the Pine, The. See Celestial Passion, The. 
Woman’s Thought, A. 

“Woods that Bring the Sunset Near, The.” 
Gildersleeve, Mrs. G. H.—True Life. 

Giles, H:—Cost of Liberty, The. 

Falstaff. 

Gilfillan, Rob’t.—Exile’s Song, The. 

’Tis Sair to Dream. 

Gill, Frances Tyrell.—Beneath the Wattle Boughs. 
Gill, Julia.—Christ and the Little Ones. 

Hannah, the Mother. See Christ and the Little 
Ones. 

Gill, W: M.—Umbrellas to Mend. 

Gillespie, N. H.—Elocution. 

Gillespy, Jeannette Bliss.—Angel, The. 

Forgiven (?). 

Seaward. 

Valentine, A. 

Gillett, Mrs. A. D.—Peril of the Passenger Train, The. 
Gillett, F. W.—Flag of Washington, The. 

Gillette, G: H.—Bashful Johnny. 

Gillilan, J. D.—Safety in the Rock. 

Gillilan, S. W.—Finnigin to Flannigan. 

Gillington, Alice E.—Doom-bar, The. 

Rosy Musk-mallow, The. 

Seven Whistlers, The. 

Gillington, Mary C. See Byron, Mrs. Mary C. [Gil¬ 
lington]. 

Gilman, Mrs. Caroline [Howard].—American Boy, The. 
Annie in the Graveyard. 

Child’s Wish in June (?). 

Gilman, Mrs. Charlotte [Perkins] [Stetson].—Beds of 
Fleur-de-lys, The. 

Common Inference, A. 

Conservative, A. 

Obstacle, An. 

Similar Cases. 

Wedded Bliss. 

Gjlman, H:—Brook of Lappington, The. 

Gilman, S:—Man of Expedients, The. 

Gilmore, Jas. Roberts (“Edmund Kirke”).—Darkey’s 
Counsel to the Newly Married. 

Three Days. 

Uncle Pete’s Counsel to the Newly Married. See 
Darkey’s Counsel to the Newly Married. 
Gilmore, Minnie.—Adieu. 

Life. 

Gilmore, Patrick Sarsfield.—Columbia. 

Gladden, Rev. Washington.—Baby over the Way, The. 
My Neighbor’s Baby. Nee Baby over the Way, The. 
Pastor’s Reverie, The. 

Ultima Veritas. 

Gladstone, W: Ewart.—Bulgarian Horrors. 

Empire and Liberty. 

Eulogy on John Bright, A. 

Home Rule for Ireland. 

Ireland to be Ruled by Irishmen. 

Temper and Aim of the Scholar, The. 


Glanville, Ernest.—-Little Bugler’s Alarm, The. 

Glase, Agnes E.—Three Kisses of Farewell. 
Glazebrook, Harriet A.—Lips that Touch Liquor Shall 
Never Touch Mine. 

Story of Santa Claus, A. 

Glazier, W: Belcher.—Cape-Cottage at Sunset. 
Gleason's Monthly. —Mr. Blifkin’s First Baby. 

Glen, Catherine Y.—Under the Rose. 

Glen, Irving.—No Royal Road to Victory. 

Glen, Jessie.—Fire-fiend, The. 

Glen, W:—Wae’s Me for Prince Charlie. 

Globe, The. —“Keats Took Snuff.” 

Glover, E. C.—Song of the Daisy. 

Glover, R:—Address of Leonidas. See Leonidas. 
Ballad of Admiral Hosier’s Ghost. 

Leonidas. 

Polydorus and Maron. See Leonidas. 

Gluck, Johann Christoph von.—To Death. 

“Glyndon, Howard.” See Searing, Laura Redden. 
Glynes, Ella Dietz.—Unless. 

Goddard, Julia.—Hide and Seek. 

Godwin, Parke.—Death of Lincoln, The. 

Edwin Booth. 

Homes of the People. 

Speech on the Death of President Lincoln. See 
Death of Lincoln, The. 

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von.—Beauteous Flower, 
The. See Fairest Flower, The. 

Brothers, The. 

Cavalier’s Choice, The. 

Country Life. 

Die Fischerin. See Erlking, The. 

Effect at a Distance. See Page and the Maid of 
Honor, The. 

Eloquence that Persuades. 

Erlking, The. 

Erlkonig. See Erlking, The. 

Fairest Flower, The. 

Faust. 

Fisher, The. 

“Future hides in it, The.” See Symbol, A. 

Give Me Back my Youth Again. 

Harvest Song. 

Haste not, Rest not. 

Heard are the Voices. 

Hermann and Dorothea. 

Iphigenia in Tauris. 

King of Thule, The. See Faust. 

Loved One Ever Near, The. 

Margaret’s Song in “Faust.” See Faust. 

Mignon Aspiring to Heaven. See Wilhelm Meis- 
ter’s Apprenticeship. 

Mignon’s Song from[“ Wilhelm Meister”]. See 
Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship. 

Minstrel, The. Nee Wilhelm Meister’s Apprentice¬ 
ship 

Page and the Maid of Honor, The. 

Pariah, The. 

Pink, The. 

Rest. 

Separation. See Loved One Ever Near, The. 
Seven Sleepers of Ephesus, The. 

Sincerity the Soul of Eloquence. 

Sleep. See Wanderer’s Night-song, The. 

Song of the Parcse. See Iphigenia in Tauris. 
Speech of the Erdgeist in “Faust.” See Faust. 
Sweet is the Pleasure. See Rest. 

Symbol, A. 

Thoughts from Goethe. 

True Rest. See Rest. 

Ueber alien Gipfeln. See Wanderer’s Night-song, 
The. 

Wanderer’s Night-song, The. 

“When I look around me and see how few of the 
companions of earlier years.” 

“Who ne’er his bread in sorrow ate.” See Wil¬ 
helm Meister’s Apprenticeship. 

Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship. 

Goetz, Philip Becker.—Whither. 

Going, C: B.—Schoolroom Idyl, A. 

Golden, Carmen.—My Great Mistake. 

Golden Days. —Fireman’s Prize, The. 

Several Cats. 

Golden Hours. —-Catacombs, The. 

Goldsmith, Gold win.—Monkey’s Glue, The. 

Goldsmith, Oliver.—Ballad, A: “Turn, gentle her¬ 
mit,” etc. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 

Beau Tibbs, His Character and Family. 

Better Country, The. See Traveller,' The; or, A 
Prospect of Society. 

Captivity, The. 

Death of a Mad Dog. See Vicar of Wakefield, 
The. 


456 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Gospel 


Goldsmith, Oliver (contiTiued). 

Deserted Village, The. 

Edmund Burke. See Retaliation. 

Edwin and Angelina. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 
Elegy on Madam[e] Blaize. See Elegy on the 
Glory of her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize. 

Elegy on Mrs. Mary Blaize. See Elegy on the 
Glory, &c. 

Elegy on that Glory of her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize, 
An. See Elegy on the Glory, &c. 

Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog. See Vicar of 
Wakefield, The. 

Elegy on the Glory of her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize 
[iw. Blaze], An. 

First, Best Country, The. See Traveller, The. 
“Good man suffers but to gain, A.” See Captivity, 
The. 

Great Man, A. See On the Death of the Right 
Hon. -. 

Hermit, The. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 
Home. See Traveller, The. 

Innocence Rewarded. See Vicar of Wakefield, 
The. 

Logicians Refuted, The. 

Memory. 

Miser and His Three Sons, The. See On Happi¬ 
ness of Temper. 

Mr. The. Cibber. 

Mrs. Hardcastle’s Journey. See She Stoops to 
Conquer. 

National Decay. See Deserted Village, The. 

On Happiness of Temper. 

On the Death of the Right Hon. —-. 

On Woman. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 

Parson Gray. 

Retaliation. 

Schoolmaster, The. See Deserted Village, The. 
She Stoops to Conquer. 

Stanzas on Woman. See Vicar of W T akefield, The. 
Traveller, The; or, A Prospect of Society. 

Vicar of Wakefield, The. 

Village Preacher, The. See Deserted Village, 
The. 

Village Schoolmaster, The. See Deserted Village, 
The. 

“When lovely woman stoops to folly.” See Vicar 
of Wakefield, The. 

Woman. See Vicar of Wakefield, The. 

Wretch, Condemned with Life to Part, The. See 
Captivity, The. 

Good Cheer. —Little Light, The. 

Tarrytown Romance, A. 

Trees of Corn. 

Good Housekeeping. —Choir’s W T ay of Telling It, The. 
Harvest, The. 

Message for Mama in Heaven, A. See Telegram, 
The. 

Telegram, The. 

Good, J: Mason.—Daisy, The. 

Good Times. —Little Army, The. 

Good Words. —Query, A. 

Good Words for the Young. —Why? 

Goodale, Dora Read.—Clematis. 

Clover. 

Dark the Day but Bright the Heart. 

Flight of the Heart, The. 

Grumbler, The. 

Hail, Bonny September! 

High and Low. 

“I love the fair lilies and roses so gay.” 
Invineibles, The. 

Judgments. The. 

Only a Little. 

Ripe Grain. 

Soul of Man, The. 

Twilight Fancy, A. 

Wait. 

Winter. 

Goodale, Elaine. See Eastman, Mrs. Elaine [Goodale], 
Goodchild, J: Arthur.—Parable of the Spirit, A. 
Schone Rothraut. 

Goodfellow, Mrs. E. J. H.—All Upset. 

Bird Talk. 

Books. 

Bumble Bee, The. 

Butterflies. 

Casting Bread upon the Waters. 

Catching a Whaie. 

Children Should Be Seen and not Heard. 

Country Girl, A. 

Dr. Brown. 

Dolly’s Vaccination. 

Drummer Boy, A. 


Goodfellow, Mrs. E. J. H. ( continued ). 

Early Miss Crocus. 

Frog in the Throat, A. 

Going to Washington. 

Good-night. 

Gracie’s Cake. 

Grandma’s Spectacles. 

Grandma’s Story and Mine. 

Keeping Store. 

Large Room, A. 

Lost Kitten, The. 

Lost Opportunity, The. 

Maids of Japan. 

Mamma’s Helper. 

My Carlo Talks. 

My Ride. 

My Speech. 

Nose out of Joint, A. 

Old and New Year, The. 

Old Folks. See Playing Old Folks. 

Packing the [Knowledge] Box. 

Patriotic Boy, A. 

Playing Old Folks. 

Rainbow, The. 

Sir Dandelion. 

Speech is Silver; Silence Golden. 

Taking Dolly’s Picture. 

Time Flies. 

Twilight. 

Twins. 

Two Kittens. 

Vice Versa. 

What Boys are Good for. 

Which Path? 

Wisdom’s Treasures. 

Goodhue, Isabel Seeley.—Modern Youth, A. 

Goodman, Minnie Buchanan.—Pierrot’s Valentine. 
Goodrich, Orrin.—Borrioboola Gha. 

Goodrich, S: Griswold.—Lake Superior. 

River, The. 

Goodwin, Grace Duffield.—Eastern Legend, An. 
Goodwin, Helen Angell.—Christmas Guest, The. 
Death’s Blunder. 

Sick Rooster. The. 

Goodwin, Hopestill.—“Dear Love, I sometimes think 
how it would be.” 

Golden Rod, The. 

May Flower, The. 

Goodwin, J. Cheever.—Awkward. 

Beggar and the King, The. 

Goodwin, Jas.—Her Satin Fan. 

Goodwin, Mrs. Mary.— Is it You? 

Goodwin, Mrs. Maud [Wilder], See Bellamy. Mrs. 
Blanche [Wilder], and Goodwin, Mrs. Maud 
[Wilder], 

Goodwin. Myra A.—First Christmas Tree, The. 
Lightkeeper’s Daughter, The. 

Gordon, Mrs. -.—Hours, The. 

Gordon. Adam Lindsay.—From the Wreck. 

How we Beat the Favorite. 

Lay Me Low. See Valedictory. 

Romance of Britomarte, The. 

Sick Stock-rider. The. 

Valedictory. 

Gordon, Adoniram Judson.—Fidelity to God is Fidelity 
to Man. 

Gordon. Armistead Churchill.—Ebo. 

Kree. 

Kyarlina Jim. 

Roses of Memory. 

Uncle Newton—A Pinchtown Pauper 
Gordon, Rev. C: W. [“Ralph Connor”].—Black Rock. 
Man from Glengarry, The. 

Ride for Life, The. See Man from Glengarry, The. 
Winners by their Own Lengths. See Black Rock. 
Gordon, G: A.—Lessons from the Washington Centen¬ 
nial. 

Gordon, Grace.—Mattie’s Wants and Wishes. 

Gordon, H. E.—House not Made with Hands, The. 
Gordon, Jas. Lindsay.—At the Concert. 

General Wheeler at Santiago. 

Remembered. 

Gordon, Jessie.—Only. 

Gordon, J: B.—Gettysburg; A Mecca for the Blue and 
Gray. 

Gordon, J: H.—When the Swallows. 

Gore. Jas. F.—Plato and Diogenes. 

Gormley, Jane E.—Persevere. 

Gormley, J: J.—Old Pipe of Mine. 

"Gosling, Fritz.”—Gosling’s Wife Snores. 

Gospel Expositor. —Little Maid’s “Amen,” A. 

Story of Faith, The. See Little Maid’s “Amen.” 
A. 


457 








Gosse 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Gosse, Edmund.—Anne Clough. 

Ballade to Banville. 

Browning’s First Manuscript. See Robert Brown¬ 
ing Personalia. 

Charcoal-burner, The. 

Dante Gabriel Rossetti. 

De Rosis Hibernis. 

Death of Arnkel, The. 

Hans Christian Andersen. 

Impression. 

John Henry Newman. 

Leconte de Lisle. 

Loss of the Eurydice, The. 

Love and Books. 

Love, the Musician. (TV.) 

Lying in the Grass. 

On a Lute Found in a Sarcophagus. 

Perfume. 

Pipe-player, The. 

Return of the Swallows, The. 

Revelation. 

Robert Browning Personalia. 

Song for Music. 

Song for the Lute. 

Sultan of My Books, The. 

Theocritus. 

To Jenny Lind. 

Voice of D. G. R., The. 

William Blake. 

With a Copy of Herrick. 

Gotthold, Arthur F.—Grind’s Dream, The. 

Gough, Jacob.—Plea for “Castles in the Air,” A. 
Gough, J: B.—Account of a Negro Sermon. 

Apostrophe to Cold Water. See Apostrophe to 
Water. 

Apostrophe to Water. (At. also to A. W. Arring¬ 
ton and to Paul Denton.) 

Appeal for Prohibition, An. 

Brother Watkins[—Ah!]. 

Buying Gape Seed. 

Cause of Temperance, The. 

Drunkards not All Brutes. 

Dying Boy, The. 

Gape-seed. (At. also to G: W. Bungay.) See Buy¬ 
ing Gape Seed. 

Glass of Cold Water, A. See Apostrophe to Water. 
Heroes. 

How to Break the Chain. 

“Intemperance wipes out God’s image and stamps 
it with the counterfeit die of the devil.” 

John Maynard, the Hero-pilot. See Pilot, The. 
Missing Ship, The. 

Need for a Prohibition Party, The. 

“Oh, if every one could put his arms round one 
other one.” 

Pilot, The[—a Thrilling Incident]. 

Poor Little Boy’s Hymn, The. 

Power of Habit, The. 

Story of John Maynard. See Pilot, The. 

Tribute to Water, A. See Apostrophe to Water. 
Water. See Apostrophe to Water. 

Water and Rum. 

“Water! look at it, ye thirsty ones.” See Apos¬ 
trophe to Water. 

“We must fight this temperance battle out.” 
What is a Minority? 

Word to Young Men, A. 

Gould, B. A., Jr.—Candida. 

Drinking Song. 

Elsinore. 

Gould, Cornelia Brownell.—Dive, The. 

Gould, Mrs. Hannah Frances [Flagg],—Aurora Borealis, 
The. 

Crocus’s Soliloquy, The. 

Frost, The. 

Ground Laurel, The. 

It Snows. 

Jack Frost. See Frost, The. 

Name in the Sand, A. (At. also to G: D. Prentiss.) 
Peach Blossoms. 

Pebble and the Acorn, The. 

Storm in the Forest, The. 

Wild Violet, The. 

Winds, The. 

Gould, Sabine Baring. See Baring-Gotxld. Sabine. 
Gould, T. H.—-Rhapsody, A. 

Gouraud, G: Fauvel.—Little Nipper an’ ’is Ma, The. 
Gow, Minnie [or Winnie] M.—Baby in Church. 

Gowdy, J:—To a Friend. 

Gower, J:—Alexander and the Robber. See Confessio 
Amantis, The. 

Cinkante Balades, Opening of the thirtieth of. 
Confessio Amantis, The. 


Gower, J: (continued). 

Nebuchadnezzar. 

Opening of the Original Prologue to the “Confessio 
Amantis.” 

Story of Constance, The. See Confessio Amantis, 
The. 

Grady, H: W.—Against Centralization. 

Appeal for Temperance. 

At the Boston Banquet, 

Before the Bay State Club. 

Bob. Nee “Bob.” How an Old Man “Came Home.” 
“Bob.” Flow an Old Man “Came Home.” 

Business Side of Prohibition, The. See Prohibi¬ 
tion in Atlanta. 

Centralization in the United States. See Against 
Centralization. 

Confederate Soldier, The. See New South, The. 
Farmer and the Cities, The. 

Future of the South, The. See South and her 
Problems, The. 

Home, The. See Before the Bay State Club. 
Home in the Government, The. See Farmer and 
the Cities, The. 

Homes of the People, The. See Before the Bay 
State Club. 

Lincoln as Cavalier and Puritan. Nee New South, 
The. 

Love and Loyalty of the Negro. See At the Bos¬ 
ton Banquet. 

Love of Home, The. See Against Centralization. 
Negro Problem, The. See At the Boston Banquet. 
New South, The. 

New South, The. See also South and her Prob¬ 
lems, The. 

Old and the New South, The. See New South, The. 
Opportunities of the Scholar. See Against Cen¬ 
tralization. 

Prohibition a Blessing to the Poor. See Prohibi¬ 
tion in Atlanta. 

Prohibition in Atlanta. 

Regard for the Negro Race. See At the Boston 
Banquet. 

Scene on the Battlefield, A. See South and her 
Problems, The. 

South and her Problems, The. 

Southern Negro, The. See At the Boston Banquet. 
Southern Soldier, The. See New South, The. 
University the Training Camp of the Future, The. 
See Against Centralization, 

Graff, G: R.—Napoleon at the Pyramids. 

Graham, Arthur.—King Christmas. 

Woman’s “No,” A. 

Graham, G: C.—Aspirant for Fame, An. 

Astonishing the Natives. 

Book-peddler, The. 

Burglar Alarm, The. 

Critics, The. 

Doctor by Proxy, A. 

Elocution Class, The. 

Empty House, The. 

Expected Visitors, The. 

Extremes Meet. 

Girl of the Period, The. 

Going! Going! Gone! 

Indian Raid, An. 

Love and Stratagem. 

Missed His Chance. 

New Boy, The. 

Nightmare of India, A. 

Photograph Gallery, The. 

Picnic Party, The. 

Strategy. 

Turning the Tables. 

Which was the Hero? 

Graham, R. P.—Spring-time. See ’Tis Spring-time. 
’Tis Sprirtg-time. 

Graham, Rob’t [Cunninghame], of Gartmore. — If 
Doughty Deeds [My Lady Please], 

Tell me How to Woo Thee. See If Doughty 
Deeds My Lady Please. 

To His Lady. See If Doughty Deeds My Lady 
Please. 

Graham, Sarah M.—New Woman Considered, The. 
Grahame, Jas.—Sabbath, The. 

Seasons, The. (?) 

Graham’s Magazine. — Cho-Che-Bang and Chil-Chil- 
Bloo. 

“Grange, Olrig.”—“But all through life I see a cross.” 
Granniss, Anna Jane.—My Guest. 

Saints’ Messenger, The. 

Grant, Anne.—On a Sprig of Heath. 

Grant, C:—Little Willie. 

Grant, P:—When the Bloom is on the Heather. 

458 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Greene 


Grant, Rob’t.—Boat Race, The [or A], See Jack Hall. 
Jack Hall; or, The School Days of an American 
Boy. 

Jack Hall's Boat-race. See Jack Hall. 

Popping the Question. 

Grant ,StVRob’t.—Hymn: “When gathering clouds,’’etc. 
Litany. 

When Gathering Clouds around I View. See 
Hymn: "When,” etc. 

Grant, Susan.—June. 

Stupid Grown Ups, The. 

Grant, Ulysses Simpson.—General Grant to the Army 
—1865. 

Speech at Hamburg, July 4. 

What Saved the Union. See Speech at Hamburg, 
July 4. 

Grattan, H:—Anti-Union Speeches. 

Appeal for Ireland. 

Catholic Question, The, Feb. 22, 1793. 

Catholic Question, The, May 13, 1805. 

Catholic Question, The, May 31, 1811. 

Catholic Question. The, April 23, 1812. 

Character of Mr. Pitt. ( Wr. at. to W: Robertson.) 
Declaration of Irish Rights. 

Disqualification of Roman Catholics. See Cath¬ 
olic Question, The, Feb. 22, 1793. 

First Earl of Chatham, The. See Character of 
Mr. Pitt. 

Heaven Fights on the Side of a Great Principle. 
Invective against [Mr.] Corry. 

Invective against Mr. Flood. See Philippic Against 
Flood. 

National Gratitude. See Declaration of Irish 
Rights. 

Philippic against Flood, Oct. 28, 1783. 

Religion Independent of Government. See Cath¬ 
olic Question, The, May 31. 1811. 

Reply to Flood. See Philippic against Flood. 
Reply to Mr. Corry. See Invective against 
Corry. 

Reply to Mr. Flood. See Philippic against Flood. 
Sectarian Tyranny, 1812. See Catholic Question, 
The, April 23, 1812. 

Union with Great Britain. See Anti-Union 
Speeches. 

Wrongs of Ireland. See Declaration of Irish 
Rights. 

Graves, Alfred Perceval.—Battle of the Boyne, The. 
(Arr .) See Boyne Water, The.—Anon. 
Changing Her Mind. 

Fan Fitzgerl. 

Father O’Flynn. 

Fortune my Foe. 

Girl with the Cows, The. 

Herring is King. 

Irish Lullaby. 

Irish Spinning-wheel, The. 

Johnny Cox. 

Limerick Lasses, The. 

Ould Doctor [or Docther] Mack. 

Rose of Kenmare, The. 

Sailor Girl, The. 

Song of the Exmoor Hunt, A. 

Song of the Ghost, The. 

White Blossom’s off the Bog, The. 

Wreck of the Aideen, The. 

Graves, Clo.—Broken Sonnet, A. 

Graves, Will L.—Chansonette. 

Sic Semper. 

Gray, Alice.—Noblest Hero, The. 

Gray, Arthur I.—“Free Puff, A.” 

Gray, Barry. See Coffin, Rob’t Barky. 

Gray, Barton.—At your Gate. 

Drifting Away. 

Gray, D:—Cross of Gold, The. 

Dear Old Toiling One, The. 

Die Down, O Dismal Day. See Sonnet: "Die 
down,” &c. 

Divided. 

Golden Wedding, The. 

Homesick. 

I Die, Being Young. 

John Milton. See Progress of Poesy, The. 

My Epitaph. 

O Winter! Wilt Thou Never Go? 

On Lebanon. 

Sonnet: "Die down,” etc. 

Gray, Eleanor.—“We walk alone through all life’s 
various ways.” 

Gray, Elliot.—Triolets: To Her Whom I Call Rose. 
Gray, H: D:—Record of a Life, The. 

Gray, Mrs. Jane L.—Morn. 

Gray, Maxwell. See Tuttiett, Miss M. G. 


Gray, T:—Bard, The. 

Curse upon Edward, The. See Bard, The. 

Elegy in a Country Churchyard. See Elegy 
Written in a Country Churchyard. 

Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. 

Eton College. See On a Distant Prospect of Eton 
College. 

Fatal Sisters. The. 

Hymn to Adversity. 

Impromptu, on Lord Holland’s Seat at Kings- 
gate. 

Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College. See 
On a Distant Prospect of Eton College. 

Ode on the Pleasure Arising from Vicissitude. 

Ode: On the Spring. 

On a Distant Prospect of Eton College. 

On a Favorite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold¬ 
fishes. See On the Death of a Favorite Cat, 
etc. 

On the Death of a Favorite Cat [Drowned in a Tub 
of Goldfishes—C.]. 

On the Spring. See Ode: On the Spring. 
Progress of Poesy, The. 

Sketch of His Own Character. 

Sonnet on the Death of Mr. Richard West. 
Spring. See Ode on the Pleasure arising from 
Vicissitude. 

Spring. See also Ode: On the Spring. 
“Thoughtless world to majesty may bow, The.” 
Greeley, Horace.—Ambition. 

Self-sacrificing Ambition. See Ambition. 
Reformer. The. 

Green, Anna Katha. See Rohlfs, Mrs. Anna Katha. 
[Green]. 

Green, Annie D. ("Marian Douglas”). See Robinson, 
Mrs. Annie Douglas [Green]. 

Green, Arthur Leslie.—Life’s Greeting. 

Green, Coroebus.—Ballad of Cassandra Brown, The. 
Green, J: R :—Death of Elizabeth, The. 

Green, Matthew.—On Barclay’s Apology for the 
Quakers. 

Spleen, The. 

Voyage of Life, The. See Spleen, The. 

Green, R. M.—Valentine, A. 

Green, S: Abbott.—Old State House, Boston (Rededi¬ 
cated, 1882), The. 

Greenaway, Kate.—Lark, Flower, Sun, and Shower. 
Greene, Albert Gorton.—Baron’s Last Banquet, The. 
Old Grimes. 

Greene, Belle C.—Our Weddin’-day. 

Greene, Clara Marcelle.—A la Mode. 

Greene, G: Arthur.—Art Lough. 

Lines: “Surely a Voice hath called her to the deep.” 
On Great, Sugarloaf. 

Return, The. 

Greene, Homer.—Bobby Shaftoe. 

De Quincey’s Deed. 

My Daughter Louise. 

What My Lover Said. 

Greene, Rob’t.—Content. See Farewell to Follie. 
Contentment. See Farewell to Follie. 

“Cupid abroad was dated in the night.” See Son¬ 
net: “Cupid,” etc. 

Cupid’s Ingratitude. See Sonnet: “Cupid,” etc. 
Description of the Shepherd and His Wife, The. 

See Mourning Garment, The. 

Doron’s Description of Samela. See Menaphon. 
Doron’s Eclogue Joined with Carmela’s. See 
Menaphon. 

Doron’s Jig. See Menaphon. 

Farewell to Follie. 

Fawnia. See Praise of Fawnia, The. 

Hero and Leander. 

Infida’s Song. See Never too Late. 

Menaphon. 

Menaphon’s Roundelay. See Menaphon. 
Menaphon’s Song. See Menaphon. 

Mourning Garment, The. 

Never too Late. 

Orpharion, The. 

Orpheus’ Song. See Orpharion, The. 

Palmer’s Ode, The. See Never too Late. 
Pandosto. See Praise of Fawnia, The. 

Philomela, the Lady Fitzwater’s Nightingale. 
Philomela’s Ode[ that she Sung in her Arbour—C.]. 
See Philomela, the Lady Fitzwater’s Nightin¬ 
gale ' 

Philomela’s Second Ode. See Philomela, the Lady 
Fitzwater’s Nightingale. 

Praise of Fawnia, The. 

Samela. See Menaphon. 

Sephestia’s Lullaby. See Menaphon. ,, 
Sephestia’s Song to her Child. See Menaphon. 


459 





Greene 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Greene, Rob’t ( continued ). 

Shepherd and the King, The. See Mourning Gar¬ 
ment, The. 

Shepherd’s Wife’s Song, The. See Mourning Gar¬ 
ment, The. 

Song: “Sweet are the thoughts that savour of con¬ 
tent.” See Farewell to Follie. 

Sonnet: “Cupid abroad was 'lated in the night.” 
Sweet Content. See Farewell to Follie. 

Weep not, My Wanton. See Menaphon. 

Greene, Roy Farrell.—In the Choir. 

My Sister has a Beau. 

Post-nuptial Reverie, A. 

Greene, Mrs. Sarah Pratt [McLean],—Cape Cod Folks. 
De Massa ob de Sheepfol’. 

De Sheepfol’. See De Massa ob de Sheepfol’. 
Grandma Keeler gets Grandpa Keeler Ready for 
Sunday School. See Cape Cod Folks. 

Hoss. 

Lamp, The. 

Lost Sheep, The. See De Massa ob de Sheepfol’. 
Greenhalge, F. T.—Age of Miles Standish, The. 
Greenleaf, Mrs. J. T.—Mistake, A. 

Greenleaf, Lawrence M.—Temple of Living Masons, 
The. 

Greenleaf, Thorpe. “Again we lift the veil amid our 
tears.” 

Greenough, Emma P.—Chalcedony. 

Greenslet, Ferris.—Chappie’s Lament. 

On the Weather. 

Whan Gladys Plays. 

Greenwell, Dora.—Christmas Morning. 

Dying Child, The. 

Good-night, Good-by. 

Home. 

Little Girl’s Lament, The. 

“Should I not I.ove My Flowers?” 

Song of Farewell, A. 

Story by the Fire, A. 

To Christina Rossetti. 

“Greenwood, Grace.” See Lippincott, Mrs. Sara 
Jane [Clarke], 

Greg, Walter Wilson.—On the Tomb of Guidarello 
Guidarelli at Ravenna. 

Gregg, Helen A.—Telephone Conversation. A. 

Gregg, Lucinda J.—Boston Grasshopper, The. 

Gregg, Rob’t Etheridge.—Love and the Sea. 

Gregory, C: N.—Two Men. 

Gregory, Sue.—Three Leaves from a Boy’s Diary. 
Gregory the Great. See St. Gregory the Great. 
Gregory, Warren Fenno.—Broken Banjo, The. 

Love’s Roses. 

Gregson, ,1: Stanley.—Virginia Tobacco. (At.) 
Greville, A:—Sweetheart. 

Greville, Fanny.—Prayer for Indifference. 

Greville, Fulke. See Brooke, Lord. 

Grevstad, Nickolay.—Nansen. 

Grey, C:, second Earl. —Necessity of Reform in Parlia¬ 
ment. 

Grey, Ethel.—She is so Pretty, f Tr.) 

Grey, Hamilton.—And the Hammock Swung On. 

Grey, Lilian.—His Riches. 

Griffin, B. F.—Springtime. 

Griffin, Gerald.—Bridal of Malahide, The. 

C6ad, Mile F&ilte, Elim! See Invasion, The. 

Eileen Aroon. 

Gile Machree. 

God’s Love. 

Invasion, The. 

Nocturne. 

Place in Thy Memory, A. See Song: “A place,” 
etc. 

Scene in an Irish School. 

Sister of Charity, The. 

Song: “A place in thy memory, dearest.” 
“There’s not a flower that decks the vale.” See 
God’s Love. 

Wake of the Absent, The. 

Griffin, W. M.—Pat’s Correspondence. 

Griffith, B. L. C.—Afternoon Tea. An. 

Between the Acts. 

Cloudy Day, A. 

Darling Jennie. 

For Her Sake. 

F orget-me-nots. 

His First Case 1 

His Wedding Morn. 

In Imminent Peril. 

Pro Tem. 

Slight Miscalculation, A. 

Soldier’s Return, The. 

Wanted, a Valet. 

Where was I? 


Griffith, E. M— Old Cradle, The. 

Griffith, G: Bancroft.—Our Fallen Heroes. 

Griffiths, Charlotte M.—Wedding Bells. 

Grigg, Jos.—“Ashamed of Me.” 

Griggs, J: W.—Ideal Lawyer, The. 

Grimald, N:—True Love, A. 

Grimke, T: Smith.—Duty of Literary Men to America. 
Duty of Literary Men to Their Country. See 
Duty of Literary Men to America. 

Our Country. See Duty of Literary Men to America. 
Sword, The. 

Grimshaw, W:—Stamp Act, The. 

Grinfield, T:—-“Oh, how kindly hast Thou led me.” 
Gris, -—.—Hans von Speigel’s Fourth of July Ora¬ 

tion. 

Grisham, G: Edgar.—Give Me Rest. 

Grissem, A:—Artist, The. 

Ballade of Forgotten Loves. 

Griswold, Arthur Miner (“Our Fat Contributor”). 
Dream of the “Fat Contributor.” 

“Fat Contributor” on Insurance Agents, The. 
Showing off an Elocutionist. 

Snyder’s Nose. 

Griswold, Carolina.—Beautiful Snow, The. 

Griswold, Eliz. M.—Freedom’s Natal Day. 

Griswold, Mrs. Hattie [Tyng];—“Birkenhead,” The. 
Gwendolen. 

Under the Daisies. 

Groser, W. H.—Trees of the Bible. 

Grossmith, G:—He Told Me So. 

Grosvenor, Edwin A.—Andronike. (Tr.) 

Last Night of Misolonghi. See Andronike. 
Grosvenor, Gilbert H.—Russia the Enigma of Europe. 
Grosvenor, Mary H.—Thanksgiving Guest, The. 

Grove, Helen W.— Grammar Lesson, A. 

Grover, Edwin Osgood.—Banquet Song, A. 

Summer Girl, The. 

Gruchy, Augusta de.—At the Dance. 

Love is a Tree. 

Grundy, Sidney.—Clock at Berne, The. 

Guild, Thatcher H.—My Rose and Hers. 

Guiney, Louise Imogen.—Florentin. 

Footnote to a Famous Lyric. 

In Leinster. See Two Irish Peasant Songs. 
London. 

M. A., 1822-1888. 

Martyr’s Memorial. 

Ode for a Master Mariner Ashore 
Of Joan’s Youth. 

On First Entering Westminster Abbey. See Lon¬ 
don. 

Pax Paganica. See M. A., 1822-1888. 

Provider, The. 

Rings, The. 

Sanctuary. 

Song in Leinster. See Two Irish Peasant Songs. 
Summum Bonum. 

Talisman, A. 

Tarpeia. 

Two Irish Peasant Songs. 

Valse Jeune. 

Wild Ride, The. 

Guiterman, A.—Call to the Colors, The. 

Gummere, Fs. Barton.—John Bright. 

Gundry, Arthur W.—My Cigar. 

Gunnison, E. Norman.—Betty Lee. 

Old Huldah. 

Women of Marblehead, The. See Old Huldah. 
Gunsaulus, Rev. Dr. Frank Wakeley.—Centennial 
Speech. 

Grant. 

Gurley, Rev. P. D.—Religious Character of President 
Lincoln, The. 

Gurney, Archer.—Come, Ye Lofty. 

Gustavus Vasa.—Gustavus Vasa to the Dalecarlians. 

(Af.) See Lefevue, Pierre F. 

Gusun, Mrs. -.—Myself. 

Guthrie, Fs. Anstey (“F. Anstey”).—Burglar Bill. 
Obstructive Hat in the Pit, The. 

Wooing of the Lady Amabel. 

Wreck of the Steamship “Puffin,” The. 

Guthrie, T:—Kneeling at the Threshold. 

Gwynn, Stephen L.—Mater Severa. 

Out in the Dark. 

Gyles, Althea.—Sympathy. 


H 

H.—Message, A. 

Pure and True and Tender. 
H., B. O.—Evidence. 

H., C.—Her Answer. 


t 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Hallam 


H., C. F.—Our Wrongs. 

H., E.—George Nidiver. 

H., E. A.—Birch-tree, The. 

H., E. S.—Chimney-sweep, The. 

Nobly Born, The. 

Wayfarers. 

Wood-fire, The. 

H., F. B.—Rose’s Plaint, The. 

H., F. H.— Man without a Country, The. 

“H., H.” See Jackson, Mrs. Helen [HuntJ. 

H., H. C—Two Ways of Life. 

H., H. F.—To the Cigarette Girl. 

H., H. M—Not Blind. 

H., J.—Acrostic. 

H., L. L.—Advice. 

H., M. J.—St. Nicholas. 

War Prayer. 

H., P.—Li’l Pickaninny Coon. 

H., R.—Firelight. 

H., R. D.—Lullaby. 

H., W. J.—College Rowing-song, A. 

Habberton, J:—Budge’s Version of the Flood. See 
Helen’s Babies. 

Evening with Helen’s Babies, An. See Helen’s 
Babies. 

Helen’s Babies. 

Ideal Citizen, The. 

“Jefful, The.” See Just One Day. 

Just One Day. 

Habington, W:—Against Them Who Lay Unchastity 
to the Sex of Women. See Castara. 

Castara. 

Cogitabo pro Peccato Meo. See Castara. 
Description of Castara [,The]. See Castara. 

Night. See Castara. 

Nox Nocti Indicat Scientiam. See Castara. 
Reward of Innocent Love, The. See Castara. 

To Castara, in a Trance. See Castara. 

To Castara. Of True Delight. See Castara. 

To Castara: The Reward of Innocent Love. See 
Castara. 

To Castara, upon the Death of a Lady. See Cas¬ 
tara. 

To Cupid, upon a Dimple in Castara’s Cheek. See 
Castara. 

To the Moment Last Past. See Castara. 

To Roses in the Bosom of Castara. See Castara. 
We Saw, and Woo’d Each Other’s Eyes. See 

I'q af a ro 

Hackley, R—Po’ Little Jude. 

Hadley, Lizzie M.—About the Size of It. 

Bug-a-boo, The. 

Christmas Folk and Children. 

Christmas Exercise, A. 

Cities of the Bible. 

Easter Exercise. 

From the Old World to the New. 

His Mother’s Cooking. 

Historical Trees. 

Just Like a Man. See His Mother’s Cooking. 
Kittens and Babies. 

Laurel Wreath, The. 

Months, The. 

Months and Holidays, The. See Months, The. 
New Year’s Exercise. 

Our Country’s Flag. 

Resurrexit. 

Star Exercise. 

Story of Thanksgiving, The. 

Ten Commandments, The. 

Thanksgiving Exercise. 

Vacation. 

Which One Was Kept? See Kittens and Babies. 
Hageman, Miller.—Birds’ Convention, The. 

Cobra, The. 

Little White Angel of Connemaugh, The. 

Periton’s Ride. 

Skylark, The. 

Hahn, C: C.—Mater Dolorosa. 

Monk’s Prayer, The. 

Sweet Peace is Born. 

Three Voices, The. 

Wait On. 

Hake, T: Gordon.—Old Souls. 

Our Book-shelves. 

Sibyl, The. 

Hale, E: Everett.—Alma Mater’s Roll. 

Dr. Hale on Emerson. 

Lamentable Ballad of the Bloody Brook, The. 
Man without a Country, The. 

My Double and how He Undid Me. 

New England’s Chevy Chase. 

Omnipresence. See Under Laurels and Maples. 


Hale, E: Everett (continued). 

Patriotic Words for the Young. 

Susan’s Escort. 

Under Laurels and Maples. 

Hale, H. D.—Semper Idem. 

Hale, Mary P.—God Made Them for Me. 

Hale, Sir Matthew.—“Be careful that you do not com¬ 
mend yourself.” 

Well-spent Sunday, The. 

Hale, Mrs. Sarah Josepha [Buell],—Alice Ray. 

Books (?). 

It Snows. 

Mary’s Lamb. 

Teachings of Nature (?). 

Watcher, The. 

Haliburton, Hugh (?).—Gucom and the Back-log. 

Talking Latin. 

Halifax, Jean.—Daisy Drill. 

Santa Claus’s Reception. 

Halket, G:—Logie o’ Buchan. 

Hall,-.—Enthusiasm. 

Mike Hooter’s Bear Story. 

Hall, Abby Mary.—Rose’s Mite, The. 

Hall, Anne.—Arbutus. 

Hall, Arthur Dudley.—Sinking of the Merrimac, 
The. 

Hall, Arthur Howard.—Where Columbia Stands. 

Hall, C: W.—Prairie Fire, The. 

Hall, Christopher Newman,—My Times are in Thy 
Hand 

Hall, E. L.—Day’s Oration is in Flowers, The. 

Hall, Eliza Calvert.—Enlisted. 

International Episode, An. 

Lesson in Mythology, A. 

Modern Psyche, A. 

Sally Ann’s Experience. 

Hall, Eugene J.—Annie Pickens. 

Big Ben Bolton. 

Debating Society, The. 

Drunkard’s Daughter, The. 

Engineer’s Story, The. 

Fourth of July at Ripton. 

Fritz’ Courtship. 

Going for the Cows. 

Highway Cow, The 
“Jesus, Lover of My Soul.” 

Kate Shelly. 

King and the Child, The. 

“Little Jack.” 

Lost Steamer, The. See Shady Side of Life, The. 
Old Clock in the Corner, The. 

Only a Chicken. 

Ride of Death, The. 

Shady Side of Life, The. 

Story of Little Moses, The. 

Victoria Grey. 

Hall, Fannie L.—Robin’s Message. 

Hall, Mrs. Florence [Howel.—May Day—a Moving 
Drama; 

Hall, Mrs. G. S.—Slight Misunderstanding. A. 

Hall, Gertrude.—Angels. 

Blind-man’s-buff. 

Dust, The. 

Mrs. Golightly. 

My Old Counselor. 

Hall, J. L. ( Tr.) Beowulf. 

Grendel’s Mother. See Beowulf. 

Hall, J. M. W.—Pilgrim’s Idea of Home, The. 

Hall. Rt. Rev Jos.—Advice to Marry Betimes. 
Coxcomb. A. 

Deserted Mansion. A 
Domestic Tutor’s Position, The. 

Golden Age, The. 

Hollow Hospitality. 

Impecunious Fop, The. 

On Simony. 

Hall, L. V.—Echo. 

Hall, Mrs. Louisa Jane [Park].—Growing Old. 

Lord’s Prayer, The. 

Hall, Rev. Newman.—"Coming to Jesus is the desire 
of the heart after Him.” 

Dignity in Labor. 

Dignity of Labor, The. 

Great Britain and America. 

Multitude of Littles, The. 

Hall, Newton M.—Shadow Ships. 

Hall, Rob’t.—Apostrophe to the Volunteers, The. 

Farewell to Departing Volunteers, A. See Apos¬ 
trophe to the Volunteers, The. 

Hall, Susan.—Vacation Fragment, A. 

Hall, Tom.—Bachelor’s Views, A. 

My Cigarette. 

Hallam, Arthur H:—Written in Edinburgh. 


461 





Halleck 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Halleck, Fitz-Greene.—Alnwick Castle. 

Burns. (To a Rose Brought from near Alloway 
Kirk in Ayrshire.) 

Fanny. 

Field of the Grounded Arms, The. 

Fortune. See Fanny. 

Green be the Turf. See On the Death of Joseph 
Rodman Drake. 

Joseph Rodman Drake. See On the Death of 
Joseph Rodman Drake. 

Marco Bozzaris. 

On the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake. 

Patriot’s Death, The. See Marco Bozzaris. 

Red Jacket. 

“There is an evening twilight of the heart.” See 
Twilight. 

To a Friend. See On the Death of Joseph Rod- 
man Drake. 

To a Portrait of Red Jacket. See Red Jacket. 

To William Cullen Bryant. 

Twilight. 

Weehawken and the New York Bay. See Fanny 
Halleck, Fitz-Greene, and Drake, Jos. Rodman (“The 
Croakers”).—Ode to Fortune. 

Hallmark, Harrydale.—Story the Doctor Told, The. 
Hallock, B.—Mrs. Hemans. 

Halloran, H:—In Memoriam Prince Leopold. 

Wishes. 

Hall’s Journal of Health. —Ideal, The. 

Halm, Frd’k.—Ingomar, the Barbarian. 

Halm, Karl von (?).—Question, A. 

Halpine, Col. C: Graham ("Miles O’Reilly”).—Canteen, 
The. 

Dolce Far Niente. 

Epigram to a Young Lady who Asked for his 
Name in her Album. 

Feminine Arithmetic. 

Formal Call, The. See Quakerdom. 

Irish Astronomy. 

Janette’s Hair. 

Last Resort, The. 

Loyal Legion, The. 

Mushroom Hunt, The. 

Poem Read at the Founding of Gettysburg Monu¬ 
ment. 

Quakerdom. 

Sambo’s Right to the Kilt. 

Song of Sherman’s Army, The. 

Song of the Soldiers. 

Trooper to his Mare, The. 

Halse, G:—Death’s Choice. 

Halsey, Rev. Leroy Jones.—Sublimity of the Bible. 
Halsey, Lewis.—Arbor Day. 

Ham, Marion Franklin.—Bob White. 

Edgar W. Nye. 

Eugene Field. 

Soarin’ o’ the Eagle, The. 

Hamberlin, L. R.—Flossie. 

Hamersley, J. Hooker.—Yellow Roses. 

Hamerton, Philip Gilbert.—Sanyassi, The. 

Wild Huntsmen, The. 

Hamilton, Dr. -.—Literary Attractions of the Bible. 

Hamilton, Alex.—American Constitution, The. See 
Speech on the Compromises of the Constitu¬ 
tion. 

Constitution of the United States. See Speech on 
the Compromises of the Constitution. 

General Government and the States, The. See 
Speech on the Compromises of the Constitution. 
On the Federal Constitution. See Speech on the 
Compromises of the Constitution. 

Speech on the Compromises of the Constitution. 
Hamilton, Anna E.—Christ’s Giving. 

Sympathy. 

Hamilton, Edwin.—Chimpanzor and the Chimpanzee, 
The. 

Hamilton, Mrs. Eliz.—My Ain Fireside. 

Hamilton, Eugene Lee. See Lee-Hamilton. Edgene. 
Hamilton, F. E. E.—Dancing the Minuet. 

Hamilton, Gail. See Dodge, Mart Abbt. 

Hamilton, Jas.—Access to God. 

Hamilton, J: Alan.—Confession and Avoidance. 

Love’s Disguise. 

Three Triolets. 

Hamilton, Rev. J: W:—One of the Common People. 
Hamilton, Kate W.—Which General? 

Hamilton Literary Monthly.- —Ubique. 

Hamilton, Pierce Stevens.—Heroine of St. John, The. 
Hamilton, Sydney.—Removal. The. 

Hamilton, W:—Braes of Yarrow, The. 

Hamilton, W: R.—Field Battery, A. 

Hamilton-King, H. E.— Ballad of the Midnight Sun, 
The. 


Hamp, Sidford Frd’k.—Friar Tuck. 

Hancock, J:—Boston Massacre, The. 

Hancock, Sallie J.—-Response to Beautiful Snow, A. 
Handford, T: W. (?)—Bessie Bo Peep of Engle Steepe. 
Easter Song, An. 

Leaves from Fatherland. 

On Grandpapa’s Knee. 

Handy, Mrs. M. P.—Only a Little Thing. 

Hangford, G. W.—Speak Gently. (A<.) See Bates, D: 
Hanks, Annie D.—Example. 

Hanmer, J:, Lord .—Pine Woods, The. 

Hannah, Annie L.—Which is Best? 

White Rose and the Poppy, The. 

Hanover, JMiner’s Death, The. 

Hansbrough, Mrs. Mary Berri [Chapman],—Doubt. 
Her Answer. 

Journey, The. 

Love’s Course. 

Harbaugh, H:—Through Death to Life. 

Harbaugh, T: Chalmers (?).—Adam never Was a Boy 
Banner Betsey Made, The. 

Grandma’s Wedding-day. 

Trouble in the “Amen Corner.” 

Harbour, J. L.— Mourning Veil, The. 

Nell’s Christmas Stocking. 

Papa and the Boy. 

Papa’s Little Boy. See Papa and the Boy. 

Harby, Lee C.—Legend of the Missions, A. 

Harcourt, T. A.—Ideal Future, An. 

What a Christmas Carol did. 

Harding, Eugenie B.—Cuba’s Maiden Martyr. 
Harding, Rev. W. W.—Cry for Life, A. 

Hardwick, C: (?)—Mr. and Mrs. Skinner. 

Hardy, Albert.—Sam. 

Tuxedo Romance, A. 

Hardy, Arthur Sherburne.—Duality. 

Immortality. 

Iter Supremum. 

Hardy, Lizzie Clark.—Hole in the Floor, The. 

My Neighbor. 

Tommy Brown. 

Hardy, T:—Far from the Madding Crowd. 

Sword Exercise, The. See Far from the Madding 
Crowd. 

Hargreaves, W: (?)—Song of the Drunkard. 

Harkee, Kathe. Van D.—Robin, The. 

Harlan, J: Marshall.—Washington and the Constitu¬ 
tion. 

Harley, T.—“I.impy Tim.” 

Harlow, Parr.—Arbor Day Greeting. 

Arbor Day Ode. 

Invocation. 

Harney, J: M.—Fever Dream, A. 

Harney, Will Wallace.—Adonais. 

Jimmy’s Wooing. 

Stab, The. 

Harper, C. F.—Song of the Battle Ships. 

Harper, Clarence S.—Doris. 

Harper, Oliver.—International Band, The. 

Harper’s Bazar. — Biddy’s Trials among the Yankees. 
Deacon Thrush in Meeting. 

Fashionable Call, A. 

Female Gossip. See Fashionable Call, A. 

John Jankin’s Sermon. 

Naming the Baby. 

Nothing. 

Our Minister’s Sermon. See John Jankin’s Sermon 
Symphony in Smoke, A. 

Umbrella on the Beach, The. 

We Two. 

Harper’s Magazine.—- “De Pen and de Swoard.” 

Doing and Giving. See Resolution. 
Drummer-boy’s Burial, The. 

Gentle Hints. See Resolution. 

“It is a dear delight for the soul to have trust in 
the fidelity of another.” 

John Chinaman’s “Cornin’ through the Rye.” 

One Bachelor of Many. 

Paddy’s Excelsior. 

Pat’s Excelsior. See Paddy’s Excelsior. 

Pine Town [Darkey] Debating Society, The. 
Resolution. 

Saladin, Malek Adhel, Attendant. See Saracen 
Brothers, The. 

Saracen Brothers, The. 

Scotch Philosophy of Kissing. 

Text without a Sermon, A. 

Untimely Trumpet, The. 

Whistling in Heaven. 

Harper’s Weekly. —Ballad of Capri, A. 

Dead Drummer-boy. 

Duel Between Mr. Shott. and Mr. Nott, The. See 
Mysterious Duel, A. 


462 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Harvard 


Harper’s Weekly ( continued). 

I Want Mamma. 

Little Child, A. See I Want Mamma. 

Me and My Dog. 

Mysterious Duel, A. 

Wonderful Duel, A. See Mysterious Duel, A. 
Harper’s Young People. —Baby Sleeps, The. See 
Don’t Wake the Baby. 

Day After, The. 

Doctor’s Visit. 

Don’t Wake the Baby. 

Farewell. 

George Washington. 

Good Company. 

Little Grenadier, The. 

Menagerie Song, A. 

Pet and Her Cat. 

Sixty Years Ago. 

Spring Meeting, A. 

Harpur, C:—Aboriginal Mother’s Lament, An. 

Midsummer’s Moon in the Australian Forest, A. 
Harraden, Beatrice.—-Ships that Pass in the Night. 
Traveler and the Temple of Knowledge, The. See 
Ships that Pass in the Night. 

“Harriet Annie.”—Death of Gaudentis. 

Harriman, Josephine M.—Last Day in District No. 6. 
Harrington, J:—-Appeal for the Cause of Liberty, An. 
Harrington [or Haryngton], Sir J:—Epigram: Treason. 
Epigrams. 

Lines on Isabella Markham. See Sonnet Made on 
Isabella Markham. 

Heart of Stone, A. See Sonnet Made on Isabella 
Markham. 

Of a Certaine Man. 

Of a Precise Tailor. 

Of the Warres in Ireland. See Epigrams. 

Sonnet Made on Isabella Markham. 

Harris, C. M. (TV.)—God’s Father-care. 

Harris, Joel Chandler.—Brer Rabbit and the Little 
Girl. See Nights with Uncle Remus. 

My Honey, My Love. 

Nights with Uncle Remus. 

Plough-hands’ Song, The. See Uncle Remus and 
his Friends. 

Revival Hymn. See Uncle Remus, His Songs 
and his Sayings. 

Uncle Remus and his Friends. 

Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings. 

Uncle Remus’ Tar-baby. See Uncle Remus, His 
Songs and his Sayings. 

Uncle Remus’s Revival Hymn. See Uncle Remus, 
His Songs and His Sayings. 

Wonderful Tar Baby [Story], The. See Uncle 
Remus, His Songs and his Sayings. 

Harris, Thaddeus Mason.—Little Orator, The. 

Harris, T: Lake.—California. 

Fledglings. 

Sea-sleep. 

Harrison, Anthony (?).—Tinker and the Glazier, The. 
Harrison, Belle R.—Darky’s Ideal Wife, A. 

Harrison, B:—Address before the 28th Graduating 
Class of the Pierce School of Business and 
Shorthand, Philadelphia, Dec. 20, 1893. 

Aim High. 

Critical Conditions of Labor, The. See Address 
before the 28th Graduating Class of the Pierce 
School, etc. 

Our Country. 

Proclamation of the Columbian Exposition. 
Harrison, Clifford.—Benediction, The. 

Faithful unto Death. 

Harrison, J.—Legend of Paginini, A. 

Harrison, J. C.—May. 

Harrison, Jennie.—Out in the Cold. 

Harrison, Leslie.—Fate. 

Harrison, Morris.—Brave Boston Boys. 

Harrison, Mrs. S. Frances (“Seranus”).—Chateau 
Papineau. 

November. 

September. 

Villanelle. 

Harrison, Virginia B.—Fdnelon’s Prayer. 

Harrison, Gen. W: H. (?)—Tribute to Washington. 
Harryman. A. H.—Through the Loopholes. 

Hart, Bessie G.—Boy’s Mercy, A. 

Toot Makes a Match. 

Hart, Edwin Kirkman.—Sunday Question of To-day, 
The. 

Hart, F. W.—Trysting. 

Hart, Jerome A.—Phantom of the Rose, The. 

Hart, Joel T.—Captive Humming-bird, The. 

Hart, J: S.—Good Reading [the Greatest Accomplish¬ 
ment], 


Hart, Jos.—Come, and Welcome, to Jesus Christ. 
Harte, (Fs.) Bret.—After the Accident. 

Aged Stranger, The. 

Angelus, The. 

At the Hacienda. 

Battle Bunny—Malvern Hill. 

Bill Mason’s Bride. (?) 

Bill Mason’s Ride. See Bill Mason’s Bride. 

“But in his eyes a mist unwonted rises.” 

Cadet Grey. 

Caldwell of Springfield. 

Chicago. 

Chimney’sMelody.The. See What theChimney Sang. 
Chiquita. 

Christmas Gift that came to Rupert, The. 
Crotalus. 

Dickens in Camp. 

Doctor’s Story, The. See Christmas Gift that 
came to Rupert, The. 

Dow’s Flat. 

Engineer’s Signal, The. See Guild’s Signal. 

Fate. 

Flynn of Virginia. See In the Tunnel. 

Greyport Legend, A. 

Grizzly. 

Guild’s Signal. 

Half an Hour before Supper. 

Heathen Chinee, The. See Plain Language from 
Truthful James. 

Her Letter. 

His Answer to “Her Letter.” 

“How are you, Sanitary?” 

I was with Grant. See Aged Stranger, The. 

In the Tunnel. 

Jessie. 

How Santa Claus Came to Simpson’s Bar. 

“Jim.” 

John Burns of Gettysburg. 

Jovita; or, the Christmas Gift. See How Santa 
Claus Came to Simpson’s Bar. 

Madrono. 

Master Johnny’s Next-door Neighbor. 

Miggles. 

Miss Edith Helps Things Along. 

“Not yet, O friend! not yet.” See Cadet Grey. 
Personified Sentimental, The. See Songs without 
Sense. 

Plain Language from Truthful James. 

Ramon. 

Rdveilld, The. 

Second Review of the Grand Army. 

Society upon the Stanislaus, The. 

Songs without Sense. 

Spelling Bee at Angel’s, The. 

Swiss Air. See Songs without Sense. 

Throes of Science, The. See Society upon the 
Stanislaus, The. 

To a Sea-bird. 

To the Pliocene Skull. 

Two Ships, The. 

What Miss Edith Saw from Her Window. 

What the Bullet Sang. 

What the Chimney Sang. 

What the Drums Say. See Rdveilld, The. 

What the Wolf Really Said to Little Red Riding- 
Hood. 

Harte, Jerome.—Time Doeth All Things Well. 

Harte, Walter.—Soliloquy, A. 

Hartley, J:—To a Daisy. 

Hartley, Susan.—Holly. 

Marigolds. 

Winter Song, A. 

Hartridge, Emelyn Battersby.— Song:—"There are 
days when the sun shines warm and bright.” 
Hartwell, Mary.—Pocahontas. 

Sim’s Little Girl. 

Hartwick, Rosa A.— SeeT horpe,I lf re.RosA[H ART wick]. 
Hartwig, Gustav.—Last String, The. 

Hartzell, J. Hazard.—-Autumn is Ended. 

Fields of Corn, The. 

Golden Orioles, The. 

Snow-storm, The. 

Harvard Advocate .—Old Days. 

Perdita. 

Harvard Lampoon .—As Usual. 

Ballade of Laura’s Fan. 

Idyl, An. 

Lines to a Transfer Check. 

Literary Vampire, The. 

Logic. 

Outward Shows, The. 

That Sweet Girl Graduate. 

Tom’s Philosophy. 


463 




Harvey 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Harvey, Jas. Clarence.—At the Stage Door. 

Bicycle Ride, The. 

Challenge, A. 

Daughter of the Desert, The. 

Nameless Guest, The. 

Rabbi and the Prince, The. 

Roman Legend, A. 

Whistling Regiment, The. 

Harwood, Elna.—Dagmar. 

Haryngton, Sir J: See Harrington, Sir J: 

Hastings, E. H.—Over the Hill. 

Hastings, Lady Flora.—Spring Morning, A. 

Hastings, Frank.—Cripple Tim. 

Hastings, Horace Lorenzo.—Drinking a Farm. 
“Savior! I follow on.” (?) 

Sketch of Moses, A. 

Hastings, Mary W.—Lover to His Lady-love, A. 
Hastings, T:—Exhortation. 

In Sorrow. 

Latter Day, The. 

Hatch, M. D.—Debutante’s Bouquets, A. 

Hathaway, Mary E. N —Seasons, The. See Signs of 
the Seasons. 

Signs of the Seasons. 

Two Visits. 

Hatton, J W.—Not Guilty. 

Haughwout, Laura M.—Happy Farmer, The. 

Haultain, Theodore Arnold.—Beauty. 

Hauptmann, Gerhart.—Hannele. 

Hausted, P:—Have you a Desire? 

Haven, Albert R.—Spain’s Hour of Doom. 

Haven, Mrs. Alice [Bradley] [Neal] (“Cousin Alice).— 
Bull Run. 

There’s no Such Word as Fail. 

Thoughts on the Forest. See Trees in the City. 
Trees in the City. 

Havens, Theo. F.—Told at the Tavern. 

Havergal, Frances Ridley.—"Be Quiet; Fear Not.” 
Bells across the Snow. 

Bonnie Wee Eric. 

Chosen Lessons. 

Compensation. 

Consecration Hymn. 

Daily Strength. 

Enough. 

Faithful Promises. 

Flowers. 

Hour of Comfort, The. See Secret of a Happy 
Day, The. 

I Gave My Life for Thee. 

“Jesus, Master, whom I serve.” 

Life Mosaic. 

“Master! to do great work for thee, my hand.” 

See Life Mosaic. 

Message of an /Eolian Harp. 

New Year’s Hymn. See Faithful Promises. 
“Now!” 

“Oh, let me know.” 

Our Shepherd. 

Secret of a Happy Day, The. 

Something to Do. 

Song of a Summer Stream, The. 

Stars. 

Sunbeam and Dewdrop. 

Thanksgiving. 

“That’s not the Way at Sea.” 

“Then bush! oh, hush! for the Father knows what 
thou knowest not.” See Compensation. 

We Cannot Love too Much. See Message of an 
.Eolian Harp. 

Who Will Take Care of Me? 

Havez, Jean.—Thanksgiving Turkey. 

Haweis, Rev. Hugh Reginald.—Lowell, Extract Con¬ 
cerning. 

Music and Morals. 

Remembrance. See Music and Morals. 

Haweis, T:—O Thou, from Whom all Goodness Flows. 
Hawes, Annie M. L.—Happy Man, The. 

Last Tudor, The. 

Love Tapped upon My Lattice. 

Hawes, Joel.—Good Name, A. 

Hawes, Stephen.—Amoure laments the absence of La 
Belle Pucel. See Pastime of Pleasure, The. 
Character of a True Knight, The. See Pastime of 
Pleasure, The. 

Description of La Belle Pucel. See Pastime of 
Pleasure, The. 

Dialogue between Graunde Amoure and La Pucel. 

See Pastime of Pleasure, The. 

His Epitaph. 

Pastime of Pleasure, The. 

True Knight, The. See Pastime of Pleasure, The. 
Hawes, W: Post.(?)—Veny Raynor’s Bear Story. 


Hawker, Rob’t Stephen.—Are they not all Ministering 
Spirits? 

Cuckoo’s Wit, The. 

Doom-well of St. Madron, The. 

Featherstone’s Doom. 

Holly. The. 

King Arthur’s Waes-hael. 

Mawgan of Melhuach. 

“Pater Vester Pascit Ilia.” 

Silent Tower of Bottreaufx], The. 

Song of the Cornish Men. See Song of the West¬ 
ern Men, The. 

Song of the Western Men, The. 

To Alfred Tennyson. 

Wail of the Cornish Mother, The. 

Hawkes, Clarence.—Dial of Time, The. 

Mountain to the Pine. The. 

Hawkins, Ethel W.—Shadow of the End, The. 
Hawkins, W. S.—More Cruel than War 
Hawkins, Willis B.—Summerset Folks, The. 

Hawks, A. W.—Easter Lily, An. 

Picture on the Wall, The. 

Hawks, Fs. Lister (?).—Faith in God. 

Hawks, Wells T.—Franz. 

Hawthorn, Kate.—Spring Song. 

Hawthorne, Hildegarde.—My Rose. 

Song: "Sing me a sweet, low song of night.” 
Hawthorne, Julian.—Bartholdi Statue, The. 

Pockets. 

Were-wolf. 

Hawthorne, Nathaniel.—Affray in King Street, Boston, 
1770, The. See Grandfather’s Chair. 

Concord River. 

Drowne’s Wooden Image. See Mosses from an 
Old Manse. 

Elf-child and the Minister, The. See Scarlet 
Letter, The. 

Endicott and the Red Cross. 

Father Time’s Granddaughters. 

Faun of Praxiteles. The. See Marble Faun, The. 
Frolic of the Carnival, A. See Marble Faun, The. 
Grandfather’s Chair. 

Gray Champion, The. 

Great Stone Face, The. 

Howe’s Masquerade. See Legends of the Province 
House. 

Legends of the Province House. 

Marble Faun, The. 

Miraculous Pitcher. The. 

Mosses from an Old Manse. 

My Visit to Niagara. 

Pandora. See Paradise of Children, The. 

Paradise of Children, The. 

Pine Tree Shillings, The. See Grandfather’s 
Chair. 

Recollections of a Gifted Woman. 

Scarlet Letter. The. 

Snow-image, The. 

Star of Calvary, The. 

Sunken Treasure, The. See Grandfather’s Chair. 

Hawtrey. Mrs. -.—Boys’ Play and Girls’ Play. 

Hay, F. W. Littleton.—Latest Comfort, The. 

Hay, Frd’k.—Sudden Arrival, A. 

Hay, Helen.—Does the Pearl Know? 

Love’s Kiss. 

Sigh not for Love. 

To Diane. 

Was there another Spring? 

Woman’s Pride, A. 

Hay, H: H.—Fragrant Timber of Her Fan, The. 

Hay, J:—Banty Tim. 

Blind Man’s Testimony, The. See Religion and 
Doctrine. 

Christine. 

Curse of Hungary, The. 

Enchanted Shirt, The. 

Good Luck and Bad Luck. ( Tr .) 

How it Happened. 

Jjm Bludso. See Jim Bludso of the Prairie Belle. 
Jim Bludso of the Prairie Belle. 

Kilvany. See Law of Death, The. 

Law of Death, The. ( Wr. at. to Edwin Arnold.) 
Liberty. 

Light of Love. The. 

Little Breeches. 

Love’s Prayer. 

Miles Keogh’s Horse. 

On the Bluff. 

Our Recent Diplomacy. 

Pledge at Spunky Point, The. 

Religion and Doctrine. 

Sir Walter Scott in Westminster. 

Sphinx of the Tuileries. The. 


464 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Hebrew 


Hay, J: ( continued ). 

Stirrup-cup, The. 

Surrender of Spain, The. 

Triumph of Order, A. 

Woman’s Love, A. 

Hayes, Mrs. Edna L. Proctor [Clarke].—Dancer, The. 
Deathless, The. 

Good-by, A. 

Humming-bird, The. 

Jacqueminot Roses. 

Mocking-bird, The. 

To a Wild Rose Found in October. 

Hayes, J: Russell.—Old-fashioned Garden. 

Hayes, Will S.—Contentment. 

Haygood, Atticus Green.—Abolition of African Slavery. 
Haynard, Virginia May.—If We Knew. 

Hayne, Paul Hamilton.—“And we, poor waifs, whose 
life-term seems.” 

Artie’s “Amen.” 

Aspects of the Pines. 

Battle of Charleston Harbor, The. 

Between the Sunken Sun and the New Moon. 
Bryant Dead. 

By the Autumn Sea. 

Cambyses and the Macrobian Bow. 

Carlyle. 

Christian Exaltation. 

Dean Stanley. 

Tn Harbor 

Little Nellie in the Prison. 

Little While I Fain would Linger Yet, A. 

Love Scorns Degrees. See Mountain of the Lovers, 
The. 

Love’s Autumn. 

Lyric of Action. 

Macdonald’s Raid. 

Mask of Death, The. 

Mountain of the Lovers, The. 

On the Death of Canon Kingsley. 

Praying for Shoes. 

Pre-existence. 

Rose and Thorn, The. 

Storm in the Distance, A. 

Story of an Ambuscade, The. 

To Alexander H. Stephens. 

To Bayard Taylor beyond Us. 

To O. W. Holmes. 

Two Epochs. 

Under the Pine 
Union of Blue and Gray. 

Upward and Onward. See Lyric of Action. 
Vicksburg. 

Winds of the Winter, The. 

Yorktown Centennial Lyric. 

Hayne, Rob’t Young.—On Mr. Foot’s Resolution in 
the United Stages Senate, Jan. 21, 1830. 

On Mr. Webster’s Defence of New England. See 
On Mr. Foot’s Resolution in the U. S. Senate. 
Reply to Mr. Webster, January, 1830. See On 
Mr. Foot’s Resolution in the U. S. Senate. 
South Carolina. See On Mr. Foot’s Resolution in 
the United States Senate. 

South Carolina and the Union. See On Mr. 

Foot’s Resolution in the United States Senate. 
South Carolina in the Revolution. See On Mr. 

Foot’s Resolution in the United States Senate. 
South during the Revolution, The. See On Mr. 

Foot's Resolution in the United States Senate. 
South during the War of 1812, The. See On Mr. 

Foot’s Resolution in the United States Senate. 
South in the Revolution. See On Mr. Foot’s 
Resolution in the United States Senate. 
Hayne, W: Hamilton.—At My Father’s Grave. 

Autumn Breeze, An. 

Cavalry Song. 

Charge at Santiago, The. 

Cyclone at Sea, A. 

Die Preacher an’ de Hants. 

Exiles. 

Loneliness. 

Moonlight Song of the Mocking-bird. 

Night Mists. 

Oliver Wendell Holmes. 

Pine-needlefs], 

Red Bird, The. 

Sidney Lanier. 

“Sleep and His Brother Death.” 

Southern Snow-bird, The. 

Threnody of the Pines. 

To a Cherokee Rose. 

Vernal Solace. 

Yule Log, The. 

Haynes, Landon C.—Tribute to East Tennessee, A. 


Hays, Will S.—O’Grady’s Goat. 

Hayward, Emeroy.—Cakes and Pies. 

Haywood, Delia A.—Teetotaler’s Story, A. 

Hazard, Eliz.—Awakened, The. 

Hazewell, E: Wentworth.—Veteran and Recruit. 
Hazlett, Mrs. S. C.—Her Lover. 

Hazlitt, W:—-Genius and Common Sense. See Table 
Talk. 

Table Talk. 

Head, Sir Edmund.—Translation from Propertius. 
Head, W: H.—Bewildered Conductor, A. 

Chinese Version of Jonah and the Whale, A. 

Dot New Song. 

“He Laughed at Five.” 

Methodist Camp Meeting, A. 

Parting, The. 

Question, A. 

That Little Girl of Mine. 

Trial at Elocution, A. 

Trials of a Columbian Guard. 

’Way Down in Ole Virginy. 

Headley, Rev. Joel Tyler.—Bell of Liberty, The. 

Burning of Moscow, The. See Napoleon and his 
Marshals. 

Last Charge of [Marshal] Ney. . See Napoleon and 
his Marshals. 

Macdonald’s Charge at Wagram. See Napoleon 
and his Marshals. 

Marshal Ney’s Last Charge at Waterloo. See 
Napoleon and his Marshals. 

Napoleon and his Marshals. 

Tree Planting. 

Waterloo. See Napoleon and his Marshals. 

Hearth and Home. —Boy and the Boot, The. 

Stubborn Boot, The. See Boy and the Boot, The. 
Washing-day. 

Heath, Lyman.—Grave of Bonaparte, The. 

Heaton, J: Langdon.—Sea Irony. 

Inconsistent Sex, The. 

Heavysege, C:—Coming of the Morn, The. 

David Exorcising Malzah. See Saul. 

Flight of Malzah, The. See Saul. » 
Magnanimous and Mean. 

Malzah and the Angel Zelehtha. See Saul 
Mystery of Doom, The. 

Night. 

Saul. 

Twilight. 

Hebei, Johann P:—Sunday Morning. 

Heber, Reginald.—At a Funeral. 

Before a Collection made for the Society for the 
Propagation of the Gospel. 

Brightest and Best [of the Sons of the Morning], 
See Epiphany. 

By Cool Siloam[’s Shady Rill]. See First Sunday 
after Epiphany. 

Early Piety. See First Sunday after Epiphany. 
Epiphany. 

Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity. 

First Sunday after Epiphany. 

Forgive. See Twenty-second Sunday after Trinity. 
Fourth Sunday after Epiphany. 

God Provideth for the Morrow. See Fifteenth 
Sunday after Trinity. 

Gulistan, The. 

Hebrew Capital Despoiled, The. 

“Help, Lord, or We Perish.” See Fourth Sun¬ 
day after Epiphany. 

Holy, Holy, Holy! See Trinity Sunday. 

Hymn for First Sunday after Epiphany. See 
First Sunday after Epiphany. 

Hymn for Trinity Sunday. See Trinity Sunday. 
“If thou wert by my side [my love].” See Lines 
Addressed to Mrs. Heber. 

Lines Addressed to his Wife. See Lines Addressed 
to Mrs. Heber. 

Lines Addressed to Mrs. Heber. 

Missionary Hymn. See Before a Collection made 
for the Society for the Propagation of the 
Gospel. 

O God that Madest Earth and Sky. 

Providence. See Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity 
Siloam’s Shady Rill. See First Sunday after 
Epiphany. 

Spring Journey, The. 

Stanzas on the Death of a Friend. See At a Fun¬ 
eral. 

Stream of Life, The. 

Sympathy. 

Thou art Gone to the Grave. See At a Funeral. 
Trisagion. See Trinity Sunday. 

Twenty-second Sunday after Trinity. 

Hebrew Journal. —So Much May Be Done. 


465 





Heckman 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Heckman, G: C.—“It is said that at the battle of 
Shiloh.” 

Hedderwick, Jas. (?).—Joy and Sorrow. 

Hedge, F: H:—Crucifixion, The. 

Mighty Fortress is our God, A. (TV.) 

Morning Star, The. 

Paraphrase of Luther’s Hymn. (TV.) See Mighty 
Fortress is our God, A. 

Questionings. 

Hedrich, Ida M.—Welcome for School Entertainment. 
Heermans, Mary A.—Tribute to Nature. 

Heine, Heinrich.—Belshazzar’s Downfall. 

Difficulty, The. 

Du Bist wie eine Blume. See Pictures of Travel. 
Excellent Man, The. 

Fisher’s Cottage, The. See Pictures of Travel. 
Good Luck and Bad Luck. 

Last Translation, The. 

Lorelei, The. See Pictures of Travel. 

Pictures of Travel. 

Pilgrimage to Kevlaar, The. 

Thine Eyes. See Pictures of Travel. 

“Thou lovest me not, thou lovest me not.” See 
Last Translation, The. 

To-: “When summer dwells,” etc. 

Translation from Heine. 

Water Fay, The. See Pictures of Travel. 
Heilman, G: Sidney.—Coleridge. 

Hudson, The. See Sonnet: to the Hudson. 

In a China Shop. 

Sonnet: to the Hudson. 

Hemans, Mrs. Felicia Dorothea.—Adopted Child, The. 
American Forest Girl, The. 

Ancient Greek Chant of Victory. 

Ballad of Roncesvalles, A. See Siege of Valencia, 
The. 

Battle of Morgarten. See Song of the Battle of 
Morgarten. 

Bended Bow, The. 

Bernardo del Carpio. 

Better Land, The. 

Birds in Summer. {At. also to Mary Howitt.) 
“Breaking waves dashed high. The.” See Land¬ 
ing of the Pilgrim Fathers, etc. 

Breathings of Spring. 

Bride of the Greek Tsle, The. 

Bride’s Farewell, The. See Bride of the Greek 
Isle, The. 

Bring Flowers. 

Casabianca. 

Child’s First Grief, The. 

Christmas Carol. 

Cliffs of Dover, The. 

Coeur de Lion at the Bier of His Father. 

Corinne at the Capitol. 

Coronation of Inez de Castro, The. 

Despair is never Quite Despair. See Lights and 
Shades. 

Dirge: “Calm on the Spirit [Bosom—C.] of Tby God.” 

See Siege of Valencia, The. 

Dirge: “Where shall we make her grave.” 

Diver, The. 

Edith. 

Fall of d’Assas, The. 

Flower of the Desert, The. 

Graves of a Household, The. 

Greeks’ Return from Battle, The. See Ancient 
Greek Chant of Victory. 

He never Smiled Again. 

Hebrew Mother, The. 

Homes of England, The. 

Hour of Death, The. 

Hour of Prayer [, The], 

Hymn for Christmas. See Christmas Carol. 
Invocation. 

Ivan the Czar. 

Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers. The. See Land¬ 
ing of the Pilgrim Fathers in New England, 
The. 

Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers in New England, 
The. 

Landing of the Pilgrims[,The]. See Landing of 
the Pilgrim Fathers in New England, The. 

Last Tree of the Forest, The. 

Lights and Shades. 

Marguerite of France. 

Meeting of the Ships. The. 

Mignon’s Song. (TV.) 

Mozart’s Requiem. 

Music. See Voice of Music, The. 

Nightingale’s Death-song, The. 

“O Love and Death.” See Edith. 

Olive Tree, The. 


Hemans, Mrs. Felicia Dorothea {continued). 

Orchard Blossoms. 

Parting Words. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The. »See Landing of the Pil¬ 
grim Fathers in New England, The. 

Raimond Released. See Vespers of Palermo, The. 
Return from Battle, The. See Ancient Greek 
Chant of Victory. 

Return of May, The. 

Revellers, The. 

Rocks of My Country. See Cliffs of Dover, The. 
Shadow of a Flower, The. 

Sicilian Captive, The. 

Siege of Valencia, The. 

Silent Multitude, The. 

Song of Mina’s Soldiers [,wr. The]. 

Song of the Battle of Morgarten. 

Song of the Rose, A. 

Spartan’s March, The. 

Storm of Delphi, The. 

Sunbeam, The. 

To Corinne. See Corinne at the Capitol. 

To Wordsworth. 

Traveller at the Source of the Nile, The. 

Treasures of the Deep, The. 

Trumpet, The. 

Two Homes, The. 

Vespers of Palermo, The. 

Voice of Music, The. 

Voice of Spring [, The]. 

Wandering Wind, The. 

Willow Song. 

Wordsworth. See To Wordsworth. 

Wreck, The. 

Hempstead, Fay.—Under the Snow. 

Henderson, Fred.—To Lucy. 

Henderson, M.—Outlaw, The. 

Henderson, Mary L.—King’s Daughter, The. 

Hendry, Jas.—Aftermath, The. 

Henley, W: Ernest.—Ballad Made in the Hot Weather. 
By the Swinging Sea. 

England, my England. 

Her Little Feet. 

Home. See To D. H. 

I. M.—R. T. Hamilton Bruce. 

I Met a Maiden To-day. See To My Mother. 

If I Were King. 

In Rotten Row. 

In the Year that’s Come and Gone. 

Invictus. See I. M.—R. T. Hamilton Bruce. 

Is it Good-bye? 

Love Notes. See To A. D. 

Made in the Hot Weather. See Ballad Made in 
the Hot Weather. 

Margaritse Sorori. 

Pleasant Song, A. See To A. D. 

To A. D. 

To D. H. 

To My Mother. 

Villon’s Straight Tip to All Cross Coves. 

“When You are Old.” 

With Strawberries. 

Henley. W: Ernest, and Stevenson, Rob’t L: See 
Stevenson, Rob’t L: 

Henniker, Florence.—Appeal. An. 

Henry, Drexa.—Noll’s Journey. 

Henry, Jas.—Old Story Over Again, The. 

Henry, Patrick.—Appeal to Arms, An. See Speech in 
the Virginia Convention. 

Call to Arms, The. See Speech in the Virginia 
Convention. 

Freedom or Slavery. See Speech in the Virginia 
Convention. 

Liberty or Death. See Speech in the Virginia 
Convention. 

On the Resolution to put the Commonwealth into 
a State of Defence—before Virginia Conven¬ 
tion. See Speech in the Virginia Convention. 
Resistance to British Aggression. See Speech 
in the Virginia Convention. 

Return of British Fugitives. 

Speech before the Virginia Convention. See 
Speech in the Virginia Convention. 

Speech in the Virginia Convention, 1775. 

Speech of Patrick Henry. See Speech iD the Vir¬ 
ginia Convention. 

War Inevitable, The. See Speech in the Virginia 
Convention. 

Henry, Re.—Cabman’s Story, The. 

Lady Maud’s Oath. 

Henry, Mrs. Sarepta Irish.—Surrender, The. 

Why Should I Sign the Pledge? 

Henry, W: Wirt.—Constitution. 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Herrick 


Henryson, Rob’t.—Bludy Serk, The. 

Garmond of Fair Ladies, The. 

Robin [or Robyn] and Makyne. 

Taill of the Lyoun and the Mous, The. 

Hensel, Luise.—Book, The. 

Hensley, Mrs. Sophie M. [Almon], See Almon-Hensley, 
Mr8. Sophie M. 

Herbert, Annie.—Mulligan’s Gospel. 

Rift of the Rock. The. 

We Shall Know. See When the Mists Have 
Rolled Away. 

When the Mists Have Rolled Away. 

Herbert, E: Herbert, Lord, of Cherbury.—Celinda. 
Love’s Eternity. 

Ode upon a Question Moved whether Love should 
Continue for Ever, An. 

Upon Combing her Hair. 

Herbert, G:—Aaron. 

Affliction. 

Be Useful. 

Bosom Sin. See Sin. 

Call, The. 

Church Porch, The. 

Collar, The. 

Confession. 

Constancy. 

Dialogue, A. 

Discipline. 

Easter. 

Elixir, The. 

Employment. 

Flower, The. 

Gifts of God, The. See Pulley, The. 

Gratefulness. 

Ljfe. 

Life and the Flowers. See Life. 

Life’s Lessons. See Sin. 

Love. 

Man. 

Memento Mori. See Virtue. 

Misery. 

Odor, The. 

Peace. 

Praise 

Providence. 

Pulley, The. 

Quip, The. 

Said I not So? 

Sin. 

Sunday. 

“Sundays the pillars are.” See Sunday. 

To Keep a True Lent. (Wr. at.) See Herrick, 
Rob’t. 

Vertue. See Virtue. 

Virtue. 

Virtue Immortal. See Virtue. 

Virtuous Soul, The. See Virtue. 

World, The. 

Herbert, Hattie.— Brought to Trial for “Blowin’.” 
(Ad.) 

Grumbling over Lessons. 

Turn about’s Fair Play. 

Two Interpreters of Dreams, The. 

Two Teachers, The. 

Herbert, H: W:—Come Back. 

Herbert, Sidney.—Bridal Wine-cup The. See Bridal 
Feast, The.—F. C. Long. 

Herbin, J: F:—Across the Dykes. 

Diver, The. 

Simon. 

Sonnet, The. 

Herder, Johann Gottfried von.—Among green Pleasant 
Meadows. See Ballad, A: “Among green,” 
etc. 

Ballad, A: “Among green pleasant meadows.” 
Hereford, W. R. —His Letter. 

Herford, Brooke.—Prayer, A. 

Herford, Oliver.—Artful Ant, The. 

Belated Violet, A. 

Chimpanzee, The. 

Cow, The. 

Earth. See Proem. 

Elf and the Dormouse, The. 

Enchanted Oak, The. 

Fall of J. W. Beane, The. 

Gold. See Overheard in a Garden. 

Hen, The. 

Hippopotamus, The. 

Metaphysics. 

Mon-goos, The. 

Overheard in a Garden. 

Packet of Letters, A. 

Platypus, The. 


Herford, Oliver ( continued ) 

Proem. 

Silver Question, The. 

Some Geese. 

Thanksgiving Fable, A. 

Why ye Blossome Cometh before ye Leafe. 
Herloszsohn, Carl.—Love Test, A. 

Herman and Wills.—Claudian. 

Curse, The. See Claudian. 

Herrick, Rob’t.—Anacreontic. 

Argument of his Book. See Argument of the 
Hesperides, The. 

Argument of the Hesperides, The. 

Art above Nature. 

Bag of the Bee, The. 

Bracelet, The: To Julia. 

Bride Cake, The. 

Bucolick betwixt Two, A. See Lacon and Thyrsis. 
Candlemas. See Ceremonies for Candlemasse Eve. 
Candlemas Eve. See Ceremonies for Candlemasse 
Eve. 

Ceremonies for Candlemasse Eve. 

Ceremonies for Christmas. 

Cheat of Gupid, The. ( Tr .) 

Cherry-ripe. 

Child’s Grace, A. See Grace for a Child. 

Chloris in the Snow. (At.) See On Chloris Walk¬ 
ing in the Snow. 

Christian Militant. 

Comfort to a Youth that had Lost his Love. 
Corinna’s Going a-Maying. 

Corinna’s Maying. See Corinna’s Going a-May¬ 
ing. 

Counsel to Girls. See To [the] Virgins, to Make 
Much of Time. 

Counsel to Virgins. See To [thel Virgins, to Make 
Much of Time. 

Country Life, The. 

Daffodils. See To Daffodils. 

Delight in Disorder. 

Dirge for Dorcas. See Widdowes Teares, The; or, 
Dirge of Dorcas. 

Dirge of Jephthah’s Daughter, The. 

Divination by a Daffodil. 

Easy Life, The. See Paranseticall, or Advisive 
Verse, to his Friend, Mr. John Wicks, A. 
Epitaph upon a Child that Died. See Upon a 
Child. 

Epitaph upon a Child that Died. See also Upon a 
Child that Died. 

Epitaph upon a Virgin, An. 

Funeral Rites of the Rose, The. 

"Gather ye rose-buds as ye may.” See To [the] 
Virgins, to Make Much of Time. 

Go, Happy Rose. See To the Rose. 

Going a Maying. See Corinna’s Going a-Maying. 
Grace for a Child. 

Hag, The. 

His Grange; or, Private Wealth. 

His Letanie to the Holy Spirit. 

His Poets. See To Live Merrily, and to Trust to 
Good Verses. 

His Prayer to Ben Jonson. 

His Winding-sheet. 

Hock-cart, The; or. Harvest Home. 

Holv Spirit, The. See His Letanie to the Holy 
Spirit. 

How Roses Came Red. 

Humility. 

Hymn to the Graces. 

Julia. See Rock of Rubies, The. 

Kiss, The. 

Lachrimae; or, Mirth Turned to Mourning. 

Lacon and Thyrsis. See Bucolick betwixt Two, A. 
Lines upon Himself. See Upon Himself. 

Litany to the Holy Spirit. See His Letanie to the 
Holy Spirit. 

Mad Maid’s Song, The. 

Matins (Mattens—C.). 

May-day. See Corinna’s Going a-Maying. 
Meditation for his Mistress, A. 

Mrs. Eliz. Wheeler. 

Morning Prayer. See Matins. 

Music. See To Music, to Becalm his Fever. 
Night-piece, Thef: To Julia], 

Not Every Day Fit for Verse. 

Oberon’s Feast. 

Ode for [wr. to] Ben Jonson, An. 

Ode on the Birth of our Saviour, An. 

Ode to Endymion Porter. 

Old Rhyme, An. See To Electra. 

On Chloris Walking in the Snow. (At.) 

On Himself. 


467 




/ 


Herrick AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Herrick, Rob’t ( continued ). 

Paranseticall, or Advisive Verse, to his Friend, Mr. 
John Wicks, A. 

Pastoral upon the Birth of Prince Charles, A. 

Poetry of Dress, The. See Delight in Disorder. 
Poetry of Dress, The. See also Upon Julia’s 
Clothes. 

Poet’s Good Wishes for the Most Hopefull and 
Handsome Prince, the Duke of Yorke. 

Prayer to Ben Jonson. See His Prayer to Ben 
Jonson. 

Present Time best Pleaseth, The. See This Age 
Best. 

Primrose, The. 

Rock of Rubies, The. 

Rose, The. See To the Rose. 

St. Distaff’s Day. 

Star-song, The[: A Carroll to the King, Sung at 
Whitehall— C.l 

Succession of the Four Sweet Months, The. 

Sweet, Be Not Proud. See To Dianeme. 

Temarie of Littles, upon a Pipkin of Jellie Sent to 
a Lady ? A. 

Thanksgiving for his House. See Thanksgiving 
to God for His House, A. 

Thanksgiving to God, A. See Thanksgiving to 
God for His House, A. 

Thanksgiving to God for His House, A. 

This Age Best. See Present Time best Pleaseth, 
The. 

To Anthea[. who may Command him Anything] 

To Ben Jonson. See Ode for Ben Jonson, An. 

To Blossoms. 

To Daffodils. 

To Daisies[, not to Shut so Soon]. 

To Death. 

To Dianeme. 

To Electra. 

To His Book. (2 poems.) 

To His Conscience. 

To His Mistress, Objecting to Him neither Toying 
or Talking. 

To His Saviour, a Child; a Present by a Child. 

To His Winding-Sheet. See His Winding-sheet. 

To Julia. See Night Piece: To Julia, The. 

To Keep a True Lent. ( Wr. at. to G: Herbert.) 

To Live Merrily and to Trust to Good Verses. 

To Meadows. 

To Music, to Becalm his Fever. 

To G3none. 

To Perilla. 

To Phillis [or Phyllis], See To Phillis to Love and 
Live with him. 

To Phillis to Love and Live with him. 

To Primroses Filled with Morning Dew. 

To Robin Redbreast. 

To Silvia. 

To the Duke of York. See Poet’s Good Wishes 
for the Most Hopefull, etc. 

To the Lark. 

To the Rose [; a Song], 

To [the] Virgins [, to Make Much of Time]. 

To the Western Wind. 

To the Willow-tree. 

To Violets. 

To Virgins, to Make Much of Time. See To the 
Virgins, etc. 

True Lent, A. See To Keep a True Lent. 

Upon a Child. 

Upon a Child that Died. 

Upon Her Feet. 

Upon Himself. 

Upon Julia’s Clothes. 

Upon Sappho Sweetly Playing and Sweetly Sing¬ 
ing. 

Upon the Los3 of his Mistresses. 

Violets. See To Violets 
Wake, The. 

When He would have His Verses Read. 

Whenas in Silks [My Julia Goes], See Upon 
Julia’s Clothes. 

White Island [; or, Place of the Blest], The. 

Widdowes Teares, The; or, Dirge of Dorcas. 

Wounded Cupid, The. 

Hersey, F. W. C.—Triolet. 

Hervey, T: Kibble.—Cleopatra at Actium. 

Dead Trumpeter, The. 

Devil at Home, The. See Devil’s Progress, The. 
Devil’s Progress, The. 

I Think on Thee. 

Love. 

‘Hesperion.”—Land of Liberty, The. See My Country. 

My Country. 

468 


Hewins, Caroline M.—Troll-man, The. 

Hewitt, A. S.—Brooklyn Bridge, The. 

Hewitt, E. E.—At Easter Time. 

Hewitt, H. S.—Soubrette’s Revenge, The 
Hewitt, J: H.—Creation of Man, The. 

Prayer in Battle, The. 

Hewitt, Mary E —Yarn, A. 

Hewitt, Oscar F.—Dime Supper, A. 

Hey, - —-. —God’s Father-care. 

Heywood, Delia A.—Abigail Fisher. 

As Seen in Later Years. 

A-Soak in “Wum Barrels.” 

What I would Be. 

Heywood, J:—Cuckoo’s Voice, The. 

Praise of His Lady, A. (At. also to T: Heywood.) 
Praise of Princess Mary, A. 

Heywood, T:—Fair Maid of the Exchange, The. 

Go, Pretty Birds. See Fair Maid of the Ex¬ 
change, The. 

Good-morrow [Song], See Rape of Lucrece, The. 
Greeting, A. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 
Greetings to My Love. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 
King Edward the Fourth. 

Love’s Ecstasy. 

Matin Song. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 

Message, The. See Fair Maid of the Exchange, 
The. 

Morning. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 

“Pack clouds away Land welcome day].” See 
Rape of Lucrece, The. 

Phillis. See Fair Maid of the Exchange, The. 
Portrait, The. See Praise of his Lady, A.—J: 
Heywood. 

Praise of Ceres. See Silver Age. 

Princes in the Tower, The. See King Edward the 
Fourth. 

Rape of Lucrece, The. 

Search after God. 

Silver Age. 

Song: “Pack clouds away, and welcome day.” 

See Rape of Lucrece, The. 

Song of the Bell. See Rape of Lucrece, The. 

To Diana. 

To Phyllis. See Fair Maid of the Exchange, The. 
Hichens, Rob’t S.—Sacrifice of Genius, The. 

Hickey, Emily Henrietta.— Ballad of St. Swithun’s 
Day, A. 

Beloved, it is Mom. 

Sea Story, A. 

Hickey, Emily M. P—“Emperor Evermore.” 
Harebells. 

Hjckman, C: D.—Obliging His Landlady. 

Hickok, Eliza M.—Prayer. 

Hickox, Chauncey.—Under the Red Cross. 

Higbee, Elnathan Elisha. D.D. — Arbor Day and the 
Children. See Nature and the Children. 
Nature and the Children. 

“Thy glory thou didst manifest.” See Water 
into Wine, The. 

Water into Wine, The. 

Higgins, J:—Books. 

Higginson, Ella.—Always Some One Below. See Help¬ 
ing Hand, A. 

Beggars. 

Beside the Sea. 

Cradle-song of the Fisherman’s Wife. 

Fairy’s Love-song, A. 

Four-leaf Clover. 

Grand Ronde Valley, The. 

Helping Hand, A. 

“Jest a-Thinkin’ o’ You.” 

Lamp in the West, The. 

Lullaby. 

Moonrise in the Rockies. 

Higginson, Mrs. Mary Potter [Thacher].—Changelings. 
Ghost-flowers. 

In the Dark. 

Inheritance. 

Playmate Hours, The. 

Higginson, T: Wentworth.—Autumn Leaves. 

Beneath the Violets. 

Decoration. 

“Easy thing O Power Divine, An.” See Things 
I Miss. The. 

I Will Arise and Go unto My Father. 

Ode to a Butterfly. 

Oratory of Wendell Phillips, The. See Wendell 
Phillips. 

Pantheism and Theism. 

Rabiah’s Defense. 

“Since Cleopatra Died.” 

Sixty and Six. 

Snowing of the Pines, The. 


i 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Holland 


Higginson, T: Wentworth (continued). 

Sonnet from Petrarch. 

Sonnet to Duty. 

‘‘Such Stuff as Dreams are Made of.’ 

Things I Miss, The. 

To Duty. See Sonnet to Duty. 

To My Shadow. 

Two Lessons, The. 

Two Voyagers. See Two Voyages. 

Two Voyages. 

Ulysses S. Grant. 

Vestis Angelica. 

Wendell Phillip . 

Higginson, Mrs. T: Wentworth. See Higginson, Mrs. 
Mary P. T. 

Higley, Warren—Arbor Day. See What Arbor Day 
has Already Done. 

Cutting off the Forests. 

What Arbor Day has Already Done. 

Hildreth, C: Lotin.—At the Mermaid Inn. 

Implora Pace. 

Snow Sorcery. 

To an Obscure Poet who Lives on My Hearth. 
Hildreth, Fred.—Our Drummer Boy. 

Hill, Aaron.—How to Deal with Common Natures. 
Hill, Alex. D.—Men of God. 

Hill, B: Dionysius (‘‘Father Edmund”).—To St. Mary 
Magdalen 

Hill, C. L.—In the Morning 
Hill, G:—Fall of the Oak. 

Good Night. 

Oak, The. See Fall of the Oak 
Song of the Elfin Steersman. 

Hill, T:—Bobolink, The. 

Hill, “Yankee.”—Yankee Fireside, The. 

Hillard, G: Stillman, LL.D. —Danger of Exclusive De¬ 
votion to Business. 

Small Beginnings of Great Historical Move¬ 
ments. 

Hillhouse, A: Lucas. — Forgiveness of Sins a Joy 
Unknown. 

Hillhouse. Jas. Abraham.—Absalom’s Vision. 
Demon-lover, The. 

Hadad. 

Hillis, Rev. Newell Dwight.—Bible, The. 

Instinct of Immortality, The. 

Hills, L. P.—Poetical Courtship. 

Hills, W: H.—City Sportsman, The. 

Hillyer, Lulu C.—Composition, The. 

Hinds, A. L.—Through Toil. 

Hinds. S:—Baby Sleeps. See Sleeping Babe, The. 
Love Keeping Watch. 

Sleeping Babe, The. 

Htne, C: Potter.—Faint Heart ne’er Won Fair Lady. 
Hinkson, Mrs. Kathe. [Tynan],—De Profundis. 

Dead Coach, The. 

Sad Mother, The 
Sheep and Lambs. 

Singing Stars. 

Hinman, Addison H.—Longing for the Old Plantation. 
To the College Idol. 

Hinxham, Miss —.—Breeze in the Church, The. 
Hirsch, Rabbi Emil.—Centennial Speech. 

Hirst, H: Beck.—Fringilla Melodia, The. 

Funeral of Time, The. 

Hita, Juan Ruiz de.—Praise of Little Women. 
Hitchcock, Pres. E: (?)—True Science and Religion. 
True Science Ought to be Religious. See True 
Science and Religion. 

Hitchcock, H:—Supreme Court and the Constitution, 
The. 

Hoar, G: Frisbee—'Against Imperialism. 

Daniel Webster. 

Free Speech and Constitutional Liberty. 

Law and Faith and Freedom. 

Nineteenth of April, 1775, The. 

Our Country’s Greatness. 

Path of Duty. The. 

Puritan and the Pilgrim, The. 

Puritanism. 

True War Spirit, The. 

United Country, A. 

Hoar, Sherman.—American Courage. 

Hoare, Prince.—Arethusa, The. 

Hobart, Hon. Mrs. C:—^Changed Cross, The. 

Hobart, Ethel.—Valentine, A. 

Hobart, G: V.—Out Sleighing with Sophia. 

Hobart, Sarah D.—Legend of St. Freda, The. 

‘‘What note of sorrow wounds the joyous May? 
Hobbes, T:—-Memory and the Muses. 

Hobson, Richmond Pierson.—Sinking of the Merrimac, 
The. 

Hoccleve, T: See Occleve, T: 


Hodge, Archibald Alex., D.D. —“To love satisfies one- 
half of our nature.” 

Hodge, C'—“God can and does render sinners happy 
in spite of their sins.” 

Hodge, Tobe.—Most Fellows Know. See One Thing 
He Forgot. 

One Thing He Forgot. 

Hodgins, Jas. Cobourg.—Greek Reverie, A. 

Once More. 

Hodgson, Fannie E. See Burnett, Mrs. Frances 
Eliza [Hodgson]. 

Hodson, Mrs. Harriet Ward.—Saving Mission on 
Infancy, The. 

Hoey, C: [or G:].—Asleep at the Switch. 

Hoey, Fs. Cashel.—Voyage and a Haven, A. 

Hofei, Johann.—Weep Not. 

Hoffard, Rev. M. L.—Jerusalem the Beautiful. 
Hoffman, C: Fenno.—Farewell, The. 

Mint Julep, The. 

Monterey. 

Seek not to Understand Her. 

Sparkling and Bright. 

Storming of Monterey, The. See Monterey. 

Think of Me, Dearest. 

Thy Name. 

Thy Smiles. 

We Parted in Sadness. 

Hoffman, Mrs. Clara.—High License. 

Hoffman, Judge Murray. (?)—“Plea of emotional in¬ 
sanity or transitory mania. The.” 

Hoffman, Ogden.-—Merits of Fulton’s Invention. 
Hoffmann, Dr. Heinrich.—Story of Little Suck-a- 
thumb, The 

Story of the Wild Huntsman, The. 

Hofifner, R. J.—Mission of a Song, The. 

Hogan, M.—Mannix the Coiner. 

Hoge, Moses D.—Unconscious Greatness of Stonewall 
Jackson, The. 

Hogg, Jas.—Abbot M’Kinnon, The. See Queen’s 
Wake, The. 

Boat-race, The. See Queen Hynde. 

Bonnie Prince Charlie. 

Boy’s Song[, A], 

Charlie is My Darling. (Another vers, by Rob’t 

Burns.) 

Fate of Macgregor, The. See Queen’s Wake, The. 
I Hae Naebody Now. 

Jock Johnstone, the Tinkler. 

Kilmeny. See Queen’s Wake, The. 

Lark, The. See Skylark. The. 

Liddel Bower, The. 

Love is I.ike a Dizziness. 

Moon was a-Waning, The. 

Queen Hynde. 

Queen’s Wake, The. 

Skylark, The. 

Way for Billy and Me, The. See Boy’s Song, A. 
“What are the flowers of Scotland?” 

When Maggy Gangs Away. 

When the Kye Come[s] Hame. 

Witch of Fife, The. See Queen’s Wake; The. 
Women Fo’k, The. 

Holbrook, E. A.—Child and Tree. 

Children’s Arbor Day March. 

Life in its Spring-time. 

March for the Children. See Children’s Arbor Day 
March. 

Song of Consecration. 

Song to the Maple Tree. 

Holcomb, T: A. E.—Mischief. 

Holcomb, Willard.—Lost Chord Found, A. 

Holcombe, W: H.—New Thanatopsis. 

Holcroft, T:—-Gaffer Gray. 

Road to Ruin, The. 

Holder, Phebe A.—Hour with Whittier, An. 

Woodland Hymn, A. 

Holdsworth, Philip J.—Hast Thou Forgotten Me. 
Holland, Josiah Gilbert.—“Are there not lofty moments 
when the soul.” See Kathrina. 

Arthur Bonnicastle. 

Babyhood. See Bitter-sweet. 

Bitter-sweet. 

Bluebeard. See Bitter-sweet. 

Brotherhood. 

Brought to Trial for ‘‘Blowin’.” See Arthur 
Bonnicastle. 

Christmas Caro![, A], 

Cradle Song. See Bitter-sweet. 

Daniel Gray. 

Death of the First-born. See Arthur Bonnicastle. 
Eureka. 

Getting the Right Start. See Timothy Titcomb s 
Letters. 


469 




Holland 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Holland, Josiah Gilbert ( continued ). 

Give us Men. See Wanted. 

Glimpse of Youth, A. 

Gradatim 

Heart of the War, The 

“Here on this blessed Thanksgiving night.” See 
Bitter-sweet. 

Hymn. The: “For summer’s bloom, etc.” 

“If life awake and will never cease.” 

Kathrina. 

Lullaby: "Over the cradle,” etc. See Where Shall 
the Baby’s Dimple Be? 

Lullaby: “Rockaby, lullaby,” etc. See Mistress of 
the Manse, The 

Mistress of the Manse, The. 

Only in Dreams. See Gradatim. 

Palmer’s Vision, The. 

Picture, A. 

Rockaby, Lullaby. _ See Mistress of the Manse. 

Sleeping and Dreaming. 

“So every little child I see.” See Glimpse of 
Youth, A. 

Song of Doubt, A. 

Song of Faith, A. 

Temperance Question, The. 

Thanksgiving Ode, A See Bitter-sweet. 

Timothy Titcomb’s Letters. 

Titcomb’s Letters. See Timothy Titcomb’s Let¬ 
ters. 

Tramp, Tramp, Tramp. See Temperance Ques¬ 
tion, The. 

Tribute, A. 

True Men. See Wanted. 

Wanted. 

Way to Heaven, The. See Gradatim. 

Where Shall the Baby’s Dimple Be? 

“With the results of Christianity before him and 
in him” (?). 

Words. 

Hollands, H. T.—Wee-waw Land, The. 

Holley, Marietta (“Josiah Allen’s Wife”). Alexander’s 
Store. See My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Brothers, The 

Buying a Feller. See Sweet Cicely. 

For a’ that; or, Selling a Feller. See Sweet 
Cicely. 

Fourth of July in Jonesville. See My Opinions 
and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Josiah Allen’s Wife as a P. A. and P. I.; or, Sa¬ 
mantha at the Centennial. 

Josiah Allen’s Wife at a Fashionable Restaurant. 
See Samantha at the World’s Fair. 

Josiah Allen’s Wife at A. T. Stewart’s Store. See 
My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Josiah and the Mermaid. See Samantha at Sara¬ 
toga. 

Josiah at the Various Springs. See Samantha 
at Saratoga. 

My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Samantha at Saratoga. 

Samantha at the Centennial. See Josiah Allen’s 
Wife as a P. A. and P. L, etc. 

Samantha at the World’s Fair. 

Samantha Smith Becomes Josiah Allen’s Wife. 
See My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s. 

Study in Dialect, A. See Josiah Allen’s Wife as a 
P. A. and P. I., etc. 

Summer. 

Sweet Cicely. 

Trying the “Rose Act.” 

What Makes the Summer? 

Widder Doodle. See Josiah Allen’s Wife as a 
P A. and P. I., etc. 

Wimmen’s Speah. See My Opinions and Betsey 
Bobbet’s. 

Woman's Rights. See My Opinions and Betsey 
Bobbet’s. 

Holliday, Frank E.—How Strange It Will Be. 

My Little Bo-peep. {At. also to S. B. M’Manus.) 

Holliday, G. Y.—“As I Have Loved You.” 

Hollinger, Emma C.—“Little Angels.” 

Holloway, H: H.—Cold Water 

Holm, Saxe.—Angel of Pain, The. 

Gospel of Mv a tery, The. 

Hymn, A. See “I cannot think but God must 
know ” 

“I cannot think but God must know.” 

Love of God, The. 

Song of Clover, A. 

Waiting on God. See “I cannot think but God 
must know.” 

Holman, Frank Newton.—In Wreaths of Smoke. 

Holmes, A. W.—Charade. 


Holmes. C. E. L—You Put no Flowers on My Papa’s 
Grave. 

Holmes, Frd’k Morell.—Owen’s Oath. 

Holmes, Mrs. Georgiana (“George Klingle”). — Make 
Thy Way Mine. 

Patience with Love. 

To-morrow’s News. 

Why Mother is Proud. 

Holmes, H. W.—Valentine, A. 

Holmes, I: E:—Death of John Quincy Adams. 

Holmes, M. Sophie.—Heaven. 

Holmes. Oliver Wendell.—Additional Verses. 
^Estivation. 

After a Lecture on Keats. 

Album Verses. 

April, ever Frail and Fair. 

Archbishop and Gil Bias, The. 

At a Birthday Festival. 

At the Atlantic Dinner. 

Aunt Tabitha 

Autocrat of the Breakfast-table, The. 

Avis. 

Ballad of the Oysterman, The. 

Before the Curfew. 

“Best Room,” The. 

Bill and Joe. 

Birthday of Daniel Webster. 

Boys, The. 

Brother Jonathan’s Lament for Sister Caroline. 
“Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul.” 

See Chambered Nautilus, The. 

Bunker Hill. See Grandmother’s Story of Bun¬ 
ker Hill Battle. _ 

Cacoethes Scribendi. 

Chambered Nautilus, The. 

City Men in the Country. See Lines Recited at 
the Berkshire Jubilee. 

Class Meeting, 1875. See For Class Meeting, 1875. 
Contentment. 

Cubes and Spheres. See Autocrat of the Break¬ 
fast-table, The. 

Daniel Webster. See Birthday of Daniel Web¬ 
ster. 

Deacon’s Masterpiece, The; or, The Wonderful 
“One-hoss Shay.” 

"Deal gently with us, ye who read!” See To My 
Readers. 

Dilemma, The. 

Dorothy Q. 

Emerson, Extract Concerning. See Ralph Waldo 
Emerson. 

Epilogue to the Breakfast-table Series. 

Evening. By a Tailor. 

Faithful Little Wife, A. See Professor at the 
Breakfast-table, The. 

Fashionable Piano Music. See Poet at the Break- 
fast-table ^The 

Father of All! in Death’s Relentless Claim. 

Flower of Liberty, The. 

For Class Metting, 1875. 

For the Moore Centennial Celebration. 

Francis Parkman. 

Gambrel-roofed House and its Outlook, The. 

See Poet at the Breakfast-table, The. 

Girdle of Friendship, The. 

God Bless Our Father Land. See International 
Ode. 

God Save the Flag. 

Golden Flower, The. 

Good Time Going, A. 

Grandmother’s Story of Bunker Hill. See Grand¬ 
mother’s Story of Bunker Hill Battle. 
Grandmother’s Story of Bunker Hill Battle. 
Grandmother’s Story. The Battle of Bunker 
Hill. See Grandmother’s Story of Bunker 
Hill Battle. 

Hats. See Autocrat of the Breakfast-table, The. 
Height of the Ridiculous, The. 

Holmes Alphabet, A. 

Homesick in Heaven. See Poet at the Breakfast- 
table, The. 

How the Old Horse Won the Bet. 

Human Voice, The. See Autocrat of the Break¬ 
fast-table, The. 

Hymn of Trust. 

“If to embody in a breathing word. ’ ’ See Poetry. 
Illustration of a Picture. 

Inevitable Trial, The. 

International Ode. 

Iris. See Professor at the Breakfast-table, The. 
Iron Gate, The. 

James Russell Lowell. See To James Russell 
Lowell. 


470 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Hood 


Holmes, Oliver Wendell ( continued). 

James Russell Lowell's Birthday Festival. See 
At a Birthday Festival. 

Katydid. See To an Insect. 

La Grisette. 

Language. See Rhymed Lesson, A (Urania). 
Last Leaf, The. 

Letting in Light. See Autocrat of the Breakfast- 
table, The. 

Lexington. 

Lines Recited at the Berkshire Jubilee, Pittsfield, 
Mass., Aug 23, 1844. 

Little Saint Cecilia. 

Living Temple, The. 

Meeting of the Dryads, The. 

Midsummer. 

Music Grinders, The. 

My Aunt. 

My Aviary. 

Never or Now. 

New Hail Columbia. See Additional Ver.es. 

Now or Never. See Never or Now. 

Ode for a Social Meeting. 

Ode for Washington’s Birthday. 

Old Constitution, The. See Old Ironsides. 

Old Hemlock, An. See Autocrat of the Breakfast- 
table, The. 

Old Ironsides. 

Old Man Dreams, The. 

On I.ending a Punch-bowl. 

Once More. 

One-hoss Shay, The; or, The Deacon’s Masterpiece. 
See Deacon’s Masterpiece, The; or, The Won¬ 
derful “One-hoss Shay.” 

Our Limitations. 

Oysterman, The. See Ballad of the Oysterman, 
The. 

Perseverance. 

Pilgrim’s Vision. The. 

Ploughman, The. 

Poem for the Dedication of the Fountain at Strat¬ 
ford-on-Avon, Presented by George W. Childs, 
of Philadelphia. 

Poem Read at the Dinner Given to the Author by 
the Medical Profession of the City of New York, 
April 12, 1883. 

Poesy. See Poetry. 

Poet at the Breakfast-table, The. 

Poetry. 

Professor at the Breakfast-table, The. 

Prologue. 

Promise, The. 

Questions and Answers. 

Ralph Waldo Emerson. 

Reflections of a Proud Pedestrian. 

Rhymed Lesson, A (Urania). 

Robinson of Leyden. See Professor at the Break- 
fast-table, The. 

Rudolph the Headsman. See Autocrat of the 
Breakfast-table, The. 

School-boy, The. 

September Gale. The. 

Soldier’s Faith, The. 

Spring Has Come, The. 

Steamboat, The. 

Stratford Fountain. See Poem for the Dedication 
of the Fountain at Stratford-on-Avon, etc. 
Strong Heroic Line, The. See Poem Read at the 
Dinner given to the Author etc. 

Sunday Hymn, A. 

Talks on Trees. See Autocrat of the Breakfast- 
table, The. 

Tattered Ensign, The. See Old Ironsides. 

Temple of Human Liberty, The. 

“Thy sacred leaves, fair freedom’s flower.” See 
Flower of Liberty, The. 

To an Insect. 

To George Peabody. 

To James Russell Lowell. 

To my Readers. 

To the Katydid See To an Insect. 

To the Portrait of “A Gentleman.” 

Toadstool, The. 

Two Streams, The. 

Under the Violets. 

Under the Washington Elm, Cambridge. 

Union, The. See Brother Jonathan’s Lament for 
Sister Caroline. 

Union and Liberty. 

Urania, a Rhymed Lesson. See Rhymed Lesson, 
A (Urania). 

Voiceless, The. 

War for the Union, The. See Inevitable Trial, The. 


Holmes, Oliver Wendell (continued). 

Welcome to the Nations. 

When We Plant a Tree. 

“Where we love is home. ’ ’ See Poet at the Break¬ 
fast-table, The. 

Why They Twinkle, See Album Verses. 
Wonderful “One-hoss Shay,” The. See Deacon’s 
Masterpiece, The; or, The Wonderful “One- 
hoss Shay.” 

Words on Language. See Rhymed Lesson, A 
(Urania). 

Holmes, Sidney E.—Child’s Good-night. The. 

Holmes, T:—Conjugating Dutchman, The. 

Conjugating German, The. See Conjugating 
Dutchman, The. 

Holstein, C: L.—But One Flag for Our Country. 

Holt, Jos.—Agriculture and Love of Country. 

Love of Country. See Agriculture and Love of 
Country. 

Stand by the Flag. 

Holty, Ludwig.—-Winter Song. 

Winter’s Snows. See Winter Song. 

Home, F. Wyville.—Dover Cliff. 

English Girl, An. 

In a September Night. 

Home, Hattie.—Seasons, The. 

Home, Rev ,1:—Douglas. 

Douglas’s Account of Himself. See Douglas. 
Norval. See Douglas. 

Scene from Douglas, A. See Douglas. 

Soliloquy of Douglas—-Solemnity. See Douglas. 
Home Recreations. —Coinin’ through the Rye. 

Hard Shave, A. 

Spirit of ’76. 

Homer.—Bending of the Bow, The. See Odyssey, The. 
Camp at Night, The. See Iliad, The. > 

Combat between Paris and Menelaus. See Iliad, 
The. 

Defiance of Hector and Ajax, The. See Iliad, The. 
Exploit of Hector, The. See Iliad, The. 

Grief of Achilles for the Slaying of Patroclus, 
Menoetus’ Son. See Iliad, The. 

Hector Slain by Achilles. See Iliad, The. 
Hector’s Exploit at the Barriers of the Grecian 
Fleet. See Iliad, The, 

Hector’s Farewell to Andromache. See Iliad, The. 
Hector’s Rebuke to Polydam Uo. See Iliad, The. 
Helen at the Sc®an Gates. See Tliad, The. 

Helen on the Rampart. See Iliad, The. 

Hermes in Calypso’s Island. See Odyssey, The. 
Iliad, The. 

Odysseus Reveals himself to his Father. See 
Odyssey, The. 

Odysseus’ Speech to Nausicaa. See Odyssey, The. 
Odyssey, The. 

Palace of Alcinoiis, The. See Odyssey, The. 
Parting of Hector and Andromache, The. See 
Iliad, The. 

Reply of Achilles to the Envoys of Agamemnon, 
Soliciting a Reconciliation. See Iliad, The. 
Song the Sirens Sung, The, See Odyssey, The. 
Triumph of Hector, The. See Iliad, The. 
Victory of Hector, The. Sec Iliad, The. 

Homer, Florence E.—George Birthington’s Washday. 
Honeywell, J.—Menagerie, The. 

Honeywood, St. John.—Darby and Joan. 

On Washington’s Farewell Address. 

Honnas, -.—Goin’ to der Races. 

Hood. C: Newton.—How the La Rue Stakes Were Lost. 
Hood, T:—Art of Book-keeping, The. (At.) See also 
Blanchard, Lam an. 

Autumn. SeeGde: Autumn. 

Bachelor’s Dream, The. 

Ballad: “It was not in the winter.” 

Ballad: “She’s up and gone, the graceless girl.’’ 
Ballad: “Sigh on. sad heart, for love’s eclipse.” 
Ballad: “Spring it is cheery.” 

Ben Bluff. 

Blank Verse in Rhyme. See Nocturnal Sketch 

[M 

Boarding-school Curriculum. 

Bridge of Sighs, The. 

Child and Mother. See To a Child Embracing 
his Mother. 

Cigar, The. 

Cockle vs. Cackle. 

Come with the Ring See Please to Ring the 
Belle. 

Comet, The. 

Death. 

Death Bed. The. 

Death’s Bamble. 

Demon Ship, The. 


471 




Hood 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Hood, T: ( continued). 

Die Herz Blume. 

Domestic Asides; or. Truth in Parentheses. 

Domestic Poems. 

Dream of Eugene Aram, The. 

Duel, The. 

Epicurean Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist. 
Equestrian Courtship. 

Eugene Aram. See Dream of Eugene Aram, 
The. 

Eugene Aram’s Dream. See Dream of Eugene 
Aram. The. 

Fair Ines. 

Faithless Nelly Gray. 

Faithless Sally Brown. 

Farewell, Life. Nee Stanzas: “Farewell, life,” etc. 
Flowers. 

Gold. See Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg. 
Good-night. See Domestic Poems. 

Happy Miller, The. 

Haunted House, The. 

Her Death. See Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious 
Leg. 

Her Moral. See Miss Kilmansegg and her Pre¬ 
cious Leg. 

History of John Day. See John Day. 

House where I Was Born, The. See I Remember, 

I Remember. 

I Love Thee. 

I Remember, I Remember. 

I’m not a Single Man. 

It was not in the Winter. See Ballad: “It was 
not in the winter.” 

John Day. 

Lady at Sea, The. 

Lady’s Dream, The. 

"Lake and a Fairy Boat, A.” See Song for Music. 

Lay of Real Life. A. 

Lay of the Laborer, The. 

Lear. 

Little Red Riding-Hood; or. The Wicked Wolf and 
the Virtuous Woodcutter (?). 

Lost Heir, The. 

Love Thee. See I Love Thee. 

Love Thy Mother, Little One. See To a Child 
Embracing his Mother. 

"Lullaby, oh, lullaby.” See Domestic Poems. 
Maiden’s Request. The. (Wr. at. to S: Lover.) 

See Please to Ring the Belle. 

May Morning, A. See Song: “O lady, leave thy 
silken thread.” 

Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg. 

More Hullahbaloo! 

Morning Meditations. 

“My New Pittayatees” (?). 

No! See November. 

Nocturnal Sketch, A. 

November. 

November in England. See November. 

Ode: Autumn. 

Ode on a Distant Prospect of Clapham Academy. 

Ode to an Infant Son. See Domestic Poems. 

Ode to Autumn. See Ode: Autumn. 

Ode to My Little Son. See Domestic Poems. 

Ode to Perry. 

Ode to Rae Wilson, Esquire. 

Old House at Home, The. See I Remember, I 
Remember. 

On the Art-unions. 

Open Question, An. 

Pain in a Pleasure Boat. 

Pansies. 

Parental Ode to My Son, Aged Three Years and 
Five Months, A. See Domestic Poems. 

Past and Present. See I Remember, I Remember. 
Pedler and His Trumpet, The. See Tale of a 
Trumpet. 

Please to Ring the Belle. 

Pompey’s Ghost. 

Queen Mab. 

Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist. See Epicurean 
Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist. 

Ruth. 

Sailor’s Apology for Bow-legs, A. 

Sally Simpkin’s Lament. 

Sausage-maker’s Ghost., The. 

Serenade: “Ah, sweet! thou little knowest how.” 
Serenade, A: “Lullaby, oh, lullaby.” See 
Domestic Poems. 

Silence. 

Singing for the Million. See More Hullahbaloo. 

Song: “A lake and a fairy boat.” See Song for 
Music. 

472 


Hood, T: {continued). 

Song: “O lady, leave thy silken thread.” 

Song: “The stars are with the voyager.” 

Song for Music. 

Song of the Shirt, The. 

Spring. 

Stanzas: “Farewell, life,” etc. 

Sunday Question, The. See Open Question, An. 
Superiority of Machinery, The. 

Tale of a Trumpet. 

Tim Turpin. 

Time, Hope and Memory. 

Time of Roses. See Ballad: “It was not in the 
winter.” 

To a Child [Embracing his Mother], 

To Charles Dickens. 

To Henrietta, on her Departure to Calais. 

To My Daughter!, on Her Birthday—C.]. 

To My Infant Son. See Domestic Poems. 

Truth in Parentheses. See Domestic Asides; or, 
Truth in Parentheses. 

Turtles. The. 

Water Lady, The. 

Waterloo Ballad, A. 

“What Can an Old Man Do but Die?” See 
Ballad: “Spring it is cheery.” 

Hood, Tom, Jr.—Muddled Metaphors. 

Hoofnagle, Fritz.—Fritz Valdher is Made a Mason. 
Hook, Theodore.—Pursuit of Legal Advice under 
Difficulties, The.—A Family Scene. 

Hooker. R:—Law. See Necessity of Law. 

Necessity of Law. 

Hooker, W. B.—Habet. 

Hooper, Ellen Sturgis.—Chimney-sweep, The. 

Dream, A. See Duty. 

Duty. 

Hooper, Mrs. Lucy Hamilton [Jones]. — Civil War 
[—An Episode of the Commune]. (Tr.) See 
Relenting Mob, A. 

Hetty McEwen. 

King’s Ride, The. 

Relenting Mob, A. (Tr.) 

Three Loves. 

Three Visitors. 

Trumpeter’s Betrothed, The. 

Hope, Anthony.—Cordial Relations. See Dolly Dia¬ 
logues, The. 

Dolly Dialogues, The. 

Heart of the Princess Osra, The. 

How they Stopped the Rim. See Sport Royal. 
Little Joke, A. 

Matter of Duty, A. See Dolly Dialogues.The. 

My Last Chance. See Dolly Dialogues.The. 
Philosopher in the Apple Orchard, The. 

Queen’s Letter, The. See Rupert of Hentzau. 
Retribution. See Dolly Dialogues, The. 

Rupert of Hentzau. 

Sin of the Bishop of Modenstein, The. See Heart 
of the Princess Osra, The. 

Slight Mistake, A. See Dolly Dialogues, The. 
Sport Royal. 

That Little Wretch. See Dolly Dialogues, The. 
Hope, Jas. Barron.—Cuba. 

Oath of Freedom, The. 

Hopkins, Alphonso A.—It Might Have been. 

Hopkins, Ellice.—Me and Thee. (Tr.) 

Hopkins, Herbert Muller.—My* Pipe is Out. 

Hopkins. Jennie L.—My Valentine. 

Hopkins, Louisa Parkins.—December. 

Nativity, The. 

School Cantata. 

Hopkins, Mary S.—Mary Ellen Attends a School of 
Elocution. 

Hopkins, Vira.—Why Ben Schneider Decides for Prohi¬ 
bition. 

Hopkinson, Fs.—Battle of the Kegs, The. 

Hopkinson, Jos.—Hail, Columbia. 

Hail, Columbia, Happy Land. See Hail, Columbia. 
Reverence for Law. 

Hopper, Anna.—Playing Entertainment. 

Hopper, Nora.—Dark Man, The. 

Eve of Mary, The. 

Fairy Fiddler, The. 

Hallow E’en. 

Phyllis and Damon. 

Hoppin, W: J.—Charley [or Charlie] Machree. 

Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus).—Contentment. 
Death of Cleopatra, The. 

Horace, Bk. IV., Ode 9. 

Man in Conscious Virtue Bold. The. 

“Non Omnis Moriar.” 

To his Books. 

Horn, E: Traill.—Three Wishes, The. 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Howells 


Horne, Herbert P.— Amico Suo. 

Formosa? Puellse. 

"If She be Made of White and Red.” 

Nancy Dawson. 

Horne, R: Hengist.—Akinetos. See Orion. 

Distraught for Merop4. See Orion. 

Eos. See Orion. 

Genius. 

In Forest Depths. See Orion. 

Laurel Seed, The. 

Meeting of Orion and Artemis. See Orion. 

Orion: An Epic Poem. 

Pelters of Pyramids. 

Plough, The. 

Slave, The. 

Solitude and the Lily. 

Spoiled Child, A. 

Horton, Judge Albert H.—Fountain of Crime, The. 
Horton, Alice.—Tale of a Temptation. 

Horton, G:—Deakin Brown’s Way. 

Enj’yin’ Poor Health. 

Farmer’s Song-bird, The. 

Night in Lesbos, A. 

Obstinate Old Man, An. 

Hosford, Maud.—Bargains in Hearts. 

Hosmer, Frd’k L.—Found. 

Indwelling God, The. 

My Dead. 

Mystery of God, The. 

On the Mount. 

Passing Understanding. 

Psalm of Trust, A. 

Hoss, G: W.—Two Pictures. 

Hough. Rev. Alfred I.—Devil, The. 

How They Caught the Panther. 

“We’re Building Two a Day!” 

Houghton, A.’B.—Dresden Shepherdess, A. 

To Prue. 

Houghton, G:—Four-leaf Clover. 

Handsel Ring, The. 

Manor Lord, The. 

Sandy Hook. 

Houghton, R: Monckton Milnes, Lord. —“Arm of aid 
to the Weak. An.” 

Brookside, The. 

Envoy to an American Lady, An. 

Finis. See “Arm of aid to the Weak, An.” 
Forest, The. 

From Love and Nature. 

Good Night and Good Morning. 

Greek at Constantinople, The. 

Half Truth. 

Humility. 

I Wandered by the Brookside. See Brookside, 
The. 

In Memoriam. 

Lady Moon. 

Life. See “So should we live,” etc. 

London Churches. 

Men of Old. The. 

Moments. 

Nessun Maggior Dolore. 

On the Death of-. 

Our Mother Tongue. See Envoy to an American 
Lady, An. 

Palm and Pine. See Palm-tree and the Pine, The. 
Palm-tree and the Pine, The. 

Shadows. See Nessun Maggior Dolore. 

Small Things. 

“So should we live that every hour.” 

Song: “1 wandered by the brook-side.” See 
Brookside, The. 

Song of the Railroad, The. 

Strangers Yet. 

To Charles Lamb. 

Venetian Serenade, The. 

Youth, that Pursuest. 

Hours at Home .—By Summer Woods. 

Elm Blossom. 

Olive Trees of Palestine. 

Our Willows. 

Household Words. —Our Sister. 

“Sow, and look onward, upward.” 

Houser, Mrs. Jessie F.—Woman Healed, The. 
Housman, A. E.—To an Athlete Dying Young. 

When I was One and Twenty. 

Houston, Mark.—Among My Books. 

Hovel, E:— See Thurlow, E: Hovel, Lord. 

Hovey, R:—At the Club. 

Beethoven’s Third Symphony. 

Birth of Galahad, The. 

Call of the Bugles, The. 

Dartmouth Winter-song. 


Hovey, R: ( continued). 

Envoy—To “More Songs from Vagabondia.” 
Hunting-song. 

Laurana’s Song. 

Love in the W inds. 

Taliesin: A Masque. 

Unmanifest Destiny. 

Wander-lovers, The. 

Ylen’s Song. See Birth of Galahad, The. 

How, W: Walsham.—Behold, l stand at the Door and 
Knock. 

O Word of God Incarnate. 

Howard, Copt. -.—Good for Evil. 

Howard, Miss. -—Jephthah’s Rash Vow. 

Howard, Blanche Willis. See Teuffel, Mme. von. 
Howard, Clara M.—Ghost of Lone Rock, The. 

Howard, Mrs. G. M.—Secret, A. 

Howard, H: See Surrey, Earl of. 

Howard, Hugh.—Brandy and Soda. 

Howard, Mrs. M. F.—How Mr. Blinks Named the 
Baby. 

Howard, Norman.—Christmas-tide Shadow, A. 
Howard, S. L.—Love up to Date. 

Howard, Sarah E.—Jubilee of the Flowers, The. 

My Baby Brother. 

Howard,' Rev. W’. D.—“Young men, let the nobleness 
of your mind impel you to its improvement.” 
Howarth, Ellen Clementine.—Passion Flower, The. 
Thou Wilt never Grow Old. 

’Tis but a Little Faded Flower. 

Way of the Cross, The. 

Howarth, G: R.—Room for You. 

Howe, Herbert A.—Life on the Moon. 

Howe, Jos.—Deserted Nest, The. 

Flag of Old England, The. 

Howe, Mrs. Julia [Ward].—Battle Hymn of the 
Republic[, The]. 

Dead Christ, The. 

Eucharist of Affliction. 

Flag, The. 

Hamlet at the Boston. 

Our Orders. 

Pio Nono. 

Royal Guest, The. 

Howe, Mark Antony De Wolfe.—Distinction. 
Travellers, The. 

“Whom the Gods Love.” 

Howe, Martha C.—Knight and the Page, The. 

Howell, Mrs. Eliz. [Lloyd].—Authors. See Literary 
Recreations. 

Boys of the Bible. 

Building the Ladder. 

Capping Quotations. See Literary Recreations. 
Flowers. See Literary Recreations. 

Holiday Acrostic, A. 

Literary Recreations. 

Milton’s Prayer of Patience. 

Milton’s Soliloquy in His Old Age. See Milton’s 
Prayer of Patience. 

Old and Blind. (Wr. at. to J: Milton.) See Mil¬ 
ton’s Prayer of Patience. 

Our Holidays. 

Seasons, The. See Literary Recreations. 
Temperance Alphabet, A. 

Ten Famous Women. 

Howell, Jas.—Opinion. 

Words. 

Howells, Mildred.—Down a Woodland Way. 

Moral in Sevres, A. 

Romance. 

Howells, W: Dean.—Battle in the Clouds, The. 

Before the Gate. 

Calvary. 

Caprice. 

Change. 

Earliest Spring. See In Earliest Spring. 

From Generation to Generation. 

Gone. 

Hope. 

If. 

In August. 

In Earliest Spring. 

Judgment Day. 

Mouse Trap, The. 

Mysteries, The. 

Our Thanksgiving Accept. See Thanksgiving. A. 
Pilot’s Story, The. 

Saint Christopher. 

Song the Oriole Sings, The. 

Thanksgiving, A. 

Two Wives, The. 

Vision. 

What Shall it Profit? 


473 










Howells 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND, RECITATIONS 


Howells, Winifred.—Forthfaring. 

Mood, A. 

Past. 

Poet and the Child, The. 

Wasted Sympathy, A. 

Howitt, Mary.—April. 

Ballad, A: “Among green pleasant meadows. ’ ’(Tr.) 
Beaver, The. 

Birds in Summer. (At. also to Felicia D. Hemans.) 
Broom Flower, The. 

Buttercups and Daisies. 

Children’s Appeal, The. 

Child’s Hymn, The. See Poor Child’s Hymn, The. 
Cornfields. 

Fairies of the Caldon-Low, The. 

Father is Coming. 

Flax Flower, The. 

Kaiser, The, 

Kingfisher, The. 

Little Brawl, A. 

Little Children. 

Little Streams. 

Mabel on Midsummer Day. 

Monkey, The. 

Northern Seas, The. (At. also to W: Howitt.) 

Oak Tree, The. 

Old Christmas. 

Poor Child’s Hymn, The. 

Sea, The. 

Sea Fowler, The. 

Sparrow’s Nest. The. 

Spider and the Fly, The. 

Spring, The. See “Spring, she is a blessed thing, 
The.” 

“Spring, she is a blessed thing, The.” 

Spring is Coming. 

Squirrel, The. 

Summer Woods, 

Use of Flowers, The. 

Uses of the Flowers. See Use of Flowers, The. 
Voice of Spring, The. 

Voyage with the Nautilus, The. 

Howitt, WDeparture of the Swallow, The. 

Northern Seas, The. (At. also to Mary Howntt.) 
Summer Noon, A. 

Wind in the Frolic, The. 

Howland, E:—Condemned, The. 

Howland, G:—Birthday of Washington ever Honored, 
The. 

Fading. 

Howland, H. E.—After-dinner Speech before the Har¬ 
vard Club of New York. 

Howland, Mrs. Mary [Woolsey] (Mrs. Rob’t G.).—First 
Spring Flowers. 

In the Hospital. 

Requieseam. See In the Hospital. 

Rest. See In the Hospital. 

Hows, G: W.—Woolen Doll, The. 

Hoyle. W: (?)—I’ll Take what Father Takes. 

Hoynton, J:—Why the Cows Came Late. 

Hoyt, ,T. K.—“Yes, sing the song of the orange tree.” 
Hoyt, Mary E.- Mystery, A. 

Hoyt, Ralph.—Old. 

Snow. —A Winter Sketch. 

World for Sale, The. 

Hubbard, Elbert.—Message to Garcia. 

Hubbard, Eliz. Ingram.— Catholic Psalm. The. 
Hubbard, Marion.—“Blyther than the Burnie.” 
Hubbard, R. B.—Texas Centennial Oration. 

Hubbard, R: Dudley.—Retrospect, A. 

Hudson, Miss H. R.—Newsboy’s Debt, The. (At. also 
to Helen Hunt Jackson.) 

Poet and Painter. 

Tit for Tat. 

Hudson, Mrs. Mary [Clemmer] [Ames],—By the Sea. 
“For they alone have need of sorrow.” 

Good-by, Sweetheart. 

Mother Love. 

Nantasket. 

Peace. 

Something Beyond. 

Words for Parting. 

Hudson, Sanford A.—Truant. 

Huestis, Annie Campbell.—Gentle-breath. 

Little White Sun, The. 

Twenty-old and Seven-wild. 

Hughes, Annie.—Pussy’s Better Nature. 

Hughes, E. A.—Two Armies, The. 

Hughes, J:—Prince Eugene. ( Tr .) 

Ungrateful Cupid, The. (Tr.) 

Hughes, M. M.—Ring Out, Wild Bells. 

Hughes, Rupert.—For Decoration Day. 

Martyrs of the Maine, The. 


Hughes, T:—At Rugby. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days at Rugby. 

Away to School. See Tom Brown’s School Days 
at Rugby. 

Boat Race, The. See Tom Brown at Oxford. 

Egg Hunting. See Tom Brown’s School Days at 
Rugby. 

Fighting. See Tom Brown’s School Days at 
Rugby. 

Hare and Hounds. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days at Rugby. 

Keeper, The. See Tom Brown’s School Days at 
Rugby. 

Morning and Afternoon Chapel. See Tom 
Brown’s School Days at Rugby. 

New Boy, The. See Tom Brown’s School Days at 
Rugby. 

Tom Brown at Oxford. 

Tom Brown at Rugby. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days at Rugby. 

Tom Brown Starting for Rugby. See Tom 
Brown’s School Days at Rugby. 

Tom Brown’s School Days at Rugby. 

“We listened, as all boys in their better moods wdll 
listen.” See Tom Brown’s School Days at 
R ugby. 

Hughes, T: Smart.—Belshazzar’s Feast. 

Hugo, Victor Marie.—Address at the Peace Congress, 
1849. 

Against Curtailing the Right of Suffrage. 

At the Barricade. 

Battle of Waterloo, The. See Les Miserables. 

Billows and Shadows. Nee Les Mist:rabies. 

Bishop’s - Silver Candlesticks, The. Nee Les Misd- 
rables. 

By Order of the King. 

Carronade. See Ninety-three. 

Caught in the Quicksand. 

Children of the Bonnet Rouge. See Ninety-three. 

Civil War [—an Episode of the Commune]. See 
Relenting Mob, A. 

Close of the Battle of Waterloo. See Les Mis4- 
rables. 

Combat with the Octopus, The. See Toilers of 
the Sea, The. 

Death Penalty, The. 

Desnair. See Les Miserable*. 

Djinns, The. 

Emperor’s Return, The. See Ives Burgraves. 

Envy and Avarice. 

Exile's Hope, The. 

Extravaganza, An. 

Father’s Curse, The. See King’s Diversion, The (Le 
Roi s’Amuse). 

Gamin, The. See Les Miserable*. 

Gastibelza. See Guitare. 

Good-night. 

Grandmother, The. 

Guitare. 

Hireling Swiss Regiment, The. See Swiss Mer¬ 
cenaries, The. 

How Good are the Poor! See Poor Fisher Folk, 
The. 

In Defense of Universal Suffrage, May 20, 1850. 

‘‘In spite of censorship, in spite of the Index.” 

‘‘It suppresses duration, it suppresses space, it 
suppresses suffering.” 

Jean Valjean. See I.es Miserables. 

Jean Valjean and the Bishop. See Les Mise¬ 
rable*. 

Jean Valjean’s Sacrifice. See Les Miserables. 

John Valjohn and the Savoyard. See Les Mise¬ 
rable*. 

King and People. See By Order of the King. 

King’s Diversion, The (Le Roi s’Amuse). 

L’Ange qui Veille. See Watching Angel, The. 

I.ast Days of a Condemned. 

Les Burgraves. 

Les Miserables. 

“Let us not fall into the vulgar whim and dis¬ 
honor the century in which we live.” 

Liberty of the Press [; or, The Human Mind]. 1850. 

Little Gavroche. See Les Miserables. 

Majesty of Trifles, The. 

Man Overboard, A. See Les Miserables. 

Monster Cannon, The. See Ninety-three. 

Monument to Shakespeare, A. See William 
Shakespeare. 

Napoleon ie Petit. See Napoleon the Little. 

Napoleon the Little. 

Napoleon’s Overthrow. See Les Miserables. 

Necessity of Religion. 

Ninety-t.hree. 


474 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Hutton 


Hugo, Victor Marie (continued). 

Poet’s Simple Faith, The. 

Poor Fisher Folk, The. 

Poor Little Children. 

Practical Religious Instruction. 

Present Age, The. See Napoleon the Little. 
Relenting Mob, A. 

Republic or a Monarchy, A? 

Retrospect, A. 

Rome and Carthage. 

Secret Executions. See Last Days of a Con¬ 
demned. 

Speech of the Grand Rabbi. Moses-Ben-Habib, to 
Ferdinand and Isabella. See Torquemada. 
Sun of Liberty, The. 

Swiss Mercenaries, The. 

“This century is the grandest of centuries.” See 
Napoleon the Little. 

“This century proclaims the sovereignty of the 
citizen.” See Napoleon the Little. 

To a Daughter on her Marriage. 

Toilers of the Sea, The. 

Torquemada. 

Two Napoleons, The. 

United States of Europe, The. See Address at 
the Peace Congress, 1840. 

Universal Suffrage, May 20th, 1S50. 

Watching Angel, The (Dans l’Alcove Sombre). 
Waterloo. See I.es Misdrables. 

“Who art thou, shadowy passer-by?” 

William Shakespeare. 

Hulme, E: M.—Lyric, A. 

Hume, Alex.—Story of a Summer Day, The. 

Summer Day, A. See Storv of a Summer Day, 
The. 

Humphrey, Fs. A.—Mercantile Transaction, A. 
Humphrey. Heman, D.D. (?)—Howard, the Prisoners’ 
Friend. 

Memory of the Good. See Howard, the Prison¬ 
ers’ Friend. 

Hungerford, Mrs. M. C.—Oh, for a Manl 
Old King Cole. 

Hunneman, Carleton.—College Days. 

Hunnis, W:—Rhymed Will of Hunnis, The. 

Hunt, Albert E.—Evening Doze, An. 

Hunt, Arthur P.—Voyage of the "Fram,” The. 

Hunt, Belle.—But—. 

Hunt, Freeman.—Behind Time. 

Hunt, Geo. D.—Choosing a Trade or Profession. 

Hunt, H. C.—Common Bond, The. 

La Jeune Malade.. 

Orphan’s Trust, The. 

Sisters, The. 

Hunt, Mrs. Helen [Fiske], See Jackson, Mrs. Helen 
[Hunt]. 

Hunt, Hester.—“Don’t give up the ship.” 

Hunt, (Jas. H:) Leigh.— Abou Ben Adhem [and the 
Angel]. 

Angel in the House, An. 

“Angel wrote and vanished. The.” See Abou Ben 
Adhem. 

Autobiography of Leigh Hunt, The. 

Better Things. (For somewhat diff. vers, see Mac¬ 
donald, G:) 

Captain Sword. 

Chorus of [the] Flowers. See Songs and Chorus 
of the Flowers. 

Cupid Swallowed. 

Dryads, The. 

Fairies’Song. (Tr.) See Song of Fairies Robbing 
an Orchard. 

Fancy Concert, The. 

Fish, the Man, and the Spirit, The. 

Flowers. See Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 
“For there are two heavens, sweet.” See Heaven 
upon Earth, A. 

Garden and Summer House, A. See Story of 
Rimini, The. 

Glove [and the Lions], The. 

Grasshopper and [the] Cricket, The. See To the 
Grasshopper and Cricket. 

Heaven upon Earth, A. 

Hero and Leander. 

His Poets. See Sonnet: “Were I to name,” etc. 
Jafifar [; an Eastern Tradition], 

Jenny Kissed Me. See Rondeau. 

Jovial Priest’s Confession, The. (Tr.) 

Joy of Spring. 

Lesson in Reading, A. See Autobiography of 
Leigh Hunt, The. 

Lilies. See Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 
Love-letters Made in Flowers. 

Mahmoud. 


Hunt, (Jas. H:) Leigh (continued). 

Nile, The. 

Nun, The. 

Poppies. See Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 
Ravenna Pine Forest. 

Rondeau. 

Roses. See Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 
Sneezing. 

Song of Fairies [Robbing an Orchard], (Tr.) 

Song to Ceres. 

Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 

Songs of the Flowers. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers. 

Sonnet: “Were I to name,’’ etc. 

Sonnet: Found bv Mr. Alexander Ireland. 

Story of Rimini, ’l'be. 

Sweet-brier. See Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 
To a Child During Sickness. See To T. L. H., Six 
Years Old, during a Sickness. 

To J. H. 

To June. 

To T. L. IF. [. Six Years Old, during a Sickness]. 
To the Grasshopper and [the] Cricket. 

True King, The. (Tr.) 

Trumpets of Doolkarnein, The. 

Two Heavens. See Heaven upon Earth. A. 
Violets. See Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 
Hunt, Josephine.—You Kissed Me. 

Hunt, Josie R.— Katie Lee and Willie Grey. (At. also 
to J. H. Pixley.) 

FIunt, Leigh. See Hunt, (Jas. H:) Leigh. 

Hunt, Rob’t.—Poetry of Science. 

Wonders of an Atom, The. See Poetry of Science. 
Hunt, Mrs. Sara Keables.—Schoolday. 

Two Little Stockings, The. 

Hunt, W: E:—Golden-rod. 

Passing of Summer, The. 

Sea’s Influence, The. 
blunter. Anne.—Indian Death-song. 

Lot of Thousands, The. 

Hunter, Rob’t Mercer Taliaferro.—Aspirations of the 
American People. 

Hunter-Duvar, J:—Adieu to France. See De Roberval 
Brawn of England’s Lay. 

De Roberval. 

Gallant Fleet, The. See De Roberval. 

How Balthazar the King went down into Egypt. 
John Avar’s Last Lay. 

Minnesingers lied. The. 

Ohn&wa. Sec De Roberval. 

Twilight Song. See De Roberval. 

Hunting, G: F.—Help One Another. 

Huntington, Jedediah.—On the Coronation of Queen 
Victoria. 

Huntington, M. It.—Little Acorn. 

Huntington, R:-—Louisburg. 

Sunrise on the Tusket. 

Huntington, W: Reed.—Authority. 

Tellus. 

Huntley, Stanley.—Mr. Spoopendyke Hears Burglars. 
See Spoopendyke’s Burglars. 

Spoopendvke’s Burglars. 

Huntress, H. P.—Ballad of the Afternoon Tea. 
Class-day Hamlet , A. 

Hurdis, Jas.—Lessons from Birds and Bees. 

Hurley, T: H:—Tennyson. 

Hurst, A. E.—Brownies’ Drill, The. 

Doll Drill. 

Dumb-bell Drill. 

Flag Drill. 

Gymnastic Drill. 

May-pole Drill. 

Ring Drill. 

Scarf Drill. 

Tambourine Drill. 

Tennis Drill. 

Hurst, Rt. Rev. J: F.—“Church of Christ, if called to 
pass again through the age of martyrdom 
The.” 

Churches and Saloons. 

Ilurw'ood,-.—Jew’s Troubles, A. 

Husenbeth, Rev. Frd’k C:—Ruins of Babylon, The. 
IFuskisson, W:—Conservative Innovator, The. 

Husted, Marg.—Bright Hours. 

Husted, W: C.—Highway, The. 

Hutchinson, Ellen Mackay. See Cortissoz, Mrs. 

Ellen Mackat [Hutchinson], 

Hutchinson. Rev. J. P.—How Do You Know. 
Hutchinson, Norman.—In the San Joaquin. 
Hutchinson. Percy Adams.—“Bottoms up” ad Finem. 

Methinks the Measure. 

Hutchinson, R. K.--Burial of the Cat, The. 

Hutton, Laurence.—Doves of Venice, The. 




Huxley 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Huxley, T: H :—Education. See Liberal Education 
and where to Find it, A. 

Liberal Education and where to Find it, A. 
Tennyson. 

Hyatt, T; J.—Albert Drecker. 

Hyde, Douglas.—Address of Death to Tomas de Roiste, 
The. 

Little Child, 1 Call Thee. 

My Grief on the Sea. 

M v Love—Oh! she is My Love. 

Ringleted Youth of My Love. 

Hyde, G:—Lent. , , 

Hvde, W: De Witt.—Mission of the Public School, 
The. 


Hyder Ali.—Love’s Stratagem. 

Hynson, G: B.—Last Charge, The. 

Uncle Tommy’s Philosophy. 

Hvslop, -las.— -Cameronian’s Dream, The. 


I 

I., W. F. E.—Twilight’s Hour. 

“Iedgarj.”—Sable 1 heology. « 

Image, Selwyn.—Her Confirmation. 

Prayer, A. 

Protestation. The. 

Imbride, Frank Morgan.—“District No. 9.” 
Independent, The .—De Rev. Plato Johnson on Free 
Cirkelatin’ T.iberies. 

Grasshopper, The. 

Jack Frost. 

Just What I Wanted. 

Message, A. , _ 

Ingalls, J: Jas.—Eulogy on the Death of Congressman 
James N. Burnes of Missouri. 

Opportunity. 

Prohibition in Kansas. 

Senator Ingalls’ Great Speech on the Death of 
Burnes of Missouri. See Eulogy on the Death of 
Congressman .Tames N. P.urnes of Missouri. 
Ingelow, Jean.—Apprenticed. See Songs of the Night 
Watches. 

"Art lireil?” See Dominion. 

At One Again. 

Better Wav, The. See Honors. 

Brides of Enderby, The; or, the High Tide. See 
High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, The. 
Brothers and a Sermon. 

Divided. 

Dominion. 

Dreamfs] that Came True, The. 

Eagles. See Songs of the Voices of Birds. 

Easter Flowers. 

Echo and the Ferry. 

Giving in Marriage. See Songs of Seven. 

God’s T ime. See Scholar and Carpenter. 
Goldilocks. See Brothers and a Sermon. 

Gone. See Star’s Monument, The. 

Heigh-Ho 1 Daisies and Buttercups. See Songs of 
Seven. 

High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire^ The], 
High Tide [The; or, the Brides of Enderby]. See 
High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, The. 
Honors. 

I Have the Courage to be Gay. See Scholar and 
Carpenter. 

“If there be memory in the world to come.” See 
Star’s Monument , The. 

"In regal quiet deep.” See Song for the Night of 
Christ’s Resurrection. 

In the Nursery. 

Like a Laverock in the Lift. 

Long White Seam, The. 

Longing for Home. See Songs of Seven. 

Love. See Songs of Seven. 

Lovers. See At One Again. 

Love’s Thread of Gold. 

Maiden with a Milking-pail, A. See Reflections. 

Looking over a Gate at a Pool in a Field. 
Noble Tuck-man, The. 

Old Fisherman, The. See Brothers and a Sermon. 
Old Fisherman’s Prayer, The. See Brothers and 
a Sermon. 

Old Man’s Prayer, The. See Brothers and a Ser¬ 
mon. 

On the Borders of Cannock Chase. 

Over the Green Downs. 

Persephone. 

Reflections. Looking over a Gate at a Pool in a 
Field. 

Regret. 


Ingelow, Jean ( continued ). 

Sailing beyond Seas. 

Scholar and Carpenter. 

Sea-mews in Winter Time. 

Seven Times Four. [Maternity.] See Songs of 
Seven. 

Seven Times One. [Exultation.] See Songs of 
Seven. 

Seven Times Seven.—Longing for Home. See 
Songs of Seven. 

Seven Times Six. — Giving in Marriage. See 
Songs of Seven. 

Seven Times Three.—Love. See Songs of Seven. 
Seven Times Two. [Romance.] See Songs of 
Seven. 

Singing Lesson, A [or The], 

Song for the Night of Christ’s Resurrection. 

Song of the Old Love. See Supper at the Mill. 
Songs of Seven. 

Songs of the Night, Watches. 

Songs of the Voices of Birds. 

Sorrows Plumanize Our Race. 

Star’s Monument, The. 

Story of Life, A. See Sweet is Childhood. 

Supper at the Mill. 

Sweet is Childhood. 

“We shall walk no more through the sodden plain.” 

See Supper at the Mill. ; 

When Sparrows Build. See Supper at the Mill. 
Winstanley. 

Wreck of “The Grace of Sunderland.” See 
Brothers and a Sermon. 

Ingemann, Bernhard Severin.—Legend of the Aspen, 
A. 

Ingersoll, Rob’t Green. — At the Tomb of Napoleon. 
See Liberty of Man, Woman, and Child, The. 
Col. Ingersoll’s Remarkable Vision. See Speech 
at Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 21, 1876. 

Country Life. 

Declaration of Independence, The. 

Decoration Day. See Oration in New York City, 
1882. 

Eulogy of Walt Whitman. 

Ingersoll’s Dream of the War. 

Liberty of Man, Woman, and Child, The. 

Liberty or Death. See Declaration of Independ¬ 
ence, The. 

Nominating James G. Blaine for President. 
Oration in New York City, 1882. 

Plumed Knight, The. See Nominating James G. 
Blaine for President. 

Speech at Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 21, 1876. 
Speech for Decoration Day. See Ingersoll’s 
Dream of the War. 

Vision of War, The. See Speech at Indianapolis, 
Ind., Sept. 21, 1876. 

Ingham, J: Hall.—Anton Seidl. 

Beethoven. 

Dreyfus. 

Genesis. 

George Washington. 

M. Carnot’s Death. 

Off Havana. 

Phillips Brooks. 

Summer Sanctuary, A. 

Thought, A. 

“Ingoldsby, T:”— See Barham, R: Harris. 

Ingraham, E. R.—Mrs. Jones’s Revenge. ( Arr .) 
Ingram, J: Kells.—Memory of the Dead, The. 
Nationality. 

Social Heredity. 

Sonnet: Majuba Hill. 

Inlander. —Coward, A. 

“Innsly, Owen.” See Jennison, Lucy White. 
Ireland, Archbishop J:—Dry of Personal Liberty, The. 
Our Future. 

Patriotism. 

Shall America be Ruled Forever by the Liquor 
Power? 

Temperance. 

Irish World. —Rum Everywhere. See Rum Evil, The. 
Rum Evil, The. 

“Ironquill.” See Ware, Eugene F. 

Irons, W: J.—Dies Irse. ( Tr). 

Irvine, J. P.—August Afternoon, An. 

Indian Summer. 

Summer Drought. 

Irving, E:—David, King of Israel. 

Irving, Eliz. Mansfield.—Medley, A. 

Irving, Sir H;—My First Reading. 

Irving, Minna.—Betsy’s Battle Flag. 

Bugle, The. 

El Camilo. 


476 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Janvier 


Irving, Minna ( continued ). 

Grandmother’s Valentine. 

Marching Still. 

Veteran, A. 

Irving, Washington.—Abbotsford. 

Album Verses. 

Alhambra, The. 

America and England. 

Author’s Chamber, The. See Alhambra, The. 

Bee-hunt in the Far West, A. 

Broken Hearts. 

Charms of Rural Life, The. See Rural Life in 
England. 

Columbus Landing in the New World. See Life 
and Voyages of Christopher Columbus. 

Death of King Philip. See Philip of Pokanoket. 

Discovery of America, The. See Life and Voyages 
of Christopher Columbus. 

Discoverv of the Hudson River, The. See Knick¬ 
erbocker History of New York. 

Dutch Governor, The. See Knickerbocker His¬ 
tory of New York. 

English Scenery. See Rural Life in England. 

Forest Trees. 

“From that time until the period of arrival.” See 
Voyage, A. 

Governor and the Notary, The. See Alhambra, 
The. 

Governor Manco and the Soldier. See Alhambra, 
The. 

Grave, The. See Rural Funerals. 

Knickerbocker History of New York. 

Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The. 

Legend of the Enchanted Soldier, The. See Al¬ 
hambra, The. 

Legend of the Moor’s Legacy, See Alhambra, 
The. 

Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus. 

Little Britain. 

Moonlight on the Alhambra. See Alhambra, The. 

Organ, The. See Westminster Abbey. 

Origin of the White, the Red, and the Black Men. 
See Seminoles, The. 

Philip of Pokanoket. 

Reflections on Westminster Abbey. See West¬ 
minster Abbey. 

Renowned Wouter Van Twiller, The. See Knick¬ 
erbocker History of New York. 

Ride of Ichabod Crane, The. See Legend of 
Sleepy Hollow, The. 

Rip Van Winkle. 

Rural Funerals. 

Rural Life in England. 

Seminoles, The— Origin of the White, the Red, 
and the Black Men: The Conspiracy of Nea- 
mathla. 

Sir Walter Scott and His Dogs. See Abbotsford. 

Sorrow for the Dead. See Rural Funerals. 

Tea Parties in Old Times. See Knickerbocker 
History of New York. 

True Nobleman, A. See Forest Trees. 

Uses of History, The. See Knickerbocker History 
of New York. 

Voyage, A. 

Westminster Abbey. 

Widow and Her Son, The. 

William the Testy. See Knickerbocker History 
of New York. 

Wouter Van Twiller. See Knickerbocker History 
of New York. 

Irwin, Emily D.—True Incident of the War, A. 

Irwin, R: W.—Historic Codfish, The. 

Irwin, T: C.—Caesar. 

Character, A. 

To a Skull. 

W T indow Song, A. 

Irwin, Will H.—Professor’s Ball Game, The. 

Ives, Daisy Noble.—Survival of the Fittest, The. 

Ives, Ella.—Little Field Preachers. 


J 

J.—Elfin Cruise, An. 

If. 

J., McG.—One Advantage of Volapuk. 

J., W. P.—French Market, The. 

Jack, Rev. Alex. B.—“Or, suppose on the other 
hand he had told you the plea was granted.” 
“You say, preach away, tell us something more of 
this Fruitless Fig Tree.” 

Jack, Anna L.—Flowers’ Convention, The. 

New Kind of Doll, A. 


Jackson, Ahdrew.—Appeal to the Patriotism of South 
Carolina, An. 

Union Linked with Liberty. 

Jackson, E. Maude.—Floral Birthday Greeting, A. 
Jackson, Edgar Stanway.—Bo’s’n Jack of the “Al¬ 
batross.” 

Dynamiter’s Daughter, The. 

Wreck of the “Mary Wiley,” The. 

Jackson, Hardy.—Song of the Headlight, The. 
Jackson, Mrs. Helen [Fiske] [Hunt]. (“H. H.”)— 
Arbutus, The. 

Ariadne’s Farewell. 

Best. 

Blind Spinner, The. See Spinning. 

Burnt Ships. 

Coronation. 

Courteous Mother, A. (?) 

Doubt. 

“Down to Sleep.” 

Emigravit. 

Forgiven. 

Fra Luigi’s Marriage. 

Glimpses. 

Gondolieds. 

Habeas Corpus. 

Hand-organ Man’s Little Girl, The. 

In April. 

Joy. 

Last Prayer, A. 

Love’s Fulfilling. 

Mom. 

Morning-glory. 

My Legacy. 

My Strawberry. 

Newsboy’s Debt, The. (At. also to H. R. Hudson.) 
Not as I Will. 

October’s Bright Blue Weather. 

Parable, A. 

Poppies in the Wheat. 

Riviera, The. 

Shining Little House, The. 

“Shore is lined with anchored ships, The.” 
Skating hath charms. 

Spinning. 

That Things are no Worse, Sire. 

Thought. 

Triumph. 

Two Truths. 

WTien the Baby Died. 

Wild Rose in September, A. 

Woman’s Death-wound, A. 

Jackson, Gen. H: R.—Live Oak, The. 

My Wife and Child. 

“W T ith his gnarled old arms and his iron form. See 
Live Oak, The. 

Jackson, Louisa.—Only for This. 

Jackson, R: A.—Incomplete Revelation, An. 

Jackson, W r illa Lloyd.—Enemies Meet at Death’s Door. 
Jacobs, Sarah S.—Changeless World, The. 

Jacobus, Melancthon Williams.—“Fire in nature is 
not a substance.” 

Jacopone, Fra.—Stabat Mater Dolorosa. 

Jacque, G:—Moon and the Child, The. 

Jacques, M. F.—Great-grandmother’s Garden. 
Jacques, Mary J.—Children’s Friend, The. 

Jago, R:—Absence. 

To Mabel. See Absence. 

Jakeway, C: Edwin.—Unfinished Prophecy, An. 
Jakeway, H. W.—Autograph Book of Blue, The. 
James. Mrs. Alice Archer [Sewall].—Butterfly, The. 
Processional. 

Sinfonia Eroica. 

James, D. I,.—Tzaak W’alton’s Prayer. 

James, Fleming.—Johnston at Shiloh. 

James, H:—Frances Anne Kemble. 

James, J: A.—“Events, with trumpet-call, summon us 
to our post.” 

Inducements to Earnestness in Religion. 

James the First of England. 

To Prince Henry. 

James the First of Scotland. 

Gude and Godlie Ballates, The. 

King’s Quair, The. 

Spring Song of the Birds. 

James. T: D.—What is that to Thee? 

Jameson, Anna.—Take Me, Mother Earth. 

Jamison, Mrs. Cecile Viets [Hamilton],—Mouse, The. 
See ’Toinette’s Philip. 

Selling the Image. See ’Toinette’s Philip. 
'Toinette’s Philip. 

Janvier, Fs. De Haes.—God Save our President. 
Sleeping Sentinel, The. 

Stigma. T e. 


47? 




Janvier 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Janvier, Fs. De Haes ( continued). 

Thomas Buchanan Read. 

Union, The. 

Voyage of Life, The. 

Janvier, Marg. Thomson (“Marg.Vandegrift”).—Catch¬ 
ing the Cat. 

Clown’s Baby, The. 

Culprit, A. 

Dead Doll, The. 

Lazyland. 

Little Wild Baby. 

Proposal, The. 

Sandman, The. 

Song of Degrees, A. 

They Will never Do so Again. See Culprit, A. 
Janvier, T: A.—Santiago. 

Janvirn, Mary W.—Mrs. Ward’s Visit to the Prince. 
Japp, Alex. Hay.—Landor. 

Memories. 

Music Lesson, A. 

Shelley. 

Japy, G:—Mysterious Portrait, The; or, a Story of 
Japan. 

Jaquith, W. L.—Oh, Golden-rod. 

Jarnette, Eva M. de.—Old Vote for “Young Marster,” 
An. 

Jarrold, Ernest.—Mickey Coachesliis Father. 

Jarvis, Mary R.— John Harding. 

“Jay, W. M. L.” See Woodruff, Mrs. Julia Louisa 
Matilda. 

Jefferson, Floyd W.—For Memory’s Sake. 

Rosemary and Rue. 

Jefferson, Jos.—Rip Van Winkle. {Dram.) 

Jefferson, T:—Declaration of Independence, The. 

First Inaugural Address. See Inauguration Ad¬ 
dress. 

Inaugural Address. See Inauguration Address. 
Inauguration Address.—March 4, 1801. 

Original Draft of the Declaration of Independ¬ 
ence, The. See Declaration of Independence, 
The. 

Party Spirit and Good Government. See Inau¬ 
guration Address. 

Republic the Strongest Government, A. See In¬ 
auguration Address. 

Jeffrey, Fs., Lord. —Example of America, The. 

“This, after all, we believe, is the tone of true 
wisdom and true virtue.” 

Jeffrey, Rosa Vertner.—Owl in Church. 

Phantom Ball, The. 

Jenkins, Rev. H. D.—Tribute to Grant, A. 

Jenkins, J: J.—Mrs. Magoogin on Spring Bonnets and 
Spring Poetry. 

Jenkins, Joshua.—How We Hunted a Mouse. 

Jenkins, Lucy.—Pantomime of “Lead, Kindly 
Light.” 

Jenkins, MacGregor.—To Phyllis Returned to Town. 
Jenks, E: A.—Going and Coming. 

Jenks, Tudor. Christmas Song, A. 

Complaint, A. {At. also to B. A. Pennypacker.) 
Madcap April. 

On the Road. 

Small and Early. 

Spirit of the Maine[, The]. 

Whirling Wheel, The. 

Jenkyn, Ruthven. See Jenkyns, Ruthven. 

Jenkyns, Ruthven.—Good Bye. ( Wr. at. to T: Moore.) 
See Sailor’s Farewell, The. 

Sailor’s Farewell, The. 

Sweetheart, Good-by! See Sailor’s Farewell, 
The. 

Though Lost to Sight, to Memory Dear. See 
Sailor’s Farewell, The. 

Jenner, Dr. E:—Signs of Foul Weather. See Signs of 
Rain. 

Signs of Rain. 

Jennings, J: A.—Rest. 

Jennison, Lucy White (“Owen Innsly”).—Bondage. 
Burden of Love, The. 

Dream of Death, A—Helena. 

Her Roses. 

To-. 

Jerome, Jerome K.—Babies. See On Babies. 

Charming Woman, A. 

Child, The. See Stage Land. 

Comic Lovers, The. See Stage Land. 

Comic Man, The. See Stage Land. 

Curate’s Story, The. 

Dark Forest of Sorrow, The. See Three Men in a 
* Boat. 

Detective, The. See Stage Land. 

Good Old Man, The. See Stage Land. 

Hanging a Picture. See Three Men in a Boat. 


Jerome, Jerome K. {continued). 

Hero, The. See Stage Land. 

Herr Slossenn Boschen’s Song. See Three Men in 
a Boat. 

How Uncle Podger Hung a Picture. See Three 
Men in a Boat. , 

Imaginary Invalid, The. See Three Men in a 
Boat. 

Irishman. The. See Stage Land. 

Lawyer, The. See Stage Land. 

Mr. Harris’s Comic Song. See Three Men in a 
Boat. 

Night. See Three Men in a Boat. 

On Babies. 

Peasants, The. See Stage Land. 

Sailor, The. See Stage Land. 

Signing of Magna Charta, The. See Three Men 
in a Boat. 

Stage Adventuress, The. See Stage Land. 

Stage Detective and Peasants, The. See Stage 

- Land. 

Stage Hero, The. See Stage Land. 

Stage Heroine, The. See Stage Land. 

Stage Land. 

That Telephone. 

Three Men in a Boat. 

Trials of the Musical Amateur. See Three Men 
in a Boat. 

Uncle Podger Hangs a Picture. See Three Men 
in a Boat. 

Unexpected Denouement, An. See Three Men in 
a Boat. 

Victim to One Hundred and Seven Fatal Mala¬ 
dies, A. See Three Men in a Boat. 

Villain, The. See Stage Land. 

Jerome, Nellie G. SeeGEROME [or Jerome], Nellie G. 

Jerrold, Douglas.—Caudle Has been Made a Mason. 

Caudle whilst Walking with His Wife has been 
Bowed to by a Younger and even Prettier 
Woman than Mrs. Caudle. 

Caudle’s Wedding Day. See Mrs Caudle Thinks 
“it Would Look Well to Keep their Wedding 
Day.” 

Curtain Lecture of Mrs. Caudle, A. See Mr. 
Caudle has Lent an Acquaintance the Family 
Umbrella. 

Decidedly Cool. 

Female Tenderness. 

Fireside Saints, The. 

Grey Head, The. 

Helpless Gray Head, The. See Grey Head, The. 

Miser’s Excuse, The. 

Mr. Caudle and His Second Wife. 

Mr. Caudle has been Made a Mason. See Caudle 
has been Made a Mason. 

Mr. Caudle has been to Greenwich Fair. 

Mr. Caudle has Lent an Acquaintance the Family 
Umbrella. 

Mr. Caudle has not “Acted like a Husband” at the 
Wedding Dinner. 

Mr. Caudle, having Come Home a Little Late, 
Declares that henceforth he “will Have a 
Key.” 

Mr. Caudle Having Lent Five Pounds to a Friend. 

Mr. Caudle Wants a “Latch-key.” See Mr. 
Caudle, having Come Home, etc. 

Mr. Caudle’s Wedding Dinner. See Mr. Caudle 
has not “Acted like a Husband,” etc. 

Mrs. Caudle has Taken Cold. 

Mrs. Caudle Needs Spring Clothing. See Mrs. 
Caudle Thinks it “High Time,” etc. 

Mrs. Caudle Urging the Need of Spring Clothing. 
See Mrs. Caudle Thinks it “High Time,” 

Mrs. Caudle Thinks it “High Time that the Chil¬ 
dren should Have Summer Clothing.” 

Mrs. Caudle’s Lecture [on Shirt Buttons]. See 
On Mr. Caudle’s Shirt buttons. 

Mrs. Caudle’s Umbrella Lecture. See Mr. Caudle 
has Lent an Acquaintance the Family Um¬ 
brella. 

On Mr. Caudle’s Shirt-buttons. 

Trouble about Miss Prettyman. See Caudle 
whilst Walking, etc. 

Jervey, Mary.—General Albert Sidney Johnston. 

Jessop, G: H.—At the Opera. 

Siren’s Wedding-ring, The. 

Telling Fortunes. 

Yes! 

Jewell, E. O.—Things that Never Die. 

Jewett, Ellen A.—Grandmother’s Sermon. 

Sermon in a Stocking, The. See Grandmother’s 
Sermon. 


478 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Jones 


Jewett, J. H.—Our Boys are Marching On. 

Those Rebel Flags. 

Voice from the Old Boys Left Behind. 

Jewett, Sara Orne.—Caged Bird, The. 

Discontent. 

Discontented Buttercup, The. See Discontent. 
Sheltered. 

Jewett, Sophie (“Ellen Burroughs”).—Armistice. 

Entre Nous. 

Friendship. A. 

"If Spirits Walk.” 

When Nature Hath Betrayed the Heart that 
Loved Her. 

Smiling Demon of Notre Dame, A. 

Song: Thy face I have seen as orte seeth. 
Jewsbury, Marie Jane.—“And this, O Spain! is thy 
return.” See Columbus in Chains. 

Columbus in Chains. 

Flight of Xerxes, The. 

Jillson, Clark.—Wet and Dry. 

Word for Each Month, A. 

Joachimsen, Caroline C.—Solomon and the Sparrow. 
Johnson, Annie R.—-Strange Request, The. 

Johnson, C: Frd’k.—Modern Romans, The. 

Then and Now. 

Johnson, C: W.— Norwegian Wedding-march of Grieg 
in Verse, The. 

Johnson, Clifton.—Christmas Night. 

Johnson, E. Pauline (Tekahionwake).—At Husking 
Time. 

Brier. 

Prairie Greyhounds. 

Shadow River. 

Song My Paddle Sings, The. 

' Vagabonds, The. 

Johnson, E:—Water for me. See Water-drinker, The. 

Water-drinker, The. 

Johnson, Frances A. M.—My Boy. 

Johnson, G. T.—Smile and the Sigh, The. 

Johnson, H. H.—Old Church, The. 

Johnson, Hannah More. — Nurse Winnie Goes Shop¬ 
ping. 

Johnson, H: H.—Twelve Months, The. 

Johnson, H: U.—Against Expansion. 

Nicknames of the States. 

Johnson, Rev. Herrick. — Some Delusions of High 
License. 

Sunday Newspaper, The. 

Two Banners of America, The. 

Johnson, Mrs. Herrick.—“Faultless.” 

Voice in the Twilight, The. 

Johnson, J. C.—Oaks, The. 

Johnson, Jas. Noel.—Genius, A. 

How an Engineer Won His Bride. 

Johnson, Lionel.—Age of a Dream, The. 

Church of a Dream, The. 

Dark Angel, The. 

Parnell. 

Saint Columba. 

Te Martyrum Candidatus. 

Ways of War. 

Johnson, M. R.—Fire-bells. 

Johnson, Marg.—Bull, The. 

Child’s Wonder, The. 

One, Two, Three. 

Johnson, Mary E. C.—Scandal. 

Johnson, Philander.—Stranger, The. 

Johnson, Rev. Plato.—Ter’ble Sperience, A. 

Johnson, Reverdy.—European Struggles for Freedom. 
Influence of American Freedom. 

Tribute to the Supreme Court. 

Johnson, Rob’t Underwood.—As a Bell in a Chime. 
Blossom of the Soul, The. 

Browning at Asolo. 

Dewey at Manila. 

Illusions. 

In Tesla’s Laboratory. 

September Violet, A. 

To the Housatonic at Stockbridge. 

Voice of Webster, The. 

Wistful Days, The. 

Johnson, Rossiter.—Evelyn. 

Ninety-nine in the Shade. 

Soldier Poet, A. 

Woman of the War, A. 

Johnson, S:—City of God, The. 

For Divine Strength. 

Inspiration. 

Made Perfect Through Suffering. . 

Johnson, Dr. S:— Burlesque of the Following Lines of 
Lopez de Vega. 

Charles XII. [of Sweden]. See Vanity of Human 
Wishes, The. 


Johnson, Dr. S: ( continued.). 

Fate of Charles the Twelfth. See Vanity of Human 
Wishes, The. 

Improviso on a Young Heir’s Coming of Age. 
Irene. 

Letter to Lord Chesterfield. See To the Right 
Honourable the Earl of Chesterfield. 

Letter to the Earl of Chesterfield. See To the 
Right Honourable the Earl of Chesterfield. 
Levet, his Death. 

Lines Added to Goldsmith’s Traveller. 

London. 

On Some Lines of Lopez de Vega. See Burlesque 
of the Following Lines of Lopez de Vega. 

On the Death of Dr. Levett. See Levet, his Death. 
On the Death of Mr. Robert Levet, a Practiser in 
Physic. See Levet, his Death. 
One-and-twenty. See Improviso on a Young 
Heir’s Coming of Age. 

Parallel between Pope and Dryden. See Pope. 
Pope. 

Prologue Spoken at the Opening of the Drury Lane 
Theatre. See Prologue Spoken by Mr. Garrick, 
etc. 

Prologue Spoken by Garrick at the Opening of 
the Theatre Royal. See Prologue Spoken by 
Mr. Garrick, etc. 

Prologue Spoken by Mr. Garrick at the Opening 
of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. 

Quiet Life, The. See Levet, his Death. 

Rise and Fall of Wolsey, The. See Vanity of 
Human Wishes, The. 

Shakespeare. See Prologue Spoken by Mr. Gar¬ 
rick at the Opening of the Theatre Royal, 
Drury Lane. 

Thales’ Reasons for Leaving London. See Lon¬ 
don. 

To the Right Honourable the Earl of Chesterfield. 
To-morrow. See Irene. 

True Objects of Desire, The. See Vanity of 
Human Wishes, The. 

Vanity of Human Wishes, The. 

Wise Man’s Prayer, The. See Vanity of Human 
Wishes, The. 

Word to the Wise, A, Prologue to. 

Johnson, W: See Cory, W : 

Johnson, W: K.—Anniversary, An. 

Johnson, W: Martin.—On Snow-flakes Melting on His 
Lady’s Breast. 

Johnson, W: Preston. Dawning Future, The. 

Johnson, Willis Fletcher.—Literature and Elocution. 
My Books. 

Johnston, Emma M.—Boy Who Went from Home, The. 
Josiah and Family at the Centennial. 

My Mother’s Song. 

Johnston, J: H.—Cross-eyed Lovers, The. 

Johnstone. H:—Charm to Call Sleep, A. 

Gardener’s Burial, The. 

Guessing Song. 

Our Gardener’s Burial. See Gardener’s Burial, 
The. 

Jolls, Amelia Walstien. See Carpenter, Mrs. Amelia 
Walstien [Jolls], 

Jones, Amanda T.—Abigail Becker. 

Apple Blossoms. 

Teddy McGuire and Paddy O’Flynn. 

We Twain. 

Jones, Brummell.—Quaker Boy, The. 

Jones, C: A.—Bible Reading on “Rock of Ages,” A. 
Jones, Ebenezer.—Face, The. 

Song of the Kings of Gold. 

When the World is Burning. 

Jones, Rev. E: C.—General Joseph Reed; or. The Incor¬ 
ruptible Patriot. 

Marion’s Dinner. 

Soliloquy of Arnold, The. 

Jones, Eliz. See Pullen, Mrs. Eliz [Jones]. 

Jones, Ernest C:—Earth’s Burdens. 

Moonrise. 

Song of the “Lower Classes.” 

Jones, Gertrude M.—Cupid’s Blunder. 

Mammy Gets the Boy to Sleep. 

Jones, H. C.— Cousin Sally Dilliard. 

Jones, I. Edgar.—“As it is in Heaven.” 

Dead Leader, The. 

Dream Rambles. 

Drunkard’s Death, The. 

Find Your Level. 

Heroes of the Mines. 

Ideal and the Real, The. 

Judge Lynch. 

Kingdom of Sham, The. 

Landlord’s Last Moments, The. 


479 




Jones 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Jones, I, Edgar ( continued). 

Legend of Kalooka, The. 

Nature Prayer, A. 

“Nearer to Thee.” 

Nickle Plated. 

On the Frontier. 

Popping the Question. 

Sable Sermon. 

Sambo’s New Year Sermon. 

Shadows on the Snow. 

Smoked American Theology. 

Sound the Reveille. 

Sunbeam’s Mission, The. 

There are None. 

Three Sunbeams. 

“Vanity of Vanities.” 

Vigilants, The. 

Jones, I. L.—Sleep, Baby, Sleep. 

Jones, J. A.—Gladiator, The. 

Jones, Senator J: Percival. (?)—Eulogy on Emmet. 
Jones, Julia Clinton.—Silent Army of Memorial Day, 
The. 

Jones, Rob’t.—My Love. 

Old Lover, An. 

When Love Most Secret Is. 

Jones, Rosaline E.—January. 

Voice of the Wind, The. 

Jones, Samantha.—Samantha’s Talk. 

Jones, T:—Tobacco. 

Jones, Mrs. W. R.—Perdita. 

Zenobia. 

Jones, Sir W:—Babe, The. (TV.) 

Baby, The. See Babe, The. 

Marayena: Spirit of God. (TV.) 

Ode: “What constitutes a state?” See Ode in 
Imitation, etc. 

Ode in Imitation of Alcaeus, An. 

Ode on the State. See Ode in Imitation of 
Alcaeus, An. 

What Constitutes a State? See Ode in Imitation 
of Alcaeus, An. 

Jones-Foster, Ardennes.—-Midnight in London. 

Jonson, Ben.—Advice to a Reckless Youth. 

/Eglamour’s Lament. See Sad Shepherd, The. 
Banquet of Sense, The. See Poetaster, The. 

Buz for Buzz], Quoth the Blue Fly. See Masque 
of Oberon, The. 

Catiline to His Army near Faesule [or Fatsulae]. 
Celebration of Charis, A. 

Charis’ Triumph. See Celebration of Charis, A. 
Chivalry See Speeches at Prince Henry’s Barriers, 
The. 

Chorus: “Spring all the graces of the age.” See 
Fortunate Isles and their Union. 

Cynthia’s Revels. 

Devil is an Ass, The. See Celebration of Charis, A. 
Discourse with Cupid. See Celebration of Charis, 
A. 

"Drink to me only with thine eyes.” See Song: 
To Celia. 

Earine. See Sad Shepherd, The. 

Echo’s Lament for [or of] Narcissus. See Cynthia’s 
Revels. 

Echo’s Song. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Elegy, An: “Though beauty be the mark of 
praise.” 

Epiccene; or, The Silent Woman. 

Epigram. “Uvedale, thou piece of the first 
times.’’ See To Sir William Uvedale. 

Epigram on Francis Drake. (TV.) 

Epigram on Sir Francis Drake. (TV.) See Epigram 
on Francis Drake. 

Epistle to a Friend to Persuade him to the 
Wars. 

Epistle to Elizabeth, Countess of Rutland. 
Epitaph: “Underneath this sable hearse.” See 
Epitaph on the Countess of Pembroke. 
Epitaph: “Underneath this stone doth lye.” See 
Epitaph on Elizabeth L. H. 

Epitaph on Elizabeth L. H. 

Epitaph on Master Philip Gray, An. 

Epitaph on Salathiel Pavy, [a Child of Queen Eliz¬ 
abeth’s Chapel,] An. 

Epitaph on the Countess of Pembroke. 

Epode. 

Equivocal. 

Eupheme, IX. Elegy on My Muse. 

“Fairy beam upon you, The.” See Masque of the 
Metamorphosed Gipsies. 

Fame. 

Fantasy. See Vision of Delight, The. 

Farewell to the World, A. See To the World. 
Fortunate Isles and their Union. 


Jonson, Ben ( continued ). 

Freedom in Dress. See Epiccene; or, The Silent 
Woman. 

Gipsies Metamorphosed, The. See Masque of the 
Metamorphosed Gipsies. 

Good Life, Long Life. See To the Immortal Mem¬ 
ory and Friendship of that Noble Pair, Sir 
Lucius Cary and Sir Henry Morrison. 

Hesperus’ Song. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Honour in Bud. See To the Immortal Memory 
and Friendship of that Noble Pair, Sir Lucius 
Cary and Sir Henry Morrison. 

“How near to good is what is fair!” See Love 
Freed from Ignorance and Folly. 

Hue and Cr$r after Cupid, The. 

Hymensei; or. The Solemnities of Masque and 
Barriers at Court. 

Hymn, A: “Hear me, O God!” See Hymn to 
God the Father, A. 

Hymn on the Nativity of My Saviour, A. 

Hymn to Cynthia. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Hymn to Diana. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Hymn to God the Father, A. 

Hymn to Pan. See Pan’s Anniversary; or. The 
Shepherd’s Holiday.” 

Karol’s Kiss. See Sad Shepherd, The. 

Kiss, The. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Life and Death. See Of Life and Death. 

Lines on the Portrait of Shakespeare. See On the 
Portrait of Shakespeare. 

Lord Bacon’s Birthday. 

Love. 

Love Freed from Ignorance and Folly. 

Masque of Oberon, The. 

Masque of Pleasure and Virtue. See Pleasure 
Reconciled to Virtue. 

Masque of the Metamorphosed Gipsies. 

Masques. See Time Vindicated. 

May. See Vision of Delight, The. 

Measure of the Perfect Life, The. See to the Im¬ 
mortal Memory, etc. 

Mercury Vindicated from the Alchemists at Court. 

Nature. See Mercury Vindicated, etc. 

Neptune’s Triumph for the Return of Albion. 

New Cry, The. 

New Inn, The. 

Noble Balm, The. See Ode, An: “High-spirited 
friend.” 

Noble Nature, The. See To the Immortal Mem¬ 
ory, etc 

Nymph’s Passion, A. 

O, Do not Wanton with Those Eyes. See Song: 
“Oh, do not wanton with those eyes.” 

Ode, An: “High-spirited friend.” 

Ode to Himself, An. 

Ode to Sir William Sidney on his Birthday. 

Of His Love’s Beauty. See Celebration of Charis, 
A. 

Of Life and Death. 

On Banck, the Usurer. 

On Banks, the Usurer. See On Banck, the Usurer. 

On Chevril the Lawyer. 

On Court-worm. 

On Don Surly. 

On Elizabeth L. H. See Epitath on Elizabeth 
L. H. 

On Lord Bacon’s Birthday See Lord Bacon’s 
Birthday. 

On Lucy, Countess of Bedford. 

On Salathiel Pavy. See Epitaph on Salathie 
Pavy, a Child of Queen Elizabeth’s Chapel, An. 

On the Countess Dowager of Pembroke. (At. also 
to W: Brown.) See Epitaph on the Countess 
of Pembroke. 

On the Portrait of Shakespeare. 

On the Union. 

Pan’s Anniversary; or. The Shepherd’s Holiday. 

Part of an Ode to the Memory of Sir Lucius Cary 
and Sir H. Morrison, A. See To the Immortal 
Memory, etc. 

Perfect Beauty. See New Inn. The. 

Perfect Life, The. See To the Immortal Memory 
etc. 

Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue. 

Pleasures of Heaven, The. See Eupheme, IX. 
Elegy on My Muse. 

Poetaster, The. 

Proper Man, A. 

Sad Shepherd, The. 

Shadow, The. 

Shepherd’s Holiday [or Holyday], The. See Pan’s 
Anniversary 

Shepherd’s Love, The. See Sad Shepherd, The. 


480 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Kavanaugh 


Jonson, Ben {continued.). 

Simplex Munditiis. See Epicoene; or, The Silent 
Woman. 

So Sweet is She. See Celebration of Charis, A. 

Song: “Follow a shadow, it still flies you.” See 
Song: That Women are but Men’s Shadows. 

Song: “How near to good is what is fair.” See 
Love Freed from Ignorance and Folly. 

Song: “Oh, do not wanton with those eyes.” 

Song: “See the chariot at hand.” See Celebra¬ 
tion of Charis, A. 

Song: “Spring all the graces of the age.” See 
Neptune’s Triumph, etc. 

Song: “Still to be neat, still to be drest.” See 
Epicoene; or. The Silent Woman. 

Song: “The owl is abroad.” See Masque of the 
Metamorphosed Gipsies. 

Song before the Entry of the Masquers. See For¬ 
tunate Isles and their Union. 

Song from Gypsies’ Metamoiphoses. See Masque 
of the Metamorphosed Gipsies. 

Song from Neptune’s Triumph. See Neptune’s 
Triumph for the Return of Albion. 

Song of Echo. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

Song of Nature. See Mercury Vindicated from 
the Alchemists at Court. 

Song: That Women are but Men’s Shadows. 

Song: To Celia. 

Speeches at Prince Henry’s Barriers, The. 

Sweet Neglect, The. See Epicoene; or, The Silent 
Woman. 

Time Vindicated. 

To a Glove. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

To Brainhardy. 

To Celia. See Song: To Celia. 

To Cynthia. See Cynthia’s Revels. 

To Doctor Empiric. 

To Elizabeth, Countess of Rutland. Sec Epistle 
to Elizabeth, etc. 

To Fine Grand. 

To Fool or Knave. 

To Heaven. 

To Himself. See Ode to Himself, An. 

To King Charles and Queen Mary, for the Loss of 
Their First-born. An Epigram Consolatory. 

To My Bookseller. 

To My Mere English Censurer. 

To Sir Annual Tilter {wr. Filter). 

To Sir Henry Goodyere. 

To Sir William Uvedale. 

To the Countess of Rutland. See Epistle to Eliza¬ 
beth, Countess of Rutland. 

To the Immortal Memory and Friendship of that 
Noble Pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir Henry 
Morrison. 

To the King on His Birthday [Nov. 19, 1632], 

To the Memory of Mv Beloved Master, William 
Shakespeare, and What He Hath Left Us. See 
To the Memory of my Beloved Mr. William 
Shakespeare, etc. 

To the Memory of my Beloved Mr. William Shakes¬ 
peare, and What he Hath Left Us. 

To the Memory of my Beloved, the Author, Mr. 
William Shakespeare, and what he hath Left 
Us. See To the Memory of my Beloved Mr 
William Shakespeare, etc. 

To the Memory of Shakespeare. See To the Mem¬ 
ory of my Beloved Mr. William Shakespeare, 

To the World. 

To William Sidney on His Birthday. See Ode to 
Sir William Sidney on his Birthday. 

Triumph, The. See Celebration of Charis, A. 

Triumph of Charis, The. See Celebration of 
Chans 

True Balm. See Ode, An: “High-spirited 
friend.” 

Truth. See Hymensei; or. The Solemnities, 
etc. 

Venetian Song. See Volpone; or. The Fox. 

Venus’ Runaway. See Hue and Cry after Cupid, 
The. 

Vision of Beauty, A. See New Inn, The. 

Vision of Delight, The. 

Volpone; or. The Fox. 

Wish, A. See Masque of the Metamorphosed 
Gipsies. 

Jordan, D: Starr.—-Viv4rols. 

Jordan, Mrs. Dulcie [Mason],—Late October. 

October. 

Jordan, T:—Coronemus nos Rosis antequam Mar- 
cescant. _ 

Josephs, Lemuel B. G.—Joker’s Mistake, The. 


“Josiah Allen’s Wife.” See Holt.ey, Marietta. 

Jot [or Tot], Joe, Jr.—Country Dance, The. 

Country Dancing. See Country Dance, The. 
Difficulty of Rhyming, The. 

Pat’s Love. 

Smooth Day, A. 

Journal of Education .—Finished Education, A. 
Jowett, B: — History of the Peloponnesian War. (Tr.) 
Speech of Pericles. ( Tr .) See History of the 
Peloponnesian War. 

Joy, Jennie.—Christmas Eve. 

Glad Surprise, A. 

Outlaw, The. 

Pardon, The. 

Saved. 

Joy, Sarah.—Little Margery. 

Joyce, P. W.—Lake of Coolfin, The. 

Joyce, R: Dwyer.—Blacksmith of Limerick, The. 
Crossing the Blackwater. 

Fineen the Rover. 

Green Dove, and the Raven, The. 

Kilbrannon. 

Juan II., King of Castile.—I never Knew it, Love, till 
Now. 

Judd, Abbie Frances.—Early Goldenrod. 

Midsummer. 

Judge .—Gigglety Girl, The. 

Little Boy’s Lament, The. 

Judkins, C: Otis.—Mountain Brook; A. 

Judson, Emily Chubbuck.—Ministering Angels. 

My Bird. 

Watching. 

June, Jennie. See Croly, Mrs. Jennie C. 

“Junius.”—To the King. See To the Printer of the 
Public Advertiser. 

To the Printer of the Public Advertiser. 
Junkerman, Kathe. E.—Union, A. 

“Juvenal.”—Lost Watch, The. 


K 

K., M.—My Twentieth Birthday. 

K., M. E.—"God never meant that we should call this 
home.” 

K., R. K—Plea for Spring Poetry', A. 

Tastes of Yesterday, The. 

White Opal, The. 

K., R. W.—My Sweetheart. 

Kahn, Mrs. Ruth [Ward], —Flower of Love, The. 

Kathrina.”—Discontented Leader, The. 

Kavanaugh, Jane.—Christmas Story, A. 

Kavanaugh, Katie H.—Treasures. 

Kavanaugh. Rose.—St. Michan’s Churchyard. 

Turn of the Tide, The. 

Kavanaugh, Mrs. Russell.—Age We Live In, The. 

Amateur Rehearsals; or, the Detective’s Dilemma. 
“Angels Can Do no More.” 

Annabel’s First Party. 

Apple of Discord. The. 

Aunt Jerusha’s Mistake. 

Baby’s Dead. 

Balance Due. 

Be Prompt in what You Do. 

Beautiful Belles. 

Beautiful Dudes. 

Between Two Stools. 

Birth of Paris, The. 

Boy and his Mother, The. 

Boy and Wolf. 

• Boys Will be Boys. 

Cardinal’s Godson, The. 

Choicest Goods, The. 

Closing Song for School Exhibition. 

Cobbler’s Secret, The. 

Cold in the Head, A. 

Coming Woman, The. 

Confidence versus Merit. 

Cure for Obstinacy, A; or. How Charlie Won a 
Wife. 

Dialogue for a Boy and Girl. 

Dialogue for a Little Boy and Girl. 

Dog and his Shadow, The. 

Dog in the Manger, The. 

Dolly and Me. 

Dumb Wife, The. 

Dumpsy-Frumpsy. 

Energy and Industry. 

Fair Fight, A; or, The Wife’s Allowance. 

Fairy’s Revenge, The. 

Fanny Gray 

Farmer Boy and the City Dude, The. 


481 





Kavanaugh 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Kavanaugh, Mrs. Russell (.continued). 

Fatal Bait, The. 

Five Wishes, The. 

Fly and the Lamb, The. 

Forbearance. 

Four Musicians, The. 

Four Queens, The. 

Four Years. 

Fox and the Goat, The. 

Fox who Lost His Tail, The. 

Golden Rule, The. 

Good Night. 

Grandma’s Talk. 

Grandmother’s Beau. 

Gray Mare is the Better Horse, The. 

Heiress’ Ruse, The. 

Holiday Speech. 

Honesty the Best Policy. 

Hopeful Youth, A. 

How He Had Him. 

How I Made My Fortune. 

‘‘I Told You Sol” 

I’m Little but I’m Spunky. 

Imaginative Invention, An. 

In Twenty Years. 

Interrupted Recitation, An. 

It’s Not Worth While to Hate. 

Joyful Surprise, A. 

Keep out of Debt. 

Lady Queen Anne. 

Lady-killer, The. 

Lark and Her Young Ones, The. 

Little Gentleman, The. 

Little Miss Ray. 

Little Mushrooms, The. 

Little Truant, The. 

Love-scrape, The. 

Luke Major. 

Man and the Goose, The. 

May Celebration. 

Merry Journey, A. 

Milkmaid, The. 

Miser’s Fate, The. 

Money is King. 

Months, The. 

Never Look Back. 

Novel Christmas-tree, A. 

Old Bachelor, The. 

Old Maid, The. 

Old Man and Death, The. 

Old Year Out and the New Year in, The. 

Olden Times, The. 

Old-time Breakdown, An. 

Open the Gates as High as the Sky. 

Opening Recitation. 

Oration for a Boy, An. 

Origin of the Peacock, The. 

Owl and Nightingale, The. 

Pat’s Purchase. 

Peevish Boy, A. 

Pet of the School, The. 

Poetry, Prose and Fact. 

Poor Men vs. Rich Men. 

Poor Old Maids. 

Power of Justice, The. 

Power of Temper, The. 

Queen of a Night, The. 

Recitation:—“I love my papa that I do.” 
Recitation: “It’s very hard, kind friends, for me.” 
Recitation: —“Much has been said by poets wise.” 
Recitation for a Boy. 

Recitation for a Boy Three Years Old. 

Recitation for a Dozen Little Girls. 

Recitation for a Little Child. 

Recitation for a Small Boy. 

Recitation for a Very Little Girl. 

Recitation for a Very Small Girl. 

Recitation for Any Number of Small Children. 
Repartee. 

Riding in the Cars. 

Robin Redbreast. 

Ruby’s Stratagem. 

Saint and Sinner. 

Salutatory for a Small Boy. 

Salutatory: For Very Small Pupils, either Girls or 
Boys. 

Santa Claus. 

Scene from the Life of Robin Hood, A. 
School-boy, The. 

Shy Gallant, The. 

Sing a Song of Christmas. 

Small Pitchers Have Large Ears. 

Smallest Grade, The. 


Kavanaugh, Mrs. Russell ( continued). 

Smart Girl, A. 

Speech:—“My pa and ma will be surprised.” 
Speech:—“My pappy asked me if I’d say.” 
Speech:—“None but a school-boy knows how hard.” 
Speech for a Boy Four or Five Years Old. 

Speech for a Boy of Eight or Nine. 

Speech for a Girl Five Years Old. See I’m Little 
but I’m Spunky. 

Speech for a Small Boy. 

Speech for a Very Small Girl. 

Story of the Kinkankee, The. 

Strike among the Flowers, A. 

Ten Thousand a Year. 

Test, The; or, Maud May’s Lovers. 

That Awful Girl! 

They Ask me why I am so Bad. 

“They Say.” 

Three Spectres, The. 

Too Late. 

Truth and Falsehood. 

Trying Hard. 

Two Frogs, The. 

Valedictory. (2.) 

Valedictory: “It now, kind friends, devolves on 
me.” 

Valedictory for a Small Boy. 

What Grandma Thinks. 

What has been Done may be Done again. 

Where there’s a Will, there’s a Way. 

Winning a Wager. 

Wolf and the Bear, The. 

Year, The. 

Young Critic, The. 

Kaylor, Reginald Whitfield.—“Good Night.” 

Kazinezi, Fs.—Separation. 

Keats, J:—Addressed to Benjamin Robert Hay don. 
Addressed to Haydon. See Addressed to Benjamin 
Robert Haydon. 

“And as, in sparkling majesty, a star.” See To 
Hope. 

Autumn. See To Autumn. 

Bacchus. See Endymion. 

Bard Speaks, The. See Epistle to my Brother 
George, The. 

Bards of Passion and of Mirth. See Ode: “Bards 
of passion and of mirth.” 

Beauty. See Endymion. 

Bright Star! Would I were Steadfast as Thou 
Art. See Last Sonnet. 

Coelus to Hyperion. See Hyperion. 

Cynthia’s Bridal Evening. See “I stood tiptoe 
upon a little hill.” 

Daisy’s Song, The. 

December: See Stanzas: “In a drear-nighted De¬ 
cember.” 

Dove, The. See Song: “I had a dove, and the 
sweet dove died.” 

Endymion. 

Endymion. See also “I stood tiptoe upon a little 
hill.” 

Epistle to my Brother George, The. 

Eve of St. Agnes, The. 

Faery Song. 

Fairy Song. See Faery Song. 

Fancy. 

Fear of Death, The. See Sonnet: “When I have 
fears that I may cease to be.” 

Flight, The. See Eve of St. Agnes, The. 
Fragment of an Ode to Maia. 

Goldfinches. See “I stood tiptoe upon a little 
hill.” 

Grasshopper and Cricket [,The]. See On the Grass¬ 
hopper and Cricket. 

Happy Insensibility. See Stanzas: “In a drear- 
nighted December.” 

Human Seasons, The. 

Hymn to Pan. See Endymion. 

Hyperion. 

Hyperion’s Arrival. See Hyperion. 

“I stood tiptoe upon a little hill.” 

Imitation of Spenser. 

In the Country. See Sonnet: “To one who has 
been long in city pent.” 

Isabella: or, The Pot of Basil. 

King Stephen. 

La Belle Dame sans Merci [or Mercy]. 

Last Sonnet. 

Lines on the Mermaid Tavern. 

Marigolds. 

Meg Merrilies. 

Mermaid Tavern, The. See Lines on the Mer¬ 
maid Tavern. 


482 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Kendall 


Keats, J: ( continued ). 

Minnows. See “I stood tiptoe upon a little hill.” 
Morning. See “I stood tiptoe upon a little hill.” 
Morning See also Imitation of Spenser. 

Music. See Eve of St. Agnes, The. 

Nature’s Delights. See “I stood tiptoe upon a 
little hill.” 

Nightingale, The. See Ode to a Nightingale. 
Oceanus. See Hyperion. 

Ode: “Bards of passion and of mirth.” 

Ode on a Grecian Urn. 

Ode on Melancholy. 

Ode on the Poets. See Ode - “Bards of passion 
and of mirth.” 

Ode to a Grecian Urn. See Ode on a Grecian Urn. 
Ode to a Nightingale. 

Ode to Apollo. 

Ode to Autumn. See To Autumn. 

Ode to Psyche. 

On a Grecian Urn. See Ode on a Grecian Urn. 

On a Picture of Leander. 

On Fame. 

On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer. 

On the Grasshopper and Cricket. 

Penitent, The. See Eve of St. Agnes, The. 

Poetry of Earth, The. See On the Grasshopper 
and Cricket. 

Realm of Fancy, The. See Fancy. 

Robin Hood. 

Saturn. See Hyperion. 

Sigh of Silence, The. See "I stood tiptoe upon a 
little hill.” 

Solitude. See Sonnet to Solitude. 

Song: “I had a dove, and the sweet dove died.” 
Song of the Indian Maid. See Endymion. 
Sonnet: “After dark vapours have oppressed our 
plains.” 

Sonnet: “To one who has been long in city pent.” 
Sonnet: “When I have fears that I may cease to 
be.” 

Sonnet: On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer. 

See On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer. 
Sonnet to Solitude. 

Sonnet: Written in January, 1817. See Sonnet: 

“After dark vapours, etc.” 

Sonnet: Written in January, 1818. See Sonnet: 

“When I have fears that I may cease to be.” 
Stanzas: “In a drear-nighted December.” 

Sweet Peas. See “ I stood tiptoe upon a little hill.” 
Terror of Death, The. See Sonnet: “When I have 
fears that I may cease to be.” 

Thea. See Hyperion. 

Thing of Beauty is a Joy Forever, A. See Endymion. 
To a Nightingale. See Ode to a Nightingale. 

To Autumn. 

To Hope. 

“To one who has been long in city pent.” See 
Sonnet: “To one whe has been long in city 
pent.” 

To Sleep. 

To the Adventurous. See On First Looking into 
Chapman’s Homer. 

To the Poets. See Ode: “Bards of passion and 
of mirth.” 

When I Have Fears that I May Cease To Be. See 
Sonnet: “When I have fears, etc.” 

Winter. See Stanzas: “In a drear-nighted De¬ 
cember.” 

“Wonder, of all-ruling Providence, The.” 

Keble, J:—All Saints’ Day. 

All Things Bright and Beautiful. 

Anticipation and Retrospection. 

April. See First Sunday after Epiphany. 

Burial of the Dead, 

Christmas Bells. 

Christmas Day. 

Effect of Example. 

Elder Scripture, The. See Septuagesima Sunday. 
Evening. 

Example. See Effect of Example. 

Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity: The Lilies of the 
Field. 

First Sunday after Epiphany. 

First Sunday after Trinity. _ . 

Flowers. See Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity. 
Gathering of the Church, The. 

Happiness. See Saint Matthew. 

Holy Matrimony 

Lilies of the Field, The. See Fifteenth Sunday 
after Trinity. 

Morning. 

Rainbow, The. See Anticipation and Retro¬ 
spection. 


Keble, J: ( continued ). 

Resignation See Wednesday before Easter. 

St. Peter’s Day 

Second Sunday after Easter. 

Second Sunday after Trinity. 

Seed Time Hymn. 

Septuagesima Sunday. 

Sun of My Soul. See Evening. 

Saint Matthew 

There are in this Loud Stunning Tide. See Saint 
Matthew. 

Third Sunday in Advent. 

Third Sunday in Lent. 

To-on Her Sister’s Death. 

To a Thrush Singing in January. See Winter 
Thrush, The. 

Twentieth Sunday after Trinity 
Twenty-first Sunday after Trinity. 

United States. 

Watch by Night, The. 

Waterfall, The. 

Wednesday before Easter. 

Who Runs may Read. See Septuagesima Sun¬ 
day. 

Winter Thrush, The. 

Keegan, J:—Caoch the Piper. 

“Dark Girl” bv the “Holy Well,” The. 

Irish Reaper’s Harvest Hymn, The. 

Keeler, C: A:—-Camilla. 

To an Alaskan Glacier. 

Keeler, Fs. L.—Some Mother’s Child 
Keese, W: L.—After the Wedding. 

Old Dobbin. 

Keife, C. A.—-Dialogue for Five Boys. 

Keller, Matthias.—American Hymn. 

Kelley, Andrew V. (“Parmenas Mix”).—Accepted and 
will Appear. 

Constant Reader, A. 

He Came to Pay. 

New Doctor, The. 

Sly Old Rat, A. 

Kelley, Ethel M.—Oh, Lady Mine. 

This Year. 

Kellock, Harold.—April Flower-song. 

Anna Virumque. 

Kellog, Jas. H —Song to Mother Earth, A. 

Kellog, Rob’t Jas—To a Dead Bird. 

Kellogg, Anita M.—Dot’s Version of the Text. 

Molly. 

Kellogg. Rev. Elijah.—Curse of Regulus, The. 
Professor in Shafts, The 

Regulus to the Carthaginians. See Curse of 
Regulus, The. 

Return of Regulus, The. See Curse of Regulus, 
The. 

Spartacus to the Gladiators [at Capua]. 

Supposed Speech of Regulus. See Curse of Reg¬ 
ulus, The. 

Vindication of Virginius. 

Kellogg, Kate.—Disappointment. 

Kellogg, Raymond N.—Law and Humanity. 

Kellogg, Sarah Winter.—Commencement. 

Second Trial, A. See Commencement. 

Kelly, Mary.—Who Should Wipe the Dishes. 

Kelly. Mary Eva.—Tipperary. 

Kelly, T: J.—Newsboy in Church, A. 

Kelly, W: D.—Country Courtship. 

Twilight of Thanksgiving, The. 

Kelso, Hugh.—Old Wood, The. 

Orchard, The. 

Kemble, Frances Anne. See Butler, Mrs. Frances 
Anne [Kemble], 

Kempis, T: &.—Imitation of Christ, The. 

“Sigh and grieve that you are yet so carnal and 
worldly.” See Imitation of Chr’st, The. 
“Think you to escape.” See Imitation of Christ, 
The. 

Ken, T:—Evening Hymn. 

Midnight Hymn. 

Morning Hymn. 

Kendall, Mrs. E. D.—Wink. 

Kendall, H: Clarence.—After Many Years. 

Coogee. 

Last of His Tribe, The. 

Mooni. 

Orara. 

September in Australia. 

To a Mountain. 

Voice in the Wild Oak, The. 

Kendall, May.—Board School Pastoral, A. 

. Legend, A. 

Page of Lancelot, The. 

Pure Hypothesis, A. 


483 





Kenealy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Kenealy, Ed.—Love’s Warning. 

Kenealy, J. J.—Tsar Oleg. 

Kennan, G:—Sudden Transformation from Winter to 
Summer. See Tent Life in Siberia. 

Tent Life in Siberia. 

Kennedy, - .—Long Life. 

Kennedy, Crammond.—Greenwood Cemetery. 
Kennedy, D:-—Saunders McGlashan’s Courtship. 

Twa Courtins, The. 

Kennedy. J: Pendleton.—Age of Work, The. See 
Mechanical Epoch, The. 

Mechanical Epoch, The. 

Kennedy, M. G.—Address of Welcome, An. 

Kennedy, S. R.—-Lenten Maid, The. 

Kennedy, Sarah Beaumont.—Battle of Manila. 

Governor’s Last I,evee, The. 

Kennedy, Susie E.—Miss Willow. 

Kennedy, W: Sloane.— Holmes, Extract Concerning. 
Shadows. 

Kent, A. F.—Kneel at no Human Shrine. 

Kent, C:—Pope at Twickenham. 

Kent, Esther. —Parting Words. 

Kent, H: S.—Helen MacTrever. 

Irish Voter, The. 

Questions. 

True Contentment. 

Wizard of Valley Forge, The. 

Kentucky State Journal. —Herman Anniversary Speech 
of Herr Hans Yager. 

Kenyon, Jas. B:—Bedouins of the Skies, The. 

Bring Them not Back. 

Challenge, A. 

Come Slowly, Paradise. 

Death and Night. 

King is Dymg, The. 

Tacita. 

Two Spirits, The. 

Kenyon, J:—Champagne Rosd. 

Kenyon, S. C.—Spirit of Summer, The. 

Keplinger, Walter S.—Scipio. 

Keppel, Lady Caroline —Robin Adair. 

Keppel, Frd’k.—Plain Man’s Dream, A. 

Keman, Will Hubbard.—Agatha. 

Kemell, Harry and J:—O’Quirk’s Sinecure 
Kemer, Andreas.—King and the Poet, The. 
Kemighan, Rob’t Kirkland.—Peepy is not Dead. 

Song of the Thaw, The. 

Kerr, Jessie V.—Who Knows? 

Kerr, Joe.—Italian’s View on the Labor Question, 
An. 

Monk’s Adventures, The. 

Over behind der Moon. 

That Littul Orfun Brat. 

Unawares. 

Voices of the Night. 

"You Get [or Git] Up.” 

“Kerr, Orpheus C.” See Newell, Rob’t H: 

Ketchum, Mrs, Annie [Chambers],—Benny. See Little 
Bennie. 

Bonnie Blue Flag, The. 

“I cannot tell the spell that binds thine image.” 
Little Bennie. 

Ketchum, Arthur.—Ballad of Dorothy, A. 

George Du Maurier. 

My Lady Goes to the Play. 

Opportunity. 

To Austin Dobson. 

Kethe. W—Psalm C. 

Key, Fs. Scott.—“Lord, with glowing heart T’d praise 
Thee.” 

Star-spangled Banner, The. 

Keyes, E: Livingston.—Cleopatra’s Protest. 
Khemnitzer [or Chemnitzer], Ivan Ivanovitch.—Rich 
Man and the Poor, The. 

Wisdom and Wealth. 

Kickham C: J.—Irish Peasant Girl, The 
Myles O’Hea. 

Rory of the Hills. 

St. John’s Eve. 

Kidder, Mrs. M. A.—Bright Side. The. 

Cherish Kindly Feelings. 

Less than Cost. 

Mother’s Mending Basket. 

What Became of a Lie. 

Ki'bourne, G: B.—When Margaret Laughs. 

Kilham, Eliz.—Tobe’s Monument. 

Killian. D. H.—Roadside Path. The. 

Kimball, Hannah Parker.—Beyond. 

Christ-child Alone, The. 

Contrast. 

Light. 

Love’s Miracle. 

One Way of Trusting. 


Kimball, Hannah Parker ( continued). 

Refuge of the Ideal, The. 

Soul and Sense. 

Two Points of View. 

Kimball, Harriet McEwen.—After the Storm. 

All’s Well. 

Angel of the Rain. 

Common Offering, The. 

Crickets, The. 

Feast-time of the Year, The, 

Flight of the Birds, The. 

Guest, The. 

In Paradise. 

Reverie. 

Song of the Leaves, The. 

Summer Vacation. 

Trusting. See Flight of the Birds, The. 
Undowered. 

White Azaleas. 

Kimball, Harry W.—Incident of the War. An. 
Kimball, M. J.—Last of the Choir, The. 

Kimball, Mather Dean.—Mariar in Heaven. 

Ol' Pickpt^ NpII 

Kimball, Orella L.—Deacon’s Call, The. 
Kimball-Gardiner, Ruth. See Gardiner, Ruth Kim¬ 
ball. 

King, Mrs. Anna Philipine [Eichberg].—Jericho Bob. 
Meteors. 

To Thee, O Country! 

King. Annie B.—Our Flag at Apia 
King, Ben.—Didn’t We. Jim? 

If I Should Die To-mght. 

Jane Jones. 

Pessimist, The. 

St. Patrick’s Day. 

Sum of Life, The. See Pessimist, The. 

Too Bad. See Pessimist, The. 

Two Orphans, The. See Didn’t We, Jim? 

King, Byron W.—What Should a Young Maid Do? 
King, Gen. C:—Marion’s Faith. 

Ray’s Ride. See Marion’s Faith. 

King, Pres. C: (?)—Future of the United States, The. 
Qur Land. 

King, E:—Tsigane’s Canzonet. The. 

Woman’s Execution, A. 

King, Georgianna Goddard.—Love and Death. 

King, Mrs. Harriet Eleanor [Hamilton],—Crocus, The 
Disciples, The. 

Execution of Ugo Bassi. 

Palermo, See Disciples, The. 

Ugo Bassi’s Sermon in the [ter. a] Hospital. 

King. Rt. Rev. H:, Bishop of Chicester.—Contemplation 
upon Flowers, A 

Exequy, The. See Exequy on his Wife. 

Exequy on his Wife. 

Life. See On the Life of Man. 

Life of Man, The. See On the Life of Man. 

On the Life of Man. 

Renunciation, A. See Surrender, The. 

Requiem, A. 

Sic Vita. See On the Life of Man. 

Surrender [, The]. 

King, Joshua.—Hosanna! 

King, T: Starr.—National Clock, The. 

Our Nationality. 

Peace Men, The. 

True Greatness. 

King, Mrs. T: Starr.—Young America. 

Kinglake, Alex. W.—Eothen. . 

Sphynx, The. See Eothen. 

Kingsbury, H. T.—Mark of the Rose, The. 

Kingsley, C: —Airly Beacon. 

Alton Locke. 

Andromeda. 

Andromeda and the Sea-nymphs. See Andro¬ 
meda. 

Bad Squire, The. See Yeast. 

Ballad. A. D. 1400. See Ballad of Earl Hal- 
dan’s Daughter. 

Ballad: Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorr£e. 

Ballad of Earl Haldan’s Daughter. 

“Be good, sweet maid.” See Farewell, A. 
Boat-song, A. See Hypatia. 

Christmas Day. 

Clear and Cool. See Water Babies, The. 

Crusader Chorus. See Saint’s Tragedy, The. 

Day of the Lord, The. 

Dead Church, The. 

Delectable Day, The. 

Dolcino to Margaret. 

Eye® and no Eyes. See Madam How and Lady 

Why. 

Farewell. A. 


484 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Knowles 


Kingsley, C: ( continued.). 

Farewell Advice. See Farewell, A. 

Fishermen, The. See Three Fishers, The. 
“Friends, in this world of hurry.” 

Home Comfort. See Delectable Day, The. 

Hope, A. 

Hypatia. 

Knight’s Leap, The. 

Lament, A. 

Last Buccaneer, The. See Last Buccanier, The. 
Last Buccanier, The. 

Lorraine. See Ballad: Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorr^e. 
Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorr4e. See Ballad' Lorraine, 
etc. 

Lorraine, Lorrtie. See Ballad: Lorraine, etc 
Lost Doll. The. See Water Babies, The 
Madam How and Lady Why. 

Merry I.ark, The. See Lament, A. 

My Childhood’s Love. See Water Babies, The. 
My Little Doll. See Water Babies, The. 

Myth, A. See Night Bird, The. 

Night Bird, The. 

“O Mary, go and call the cattle home. ” See Sands 
of Dee, The. 

Ode to the Northeast Wind. 

“Oh, be at least able to say in that day.” 

Oh, that W T e Two were Maying. See Saint’s 
Tragedy, The 

Old Love, The. See Water Babies, The. 

Old, Old Song, The. See Water Babies, The. 
Pallas in Olympus. See Andromeda. 

Pleasant Isle of AvCs, The. See Last Buccanier, 
The. 

Red King, The. 

Rough Rhyme on a Rough Matter, A. See Yeast. 
Saint Elizabeth. See Saint’s Tragedy, The. 
Saint’s Tragedy, The. 

Sands of [or o’] Dee, The. 

Sea Fight, The. See Westward, Ho! 

Sir Francis Drake. See Westward, Ho! 

Song of Madame Do-as-You-Would-Be-Done-by, 
The. See Water Babies, The. 

Song of the River. See Water Babies, The. 
Song: “Oh! that we two were maying.” See Saint’s 
Tragedy, The. 

Three Fishers, The. 

Three Fishers Went Sailing. See Three Fishers, 
The. 

Tide River, The. See Water Babies, The. 

To Miss Mitford, Authoress of “Our Village.” 

To the Authoress of “Our Village.” See To Miss 
Mitford, Authoress of “Our Village.” 

Twin Stars Aloft. See Hope, A. 

Waiting for the Armada. See Westward. Ho 1 
Water Babies. The. 

Weird Lady, The. 

Welcome. A. See Ode to the Northeast Wind. 
Westward, Ho! 

When all the World is Young [,Lad]. See Water 
Babies, The. 

Wild Oats. See Water Babies, The. 

Yeast. 

Young and Old. See Water Babies, The. 

Youth and Ago. See Water Babies, The. 

Kingsley, H:—Blackbird’s Song, The. 

Kinkel, J: Gottfried.—Patriotic Song. 

Kinne, Abbie.—Child’s Mirror, The. See True Story, 
A. 

True Story, A. 

Kinney, Coates.—-Rain on the Roof. 

Kmney, Eliz. Clementine.—Blind Psalmist, The. 
Dream, A. 

Moonlight in Italy. 

Quakeress Bride, The. 

Ralph Waldo Emerson. 

To the Boy who goes Daily Past my Windows 
Singing. 

Kipling, Rudyard.—Ballad of East and West. The. 
Ballad of Fisher’s Boarding-house. The. 
Betrothed, The. 

B ; mi. 

Cecil Rhodes. 

Coast-wise Lights, The. See Song of the English. 
Conundrum of the Workshops. The. 

Cupid’s Arrows. 

Danny Deever. 

Dedication, A. 

Dove of Dacca. The. 

Fall of .Took Gillespie, The. 

Files-on-Parade. See Danny Deever. 

Flag of England, The. 

“ Fuzzy-wuzzy.” 

His Majesty the King. 


Kipling, Rudyard ( continued ). 

His Wedded Wife. 

Last Chantey The. 

Last of tie Light Brigade, The. 

I.aw of the Jungle, The. 

I.’Envoi. 

Man who Would Be King, The. 

Mandalay. 

My Rival. 

Overland Mail, The. 

Post that Fitted, The. 

Recessional. 

Seal Lullaby, See White Seal, The. 

Soldier, Soldier. 

Song of the English, A 

Sons of the Widow, The. .See Widow at Windsor, 
The. 

Thrown Away. 

Wee Willie Winkie. 

“What Happened.” 

White Man’s Burden, The. 

White Seal, The. 

Widow at Windsor, The. 

Kirby, W:—At Spencer Grange. 

Marquis of Lorre’s Visit to the North-west, The. 
Sparrows, The. 

Kirk, Eleanor. See Ames, Mrs. Eleanor Maria 
[Easterbrook], 

Kirk, R - R.—Brother Toper. 

Comforter, The. 

Indian Summer. 

Girl of Our Town, The. 

Mis’ Rose. 

My Wine. 

Spring Rondeau, A. 

Where are You Sleeping, Lady Fair? 

“Kirke, Edmund.” See Gilmore, Jas. Roberts. 
Kirkham, B. W.—Last Wish, The. 

Kiser, S- Ellsworth.—Boy’s King, A. 

Budd Wilkins at the Show. 

Getting to be a Man. 

His New Suit. 

She Never was a Boy. 

So dier Boy for Me, The. 

Visiting Laura Belle. 

Kitchell, W. L.—“It’s an Ill Wind ” 

Old Letters. 

Klingle, G: See Holmes, Mrs. Georgiana. 

Knapp, Adeline.—Bull of Bashan, A. 

Knapp. Lillian E.—Arbor Day Poem. 

Knickerbocker —In the Garret. 

Kniel, S. M.—-For Decoration Day. 

Let Little Hands. See For Decoration Day. 
Knight, Mrs. —On the Birthday of Catherine of Bra- 
ganza. 

Knight, H: Cogswell.—Lunar Stanzas. 

Knight, Matthew Rickey.—Jacques Cartier. 

Mercy of God, The. 

Sovereign Moments. 

Knott, Proctor.—Proctor Knott on Duluth. 

Knowles, F: Lawrence.— Another Complaint against 
Cupid. 

Columbia. 

Funeral, A. 

Hail, America. 

Her Little Glove. 

Jacqueminot. 

Love’s Entrance. 

Love’s Prayer. 

Nature: The Artist. 

Pasture, A. 

Royalty. 

Soap-bubble, A. 

Soul Shadow. 

Tildy in the Choir. 

To a Football. 

To the American Poet. 

With a Copy of Keats. 

Ye Golde-headed Cane. 

Yesterday. 

Knowles, Herbert.—Lines W'ritten in a Churchyard. 

See Lines Written in Richmond Churchyard, 
Yorkshire. 

Lines Written in Richmond Churchyard], York¬ 
shire]. 

Written in the Churchyard of Richmond, York¬ 
shire. See Lines Written in Richmond 
Churchyard. Yorkshire. 

Knowles, Jas. Sheridan.—Alfred the Great; or, The 
Patriot King. 

Alfred the Great to His Men. See Alfred the 
Great; or, The Patriot King. 

Csesar Passing the Rubicon. 


485 





Knowles 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Knowles, Jas. Sheridan ( continued). 

Caesar’s Passage of the Rubicon. See Caesar Pass¬ 
ing the Rubicon. 

Caius Gracchus. 

Caius Gracchus Cited before the Censors. Appeals 
to. the People. See Caius Gracchus. 

Crossing [of] the Rubicon. See Caesar Passing the 
Rubicon. 

Description of the Chase. See Love Chase, The. 
False Witness Detected. 

Helen and Modus. See Hunchback, The. 
Hunchback, The. 

Hunt, The. See Love Chase, The. 

Lessons in Love. See Hunchback, The. 

Love Chase, The. 

‘‘Oh, with what pride T used.” See William TelJ. 
Passing of the Rubicon, The. See Caesar Passing 
the Rubicon. 

Rolla’s Address to the Peruvians. (Wr. at.) See 
Sheridan, R: Brinsley. 

St. Pierre to Ferrardo. See Wife, The. 

Scene from “The Love Chase.” See Love Chase, 
The. 

Switzerland. See William Tell. 

Tell on His Native Hills. See William Tell. 

Tell on Switzerland. See William Tell. 

Tell’s Address to the Alps. See William Tell. 
Tell’s Address to the Mountains. See William 
Tell. 

Virginius. 

Wife, The. 

William Tell. 

William Tell among the Mountains. See Wiliam 
Tell. 

William Tell on Switzerland. See William Tell. 
William Tell’s Address to His Native Hills. See 
William Tell. 

“Ye crags and peaks, I’m with you once again.” 
See William Tell. • 

Knox, Isa Craig —Ballad of the Brides of Quair, The. 

Woodruffe, The. 

Knox, J. Armoy.—Tragedy, A. 

Knox, T:—“Though scoffers ask, where is your gain?” 
Knox, W:—Atheist, The. 

Curse of Cain. The. 

Mortality. See Oh, Why Should the Spirit of 
Mortal be Proud? 

Oh [or O], Why Should the Spirit of Mortal be 
Proud? 

Kobb6, Gustav.—Wanted—a Nurse. 

Koehner, lheodore.—Sore Disappointment. 

Kohaus, Hannah More.—Child Angel, The. 

Santa Claus’ Agent. 

Koopman, Harry Lyman.—Death of Guinevere, The. 
Icarus. 

John Brown. 

Revealed. 

Satirist, The. 

Sea and Shore. 

Kopisch. August.—Blucher on the Rhine. 

Komer. Andreas Justinus—Richest Prince, The. 
Komer, Karl Theodore.—Battle Hymn[, The], 

Good Night. 

Men and Boys. 

Song of the Sword. See Sword Songf, The]. 

Sword Songf, The]. 

Kossuth, L: — Address before the Congress of the 
United States in 1851. 

Appeal to the Hungarians. 

Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Contentment of Europe, The. See Speech at 
Manchester. 

Duties of Christianity, The. 

Hereditary Policy of America, Dec. 11, 1851. 
Heroism of the Hungarian People. See Speech 
at Birmingham. 

Hungary and Austria in Religious Contrast 
“In a Just Cause.” See Hereditary Policy of 
America. 

Mourning Hero’s Vision, Thee. 

No Peace without Liberty. See Hungary and 
Austria in Religious Contrast. 

Peace Inconsistent with Oppression. See Hun¬ 
gary and Austria in Religious Contrast. 

Roman Senate and the American Congress, The. 
See Address before the Congress of the United 
States in 1851. 

Russia the Antagonist of the United States. 
Speech at Birmingham, Nov. 12, 1851. 

Speech at Manchester, Nov. 11, 1851. 

Kotzebue,-.—Hugo Grotius. 

Spaniards in Peru, The. See Sheridan, R: 
Brinsley. 


Krauth, C. P.—Martin Luther. 

Krilof [or Kriloff or Kryloff], Ivan Andreyevitch.— 
Eagle and the Spider, The. 

Kringle, G:—To-morrow’s News. 

Krohn, Rev. Phillips.—Illustration, An. 

Krout, Mary Hannah.—Little Brown Hands. 

Once at Battle Eve. 

Krummacher, Friederich Wilhelm.—Alpine Heights. 

Moss Rose, The. 

‘ ‘ Kruna. ’ ’—Corregi o. 

Kryloff, Tvan Andreyvitch. See Krilof, Ivan An- 

DREYVITCH. 

Kunkler, Marie F.—But Little Folks. See We are but 
Little Folks, you See. 

We are but Little Folks, you See. 

Kyle, G: W.—Alphabetical Sermon. 

Anatomical Tragedian, The. 

Billy’s Pets. 

Burglar’s Grievances, The. 

Classical Music. 

Delancey Stuyvasant and the Horse-car. 

Dentist and Patient. 

Dunderburg Jenkins’s “Forty-graf” Album. 
Felinaphone, The. 

Good Little Boy and the Bad Little Boy, The. 
High Art and Economy. 

Hoolahan on Education. 

Juggler, The. 

Mrs. Britzenhoeffer’s Troubles. 

Professor Gunter on Marriage. 

Swell [in a Horse-car], The. See Delancey Stuyva¬ 
sant and the Horse-car. 


L 

L.—Kiss. A. 

L., A. T.—“When vanished in this vapor we call life.’ 
L., E. R.—Blest Spring Time. (TV. 1 ) 

L., G. T.—Millionaire and the Barefoot Boy, The. 

L„ H—What I Like. 

L., J. M.—One Summer. 

Questions. 

Stranger, A. 

L., L. M.—Sensible Serenade, A. 

L., M. A.—Time Only for Love. 

L., O.—Prayer of the Satirist. 

River of Commerce, The. 

Verse. 

L., R. A.—Under False Colours. 

Laboulaye, Edouard Rend Lefebvre.—New Fairy 
Story, A. 

La Bruyiire, Jean de.—Characters: Of Judgments. 

True Liberty. See Characters: Of Judgments. 
Lacey [or Locey], Maria.—Loveliness. 

La Conte [or Lacoste], Maria.—Somebody’s Darling. 
Ladies' Home Journal. —Stars’ Ball, The. 

La Fontaine, Jean de.—Castle-builder, The. 

Council of the Rats, The. 

Drunkard and His Wife, The. 

Middle Aged Man and the Two Widows, The. 
Laidlaw W:—Lucy’s Flittin’. 

I.aighton [tor. Leighton], Albert.—Autumn. 

Found Dead. 

Joe. 

Missing Ships, The. 

To My Soul. 

Under the Leaves. 

Laighton, Oscar.—Clover Blossoms, The. 

Laittg, Alex.—My Ain Wife. 

Laird, Frank F.—Negro in American History, The. 
Lake Forest Student. —Football Maiden, The. 

Lamar, Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus.—Nineteenth Cen¬ 
tury Ends Slavery, The. 

Lamar, Mirabeau Bonaparte.—Daughter of Mendoza, 
The. 

Lamartine, Alphonse de.—Character of Napoleon, The. 
Establishment of the Republic. The. 

Execution of Madame Roland. See Girondists, 
The. 

Execution of Queen Mary. See Mary Stuart. 
Girondists, The. 

History of the Restoration of Monarchy iD France, 
The. 

Lord Byron to the Greeks. 

Mary Stuart. 

Reign of Napoleon, The. See History of the Res¬ 
toration of the Monarchy in France, The. 
Religion of Revolutionary Men. 

Republic Defined, A. See Establishment of the 
Republic, The. 

Zarafi. 


486 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Landor 


Lamb, C:—Barbara S-. 

Child, A. See Parental Recollections. 

Childhood. 

Christening, The. 

Cold in the Head, A. See Letter to Bernard Bar¬ 
ton, Jan. 9th. 1824. 

Confessions of a Drunkard. 

Cry from the Depths, A. See Confessions of a 
Drunkard. 

Death of Coleridge, The. See On the Death of 
Coleridge. 

Dissertation upon Roast Pig, A. 

Dream Children: a Reverie. 

Epigram. Written in the Last Reign. 

Farewell to Tobacco, A. 

Fragments of Burton. Extract TIL—A Conceipt 
of Diabolical Possession. 

Gipsy’s Malison, The. 

Grandame. The. 

Hester. 

Housekeeper. The. ( Tr .) 

Hypochondriacus. See Fragments of Burton. 

In Memoriam. See Parental Recollections. 

In the Album of Lucy Barton. 

In the Chuicbyard. See Rosamund Gray. 

Letter to Bernard Barton, Jan. 9th, 1824. 

Love, Death, and Reputation. 

Margaret Gray. See Rosamimd Gray. 

My First Play. 

Nonsense Verses. 

Old China. 

Old Familiar Faces, The. 

On an Infant Dying as soon as Born. 

On Rising with the Lark. See That we should 
Rise with the Lark. 

On the Death of Coleridge. 

On the Disappointment of the Whig Associates of 
the Prince Regent, at not Obtaining Office. 
See Epigram. Written in the Last Reign. 
Origin of Roast Pig, The. See Dissertation upon 
Roast Pig. A. 

Parental Recollections. 

Popular Fallacies See That we should Rise with 
the Lark. 

Recollections of Childhood. See Rosamund Gray. 
Reflections in the Pillory. 

Rejoicing [Rejoicings—C.] upon the New Year’s 
Coming of Age. 

Roast Pig. See Dissertation upon Roast Pig, A. 
Rosamund Cray. 

That we should Rise with the Lark. 

Valentine’s Day. 

Warning [to the Intemperate], A. See Confessions 
of a Drunkard. 

We Cherish Dreams. See That we should Rise 
with the Lark. 

Work. 

Lamb.C: and Mary.— Ballad: Noting the Difference of 
Rich and Poor, in the Ways of a Rich Noble’s 
Palace and a Poor Workhouse, A. 

Beasts in the Tower, The. 

Beggar Man, The. 

Boy and Snake, The. 

Boy and the Skylark, The. 

Breakfast. 

Broken Doll, The. 

Brother’s Reply, The. 

Child and the Snake, The. See Boy and Snake. 
The. 

Cleanliness 
Coffee Slips, The. 

David in the Cave of Adullam. 

Dialogue between a Mother and Child. 

Envy. 

First Sight of Green Fields, The. 

First Tooth, The. 

Going into Breeches. 

Helen. - . 

Lines on a Picture by Leonardo Da Vinci, called 
“The Virgin of the Rocks.” See Lines on the 
Celebrated, etc. 

Lines on the Celebrated Picture by Leonardo Da 
Vinci, called The Virgin of the Rocks. 

Lines on the Same Picture being Removed to 
Make Place for a Portrait of a Lady by Titian. 
Lines Suggested by a Picture of Two Females by 
Leonardo Da Vinci. 

Love, Death and Reputation. 

Magpie’s Nest, The. 

Memory. 

Nursing. 

On the Lord’s Prayer. 

Peach, The. 


Lamb, C: and Mary ( continued ). 

Queen Oriana’s Dream. 

Rainbow, The. 

Rook and the Sparrows, The. 

Salome. 

Sister’s Expostulation on the Brother’s Learning 
Latin, The. 

Three Friends, The. 

Time Spent in Dress. 

To a River in which a Child was Drowned. 

Vision of Repentance, A. 

Written in the first leaf of a Child’s Memorandum 
Book. 

Lamb, Mary.—Child, A. 

Choosing a Name. 

Choosing a Profession. 

Feigned Courage. 

In Memoriam. 

Spartan Boy, The. 

Lambert, Irvin C.—Road to Wrinkle Town, The. 

La Moille, T. G.—Only a Tramp. 

Thanksgiving. 

“39.” 

Lamont, Alex.—Round of Life, The. „ 

La Motte, Francois de Salignac de. See Fenelon. 

Lampertus,-.—German Trust Song. 

Lampman, Archibald.—After Rain. 

Among the Millet. 

Between the Rapids. 

City of the End of Things, The. 

Evening. 

Forecast, A. 

Goal of Life, The. 

Heat. 

In Absence. 

June. 

Loons, The. 

Organist, The. 

Outlook. 

Perfect Love. 

Railway Station, The. 

September 

Snowbirds. 

Spirit of the House, The. 

Sun Cup, The. 

Lampson, Frd’k Locker. See Locker-Lampson, Frd’k. 
Lampton, W: Jas.—Final Day Dialogue, A. 

Lightning Story, A. 

Once. 

Unexpected, The. See Once. 

Lanahan. J:—God in History. 

Lancaster, A. E.—Little Church Round the Corner, 
The. 

Lander, General Frd’k. W:—Rhode Is and to tl e South. 
Landon, Letit'a Eliz. See Maclean, Mrs. Letitia 
Eliz. [Landon], 

Landon, Melville DeLancey (“Eli Perkins”).— What 
Drove me into a Lunatic Asylum. 

Landor, Walter Savage.—Absence. 

Advice. 

“Aged man who loved to doze away An.” 

“Ah! what avails the sceptered race!” See Rose 
Avlmer. 

Alciphron and Leucippe. ' 

Appeal, The. See Remain! 

Approach of Age, The. 

Autumn. 

Bossuet and the Duchess of Fontanges. See Im¬ 
aginary Conversations. 

Brier, The. 

Child of a Day. 

Children. 

Children Playing in a Churchyard. 

Cleone to Aspasia. See Pericles and Aspasia. 
Corinna from Athens, to Tanagra. See Pericles 
and Aspasia. 

Corinna to Tanagra, from Athens. See Pericles 
and Aspasia. 

Cowslips. 

Death. 

Death of Artemidora, The. 

Death Undreaded. See Death. 

Dirce. 

Examination of Shakespeare. 

F*sulan Idyl. 

Farewell to Italy. 

Fault is not Mine, The. 

Feathers. See “There falls with every wedding 
chime.” 

Fiesolan Idyl. See Faesulan Idyl. 

Finis. See On his Seventy-fifth Birthday. 

For an Epitaph at Fiesole. 

Forsaken. See Mother, I Cannot Mind my Wheel. 


487 







Landor 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Landor, Walter Savage ( continued ). 

F riends. 

Gebir. 

Gifts Returned. 

Hamadryad, The. 

Heartsease. 

How many Voices. 

How to Read Me. 

Ianthe. 

Ianthe’s Question. 

Ianthe’s Troubles. 

Imaginary Conversations. 

In After Time. 

Inscription on a Sea Shell. See Gebir. 
Invocation, An. See Regeneration. 

Iphigenia and Agamemnon. 

Ireland. 

Late Leaves. 

“Lately our Songsters [i vr. Poets] loitered in green 
lanes.” 

Leaf after Leaf. 

Little Aglae to her Father. 

Lying in State. 

Macaulay. See To Macaulay. 

Maid’s Lament, The. See Examination of Shake¬ 
speare. 

Man. 

Margaret. See Mother, I Cannot Mind my Wheel. 
Memory. 

Mother, I Cannot Mind my Wheel. 

“Myrtis.” 

Of Clementina. See Sixteen. 

Old Poet to Sleep, An. 

On Catullus. 

On Himself. See On his Seventy-fifth Birthday. 
On His Seventy-fifth Birthday. 

On Living too Long. 

On Lucretia Borgia’s Hair. See On Seeing a Hair 
of Lucretia Borgia. 

On Music. 

On Observing a Vulgar Name on the Plinth of 
an Ancient Statue. 

On Seeing a Hair of Lucretia Borgia. 

On Southey’s Death. 

On the Death of M. D’Ossoli and His Wife, Mar¬ 
garet Fuller. 

On the Death of Southey. 

One Gray Hair, The. 

One White Hair, The. See One Gray Hair, The. 
One Lovely Name.- 
Pericles and Aspasia. 

Persistence. 

Plays. 

Prayer to Fate, A. 

Prayers. See Gebir. 

Prophecy,A. 

Proud Word you Never Spoke. See Prophecy, A. 
Regeneration. 

Remain! 

Resignation. See “Why, why repine, my pensive 
friend.” 

Retrospect, A. 

Robert Browning. See To Robert Browning. 

Rose Aylmer. 

Rose Aylmer’s Hair, Given by Her Sister. 

Rubies. 

Sacrifice. See Iphigenia and Agamemnon. 

“Say ye, that years roll on and ne’er return?” See 
To the Comtesse de Molande, about to Marry 
the Due de Luxembourg. 

Separation. 

Shakespeare and Milton. 

Shell, The. See Gebir. 

Siddons and Her Maid. 

Sixteen. 

Tamar and the Nymph. See Gebir. 

Test, The. 

“There are who say we are but dust.” 

There Falls with Every Wedding Chime. 

Thought, A. 

Thrasymedes and Eunoe. 

Time to be Wise. 

To a Cyclamen. 

To a Fair Maiden. 

To Age. 

To Ianthe. 

To Macaulay. 

To Robert Browning. 

To Sleep. 

To Tacrea. 

To the Comtesse de Molande, about to Marry the 
Due de Luxembourg. 

To the Sister of Elia. 


Landor, Walter Savage ( continued). 

To Youth. 

Twenty Years Hence. 

“Twenty years hence my eyes may grow.” See 
Twenty Years Hence. 

Under the Lindens. 

Verse: “Past ruin’d Ilion Helen lives.” 

Verses w-hy Burnt. 

Washington and Franklin. See Imaginary Con¬ 
versations. 

“When Helen first saw wrinkles in her face.” See 
W T rinkles. 

Where are Sighs? 

"Why, why repine, my pensive friend.” 

Wrinkles. 

Years. 

“You smiled, you spoke, and I believed.” See To 
Ianthe. 

Lane, A. K.—Toast, A 

Lane, Burneston.—One Who Stays at Home. The. 
Lane, Denny.—Lament of the Irish Maiden, The. 

Lane, J. Beaufoy.—Knight’s Vow, The. 

Lanergan, G: T.—Duelist’s Victory, The. 

Lang, Andrew.—HSsop. 

Ballad of the Unattainable. 

Ballade of Blue China. 

Ballade of his Choice of a Sepulchre. 

Ballade of Life. 

Ballade of the Book-hunter. 

Ballade of the Bookman’s Paradise. 

Ballade of True Wisdom. 

Ballade to Theocritus in Winter. 

Catullus to his Book. ( Tr .) 

Colonel Burnaby. 

Epigram: “Pest of the muses,” etc. (Tr.) 

Erinna. (Tr.) 

Ghosts in the Library. 

Heliodore Dead. (Tr.) 

Lost Love. 

Melville and Coghill. 

Odyssey, The. 

Of Blue China. See Ballade of Blue China. 

Of his Choice of a Sepulchre. See Ballade of his 
Choice of a Sepulchre. 

Of Life. See Ballade of Life. 

Of the Book-hunter. See Ballade of the Book- 
hunter. 

On Calais Sands. 

Romance. 

Rowfant Books, The. 

Rowfant Library, The. 

San Terenzo. 

Scot to Jeanne d’Arc, A. 

Scythe Song. 

Spring. 

Telling the Bees. 

Three Portraits of Prince Charles. 

To Theocritus, in Winter. See Ballade to Theoc¬ 
ritus in Winter. 

White Pacha, The. 

Woman and the Weed. 

Langbridge, Frd’k.—Parson’s Comforter, The. 

Sent Back by the Angels. 

Song for the Girl I Love, A. 

Langdon, W. C., Jr.—Unseen Depths, The. 

Langheim,-.—I-Have and Oh! Had-I. 

Langhorne, C: Hartley.—Theocritus. 

Langhorne, Dr. J:-—To a Redbreast. 

Langland [or Langley], W:—Pilgrimage in Search of 
Do-Well. See Vision of Piers [the] Plowman. 
Vision of Piers [the] Plowman. 

Langston, J: Mercer.—Abraham Lincoln. 

Lanier, Clifford Anderson.—Friar Servetus. 

Lanier, Sidney. America. See Centennial Meditation 
of Columbia, The. 

Ballad [jit. Ballade] of Trees and the Master, A. 
Battle of Lexington, The. See Psalm of the West. 
Betrayal. See Jaquerie, The. 

Centennial Cantata. See Centennial Meditation of 
Columbia, The. 

Centennial Meditation of Columbia, The. 
Centennial Ode, The. See Centennial Meditation 
of Columbia, The. 

Corn. 

Dear Land of All My Love. See Centennial Medi¬ 
tation of Columbia, The. 

Dying Words of Stonewall Jackson, The. 

Evening Song. 

Harlequin of Dreams, The. 

Hound, The. See Jaquerie, The. 

In Absence. 

Jaquerie, The. 

Marshes of Glynn, The. 


488 







AUTHOR INDEX 


Lawrence 


Lanier, Sidney ( continued ). 

Mocking Bird, The. 

My Springs. 

Night and Day. 

Nilsson. 

On the Shore. See Evening Song. 

Psalm of the West. 

Revenge of Hamish, The. 

Song of the Chattahoochee. 

Stirrup-cup, The. 

Sunrise., 

Trees and the Master, The. See Ballad of Trees 
and the Master, A. 

Wedding Hymn. 

Lanier, Sidney and Clifford.—Power of Prayer{; or, the 
First Steamboat up the Alabama], The. 
Lanigan, G: T.—Ahkoond of Swat, The. See Thren¬ 
ody, A. 

Amateur Orlando, The. 

Dirge of the Moolia of Kotal. 

Golden Bridge, The. 

Latest Version, The, 

Threnody, A. 

Lanigan, R. W.—Charity. 

Lansing, ——.—Deacon’s Downfall, The. 

Lantern, The .—Shadows. 

“Lapius, S. Q.”—In the Ol’ Tobacker Patch. 

W’en de Darky am a-Whistlin’ in de Co’n. 
Lapraik, J:—Matrimonial Happiness. 

La Ram^e, Louise de (“Ouida”).—Battle of Zaraila, 
The. See Under Two Flags. 

El Dog of Flanders, A. 

Forest King’s Race. See Under Two Flags. 

In Pitti. 

r r Military Steeple-chase, The. See Under Two Flags. 

r Under Two Flags. 

Larcom, Lucy.—Across the River. 

“And in that twilight hush. God drew their hearts.” 
At Nightfall. 

At Queen Maude’s Banquet. 

Baby’s Day. 

Baby’s Thoughts, The. 

Barn-window, The. 

“Battle of our life is won, The.” 

Berrying Song. 

Between Winter and Spring. 

Breezes, The. 

Bring Back My Flowers. 

Brook that Ran into the Sea, The. 

Brown Thrush, The. 

By the Fireside. 

Calling the Violet. 

Cat-questions. 

Christmas Green. 

Christmas Thought, A. 

Clock-tinker, The. 

Do Something. See Three Old Saws. 

Dumpy Ducky 
Easter Dawn. 

Face in the Tongs, A. 

Farther On. 

Flower-girl . 

Friend. A. 

Gipsy Children’s Song. 

Golden-rod, 

Gowns of Gossamer. 

Grace and her Friends. 

Grace’ Friends. See Grace and her Friends. 
Growing Old. 

Hal’s Birthday. 

Hannah Binding Shoes. 

Harebell, A. 

“He who plants a tree.” See Plant a Tree. 
Hints. 

“I bring you these little song-blossoms.” 

If I were a Sunbeam. 

“If the world seems cold to you.” See Three Old 
Saws. 

Immortal. 

In Fairy Land. 

In the Air. 

In the Tree-top. 

In Time’s Swing. 

Jessie’s Book. 

Last Flower of the Year, The. 

Lily’s Word, A. 

Little Brown Cabin, The. 

Little Cavalier, A. 

Little Nannie. 

Little Tambourine Girl, The. 

Loyal Woman’ No, A. 

Manitou’s Garden. 

Moon hine. 


Larcom, Lucy ( continued ). 

My Children. 

National Flower, The. 

New Year Song. 

New Year’s Wishes. 

Nineteenth of April, 1861, The. 

On the Stairway. 

Our Christ. 

Peepsy. 

Plant a Tree. 

Playthings. 

Prince Hal. 

Proof, The. 

Pussy Clover. 

Red Sandwort. 

Red-top and Timothy. 

Ring, Happy Bells. 

Rivulet, The. 

Roadside Preacher, The. 

School-mistress, The. 

Sing-away Bird, The. 

Sir Robin. 

Sister and Bluebirds. 

Sister Months, The. 

Snow Song. 

Spring Whistles. 

Starlight. 

Strip of Blue, A. 

Swing Away. 

Swinging on a Birch-tree. 

Thanksgiving, A. 

Three Old Saws. 

What Shall we Wrap the Baby In? 

What the Train Ran Over. 

Who Plants a Tree. See Plant a Tree. 
Larminie, W:—Consolation. 

Epilogue to Fand. See Fand. 

Fand. 

Moytura. 

Speech of Emer, The. See Fand. 

Sword of Tethra, The. See Moytura. 

Larned, Frank Madison.—Oblivion’s Gate. 
Larrabee, W: Clark.—“Plant trees and care for 
them.” 

Larremore, Wilbur.—Blossom Time. 

Madam Hickory. 

Lathbury, Mary Anne.—Bread of Life, The. 

Dying Day, The. 

Lathrap, Mrs. Mary T-—“Come out from among 
them ” 

Dead March, The. 

Dramshop or the Republic, The. 

God in Government. 

Will it Pay? 

Lathrop, G: Parsons.—Book Battalion, The 
Cavalry Charge, The. 

Child’s Wish Granted, The. 

Flown Soul, The. 

Keenan’s Charge. 

Marthy Virginia’s Hand. 

Phcebe-bird, The. 

Remembrance. 

Song- parrow. The. 

South Wind. 

Sunshine of Thine Eyes, The. 

Voice of the Void, The. 

Wedding of the Moon, The. 

Lathrop, Lena.—Her Reply. See Woman’ Ques¬ 
tion, A. 

Woman’s Question, A. (TFr. at. to Eliz. B. Brown¬ 
ing.) 

Lathrop, Mrs. Rose [Hawthorne],—Clock’s Song, The. 
Despair. See Give me not Tears. 

Dorothy. 

Give me not Tears. 

Joy. See Give me not Tears. 

Song before Grief, A. 

Lathrop, W: A.—Realism of Dickens, The. 

Latimer, Mrs. (Mary) Eliz. [Wormeley].—-Romance 
of a Hat. (TV.) 

Saint Anthony. 

St. George and the Dragon. 

Latta, E. R.—Welcome Spring, The. 

Laughton, Frances Parker. See Mace, Mrs. Frances 
Parker [Laoghton], 

Laurie. Rev. Wm.—Answer to “I Am Dying.” 
Lavater, Johann Caspar (?).—“Ask thyself at evening: 

What that is immortal have I done to-day?” 
Lawless, Marg. H.—“Bring out Your Dead.” 

Fighting Fire. 

Lawrence, Abbott.—Before and Behind. 

Lawrence, Annie M.—Ben Isaac’s Vision. 

Lawrence. Jonathan.—Look Aloft. 






Lawrence 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lawrence, Kate.—Child’s Thoughts about God, A. 
Little Boy’s Wants, A. 

Questions. 

Story of a Cent, The. 

Who Did it? 

Lawrence. S. St. G.—Safe Attachment, A. 

Lawson, Mrs. Mary Jane [Katzmann],—Face in the 
Cathedral. The. 

Lawton, D:—Life’s Purpose. 

Lawton, W: Cranston.—My Fatherland. 

Song, Youth, and Sorrow. 

Lay, E. Eliz.—Margaret’s Guest. 

Laycock, S:—Welcome, Bonny Brid! 

Layne, Castle.—Love’s Caramels Lost. 

Layton, Addie.—Only a Baby. (At.) 

Lazarus, Emma.—Banner of the Jew, The. 

Cranes of Ibycus, The. 

Crowing of the Red Cock, The. 

Destiny. 

Gifts. 

Hope. 

Mater Amabilis. 

New Ezekiel, The. 

On the Proposal to Erect a Monument in Eng¬ 
land to Lord Byron. 

Patience. 

Raschi in Prague. 

To Carmen Sylva. 

Venus of the Louvre. 

Leach, Grace W.—Skaters, The. 

“White Morning, A.” 

Leach, Mary A.—Better than a Doctor. 

“Leaf, Olive.”—“God is Nowhere.” See Little Reader, 
The. 

Little Reader. The. 

Leahy, W. A.—Riding to the Hunt. 

Lear, E:—Ahkond of Swat, The. 

“Author of the Pobble,” The. See Lines to a 
Young Lady. 

Incidents in the Life of My Uncle Arly. 

Jumblies, The. 

Limericks. 

Lines to a Young Lady. 

Nonsense Alphabet. 

Owl and the Pussy-cat, The. 

Pobble who has no Toes, The. 
Yonghv-Bonghy-Bo, The. 

Learned, Walter.—Consolation. 

Explanation, An. . 

Five Little White Heads. 

In Explanation. See Explanation, An. 

Last Reservation, The. 

On a Fly-leaf of a Book of Old Plays. 

On the Fly-leaf of Manon Lescaut. 

On the Fly-leaf of a Book of Old Plays. See On 
a Fly-leaf, etc. 

Song of the Vane, The. 

To Critics. 

Wayside Well, The. 

What else could he Do? See Explanation, An. 
With a Spray of Apple Blossoms. 

Leatherman, Jos. W.—Fireside Colloquy. 

Leavitt, Mrs. Mary Clement.—World’s Problem, The. 
Lecky, W: E: Hartpole.—On an Old Song. 

Sower and His Seed, The. 

Undeveloped Lives, The. 

Le Compte, Irville C.—Memory, A. 

Ledyard. Ray.—Boat-building in Spain. 

Lee, Fitzhugb.—States, The. 

Lee, Fs.—Tree that Tried to Grow, The. 

Lee, Frank.—He’ll See it when he Wakes. 

Lee, Franklyn W.—House-cleaning. 

Lee, H:—Father of His Country, The. See Funeral 
Oration on the Death of General Washington. 
Funeral Oration on the Death of General Wash¬ 
ington. 

Washington’s Birthday. See Funeral Oration on 
the Death of General Washington. 

Lee, Holme.—Lost on the Shore. 

Lee, Jas. Wideman.—Henry W. Grady as an Orator. 
Lee, Laurence.—Remarkable Honeymoon Trip, A. 
Lee, Mrs. Mary Eliz.—Blind Communicant, The. 
Grandmother’s Hour with the Hymns. 

Speak Gently to the Erring (?). 

Lee, Nathaniel.—Alexander. 

Brutus and Titus. See Lucius Junius Brutus. 
Lucius Junius Brutus. 

Lee, R: H.—Address to the People of England. 

For Independence, 1776. 

Lee, Gen. Rob’t E:—“Nearly one hundred years ago 
there was a day of remarkable gloom and dark¬ 
ness.” 

Lee, Mrs. Sophia V. [Gilbert].—Brook The. 


Lee, Rev. W : .1.—Life’s Loom. 

Shelter. 

Leeds Mercury .—How Pat Went Courting. 
Lee-Hamilton, Eugene.—Charles II. of Spain to Ap¬ 
proaching Death. 

Flight from Glory, A. 

Ipsissimus. 

Izaak Walton to River and Brook. 

On His “Sonnets of the Wingless Hours.” 
Sea-shell Murmurs. 

Sir Walter Raleigh to a Caged Linnet. 

Sunken Gold. 

To My Tortoise Chrono . 

What the Sonnet is. 

Le Fanu, Jos. Sheridan.—Abhrain an Bhuideil. 
Fionula. 

Shamus O’Brien. (At. also to S: Lover.) 

Shemus O’Brien. See Shamus O’Brien. 

Lefevre, Mrs. Lily Alice (“Fleurange”).—Imprisoned. 
Inspiration. 

Lefevre, Pierre Frangoi .—Gustavus, King of Sweden, 
to His Soldiers. 

Gustavus Vasa to the Dalecarlians. See Gustavus, 
King of Sweden, to his Soldier . 

Lefroy, E: Cracroft.—Foot-ball Player, A. 

Shepherd Maiden, A. 

Sicilian Night, A. 

Le Gallienne, R:—Confessio Amantis. 

Happy Smoking-ground, The. 

Love’s Poor. 

Old Man’ Song, An. 

Orbits. 

Passionate Reader to His Poet, The. 

Regret. 

Second Crucifixion, The. 

Song: “She’s somewhere in the sunlight strong.” 
To Mv Wife, Mildred. 

War Poem. 

With Pipe and Book. 

Woman’s Half-profits, The. 

Wonder-child, The. 

Legar6, Hugh Swinton.—American Constitution no 
Experiment, The. 

Constitution of the United States not an Experi¬ 
ment, The. See American Constitution no Ex¬ 
periment, The. 

Emotions on Returning to the United States. 
Laboring Classes, The. 

Liberty and Greatness. (?) 

Legard, Jas. Mathews.—Ahab Mohammed. 

Amy. 

To a Lily. 

Legge, Arthur E. J.—Losing Side, The. 

Leggett, W:—Love and Friendship. 

Lehigh Burr .—Applied Mathematics. 

Gory Gambols. 

Mathematical. 

Sub-mistletoe. 

Leigh, Amy E.—If I but Knew. 

Leigh, Felix.—Old Doll to the New One, The. 

Leigh, H: Sambrooke.—Cossimbazar. 

Getting Up. 

Maud. 

My After-dinner Cloud. 

My Three Loves. 

Only Seven. 

Trials of a Twin. See Twins, The. 

Twins, The. 

Leighton, Albert.—Found Dead. 

Leighton, Rob’t.—Dried-up Fountain, The. 

John and Tibbie Davison’s Dispute. 

John and Tibbie’s Dispute. See John and Tibbie 
Davison’s Dispute. 

John Davidson. See John and Tibbie Davison’s 
Dispute. 

Scotch Words. 

Too Manv Books. 

Leiser, Jos.—Day of Atonement, The. 

Kol Nidra. See Day of Atonement, The. 

Leland, C: Godfrey (“Hans Brietmann”).—Ballad: 
“Der noble Ritter Hugo.” 

Ballad of Charity, The. 

Ballad of the Green Old Man, The. 

Ballad of the Mermaid. See Ballad: “Der noble 
Ritter Hugo.” 

Breitmann in Maryland. 

Carey, of Carson. 

El Capitan-General. 

Fisher’s Cottage, The. (Tr.) 

Hans Breitmann and the Turners. 

Hans Breitmann’s Party. 

In Nevada. 

Masher, The. 


490 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Lincoln 


Leland, C: Godfrey ( continued ). 

Maud Muller [in Dutch], 

Riddler, The. 

Ritter Hugo. See Ballad: “Der noble Ritter 
Hugo.” 

Romany Song. 

Schnitzerl’s Philosopede [or Velocipede]. 

To a Friend Studying German. 

Two Friends, The. 

Water Fay. The. (7V.) 

"Lemon, Mark.” See Taylor, Tom. 

Leonard, Rev. Adna B.—Prohibition Party a Necessity, 
A. 

Leonard, Priscilla.—Always in a Hurry. 

In the Looking-glass. 

Leonidas of Alexandria.—Home. 

Leonidas to His Three Hundred. 

On the Picture of an Infant [Playing near a Preci¬ 
pice]. 

Leprohon, Mrs. R. E. [Mullins].—"-Huron Chief’s Daugh¬ 
ter, The. 

Le Row, Caroline Bigelow.—For a Warning. 
“Scallywag.” 

Song of the Steamer Engine. 

Leslie, Caroline.—“I stood beside my window one 
stormy winter day.” 

Meadow Talk. 

Leslie, Norman.—Address to the Jury. 

Leslie’s Weekly. — How Christmas came to Crappv 
Shute. 

Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim.—Avaro. See Epigram: 
“There comes from old Avaro’s grave.” 

Bad Orator, The. 

Bad Wife, The. 

Cupid and Mercury; or, The Bargain. 

Dead Miser, The. 

Epigram: “There comes from old Avaro’s grave.” 
Fritz. 

Mendax. 

Nathan the Wise. 

Nice Point, A. 

Niger. 

On Dorilis. 

On Fell. 

On Two Beautiful One-eyed Sisters. 

Opal Ring, The. See Nathan the Wise. 
Per-contra, or Matrimonial Balance, The. 

Ring, The. See Nathan The Wise. 

Specimen of the Laconic. 

To a Liar. 

To a Slow Walker and Quick Eater. 

True Nobility. 

Wise Child. The. 

Lester, C. F.—On the Stair. 

Take it Like a Man. 

L’Estrange, Sir Roger.—In Prison. See Loyalty Con¬ 
fined. 

Loyalty Confined. 

Lettsom, W: Nanson. ( Tr .)—How Brunhild was re¬ 
ceived at Worms. See Nibelungen Lied. 

How Margrave Rudeger was Slain. See Nibe¬ 
lungen Lied. 

How Siegfried was Slain. See Nibelungen Lied. 
Nibelungen Lied. 

Leuville, Marquis de.—Choice of Arms, The. 

Lever, C: Jas.—Charles O’Malley, the Irish Dragoon. 
Larry M’Hale. 

Mickey Free and the Priest. See Charles O’Malley, 
the Irish Dragoon. 

Mickey Free’s Letter to Mrs. M’Gra. See Charles 
O’Malley, the Irish Dragoon. 

Miss Judith Macan. See Charles O’Malley, the 
Irish Dragoon. 

Why My Father Left the Army. 

Widow Malone. 

Leverett, Mary E.—Discovery in Biology, A. 

Leveridge [or Loveridge], R:, and Fielding, H:—Roast 
Beef of Old England, The. 

Levin, Lewis C.—Best Policy in Regard to Naturaliza¬ 
tion. 

Tree-tise on Nature, A. 

Levy, Amy.—Between the Showers. 

In the Mile End Road. 

London Plane-tree, A. 

To Vernon Lee. 

Levy, Eugene H.—Grant at Appomattox. 

Lewes, G: H.—Life of Goethe. 

Lewis, Mrs. A. G.—Daughter of the Regiment Drill. 
Lewis, C: Bertrand ("M. Quad”).—As the Pigeon Flies. 
Bijah. 

Bijah’s Story. See Bijah. 

Canvassing under Disadvantages. 

Champion Liar, The. 


Lewis, C: Bertrand (“M. Quad”) ( continued ). 

Face of a Demon, The. 

Goin’ Somewhere. 

His Time for Fiddling. 

In the Chimney Corner. 

Interesting Traveling Companion, An. 

Last Roll-call, The. 

Little Tom. 

Mr. Bowser among the Dressmakers. 

Mr. Bowser Takes Precautions. 

Rural Infelicity. See Goin’ Somewhere. 

“Shake’s Telephone.” 

Wrong Train, The. 

Lewis, D:—Line to Alexander Pope. 

Lewis, Mrs. Jennie T. [Hazen],—"Papa Says so, Too.” 

Lewis, Matthew Gregory.—Alonzo tne Brave and the 
Fair Imogine. 

Maniac, The. 

Progress of Madness, The. See Maniac, The. 

Lewis, W: E.—Opening of the Mississippi in 1862, The. 

Leyden, J:—Daisy, The. 

Noontide. 

Ode to an Indian [Gold] Coin. 

Sabbath Morning, The. 

To the Evening Star. 

Liddell, Mrs. Catherine C. [Fraser-Tytler].—Jesus the 
Carpenter. 

Poet in the City, The. 

Liddell, E. Louise.—Spring Maiden, A. 

Life. —Flag, The. 

His Finish. 

That Fire at the Nolans. 

Woman’s Career. 

Lighthall. W: Douw. See Schuyler-Lighthall, W : 
Dodw. 

Lilienthal, Jos.—Full Edition, A. 

Large Edition, A. See Full Edition, A. 

“Lilliput Levee.” See Rands, W: Brighty. 

Lincoln, Abraham.—Address at Cooper Institute, New 
York, Feb. 27, 1860. 

Address at Gettysburg, 1864. See Address at the 
Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettysburg. 

Address at the Dedication of Gettysburg Cemetery. 
See Address at the Dedication of the Cemetery 
at Gettysburg. 

Address at the Dedication of the Cemetery at 
Gettysburg. 

Address before the Springfield Washingtonian 
Temperance Society, Feb. 22, 1842. 

"Brave men, living and dead, who struggled here. 
The.” See Addres at the Dedication of the 
Cemetery at Gettysburg. 

Constitution and the People, The. See First In¬ 
augural Address. 

Cooper Institute Address. See Address at Cooper 
institute. 

Dedication of Gettysburg Cemetery. See Address 
at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettys¬ 
burg. 

Eulogium on Henry Clay. See Eulogy on Henry 
Clay. 

Eulogy on Henry Clay. 

First inaugural Address. 

Gettysburg Address. See Address at the Dedica¬ 
tion of the Cemetery at Gettysburg. 

Inaugural Address. See First Inaugural Address. 

Proclamation of Emancipation. 

Remarks at the Dedication of the National Cem¬ 
etery at Gettysburg, Nov. 19, 1863. See Ad¬ 
dress at the Dedication of the Cemetery at 
Gettysburg. 

Retribution. See Second Inaugural Address. 

Second Inaugural Address. 

Speech at the Dedication of the National Cem¬ 
etery at Gettysburg. See Address at the Dedi¬ 
cation of the Cemetery at Gettysburg. 

Two Revolutions. See Address before the Spring- 
field Washingtonian Temperance Society. 

War or Peace? See First Inaugural Address. 

‘‘With malice towards none, with charity for all.” 
See Second Inaugural Address. 

Lincoln, Faith.—Winter Gloaming. 

Lincoln, Jas.—England. 

Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester. 

Lincoln, Joe.—Ant and the Grasshopper, The. 

At Eventide. 

“Aunt ’Mandy.” 

Ballad of McCarty’s Trombone, The. 

Ballade of the Dream-ship, The. 

Best Spare Room, The. 

Birds’-nesting Time. 

Bullfrog Serenade. The. 

Circle Day. 


491 










Lincoln 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lincoln, Joe ( continued). 

Cod-fisher, The. 

College Training, A. 

Croaker, The. 

Crushed Hero, A. 

Cuckoo Clock, The. 

“Evenin’ Hymn, The.” 

“Fift’ Ward J’int Debate. The.” 

Fireman O’Rafferty. 

Friday Evening Meetings. 

Grandfather’s “Summer Sweets.” 

Hand-organ Ball, The. 

Hezekiah’s Art. 

His New Brother. 

In Mother’s Room. 

“Jim.” 

Life’s Paths. 

Ljfe-saver, The. 

Light-keeper, The. 

Little Bare Feet. 

“Little Feller’s Stockin’, The.” 

Little Old House by the Shore, The. 

Matildy’s Beau. 

May Memories. 

Mayflower, The. 

Meadow Road, The. 

Midsummer. 

Minister’s Wife, The. 

My Old Gray Nag. 

Ninety-eight in the Shade. 

November’s Come. 

Old Carryall, The. 

Old Daguerreotypes, The. 

Old Sword on the Wall, The. 

Old-fashioned Garden, The 
O’Reilly’s Billy" Goat. 

Our First Fire-crackers. 

Parson’s Daughter, The. 

Popular Song, The. 

Rainy" Day, A. 

“Reg’lar Army Man, The.” 

“Sary Emma’s Photygraphs.” 

School-committee Man, The. 

“September Mornin’s.” 

Sermon Time. 

Sister Simmons. 

“Sister’s Best Feller.” 

Song of the Sea, The. 

Story-book Boy, The. 

Summer Nights at Grandpa’s. 

Sunday Afternoons. 

Sunday-school Picnic, The. 

Sunset-land. 

Surf along the Shore, The. 

Susan Van Doozen. 

“Takin’ Boarders.” 

Thanksgiving Dream, A. 

Through the Fog. 

Tin Peddler, The. 

Village Oracle, The. 

Wasted Energy. 

Watchers, The. 

When Papa’s Sick. 

When the Minister Comes to Tea. 

When the Tide Goes Out. 

“Widder Clark, The.” 

Wind’s Song, The. 

Winter Nights at Home, The. 

“Yap.” 

Lincoln, Kitty.—Troubles of a Wife. 

Linden, Anna—Reformed Man’s Lament, A. 

Ljndsay, -.—Paulus the Lawyer. 

Lindsay, Lady Anne. See Barnard, Lady Anne [Lind- 
sat], 

Lindsay, Blanche Eliz. [FitzRoy], Lady. — My Heart 
is a Lute. 

Persian Love Song. 

Sonnet, Suggested by Mr. Watts’s Picture of Love 
and Death. 

Lindsay, M.—Far Away. 

Lindsay, Mrs. S:—What is Worth While. 

Lindsey, W:—En Garde, Messieurs. 

Hundred-yard Dash, The. 

Linn, Mrs. Edith L. [Willis],—Festival of the Year, The. 

Where Shall We Find God? 

“Linn, Ethel.” See Beers, Mrs. Ethelinda [Eliot], 
Linsley, Edna E.—My Zoological Flame. 

Linton, W: Jas.—Epicurean. 

Eviction. 

Heart and Will. 

Love and Youth. 

Love’s Blindness. 

Our Cause. 


Linton, W: Jas. ( continued). 

Patience. 

Silenced Singer, The. 

Spring and Autumn. 

Threnody in Memory of Albert Darasz, A. 

Too Late. 

Weep not! Sigh not! 

Lippard, G:—Andrew Jackson. 

Arnold the Traitor. See Benedict Arnold. 
Battle of Brandywine, The. See Battle of Ger¬ 
mantown, The. 

Battle of Germantown, The. 

Benedict Arnold. 

Benedict Arnold’s Death-bed. See Benedict 
Arnold. 

Black Horse and His Rider, The. See Benedict 
Arnold. 

Death of Robespierre, The. See Fourth of July, 
1776, The. 

Death-bed of Benedict Arnold. See Benedict 
Arnold. 

Fourth of July, 1776, The. 

Glass Railroad, The. 

Hero Woman, The. See Wissahikon, The. 
Heroes of the Land of Penn. See Battle of Ger¬ 
mantown, The. 

Patriot and Traitor, The." See Benedict Arnold. 
Rider of the Black Horse, The. See Benedict 
Arnold. 

Signing of the Declaration, The. See Fourth of 
July, 1776, The. 

Traitor’s Death-bed, The. See Benedict Arnold. 
Unknown Rider, The [or An]. See Benedict 
Arnold. 

Unknown • Speaker, The. See Fourth of July, 
1776, The. 

Wissahikon, The. 

Lippincott, Mrs. Sara Jane [Clarke] (“Grace Green¬ 
wood ”). 

Horseback Ride, The. 

Mother’s Excuse, A. 

Poet of To-day. The. 

“There is a grandeur in the soul that dares.” 

Wife’s Appeal, The. 

Lippincott’s Magazine. —Ballet-girl, The. 

Lippmann, Julie Mathilde.—Love and Life. 
Memory-bridges, The. 

Pines, The. 

Stone Walls. 

Who is She? 

Lipscomb, Mrs. M. A.—Ladies of Athens. 

Lisenbee, Will.—Colonel’s Experiment, The. 

Lisle, Rouget de. See Rouget de Lisle, Claude Jos. 
Litchfield, Grace Denio.—“Good-by.” 

How it Really Was. 

My Letter. 

My Other Me. 

To a Hurt Child. 

Two Dutiful Daughters. 

Littell’s Living Age. —Wanderer, The. 

Little, Lizzie M.—Life. 

Little, Noah.—Fate of Mackay, The. 

Little, W: H:—Memorial Day 
Little Corporal. —Old Year, The. 

Little Folks. —Quarrel, A. 

Little Rock Gazette. —Bald-headed Man, The. 
Littlefield, C: E.—Our Pledge to Puerto Rico. 
Littlefield, Walter.—Pipe Critic, The. 

Littlejohn, W:—Mad. 

Livermore, Mrs. Mary Ashton [Rice].—“But time 
would fail to attempt to catalogue the grand 
women.” 

“With white wings spread she bounded o’er the 
deep.” 

Livingston, Rob’t R.—Aristocracy. 

Livingston, S. T.—At Church. 

Hidden. 

Livingston, Stuart.—Keats. 

King’s Fool, The. 

To E. N. L. 

Volunteers of ’85, The. 

Livingstone, D:—“Heart may often be cheered by 
observing, The.” 

Livy.—Canuleius against Patrician Arrogance. See 
History of Rome. 

Fabius to ^Emilius. See History of Rome. 
Hannibal Pleads for Peace. See History of Rome. 
Hannibal to His Army. See History of Rome. 
Hannibal to the Carthaginian Army. See His¬ 
tory of Rome. 

Hannibal’s Address to his Army. See History of 
Rome. 

History of Rome. 


492 





AUTHOR INDEX 


London 


Livy ( continued). 

Publius Scipio to the Roman Army, before the 
Battle of Ticin. See History of Rome. 
Roman Liberty in Peril. See History of Rome. 
Scipio Declines Hannibal’s Overtures for Peace. 
See History of Rome. 

Scipio to His Army. See History of Rome. 

Titus Quintius against Quarrels between the Sen¬ 
ate and the People. See History of Rome. 
Virginius as Tribune, Refuses the Appeal of Ap- 
pius Claudius. See History of Rome. 

Lloyd, Alfred H:(?).—Modulation. 

“’Tis not enough the voice be sound and clear ” 
See Modulation. 

Lloyd, Beatrix Demarest.—Love and Time. 

Night-wind. 

With Roses. 

Lloyd, Eliz. See Howell, Mrs. Eliz. [Lloyd], 

Lloyd, Rob’t (?).—Milkmaid, The. 

Lloyd, W.—Song without a Name, The. 

Locey, Maria. See Lacey, Maria. 

Locke, Addie I.—Song, A: “She sat alone by the gray 
stone wall.” 

Locke, Belle Marshall.—Bessie’s First Party. 

Hiartville Shakespeare Club. The. 

Little Heroine, A. 

Making Him Feel at Home. 

Mrs. Tubbs at the Sewing-circle. 

Private Rehearsal, A. 

Sister Ernestine’s Beau. 

Locke, D: Ross (“Petroleum V. Nasby”).—Betsy De¬ 
stroys the Paper. 

Hannah Jane. 

Locke, J:—Dawn on the Irish Coast. 

Locke, Nellie M.—Heartrending Affair, A. 

Locke, Una.—Humility. 

Locker-Lampson, Frd’k.—At Her Window. 

Baby Mine. 

Cuckoo, The. 

Earliest Recollection. See Terrible Infant, A. 
From the Fly-leaf of the Rowfant Montaigne 
(Florio. 1603). 

Garden Idyll, A. 

Garden Lyric, A. See Garden Idyll, A. 

Geraldine and I. See Garden Idyll, A. 

Gertrude’s Necklace. 

Mabel. See At Her Window. 

Mrs. Smith. 

My Mistress’s Boots. 

Nice Correspondent, A. 

Old Letters. 

On an Old Muff. 

Only One. See Rhyme of One, A. 

Rhyme of One, A. 

Rose and the Ring, The. 

St. George’s, Hanover Square. 

Skeleton in the Cupboard, The. 

Terrible Infant, A. 

To My Mistress. 

To My Grandmother. 

Widow’s Mite, The. 

Lockhart, Arthur J:—Acadie. 

Lonely Pine, The. 

Waters of Carr, The. 

Lockhart, Burton Wellesley.—By the Gaspereau. 

Love and Song. 

Retrospect, The. 

Lockhart, J: Gibson.—Avenging Childe, The. 

Bernardo and King Alphonso. 

Bridal of Andalla, The. (TV.) 

Broadswords of Scotland, The. 

Bull-fight [of Gazul], The. (TV.) 

Cid, The. (TV.) 

Cid and Bavieca, The. (TV.) See Cid, The. 

Cid and the Leper, The. (TV.) See Cid, The. 
Garci Perez de Vargas. ( Tr.) See Lord of Bu- 
trago, The. 

Lamentation for Celin, The. (Tr.) 

Lamentation of Don Roderick, The. (Tr.) 

Lines:—“When youthful faith hath fled.” 

Lord of Butrago, The. (Tr.) 

Moor Calaynos, The. (Tr.) 

Napoleon. 

Wandering Knight’s Song, The. 

Zara’s Ear-rings. (Tr.) 

Lockport Express. —No Room for Mother. 

Lockwood, DeWitt Clinton.—Landlord’s Visit, The. 
Lodge, G: Cabot.—Song of the Wave, A. 

Youth. 

Lodge, H: Cabot.—Americanism. 

Blue and the Gray, The. See Speech to Rob t E. 

Lee Camp Confederate Veterans. 

Character of Washington, The. 


Lodge, H: Cabot (continued). 

Cuba and Armenia. 

Fight off Santiago, The. See War with Spain, The. 
Great Peril of Unrestricted Immigration, The. 
House of Representatives, The. 

Independent Spirit of the Puritans, The. 

Man and the Cause. 

Massachusetts. See Tribute to Massachusetts, A. 
“Old Ironsides.” 

Pilgrims as Conquerors, The. 

Puritan of Essex County, The. 

Speech before the Republican State Convention of 
Massachusetts, March 27, 1806. 

Speech Delivered at a Dinner of the New England 
Society of New York, Dec. 22, 1884. 

Speech to Robt. E. Lee Camp Confederate Veter¬ 
ans. 

Traditions of Massachusetts, The. 

Tribute to Massachusetts, A. 

True Americanism. See Speech Delivered at a 
Dinner of the New England Society. 
Venezuela Question, The. 

War with Spain, The. 

What the Flag Means. See Speech before the Re¬ 
publican State Convention of Massachusetts. 
Lodge, T:—Deceitful Mistress, The. 

Do Me Right, and Do Me Reason. See Looking- 
glass for London and England, A. 

Harmony of Love, The. 

Lament in Spring, A See Scylla’s Metamorpho¬ 
sis. 

Life of Robert. Second Duke of Normandy. 
Looking-glass for London and England. A. 

Love and Phillis. See Love’s Wantonness. 

Love’s Wantonness. 

Margarite of America, A. 

Montanus’ Sonnet. (I. and II.) See Rosalynde. 
On Phillis’ Sickness. 

Phillis. (I.) See To Phillis the Fair Shepherdess. 
Phillis (II.) See Love’s Wantonness. 

Phillis’ Sickness. See On Phillis’ Sickness. 

Poet’s Vow, A. See Rosalynde. 

Rosader’s Description of Rosalynd. See Rosa¬ 
lynde. 

Rosader’s Sonetto. See Rosalynde. 

Rosalind’s Complaint. See Rosalynde. 

Rosalind’s Description. See Rosalynde. 

Rosalind’s Madrigal. See Rosalynde. 

Rosaline. See Rosalynde. 

Rosalynde; or, Euphues’ Golden Legacy. 
Rosalynd’s Madrigal. See Rosalynde. 

Scylla’s Metamorphosis. 

Solitary Shepherd's Song, The. See Margarite of 
America, A. 

Spring and Melancholy. See Scylla’s Metamor¬ 
phosis. 

To Phillis the Fair Shepherdess. (At. also to Sir 
E: Dyer.) 

Whilst Youthful Sports are Lasting. See Life of 
Robert, Second Duke of Normandy. 

Loffland, J: ("Milford Bard”).—Burning of the Lex¬ 
ington. 

March of Mind, The. 

Serpent of the Still, The. 

Logan.—Logan, a Mingo Chief, to Lord Dunmore. 
Logan, J:—Braes of Yarrrow, The. See Song: The 
Braes of Yarrow. 

Cuckoo, The. See To the Cuckoo. 

Heavenly Wisdom. 

Messenger of Spring The. See To the Cuckoo. 
Ode to the Cuckoo, (.4t. to Michael Bruce.) See 
To the Cuckoo. 

Song: “Thy braes were bonny.” See Song: The 
Braes of Yarrow. 

Thy Braes were Bonny. See Song: The Braes of 
Yarrow. 

To the Cuckoo. 

Logan, J: E. (“Barry Dane”).—Blood-red Ring Hung 
round the Moon. See Indian Maid’s Lament, 
The. 

Dead Singer, A. 

Indian Maid’s Lament, The. 

Nor’-west Courier, The. 

Logan, Walter Seth.—Dollar, The. 

Logau, F. von.—Retribution. 

Siege of Cuantla, The: The Bunker Hill of Mexico. 
Loines, Russell Hillard.—On a Magazine Sonnet. 
Lomin, M.—“Then, too, I love thee.” 

London A lias. —Contrast of Tact and Talent. See 
Tact and Talent. 

Tact and Talent. 

London Chronicle. —Greeting from England. 

London Clarion. —New “Hey Diddle Diddle.” 




493 








London 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


London Economist. —Honor to the Hammer. 

London Figaro. —Baby’s Reflections, A. 

London Fun. —New Toreador, The. 

London Graphic. Girl with Thirty-nine Lovers, The. 
See Thirty-nine Lovers, The. 

Thirty-nine Lovers, The. 

London Leader. —Jupiter Amans. 

London Public Opinion. —Christmas Eve. 

London Punch. See Punch. 

London Society. —In the Hammock. 

London Speaker. —Emir’s Game of Chess, The. 

London Spectator. —Last Pipe, The. 

Millais’s “Huguenots.” 

London Tid-bits. —Their First Spat. 

They never Quarreled. See Their First Spat. 
London Tobacco. —Two Other Hearts. 

Long, F. C.—Bridal Feast, The. 

Bridal Wine-cup, The. See Bridal Feast, The. 
Pledge with Wine. See Bridal Feast, The. 
Lonergan, Annie L.—Little Advice, A. 

Long, Howard W.—-On the River. 

Long, J: Davis.—Boy in Blue, The. 

Day of Our Country, A. 

Declaration of Independence, The. 

Duty of the Enlightened Classes. 

Forefathers’ Day. 

Great Man, A. 

Memorial Day. 

Oxford County. 

Philippine Islands, The. 

Pilgrim Commemoration, The. 

Significance of the Spanish War, The. 

Soldier Boy, The. 

Long, J: Luther.—Lucky Jim. 

Long, Lily A.—His Reverie. 

Longfellow, H: Wadsworth. — Abbess’s Story, The. 
See Christus: A Mystery. 

Abbot Joachim. 

Afternoon in February. 

Age. See Morituri Salutamus. 

“Ah, me! how dark the discipline of pain!” See 
President Garfield. 

“Ah! when the infinite burden of life descendeth 
upon us.” See Children of the Lord’s Supper, 
The. 

“Angel with Great Joy Received his Guests, 
The.” See King Robert of Sicily. 

April. See April Day, An. 

April Day, An. 

Armory, The. See Arsenal at Springfield, The. 
Arrow and Song. See Arrow and the Song, 
The. 

Arrow and the Song, The. 

Arsenal, The. See Arsenal at Springfield, The. 
Arsenal at Springfield, The. 

Ballad of Carmilhan, The. 

Ballad of the French Fleet, A. 

Beleaguered City, The. 

Bell of Atri, The. 

Bells of Lynn, Thp. 

Bells of San Bias, The. 

Beware! (7V.) 

Birds of Killingworth, The. 

Blind Girl of CasttM CuilR, The. 

Boy and the Brook, The. 

Bridge. The. 

Builders, The. 

Building of the Ship. The. 

Burial of the Minnisink. 

Burial of the Poet, The. 

Captain Kempthorn. See John Endicott. 
Carillon. 

Castle by the Sea, The. (TV.) 

Catawba Wine. 

Chamber over the Gate, The. 

Charles Sumner. 

Chaucer. 

Children, The. 

Children of the Lord’s Supper, The. 

Childreri’s Hour, The. 

Christmas Bells. 

Christus: A Mystery. 

City and the Sea, The. 

Coliseum, The. See Rome in Midsummer. 
Courtship of Miles Standish, The. 

Crocus. 

Crew of the Long Serpent, The. See Saga of King 
Olaf. The. 

Cumberland, The. 

Curfew. 

Dante. 

Day is Done, The. 

Daybreak. 


Longfellow, H: Wadsworth ( continued ). 

Death of Minnehaha, The. See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The. 

Decoration Day. 

Disasters. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Discoverer of the North Cape, The. 

Divina Commedia. 

Drifting. See Seaweed. 

Dutch Picture, A. 

Eliot’s Oak. 

Emma and Eginhard. 

Emperor’s Bird’s-nest, The. 

Endymion. 

Epimetheus. 

Evangeline. 

Evangeline in Acadia. See Evangeline. 
Evangeline on the Prairie. See Evangeline. 
Excelsior. 

Exile of the Acadians, The. See Evangeline. 
Famine, The. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz, The. 

Finding of Gabriel, The. See Evangeline. 
Finished. See Abbot Joachim. 

Fire of Drift-wood, The. 

Flowers. 

Footsteps of Angels. 

From my Arm-chair. 

Ghosts, The. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Glimpses into Cloudland. See Hyperion. 

Goblet of Life, The. 

God’s-acre. 

Golden Legend, The. See Christus: A Mystery. 
Golden Mile-stone, The. 

Hanging of the Crane, The. 

Happiest Land, The. 

Harvest Moon, The. 

Haunted House. 

Hawthorne. 

Hemlock Tree, The. (TV.) 

Hiawatha. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Hiawatha’s Brothers. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Hiawatha’s Chickens. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Hiawatha’s Childhood. See Song of Hiawatha, 
The. 

Hiawatha’s Sailing. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Hiawatha’s Wedding-feast. See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The. 

Hiawatha’s Wooing. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Holidays. 

Home Song. See Song: “Stay, stay at home,” etc. 
Household Sovereign, The. See Hanging of the 
Crane, The. 

“How beautiful is youth! how bright it gleams.” 

See Morituri Salutamus. 

How Love Comes. See Endymion. 

Hymn for my Brother’s Ordination. 

Hymn of the Moravian Nuns of Bethlehem. 
Hymn to the Night. 

Hyperion. 

“I do not love thee less for what is done.” See 
Masque of Pandora, The. 

Indian Hunter, The. 

Janus and January. 

John Endicott. 

Journey into Spain, The. See Outre Mer. 

Judas Maccabseus. 

Jugurtha. 

Kavanagh. 

Killed at the Ford. 

King Robert of Sicily. 

Ladder of St. Augustine, The. 

Lady Wentworth. 

Launch of the Ship, The. See Building of the 
Ship, The. 

Launching of the Ship, The. See Budding of the 
Ship, The. 

Leap of Roushan Beg, The. 

Legend Beautiful. The. 

Legend of Rabbi Ben Levi, The. 

Legend of the Beautiful, The. Nee Legend Beau¬ 
tiful, The. 

Life. See Psalm of Life, A. 

Light of Stars, The. 

Lighthouse, The. 

Lines. See Building of the Ship, The. 

Lives of Great Men. See Psalm of Life, A. 
Longfellow Alphabet, A. 

Longfellow, From. 

Loss and Gain. 

Lost Found, The. See Evangeline. 

“Love and believe: for works will follow spon¬ 
taneous.” See Children of the Lord’s Supper, 
The. 


494 




» 


AUTHOR INDEX Lovelace 


Longfellow, H : Wadsworth ( continued). 

Maidenhood. 

Masque of Pandora, The. 

Meeting of Evangeline and Gabriel. The. See 
Evangeline. 

Michael Angelo. 

Miles Standish’s Encounter with the Indians. 

See Courtship of Miles Standish, The. 

Milton. 

Moonlight on the Prairie. See Evangeline. 
Morituri Salutamus. 

Musician’s Tale, The. See Ballad of Carmilhan, 
The. 

Musings 
My Books. 

My Lost Youth. 

Nature. 

New England Tragedies, The. 

New Household, A. See Hanging of the Crane, 
The. 

Nuremberg. 

Oaks of Monte Luca, The. 

Old Bridge at Florence, The. 

Old Clock, The. See Old Clock on the Stairs, 
The. 

Old Clock on the Stairs, The. 

Old St. David’s at Radnor. 

On the Atehafalaya. See Evangeline. 

On the Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz. See Fiftieth 
Birt day of Agassiz, The. 

Open Window, The. 

Outre Mer. 

Paul Fleming Resolves. See Hyperion. 

Paul Revere’s Ride. 

Pegasus in Pound. 

Phantom Ship, The. 

Poetry of City and Country Life, The. See 
Hyperion. 

“Poor, sad Humanity.” See Christus: A Mys¬ 
tery. 

Praise of Little Women. (Tr.) 

President Garfield. 

Primeval Forest, The. See Evangeline. 

Psalm of Life, A. 

Pulaski’s Banner. See Hymn of the Moravian 
Nuns of Bethlehem. 

Rain in Summer. 

Rainy Day, The. 

Reaper and the Flowers, The. 

Tittip 

Republic, The. See Building of the Ship, The. 
Resignation. 

Retribution. (Tr.) 

Rome in Midsummer. 

Rustic Bridal, The. See Blind Girl of Castel CuilF, 
The. 

Saga of King Olaf, The. 

St. Augustine’s Ladder. See Ladder of Saint 
Augustine, The. 

Sandalphon. 

Santa Filomena. 

Seasons in Sweden, The. See Kavanagh. 
Seaweed. 

Secret of the Sea, The. 

Serenade [from “The Spanish Student”]. See 
Spanish Student, The. 

“Setting of a great hope is like the setting of the 
sun, The.” See Hyperion. 

She is a Maid of Artless Grace. (Tr.) 

Ship of State, The. See Building of the Ship, The. 
Singers, The. 

Sir Humphrey Gilbert. 

Skeleton in Armor, The. 

Slave Singing at Midnight, The. 

Sleep, Comrades, Sleep. See Decoration Day. 
Snow-flakes. 

“So these lives that had run thus far in separate 
channels.” See Courtship of Miles Standish. 
Song: “Stay, stay at home,” etc. 

Song of Birds. See Birds of Killingworth, The. 
Song of Hiawatha, The. 

Song of the Silent Land. (Tr.) 

South Wind, The. See Song of Hiawatha, The. 
Spanish Student, The. 

Spirit of Poetry, The. 

Spring. See Hyperion. 

Stars and the Flowers, The. See Flowers. 

Story of “Hiawatha,” The. See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The. 

Story of the Monk Felix, The. See Christus: A 
Mystery. 

Success. Nee Hyperion. 

Sunrise on the Hills. 


Longfellow, H: Wadsworth (continued). 

Tableaux from Hiawatha. Nee Song of Hiawatha, 
The. 

“There are two angels that attend unseen.” 

See Christus: A Mystery. 

There was a Little Girl. 

Three Kings, The. 

Tide Rises, the Tide Falls, The. 

To Alfred Tennyson. See Wapentake. 

To the River Charles. 

To the Silent River. See To the River Charles. 
Twilight. 

Two Angels, The. 

Two Locks of Hair, The. (Tr.) 

Valley of the Loire, The. See Outre Mer. 

Village Blacksmith, The. 

Voices of the Forest. See Masque of Pandora, The. 
Voices of the Night. 

Wapentake.—To Alfred Tennyson. 

Warden of the Cinque Ports, Fhe. 

Warning, The. 

“Were half the power that fills the world with ter¬ 
ror.”— See Arsenal at Springfield, The. 

“When the hours of day are numbered.” See 
Footsteps of Angels. 

“Whene’er [wr. where’er] a noble deed is wrought.” 

See Santa Filomena. 

Windmill, The. 

Woods in Winter. 

Wreck of the Hesperus, The. 

Longfellow, S:—April. 

Church Universal, The. 

Glen Ellis Falls. 

Golden Sunset, The. 

Hymn of Winter. 

Looking unto God. 

Love. 

November. 

To a Daughter on Her Marriage. (Tr.) 

Vesper Hymn. 

Loomis, C: Battell.—Classic Ode, A. 

Grace’s Choice. 

O—U—G—H—. 

Timon of Archimedes. 

Loomis, E. S.—Reason off Duty. 

Loomis, Louise R.—By the Roadside. 

Look, H: M.—Rescue of Chicago, The. 

Lord, J:—Woman as Friend. 

Lord, W: Wilberforce.-—Brook, The. 

Keats. See Ode to England, An. 

Ode to England, An. 

On the Defeat of a Great Man. See On the Defeat 
of Henry Clay. 

On the Defeat of Henry Clay. 

To Rosina Pico. 

Wordsworth. See Ode to England. An. 

Worship. 

Loring, C: G., Jr.—To Peggy. 

Loring, Frd’k Wadsworth.—Crimson and the Blue, 
The. 

In the Old Churchyard at Fredericksburg. 

Minding the Hens. 

Tildy See Minding the Hens. 

Los Angeles Express. —Story of Chinese Love, A. 
Lothrop, Mrs. Harriet Mulford [Stone] ("Marg. Sid¬ 
ney”).—Christmas. 

Little Brown Seed, The. 

Memorial Day. 

Piece of News, A; or, Aunt Ray’s Cat. 

Vacation Days. 

Loudon, Jane.—Rats. 

Louther, Hal.—Yes or No. 

Lovejoy, Mrs. F. J.—Goldenrod. 

Lovejoy, Mary I.—"Speak to the children, little book.” 
Lovelace, R:—From Prison. See To Althea from 
Prison. 

Going to the Wars. See To Laucasta[, on going to 
the Wars]. 

Grasshopper, The. 

Gratiana Dancing. See Gratiana Dancing and 
Singing. 

Gratiana Dancing and Singing. 

Her Golden Hair. See Song:—To Amarantha: that 
She would Dishevel her Haire. 

Ode to Mr. C. Cotton. See Grasshopper, The. 
Orpheus to Beasts. 

Rose, The. 

Song:—To Amarantha: that She would Dishevel 
her Haire. 

Song: To Lucasta Going to the Warres. See To 
Lucasta[, on Going to the Wars], 

To Althea. See To Althea from Prison. 

To Althea from Prison. 


495 






f 


Lovelace AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lovelace, R: ( continued). 

To Amarantha, that she would dishevel her Hair. 
See Song: — To Amarantha: that She would 
Dishevel Her Haire. 

To Lucastaf, Going beyond the Seas]. 

To Lucasta, Going to the Wars. See To Lucasta 

t on Going to the Wars]. 
ucasta[, her Reserved Looks]. 

To Lucastaf, on Going to the Wars], 

Lovell, Arthur.—Warning, A. 

Lovell, Bertha Chase.—When Daylight Dies. 

Lovell, J. E. (?).—True Eloquence. ( Wr. at.) See 
Webster, Daniel. 

Lovell, Maria.—Ingomar, the Barbarian. ( Tr.) 
Loveman, Rob’t.—April. 

Diamond, A. 

Hobson and His Men. 

March. 

Spring. 

Sunset, A. 

Lover, S:—Angel’s Whisper, The. 

Baby Dear. {At.) 

Barney O’Hea. 

Birth of St. Patrick, The. 

Carolan and Bridget Cruise. 

Cradle Song of the Buccaneer’s Wife. See Baby 
Dear. 

Dermot O’Dowd. 

Disgusted Dutchman, The. See White Horse of 
the Peppers, The. 

Father Blake’s Collection. See Father Phil’s Col¬ 
lection. 

Father Molloyf; or, The Confession], 

Father Phil’s Collection. 

Father Roach. 

Father-land and Mother-tongue. ( Also at. to Lord 
Byron.) 

Fox and the Ranger, The. (?) 

Gridiron, The. 

Handy Andy. 

Handy Andy and the Squire. See Handy Andy. 
Handy Andy’s Little Mistakes. See Handy Andy. 
Haunted Spring, The. 

How to Ask and Have. 

Jimmy Hoy. See Paddy at Sea. 

King O’Toole and Saint Kevin. 

Lanty Leary. 

Low-back[ed] Car, The. 

Maiden’s Request, The. {Wr. at.) See Hood, T: 
Molly Carew. 

Never Despair. 

Old Ballad, An. See Lanty Leary. 

Paddy at Sea. 

Paddy Blake’s Echo. 

Paddy O’Rafther. 

Paddy the Piper. 

Paddy the Sport. 

Pat and the Fox. See Paddy the Sport. 

Pat and the Gridiron. 

Quaker and the Robber, The. See Quaker’s Meet¬ 
ing, The. 

Quaker’s Meeting, The. 

Rory O’More [; or, All for Good Luck], See Rory 
O’More; or. Good Omens. 

Rory O’More; or, Good Omens. 

Rory O’More’s Present to the Priest. 

Shamus O’Brien [the Bold Boy of Glingall]. {At. 

also to Jos. S. Le Fanu.) 

Shemus O’Brien. See Shamus O’Brien. 
Subscription List, The. See Father Phil’s Collection. 
To Ask and to Have. See How to Ask and Have. 
What Will You Do, Love? 

White Horse of the Peppers, The. 

Widow Machree. 

Won’t you Follow Me. See Lanty Leary. 
Loveridge, R: See Leveridge, R: 

Lovett, Eva.—Philosopher’s Escape, The. 

Wisest Fool, The. 

Low, Seth.—Address Delivered before the New Eng¬ 
land Society in New York City, Dec. 22, 1892. 
Brooklyn Bridge, The. 

Teaching of the Colleges, The. See Address De¬ 
livered before the New England Society. 
Lowater, Ninette M.—Easter Bells. 

Lowe, J:—Mary’s Dream. 

Lowe, Mrs. Martha Ann [Perry],—Honor all Men. 
Work. 

Lowe, Rob’t. See Sherbrooke, Viscount. 

Lowell, C: Russell.—Reverence Due from the Old to 
the Young, The. 

Lowell, Jas. Russell.—Abraham Lincoln. 

Abraham Lincoln. See also Ode Recited at the 
Harvard Commemoration. 


Lowell, Jas. Russell {continued). 

After the Burial. 

Agassiz. 

Agro-Dolce. 

A1 Fresco. 

Aladdin. 

All-Saints [Day]. 

American Tract Society, The. 

Appledore. See Pictures from Appledore. 
Appledore in a Storm. See Pictures from Apple¬ 
dore. 

“At the devil’s booth all things are sold.” See 
Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 

At the Unveiling of the Gray Memorial. 

Auf Wiedersehen! 

Auspex. 

Autograph, An. 

Beggar, The. 

Bibliolatres. 

Biglow Papers, The. 

Birch Tree, The. 

Books and Libraries. 

Brook in Winter, The. See Vision of Sir Launfal, 
The. 

Candidate’s Creed, The. See Biglow Papers, The. 
Candidate’s Letter, The. See Biglow Papers, 
The. 

Changeling, The. 

Christmas Carol, A. 

Columbus. 

Commemoration Ode. See Ode Recited at the 
Harvard Commemoration. 

Courtin’, The. See Biglow Papers, The. 
Democracy. 

Disappointment. 

Elegy on the Death of Dr. Channing. 

Ember Picture, An. 

Extreme Unction. 

Fable for Critics, A. 

Fatherland, The. 

Finding of the Lyre, The. 

First Snow-fall, The 
Foreboding, A. 

Fountain, The. 

Freedom. See Stanzas on Freedom. 

God’s Love. See Incident in a Railroad Car, An. 
“Goe, Little Booke!” 

Hand in Hand. (?) 

Harvard Commemoration Ode. See Ode Recited 
at the Harvard Commemoration. 

Hebe. 

“Her fittest triumph is to show that good.” See 
Legend of Brittany, A. 

Heritage, The. 

Hosea Biglow’s Lament. See Biglow Papers, 
The. 

In a Copy of Omar Khayyam. 

In the Twilight. 

Incident in a Railroad Car, An. 

International Arbitration. 

International Copyright. 

“It may be glorious to write.” See Incident in a 
Railroad Car, An. 

January. See Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 
Jonathan to John. 

June. See Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 

June Weather. See Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 
Legend of Brittany. 

Letter from a Candidate for the Presidency, A. 
See Biglow Papers, The. 

Letter from Mr. Ezekiel Biglow, A. See Biglow 
Papers, The. 

Letter from Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Hon. J. T. 

Buckingham. See Biglow Papers, The. 
Lincoln. See Ode Recited at the Harvard Com¬ 
memoration. 

Longing. 

Love. 

Lowell Alphabet, A. 

Martyr Chief, The. See Ode Recited at the Har¬ 
vard Commemoration. 

Mason and Slidell. See Biglow Papers, The. 
Midnight. 

Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Editor of “The Atlantic 
Monthly.” See Biglow Papers, The. 

My Garden Acquaintance. 

My Love. 

New House, The. See Unhappy Lot of Mr. Knott, 
The. 

Newspaper, The. See Biglow Papers, The. 
Nightingale in the Study, The. 

Oak, The. 

Ode of Thanks for Certain Cigars, An. 


496 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Lyiy 


Lowell, Jas. Russell ( continued ). 

Ode Read at the One Hundredth Anniversary of 
the Fight at Concord Bridge. 

Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration— 
July 21, 1865. 

Ode to France. 

Ode to Freedom. See Ode Read at the One Hun¬ 
dredth Anniversary of the Fight at Concord 
Bridge. 

On the Death of a Friend’s Child. 

On Himself. See Fable for Critics, A. 

Once to Every Man and Nation. See Present 
Crisis, The. 

Origin of Didactic Poetry, The. 

Our Country Saved. See Ode Recited at the 
Harvard Commemoration. 

Our Heritage. See Heritage, The. 

Our Lives Should Widen. (?) 

Out of Doors. (?) 

Palinode. 

Peace on Earth See Christmas Carol, A. 

Pictures from Appledore. 

Poor and the Rich, The. See Heritage, The. 
Pregnant Comment, The. 

Present Crisis, The. 

Protest, The. 

Revolutionary Hero, A. See Biglow Papers, The. 
Rhcecus. 

Rose, The. 

School-house, The. See Biglow Papers, The, 

She Came and Went. 

Shepherd of King Admetus, The. 

Singing Leaves, The. 

Sir Launfal and the Leper. See Vision of Sir 
Launfal, The. 

Sirens, The. 

Slavery. See American Tract Society, The. 

Song: “Violet! sweet violet.” 

Sonnet: “Give me that growth,” etc. 

Sonnet: “I ask not,” etc. 

Sonnet: “I cannot think that thou,” etc. 

Sonnet: “I thought our love at full,” etc. 

Sonnet: "My love, I have no fear,” etc. 

Sonnet: “Our love is not a fading,” etc._ 

“Soul in grass and flowers. A.” See Vision of Sir 
Launfal, The. 

Sphinx (?). 

Spring. See Biglow Papers, The. 

Stanza on Freedom, A. See Stanzas on Free¬ 
dom. 

Stanzas on Freedom. 

Summer. See Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 
Summer Rain. See Summer Storm. 

Summer Storm. 

Sunthin’ in the [wr. a] Pastoral Line. See Biglow 
Papers, The. 

' Telepathy. 

Tender and True. See Love. 

“They are slaves who fear to speak.” See Stan¬ 
zas on Freedom. 

’Tis Sorrow Builds the Shining Ladder up. See 
On the Death of a Friend’s Child. 

To a Pine Tree. 

To C. F. Bradford. 

To H. W. L. 

To Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. See To H. W. L. 
To His Countrymen. See Fable for Critics, A. 

To John Greenleaf Whittier. 

To the Dandelion. 

To W. L. Garrison. 

Token, The. 

Under the Old Elm. 

Under the Willows. 

Unhappy Lot of Mr. Knott, The. 

Unreturning Brave, The. See Ode Recited at the 
Harvard Commemoration. 

Violet, The. See Song: "Violet! sweet violet.” 
Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 

Washers of the Shroud, The. 

Washington. See Under the Old Elm. 

Wendell Phillips. 

What Mr. Robinson Thinks. See Biglow Papers, 
The. 

William Lloyd Garrison. See To W. L. Garrison. 
Winter Evening Hymn to My Fire, A. 

Winter Morning. A. See Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 
Winter Pictures. See Vision of Sir Launfal, The. 
“With my [thy-C.] love this knowledge too was 
given.” See Sonnet: “My love, I have no 
fear,” etc. 

Without and Within. 

Yussouf. 

Zekle. See Biglow Papers, The, 


Lowell, Mrs. Maria [White].—Alpine Sheep, The. 
Morning-glory, The. 

Song: “O bird, thou dartest to the sun.” 

Lowell New Moon. —Jealousy in the Choir. 

Lowell, Rob’t Traill Spence.—After-comers, The. 
Brave Old Ship, the Orient, The. 

Massachusetts Line, The. 

Relief of Lucknow, The. 

Lucas, Dinah B.— In the Land where We Were Dream¬ 
ing. 

Luce, A. B.—De Candy Pull. 

“Lucette.”—“If you wish to win bright laurels.” 
Luders, C: H:—Four Winds, The. 

Haunts of the Halcyon, The. 

Heart of Oak. 

Memory. 

Mountebanks, The. See Passing Show, The. 

Old Thought, An. 

Passing Show, The. 

Time and Eternity. 

Ludlow. Fitz-hugh.—Billy. 

School, The. 

Too Late 

Ludlow, Helen W.—Little White Beggars, The. 
Ludlow, Dr. Jas. Meeker.—Brudder Yerkes’s Sermon. 
Ludlum, J. K.—Edith’s Secret. 

Luke, Mrs. Jemima Thompson.—Child’s Desire, The. 
See “Of Such is the Kingdom of Heaven.” 

“I think when I Read that sweet story of old.” 

See “Of Such is the Kingdom of Heaven.” 
“Of Such is the Kingdom of Heaven.” 

Luke, Loren M.—Lines on a Ring. 

Lummis, C: Fletcher.—Arizona Jim. See Jim, Arizo¬ 
na, 1885. 

Empty Pocket, The. 

Fellow in Greasy Jeans, The. 

Jim, Arizona, 1885. 

My Cigarette. (At. also to Chester A. Snyder.) 

My Meerschaums. 

Lummis, Dorothea.—Consensus of the Competent, A. 
Lundt, Dorothy.—Dikkon’s Dog. 

Lunt, G.—Requiem [for One Slain in Battle]. 

Lunt, Rev. W: Parsons.;—Ship of State, The. 
Lushington, Sir Franklin.—Alma. 

Fleet under Sail, The. 

No More Words. 

Lushington, H:—Inkerman. 

Morn of Inkerman, The. 

Road to the Trenches, The. 

To the Memory of Pietro d’Alessandro, 

Luther, Martin.—Cradle Hymn. 

Little Bird, The. 

Martin Luther’s Letter to His Little Son. 

Martyr’s Hymn, The. 

Mighty Fortress is our God, A. See Psalm Forty- 
six. 

Paraphrase of Luther’s Hymn. See Psalm Forty- 
six. 

Psalm Forty-six. 

Safe Stronghold, A. See Psalm Forty-six. 
Luzader, Malcolm M.—Bachelor’s Hope, The. 

Lyall, Sir Alfred Comyns.—After the Skirmish. 

Hindoo’s Search for Truth, A. See Meditations of 
a Hindu Prince. 

Meditations of a Hindu [or Hindoo] Prince [and 
Skeptic]. 

Night in the Red Sea, A. 

Retrospection. 

Theology in Extremis. 

Lydgate, J:—Description of the Golden Age. ( Tr.) See 
Falls of Princes. 

Dietary, The; or, Rules for Health. 

Falls of Princes. (Tr.) 

London Lickpenny [or Lackpenny], The. 

Vox Ultima Crucis. 

Lyle, W:—A’ aboot it. 

Bonny Wee Hoose, The. 

Oor Wee Laddie. 

Scottish Ballad, A. 

Tit for Tat. 

Lyly, J:—Alexander and Campaspe. 

Apelles’ Song. See Alexander and Campaspe. 
Arrows for Love. See Sapho and Phao. 

Cards and Kisses. See Alexander and Campaspe. 
“Cupid and my Campaspe play’d.” See Alex¬ 
ander and Campaspe. 

Cupid and Campaspe. See Alexander and Cam¬ 
paspe. 

Cupid Arraigned. See Galatea. 

Daphne. See Midas. 

Endimion. 

Eupheus: Of the Education of Youth, etc. 

Fairy Revels. See Endimion. 


497 











AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lyiy 


Lyly, J: ( continued ). 

Galatea. 

Hymn to Apollo. See Midas. 

In Praise of Daphne. See Midas. 

Love’s College. See Mother Bomhie. 

Maydes Metamorphosis, The. 

Midas. 

Mother Bomhie. 

Pan’s Song. See Midas. 

Phaon, the Ferryman. See Sapho and Phao. 
Sapho and Phao. 

Sappho’s Song. See Sapho and Phao. 

Song of Daphne to the Lute, A. See Midas. 
Song of the Fairies. See Maydes Metamorphosis, 
The. 

Song: “Pan’s Syrinx was a girl indeed.” See 
Midas. 

Song to Apollo. See Midas. 

Song: “What bird so sings, yet does so wail?” 

See Alexander and Campaspe. 

Songs of Birds, The. See Alexander and Cam¬ 
paspe. 

Spring, The. See Alexander and Campaspe. 
Spring’s Welcome. See Alexander and Campaspe. 
Syrinx. See Midas. 

Tongue, The. See Eupheus: Of the Education of 
Youth. 

Urchins’ Dance, The. See Maydes Metamorpho¬ 
sis, The. 

“What bird so sings, yet does so wail?” See Alex¬ 
ander and Campaspe. 

Lyman, G: F.—My Little Tease. 

Lynch,-.—Silence. 

Lynch, Anne C. See Botta, Mrs. Anne Charlotte 
[Lynch], 

Lynch, Michael.—Frontier Wedding, A—Almost a 
Tragedy. 

Lynde, Fs.—Phoebe’s Exploit. 

Lyndesay, Sir D:—Ane Satyre of the Threi Estaitis. 
Carman’s Account of a Lawsuit, A. 

Dreme. The. 

Hope of Immortality, The. 

Monarchie, The. 

Prologue to the Dreme, The. See Dreme, The. 
Satire on the Syde Taillis—Ane Supplication Di- 
rectit to the Kingis Grace. 

Testament and Complaynt of the Papingo.The. 
Lynes, Alfred M.—Old Winter, Esquire. 

“Lynn, Ethel.” See Beers, Mrs. Ethelinda [Eliot], 
Lyon, Milford H.—Individualism in Society. 

Lyons, Rev. Jas. Gilbourne.—Tempest Stilled, The. 

Triumphs of the English Language. 

Lyons, J: P.—Bagged the Wrong Bird. 

Teaching a Sunday-school Class. 

Lysaght, E:—Kitty of Coleraine. (At.) See Shanly, 
C: D. 

Lyster. F:—At the Tunnel’s Mouth. 

Wreck of the Solent, The. 

Lyte, H: Fs.—Abide with Me. 

“Abide with me; fast falls the eventide.” See 
Abide with Me. 

Agnes. 

Jesus, I my Cross have Taken. 

Lo, We Have Left All. See Jesus, I my Cross 
have Taken. 

Long did I Toil. 

Lost Love, A. 

Psalm LXXXIY. 

Secret Place, The. 

Lytle, W: Haines.—Antony and Cleopatra. 

Antony to Cleopatra. See Antony and Cleopatra. 
“I am Dying, Egypt.” See Antony and Cleopatra. 
Lyttelton, G:, Lord. —James Thomson. 

Song:—“When Delia on the plain appears.” 

Tell Me, My Heart [, if This be Love]. See Song: 
—“When Delia on the plain appears.” 

Lytton, Sir E: Bulwer. See Bulwer-Lytton, E: 
Lytton, E: Rob’t Bulwer-Lytton, Earl of (“Owen Mere¬ 
dith”). 

Adolphus, Duke of Guelders. 

At the Opera. See Aux Italiens. 

Aux Italiens. 

Babylonia. 

Battle of Kossovo, The. (TV.). 

Changes. 

Character of Lucile. See Lucile. 

Chess-board, The. 

Dinner-hour, The. See Lucile. 

Evening. 

First Kiss, The. 

Good-night in the Porch. 

Indian Love-song. 

Last Remonstrance, The. 


Lytton, E: Rob’t Bulwer-Lytton, Earl of (“Owen Mere¬ 
dith”) (continued). 

Last Time I Met Lady Ruth, The. 

Legend of the Dead Lambs, The. 

Love-letter, A. 

Lucile. 

Midges. 

Mohammed. 

•Night in Italy, A. See Wanderer, The. 

“No stream from its source flows seaward.” 

See Lucile. 

One Isn’t Loved Every Day. See Aux Italiens. 
Only a Shaving. 

Palingenesis. See Wanderer, The. 

Parting before Sebastopol, The. See Lucile. 
Portrait, The. 

Possession. 

Remonstrance, A. See Last Remonstrance, The. 
Retrospections. 

Sea Side Songs. 

Serenade: “The day is down into his bower.” See 
Sea Side Songs. 

Since We Parted. 

Song:—“We must love and unlove, and, it may 
be.” See Wanderer, The. 

Streets of London, The. 

Tempora Acta. See Babylonia. 

'Tis the White Anemone. 

Under Canvas. See Lucile. 

Utmost, The. 

Wallenstein’s Death. 

Wanderer, The. 

Wanderer, The. See also Retrospections. 

Want. 

White Anemone, The. See ’Tis the White Anem¬ 
one. 


M 

M., A. I.—On the Hillside. 

Trust. See On the Hillside. 

M., B.—’Specially Jim. 

M., J. W.—Battle-ship and Torpedo-boat. 

M., L. F.—Life. 

M., M.—Christmas Eve Adventure, A. 

Little Snowflakes. 

Mabie, Hamilton W.—Value of Literature, The. 
MacAleese, D.—Memory, A. 

Macartney, Louise. See Crawford, Mrs. Louise 
[Macartney]. 

McAthol, H. D.—Lassie’s Decision, The. 

Macaulay, T: Babington Macaulay, Lord. —Acquittal 
of the Bishops, The. 

Antiquity of the Roman Catholic Church, The. 
Armada, The. 

Bacon’s Philosophy. 

Battle of Ivry, The. See Ivry, a Song of the 
Huguenots. 

Battle of Lake Regillus, The. 

Battle of Moncontour, The. 

Battle of Naseby, The. 

Charles the First. See Milton. 

Church of Ireland, The. 

Coming of Charlemagne. 

Copyright. 

Corn Laws. 

Country Clergyman’s Trip to Cambridge, The. 
Courtesies of War, The. See On Mitford’s His¬ 
tory of Greece. 

Death of Herminius, The. See Battle of Lake 
Regillus, The. 

Distrust of Liberty. See Milton. 

Epitaph on a Jacobite. 

Established Church of Ireland, The. See Church 
of Ireland, The. 

Fate of Virginia, The. See Virginia. 

Fruits of Liberty, The. See Milton. 

Government Should Grow with the People, A. 

See Parliamentary Reform. 

Holland House. See Lord Holland. 

Horatius. 

Horatius at the Bridge. See Horatius. 

Icilius on Virginia’s Seizure. See Virginia. 
Influence of Athens, The. See On Mitford’s His¬ 
tory of Greece. 

Ivry, a Song of the Huguenots. 

Jacobite’s Epitaph, A. See Epitaph on a Jacobite. 
Jewish Disabilities. 

John Bunyan. 

Labor Hours Have Limits. See Ten Hours Bill, 
The. 

Last Buccaneer, The. 


498 





AUTHOR INDEX 


MacCarthy 


Macaulay, T: Babington Macaulay, Lord ( continued ). 
Letter to Thomas Flower Ellis, March 30, 1831. 
Liberty. See Milton. 

Lines Written in August, 1847. 

Lord Chatham’s Eloquence. See William Pitt, 
Earl of Chatham. 

Lord Holland. 

Marriage of Tirzah and Ahirad, The. 

Men Always Fit for Freedom. See Milton. 

Milton. 

Muster, The. See Horatius. 

Naseby. See Battle of Naseby, The. 

On Limiting the Hours of Labor, 1846. See Ten 
Hours Bill, The. 

On Mitford’s History of Greece. 

Opening Scene at the Trial of Warren Hastings, 
The. See Warren Hastings. 

Parliamentary Reform. 

Passage of the Reform Bill. See Letter to Thomas 
Flower Ellis. 

Prophecy <pf Capys, The. 

Public Opinion and the Sword. See Parliamen¬ 
tary Reform. 

Puritan[s], The. See Milton. 

Reform Bill, The. See Speech Delivered in the 
House of Commons on the 2nd of March, 1831. 
Reform Bill a Second Bill of Rights, The. See 
Speech Delivered in the House of Commons 
on the 5th of July, 1831, A. 

Reform Irresistible. See Speech Delivered in the 
House of Commons on the 16th of Dec., 1831, 
A. 

Reform that You May Preserve. See Speech De¬ 
livered in the House of Commons on the 2nd 
of March, 1831. 

Roman Father’s Sacrifice, The. See Virginia. 
Spanish Armada, The. See Armada, The. 

Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on 
the 2nd of March, 1831, A. 

Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on 
the 5th of July, 1831, A. 

Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on 
the 16th of Dec., 1831, A. 

Ten Hours Bill, The. 

Trial of Warren Hastings, The. See Warren Hast- 
ings. 

Virginia. 

Virginius. See Virginia. 

Warren Hastings. 

William Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 

McBeath, S. Blair.—Danger Signal, The. 

Joe, My Pard, the Parson. 

Told by the Hospital Nurse. 

McBride, H. Elliott.-—Acting Drunk. 

Adalina’s Arrival; or, There’s no Place like Old 
Connecticut. 

Advertising for a Husband. 

Another Arrangement. 

Arabella’s Poor Relations. 

Arresting the March of Intemperance. 

Assisting Hezekiah. 

Awful Boots. 

Bad Cold, A. 

Banishing the Bitters. 

Barney’s Resolution. 

Beer Drinker’s Courtship. 

Ben, the Orphan Boy; or, ‘‘Honesty is the Best 
Policy. ’ ’ 

Boy’s Meeting, A. 

Closing of the “Eagle,” The. 

Commencing to Work. 

Courtin’ in the Country. 

Curing the Borrowers. 

Dad Says So, Anyhow. 

Don’t Marry a Drunkard to Reform Him. 
Elwood’s Decision. 

Farmers’ Meeting, A. 

Frightened Lodger, A. 

Frog Hollow Lyceum, The. 

From Down East. 

From Punkin Ridge. 

Going to a New Home. 

Goose Hollow Farmer’s Club. 

Gumtown Woman’s Association, The. 

Happy Couple, A. 

Happy Family, A. 

Infernal Machine, The. 

Ivery Inch a Gintleman. 

Jimtown Lyceum. 

John Jones’ Fortune. 

Jonathan’s Daughter. 

Josiah’s Proposal. 

Just from the City. 


McBride, H. Elliott ( continued ). 

Lament of Jacob Gray, The. 

Leaving Jonah. 

Little Folks’ Opinions. 

Love’s Labor not Lost. 

Marrying for Money. 

Maud’s Command; or, Yielding to Temptation. 
Meeting of Liquor Dealers, A. 

“Mind Your Own Business.” 

Mournful Tale, A. 

Mrs. Bolivar’s Quilting. 

* Mrs. Smith’s Boarders. 

Obtaining a Promise. 

Old Apple-woman, The. 

Old House on the Hillside, The. 

Old School House, The. 

Out of the Depths. 

Pain in the Side, A. 

Pantaloon Fight, A. 

Pine Valley Boys. 

Poisoned Darkys, The. 

Ralph Coleman’s Reformation. 

Recess Speeches. 

Reclaimed Brother, The; or, the Chain of*Roses. 
Reclaimed Father, The. 

Reclaimed; or, Sunshine Comes at Last. 

Reformed Morman Tippler, The. 

Rehearsal, The. 

Returned Brother, The. 

Reunion of Peter and Jane. 

Riches Have Wings. 

Row in the Kitchen, A. 

Rumpus, A. 

Rumpus in a Shoemaker Shop, A. 

Running for Office. 

Scene in the Backwoods School. 

Scene in the Bobtown School. 

Scene in the Railway Station. 

Second Prize, The. 

Silver Dollar, The. 

Society for Doing Good, A. 

Something to Our Advantage. 

Stage-struck Blacksmith, The. 

Striking Oil. 

Striking the Blow. 

Temperance Meeting, A. 

Test, The. 

Thanksgiving. 

Trouble in a Morman Family. 

Uncle Jacob’s Money. 

Uncle Sam’s Wars. 

Unfaithfulness. 

United at Last. 

Unwelcome Guest, The. 

Vanity Vanquished. 

Viola’s Answer. 

Who Wears the Breeches? 

Young Debaters, The. 

McBurney, W: B. (“Carroll Malone”).—Croppy Boy, 
The. 

Good Ship Castle Down, The. 

McCabe, Jas. Dabney.—Capture of Quebec, The. 

Defeat of General Braddock, The. 

MacCabe, J: A.—-Why my Father Left the Army. (Arr.) 
MaeCabe, W: Bernard.—Irish Philosopher, The. 
McCabe, W: Gordon.—Christmas Night of ’62. 
Dreaming in the Trenches. 

Unknown Hero, An. 

M’Caig, Donald.—Tramp, The. 

McCall, Patrick Jos.—Herself and Myself. 

Old Pedhar Carthy from Clonmore. 

McCall, S: Walker.—Political Equality the Soul of the 
Republic. 

McCallom, Dan’l C.—Water-mill. The. (.At.) See 
Doudney, Sarah. 

McCann, J: Ernest.—America. 

M’Cardell, Roy L.—Marsh Symphony, A. 

M’Carroll, Jas.—Dawn. 

Grey Linnet, The. 

Irish Wolf, The. 

Royal Race, A. 

M’Cartee, Jessie G.—Death of Moses, The. 

MacCarthy, Denis Florence.—Bell-founder, The. 
Bless the Dear Old Verdant Land. 

“Cease to do Evil—Learn to do Well.” 

Foray of Con O’Donnell, The. 

Ireland. _ 

Irish Wolf-hound, The. See Foray of Con O Don¬ 
nell, The. 

Labor Song. See Bell-founder, The. 

Love and Time. 

Spring Flowers from Ireland. 

Summer Longings. 


499 










McCarthy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


McCarthy, Justin.—“If you mark, my lord.” 

Sensation novel has had its day, The. 

McCaskey, J. P.—Monument of Trees, A. 

McCheyne, Rob’t: Murray.—“I feel when I have 
sinned, an immediate reluctance to go to 
Christ.’ ’ 

Jehovah Tsidkenu. 

McClure, Alex. Kelly.—Agencies in our National Pro¬ 
gress. 

McClure, Bessie B.—Trials. 

McClure, C: Floyd.—Lines to Her. 

MacColl, Evan.—Child of Promise, The. 

Glenorchy. 

McCollum, Elsie Malone.—At Uncle Dock’s. 

Aunt Hannah’s Letter. 

My Aunt Maria. 

McConaughy, Mrs. J. E.—Aunt Debby’s Speculation. 
Discontented Girls, The. 

Genteel and Polite. 

Two Ways of Doing Good. 

McCook, H: Christopher.—Latimers, The. 

“Settin’ up with Elder McK’ag’s Peggy.” See 
Latimers, The. 

Settin’ up with Peggy McKeag. See Latimers, 
The. 

McCord, J. P.—"I See the Point.” 

McCrae, G: Gordon.—Column of July, The. 

Forby Sutherland. 

McCreery, J. L.—There are no Dead. See There is 
no Death. 

There is no Death. (Wr. at. to E: Bulwer-Lytton.) 
McCurdy, Florence.—My Lover. 

Only a Smile. 

McCutchen, Marg. Wilson.—Long Ago, The. 

McDermott and Trumble.—All in Der Family. 

“Dark Noight’s Business, A.” 

“Dot Quied Lotgings.” 

M’Dermott, B. J.—Old Friends. 

McDermott, Hugh Farrar.—Do not Sing that Song 
Again. 

Fire, The. 

McDermott, Jessie.—April. 

MacDermott. Martin.—Girl of the Red Mouth. 

McDonald. Belle.—How Girls Study 
MacDonald, Mrs. Eliz. [Roberts].—Song of Seasons, 

A. 

McDonald, Fs. C:—Bob White. 

Inconstancy. 

Song, A: “This I learned from the birds.” 
Truth-seekers, The. 

Macdonald, Frederika Richardson.—New Year’s Eve 
—Midnight. 

Macdonald, G:—Adela Cathcart. 

Anxiety. See Early Bird, The. 

At the Back of the North Wind. 

Baby. See At the Back of the North Wind. 

Better Things. (For diff. vers, see Hunt, Leigh.) 
Cinderella; or, The Glass Slipper. 

Crimson Throne, The. 

Earl o’ Quarterdeck, The. 

Early Bird, The. 

Endurance. 

Father’s Hymn for the Mother to Sing, The. 

Foolish Harebell, The. 

God Watcheth. See My Child Woke Crying from 
her Sleep. 

If the Heart be True. 

"It is a sair thing to be misjudged.” 

Light. 

Like a Little Child. See Father’s Hymn for the 
Mother to Sing, The. 

Little Diamond and the Drunken Cabman. See 
At the Back of the North Wind. 

Little White Lily. 

Marquis of Lossie, The. 

Mr. Graham and Lady Clementina. See Marquis 
of Lossie, The. 

My Child Woke Crying from her Sleep. 

O Thou of Little Faith. 

Over the Hill. See Tell Me. 

Owl and the Bell, The. 

Paul Faber, Surgeon. 

Phantastes. A Faerie Romance for Men and 
Women. 

Pity of It, The. 

Polly. 

Rest. 

Sea-shell, The. 

Shadows, The. 

Sir Lark and King Sun: a Parable. See Adela 
Cathcart. 

Smoke, The. 

Smoke of Sacrifice, The. See Smoke, The. 

500 


Macdonald, G: (continued). 

Song: “I dreamed that I woke from a dream.” 

See Wilfrid Cumbermede. 

Song: “ ‘O lady, thy lover is dead,’ they cried.” 
See Phantastes. A Faerie Romance for Men 
and Women. 

Song of Winter Days. 

Sonnet Sequence, A. 

Sweet Peril. See Pity of It, The. 

Tell Me. 

That Holy Thing. See Paul Faber, Surgeon. 

This Side and That. 

Up in the Tree. See At the Back of the North 
Wind. 

Waif. See Crimson Throne, The. 

What Man is There of You? 

What Would You See? See At the Back of the 
North Wind. 

Where did You Come from-[, Baby]? See At the 
Back of the North Wind. 

Wilfrid Cumbermede. 

Wind and the Moon, The. 

World and Soul. 

Yerl o’ Waterydeck, The. See Earl o’ Quarter¬ 
deck, The. 

Macdonald, Hugh.—Birds of Scotland, The. 

MacDonell, Agnes.—Incident, An. 

Only a Soldier. See Incident, An. 

M’Donnell, W:—Manita. 

McDonough, J. C.—Come and Hug Me! 

McDowell, Ed. L.—Crushed Tragedian, The. 

Gypsy Flower Girl, The. 

McDowell, Jas.—Dangerous Legislation. 

Macduff, Rev. J: Ross.—“Plan not, nor scheme, but 
calmly wait.” 

McDuffie, G:—Political Corruption. 

Popular Elections. See Popular Interest in Elec¬ 
tions. 

Popular Interest in Elections. 

Mace, Mrs. Frances Parker [Laughton],—Alcyone. 
Angelus, The. 

Easter Morning. 

In the Breaking of the Day. 

“Only Waiting.” 

Succession, The. 

Thy Song. 

M’Evoy, Bernard.— Photograph in a Shop Window, A. 
Revised Proofs. 

McFadon, O. E. (Arr.) —Erminie. 

Lullaby: “Bye-bye, drowsiness o’ertaking”. See 
Erminie. 

Lullaby: “Lullaby and good-night.” 

McFarland, A.—Doctor in Love, The. 

Macfarlane, J: (“John Arbory”).—Grave in Samoa, A. 
Midsummer Madrigal, A. 

Two Angels, The. 

McFetridge, Rev. W. S.—Creeping up the Stairs. 
McGaffey, Ernest.—As for Me, I Have a Friend. 

As the Day Breaks. 

Geronimo. 

I fear no Power a Woman Wields. 

“Mark.” 

Rib, The. 

“Rise, A.” 

Saint Valentine’s Eve. 

Yellow and White. 

McGee, T: D’Arcy.—Celtic Cross, The. 

Dead Antiquary O’Donovan, The. 

Exile’s Devotion, The. 

Infelix Felix. 

Irish Wife, The. 

Our Ladye of the Snow. 

Randall M’Donald. 

Rest at Eventide. 

Salutation to the Kelts. 

To Duffy in Prison. 

McGill, Virginia.—.Esthetic Craze, The. 

M’Gill, W:—Elixir of Life, The. 

Macgillivray, W: (?).—Thrush’s Song, The 
McGlasson, Eva Wilder. See Brodhead, Mrs. Eva 
Wilder [McGlasson]. 

McGuire, Mary.—Exiled. 

Ganges, The. 

Grandfather’s House. 

Little Jo. 

Old and the New, The. 

Soldier’s Cradle-hymn, The. 

Then and Now. 

McGuire. Will Victor.—College “Oil Cans.” 

Coriolanus. 

Gambler’s Tale, The. 

Siege of Calais. The. 

McHale, Frank.—Her Photograph. 





AUTHOR INDEX 


McManus 


Macbar, Agnes Maude.—Love and Faith. 

Madonna of the Entry, A. 

Schiller’s Dying Vision. 

William Ewart Gladstone. 

Machlin, C:—Man of the World, The. 

Utility of Booing, The. See Man of the World, 
The. 

McIntosh, J: S.—Potency of English Words. 

Rats. 

McIntyre, Rev. Rob’t—Centennial Speech. 

When the Cork Goes Down. 

McIntyre, W. T.—Easter Phantasy, An. 

En Garde. 

To Elizabeth. 

When Bess Goes Out. 

McK., F.—Harbor Mine, The. 

Strike the Blow. 

Mack, Henrietta Robins. See Eliot, Mrs. Henri¬ 
etta Robins [Mack]. 

Mack, J. J., Jr.—-“As Ye Sow.” 

Rondel: "I'd draw the knot as tight as man can 
draw. ’ ’ 

Mackail, J: W:—Etruscan Ring, An. 

Mackay, C:—Be as Thorough as you Can. See Vicar’s 
Sermon, The. 

Bit of a Sermon, A. See Vicar’s Sermon, The. 
Bridge of Glen Aray, The. 

Building of the House, The. 

Clansman to his Chief, The. See Maclaine’s Child; 

a Legend of Lochbuy-Mull. 

Clear the Way. 

Cleon and I. 

Daily Work. 

Days that are Gone The. 

Deed and a Word, A. See Little and Great. 
Differences. 

Dream of the Reveler, The. 

Earl Norman and John Truman. 

Eternal Justice. 

Golden City, The. 

Gone. 

Good Time Coming, The. 

Gourd and the Pine, The. ( Tr .) 

Happy Love. 

Tf I were a voice. 

I Lay in Sorrow, Deep Distressed. 

T Love My Love. 

Inkermann. 

Inquiry, The. 

Invocation to Poesy, An. 

King and the Nightingales, The 
Little and Great. 

Love Extravaganza, A. 

Maclaine’s Child; a Legend of Lochbuy-Mull. 
Miller of [the] Dee, The. 

Mountain Torrent, The. 

New Version of "A Man’s a Man for a’ That.” 
Now. 

Old Tubal Cain. See Tubal Cain. 

O Ye Tears! 

Phantoms of St. Sepulchre, The. 

Philosophy of Sport, The. 

Praise of Woman. 

Protestations. 

Quarrel, The. 

Reveler’s Dream, The. See Dream of the Rev¬ 
eler, The. 

Ship on Fire. The. 

Sisyphus. 

Small Beginnings. See Little and Great. 
Supplication. See Maclaine’s Child; a Legend of 
Lochbuy-Mull. 

Tell Me, Ye Winged Winds. See Inquiry, The. 
Three Preachers, The. 

Triumph of Truth. 

Tubal Cain. 

Under the Holly Bough. 

Vicar’s Sermon, The. 

What Might Be Done. 

William the Conquerer. 

You and I. 

Mackay, Eric.—Ecstacy. 

In Tuscany. 

Mary Arden. 

Waking of the Lark, The. 

McKay, Jas. T.—Whispering Gallery, The. 

Mackay, Marg.—Asleep in Jesus. 

Mackay, Minnie.—Life Brigade, The. 

McKeever, J:—Comical Dun, A. 

McKeever, S. A.—Oil on the Brain. 

MacKellar, T:—To a Troublesome Fly. 

McKenzie, Alex.—Truth of the Gospel, The. 
Mackenzie, May R.—Flibbertygibbet and Me. 


Mackenzie, Rob’t.—King Cotton. 

M’Kenzie, W: P.—Gabrielle. 

Lullaby Song. 

Moonlight. 

Mother’s Song, The. 

Mackey, Nettie.—AVine and Water. 

McKinley, W;—Citizen’s Responsibility, A. 

Duty of the Hour, The. 

Future of the Philippines. 

Grant. 

Grant, the Soldier and Statesman. 

Inaugural Address, Mar. 4, 1901. 

Nashville Exposition, The. 

National Progress. See Inaugural Address. 

Our Duty to the Philippines. See Future of the 
Philippines. 

Our New Relations. See Future of the Phil¬ 
ippines. 

President McKinley’s Last Address [or Speech], 
Republican Press, The. 

Republic’s Duty, The. 

Reunited Country, A. 

Washington and the Nation. 

Washington’s Foreign Policy. 

Mackintosh, Sir Jas.—Defence of M. Peltier for a 
Libel on Napoleon. 

England and America. 

England’s Relations to America. See England 
and America. 

Revolutionary Desperadoes. 

Mackintosh, Newton.—-‘‘Cleopatra, who thought they 
maligned her.” 

Fin de Siticle. 

McKnight, G:—Euthanasia. 

In Unison. 

Kinship. 

Live while You Live. 

M’Lachlan, Alex.—Bobolink. 

Indian Summer. 

Man who Rose from Nothing, The. 

MacLaren, Ian. See Watson, Dr. J: 

McLaughlin, Maurice E.—-And the Band Played. 
Conductor’s Story, The. 

Parlor Lamp, The. 

Romance of a Rose. 

Maclean, Mrs. Clara Victoria [Dargan].—Ruined Cot¬ 
tage, The. (?) 

McLean, Judge J:—Moral Power the Most Formid¬ 
able. 

Maclean, Kate Seymour.—Ballad of the Mad Ladye. 
Bird Song. 

Silent Land, The. 

Maclean, Mrs. Letitia Eliz. [Landon] (Mrs. G: Maclean). 
—Ancestress, The.. 

Awakening of Endymion, The. 

Banquet, The. 

Bonds of Affection. 

Cedars of Lebanon, The. 

Crescentius. 

Death and the Youth. 

Drooping-willow, The. 

Felicia Hemans. 

Female Convict, The. 

Grasp of the Dead, The. 

Isabel’s Grave. 

Little Red Riding Hood. 

Night at Sea. 

“Oh, if thou lovest and art a woman.” 

“She was sent forth.” 

Shepherd Boy, The. 

Violet, The. , 

“Violets! deep-blue violets.” See Violet, The. 
Wind, The. 

McLean, Mary Hollands..—Senior Schedule, A. 
McLean, Nancy Patton.—Unseen Angel, An. 

McLean, Sally [or Sarah] Pratt. See Greene, Mrs. 
Sarah Pratt [McLean]. 

Maelellan, Rev. -.—Poor Man and the Fiend, The. 

McLellan, I:—Battle of Eylau, The. 

Death of Napoleon. 

Fall of the Indian. 

Fields of War, The. 

Lost Mexican City, The. 

New England’s Dead. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The. See Pierpont, J: 
MacLeod, Mrs. Eliz. S.—Alexander Mackenzie. 
Macleod, Norman.—“Perish policy and cunning.” 
Rhymes for Hard Times. See Trust in God. 
Trust in God. • 

McM., S. J.—Valentine, A. 

McManus, S. B.—Flicker on the Fence, The. 

My Little Bo-peep. (Also at. to Frank E. Holliday.) 
Perfect Faith, A. 


501 







McMaster 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


McMaster, Guy Humphreys.—Carmen Bellicosum. 
Old Continentals, The. 

Song of the War. See Old Continentals, The. 
Macmillan’s Magazine. —Half-hearted. 

Somebody’s Mother. 

McMullen, Mrs. Addie V.—Birch Tree, The. 

Plant the Oak. 

McNabb, May Rapley.—Auntie’s Education. 

Brother Jim. 

Cross at Santa. 

How Sad. 

Mrs. Santa Claus. 

When Papa puts His Great Coat on. 

Where Honeysuckles Grow. 

McNally, Leonard.—“Robin Hood.” 

McNaughton, J. H.—Burning Ship, The. See Onnalinda. 
Onnalinda. 

Macneil, Hector.—Mary of Castle Cary. 

Macneil, Mary. See Fenollosa, Mrs. Mart [McNeil], 
Macneill, A. D.—Sea-gull, The. 

McNulty. J: A.—Frenchman’s Dilemma, The. 
McNulty, Rev. R. R.—“Through court, and through 
mart, and through college.” 

Macon, J: Alfred.-—Cabin Love-song. 

Dancing in the Flat Creek Quarters. 

Evening Song on the Plantation. 

Observations by Rev. Gabe Tucker. See Rev. 

Gabe Tucker’s Remarks. 

Rev. Gabe Tucker’s Remarks. 

Terpsichore in the Flat Creek Quarters. See 
Dancing in the Flat Creek Quarters. 

Theology in the Quarters. 

Uncle Gabe at the Corn-shucking. 

Uncle Gabe on Church Matters. 

McPhelim, E: J.—Elia. 

Outlaws, The. 

MacPherson, Jas. (“Ossian”). — Address to the Sun. 
See Carthon. 

Carthon. 

Comal and Galbina. See Fingal. 

Fingal. 

Ossian’s Address to the Sun. See Carthon. 
M’Pherson, J:—In the Woods. 

Mayflower, The, 

Macqueen, Lucy Hayes.—Reasonable Man, A. 
Macrae, D:—Four Brothers, The. 

Leap-year Wooing, 

Railway Chase, The. 

McRay, Rae.—“Somebody’s.” 

McSparren, Will F.—Huskin’, The. 

School-day, A. 

McVean, Mrs. L. C.—Paving the Streets. 

McVey, Paul B.—Her Dilemma. 

McWight, A.—Honest Rum-seller’s Advertisement, An. 
Macy, Arthur.—Rollicking Mastodon, The. 

Macy, J. C.—Two Old Soldiers, The. 

Macy, J: Albert.—Literary Lottery. 

Vagabonds, The. 

Madison, Jas.—Advice to My Country. 

American Innovations. 

Responsibility of Our Country, The. 

Magee, L: Jones.—District Telegraph Boy, The. 
Spring Lament, A. 

Magill, Rev. Mr. -.—“Are You a Mason?” 

Maginn, W:—Irishman, The. See Irishman and the 
Lady, The. 

Irishman and the Lady, The. 

St. Patrick of Ireland, my Dear! 

Soldier-boy, The. 

Waiting for the Grapes. 

Maguire, Rob’t.—Belfry of Ghent, The. 

Mahoney, Fs. Sylvester (“Father Prout”).—Bells 
of Shandon, The. 

Flight into Egypt, The. 

Malbrouck. (TV.) 

Obsequies of David the Painter. (TV.) 

Popular Recollections of Bonaparte. ( Tr.) 
Shandon Bells, The. See Bells of Shandon, The. 
Song of the Cossack to his Horse, The. 

Mail and Express. —At Set of Sun. See Our Daily 
Reckoning. 

Our Daily Reckoning. 

Mainwaring, Eliz. W.—Coronation, The. 

Mair, C:—Buffalo Herds, The. See Tecumseh: a 
Drama. 

How Burlington was Saved. 

Humming Bird, The. 

Iena’s Song. See Tecumseh: a Drama. 
Innocence. 

Lefroy in the Forest. See Tecumseh: a Drama. 
Tecumseh: a Drama. 

Untamed. 

Voice of the Pines, The. 


Maitland, M. A.—Fought and Won. 

True Victory. See Fought and Won. 

Mallett, D:—Funeral Hymn, A. 

William and Margaret. 

Mallon, Isabel A.—“Uncle Todd.” 

Mallory, Sir T:—Le Morte d’Arthur. 

Sir Lancelot. See Le Morte d’Arthur. 

“Malone, Carroll.” See McBurney, W: B. 

Malone, Walter.—He Who Hath Loved. 

October in Tennessee. 

Manchester, C. M.—McKinley’s Funeral Address. 
Manchester, Ellen R.—Lullaby, Rest. 

Mangan, Jas. Clarence.—Dark Rosaleen. 

Dawning of the Day, The. 

Death of Hofer, The. (TV.) 

Gone in the Wind. 

Hofer the Tyrolese. See Death of Hofer, The. 
Karamanian Exile, The. 

Kathaleen Ny-Houlahan. 

Lament for the Princes of Tir-Owen and Tir- 
Connell. 

Minstrel, The. (Tr.) 

Nameless One, The. 

Napoleon’s Midnight Review. (Tr.) 

O’Hussey’s Ode to the Maguire. 

Shapes and Signs. 

Siberia. 

Soul and Country. 

Sunken City, The. (Tr.) 

Time of the Barmecides, The. 

Vision of Connaught in the Thirteenth Century, A. 
Woman of Three Cows, The. 

Written in a Nunnery Chapel. 

Mann, Prof. B. Pickman.—“Project of connecting the 
planting of trees. The.” 

Mann, Horace.—Dangers to Our Republic. 

Education. 

Evils of Ignorance, The. 

Free Schools. 

Ignorance a Crime in a Republic. See Ignorance 
in our Country a Crime. 

Ignorance in our Country a Crime. 

Let there be Light. 

Opposite Examples. 

Orient Yourself. 

Thoughts for Young Men. 

Manning, Rev. Jacob M.—Address to the Soldiers. 
Manning, Silvia.—Ambitious. See Concert Recita¬ 
tion. 

Concert Recitation. 

Speech for a Little Boy. 

Manning, W. E.—Beneath the Beam. 

Mannyng, Rob’t, of Brunne.—Praise of Women. 
Manrique, Don Jorge.—Coplas de Manrique. 

Footprints of Decay. See Coplas de Manrique. 
Life. See Coplas de Manrique. 

Relentless Time. See Coplas de Manrique. 
Mansfield, R:—Eagle’s Song, The. 

Mansfield, W: Murray, Lord. —Attempts to Bias Judg¬ 
ment in Case of Wilkes. 

Motives of Action. 

Worth of Present Popularity. 

Manville, Marion. See Pope, Mrs. Marion [Manville]. 
Mapes, Walter de.—Jovial Priest’s Confession, The. 
Marble, Earle.—House not Made with Hands, A. 
Spelling in the Nursery. 

Wabash Violets. 

Marc, Friedrich.—To My Cigar. 

March, C: W.—Description of Webster’s Speech in 
Reply to Hayne. 

March, Rev. Dr. Dan’l (?).—“Pupil of the eye is the 
portal.” 

Marcus Aurelius. See Antoninus, Marcus Aure¬ 
lius. 

Marion, Frank.—She was Travelling All Alone. 

Mark, Rickman.—Boy Decides, The. 

Snow in Town. 

Markham, Edwin.—At Little Virgil’s Window. 

Flying Mist, The. 

Joy of the Hills, The. 

Joy of the Morning. 

Last Furrow, The. 

Lincoln, the Great Commoner. See Lincoln, the 
Man of the People. 

Lincoln, the Man of the People. 

Little Brothers of the Ground. 

Look into the Gulf, A. 

Lyric Seer, The. See Poet-lore. 

Man with the Hoe, The. 

My Comrade. 

Poet-lore. 

Poetry. 

Whirlwind Road, The. 


502 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Mason 


Markham, T: R.—“I have sought to counsel you in 
your perplexities.” 

Marlowe, Christopher.—Ambition. See Tamburlaine 
the Great. 

Doctor Faustus. 

Edward II. 

Faustus’s Last Speech on Earth. See Doctor 
Faustus. 

Hero and Leander. 

King Edward the Second. See Edward II. 

Last Soliloquy of Faustus, The. See Doctor 
Faustus. 

Milk-maid’s Song, The. See Passionate Shepherd 
to his Love, The. 

Passionate Shepherd to his Love, The. 

Shepherd to His Love, The. See Passionate Shep¬ 
herd to his Love, The. 

Tamburlaine the Great. 

Marlyn, Eliza L.—God’s Wonders. 

Marot, Clement.—Portrait, The. 

To Anne. 

Marriott, J:—How Marriage is Like a Devonshire Lane. 
Marryat, Captain Frd’k.—Captain Stood on the Car- 
ronade, The. See Old Navy, The. 

Old Navy, The. 

Marsden, W:—What is Time? 

Marsh, Annette.—School-girl’s Troubles, A. 

Marsh, C: Capron.—Death of the Old Clock, The. 
Down the Road to Sally’s. 

Homeward Road, The. 

Toast, The. 

Marsh, G: Perkins.—Man and Nature. 

Marsh, Marie More.—Emergency, An. 

From the Window. 

My Dogand I. 

Marsh, Rev. W. W.—Brita’s Wedding. 

Jephtha’s Daughter. 

Race for Life, A. 

Marshall, Anna P.—Ben Hazzard’s Guests. 

Marshall, E:—After the Charge at La Quasina. 
Marshall, Frank A.—Admiral Dewey. 

Marshall, T: (?), Dean of Gloucester. — Stability of 
Virtue, The. 

Sturdy Rock, for all his Strength, The. See Sta¬ 
bility of Virtue, The. 

Marshall, T: Francis.—Temperance Pledge, The. 
Marston. J:—Philosophy. See Scholar and his Dog, A. 
Scholar and his Dog, A. 

To Detraction. 

To Everlasting Oblivion. 

Marston, J: Westland.—Death-ride, The. 

Donna Diana. 

Marie de Meranie. 

Parting of King Philip and Marie, The. See 
Marie de Meranie. 

Pride against Pride. See Donna Diana. 
Marston, Philip Bourke.—After Many Days. 

After Summer.! 

At Last. 

At the Last. 

Ballad of Brave Women, A. 

Garden Fairies. 

Greeting, A. 

Her Pity. 

How My Song of Her Began. 

If you Were Here. 

Love and Music. 

Love’s Music. 

No Death. 

Old Churchyard of Bonchurch, The. 

Parting Words. 

Rose and the Wind, The. 

Summer Changes. 

To All in Haven. 

To the Spirit of Poetry. 

Vain Wish, A. 

What the Rose Saw. 

Marston, Westland. See Marston, J: Westland. 
Martial (Marcus Valerius Martialis).—His Book’s 
Patron. 

His Bookseller’s Address. 

Stingy Friend, The. 

Martin, Ada Louise.—Sleep. 

Martin, Arthur P.—Bush Study, & la Watteau, A. 
Cynic of the Woods, The. 

Love and War. 

Romance in the Rough, A. 

Martin, E: Sanford.—Egotism. 

Girl of Pompeii, A. 

Little Brother of the Rich, A. 

Martin, G:—Laleet. 

Shelley. 

To My Canary Bird. 


Martin, Theodore.—-Alpine Minstrelsy. ( Tr .) See 
William Tell.—Friedrich Schiller. 

Veiled Statue at Sais, The. (Tr.) 

Martin, W: Wesley.—Apple Blossoms. 

Apple Orchard in the Spring, An. See Apple 
Blossoms. 

Martineau, Harriet.—“Beneath this starry arch.” 
See On, On, Forever. 

On, On, Forever. 

Martley, J:—Budget of Paradoxes, A. 

Valley of Shanganagh, The. 

Martyn, M. E.—Late Love. 

“Marvel, Ik.” See Mitchell, Donald G. 

Marvell, Andrew.—Bermudas [, The]. See Song of the 
Emigrants in Bermuda. 

Clorinda and Damon. 

Cromwell and King Charles. See Horatian Ode 
upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland, A. 
Damon the Mower. 

Death of Charles I., The. See Horatian Ode upon 
Cromwell’s Return from Ireland, A. 

Death of the White Fawn. See Nymph Com¬ 
plaining for the Death of her Fawn, The. 
Dialogue between Thyrsis and Dorinda, A. 

Drop of Dew, A. 

Emigrants in [the] Bermudas, The. See Song of 
the Emigrants in Bermuda. 

Epitaph, An: “Enough; and leave the rest to 
fame.” 

Execution of Charles I. See Horatian Ode upon 
Cromwell’s Return from Ireland, A. 

Garden, A. (?) 

Garden, The. 

Garden Scene, A. See Garden, The. 

Girl Describes Her Fawn, The. See Nymph Com¬ 
plaining for the Death of her Fawn, The. 
Horatian Ode [upon Cromwell’s Return from Ire¬ 
land], A [or An]. 

In Exile. See Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda. 
Lover to the Glow-worms. The. See Mower to 
the Glow-worms, The. 

Mower-to the Glow-worms, The. 

Nostradamus’s Prophecy. 

Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn, 

Nymph Mourning her Fawn, The. See Nymph 
Complaining for the Death of her Fawn, The. 
On Milton’s Paradise Lost. 

Picture of Little T. C. in a Prospect of Flowers, 
The. 

Picture of T. C., The. See Picture of Little T. C. 

in a Prospect of Flowers, The. 

Poet’s Retirement, The. See Garden, The. 

Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda. 

Thoughts in a Garden, See Garden, The. 

To His Coy Mistress. 

Two Kings. See Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s 
Return from Ireland, A. 

What Wondrous Life is This I Lead? See Gar¬ 
den, The. 

Young Love. 

Marvin, Dwight M.—Land of Song, The. 

Morning. 

“Mary of the Nation.” See Downing, Mrs. Ellen 
Mary [Patrick], 

Mary, Queen of Hungary.—Prayer. 

Mary, Queen of Scots (Mary Stuart).—Farewell to 
France. 

Marzials, Frank T:—Death as the Fool. 

Death as the Teacher of Love-lore. 

Orpheus and the Mariners Make Answer. See 
Two Sonnet-songs. 

Sirens Sing, The. See Two Sonnet-songs. 

Two Sonnet-songs. 

Marzials, Th^ophile.—Carpe Diem. 

Last Night. 

May Margaret. 

Pastoral, A. 

Twickenham Ferry. 

Mason, Mrs. Agnes Louisa [Carter],—Whenever a Little 
Child is Born. 

Mason, Mrs. Caroline Atherton [Briggs],—Caged. 
Child-song, A. t 

“En Voyage.” 

Eventide. 

June. 

Lost and Found. 

Martha or Mary? 

Not Yet. 

Open Secret, An. 

Reconciliation. 

Waking. 

When I am Old. 

503 


I 







Mason 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mason, E. B.—Darktown Nine, The. 

Mason, Jonathan.—Columbus to Ferdinand. 

Mason, Mary Augusta.—My Little Neighbor. 

Scarlet Tanager, The. 

Mason, Walt.—Columbian Legend, A. 

Mason, W: E.—Centennial Speech. 

Massey, Gerald.—Angels. 

Babe Christabel. 

Battle of Inkerman, The. 

Christie’s Portrait. 

Death-ride, The. 

Deserter from the Cause, The. 

Epigram. 

His Banner over Me. 

Looking into the Future. 

Lowly Life, The. 

Nelson. 

No Jewell’d Beauty. 

O, Lay Thy Hand in Mine, Dear! 

Our Wee White Rose. 

Parting. 

Promised Land To-morrow, The. See To-day 
and To-morrow. 

Robin Burns. 

Song: “All glorious as the rainbow’s birth ” 
Sweet Song of Songs, A. 

“’Tis weary watching wave by wave.” 

To-day and To-morrow. 

Massillon, Jean Baptiste.—Immortality. 

Massinger, Philip.—Maid of Honor, The. 

New Way to Pay Old Debts, A. 

Masson, Tom.—All-[a]round Intellectual Man, An. 

At Last. 

Desolation. 

Her Fifteen Minutes. 

Modern Girl, The. See We All Know Her. 

Only a Woman. 

Price, The. 

Taking the Veil. 

We All Know Her. 

Masterson, Kate.—April Fools. 

Her Ideal. 

Matchett, Ella Lindsay.—Blind Flower Girl of Pom¬ 
peii, The. 

Mather, Wallace E.—Scarecrow, The. 

Mathers, E. A.—Robin Redbreast. 

Matheson, A.—Into the Light. 

Matheson, E.—For Love’s Sweet Sake. 

New Woman, The. 

Wilt Thou be Long? 

Mathews,-.—Bashful Man, The. (At.) See Smith, 

Jas. 

Mathews, Albert.—To an Autumn Leaf. 

Mathews, C:—Nothing in It. 

Mathews, Cornelius.—Poet, The. 

Mathews, Joanna Hooe.—Daisy’s Faith. 

Mischievous Daisy. 

Matthews, -.—Goody Grim vermis Lapstone. (?) 

Mr. Rogers and Monsieur Denise. (?) 

Matthews, Annie Laura.—“Wild raged the tempest.” 
Matthews, Brander. See Matthews, [Jas.] Brander. 
Matthews, Fannie A. Silent Partner, The. 
Matthews, [Jas.] Brander.—American Girl, An. 

Ballade of Tobacco, The. 

Matthews, Jas. Newton.—Coward, The. 

When Jimmy Comes from School. 

Matthison, Arthur.—Little Hero, The. (?) 

Sentence of Death on the High Seas. 

Stowaway, The. See Little Hero, The. 
Matthisson, Friedrich von.—I Think of Thee. 
Maughan, H: Neville.—Song of St. Francis, A. 
Maulsby, D. L.—Visions. 

Maupassant, Guy de—Government by Epigrams. 
See Sur 1’Eau. 

Necklace, The. , 

Piece of String, The. 

String, The. See Piece of String, The. 

Sur 1’Eau. 

Maury, Matthew Fontaine.—Air and Sea, The. 

Oratory. (?) 

"There is a river in the Ocean.” , 

Max, Ruth.—Just Graduated. 

Maxcy, Jonathan.—First American Congress, The. 

Loss of National Character. 

Maxwell, W: Hamilton.—Hector O’Halloran. 

Matrimonial Adventures of Dick Macnamara. See 
Hector O’Halloran. 

May, Caroline.—Boy’s Rights. 

“Every flower is sweet to me.” 

"May, Edith.” See Drinker, Mrs. Anna. 

May, Julia H.—Scholar’s Convention, The. 

"May, Sophie.” See Clarke, Rebecca Sophia. 


Mayhew, Jonathan.—Repeal of the Stamp Act, The. 
Mayne, Jasper.—Time. 

“Time is a feathered thing.” See Time. 

Mayne, J:—Helen of Kirkconnell. 

Logan Braes. 

Mazzini, Jos.—Address to the Young Men of Italy. 
Mead, Leon.—Wish-bone, The. 

Meader, Sarah.—At the Camp-fire. 

Meagher, T: Fs.—Appeal to Ireland. 

Condition of Ireland, The. 

Examples for Ireland. 

Fate of European Kings, The. 

Meagher’s Defense. 

On being Found Guilty of Treason. See Meagher’s 
Defense. 

Patriotism. 

Sword and a Nation’s Rights, The. 

Medical World. —Doctor’s Story, A [or The]. 

Meehan, J: Jas.—Dead Player, The. 

Grant at Rest. 

Race of the “Oregon,” The. 

Meek, Alex. Beaufort (“Alex. Smith”). — All things 
have something more than barren use.” 

Among My Books. 

Balaklava. 

Barbara. See Life-drama, A. 

Beauty. 

Duty and Fame. 

Dying King, The. 

Forerunners. See Life-drama, A. 

Historic Trees. 

“I will go forth 'mong men, not mailed in scorn.” 
Lady Barbara. 

Life-drama, A. 

Love. 

“Man does not plant a tree for himself. A.” 

Minor Poet, A. See Life-drama, A. 

Miss Nightingale. 

Night before the Wedding, The; or, Ten Years 
After. 

“Saddest thing that can befall a soul. The.” 
Sea-marge. See Life-drama, A. 

To-. 

Meetkerke, C. E.—Shadows. 

Meigs, Mary Noel.—June. 

Melcombe, G: Bubb Dodington, Lord. —Shorten Sail. 
Meleager.—Heliodore Dead. 

Vow, The. 

Mellen, Grenville.—Bunker Hill. 

Entrance of Columbus into Barcelona. 

In Memory of the Pilgrims. 

Lonely Bugle Grieves, The. See Ode on the Cele¬ 
bration of the Battle of Bunker Hill. 

Ode on the Celebration of the Battle of Bunker 
Hill. 

Mellen, H: J.—Invocation to Tobacco. 

Melone, Luck.—Mule and the Bees, The. 

Melroy, L. I.—Say! 

Melville, Ada M.—My Little Newsboy. 

Melville, Herman.—College Colonel, The. 

Crossing the Tropics. 

Eagle of the Blue, The. 

Enviable Isles, The. 

On the Slain at Chickamauga. 

Running the Batteries. 

Stonewall Jackson. 

Un inscribed Monument on One of the Battle¬ 
fields of the Wilderness, An. 

Melville, Mark.—Mike McGaffaty’s Dog. 

Menaid. J. Gertrude.—New Santa Claus, A. 

Mendum, Georgiana.—Tahawus. 

Mennis, Sir JSir John Suckling’s Campaign. (At.) 
Mercer, Marg.—Exhortation to Prayer. 

Merchant and Manufacturer. —High School Girl, The. 
Merchant Traveler. —Fashionable. 

Hindrances to Happiness. 

Tramp’s Philosophy, A. 

Meredith, G:—All Other Joys. See Modern Love. 
Ballad of the Past Meridian. 

Coin of Pity, The. See Modern Love. 

Dirge in Woods. 

Ferdinand and Miranda. See Ordeal of Richard 
Feverel, The. 

Head of Bran, The. 

Hiding the Skeleton. See Modern Love. 

Juggling Jerry. 

Lark Ascending, The. 

Lines: “Love within the lover’s breast.” 

Love in the Valley. 

Love’s Grave. See Modem Love. 

Lucifer in Starlight. 

Martin’s Puzzle. 

Modern Love. 


504 












AUTHOR INDEX 


Miller 


Meredith, G: ( continued ). 

One Twilight Hour. See Modern Love. 

Ordeal of Richard Feverel, The. 

Past Meridian. See Ballad of the Past Meridian, 
Phoebus with Admetus. 

Question Whither, The. 

Spirit of Shakespeare, The. 

Tardy Spring. 

Two Masks, The. 

“Meredith, Owen.” See Lytton, E: Rob’t Bulwer- 
Lytton, Earl of. 

Meredith, Sir W:—On Frequent Executions. 

Meredith, W: Tuckey.—Farragut. 

Merington, Marguerite.—Hey Nonny No. 

Merivale, Herman C:—.-State XIX. 

Darwinity. 

New Birth, The. 

Ready, Ay, Ready. 

Thaisa’s Dirge. 

White Pilgrim, The. 

Merivale, J: Herman.—Vow, The. ( Tr .) 

Meriwether, Mrs. Lide.—Prohibition’s Bugle Call. 
Merriam, Mattie E.—Little Boy, A. 

Merrick, Jas.—Chameleon, The. 

Psalm Twenty-three. 

Merrill, C: Edmund, Jr.—Comfort. 

Persicos Odi. 

Merrill, Helen M.—At Edgewater. 

Blue Flower, The. 

Promise of Spring, The. 

Sun-gold. 

Merrill, Mabel S.—Golden Scepter, The. 

Merrill, Marg. M.—Soul of the Violin, The. 

Merriman, Effie W.—Pards. 

Merritt, W:—Girl in Gray, The. 

Une Robe Angelique. 

Merry [or Cherry], J. W.—Shells of Ocean. 

Messares, Waldo.—Ben Hassan’s Dream. 

Messenger, Rob’t Hinckley.—Give Me the Old. 

Winter Wish, A. See Give Me the Old. 
Metastasio, Pierre A. D. B.—Without and Within. 
Metcalfe, Jas. Stetson.—Full Suite, The. 

Mystery, A. 

To a Would-be New Woman. 

Meteors, The. —To the Tobacco Pipe. 

Methodist Recorder. —Negro Prayer. A 
Meyers, Rob’t C. V.—Bill Jepson’s Wife 
Bo. 

Bonnet for My Wife, A. 

Brother Ben. 

Burton’s Curtains. 

Cadwalader Fry and his Theory. 

Colonel’s Orders, The. 

Coward, The. 

Curtsy, The. 

Day before the Wedding, The. 

Desperate Encounter, A. 

Did You ever See a Ghost? 

Don Crambo. 

Don Pedro and Fair Inez. 

Drummer of Company G, The. 

Dynamite Plot, A. 

Epitaph, The. 

Eunice. 

For Christmas’ Sake. 

Four Knights, The 
Fra Fonti. 

From the Iron Gate. 

Gabe’s Christmas Eve. 

Game of Chess, A. 

Go. 

Granddad’s Polka. 

Grandfather’s Clock. 

Horse-thief Jim. 

If I should Die To-night. [At. also to Arabella 
E. Smith.) 

In the Elevator. 

Interrupted Proposal, An. 

Jamie. 

Jewels of My Aunt, The. 

Lady from the West, The. 

Letters for Mr. Smith. 

Ljttle Dago Girl, The. 

Little Joe. 

Lizzie. 

Long-lost Nephew, The. 

Lost od the Desert. 

Masque, The. 

Matrimonial Mix, A 
Me and Jones. 

On the Prairie. 

Our C’lumbus. 

Pair of Gloves, A. 


Meyers, Rob’t C. V. ( continued ). 

Parrots, The. 

Pink Perfumed Note, A. 

Practical Jokes. .. 

Quicksand, The. 

Raggles. 

Revenge, A. 

Sally. 

Saved by a Boy. 

Sentinel of Metz, The. 

Smith’s Bargain Day. 

Soft Black Overcoat with a Velvet Collar. A. 
Song-bird of the Princess, The. 

Strange Harvest, The. 

Strange Land, The. 

Tommy and the Crocodile. 

Top Landing, The. 

Under an Umbrella. 

Veteran, A. 

When Grandfather Went to Town. 

Where’s My Hat. 

You Must be Dreaming. 

Ze Moderne English. 

Meynell, Alice.—Changeless. 

Lady of the Lambs, The. See Shepherdess, 
The. 

Modern Poet, The. 

Renouncement. 

Shepherdess, The. 

Song: “My fair, no beauty of thine will last.” 
Song of the Night at Daybreak. 

Meyrick, Geraldine.—Triumph of Cupid, The. 
Michael, F. M.—Monarch of the Old Regime, A. 
Mjchelangelo. See Buonarrotti, Michelangelo. 

Mjchelet, Madame -.—Spare the Trees. 

Michelet, Jules.—History of France. 

Joan of Arc. See History of France. 

Michell, N.—Progress. 

Michigan Christian Advocate. —Little Feller, A. 
Michigan University Magazine. —Sophomore’s Solil¬ 
oquy, The. 

Mickiewicz,-.—Moor’s Revenge, The 

Mickle, W: Jas.—Sailor’s Wife, The. (At.) See 
Adam, Jean. 

There’s Nae Luck about the House. (Ah) See 
Sailor’s Wife, The. 

Mickle, W: Julius.—Cumnor Hall. 

Lusiad, The. See Camoens, Luis de. 

Middleton, T:—Charity. (?) 

Epigram on Waller. 

On the Death of Burbage. 

What Love is Like. 

Mifflin, Lloyd.—April. See Fields of Dawn, The. 
Autumn. See Fields of Dawn, The. 

Demon Ship, The. 

Doors, The. 

Fiat Lux. 

Fields of Dawn, The. 

Flight, The. 

He Made the Stars Also. 

M etamorphosis. 

Milton. 

Night. 

Sesostris. 

Ship, The. 

Sovereigns, The. 

Summer. See Fields of Dawn, The. 

Take Back Your Words. 

Theseus and Ariadne. 

To a Maple Seed. 

To an Old Venetian Wine-glass. 

To the Milkweed. 

Mignonette, May.—Over the Hills from the Poor- 
house. 

Miles, Alfred H.—City Tale, A. 

Nat Ricket at Cricket. 

Timothy Grey. 

Miles, G: H.—Bill and I. 

Ivory Crucifix, The. 

Miles, Sarah Eliz.—Looking unto Jesus. 

“Milford Bard.” See Loffland, J. 

Mill, J. Stuart.—Liberty in Government. See On 
Liberty. 

On Liberty. 

Uses of Poetry and Art. 

Millard, Frances.—Runaway Ride, A. 

Miller, A. P.—Thunder Storm, A. 

Miller, Mrs. Alex. McVeigh.—Cherished Letters. 
Parson Policy. 

Waiting at the Church Door. 

Miller, Alice Duer.—Song: The Light of Spring. 

Sonnet, A: “Dear, if you love me, hold me most 
your friend.” 


505 








Miller 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Miller, Cincinnatus Hiner (“Joaquin Miller”).—“Ah, 
there be souls none understand.” See Ship 
in the Desert, The. 

Army of the Potomac. 

At the Grave of Walker. See With Walker in 
Nicaragua. 

Battle Flag at Shenandoah, The. 

Bear Story. 

Bravest Battle, The. 

Bravest Battle that ever was Fought, The. See 
Bravest Battle, The. 

By the Pacific Ocean. 

By the Sun-down Seas. 

Columbus. 

Columbus—Westward. See Columbus. 

Comanche. 

Como. 

Crossing the Plains. 

Cuba Libre. 

Dead in the Sierras. 

Dead Millionaire, The. 

Defence of the Alamo, The. 

Don’t Stop at the Station Despair.' 

Dreamers See Ship in the Desert, The. 

Flag at Shenandoah, The. See Battle Flag at 
Shenandoah, The. 

Hope. 

How We Hung Red Shedd. 

Ideal and the Real, The. 

In a Gondola. 

Is it Worth While? 

“Is it worth while that we jostle a brother.” See 
Is it Worth While? 

Juanita. 

Judge Not. 

Kit Carson’s Ride. 

Last Supper, The. 

Luther. 

“Oh, thou to-morrow! Mystery!” See Songs of 
the Soul. 

Old Soldier Tramp, The. 

People’s Song of Peace, The. See Song of the Cen¬ 
tennial. 

Peter Cooper. 

Port of Ships, The. See Columbus. 

Poveri! Poveris! 

Sea of Fire, The. 

Ship in the Desert, The. 

Sierras [from the Sea—C.]. The. 

Sioux Chief’s Daughter, The. 

Soldiers’ Home, Washington, The. 

Song of the Centennial. 

Songs of the Soul. 

Storm in Venice, A. See Ideal and the Real, The. 
Tantalus: Texas. 

That Gentle Man from Boston Town. 

To Florence. See To the Jersey Lily. 

To Russia. 

To the Jersey Lily. 

To the Lion of St. Mark. See Venice. 

Tribute to Columbus, A. See Columbus. 
Twilight at Nazareth. 

Twilight at the Heights [Hights—C.]. 

Vaquero. 

Venice. 

Voice of the Dove, The. 

Westward Ho! 

William Brown of Oregon. 

With Walker in Nicaragua. 

Woman. 

Miller, Mrs. Emily Huntington.—April Fools. 
Bluebird, The. 

Bluebird’s Song, The. See Bluebird, The. 
Coast-guard, The. 

Declamation by a Little Tot. 

Easter Lilies. 

Empty Nest, The. 

Grandpa and Bess. 

Her World. 

Letter to Santa Claus. 

Little May. 

Musjc. See Little May. 

Music of Nature. See Little May. 

My Beacon. 

My Good-for-Nothing. 

Once on a Time. 

Sermon from a Thorn-apple Tree, A. See Thorn- 
apple. 

Song of the Crickets, The. 

Thorn-apple. 

True Immortality, The. 

What are You Good For? See My Good-for- 
Nothing. 


Miller, Mrs. Emily Huntington ( continued ). 

What Boys are Good For. See My Good-for- 
Nothing. 

When I am a Man. 

Miller, Freeman E.—Angelus, The. 

Miller, Mrs. H. M— Echo Dell. 

Miller, Hugh.—Babie, The. (.At.) See Rankin, Jere¬ 
miah E. 

Beauty of Nature. 

Nature. 

Miller, Jos. W.—Song to the Trees. 

“Miller, Joaquin.” See Miller, Cincinnatus Hiner. 
Miller, Kathe.—Stevenson’s Birthday. 

Miller, Theodore D. C.—How We Take It. 

Miller, T:—Old Baron, The. 

Tale of a Leg, A. 

To George M-. 

Miller, W:—Willie Winkie. 

Wonderfu’ Wean, The. 

Miller, W: E.—Mustered Out. See Wounded. 
Wounded. 

Millholen, Herbert Eugene.—To a Picture. 

Milliken. R: Alfred.—Groves of Blarney, The. 

Mills, Frank V.—Heroism of Horatio Nelson, The. 
Mills, Harry E.—Sod House in Heaven, The. 

Mills, H:—Dimes and Dollars. 

Mills, J. Harrison.—Over the Range. 

Milman, H: Hart.—Bound upon th’ Accursed Tree. 
Bridal Song. See Fall of Jerusalem, The. 

Burial Hymn. 

Chorus: “King of kings,” etc. 

Christ Crucified. 

Death of Yajnadatta. See Ramayana, The. 
Descent of the Ganges, The. See Ramayana, The. 
Fall of Jerusalem, The. 

Hebrew Wedding. See Fall of Jerusalem, The. 
Hymn: “Brother, thou art gone before us.” See 
Burial Hymn. 

Hymn for the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity. 
Jewish Hymn in Babylon. 

Nativity, The. 

Ramayana, The. (7V.) 

Ride on in Majesty. See Christ Crucified. 

When our Heads are Bowed with Woe. See 
Hymn for the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity. 
Milne, Ruth Parsons.—Clarissa Laughs. 

Milne, Saidee V.—Automatic Woman. The. 

Milnes, R: Monckton. See Houghton, Lord. 

Milton, .1:—Adam and Eve. See Paradise Lost. 

Adam Describing Eve. See Paradise Lost. 

Adam Describing the Creation of Eve. See Para¬ 
dise Lost. 

Adam to Eve. See Paradise Lost. 

Adam’s Account of His Creation. See Paradise 
Lost. 

Adam’s Morning Hymn in Paradise. See Paradise 
Lost. 

Apostrophe to Light. See Paradise Lost. 

Arcades. 

Arms and the Muse. See When the Assault was 
Intended to the City. 

At a Solemn Music[k]. 

Battle of the Angels. See Paradise Lost. 

Belial’s Address, Opposing War. See Paradise 
Lost. 

Blindness. See On His Blindness. 

Christmas. See On the Morning of Christ’s Na¬ 
tivity. 

Christmas Hymn. See On the Morning of Christ’s 
Nativity. 

Comusf: a Mask], 

Concord. See Paradise Lost. 

Death of Samson, The. See Samson Agonistes. 
Demeanor of Books, The. 

Departure from Paradise, The. See Paradise Lost. 
Destruction of the Philistines. See Samson Ago¬ 
nistes. 

Discord. See Paradise Lost. 

Echo. See Comus. 

Epitaph on Shakespeare. See Epitaph on the 
Admirable Dramatic Poet, W. Shakespeare, 
An. 

Epitaph on the Admirable Dramatic Poet, W. 
Shakespeare, An. 

Eternal Spring, The. See Paradise Lost. 

Eve to Adam. See Paradise Lost. 

Evening. See Paradise Lost. 

Evening in Paradise. See Paradise Lost. 

Eve’s Lament. See Paradise Lost. 

Eve’s Lamentation. See Paradise Lost. 

Eve’s Mirror. See Paradise Lost. 

Eyeless at Gaza. See Samson Agonistes. 

Faithful Angel, The. See Paradise Lost. 


506 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Mitchell 


Milton, J: ( continued). 

Fame. See Lycidas. 

Flowers. See Lycidas. 

Hail, Holy Light. See Paradise Lost. 

Haunt of the Sorcerer, The. See Comus. 

Hymn, The. See On the Morning of Christ’s Na¬ 
tivity. 

Hymn of Praise [by Adam and Eve]. See Paradise 
Lost. 

Hymn of our First Parents. See Paradise Lost. 

Hymn on the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. See 
On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. 

Hymn on the Nativity. See On the Morning of 
Christ’s Nativity. 

Hymn to the Nativity. See On the Morning of 
Christ’s Nativity. 

II Penseroso. 

“Immortal amaranth, a flower which once ” See 
Paradise Lost. 

Incantation. See Comus. 

Invocation from Paradise Lost. See Paradise Lost. 

Invocation to Light. See Paradise Lost. 

Lady in Comus, The. See Comus. 

Lady Lost in the Wood, The. See Comus. 

L’Allegro. 

Land of Eternal Summer, The. See Comus. 

Late Massacre in Piedmont, The. See On the Late 
Massacre in Piedmont. 

Light. See Comus. 

Light. See also Paradise Lost. 

March of the Rebel Angels. See Paradise Lost. 

Lycidas. 

May Morning. See Song on May Morning. 

Moloch. See Paradise Lost. 

Moloch to the Fallen Angels. See Paradise Lost. 

Morning. See Paradise Lost. 

Morning Hymn [in Paradise], A. See Paradise 
Lost. 

Nymph of the Severn, The. See Comus. 

Ode on the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. See On 
the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. 

Old and Blind. (Wr. at.) See Howell, Eliz. L. 

On His Being Arrived at the Age of Twenty-three. 

On His Blindness. 

On His Deceased Wife. 

On His Own Blindness. See To Cyriack Skinner. 
( 1655 .). 

On May Morning. See Song on May Morning. 

On the Late Massacre in Piedmont. 

• On the Lord General Fairfax. 

On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. 

On the Oxford Carrier. See On the University 
Carrier. 

On the University Carrier. 

On Time. 

“On to the sacred hill.” See Paradise Lost. 

Out of Adversity. See Samson Agonistes. 

Paradise Lost. 

Paradise Regained. 

Raphael’s Account of the Creation. See Paradise 
Lost. 

"Ring out, ye crystal spheres.” See On the Morn¬ 
ing of Christ’s Nativity. 

Sabrina [Fair]. See Comus. 

Samson Agonistes. 

Samson on His Blindness. See Samson Agonistes. 

Satan. See Paradise Lost. 

Satan’s Encounter with Death. See Paradise 
Lost. 

Satan’s Speech to his Legions. See Paradise 
Lost. 

Saviour’s Reply to the Tempter, The. See Para¬ 
dise Regained. 

Scene in Paradise, A. See Paradise Lost. 

Song: “Nymphs and shepherds, dance no more.” 
See Arcades. 

Song: “O’er the smooth enamelled green.” See 
Arcades. 

Song: “Sweet echo, sweetest nymph, that livest 
unseen.” See Comus. 

Song: A May Morning. See Song on May Morn¬ 
ing. 

Song of Praise. See Paradise Lost. 

Song on May Morning. 

Sonnet: On his Blindness. See On his Blind¬ 
ness. 

Sonnet: On the Late Massacre in Piedmont. See 
On the Late Massacre in Piedmont. 

Sonnet: To Sir Henry Vane. See To Sir Henry 
Vane, the Younger. 

Sonnet. To the Lord General Cromwell, etc. 

Sonnet to the Nightingale. 

Spirit’s Song to Sabrina. See Comus. 


Milton, J: ( continued ). 

Spirit-shepherd, The. See Comus. 

Temptation of the Vision of the Kingdoms of the 
Earth, The. See Paradise Regained. 

"These eyes, though clear.” See To Cyriack 
Skinner. (1655.) 

To Be no More. See Paradise Lost. 

To Christina of Sweden. 

To Cyriack Skinner [(1655)— C.]. 

To Cyriack Skinner [(1656)—C.J. 

To Echo. See Comus. 

To Mr. Lawrence. 

To Sir Henry Vane, the Younger. 

To the Lady Margaret Lay. 

To the Lord General [Cromwell]. See Sonnet to 
the Lord General Cromwell. 

To the Nightingale. See Sonnet to the Nightin¬ 
gale. 

“To the Ocean now I fly.” See Comus. 

True Glory. See Paradise Regained. 

Truth. 

Two Songs. See Arcades. 

When the Assault was Intended to the City. 
“Whence and what art thou, execrable shape.” 
See Paradise Lost- 

Wisdom and Goodness of God, The. See Paradise 
Lost. 

World Beautiful, The. See Paradise Lost. 

Mines, Flavel Scott.—Reproach, A. 

World’s Verdict, The. 

Mink, Eva K.—Pierre La Forge’s Dream. 

Minot, J: Clair.—Little Parable, A. 

Minshall, W. E.—Golden Wedding, The. 

Minster, Verend.—Carnival of Sports, A. 

Minton, H: C.—“But the higher departments of moral 
and religious thought.” 

“But there is a limit, both to the necessity and the 
capacity of this power of invention.” 

“History of mankind as well shows forth the uni¬ 
formity of law, The.” 

“Present age, exultant over the many recent won¬ 
derful triumphs. The.” 

“Spirit of free thought may be seen in every de¬ 
partment of active life, The.” 

“This system and order everywhere forms the 
basis of all science.” 

Mirabeau, Gabriel Honors Riquetti, Comte de. —Ad¬ 
dress to the Assembly of Noblesse. 

Against the Nobility and Clergy of Provence. 
Defence against the Charge of Corruption. 
Disobedience of Magistrates, The. 

Eulogium on Franklin. 

In Reply to Those Who Denied the National As¬ 
sembly the Legitimate Powers of a National 
Convention. 

Necker’s Financial Plan. 

On Being Suspected of Receiving Overtures from 
the Court. 

Union of Church and State, The. 

Mitchel, Ormsbv MacKnight.—Astronomer’s Vision, 
The. (TV.) 

First Predicted Eclipse, The. 

First Revolution of the Heavens [Witnessed by 
Man], The. 

Immensity of Creation, The. See Infinity of the 
Universe, The. 

Infinity of the Universe, The. 

Problem of the Universe, The. 

Study of Astronomy, The. 

Mitchell, A. L.—Dispute, A. 

Mitchell, Mrs. Agnes E.—To Barbary Land. 

When the Cows Come Home. 

Mitchell, Donald G. ("Ik Marvel”).—Dream Life. 

My Farm of Edgewood. 

Rain in the Garret. See Dream Life. 

Reveries of a Bachelor. 

Sea, The. See Reveries of a Bachelor. 

Water in Landscape. See My Farm of Edgewood. 
Mitchell, Grace.—Lullaby. 

Mitchell, J. Stevenson.—Ode to Independence Hall, 
An. 

Mitchell, Lalia.—Afore Yo’ Daddy Comes. 

Mitchell, Langdor Elwyn.—Fear. 

Imperial Soul, The. 

“Mary, the mother, sits on the hill.” 

Purpose. See To a Writer of the Day. 

Sweets that die. 

Technique. See To a Writer of the Day. 

To a Writer of the Day. 

To One Being Old. 

Wayside Virgin, The: France. 

WYitten at the End of a Book. 

Mitchell, R. W.—Game of Marbles, A. 


507 






Mitchell 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mitchell, Dr. S[ilas] Weir.—Decanter of Madeira, aged 
86, to George Bancroft, aged 86, Greeting. 
Ghost of a Sensation, The. 

Idleness. 

Mr. Kris Kringle. 

Of One who seemed to have Failed. 

On a Boy’s First Reading of “King Henry V.” 
Quaker Graveyard, The,. 

Shriving of Guinevere, The. 

To a Magnola Flower in the Garden of the Arme¬ 
nian Convent at Venice. 

Mitchell, Walter F.—Tacking Ship off Shore. 

Mitchell, W: H.—In iEsop’s Vein. 

Palace o’ the King, The. 

Mitford, J:—Roman Legions, The. 

Mitford. Mary Russell.—Rienzi. See Rienzi’s Address 
to the Romans. 

Rienzi to the Romans. Nee Rienzi’s Address to 
the Romans. 

Rienzi’s Address [to the Romans]. 

“Mix. Parmenas.” See Kelley, Andrew V. 

Mobile Register. —Driving a Hen. 

Moffatt, Marie L.—Border Land, The. 

Moggridge, G:—Man in the Fustian Jacket, The. 
Moir, D: Macbeth.—Casa Wappy. 

Casa’s Dirge. 

Mansie Waugh’s First and Last Play. 

Rustic Lad’s Lament in the Town, The. 

Spring Morning. (?) 

Moliere, Jean Baptiste Poquelin de.—Debtor and the 
Dun, The. 

Dorcas and Gregory. See Physician in Spite of 
Himself, The. 

Imaginary Sick Man, The. See Le Malade Imagi- 
naire. 

Le Malade Imaginaire. 

Physician in Spite of Himself, The. 

Molloy, J. L.—Race for Life, A. 

Molloy, Mary A.—Suggested by Plato’s Bust in the 
Logic Room. 

Mommsen, Theodore.—History of Rome. 

Monarchy of Caesar, The. See History of Rome 
Moncrieff, W. T.—Characteristic Address. 

Parson and the Corkscrew, The. (?) 

Monkhouse, Cosmo.—Bristol Figure, A. 

Dead March, A. 

De Libris. 

Night Express, The. 

Secret, The. 

Song: “Who calls me bold because I won my love.’ 
Spectrum, The. 

“There once was an old man of Lyme.” 

Monod, Theodore.—None of Self and All of Thee. 
Monroe, Harriet.—Commemoration Ode, World’s 

Columbian Exposition. 

Democracy. See Commemoration Ode. 

Farewell, A. 

Fortunate One, The. 

In the Beginning. 

Lincoln. See Commemoration Ode. 
Night-blooming Cereus, The. 

Washington. See Commemoration Ode. 
Monroe, Jas.—Monroe Doctrine, The. 

Monsell, J: S. Bewley.—Litany. 

Phantom Isles, The. 

“Montebelle,-.”—“I wake! Ah! would that I could 

sleep again.” 

Montfort, T: P.-—Educating to a Purpose. 
Montgomerie [or y], Alex.—Night is near Gone, The. 

Night is nigh Gone. See Night is near Gone, The. 
Montgomery, Eleanor.—Adieu. 

New Zealand Regret, A. 

Montgomery, Flora Newhouse.—Good Queen Bess. 
Montgomery, G: Edgar.—At Night. 

Dead Soldier, A. 

England. 

Fallen. 

To a Child. 

Montgomery, Jas.—Alps, The. 

Arnold Winkelried. See Patriot’s Pass-word, The. 
At Home in Heaven. 

Battle of Alexandria, The. 

Birds. See Pelican Island, The. 

Bolehill Trees. 

Charity. 

Christ our Example in Suffering. 

Common Lot, The. 

Coral Reef, The. See Pelican Island, The. 
Crucifixion, The. See Sonnet. The Crucifixion. 
Daisy, The. See Field Flower, A. 

Daisy in India, The. 

Day in the Lord’s Courts, A. 

Dial, The. 


Montgomery, Jas. ( continued ). 

Evening in the Alps. See Alps, The. 

Field Flower, A. 

Field of the World, The. 

Forever with the Lord. See At Home in Heaven. 
Friend after Friend Departs. See Friends. 
Friends. 

Funeral Hymn. 

Gethsemane. See Christ our Example in Suffering. 
Home. See West Indies, The. 

Humility. 

Lord the Good Shepherd, The. See Psalm XXIII. 
Make Way for Liberty. See Patriot’s Pass¬ 
word, 'The. 

Mother’s Love, A. 

Love of Country and Home. See West Indies, The. 
My Country. See West Indies, The. 

Night. 

Night. See also Alps, The, 

Oak, The. 

Ocean, The. 

Our Cherished Flag. See Our Flag. 

Our Flag. 

Parted Friends. See Friends. 

Patriot’s Pass-word, The. 

Pelican, The. See Pelican Island, The. 

Pelican Island, The. 

Prayer. See What is Prayer? 

“Prayer is the soul’s sincere desire.” See What 
is Prayer? 

Prisoner to a Robin who Came to His Window, 
The. See Verses to a Robin Red-breast, etc. 
Psalm XXIII. 

Psalm LXXII. 

Psalm XC. 

Reign of Christ on Earth, The. See Psalm LXXII. 
Sea Life. See Pelican Island, The. 

Song of the Hundred and Forty and Four Thou¬ 
sand, The. 

Sonnet: “If in the field,” etc. Nee Sonnet Imi¬ 
tated from the Italian of Gaetana Passerini. 
Sonnet. Imitated from the Italian of Gaetana 
Passerini. 

Sonnet. The Crucifixion. 

Sower, The. See Field of the World, The. 
Stranger and his Friend, The. 

Sun-dial, See Dial, The. 

Sun-flower, The. 

Thou, God, Seest Me. 

Time Past, Time Passing, Time to Come. See 
Psalm XC. 

To Thy Temple I Repair. See Day in the Lord’s 
Courts, A. 

True Aspiration of Youth, The. 

Verses to a Robin Red-breast who Visits the Win¬ 
dow of my Prison every Day. 

Walk in Spring, A. 

West Indies, The. 

What are These in Bright Array. See Song of 
the Hundred and Forty and Four Thousand, 
The. 

What is Prayer? 

Montgomery, Lucy L.—Little Quaker Sinner, The. 
Montgomery, R:—Marathon by Starlight. 
Montgomery, W: H.—Faith and Works. 

Montreuil, Mathieu de.—To Madame de Sdvignd 
(Playing Blind-Man’s-Buff). 

Montrose, Jas. Graham, Marquis of. —Heroic Love. 
See My Dear and only Love [, I Pray]. 

I’ll never Love Thee More. See My Dear and 
only Love [, I Pray], 

Montrose’s Love. See My Dear and only Love 
[, I Pray], 

My Dear and Only Love [, I Pray], 

Upon the Death of King Charles I. 

Moodie, -.—Beauties of Nature. 

Moodie, Susanna Strickland.—Canadian Hunter’s Song. 
Fisherman’s Light, The. 

Maple-tree, The. 

Moody, Dwight L.—Warning against Wine, A. 
Moody, W. S., Jr.—Moonshine. 

Moody, W: Vaughn.—“No Hint of Stain.” See Ode 
in Time of Hesitation, An. 

Ode in Time of Hesitation, An. 

Robert Gould Shaw. See Ode in Time of Hesita¬ 
tion, An. 

Serf’s Secret, The. 

Moor, Millicent.—Little Peddlers, The. 

Moore, Annie.—Flowers’ Sleep, The. 

Moore, Augusta.—Hagar’s Farewell. 

Pauper’s Child, The. 

“Pitty Fower,” The. 

Widow’s Light, The. 


508 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Moore 


Moore, Beverly.—Our Oriole Neighbors. 

Moore, C: Leonard.—Book of Day-dreams. 

Disenchantment. See Book of Day-dreams. 

Or ever the Earth Was. See Book of Day¬ 
dreams. 

Soul unto Soul Glooms Darkling. See Book of 
Dav-dreams. 

Then Shall we See. See Book of Day-dreams. 
Thou Livest, O Soul! See Book of Day-dreams. 
To England. 

Moore, Clara J.—Web of Life, The. 

Moore, Clement Clarke.—Christmas Times. See Visit 
from St. Nicholas, A. 

Night Before Christmas, The. See Visit from 
St. Nicholas, A. 

St. Nicholas’ Dashing Ride. See Visit from St. 
Nicholas, A. 

Visit from St. Nicholas, A. 

Moore, E:—Happy Marriage, The. 

Moore, Ella M.—“Rock of Ages.” {At. also to E: H. 
Rice.) 

Moore, Fs. W.—His Guiding Star. 

“I Know a Maiden Fair to See.” 

Moore, J: Trotwood.—Ole Mistis. 

Moore, Kathie.—Bird Songs. 

Moore, Lucy.—What Little Folks Can Do. 

Moore, Maudfe].—Death of Charles the Ninth, The. 
“Only a Bit of Childhood Thrown Away.” 

Why? 

Moore, Mollie E. See Davis, Mrs. Mary Evelyn 
[Moore], 

Moore, Monnie.—Incident of the Johnstown Flood, An. 
Moore, T. Sturge.—Duet, A. 

Moore, T:—After the Battle. 

Alas! how light a cause may move. See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Anacreontique. 

Antipater, the Sidonian, to Anacreon. 

And Doth not a Meeting like This. 

Araby’s Daughter. See Lalla Rookh. 

Arranmore. 

“As a beam o’er the face of the waters may glow.” 
As by the Shore at Break of Day. 

As Slow Our Ship. 

At the Mid Hour of Night. 

“At the mid hour of night, when stars are weep¬ 
ing.” See At the Mid Hour of Night. 

Ballad of Nathan Hale, The. 

Ballad Stanzas. 

Ballad, A: The Lake of the Dismal Swamp. 
Battle, The. 

Beauty, Wit and Gold. 

Believe Me, if All Those Endearing Young Charms. 
Bird, The. See Bird Let Loose, The. 

Bird, Let Loose [in Eastern Skies], The. 

Black and Blue Eyes. 

By that Lake, whose Gloomy Shore. 

Caliph’s Encampment. The. See Lalla Rookh. 
Calm. See Lalla Rookh. 

Canadian Boat Song. 

Church and State. 

Come o’er the Sea. 

Come, Rest in This Bosom. 

Come, Send Round the Wine. 

Come, Ye Disconsolate. 

Curse on the Traitor, A. See Lalla Rookh. 

Dear Harp of My Country. 

Denunciation. See Lalla Rookh. 

Dialogue between a Catholic Delegate and His 
Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland. See 
Epigram: “Said his Highness to Ned,” &c. 
Donkey and His Panniers, The. 

Dost Thou Remember. 

Echo. 

Echoes. See Echo. 

Epigram: “Said his Highness to Ned,” etc. 
Epitaph on a Tuft-hunter. 

Epitaph on a Well-known Poet (Robert Southey). 
Erin and the Days of Old. 

Eternal London. See Rhymes on the Road. 

Fare Thee Well, Thou Lovely One! 

“Farewell! but whenever [you welcome the 
hour].” 

"Farewell to thee, Araby’s daughter.” See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Feast of Roses, The. See Lalla Rookh. 

Fill the Bumper Fair. 

Finland Love-song. (TV.) 

Fire-worshippers, The. See Lalla Rookh. 

Fly not Yet. 

Fly to the Desert [,Fly with me]. See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Forget not the Field. 


Moore, T: ( continued ). 

Fragment of a Character. 

From the French. 

Fudge Family in Paris, The. 

Garland I Send Thee, The. 

Gheber to his Followers, The. See Lalla Rookh. 
Gheber’s Bloody Glen, The. See Lalla Rookh. 
Glory of God in Creation, The. See Thou Art, O 
God! 

Go Where Glory Waits Thee 

God the True Source of Consolation. See Oh 
Thou who dry’st the mourner’s tear.” 
Good-bye. (A<.) See Sailor’s Farewell, The.— 
Jenkyns. 

Grief. See “As a beam o’er the face of the waters 
may glow.” 

Harp that Once through Tara’s Halls, The. 

Her Last Words at Parting. 

High-born Lady, The. 

Home of Peace, The. See Ballad Stanzas. 

“How calm, how beautiful.” See Lalla Rookh. 

I Knew by the Smoke that so Gracefully Curled 
See Ballad Stanzas. 

I Wish I Were [Was—C.] by that Dim Lake. 

If You Have Seen. See Nonsense. 

Impromptu upon being Obliged to Leave a Pleas¬ 
ant Party. 

Irish Peasant to his Mistress, The. 

Joke Versified, A. 

Journey Onwards, The. See As Slow our Ship. 
Kiss, The. 

Lake of the Dismal Swamp, The. See Ballad, A: 

The Lake of the Dismal Swamp. 

Lalla Rookh. 

Language of Flowers. The. 

Last Rose of Summer, The. See ’Tis the Last Rose 
of Summer. 

Lesbia Hath a Beaming Eye. 

Letters from Miss Biddy Fudge at Paris to Miss 

Dorothy -, in Ireland. See Fudge Family 

in Paris, The. 

Light of Other Days, The. See Oft in the Stilly 
Night. 

Light of the Harem, The. See Lalla Rookh. 
Light-house, The. 

Linda to Hafed. See Lalla Rookh. 

Lines on Leigh Hunt. See “Living Dog” and 
"The Dead Lion,” The. 

Lines on Naples. See Lines on the Entry of the 
Austrians into Naples. 

Lines on the Death of Sheridan. 

Lines on the Entry of the Austrians into Na¬ 
ples. 

Lines Relating to Curran’s Daughter. See She is 
Far from the Land. 

Little Grand Lama, The. 

“Living Dog” and “The Dead Lion,” The. 

Love and Reason. 

Love is a Hunter Boy. 

Love Thee? 

Love thee, Dearest? Love Thee? 

Love’s Young Dream. 

Lying. 

M. P.; or, The Blue Stocking. 

Meeting of the Waters, The. 

Millennium, The. 

Milling-match between Entellus and Dares, The. 
Minstrel-boy, The. 

Miriam’s Song. See Sound the Loud Timbrel. 
Miss Biddy’s Epistle. See Fudge Family in Paris, 
The. 

My Birthday. 

Nets and Cages. 

Nights of Music. 

No, not More Welcome. 

Nonsense. 

Nourmahal. See Lalla Rookh. 

0 Say, Thou Best and Brightest. 

Occupation of Naples by the Austrians. See Lines 
on the Entry of the Austrians into Naples. 
Oft in the Stilly Night. 

Oh [ wr. O], Breathe not His Name! (Robert Em¬ 
met.) 

Oh, Call it by Some Better Name. 

Oh! Doubt Me not. 

Oh, No—not E’en When First We Loved. 

Oh [wr. O], the Sight Entrancing. 

“Oh, Thou who dry’st the mourner’s tear.” 

On -. 

On a Squinting Poetess. 

On a Tuft-hunter. See Epitaph on a Tuft-hunter. 
On Anacreon. See Antipater, the Sidonian,to 
Anacreon. 


509 







Moore 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Moore, T: ( continued ). 

On Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party. See 
Impromptu upon being Obliged, etc. 

On Factotum Ned. See Fragment of a Character. 
On Music. 

On Taking a Wife. See Joke Versified, A. 

On the Death of Mr. Perceval. 

One Dear Smile. 

Orator Puff. 

Origin of the Harp. The. 

Paradise and the Peri. See Lalla Rookh. 

Peace to the Slumberers. 

Pleasures of Memory. See On Music. 

Potato, The. 

Pretty Rose-tree, The. 

Pro Patria Mori. See When he, who adores thee. 
Rabbinical Origin of Woman [or Women], The. 
Rape of the Bell, The. 

Rebellion. See Lalla Rookh. 

Resignation. See “Oh, Thou who dry’st the 
mourner’s tear.” 

Rhymes on the Road. IX. 

Rienzi to the Roman Conspirators in 1347. 

Rings and Seals. 

Robert Emmet. See Oh, Breathe not His Name. 
Rose, The. ( Tr.) 

She is Far from the Land. 

Song of Fionnuala, The. 

Song of Nourmahal. See Lalla Rookh. 

Sound the Loud Timbrel. 

Speculation [, A]. 

“Spirits of fire that brood not long.” See Lalla 
Rookh. 

Spring. (TV.) 

Surprise, The. 

Sweet Innisfallen. 

Sweet Remembrances. See “Farewell! but when¬ 
ever you welcome the hour. ’ ’ 

Syria. See Lalla Rookh. 

Tear of Repentance, The. See Lalla Rookh. 
Temple to Friendship, A. 

Then, Fare Thee Well. 

“There’s a bliss beyond all that the minstrel has 
told.” See Lalla Rookh. 

There’s nothing Bright, Above, Below. See Turf 
shall be my Fragrant Shrine, The. 

They Know not My Heart. 

They May Rail at this Life. 

They Met but Once. 

This World is All a Fleeting Show. 

Those Evening Bells. 

Thou Art, O God! 

“Though Lost to Sight, to Memory Dear.” ( Wr. 

at.) See Sailor’s Farewell, The.—Jenkyns. 
Time I’ve Lost in Wooing, The. 

’Tis the Last Rose of Summer. 

To-. 

To Campbell. See Verses to the Poet Crabbe’s 
Inkstand. 

To Fanny. 

To Miss-. 

To Sir Hudson Lowe. 

To the Neapolitans. See Lines on the Entry of 
the Austrians into Naples. 

To Sigh, yet Feel no Pain. See M. P.; or, The 
Blue Stocking. 

Torch of Liberty, The. 

Turf Shall be my Fragrant Shrine, The. 

Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party. 
See Impromptu upon being Obliged to Leave a 
Pleasant Party. 

Vale of Avoca, The. See Meeting of the Waters, 
The. 

Vale of Cashmere, The. See Lalla Rookh. 

Verses to the Poet Crabbe’s Inkstand. 

Verses Written in an Album. See Written in the 
Blank Leaf of a Lady’s Commonplace book. 
What’s My Thought Like? 

When He, Who Adores Thee. 

“When I Remember.” See Oft in the Stilly 
Night. 

When ’midst the Gay I Meet. 

When Thou Art Nigh. 

When Twilight Dews. 

Who’ll Buy My Love-knots? 

Wreathe the Bowl. 

Written in a Young Lady’s Commonplace Book. 
Written in the Blank Leaf of a Lady’s Common¬ 
place Book. 

Yet, no—not words, for they.” See Language of 
Flowers, The. 

Young Jessica. 

Young May Moon, The. 


Moorhouse, Helen Isabel.—Secret, A. 

Moran, J:—After a Dance. 

More, Ella Maud.—“Rock of Ages.” (At. also to E: 
H. Rice.) 

More, Hannah.—Duty to One’s Country. See Inflexi¬ 
ble Captive, The. 

Humble and Unnoticed Virtue. 

Inflexible Captive, The. 

Patriotism. See Inflexible Captive, The. 

“Prayer is the application of want to Him who 
only can relieve it.” 

Province of Woman, The. 

Riddle, A. 

Two Weavers, The. See Turn the Carpet; or, 
The Two Weavers. 

Turn the Carpet; or, The Two Weavers. 

More, H:—Euthanasia. 

Love and Humility. 

Philosopher’s Devotion, The. 

Morford, H:—Engineer’s Murder, The. 

Home to Rest in, A. (?) 

Old Knight’s Treasure, The. 

Two Queens in Westminster. 

Wrecker’s Oath on Barnegat, The. 

Morgan, Anna.—Close of School. 

Morgan, Bessie.—“Spacially Jim.” 

Morgan, Carrie Blake.—From the Valley o’ the Shad- 
der 

Undertow, The. 

Morgan, Fred E.—True Socialism, The. 

Morgan, Jas. Appleton.—Malum Opus. 

Morgan, Mary.—Charity. 

“In Apprehension, so like a God.” 

Life. 

Morgan, Tom P.—How Ben Fargo’s Claim was Jumped. 
“Jumped,” The Story of Ben Fargo’s Claim. See 
How Ben Fargo’s Claim was Jumped. 
Morgridge, Harriet S.—Jack and Jill. 

Mother Goose Sonnets. 

Simple Simon. 

Moriarty, Eliza F.—New Year’s Guest, A. 

Morningside. —Quatrain. 

Morrell, A. H.—Little Foxes. 

Little Foxes and Little Hunters. See Little 
Foxes. 

Morris, Airs. -. —New-born Babe, The. 

Morris, A. H.—Modest Maid, The. 

Morris, G:—“Star of love now shines above, The.” 
Morris, G: K.—Manhood. 

Morris, G: Pope [or Perkins].—Flag of Our Union, The. 
I’m with You Once Again. 

Leap for Life, A. 

Jeannie Marsh. 

Main-truck, The. See Leap for Life, A. 

My Mother’s Bible. 

Near the Lake. 

Retort, The. 

We Were Boys Together. 

When Other Friends are Round Thee. 

Where Hudson’s Wave. 

Woodman, Spare that Tree. 

Morris, Gouverneur.—Free Navigation of the Missis¬ 
sippi. ' 

Funeral Oration by the Dead Body of Hamilton. 
On the Judiciary Act. See Second Speech on the 
Judiciary Establishment. 

Oration on Hamilton. See Funeral Oration by 
the Dead Body of Hamilton. 

Second Speech on the Judiciary Establishment. 
Morris, Gouverneur, the younger. —D’Artagnan’s Ride. 
Morris, Harrison Smith.—Destiny—A. D., 1899. 

Fickle Hope. 

Lonely-bird, The. 

Mohammed and Seid. 

Pine-tree Buoy, The. 

Walt Whitman. 

Morris, J: W: (?)—Collusion between a Alegaiter and 
a Water-snaik. 

Morris, Sir Lewis.—At Last. 

Aphrodite. See Epic of Hades, The. 

Epic of Hades, The. 

Maidens’ Lake, The. 

Marsyas. See Epic of Hades, The. 

Ode on a Fair Spring Morning. 

On a Birthday. (Lord Aberdare’s.) 

On a Thrush singing in Autumn. 

Saint Cecilia. 

Song: “Love took my life and thrilled it.” 

What Shall I do for My Love? 

Morris, Madge.—Rocking the Baby. 

Trapper’s Last Trail, The. 

Morris, Rob’t.—We Meet upon the Level and We 
Part upon the Square. • 


510 







AUTHOR INDEX 


Mowat 


Morris for Norris], S. Walter.—Dreams. See Dreams 
for Sale. 

Dreams for Sale. 

Morris, W:—“Ah, when wall all be ended?” See Life 
and Death of Jason, The. 

Antiphony. See Earthly Paradise, The. 

Atalanta Conquered. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Atalanta Victorious. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Atalanta’s Defeat. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Atalanta’s Race. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Atalanta’s Victory. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Blue Closet, The. 

Burgher’s Battle, The. 

Christmas Carol. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Day is Coming, The. 

Death Song, A. 

Earthly Paradise, The. 

Eve of Crecy, The. 

Gillyflower of Gold, The. 

House of the Wolfings, The. 

King’s Visit, The. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Land across the Sea, A. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Life and Death of Jason. 

Love is Enough. 

March. See Earthly Paradise, The. 

Minstrels and Maids. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Nymph’s Song to Hylas, The. See Life and Death 
of Jason, The. 

Of the Passing Away of Brynhild. See Story of 
Sigurd the Volsung, The. 

Riding Together. 

Shameful Death. 

Sigurd the Volsung. See Story of Sigurd the Vol¬ 
sung, The. 

Singer’s Prelude, The. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Slaying of the Niblungs, The. See Story of Sigurd 
the Volsung, The. 

Song from Jason. See Life and Death of Jason, The. 
Song: To Psyche. See Earthly Paradise, The. 
Summer Dawn. 

Summer Storm. See Life and Death of Jason, The. 
War-horn of the Elkings, The. See House of the 
Wolfings, The. 

Writing on the Image, The. See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The. 

Morrison, Arthur.—On the Stairs. 

Morrison, Mrs. J.—Nursery Song. (At. also to Mrs. 
Carter.) 

Recitation for Three Little Girls. See Nursery 
Song. 

What the Mother Heard. See Nursery Song. 
Morrison, M. T.—Foolish Little Maiden, A. 

What the Choir Sang about the New Bonnet. See 
Foolish Little Maiden, A. 

Morrow, W. C.—Inmate of the Dungeon, The. 

Morse, E. M.—Mountains. 

Morse, James Herbert.—Brook Song. 

His Statement of the Case. 

Labor and Life. 

Morning in August. 

Silence. 

Wayside, The. 

Who Knows. 

Wild Geese, The. 

Morse, Philip.—Let Down the Bars. See Lovejoy 
Cow, The. 

Lovejoy Cow, The. 

Milking-time. See Lovejoy Cow, The. 

Slimmer Idyl, The. 

Morse, Sidney H.—Sundered. 

Morton, T: (?).—Box and Cox. 

Not Ashamed of His Occupation. 

Rival Lodgers, The. See Box and Cox. 

Morton, Eliza H.—What We Love. 

Morton, Irene Elder.—Browning. 

Completeness. 

In June. 

My Garden Wall. 

Song: “Where the soft shadows fall.” 

Song of the Pagan Princess. 

Morton, Levi P.—Welcome to the Nations. 

Morton, Marguerite W.—/Esthetic Drill. 

Butterfly Drill. 

Floral Drill. 

Flower Drill, A. 

Friend at Court, A. 

Last Days of Pompeii, Scene from. (Air .) 
May-pole Drill. 

Rainbow Drill. 

Ribbon Drill. 

Swing Song and Drill. 

Sword Drill and March. 

Taper March and Drill. 


Morton, Sue S.—Christmas Rose, The. 

Little Motto Bearers, The. 

Mosbv, V. Stuart.—After the Battle. 

War’s Sacrifice. See After the Battle. 

Moseley, Litchfield.—After-dinner Speech by a French¬ 
man. See Charity Dinner, The. 

Badger’s Debut as Hamlet. 

Charity Dinner, The. 

Frenchman Proposes the Ladies, A. See Charity 
Dinner, The. 

Love in a Balloon. 

Speech of M. Hector De Longuebeau. See Char¬ 
ity Dinner, The. 

Mosen, Julius.—Andrew Hofer. 

Death of Hofer, The. See Andrew Hofer. 

Dying Trumpeter, The. 

Hofer the Tyrolese. See Andrew Hofer. 

Mosher, M. Florence.—It is Coming. 

Moses, T: P.—Flowers. 

Mosher, L. E.—Stranded Bugle, The. 

Moss, T:—Beggar, The. 

Beggar’s Petition, The. See Beggar, The. 
Motherwell, W:—Bloom hath Fled thy Cheek, Mary, 
The. 

Cavalier’s Song, The. 

Covenanters’ Battle-chant, The. 

I Plucked the Berry. 

Jeanie Morrison. 

Merry Summer Months, The. See They Come, 
the Merry Summer Months. 

Midnight and Moonshine. 

Midnight Wind, The. 

My Heid is Like to Rend, Willie. 

“O God! This is a Holy Hour.” See Midnight 
and Moonshine. 

Ouglou’s Onslaught. 

Rose and the Fair Lily, The. 

Sing on, Blithe Bird! See I Plucked the Berry. 
“Tchasson Ouglou is on!” See Ouglou’s On¬ 
slaught. 

They Come! the Merry Summer Months. 

True Love’s Dirge. 

Water! the Water, The. 

When I beneath the Cold, Red Earth am Sleeping. 
Motley, J: Lothrop.—Fall of Antwerp, The. See Rise 
of the Dutch Republic, The. 

Rise of the Dutch Republic, The. 

Mott, C. C.—Wreck of the Scotch Express, The. 
Moulton, Mrs. (Ellen) Louise [Chandler],—Alone by 
the Bay. 

At End. 

Childhood’s Country. 
i Come unto Me. 

Dead Men’s Holiday. 

Easter Morning. 

‘Fain Would I Climb.’ 

For Easter Morning. See Easter Morning. 

Help Thou My Unbelief! 

Hie Jacet. 

House of Death, The. 

In a Garden. 

In Mid-ocean. 

John A. Andrew. 

King is Dead, Long Live the King, The. 

Last Good-by, The. 

Late Spring, The. 

Laura Sleeping,. 

Laus Veneris. 

Long is the Way. 

Louisa May Alcott. 

Lover and Friend Hast Thou Put Far from Me. 
Love’s Resurrection' Day. 

On Homeward Wing. 

Open Door, An. 

Painted Fan, A. 

Prayer in Sorrow, A. 

Question. 

Selfish Prayers. 

Shadow Dance, The. 

Some Day or Other. 

Song of the Stars, The. 

To-night. 

We Lay us down to Sleep. 

Were but My Spirit Loosed upon the Air. 
Moulton, Lillian A.—Pat’s Bondsman. 

Moulton, R. H.—To Master Robbie Miller. 

Moultrie, J:—Dear Little Violets. See Violets. 

Forget Thee? 

Three Sons, The. 

Violets. 

Mount Holyoke. —Verse. 

Mountford, W:—Plea for the Sailor, A. 

Mowat, Helen.—“Cupid among the Strawberries.” 

511 





Mozoomdar 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mozoomdar, Protap Chunder.—Emerson, Extract Con¬ 
cerning. 

Muhlenberg, W: A:—Heaven’s Magnificence. 

I Would not Live Alway. 

Saviour, who Thy Flock art Feeding. 

Shout the Glad Tidings. 

So.ul’s Home, The. 

Mulchinock, W: P.—Music Everywhere. 

Mulholland, Rosa. See Gilbert, Lady. 

Muller, Max.—“There is, between the whole animal 
kingdom on the one side.” 

Muller, Wilhelm.—Beautiful Spring, Haste, oh, Haste! 
Coming of Spring, The. ( Diff. and longer tr. oj 
foregoing.) 

Sunken City, The. 

Mulock, Dinah Maria. See Craik, Mrs. Dinah Maria 
[Mulock]. 

Mulvaney, C: Pelham.—Emmeline. 

Long Deserted. 

Poppoea. 

Mumford, W:—Combat between Paris and Menelaus. 
(Tr.) See Iliad, The. 

Iliad, The. (Tr.) See Homer. 

Triumph of Hector, The. (Tr.) See Iliad, The. 
Munby, Arthur Jos.—Apres. 

Beauty at the Plough. See Dorothy: a Country 
Story. 

Country Kisses. See Dorothy: a Country Story. 
Doris [: A Pastoral]. 

Dorothy [: a Country Story], 

Dorothy’s Room. See Dorothy: a Country Story. 
Ex Libris. 

Flos Florum. 

On an Inscription. 

Susan: a Poem of Degrees. 

Sweet Nature’s Voice. See Susan: a Poem of De¬ 
grees. 

Munday, Anthony.—Beauty Bathing. See To Colin 
Clout. 

Colin. See To Colin Clout. 

To Colin Clout. 

Munday, Eugene H.—Blowing Bubbles. 

Mundy, Johnson M.—My Meerschaum Pipe. 

Munger, Rob’t L:—Evening Song, An. 

God’s Will. 

Where Cupid Dwells. 

Munkittrick, R: Kendall.—At the Shrine. 

Autumn Haze. 

Bulb, A. 

Ghosts. 

In Midsummer. 

June in January. 

October. 

Patriotic Tourist, The. 

Those Ashes. 

’Tis Ever Thus. 

To Miguel de Cervantes Saavadra. 

What’s in a Name? 

Munro, Dr. -.—Physician’s Story, A. 

Munroe, Harry Keiser.—Her Winsome Smile. 
Munsey’s Magazine. —Brief Burlesque, A. 

Munson, Jennie E.—“Get out of My Shop!” 

Munson, W. C.—Correct Habits. 

Munyon, J. M.—Is Freedom a Lie? 

Up Thar behind the Sky! 

Yes, I’m Guilty. 

Murdoch, Alex. G.—Convict Joe. 

Lotty’s Message. 

Murphy, Arthur (?).—Arminius to His Soldiers. 
Murphy, J: A.—“Get into some good library and read. ’ ’ 
Murphy, Jos. Quinlan.—Casey at the Bat. (At. also 
to Phineas Thayer.) 

Murray, Charlotte.—“And this thought will be our 
comfort. ’ ’ 

Consider the Lilies. 

Only. 

Murray, Ellen.—Agnes the Martyr. 

Cain, Ancient and Modern. 

Count Me. 

Crusaders, The. 

“De Lord Am Coming.” 

De Ole Elder’s Mistake. 

Dragon Drink, The. 

Elijah and the Rain. 

Esau and Jacob. 

Father’s Counsel, The. 

Go Forward. 

Keep to the Line. 

Last Battle, The. 

Leonidas. 

Liquor-seller’s Dream. The. 

Martyrs of Uganda, The. 

My Boy Fritz. 


Murray, Ellen (continued). 

New Story, The. 

Our Delight. 

Quest of Three Kings, The. 

Resurrection Morn. 

Seer and the Dreamers, The. 

Shepherd Dog of the Pyrenees, The. 

Stars, The. 

Temperance Dialogue. 

Three Nazarites, The. 

Three Trees, The. 

What I Said. 

Murray, Frank.—Blacksmith of Ragenbach, The. 
Murray, G:—Lesson of Mercy, A. 

Thistle, The. 

To a Humming Bird in a Garden. 

Murray, R. F.—Banished Bejant, The. 

Murray, W: See Mansfield, Lord. 

Murray, W: H: Harrison.—Adirondack Adventures. 
Camping and Campers. See Cones for the Camp 
Fire. 

Cones for the Camp Fire. 

Crossing the Carry. See Adirondack Adventures. 
Honor of the Woods, The. See Story of the Man 
who didn’t know much. The. 

“It is hard to say farewell to a hope that has 
cheered us.” 

Lake Champlain and its Shores. 

“Luther rebelled against the Pope in behalf of the 
ministry.” 

“Man’s value and progress in this life must be 
measured, A.” 

Parson’s Conversion, The. 

“Public opinion employs no officers.” 

“Public opinion is the collective judgment of 
men.” 

Race with the Flames, The. See Who Was He? 
Story of the Man who didn’t Know much, The. 
“Torment of hell is bred of these two things, The.” 
Two Drowned Lovers. See Lake Champlain and 
its Shores 

“Well-nerved and stout be the arm that smiteth 
wrong. ’ ’ 

Who Was He? 

“Years back of us are full of voices, The.” 
Musica Transalpina. —Brown is My Love. 

Musset, Alfred de.—Open or Shut. 

Muzzey, Annie I.—Deeds versus Creeds. 

Myers, Ernest.—Etsi Omnes, Ego Non. 

Gordon. 

Milton. 

Sea-maids’ Music. The. 

Myers, F: W. H.—Immortality. 

I Saw, I Saw the Lovely Child. 

Last Appeal, A. 

Letter from Newport, A. 

On a Grave at Grindelwald. 

Saint Paul. 

Song: “The pouring music, soft and strong.” 
Unsatisfactory. 


N 

Nabbes, T:—Milkmaid, The. 

Nack, Jas.—Here She Goes—and There She Goes. 

Naden, Constance Caroline Woodhill.—Pantheist’s 
Song of Immortality, The. 

Nadaud, Gustave Jean.—Carcasonne. 

Nairne [or Nairn], Caroline Oliphant, Baroness. —Cas- 
tell Gloom. 

Laird o’ Cockpen, The. 

Land o’ the Leal, The. 

Lullaby, A. 

Rest is not Here. 

Wha’ll be King but Charlie? 

Would You be Young again? 

Napoleon Bonaparte.—“Across a chasm of eighteen 
hundred years Jesus Christ makes a !de- 
mand.” (?) 

Bonaparte to his Army in Ttaly. See To the Army 
of Italy. 

Farewell to the Army at Fontainebleau. 

Proclamation to the Army of Italy. See To the 
Army of Italy. 

To the Army of Italy, May 15, 1796. 

“Nasby, Petroleum Vesuvius.” See Locke, D: Ross. 

Nash, Frances.—Elocution Lesson, The. 

Nashe, T:—Birds in Spring, The. See Summer’s Last 
Will and Testament. 

Death’s Summons. See In Time of Pestilence. 

Fading Summer. 


512 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Nichols 


Nashe, T: ( continued). 

In Time of Pestilence. 

Spring. See Summer’s Last Will and Testament. 
Spring, the Sweet Spring. See Summer’s Last Will 
and Testament. 

Summer’s Last Will and Testament. 

Nason, Agnes Carter.—Whenever a Little Child is Born. 
Nason, Mrs. Emma [Huntington],—Bishop’s Visit, The. 
Child’s Question, A. 

Mission Tea Party, The. 

Small Boy’s Questions, A. 

Unter den Linden. 

Nassau Magazine. —Infelicissime. 

Nation, The. —“Every calling is constantly making a 
silent, invisible draft.” 

“Within a few years it has become the fashion.” 
National Preceptor. —Might Makes Right. 

Sowing and Reaping. See Might Makes Right. 
Warrior’s Wreath, The. 

National Teacher’s Monthly. —Birth of Ireland, The. 

Origin of Ireland, The. See Birth of Ireland, The. 
Naughton, Jas. C.—She Would be a Mason. 

Naval Songster. —Wasp’s Frolic, The. 

Naylor, C. C.—American Laborers. 

Northern Laborers. See American Laborers. 
Neal, Mrs. Alice [Bradley]. See Haven, Mrs. Alice 
[Bradley] [Neal]. 

Neal, J:—Bunker’s Hill. 

Dry Experiment, A. 

Little Child’s Trials, A. 

Men of the North. 

Music of the Night. 

My Experience in Elocution. 

Neale, Hannah Lloyd.—Neglected Call, The. 

Neale, J: Mason.—Art Thou Weary? (TV.) 

Celestial Country, The. (TV.) 

Darkness is Thinning. (TV.) 

Each Sorrowful Mourner. (TV.) 

Jerusalem the Golden. See Celestial Country, The. 
Martyrdom of St. Lucy, The. 

Martyrdom of the Archbishop of Paris, The. 
“Well I know thy trouble.” 

Neall, W. H.—Economical Boomerang, An. 

Quiet Smoke, A. 

Raising the Wind. 

Squire’s Rooster, The. 

Uncle Peter and the Trolly Car. 

Uncle Peter at the “Big House.” 

Nealy, Julia. See Finch, Mrs. Julia [Nealy], 

Neele, Id:—Moan, Moan, Ye Dying Gales. 

Where is He? 

Neish, R.—Academy Episode, An. 

Nelson, Julia Bullard.—Dutchman’s Equal Rights, 
The. 

Nelson, T: A. R.—Why Destroy This Government? 
Nencione, Enrice.—St. Simeon Stylites. 

Nesbit, E. See Bland, Mrs. Edith [Nesbit], 
Nesmith, Jas. Ernest.—Point Sublime, Colorado Canon. 

Statue of Lorenzo de’ Medici, The. 

Neville, M. J. —Keno! 

New, Egan.—T’ward Arcadie. 

New England Magazine. —Hebrew Minstrel’s Lament, 
The. 

Seven Invincibles, The. 

New England Primer.— Child’s Prayer. 

New Orleans Times Democrat. —Dreamer’s Pipe, The. 
Hoffenstein’s Bugle. 

New Testament Records. —Hebrew Codes Developed, 
The. 

New York Dispatch. —Bylo Land. 

New York Evangelist. —Saved by a Hymn. 

New York Evening Post.- —Recipe for a Poem. 

Uncle Sam’s a Hundred. 

New York Graphic. —Card Houses. 

New York Herald.— Oh! the Golden, Glowing Morning. 
Yacht Race, The. 

New York Observer. —“Laid on thine altar, O my Lord 
divine!” 

New York Star. —Rosebud’s First Ball. 

New York Sun. —Blue and Gray. 

Christmas Outcasts. 

“Draper in his last book tries to prove.” 

How it Once Was. 

Johnny and the Teacher. See Trials of a School¬ 
mistress. 

Mental Arithmetic. See Trials of a Schoolmis- 

Trials of a Schoolmistress [or School Teacher], The. 
Untimely Call, An. 

Wanted to see His Old Home. 

New York Times. —Tiresome Insects. 

New York Tribune. —International Good Will. 

Sailing of the Fleet, The. 


New York Weekly .—Away from the Wine-cup, Away. 

Bad Boy’s Diary, A. 

New York World .—My Big Brother. 

Newberry, Fanny E.—Triumph through Faith. 
Newbolt, H:—-Craven. 

Drake’s Drum. 

“Fidele’s” Grassy Tomb. 

Fighting T4m£raire, The. 

Hawke. 

He Fell among Thieves. 

Newcomer, A. G.—To a Conservatory Flower. 

Turkish Refrain. 

Newell, Howard Y.—Plain-spoken Philosophy. 

Newell, P:—Her Dairy. 

Her Polka Dots. 

Timid Hortense. 

Wild Flowers. 

Newell, Rob’t H: (“Orpheus C. Kerr”).—American 
Traveller, The. 

Calmest of Her Sex, The. 

Editor’s Wooing, The. 

Great Fit, A. 

Irish Picket, The. 

“Picciola. 

Poems Received in Response to an Advertised Call 
for a National Anthem. 

Rejected “National Hymns,” The. See Poems 
Received in Response, etc. 

Similia Similibus Curantur. 

Widow MacShane. 

Newell, W:—He Careth for Us. 

Newman, G:—“Leave God to order all thy ways.” 
Newman, J: H:, Cardinal. —Consolations in Bereave¬ 
ment. 

Daisy, The. 

Dream of Gerontius, The. 

Elements, The. 

England. 

Flowers without Fruit. 

Knowledge. See Voice from Afar, A. 

Lead, Kindly Light. See Pillar of the Cloud, 
The. 

“Lead, kindly light! amid the encircling gloom.” 

See Pillar of the Cloud, The. 

Lead Thou Me. See Pillar of the Cloud, The. 
Pillar of the Cloud, The. 

Rest. See Waiting for the Morning. 

Reverses. 

St. Paul at Melita. 

Sign of the Cross, The. 

Thanksgiving, A. 

Trance of Time, The. 

True Gentleman, The. 

Voice from Afar, A. 

Waiting for the Morning. 

Newman, Bishop J: Philip.—Abraham Lincoln. 

Abraham Lincoln’s Place in History. See Abra¬ 
ham Lincoln. 

Eulogy on General Grant. 

Majestic in His Individuality. See Abraham Lin¬ 
coln. 

Newton, C. B.—How I Love Her. 

Newton, Frances H.—Iliad, The. 

Newton, H: Chance.—Penny Showman, The. 
“Supers.” 

Weird Warble, A. 

Newton, J:—Home in View. 

How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds. 

Psalm LXXXVII. 

Weeping Mary. 

Newton, Mary L.—Arcady. 

Niccolls, Dr. -.—Grace of Fidelity, The. 

Nichol, H. Ernest.—Love Thought, A. 

Nichol, J:—H. W. L. 

Mare Mediterraneum. 

Nichol, J: Pringle.—Day Conceals What Night Reveals. 
Nicholls, J: F.—Brave Woman, A. 

Brought Back. 

Crippled for Life. 

Hunting a Madman. 

Idiot’s Gallantry, An. 

Little Fireman, The. 

Mother’s Daring, A. 

Pauper’s Revenge, A. 

Tommy’s Prayer. 

Watchman’s Story, The. 

Nichols, Mrs. C.—Midnight Train, The. 

Nichols, J. B. B.—From the Persian. 

Half-way in Love. 

Lines by a Person of Quality. 

Pastoral, A. 

Nichols, Laura D.—Dear Dandelion. 

Midshipman, The. 


513 








Nichols 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Nichols, Mrs. Rebecca S. [Reed].—Philosopher Toad, 
The. 

Nichols, W. C.—Ball-room Madrigal, A. 

In Maiden Meditation. 

Reveries of a Bachelor. 

Which? 

Nicholson, E. J.—Little Nut People. 

Nicholson, E: Byron.—Jim Lord’s Cat. 

Nicholson, Mrs. Eliza [Poitevent] (“Pearl Rivers”).— 
Hagar. 

Last Mile-Stones, The. 

Nicholson, J. G. F.—My Heart’s Treasure. 

Told in the Twilight. 

Nicholson, Meredith.—Old Artillerist, The. 

Nickerson, H. M.—Recollection, A. 

NicoU, Rob’t.—Bonnie Bessie Lee. 

Hero, The. 

We are Brethren A’. 

We’ll a’ Go’ Pu’ the Heather. 

Nile, N:—Night that Baby Died, The. 

Niles, H. B.—Reformation. 

Ninde, W. X.—“One thing is sure, the day of the Lord 
is hastening on. ’ ’ 

Noble, Frd’k Alphonso.—“Proposed religious amend¬ 
ment to the Constitution, The.” 

Noble, Jas. Ashcroft.—George Eliot. 

Love and Absence. 

Only a Woman’s Hair. 

Red Thread of Honour, The. 

Noble, Lucretia Gray.—Stars and Stripes, The. 

Noel, Caroline M.—Why Will Ye Call it Death’s Dark 
Night? 

Noel, Hon. Roden Berkeley Wriothesley.—Byron’s 
Grave. 

Death of Livingstone, The. 

Dying. See Old, The. 

Lament. 

Merry-go-round, The. 

Old, The. 

Sea Slumber-song. 

Secret of the Nightingale, The. 

“That They All May be One.” 

Toy Cross, The. 

Water-nymph and the Boy, The. 

Noel, T:—Old Winter. 

Pauper’s Drive, The. 

Nones, Jeff. H. — How the Fifty-first Took the 
Bridge. 

Norris, Adelaide.—Doll Drill, The. 

Norris, Edith M.—Leading the Choir. 

Norris, J:—Aspiration, The. 

Hymn to Darkness. 

My Little Saint. 

Parting, The. 

Reply, The. 

Norris, S. Walter. See Morris, S. Walter. 

North British Review. —Lowell, Extract Concerning. 
North, Christopher. See Wilson, J: 

Northrop, Birdsey Grant.—Arbor Day [, Its Educat¬ 
ing Influence]. 

Norton, Andrews.—After a Summer Shower. 

Dedication of a Church, The. See Hymn for the 
Dedication of a Church. 

Hymn for the Dedication of a Church. 

Norton, Caroline Eliz. Sarah [Sheridan]. See Stirling- 
Maxwell, Lady. 

Norton, Rev. J. F.—Wasted. 

Norton, Jessie.—Spring Song. 

Notes and. Queries.— Wisdom of Krishna. 

Nott, Eliphalet.—Criminality of Duelling. See Dis¬ 
course Delivered in the North Dutch Church, 
1804, A. 

Death of [Alexander] Hamilton. See Discourse 
Delivered in the North Dutch Church, 1804, A. 
Discourse Delivered in the North Dutch Church, 
1804, A. 

Nott, Martha J.—William Tell and His Son. 

Nott, T: W.—Rum’s Maniac. See also Fenno, F. H. 
One More Year. 

Nursery, The. —Carl’s Menagerie. 

Christmas. 

J ohnny-cake .The. 

Nutting, J. K.—Little Servants. 

Nutting, M. L.—Drinking-house over the Way, The. 

Nye, Bill. See Nye, Edgar Wilson. 

Nye, Edgar Wilson (“Bill Nye”).—Autumn Thoughts. 

Bill Nye on Hornets. 

Bill Nye’s Hired Girl. 

If I were a Boy Again 
Jim Onderdonk’s Sunday-School Oration. 

Legend of the Knot-hole, The. 

*‘Nym Crinkle.” See Wheeler, Andrew Carpenter. 

514 


o 

O., L. E.—Trials That Jar. 

O., W. T.—My Quest. 

Oakey. Emily Sullivan.—Sowing and Harvesting. 
Oberholtzer, Mrs. Sara Louisa [Vickers].— Changed 
Housewife, A. 

Come for Arbutus. 

Dawn of the Centennial, The. 

Going to the Dentist’s. 

Have a Shine, Sah? 

Spirit of Liberty, The. 

O’Brien, Cornelius.—-St. Cecilia. 

O’Brien, Fitz-James.—Ballad of the Shamrock, The. 
Challenge, The. ( Wr. at. to Roger Atkinson 
Pryor.) 

Demon of the Gibbet, The. 

Kane. 

Legend of Easter Eggs. 

Lost Steamship, The. See Second Mate, The. 
Minot’s Ledge. 

Ormolu’s Tenement House. 

Second Mate, The. 

Wanted —Saint Patrick. 

“Occidente, Maria del.” See Brooks, Mrs. Maria 
[Gowen], < _ 4 

Occleve [or Hoccleve], T:—De Regimine Principum. 

Lament for Chaucer. 

O’Connell, Dan’l.—Gentleman Jim. 

Irish Disturbance Bill, The. See On the Irish Dis¬ 
turbance Bill. 

On the Irish Disturbance Bill. 

Press the Protection of the People, The. 

Repeal of the Union. 

Universal Religious Liberty. 

Violation of English Promises. 

O’Connor, Fs.—Country Courtship, A. 

O’Connor, Jos.—Fount of Castaly, The- 
General’s Death, The. 

What Was My Dream? 

White Rose, The. 

O’Connor, Michael.—Reveille. 

O’Daly, Carol.—Eileen a Roon. 

O’Donnell, Jessie Fremont.—Coal Digger, The. 

Great Bell of Pekin, The. 

Sale of the Pig, The. 

“Star-spangled Banner, The.” 

O’Donnell, J: Fs.—Spinning Song, A. 

O’Donovan, J:—Man’s Mortality. ( Tr.) 

What is Man? See Man’s Mortality. 

Offord, Rob’t M.—“Lord, make me quick to see.” 
Ogden, Eva L.—Miller of Dee, The. 

Mistress Sherwood’s Victory. 

Sea, The. 

O’Grady, Standish Jas.—I Give My Heart to Thee. 
Lough Bray. 

O’Hagan, J:—Death of Roland, The. (Tr.) See Song 
of Roland, The. 

Old Story, The. 

Ourselves Alone. 

Protestant Ascendency. 

Song of Roland, The. (TrO 
O’Hagan, T:—Another Year. 

Ripened Fruit. 

Song My Mother Sings, The. 

O’Hara, Theodore.—Bivouac of the Dead, The. 

Muffled Drum’s Sad Roll, The. See Bivouac of 
the Dead, The. 

O’Hare, Teresa B.—Play Softly, Boys. 

O’Keefe, J:—I am a Friar of Orders Gray. See Robin 
Hood. 

Robin Hood. 

Olcott, Millie M.—Census Taker, The. 

Colorado. 

Floral Guide, The. 

Unappreciated Genius. 

Oldham, E: A.—When the Hammock Swings. 

Oldham, J:—Domestic Chaplain, The. See Satire Ad¬ 
dressed to a Friend, etc. 

Quiet Soul, A. 

Satire Addressed to a Friend that is about to 
Leave the University, A. 

Satires upon the Jesuits. 

Oldys, W:—“Busy, curious, thirsty fly.” See Fly, 
The. 

Fly, The. 

On a Fly Drinking out of his Cup. See Fly, The. 
To a Fly. See Fly, The. 

O’Leary, Cormac.—Paddy’s Reflections on Cleopatra’s 
[or Cleopathera’s] Needle. 

Reflections on Cleopathera’s Needle. See Paddy’s 
Reflections on Cleopatra’s Needle. 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Otway 


O’Leary, Ellen.—My Old Home. 

To God and Ireland True. 

Olin, Stephen.—Battle of Life, The. 

Oliphant, Carolina. See Nairne, Baroness. 

Oliphant, Mrs. Margaret Oliphant [Wilson].—Mrs. Har¬ 
wood’s Secret. See Story of a Governess. 
The. 

Story of a Governess, The. 

Oliphant, T:—Where are the Men? (7V.) 

Olive, Frank.—Blacksmith’s Story, The. 

Words and Their Uses. 

Olivers, T:—God of Abraham Praise, The. 

Lo! He Comes, with Clouds Descending! 

Ollivant, Alfred.—Black Killer, The. See Bob, Son of 
Battle. 

Bob, Son of Battle. 

Shepherd’s Trophy, The See Bob, Son of Battle. 
Omaha World. —Farmer’s Conclusion, The. 

Pennsylvanian’s Lament, The. 

Omar Kh&yyhm.—And yet—and yet! See Rubaiyht. 
Life and Death. See Rubaiyat. 

Master-knot, The. See Rubaiyat. 

Moving Finger Writes, The. See Rubaiy&t. 
Overture. See Rubaiy&t. 

Paradise Enow. See Rubaiyftt. 

Phantom Caravan, The. See RubaiyAt. 

Rubaiyfit of Omar Khayy;'im. 

Onderdonk, H: Ustiek. — “Spirit in Our Hearts, 
The. ’ ’ 

O’Neill, Helen F.—United. 

O’Neill, Moira.—Corrymeela. 

Johneen. 

Lookin’ Back. 

“Oofty Gooft.”—’Dis Den I’ll Dink of Dou. 

Dot Sunflower. 

He vas Dhinkin. 

In der Schweed Long Ago. 

Katrina Likes me Poody Veil. 

Schneider’s Ride. (At. also to Gus Phillips.) 
Shonny, Don’d You Hear Me? 

Opie, Mrs. Amelia.—Fatal Falsehood, The. 

Forget Me Not. 

God’s Mark on all Things. See Hymn: “There’s 
not a leaf, ’ ’ etc. 

Hymn: “There’s not a leaf within the bower.” 
Orphan Boy, The. 

Orphan Boy’s Tale, The. See Orphan Boy, 
The. 

Opper, Emma A.—Grandma that’s just Splendid, A. 
May Day. 

Opper, F: Burr.—Her Soliloquy. 

O’Reilly. J: Boyle.—Art Master, An. 

At Best. 

At Fredericksburg. Dec. 13, 1862. 

Boston. 

Boston Massacre, The. See Crispus Attucks. 
Builder’s Lesson, A. 

Chicago. 

Common Citizen-soldier, The. 

Constancy. 

Crispus Attucks. 

Cry of the Dreamer, The. 

Daniel O’Connell. See Nation’s Test, A. 

Dead Singer, The. 

Dukite Snake[: an Australian Bushman’s Story], 
The. 

Dying in Harness. 

Fisherman of Wexford, The. 

Flying Dutchman, The. 

Forever. 

Good, The. See What is Good? 

How? See Builder’s Lesson, A. 

John Mitchel. 

Loss of the Emigrants, The. 

Macarius the Monk. 

Mayflower. 

Monster Diamond, The. 

My Native Land. 

Nation’s Test, A. 

Old School Clock, The. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The. 

Press Evangel, The. 

Released [January, 1878—C.] 

Republic of New England, The. See Common 
Citizen-soldier, The. 

Ride of Collin Graves, The. 

Savage, A. 

Wendell Phillips. 

What is Good? 

What is the Real Good? See What is Good? 
White Rose, A. 

Wonderful Country, The. 

“O’Reilly, Miles.” See Halpine, C: Graham. 


Oriel, Patience.—Light in the Window, The. 

Little Efrum’s Ride. 

"Orinda.” See Philips, Katha. 

Orleans, Charles d’. See Charles, Duke of Orleans. 
Ormsby, J: (Tr.). —Count Raymond and My Cid. See 
Poem of the Cid. 

My Cid’s Triumph. See Poem of the Cid. 

Poem of the Cid. 

Ormsby, Mary F.—Music of Nature, The. 

Orne, Caroline Frances.—Letter of Marque, The. 

No Work the Hardest Work. 

Toilers, The. See No Work the Hardest Work. 

Osborne,-.—Miser Fitly Punished, The. 

Woman. 

Osborne, Duffield. See Osborne, (S:) Duffield. 
Osborne, Rose.—Bell of the Angels, The. See Legend, A. 
Legend,A. 

Osborne, (S:) Duffield.—Ave! Nero Imperator. 

Fall of Jericho, The. See Spell of Ashtaroth, The. 
Spell of Ashtaroth, The. 

Osborne, Selleck.—Modest Wit, A. 

Osgood, Mrs. Frances Sargent [Locke].—“Angel face, 
its sunny wealth of hair, An.” See Woman’s 
Trust. (Wr. at. to Edgar Allan Poe.) 

Bois Ton Sang, Beaumanoir. 

Calumny. 

Dancing Girl, A. 

I Have Something Sweet to Tell You. 

Labor. See Labor is Worship. 

Labor is Worship. 

Lahore est Orare. See Labor is Worship. 

Little Things. (At.) See Carnet, Mrs. Julia 
A. T. 

On a Dead Poet. 

On Sivori’s Violin. 

Song: “Your heart is a music-box, dearest.” 

To Labor is to Pray. See Labor is Worship. 

To Sleep. 

Woman’s Trust. 

Osgood, Kate Putnam.—Cob House[s], The. 

Driving Home the Cows. 

Sunset in the Orchard. 

What? 

What Else? 

O’Shaughnessy, Arthur W: Edgar.—At Her Grave. 
Bisclaveret. 

Enchainment. 

Epic of Women. See Bisclaveret. 

Fair Maid and the Sun, The. 

Fountain of Tears, The. 

Greater Memory. 

Has Summer Come without the Rose? See Song: 

“Has summer come without the rose?” 
Herodias. 

I Made Another Garden. See Song: “I made an¬ 
other garden, yea.” 

If She but Knew. 

In Love’s Eternity. 

Keeping a Heart. 

Love after Death. 

Love Symphony, A. 

Lynmouth. 

Ode: “We are the music makers.” 

St. John Baptist. 

Silences. 

Song: “Has summer come without the rose?” 
Song: "I made another garden, yea.” 

Song: “I went to her who loveth me no more.’ 
Song of Palms. 

Spectre of the Past, The. 

Zuleika. 

Osier, E:—Praise. 

Ossian. See Macpherson, Jas. 

Ostrander, Luther A.—Opinions Stronger than Armies. 
O’Sullivan, Dennis.—“Will My Soul Pass through Ire¬ 
land?” 

O’Sullivan, J: L.—Djinns, The. (Tr.) 

Oswald, J: I.—Toast to the Ladies, A. 

Otis, Jas.—Mother’s Children. See Muzzer’s Children. 
Muzzer’s Children. 

On the Stamp Act. 

On the Writs of Assistance. 

Otterson, F. J.—Bridal in Eden, The. 

Ottolengui, B. A. R.—Switchman’s Story, The. 

Otway, T:—Candor. 

Enchantment, The. 

I Did but Look. See Enchantment, The. 

Jaffier Parting with Belvidera. See Venice Pre¬ 
served. 

Orphan, The. 

Poet's Complaint of His Muse, The. 

Priuli and Jaffier. See Venice Preserved. 

Venice Preserved. 


515 






Oughton 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Oughton, Mrs. T. S.—Noten Like a Patience. 
“Ouida.” See La Ramee, Louise de. 

Oulton, Walley Chamberlain (?).—Irishman’s Lesson, 
The. 

“Our Fat Contributor.” See Griswold, A. Minor. 
Our Little Men and Women. —Suppose. 

Our Little Ones. —If. 

Two Little Bears. 

Where Did They Go? 

Our Youth. —Which Side are You On? 

Ousley, Clarence N.—Tears. 

Outlook. —Baby of the Future, The. 

Outram, G.—Annuity, The. 

Overton, Rob’t.—Heroes'of Inkerman. 

Idiot Lad, The. 

Jail-bird’s Story, A. 

Jim: a Hero. 

Juberlo Tom. 

Little Charlie. [As told by an English Jail 
Bird.] 

Me and Bill. 

Peter Adair. 

Three Parsons, The. [A Sailor Deacon’s Story.] 
Turning the Points. 

Owen, F. M.—Children’s Music, The. 

Owen, Rob’t Dale.—Factory Girl’s Last Day, The. 
Owens, A. F.—Where is my Hat? 

OweDs, J. J.—Cleopatra’s Dream. 

Oxenford, J:—I Love Thee. 

Oxenham, H: Nutcombe.—“Earth with its bright and 
glorious things, The.” 

Oxford, E: Vere, Earl of. —Fancy and Desire. 
Renunciation, A. 


P 

P., D. D.—“If she knew that I am Cupid ” 

P., F. M.—“Desultory Reading.” 

P., G. A.—Resolved? 

P., H. E.—Banish the Snakes. 

P., H. K.—Farewell of the Birds. 

What’s the Matter? 

P., M.—Song of the Mad Poet. 

P., M. A.—Winter Dawn. 

P., P. A.—My Callie. 

P., R. S.—Acrostic Plaint, An. 

P., S.—Song, A: “Oh, the hopper grass is clattering and 
flying all the day.” 

P., S. F.—American Girl, The. 

P., T. G.—Thorn that Guards, The. 

Pabodie, W: Jewett.—Forest, The. See Thoughts on 
the Forest. 

Our Country. 

Thoughts on the Forest. 

Packard, Charlotte M.—Vespers. 

Pagan, Isabel.—Ca’ the Yowes [to the Knowes], {At.) 

See also Burns, Rob’t. 

Page, Herman.—Heroic Medley. 

Page, Marv Eli.—Days of the Week. 

Page, R. W.—Carolina. 

Sea Gulls. 

Page, T: Nelson.—Ashcake. 

Billington’s Valentine. 

How Jinny Eased Her Mind. 

Soldier of the Empire, The. 

Uncle Gabe’s White Folks. 

Valentine Verses. See Billington’s Valentine. 
Pain, Barry.—Martin Luther at Potsdam. 

Oh! Weary Mother. 

Poets at Tea, The. 

Paine, Albert Bigelow.— House of too Much Trouble, 
The. 

In Louisiana. 

Little Child, The. 

Mis’ Smith. 

New Memorial Day, The. 

Sary “Fixes up” Things. 

Tale of a Dog, The. 

Why Sammy Left the Farm. 

Paine, Ralph D.—Sailing. 

Paine, Rob’t Treat—Columbia and Liberty. 

Unselfishness of Washington, The. 

Paine, T:—Birthday of the Republic, The. 

Castle in the Air, The. 

Liberty Tree[, The]. 

Painter, Florence. —“Choosing a State Tree”— The 
Hickory. 

Paley, WHappy World, A. See Natural The¬ 
ology. 

Natural Theology. 

Palfrey, R. S.—Three o’clock in the Morning. 


Palfrey, Sarah Hammond.—Child’s Plea, The. 
Exchange, The. 

Fifer and Drummer of Scituate, The. 

Pilgrim, The. 

Sir Pavon and St. Pavon. 

Palgrave, Fs. Turner.—Ancient and Modem Muses, 
The. 

Danish Barrow, A. 

Elizabeth at Tilbury. 

“If thou couldst know thine own sweetness.” 
Little Child’s Plymn, A. 

Love’s Language. 

Pro Mortius. 

To a Child. 

William Wordsworth. 

Pall Mall Gazette. —Bachelor’s Invocation, A. 

Palmer, Mrs. Alice [Freeman].—Four Mottoes. 

Palmer, Arthur.—Epicharis. 

Palmer, E. H.—-Parterre, The. 

Shipwreck, The. 

Palmer, F. S.—Nature’s Poem. 

Palmer, F. W.—Piece of Bunting, A. 

Palmer, H: Robinson.—Two Views of War. 

Palmer, H: W.—Soliloquy at the Oak Grove (8.55 
A. M.). 

Visitation. 

Palmer, J: Williamson.—Fight at [the] San Jacinto, 
The. 

For Charlie’s Sake. 

Maryland Battalion, The. 

Stonewall Jackson’s Way. 

Thread and Song. 

Palmer, Loren.—Boat o’ Dreams. 

My Fire. 

Palmer, Rev. Ray.—Crown, The. 

Faith. 

Holmes, Extract Concerning. 

I Saw Thee. 

My Faith Looks up to Thee. See Faith. 

Soul’s Cry, The. 

Unfaltering Trust. 

Unseen, not Unknown. 

Palmer, W: Pitt.—Kiss in School, The. See Smack 
in School, The. 

Light. 

Smack in School, The. 

Palmerston, J. H. Temple, Viscount. —Civil War the 
Greatest National Evil. 

Paradise. Mrs. Caroline Wilder [Fellowes],—Little 
Theocritus. 

Pardee, Julia.—Beacon Light, The. 

Pardessus, S J.—Marriage Tour, A. 

No. 5 Collect Street. 

Park, Mrs. A. G.—April’s Fools. 

Park, Mungo.—Women of Sego, The. 

Park, W: G.—May. 

Parke, J. R.—When Should a Girl Marry? 

Parke, Walter.—“There was a young man who was 
bitten.” 

Young Gazelle, The. 

Parker, B: S.—“There is a glory in tree and blossom.” 
Parker, Fred A.—Political Stump Speech, A. 

Parker, H.—Loyal Hearts. 

Parker, Sir (Horatio) Gilbert.—Art. See Lover’s 
Diary, A. 

Battle of the Strong, The. 

Envoy. See Lover’s Diary, A. 

I Loved my Art. See Lover’s Diary, A. 
Invincible. See Lover’s Diary, A. 

It is Enough. 

“Little Garaine.” 

Lover’s Diary, A. 

Love’s Outset. See Lover’s Diary, A. 

Reunited. See Lover’s Diary, A. 

Scaling of Perc6 Rock, The. See Battle of the 
Strong, The. 

Their Waving Hands. See Lover’s Diary, A. 
Woman’s Hand, A. See Lover’s Diary, A. 
“Parker, Hyde.”—Three Topers. 

Parker, J:—His Care. 

Parker, Joseph.—Eulogy on Henry Ward Beecher. 

“If a man’s mind be thoroughly alive, he can¬ 
not be content with good health.” 

“There are parts of our life we do not like to 
think about.” 

“To-day the great question that is stirring men’s 
hearts.” 

Parker, L: N.—Field of Wagram, The. (TV.) 

Parker, Martyn.—Ye Gentlemen of England. 

Parker, Theodore.—Against the Fugitive Slave Law. 
Almighty Love, The. 

Aunt Kindly. 

Children of the Poor, The. 


516 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Peabody 


Parker, Theodore ( continued ). 

Grandfather’s Reverie. 

Higher Good, The. 

Hymn: “In darker days and nights of storm.” 

See Almighty Love, The. 

Jesus. 

Love of Justice. 

March of Freedom, The. 

National Injustice. 

“O, Thou Great Friend to all the Sons of Men.” 

See Way, the Truth, and the Life, The. 
Reminiscence of Lexington, A. 

Slave of Boston, The. 

Thoughts for a New Year. 

Washington at Valley Forge. 

Way, the Truth, and the Life, The. 

Parkhurst, C: H.—Christian Citizenship. 

Corruption of Municipal Government, The. . 

Moral Crisis, A. 

Piety and Civic Virtue. 

Pulpit and Politics, The. 

Parkinson, Amy.—Messenger Hours, The. 

Parkman, Fs.—Battle of the Plains of Abraham, The. 

See Montcalm and Wolfe. 

Montcalm and Wolfe. 

Parlor Magazine. —Fifty Years Apart. 

Parmelee, M. L.—Claribel’s Prayer. 

Parmely [or Parmele], Rev. L.—Independence Day. 
Parnell, Frances [or Fanny] Isabel.—After Death. See 
Post Mortem. 

Post Mortem. 

Parnell, T:—Bookworm, The. (TV.) 

Hermit, The. 

Hymn to Contentment, A. 

“Night-piece on Death, A.” 

Song: “When thy beauty appears.” 

When Your Beauty Appears. See Song: ‘‘When 
thy beauty appears.” 

Parry, Sarah.—-Joseph Clayton. 

Parsons, Edith F.— Sea-bird’s Cry, The. 

Parsons, Eugene.—Landlady’s Daughter, The, (TV.) 

Lines to the Des Moines River. 

Parsons, Laura S.—I Guess I’m the Man. 

Parsons, S. B.—Father’s Choice, The. 

Parsons, T: William.—Andrew. 

Bust of Dante. See On a Bust of Dante. 

Dirge for One Who Fell in Battle. 

Epitaph on a Child. 

Everett. 

Groomsman to his Mistress, The. 

Groomsman to the Bridesmaid, The. See Grooms¬ 
man to his Mistress, The. 

Her Epitaph. 

Into the Noiseless Country. 

“Like as the Lark.” 

Mary Booth. 

Mercedes. 

O ye Sweet Heavens! 

Obituary. 

On a Bust of Dante. 

On a Lady Singing. 

Paradisi Gloria. 

Saint Peray. 

Song for September, A. 

Taking of Sebastopol, The. 

To a Lady. 

To a Young Girl Dying. 

Parton, Mrs. Sarah Payson [Willis] [Eldridge] (‘‘Fanny 
Fern”).—Little Allie. 

Quiet Mr. Smith, The. 

Romance at Home. 

“Partington, Mrs.” See Shillaber, B: Penhallow. 
Partridge, S: William.—“Not to Myself Alone.” (At. 

also to J. R. Webb.) 

Partridge, W: Ordway.—Change. 

Master’s Work, The. 

Pascal, Blaise.—Greatness and Littleness of Man, The. 

See Thoughts. 

“Man is but a reed, the weakest in nature.” See 
Thoughts. 

Profession of Faith. 

Thoughts. 

Pastner. Paul.—Maiden Missionary, The. 

Patmore, Coventry.—Amelia. 

Angel in the House, The. 

Dean’s Consent, The. See Angel in the House, 
The. 

Departure. 

Dragon of Want ley. The. 

Evening Scene, An. See River, The. 

Farewell. A. 

Girl of All Periods, The. 

Going to Church. See Angel in the House, I he. 

517 


Patmore, Coventry (continued). 

Honoria. See Angel in the House, The. 
Honoria’s Surrender. See Angel in the House, 
The. 

“If I were Dead.” 

If Thou didst Bid thy Friend Farewell. See 
Parting. 

Joy. See Angel in the House, The. 

Love Ceremonies. See Angel in the House, The. 
Magna est Veritas. 

Married Lover, The. See Angel in the House, 
The. 

Night Thoughts. See Angel in the House, The. 
Nunc Amet Qui Nunquam Amavit. See Angel 
in the House, The. 

Paradox, The. See Angel in the House, The. 
Parting. 

Queen, The. See Angel in the House, The. 
Regina Coeli. 

River, The. 

Rose of the World, The. See Angel in the House, 
The. 

Sentences. See Angel in the House, The. 

She was Mine. See Angel in the House, The. 

Sly Thoughts. See Angel in the House, The. 
Sweet Meeting of Desires. See Angel in the 
House, The. 

Toys, The. 

Tribute, The. See Angel in the House, The. 
Truth is Great. See Magna est Veritas. 

Two Deserts, The. 

Winter. 

Wisdom. See Angel in the House, The. 

Paton, Sir Joseph Noel.—Last of the Eurydice, The. 
Requiem. 

Patten, G: William.—Defiant Seminole Chief, The. 
See Seminole’s Defiance, The. 

Seminole’s Defiance, The. 

Seminole’s Reply, The. See Seminole’s Defiance. 
The. 

Patterson, C. H.—Why? 

Patterson, Jas. Willis.—Again Brethren and Equals. 
“If all our youth, sprung from whatever na¬ 
tionality.” 

Patterson, Minnie W.—Dot and Dolly. 

Paul, -.—Stray Parrot, A. 

Paul, Brother. —Cordelie. 

Paul, C. K.—Lines: “In the merry hay-time,” etc. 
Paul, Howard.—Change of System, A. 

Touch Snuff Story, The. 

“Paul, J:” See Webb, C:H: 

Paulding, James Kirke.—Humbugging a Tourist. (?) 
Old Man’s Carousal, The. 

Quarrel of Squire Bull and His Son Jonathan 
[, The], 

Pauli, Mrs. G: W.—Chimes of Amsterdam, The. 
Paxton, J: R.—Corporal of Chancellorsville, The. 
Payn, James.—Mrs. B.’s Alarms. 

Payne, J:—Cadences. 

Love’s Autumn. 

Sibyl. 

Songs’ End. 

Thorgerda. 

Payne, J: Howard.—Brutus on the Death of Lucretia. 
See Brutus; or, The Fall of Tarquin. 

Brutus; or. The Fall of Tarquin. 

Brutus over the Dead Lucretia. See Brutus; or. 
The Fall of Tarquin. 

Brutus over the Body of Lucretia. See Brutus; 
or, The Fall of Tarquin. 

Clari, the Maid of Milan. See Home, Sweet 
Home! 

Home, Sweet Home. 

Home! Sweet! Sweet Home. See Home, Sweet 
Home! 

Lucius Junius Brutus[’s Oration] over the Body of 
Lucretia. See Brutus; or. The Fall of Tarquin. 
Roman Father, The. See Brutus; or. The Fall of 
Tarquin. 

Sweet Home. See Home, Sweet Home. 

Payne, Percy Somers.—Rest. 

Payne, Rob’t Treat, Jr.—Eulogy on Washington. 
Payne, W: Morton.—Ej Blot Til Lyst. 

Incipit Vita Nova. 

Lohengrin. 

Tannhauser. 

Payson, E:—“What if God should place in your hand 
a diamond.” 

Payson, Eliz. See Prentiss, Mrs. Eliz. [Payson]. 
Payson, Lillian.—Sweet Peas. 

Peabodie, W: J. See Pabodie, W: J. 

Peabody, Andrew P.—Idle Words. 

Peabody, Clarence W.—In Bachelor’s Hall. 





Peabody 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Peabody, Ephraim.—Skating Song. 

Peabody, Josephine Preston.—After Music. 

Caravans. 

Changeling Grateful, A. 

Far-off Rose', A. 

Isolation. 

Prelude. 

Rubric. 

Sonnet in a Garden. 

Wood-song. 

Peabody, S. C.—Contentment. 

Peabody, W: J. See Pabodie, W: J. 

Peabody, W: Bourne Oliver.—Autumn Evening, The. 
Lament of Anastasius. 

Moses in Sight of the Promised Land. 

Ruth and Naomi. 

Spring. 

Peacock, T: Love.—Cauldron of Ceridwen, The. 
Crotchet Castle. 

Flower of Love, The. See Melincourt. 

Grave of Love, The. 

Llyn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd. See Crotchet Castle. 
Love and Age. 

Margaret Love Peacock. 

Melincourt. 

Men of Gotham, The. See Nightmare Abbey. 
Misfortunes of Elphin, The. 

Mr. Cypress’s Song in Ridicule of Lord Byron. 

See Nightmare Abbey. 

Nightmare Abbey. 

Oh! Say not Woman’s Heart is Bought. See She 
Loves and Loves Forever. 

Pool of the Diving Friar, The. See Crotchet 
Castle. 

Priest and the Mulberry Tree, The. 

Rhododaphne. 

She Loves and Loves Forever. 

Song: “For the tender beech and the sapling oak.” 
Song: "Oh! say not woman’s heart is bought.” 

See She Loves and Loves Forever. 

Spell of the Laurel Rose, The. See Rhododaphne. 
Three Men of Gotham. See Nightmare Abbey. 
Vengeance of Bacchus, The. See Rododaphne. 
War-song of Dinas-Vawr, The. See Misfortunes 
of Elphin, The. 

Peale, E: H.—How Three were Made One. 

Peale, Rembrandt.—Don’t be Sorrowful, Darling. 

Faith and Hope. See Don’t be Sorrowful, Darling. 
Pearre, O. F.—My Neighbor Jim. 

Our Heroes. 

What’s the Difference? 

Pearson, Harlan Colby.—Faint Heart. 

Pearson, H: Clemens.—Purpose, A. 

Pease, Calvin. (?)—Ye May Drink, if Ye List. 

Peaslee, Prof. J: B.—Arbor Day. 

“Broad-minded selection of noble passages, A.” 
Peat, Mrs. C. M.—Laughter. Nee Philosophy of 
Laughter. 

Motto; or. Example, The. 

Philosophy of Laughter. 

Peck, Ellen O.—-Good-bye. 

Half an Hour with the Poets. 

Peck, G: R.—John A. Logan. 

Peck, Georgia A.—Little Turncoats. 

My Neighbor’s Call. 

Overflow of Great River, The. 

Peck, H. P.—Cannon Song. 

Peck, Harry Thurston.—Heliotrope. 

Jefferson Davis. 

Other One, The. 

Unter den Linden. 

Victor and Vanquished. 

Wonderland. 

Peck, Rev. J. O.—No Surrender! No Compromise. 
Peck, Mary B.—Early Christmas Morning. 

Peck, Philip C.—Lost Memory, A. 

Peck, S: Minturn.—All for You. 

Among My Books. 

Autumn’s Mirth. 

Bessie Brown, M. D. 

Captain’s Feather, The. 

Cupid at Court. 

Dollie. 

Dream-love. 

Fate of Sin Foo, The; or, The Origin of the Tea 
Plant. 

Grapevine Swing, The. 

I Wonder What Maud Will Say? 

Kiss in the Rain, A. 

Knot of Blue, A. See Little Knot of Blue, A. 
Little Bo-Peep and Little Boy-Blue. 

Little Knot of Blue, A. 

Love that Lives for Aye, The. 


Peck, S: Minturn ( continued ). 

Mignon. 

My First Kiss. 

My Grandmother’s Fan. 

My Little Girl. 

My Sweetheart. 

Priscilla. 

Sassafras. 

Sea-side Flirtation, A. 

Southern Girl, A. 

When Mabel Smiles. 

Peck’s Sun. —Bad Boy and the Limburger Cheese, The. 

Royal Bumper Degree, The. 

Peel, Sir Rob’t.—Legislative Union, The. 

Peele, G:—Aged Man-at-Arms, The. See Farewell to 
Arms, A. 

Arraignment of Paris, The. 

Fair and Fair. 

Farewell to Arms, [A]. 

Farewell to Sir John Norris and Sir Francis Drake, 
A. 

Handiwork of Flora, The. See Arraignment of 
Paris The 

Harvester’s Song, The. See Old Wives’ Tale, The. 
Harvestmen, a-Singing. See Old Wives’ Tale, The. 
Old Wives’ Tale, The. 

Song of Paris and (Enone[, The]. See Arraign¬ 
ment of Paris, The. 

Peet, Kate E.—New Muff and Collar, The. 

Pelham, Nettie H.—Overdrawn Accounts. 

Playing for Keeps. 

Reply to “A Woman’s Question.” 

Pellew, G:—Death. 

On a Cast from an Antique. 

Peltree, J. T. See Pettee, J. T. 

Pember, E. C.—Per gl’ Occh Almeno non v’6 Claiisura. 
Pemberton, Harriet L. Childe. See Childe-Pember- 
ton, Harriet L. 

Pembroke, Mary [Sidney] Herbert, Countess of. Psalm 
XCIII. (At. also to Philip Sidney.) 

Psalm XCVI. (At. also to Philip Sidney.) 

Psalm CXXXIX. (At. also to Philip Sidney.) 

Sing unto the Lord. See Psalm XCVI. 

Penfield, Kathe. C.—Empty Prayer, An. 

Penn, W:—Think before You Speak. 

Pennefather, Mrs. C.—Not Now. 

Pennell, H: Cholmondeley. Nee Cholmondeley-Pen- 
nell, H: 

Pennell, P. S.—There’s Business for All. 

Penney, Hattie A.—Little Leaf’s Sacrifice. 

Penney, W: Edward.—Davy and Goliar. 

Kid Sixey’s Christmas. 

“There was a Crooked Man.” 

Pennypacker, B. A.—Complaint, A. (At. also to 
Tudor Jenks.) 

Pennypacker, I: W.—Tale of Providence, A. 
Pennypacker, J. L.—Engaged. 

Pentecost, Rev. G: F.—God’s Clock Strikes. 

Saloon in Relation to Morals, The. 

People’s Magazine. —Memory. 

Percival, Jas. Gates.—Coral Grove. The. 

Elegiac. 

Graves of the Patriots, The. 

“In eastern lands they talk in flowers.” See Lan¬ 
guage of Flowers, The. 

It is Great for our Country to Die. See Elegiac. 
Language of Flowers, The. 

Lily [of the Valley], The. 

May. See Reign of May, The. 

Morning among the Hills. 

My Love. 

New England. 

Perry’s Victory [on Lake Erie—C.]. 

Poetry. 

Reign of May, The. 

Remembrance. See Retrospection. 

Retrospection. 

Seneca Lake. See To Seneca Lake. 

To Seneca Lake. 

Washington’s Name. 

Percy, Edith M.—Yesterday. 

“Percy, Florence.” See Allen, Mrs. Eliz. Ann [Chase] 
[Akers], 

Percy, T: (editor). See Reliques of Ancient English 
Poetry, in Title Index. 

Pericles.—Glory of Athens. 

Perkins, Charlotte. See Gilman, Mrs. Charlotte 
[Perkins] [Stetson], 

“Perkins, Eli.” See Landon, Melville De Lancet. 
Perkins, G. M.—Prophet, The. 

To the Evening Star. 

Perkins, Helen Standish.—Little Visitor, A. 

Through the Lovely Vale. 


518 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Phillips 


Perronet, E:—Coronation. 

Perry, Carlotta [Charlotte Augusta—C.].—Guided by 
a Star. 

How the Bees Came by their Sting. 

Little Boy’s Troubles, A. 

Love is Eternal. 

Love’s Meaning. 

Only. 

Procrustes’ Bed. 

True Story of Little Boy Blue, The. 

Unbidden Guest, The. 

With Clearer Vision. 

Work that is Best, The. 

Perry, H: G.—Triple Tie, The. 

Perry, Ivathe. H.—Every-day Botany. 

Perry, Lilia Cabot.—Art. 

Life and Death. 

Meeting after Long Absence. 

Perry, Nora.—After the Ball. 

Coming of Spring, The. 

Cressid. 

In June. 

Jim. 

Lesson of Trust, The. 

Loss and Gain. 

Love-knot, The. 

Next Year. 

Prayer, A. 

Riding Down. 

Romance of a Rose, The, 

Some Day of Days. ( At. also to Eliz. S. Phelps.) 
That Waltz of Von Weber. 

To-morrow at Ten. 

Tying Her Bonnet under Her Chin. 

Who Knows? 

Perry, Susan Teall.—Katie’s Part. 

Little Boy Who Ran Away, The. 

Little Maid’s Sermon, The. 

Persell, G: A.—On a Pet Cat. 

Peter, W:—Damon and Pythias; or, True Friendship. 
Danae. ( Tr.) 

Peters, K. A.—How Colonel Ashton Signed the Pledge. 
Peters, Mrs. Phillis [Wheatley], On the Death of the 
Rev. George Whitefield. 

Peterson, Arthur.—Kelpius’s Hymn. 

Peterson, Frd’k.—Solitude. 

Sweetest Flower that Blows, The. 

Peterson, H:—Death of Lyon, The. See Lyon. 
Execution of Andr4, The. See Pemberton. 
Lyon. 

“Memento Mori.” 

Ode for Decoration Day. 

Pemberton. 

Rinaldo. 

Petit, Amelie V.—Sun and the Violet, The. 

Petrarch, Francesco.—Sonnet from Petrarch. 

Vision of the Fawn, The. 

Pettee, G. W.—Sleigh Song. 

Pettee [or Peltree], Rev. J. T.—Prayer and Potatoes. 
Pettinos, Sarah J.-—Song of Arbor Day. 

Pettit, W: S.—At the Rock. 

Pfeffel, Gottlieb Konrad.—Nobleman and the Pen¬ 
sioner, The. 

Pfeiffer, Emily.—Song of Winter, A. 

To a Moth that Drinketh of the Ripe October. 
To the Herald Honeysuckle. 

Pfizer, Gustav.—Two Locks of Hair, The. 

Phelps, Amos A.—Prohibition the Ujtimatum. 

Phelps, Austin.—Earnest Views of Life. 

“If the sinner persists in rejecting Christ, the ruin 
of his soul will be his own work.” 

“Sin runs to passion; passion to tumult in char¬ 
acter.” 

Phelps, C: Henry.—Henry Ward Beecher. 

Rare Moments. 

Yuma. 

Phelps, Mrs. Dawson M.—“Lily’s” Thanksgiving, 
The. 

Phelps, E: John.—Battle of Bennington, The. 

Chief Justice Marshall. 

Farewell to England. 

Sovereignty of the People, The. 

Phelps, Egbert.—Life’s Incongruities. 

Phelps, Eliz. Stuart. See Ward, Mrs. Eliz. Stuart 
[Phelps]. 

Phelps, L. L.—Harry’s Logic. 

Phelps, Pauline.—Average Boy, The. 

Back in War Days. 

Firetown's New Schoolhouse. 

How Mr. Simonson Took Care of the Baby. 

Jolly Brick, A. 

Just Commonplace. 

Just Like Them. 


Phelps, Pauline ( continued). 

Old Benedict Arnold. 

Scorching versus Diamonds. 

Spinster Thurber’s Carpet. 

Story of Hard Times, A. 

Phelps, Mrs. Phoebe Harris.—Socks for John Randall. 

Phelps, Sheffield.—With Roses. 

Phelps, Sylvan us Dryden. — Ode for Decoration 
Day. 

Philadelphia Press. —“Great end of education is not 
information. The.” 

Modern Seer, A. 

Robert Browning. 

Philadelphia Record. —War ship of 1812, The. 

Philadelphia Times. —Pipe, The. 

Philips, Ambrose.—Albino. 

Blest as the Immortal Gods. (TV.) 

Fragment from Sappho, A. (Tr.) See Blest as the 
Immortal Gods. 

Ode to Miss Carteret, The. 

To Charlotte Pulteney. See To Miss Charlotte 
Pulteney, in her Mother’s Arms. 

To Miss Charlotte Pulteney, in Her Mother’s Arms. 

Philips, Barclay.—Holiday Task, A. See Polka 
Lyric, A. 

Polka Lyric, A. (At. also to G. A. h Becket.) 

Philips, J:—Splendid Shilling, The. 

Philips, Kathe. (“Orinda”).—To One Persuading a 
Lady to Marriage. 

Phillips, -.—Infidelity not Friendly to Freedom. 

Phillips, C:—America. 

American Republic, The. See America. 

Analysis of the Character of Bonaparte. See 
Napoleon Bonaparte. 

Appeal to the Jury. 

Character of Napoleon Bonaparte. See Napoleon 
Bonaparte. 

Character of Washington. See Washington. 

Destiny of America. See America. 

For Decoration Day. 

Napoleon Bonaparte. 

Panegyric on America. See America. 

Value of Reputation. 

Washington. 

Phillips, G: Searle (“January Searle”).—Geordie to 
his Tobacco-pipe. See Gypsies of the Dane’s 
Dike. 

Gypsies of the Dane’s Dike. 

Phillips, Gus.—Schneider’s Ride. (At. also to “Oofty 
Gooft..”) 

Phillips, Philip.—Home of the Soul. 

Phillips, Stephen.—Herod. 

Marpessa. 

Paolo and Francesca. 

Phillips, Susan Kelly.—Between the Lines. 

In November. 

We Shall Be Satisfied. 

Phillips, Rev. W r . O.—Frances E. Willard Exercise. 

Phillips, Wendell.—Burial of John Brown, The. 

Christian Citizenship. 

Daniel O’Connell. 

Daniel O’Connell the Orator. See Daniel O’Con¬ 
nell. 

Daniel O’Connell’s Power over the Irish People. 
See Daniel O’Connell. 

Distrust of the People. See Scholar in a Repub¬ 
lic, The. 

Educate the Masses. See Scholar in a Republic, 
The. 

Eloquence of O’Connell, The. See Daniel O’Con¬ 
nell. 

Enforcement of the Liquor Law, The. See Maine 
Liquor Law, The. 

Higher Views of the Union. See Lincoln’s Elec¬ 
tion. 

Idols. 

Is This AH? See Lincoln’s Election. 

“I will not speak of war in itself.” See War for 
the Union, The. 

Lincoln’s Election. 

Lost Arts, The. 

Maine Liquor Law, The. 

Murder of Lovejoy [, at Alton, Illinois, 1837], 
The. 

Napoleon Bonaparte and Toussaint L’Ouverture. 
See Toussaint L’Ouverture. 

Necessity of Outside Agitation, The. See Daniel 
O’Connell. 

Old South Meeting-house, The. 

Permanency of Empire, The. 

Pilgrims, The. 

Plea for the Old South Church, Boston. See Old 
South Meeting-house, The. 


519 





Phillips 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Phillips, Wendell ( continued ). 

Public Opinion. 

Russian Nihilism. 

Scholar in a Republic, The. 

Scholar’s Distrust, The. See Scholar in a Re¬ 
public, The. 

Temperance. See Maine Liquor Law, The. 
Temperance Question, The. See Maine Liquor 
Law, The. 

Toussaint L’Ouverture. 

War for the Union, The. 

What We Owe the Pilgrims. See Pilgrims, The. 
William Lloyd Garrison. 

Philostratus.—Drink to me only with Thine Eyes. 

See Jonson, Ben. 

Philpot, W:—Maritae Suae. 

Phoenix , The. —Dux's Speech. 

“Phoster, Esse.”—“Der Wreck of der Hezberus.” 
Piatt, J: Jas.—Book of Gold, A. 

Child in the Street, The. 

Farther. 

Glow-worm and Star. 

Guerdon, The. 

Ireland. 

Leaves at My Window. 

Lost Genius, The. 

Morning Street, The. 

Mower in Ohio, The. 

Purpose. 

Rose and Root. 

Song of Content, A. 

To a Lady. 

To Abraham Lincoln. 

Torch-light in Autumn. 

Transfiguration. 

Two Kings. 

"We may not stand content; it is our part.” 
Piatt, Mrs. Sarah Morgan [Bryan],—After Wings. 
Answer of the Gardener, The. 

Call on Sir W alter Raleigh, A. 

Dance of the Daisies, The. 

Dream’s Awakening, A. 

Envoy. 

Faith. 

Gift of Tears, The. 

In Clonmel Parish Churchyard. 

Into the World and Out. 

Irish Wild-flower, An. 

My Babes in the Wood. 

Questions of the Hour. 

Term of Death, The. 

Tradition of Conquest. 

Transfigured. 

Watch of a Swan, The. 

We Two. 

When Saw We Thee. 

Witch in the Glass, The. 

Word with a Skylark, A. 

Pichat, ——-.—Leonidas to His Three Hundred. (7V.) 
Pickering, Ellen.—Drawing a Long Bow. 

Fortune Hunter, The. 

Matrimonial Tiff, A. (?) 

Now or Never, 

Reception, The. 

Report, The. 

Scandal Monger, The. (?) 

Shocking Mistake, A. (?) 

Uncle, The; or, “Comparisons are Odious.” 
Wedding Day, The.. 

Will, The. 

Pickering, Julia.—Meriky’s Conversion. 

Pickering, Theodosia.—When George was King. 
Pickhardt, Emile.—Unsophisticated. 

Pier, R.—Summer’s Day, A. 

Pierce, E: Lillie.—View from Lookout Mountain, The. 
Pierce, Etta W.—Wedding-gown, The. 

Pierce, Fred’k. E.—Moonlight on the Campus. 

Pierce, G. W.—My Politics. 

Pierpont, J:—Ballot, The. 

Bunker Hill. 

Evening Hymn for a Child. 

Exile at Rest, The. See Napoleon at Rest. 
“Fourth of July.” 

Fugitive Slave’s Apostrophe to the North Star, 
The. 

Gen. Joseph Warren’s Address. See Warren’s Ad¬ 
dress. 

General Warren to His Troops at the Battle of 
Bunker Hill. See Warren’s Address. 

Hymn of the Last Supper. 

Kindapping of Sims, The. 

Morning Hymn for a Child. 

Music of Nature. (?) 


Pierpont, J: ( continued ). 

My Child. 

Napoleon at Rest. 

Not on the Battle-field. 

Passing Away. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The. (IF. add. by M’Lellan.) 
Sparkling Bowl, The. 

Stand! the Ground’s Your Own. See Warren’s 
Address. 

“Sword! a name of dread, The.” 

Two Hundred Years. (?) 

Universal Worship. 

Warren’s Address. 

Warren’s Address at the Battle of Bunker Hill . 
See Warren’s Address. 

Warren’s Address before the Battle of Bunker’s 
Hill. See Warren’s Address. 

W T arren’s Address to the American Soldiers. See 
Warren’s Address. 

W’arren’s Supposed Address at Bunker Hill. See 
Warren’s Address. 

Washington as a Leader. 

“Weapon that comes down as still, A.” See Bal¬ 
lot, The. 

Whittling. 

Whittling—a Yankee Portrait. See Whittling. 
Whittling Typical of Young America. See Whit¬ 
tling. 

Yankee Boy, The. See Whittling. 

Pierson, Clarence H.—Why Jim Forsook the Ministry. 
Pierson, E. De Lancey.—At the Opera. 

Four Flies], a Boarding House Episode], The. 
Pierson, Jennie.—Choosing a “State Tree”—the Ash. 
Pifer, Edwin F.—Verses. 

Pike. Albert.—Buena Vista. 

Dixie. 

Every Year. {Also at. to Jas. W. Covert.) 
Growing Old. 

Old Canoe, The. 

To the Mocking-bird. 

Widowed Heart, The. 

Pike, M. S.—Home Again. 

Pike, Manley H.-—Palmetto and the Pine, The. 
Pillsbury, A. E.—Sense of Public Duty, The. 

Pillsbury, Annie Ivnowlton.—Silhouettes. 

“Pindar, Peter.” See Wolcott, J: 

Piner, Howell L.—After so Long. 

Art Artistic. 

Battle with the Tramp, The. 

By Ned! 

Cuban Refugee, The. 

Debutante. 

Did You—Will You? 

Dimes for Turnips’ Blood. 

Fellow with the Grippe, The. 

Gamut of Merry Momus, The. 

Gazelle and Swan. 

Hayseed’s Impression of the Snap Shot Man, The. 
Hess. 

If He’s Bu’sted? 

Joe and Meg. 

Little Cookie-hookie. 

Mrs. Bacon, Lawyer. 

Mp-ta-ta. 

My Little Boy. 

Mv Neighbor Jim. 

My ’Shine. 

Night Shade. 

Noth’n’ ’t All. 

Pantomime of Campbell’s "Pleasures of Hope.” 
Payin’ Honest Debts. 

Picaninny’s Cyclone, The. 

Sherman Tornado, The. 

Soul that Passed in the Night, A. 

Toast to the Lovers and Husbands of the Shakes¬ 
peare Club. 

To My Mother. 

Vanessa. 

’Way Down Souf in Georgy. 

“We All Wishes You was up Here.” 

“Where the Lilies Bloom.” 

Where Thou Goest I Will Go. 

Pinero, Arthur Wing.—Fallen Star. A. 

Pinkley, Virgil Alonzo.—Better than the Miser’s Gold. 
Model American Girl, The. 

Work, Work Away. 

Pinkney, E: Coate.—Realth, A. 

Serenade, A: “Look out upon the stars, my love.” 
Song: “We break the glass whose sacred wine.” 
Votive Song. 

Pinkney, W:—Predictions of Disunion. 

Piozzi, Mrs. Hester Lynch [Salisbury] [Thrale]. Three 
Warnings, The. 


520 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Pope 


Pitt. W: (1708-1778.) See Chatham. Earl of. 

Pitt, W the younger. (1759-1806.)—African Slave 
Trade. 

Barbarism of our British Ancestors. See African 
Slave Trade. 

On a Motion to Censure the Ministry. (1783.) 
See Parliamentary Speech of Feb. 21, 1783, on 
American Peace. 

On an Attempt to Coerce Him to Resign. See 
Parliamentary Speech, Feb. 20th, 1784. 
Parliamentary Speech of Feb. 21, 1783, on Amer¬ 
ican Peace. 

Parliamentary Speech, Feb. 20th, 1784. 

Pitt, W: (1749-1823.)—American War Denounced, 
The. 

Sailor’s Consolation, The. ( Also at. to C: Dibdin.) 
Pixley, Frank S.—Chrysanthemum, The. 

Day before Thanksgiving, The. 

Pixley, J. H.—Katie Lee and Willie Grey. (.Also at. to 
Josie R. Hunt.) 

Planch^, Jas. Robinson.—Collegian and the Porter, 
The. 

One-legged Goose, The. 

Sea-serpent, The. 

They Parted. 

To Mollidusta. 

Vat You Please. (At. also to W: B. Fowle.) 
Platen-Hallermiinde, August, Count. —Before the Con¬ 
vent of Yuste, 1556. 

Plato.—Apology for Socrates. 

Pliny.—Fabricius Refuses Bribes. 

Plough, Carl.—-Sleep, Weary Child. 

Plowman, Idora M.—Piecing the Preacher’s Quilt. 
Plummer, Howard A.—-Dutch Lullaby. 

Plumptre, E: Hayes.—Dedication to Dante’s Divine 
Comedy (Vita Nuova). 

River, The. 

Plunket, W: Conyngham, Lord. —Irish Parliament, The. 
See Union, The. 

Union, The. 

Plutarch.—Of the Education of Youth. See Euphues, 
—J: Lyly. 

Representative Government Trustworthy. 
Plympton, A. G.—Dorothy’s Auction. 

Pocklington, W.—Five Minutes with a Mad Dog. 

Poe, A. H.—“Gran’ma Al’as [or Al’us] Does.” 

Poe, Edgar Allan.—Alone. 

Annabel Lee. 

Bells, The. 

Brazen Bells, The. See Bells, The. 

City in the Sea, The. 

Conqueror Worm, The. 

Convalescence. See For Annie. 

Eldorado. 

Eulalie. 

For Annie. 

‘‘From childhood’s hour I have not been as others 
were.” See Alone. 

Gold-bug, The. 

Haunted Palace, The. 

Israfel 

Iron Bells, The. See Bells, The. 

Lenore. 

Murderer’s Confession, A. See Tell Tale Heart, 
The. 

Poetic Principle, The. 

Poetry. See Poetic Principle, The. 

Raven, The. 

Silence. 

Silver Bells, The. See Bells, The. 

Sleeper, The. 

Tell Tale Heart, The., 

Three Sundays in a Week. 

To F. S. O. 

To Helen. 

To One in Paradise. 

Ulalume. 

Valley of Unrest, The. 

Wedding Bells, The. See Bells, The. 

Pollard, Josephine.—Annabel’s First Party. 

Demon on the Roof, The. 

First Party, The. See Annabel’s First Party. 
Funny Story, The. 

His Names. See One of his Names. 

In Trouble. 

Keep Working. See Over and Over Again. 
Love’s Power. 

My Mother. 

Old Year and the New, The. 

One of His Names. 

Over and Over Again. 

Price of a Drink, The. 

Rough and Smooth. 


Pollard, Josephine (continued). 

Strange Experience, A. 

Tangled Skein, A. 

Vagrant, A. 

What Ailed the Pudding. 

Pollard, Myra E.—Chinese Lilies. 

Pollock, E:—Olivia. 

Parting Hour, The. 

Pollock, Frank L.—Ad Bellonam. 

Trail of Gold, The. 

Pollock, Sir Frd’k.—Sin of Sir Pertab Singh, The. 

Six Carpenters’ Case, The. 

Pollock, Walter Herries.—Below the Heights. 
Conquest, A. • 

Father Francis. 

Price, The. 

Ruined Library, A. 

Pollok, Rob’t.—Byron. See Course of Time, The. 
Course of Time, The. 

Happiness. See Course of Time, The. 

Hypocrite, The. See Course of Time, The. 

“It was an eve of autumn’s holiest mood.” See 
Course of Time, The. 

Lord Byron. See Course of Time, The. 

Miser, The. See Course of Time, The. 

Ocean. See Course of Time, The. 

Perversion of the Bible. 

Pomeroy, “Brick.” See Pomeroy, Marcus Mills. 
Pomeroy, Marcus Mills.—Pluck. 

Pomeroy, Millie C.—Four Scenes. 

Good-bye, Old Church. 

Good-bye, Old House. 

Self Conceit. 

Smooth Path. A. 

Pond, Chester E.—Theophilus Thistle’s Thrusted 
Thumb. 

Pond, Enoch.—“Preaching may be compared to 
lightning.” 

Pond, S: N.—Conjugal Lament. 

Poole, J:—Disagreeable Meddler, The. 

Not Quite. See Paul Pry. 

Paul Pry. 

Paul Pry at Doubledof’s. See Paul Pry. 

Sketch of the “Old Coaching Days,” A. 

Pope, Alex.—Addison. See Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot. 
Age of Queen Anne, The. See Rape of the Lock, 
The. 

Angling. See Windsor Forest. 

Autumn; or, Hylas and Aegon. 

Belinda. See Rape of the Lock, The. 

Content. See Essay on Man, An. 

Death of the Duke of Buckingham, The. See 
Moral Essays. 

Defiance of Hector and Ajax. (Tr.) See Iliad, 
The. 

Descend, Ye Nine. See Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day, 
The. 

Diversities of Judgment. See Essay on Criticism, 
An. 

Dunciad, The. 

Dunciad—The Description of Dulness, The. See 
Dunciad. The. 

Dying Christian, The. See Dying Christian to 
his Soul, The. 

Dying Christian to His Soul, The. 

Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady. 
Epilogue to the Satires. 

Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot. 

Essay on Criticism, An. 

Essay on Man, An. 

Fame. See Essay on Man, An. 

First Epistle of the Second Book of Horace. 

Fool and the Poet, The. 

Greatness. See Essay on Man, An. 

Happiness. See Essay on Man, An. 

Horace. See Essay on Criticism, An. 

Horace Imitated. See First Epistle of the Second 
Book of Horace. 

Humanity’s Heroes. See Prologue to Mr. Ad¬ 
dison’s Cato. 

Iliad, The. (Tr.) See Homer. 

Lines by a Person of Quality. See Song by a 
Person of Quality. 

Love Song, in the Modern Taste, A. (Also at. to 
Jonathan Swift.) See Song by a Person of 
Quality. 

Man of Ross, The. See Moral Essays. 

Messiah. 

Moral Essays. 

Nature. See Moral Essays. 

Nature’s Chain. See Essay on Man, An. 

Ode for Music on St. Cecilia’s Day. See Ode on 
St. Cecilia’s Day. 


521 





Pope 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Pope, Alex. ( continued). 

Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day. 

Ode on Solitude. 

Ode to Solitude. See Ode on Solitude. 

On a Certain Lady at Court. 

On Mrs. Tofts [A Famous Opera Singer], 

Order of Nature, The. See Essay on Man, An. 
Poet’s Friend, The. See Essay on Man, An. 
Portrait of Addison. See Epistle to Dr. Arbuth- 
not. 

Prologue to Mr. Addison’s [Tragedy of] Cato. 
Prologue to the Satires. See Epistle to Dr. Ar- 
buthnot. 

Quiet Life, The. See Ode on Solitude. 

Rape of the Lock, The. 

, Reason and Instinct. See Essay on Man, An. 
Road to Happiness Open, The. See Essay on 
Man, An. 

Ruling Passion, The. See Moral Essays. 

Sandy’s Ghost; or, A Proper New Ballad of the 
New Ovid’s Metamorphoses, as it was Intended 
to be Translated by Persons of Quality. 

Satire on the Whig Poets. 

Scandal. See Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot. 

Solitude. See Ode on Soljtude. 

Song by a Person of Quality. 

Sporus. See Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot. 

To a Blockhead. 

Toilet, The. See Rape of the Lock, The. 
Universal Prayer, The. 

Verbatim from Boileau. 

Windsor Forest. 

Pope, Mrs. Marion [Manville].—Little Jack Two-sticks. 
Over the Divide. 

Scotch Heather. 

Popular Educator. —Christmas Pantomime. 

Fable, A. 

George Washington. 

Life’s Maxims. 

Pretty is that Pretty Does. 

Tom’s Eyes and Mine. 

What to do. See Life’s Maxims. 

Wonderful Weaver, The. 

Porter, Annie.—Devil in Search of a Wife, The. 

Porter, Bruce.—“H was an indigent Hen.” 

Porter, H. H.—Forty Years After. 

Porter, Horace.—American Patriotism. 

Courage. 

Hero-president, The. 

Reverence for the Flag. 

Tribute to Gen. Sherman, An. 

Porter, Ivan M.—‘‘Shot through the Heart.” 

Porter, J: Addison.—Kalevala, The. (TV.) 

Legend of Aino, The. (7V.) See Kalevala, The. 
Wainamoinen’s Sowing. (TV.) See Kalevala, 
The. 

Porter, J: K.—Guiteau the Assassin. 

Porter, Linn Boyd (“Albert Ross”).—Judy O’Shea 
Sees Hamlet. 

Porter, Noah.—Advice to Young Men. 

“Science, if true to itself, must come back to a 
personal God.” 

“Young men, you are the architects of your own 
fortunes.” See Advice to Young Men. 

Porter, Ray. “Charge of the Lightning Judge, The.” 
Porter, T: Conrad.—Wanderer’s Night-song, The. 
(TV.) 

Porter, W. D.—Commencement Day. 

Porter, Walter.—-Love in Thy Youth. 

“Love in thy youth, fair maid, be wise.” See 
Love in "Thy Youth. 

Porteus, Beilby.—Death. 

Portland Oregonian.— Ninkum Land, The. 

Post, Waldron Kintzling.—Harvard-Yale Football 
Game [or Match], A. See Jack Rattleton Goes 
to Springfield and Back. 

Jack Rattleton Goes to Springfield and Back. 
Potter, D;—When Witherspoon was President. 
Potter, H: Codman.—Royalty of Virtue, The. 

Potter, Reuben M.—Hymn of the Alamo. 

Poulsson, (Anne) Emilie.—Flower’s Easter Message, 
The. 

Little Gardens. 

Sunbeams, The. 

Powderly, Terence Vincent.—Curse to Labor, The. 
Greatest Curse to Labor, The. See Curse to La¬ 
bor, The. 

Knights of Labor. 

Powell, Joseph C.—Tragedy of the North Sea, A. 
Powell, R: Stillman.—Dirge of the Householder, The. 
“I go Fishin’.” 

Two Kisses. 

Two Verses. 


Powell, W; N.—Approach of Night, The. 

Power, Marguerite A.—Hidden Rose-tree, A. See 
Virginia’s Hand. 

Virginia’s Hand. 

Power, Rev. P. B.—Snow Twins, The. 

Power, Sarah Helen. Nee Whitman, Mrs. Sarah Helen 
[Power]. 

Power, Tyrone.—Fight of Hell-kettle, The. 

Powers, Ella M.—Christmas Gift, A. 

Powers, Horatio Nelson.—Chimney Swallows. 
Fireflies. 

My Walk to Church. 

Our Sister. 

Praed, Winthrop Mackworth.—April Fools. 

Belle of the Ball, The. Nee Every-day Charac¬ 
ters. 

Camp-bell. See Charade on the Name of Camp¬ 
bell, the Poet. 

Charade [on the Name of Campbell, the Poet]. 
Death of Ajax, The. See Ovid’s Metamor¬ 
phoses. 

Dying Girl to Her Lover, The. See Last Words. 
End of the Romance, The. See Every-day Char¬ 
acters. 

Every-day Characters. 

Fairy Song. See Legend of the Haunted Tree, 
The. 

Knight’s Toast, The. See Toast, The. 

Last Words. 

Laugh and Grow Fat. 

Legend of the Haunted Tree, The. 

Letter of Advice, A. 

L’Inconnue. 

Mad—Quite Mad. 

Marius amidst the Ruins of Carthage. 

Marston Moor. See Sir Nicholas at Marston 
Moor. 

My Mother. See Toast, The. 

My Partner. See Every-day Characters. 

Newly Wedded, The. 

Ovid’s Metamorphoses. (TV.) 

Quince. See Every-day Characters. 

Red Fisherman, The; or. The Devil’s Decoy. 
School and School-fellows. 

Sir Nicholas at Marston Moor. 

Sketch of a Young Lady Five Months Old. 

Song of Impossibilities, A. 

Stanzas on Seeing the Speaker Asleep. 

Talented Man, The. 

Toast, The. (At.) 

Twenty-eight and Twenty-nine. 

Verses on Seeing the Speaker Asleep in His Chair. 

See Stanzas on Seeing the Speaker Asleep. 
Vicar, The. See Every-day Characters. 

Pratt, Agnes L.—“From Shadow-pun.” 

Pratt, Anna Maria.—Charade. 

Early News. 

Little Penelope’s Sewing 
May Song, A. 

Mortifying Mistake, A. 

Pratt, Florence E.—Courting in Kentucky. 

Kerrected. See Courting in Kentucky. 
School-ma’am’s Courting, The. See Courting in 
Kentucky. 

Pratt, W:W.—Drunkard’s Repentance, A. See Ten 
Nights in a Barroom. 

Ten Nights in a Barroom. 

Prentice, G: Denison.—At My Mother’s Grave. 
“Beyond the farthest glimmering star.” 

Charter Oak, The. 

Closing Year, The. 

Harvest Hymn. 

In Memoriam. 

Memories. 

“Men try to drown the floating dead of their own 
souls in the wine-cup.” 

Name in the Sand, A. (At. also to Hannah F. 

Gould.) 

New England. 

Sabbath Evening. 

Shall We Meet Again? 

Thunder Storm, The. 

“ ’Tis a time for memory and for tears.” 

To an Absent Wife. 

Prentiss, Mrs. Eliz. [Payson], (Mrs. G: Lewis Prentiss.) 
Cradle Song. (TV.) 

Kitten and the Mouse, The. See Little Kitty. 
Little Angel, The. 

Little Kitty. 

Lullaby Song. See Cradle Song. 

“More Love to Thee. O Christ!” 

Mystery of Life in Christ, The. 

Sleep, Baby, Sleep. See Cradle Song. 


522 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Procter 


Prentiss, Sergeant Smith.—Address on the Landing of 
the Pilgrims. 

Appeal in Behalf of Ireland. See Relief for Starv¬ 
ing Ireland. 

Defalcation and Retrenchment. 

Glorious New England. See Address on the Land¬ 
ing of the Pilgrims. 

In Behalf of Starving Ireland. See Relief for 
Starving Ireland. 

New England. See Address on the Landing of 
the Pilgrims. 

New England’s Fairest Boast. 

Relief for Starving Ireland, 1847. 

Sending Relief to Ireland. See Relief for Starving 
Ireland. 

Value of the Union, 1847, The. 

Presbyterian Journal. —Aunt Parsons’s Story. 

Brightest Gift, The. 

Prescott, Mary Newmarch.—Supposing. 

Work. 

Prescott, W: Hickling.—Colonization of America, 
The. 

History of the Conquest of Mexico. 

History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isa¬ 
bella. 

How Montezuma Lived. See History of the Con¬ 
quest of Mexico. 

Return of Columbus, The. See History of the 
Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella. 

Sir Walter Scott. 

“Triumphs of the warrior are bounded by the nar¬ 
row theatre of his own age, The.” See Sir 
Walter Scott. 

Venice of the Aztecs, The. See History of the 
Conquest of Mexico. 

Prest, -.—Frenchman and the Sheep’s Trotters, 

The. 

Frenchman’s Dinner, A. See Frenchman and the 
Sheep’s Trotters, The. 

Preston, Mrs. Anna A.—Bessie Kendrick’s Journey. 
Green Grass Under the Snow, The. 

Ideal is the Real, The. 

Singing Joseph. 

Preston, Elliott.—-Gambler’s Last Deal, The. 

Preston, Mrs. Marg. [Junkin].—Antonio Oribono. 
Euthanasia. 

First Te Deum, The. 

For Love’s Sake. 

“Gone Forward.” 

Grave in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, A. 
Hero of the Commune, The. 

Hero of the Gun, The. 

His Name. 

Little Watcher, The. 

Maestro’s Confessions, The. 

Murillo’s Trance. 

One of God’s Little Heroes. 

Rabboni. 

Read to Sleep. 

Recalled. 

Save the Other Man. 

Shade of the Trees. The. 

Silver Plate, The. 

Sir Walter’s Honor. 

Sonnet: One Day. 

“There is no morrow.” See Sonnet: One Day. 
Under the Shade of the Trees. See Shade of the 
Trees, The. 

Vision of the Snow, The. 

Wanderer’s Bell, The. 

We Two. 

Young Van Dyck, The. 

Preston, W: C.—Eloquence and Logic. 

On Eloquence. See Eloquence and Logic. 
"Pretzel, Carl.”—Carl Pretzel’s Ride. 

Der Loddery Dicket. 

Dot Loaf of Bread. 

Dot Young Vidow, Clara. 

Indemberance. 

Pretzel’s Speech before the Illinois Assembly. 
Price, Col. J. A.—Tribute to Washington. 

Prickett, J. P.—Reason Why, The. 

Pride, Anna R.—Arbor Day Poem. 

Priest, Nancy Amelia Woodbury. Nee Wakefield, Mrs. 

Nancy Amelia Woodbury [Priest], 

Prince, J: G.—Who are the Free? 

Prince, W. R.—True Honor of a Nation, The. 
Princeton Tiger. —In Spring. 

Metamorphosis. 

Prindle, Emma M.—Edmund Burke. 

Pringle, T:—Afar in the Desert. 

Dearest Love! Believe Me. 

Lion and the Giraffe, The. 


Prior, Matthew.—"Accept, my love, as true a heart." 
Another Enigma. 

Better Answer, A. 

Bibo and Charon. 

Chameleon, The. 

Cupid Mistaken. 

Earning a Dinner. 

English Ballad on the Taking of Namur by King 
of Great Britain, MDCXCV., An. 

Epigram of Plato, An. 

Epigram on Bishop Atterbury. 

Epigram Written to the Duke de Noalles. 

Epitaph, An: “Interr’d beneath this marble stone." 
Epitaph Extempore. 

Flies, The. 

For My Own Monument. 

Forma Bonum Fragile. 

“In vain you tell your parting lover.” 

Jack and Joan. See Epitaph, An: “Interr’d be¬ 
neath this marble stone.” 

Lady who Offers her Looking-glass to Venus, The. 

See Epigram of Plato, An. 

Letter, A.—(To Lady Margaret Cavendish [Holles- 
Harley, when a child].) 

Love’s Disguises. See Ode, An: “The merchant to 
secure his treasure.” 

“Merchant, to secure his treasure, The.” See Ode, 
An: “The merchant to secure his treasure.” 
Merry Andrew. 

Ode, An: “The merchant to secure his treasure.” 
On Bishop Atterbury. See Epigram on Bishop 
Atterbury. 

On My Birthday, July 21. 

On the Taking of Namur by the King of Great 
Britain. See English Ballad od the Taking of 
Namur by the King of Great Britain. 

Pedant, The. 

Phillis’s Age. 

Question to Lisetta, The. 

Remedy Worse than the Disease, The. 

Secretary, The. 

Simile, A. 

Song: “The merchant, to secure his treasure.” 
See Ode, An: “The merchant to secure his 

trpflQiirp ^ 

To a Child of Quality. 

To a Child of Quality, Five Years Old. See To a 
Child of Quality. 

To a Lady: she refusing to continue a dispute. 

To the Duke de Noalles. See Epigram Written 
to the Duke de Noalles. 

To the Hon. Charles Montague. 

Truth and Falsehood. 

Two Enigmas. 

Two Riddles. 

Probyn, May.—Bees of Myddelton Manor, The. 
Christmas Carol. 

Is it Nothing to You? 

Procter, Adelaide Anne.—Angel’s Story, The. 
Annunciation, The. 

Because. 

Chain, A. 

Christmas Flowers. 

Cleansing Fires. 

Comforter, A. 

Dead Past, A. See Old and the New Year, The. 
Desire, A. 

Doubting Heart, A. 

Dream, A. 

Envy. 

Evening Hymn. 

“Fail—yet rejoice; because no less.” See Light 
and Shade. 

Fidelis. 

Hearts. 

Homeward Bound. 

Hush. 

“I hold him great, who for love’s sake. See 
Maximus. 

If Thou Couldst Know. 

Incompleteness. 

Judge Not. . 

“Judge not: the workings of his brain.” See 
Judge Not. 

King and Slave. 

Lead Me, O Lord. See Per Pacem ad Lucem. 
Legend of Bregenz, A. 

Legend of Provence, A. 

Light and Shade. 

Lost Chord, A. 

Maximus. 

Nights, The. 

Now. 


523 





Procter 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Procter, Adelaide Anne ( continued). 

Old and the New Year, The. 

One by One. 

Per Pacem ad Lucern. 

Pilgrims, The. 

Present, The. 

Requital, The. 

“Rise! for the day is passing.” See Now. 

Sent to Heaven. 

Shadow, A. 

Sowing. See Sowing and Reaping. 

Sowing and Reaping. 

Storm, The. 

Story of the Faithful Soul, The. 

Strive, Wait and Pray. 

Through Peace to Light. See Per Pacem ad 
Lucem. 

Tomb in Ghent, A. 

Wayside Inn, The. 

Wind, The. 

Woman’s Answer, A. 

Woman’s Question, A. 

Procter, Bryan Waller (“Barry Cornwall”).—Ad¬ 
dress to the Ocean. See Ocean, The. 
Autobiographical Fragment, An. 

Bacchanalian Song, A. 

Belshazzar. 

Blood Horse, The. 

Bolivar. See Build a Column to Bolivar. 

Bridal Dirge, A. 

Build a Column to Bolivar. 

Courage. 

Doctor’s Story, The. See Surgeon’s Tale, The. 
Drinking Song, A. 

Fisherman, The. 

Flowers. 

For Music. 

Golden Girl, A. See Lucy. 

Golden-tressed Adelaide. 

Hermione. 

History of a Life [, The]. 

Hunter’s Song, The. 

Inscription for a Fountain. 

King Death. 

King of the Night, The. See Owl, The. 

Life, A. See History of a Life, The. 

Life. 

Lost and Found. See Thirteen Years Ago. 

Love Me if I Live. See Song: “Love me if I live.” 
Lucy. 

Modern Cymon, The. 

Mother’s Last Song, The. 

My Books. See Autobiographical Fragment, 
An. 

New Alcestis, A. 

Ocean, The. 

Owl, The. 

Peace! What do Tears Avail? 

Petition to Time, A. 

Poet’s Song to His Wife, The. 

Poet’s Thought, A. 

Recalled to Life. See New Alcestis, A. 

Repose, A. 

Sea, The. 

Sea-king, The. 

Serenade, A. Set to Music by the Chevalier 
Neukomm. 

She was not Fair nor Full of Grace. 

Sit Down, Sad Soul. 

Softly Woo away her Breath. 

Song: “Love me if I live.” 

Song for the Seasons, A. 

Song in Praise of Spring. 

Song of the Sea, A. See Sea, The. 

Song of Wood-nymphs. 

Stars. 

Stormy Petrel, The. 

Surgeon’s Tale, The. 

Thirteen Years Ago. 

Time. See Petition to Time, A. 

Violet, The. 

Way to Conquer, The. 

White Squall, The. 

Proctor, Edna Dean.—Brooklyn Bridge, The. 
Columbia’s Banner. 

Columbia’s Emblem. 

For Freedom. 

Grave of Lincoln, The. 

Heaven, O Lord, I cannot Lose. 

Heroes. 

Lost War-sloop, The. 

Matins [at St. Mary’s]. 

Minstrel, The. 


Proctor, Edna Dean ( continued ). 

On the Freeing of the Serfs. See Russian Jour¬ 
ney, A. 

Our Country. 

Perfect Day, The. 

Prayers for the Dead. 

Return of the Dead, The. 

Russian Journey, A. 

Song of the Ancient People, The. 

Stripes and the Stars, The. 

Take Heart. 

Waiting for Easter. 

Propertius. Translation from Propertius. 

Proudfit, D: Law (“Peleg Arkwright”).—Bartender’s 
Story, The. 

Bismillah. 

Catastrophe, A. 

Christmas Gift, A. 

Cousin Floy. 

Daddy Flick’s Spree. 

Demmy Jake. 

Father John. 

Fishin’. 

Little Joe’s Flowers. See Poor Little Joe. 

Love in the Kitchen. 

Love on the Half-shell. 

Palmer, The. 

Poor Little Joe. 

Prehistoric Smith. 

Retribution. 

Warden, Keep a Place for Me. 

Willis, The. 

"Prout, Father.” See Mahony, Fs. Sylvester. 
Provost, Agnes Louise.—Out of Muhlqueen’s Alley. 
Prudentius, Clemens Aurelius.—Each Sorrowful 

Mourner. 

Pryor, Roger Atkinson.—Challenge, The. (At.) See 
O’Brien, FitzJames. 

Public Opinion. —At the Loom. 

Puck. —Ladies’ Whist Club, The. 

Magruder’s Lullaby. 

Proposal, A. 

Pugh, Edwin.—Betties. 

In His Way a Hero. See Betties. 

Pullen, Mrs. Eliz. [Jones] [Cavazza].—Alicia’s Bonnet 
Derelict. 

Her Shadow. 

Love and Poverty. 

Lullaby: “Through Sleepy-land doth a river flow.” 
Sea-weed. The. 

When Angry, Count a Hundred. 

Pullen, Eugene Henry.—Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep. 
Pulsford, J:—Self-life. 

Pulteney, W:—On Reducing the Army. 

Punch. —Alarming Prospect. 

Amende Honorable, The. 

Apple Pie. 

Art of Conversation, The. 

Ballad of Bedlam [, A], 

Bandit’s Fate, The. 

Barber’s Shop, The. See Jones at the Barber’s 
Shop. 

Barley Broth. 

Barley Water. 

Bas Bleu. 

Beignet de Pomme. 

Bitter Cry of the Outcast Choir Boy, The. 

Black and White. 

Boa and the Blanket, The. 

Boiled Chicken. 

“Book in a Bustle, A.” 

Calf’s Heart. 

Cardinal Manning. 

Cause, The. 

Charles H. Spurgeon. 

Chemist and [or to] His Love, The. 

Cherry Pie. 

“Children must be Paid for.” 

Christmas Pudding, The. 

Collegian to His Bride, The. 

Colloquy on a Cab-stand. 

“Come strike me the harp with its soul-stirring 
twang.” 

Concerning Sisters-in-law. 

Conjugal Conundrum, A. 

Courtship [and Matrimony], 

Curry. 

Czar, The. 

Death of King Bomba, The. 

Death-bed of Bomba, King of Naples. See Death 
of King Bomba, The. 

Deviled Biscuit. 

Dilly and the D’s, The. 


524 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Quiz 


Punch ( continued ). 

Domestic Economy. 

Drama for Every-day Life. 

Eating Soup. 

Elegy, Written in a Railway Station. 

Epigram: Vox et Prseterea Nihil. 

Epitaph on a Candle. 

Epitaph on a Locomotive. 

Exclusive’s Broken Idol, The. 

Feast of Vegetables and the Flow of Water, 
The. 

Fight over the Body of Keitt, The. 

First Sensible Valentine, The. 

Fragment, A. 

Grammar for the Court of Berlin. 

Green Pea Soup. 

Greeting to the “George Griswold.” 

His Eye was Stern and Wild. See Fragment, A. 
Imaginative Crisis. The. 

In Memory of Lewis Carroll. 

Inquest—not Extraordinary. 

Invitation to the Zoological Gardens, An. 

Irish Particular. k 
Irish Stew. 

Jones at the Barber[’s] Shop. 

Justice to Scotland. 

Kindred Quacks. 

Last Appendix to “Yankee Doodle,” The. 

Last Kick of Fop’s Alley, The. 

Letter and an Answer, A. 

Lines addressed to-, on the 29th of Septem¬ 

ber, when we Parted for the Last Time. 

Lines for Music. 

Lines to Bessy. 

Lines Written After a Battle. 

Lobster Salad. 

Lobsters, The. 

Love on the Ocean. 

Ludgate Hill.—A Mystery. 

Mad Cabman’s Song of Sixpence, The. 

Madman, The. See Fragment, A. 

Madness. 

* Monody on the Death of an Only Client. 

Mutton Chops. 

My Last Shirt. See Lines Addressed to -, 

on the 29th of September, etc. 

Numbers Altered. 

Ode to the Great Sea-serpent on His Wonderful 
R6ftDP6ftr?tncG 

“Oh, Wilt Thou Sew My Buttons on?” and “Yes, 
I Will Sew Thy Buttons On!” 

On a Rejected Nosegay. 

On a Tear which Angelina Observed Trickling 
Down My Nose at Dinner Time. See Stanzas 
for the Sentimental. 

On My Finding Angelina Stop Suddenly in a 
Rapid After-supper Polka. See Stanzas for 
the Sentimental. 

On My Refusing Angelina a Kiss under the Mistle¬ 
toe. See Stanzas for the Sentimental. 

On Seeing an Execution. 

One Good Turn Deserves Another. 

Paid Bill, The. 

Papa to his Heir. 

Parody for a Reformed Parliament. 

People and their Palace, The. 

Phrenologist to his Mistress, The. 

Poet Foiled, The. 

Poetical Cookery-book, The. 

Poetry on an Improved Principle. 

Positively the Last Performance! 

Proclivior. 

Pup-Pup-Poetry. See Invitation to the Zoologi¬ 
cal Gardens. An. 

Railroad Nursery Rhyme. 

Railway Gilnin. The. 

Railway of Life, The. 

Railway Traveler’s Farewell to His Family, 
The. 

Red Herrings. 

Roasted Sucking-pig. See Poetical Cookery- 
book. The. 

Sapphics of the Cabstand. 

Sated One, The. 

Scene on the Austrian Frontier, A. 

Secret Sorrow, The. 

Selling off at the Opera House. 

Serenade, A. “Smile, lady, smile.” 

Sick Child, The. 

Song for a Catarrh, A 
Song for Punch Drinkers. 

Song of Hiawatha, The. An English Criticism. 
Song of the Humbugged Husband, The. 


Punch ( continued). 

Stanzas for the Sentimental. 

Stanzas to an Egg. 

Stanzas to Pale Ale. 

Steak, The. 

Stewed Duck and Peas. 

Stewed Steak. 

Sticky. 

“Swell’s” Homage to Mrs. Stowe, A. 
Temperance Song. 

Thomas Carlyle. 

Ticket of Leave, The. 

To a Rich Young Widow. 

To Song-birds on a Sunday. 

To the Leading Periodical. 

Trifle. 

Vigil, The. 

Voice, and Nothing Else, A. See Epigram: Vox 
et Praterea Nihil. 

Waiter, The. 

William E. Gladstone. 

Wonders of the Victorian Age. 

Punch Bowl. —Is Love Blind? 

Lover’s Complaint. 

Taking the Veil. 

With a Golfer’s Apologies to Tennyson. 

Punshon, W: M.—Catherine de Medicis. 

Macaulay. 

Savonarola. 

Purdy, James C.—Settin’ the Flags. 

Pushmataha.—To the Secretary of War, 1824. 
Putnam, Rev. Albert P.—American Flag, The. 

“And every village graveyard will have its green 
mounds.” (?) 

History of Our Flag. 

National Ensign, The. See Our Flag. 

Our Flag. 

Putnam, G:—Scholar’s Mission, The. 

Putnam, Granville B.—Columbia’s Jubilee. 

Putnam, M. S. H.—Fish Family, The. 

Putnam, Mrs. Sarah A. [Brock].—Out of the Window. 
Pyatt, Florence E. See Pratt, Florence E. 

Pyle, Howard.—Tilghman’s Ride from Yorktown to 
Philadelphia. 

Pym, J:—End of Government, The. 

Three Liberties, The. 


Q 

‘‘Quad, M.” See Lewis, C: Bertrand. 

“Quaker Poet,” The. See Barton, Bernard. 
Quarles, Fs.—Delight in God [Only], 

Divine Rapture, A. 

Mystical Ecstacy, A. See Divine Rapture, A. 
“Phosphor, bring the day." 

Respice Finem. 

Shortness of Life, The. 

Sonnet: “How orient is thy beauty! How 
divine!” 

Sonnet: “Nor myrrh, nor cassia, nor the choice 
perfumes.” 

Sonnet: “Who ever smelt the breath of morning 
flowers.” 

True Repentance. 

Vanity of the World, The. 

Voyage of Life, The. 

Quarles, J:—Divine Ejaculation. 

Quayle, W. A.—Nature of Oratory, The. 
“Queerquill.”—Pat’s Letter. 

Quencher, Mark.—Dissibation. 

Quiet, C:—Failure. 

Quill, J:—Sorrowful Tale of a Hired [or Servant] Girl. 
Wilkins Family, The. 

Quiller-Couch, Arthur T:—Famous Ballad of the 
Jubilee Cup, The. 

Sage Counsel. 

Splendid Spurt, The. 

Waiting Juliet. The. 

White Moth, The. 

Quiller-Couch, Mabel.—Delayed in Transmission. 
Quilp, T:—Deacon Stokes. 

Quimby, Lillian B.—Four o’Clocks. 

Quincy, Josiah.—Against the Embargo, 1808. 
British Aggressions. 

Embargo, The. See Against the Embargo. 

In Defence of the British Soldiers. 

Letter-signed Hyperion. 

“No Free Government was Ever Founded. 
Principles of the Revolution, The. 

Quint, Wilder Dwight.—Violiniste. 

“Quiz.”—London Bee Story, A. 


525 






R., A. L. 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


R 

R., A. L.—Beautiful Trees. 

R., C. P.—Nearing Port. 

R., G. L.—Philosophia Amoris. 

R., J.—Won the Pot. 

R., M.—Modern Book, The. 

R., M. L.—True Manliness. 

R. t P. D.—To My Meerschaum. 

R., S. B.—Fra Moreale. 

R., S. J.—His Father Took Him Home. 

It., W. T.-—Song: “Gray is the sky but naught care I.” 
Rabb, Mrs. Kate [Milner],—dineid, Story of the. 
Beowulf, Story of. 

Divine Comedy, Story of the. 

Iliad, Story of the. 

Jerusalem Delivered, Story of the. 

Kalevala, Story of the. 

Lusiad, Story of the. 

Maha-Bharata, Story of the. 

Nibelungen Lied, Story of the. 

Odyssey, Story of the. 

Orlando Furioso, Story of the. 

Paradise Lost, Story of. 

Paradise Regained, Story of. 

Poem of the Cid, Story of the. 

Ramayana, Story of the. 

Shah-Nameh, Story of the. 

Song of Roland, Story o the. 

Rabillon, Leonce.—Horn, The. (TV.) See Song of 
Roland. 

Roland’s Death. (TV.) See Song of Roland. 
Song of Roland. (TV.) 

Radcliff, Emily.—Gods in Council, The. 

Radford, Dollie.—Ah, Bring it Not. 

If All the World. 

Model, A. 

My Little Dear. 

October. 

Rae-Brown, Campbell.—Fawcett’s Fame. 

How We Beat the Captain’s Colt. 

Kissing Cup’s Race. See Winning Cup’s Race. 
Ladybird’s Race. 

Shadow of a Song, The. 

Terrible Race, A. 

Winning Cup’s Race. 

Ragsdale, Cora Lee.—Bible Legend of the Wissa- 
hickon, The. 

Ragsdale, Lulah.—Tried. 

Raleigh, E: A.—When Morning Breaks. 

Raleigh, Sir Walter.— As You Came from the Holy 
Land. 

Conclusion, The. See. Verses Found in his Bible 
in the Gate-house at Westminster. 

Death of Sir Walter Raleigh. See Verses Found in 
in his Bible in the Gate-house at Westmin¬ 
ster. 

Epitaph on the Earl of Leicester. 

Epitaph upon the Right Honourable Sir Philip 
Sidney, An. 

Even such is Time. See Verses Found in his Bible 
in the Gate-house at Westminster. 

Her Reply. See Reply to Marlowe, A. 

His Pilgrimage. See Sir Walter Raleigh’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Last Lines. See Verses Found in his Bible, etc. 
Lie, The. 

Lines Found in his Bible. See Verses Found in his 
Bible, etc. 

Lines Written the Night before his Execution. See 
Verses Found in his Bible, etc. 

Lye, The. See Lie, The. 

Milk-maid’s Mother’s Answer, The. See Reply to 
Marlowe, A. 

Nymph’s Reply [to the Passionate Shepherd], The. 

See Reply to Marlowe, A. 

Pilgrim, The. See Sir Walter Raleigh’s Pilgrimage. 
Pilgrim to Pilgrim. See As you Came from the 
Holy Land. 

Pilgrimage [, The]. See Sir Walter Raleigh’s Pil¬ 
grimage. 

Reply to Marlowe, A. 

Reply to Marlowe’s “The Passionate Shepherd to 
His Love.” See Reply to Marlowe, A. 
Shepherdess’s Reply, The. See Reply to Mar¬ 
lowe, A. 

Shepherd’s Description of Love, The. 

Silent Lover, The. 

Sir Walter Raleigh’s Pilgrimage. 

Soul’s Errand, The. See Lie, The. 

Verses Found in his Bible in the Gate-house at 
Westminster. 


Raleigh, Sir Walter ( continued ). 

Vision upon the Faerie Queen, A. See Vision up¬ 
on this Conceit of the Fairy Queen, A. 

Vision upon this Conceit of the Fairy [or Faerie] 
Queen, A. 

Ralston, Eliz. E.—Tobacco Pledge, The. 

Ramal, Walter.—Alulvan. 

As Lucy Went a-Walking. 

Bluebells. 

Buckle, The. 

Bunches of Grapes. 

Captain Lean. 

Cecil. 

Child in the Story Awakes, The. 

Child in the Story Goes to Bed, The. 

Christening, The. 

Dame Hickory. 

Down-adown-Derry. 

Dwarf, The. 

Englishman, The. 

Envoy. 

Fairies Dancing, The. 

Fly, The. 

Gage, The. 

Gnomies, The. 

Grey Wolf, The. 

Hare, The. 

Haunted. 

Horn, The. 

I Met at Eve. 

I Saw Three Witches. 

Isle of Lone, The. 

John Mouldy. 

Lamplighter, The. 

Lovelocks. 

Lullaby. 

Miller and His Son, The. 

Mother Bird, The. 

Night-swans, The. 

O Dear Me! 

Ogre, The. 

Pedlar, The. 

Phantom, The. 

Pilgrim, The. 

Portrait of a Warrior, The. 

Raven’o Tomb, The. 

Reverie. 

Silver Penny, The. 

Sleeping Beauty, The. 

Song- “O for a moon to light me home!” 

Supper, The. 

Tartary. 

Three Beggars, The. 

Rameau, Jean.—Legend of the Earth, The. 

Ramsay, Allan.—An Thou were My Ain Thing 

“At setting day and rising morn.” See Gentle 
Shepherd, The. 

Gentle Shepherd, The. 

Jenny and Peggy. See Gentle Shepherd, The 
Lochaber no More. See Song- "Farewell to Loch- 
aber, ’ ’ etc. 

My Peggy. See Gentle Shepherd, The. 

Patie and Peggy. See Gentle Shepherd, The. 
Patie and Roger. See Gentle Shepherd, The. 
Peggy. See Gentle Shepherd, The. 

Song: “At, setting sun,’’etc. (At. also to J: Gay.) 

See Gentle Shepherd, The. 

Song: “Farewell to Lochaber,” etc. 

Through the Wood, Laddie. 

Ramsay, Andrew.—Atkinson’s Mill. 

I Will not Tell. 

Jephtha’s Daughter. 

Ramsav, C. F.—Hereafter. 

Rand, E: A.—Humming of the Wires, The. 

Little Ships in the Air. 

Rand, N. W.—At Bethlehem. 

Rand, Theodore Harding.—Beauty. 

Carven Shores, The. 

Dragonfly, The. 

Ghost Flower, The. 

Glory-roses. 

Hepatica, The. 

“I Am.” 

Love. 

Veiled Presence, The. 

Whitethroat, The. 

Randall, Jas. Ryder.—Dead Cannoneer, The. See John 
Pelham. 

John Pelham. 

Maryland. See My Maryland. 

My Maryland. 

There’s Life in the Old Land Yet. 

Why the Robin’s Breast is [or was] Red. 

Randall, W. H.—Decoration Hymn. 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Realf 


Randolph, -.—Drunkenness. 

L’Envoy. 

Randolph, Amy.-—City Mystery, A. 

Randolph, Anson Davies Fitz.—Hopefully Waiting. 
Master’s Invitation, The. 

Randolph, Edmund.—Extent of Country no Bar to 
Union. 

In Defence of Aaron Burr. 

Union of the States, The. iSee Extent of Country 
no Bar to Union. 

Randolph, Innes.—Back-log, The; or, Uncle Ned’s Lit¬ 
tle Game. 

Randolph, J:—British Influence, 1811. 

In Favor of a State Law against Duelling. 

On Altering the Virginia Constitution. 

On the Greek Question. 

Randolph, T:—Amyntis; or, The Impossible Dowry. 
Cotswold Eclogue, The. 

Devout Lover, A. See His Mistress. 

Fairies’ Song. See Amyntis; or, The Impossible 
Dowry. 

He Lives Long who Lives Well. See Precepts. 

His Mistress. 

Ode to Master Anthony Stafford. An. 

Pastoral Courtship, A. 

Precepts. 

Song of Fairies. See Amyntis; or, The Impossi¬ 
ble Dowry. 

Song of the Fairies Robbing an Orchard. See 
Amyntis; or. The Impossible Dowry. 

To a Lady Admiring Herself in a Looking- 
glass 

To Ben Jonson. , 

To my Picture. 

Rands, W; Brighty (“Lilliput Levee”).—Boy’s Dream, 

A. See Dream of a Boy who Lived at Nine- 
elms, The. 

Child’s World, The. (Wr. at. to Matthew Brown.) 

See Great, Wide, Beautiful, Wonderful World. 
Cicely and the Bears. See Shockheaded Cicely 
and the Two Bears. 

Doll Poems. 

Dolladine. See Doll Poems. 

Dream of a Boy who Lived at Nine-elms, The, 
Dressing the Doll. See Doll Poems. 

Eggs and Birds. 

Flowers, The. 

Great., Wide, Beautiful, Wonderful World. 

Happy Child, The. 

I Saw a New World. See New World, The. 

Lilliput Levee. 

Lilliput Notice. 

Little Brother, The. 

Little Christel. 

Love and the Child. See Happy Child, The. 

New World, The. 

Pedlar’s \or Peddler’s] Caravan, The. 

Picture, The. See Doll Poems. 

Polly. 

Race of the Flowers [, The]. 

Shockheaded Cicely and the Two Bears. 

Shooting Song, A. 

Thought, The. 

Topsy-turvey World. 

Wonderful World, The. See Great, Wide, Beau¬ 
tiful, Wonderful World. 

World, The. See Great, Wide, Beautiful, Won¬ 
derful World. 

Rankin, Jeremiah Eames.—America. 

Babie, The. (Wr. at. to Hugh Miller.) 

Jean Anderson, My Joy, Jean. 

Let the Angels Ring the Bells. 

Nae Shoon. See Babie, The. 

Word of God to Leyden Came, The. 

Ransom, Seymour Herbert.—To a Rose. 

Ransome. J. W.—Cohen at the Seashore. 

Rascas, Bernard.—Love of God, The. 

Raspe, Rudolph Erich.—Adventure of Baron Mun¬ 
chausen in a Fight with the Turks. See Trav¬ 
els of Baron Munchausen. 

Adventure of Baron Munchausen with his Horse. 

See Travels of Baron Munchausen. 

Travels of Baron Munchausen. 

Ratcliffe, Walter A.—Wanted. 

Rave, Hermann.-—Ballad of the Pipe, The. 

Ravenscroft, T:—Who Liveth so Merry. 

Rawnsley, H. D.—Ballad of the Conemaugh Flood, 

A. 

Ray. Dr. J. C.—National Prohibition Party Our Only 
Deliverer, A. 

Rayhill, -Tas. H.—Hilda. 

Raymond, G. L.—Ethan Allen. 

Raymond, Laurie A.—Miss Simmons’ New Bonnet. 
Raymond, R. L.—Hvmns Ancient and Modern. 

527 


Raymond. Rossiter W.—Banner of the Stars, The. 
Cavalry Song. 

Christmas Angel, The. 

Karl the Fiddler. 

Palace of the Days, The. 

Santa Claus in Spite of Himself. 

Trooper’s Death, The. (TV.) 

Rayne, Mrs. M. L.—Behind the Scenes. 

Brave Kate Shelley. 

Lost Type, A. 

Read, Opie P.—Boy Kept Step, The. 

How Buck was Brought to Time. 

Read, Thos. Buchanan.—Angler, The. See Summer 
Story, A. 

Autumn’s Sighing. 

Awakening Year, The. 

Bards, The. 

Brave at Home, The. See Wagoner of the Alle- 
ghanies, The. 

Brushwood. 

Celestial Army, The. 

Christine. 

Closing Scene, The. 

Defenders, The. 

Drifting. 

Flag of the Constellation, The. 

Lines to a Blind Girl. 

“Mother who conceals her grief, The.” See Wag¬ 
oner of the Alleghanies, The. 

Nativity, The. 

Oath, The. 

“Oh, sweet is the sound of the shuttle and the 
loom.” 

Our Defenders. See Defenders, The. 

Patriotism of American Women. See Wagoner 
of the Alleghanies, The. 

Revolutionary Rising, The. See Wagoner of the 
Alleghanies, The. 

Rising in [or of] 1776, The. See Wagoner of the 
Alleghanies, The. 

Sheridan’s Ride. 

Song of the Mountaineers. See Wagoner of the 
Alleghanies, The. 

“Speed, Ringbolt, to your leader speed!” (?) 
Stranger on the Sill, The. 

Summer Shower, The. 

Summer Story, A. 

Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The. 

“Wild Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The.” See 
Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The. 

Windy Night, The. 

Reade, C:—Course of True Love never Did Run Smooth, 
The. 

Digging for Hidden Treasure. See It is Never Too 
Late to Mend. 

Disillusionizing of Alexander Oldworthy, The. 
See Course of True Love never did run Smooth, 
The. 

It is never Too Late to Mend. 

Lark, The. See It is never too Late to Mend. 
Lark in the Gold-fields, The. See It is never too 
Late to Mend. 

Mrs. Woffington’s Portrait. See Peg Woffington. 
Peg Woffington. 

Reade, J:—Dominion Day. 

In My Heart. 

Kings of Men. 

Pictures of Memory. 

Queen Vashti’s Lament. 

Rizpah. 

To Louis Frechette. 

Reading, Hon. J. N.—Judge’s Temperance Lecture, A. 
Real Life.- —-Drunkard, The. 

Realf, R :—Apocalypse. 

Defense of Lawrence, The. 

“Fair are the flowers and the children, but their 
subtle suggestion is fairer.” See Indirection. 
“He was a-weary, but he fought his fight.” See 
Written on the Night of his Suicide. 

Holy Nation, A. See Of Liberty and Charity. 
Indirection. 

Man’s Name, A. 

My Slain. 

O Earth, thou hast not any wind that blows. See 
Symbolisms. 

Of Liberty and Charity. 

Old Man’s Idyl, An. 

Symbolisms. 

Vale. See Written on the Night of his Suicide. 
“When for me the end has come and I am dead. 

See Written on the Night of his Suicide. 
Word, The. See Symbolisms. 

Written on the Night of his Suicide. 





Reavis 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Reavis, Rebecca M.—Love-making. 

Red and Blue .—Bit of Lace, A. 

Cuba Libre. 

Idyl of the Strap, An. 

Modern Instance, A. 

Red Jacket (Sa-go-ye-wat-ha).—Speech of Red Jacket. 
Redden, Laura C. (“Howard Glyndon”). See Sear¬ 
ing, Mrs. Laura [Redden]. 

Redi, Francesco.—Love, the Musician. 

Redmond, Cornelia.—Billy’s Santa Claus Experience. 
Redpath, Jas.—“Ireland is the Gethsemane of Europe.” 
Reed, C. E.—Foundering of the Dolphin. 

Reed, E: B.—L’Envoi. 

Picture A 

Reed, Hodges.—Child’s Prayer, The. 

Reed, Jas. Reann.—Eliab Eliezer. 

Fisherman Job. 

Only Joe. 

Reed, Rebecca. See Nichols .Mrs. Rebecca [Reed]. 
Reed, T: Brackett.—Opportunity to Labor. 

To the Grand Army of the Republic. 

Reed, W:—Senex Jubilans. 

Reese, Lizette Woodworth.—Anne. 

Anne—Sudbury Meeting House, 1653. 

Daffodils. 

Elizabeth. 

Holiday, A. 

Immortality. 

In Time of Grief. 

Keats. 

Lord, Oft I Come. 

Lydia. 

Reserve. 

Rhyme of Death’s Inn, A. 

Tears. 

Telling the Bees. 

That Day You Came. 

Thomas h Kempis. 

To a Town Poet. 

Trust. 

Reese, Madeleine.—To St. Valentine. 

Reeves, Rev. H:—Country Justice, The. See Green 
Mountain Justice, The. 

Green Mountain Justice, The. 

William Goetz. 

Reid, G. C.—His Birthday. 

Reid, Isabel H.—Malaria. 

Reid, Rob’t.—Poesie. 

Song of Canada, A. 

Reiley, Mary T.—Valentine. A. 

Reilly, Philip C.—My Fiancee. 

Reithard, J. J.—Judge of Bellinzona, The. 

Reimer, Marie.—Has it Come to This? 

Remak, Sue M.—In Memory of Charles Dickens. 
Remick, M.—Grave of Mrs. Judson, The. 

Remsen, H. R.—Song, A: “Knowest thou but joy.” 
Renaud, E:—Count Gaultier’s Ride. 

King’s Wooing. The. 

Last Banquet, The. 

Renninger, Eliz D.—Tim’s Madonna. 

Requa, Mrs. Harriet W.—Keep the Record Clean! 
Requier, Augustus Julian.—Baby Zulma’s Christmas 
Carol. 

Revell, Alex. H.—Chicago’s Greeting to Atlanta and 
the South Land. 

Reviere, Louise.—Little Lady, A. 

Rexford, Eben Eugene.—Bluebird, The. 

Boy and the Bird, The. 

Boy’s Story, The. 

Flo’s Letter. See Oversight of Make-up, An. 

For the Slumber Islands, Ho! See “Ho, for 
Slumberland!” 

Grandfather’s Barn. 

“Ho, for Slumberland!” 

In April. 

Kissed His Mother. 

Ljght on Deadman’s Bar, The. 

Little Flo’s Letter. See Oversight of Make-up, An. 
Little Miss Trot. 


Old Year and the New. The. 

On the Road to Dreamtown. 

One of the Heroes. 

Oversight of Make-up, An. 

Paul Venarez. See Ride of Paul Venarez, The. 
Ride of Paul Venarez, The. 

Saved by a Ghost. 

Song for May, A. 

That Kiss of Martha’s. 

Reynolds, G: Nugent.—Kathleen O’More. 

Reynolds, J:—Nosegay, A. 

Rhodes, W: B.—Bombastes Furioso. 


Rhys, Ernest.—Autobiography, An. 

Brechva’s Harp Song. 

Diana. 

London Feast. 

Song of the Wulfshaw Larches. 

Wedding of Pale Bronwen, The. 

White Roses. 

Rice, A. H.—Our National Anniversary. 

Rice, C. S.—Cuba’s Appeal. 

Rice, Prof. E: H.—“Rock of Ages.” (At.) See Moore, 
Ella M. 

Rice, Lilian Dynevor.—Ferry for Shadowtown, The. 
See Shadow-town Ferry. 

Fourth of July Record, A. 

Shadow-town Ferry. 

Rice, Sara S.—Harvest Drill. 

Japanese Wedding, A. 

Rice, Wallace.—Battle of New Orleans, The. 
Battle-song of the Oregon. 

Blood is Thicker than Water. 

Brooklyn at Santiago, The. 

End, The. 

Immortal Flowers. 

Jackson at New Orleans. 

Minute Men of Northboro, The. 

Peace Hath Her Victories. 

Richard Hakluyt’s Men. 

Spain’s Last Armada. 

Sudbury Fight, The. 

Under the Stars. 

Rich, Mrs. Helen [Hinsdale].—Justice in Leadville, 1878. 
Little Phil. 

Rich, Hiram.—In the Sea. 

Jerry an’ Me. 

Richards, Mrs. Alice Lewis.—Alice’s Choice. 

All Happy in Spring. 

April. 

August. 

Auntie’s Parlor. 

Awful Boy, An. 

Because. 

Bennie’s Penny. 

Bill an’ Me. 

Billie. 

Birds’ Good-night, The. 

Birds’ Party, The. 

Boasting Pair, A. 

Boy and Bee. 

Busy Little Housekeeper, The. 

Changes. 

Clarabel’s Valentine. 

Clement’s Day Dream. 

Clifford’s Way. 

David’s Soliloquy. 

Day without a Sermon, A. 

December. 

Dedication. 

Different Kind er Boy, The. 

Does Jesus Know? 

Dolly Days. 

Dot’s New Leaf. 

Dream of Easter, A. 

Dreaming, Sweetly Dreaming. 

Drops of Honey. 

Emma’s Ideal. 

February. 

First Robin, The. 

Foolish Flowers, The. 

Forgetful Tommie. 

Frogie on the Log. 

George’s Example. 

George’s Letter. 

Good-night. 

Grandma’s Pocket. 

Grandpa and Pet. 

Guy’s Ideal. 

Harley’s Trip to Dreamland. 

He and She. 

Helping Hand, A. 

How Hazel Kept House. 

How Pussy was Left. 

If. 

It Wasn’t Me. 

January. 

Johnny’s Choice. 

Johnny’s Sisters. 

July. 

June. 

Kitty Bell. 

Lila’s Conclusion. 

Lisle’s Dream. 

Little Brother, Little Sister. 

Little Crib Bed, The. 


528 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Riley 


Richards, Mrs. Alice Lewis ( continued ). 

Little Sunbeams. 

Mabel Gray. 

Mama’s Dear Lap. 

Man in the Dark, The. 

March. 

Marion’s Lament. 

Martin’s Reward. 

May. 

May’s Apple-tree. 

Minnie’s Secret. 

Mr. Hop-toad. 

Mother Goose’s Dinner Party. 

Mother Robin. 

Myrtle’s Letter. 

Naughty Crow, The. 

Naughty Hornet, A. 

Nellie’s Easter Eggs. 

New Sister, The. 

November. 

October. 

Off to School We Go. 

Old and the New, The. 

Olive’s Advice. 

One Easter Day. 

Only a Sparrow. 

Our Aunt Lucy. 

Papa’s Best Girl. 

Pa’s Mem’ry. 

Pa’s Ways. 

Patsy’s and Tom’s Thanksgiving. 

Robin’s Farewell. 

Robin’s Return. 

Rob’s Temptation. 

Roger’s Wish. 

Santa’s Queer Joke. 

September. 

Sis’s Beau. 

Snowdrop’s Call, The. 

Some Stylish “Cumpny.” 

Spider and the Bee, The. 

Spider’s Parlor, The. 

Teaching a Lesson. 

Thankful Children. 

Thanksgiving at Grandma’s. 

That Giggle. 

Three Little Kittens. 

Tree-toad on the Limb, The. 

Two Friends, The. 

Two Goslings. 

Two Little Boys. 

Us Boys. 

Us Two. 

We’re Only Little Children. 

What Good is a Brother? 

What Janie Thinks. 

What Ma Kin Do. 

What Robin Said. 

What the Bells Said. 

When a Feller’s a Boy. 

When Brother was a Sister. 

When Dolly was Sick. 

When Grandpa was Little. 

When I’m a Big Girl. 

When I’m Growed up Big. 

When I was a Baby. 

When I was a Girl. 

When Ma Begins to Clean. 

When My Dollie Went to School. 

When My Kitty was a Kitten. 

When Work and Me Fell Out. 

Where Do Babies Go? 

Why? 

Wilford’s Piece. 

Will’s Dollar Bill. 

Richards, Janet E. H.—National Hymn, The. 
Richards, Mrs. Laura Elizabeth [Howe].—Ballad of 
Titus Labienus, The. 

In the Closet. 

John Bottlejohn. 

Little Sunbeam. 

Men of Gloucester, The. 

New Year’s Talk, A. 

Our Presidents. 

Song of the Com Popper, The. 

Song of Two Angels, A. 

Valentine, A. 

Where Helen Sits. 

Richards, S:—Christmas-day. 

Richards, Rev. W: C.—Rosalie. 

Songs in Sleep. 

Still Waters. 

Under the Cross. 


Richardson, -.—Beyond the Mississippi. 

Rjchardson, Mrs. Abby [Sage].—Little Boy Blue. 
Richardson, B. W.—Questions of Nations, The. 
Richardson, C: Fs.—After Death. 

Conjecture, A. 

Hymn at Nightfall. 

Justice. 

Love. 

Mazurka of Chopin’s, A. 

Peace. 

Prayer. 

Wisdom. 

Richardson, G: Lynde.—Classical Criticism. 
Richardson, Rev. H.Stone.—Decoration Day Address,A. 
Richardson, N. K.—Hail! to the Veterans. 

No God. 

Richardson, Sherman D.—Midnight Express, The. 
Riche, Marion P.—Compassion. 

Easter Poem, An. 

Memories of the War. 

Rescue, The. 

Richenbach, Alcide.—Respect the Aged. 

Richmond, C. E.—Tramp’s Story, The. 

Richmond Christian Advocate. —Shadows. 

Richmond, Mrs. Euphemia Johnson [Guernsey],—Only 
a Glass of Cider. 

Violet’s Prayer, The. 

Richmond, H. A.—Laudo Puellam. 

Phyllis’s Slippers. 

To Ruby Lips. 

Rjchmond, T. C.—How to Succeed. 

Richter, Jean-Paul.—“But man is higher than his 
dwelling place.” 

Complaint of the Bird in a Dark Room. 

Dream of the Universe, A. 

“My last word to you is, be courageous!” 

New Year’s Dream, A. See Two Roads, The. 
Two Roads, The. 

Ridpath, J: Clark.—History of the World. 

Province of History, The. See History of the 
World. 

Rienzi, Cola di.—Rienzi’s Last Appeal to the Romans. 
Riggs, Mrs. Kate Douglas JSmith] [Wiggin],—Aunt 
Hitty Tarbox. See Timothy’s Quest. 
Children’s Rights. 

Timothy’s Quest. 

Ricker, Ella W.-—Day after the Fourth, The. 

Ricker, Helen Adelaide.—Seasons, The. 

Rickoff, Rebecca D.—My Elm Tree. 

Story of a Leaf, The. 

Riley, Jas. Whitcomb.—Absence of Little Wesley, The. 
Afterwhiles. 

Alex Tells a Bear Story. 

Almon Keeper. 

And Makes Nursery Rhymes. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A. 

At Aunty’s House. 

At Noey’s House. 

At Noon and Midnight. 

Away. 

Back Where They Used to Be. See Griggsby’s 
Station. 

Bear Family, A. 

Bear Story, The. See Alex Tells a Bear Story. 
Beautiful City, The. 

Bereaved. 

Best Times, The. 

Bewildering Emotions. 

Billy and His Drum. 

Book of Joyous Children, The. 

Born to the Purple. 

Boy Lives on Our Farm, The. 

Boy Patriot, The. 

Boys’ Candidate, The. 

Boy’s Mother, A. 

Bud’s Fairy-tale. 

Bumblebee, The. 

Canary at the Farm, A. 

Chant of the Cross-bearing Child, The. 
Child-world, The. 

Christmas Memory, A. 

Circus-day Parade, The. 

Climatic Sorcery. 

Clover, The. 

Coffee my Mother used to Make, The. See Like 
His Mother Used to Make. 

"Company Manners.” 

Cousin Rufus’ Story. 

Curly Locks. 

Daring Prince, The. Nee Session with Uncle 
Sidney, A. 

Das Krist Kindel. 


529 







Riley 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Riley, Jas. Whitcomb ( continued). 

Days Gone By[, The]. 

Dead Wife, The. 

Delicious Interruption, A. 

Diners in the Kitchen. See Session with Uncle 
Sidney, A. 

Diverted Tragedy, A. 

Dolly’s Mother, The. 

Down around the River. 

Dream-march. 

Dubious “Old Kriss,” A. 

Dwainie. See Flying Islands of the Night, The. 
Elf-child, The. See Little Orphant Annie. 

Elmer Brown. 

Envoy. 

Evening Company, The. 

Evensong. 

Ever a Song Somewhere. See Song, A: “There 
is ever a song,” etc. 

Extremes. 

Fall-Crick View of the Earthquake, A. 

Find the Favorite. 

First Blue-bird, The. 

Fishing Party, The. 

Floretty’s Musical Contribution. 

Flying Islands of the Night, The. 

Fool Youngens. 

Funny Little Fellow, The. 

Gathering of the Clans, The. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A. 

Good, Old-fashioned People, The. 

Grandfather Squeers. 

Granny. 

Griggsby’s Station. 

Gustatory Achievement, A. 

Happy Little Cripple, The. 

Heat Lightning. 

Hik-tee-dik. 

Hired Man and Floretty, The. 

History. 

Home-made Fairy Tale, A. 

Honey Dripping from the Comb. 

Ike Walton's Prayer. 

Imperious Angler, The. See Session with Uncle 
Sidney, A. 

Impetuous Resolve, An. 

Impromptu Fairy-tale, An. 

In Fervent Praise of Picnics. 

Intellectual Limitations. 

Iry and Billy and Jo. 

“It.” See Session with Uncle Sidney, A. 

Jaybird, The. 

Jim. 

Jolly Miller, The. 

Just Be Glad. See Kissing the Rod. 

Katydids, The. 

Kingly Presence, The. See Das Krist Kindel. 
Kissing the Rod. 

Knee-deep in June. 

Land of Thus-and-so, The. 

Life Lesson, A. 

Like His Mother Used to Make. 

Limitations of Genius. 

Little Coat, The. 

Little Dick and the Clock. 

Little-Girl-Two-Little Girls. 

Little Hunchback, The. See Happy Little Cripple, 
The. 

“Little Jack Janitor.” 

Little Lady, The. 

Little Orphant Annie. 

Little Tommy Smith. 

Little White Hearse, The. 

Loehrs and the Hammonds, The. 

Longfellow. 

Lost. 

Lost Kiss, The. 

Love’s Prayer, See Prayer Perfect, The. 
Lugubrious Whing-whang, The. 

Mabel. 

Mad, Mad Muse, The. See Lugubrious Whing- 
whang, The. 

Man by the Name of Bolus, A. 

Man in the Moon, The. 

Mary Alice Smith. See Where is Mary Alice 
Smith? 

Masque of the Seasons, A. 

Maymie’s Story of Red Riding Hood. 

Mr. Hammond’s Parable—The Dreamer. 

My Fiddle. 

Name of Old Glory, The. 

Naughty Claude. 

Nine Little Goblins. 


Riley, Jas. Whitcomb ( continued ). 

No Boy Knows. 

Noble Old Elm, The 
Noey Bixler. 

Noey’s Night-piece. 

“Noted Traveler, A.” 

Nothin’ to Say. 

Old Aunt Mary’s. 

“Old Bob White.” 

Old Hay-mow, The. 

Old Home Folks, The. 

Old Man and Jim, The. 

Old Man Whiskery-Whee-Kum-Wheeze. 

Old Sweetheart of Mine, An. 

Old Tramp, The. 

Old-fashioned Roses. 

On the Death of Little Mahala Ashcraft. 

On the Sunny Side. 

One of His Animal Stories. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A. 

Orchard-lands of Long Ago, Xhe. 

Our Hired Girl. 

“Out to Old Aunt Mary’s.” See Old Aunt Mary’s. 
Parent Reprimanded, A. 

Pathos of Applause, The. 

Penalty of Genius, The. 

Pet Coon, The. 

Pixy People, The. 

Prayer Perfect, The. 

Prior to Miss Belle’s Appearance. 

Proem to “Afterwhiles.” See Afterwhiles. 
Prospective Visit, A. 

Raggedy Man, The. 

Rambo-tree, The. 

Rider of the Knee, The. 

Runaway, The. See Runaway Boy, The. 
Runaway Boy, The. 

Runaway Boy, The. (Prose.) 

Sea-song from the Shore, A. 

Session with Uncle Sidney, A. 

She “Displains” It. 

Sings a “Winky-tooden” Song. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A. 

So I Got to Thinkin’ of Her. 

Song, A: “There is ever a song somewhere, my 
dear.” 

Song of Singing, A. 

Song of the Bullet. 

South Wind and the Sun, The. 

Spirk Troll—Derisive. 

Spring. See When the Green Gits Back in the 
Trees. 

Squirtgun Uncle Maked Me, The. 

Subtlety. 

Sudden Shower, A. 

' 2 ' 

"That Little Dog.” 

Thomas the Pretender. 

Time of Clearer Twitterings. 

To the Child Julia. 

Told by “The Noted Traveler.” 

Traveler’s Story, The. See Told by “The Noted 
Traveler.” 

Treasure of the Wise Man, The. 

Twins, The. 

Uncle Brightens Up. See Session with Uncle 
Sidney, A. 

Uncle Mart’s Poem. 

Used-to-be, The. 

Waitin’ fer the Cat to Die. 

Way the Baby Slept, The. 

Way the Baby Woke, The. 

Wet Weather Talk. 

When Old Jack Died. 

When she Comes Home. 

When she Comes Home Again. See When she 
Comes Home. 

“When the Frost is on the Punkin.” 

“When the Green Gits Back in the Trees.” 

When We First Played “Show.” 

Where is Mary Alice Smith? 

Who Santy Claus Wuz. 

Wind of the Sea. 

Winter Fancies. 

“With a hey! and a hi! and a hey-ho rhyme!” 
“You who to the rounded prime.” 

Riley, Z. F.—Memorial Day. 

Thanksgiving Turkey. 

Vacation. 

Rinkart, Martin.—“Now thank we all our God.” See 
Nun Danket alle Gott. 

Nun Danket alle Gott. 

Riordan, Julia T.—Fauntleroy’s Wail. 

530 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Roche 


Ripley, J: W.—Choosing a “State Tree”—The Black 
Walnut. 

Risley, C: R.—My Wife’s Husband. 

Wayback Temperance Lecture. 

Risley, R: Voorhees.—Dewey in Manila Bay. 

Ritchie, Mrs. Anne Isabella [Thackeray].—Influence of 
Life, The. See Jane Austen. 

Jane Austen. 

Ritchie, G: M.—How I Kissed Her. 

Ritchie, Mary Helen.—“Give Me the Town.” 

Ritter, Mary Louise.—Outcast, The. 

Perished. 

Why? 

Wings. 

“Rivers, Pearl.” See Nicholson, Mrs. Eliza [Poite- 
vent]. 

Rives, Amelie. See Thoubetskoy, Princess. 
Rivington’s Gazette.— Siege of Savannah, The. 

Roach, Sallie Neill.—Lessons. 

Robb, -.—Courting in French Hollow. 

Old Sugar’s Courtship. 

Robbins, Alice.—Joe. 

Left Alone at Eighty. 

What the Old Man Said. 

Robbins, Asher.—Washington’s Fame. 

Robbins, Chandler.—Evening Hymn. 

Robbins, R. C.—Call of Duty, The. 

Robbins, R. D. C.—Soldier’s Reprieve, The. 

Robbins, S: Dowse.—Baca. 

Compass, The. 

Robert II. of France.—Veni Sancte Spiritus. 

Roberts, C:—Domine, Cui Sunt Pleiades Cur®. 
Roberts, C: G: Douglas.—Afoot. 

Ascription. 

Autochthon. 

Ballad of Manila Bay, A. 

Ballad of the Brook, The. 

Ballad of the “Laughing Sally,” The. 

Bird’s Song, the Sun, and the Wind, The. 

Burnt Lands. 

Canada. 

Canadian Streams. 

Deserted City, The. 

Epitaph for a Husbandman, An. 

Epitaph for a Sailor Buried Ashore. 

Falling Leaves, The. 

Flight of the Geese, The. 

Frosted Pane, The. 

Hawkbit, The. 

In Apia Bay. 

Isles. The. 

Keepers of the Pass, The. 

Marsyas. 

Night in a Down-town Street. 

Night Sky, The. 

Nocturne of Consecration, A. 

Nocturne of Spiritual Love, A. 

Ode for the Canadian Confederacy, An. 

Origins. 

Recessional. 

Silver Thaw, The. 

Sleepy Man. 

Song of Growth, A. 

Train among the Hills, The. 

Wrestler, The. 

Roberts, Elizabeth. See Macdonald, Mrs. Elizabeth 
[Roberts]. 

Roberts, (Jane) Elizabeth Gostwycke.—In the Golden 
Birch. 

Roberts, Theodore.—Chase, The. 

Cold. 

Last Taps. 

Men of My Heart’s Desire. 

Spears of Kan-Mar, The. 

Roberts, W: C.—Easter Memory, An. 

My Comrade Canoe. 

Robertson, Frd’k W:—“Ask you where the place of 
religious might is?” 

Colors of the Regiment, The. 

Elijah. 

“Have you ever seen those marble statues in some 
public square or garden?” 

“Hell is the infinite terror of the soul, whatever 
• that may be.” 

"In that hour, which of all the twenty-four.” 
See Shadow and Substance of the Sabbath, 
The. 

Influence of Poetry on the Working Classes. 

“It is a common saying that religion has nothing 
to do with politics. ” 

Last Utterances of Christ, The. 

Pass in the Indian Hills, The. 

Poetry in Battle. See Influence of Poetry on the 
Working Classes. 


Robertson, Frd’k W: ( continued). 

Poetry the Language of Symbolism. See Influ¬ 
ence of Poetry on the Working Classes. 

Rights and Duties. 

Shadow and Substance of the Sabbath, The. 

True Liberty. See Rights and Duties. 

War and Peace. 

“We are ever taking leave of something that will 
not come back again.” See Last Utterances 
of Christ, The. 

“We are what the past has made us. ’ ’ 

“What is ministerial success?” See Elijah. 
Robertson. Harrison.—How the Derby Was Won. 
Kentucky Philosophy. 

Story of the Gate. 

Sunday Fishin’. 

Robertson, Peter.—Drops. 

Robertson, T. M.—Suppose. 

Robertson, W. H.—“Music of art is but the imitation 
of the music of nature, The. ’ ’ 

Robertson, W:—Character of Mr. Pitt. ( Wr. at.) See 
Grattan, Henry. 

Robespierre, Maximilien Marie Isidore.—Against War 
[, January 13, 1792]. 

Defence from the Charge of Tyranny. 

Morality the Basis of Civilized Society—Belief in 
God the Basis of Morality. 

On the Punishment of Louis XVI. 

Robespierre’s Last Speech. 

Robins, Harry Douglas.-—When Pa Begins to Shave. 
Robinson, A. R.—Man for the Hour, The. 

Robinson, Agnes Mary Frances. SeeDucLAUX, Mme. 

Agnes M. T. [Darmesteter], 

Robinson. Mrs. Annie Douglas [Green] ("Marion 
Douglas”).—Catching the Colt. 

Cheerfulness. See Who is She? 

Chimney Tops. 

Chosen Princess, The. 

Country Child, The. 

First Parting, The. 

Freedom’s Flower. 

Kings and Queens. 

Kitty. 

Little Sorrow. 

Mary and the Swallow. 

Mrs. Piper. 

Motherless Turkeys, The. 

Naming the Baby. 

Oh, Dear Me. 

One Saturday. 

Parson Kelly. 

Politics. 

Pussy Willow. 

Song of the Bee, The. 

Two Pictures. 

White Kitten, The. 

Who is She? 

Robinson, D: C.—Pilgrim Ancestor, mt, 

Robinson, Ednah.—On Board the Victory. 

Robinson, Edwin Arlington.—Ballade of Dead Friends. 
Clerks, The. 

House on the Hill, The. 

Luke Havergal. 

Pity of the Leaves, The. 

Robinson, G: D.—Town of Concord, Mass., The. 
Ulysses S. Grant. 

Webster Statue at Concord, N. H., The. 
Robinson, J. D.-—Little Boy that Died, The. 

Robinson, J: Ryley.—Lost Child, The. 

Robinson, Mrs. Lucy Catlin [Bull],—Ballade of 
Islands, A. 

Fore i’ the Flint, The. 

“Hie me, Pater Optime, Fessam Deseris. ” 
Robinson, Phil.—Bee and the Fly, The. 

Robinson, R. H.—Light at Evening-time. 

Robinson, Rob’t.—Come, thou Fount of Every Blessing. 
Robinson, S:—Raja of India Sends a Chessboard to 
Nushirvan, The. See Shah-Nameh, The. 
Shah-Nameh, The. (TV.) 

Zal and Rudabeh. See Shah-Nameh, The. 
Robinson, Tracy.—Song of the Palm. ’ 

Robinson, T. S.—Student’s Frolic, The. 

Robinson, Wade.—Singer, The. 

Roby, H. A.—Red and the Blue, The. 

Roche, Jas. Jeffrey.—Andromeda. 

Boston Lullaby, A. 

Concord Love Song, A. 

Constitution’s Last Fight, The. 

Fight of the “Armstrong” Privateer, The. 

Gospel of Peace, The. 

Jack Creamer. 

Kearsarge, The. 

Men of the Alamo, The. 

My Comrade. 


531 





Roche 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Roche, Jas. Jeffrey ( continued ). 

Reuben James. 

Sailor’s Yarn, A. 

Sir Hugo’s Choice. 

Skeleton at the Feast, The. 

V-A-S-E, The. 

Rochester, J: Wilmot, Earl of. —Bowl, The. 

Constancy. 

Epigram Written on the Bed-chamber Door of 
Charles II. See Epitaph on Charles II. 
Epitaph on Charles II. 

Love and Life. 

“My dear mistress has a heart.” See Song: “My 
dear mistress,” etc. 

Return. 

Song: “Absent from thee I languish still.” See 
Return. 

Song: “Dear, from thine arms then let me fly.” 
Song: “My dear mistress has a heart.” 

Song: “When on those lovely looks I gaze.” 
Song from “Valentinian.” See Valentinian. 

Song in Imitation of Sir John Eaton A. 

To His Mistress. 

“Too late, alas! I must confess.” See Song in 
Imitation of Sir John Eaton, A. 

Valentinian. 

Rock, Magdalen.—Day too Late, A. 

Rocke, Mary A.—Abandoned Troop Horse, The. 
Rockland Courier [Gazette]. Awful Squirt, An. 

Party at Mr. Wigglesworth’s, A. 

Music Hath Charms. 

Rockwell, J. O.—Drunkard, The. 

Rodd, Rennell.—Actea. 

At Tiber Mouth. 

Daisy, The. 

Imperator Augustus. 

In Chartres Cathedral. 

Roman Mirror, A. 

Song of Autumn, A. 

Then and Now. 

“When I am Dead.” 

Rodger, Alex.—Behave Yoursel’ before Folk. 

Roe, Grace D.—Bivouac by the Rappahannock. 

RogA Mrs. Charlotte Fiske [Bates],—Character, A. 
Clue, The. 

Delay. 

Evil Thought. 

Living Book, The. 

Satisfied. 

Woodbines in October. 

Rogers, Charlotte.—Leap Year Farce, A. 

Rogers, Dollie Louise.—Tampa Romance, A. 

Rogers, Mrs. Loula Kendall.—Three Missions, The. 
>wToccoa. the Beautiful. 

Rogers, Pierre.—“Who has not looked upon her brow.” 
Rogers, Rob’t Cameron.—Colonel’s Story, The. 
Dancing Faun, The. 

Doubt. 

Health at the Ford, A. 

Rosary, The. 

Shadow Rose, The. 

Sleeping Priestess of Aphrodite, A. 

Spaniard Answered, The. 

Thackeray’s Birthday. 

Virgil’s Tomb. 

Rogers, S:—Alps, The. See Italy. 

Bergamo. See Italy. 

Descent, The. 

Don Garzia. See Italy. 

Epitaph on a Robin-redbreast, An. 

Farewell. See Italy. 

Florence. See Italy. 

From a Greek Epigram. ( Tr .) 

From an Italian Sonnet. 

Ginevra. See Italy. 

Human Life. 

Italian Song, An. 

Italy. 

Jorasse. See Italy. 

Lost Bride, The. See Italy. 

Marriage. See Human Life. 

My Native Vale. See Italian Song, An. 

Naples. See Italy. 

“Nature denied him much.” See Italy. 

Night and Dav, The. See Italy. 

On-Asleep. 

On a Tear. 

On Lord Dudley and Ward. 

On the Picture of an Infant Playing near a Preci¬ 
pice. See From a Greek Epigram. 

Pleasures of Memory, The. 

Rome. See Italy. 

Sasso di Dante, The. 

Sensibility. See Human Life. 


Rogers, S: ( continued ). 

Sleeping Beauty, The [or A], See On-Asleep. 

Tear, A. See On a Tear. 

To the Butterfly. 

Venice. See Italy. 

Wish, A. 

Rohlfs, Mrs. Anna Katherine [Green],—Defence of the 
Bride, The. See Sword of Damocles, The. 
Sword of Damocles, The. 

Tragedy of Sedan, A. 

Rolleston, T. W.—Dead at Clonmacnois, The. 

Lament of Maev Leith-Dherg, The. 

Song of Maelduin. 

Rollins, Mrs. Alice Marland [Wellington].—Agony Bells. 
Death of Azron, The. 

Faces We Meet, The. 

I Know Myself the Best Beloved of All. 

Many Things Thou Hast Given Me, Dear Heart. 
My Welcome Beyond. 

Ships at Sea. 

Vita Benefica. 

Romaine, Harry.—All on One Side. 

Brief Description, A. 

Could it Be? 

Critic, A. 

Food of Love. 

Miss Jones. 

Our Hero. 

Romanes, G: J:—Home at Last. 

I Ask not for Thy Love, O Lord. 

Simple Nature. 

Ronsard, Pierre.—Return of Spring. 

Rose, The. 

Rook, E. Celia.—Don’t. 

Loving Little Girl, The. 

New Mittens, The. 

Our Country’s Wealth. 

Rook, E. Celia and Lizzie J.—After the Explosion. 
Almost a Man. 

Among the Animals. 

Art Critic, The. 

Aunt Kitty’s Shopping. 

Baby’s Drawer. 

Bandage. 

Be Polite. 

Before the Explosion. 

Bessie’s Letter. 

Best Beauty, The. 

Bird that Sings, The. 

Bite, The. 

Boys and Girls. 

Breakfast. 

Bridget’s Investment. 

Broom Drill. 

Bunch of Flowers, A. 

Burlesque on Fan Drill. 

Catch the Sunshine. 

Christening Dolly. 

Christmas Bells. 

Composition on Animals. 

Counterfeit Money. 

Dairy-maids’ Drill, The. 

Dead Bird, The. 

Dickey-bird, The. 

Doll Drill. 

Dolls’ Hospital, The. 

Drill of the Little Patriots. 

Dumb-bell Drill. 

Eddie Visits the Barber. 

Edna’s Birthday. 

Elsie’s Soliloquy. 

Evening Prayer. 

Exercise Recitation, An. 

Fan Drill. 

Farm Boys’ Song, The. 

Farmer, The. 

Flag. 

Free Smoke, A. 

Going to the Train. 

Good Advice. 

Grace and Dolly. 

Grandma’s Schooldays. 

He Loves Me; He Loves Me Not. 

Holiday Convention, The. 

Hoop Drill and March. 

How Did it Happen? 

How the Quarrel Began. 

I Wonder whom it is from? 

Idolize. 

Illustrated Story, An. 

In the Morning. 

Independence Day. 

Is it You? 

Japanese Fan Drill. 


532 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Rossetti 


Rook, E. Celia and Lizzie J. ( continued). 

Keystone. 

Kittens, The. 

Lily March and Song. 

Little Housekeepers. 

Little Speech, A. 

Looking Ahead. 

Lost Kitty, The. 

March, Song, and Drill with Dolls. 

Masquerading. 

Mother Goose Medley. 

Mother Goose Reception and Drill. 

Moving. 

My Best Friend. 

My Dog. 

Ned’s Best Friend. 

New Tambourine Drill. 

New Toy, The. 

Old Time Lovers. 

Old Time Plays. 

On the Train. 

Our Work. 

Package. 

Parasol Drill. 

Parent. 

Phantom. 

Phil’s Complaint. 

Pious. 

Playing Doctor. 

Playing Grandma. 

Playing Store. 

Poor Work Don’t Pay. 

Proverbs. 

Proverbs, or Rhymes and Reasons. 

Rainbow. 

Rainy Day, The. 

Sammie—-Sallie. 

Shadows. 

Simple March, A. 

Sixty Years Ago. 

Snow Brigade, The. 

Some Children of the Bible. 

Sunday-school Acrostic. 

Tambourine Drill. 

Thanksgiving. 

Those I Love. 

Tom’s Practical Joke. 

Too Hot. 

Troublesome Visitor, A. 

Umbrella March. 

Unjust Suspicion. 

Visitors from Story Land. 

Waiter Drill. 

Waylaid. 

We are Four. 

What They Said. 

Winter Jewels. 

Writing to Grandma. 

Rook, Lizzie J.—Diligent Bessie. 

Ethel’s Birthday Party. 

Grandma’s Tea. 

Harry’s Lecture. 

Jolly March. 

Little Army, The. 

Mamma’s Little Market Woman. 

Mary and Dinah. 

Pussy’s Picture. 

Things that I Do not Like to See. 

When We Grow Big. 

Womanhood. 

Rooney, J- Jerome.—Beam of Light, A. 

Homing. The. 

Joined the Blues. 

M’llrath of Milate. 

Men behind the Guns, The. 

New Beacons Set. 

Rfthat, The. 

Where Helen Comes. 

Roosa, Lizzie D.—Hail, Arbor Day. 

Roosevelt, Theodore.—Americanism. See True Amer¬ 
icanism. 

National Duties. 

True Americanism. 

Use and Abuse of Property, The. 

Root, G: F.—Tramp, Tramp, Tramp. 

Ropes, Arthur Reed.—In Pace. 

On the Bridge. 

Rosaire, Claudius. — Un Potpourri d’Elocution. 
(Arr.) 

Roscoe, Mrs. H:—Butterfly’s Ball, The. (At. also to 
T: Roscoe.) 

Sonnet: “As when, O lady mine.” (Tr.) 

Roscoe, T:—Butterfly’s Ball, The. (At. also to Mrs. H: 
Roscoe.) 


Roscoe, W:—On Parting with his Books. See To My 
Books on Parting with Them. 

On the Death of Burns. 

To My Books on Parting with Them. 

Roscoe, W: Caldwell.—Earth. 

Master-chord, The. 

To la Sanscceur. 

Roscoe, W: Stanley.—Dirge. 

Roscommon, Wentworth Dillon, Earl of. —Essay on 
Translated Verse, The. 

Rose, Laura.—Ocean of Life, The. 

Rose, W: B.—First Trowsers, The. 

Rose, W: Russell.—Bell of Zanora, The. 

Joshua of 1776, The. 

On Crutches. 

Rose, W: Stewart.—Death of Zerbino, The. See Or¬ 
lando Furioso. 

Orlando Furioso. (Tr.) 

Rosegarten, Jos. G: (?).—Amen of the Rocks, The. 
(Tr.) 

Through Trials. 

Rosenberg, Jas. Naumberg.—Darkness. 

Rosenfeld, Morris.—I Know not Why. 

“Ross, Albert.” See Porteb, Linn Boyd. 

Ross, Bert.—Cup and Saucer Episode, A. 

Ross, I:—All the Same in the End. 

Song on William III., A. See All the Same in the 
End. 

Ross, Lawrence S.—Our Banner Unrent; its Stars Un¬ 
obscured. 

Ross, Lee.—Foxes’ Tails, The; or, Sandy McDonald’s 
Signal. See Sandy Macdonald’s Signal. 
Sandy Macdonald’s Signal. 

Rossetti, Christina Georgina. Abnegation. See 
Monna Innominata. 

After Death. 

Aloof. See Thread of Life, The. 

All Things Wait upon Thee. 

At Home. 

Better Resurrection, A. 

Birthday, A. 

Birthday Gift, A. See Christmas Carol, A. 
Bourne, The. 

Bride Song. See Prince’s Progress, The. 

Child’s Talk in April. 

Chill, A. 

Christmas Carol, A. 

Consider. 

Death of a Firstborn. 

Dost Thou Not Care. 

Dream-land. 

Easter Even. 

Echo. 

Echo from Willowwood, An. 

Farm Walk, A. 

First Meeting, The. See Monna Innominata. 
Fluttered Wings. 

Goblin Market. 

Good Sister, The. See Goblin Market. 

Good-by. 

Heaven Overarches. 

“Heaven overarches earth and sea.” See Heaven 
Overarches. 

“Hope is like a harebell, trembling from its birth. ” 
In Patience. 

In the Round Tower at Jhansi. 

Is it Well with the Child? 

“Italia, Io Ti Saluto!” 

It is Finished. 

Jessie Cameron. 

Lady Moon. See “O Lady Moon [, your horns 
point toward the east]. ’ ’ 

Later Life. 

Listening. 

Love from the North. 

Maiden Song. 

Marvel of Marvels. 

Maude Clare. 

Meeting. See Pause, A. 

Milking Maid, The. See Farm Walk, A. 

Milking Time.. 

Monna Innominata. 

Mother Country. 

Next of Kin. 

"O Lady Moon [, your horns point toward the 
east ’ ’— C.]. 

Old and New Year Ditties. 

Passing and Glassing. 

Passing Away. See Old and New Year Ditties. 
Pause, A. 

Prince’s Progress, The. 

Remember. 

Rest. 

Ring Posy, A. 


533 




Rossetti 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Rossetti, Christina Georgina ( continued). 

Royal Princess, A. 

. Sleep at Sea. 

Somewhere or Other. 

Song: “O roses for the flush of youth.” 

Song: “Two doves upon the selfsame branch.” 
Song: “When I am dead, my dearest.” 

Sonnet: “O my heart’s heart, and you who are to 
me.” See Monna Innominata. 

Sonnet: “Trust me, I have not earned your dear 
rebuke.” See Monna Innominata. 

Summer. 

Summer Days. See Summer. 

Summer Is Ended, The. 

There’s Nothing Like the Rose. 

Thread of Life, The. 

Three Seasons [, The]. 

To the End. 

Too Late. See Prince’s Progress, The. 

Trust. See Monna Innominata. 

Twice. 

Twist me a Crown. 

Unseen World—at Home, The. See At Home. 
Uphill. 

Weary in Well-doing. 

Wife to Husband. 

Winter Rain. 

Year’s Windfalls, A. 

Rossetti, Dante Gabriel.—Alexander II. See Sonnet: 
Czar Alexander the Second. 

Aspecta Medusa. 

Ave. 

Ballad of Dead Ladies, The. (TV.) 

Ballad of Old Time Ladies. (Tr.) See Ballad of 
Dead Ladies, The. 

Birth-bond, The. See House of Life, The. 
Blessed Damozel, The. 

Broken Music, See House of Life, The. 

Dante Alighieri. See Dante at Verona. 

Dante at Verona. 

Dark Glass, The. See House of Life, The. 

For a Venetian Pastoral by Giorgione. 

Her Gifts. See House of Life, The. 

His Lady’s Praise. See Vita Nuova. 

Hope Overtaken. See House of Life, The. 

House of Life, The. 

Inclusiveness. See House of Life, The. 
Introductory. See House of Life, The. 

King’s Tragedy, The. 

Little While, A. 

Lost Days. See House of Life, The. 

Love Enthroned. See House of Life, The. 
Love-letter, The. See House of Life, The. 
Love-lily. 

Love’s Lovers. See House of Life, The. 

Love’s Nocturn. 

Lovesight. See House of Life, The. 

Mary Magdalene at the Door of Simon the Phari¬ 
see. 

Monochord, The. See House of Life, The. 
Nevermore, The. See House of Life, The. 

New Year’s Burden, A. 

Newborn Death. See House of Life, The. 

One Hope, The. See House of Life, The. 

Parted Love. See House of Life, The. 

Portrait, The. 

Raleigh’s Cell in the Tower. 

“Retro Me, Sathana.” See House of Life, The. 
St. Luke the Painter. See House of Life, The. 
Sea-limits, The. 

Sibylla Palmifera. See House of Life, The. 

Silent Noon. See House of Life, The. 

Sister Helen. 

Sonnet: Czar Alexander the Second. 

Soothsay. 

Soul’s Beauty. See House of Life, The. 

Staff and Scrip, The. 

Sudden Light. 

Sun’s Shame, The. See House of Life. The. 
Sunset Wings. 

Superscription, A. See House of Life, The. 
“There will I ask of Christ the Lord.’’ 

Three Shadows. 

Venetian Pastoral, A. See For a Venetian Pas¬ 
toral by Giorgione. 

White Ship, The. 

Willowwood. See House of Life, The. 

Without Her. See House of Life, The. 
Woodspurge. The. 

Young Fir-wood, A. 

Rosslyn, Fs. St. Clair-Erskine, Earl of .—Among My 
Books. 

Bedtime. 

Memory. 


Rostand, Edmond.—Balcony Scene from “Cyrano de 
Bergerac,” The. See Cyrano de Bergerac. 
Cyrano de Bergerac. 

Field of Wagram, The. See L’Aiglon. 

L’Aiglon. 

Scene from Cyrano de Bergerac. See Cyrano de 
Bergerac. 

Rothwell, Annie. See Christie, Mrs. Annie [Roth- 
well]. 

Rouget de Lisle [or Delisle], Claude Jos.—French 
National Hymn. See Marseillaise, The. 
Marseillaise, The. 

Marseilles Hymn. See Marseillaise, The. 
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques.—Days of Absence. 

Death is Compensation. 

Rowe. H:—Moon. 

Sun. 

Rowe, M. F.—“Buy Your Cherries.” 

Rowe, N:—Colin’s Complaint. 

Rowland, C:—One Hundred Years from Now. 
Rowlands, R:—Lullaby, A: “Upon my lap my sov¬ 
ereign sits.” 

“Upon my lap my sovereign sits.” See Lullaby, A. 
Rowlands, S:—-In Favor of Tobacco. 

Rowley, Sam.—Sorrow-song. 

Roy, G:—Young Donald. 

Royden, Matthew.—Elegy on a Friend’s Passion for 
His Astrophill, An. 

Lament for Sir Philip Sidney. See Elegy on a 
Friend’s Passion, etc. 

On Sir Philip Sidney. See Elegy on a Friend’s 
Passion, etc. 

Roys, R. L.—Old Woman’s Complaint, An. 

Riickert, Friedrich.—Christkindlein. 

Greediness Punished. 

Greeting from Far Away. 

Love Doth to Her Eyes Repair. 

Three Pairs and One. 

Two and One. 

Wer Wenig Sucht, der Findet Viel. 

Rude, Mrs. B. C.—Daisy, The. 

Home by the Warm Southern Sea, A. 

Naming the Tree. 

’Neath the Cotton-wood Trees. 

Shut Your Cattle In. 

Si, Do, Re. 

Tree of State, The. 

Ruggles, Lucy S.—Baby Sister. 

“It Rains.” 

Morning. See Up and Doing. 

Old Speckled Hen. 

Spider, The. 

Toad, The. 

Up and Doing. 

Whip-poor-will. 

Ye Children, Be Gay. 

Runcie, Mrs. Constance [Faunt LeRoy].—Anselmo, the 
Priest. 

Demetrius. 

Known unto God. 

This Would I Do. 

Runkle, Bertha Brooks.—Song of the Sons of Esau, The. 
Rusby, H: H.—Columbine. 

Ruskin, J:—Beauty of the Clouds. See Modern 
Painters. 

Cloud Beauty. See Modern Painters. 

Clouds, The. See Modern Painters. 

Crown of Wild Olive, The. 

Dawn of Peace, The. 

Death of Moses, The. See Modern Painters. 
Definite Training. 

Eagle’s Nest, The. 

Earth’s First Mercy, The. See Modern Painters. 
Education. See Stones of Venice, The. 

Ethics of the Dust, The. 

Faults and Virtues. See Ethics of the Dust, The. 
Fors Clavigera. 

Great Art. See Two Paths on Art. 

Humblest of the Earth-children, The. See 
Modern Painters. 

King of the Golden River, The. 

Lady, The. See Sesame and Lilies. 

Love of Change. See Stones of Venice, The. 
Madonna dell’ Acqua. 

Man of Genius, The. See Stones of Venice, The. 
Modern Painters. 

Mosses—Earth’s Humblest Children. See Modern 
Painters. 

Nests. See Eagle’s Nest, The. 

“On the whole, there are much sadder ages than 
the early ones.” See Modern Painters. 

Open Sky, The. See Modern Painters. 

Pine Tree, The. See Modern Painters. 

Power. See True Kings of the Earth, The. 


534 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Sabine 


Ruskin, J: ( continued ). 

“Power to converse well is a very great charm. 
The.” 

Princes. See Crown of Wild Olive, The. 

Reading for the Thought. See Sesame and Lilies. 
Saint Ursula. See Fors Clavigera. 

Sermons. See Stones of Venice, The. 

Sesame and Lilies. 

Sky, The. See Modern Painters and Stones of 
Venice, The. 

Stones of Venice, The. 

“To-day.” 

True Contentment. See Modern Painters. 

True Kings of the Earth, The. 

Trust Thou Thy Love. 

Truth of Truths, The. 

Two Paths on Art. 

Tyre, Venice and England. See Stones of Venice, 
The. 

Utility of the Beautiful, The. See Modern 
Painters. 

Water. See Modern Painters. 

Wreck, The. 

Russell, Sir C:—Arbitration and Civilization. 

Russell, C: E.—Benjamin Harrison. 

Chatterton. 

Chatterton at Bristol. 

Defence of the Irish Party, A. 

Fifteenth of February, The. 

Fleet at Santiago, The. 

Nikolson’s Nek. 

Sixty-second Birthday of Swinburne, The. 

To Philip Massinger, “a Stranger.” 

Russell, G: R.—Opportunity for Effort [or Work]. 
Russell, G: W: (“A. E.”).—By the Margin of the* 
Great Deep. 

Connla’s Well. 

Dana. 

Great Breath, The. 

Immortality. 

Inheritance. 

Janus. 

Krishna. 

Man to the Angel, The. 

Memory of Earth, The. 

Om. 

Our Thrones Decay. 

Sacrifice. 

Self-discipline. 

Symbolism. 

Three Counsellors, The. 

Russell, Mrs. Hattie S.—Christmas Song, A. 

Russell, Irwin.—“Along the Line.” 

“Business” in Mississippi. 

Christmas Night in the Quarters. 

De Fust Banjo. See Christmas Night in the 
Quarters. 

First Banjo, The. See Christmas Night in the 
Quarters. 

First Client, The. 

Half-way Doin’s. 

Larry’s on the Force. 

Mahsr John. 

Nebuchadnezzar [or Nebuchadnezzah], 

Nine Graves in Edinbro. 

Norvem People. 

Old Fiddling Josey. 

Origin of the Banjo, The. See Christmas Night 
in the Quarters. 

Practical Young Woman, A. 

Sermon for the Sisters, A. 

Uncle Pete’s Sermon. See Half-way Doin’s. 
Russell, Lord J:—On Parliamentary Reform. 

Russel], Lawrence K.—At a Women’s Club. 

Lines on an X-Ray Portrait. 

Russell, Paul M.—Stonewall Jackson’s Death. 

Russell. Percy.—Birth of Australia, The. 

Russell, T’—Pilgrim Charter and Covenant, The. 
Russell, W. E.—Commonwealth of Massachusetts, The. 
Ruth, Anna L.—Eleventh Hour, The. 

Gates Ajar. 

Little Steenie. 

Rutherford, Lily.—Spring-time, The. 

Rutledge, A. B.—Blue. 

Rutter, Edith.—Without Him. 

Ryan, Rev. Abram Jos: (“Father Ryan”).—Cause of 
the South, The. See Sentinel Songs. 

Child’s Wish, A. 

Christmas Carol, A. 

Christmas Song, A. 

Conquered Banner, The. 

Erin’s Flag. 

“Follow Me.” See Thought, A. 

Rest. 


Ryan, Rev. Abram Jos: (“Father Ryan”) ( continued ). 
Rosary of My Years, The. 

Sentinel Songs. 

Song of the Mystic], The]. 

Song of the River. 

Thought, A. 

Trailed Banner, The. See Conquered Banner, 
The. 

Ryan, Carroll.—Malta. 

Ryan, J. H.—Bachelor’s Love Song, A. 

Ryan, J: W.—Solution, The. 

Ryan, Julia M.—Tintamarre, The. 

Ryan, Malachy.—Rose Adair. 

Ryan. Archbishop Patrick J: (?).—Eternity of Music, 
The. 

Ryan, R:—O, Saw Ye the Lass? 

Ryder, H. I. D.—Question, A. (TV.) 

Ryder, Rev. Father H: Dudley. (?).—Photographic 
Album. 

Ryder, R. O.-—Panacea, A. 

Ryman, Fred Shelley.—Ideal India, The. 


s 

S., A. C.—Fireflies. 

S., A. C. H.—Story Katie Told, The. 

S., A. H.—“Halt! who passes, friend or foe?” 

S., A. M — I Fill My Pipe. 

S., C.—“Across the Lot.” 

Letter, A. 

S., C. A.— Lovers, The. See Tragedy on Past Parti¬ 
ciples, A. 

Tragedy on Past Participles, A. (At. also to Phoebe 
Cary.) 

S., E. H.—Ad Nicotina. 

S., E. V.—Canary’s Story, The. 

S., F.—Unfortunate Phrase, An. 

S., G. V.—Questions. 

S., L. D.—Waiting 

S., L. H.—Stars in My Country’s Sky. 

S., M. D.—Fortune Teller, The. 

Modern Chivalry. 

S., M. H.—Hymn:'—“I’m but a little child.” 

S„ M. W.—Flag, The. 

S„ P. P.—Effigy, The. 

S., R.—Our Childhood’s Home. 

Sabean, W. H.—Uncle Zeke’s Opinion. 

Sabine, Julia A.—Alborak. See Ascutney Charades. 
Ascutney. See Ascutney Charades. 

Ascutney Charades, The. 

Bedroom. See Ascutney Charades. 

Blackbird. See Ascutney Charades. 

Bleak House. See Ascutney Charades. 

Bo Peep. See Ascutney Charades. 

Catalogue. See Ascutney Charades. 

Chestnut. See Ascutney Charades. 

Cockscomb. See Ascutney Charades. 

Concord. See Ascutney Charades. 

Conundrum. See Ascutney Charades. 

Cotton. See Ascutney Charades. 

Countless. See Ascutney Charades. 

Cowpens. See Ascutney Charades. 

Cowslip. See Ascutney Charades. 

Culdee. See Ascutney Charades. 

Dog Days. See Ascutney Charades. 

Dog Star. See Ascutney Charades. 

Dollar. See Ascutney Charades. 

Dormouse. See Ascutney Charades. 

Edgeworth. See Ascutney Charades. 

Excel. See Ascutney Charades. 

Feline. See Ascutney Charades. 

Fly Leaf. See Ascutney Charades. 

Grimalkin. See Ascutney Charades. 

Ground Hog. See Ascutney Charades. 

Hamilton. See Ascutney Charades. 

Hedgerow. See Ascutney Charades. 

Kangaroo. See Ascutney Charades. 

Kickshaw. See Ascutney Charades. 

Liberty Bell. See Ascutney Charades. 

Linden. See Ascutney Charades. 

Madrigal. See Ascutney Charades. 

Mother Hubbard. See Ascutney Charades. 
Muffet. See Ascutney Charades. 

Newness. See Ascutney Charades. 

Palaver. See Ascutney Charades. 

Perverse. See Ascutney Charades. 

Picture. See Ascutney Charades. 

Plymouth Rock. See Ascutney Charades. 
Portiere. See Ascutney Charades. 

Postage. See Ascutney Charades. 

Potatoes. See Ascutney Charades. 

Rubber. See Ascutney Charades. 


535 




Sabine 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Sabine, Julia A. ( continued ,). 

Samson. See Ascutney Charades. 

Sirloin. See Ascutney Charades. 

Skylight. See Ascutney Charades. 

Sonnet. See Ascutney Charades. 

Teacups. See Ascutney Charades. 

Tom Tom. See Ascutney Charades. 

Sackville, C: See Dorset, C: Sackville, Earl of. 
Sackville, T: See Dorset, T: Sackville, Earl of. 
Sacramento Union. —Accursed. 

Safford, Mary Joanna.—Lady of Gedo, The. (TV.) 
Sage, Agnes Carr.—Ambitious Marguerite, The. 
Sagebeer, Jos. Evans.—Maid of Orleans, The. 
Sa-go-ye-wat-ha. See Red Jacket. 

St. Albans, Viscount. See Bacon, Fs. 

St. Ambrose.—I Love Thy Kingdom, Lord. 

Love to the Church. See I Love Thy Kingdom, 
Lord. 

Veni Creator [Spiritus], (Ah) 

Saint-Aubin, Stephanie Felicite Ducrest de. See Gen- 
lis, Comtesse de. 

St. Bernard of Cluny. See ^Bernard of Cluny or 
Morlaix. 

St. Clair-Erskine, Fs. See Rosslyn. Earl of. fj 
St. Francis Xavier.—My God, I Love Thee. 

St. Georges, Jules Henri Vernoy de.—Gypsy’s Warn¬ 
ing, The. See Martha. 

Martha. 

St. Gregory the Great.—Darkness is Thinning. 

Veni Creator [Spiritus]. (Ah) 

Saint James Gazette. —Bean-blossoms. 

Patriotic Smoker’s Lament, The. 

Still True. 

St. Joannes Damascenus.—“From my lips in their de¬ 
filement. ’ ’ 

Saint John Chrysostom.—Divine Providence in Nature. 
Saint John, J. Hector.—Humming-bird, The. 

Saint John, J: P.—Bible and the Liquor Traffic, The. 
Sparrow Must Go, The. 

Vote the Traffic Down. 

Saint John, Keith.—What the April Breeze Said to 
the Trees. 

Saint John, P:—Taxation of America. 

St. John, Rob’t Porter.—Game of Chess, A. 

Thief’s Apology, A. 

St. Louis Chronicle. —Looking for Bargains. 

St. Louis Republic. —Maine’s Men, The. See Sinking 
of the Maine. 

Sinking of the Maine. 

St. Nicholas. —Arithmetic. See Harry’s Arthmetic. 
Bobolink and Chick-a-dee, The. 

Christmas Morning. 

First Christmas-tree in New England. 

Grown-up Land. 

Harry’s Arithmetic. 

How Persimmons Took Cah ob der Baby. See 
“Take Good Care of Baby.” 

“I had a little yellow bird.” 

Lilac, The. 

Little Dora’s Soliloquy. 

Little Seamstress, A. 

‘Once from the town a starling flew. ” 

Sad Story of a Little boy that Cried, The. 
Stagnant, The. 

“Take Good Care of Baby.” 

What is a Baby Good for? See Little Dora’s Solil¬ 
oquy. 

Saint-Juirs.—Jasmine Flower, The. 

Saint Stephen the Sabaite [St. Stephanos].—Art Thou 
Weary? 

Sala, G: A:—Conversion of Colonel Quagg. 
Salis-Seewis, Johann Gaudenz von.—Song of the Silent 
Land. 

Sallume, Marg.—Growing Old. (?) 

Sallust, Caius Crispus.—Caius Marius to the Romans 
on the Objections to Making Him General. 
See Jugurthine War, The. 

Jugurthine War, The. 

Merit before Birth. See Jugurthine War, The. 
Prince Adherbal before the Roman Senate. See 
Jugurthine War, The. 

Salmon, Arthur L.—If Thou Wert False. 

Love that Availeth. 

Salsbury [or Saulsbury], Etta G.—Willie’s Breeches. 
Salter, W. H.—Queer Boy, A. 

Saltus, Edgar Evertson.—Chariot-race in the Time of 
Christ, A. 

Saltus, Fs. Saltus.—Andalusian Sereno, The. 
Austerlitz. 

Bayadere, The. 

Caesar. 

Chibouque. 

Gaetano Donizetti. 

Henry IV. 


Saltus, Fs. Saltus ( continued ). 

Ideal, The. 

Jena. 

Judas the Second. 

Mario. 

Napoleon. 

Napoleon II., Duke of Reichstadt. 

Pastel. 

Richard III. 

Sphinx Speaks, The, 

Sanborn, Franklin B:—Anathemata. 

Ariana. 

Ode Written for the Consecration of Sleepy-Hollow 
Cemetery. 

River Song. 

Samuel Hoar. 

Sanborn, Rev. J. W.—Two Bells. 

Sanborn, T. P.—“Ever so Long Ago.” 

High-backed Chair, The. 

To Millicent Abroad. 

Sand, G: See Dudevant. Amantine Lucile Aurore 
Dupin, Mme. 

Sanderson, Eliz.—Last Word, The. 

Sands, Rob’t C:—Good-night. 

Green Isle of Lovers, The. 

Sandys, G:—Paraphrase upon Luke 1st. 

Sanford, H. R.—Pruning Trees. 

Sanford, M. E.—Junior Partner Wanted, A. 

San Francisco News Letter. —Pwize Spwing Poem. 
Sangster, C:—Comet, The. 

England and America. 

Illuminated Goal, The. 

Living Temple, A. 

Love’s Renewal. 

Snows, The. 

’Tis Summer Still. 

Sangster, Mrs. Marg. Eliz. [Munson].—Across the 
Wheat. 

Are the Children at Home? 

Autumn Day, An. 

Awakening. 

Best that I Can, The. See Do All that you Can. 
Christmas. See Christmas Tree, The. 

Christmas Tree, The. 

Comfort One Another. (?) 

Dinna Chide. 

Dinna Chide the Mither. See Dinna Chide. 

Do All that you Can. 

Eastertide. See Splendor of Lilies, The. 
“Elizabeth, Aged Nine.” 

Growing. 

Growing Old. 

In Galilee. 

“It isn’t the thing you do, dear.” See Sin of 
Omission, The. 

Katydid. 

Left Undone. See Sin of Omission, The. 
Moth-eaten. 

N e w Year A. 

Old Sampler, The. See “Elizabeth, Aged Nine.” 
Our Lost. 

Our Own. 

Overcometh. 

St. Martin and the Beggar. 

Sin of Omission, The. 

Song of Summer, A. 

Splendor of Lilies, The. 

Thanksgivin’ Pumpkin Pies. 

Unkind Words. See Our Own. 

Washington’s Birthday. 

Whittier. 

Santayana, G:-—Faith. 

On a Piece of Tapestry. 

On the Death of a Metaphysician. 

Sappho.—Achilles Tatius. 

Blest as the Immortal Gods. 

Fragment from Sappho, A. See Blest as the 
Immortal Gods. 

Song of the Rose. See Achilles Tatius. 

Sapte, William, Jr.—Advance of Science, The. 

Gallant Rescue, A. 

Soft-hearted Bill. 

Sargeant,-.—How Two Men Spoke the Same Words. 

Sargeant, J:—Law of Success, The. 

Sargent, A.—Boys We Want, The. 

Sargent, Epes.—Critic, The. (?) (TV.) 

Deeds of Kindness. 

Excitement at [or in] Kettleville, The. 

Great Musical Critic, The. See Critic, The. 
Lleart’s Summer, The. 

Life on the Ocean Wave, A. 

Lines for a Little Lassie. See Deeds of Kindness. 
Little Cowslip, The. See Deeds of Kindness. 


s 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Schiller 


Sargent, Epes ( continued ). 

Little Things. See Deeds of Kindness. 

Martyr of the Arena, The. 

Our Country. 

Queen Isabella’s Resolve. 

Reading the Will. 

Regulus to [or before] the Roman Senate. 
Resolve of Regulus, The. 

Return of Columbus, The. 

Spartacus to the Roman Envoys [in Etruria]. 
Suppose. See Deeds of Kindness. 

Tempest, The. 
w cbstor 

Will, The. {At. to W. B. Fowle.) See Reading 
the Will. 

Sargent, H. F.—Land of Dreams, The. 

Sargent, Harry S.—Burnt Corkers. 

Sargent, J: Osborne.—Horace. 

Sargent, Julia E.—In the Rock. 

Saulsbury, Etty G. See Salsbury, Etta G. 
Saunders, C. R.—May. 

Saunders, Cavt. W: H.—Ocean Burial, The. 

Savage, J. W.—Tomb of Washington, The. 

Savage, J^Shane’s Head. 

Savage, Louise H.—Biddy O’Brien has the Toothache. 
Miss O’Mulligan Takes a Bicycle Ride. 

Nora Mulligan’s Thanksgiving Party. 

Savage, Rev. Minot Judson.—Christmas Question, A. 
City of Is, The. 

Each and All. 

Longfellow, Extract Concerning. 

Love’s Return. 

My Birth. 

Mystery. 

Savage, Philip H:—Infinity. 

Morning. 

Silkweed. 

Solitude. 

Savage, R: H:—Ben Hafiz, the Muezzin. 
Savage-Armstrong, G: F. S.—Autumn Memories. 
“Father, The.” 

Gay Provence. 

“I loved thee for that dear, deep lovingness.” 

My Guide. 

Mystery, The. 

One in the Infinite. 

Scalp, The. 

Through the Solitudes. 

Wicklow. 

Wicklow Scene, A. 

Wreck off Mizen-Head, The. 

Savary, J:—Wedding Song, A. 

Savonarola, Girolamo.—Good Friday. 

Sawyer, C: Carroll.—When this Cruel War is Over. 
Sawyer, Harriet Adams.—King Alcohol’s Soliloquy. 
Sawyer, Jas. P.—Her Reason. 

I Love My Love. 

Messages the Roses Bring, The. See Prom-roses. 
Prom-roses. 

She Shook Her Head. 

Varium et Mutabile. 

Sawyer, W:—-Christmas. 

Dying Chief, The. 

Flight for Life, The. 

Recognition, The. 

Rose Song. 

Two Loves and a Life. 

Saxby, J. E.—Oh, Ask not Thou. 

Saxe, J: Godfrey.—“Allow for the Crawl”—A Homily. 
Blind Man and His Candle, The. 

Blind Man and the Elephant, The. 

Bore, The. See My Familiar. 

Briefless Barrister, The. 

Charming Woman, A. 

Cold-water Man, The. 

Comic Miseries. 

Connubial Eclogue, A. 

Do I Love Thee? 

Early Rising. 

Echo. See Ego et Echo. 

Ego and Echo. See Ego et Echo. 

Ego et Echo. 

Family Quarrels. 

Four Misfortunes, The. 

Game of Life, The. 

Go It Alone. See Game of Life, The. 

Grateful Preacher, The. 

Head and the Heart, The. 

How Cyrus Laid the Cable. 

How the Lawyer[s] got a Patron Saint. 

Icarus; or, The Peril of Borrowed Plumes. 

I’m Growing Old. 

King Solomon and the Bees. 


Saxe, J; Godfrey ( continued ). 

Kiss Me Softly. See To my Love. 

Lake Saratoga. 

Library, The. 

Life’s Story. See Story of Life, The. 

Maiden to the Moon, The. 

Maximilian. 

Mourner A la Mode, The. 

My Eyes! How I Love You. 

My Familiar. 

Ode to the Legislature. 

On a Recent Classic Controversy. 

On an Ill-read Lawyer. 

On an Ugly Person Sitting for a Daguerreotype. 
Orpheus and Eurydice. 

Phaethon; or, The Amateur Coachman. 

Poor Tartar. A Hungarian Legend. 

Proud Miss MacBride, The. 

Puzzled Census-taker, The. 

Pyramus and Thisbe. 

Railroad Rhyme. See Rhyme of the Rail. 
Reflective Retrospect, A. 

Rhyme of the Rail. 

Romance of Nick Van Stann, The. 

Saint Jonathan. 

Sheriff of Saumur, The. 

Solomon and the Bees. See King Solomon and 
the Bees. 

Song of Saratoga. 

Sonnet to a Clam. See To a Clam. 

Stammering Wife, The. 

Story of Life, The. 

Stuttering Lass, The. See Stammering Wife, The. 
Superfluous Man, The. 

Tartar, The. See Poor Tartar. A Hungarian 
Legend. 

This, Too, Will Pass Away. 

To a Clam. 

To my Love. 

Two Church-builders, The. 

When I Mean to Marry. 

Where there’s a Will there’s a Way. 

Will and the Wav, The. See Where there’s a 
Will there’s a Way. 

Woman’s Will. 

Saxon, Eliz. L.—Siege of the Alamo. 

Saxton, Andrew Bice.—First Step, The. 

Who Gather Gold. 

Scanlan, Michael.—Hero of the Rank and File, The. 
Scannell, Edith.—Jean Noel—Christmas in France. 
Schaeffer, E.—Doing for Others. 

Schaff, Philip—“Poetry, and its twin-sister, Music, 
are the most sublime and spiritual of arts.”(?j 
Thoughts on Immortality. 

Schanz, Frida.—In Sturmes Not. 

Scharff, V. E.—Pine Tree Academy, The. 

Schauffler, Robert Haven.—Influence. 

Schiller, Johann Christopher Friedrich von.—Address 
to the Swiss. See William Tell. 

Alpine Minstrelsy. See William Tell. 

Antique at Paris. 

Astrological Tower, The. See Wallenstein. 

Battle, The. 

Belief in Astrology, The. See Wallenstein. 
Cranes of Ibycus, The. 

Damon and Pythias. 

Das Licht des Auges. See William Tell. 

Death of Wallenstein, The. See Wallenstein. 
Dirge: He is gone—is dust. See Wallenstein. 
Diver, The. 

Don Carlos. 

Duty. 

Fame. Nee Duty. 

Glove, The. 

Grief of Bereavement, The. See Wallenstein. 
Heroism. See Wallenstein. 

Hope, Faith, [and] Love. See Words of Strength. 
Hostage, The. See Damon and Pythias. 
Invincible Armada, The. 

Joan of Arc’s Farewell to Home. See Maid of 
Orleans, The. 

Knight of Toggenburg, The. 

Maid of Orleans, The. 

Mary Stuart. 

Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland. See Mary 
Stuart. 

Mythology. See Wallenstein. 

Piccolomini, The. See Wallenstein. 

Pilgrim, The. 

Thekla’s Song. See Wallenstein. 

Three Words of Strength. See Words of Strength. 
Veiled Statue at Sais, The. 

Wallenstein. 


537 




Schiller 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Schiller, Johann Christopher Friedrich von ( continued ). 
Wallenstein's Soliloquy. See Wallenstein. 
William Tell. 

William Tell Describes His Escape. See William 
Tell. 

William Tell in Wait for Gessler. See William 
TeU. 

Words of Strength. 

World, The. 

Schley, Admiral Winfield Scott.—Battle of Santiago. 
Schmolke, B.—Heavier the Cross. 

Schneckenburger, Max.—Guard on the Rhine, The. 
See Watch on the Rhine, The. 

Watch on the Rhine, The. 

Schnezler, August.—Deserted Mill, The. 

Schroeder, Mrs. Evelyn Noble.—Marguerite. 

Schultze, Martha M.—Foundations. 

Schurman, Jacob Gould.—Hope of the Nation, The. 
Schurz, Carl.—American Battle-flags. See Eulogy 
on Charles Sumner. 

Battle-flags, The. See Eulogy on Charles Sumner. 
Charles Sumner. See Eulogy on Charles Sumner. 
Declaration of Independence, The. 

Emancipation Proclamation, The. 

Eulogy on Charles Sumner. 

General Amnesty. 

Schuyler, Montgomery.—Carlyle and Emerson. 
Schuyler-Lighthall, W : Douw.—Artist’s Prayer, The. 
Battle of La Prairie, The. 

Canada not Last. 

Confused Dawn, The. 

Montreal. 

My Native Land. 

Praeterita ex Instantibus. 

Sweet Star, The. 

Scollard, Clinton.—As I Came Down from Lebanon. 
Ballad of the Paco Town[, The]. 

Be Ye in Love with April Tide? 

Bell, A. 

Bird’s Song in April. 

Book-stall, The. 

Deeds of Valor at Santiago. 

Down in the Strawberry Bed. 

Easter Eve at Kerak-Moab 
For Our Dead. 

In Solitude. 

In the Library. 

Khamsin. 

Melik the Black. 

Memnon. 

Men of the “Merrimac,” The. 

Montgomery at Quebec. 

Perpetuity. 

Sidney Godolphin. 

Song for the Fleet, A. 

Scott, Alex.—Bequest of His Heart, A. 

Rondel of Love, A. 

Scott, Clement.—Clown’s Lament, The 
Had I but Known. 

Last Night. 

Lilian Adelaide Neilson. 

Lost Letter, A. 

Midnight Charge, The. 

Midshipmite. The. 

Mizpah. 

Noon of Life, The. 

Rus in Urbe. 

Story of a Stowaway, The. 

Stowaway, The. See Story of a Stowaway, The. 
“Will Frank Buchanan Write?” 

Woman’s Song, A. 

Women of Mumbles Head, The. 

Scott, Duncan Campbell.—Above St. Iriin^e. 

At Les Eboulements. 

At the Cedars. 

End of the Day, The. 

Fifteenth of April, The. 

Flock of Sheep, A. 

Home Song. 

In November. 

Life and Death. 

Little Song, A. 

Memory. 

Off Riviere du Loup. 

Ottawa. 

Reed-player, The. 

Scott, Frank N.—Fall In! 

Miller and the Maid, The. 

Scott, Frd’k G:—Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam. 

Dawn. 

Dream of the Prehistoric, A. 

Easter Island. 

God’s House. 


Scott, Frd’k G: ( continued). 

Knowledge. 

Reverie, A. 

Samson. 

Time. 

Van Elsen. 

Scott, J. L.—I Haven’t much Religion. 

When We Go Home. 

Scott, J. W.—Victory Deferred. 

Scott, Lady J:—Annie Laurie. (At.) <See Douglas, 
William, of Finrjland. 

When Thou Art Near Me. 

Scott, Mary McNeil. See Fenollosa, Mrs. Mart 
McNeil [Scott]. 

Scott, Sir Walter.—Abbot’s Blessing on the Bruce, 
The. See Lord of the Isles, The. 

Albert Graeme’s Song. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel. 

Alice Brand. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Allan-a-Dale. See Rokeby. 

Amy Robsart and Richard Varney. See Kenil¬ 
worth. 

“And said I that my limbs were old.” See Lay 
of the Last Minstrel. 

Anglo-Norman Days. See Ivanhoe. 

Answer. See Old Mortality. 

Antiquary, The. 

Archery Contest, The. See Ivanhoe. 

Ballad of Alice Brand, The. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Bannatyne Club, The. 

Bannockburn. See Lord of the Isles, The. 

Baron and the Jew, The. See Ivanhoe. 

Battle of Beal’ an Duine. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

Battle of Harlaw.l 

Beal’ an Dhuine. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Besieged Castle, The. See Ivanhoe. 

Beware. See Bride of Lammermoor, The. 
Blanche of Devan. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Blanche of Devan’s Last Words. See Lady of 
the Lake, The. 

Boat Song. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Bonnets of Bonnie Dundee, The. See Doom of 
Devorgoil, The. 

Bonnie [or Bonny] Dundee. See Doom of Devor¬ 
goil, The. 

Border Ballad. See Monastery, The. 

Border Minstrelsy. (Ed.) See Minstrelsy of the 
Scottish Border, in Title Index. 

Border Song. See Monastery, The. 

Branksome Hall. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 
Breathes there the Man. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel. 

“Breathes there the man with soul so dead.” See 
Lay of the Last Minstrel. 

Bride of Lammermoor, The. 

Brignall Banks. See Rokeby. 

Bruce and the Abbot. See Lord of the Isles, 
The. 

Buccaneer, The. See Rokeby. 

Camp, The. See Marmion. 

Cavalier, The. See Rokeby. 

Charge at Waterloo, The. See Field of Water¬ 
loo, The. 

Chase, The. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Chase, The. (Tr.) See also Wild Huntsman, The. 
Child Dyring. (At.) 

Christmas. See Marmion. 

Christmas Eve in the Olden Time. See Marmion. 
Christmas in England. See Marmion. 

Christmas in [the] Olden Time. See Marmion. 
Clan-Alpine. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Combat between Fits James and Roderick [Dhu]. 

See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Constance de Beverley. See Marmion. 
Contempt. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Convent Scene from Marmion. See Marmion. 
Coronach. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Count Albert and the Fair Rosalie. See Fire- 
king, The. 

Countess Amy and Her Husband, The. Nee 
Kenilworth. 

County Guy. See Quentin Durward. 

Dance of Death, The 

Datur Hora Quieti. See Doom of Devorgoil, The. 
Davie Gellat ley’s Song. See Waverley. 

Death of Bertram, The. See Rokeby. 

Death of Marmion, The. See Marmion. 

Death of Mr. Bertram, The. See Guy Mannering. 
Death of Morris. See Rob Roy. 

Death Struggle, The. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Defiance. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 


538 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Scott 


Scott, Sir Walter ( continued). 

Dies Ine. (TV.) See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 
Doom of Devorgoil, The. 

Douglas. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Douglas to the Populace of Stirling. See Lady of 
the Lake, The. 

Dreams. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Dying Bard, The. 

Edmund’s Song. See Rokeby. 

Elspeth’s Ballad. See Antiquary, The. 

Erl-king, The. (TV.) See Goethe, Johann W. 
von. 

Eve of St. John, The. 

Evening. See Doom of Devorgoil, The. 

Fair Annie. (At.) 

Fair Helen. (At.) 

Farewell. See Pirate, The. 

Field of Waterloo, The. 

Fire-king, The. 

Fitz-James and Roderick Dhu. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

FitzTraver’s Song. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 
Flight. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Flodden Field. See Marmion. 

Friar of Orders Gray. See Rokeby. 

Gathering Song of Donald [or Donuil] Dhu. See 
Pibroch of Donald Dhu. 

Gathering Song of Donald the Black. See Pibroch 
of Donald Dhu. 

Gay Goss-hawk, The. 

Graeme and Bewick. 

Guy Mannering. 

Harold the Dauntless. 

Harold’s Song. See Lay of the Last Minstrel, The. 
Heart of Midlothian, The. 

Heath this Night must be My Bed, The. See Lady 
of the Lake, The. 

Helvellyn. 

Hie Away. See Waverley. 

Highland Chase, The. See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Highland Stranger, The. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

Highland War Song. See Pibroch of Donald Dhu. 
Hunting Song. 

Hymn for the Dead. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel, The. 

Hymn of the Hebrew Maid. See Ivanhoe. 

In Memoriam: Nelson, Pitt, Fox. See Marmion. 
Innominatus. See Lay of the Last Minstrel, The. 
Interview between Amy and Lord Leicester at 
Kenilworth. See Kenilworth. 

Ivanhoe. 

James Fitz-James and Ellen. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Jeanie Deans and Queen Caroline. See Heart of 
Midlothian, The. 

Jock of Hazeldean. 

Kenilworth. 

Kinmont Willie. (At.) 

Knight’s Toast, The. 

Lake Coriskin. See Lord of the Isles, The. 

Lady of the Lake, The. 

Last Minstrel, The. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel. 

Lay of the Imprisoned Huntsman. See Lady of 
the Lake, The. 

Lay of the Last Minstrel. 

Legend of Montrose, The. 

Leonard Tarries Long. See Doom of Devorgoil, 
The. 

Lighthouse, The. See Pharos Loquitor. 

Lines Addressed to Monsieur Alexandre, the Cele¬ 
brated Ventriloquist. 

Lochinvar. See Marmion. 

Lochinvar’s Ride. See Marmion. 

Lodge, The. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Lord of the Isles, The. 

Love of Country. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 
Lucv Ashton’s Song. See Bride of Lammermoor, 
the. 

Lucy Bertam and Domine Sampson. See Guy 
Mannering. 

Lullaby of an Infant Chief. 

Lullaby on an Infant Chief. See Lullaby of an 
Infant Chief. 

Lullaby to an Infant Chief. See Lullaby of an 
Infant Chief. 

Macgregor’s Defence. See Rob Roy. 

Maid of Neidpath, The. 

Marmion. 

Marmion and Douglas. See Marmion. 

Marmion Taking Leave of Douglas. See Marmion. 
Mass, The. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 


Scott, Sir Walter (continued) 

Melrose Abbey. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 
Melrose by Moonlight. See Lay of the Last Min¬ 
strel. 

Monastery, The. 

Morning Landscape, A. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

My Mother. (At.) 

My Native Land. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 
Nelson, Pitt, Fox. See Marmion. 

Nora’s Vow. 

Norham Castle. See Marmion. 

Nubian, The. See Talisman, The. 

Old English Christmas, The. See Marmion. 

Old Mortality. 

Omnipotent, The. See Antiquary, The. 

One Volume More. See Bannatyne Club, The. 
Orphan Maid, The. See Legend of Montrose. The. 
Outlaw, The. See Rokeby. 

Palmer, The. 

Parting of Douglas and Marmion. See Marmion. 
Patriotism. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 

Pharos Loquitur. 

Pibroch. See Pibroch of Donald Dhu. 

Pibroch of Donald [or Donuil] Dhu. 

Pirate, The. 

Pitt and Fox. See Marmion. 

Poet, The. See Lay of the Last Minstrel 
Pride of Youth, The. See Heart of Midlothian, 
The. 

Proud Maisie. See Heart of Midlothian, The. 
“Proud Maisie is in the wood.” See Heart of Mid¬ 
lothian, The. 

Quentin Durward. 

Raleigh. See Kenilworth. 

Ravenswood and Lucy Ashton. See Bride of 
Lammermoor, The. 

Rebecca’s Hymn. See Ivanhoe. 

Red Harlaw, The. See Antiquary, The. 
Reflections of Sir Walter Scott. 

Richard to the Princes of the Crusade. See Talis¬ 
man, The. 

Rob Roy. 

Rokeby. 

Rosabelle. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 

“Rose is fairest when ’tis budding new. The.” 

See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Rover, The. See Rokeby. 

Rover’s Adieu, The. See Rokeby. 

St. Swithin’s Chair. 

Scotland. See Lay of the Last Minstrel. 

Search after Happiness, The; or, The Quest of 
Sultaun Solimaun. 

Serenade, A. See Quentin Durward. 

Soldier, Rest! See Lady of the Lake, The. 
Soldier, Rest! Thy Warfare O’er. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Song: “A weary lot is thine, fair maid.” See 
Rokeby. 

Song: “ Allan-a-Dale has no fagot,” etc. See 
Rokeby. 

Song: “O Brignall Banks,” etc. See Rokeby. 
Song: “Soldier, rest! thy warfare o’er.” See Lady 
of the Lake, The. 

Song: “The heath this night must be my bed.” 

See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Song: “Where shall the lover rest.” See Mar¬ 
mion. 

Song from “The Lady of the Lake.” See Lady of 
the Lake, The. 

Song of Clan-Alpine. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

Song of the Young Highlander. See Lady of the 
Lake, The. 

Sound, Sound the Clarion. See Old Mortality. 
Stag Hunt, The. See Ladv of the Lake, The. 
Storming of the Castle, The. See Ivanhoe. 
Summer. See Lady of the Lake, The. 

Summons, The. See Pibroch of Donald Dhu. 

Sun upon the Lake, The. See Doom of Devor¬ 
goil, The. 

Sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill, The. 

Sunset in the Mountains. See Lady of the Lake, 
The. 

Talisman, The. 

Time. See Antiquary, The. 

To Mr. Alexandre, the Ventriloquist. See Lines 
Addressed to Monsieur Alexandre, the Cele¬ 
brated Ventriloquist. 

Trial of Rebecca, The. See Ivanhoe. 

Trosachs, The. See Lady of the I.ake, The. 
Twist Ye, Twine Ye. See Guy Mannering. 

Violet, The. 


539 





Scott 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Scott, Sir Walter ( continued). 

Waken, Lords and Ladies Gay. See Hunting 
Song. 

Waverley. 

Weary Lot is Thine[, Fair Maid], A. See Rokeby. 
“Where shall the lover rest.” See Marmion. 
Wild Huntsman, The. ( Tr .) 

Young Lochinvar. See Marmion. 

Youth. See Rokeby. 

"Scott, Sir We-alter.”—Paddy Dunbar. 

Scott, W: Bell.—Below the Old House. 

Glenkindie. 

Hero-worship. 

Lowland Witch Ballad, A. 

My Mother. 

Norns Watering Yggdrasill, The. 

Parting and Meeting Again. 

Pygmalion. 

To the Dead. 

Witch’s Ballad, The. 

Youth and Age. 

Scott-Gatty, Alfred Scott.—Three Little Pigs, The. 
Scotus, Edmundus.—Cavalry Scout, The. 

Scoville, D. C.—Truth and Victory. 

Scranton, Bertha S.—Christmas Thought about Dick¬ 
ens, A. 

Scranton, J. H.—Gertrude. 

Summer Campaign, A. 

Scribner, Annie Nyhan.—Panacea. 

Scribner, Mrs. Josephine E. [Pittman],—Sad Mistake, 
A. 

Scribner’s Monthly. —Call me not dead, when I, indeed, 
have gone. 

“Friend who holds a mirror to my face, The.” 
Harvesters, The. 

Isaac Rosenthal on the Chinese Question. 

Lides to Bary Jade. 

Monk in His Cell, A. 

Nun at Her Devotions, A. 

Ophelia. 

Rev. Gabe Tucker’s Remarks. 

Safest Plan, The. 

“Strength for the day! at early dawn I stand.” 
Terpsichore in the Flat Creek Quarters. 

There’s No Rose without a Thorn. 

Undine. 

Vas Bender Henshpecked? 

“We Americans make a God of our common- 
school system.” 

“When I am dead and buried.” 

“Scroggin, Andrew.’*—Piece of Red Calico, A. 

Scudder, Eliza.—Love of God, The. 

New Heaven, The. 

Quest, The. 

To a Young Child. 

Truth. 

Vesper Hymn. 

Whom but Thee. 

Scudder, Horace Elisha.—Emerson, Extract Concern¬ 
ing. 

Whittier, Extract Concerning. 

Scudder, H. Martyn.—Destroyer, The. 

What Intemperance Does. See Destroyer, The. 
Seabury, Emma Playter.—New Woman, The. 
Seagrave, Robert.—Rise, My Soul, and Stretch Thy 
Wings. 

Seaman, Owen.—Bulbul, The. 

Of Baiting the Lion. 

Presto Furioso. 

To Julia in Shooting Togs. 

To Julia under Lock and Key. 

To the Lord of Potsdam. 

Searing, Mrs. Laura Catherine [Redden] ("Howard 
Glyndon”).—Battle of Gettysburg, The. 
Disarmed. 

Mazzini. 

Which is Best? 

“Searle, January.” See Phillips, G: Searle. 

Sears, Edmund Hamilton.—Angel’s Song, The. See 
It Came upon the Midnight Clear. 

Calm on the Ear of Night. See Christmas Song. 
Christmas Hymn. See Christmas Song. 
Christmas Song. 

Glorious Song of Old, The. See It Came upon the 
Midnight Clear. 

Ideals. 

It Came upon the Midnight Clear. 

Peace on Earth. See It Came upon the Midnight 
Clear. 

Seavey, Gideon Webster.—Ich Bin Dein. (?) 

Seawell, Molly Elliot.—’Lijah’s Call to Preach. 
Sedaine,-.—Blondel’s Song under the Prison Win¬ 

dow of Richard Coeur-de-Lion. 


Sedgwick, Alfred B.—Gay Old Man am I, A. 

"Let Those Laugh Who Win.” 

Old Man’s Laughing Song. See Gay Old Man 
am I, A. 

Pity the Sorrows of a Poor Old Man. See Gay 
Old Man am I, A. 

Tootle, Tootle, Too. 

Sedley, Sir C: —Child and Maiden. See Mulberry 
Garden, The. 

Constancy. See To Celia. 

"Love still hath something of the sea.” See 
Song: "Love still hath something of the sea.” 
Mulberry Garden, The. 

"Not, Celia, that I juster am.” See To Celia. 
Phillis. See Phillis is my Only Joy. 

Phillis is my Only Joy. 

Song: "Love still has something of the sea.” 
Song: "Phillis is my only joy.” See Phillis is 
my Only Joy. 

Song from "The Mulberry Garden.” See Mul¬ 
berry Garden, The. 

Song to Chloris. See Mulberry Garden, The. 

To a Very Young Lady. See Mulberry Garden, 
The. 

To Celia. 

To Chloris. See Mulberry Garden, The. 

Seelye, Julius Hawley.—God Save Our Native Land. 
Demerits of High License, The. (?) 

S6gur,- de.—-Utility of History. 

Seiss, Jos. A.—Strong Drink. 

"Selim.”—Brief Puff of Smoke, A. 

Selinger, Emily. James Henry in School. 

Selkrig, Amanda P.—Washington’s Vision. 

Sellers, J. C., Jr.—Master Character of Victor Hugo, 
The. 

Sellers, Minnie L.—Belshazzar’s Feast. 

Sels, H.—Christmas Carol, A. 

Semple, Will H.—In a Horse Car. 

Seneca, Lucius Annseus.—Morals. 

True King, The. 

"We all complain of the shortness of time.” See 
Morals. 

Sennott, G:—Name Your Poison. 

Sentleger, Sir Antonio.—Sir Thomas Wyatt. 

Sergeant, J:—Military Qualifications Distinct from 
Civil. 

Sertrew, Saul.—"Der Dog und der Lobster.” 

Humorous Irish Sketch. 

Setoun, Gabriel.—Jack Frost. 

Romance. 

World’s Music, The. 

Sewall,-.—Eulogy on Laughing. 

Sewall, Alice Archer. See James, Mrs. Alice Archer 
[Sewall], 

Sewall, Frank.—Roll Out, O Song. 

Sewall, Mrs. Harriet [Winslow],—Why Thus Long¬ 
ing? 

Seward, Jonathan Mitchell.—War and Washington. 
Seward, W: H.—American and the Corsican, The. 
See John Quincy Adams. 

America’s True Greatness. See True Greatness 
of our Country, The. 

Central American Treaty, The. 

Character of Henry Clay. See Henry Clay. 
Corsican not Content, The. See John Quincy 
Adams. 

Daniel O’Connell. 

Daniel O’Connell’s Epitath. See Daniel O’Con¬ 
nell. 

Defence of Abel F. Fitch and Others. 

Defence of Alleged Conspirators against the 
Michigan Central Railroad Company. See De¬ 
fence of Abel F. Fitch and Others. 

Defence of William Freeman. 

Eulogy on O’Connell. See Daniel O’Connell. 
Henry Clay. 

Home and School the Bulwark of Our Country. 

See True Greatness of our Country, The. 
Irrepressible Conflict, The. 

John Quincy Adams. 

Plea for the Union. 

Plea for William Freeman, A. See Defence of 
William Freeman. 

True Greatness of our Country, The. 

Welcome to Louis Kossuth. 

Sewell, G:—Dying Man in his Garden, The. 

Seymour, H. M.—Dakin’ a Shweat. 

Shafer, Anna L.—Oratory among the Arts. 

Shairp, J: Campbell.—Bush aboon Traquair, The. 
Cailleach Bein-y-Vreich. 

Lost on Schihallion. 

Remembrance, A. 

Return to Nature. 


540 







t 


AUTHOR INDEX 


Shakespeare 


Shakespeare, W:—Absence. See Sonnets. 

Abuse of Authority. See Measure for Measure. 

• Adam’s Warning. See As You Like It. 
Adversity. See As You Like It. 

Agineourt. See King Henry V. 

“Ah me! for aught that ever I could read.” See 
Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Airy Nothings. See Tempest, The. 

' “All the World’s a Stage.” See As You Like It. 
All’s Well that Ends Well. 

Amor Omnia Vincit. See Sonnets. 

“And this man is now become a god.” See 
Julius Csesar. 

Anger. See Coriolanus. 

Ann Hathaway. See Anne Hathaway. 

Anne Bullen. See King Henry VIII. 

Anne Hathaway. (Also at. to C: Dibdin). 
Antony and Cleopatra. 

Antony and the Soothsayer. See Antony and 
Cleopatra. 

Antony on the Death of Csesar. See Julius Caesar. 
Antony over the Dead Body of Caesar. See 
Julius Csesar. 

Antony’s Address to the Romans. Nee Julius 
Caesar. 

Antony’s Address to the Romans on the Death of 
Caesar. See Julius Caesar. 

Antony’s Lament over Caesar. See Julius Caesar. 
Antony’s Oration over Caesar. See Julius Caesar. 
Antony’s Oration over the Body of Caesar. See 
Julius Caesar. 

Approach of Age, The. See Sonnets. 

Approach of the Fairies, The. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream. 

Ariel’s Song[s]. See Tempest, The. 

Armado and Moth. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 
Art and Nature. See Winter’s Tale, The. 

Arthur in King John. See King John. 

As You Like It. 

Aubade. See Cymbeline. 

Balcony Scene from Romeo and Juliet. See 
Romeo and Juliet. 

Battle of Barnet. See King Henry VI., Pt. III. 
Battle of St. Albans. See King Henry VI., Pt. II. 
Battle of St. Crispian’s Day. See King Henry V. 
Battle of Shrewsbury. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
Battle of Tewksbury. See King Henry VI., Pt. 
III. 

Battle of Towton. See King Henry VI., Pt. III. 
Be Just, and Fear Not. See King Henry VIII. 
Bees, The. See King Henry V. 

Benedick’s Soliloquy. See Much Ado about 
Nothing. 

Birds. See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Biron’s Canzonet. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 
Black Prince, The. See King Henry V. 

Blind Love. See Sonnets. 

Blossom, The. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind. See As You 
Like It. 

Bluntness. See King Lear. 

Bolingbroke’s Entrance into London. See King 
Richard II. 

Bridal Song [A], See Two Noble Kinsmen, The. 
Brutus’ Harangue on the Death of Caesar. See 
Julius Caesar. 

Brutus Justifying the Assassination of Caesar. 
See Julius Caesar. 

Brutus on the Death of Caesar. See Julius Caesar. 
Brutus to Cassius. See Julius Caesar. 
Buckingham’s Address on his Way to Execution. 
See King Henry VIII. 

“Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased.” 
See Macbeth. 

Cardinal Wolsey. See King Henry VIII. 
Cardinal Wolsey on Being Cast Off by King 
Henry VIII. See King Henry VIII. 

Cardinal Wolsey’s Soliloquy. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Carpe Diem. See Twelfth Night; or, What you 

Will. . 

Casket Scene, The. See Merchant of Venice, The. 
Cassio’s Lost Reputation. See Othello, the Moor 
of Venice. 

Cassius. See Julius Caesar. 

Cassius against Caesar. See Julius Caesar. 

Cassius’ Complaint of Caesar. See Julius Caesar. 
Cassius Instigating Brutus against Caesar. See 
Julius Caesar. 

Cassius to Brutus. See Julius Caesar. 

Caution. See King Richard III. 

Clarence’s Dream. See King Richard III. 
Cleopatra. See Antony and Cleopatra. 


Shakespeare, W: ( continued ). 

Cleopatra and the Messenger. See Antony and 
Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra’s Barge. See Antony and Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra’s Resolution. See Antony and Cleo¬ 
patra. 

Closet Scene from Hamlet. See Hamlet. 

Clown’s First Rehearsal, The. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream. 

Clown’s Second Rehearsal, The. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream. 

Colloquy between Portia and Nerissa Regarding 
the Suitors. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Come Away, Come Awav, Death. See Twelfth 
Night; or, What you Will. 

Come away, Death. See Twelfth Night; or. What 
you Will. 

Come, thou Monarch of the Vine. See Antony 
and Cleopatra. 

“Come unto these yellow sands.” See Tempest, 
The. 

Comedy of Errors, The. 

Common Sense. See Sonnets. 

Commonwealth of the Bees, The. See King 
Henry V. 

Compliment to Queen Elizabeth. See Midsum¬ 
mer Night’s Dream. 

Conscience. See King Richard III. 

Consolation, A. See Sonnets. 

Constance’s Denunciation of King Philip of 
France and Lymoges of Austria. See King 
John. 

Coriolanus. 

Coriolanus and Aufidius. See Coriolanus. 

Coriolanus at Antium. See Coriolanus. 

Courage. See Antony and Cleopatra. 

Courage. See also King Richard III. 

Course of Love, The. See Othello, the Moor of 
Venice. 

Course of True Love, The. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream. 

Court Scene from “The Winter’s Tale.” See 
Winter’s Tale, The. 

Crabbed Age and Youth. See Passionate Pil¬ 
grim, The. 

Crime. See Julius Caesar. 

Crispian’s Day. See King Henry V. 

Cymbeline. 

Dagger of the Mind, A. See Macbeth. 

Dagger Scene, The. See Macbeth. 

Dagger Soliloquy. See Macbeth. 

Dawn. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Death of Cardinal Beaufort. See King Henry VI., 
Pt. III. 

Death of Jack Cade. See King Henry VI., Pt. II. 

Death of Julius Caesar, The. See Julius Caesar. 

Death of Prince Arthur. See King John. 

Dialogue between King John and Hubert. See 
King John. 

Dirge: “Come away, come awav, death.” See 
Twelfth Night; or, What you Will. 

Dirge: “Fear no more the heat o’ the sun.” See 
Cymbeline. 

Dirge of Imogen, The. See Cymbeline. 

Dirge of Love. See Twelfth Night; or, What you 
Will. 

Dirge of the Three Queens. See Two Noble Kins¬ 
men, The. 

Dover Cliff[s]. See King Lear. 

Dream of Clarence, The. See King Richard III. 

Duke of Gloster, The. See King Richard III. 

Each and All. See Measure for Measure. 

Earl of Richmond to His Army, The. See King 
Richard III. 

Exhortation to Courage. See King John. 

Fairies’ Lullaby, The. See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream. 

Fairy Land, I. See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Fairy Land, II. See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Fairy Land, III. See Tempest, The. 

Fairy Land, IV. See Tempest, The. 

Fairy Land, V. See Tempest, The. 

Fairy Life, The. See Tempest, The. 

Fairy Song: “Over hill, over dale.” See Midsum¬ 
mer Night’s Dream. 

Fairy Songs. See Tempest, The. 

Fairy to Puck, The. See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream. 

Fairy’s Song, A. See Midsummer Night's Dream. 

Fall of Wolsey. See King Henry VIII. 

Falstaff and Prince Hal. See King Henry IV., 
Pt. I. 

Falstaff’s Boasting. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 


541 





Shakespeare 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Shakespeare, W: ( continued). 

Falstaff’s Honor. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
Falstaff’s Instinct. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
Fancy. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Farewell! Thou art too Dear. .See Sonnets. 
“Farewell! thou art too dear for my possessing.” 
See Sonnets. 

Fear No More the Heat o’ the Sun. See Cym- 
beline. 

Fidele. See Cymbeline. 

Firmness. See King Henry VIII. 

Flowers. See Winter’s Tale, The. 

Fop, The. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 

“For who would bear the whips and scorns of time.” 
See Hamlet. 

Foresight. See Troilus and Cressida. 

Forest of Arden, The. See As You Like It. 
Forum Scene. The. See Julius Caesar. 

Fourth Act of “The Merchant of Venice.” See 
Merchant of Venice, The. 

Friendship, See Hamlet. 

Friendship. See also Sonnets. 

Frustra. See Measure for Measure. 

“Full fathom five thy father lies.” See Tempest, 
The. 

Garden of Love, The. See Sonnets. 

Gentleman, A. See Hamlet. 

Ghost in Hamlet, The. See Hamlet. 

Good Deeds Past. See Troilus and Cressida. 

Good Name. See Othello, the Moor of Venice. 
“Good name in man and woman, dear my lord.” 

See Othello, the Moor of Venice. 

Good Omens. See Sonnets. 

Gracious Time, The. See Hamlet. 

Graveyard Scene, The. See Hamlet. 

“Great man down, you mark his favorite flies. 
The.” See Hamlet. 

Greenwood Tree, The. See As You Like It. 
Grief. See Hamlet. 

“Grief fills the room up of my absent child.” See 
King John. 

Guidance. See Hamlet. 

Hamlet- 

Hamlet to the Ghost. See Hamlet. 

Hamlet to the Players. See Hamlet. 

Hamlet’s Advice to the Players. See Hamlet. 
Hamlet’s First Soliloquy. See Hamlet. 

Hamlet’s Ghost. See Hamlet. 

Hamlet’s Instruetion[s] to the Players. See 
Hamlet. 

Hamlet’s Soliloquy. See Hamlet. 

Hamlet’s Soliloquy on Death. See Hamlet. 
Hark! See Cymbeline. 

Hark, Hark! the Lark. See Cymbeline. 

“Hark! hark! the lark at heaven’s gate sings.” 
See Cymbeline. 

Hate and Revenge. See King Henry VI., Pt. II. 
Hatred. See King Richard III. 

Helena and Hermia. See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream. 

Henry IV. See King Henry IV. 

Henry the Fourth’s Soliloquy on Sleep. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. II. 

Henry V. See King Henry V. 

Henry V. at Harfleur. See King Henry V. 

Henry V. at the Siege of Harfleur. See King 
Henry V. ‘ 

Henry Fifth Encouraging His Soldiers. See King 
Henry V. 

Henry V. to His Soldiers. See King Henry V. 
Henry V. to His Soldiers at the Siege of Harfleur. 
See King Henry V. 

Henry V. to His Troops. See King Henry V. 
Henry V.’s Audience of French Ambassadors. See 
King Henry V. 

Henry V.’s Wooing. See King Henry V. 

Henrv VI. See King Henrv VI., Pt. II. 

Henry VIII. See King Henry VIII. 

Henry’s Speech before Agincourt. See King 
Henry V. 

Henry’s Speech before Harfleur. See King Henry 
V. 

Hesitation. See Macbeth. 

Hotspur. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Hotspur and the Fop. See King Henrv IV., Pt. I. 
Hotspur to Worcester. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
Hotspur’s Defence. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
Hotspur’s Description of a Fop. See King Henry 
IV., Pt. I. 

Hotspur’s Quarrel with Henry IV. See King 
Henrv IV.. Pt. I. 

Hotspur’s Soliloquy on the Contents of a Letter. 
See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 


Shakespeare, W: (continued). 

"Row like a winter hath my absence been.” See 
Sonnets. 

How Should I Your True Love Know? See Ham¬ 
let. 

Human Life. See Tempest, The. 

“I can as well be hanged, as tell the manner of it.” 
See Julius Caesar. 

I See Men’s Judgments. See Antony and Cleo¬ 
patra. 

If ’twere Done when ’tis Done. See Macbeth. 

In the Greenwood. See As You Like It. 

Inborn Royalty. See Cymbeline. 

Inconstancy. See Much Ado about Nothing. 
Influence of Music. See King Henry VIII. 
Insubstantial Pageant, An. See Tempest, The. 

Is This a Dagger? See Macbeth. 

It was a Lover and his Lass. See As You Like It. 
Jog on, Jog On. See Winter's Tale, The. 

"Jog on, jog on, the foot-path way.” See Winter’s 
Tale, The. 

Julius Caesar. 

Katharine’s Appeal to King Henry. See King 
Henry VIII. 

Killing of Macbeth. See Macbeth. 

King Henry IV., Pt. I. 

King Henry IV., Pt. II. 

King Henry V. 

King Henry V. at Harfleur. See King Henry V. 
King Henry VI., Pt. I 
King Henry VI., Pt. II. 

King Henry VI., Pt. III. 

King Henry VIII. 

King Henry’s Address to His Soldiers. See King 
Henry V. 

King Henry’s Ambition. See King Henry VI., Pt. 
III. 

King John. 

King Lear. 

King Richard II. 

King Richard III. 

King Richard’s Soliloquy. See King Richard III. 
King to His Soldiers before Harfleur, The. See 
King Henry V. 

King’s Repentance. A. See Hamlet. 

Lady Macbeth—Sleep Walking Scene. See Mac¬ 
beth. 

“Let me not to the marriage of true minds.” See 
Sonnets. 

Letter Scene, The. See Macbeth. 

Life and Death. See Measure for Measure. 

Life without Passion, The. See Sonnets. 

Little Princes, The. See King Richard III. 

Love. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Love. See also Sonnets. 

Love and Marriage of Ferdinand and Miranda, The. 
See Tempest, The. 

Love Complaining. See Two Gentlemen of Verona. 
Love Dissembled. See As You Like It. 

“Love thyself last; cherish thou hearts that hate 
thee.” See King Henry VIII. 

Lover’s Lament, A. See Twelfth Night; or, W’hat 
you Will. 

Lover’s Night Thoughts, The. See Sonnets. 
Lover’s Tears, The. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 
Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Love’s Memory. See All’s well that Ends Well. 
Love’s Perjuries. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 
Lucrece. 

Lullaby for Titania. See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream. 

Macbeth. 

Macbeth and the Witches. See Macbeth. 
Macbeth before the Murder of Duncan. See Mac¬ 
beth. 

Macbeth to the Ghost. See Macbeth. 

Macbeth’s Soliloquy. See Macbeth. 

Madrigal, A: “Crabbed age and youth.” See Pas¬ 
sionate Pilgrim, The. 

Madrigal; “Take, O, take those lips away.” See 
Measure for Measure. 

Madrigal: “Tell me where is fancy bred.” See 
Merchant of Venice, The. 

Malice. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Man and Woman. See Much Ado about Nothing. 
Man’s Ingratitude. See As You Like It. 

Marc Antony’s Funeral Oration. See Julius 
Caesar. 

Marcus Brutus on the Death of Caesar. See Julius 
Caesar. 

Mark Antony Scene. See Julius Caesar. 

Mark Antony to the People on Caesar’s Death. 
See Julius Caesar. 


542 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Shakespeare 


Shakespeare, W; ( continued ). 

Marriage Hymn. See Two Noble Kinsmen, The. 
Martial Friendship. See Coriolanus. 

Marullus to the Roman Populace. See Julius 
Caesar. 

Measure for Measure. 

Meeting of Orlando and Rosalind. See As You 
Like It. 

Memory. See Sonnets. 

Merchant of Venice, The. 

Merciful Heaven. See Measure for Measure. 
Mercutio’s Description of Queen Mab. See Romeo 
and Juliet. 

Mercy. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

Moonlight. See Mercnant of Venice, The. 
Morning. See Cymbeline. 

Morning. See also Macbeth. 

Morning. See also Romeo and Juliet. 

Morning Song, A. See Cymbeline. 

Morning Song for Imogen, A. See Cymbeline. 
Mother's Blessing. See All’s Well that Ends Well. 
Much Ado about Nothing. 

Murder, The. See Macbeth. 

Murder of King Duncan. See Macbeth. 

Murder of the Princes in the Tower. See King 
Richard III. 

Music. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Music by Moonlight. See Merchant of Venice, The. 
Music's Silver Sound. See Romeo and Juliet. 
My Music. See Sonnets. 

Nestor to Hector. See Troilus and Cressida. 
Night. See Macbeth. 

O Mistress Mine. See Twelfth Night; or. What 
you Will. 

"O mistress mine, where are you roaming?” See 
Twelfth Night; or. What .you Will. 

Oberon and Titania to the Fairy Train. See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream. 

Old Age of Temperance. See As You Like It. 
Olivia. See Twelfth Night; or, What you Will. 
“On a day, alack the day!” See Love’s Labour’s 
Lost. 

One Touch of Nature. See Troilus and Cressida. 
Opportunity. See Julius Caesar. 

Oracle: “Mine honesty and I,” etc. See Antony 
and Cleopatra. 

Oracle: “The flighty purpose,” etc. See Macbeth. 
Oracle: “There is a history,” etc. See King 
Henry IV.. Pt. II. 

Oracle: “There is a mystery,” etc. See Troilus 
and Cressida. 

Oracle: “We must not stint,” etc. See King 
Henry VIII. 

Oration of Mark Antony. See Julius Caesar. 
Orlando’s Wooing. See As You Like It. 
Orpheus. (Sometimes at.) See King Henry 
VIII. 


“Orpheus with His Lute.” See King Henry VIII. 
Othello. See Othello, the Moor of Venice. 
Othello, the Moor of Venice. 

Othello’s Address to the Duke of Venice and the 
Senators. See Othello, the Moor of Venice. 
Othello’s Apology. See Othello, the Moor of 
Venice. 

Othello’s Courtship. 

Venice. 

Othello’s Defence. 

V enicc 

Othello’s Farewell. 

Venice. 

Othello’s Last Words. 

Venice. 

Othello’s Remorse. See 
Venice. 

Out and Inward Bound. 

The. , , 

Over Hill, over Dale. See Midsummer Night s 
Dream. 

Passionate Pilgrim, The. 

Peace. See King Richard III 

Perjury Excused. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Phoenix and the Turtle, The. 

Phoenix and Turtle-dove. See Phoenix and the 
Turtle, The. 

Polonius’ Advice to Laertes. See Hamlet. 
Polonius to Laertes See Hamlet. 

Pomposity. See Merchant of Venice. The. 
Portia in “The Merchant of Venice.” See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The. 

Portia to Shylock. See Merchant of Venice, The. 
Portia’s Picture. See Merchant of Venice The. 


See Othello, the Moor of 
See Othello, the Moor of 
See Othello, the Moor of 


See Othello, the Moor of 


Othello, the Moor of 
See Merchant of Venice, 


Portia’s Plea for Mercy. 
The. 


See Merchant of Venice, 


Shakespeare, W: ( continued ). 

Portia’s Speech on Mercy. See Merchant of 
Venice, The. 

Portia's Speech to Bassanio on his Choice of the 
Casket. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Post Mortem. See Sonnets. 

Potion Scene. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Power of Music, The. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Prayers. See Measure for Measure. 

Prince Henry and Falstaff. See King Henry IV., 
Pt. I. 

Prologue from “King Henry V.” See King 
Henry V. 

Puck and the Fairy. See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream. 

Quality of Mercv, The. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

“Quality of mercy is not strained, The.” See 
Merchant of Venice, The. 

Quarrel between Brutus and Cassius, The. See 
Julius Csesar. 

Quarrel of Brutus and Cassius, The. See Julius 
Caesar. 

Quatuor Novissima. See Sonnets. 

Queen Catherine. See King Henry VIII. 

Queen Catherine to the King and Court of Car¬ 
dinals. See King Henry VIII. 

Queen Katharine’s Appeal to King Henry VIII. 
for Mercy. See King Henry VIII. 

Queen Katherine. See King Henry VIII. 

Queen Mab. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Reduction of Harfleur, The. See King Henry V. 

Regrets of Drunkenness. See Othello. 

Relief of Orleans. See King Henry VI., Pt. I. 

Remorse. See Macbeth. 

Remorse of King Claudius. See Hamlet. 

Resignation. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Revolutions. See Sonnets. 

Rhyme of White and Red. See Love’s Labour’s 
Lost. 

Rhymers. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 

Richard II. See King Richard II. 

Richard III. See King Richard III. 

Richmond to his Army. See King Richard III. 

Richmond to his Troops. See King Richard III. 

Romeo and Juliet. 

Romeo’s Presage. See Romeo and Juliet. 

Ruthless Time. See Troilus and Cressida. 

Scene between Hamlet and the Queen. See 
Hamlet. 

Scene from Hamlet. See Hamlet. 

Scene from “Henry IV.” See King Henry IV., 
Pt. I. 

Scene from “Henry V.” See King Henry V. 

Scene from ‘‘Julius Csesar.” See Julius Csesar. 

Scene from “King Henry VIII.” See King Henry 
VIII. 

Scene from “King Richard III.” See King 
Richard III. 

Scene from “The Merchant of Venice.” See 
Merchant of Venice, The. 

Sea Dirge, A. See Tempest, The. 

Seven Ages, The. See As You Like It. 

Seven Ages of Man. See As You Like It. 

“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” See 
Sonnets. 

“She thanked me, and bade me.” See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice. 

Sheen-shearing, A. See Winter’s Tale, The. 

Shepherd’s Life, A. See King Henry VI.. Pt. III. 

Short Selections. 

Shylock. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Shylock for the Jews. See Merchant of Venice, 
The. 

Shylock Lends the Ducats. See Merchant of 
Venice, The. 

Shylock to Antonio. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Shylock’s Soliloquy and Address. See Merchant 
of Venice, The. 

Sickness. See King Henry IV., Pt. II. 

Sigh no more, Ladies. See Much Ado about 
Nothing. 

Silvia [or Sylvia]. See Two Gentlemen of Verona. 

Sister Pleads for a Brother’s Life, A. See Measure 
for Measure. 

Slander. See Cymbeline. 

Sleep. See King Henry IV., Pt. II. 

Sleep-walking Scene, The. See Macbeth. 

Soliloquies from Hamlet. See Hamlet. 

Soliloquy of King Richard III. See King Richard 
III. 

Soliloquy of Romeo in the Garden. See Romeo 
and Juliet. 


543 




Shakespeare 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Shakespeare, W: ( continued ). 

Soliloquy on Character. See King Henry V. 

Soliloquy on Death. See Hamlet. 

Song: “Fear no more the heat o’ the sun.” See 
Cymbeline. 

Song: “Hark, hark! the lark at heaven’s gate 
sings.” See Cymbeline. 

Song: “How should I your true love know.” See 
Hamlet. 

Song: “On a day, alack the day!” See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost. 

Song: “Orpheus with his lute made trees.” See 
King Henry VIII. 

Song: “Tell me, where is fancy bred.” See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The. 

Song: “Under the greenwood tree.” See As You 
Like It. 

Song- “When icicles hang by the wall.” See 
Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Song from “Measure for Measure.” See Measure 
for Measure. 

Song from “The Merchant of Venice.” See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The. 

Song of Ariel. See Tempest, The. 

Song of Autolycus. See Winter’s Tale, The. 

Song of the Fairy. See Midsummer’s Night Dream. 

Song of the Holly. See As You Like It. 

Song: The Greenwood Tree. See As You I.ike It. 

Sonnets. 

Soul and Body. See Sonnets. 

Speech of Cassius, Instigating Brutus to Join the 
Conspiracy against Caesar. See Julius Caesar. 

Speech of Henry V. See King Henry V. 

Speech of Prospero, A. See Tempest, The. 

Speech of the Dauphin. See King John. 

Spoils of Time, The. See Sonnets. 

Spring. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Spring and Winter. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Suspicion. See Julius Caesar. 

Sweet and Twenty. See Twelfth Night; or, What 
You Will. 

“Sweet are the uses of adversity.” See As You 
Like It. 

Sylvia. See Two Gentlemen of Verona. 

Take, O, Take Those Lips Away. See Measure 
for Measure. 

Taming of the Shrew. 

Tell Me where is Fancy Bred. See Merchant of 
Venice, The. 

Tempest, The. 

Terror. See King Richard III. 

That Time of Year. See Sonnets. 

“That time of year thou mayst in me behold.” 
See Sonnets. 

“That you have wronged me doth appear in this.” 
See Julius Caesar. 

“There is a tide in the affairs of men.” See Julius 
Caesar. 

“This army led by a delicate and tender prince.” 
See Hamlet. 

“This is the state of man.” See King Henry 
VIII. 

“Thou mayst, thou shalt, I will not go with thee.” 
See King John. 

Threatening, See King John. 

Time and Love. See Sonnets. 

Timon of Athens. 

To Be or Not To Be. See Hamlet. 

To His Love. See Sonnets. 

To Imogen. See Cymbeline. 

“To me, fair friend[, you never can be old].” See 
Sonnets. 

To Sylvia. See Two Gentlemen of Verona. 

Tomorrow and Tomorrow. See Macbeth. 

Tongues in Trees. See As You Like It. 

Tragedy of King John, The. See King John. 

Trial of Queen Katherine. See King Henry VIII. 

Trial Scene, The. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Triumph of Death, The. See Sonnets. 

Troilus and Cressida. 

True Love. See All’s Well that Ends Well. 

True Love. See also Sonnets. 

Twelfth Night; or, What you Will. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona. 

Two Noble Kinsmen, The.—Shakespeare and 
Fletcher. 

Ulysses and Achilles. See Troilus and Cressida. 

Unchangeable, The. See Sonnets. 

Under the Greenwood Tree. See As You Like It. 

Unrequited Love. See Twelfth Night; or, What 
You Will. 

Venus and Adonis. 

Viola Disguised, and the Duke. See Twelfth 
Night; or, What You Will. 


Shakespeare, W: ( continued). 

Violet Bank, A. See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 
“War! War! no peace! Peace is to me a war.” 
See King John. 

Wedlock Hymn, A. See As You Like It. 

“When daisies pied and violets blue.” See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost. 

"When he shall hear she died upon his word.” 

See Much Ado about Nothing. 

“When Icicles Hang by the Wall.” See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost. 

When in Disgrace. See Sonnets. 

“When in the chronicle of wasted time.” See 
Sonnets. 

When to the Sessions of Sweet Silent Thought. 
See Sonnets. 

“When we in our viciousness grow hard.” See 
Antony and Cleopatra. 

“Where the bee sucks, there suck I.” See Tem¬ 
pest, The. 

Who is Silvia [or Sylvia]? See Two Gentlemen of 
Verona. 

"Who is Sylvia? What is She.” See Two Gentle¬ 
men of Verona. 

Winter. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 

Winter Song, A. See Love’s Labour’s Lost. 
Winter’s Tale, The. 

Witches’ Meeting, The. See Macbeth. 

Wolsev’s Advice to Cromwell. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Wolsey’s Fall. See King Henry VIII. 

Wolsey’s Farewell. See King Henry VIII. 
Wolsey’s Farewell Address to Cromwell. See King 
Henry VIII. 

Wolsey’s Farewell to Cromwell. See King Henry 
VIII. 

Wolsey’s Soliloquy. See King Henry VIII. 
Woodbine. See Midsummer Night’s Dream. 
Wooing of the French Princess. See King Henry 
V. 

World’s Way, The. See Sonnets. 

Young Love. See Merchant of Venice, The. 

Youth and Age. See Passionate Pilgrim, The. 
Shanly, C: Dawson.—Brier-wood Pipe, The. 

Broken Pitcher, The. See Kitty of Coleraine. 
Civil War. 

Fancy Shot, The. See Civil War. 

Kitty. See Kitty of Coleraine. 

Kitty of Coleraine. (At. also to E: Lysaght.) 
Walker of the Snow, The. 

Sharp, W:—Coves of Crail, The. 

Death-child, The. 

Isle of Lost Dreams, The. 

Last Aboriginal, The. 

Red Poppies in the Sabine Valley near Rome. See 
Sospiri di Roma. 

Song: “Love in my heart; oh, heart of me, heart of 
me!” 

Sospiri di Roma. 

Susurro. See Sospiri di Roma. 

White Peacock, The. See Sospiri di Roma. 

Sharpe,-.—Come and Go. 

Sharpe, Mary E.—Daffodil, The. 

Dainty Lady Daffodil. See Daffodil, The. 

Sharpe, R. S.—Conjugal Love. See Love’s Strategy. 
Love’s Strategy. 

Minute-gun, The. 

Sharpley, Sam.—Election Stump Speech. 

Shaw, Alfred C.—Somewhere. 

Shaw, Anna H.—Loyalty to Truth. 

Shaw, D: T.—Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean. 

Columbia, the Land of the Brave. See Columbia, 
the Gem of the Ocean. 

Red, White, and Blue, The. See Columbia, the 
Gem of the Ocean. 

Shaw, Dora.—Out in the Sobbing Rain. 

Shaw, Emma.—Night Ride on the Engine. 

School Episode, A. 

Shaw, Frances A.—Miss Margaret. (Tr.) 

Shaw, Fs. A.—Heroes. 

Shaw, H: Wheeler (“Josh Billings”).—Billings on “The 
District Schoolmaster.” 

Bull-head, The. 

Codfish, The. 

Courting. See On Courting. 

Hornet, The. 

Josh Billings on Artemus Ward. 

Josh Billings on Courting. See On Courting. 

Josh Billings on “Gongs.” See My Fust Gong. 
Josh Billings on Laughing. See Laughing. 

Josh Billings on “Manifest Destiny.” See Mani¬ 
fest Destiny. 

Josh Billings on the Mule. See Mule, The. 


544 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Shenstone 


Shaw, H: Wheeler (“Josh Billings”) (continued). 
Laffing. See Laughing. 

Laughing. 

Manifest Destiny. 

Mule, The. 

My Fust Gong. 

On Courting. 

Receipt for Hash. 

Shaw, J:—Sleighing Song. 

Song: “Who has robbed the ocean cave.” 

Shea, J: A:—O’Kavanagh, The. 

Sheale, R:—Ballad of, Chevy-Chase, The. See Chevy- 
Chase. 

Chevy-Chase [or Chace]. 

Shee, Sir Martin Archer.—Alasco to His Countrymen. 
Sheffield, J:—On One who Died Discovering her Kind¬ 
ness. 

Reconcilement, The. 

Sheil, R: Lalor.—Catholics of Ireland, The. 

Church of Ireland, The. 

Colonna to the King. 

England’s Misrule of Ireland. 

Established Church of Ireland, The. See Church 
of Ireland, The. 

Irish Agitators. See Repeal of the Union, The. 
Irish Aliens. See Irish Aliens and English Vic¬ 
tories. 

Irish Aliens and English Victories. 

Irish Church, The. See England’s Misrule of Ire¬ 
land. 

Irish Grievances. See Resolution on the Prose¬ 
cution of Mr. O’Connell. 

Irish Loyalty and Valor. See Irish Aliens and 
English Victories. 

Irish Municipal Bill. See Irish Aliens and English 
Victories. 

Irish Valor and Loyalty. See Irish Aliens and 
English Victories. 

On Charges against Roman Catholics. See Cath¬ 
olics of Ireland, The. 

Repeal of the Union, The. 

Resolution on the Prosecution of Mr. O’Connell. 
Tithes. See England’s Misrule of Ireland. 
Sheldon, C: Munroe.—Duty. 

Sheldon, F. L.—Trees of History and Mythology. 
Sheldon, G. M.—Telemachus. 

Sheldon, Lurana W.—No Science for Him. See Too 
Progressive for Him. 

Too Progressive for Him. 

Shelley, D. N.—Devotion to Duty. 

Shelley, Percy Bysshe.—Adonais. 

Alastor; or, The Spirit of Solitude. 

Arethusa. 

Autumn[: a Dirge]. 

Cenci, The. 

Charles the First. 

Child of Twelve, A. See Revolt of Islam, The. 
Cloud, The. 

Daybreak. 

Death. 

Dirge, A. 

Dirge for the Year. 

Dream of the Unknown. A. See Question, The. 
Drones of the Community, The. See Queen Mab. 
Elegy on the Death of John Keats, An. See 
Adonais. 

Epipsychidion. 

Eternal, The. See Adonais. 

Evening. 

Fear. See Cenci, The. 

Flight of Love, The. See Lines. 

“Fountains mingle with the river, The.” See 
Love’s Philosophy. 

From the Arabic. An Imitation. 

Fugitives, The. 

Hellas. 

“How beautiful this night! The balmiest sigh.” 

See Queen Mab. 

Hymn of Pan. 

Hymn to Intellectual Beauty. 

I Arise from Dreams of Thee. See Indian Sere¬ 
nade, The. 

I Fear Thy Kissesf, Gentle Maiden], See To-: 

“I fear,” etc. 

Indian Serenade, The. 

Invitation, The. See To Jane. 

Invocation to Nature. See Alastor; or, The Spirit 
of Solitude. 

Italian Ravine, An. See Cenci, The. 

Lament, A: “O world! O life! O time!” 

Lament, A: “Swifter far than summer’s flight. 

See Remembrance. 

Last Chorus of Hellas. See Hellas. 


Shelley, Percy Bysshe ( continued ). 

Lines. 

Lines on the Death of Napoleon. 

Lines to an Indian Air. See Indian Serenade, 
The. 

Lines Written among the Euganean Hills. 

Love’s Philosophy. 

Magic Car Moved On, The. See Queen Mab. 

Mask of Anarchy, The. 

“Men of England, Heirs of Glory.” See Mask of 
Anarchy, The. 

Moon, The. See To the Moon and Waning Moon, 
The. 

Music, when Soft Voices die. See To -: “Mu¬ 

sic, when,” etc. 

Mutability. 

Night. See Queen Mab. 

Night. See also To Night. 

Ode to a Skylark. See To a Skylark. 

Ode to the Assertors of Liberty, An. 

Ode to the West Wind. 

Ode, Written 1819, before the Spaniards had Re¬ 
covered their Liberty, An. See Ode to' the 
Assertors of Liberty, An. 

On His Marriage to Mary Godwin. See To Mary 
Wollstonecraft Godwin. 

One Word is too Often Profaned. See To-: 

“One word,” etc. 

Ozymandias [of Egypt]. See Sonnet.—Ozyman- 
dias. 


Peace and War. See Queen Mab. 

Poet’s Dream, The. See Prometheus Unbound. 
Poet’s World, The. See Prometheus Unbound. 
Prometheus Unbound. 

Queen Mab. 

Question, The. 

Recollection, The. 

Remembrance. 

Remorse. See Stanzas. — April, 1814. 

Revolt of Islam, The. 

Sensitive Plant, The. 

Serenade, The. See Indian Serenade, The. 
Skylark, The. See To a Skylark. 

Song: “Rarely, rarely, comest thou.” 

Sonnet : Ozymandias. 1 

Spirit of Delight, The. See Song. 

Stanzas. — April, 1814. 

Stanzas Written in Dejection near Naples. 
Summer and Winter. 

Sun is Warm, the Sky is Clear, The. See Stanzas 
Written in Dejection near Naples. 

Sunbeam, The. 

Sunrise. See Prometheus Unbound. 

Sunset. See Queen Mab. 

Threnos. See Lament, A: “O world!” etc. 

To 
To 
To 


“I fear thy kisses,” etc. 

“Music, when soft voices die.” 

“One word,” etc. 

To a Lady with a Guitar. See With a Guitar; to 
Jane. 

To a Skylark. 

To Constantia—Singing. 

To Ianthe, Sleeping. See Queen Mab. 

To Jane. 

To Jane—the Recollection. See Recollection, 
The. 

To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin. 

To Night. 

To the Moon. 

To the Night. See To Night. 

To the Skylark. See To a Skylark. 

View from the Euganean Hills, North Italy. See 
Lines Written among the Euganean Hills: 
Voice in the Air, Singing. See Prometheus Un¬ 
bound. 

Waning Moon, The. 

War. See Queen Mab. 

When the Lamp is Shattered. See Lines. • 

Widow Bird, The [or A]. See Charles the First. 
With a Guitar; to Jane. 

World’s Wanderers, The. 

Written among the Euganean Hills. See Lines 
Written among the Euganean Hills. 
Shellman, Harry J.—Over the Orchard Fence. -• 
Shelton, Ada S.—In Santa Claus Land. 

Shenstone, W:—Dying Kid, The. 

Hope. See Pastoral Ballad, A. 

Much Taste and Small Estate. See Progress of 
Taste, The. 

Pastoral. See Pastoral Ballad, A. 

Pastoral Ballad, A. 

Progress of Taste, The. •' 

Schoolmistress, The. • • 


545 











Shenstone 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Shenstone, W: ( continued). 

Shepherd’s Home, The. See Pastoral Ballad, A. 

Suffering and Sympathy. See Schoolmistress, The. 

Village Schoolmistress, The. See Schoolmistress, 
The. 

Written at an Inn at Henley. 

Shepherd, Eli.—To a Cricket. 

Shepherd, Nathaniel Graham.—Calling the Roll. See 
Roll-call. 

“I sit before my fire alone.” See Summer Remi¬ 
niscence, A. 

Only the Clothes She Wore. 

Poor and Little Greece. 

Roll-call. 

Summer Reminiscence, A. 

Shepherd, R: H.—Poet’s Pipe, A. 

“Shepherd Tonie.” See Munday, Anthony. 

Sheppard, C:—Black Horse and His Rider, The. See 
Lippard, G: 

Sheppard, S:—Epithalamium. (?) 

Sheppard, T.—Arkansaw Pete’s Adventure. 

Colorado Hotel Rules. 

Reasons Why. 

Sherbrooke, Rob’t Lowe, Viscount. — Song of the 
Squatter. 

Sheridan, Caroline Eliz. Sarah. See Stirling-Max- 
well, Lady. 

Sheridan, Helen Selina. See Dufferin, Lady. 

Sheridan, G: A.—Immortal Memories. 

Sheridan, R: Brinsley Butler.—Against Political Job¬ 
bing. 

Atheistical Government Impossible, An. 

Begum Speech. See Impeachment of Warren 
Hastings. 

Challenge, The. See Rivals, The. 

Character of Justice. See Impeachment of 
Warren Hastings. 

Cool Reason. See Rivals, The. 

Critic, The; or, A Tragedy Rehearsed. 

Dry be that Tear. 

Duel, The. See Rivals, The. 

Duel Scene from “The Rivals,” The. See Rivals, 
The. 

Duenna, The. 

Epilogue to Hannah More’s Play, “The Fatal 
Falsehood.” 

Impeachment of Mr. Hastings, The. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings. 

Impeachment of Warren Hastings. 

Lady Teazle and Sir Peter. See School for Scan¬ 
dal, The. 

Las Casas Dissuading from Battle, See Pizarro. 

Let the Toast Pass. See School for Scandal, The 

Literary Lady, The. See Epilogue to Hannah 
More’s Play, “The Fatal Falsehood.” 

Mr. Puff’s Account of Himself. See Critic, The; 
or, A Tragedy Rehearsed. 

Mrs. Malaprop’s Idea of Education. See Rivals, 
The. 

Nature of Justice, The. See Impeachment of 
Warren Hastings. 

Old Gentleman who Married a Young Wife, The. 
See School for Scandal, The. 

Orator Described, The. See Perfect Orator, The. 

Perfect Orator, The. 

Pizarro. ( Tr .). 

Pizarro and Rolla. (Tr.) See Pizarro. 

Popular and Kingly Examples. 

Quarrel between Sir Peter and Lady Teazle. See 
School for Scandal, The. 

Quarrel Scene from “School for Scandal.” See 
School for Scandal, The. 

Rivals, The. 

Rolla to the Peruvians. (Tr.) See Pizarro. 

Rolla’s Address to the Peruvians. (Tr.) See 
Pizarro. 

Scenes from “The School for Scandal.” See School 
for Scandal, The. 

School for Scandal, The. 

Sir Peter and his Lady Quarrel. See School for 
Scandal, The. 

Song: “Had I a heart for falsehood framed.” See 
Duenna, The. 

Song: “I ne’er could any luster see.” 

Speech of Rolla to the Peruvian Army. (Tr.) 
See Pizarro. 

Swallows, The. 

Wife, A. 

Sheridan, T:—New Simile for the Ladies, A. 

On a Caricature. 

On Dean Swift’s Proposed Hospital for Lunatics. 

To a Dublin Publisher. 

Sherman, C. H.—Rainbow Drill. 


Sherman, C: Pomeroy.—Bachelor’s Wedding Trip, A. 
Spirits of Fire, The. See Bachelor’s Wedding 
Trip, A. 

Sherman, E. B.—Eulogy on U. S. Grant. 

Tribute to Logan. 

Sherman, Fs.—Between the Battles. 

Builder, The. 

Little While before the Fall was Done, A. 

Prelude, A. 

Sherman, Frank Dempster.—Allah’s House. 
Anemone. 

April. 

Archer, The. 

At Midnight. 

August. 

Bacchus. 

Bees. 

Bird’s Music. 

Blossoms. 

Book-hunter, The. 

Canary, The. 

Cherries. 

Christmas Cat, The. 

Clouds. 

Daisies [, The]. 

December. 

Dewdrop, A. 

Dreams. 

Easter. 

Elfin Lamps. 

Fairies’ Dance, The. 

Fairy Jewels. 

Fairy Shipwreck. 

Fairy Story, A. 

February. 

Flying Kite. 

Footprints in the Snow. 

Four Winds, The. 

Funny Fellow, A. 

Ghost Fairies. 

God’s Miracle of May. 

Golden-rod. 

Hide-and-seek. 

Hollyhock, A. 

Humming-bird Song. 

In the Meadow. 

In the Orchard. 

January. 

Jester Bee. 

Juggler, The. 

July. 

June. 

King Bell. 

Kriss Kringle. 

Last Letter, The. 

Leaves at Play. 

Library, The. 

Love’s Seasons. 

Lullaby. 

Madrigal, A. 

March. 

May-children. 

May. 

Moonrise. 

November. 

October. 

On a Clock. 

On a Greek Vase. 

On some Buttercups. 

Pebbles. 

Quatrain, A: “Hark at the lips,” etc. 

Rainbow, The. 

Rain-harp, The. 

Real Santa Claus. A. 

Rhyme for Priscilla, A. 

Robin’s Apology. 

Rose’s Cup, The. 

September. 

Shadow Children. 

Shadow Pictures. 

Shadows, The. 

Smiles and Tears. 

Snow Song. 

Snow-bird, The. 

Snowflakes. 

Snow-weaver, The. 

Soldiers of the Sun. 

Song for Winter. 

Spinning Top. 

Spring’s Coming. 

Story of Omar, The. 

Story-teller, The. 

“Then let the holly red be hung.” 


546 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Sidney 


Sherman, Frank Dempster ( continued ). 

To a Rose. 

To the Little Readers. 

Vacation Song. 

Valentine, A. 

Waterfall, The. 

Winter Starlight. 

Winter’s Acrobats. 

Wizard Frost. 

Sherman, J. D.—John Brown’s Body. 

Sherman, Mary.—When I am Weak then I am Strong. 
Sherman, W: Tecumseh.—Belligerent Non-combatants. 
Our Army and Navy. 

Sherman on the Veterans. See Veterans, The. 
Veterans, The. 

Sherwood, Ada Simpson.—Adown the Years. 

Sherwood, Mrs. J: See Sherwood, Mrs. Mary Eliz. 
[Wilson]. 

Sherwood, Mrs. Kathe. Marg. [Brownlee],—Albert Sid¬ 
ney Johnston. 

Drummer Boy of Mission Ridge, The. 

Fall In. 

First Crocus, The. 

Men Who Wore the Shield, The. 

Mollie Pitcher. 

Red, the White, the Blue, The. 

Soldier’s Retrospect, A. 

Thomas at Chickamauga. 

Ulruc Dahlgren. 

Sherwood, Mrs. Mary Eliz. [Wilson],—Carcassonne. 

( Tr.) 

Romance of a Year, The. 

Shields, Annie S.—Ann Rafferty’s Evidence. 

Shillaber, B: Penhallow (“Mrs. Partington”).— 
Blifkins the Bacchanal. 

Blifkins the Ruralist. 

Horse-car Incident, A. 

“If Things Was Only Sich.” 

John Smith’s Will. 

Mrs. Partington’s Reflections on New Year’s Day. 
Mouse-hunting. 

My Childhood Home. 

My Friend’s Secret. 

Mysterious Rappings. 

Picture, A. See My Childhood Home. 

Sagamore, The. 

True Faith. 

What is it to Me? 

Shinn, Milicent Washburn.—Song and Science (“The 
Twilight of the Poets”). 

Washington Sequoia, The. 

When Almonds Bloom. 

Yosemite. See Washington Sequoia, The. 

Shirley, Jas.—Contention of Ajax and Ulysses, The. 
Cupid and Death. 

Death the Leveller. See Contention of Ajax and 
Ulysses, The. 

Death’s Final Conquest. See Contention of Ajax 
and Ulvsses, The. 

Death’s Triumph. See Contention of Ajax and 
Ulysses, The. 

Dirge, A: “The glories of our blood and state.” 

See Contention of Ajax and Ulysses, The. 
Garden, The. 

Holiday in Arcadia. See School of Compliments, 
The. 

Hymn, A: “O fly my soul! what hangs upon.” 
Imposture, The. 

King of Kings, The. See Contention of Ajax and 
Ulysses, The. 

Last Conqueror, The. See Cupid and Death. 
Looking-glass, The. See To a Lady, upon a Look¬ 
ing-glass Sent. 

Lullaby, A. See Triumph of Beauty, The. 

Might of Death, The. See Cupid and Death. 

On Her Dancing. 

Pan’s Holiday. See School of Compliments, 
The. 

Peace Restored. See Iinposture, The. 

School of Compliments, The. 

To a Lady, upon a Looking-glass Sent. 

To King Charles and Queen Henrietta. See Tri¬ 
umph of Peace, The. 

To One Saying She was Old. See To One that 
Said his Mistress was Old. 

To One that Said his Mistress was Old. 

Triumph of Beauty, The. 

Triumph of Peace, The. 

Victorious Men of Earth. See Cupid and Death. 
Shirley, Moses Gage.—Before She Thought. 

Shoals. A. F.—Valedictory. 

Shoemaker, Dorothy A.—King’s Decree, The. 
Shoemaker, J. W.—Bible Reading. 


Shoemaker, Mrs. Rachel [Hinkle].—Address to the 
Class of 1877. 

Shope, C: W.—Polly. 

Shore, T: Teignmouth. Child’s Tear, A. 

Short, Mamie T.—Mother’s Lullaby. 

Short, Marion.—Bird among the Blooms. 

Fairy Bell. 

He Let Her Know. 

Short, Seymour S.—Arbor Day. 

Resurgam. 

Shorter, Mrs. Clement (Dora Sigerson).—All Souls’ 
Night. 

Ballad of Marjorie, A. 

Cean Duv Deelish. 

Ireland. 

One Forgotten, The. 

Rose will Fade, A. 

Wind on the Hills, The. 

Showerman, Grant.—El Dorado. 

Shuman, Edwin L.—Mission of the Press, The. 
Shurtleff, Ernest Warburton.—Gettysburg. 

Lights of Lawrence, The. 

Old Thanksgiving Days, The. 

Shurtleff, W: S.—Way, The. 

Sibley, C:—Adoon the Lane. See Plaidie, The. 

Plaidie, The. 

Sibley, Fred Warner.—Dad’s Little Fiddle. 

Sibley, Jos. C.—For Expansion. 

Sickel, Corinne.—Jog Alaskar Nordue. 

Sickels, D: Banks.—Reincarnation. 

Sidell,-.—Yoppy’s Varder unt hees Drubbles. 

Sidey, Jas. A.—Irish Schoolmaster, The. 

“Sidney, Marg.” See Lothrop, Mrs. Harriet Muir 
ford [Stone], 

Sidney, Sir Philip.—Absence. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

All Said, Still Say the Same. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Angel’s Sophistrie. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Arcadia, The. 

Aspire to Higher Things. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Astrologie. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Astrophel and Stella. 

Bankrout. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Bargain, The. See Arcadia, The. 

“Because I oft in dark abstracted guise.” See 
Astrophel and Stella. 

Come, Sleep. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia, The. See Arca¬ 
dia, The. 

Country Song, A. See Arcadia, The. 

Covenant. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Dirge, A: "Ring out your bells, etc.” See Sidera. 
Ditty, A. See Arcadia, The. 

Do not Will Me from my Love to Flie. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

Dorus to Pamela. See Arcadia, The. 

Dutie to Depart. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Eleventh Song. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Fame. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Golden Haire. See Astrophel and Stella. 

“Having this day my horse, my hand, my lance.” 
See Astrophel and Stella. 

Heart and Soul. See Pansies from Penshurst and 
Wilton. 

Highway, The. See Astrophel and Stella. 

His Lady’s Cruelty. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Hope to Feede. See Astrophel and Stella. 

I am no Pickpurse of Another’s Wit. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

I Might. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Look in thy Heart, and Write. See Astrophel and 
Stella. 

Love’s Silence. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Moone, The. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Morpheus. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Most Alone in Greatest Company. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

My Muse. See Astrophel and Stella. 

“My true-love hath my heart [and I have his].” 
See Arcadia, The. 

Nico and Dorus. See Arcadia, The. 

Night. See Arcadia, The. 

"Nightingale, as soon as April bringeth, The.” 
See Sidera. 

Nobler Exercise, A. See Astrophel and Stella. 
“O happy Thames that did my Stella bear.” See 
Astrophel and Stella. 

On Sleep. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Overcome by Love. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Pansies from Penshurst and Wilton. 

Pensiveness. See Astrophel and Stella. 


I 





Sidney 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Sidney, Sir Philip ( continued). 

Philomela. See Sidera. 

Planet of my Light. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Psalm XCIII. (At. also to Countess of Pembroke.) 
Psalm XCVI. (At. also to Countess of Pembroke.) 
Psalm CXXXIX. (At. also to Countess of Pem¬ 
broke.) 

Questions. See Astrophel and Stella. 

See What it is to Love. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Seventh Song. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Sidera. 

Sing unto the Lord. See Psalm XCVI. 

Sleep [Sleepe— C.]. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Song: “Who hath his fancy pleased.” 

Song from the Arcadia, A. See Arcadia, The. 
Songs from “Astrophel and Stella.” See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

Sonnet: “Come sleep, O sleep,” etc. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

Sonnet: “In martial sports I had my cunning 
tried.” See Astrophel and Stella. 

Sonnet: “O happy Thames,” etc. See Astrophel 
and Stella. 

Sonnet: “With how sad steps,” etc. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

Sonnet: Eternal Love. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sonnet: Heart Exchange. See Arcadia, The. 
Sonnet: Inspiration. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sonnet: Love is Enough. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sonnet: Philomela. See Sidera. 

Sonnet to the Moon. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sonnets from “Astrophel and Stella.” See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

Splendidis Longum Valedico Nugis. See Astro- 
. phel and Stella. 

Stella Lookt On. See Astrophel and Stella. 
“Stella, the only planet of my light.” See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella. 

Still, Still Kiss. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Sweete Cruell Shot. See Astrophel and Stella, 
i Tenth Song. Absence. See Astrophel and Stella. 
They Love indeed who Quake to Say they Love. 
See Astrophel and Stella. 

Tho’ Worlds 'quite Me, shall I Myself Forgive? 

See Astrophel and Stella. 

To Sleep. See Astrophel and Stella. 

To Stella. See Astrophel and Stella. 

To the Moon. See Astrophel and Stella. 

True Beautie Vertue is. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Unkinde Guest, The. See Astrophel and Stella. 
Verses: “O fair! O sweet!” See Pansies from 
Penshurst and Wilton. 

Via Amoris. See Astrophel and Stella. 

Voices at the Window. See Astrophel and Stella. 
What. Now, Sir Foole! See Astrophel and Stella. 
“With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb’st the 
skies!” See Astrophel and Stella. 
Sienkiewicz, Henryk.—Contest in the Arena, The. See 
Quo Vadis. 

Fight with the Aurochs, The. See Quo Vadis. 
Quo Vadis. 

Rescue of Lygia, The. See Quo Vadis. 

Ursus and the Aurochs. See Quo Vadis. 

Sigerson, Dora. See Shorter, Mrs. Clement. 
,Sigerson, G:—Blackbird’s Song, The. 

Calling, The. 

Dirge of Cael, The. 

. Far-away. 

Lay of Norse-Irish Sea-kings. 

Lost Tribune, The. 

Love’s Despair. 

My Mauria ni Millebn. 

Ruined Nest, The. 

Solace in Winter. 

Things Delightful. 

Sigourney, Major. —Beautiful Snow. 

Sigourney, Mrs. Lydia Howard [Huntly].—Adver- 
. tisement of a Lost Day. 

Apostrophe to Niagara. 

Bell of the “Atlantic,” The. 

Bernardine du Born. 

Bride, The. 

Camel’s Nose, The. 

Cold Water. 

Columbus. 

Coral Insect. The. 

Daily Counsellor, The. 

Death of Cardinal Mazarin, The. 

Death of King Edmund, The. 

Faithful Dog, The. 

“Give words, kind words, to those who err.” See 
Daily Counsellor, The. 

Go to Thy Rest. 


Sigourney, Mrs. Lydia Howard [Huntly] (continued). 
Hebrew Tale, A. 

Indian Names. 

Indian’s Welcome to the Pilgrim Fathers, The. 
Know Thyself. 

Lilac, The. 

Man—Woman. 

My Beautiful Child. 

Prohibition Song of Good Fellowship. 
Rain-lesson. 

Return of Napoleon from St. Helena, The. 
Sailor’s Funeral, The. 

Upas-tree, The. 

Sill, E: Rowland.—Among the Redwoods. 

Before Sunrise in Winter. 

Coup de Grace, The. 

Cuckoo, The. 

Eve’s Daughter. 

Five Lives. 

Fool’s Prayer, The. 

Force. 

Future, The. 

Home. 

Life. 

Lover’s Song, The. 

Morning Thought, A. 

Opportunity. 

Prayer, A. 

Spring Twilight. 

Tempted. 

Tropical Morning at Sea, A. 

Truth at Last. 

Sill, Eliz.—Fanny’s Mud Pies. 

“Silonius.”—New Preacher, The. 

Simcox, -.—In the Jacquerie. 

Simeon, C. See Stmon,-. 

Simes, Louisa.—Dedication of a Schoolhouse. 
Simmons, Bartholomew.—Stanzas to the Memory of 
Thomas Hood. 

To the Memory of Thomas Hood. See Stanzas 
to the Memory of Thomas Hood. 

Simmons, H: Martyn.—Intimations of Immortality. 
Simms, W: Gilmore.—Brooklet, The. 

Decay of a People, The. 

Grape-vine Swing, The. 

Lost Pleiad, The. 

Mother and Child. 

Shaded Water, The. 

Song in March. 

Swamp Fox, The. 

“’Twas ever thus! each hour that came.” 

Union and its Government, The. 

Simon, M. N.—Three Wishes. 

Simonds, A. B.—Reductio ad Absurdum. 

Simonides.—Danae. 

Epitaph. 

Simpson, Rt. Rev. Matthew.—Study of Elocution, The. 
Sims, G: R.—Actor’s Story, The. See Old Actor’s 
Stofy, The. 

Billy’s Rose. 

Bunch of Primroses, A. 

Deadly Weapon, A. 

In the Harbor. 

In the Signal Box[: A Station Master’s Story], 
Last Look, A. 

Lifeboat, The. 

Lights o’ London, The. 

Little Jim. 

Little Worries. 

Magic Wand, The. 

Moll Jarvis O’Morley. 

Nellie’s Prayer. 

Old Actor’s Story, The. 

’Ostler Joe. 

Road to Heaven, The. 

Sir Rupert’s Wife. 

Station-master’s Story, The. See In the Signal Box. 
Street Tumblers, The. 

Tale of Sweethearts, A. 

Ticket o’ Leave. 

Valentine, A. 

Sims, W: R.—Mended Vase, The. 

Sinnett, C: N.—Latches. 

Sinnett, Percy F.—-Song of the Wild Storm-waves, The. 
Skeat, W. W.—Fame, Wealth, Life, Death. 

Skelton. J:—Bowge of Courte, The. 

Chaplet of Laurell, The. See Garlande of Laurell, 
The. 

Colyn Cloute. 

Crowne of Lawrell, The. See Garlande of Laurell, 
The. 

Garlande of Laurell, The. 

Lullabye, A. 


548 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Smith 


Skelton, J: ( continued ). 

Nun’s Lament for Philip Sparrow, The. See 
Phyllyp Sparowe. 

Phyllyp Sparowe. 

Picture of Riot. See Bowge of Courte, The. 

To Maystress Margaret Hussey. See Garlande 
of Laurell, The. 

To Mistress Isabel Pennell. See Garlande of 
Laurell, The. 

To Mistress Margaret Hussey. See Garlande of 
Laurell, The. 

To Mistress Margery Wentworth. See Garlande 
of Laurell, The. 

Sketchley, Arthur.—Mrs. Brown on Modern Houses 
Mrs. Brown on the State of the Streets. 

Skill, F. J.—-Lord Dundreary Proposing. 

Skinner, J:—-Tullochgorum. 

Skipsey, Joseph.—Butterfly, The. 

Dewdrop, The. 

Merry Bee, A. 

Mother Wept. 

Songstress, The. 

Violet and the Rose, The. 

Skirving, Adam.—Johnnie Cope. 

“Skwirt, A.”—-Owed to the Steam Fire Engine. 
Slade, Mrs. M. B. C.—Choice of Trades. 

Columbia’s Centennial Party. 

Lessons from Scripture Flowers. 

Trees of the Bible, The. 

Sladen. Douglas B. W.—Charles II. 

Christmas Letter from Australia, A. 

Salopia Inhospitalis. 

Sunset on the Cunimbla Valley, Blue Mountains. 
Tropics, The. 

Waterloo. 

Slaeter, Nick.—Dem Ole Dimes Habbiness and Dem 
New. 

Sleeper, Ethel E.—Mud Cakes. 

Sloper, Mrs. L. M.—Saved. 

Slosson, Mrs. Annie [Trumbull].—Child’s Easter, A. 
Christmas Carol, A. 

Puzzled. 

Uncle Jotham’s Boarder. 

Slosson, May Preston.—Frances E. Willard. 

Small, S: W.—“Ole Marster’s” Christmas, The. 

Them Yankee Blankits. 

Treadwater Jim. 

Smalley, Bertrand.—She Sayeth “No.” 

Smarius, C. F.—Blessed are the Dead. 

Smart, Alexander.—Better than Gold. 

Still Small Voice, The. 

Smart, Christopher.—Song of David, The. See Song 
to David, A. 

Song to David, A. 

Smedley, Menella Bute.—Ballad of War, A. 

Bishop Patteson. 

Little Fair Soul, The. 

Smiles, S:—Happy Life, A. 

Neglect of Little Things. See Thrift. 

Thrift, 

Smiley, Jos. Bert.—-As She Says. 

Chinese Version of “Maud Muller,” A. 

Dude, A. 

Galesburg Fire Department. 

Garden Path, The. 

Oh, No,—of Course not. 

Presto Change. 

So Was I. 

Story of Good Little Vincent. 

Up Higher. 

“Well, then I’m Yourn.” 

Smith,-.—Auctioneer and the Lawyer, The. 

Smith, A. C.—Waif, The. 

Smith, A. L. A.—Queen of Prussia’s Ride, The. 

Smith, Mrs. Albert. See Smith, Mrs. Mary Louise 
[Riley], 

Smith, Alexander. See Meek, Alexander Beaufort. 
Smith, Alonzo Washington.—Mother’s Songs. 

Smith, Arabella E.—If I Should Die Tonight. (At.) See 
Meyers, Rob’t C. V. 

Smith, Arthur Maurice.—Vindication. 

Smith, Belle E.— See Smith, Arabella E. 

Smith, Carl.—At the Hospital Window. 

Smith, Carlisle.—Prophetic Mirror, A. 

Smith, C: E.—Politics and Journalism. 

Smith, C: H. (“Bill Arp”).—Bill Arp on the Rack. 

Old-time Negro, An. 

Smith, Charlotte.—First Swallow, The. 

Nightingale’s Departure, The. See On the De- 
parture of the Nightingale. 

On the Departure of the Nightingale. 

“Queen of the silver bow, by thy pale beam. 
Swallow, The. See First Swallow, The. 


Smith, Clara.—Jack in the Pulpit. 

Smith, Clement L.—Three Pairs and One. (Tr.) 

Smith College Monthly.— Mountain Stream, A. 

Smith, Dexter.—Ring the Bell Softly. 

Smith, Dyer.—Now, Wouldn’t You Like to Know. 
Smith, Mrs. Eliz. Oakes [Prince].—Drowned Mariner, 
The. 

Oak, The. 

Sinless Child, The. 

Smith, Emeline Sherman.—Time’s Silent Lesson. 

Smith, F. Burge.—Little Goldenhair. 

Smith, Fs. Hopkinson.—Caleb West, Master Diver. 
Captain Joe. 

Colonel Carter of Cartersville. 

Equinoctial Storm, The. See Caleb West, Master 
Diver. 

One-legged Goose [or Duck], The. See Colonel 
Carter of Cartersville. 

Smith, Fs. S.—Chief Mourner, The. 

Drunkard’s Dream, The. 

Indian Brave, The. 

Playing Drunkard. 

Smith, G. C.—Tete-fi-tC'te with Phyllis. 

Smith, Gerrit.—Free Speech. 

Smith, Gertrude.—New Year’s Deed, A. 

Smith, Goldwin.—Abraham Lincoln. 

Flossy (with her own Portrait) to Her Mistress. 
Smith, H. Greenhough.—Rivals, The. 

Smith, Harry Bache.— See Smith, H : Bache. 

Smith, Harry Jas.—Song of Yesteryear, A. 

Smith, H: Bache.—Armorer’s Song, The. 

Long Night, The. 

My Angeline. See Wizard of the Nile, The. 
New-fashioned Singin’, The. 

Song of the Turnkey, The. 

What is the Song the Swallows Sing? 

Wizard of the Nile, The. 

Smith, Horace.—Address to the Mummy in [or at] Bel- 
zoni’s Exhibition. 

Contrast, The. See On the Death of George the 
Third. 

Blindman’s Buff. 

Culprit and the Judge, The. 

Death. 

Doctor and the Lampreys, The. 

Drury’s Dirge. 

Effusion by a Cigar Smoker. 

Farmer and the Counsellor, The. 

Gouty Merchant and the Stranger, The. 

How to Have Just what We Like. 

Hymn to the Flowers. 

Jester Condemned [to Death], The. 

Lachrymose Writers. 

Moral Cosmetics. 

Mummy, The. See Address to the Mummy, etc. 
On the Death of George the Third. 

Poet and the Alchemist, The. 

Sanctuary [within the Breast], The. 

Tale of Drury Lane, A. 

To a Mummy. See Address to the Mummy, etc. 
Smith, Jas.—Baby’s Debut, The. 

Bashful Man, The. At. also to Mathews. 

Epigram. 

Play-house Musings. 

Poet of Fashion, The. 

Soldier’s Pardon, The. 

Theatre TThe. 

Smith, Mrs. Luella [Dowd].— Story which the Ledger 
Told, The. 

Smith, Lyman C.—Canada to Columbia. 

Day with Homer, A. 

Smith, Mrs. Mary Louise [Riley].—Blessings of To¬ 
day, The. See If we Knew. 

Christmas Roses. 

Dandelion and Clover-top. 

Departure. 

Elm versus Apple. 

God Ivnoweth Best. See Sometime. 

If we Knew. 

Linings. 

March. 

Milly. 

My Uninvited Guest. 

Pompeian Preacher, A. 

Sometime. 

“Sometime, when all life’s lessons have been 
learned.” See Sometime 
Thanksgiving Prayer, A. 

Tired Mothers. 

To a Tired Mother. See Tired Mothers. 

Trifles. 

Two Valentines. 

What March Does. See March. 


519 







Smith 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Smith, Minna Caroline.—Laddy Blue Eyes. 

Railroad Train, The. 

Smith, Nora Archibald.—Neighbors of the Christ 
Night. 

Smith, Rev. S.—Folly of Pride, The. 

Smith, S. Decatur.—Beggar’s Gift, The. 

Smith, S. Jennie.—Aunt Maria at the Eden Musde. 
Change of Toys. 

Doctor Cure-all. 

Every-day Occurrence, An. 

Examination Day. 

“Flat” Contradiction, A. 

Honesty is the Best Policy. 

How He Teased Ned. 

How Mrs. O’Doolahan had Mike Arrested. 
Johnnie’s Poetry. 

Journey of Life, The. 

Little Gossips. 

Little Mimics. 

Mary Ann’s Escape. 

Mrs. Guptill gets ahead of the Grip. 

Mrs. McShane’s Shopping Expedition. 

Mrs. Murphy’s Recipe for Cake. 

Mrs. O’Toole and the Conductor. 

Mother’s Tinder Falin’s, A. 

Playing School. 

Reading a Letter. 

Serious Mishap, A. 

Susie’s Lesson. 

Tim’s Downfall. 

To 1 he Palace of the King. 

Turning the Tables. 

Village Scare, The. 

Way to Freedom, The. 

What They Knew. 

Smith, S: Fs.—America. 

Breathe Balmy Airs. 

Cherished Names. 

Decoration Day. 

Eloquence of Nature, The. 

Eve of Decoration Day, The. 

Flag in Nature, The. 

Flowers in Winter. 

Memorial Day. 

Missionary Hymn. 

My Country, ’Tis of Thee. See America. 

National Hymn. See America. 

Our Honored Heroes. See Decoration Day. 
Patriot Dead, The. See Breathe Balmy Airs. 
Patriot Sons of Patriot Sires. 

Precious Lives. See Breathe Balmy Airs. 

Three Flowers, The. 

Tree-planting. 

Trees. See Tree-planting. 

Smith, Sarah F.—Immortality. 

Smith, Seba (“Jack Downing”).—Mother’s Sacrifice 
The. 

Smith, Rev. Sydney.—America. 

Dame Partington and the Atlantic Ocean. 

False Notions of Government Vigor. 

Letters of Peter Plymley—on “No Popery.” 

Love of Country. 

Means of Acquiring Distinction. 

Moral Courage. 

Parody on Pope. 

Professional Education. 

Receipt for Salad, A. See Recipe for a Salad, A. 
Recipe for [a] Salad. A. 

Rejection of the Reform Bill. See Speech at 
Taunton in 1831, etc. 

Salad. See Recipe for a Salad, A. 

Speech at Taunton in 1831 on the Reform Bill 
not being Passed. 

Study of Latin and Greek. See Professional 
Education. 

Taxes [the Price of Glory]. See America. 

To Professor Airey. 

Smith, W. B.—Hazards of Our National Prosperity. 
Smith, W. H.—Heartless. 

Smjth, W. L.—Beauty Everywhere. 

Smith, Walter C.—-Daughters of Philistia. See Olrig 
Grange. 

“Not to be served, O Lord, but to serve man.” 
Olrig Grange. 

Self-exiled, The. 

Smith, Walter S.—Lesson from a Bell, A. 

Smith, W: Hawley.—Evolution of Dodd, The. 

Other Fellow, The. See Evolution of Dodd, 
The. 

Smith, W: Wye.—Canadians on the Nile, The. 

Smits, Dirk.—Death of an Infant. 

On the Death of an Infant. See Death of an 
Infant. 


Smollett, Tobias G:—Independence. See Ode to Inde¬ 
pendence. 

Ode to Independence. 

Ode to Leven Water. 

Tears of Scotland, The. 

To Leven Water. See Ode to Leven Water. 
Smuller, E. A.—Thanksgiving of Old. 

Smyth, S. P. N.—Old Faiths in New Light. 

Smythe, Albert Ernest Stafford—Death the Revealer. 

Forgotten Poet, The. 

Smythe, G: See Strangford, Viscount. 

Smythe, Percy Clinton Sydney. See Strangford, 
Viscount. 

Snedeker. Florence Walters.—House with the Cross, 
The. 

Snow, Onlie Ama.—Mat and Hal and I. 

Snow, Mrs. Sophia P.—Annie and Willie’s Prayer. 

Santa Claus and the Motherless Children. See 
Annie and Willie’s Prayer. 

Snowden, Willard.—Challenge, A. 

Snowden, Yates.—South Carolina Bourbon, A. 

Snyder, C: M.—Agnostic, The. 

Mullins the Agnostic. {At. also to A. T. Worden.) 

See Agnostic, The. 

New Baby, The. 

Overheard at the Zoo. 

Snyder, Chester A.—My Cigarette. {At. also to C:F. 
Lummis.) 

Socrates.—Friendship. 

Somers, Fred M.—Madrona, The. 

Somerset, Isabel, Lady H:—“Thy Kingdom Come.” 
Somerville, C. C.—Home, Sweet Home. 

On the Rappahannock. {At. also to C: H. Tiffany.) 
See Home, Sweet Home. 

Somerville Journal. — Educational Courtship. See 
What He Called it. 

How He Lost Her. 

She Referred Him to Her Pa. 

True Bostonian [at Heaven’s Gate], A. 

What He Called it. 

Somerville, W:—Chase, The. 

Somerville, W:, and Congreve, W:—White Rose, The. 
Soper. Dora Schoonmaker.—Ascent of Japan’s Sacred 
Mountain—F usi-Y ama. 

Soper, G: Albert.—Her Flower. 

Soper, H. M.—Medley. 

True Manhood the Nation’s Only Safety. 

Vera Victoria. 

Sophocles.—Antigone. 

Chariot Race, The. See Electra. 

Electra. 

Soule, Eva Linnette.—Senior and the Rose, The. 
Soule, J: B. L.—Wooing. 

Southern Collegian. —American Partridge, The. 

Portrait, The. 

Southesk, Jas. Carnegie, Earl of. —Flitch of Dunmow, 
The. 

Good Old Souls. 

November’s Cadence. 

Southey, Mrs. Caroline Anne [Bowles],—April Day, An. 
Autumn Flowers. 

Birthday, The. 

Cuckoo Clock, The. See Birthday, The. 

“I never cast a flower away.” 

Ladybird, Ladybird. See Little Ladybird, The. 
Last Journey, The. 

Little Ladybird, The. 

Mariner’s Hymn. 

Once upon a Time. 

Pauper’s Death-bed, The. 

Ranger’s Grave. 

River, The. 

To the Lady-bird. See Little Lady-bird, The. 
Young Gray Head, The. 

See also Southey, Robert and Caroline. 

Southey, Rob’t.—After Blenheim. See Battle of Blen¬ 
heim, The. 

Amatory Sonnets of Abel Shuffiebottom, The. 

At Coruna. 

Battle of Blenheim, The. 

Battle of Pultowa, The. 

Bishop Hatto. See God’s Judgment on a Wicked 
Bishop. 

Books. 

Books and Reading. 

Cataract of Lodore, The. 

Cid, The. ( Tr.) 

Cock and Hen Story, A. See Pilgrim to Compos- 
tella, The. 

Complaints of the Poor, The. 

Crowning of the King, The. See Joan of Arc. 

Curse of Kehama. The. 

Death of Nelson, The. 


550 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Spenser 




Southey, Rob’t ( continued). 

Death of Wallace, The. 

Delia at Play. See Amatory Sonnets of Abel 
Shufflebottom, The. 

Emmet’s Epitaph. See Writen immediately after 
Reading the Speech of Robert Emmet. 

Epitaph on Algernon Sidney. 

Father William. See Old Man’s Comforts and 
how he Gained Them, The. 

Funeral Ode on the Death of the Princess Char¬ 
lotte. 

God’s Judgment on a Wicked Bishop. 

His Books. See Books. 

Holly-tree, The. 

Idiot Boy, The. 

Immortality of Love. See Curse of Kahama, 
The. 

In a Forest. 

Inchcape Rock, The. 

Inscription for a Monument at Vimeiro. 

Inscription for the Apartment in Chepstow Castle, 
where Henry Marten was imprisoned. 

Joan of Arc. 

Kehama. See Curse of Kehama, The. 

King Henry V. and the Hermit of Dreux. 

King of the Crocodiles, The. 

Legend, The. See Pilgrim to Compostella, The. 

Leonard and Margaret. 

Llewellyn and His Dog. (At.) See Beth Gelert. 
—W: Rob’t Spencer. 

Library, The. See Books. 

Loss in Delay. 

Love Elegies of Abel Shufflebottom, The. 

Love’s Immortality. See Curse of Kehama, 
The. 

March to Moscow, The. 

Mary the Maid of the Inn. 

Miracle of the Roses, The. See Rose, The. 

“Moments there are in life—alas, how few!” 

My Days among the Dead [are Passed]. See 
Books. 

Night. See Thalaba the Destroyer. 

Night in the Desert. See Thalaba the Destroyer. 

Oak of our Fathers, The. 

Ode Written during the Negotiations with Buona¬ 
parte. 

Old Man’s ComfortsL and How He Gained Them], 
The. 

Pig, The. 

Pilgrim to Compostella, The. 

Poet Expatiates on the Beauty of Delia’s Hair, 
The. See Love Elegies of Abel Shufflebottom, 
The. 

Poet Expresses his Feelings Respecting a Portrait 
in Delia’s Parlor, The. See Amatory Sonnets 
of Abel Shufflebottom, The. 

Poet Proves the Existence of a Soul from his Love 
for Delia, The. See Amatory Sonnets of Abel 
Shufflebottom, The. 

Poet Relates how he Obtained Delia’s Pocket- 
handkerchief, The. See Love Elegies of Abel 
Shufflebottom, The. 

Poet Relates how he Stole a Lock of Delia’s Hair, 
and her Anger, The. See Love Elegies of Abel 
Shufflebottom, The. 

Prayer, A. 

Remembrance. 

Roderick. 

Rose, The. 

St. Romauld. 

Scholar, The. See Books. 

Seasons of Life, The. 

Ship, The. 

Siege of Zamora, The. (7V.) See Cid, The. 

Snuff. 

Stanzas written in his Library. See Books. 

Thalaba [the Destroyer], 

“They sin who tell us love can die.” See Curse 
of Kehama, The. 

Traveller’s Return, The. 

Wat Tyler. 

Wat Tyler’s Address to the King. See Wat Tyler. 

Wedding, The. 

Well of St. Keyne, The. 

Winter. 

Written immediately after Reading the Speech 
of Robert Emmet. 

Southey, Rob’t and Caroline.—Greenwood Shrift, 
The. 

Southey, Rob’t, and Coleridge, S: T.—Devil’s Walk, 
The. . „„ „ 

Devil’s Walk on Earth, The. See Devil’s Walk, 
The. 


Southwell, Rob’t.—Burning Babe, The. 

Loss in Delay. 

New Prince, New Pomp. 

Procrastination. See Loss in Delay. 

St. Peter’s Complaint. 

Times Go by Turns. 

Southwestern Presbyterian. —“It is a fitting opportunity 
to advert to the fact that a revival of religion. 5 ’ 
Southwick, H. C.—Sport. 

Souvestre, Emile.—Mrs. Willis’s Will. 

Spalding, Bishop J: Lancaster.—At the Ninth Hour. 
See God and the Soul. 

Believe and take Heart. See God and the Soul. 

Et Mori Lucrum. See God and the Soul. 

Faith and a Heart. See God and the Soul. 
Forepledged. 

God and the Soul. 

Nature and the Child. See God and the Soul. 
Silence. See God and the Soul. 

Sursum Corda. See God and the Soul. 

Starry Host, The. See God and the Soul. 

Visions of Childhood. See God and the Soul. 

Void Between, The. See God and the Soul. 
Spalding, Archbishop Martin J:—Post Nummos Virtus. 
Spalding, Mrs. Susan [Marr].—Fate. 

Sea’s Spell, The. 

Song’s Worth, A. 

Spangenberg, Mrs. F.—Christmas Time. 

Sparks, Jared.—Lesson of the Revolution, The. 

Teachings of the American Revolution. See Les¬ 
son of the Revolution, The. 

Spaulding, -.—Humbugging a Tourist. 

Never-ending Progress. 

Spaulding, Harriet M.—Peculiar Neighbor, The. 
Spearman, Frank H.—“Bucks.” 

Spectator, The. —Character and a Question, A. 

Heroic Death, A. 

Hindoo Sceptic, The. 

Love of the Past, The. 

Ode in Memory of Dr. Hoffmann. 

Song of the Rain, The. 

Speed, T:—Story of Guggle. 

Spence, W. Hamilton.—Washington. 

Spencer, Alfred L.—Her Programme of Dance. 
Spencer, Carl.—King’s Ships, The. (At. also to Caro¬ 
line Spencer.) 

Reawakening. 

Song of Joy, The. 

Spencer, Caroline S.—King’s Ships, The. (At. also to 
Carl Spencer.) 

Living Waters. 

Spencer, E:—Maturnus’ Address to his Band. 

Spencer, Herbert.—Education: What Knowledge is 
of Most Worth? 

Genesis of Science. 

Mathematics and Physics. See Genesis of Science. 
Poetry of Science, The. See Education. 

Spencer, Hiram Ladd.—Hundred Years to Come, A. 
River, The. 

Spencer, Wilbur Daniel.—My Treasures. 

To-morrow. 

Spencer, W: Rob’t.—Beth G61ert[; or, The Grave of 
the Greyhound], 

Llewellyn and his Dog. (Wr. at. to Rob’t Southey). 

See Beth Gelert. 

To Lady Anne Hamilton. 

Too Late I Stayed. See To Lady Anne Hamilton. 
“When midnight o’er the moonless skies.” 

Wife, Children and Friends. 

Spenser, Edmund.—Amoretti and Epitbalamion. 

April. See Shepheardes Calendar, The. 

At Court. See Prosopopoia; or, Mother Hub- 
berd’s Tale. 

August. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Autumn. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Beauty. See Hymn in Honor of Beauty. 

Bower of Bliss, The. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Bride, The. See Epithalamion. 

Cave of Mammon, The. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Cave of Sleep, The. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Chase after Love. See Shepheardes Calender, The. 
Claims of Mutability Pleaded before Nature. See 
Faerie Queene, The. 

Complaint of Age, The. See Shepheardes Cal¬ 
ender, The. 

Complaint of Thalia. See Teares of the Muses, 
The. 

Contentment. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Cupid and the Bee. See Epigram: “Upon a day 
as Love,” etc. 

Daphnaida. 

December. See Shepheardes Calender, The. 


551 






/ 


Spenser 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Spenser, Edmund ( continued ). 

Description of. Maying. See Shepheardes Calen¬ 
der, The. 

Ditty, in Praise of Eliza, Queen of the Shep¬ 
herds, A. See Shepheardes Calender, The. 

“Doubt which ye misdeem, fair love, is vain, The.” 
See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Easter. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Easter Morning. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Epigram: “Upon a day, as Love,” etc. 

Epithalamion. 

Fable of the Oak and the Briar. See Shepheardes 
Calender, The. 

Faerie Queene, The. 

Fate of the Butterfly, The. See Muiopotmos; or, 
The Fate of the Butterfly. 

Gardens of Venus. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Gloriana. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Her Eyes. See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Herself all Treasure. See Amoretti and Epitha¬ 
lamion. 

House of Busyrane. See Faerie Queene, The. 

House of Pride, The. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Hymn in Honour of Beauty. 

Hymn of Heavenly Beauty. 

In Praise of Trees. See Faerie Queene, The. 

January. See Shepheardes Calender, The. 

June. See Shepheardes Calender, The. 

Kinds of Trees to Plant. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

“Like as the culver on the bared bough.” See Am¬ 
oretti and Epithalamion. 

May. See Faerie Queene, The. 

May. See also Shepheardes Calender, The. 

Ministry of Angels, The. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Months and Seasons. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Mother Hubberd’s Tale. See Prosopopoia; or. 
Mother Hubberd’s Tale. 

Muiopotmos; or, The Fate of the Butterfly. 

Mutability. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Oak and the Briere, The. See Shepheardes Cal¬ 
ender, The. 

Our Love shall Live. See Amoretti and Epitha¬ 
lamion. 

Phsedria and the Idle Lake. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Prosopopoia; or, Mother Hubberd’s Tale. 

Prothalamion. 

Quelling of the Blatant Beast, The. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Red Cross Knight and Una, The. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Seasons, The. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Shepheardes Calender, The. 

Song: “Wake now, my love, awake.” See Epi¬ 
thalamion. 

Song of Enchantment. The. See Faerie Queene, 
The. 

Sonnet: “Fayre is my Love, when her fayre golden 
heares.” See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Fresh Spring, the herald of Love’s 
mighty king. ’ ’ See Amoretti and Epitha¬ 
lamion. 

Sonnet: “Joy of my life! full oft for loving you.” 
See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Lackyng my love, I go from place to 
place.” See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Like [or Lyke] as a ship, that through 
the ocean wide.” See Amoretti and Epitha¬ 
lamion. 

Sonnet: “ Men call you fair, and you do credit it.” 
See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “More than most fair, full of the living 
fire.” See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Most glorious Lord of life! that, on this 
day.” See Amoretti and Epithalamion (Easter). 

Sonnet: “Sweet Smile! the daughter of the 
Queene of Love. ’ ’ See Amoretti and Epi¬ 
thalamion. 

Sonnet: “The doubt which ye misdeem, fair love.” 
See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “Thrise happie she that is so well assured. ” 
See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Sonnet: “What guyle is this, that those her 
golden tresses.” See Amoretti and Epitha¬ 
lamion. 

Spenser at Court. See Prosopopoia; or, Mother 
Hubberd’s Tale. 

Summer. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Sunrise. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Sweet and Bitter. See Amoretti and Epithala- 


Spenser, Edmund ( continued ). 

“Sweet is the rose[, but grows upon a brere]. ” 
See Amoretti and Epithalamion. 

Teares of the Muses, The. 

To His Book. Of His Lady. See Amoretti and 
Epithalamion. 

Trees. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Una and the Lion. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Una and the Red Cross Knight. See Faerie 
Queene, The. 

Una’s Marriage. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Wake Now, my Love. See Epithalamion. 

Whilst it is Prime. See Amoretti and Epithala- 
_ mion. 

Winter. See Faerie Queene, The. 

Wooing of Amoret. See Faerie Queene, The. 
Spingarn. Joel Elias.—Helios. 

Poet’s Epitaph. 

Spluttermann, Yawcob von.—Glory mit ter Stars und 
Sthripes. 

Spofford, Mrs. Harriet Eliz. [Prescott].—Ballad: “In 
the summer even. ’ ’ 

Between the Graves. 

Christmas Peal, The. 

Days of Rest. 

Evanescence. 

First and Last. 

Gingerbread Tree, The. 

Hereafter. 

How We became a Nation. 

Hunt, The. 

In Song Time. 

Measure for Measure. 

Music in the Night. 

Night Sea, The. See Ballad: “In the summer 
even. ’ ’ 

Phantoms all. 

Phillips Brooks. 

Pines, The. 

Sigh, A. 

Snowdrop, A. 

Vanity. (At.) See Cary, Alice. 

Voice. See In Song Time. 

What One Boy Thinks. 

Witnesses. 

Spooner. A. C.—Old Times and New. 

Sprague, C:—American Indian, The. See North 
American Indians. 

.A.rt 

Brothers, The. 

Centennial Ode. 

Curiosity. 

Eulogy on Lafayette. 

Family Meeting, The. 

Fathers of New England, The. See Centennial Ode. 
Fiction. See Curiosity. 

Indians. See Centennial Ode. 

Individual Purity the Hope of the State. 

News, The. See Curiosity. 

North American Indians. 

Ocean. 

Ode on Art. See Art. 

Our Fathers. See Centennial Ode. 

Stability of our Government, The. See Individ¬ 
ual Purity the Hope of the State. 

To My Cigar. 

Winged Worshippers, The. 

Sprague, Sarah E.—Robin or I? 

Sprague, W: Buell.—Voltaire and Wilberforce. 
Springfield Republican. —Aunt Patience’s Doughnuts. 
Blue and Gray. See Two Colors. 

Little Charlie’s Big Story. 

“No candid observer will deny that whatever of 
good there may be.” 

Over the Crossin’. 

Two Colors. 

United at Last. See Two Colors. 

Sproat, Eliza L.—May Morning. 

Spurgeon, C: H.—Goodness and Greatness of God. 
Songs of the Night. 

Spurgeon’s Advice. 

Stackpooie, Harry.—Drop of Water, The. 

Stacy, Joel.—Sweet Red Rose, The. 

Stacy, T. H.—In Days Like These. 

Stadmuller, Henrietta L.—Change of Heart, A. 
Stafford, Ezra Hurlburt.—Chinook. 

Last Orison, The. 

Strange Vessel, The. 

Stafford, Juniata.—My Country’s Flag. 

Stall, Sylvanus.—“Church in debt feels that prudence 
demands. The.” 

Standard of the Cross. —Beautiful Grandmamma. 
Stanhope, Philip Dormer. Nee Chesterfield, Earl of. 


552 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Sternhold 


Stanley, Dean Arthur Penrhyn.—“In the transforma¬ 
tion of opinion.” 

Teach Us to Die. 

“Throughout the entire word of God, we are 
taught the sacred duty of being happy.” 

Till Death us Join. 

“ ‘Till death us part.’ ” See Till Death us Join. 
Stanley, Caroline F.—Uncle Isrul’s Call. 

Stanley, F. M.—Jack. 

Stanley, H: Morton.—Through the Dark Forest. 
Stanley, M. Lizzie.—Some Years in Washington’s Life. 
Stanley. T:—Celia Singing. 

Relapse, The. 

Tomb, The. 

Stansbury, Mary Anna P.—How He Saved St. Mich¬ 
ael’s. 

Jem’s Last Ride. 

Surprise at [or of] Ticonderoga, The. 

Stansbury, P. R.— Botts Twins, The. 

Stanton, Frank Lebby.—Annetta Jones—Her Book. 
Answering to Roll-call. 

“Didn’t Think o’ Losin’ Him.” 

Dreamin’ o’ Home. 

Dreaming of Home. See Dreamin’ o’ Home. 
Fallen Asleep. 

Graveyard Rabbit, The. 

“Hangin’ On.” 

How a Song Saved a Soul. 

In the Time of Strife. 

Little Hand, A. 

Little Way, A. 

Love Lights of Home, The. 

Lucinda’s Fan. 

Matthew the Miner. 

Mocking-bird, The. 

Old Battle-field, An. 

Old Flag Forever. 

Old Pine Box, The. See Ole Pine Box, The 
Old School Exhibitions, The. 

Ole Pine Box, The. 

One Country. 

Picnic at Salina, The. 

Plantation Ditty, A. 

Regiment Song. 

Reunited. 

“Rock of Ages.” See How a Song Saved a Soul. 
“Shoutin’.” 

Song of the Fleet, A. 

Story of Dick, The. 

Thankful Soul, A. 

That Boy Jim. 

This Old Country. 

Volunteer, The. 

War-ship “Dixie,” The. 

Wearyin’ for You. 

When Summer Says Good-bye. 

Stanton, H: Thompson.—Moneyless Man, The. 
Peter-bird, The. 

Stapleton, Mrs. Patience [Tucker]. — Sailor Santa 
Claus, A. 

Senator’s Grandmother, The. 

Starkey, Rev. O. F.—-Blowing Bubbles. 

Patrick Dolin’s Love Letter. 

Pat’s Love Letter. See Patrick Dolin’s Love 
Letter. 

Starkie. J:—Popular Error, A. 

.Starr, Hattie.—Little Alabama Coon. 

Start, Alaric Bertrand.—Jim-Jam King of the Jou- 
Jous, The. 

Stauffer, Fs. H:—Very Bad Case, A. 

Stearns, E. F.—Arbor Day. 

Stebbins, Mrs. Mary Eliz. [Moore] [Hewitt].—Harold 
the Valiant. 

Sunflower to the Sun, The. 

Stebbins, Sarah B.—Basket of Flowers, A. 

Stedman, Edmund Clarence.—Alice of Monmouth. 
Autumn Song. 

Betrothed Anew. 

Cavalry Charge, The. 

Cavalry Song. See Alice of Monmouth. 
Comedian’s Last Night, The. 

Corda Concordia. 

Country Sleighing. 

Discoverer, The. 

Doorstep, The. 

Falstaff’s Song. 

Flight of the Birds, The. 

Gettysburg. 

Going a-Nutting. See Autumn Song. 

Hand of Lincoln, The. 

Helen Keller. 

Hnrjipp Orpplpv 

How Old Brown Took Harper’s Ferry. 


Stedman, Edmund Clarence ( continued ). 

Invocation. 

John Brown of Osawatomie. See How Old Brown 
Took Harper’s Ferry. 

Kearny at Seven Pines. 

Laura, My Darling. 

Morgan. 

Mors Benefica. 

Mother’s Picture, A. 

Old Admiral, The. 

On a Great Man whose Mind is Clouding. 

On the Doorstep. See Doorstep, The. 

Ordeal by Fire, The. 

Pan in Wall Street. 

“Perhaps ’twas boyish love.” 

Prelude: “England! Since Shakespeare died,” 
etc. 

Quest. See Corda Concordia. 

Salem, A. D. 1692. 

Seeking the May-flower. 

Si Jeunesse Savait! 

Singer, The. 

Song from a Drama. 

Song from a Drama. See also Stanzas for Music. 
Stanzas for Music. 

Sumter. 

Surf. 

Toujours Amour. 

Treason’s Last Device. 

Twelfth of April, The. See Sumter. 

Undiscovered Country, The. 

Wanted—A Man. 

Wedding-day, The. 

What the Winds Bring. 

Wind, The. See What the Winds Bring. 

World Well Lost, The. 

Stedman, J. H.—What is Fame? 

Steele, Alice C.—Easter Song, The. 

Steele, Anne.—Living to Thee. 

Steele, Sir R:—Benevolence and Charity. 

Commonwealth of Lunatics, The. See Tatler, 
The. 

Coverley Household, The. See Spectator, The.— 
Jos. Addison. 

Gentleman, The. 

Tatler, The. 

Steele, Ward.—Wait! 

Stein, Evaleen.—Budding-time too Brief. 

Flood-time on the Marshes. 

In Mexico. 

In Youth. 

Stein, M. Hallock.—Santa and His Reindeer. 

Stephen, Jas. Kenneth.—Elegy on De Marsay. 

Lapsus Calami. 

Millennium, The. See Lapsus Calami. 

Pair of Fools, A. 

Sonnet, A: Two Voices are There; One is of the 
Deep. 

Thought, A. 

Woman’s Face, A. 

Stephens, Alex. Hamilton.—Appeal to the Georgia 
Convention of 1860 against Secession. 

Energy. 

Restoration of the Union, The. 

Separate as Billows, but One as the Sea. 

Stephens, Mrs. Ann Sophia [Winterbotham],—Death- 
fire, The. 

Polish Boy, The. 

Thanksgiving Dinner, A. 

Stephens, Jas. Brunten.—Dominion of Australia, The. 

My Other Chinee Cook. 

Stephens, Rowan.—Cradle Song. 

Sterlen6, Earl of. See Stirling, Earl of. 

Sterling, Harriet B.—Fastidious. 

Sterling, J:—Alfred the Harper. 

Daedalus. 

Husbandman, The. 

Louis XV. 

On a Beautiful Day. 

Rose and the Gauntlet, The. [At. also to J: Wil¬ 
son.) 

San Miniato. 

Shakespeare. 

Spice-tree, The. 

To a Child. 

Two Oceans, The. 

Stern, Edwin M.—In May. 

Sterne, Laurence.—Bastille and the Starling, The. 

“I was ill of an epidemic vile fever.” See Senti¬ 
mental Journey, A. 

Sentimental Journey, A. 

Sterne, Stuart. See Bloede, Gertrude. 

Sternhold, T:—Psalm XVIII. 

553 





Sterry 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Sterry, DeWitt.—Ashes. 

To an Old Pipe. 

Sterry, J. Ashby .—See Ashby-Sterry, Jos. 

Stetson, C: P.—Rock and the Sea, The. 

Stetson, Mrs. Charlotte [Perkins]. See Gilman, Mrs. 
Charlotte P. 

Stetson, Mrs. Grace Ellery [Channing], See Chan- 
ning-Stetson, Mrs. Grace Ellery. 
Steubenville Herald .—Frivolous Girl, The. 

Stevens, B. R.—War Hymn. 

Stevens, G. A.—Bullum versus Boatum. 

Daniel versus Dishclout. 

Stevens, G: (“Wade Whipple”).—Orthography. 
Stevens, G: Alex.—-Storm, The. 

Stevens, Jack.—Ye Sleighride Partie. 

Stevens, W.—Sonnet: “There Shines the Morning 
Star!” 

Stevenson, Burton Egbert.—After the Play. 
Afterwards. 

Stevenson, Rob’t Louis.—Armies in the Fire. 

At the Sea-side. 

Auntie’s Skirts. 

Autumn Fires. 

Bed in Summer. 

Block City. 

Child’s Fancies, A. 

Cow, The, 

Difference. The. See “It is the season now to go. ” 
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. See Strange Case of 
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The. 

Dr. Lanyon’s Narrative [or Story], See Strange 
Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The. 

Dumb Soldier, The. 

Escape at Bedtime. 

Fairy Bread. 

Farewell to the Farm. 

Flowers, The. 

Foreign Children. 

Foreign Lands. 

Friends. 

From a Railway Carriage. 

Gardener, The. 

Good and Bad Children. 

Good Boy, A. 

Good Manners. See Whole Duty of Children. 
Good Night. See North-west Passage. 

Good Play, A. 

Happy Thought. 

Hayloft, The. 

Heather Ale[: a Galloway Legend]. 

Historical Associations. 

House Beautiful, The. 

In the Highlands. 

In the Season. See “It is the season now to go.” 
In the States. 

“It is the season now to go.” 

Keepsake Mill. 

Lamplighter, The. . 

Land of Counterpane, The. 

Land of Nod, The. 

Land of Story-books, The. 

Little Land, The. 

Looking Forward. 

Looking-glass River. 

Marching Song. 

Moon, The. 

Mother and Son. 

My Bed is a Boat. 

My Kingdom. 

My Shadow. 

My Ship and I. 

My Treasures. 

Nest Eggs. 

Night and Day. 

North-west Passage. 

Not I. 

Other Children. See Foreign Children. 
Picture-books in Winter. 

Pirate Story. 

Prince Otto. 

Princess and the Countess, The. See Prince Otto. 
Rain. 

Requiem, A. 

Romance. 

Singing. 

Spaewife, The. 

Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The. 
Summer Sun. 

Sun’s Travels, The. 

Swing, The. 

System. 

Thought, A. 

Ticonderoga. 


Stevenson, Rob’t Louis ( continued ). 

Time to Rise. 

To Any Reader. 

To Auntie. 

To Minnie. 

To Minnie: A Picture-frame for you to Fill. 

To My Mother. 

To My Name-child. 

To N. V. de G. S. 

To S. R. Crockett. 

To Willie and Henrietta. 

Travel. 

Unseen Playmate, The. 

Visit from the Sea, A. 

Whaups, The. See To S. R. Crockett. 

“When the golden day is done.” See Night and 
Day. 

Where Go the Boats? 

Whole Duty of Children. 

Wind, The. 

Windy Nights. 

Winter-time. 

With a Hand-glass. See To Minnie: A Picture- 
frame for you to Fill. 

Young Night Thought. 

Stevenson, Rob’t Louis, and Henley, W: Ernest.— 
Deacon Brodie[: or, The Double Life]. 

Stewart, ——-.—True Aristocrat, The. 

Stewart, Alex. C:—Wanderer, The. 

Stewart, Andrew.—Bob Johnson’s Visit to the Circus. 

Domestic Mutual Improvement. 

Stewart, C: D.—Funny Man, A. See' Her Grandpa. 
Her Grandpa. 

Stewart, F. C.—Choosing a State Tree.—The Elm. 
Stewart, Marv.—Alameda. 

Old Violin, The. 

Stewart, Phillips.—Corydon and Amaryllis. 

De Profundis. 

Hope. 

Stickney, Mrs. Julia Granby [Noyes].—Hotel in the 
Storm, A. 

Still, J:—Good Ale. See Jolly Good Ale and Old. 

Jolly Good Ale and Old. 

Stillingfleet, B: (?).—Raillery. 

Stillman, Annie R.—Birth. 

Stilwell, Emma Sophie.—Christmas Week. 

Genevra. 

Ho, Boat Ahoy! 

Stirling [or Sterling], W: Alexander, Earl of. —Aurora. 
Pride. 

Sonnets from “Aurora.” See Aurora. 

To Aurora. See Aurora. 

Tragedy of Darius, The. 

Stirling-Maxwell, Caroline Eliz. Sarah [Sheridan] [Nor¬ 
ton], Lady. —Allan Percy. 

Arab to His Favorite Steed, The. See Arab’s 
Farewell to his Horse, The. 

Arab’s Farewell to his Horse, The. 

Arab’s Farewell to his Steed, The. See Arab’s 
Farewell to his Horse, The. 

Banner of the Covenanters, The. 

Bingen on the Rhine. 

Child of Earth, The. 

Haunting Eyes. 

I Do not Love Thee. 

King of Denmark’s Ride, The. 

Lady of La'Garaye, The. 

Love Not. 

Mother’s Heart, The. 

Soldier from Bingen, The. See Bingen on the 
Rhine. 

Soldier’s Burial, The. 

To My Books. 

We Have been Friends Together. 

Wealth is not Happiness. 

Stockard, H: Jerome.—As some Mysterious Wanderer 
of the Skies. 

Mocking-bird. The. 

Over Their Graves. 

Review of the Dead, The. 

Stockton, Fs. R:—Dusky Philosophy. 

Our First Experience with a Watchdog. See 
Rudder Grange. 

Our Hir- d Girl. See Rudder Grange. 

Pomona Describes Her Bridal Trip. See Rudder 
Grange. 

Rudder Grange. 

Story of Seven Devils, A. See Dusky Philosophy. 
That Other Baby at Rudder Grange. See Rudder 
Grange. 

Transferred Ghost, The. 

Uncle Peter’s Masterly Argument. See Dusky 
Philosophy. 


554 





AUTHOR TNDEX 


« 


Stowe 


Stockton, Commodore Rob’t Field.—Against Flogging 
in the Navy. 

Against Whipping in the Navy. See Against 
Flogging in the Navy. 

American Sailor, The. See Against Flogging in 
the Navy. 

“Shall an American Citizen be Scourged?” See 
Against Flogging in the Navy. 

Stoddard, A. C.—Polly’s Thanksgiving. 

Stoddard, C: Warren.—Albatross. 

Cocoa-tree, The. 

Rhyme of Life, A. 

Royal Mummy to Bohemia, The. 

Wind and Wave. 

Stoddard, Mrs. Eliz. Drew [Barstow]. — In the Still 
Star-lit Night. 

Last Days. 

Mercedes. 

November. 

On the Campagna. 

Poet’s Secret, The. 

Summer Night, A. 

Unit, A. 

Unreturning. 

Stoddard, Lavinia.—Soul’s Defiance, The. 

Stoddard, R: H:—Abraham Lincoln. (Sonnet.) 
Abraham Lincoln[. A Horatian Ode]. 

Adsum. 

Arab Song. 

At Last. 

Birds. 

Birds are Singing Round My Window. See Birds. 
Boast Not. See Morals of Marcus Aurelius, The. 
Brahman’s Son, The. 

Brahma’s Answer. 

Burial of Lincoln. See Abraham Lincoln], A 
Horatian Ode]. 

Castle in the Air, The. 

Catch, A. 

Companions. 

“Day and night my thoughts incline.” 

Divan, The. 

Dying Lover, The. 

Falcon, The. See “I am a white falcon, hurrah!” 
Flight of the Arrow, The. 

Flight of Youth, The. 

Gazelle, A. 

“House is dark and dreary, The.” 

“I am a white falcon, hurrah!” 

It Never Comes Again. See Flight of Youth, The. 
Jar, The. See “Day and night my thoughts incline.” 
Legend, A. See Roses and Thorns. 

Little Drummer, The. 

Longfellow, Extract Concerning. 

Lost. See Flight of Youth, The. 

Lover, The. (Japan.) 

Men of the North and West. 

Morals of Marcus Aurelius, The. 

Mors et Vita. 

Never Again. See Flight of Youth, The. 

Old Song Reversed, An. 

“Out of the deeps of Heaven.” 

Pearls. 

“Perhaps it will all come right at last.” See 
Wishing and Having. 

Roses and Thorns. 

Sea, The [Storm], 

Shadow, The. 

Sky, The. See Sky is a Drinking Cup, The. 

Sky is a Drinking Cup, The. 

Songs. 

Sorrow and Joy. 

There are Gains for all our Losses. See Flight of 
Youth, The. 

Thomas Moore. 

Twilight on Sumter. 

Two Anchors, The. 

Under the Rose. 

Whittier, Extract Concerning. 

Why Biddy and Pat Married. 

Wine and Dew. See "You may drink to your 
leman in gold.” 

Wishing and Having. 

Witch’s Whelp, The. 

Without and Within. 

“You may drink to your leman in gold.” 
Stoddard, W: O.—Deacon’s Prayer, The. 

Death of Garcia, The. See Running the Cuban 
Blockade. 

Golden Street, The. 

Letter to Santa Claus, A. 

Parable of the Wrecks, The. 

Running the Cuban Blockade. 


Stoddart, Alfred.—Halliday Hunt Breakfast, The. 
Skimpsey. 

Stoddart, M. A.—One Thing at a Time. See Work and 
Play. 

Walk in Spring, A. 

Work and Play. 

Stoddart, T: Tod.—Angler’s Invitation, The. 

Angler’s Trysting-tree, The. 

Stokes, Fs. G.—Blue Moonshine. 

Stokes, Whitley.—King Ailill’s Death. 

Lament for King Ivor. 

Man Octipartite. 

Stone, Andrew Leete. (?)—Our Flag. 

“Rally round the Flag.” See Our Flag. 

Stone, C. S.—Good-by, Winter! 

Stone, Eudora May.—Little Folks. The. 

Stone, H: Morgan.—Appropriate Keepsake, An. 
Tantalizing. 

Toast, A. 

Stone, J: A:—Metamora. 

Stone, L. C.—-To Maude’s Guitar. 

Stone, S. C.—-Notes from a Battle-field. 

Storrs, J: W.—Only. 

Storrs, R: Salter.—Book and the Building, The. 
Happiest Time in Life, The. 

John Wycliffe and the Bible. 

On the Declaration of Independence. 

Puritan Spirit, The. 

Supremacy of Conscience, The. 

“We do not get our best vision of heaven.” 
“When loss of property and loss of repute are 
come.” 

Story, Jos.—Advice to a Young Lawyer. 

Advice to an Advocate. 

Advice to Young Lawyers. See Advice to a 
Young Lawyer. 

American Indians, The. See Indians, The. 
Appeal for Liberty, An. 

Destiny of Our Country. 

Eloquence or Oratory. See Advice to an Advo¬ 
cate. 

Indians, The. 

Our Duties [or Duty] to the Republic. See Des¬ 
tiny of Our Country. 

Our Future. See Destiny of Our Country. 
Responsibilities of our Republic. See Destiny of 
Our Country. 

Responsibility of American Citizens. See Destiny 
of Our Country. 

Shall America Betray Herself. See Destiny of Our 
Country. 

Story, Louisa F.—Sometimes. 

Story. Rob’t.—Whistle, The. 

Whistler, The. See Whistle, The. 

Story, W: Wetmore.—Battle of Morat, The. 

Cleopatra. 

Giannone. 

Government Spy, The. See Giannone. 

English Language, The. 

He and She; or, A Poet’s Portfolio. 

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. 

Io Victis. See He and She; or, A Poet’s Portfolio. 
Leonardo da Vinci Poetizes to the Duke in his 
own Defence. ( Tr .) 

Love. 

Love and Prudence. 

O Filia Pulchra! See He and She; or, A Poet’s 
Portfolio. 

On the Picture of the Last Supper, at Milan. See 
Padre Bandelli Proses to the Duke Ludovico 
Sforza about Leonardo da Vinci. 

Padre Bandelli Proses to the Duke Ludovico 
Sforza about I.eonardo da Vinci. 

Pan in Love. 

Perseverance. (Tr.) See Leonardo da Vinci Po¬ 
etizes to the Duke in his own Defence. 
Praxiteles and Phryne. 

Sayings and Doings. See He and She; or, A 
Poet’s Portfolio. 

Song for the Conquered, A. See He and She; or, 
A Poet’s Portfolio. 

“Through the tense, clear sky above us.” See Un 
Bacio Dato non e Mai Perduto. 

Un Bacio Dato non e Mai Perduto. 

Violet, The. 

Stoughton, J:—Desirable Objects of Attainment. 

Stout, W. Alex.—-Pussy Wants a Corner. 

Stover, G: H.—Oak’s Farewell, The. 

Stowe, Mrs. C. M.—Silver Wedding, The. 

Stowe, Mrs. Harriet Eliz. [Beecher],—Abide in Me, and 
I in You. 

Canal-boat, The. 

Cassy. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 


555 





Stowe 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Stowe, Mrs. Harriet Eliz. [Beecher] ( continued). 
Charmer, The. 

Cruelty of Legree, The. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 
Day in the Pamfili Doria, A. 

Death of Uncle Tom, The. See Uncle Tom’s 
Cabin. 

Escape, The. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Eva’s Death. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Freeman’s Defence, The. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 
Hours of the Night—Third Hour. 

In the Other World. See Other World, The. 
Interview between Aaron Burr and Mary Scudder. 

See Minister’s Wooing, The. 

Knocking. 

Laughing [or Laughin’] in Meeting [or Meetin’]. 

See Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories. 

Lines to the Memory of “Annie.” 

Little Edward. 

Little Eva. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Little Evangelist, The. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 
“Looking over the world on a broad scale.” 
Minister’s Housekeeper, The. See Sam Lawson’s 
Fireside Stories. 

Minister’s Wooing, The. 

Only a Year. 

Other World, The. 

Parson's Horse Race, The. See Sam Lawson’s 
Fireside Stories. 

Peace in God. See Hours of the Night. 

Poganuc People. 

Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories. 

Secret, The. 

Soul’s Answer, The. See Abide in Me, and I in 
You. 

Still, Still, with Thee. See When I Awake I am 
Still with Thee. 

Topsy. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Topsy’s First Lesson. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 
Uncle Abel and Little Edward. See Little 
Edward. 

Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 

Uncle Tom’s Testament. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin. 
When I Awake I am Still with Thee. 

Zeph Higgins’ Confession. See Poganuc People. 
Stowe, W. Walsham.—Poetry and the Poor. 
Strafford, T: Wentworth, Earl of. —Earl of Strafford’s 
Defence, The. 

Strafford’s Defence Against the Charge of High 
Treason. See Earl of Strafford’s Defence, The. 
Strangford, G: A: F. P. S. Smythe, Viscount. —Aris¬ 
tocracy of France, The. 

Merchants of Old England, The. 

Strangford, Percy Clinton Sydney Smythe, Viscount .— 
Blighted Love. (TV.) 

Year Ago, A. 

Straton, Barry.—America. 

Charity. 

Love’s Harvest. 

“Strauss, Yawcob.” See Adams, C: F. 

Streamer, Col. D.—Aunt Eliza. 

Impetuous Samuel. 

Misfortunes never Come Singly. 
Tender-heartedness. 

Street, Alfred Billings.—Death of Osceola, The. 

Gray Forest Eagle, The. 

Loon, The. 

Nightfall: a Picture. 

Settler, The. 

Street, Rev. T:—My Dog “Sport.” 

Streeter, R. M.—Song of the Maple. 

Wedding Fee, The. 

Streeter, S. F.—“Oh, man, boast not thy ‘lion heart.’ ” 
Stretch, Wesley.—Singing across the Water. 

Widow’s Son Restored to Life, The. 

Stringer, Arthur J: (Arbuthnot).—Beethoven. 

Beside the Martyr’s Memorial. 

Canada to England. 

Song in Autumn, A. 

Strode, W:—-Kisses. 

Music. 

Praise of Music. See Music. 

Song: In Commendation of Music. See Music. 
Strong, Hezekiah.—-Railroad Crossing, The. 

Strong, Latham Cornell.—West Point. 

Strong, Philip B.—Tongue, The. 

Two Chimneys, The. 

Strongfeldt, J. Q.—Is Fidelity Eternal? 

Strozzi, Giovanni.—Lines Found in the Hand of the 
Statue of Night at Florence in the Sixteenth 
Century. 

Stryker, Melanchthon Woolsey.—Abraham Lincoln. 
Simplicity. 

Stuart, C. D.—Gentle Words. 


Stuart, Esm6.—Romance of the Matterhorn, A. 

Stuart, Mary. See Mart, Queen of Scots. 

Stuart, Mrs. Ruth M’Enery.—Christmas Guest, A. 
Student, The. —Arbor Day. 

Sturm, Julius.—God’s Anvil. 

I Hold Still. See God’s Anvil. 

Stuttle [or Suttle], Mrs. L. D. A.—Deacon’s Courtship, 
The. 

Wife-hunting Deacon, The. See Deacon’s Court¬ 
ship, The. 

“Stylites. ’ ’—Ballade. 

Suckling, Sir J:—Aglaura. 

Ballad upon a Wedding, A. 

Bride, The. See Ballad upon a Wedding, A. 
Constancy. See Sir J. S. 

Constant Lover, The. See Sir J. S. 

Dance, The. See Song: “Love, Reason,” etc. 
Doubt of Martyrdom, A. 

Encouragements to a Lover. See Aglaura. 

I Prithee Send Me Back My Heart. See Song: 

“I prithee send,” etc. 

Lute Song in “The Sad One,” The. 

Moods. See Sir J. S. 

Orsames’ Song [in “Aglaura”]. See Aglaura. 

Sir J. S. 

Song: “I prithee send me back my heart.” 

Song: “Love, Reason, Hate, did once bespeak.” 
Song: "No, no, fair heretic! it needs must be.” 
Song: “When, Dearest, I but think of thee.” 
Song: “Why so pale?” See Aglaura. 

Sonnet: “Of thee, kind boy, I ask no red and 
white. ’ ’ 

To a Lover. See Aglaura. 

True Love. See Song: “No, no, fair heretic,” etc. 
Truth in Love. See Sonnet: “Of thee, kind boy,” 
etc. 

When, Dearest, I but think of Thee. See Song: 
“When, Dearest,” etc. 

Why so Pale and Wan [, Fond Lover]? See 
Aglaura. 

Sullivan, Alan.—Venice. 

White Canoe, The. 

Sullivan, Ellen T.—Birds and the Children, The. 

Three Little Lads. 

Sullivan, Timothy D.—Dear Old Ireland. 

Death of King Conor Macnessa. 

Michael Dwyer. 

Steering Home. 

You and I. 

Sullivan, W:—President Washington’s Receptions. 

Rum’s Devastation and Destiny. 

Summers, T: Osmond.—Keep Those Banners. 

Sumner, C:—Age of Progress. See Scholar, the Jurist, 
the Artist, the Philanthropist, The. 

American Flag, The. See Are We a Nation? 

Are We a Nation? 

Battle, A. 

Crime against Kansas, The. 

Duties of Massachusetts at the Present Crisis: 

Foundation of the Republican Party. 

Horrors of War. See War System of the Com¬ 
monwealth of Nations. 

Incentives to Duty. See Scholar, the Jurist, the 
Artist, the Philanthropist, The. 

Judicial Tribunals. See Duties of Massachusetts 
at the Present Crisis. 

Kansas. See Crime against Kansas, The. 
Lafayette, the Faithful One. 

Law of Human Progress, The. 

Law of Love as a Rule of Conduct, The. See True 
Grandeur of a Nation, The. 

Marquis de La Fayette. See Lafayette, the Faith¬ 
ful One. 

National Flag, The. See Are We a Nation? 

Our Nation and Flag. See Are We a Nation? 
Peace. See True Grandeur of Nations, The. 
Progress is Constant. See Law of Human Pro¬ 
gress, The. 

Progress of Humanity, The. See Law of Human 
Progress, The. 

Scholar, the Jurist, the Artist, the Philanthropist, 
The. 

Sumner’s Tribute to William Penn. See True 
Grandeur of Nations, The. 

True Grandeur of Nations, The. 

"True honor of a nation is to be found only in 
deeds of justice, The.” See True Grandeur 
of Nations, The. 

Victories of Peace, The. See True Grandeur of 
Nations, The. 

War. See War System of the Commonwealth of 
Nations. 

War System of the Commonwealth of Nations. 


556 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Swinburne 


Sunday Afternoon. —-In September. 

“It sometimes happens that two friends will meet.” 
Sunday Magazine. —“If you have gentle words and 
looks, my friends.” 

Lord Careth, The. 

Moon and Dawn. 

Sunday School Advocate. —Temperance Boy, The. 
Sunday School Times. —Nathan’s Case. 

Supine, T: Danby.—Horatii and Curiatii, The. 

Surrey, H: Howard, Earl of. —Age of Children Happi¬ 
est, The. See How no Age is Content. 
Complaint by Night of the Lover not Beloved, 
A. 

Complaint of the Absence of Her Lover being 
upon the Sea. 

Description and Praise of his Love Geraldine. 
Description of Spring. 

Epitaph on Clere, Surrey’s Faithful Friend and 
Follower, An. See Epitaph on Sir Thomas 
Clere. 

Epitaph on Sir Thomas Clere. 

Give Place, Ye Lovers. See Praise of his Love, 
etc. 

Harpalus’ Complaint of Phillida’s Love Bestowed 
on Corin. (?) 

How no Age is Content. 

Lines written in Imprisonment at Windsor. See 
Prisoned in Windsor, etc. 

Means to Attain Happy Life, The. 

No Age Content with his Own Estate. See How 
no Age is Content. 

On the Death of Sir Thomas Wyatt. 

Praise of his Love [wherein he Reproveth them that 
Compare their Ladies with his], A. 

Prisoned in Windsor he Recounteth his Pleasure 
there Passed. 

Sonnet: Complaint of a Lover Rebuked. 

Sonnet: Description of Spring. See Description 
of Spring. 

Sonnet: Geraldine. See Description and Praise of 
his Love Geraldine. 

Surtees, Rob’t.—Barthram’s Dirge. 

Surtleff, Ernest Warburton.—Proud Winter Cometh. 
Surville, Clotilde de.—Child Asleep, The. 

Suter, W. E.—Wanted, a Young Lady. 

Sutherland, Millicent Fanny St. Clair-Erskine (?), 
Duchess of. —Farewell, A. 

Sutphen, (W: Gilbert) Van Tassel.—Deep Waters. 
Suttle, L. D. A. See Stuttle, Mrs. L. D. A. 

Sutton, E. A.—Grandma’s Shamrocks. 

Sutton, G: D.—Sara. 

Sutton, G: D., and Benjamin, C: L.—Flag that Has 
never Known Defeat, The. 

Swain, C:—Child and the Angels, The. 

Dryburgh Abbey. 

Heart for Every One. A. 

I Waited till the Twilight. 

Life. 

Love. 

“Love? I will tell thee what it is to love!” See 
Love. 

Love’s Confession. 

One Story’s Good till Another is Told. 

Rose thou Gav’st, The. 

Smile and never Heed Me. 

Something Cheap. 

Take the World as It Is. 

Tribute to Sir Walter Scott, A. See Dryburgh 
Abbey. 

Tripping down the Field-path. 

True Nobility. 

’Twas just before the Hay was Mown. 

Violet in Her Hair, A. 

Swain, Edith L.—Happiness and Duty. 

Swain, Leonard.—God’s Ownership of the Sea. 

Swan, E. M.—Hannibal on the Alps. 

Hannibal’s Address. See Hannibal on the Alps. 
Swander, Mrs. R. Morris.—False Accusation, The. 
Misfortune of Civil War, The. 

Mutual Development Society, The; or, Capital vs. 
Labor. 

Swarthmore Phoenix. —Ballad of College Days, A. 
Sweet, Sarah O.—Spendthrift Doll, The. 

Sweetzer, Rev. E. C.—“Theatre is neither moral nor 
immoral, The.” 

Swett, H. B.—Gathering, The. 

Swett, Susan Hartley.—Blue-jay, The. 

■ Complaining March. 

July. ^ 

Swift, Frances Dorr. See Tatnall, Mrs. Frances 
Dorr [Swift]. 

Swift, Frd’k J.—Career of Gordon, The. 

Swift, J: Lindsay.—Soldier’s Monument, The. 


Swift, Dean Jonathan.—Apollo’s Edict. 

Baucis and Philemon. 

Beasts’ Confession, The. 

Cadenus and Vanessa. 

Cudgeled Husband, The. See Epigram: “As 
Thomas,” etc. 

Day of Judgment, The. 

Description of a City Shower, A. 

Description of the Morning, A. 

Die. 

Echo, An. (?) 

Elegy on Partridge. See Grub Street Elegy, A 
Epigram: “As Thomas was cudgell’d,” etc. 
Epigrams against Carthv. 

Epitaph on Demar the tJsurer. 

Fan, A. See On a Fan. 

Gentle Echo on Woman, A. 

Grub Street Elegy on the Supposed Death of Par¬ 
tridge the Almanack Maker, A. 

Horace, Bk. 4, Ode 9, Addressed to Archbishop 
King. (Tr.) 

Jove and the Souls. See Day of Judgment, The. 
Love Song, in the Modern Taste, A. (At. also to 
Alex. Pope.) 

Mary the Cook-maid’s Letter to Doctor Sheridan. 
Maypole, A. (?) 

Meditation upon a Broom-stick, A. 

Mrs. Frances Harris’ Petition. 

Moll. See To Samuel Bindon, Esq. 

Morning in London. See Description of the Morn¬ 
ing, A. 

Ode on Science. 

On a Candle. (?) 

On a Cannon. (?) 

On a Circle. (?) 

On a Corkscrew. (?) 

On a Fan. 

On a Pair of Dice. (?) 

On a Pen. (?) 

On a Shadow in a Glass. (?) 

On a Usurer. See Epitaph on Demar the Usurer. 
On Burning a Dull Poem. 

On Ink. 

On One Delacourt’s Complimenting Carthy on His 
Poetry. See Epigrams against Carthy. 

On Seeing the Busts of Newton, Locke, and 
Others. 

On Seeing Verses Written upon Windows at Inns. 
On Snow. (?) 

On the Church’s Danger. 

On the Death of Dr. Swift. 

On the Five Senses. (?) 

On the Moon. (?) 

On the Vowels. 

On Time. (?) 

Place of the Damned, The. 

Progress of Poetry, The. 

Relations of Booksellers and Authors, The. See 
Tale of a Tub, A. 

Reverse, The; or, Mrs. Cludd. 

Riddle, A. See On the Vowels. 

Tale of a Tub, A. 

To a Lady. See To Mrs. Houghton of Bourmont, 
on Praising, etc. 

To Mrs. Biddy Floyd; or, The Receipt to Form a 
Beauty. 

To Mrs. Houghton of Bourmont, on Praising her 
Husband to Dr. Swift. 

To My Mistress. 

To Samuel Bindon, Esq. 

Tonis ad Resto Mare. (?) 

Twelve Articles. 

Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift. See On the 
Death of Dr. Swift. 

Swinburne, Algernon C:—Adieux a Mary Stuart. 

Age and Song. 

Armada, The. 

Atalanta in Calydon. 

Ave Atque Vale. 

Baby’s Eyes. See Etqde R4alist4. 

Baby’s Feet, A. See Etude Realis,tA 
Baby’s Feet and Hands/ A. See Etude Realists. 
Baby’s Hands, A. See Etude R^alistA 
Ballad of Dead Men’s Bay, The. 

Bothwell. 

Bride’s Tragedy, The. 

Brothers, The. 

Burton. See On the Death of Richard Burton. 
Casquettes, The. 

Chastelard. 

Child’s Laughter, A. 

Child’s Song. 


557 




Swinburne 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Swinburne, Algernon C: ( continued). 

Chorus: “We have seen thee, O love.” See 
Atalanta in Calydon. 

Chorus: “When the hounds,” etc. See Atalanta 
in Calydon. 

Chorus from “Atalanta [in Calydon].” See Ata- 
tanta in Calydon. 

Disappointed Lover, The. See Triumph of Time, 
The. 

England. See Armada, The. 

Envoi. 

Epicede. 

Etude Rtialiste. 

Farewell. 

Felise. 

First Footsteps. 

Forsaken Garden, A. 

Garden of Proserpine, The. 

“Green earth haa her sons and her daughters.” 
Had I Wist. 

Heptalogia, The. 

Hertha. 

Hesperia. 

Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The. 

Hope and Fear. 

In a Garden. 

In Memory of Barry Cornwall. 

In Memory of Walter Savage Landor. 

In San Lorenzo. 

Itylus. 

Jacobite in Exile, A. 

John Jones. 

John Knox’s Indictment of the Queen. See Both- 
well. 

King’s Daughter, The. 

Kissing Her Hair. 

Love at Sea. 

Making of Man, The. See Atalanta in Calydon. 
Match, A. 

Memorial Verses on the Death of Th^ophile 
> Gautier. 

Nell Gwynn. 

Nephelidia. See Heptalogia, The. 

New Year’s Eve. See Age and Song. 

Not a Child. 

Oblation, The. 

On the Cliffs. 

On the Death of Richard Burton. 

On the Deaths of Thomas Carlyle and George Eliot. 
On the Monument Erected to Mazzini at Genoa. 
Rondel. See Kissing Her Hair. 

Rosamond. 

Rosamond at Woodstock. See Rosamond. 
Roundel, The. 

Sappho. See On the Cliffs. 

Sea-swallows, The. 

Song: “O lips that mine have grown into.” See 
Felise. 

Soul and Body. See Atalanta in Calydon. 

Statue of Victor Hugo, The. 

Swimming. See Tristram of Lyonesse. 

Th^ophile Gautier. See Memorial Verses on the 
Death of Th^ophile Gautier. 

To Dr. John Brown. 

Tristram of Lyonesse. 

Triumph of Time, The. 

Victor Hugo. See Statue of Victor Hugo, The. 

We Have Seen Thee, O Love. See Atalanta in 
Calydon. 

When the Hounds of Spring. See Atalanta in 
Calydon. 

White Butterflies. See Envoi. 

Witch-mother, The. 

Swinburne, T: Thackery.—Parting Song. 

Swinerton, J. G.—Old Man Goes to Town, The. 

Swing, D:—“As the highly colored birds do not fly 
around in the dull.” 

Beautiful Hands. 

“Clergymen while speaking in the pulpit.” 

Easter. 

“Let us learn to be content with what we have, 
with the place we have in life.” 

Lincoln’s Birthday.—February 12, 1809. 

Memorial Hymn—-J. A. Garfield. 

"Of all the solemnities of which the mind can 
conceive, death is the greatest.” 

“Supernatural in this Jesus is the best hope of 
the world. The.” 

“Was James A. Garfield great? Ask those early 
years.” 

Yesterday. 

Swingle, Emma F.—Rest for the Weary. 

Switer, W: H.—Ruling Passion, The. 


"Sylva, Carmen.” See Elizabeth Pauline Attilia, 
Queen of Roumania. 

Sylvester, Mrs. Clara A.—Trusty and True. 

Sylvester, Joshua.—Contented Mind. The. See Con¬ 
tentment. 

Contentment. 

Love’s Omnipresence. 

“Oh courage! there he comes.” 

Sonnet: “Were I as base as is the lowly plain.” 

See Love’s Omnipresence. 

Ubique. See Love’s Omnipresence. 

Were I as Base as is the Lowly Plain. See Love’s 
Omnipresence. 

Symon [C: Simeon?].—Lesson of Wisdom for All Man¬ 
ner of Children. 

Symonds, J: Addington.—Christmas Lullaby, A. 
Episode, An. 

Fall of a Soul, The. 

Farewell. 

II Fior degli Eroici Furori. 

In February. 

Jews’ Cemetery on the Lido, The. 

Lost Love, A. 

Lux Est Umbra Dei. 

Mystery, A. 

Nightingale. The. 

Parting in Dreamland, A. 

Sonnet, The. 

Thyself. 

Venice. 

Symons, Arthur.—After Love. 

At Fontainebleau. 

During Music. 

Javanese Dancers. • 

To a Portrait. 

Syracuse University Herald. —Beloved Syracuse. 


T 

T., A. J.—What is Love? 

T., C. S.—Poet, The. 

T., E. M.—Rocks of Mt. Desert, The. 

T., S. L.— Social Scale, The. 

T., W.—Awful Fly, An. 

For a Girl Ten Years Old. 

Quarrelsome Boy, The. 

Tabb, Rev. J: Banister.—Alter Ego. 

Annunciation, The. 

Anonymous. 

Assumption, The. 

At Bethlehem. See Child, The. 

Becalmed. 

Bubble, The. 

Bunch of Roses, A. 

Child, The. 

Childhood. 

Clover. 

Confided. 

Departed, The. 

Druid, The. 

Earth’s Tribute. 

Easter. 

Evolution. 

Fame. 

Father Damien. 

Fern Song. 

Humming-bird, The. 

In Absence. 

Incarnation, The. 

Indian Summer. 

Nekros. 

Paschal Moon, The. 

Playmates, The. 

Resurrection. 

Sisters, The. 

Sunbeam, The. 

Tax-gatherer, The. 

To Shelley. 

To the Christ. 

Water-lily, The. 

White Jessamine, The. 

Tacitus, Caius Cornelius.—Annals. 

Calgacus [or Galgacus] to the Caledonians. See 
Life of Cnaeus Julius Agricola. 

Germanicus to His Mutinous Troops. See Annals. 
Life of Cnaeus Julius Agricola. 

Tadema, Laurence Alma. See Alma-Tadema, Lau¬ 
rence. 

Taggart, Alice R.—Love’s Token. 

Taine, Hippolyte Adolphe.—“Critic is now aware that 
his personal taste has no value. A.” 


558 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Taylor 


Talbot, C: R.—Lesson in Weighing, A. 

Number One. 

Talbot, J. J.—Voice of Despair, The. 

Talfourd, F.—Household Fairy, A. 

Talfourd, Sir T: Noon.—Charity. 

Death of Queen Carolina, The. 

Extension of the Term of Copyright. 

International Copyright, An. 

Ion, a Tragedy. 

Reality of Literary Property. 

Sympathy. See Ion. 

’Tis a Little Thing. 

World Without and Within, The. 

Talhaiarn, -.—Where are the Men? 

Talmage, T: De Witt.—Archfiend of Nations, The. 
Back from the War. 

Bible, The. 

Carlo and the Freezer. 

Christmas Thoughts. 

Curse of Drink, The. 

Cut Behind. 

Grandmother's Spectacles. 

Half was not Told Me, The. 

Hand, The. 

High License. 

Hobbies. 

Home. 

National Prohibition. 

Original Liquor League, The 
Our National Curse. 

Our Regiments of Reform. 

Power of Music, The. 

Queen Vashti. 

Rum Fiend’s Portrait, The. 

Rum the Worst Enemy of the Working-classes. 
Suicide; or, The Sin of Self-destruction. 
Swallowing a Fly. 

To the Dykes! 

Tragedy, A. 

Women’s Dispositions. 

World We Live In, The. 

Wreck of the Huron. 

Talmud , The. —Two Brothers, The. 

Tannahill, Rob’t.—Braes o’ Balquhither, The. 

Flower o’ Dumblane, The. 

Jessie, the Flower o’ Dumblane. See Flower o’ 
Dumblane, The. 

Midges Dance aboon the Burn, The. 

Tappan, Eva M.—Bertie’s Philosophy. 

Tappan, W: Bingham.—Hour of Peaceful Rest, The. 
Tarbox, Rev. Increase Niles.—Ride on the Black Val¬ 
ley Railroad L A], 

Solomon’s Wise Choice. 

“With gentle looks and hearts made calm by sor¬ 
row. ’ ’ 

Tarson, C:—Scene at Niagara Falls. 

Tassin, Algernon.—Attainment. 

Autumn Wedding-song, An. 

In the Hospital. 

Tasso, Torquato.—Jersalem Delivered. 

Shepherd’s Song, The. See Jerusalem Delivered. 
Sophronia and Olindo. See Jerusalem Delivered. 
Tastu, Mme. Sabine Casimere Amable [Voiart].—Little 
Nurse, The. 

To the Guardian Angel. 

Tate, Nahum.—Christmas. 

While Shepherds Watched [Their Flocks by 
Night]. See Christmas. 

Tate, Nahum, and Brady, N:—Psalm C. 

Tatlow, Edson W. B.—Borrowed Baby. The. 

Tatnall, Mrs. Frances Dorr [Swift].—Art Thou the Same. 

Taylor, -.—Frank Hayman. 

Still Waters run Deep. 

Taylor, Ann. See Gilbert, Mrs., also Taylor, Jane 
and Ann. 

Taylor, Bayard.—America. See National Ode. 

Arab to the Palm, The. 

Ariel in the Cloven Pine. 

Ballad of Hiram Hover, The. See Echo Club, 
The. 

Bedouin Love-song. See Bedouin Song. 

Bedouin Song. ' 

Crimean Incident, A. See Song of the Camp, 
The. 

Dedicatory Ode for the Gettysburg National Ceme¬ 
tery. See Gettysburg Ode. 

Demon of the Mirror, The. 

Echo Club, The. 

El Canalo. 

Fight of Paso del Mar, The. 

Friend’s Greeting, A. 

Gettysburg Ode. 

Goblet, The. 


Taylor, Bayard ( continued ). 

Hassan Ben Khaled. See Temptation of Hassan 
Ben Khaled, The. 

Hylas. 

Inscription to the Mistress of Cedarcroft. 

King of Thule, The. ( Tr.) See Faust.—Johann 
W. von Goethe. 

Kubleh. 

Lost May, The. 

Metempsychosis of the Pine. 

Mon-da-min. 

National Ode: Read at the Celebration in Inde¬ 
pendence Hall, Philadelphia, July 4, 1876. 
Night with a Wolf, A. See Story for a Child, A. 
Ode on a Jar of Pickles. See Echo Club, The. 

On the Sea. 

Palabras Grandiosas. See Echo Club, The. 

Palm and the Pine, The. 

Phantom, The. 

Poet’s Journal, The. 

Possession. 

Praise. See Poet’s Journal, The. 

Prayer, A. See Poet’s Journal, The. 

Proposal. 

Quaker Widow, The. 

Return of Spring, The. 

Rose. The. See Temptation of Hassan Ben Kha¬ 
led, The. 

Scott and the Veteran. 

“She takes but to give again.” See National 
Ode. 

Soldier and the Pard, The. 

Song: “Daughter of Egypt, veil thine eyes.” 

Song of 1876, The. 

Song of the Camp, The. 

Spirit of the Pine, The. See Metempsychosis of 
the Pine. 

Stone-cutter, The. 

Storm Song. 

Story for a Child, A. 

Sunset. See Inscription to the Mistress of Cedar- 
croft. 

Sunshine of the Gods, The. 

Temptation of Hassan Ben Khaled, The. 

“They turned to the earth, but she frowns on her 
cliild.” 

Through Baltimore. 

Tomb of Charlemagne, The. 

To M. T. 

Tulip Tree, The. 

Wait. (?) 

Wind and the Sea, The. 

Taylor, B: Franklin. 

Baggage. 

Bark of True Love, The. See Bark “True Love,” 
The. 

Bark “True Love,” The. 

Battle of Mission Ridge, The. See Storming of 
Mission Ridge, The. 

Battle Poem, A. 

Bell, The. See Baggage. 

Burning of Chicago, The. See Fort Dearborn. 
Capture of Lookout Mountain, The. 

Cavalry Charge, The. 

Churning, The. 

Dead Grenadier, The. 

Fort Dearborn. 

Going Home. 

Gone Before. 

Heroes and the Flowers, The. (Rose Hill.) 

Isle of [the—C.] Long Ago, The. 

Long Ago. The. See Isle of Long Ago, The. 

Mary Butler’s Ride. 

Money Musk. 

Month of Mars, The. See October. 

Northern Lights, The. 

October. 

Old Barn, The. See Money Musk. 

Old Village Choir, The. 

Old-fashioned Choir, The. See Old Village Choir, 
The. 

Psalm-book in the Garret, The. 

Rescue, The. 

River Time, The. See Isle of Long Ago, The. 
School “Called.” 

Storming of Mission Ridge, The. 

Success. 

Vane on the Spire, The. 

Taylor, C: E:—-For Sale, a Horse. 

Taylor, Emily.—Absence. (Tr.) 

Contented John. (At. also to Jane Taylor.) 

Taylor, Mrs. Enoch.—Church Reveries of a School¬ 
girl. 


559 






Taylor 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Taylor, G: Lansing.—Alexander Breaking Buceph¬ 
alus. 

Christmas Bells. 

God’s Ragamuffin Army. 

Jehosaphat’s Deliverance. 

No Slave beneath that Starry Flag. See No Slave 
beneath the Flag. 

No Slave beneath the Flag. 

Pax Vobiscum! 

Prohibition the Only Safeguard for Youth. 
Temperance Enlightening the World. 

Taylor, H. S.—Man with the Musket, The. 

Taylor, Sir H:—Aretina’s Song. 

Artevelde. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Artevelde’s Vision. See Philip van Artevelde. 
Athulf and Ethilda. 

Characterization. 

Edwin the Fair. 

Elena’s Song. See Philip van Artevelde. 
Heart-rest. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Hero, The. 

“How little flattering is a woman’s love.” 

In Remembrance of the Hon. Edward Ernest 
Villiers. 

John of Launoy. See Philip van Artevelde. 
“Nay, said I not.” See Philip van Artevelde. 
Philip van Artevelde. 

Philip van Artevelde to the Men of Ghent. See 
Philip van Artevelde. 

Philip van Artevelde’s Defence of His Rebellion. 

See Philip van Artevelde. 

Revolutions. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Scholar, The. See Edwin the Fair. 

Song: “Down lay in a nook my lady’s brach.’ 
See Philip van Artevelde. 

Song: “Quoth tongue of neither maid nor wife.” 

See Philip van Artevelde. 

Van Artevelde to the Men of Ghent. See Philip 
van Artevelde. 

Van den Bosch and van Artevelde. See Philip 
van Artevelde. 

Voice of the Wind. See Edwin the Fair. 

. What Makes a Hero. See Hero, The. 

Wife, A. See Philip van Artevelde. 

Wind in the Pines, The. See Edwin the Fair. 
Taylor, J. E.—"If it be true that any beauteous 
thing.” (TV.) See Sonnet. 

Might of One Fair Face, The. (TV.) 

“Might of one fair face sublimes my love, The.’ 

(TV.) See Might of One Fair Face, The. 
Sonnet: “If it be true,” etc. ( Tr .) 

Taylor, Jane.—“Ah, dear papa, did you but know.” 
See Petition. 

Chatterbox, The. 

Contented John. (At. also to Emily Taylor.) 
Contrasted Soliloquies. 

Discontented Pendulum, The. 

Forgiveness. 

Fox and the Crow, The. 

Gleaner, The. 

God Made All Things. See Works of God, 
The. 

Love of Jesus. 

Petition. 

Philosopher’s Scales, The. 

Poppy, The. 

Pretty Cow. See Thank you, Pretty Cow. 
Squire’s Pew, The. 

Star, The. See Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star. 
Thank You, Pretty Cow. 

Toad’s Journal, The. 

Twinkle, Twinkle[, Little Star]. 

Violet, The. (At. also to Jas. Beatty.) 

Way to be Happy. 

Wooden Doll and the Wax Doll, The. 

Works of God, The. 

Taylor, Jane and Ann.—Another Plum-Cake. 

Birds, Beasts, and Fishes. 

Boys and the Apple Tree, The. 

False Alarms. 

Frances Keeps her Promise. 

George and the Chimney-sweep. 

Greedy Richard. 

James and the Shoulder of Mutton. 

Last Dying Speech and Confession of Poor Puss, 
The. 

Little Fisherman, The. 

Notorious Glutton, The. 

Meddlesome Matty. 

Plum Cake, The. 

Truant Boys, The. 

Two Gardens, The. 

Vulgar Little Lady, The. 

Taylor, Jeffreys.—Milkmaid, The 


Taylor, Jeremy.—Christ’s Coming to Jerusalem in 
Triumph. See Second Hymn for Advent, The. 
Heaven. See Of Heaven. 

Of Heaven. 

Prayer. 

Second Hymn for Advent, The. 

Taylor, Jerome.—Drunkard, The. 

Taylor, J:—Monsieur Tonson. 

Taylor, Jos. Russell.—Flute, The. 

Veery-thrush, The. 

Taylor, M. J.—Gentle Words. 

Taylor, Tom (“Mark Lemon”).—Abraham Lincoln. 
Burlesque Challenge to America, A. 

Fool’s Revenge, The. 

‘ Oh, would I were a boy again.” 

Old Time and I. 

On the Assassination of Lincoln. See Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Patriot President, The. See Abraham Lincoln. 
Taylor, W: M.—Put out That Fire. 

Tech, The. —She Still Wins. 

Tekahionwake. See Johnson, E. Pauline. 

Temple Bar. —Rest in the Grave. 

Ten Eyck, E. E.—Daniel in the Lions’ Den. 

Tennant, W:—Anster Fair. 

Ode to Peace. 

Rab the Ranter’s Bag Pipe Playing. See Anster 
Fair. 

Tennessee University Magazine. —Our Favourite Hymn. 
Tenney, S. G.—Ah, Lassie Fair! 

“Well, Dinah Might.” 

Tennyson, Alfred, Lord. —“Ah, When Shall All Men’s 
Good.” See Golden Year, The. 

Akbar’s Dream. 

Albert the Good. See Idylls of the King. 
Alexandra. See Welcome to Alexandra, A. 

All is Well. See In Memoriam. 

Amphion. 

April. See In Memoriam. 

April Days. See In Memoriam. 

Arrival, The. See Day-dream, The. 

Arthur Henry Hallam. See In Memoriam. 
Arthur’s Farewell. See Idylls of the King. 

Ask Me no More. See Princess, The. 

As thro’ the Land. See Princess, The. 

At Life’s Best. 

At the Window. See Enoch Arden. 

Autumn. See In Memoriam. 

Aylmer’s Field. 

Ballad of Oriana, The. 

Ballad of the Fleet, A. See “Revenge,” The. 
Becket. 

Becket Saves Rosamund. See Becket. 

Beggar Maid, The. 

Beggar Maid and King Cophetua, The. See Beg¬ 
gar Maid, The. 

Bells of Yule. See In Memoriam. 

Bird and the Baby, The. 

Birdie and Baby. See Bird and the Baby, The. 
“Birds in the high hall-garden.” 

Birth of Christ, The. See In Memoriam. 
Blackbird, The. 

Blow, Bugle. See Princess, The. 

Blow, Bugle, Blow. See Princess, The. 

Bower Scene from "Becket,” The. See Becket. 
Break, Break, Break. 

Brook, The. 

Bugle, The. See Princess, The. 

Bugle Song[, The]. See Princess, The. 

Burial of the Duke of Wellington. See Ode^on 
the Death of the Duke of Wellington. 

Captain. The. 

Charge of the Heavy Brigade [at Balaklava], 
The. 

Charge of the Light Brigade [at Balaklava], The. 
Child and the Sunshine, The. 

Choric Song. See Lotos-eaters, The. 

Christmas. See In Memoriam. 

Christmas-bells. See In Memoriam. 

Circumstance. 

City Child, The. 

Claribel. 

Come Down, O Maid. See Princess, The. 

Come into the Garden, Maud. See Maud. 

Come not, when I am Dead. 

Coming of Arthur, The. See Idylls of the King. 
Contemplate all this Work. See In Memoriam. 
Cradle Song. See Bird and the Baby, The. 
Crossing the Bar. 

Crowning of Arthur, The, See Idylls of the King. 
Daisy, The. 

Day-dream, The. 

Days that are no More, The. See Princess, The. 
Dead, in a Foreign Land. See In Memoriam. 


560 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Tennyson 


Tennyson, Alfred, Lord ( continued ). 

Dear Friend, The. See In Memoriam. 

Death in Life’s Prime. See In Memoriam. 

Death of the Old Year, The. 

Dedication to Idylls of the King. See Idylls of the 
King. 

Dedicatory Poem to the Princess Alice. 

Defence of Lucknow, The. 

Departure, The. See Day-dream, The. 

Deserted House, The. 

Despair. 

Dirge, A. 

Dora. 

Dost Thou Look Back? See In Memoriam. 
Dragon-fly, The. See Two Voices, The. 

Dream of Fair Women, A 

Duke of Wellington, The. Sec Ode on the Death 
of the Duke of Wellington. 

Eagle, The. 

Early Spring. 

Edward Gray. 

Elaine. See Idylls of the King. 

Eleanore. 

England and America [in 1782], 

Enid. See Idylls of the King. 

Enid’s Song See Idylls of the King. 

Enoch Arden. 

Enoch Arden at the Window. See Enoch Arden. 
Epitaph on General Gordon. 

Eve of St. Agnes. See St. Agnes’ Eve. 

Evening. See In Memoriam. 

Falcon, The. 

F ar—far—away. 

Farewell, A. 

Farewell of Enoch Arden. The. See Enoch Arden. 
First Quarrel, The. 

Flower, The. 

Flower in the Crannied Wall. 

Foolish Virgins, The. See Idylls of the King. 
“For I trust if an enemy’s fleet came yonder round 
by the hill.” See Maud. 

Foresters, The. 

Frater Ave atque Vale. 

Friendship. See To - . 

Garden Song. See Maud. 

Gardener’s Daughter, The. 

Gareth. See Idylls of the King. 

Gareth and Lynette. See Idylls of the King. 

Gate of Camelot, The. See Idylls of the King. 
Geraint and Enid. See Idylls of the King. 

God and the Universe. 

Godiva. 

Golden Supper, The. See Lover’s Tale, The. 
Golden Year. The. 

Grandmother’s Apology, The. 

Grasshopper, The. 

Grief Unspeakaple. See In Memoriam. 

Guinevere. See Idylls of the King. 

Happiest Hour, The. See Queen Mary. 

Harold. 

Heavy Brigade, The. See Charge of the Heavy 
Brigade, The. 

Hero to Leander. 

Higher Pantheism, The. 

Home. See Princess, The. 

Home They Brought Her Warrior [Dead], See 
Princess, The. * 

How to be Noble. _ See Lady Clara Vere de Vere. 
Hymn: “Once again thou flamest heavenward.” 

See Akbar’s Dream. 

“I Live for Thee.” See Princess, The. 

Idylls of the King. 

In Memoriam. 

In the Children’s Hospital. 

In the Fight. See Princess, The. 

In the Valley of Cauteretz. 

“It is the miller’s daughter.” See Miller’s Daugh¬ 
ter, The. 

King Arthur and Queen Guinevere. See Idylls of 
the King. 

King Richard in Sherwood Forest. See Foresters, 
The. 

Lady Clara Vere de Vere. 

Lady Clare. 

Lady of Shalott, The. 

Lancelot and Elaine. See Idylls of the King. 
Land of Lands, The. See You Ask me why, tho’ 
Ill at Ease. 

"Land which freemen till, The.” See You Ask me 
why, tho’ Ill at Ease 
Landscape See In Memoriam. 

Late, Late, So Late! See Idylls of the King. 
Leolin and Edith. See Aylmer’s Field. 

Letters, The. 


Tennyson, Alfred, Lord ( continued ). 

Lilian. 

Little Birdie. See Bird and the Baby, The. 
Locksley Hall. 

Lord of Burleigh, The. 

Lotos-eaters, The. 

Love and Death. 

Love and Duty. 

“Love is come with a song and a smile.” See 
Harold. 

Love Thou Thy Land. 

Lover’s Tale, The. 

“Love’s arms were wreathed about the neck of 
Hope.” See Lover’s Tale, The. 

Lullaby: "Sweet and low.” See Princess, The. 
Mariana. 

Mariana in the South. 

Marriage of Geraint, The. See Idylls of the King. 
Mary. See In Memoriam. 

Maud. 

May Queen, The. 

Memory. See Ode to Memory. 

Merlin and Vivien. See Idylls of the King. 
Mermaid, The. 

Merman, The. 

Miller’s Daughter, The. 

Milton. 

Minnie and Winnie. 

Moral. See Day-dream, The. 

“More things are wrought by prayer.” See Morte 
d’Arthur. 

Morning Song. See Bird and the Baby, The. 
Morte d’Arthur. 

Murderer of Thomas h Becket, The. See Becket. 
My Love has Talked. See In Memoriam A 
“My own dim life should teach me this.” See In 
Memoriam. 

Mystery of Life. 

National Song. See Foresters, The. 

New Year, The. 

New Year, The. See also In Memoriam. 

New Year’s Eve. See In Memoriam. 

New Year’s Eve. See also May Queen, The. 
Northern Cobbler, The. 

Northern Farmer. (New Style.) 

Northern Farmer. (Old Style.) 

O Days and Hours. See In Memoriam. 

“O let the solid ground.” See Maud. 

O Swallow, Swallow[, Flying South], See Prin¬ 
cess, The. 

O that ’twere Possible. See Maud. 

O Yet We Trust [that somehow Good]. See In 
Memoriam. 

Oak, The. 

Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. 
Ode, Sung at the Opening of the International 
Exhibition. 

Ode to Memory. 

(Enone; or, The Choice of Paris. 

Of old sat Freedom on the Heights. 

“Oh, heart of God that pities all!” 

Oh, that ’twere Possible. See Maud. 

“Oh, yet we trust [that somehow good].” See In 
Memoriam. 

Old Home, The. See In Memoriam. 

Old Year and the New, The. See In Memoriam. 
Olivia. See Talking Oak, The. 

On the Death of Duke of Wellington. See Ode 
on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. 

One Writes that Other Friends Remain. See In 
Memoriam. 

Owd Roii. 

Owl, The. 

Passing of Arthur, The. See Idylls of the King. 
Path of Duty, The. See Ode on the Death of the 
Duke of Wellington. 

Peace of Sorrow, The. See In Memoriam. 
Personal Resurrection. See In Memoriam. 

Poet’s Mind, The. 

Poet’s Song, The. 

Poet’s Tribute, The. See In Memoriam. 

Pray for My Soul. See Morte d’Arthur. 

Prayer. See Morte d’Arthur. 

Prayer, The. See Maud. 

Prince Consort, The. See Idylls of the King. 
Princess, The. 

Queen Mary. 

Reconciliation, The. See Princess, The. 
Retrospection. See Princess, The. 

“Revenge,” The: A Ballad of the Fleet. 

Revival, The. See Day-dream, The. 

Ring out, Wild Bells. See In Memoriam. 

Rizpah. 

Round Table, The. See Idylls of the King. 


561 





Tennyson 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Tennyson, Alfred, Lord ( continued). 
bailor Boy, The. 

St. Agnes’ Eve. 

Sea, The. See Break, Break, Break. 

Sea Dreams. See Bird and the Baby, The. 
Second Song — To the Owl. See Song — The Owl. 
Separation. See In Memoriam. 

Shell, The. See Maud. 

Silent Voices, The. 

Sir Galahad. 

Sir John Franklin. 

Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere. 

Sleeping Beauty, The. See Day-Dream, The. 
Sleeping Palace, The. See Day-Dream, The. 
Sobbing. See Dora. 

Song: “ In love, if love be love.” See Idylls of the 
. King. 

Song: “The winds as at their hour of birth.” 

Song in “The Foresters.” See Foresters, The. 
Song of Elaine. See Idylls of the King. 

Song of the Brook. See Brook, The. 

Song of the Lotos-eaters [, The]. See Lotos-eaters, 
The. 

Song of the Maiden. See Princess, The. 

Song of the Milkmaid. See Queen Mary. 

Song of Vivien. See Idylls of the King. 

Song — The Owl. 

Spiritual Communions. See In Memoriam. 
Spiritual Companionship. See In Memoriam. 
Splendour Falls on Castle Walls, The. See Prin¬ 
cess, The. 

Spring. See In Memoriam. 

Stanzas from “ In Memoriam.” See In Memoriam. 
Strife, The, See In Memoriam. 

Strong Son of God, Immortal Love. See In Me¬ 
moriam. 

Summer is Coming. See Throstle, The. 

Summer Night. See Princess, The. 

Sweet and Low. See Princess, The. 

Talking Oak, The. 

Tears, Idle Tears. See Princess, The. 

That which We Dare Invoke to Bless. See In 
Memoriam. 

Throstle, The. 

Thy Voice is Heard [thro’ Rolling Drums]. See 
Princess, The. 

Time and Eternity. See In Memoriam. 

Tithonus. 

To-——: “As when with downcast eye.” 

To the Critic. See Poet’s Mind, The. 

To the Memory of Prince Albert. See Idylls of 
the King. 

To the Princess Alice. See Dedicatory Poem to 
the Princess Alice. 

To the Queen. 

To the Rev. F. D. Maurice. 

To Victor Hugo. 

To Virgil. 

To-morrow. 

“ Too hard to bear! Why did they take me thence?” 
See Enoch Arden. 

Tribute to Motherhood, A. See Princess, The. 
Tristram’s Song. See Idylls of the King. 

Tropical Scene, A. See Enoch Arden. 

Turn, Fortune!, Turn Thy Wheel]! See Idylls of 
the King. 

Two Voices, The. 

Ulysses. 

Vastness. 

Victim, The. 

Vivien. See Idylls of the King. 

Vivien’s Song. See Idylls of the King. 

Voyage of Maeldune, The. 

Wages. 

We are Free. See Song: “The winds,” etc. 

We Kiss’d again with Tears. See Princess, The. 
Wedding-day, The See In Memoriam. 

Welcome to Alexandra (Princess of Wales), A. 
Welcome to Her Royal Highness Marie Alexan- 
drovina, Duchess of Edinburgh, A. 

Welcome to the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, 
A. See Welcome to Her Royal Highness Marie 
Alexandrovina, Duchess of Edinburgh, A. 
What Does Little Birdie Say? See Bird and the 
Baby, The. 

What Sequel? See Love and Duty. 

What the Birdie and Baby Say. See Bird and 
the Baby, The. 

When? 

Widow and Child, The. See Princess, The. 
Window, The 

Winter. See Window, The. 

With Trembling Fingers Did We Weave. See In 
Memoriam. 


Tennyson, Alfred; Lord ( continued). 

Woman. See Princess, The. 

Woman’s Cause, The. See Princess, The. 

Wreck, The. 

Wyatt’s Harangue to the London Crowd. See 
Queen Mary. 

Yorkshire Cobbler, The. See Northern Cobbler, 
The. 

You Ask me why, tho’ Ill at Ease. 

Tennyson, Bertram.— Gordon. 

Tennyson, Faith.— He Careth. 

Tennyson, Frd’k.— Blackbird, The. 

Dream of Autumn, A. 

Glory of Nature, The. 

Golden City, The. 

Holy Tide, The. 

“Niobe.” 

Skylark, The. 

Song of an Angel. 

Thirty-first of May. 

Tennyson-Turner, C:—Afternote of the Hour, The. 
Anastas is. 

Buoy-bell, The. 

Forest Glade, The. 

Going Home. 

Her First-Born 

“It was her first sweet child, her heart’s delight.” 

See Her First-born. 

Lachrymatory, The. 

Lattice at Sunrise, The. 

Letty’s Globe. 

Lion’s Skeleton, The. 

Little Sophy by the Seaside. 

Mary. 

Mary — A Reminiscence. 

Mary Queen of Scots. 

Ocean, The. 

On Certain Books. 

Orion. 

Our Mary and the Child Mummy. 

Resuscitation of Fancy. 

Rookery, The. 

Steam Threshing Machine, The. 

To the Gossamer-light. 

Vacant Cage, The. 

Terhune, Albert Payson.—- I Flunked To-day. 

To Phyllis. 

Terret, W: B.— Platonic. 

Terry, Kathe. H.— Reason Why, The 
Views of Farmer Brown. 

Terry, Paul.— To a Laugh. 

Terry, Rose. See Cooke, Mrs. Rose [Terry]. 
Tersteegen, Gerhard.— Divine Love. 

Love of God Supreme. See Divine Love. 
Terwilliger, R. J.— He Gave Him a Start. 

Teuffel, Mme. Blanche Willis [Howard] von.— Guenn. 

Popular Poplar Tree, The. 

Texas Siftings. — Counting Eggs. 

How Mose Counted the Eggs. See Counting Eggs. 
Nickerdemus Quadrille. 

Raising a Beard. 

Texas Cow, The. 

Was it Right? 

Thacher, J. H.— Lawyer’s Daughter, A. 

Thackeray, W: Makepeace.— Abdication of Napoleon. 
$ee Chronicle of the Drum, The. 

After the Storm. .See White Squall, The. 

Age of Wisdom, The. 

At the Chucrh Gate. See Pendennis. 

Bachelor’s Cane-bottomed Chair, The. See Cane- 
bottomed Chair, The. 

Ballad of Bouillabaisse, The. 

Ballad of Eliza Davis, The. 

Barry Lyndon. 

Battle of Limerick, The. 

Book of Snobs, The. 

Cane-bottomed Chair, The. 

Chronicle of the Drum, The. 

Comparison of George Washington with George 
the Fourth, called the First Gentleman of 
Europe. See George the Fourth. 

Crystal Palace, The. 

Description of the Venus of Milo. See New- 
comes, The. 

Dr. Birch and his Young Friends. 

End of the Play, The. See Dr. Birch and his 
Young Friends. 

Execution of Louis XVI. See Chronicle of the 
Drum, The. 

Execution of Marie Antoinette. See Chronicle 
of the Drum, The. 

Execution of the Princess de Lamballe. See 
Chronicle of the Drum, The. 

Garret, The. 




562 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Thaxter 


Thackeray, W: Makepeace ( continued). 

George the Third. 

George the Fourth. 

How to Live Well on Nothing a Year. See Van¬ 
ity Fair. 

Jacob Omnium’s Hoss. 

King Canute. 

King of Brentford’s Testament, The. 

Lamentable Ballad of the Foundling of Shore¬ 
ditch, The. 

Lines on a Late Hospicious Ewent. 

Little Billee. 

Mahogany Tree, The. 

Miss Pinkerton’s Academy for Young Ladies. 
See Vanity Fair. 

Mr. Molony’s Account of the Ball. 

Molony’s Lament. 

Music at Mrs. Ponto’s. See Book of Snobs, The. 
Newcomes, The. 

On a Hundred Years Hence. 

Pen and the Album, The. 

Pendennis. 

Piscator and Piscatrix. 

Pocahontas. 

Princess’s Tragedy, A. See Barry Lyndon. 

Rose upon My Balcony, The. See Vanity Fair. 
Snobs. See Book of Snobs, The. 

Sorrows of Werther. 

Speculators, The. 

Three Sailors, The. See Little Billee. 

Titmarsh’s Carmen Lilliense. 

Vanitas Vanitatum. 

Vanity Fair. 

When Moonlike are the Hazure Seas. 

White Squall, The. 

Willow-tree, The. 

Wofle New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, 
The. 

Yankee Volunteers, The. 

Thatcher, G:—Adhesive Poem, An. 

Advice to Amateurs. 

Banana. 

Blue Alsacian Mountains. 

Census Enumerator, The. 

Clippings from the Press. 

Down on the Farm. 

Ex-President Cleveland’s Anniversary Letter 
(written on his 50th Birthday). 

Few Remarks on Pants, A. 

Fowl Proceeding. A. 

Grandfather’s Pants. 

Hannah Beasley. 

Hard Luck. 

Hebrew Children, The. 

Home, Sweet Home. 

Horse Business, The. 

In the Gloaming. 

Lesson in Etiquette, A. 

Minstrel’s Seven Ages, The. 

Montravers O’Brien. 

Moss Covered Onion, The. 

My Boarding-houses. 

My Experience in the Dry Goods Business. 

My Son John. 

My Wife. 

On Various Subjects. 

Only. • 

Patents Applied For. 

Poetic Inspiration. 

Quiet Summer Resort, A. 

Salt Water Adventures. 

Stock-broker, The. 

Story of the Old Arm-chair, The. 

Superstition. 

Think it Over. 

Valedictory. 

What Constitutes Successful Management. 

What I Saw in Washington. 

When I was a Baker. 

Willie and His Esmeralda. 

Written under Difficulties. 

“Yaller” Dog’s Love for a Nigger, A. 

Thaxter, A. Wallace.—There’s Tan in the Street. 
Thaxter, Celia.—Albatross, The. 

All’s Well. 

Almost a Tragedy. 

April and May. 

August. 

Back Again. 

Bare Boughs and Buds. 

Be Lovely Within. 

Bear at Appledore, The. 

Bergetta’s Misfortunes. 

Bird’s Orchestra, The. 


Thaxter, Celia ( continued ). 

Blackberry Bush, The. 

Blind Lamb, The. 

Bluebirds in Autumn. 

Burgomaster Gull, The. 

Butcher-bird, The. 

Cat’s-cradle. 

Chanticleer. 

Chickadee, The. 

Child and the Year, The. 

Cockatoos, The. 

Constant Dove, The. 

Courage. 

Cradle, The. 

Cradle Song. 

Crocus. 

Cruise of the Mystery, The. 

Double Sunflower, The. 

Dust. 

Fern-seed. 

Flock of Doves, The. 

Flowers for the Brave. 

For Thoughts. 

Gold Locks and Silver Locks. 

Good-by, Sweet Day. 

Grandmother to Her Grandson. 

Great Blue Heron, The. 

Great White Owl, The. 

Heartbreak Hill. 

Heavenly Guest, The. (TV.) 

Hylas, The. 

In the Black Forest. 

In the Lilac-bush. 

Inhospitality. 

Jack Frost. 

Kaiserblumen, The. 

King Midas. 

Kingfisher, The. 

Kittiwakes, The. 

Little Assunta. 

Little Gustava. 

Lost. 

Lost Bell, The. 

Lullaby, A. 

Madame Arachne. 

Maize for the Nation’s Emblem. 

March. 

Marjorie. 

May Morning. 

Milking. 

Mozart at the Fireside. 

My Lighthouse. 

New Year, The. 

Nightingale, The. 

Nikolina. 

Old Saw, An. 

Open Secret, An. 

Peggy’s Garden, and what Grew Therein. 
Perseverance. 

Phantom Ship, The. See Cruise of the Mystery, 
The. 

Piccola. 

Poppy Seed, A. 

Portent. 

Presage. 

Rescued. 

Robin, The. 

Robin’s Rain-song. 

Sandpiper, The. 

Sandpiper and I, The. See Sandpiper, The. 
Sandpiper’s Nest, The. 

Scarecrow, The."* 

Seaward. 

Shadow of Doom, The. See All’s" Well. 

Shag. The. 

‘Smg, children, sing!” See Song of Easter, A. 
Sir William Napier and Little Joan. 

Sir William Pepperell’s Well. 

Slumber Song. 

Some Polite Dogs. 

Song: "We sail towards evening’s lonely star.” 
Song of Easter, A. 

Sorrow. 

Sparrows, The. 

Spray Sprite, The. 

Spring. 

Spring Planting-time. 

Sunrise never Failed us yet, The. 

Tragedy. 

Triumph, A. 

Unbidden Guest, The. 

Under the Light-house. 

Waning Moon, The. 

Warning. 


563 





Thaxter 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Thaxter, Celia ( continued ). 

Water-bloom, The. 

Wild Geese. 

Wounded Curlew, The. 

Yellow-bird. 

Thayer, Julia M. [or H.]—Easter Altar-cloth, The. 
Fighting the Rum-fiend. 

Little Boy’S Lecture, A. 

Thayer, Phineas.—Casey at the Bat. {At. also to 
Joseph Quinlan Murphy.) 

Thayer, Stephen H:—“Abide with Me.” 

Europa. 

Poet of Earth. 

‘Thou canst not frown, O Death.” 

Waiting Chords, The. 

Thayer, W. M.—Drive On! Drive On! 

Thayer, W: Roscoe.—Last Hunt, The. 

Man in Nature. 

Perfectibility. 

Violin’s Complaint, The. 

Theocritus.—Helen’s Epithalamion. See Sixe Idillia. 
Prayer of Theocritus for Syracuse, The. See Sixe 
Idillia. 

Sixe Idillia. 

Thierry, Augustin.—Murder of Thomas a Becket in 
Canterbury Cathedral, The. 

Thom, W:—Blind Boy’s Pranks, The. 

Mitherless Bairn, The. 

Thomas, Albert Ellsworth.—Apparent. 

Mores! 

Thomas, Annie.—Women of the War. 

Thomas, Brandon.-—Fell from Aloft. 

Thomas, C. H. N.—Sailor’s Story, A. 

Thomas, C: E.—To a Moth. 

Thomas, Edith Matilda.—Augury. 

Betrayal of the Rose, The. 

Breath of Hempstead Heath. 

Constancy. 

Fall Fashions. 

Far Cry to Heaven, A. 

Far in the Woods in May. 

Frost. 

Grasshopper, The. 

Gray Hair in Youth. 

Heart’s Call, The. 

"If still they live!, whom touch nor sight].” See 
Inverted Torch, The. 

Insomnia. 

Inverted Torch, The. 

“Let dead names be eternized by dead stone.” 
Liberty. 

Little Boy’s Vain Regret, A. 

Morning Songs. 

Mother England. 

Mother who Died too, The. 

Night is Still, The. 

"Oft have I wakened ere the spring of day.” See 
Inverted Torch, The. 

Quiet Pilgrim, The. 

Revival of Romance. 

Solstice. 

Soul in the Body, The. 

Summer Solstice, The. See Solstice. 

Sunshine Land. 

Talking in their Sleep. 

Tears of the Poplars, The. 

Tell Me. See Inverted Torch, The. 

Thefts of the Morning. 

To Imagination. 

To Spain—A Last Word. 

Vesper Sparrow, The. 

What the Lambs Say. 

When in the First Great Hour. See Inverted 
Torch, The. 

Will it be so? See Inverted Torch, The. 

Winter Sleep. 

Winter Solstice, The. See Solstice. 

Thomas, Emma S.—-Arbor Day Invocation. 

Class Tree, The. 

Thomas, Frd’k. W:—Song: “’Tis said that absence 
conquers love!” 

'* ’Tis said that absence conquers love.” See Song. 
“ ’Tis said,” etc. 

Thomas, J. R.—Our Own Dear Land. 

Thomas, Mary Pettus.—Will’s Desire. 

Thompson, Carrie W.—Kitty Clover. 

"Lulu.” See Kitty Clover. 

Naughty Kitty Clover. See Kitty Clover. 
Thompson, C: Lemuel.—Two Streams of History, 
The. 

Thompson, C: West.—American Eagle, The. 
Thompson, D. W.—Pure and Holy Motive. 

Thompson, D’Arcy W.—Poor Dear Grandpapa. 
Thompson, Douglas.—Days of Yore, The. 


Thompson, Fs.—Daisy. 

Dream Tryst. 

"Ex Ore Infantium.” 

Judgment in Heaven, A. 

Poppy, The. 

To a Poet Breaking Silence. 

Thompson, Jas. M.—Blacksmith of Bottledell, The. 
Thompson, J: Angus.—To a Chrysanthemum. 
Thompson, J: Randolph.—Ashby. 

Burial of Latanti, The. 

Carcassonne. (TV.) 

Lee to the Rear. 

Music in Camp. 

Obsequies of Stuart. 

Thompson, Maud.—Soul’s Kiss, The ; 

Thompson, Maurice.—Alice of Old Vincennes. 

Alice’s Mag. See Alice of Old Vincennes. 

Ballad of a Little Fun, The. 

Claudius and Cynthia. See Doom of Claudius 
and Cynthia, The. 

Creole Slave-song, A. 

Doom of Claudius and Cynthia, The. 

Early Bluebird, An. 

Farewell. 

Fertility. See Prelude, A. 

Flight Shot, A. 

In the Haunts of Bass and Bream. 

Incident of War, An. 

Lincoln’s Grave. 

Lion’s Cub, The. 

Prelude, A. 

Prophecy, A. See Lincoln’s Grave. 

Written on a Fly-leaf of Theocritus. 

Thompson, Milton.—Kiss in the Dark, A. 

Old Man’s Story, An. 

Thompson, Phillips.—Failed. 

Thompson, T: R.—Down Grade, The. 

Who’ll be the Drunkards, Then? 

Thompson, Vance.—Linen Bands. 

Symbols. 

Thompson, Will H:—Bond of Blood, The. 

Come Love or Death. 

High Tide at Gettysburg, The. 

Thompson, W: A.—Hard to Beat. 

Thomson,-.—Philosophy. 

Success. 

Thomson, A. A. Vivyan.-—Circus Boy, The. 

Thomson, C. W.—Sympathy. 

Thomson, E: W:—Bad Year, The. 

Day-dream, A. 

Ride by Night, The. 

Song-sparrow, The. 

Thomson, Estelle.—Davy, the Teamster. 

Hepsy’s Ambition. 

Young Timothy and the Forget-me-nots. 
Thomson, Jas. (1700-1748.)—Address to the Indo¬ 
lent. See Castle of Indolence, The. 

Alfred. See Rule, Brittania. 

Angling. See Seasons, The: Spring. 

Autumn. See Seasons, The: Autumn. 

Bathing. See Seasons, The: Summer. 

Britannia. 

Castle of Indolence, The. 

Coming of the Rain, The. See Seasons, The 
Spring. 

Connubial Life. See Seasons, The: Spring. 
Death Typified by Winter. See Seasons, The: 
Winter. 

Domestic Birds. See Seasons, The: Spring. 
Early Spring. See Seasons, The: Spring. 

“For ever, fortune, wilt thou prove.” See To 
Fortune. 

Freedom of Nature. See Castle of Indolence, The. 
“Hence, let me haste.” See Seasons, The: Sum¬ 
mer. 

Hymn on [or of] the Seasons. See Seasons, The: 

A Hymn. 

Lilacs. (?) 

Lost in the Snow. See Seasons, The: Winter. 
Masque of Alfred. See Rule Britannia. 

Nature in Spring. See Seasons, The: Spring. 
Nightingale, The. See Seasons, The: Spring. 
“Oh, bear me then.” See Seasons, The: Autumn. 
“Oh, first of human blessings.” See Britannia. 
On the Death of a Particular Friend. See On the 
Death of Mr. Aikman. 

On the Death of Mr. Aikman. 

Peace. See Britannia. 

Plea for the Animals. See Seasons, The: Spring. 
Rainbow, The. See Seasons, The: Spring. 

Rule, Britannia. 

Seasons, The. 

Sheep Washing, The. See Seasons, The: Summer. 
Snow Scene, A. See Seasons, The: W’inter. 


564 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Times 


Thomson, Jas. (1700-1748) ( continued ). 

Snow-storm, The. See Seasons, The: Winter. 

Song: “Tell me, thou soul of her I love.” 

Songsters, The. See Seasons, The: Spring. 

Soul Culture. See Seasons, The: Spring. 

Spring. See Seasons, The: Spring. 

Stag Hunt, The. See Seasons, The: Autumn. 

Storm in Harvest. See Seasons, The: Autumn. 
Summer. See Seasons, The. 

To Fortune. 

To Her I Love. See Song: “Tell me, thou soul,” 
etc. 

Thunderstorm, The. See Seasons, The: Summer. 
Universal Hymn of Nature, The. See Seasons, 
The: A Hymn. 

War for the Sake of Peace. See Britannia. 
“Welcome, ye shades, ye bowery thickets, hail!” 

See Seasons, The: Summer. 

Winter. See Seasons, The. 

Winter Scenes. See Seasons, The: Winter. 
Thomson, Jas. (“B. V.”) (1834-1882).— City of 

Dreadful Night, The. 

E. B. B. 

Gifts. See Sunday up the River. 

He Heard Her Sing. 

In the Train. See Sunday at Hampstead. 

Life’s Hebe. 

Melencolia. See City of Dreadful Night, The. 
Sunday at Hampstead. 

Sunday up the River. 

To E. B. B. See E. B. B. 

Vine, The. See Sunday up the River. 

Thomson, J: Stuart.—-Eventime. 

Late Autumn. 

Vale of Estabella. 

Thomson, R:—Book of Life, The. 

Thomson, W:—Maister an’ the Bairns, The. 

Thoreau, H: D:—Brute Neighbors. 

Cape Cod. 

Fisher’s Boy, The. 

Haze. See Week on the Concord and Merrimac 
Rivers, A. 

Highland Light, The. See Cape Cod. 

Inspiration. 

Mist. See Week on the Concord and Merrimac 
Rivers, A. 

Nature. 

Smoke. See Walden. 

Sounds. See Walden. 

Spring. See Walden. 

Summer Rain, The. See Week on the Concord 
and Merrimac Rivers, A. 

Sympathy. See Week on the Concord and Merri¬ 
mac Rivers, A 

Upon the Beach. See Fisher’s Boy, The. 

Walden. 

Week on the Concord and Merrimac Rivers, A. 

Wild Apples. 

Thorn, Frank M.—Advertisement Answered, The. 
Thorn bury, G: Walter.—Cavalier’s Escape, The. 

Cuckoo, The. 

Dayrise and Sunset. 

Death of Marlborough, The. 

Death of Oberon. 

Eve of St. Bartholomew, The. 

Jacobite on Tower Hill, The. 

Jester’s Sermon, The. 

La Tricoteuse. 

Melting of the Earl’s Plate. 

Old Grenadier’s Story, The. 

Old Sir Walter. 

Pompadour, The. 

Retreat from Moscow, The. 

Sally from Coventry, The. 

Three Scars, The. 

Three Troopers, The. 

White Rose over the Water, The. 

Thornbury, W. G.—Riding to the Tournament, 
The. 

Thorne, Anna H.—Dawn of the Century. 

Thorne, Meta E. B.—Path of the Cyclone, The. 

Songs of the Seasons. 

Thornton, Abbie J.—Beauty of Face and Beauty of 
Soul. 

Thornton, Eliza.—Reign of Peace, The. 

Thorpe, E. Carson.—Dot Dutchman in der Moon. 

Thorpe, Mrs. Rose A. [Hartwick].—Archie’s Mother. 
Crippled Joe. 

Curfew Must not Ring Tonight. 

Down the Track. 

Drifted out to Sea. 

Engineer’s Story, The. 

In Answer. 

In the Mining Town. 

565 


Thorpe, Mrs. Rose A. [Hartwick] ( continued ). 

One Flower for Nelly. 

Soldier’s Reprieve, The. 

Station-agent’s Story, The. 

Thanksgiving Day. 

Thoughts. 

Thrale, Mrs. Hester Lynch. <See,Piozzi Mrs. Hester 
Lynch [Salisbury]. 

Throop, G. E.—Two Professions. 

Thrupp, Dorothy Ann.—“I am the Good Shepherd.” 
Thucydides.—Address of Nicias to His Troops. See 
History of the Peloponnesian War. 

Glory of Athens. See History of the Pelopon¬ 
nesian War. 

History of the Peloponnesian War. 

Speech of Pericles. See History of the Pelopon¬ 
nesian War. 

Thurlow, E: Hovel, Lord. —Beauty. See Sonnet: “’Tis 
much,” etc. 

Lord Thurlow’s Reply to the Duke of Grafton. 
May. See Song to May. 

Reply to Grafton. See Lord Thurlow’s Reply to 
the Duke of Grafton. 

Reply to the Duke of Grafton. See Lord Thur¬ 
low’s Reply to the Duke of Grafton. 

Song to May. 

Sonnet: “The Crimson moon uprising from the 
sea.” 

Sonnet: “The nightingale is mute—and so art 
thou.” 

Sonnet: “’Tis much immortal beauty to admire.” 
Sonnet: “Who best can paint th’ enameled robe 
of spring.” 

Sonnet to a Bird that Haunted the Waters of 
Laaken in the Winter. See To a Bird, etc. 
Summer. 

To a Bird that Haunted the Waters of Laaken in 
the Winter. 

To the Moon. 

Thurston, Charlotte W.—Difficult Problem, A. 
Thurston, Hon. J : Mellen.—Affairs in Cuba. 

Centennial Speech. 

Cuba. 

Lincoln: A Man Called of God. 

Man Who Wears the Button, The. 

Monroe Doctrine, The. 

Our Rich Heritage. 

Plea for Cuba, A. 

Thwing, Dr. E. P.—Decoration Day. 

Ticheborne, Chediock. See Tychborn, Chediock. 
Tickell, T:—Colin and Lucy. 

On the Death of Mr. Addison. See To the Earl 
of Warwick, etc. 

To a Lady before Marriage. 

To the Earl of Warwick, on the Death of [Mr.—C.] 
Addison. 

Ticknor, Dr. Fs. Orrery.—Gracie of Alabama. 

Little Giffen [of Tennessee]. 

“Our Left.” 

Song for the Asking, A. 

Virginians of the Valley, The. 

Tieck, Ludwig.—Spring. 

Tiedge, Christopher August.—Wave, The. 

Tiffany, C: H.—On the Rappahannock. 

On the Rappahannock. ( Diff. poem — at. also to 
C. C. Somerville.) 

Tiffany, Esther B.—Applied Astronomy. 

Tighe, Mary.—Written at Killarney. 

Tilden, W. P.—Our Banner. 

Tilley, Lucy Evangeline.—When Even Cometh On. 
Tillotson, Archbishop J:—Advantages of Truth and 
Sincerity. 

Truth and Integrity. See Advantages of Truth 
and Sincerity. 

Tilney, Rob’t.—Lost Church, The. (TV.) 

Minstrel’s Curse, The. ( Tr .) 

Tilton, Theodore.—AH Things Shall Pass Away. 

“As other men have creed, so have I mine.” 

“At the end of life a man finds himself rich.” 
Baby Bye. See Fly, The. 

Coeur de Lion to Berengaria. 

Even This Shall Pass Away. See All Things Shall 
Pass Away. 

Flight from the Convent, The. 

Fly, The. 

French with a Master. 

God Save the Nation. 

Great Bell Roland, The. 

In God’s Acre. 

King’s Ring, The. See All Things Shall Pass 
Away. 

Problem of Life, The. 

Sir Marmaduke’s Musings. 

Times of India. —Transcendentalism. 





Timrod 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Timrod, H:—At Magnolia Cemetery. See Ode on 
Decorating the Graves, etc. 

Carolina. 

Charleston. 

Common Thought, A. 

Cotton Boll, The. 

Cry to Arms, A. 

Decoration Day at Charleston. See Ode on Dec¬ 
orating the Graves, etc. 

Elusive Nature. 

Katie. 

Ode on Decorating the Graves of [the] Confederate 
Dead [or Soldiers]. 

Ode Sung on the Occasion of Decorating the 
Graves of the Confederate Dead. See Ode on 
Decorating the Graves, etc. 

Quatorzain. 

Spring [in Carolina]. 

Tincker, Mary Agnes.—Aurora. 

Banquet, The. See Aurora. 

Tindall, Everett L.—Choosing a “State Tree.”—The 
Maple. 

Tirrell, Julia A.—Lazy Boy’s Lesson, A. 

■Titherington, R. N.—Faithful unto Death. 

Tobin, JBalthazar and the Quack. 

Confession of Love, A. See Honeymoon, The. 
Honeymoon, The. 

• Taming a Wife. See Honeymoon, The. 

Zamora. See Honeymoon, The. 

Tocqueville, Alexis de.—Democracy Adverse to Social¬ 
ism. 

Todd, J:—“There is but one thing in the wide universe 
which is really valuable.” 

Todd, Mrs. R. K.—Just Twenty-one. 

Todhunter, J.—Aghadoe. 

Banshee, The. 

Beethoven. 

Druid Song of Cathvah, The. 

Fairy Gold. 

Fate of the Sons of Usna, The. See First Duan, 
The: The Coming of Deirdre. 

First Duan, The: The Coming of Deirdre. 

First Spring Day, The. 

Laurella. 

Maureen. 

Morning in the Bay of Naples. See Laurella. 
Rossini. 

Song: “Bring from the craggy haunts of birch and 
pine.” 

Sons of Turann, The. 

Toilet, Eliz.—To Mr. Congreve. 

Tolstoi, Count Lyof.—Heavenly Guest, The. See Where 
Love is, there God is also. 

My Religion. 

Race, The. 

Where Love is, there God is also. 

"Tom o’ Bedlam.”—“I know more than Apollo.” 
Tomb, H. S.—Jim’s Story. 

Tomlinson, Mrs. A. M.—Christmas Sheaf, The. 
Tompkins, Juliet Wilbur.—For All These. 

Humble Romance, A. 

“Merry, blue-eyed laddie goes laughing through 
the town, A.” 

Of Course. 

Rosalie. 

Two Simple Little Ostriches. 

Under two Flags. 

“Tomson, Graham R.” See Watson, Rosamund 
Marriott. 

Tongue, Rob’t Clarkson.—Elam Chase’s Fiddle. 

Life and Love. 

Tonna, Mrs. Charlotte Eliz. [Browne] (“Charlotte 
Elizabeth”).—Evils of Tight Lacing, The. 
Maiden City, The. 

Tooker, Lewis Frank.—His Quest. 

Last Fight, The. 

Return, The. 

Sleep. 

Toplady, A: Montague.—Love Divine, All Love Excel¬ 
ling. 

Prayer Living and Dying, A. See Rock of Ages. 
Rock of Ages. 

“Rock of Ages, cleft for me!” See Rock of Ages. 
Topping, Mary E.—Conflict, The. 

Tormey, Michael.—Ancient Race, The. 

Torrence, F: Ridgely.—Carpe Diem. See House of a 
Hundred lights, The. 

Compensation. See House of a Hundred Lights,The. 
Conclusion of the Whole Matter, The. See House 
of a Hundred Lights, The. 

House of a Hundred Lights, The. 

Young Lovers, The. See House of a Hundred 
Lights, The. 

Youth and Age. SeeHouseof a Hundred Lights,The 


“Tot, Joe, Jr.” — See “Jot, Joe,” Jr. 

Tourgee, Albion Winegar.—Change of Base, A. 

Daniel Periton’s Ride. 

Fool’s Errand, A. 

Lily Servosse’s Ride, The. See Fool’s Errand, A. 
Son of Abdallah, A. See Son of Old Harry, A. 
Son of Old Harry, A. 

"Though He Slay!” 

What Waked the World. 

Tourgenieff [or Turgenief], Ivan Sergyevich.—Alms, An. 
Festival of the Supreme Being, The. 

Happy Land, The. 

M^schft 

Towne, Belle Ivellog.—Were I You, Little Lad. 
Townley, Mary.—Rose in October, The. 

Townsend, Eliz. W.-—Baby, The. 

Townsend,G: Alfred.—ArmyCorrespondent’s Last Ride. 
Cow and the Bishop, The. 

In Rama. 

Townsend, M. E.—“And now we only ask to serve.” 
Far from Home and Country. 

So Tired. 

“They who the sweetest rest.” 

Townsend, M. G.—Ugliest of Seven, The. 

Townsend, Mrs. Mary Ashley [Van Voorhees],—At Set 
of Sun. 

Christening, The. 

Credo. 

Dead Singer, The. 

Down the Bayou. 

Embryo. 

Georgia Volunteer, A. 

Her Horoscope. 

How Much Do You Love Me? 

Love’s Belief. See Credo. 

Reserve. 

Two. 

Virtuosa. 

Woman’s Wish, A. 

Townsend, Myra.—Capital Punishment. 

Townshend, Chauncy Hare.—“Reflected in the lake I 
love to mark.” (?) 

Thy Joy in Sorrow. 

Tracy, F. P.—Normans, The. 

Trafton, E. H.—All Right at Last. 

Beginning Right. 

Convict’s Soliloquy [the Night before Execution], 
The. 

Good Library Gone up in Smoke, A. 

Life: a School Scene. 

Precarious Predicament, A. 

Sleeping Boy, The. 

Trafton, Rev. Mark.—Our Martyred Dead. 

Traherne, T'—News. 

Train, Arthur Cheney.—R ambling Rhyme of Dorot hy, A. 
Train, E. P.—-To Narcissa. 

Train, W. J. C.—Brothers Once More. 

Our Dead Heroes. 

Resurrection. 

Royal Birthday, A. 

Traquair, E. M.—Nameless Hero, A. 

Squire’s Bargain, The. 

Trask, Mrs. Kate [Nichols] —Aidenn. 

At Last. 

Love. 

Sorrow. 

Trask, “Katrina.”— See Trask. Mrs. Kate [Nichols]. 
Traubel, Horace Logo.—Epicedium. 

I Served in a Great Cause. 

If all the Voices of Men. 

Traveler’s Magazine. —Consolation even on a Mixed 
Train. 

Traveler’s Record. —Modern Summer Hotel, A. 

Traver, Georgene.—Not so Well Acquainted. 

Pauper Girl, The. 

Trt'lat,-.—Address to the Chamber of Peers. 

Trench, R: Chenevix.—After the Battle. 

Alma. 

Be Patient. 

Content and Discontent. See Different Minds. 
Dew-drop. The. 

Dewdrop Falling, A. See Dew-drop, The. 
Different Minds. 

Enjoyment of the Present. 

Harmosan. 

Inkerman. 

Kingdom of God, The. 

Mother’s Jewels. The. 

“O life, O death, O world, O time.” See Suffering. 
Our Father’s Home. See Kingdom of God, The. 
Returning Home. 

“Some murmur when their sky is clear.” See 
Different Minds. 

• Sonnet: "All beautiful things bring sadness.” 





AUTHOR INDEX 


Uncle 


Trench, R: Chenevix ( continued ). 

Suffering. 

Xerxes at the Hellespont. 

Trinity Archive. —Let Me Forget. 

Trinity Tablet. —Echo’s Secret. 

Love Laughs. 

Portrait, A. 

Reward of Merit, A. 

Sly Little Maid, A. 

Speed. 

White Alder, The. 

Troland, J:—Visit to the Sea, A. 

Troubetzkoy, Princess Amalie [Rives] [Chanler],—Be¬ 
fore the Rain. 

Death. 

Mood, A. 

Sonnet, A: “Take all of me,—I am thine own, 
heart, soul.” 

Unto the Least of these Little Ones. 

Winter Hymn, A. 

Trowbridge, J: Townsend.—At Sea. 

Aunt Melissy on Boys. 

Beyond. 

Charcoal Man, The. 

Coupon Bonds. 

Cudjo’s Cave. 

Cup, The. 

Darius Green and His Flying-machine. 

Dorothy in the Garret. 

Emigrant’s Story, The. 

Evening at the Farm. 

Farm-yard Song. See Evening at the Farm. 

Fox in the Well, The. 

Goat and the Swing, The. 

How the King Lost His Crown. 

Knight and the Lady, The. 

Midsummer. 

Midwinter. 

Nancy Blynn’s Lover. 

Old Robin. 

One Day Solitary. 

One Good Turn Deserves Another. 

Pewee, The. 

Pomp’s Story. See Cudjo’s Cave. 

Sheriff Thorne. 

Story of the Barefoot Boy, A. 

Summer. See Midsummer. 

Tom’s Come Home. 

Trouting. 

Vagabonds, The. 

Widow Brown’s Christmas. 

Wolves, The. 

Wonderful Sack, The. 

Trowbridge, Robertson.—Altruism. 

Troy Times. —Our Beloved Dead. 

True, J: Preston.—My Hero. 

True, Kate.—Kitty Malone. 

Truesdell.EUa M.—When theWindGoes thro’ theMaples. 

Trumble,-.— See McDermott and Trumbull. 

Trumbull, Annie Eliot.—To O. S. C. 

Trumbull, J.—McFingal. 

Truth Seeker. —Where are Wicked Folks Buried? 
Tubbs, Arthur Lewis.—Bicycling in the Sky. 

King’s Kisses, The. 

Tucker, J. H.—Told in the Stalls. 

Tucker, Mary E.—Remember, Boys Make Men. 
Tucker, St. George.—Days of My Youth. 

Tuckerman, F: Gordon.—Rhotruda. 

Tuckerman, H: Theodore.—Newport Beach. 

To an Elm. 

Washington’s Statue. 

Tulane Collegian. —Mayonette River, The. 

Tulloch, J:, D.D. (?).—“We cannot- say to any young 
man: Do not play billiards.” 

Tully. See Cicero, Marcus Tullius. 

Tupper, Edith S.—Grandmamma’s Fan. 

Tupper, Martin Farquhar.-—All’s for the Best. 

America an Aggregate of Nations. 

“But three feet good of that old wood.” (?) 

Hidden Uses of Plants. 

I am not Old. See Song of Seventy, The. 

Never Give Up. 

Of Cruelty to Animals. See Proverbial Phi¬ 
losophy. 

Proverbial Philosophy. 

Song of Seventy, The. 

To America in 1876. 

Truth. 

Wedding Gifts. (?) 

Turberville, G:—Lover to his Lady that Gazed much 
up to the Skies, The. 

Turgenief, Ivan. See Tourgenieff, Ivan Sergyevich. 
Turk, M. H.—“Book Lamin’.” 

Turnbull, W: Watson.—Dr.Jotham Tindale’s Cue a Cure- 


Turner, A. V.—Light. 

Turner, C: H.—Dat Yaller Gown. 

Turner, C: Tennyson. See T e n n ys on-Tu rn e r,. 
Charles. 

Turner, E: F.-—Fairy Tale, A. 

How Mr. Smiggles Went to a Public Dinner. 

Mr. Piper’s Mittens. 

My First and Last Appearance. 

Number 999. 

Our Debating Club. 

Underground Jottings. 

Turner, Mrs. Eliza [Sproat].—All Mother. 
Compensation. 

Little Goose, A. 

Lost. See Little Goose, A. 

Stray Child, A. See Little Goose, A. 

Turner, Eliz.—Ambitious Sophy. 

Cruel Boy, The. 

Dizzy Girl, The. 

Falsehood “Corrected.” 

Giddy Girl, The. 

Greedy Boy, The. 

How to Look When Speaking. 

How to Write a Letter. 

Hoyden, The. 

Lesson, The. 

Lost Pudding, The. 

Maria’s Purse. 

Models, The. 

Playing with Fire. 

Poisonous Fruit. 

Politeness. 

Rebecca’s After-thought. 

Result of Cruelty, The. 

Richard’s Reformation. 

Rudeness. 

Sash, The. 

Superior Boys, The. 

Wonders, The. 

Worm, The. 

Turner, Rev. J. R.—Why I Object to High License- 
Turner, Joseph Mallord William.—For the Picture. 
Turner, J/rs. R. N.-—Song We Sing, The. 

Turner, W: Mason.—Dead Soldier-boy, The. 

Tuttiett, Miss M. G. (“Maxwell Gray”).—Rondel.. 
Tuttle, Hudson.—Soldier’s Return, The. 

“Twain, Mark.” See Clemens, S: L. 

Twamley, L. A.—Ragged Robin. 

Twig, J:—Ballade of the Nurserie, A. 

Twitchell, Rev. Dr. -.—“Only way to clear the- 

track of life is to leave no enemy behind, The.”' 
Tychborn [or Ticheborne], Chidiock [or Chediock].— 
Chediock Ticheborne. See Lines Written by 
One in the Tower. 

Lines Written by One in the Tower[, being Young 
and Condemned to Die]. 

Tylee [or Tyler], Florence.—In Vanity Fair. 

Something Great. 

Tyler, Royall.—Independence Day, 1798. 
Tynan-Hinkson, Mrs. Katharine.—August Weather. 
Daffodil. 

Geoffrey Barron. 

Island Fisherman, An. 

Larks. 

Lux in Tenebris. 

St. Francis and the Wolf. 

Summer-sweet. 

Waiting. 

Winter Evening. 

Tyrrell, H:—Ethiopiomania. 

Tyrtaeus.-—Youthful Valor. 

Tyrwhitt, R: St. John.—Glory of Motion, The. 
Tytler, C. C. Fraser.—Love’s Colors. 


u 

Udall, N:—Pipe, Merry Annot. (?) 

Ufford, N. P.—What We Did with the Cow. 

Uhland, Johann Ludwig.—Castle by the Sea, The. 
Goldsmith’s Daughter, The. 

Landlady’s Daughter, The. 

Lost Church, The. 

Minstrel’s Curse, The. 

Passage, The. 

Song of the Mountain-boy. 

Song of the Mountain Shepherd Boy. See Song 
of the Mountain-boy. 

Song of the Silent Land. ( At.). 

To a Poet who Died of Want. 

“Uncle Schneider.”—Schneider Sees Leah. 

Schneider’s Description of the Play of Leah. See 
Schneider Sees Leah. 





Underhill 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Underhill, E: F.—Cap’n Peleg Bunker Describes a 
Game of Baseball. 

Underwood, Frances H.—Holmes, Extract Concerning. 
Lowell, Extract Concerning. 

Whittier, Extract Concerning. 

Underwood, J: Curtis.—Senior’s Plea, A. 

Underwood, Sara J.—Song for Tree-planting. 
Underwood, Wilbur.—Cattle of His Hand, The. 
United Irishman , The. —Kate. 

University Herald. —Continuity and Differentiation. 
Freshman’s Vacation, The. 

On Afric’s Golden Sands. 

What the Wild Waves Said. 

University of Chicago Weekly. —Football Tragedy, A. 
University of Virginia Magazine. —Evening Rest, The. 
Upham, C: Wentworth.—Washington’s Training. 
Upham, Louise S.—Death Makes All Men Brothers. 
Drink! Drink! Drink! 

Knife of Boyhood, The. 

Stepping in Father’s Tracks. 

Unequal Partnership, An. 

Upton, Jas.—Lass of Richmond Hill, The. 

Urmy, Clarence.—As I Came down Mount Tamalpais. 
Blondel. . 

Urner, Nathan D.—Bayonet Charge, The. 

Urquhart, Frank J: —Hortense. 

Urquhart, W. A.—-“Yes, I shall sleep! some sunny day.” 
Usher, J:—Pipe of Tobacco, A. 

Utter, Mrs. Rebecca [Palfrey].—King’s Daughter, The. 
Utter, Rob’t Palfrey.—Voice of the West Wind, The. 


V 

Vail, Clara Warren.—Bed during Exams. 

Vail, Madge.—Choosing a“StateTree.”—TheTulipTree 
Valentine, - — ■■—Country Pedagogue, The. 

Wrangling Pair, The. 

Valentine, Dr. -.-—Debating Society, The. 

Hypochondriac, The. 

Taking the Census. 

Valentine, E: Abram Uffington.—Helen. 

St. Valentine’s Day. 

Spirit of the Wheat. The. 

Valentine, Viola.—Then and Now. 

Time Turns the Tables. See Then and Now. 

Van Alstyne, Mrs. Frances Jane [Crosby].—Three 
Cheers for the Olden Time. 

What the Little Things Said. 

Vance, Sallie Ada.—Guard Thine Action. 

Vance, Zebulon B.—Character of Washington, The. 
Van Cleve, J: S.—“Life is a Mystic flame.” 
“Vandegrift, Marg.” See Mrs. Janvier, Marg. 
[Thompson], 

Vandenhoff, G:, Fiske, H. G., and Burnham, C. L.— 
All at Sea. 

Jessie Brown at Lucknow. 

Poor Player at the Gate, The. 

Van Dyke, H: (Jackson).—Address at the Annual 
Banquet of the New England Society in New 
York City, Dec. 23, 1895. 

Against the Spoils System. 

Ancestral Ideals. 

Angler’s Reveille, The. 

Angler’s Wish, A 
Four Things. 

If all the Skies. 

Lily of Yorrow, The. 

Maryland Yellow-throat, The. 

Puritan Sabbath, The. See Address at the Annual 
Banquet of the New England, etc. 

Roslin and Hawthornden. 

Snow-song, A. 

Song-sparrow, The. 

Tennyson. 

Typical Dutchman, The. 

Veery, The. 

Whip-poor-will, The. 

Vandyne, Mary E.—Bald-headed Tyrant, The. 
Nation’s Birthday, The. 

Some One Loves Us Best. 

Vane, Sir H:—Against the Succession of Richard 
Cromwell to the Protectorate. 

Van Fleet, A. B.—Old Clay Pipe. The. 

Vannah, Kate.—-Nice Distinction, A. 

Vannan, Lilia.—-Little Highland Shepherdess. 

Van Norman, Louis E.—“Bud’s Charge.” 

Nightingale, The. 

Van Rensselaer Peyton.—At Twilight. 

Van Sickle, Annie D. G.—Wife’s Prayer, The. 

Van Vorst, Marie.—Sing Again. 

Van Wagenen, Jared, Jr.—At Vespers. 

"Vara.”—Blue Sky Somewhere. 


Vassar Miscellany. —Approach of the Storm, The. 
“Three’s a Crowd.” 

Vaughan, Rev. C: J.—“Of all the reproaches which arise 
against a man in his chamber of study.” 
Vaughan, H:—Beyond the Veil. See They are all 
Gone. 

Burial of an Infant, The. 

Chosen Path, The. 

Feast, The. 

Friend Departed. See They are all Gone. 

Friends in Paradise. See They are all Gone. 
Night, The. 

Peace. 

Retreat, The. 

Rules and Lessons. 

Son-dayes. 

They are all Gone. 

Timber, The. 

To His Books. 

Vision, A. See World, The. 

World, The. 

Vaughan, V.—To Admiral George Dewey. 

Vautor, T:—Sweet Suffolk Owl. (At.) 

Vaux, T:, Lord. —On a Contented Mind. 

Veazey, Judge. —Grant’s Strategy. 

Vecaresco, Helene.—Soldier’s Tent, The. 

Vedder, D:—Nature’s Temple. 

Veitch, J:—Laird of Schelynlaw, The. 

Veley, Marg.—First or Last? 

Spring. 

Venable, W: H.—Forest Song. 

My Catbird. 

“Oh, keep their memory green who led.” 
School-girl, The. 

Teacher’s Dream, The. 

Welcome to “Boz,” A. (On His First Visit to the 
West.) 

Venables, Gilbert.—Reconsidered Verdict, The. 

Vere, E: See Oxford, Earl of. 

Verey, Jos.—Curtain Falls, The. 

Modern Hero, A. 

Vergil. See Virgil. 

Vergniaud, Pierre Victurnien.—Against the Terrorism 
of the Jacobins. 

To the French People. 

Verne, Jules.—Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon. 
Joam Docasta. See Eight Hundred Leagues on 
the Amazon. 

Michael Strogoff. 

Verplanck, Julian Crommelin.—American History. 
America’s Contributions to the World. 

Land of Benedictions. See America’s Contribu¬ 
tions to the World. 

Our History. See American History. 

Verulam, Baron. See Bacon, Fs. 

Very, Jones.—Barberry-bush, The. 

“Bud will soon become a flower, The.” See Now 
is the Time. 

Dead, The. 

Gifts of God, The. 

Idler, The. 

Labor and Rest. 

Latter Rain, The. 

Life. 

Light from Within, The. 

Nature. 

New World, The. 

Now is the Time. 

October. 

Old Road, The. 

Prayer, The. 

Presence, The. 

Sabbatia, The. 

Spirit, The. 

Spirit Land, The. 

Strangers, The. 

To the Humming-bird. 

Tree, The. 

World, The. 

Yourself. 

Vetrepont, Joy.—Griffith Hammerton. 

Vicente, Gil.—Nightingale, The. 

She is a Maid of Artless Grace. 

Vickers, G: M.—American’s Farewell, The. 

Aunt Polly Green. 

Buzby’s Goat. 

Buzzard’s Point. 

Charity Collector, The. 

Cobbler of Lynn. The. 

Dead Man’s Gulch. 

Dew-drop Inn, The. 

Dying Child, The. 

Farewell. 

Four Kisses, The. 


568 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Waller 


Vickers, G: M. ( continued ). 

Gentleman, A. 

Ghost of Crooked Lane, The. 

Grain of Truth, A. 

Hold Fast to the Dear Old Sabbath. 

I'm Getting too Big to Kiss. 

Jaqueline. 

Little Fritz. 

Music. 

New Rosette, The. 

Old Canteen, The. 

Pilot’s Bride, The. 

Potter’s Field, The. 

Public Worrier, The. 

Rizpah. 

Rusty Sword, The. 

Sailor’s Story, The. 

Soldier’s Offering, A. 

Thief on the Cross, The. 

Tom’s Thanksgiving. 

Tribulations of Biddy Malone, The. 

Two Lives. 

Vick's Magazine. —Arbor Day. 

Golden Rod, The. 

Tree’s Record of its Life, A. 

Vicortari, -.—Violet’s Grave, The. 

VieE, Herman K.—To Robert Louis Stevenson. 

Vilas, W: F.—Great and Noble Man, A. 

Our First Commander. 

Villejas, -.—“ ’Tis sweet in the green spring.” 

Villemain, Abel FranQois.—Christian Orator, The. 
Villiers, G: See Buckingham, Duke of. 

Villon, Francois.—Ballad of Dead Ladies, The. 

Ballad of Old Time Ladies. See Ballad of Dead 
Ladies, The. 

Vincent, Ellen Kingsbury.—Fair Easter Lilies. 
Vincent, J. H.—‘‘Benefits of college training are five¬ 
fold, The.” 

Vinci, Leonardo da.—Leonardo da Vinci Poetizes to 
the Duke in his own Defence. 

Perseverance. See Leonardo da Vinci Poetizes 
to the Duke in his own Defence. 

Vinton, J. D.—Not what He Wanted. 

Singing Temperance Songs. 

Stealing Apples. 

Vinton, Miller.—Cautious Wooer, A. 

“Viola.”—Because You Love Me, Dear. 

Her Eyes. 

On Receiving a White Pink. 

Why? 

Virgil (Publius Virgilius Maro).—.Eneid, The. 

Destiny of Rome, The. See Aineid, The. 
Destruction of Troy, The. See ^Eneid, The. 
Dido’s Hunting. See .lEneid, The. 

Ghost of Creusa, The. See iEneid, The. 

Nisus and Euryalus. See HCneid, The. 

Sleep. See .Eneid, The. 

Tribes of the Dead, The. See ^Eneid, The. 
Virginia City Chronicle. —“Whar’s de Kerridge?” 
Viroe.—Just Like God. 

Visscher, Maria Tesselschade.—Nightingale, The. 
Voiart, Sabine Casimere Amable. See Tastu, Mme. 
Volk, Hattie Town.—Only a Beggar Boy. 

Voltaire, Francois Marie Arouet de.—Zaire. 

Von Boyle, A. Claud.—Ever so Far Away. 

Pointer’s Dyspepsia Goat. 

Schlausenheimer’s Alarming-glock. 

Schlausheimer Don’t Gonciliate. 

Vas Bender Henshpecked? 

Von Brandis, Annette.—May Bug, The. 

Von Dunkerfoodle, H.—Hold Dot Fort for Ve Vas 
Coming. 

Von Fallersleben, Hoffman.—My Fatherland. 

Von K„ Camilla K.—“- 

Von Salis, Johan Gaudens.—Harvest-time. 

Song of the Silent Land. ( Also at. to J. L. Uh- 
land.) 

Vynne, H. R.—Cuba—1898. 


w 

W.—Fate. 

Yours. 

W., A.—Dialogue between the Soul and the Body, A. 
Fiction how Cupid Made a Nymph Wound Her¬ 
self with His Arrows, A. 

W., B. B.—Fan Painted by Watteau, A. 

W., E.—Flower from the Catskills, A. 

W., E. H.—In Ethics. 

W., E. W.—More Truth than Poetry. 

W., F. A. F. W.—Sometime. 

W., F. B.—Villon to His Mistress. 


W., G. F.—Sense and Spirit. 

W„ H.—Sea-shell, The. 

W., H. E., Jr.—Manila Bay. 

W., L.—De Trop. 

Song of the Smithy. 

W„ M. E.—Her Sofa. 

Marigold Lane. 

W., M. S.—Cupid’s Metamorphosis. 

W., R. C.—“Ocean stood like crystal, The.” 

W., S. G.—Come Morn- 
Consolers, The. 

Shield, The. 

W., W. F.—Fredericksburg. 

Waddington, S:—Beata Beatrix. 

Inn of Care, The. 

Literature and Nature. 

Soul and Body. 

Wade, Frank B.-—To a Poem. 

Wade, Mrs. Levi.—To Whom Shall We Give Thanks. 
Wade, T:—Birth and Death. 

Half-asleep, The. 

Net-braiders, The. 

Wadleigh, Frances E.—Pattin’ Juba. 

Wadsworth, C:—‘“Flower fadeth,’ but the seed and 
the fruit come,” The. 

Wadsworth, C:, Jr.—In Manila Bay. 

Wadsworth, Olive A.—Over in the Meadow. 

Waite, Morris.—About a Brakeman. 

Waithman, F. M.—Summer Idyll, A. 

Waithman, Helen Maud.—Love’s Young Dream. 
Wake, W: Basil.—Saying not Meaning. 

Wakefield, Mrs. Nancy Amelia Woodbury [Priest].— 
Heaven. 

Over the River. (At. also to Mrs. J. M. Winton.) 
Wakeman, Antoinette V. H.—Sower, The. 

Wakeman, Edgar L.-—Magdalen. 

Songs My Mother Sung, The. 

Walbridge, Helen I.—Dream of the Boats, The. 
Walch, Garnet.—Little Tin Plate, A. 

Walcott, Julia A.—America in Pinafore. 

Our Christmas. 

Waldron, Adelaide C.—Story of the Swords, The. 
Waldron, J. A.—He Loved a Cross-eyed Girl. 

Walker, Fs. A.—Our Dead Soldiers. 

Walker, H: A.—“There are recollections as pleasant 
as they are sacred and eternal.” 

Walker, R. R.—Song of the Road, A. 

Walker, Raymond W.—Aftermath. 
Eighteenth-century Fan, An. 

Football Girl, The. 

Hunting Song. 

Junior’s Foxy Friends, The. 

Latest Toast, The. 

My Bess. 

Walker, Timothy.—Dangers of Our Prosperity. 
Walker, Welby.—He Has Been there Himself. 

Walker, W: Sidney.—Death’s Alchemy. See Thou wert 
Lovely on thy Bier. 

Thou wert Lovely on thy Bier. 

“Too solemn for day, too sweet for night.” 

Wall, Annie.—Legend of the Lily, The. 

Wall, Will H.—Nursery Fable, A. 

Wallace,-.—Speak Gently. (At. also to D: Bates 

and to Hangford.) 

Wallace, G. R.—Le Depart. 

Wallace, H. B.—Life. 

Wallace, Jas. S.—Moses on Pisgah. 

Wallace, Lew.—Angel and the Shepherds, The. See 
Ben-Hur. 

Ben-Hur. 

Ben-Hur and Iras. See Ben-Hur. 

Chariot Race, The. See Ben-Hur. 

Crucifixion, The. See Ben-Hur. 

First Christmas, The. See Ben-Hur. 

Race, The. See Ben-Hur. 

Song from Ben-Hur. See Ben-Hur. 

Wallace, W: Ross.—Greenwood Cemetery. 

Mirabeau Dying. 

O, not by Graves. 

Psalm of the Union, A. See United States Na¬ 
tional Anthem. 

Sword of Bunker Hill, The. 

United States National Anthem. 

Waller, Edmund.—Apology for Having Loved Before. 
Battle of the Summer’s Islands, The. 

Bud, The. 

Epigram on a Painted Lady with Ill Teeth, An. 
Girdle, A. See On a Girdle. 

Go, Lovely Rose. See Song: “Go, lovely rose.’ 
His Majesty’s Escape at St. Andrews. See Of the 
Danger his Majesty (being Prince) Escaped 
in the Road at Saint Andero. 

In Answer to One who Writ a Libel against the 
Countess of Carlisle. 


569 








Waller 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Waller, Edmund ( continued ). 

Last Prospect, The. See On the Foregoing 
Divine Poems. 

Marriage of the Dwarfs, The. See Of the Mar¬ 
riage of the Dwarfs. 

My Charmer. 

Of the Danger his Majesty (being Prince) Escaped 
in the Road at Saint Andero. 

Of the Marriage of the Dwarfs. 

Old Age. See On the Foregoing Divine Poems. 
Old Age and Death. See On the Foregoing Divine 
Poems. 

On a Girdle. 

On a Painted Lady with Ill Teeth. See Epigram 
on a Painted Lady with Ill Teeth, An. 

On His Divine Poems. See On the Foregoing 
Divine Poems. 

On the Foregoing Divine Poems. 

On the Statue of King Charles I. at Charing Cross 
in the Year 1674. 

Rose, The. See Song: “Go, lovely rose!” 

Rose’s Message, The. See Song: “Go, lovely rose!” 
Song: “Go, lovely rose!” 

Song: “Whilst I listen,” etc. 

“Soul’s dark cottage, battered and decayed, The.” 
“Stay, Phcebus[, stay]!” 

To a Lady in Retirement. 

To Chloris. See Song: “Whilst I listen,” etc. 

To Chloris, Singing a Song of His own Composi¬ 
tion. 

To Flavia. 

To One who W T rote Against a Fair Lady. See 
In Answer to One who Writ a Libel against 
the Countess of Carlisle. 

Waller, J: Fs.—Dance Light. See Kitty Neil. 

Irish Melody, An. See Kitty Neil. 

Kitty Neil. 

Magdalena; or, The Spanish Duel. 

Spinning-wheel, The. See Spinning-wheel Song. 

A. 

Spinning-wheel Song, A [or The]. 

Wallis, S. Teackle.—Guerillas, The. 

Walpole, Sir Rob’t.—Against Mr. Pitt. 

Against Wm. Pitt. See Against Mr. Pitt. 

How Patriots May be Made. 

Sir Robert Walpole against Mr. Pitt. See Against 
Mr. Pitt. 

Walpole’s Attack on Pitt. See Against Mr. Pitt. 
Walsh, E:—Dawning of the Day, The. 

Have You been at Carrick? 

Lament of the Mangaire Sugach. 

Mo Craoibhin Cno. 

Walsh, F. J.—Mission of the Anglo-Saxons, The. 
Walsh, J:—Drimin Donn Dilis. 

To My Promised Wife. 

Walsh, W:—Despairing Lover, The. 

Rivalry in Love. 

Rivals. See Rivalry in Love. 

Sonnet: Death. 

Sonnet:—“What has this bugbear death that’s 
worth our care?” See Sonnet: Death. 

To His Book. 

Walster, Kate Douglas.—Seasons. 

Walter, J. B.—Be Ye Ready. 

Walton, Izaak.—Angler’s Wish, The. See Compleat 
Angler, The. 

Compleat Angler, The. 

Warburton, Cora Isabel.—Skating Song. 

Warburton, W:—Capture of Quebec, The. 

“Ward, Artemus.” See Browne, C: Farrar. 

Ward, C: F.—Battle of Gettysburg. 

Ward, Mrs. Eliz. Stuart [Phelps].—Apple Blossoms. 
At the Party. 

Conemaugh. 

“Day of Judgment, The.” See Trotty’s Wedding 
Tour. 

Fall of the Pemberton Mill, The. See Tenth of 
January, The. 

Feeling the Way. 

Gloucester Harbor. 

How June Found Massa Linkum. 

Lady of Shalott, The. 

Learning to Pray. 

Letter, A. 

Little Mud-sparrows, The. 

Lost Colors, The. 

Room’s Width, The. 

“Some day, some day of days, threading the 
street.” (At.) See Perry, Carlotta. 

Tenth of January, The. 

Trot’s Wedding Journey. See Trotty’s Wedding 
Tour. 

Trotty’s Wedding Tour. 

Ward, S:—Proem, A. 


Ward, W: Hayes.—New Castalia, The. 

To John Greenleaf W'hittier, on the Death of Lowell. 

Ware,-.—Industry Necessary to the Attainment 

of Eloquence. 

Ware, Annie D.—Relics. 

Ware, Eugene Fitch (“IronquiU”).—Aztec City, The. 
Blaine of Maine. 

Capers et Caper. 

Constant Friend, The. See Washerwoman’s Song. 
The. 

Decoration Day. 

John Brown. 

Neophyte. 

Pass. 

Three "Rhymes of IronquiU.” 

Washerwoman’s Friend, The. See Washerwoman’s 
Song, The. 

Washerwoman's Song, The. 

Ware, H:—Christmas Gathering. 

Resurrection of Christ. 

Vision of Liberty, The. 

Ware, J. R.—Dead Light-house Keeper, The. 

Ware, W:—Aurelian. 

Aurelian and Zenobia. See Zenobia. 

Christian Martyr, The. See Aurelian. 

Speeches of Zenobia and Her Council in Reference 
to the Anticipated War with Rome. See 
Zenobia. 

Zenobia. 

Zenobia to Her People. See Zenobia. 

Zenobia’s Ambition. See Zenobia. 

Zenobia’s Defence. See Zenobia. 

Warfield, Catharine M.—Manassas. 

Song: “I never knew how dear thou wert.” 
Waring, Anna Lsetitia.—My Times are in Thy Hands. 
See Thy Will be Done. 

Source of My Life. 

Supplication. See Thy WiU be Done. 

Tender Mercies. 

Thy Will be Done. 

Waring, Carl.—Trout-brook, The. 

Warman, Cy.-—Memorial Day. 

Warner, Anna B.—Brave Little Flower, The. 

Daffy-down-Dilly. See Brave Little Flower, The. 
Ready for Duty. See Brave Little Flower, The. 
Warner, C: Dudley.—Address at Unveiling Hale Statue 
—June 16. 

Backlog Studies. 

Being a Boy. 

Bookra. 

In the Wilderness. 

Martyr-spy, The. See Address at Unveiling Hale 
Statue. 

Mountain Tragedy, A. See In the Wilderness. 
What is your Culture to me? 

Young Scholar, The. See W r hat is your Culture 
to me? 

Warner, C: Dudley, and Clemens, S- Langhorne.— 
See Clemens, S: Langhorne, and Warner, C: 
Dudley. 

Warner, Mrs. J. O.—Prisoner of the Bastile, The. 
Warner, Lily.—Chin Wee. 

"Hold Fast what I Give You.” 

Warner, L. G.—Friends. 

Warner, Susan.-—Wind’s Voices, The. 

Warner, W:—Albion’s England. 

Before the Battle of Hastings. See Albion’s 
England. 

Warren, Edgar L.—Schemer, A. 

Warren, Emily.—Daisy. 

Our Little Queen. See Daisy. 

Warren, G: M.—Baitsy and I are Oudt. 

Doketor’s Drubbles, A. 

Fritz and His Betsy Fall Out. See Baitsy and 
I are Oudt. 

Warren, H. W.—Organ Creations. 

Warren, Jos.—American Rights. 

Constitutional Liberty and Arbitrary Power. 

Free America. (?) 

Scorn to be Slaves. See Constitutional Liberty 
and Arbitrary Power. 

Warren, S:—Ten Thousand a Year. 

Tittlebat Titmouse’s Experiment. See Ten Thou¬ 
sand a Year. 

Warren, T. Herbert.—In Memoriam.—Alfred, Lord 
Tennyson. 

Warton, T: (1687-1745.)—Sonnet—Written after See¬ 
ing Windsor Castle. 

Warton, T: (1728-1790.)—Fairies. 

First of April, The. 

Inscription in a Hermitage. 

On a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s Monasticon. See 
Sonnet Written in a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s 
“Monasticon.” 


570 








AUTHOR INDEX 


Watts 


Warton, T: (1687-1745) ( continued). 

On Revisiting the River Loddon. See To the 
River Lodon. 

Retirement. See Inscription in a Hermitage. 
Sonnet Written in a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s 
‘Monasticon.’ 

To the River Lodon. 

Triumph of Isis, The. 

Washburn, Alice.—Sound Money. 

Washburn, H: Stevenson.—Day in June, A. 

East Wind, The. 

Last Robin, The. 

Song of the Harvest. 

Sunset on Lake Leman. 

To the First Robin. 

Washburn, W: T.—Face, A. 

Washington, Booker Taliaferro.—Address at the Har¬ 
vard Alumni Dinner. 

Better Part, The. 

Message from the South, A. 

On Receiving the Master’s Degree from Harvard. 

See Address at the Harvard Alumni Dinner. 
Solution of the Southern Problem, The. 
Washington Capitol. —“You may get through the world, 
but ’twill be very slow.” 

Washington, G:—Address to His Troops. See To the 
American Troops before the Battle of Long 
Island. 

Against Foreign Entanglements. 

Approach of the Presidency, The. 

Farewell Address. 

First Inaugural Address. See Washington’s In¬ 
augurals, Apr. 30, 1789. 

First Thanksgiving Proclamation Issued by George 
Washington, The. See For a National Thanks¬ 
giving. 

For a National Thanksgiving. 

France and the United States. See Reply to 
Address Presenting Colors of France to United 
States. 

General Washington’s Resignation. 

Maxims of George Washington. 

Original Maxims of George Washington. 

Our Relations with Europe. See Farewell Ad¬ 
dress. 

Reply to Address Presenting Colors of France to 
United States. 

To the American Troops before the Battle of Long 
Island, 1774. 

Washington to His Soldiers. See To the Ameri¬ 
can Troops before the Battle of Long Island. 
Washington’s Address to His Troops. See To the 
American Troops before the Battle of Long 
Island. 

Washington’s Inaugural Address. See Washing¬ 
ton’s Inaugurals, Apr. 30, 1789. 

Washington’s Inaugurals, Apr. 30, 1789. 
Washington’s Inaugurals, Dec. 3, 1793. 
Washington News. —Brought Back by the Butcher's Boy. 
Washington Post. —Her Laugh—in Four Fits. 

Husband’s Programme. 

Wasson, Rev. D: Atwood.—All’s Well. 

Ideals. 

Joy-month. 

Love against Love. 

Love’s Victory. 

Royalty. 

Scipio to the Senate. 

Seen and Unseen. 

Whittier, Extract Concerning. 

Wastell, Simon.—Man’s Mortality. See Microbiblion. 
Microbiblion. 

Of Man’s Mortality. See Microbiblion. 

What is Man? See Microbiblion. 

Waterbury, Dr. E. P.—Planting the Tree. 

Waterfield, W:—St. Valentine’s Magic Wand. 
Waterhouse. A. J.-—Price of High License, The. 
Waterloo, Stanley.—Bobolink’s Song, The. 

Drum, A. 

Waterman, Leonine.—Two Ways of Looking at It. 
Waterman, Nixon.—Casey’s Little Boy. 

Don’t. 

When the Summer Boarders Come. 

When the Train Comes In. 

Waters, Fs. L. Dominick.—Water Lily, The. 
Waterston, Rob’t C.—Ceaseless Aspirations. 

Mortal and Immortal. 

Watkins, Jas. S.—God’s Beverage. 

Watrous, Andrew E.—De Long. 
pTitz-James O’Brien. 

Her First Train. 

F ~ In Memoriam—J. O. 

• Lohengrin. 

r On a Forgotten By-way. 


Watson, E: Willard.—Absolution. 

Watson, Jas. W. See Watson, J: W. 

Watson, Dr. J: (“Ian MacLaren”).—Beside the Bonnie 
Brier Bush. 

Death of the Country Doctor, The. See Beside 
the Bonny Brier Bush. 

Doctor of the Old School, A. See Beside the Bonnie 
Brier Bush. 

His Mother’s Sermon. See Beside the Bonnie 
Brier Bush. 

Through the Flood. See Beside the Bonnie Brier 
Bush. 

Watson, J: [tor. Jas.] W. —Beautiful Snow. 

Ring down the Drop—I Cannot Play. 

Stick to Your Bush. 

What Farmer Green Said. 

Wounded. See Wounded Soldier, The. 

Wounded Soldier, The. 

Wounded to Death. See Wounded Soldier, The. 
Watson, Kate L.—Great-Grandmamma and I. 
Watson, Rosamund Marriott (“Graham R. Tomson”). 
•—All Soul’s Day. 

Ave atque Vale. 

Ballad of the Bird-bride. 

Ballad of the Were-wolf, A. 

Ballade of Biblioclasts. 

Ballade of Nicolete. 

Deid Folks’ Ferry. 

Farm on the Links, The, 

Hereafter. 

Le Mauvais Larron. 

To My Cat. 

Wrecker of Priest’s Cove, The. 

Watson, T:—Hecatompathia. 

Lament for Melibceus, A. 

May. 

“Timewasteth years, and months, and hours.” 
Watson, W:—Byron. 

Byron the Voluptuary. See Byron. 

Domine, quo Vadis? 

England and Her Colonies. 

Exit;. 

First Skylark of Spring, The. 

Glimpse, The. 

Great Misgiving, The. 

In Laleham Churchyard. 

Insight. 

Lachrymse Musarum. 

Ode in May. 

On Diirer’s “Melencolia.” 

Play of “King Lear,” The. 

Song: “April, April, laugh thy girlish laughter.” 
Song in Imitation of the Elizabethans. 

Song to April. See Song: “April, April.” 

To a Seabird. 

Wordsworth’s Grave. 

Watterson, H:—Abraham Lincoln. 

Columbian Oration. See Our Expanding Re¬ 
public. 

Dedication of Columbian Exposition See Our 
Expanding Republic. 

Gray Honors the Blue, The. See Nation’s Dead, 
the. 

“Let Us Have Peace.” See Nation’s Dead, The. 
Nation’s Dead, The. 

New Americanism, The. 

Our Expanding Republic. 

Retrospect, A. See Our Expanding Republic. 
Schools take Part, The. See Our Expanding 
Republic. 

Secret of Lincoln’s Power, The. See Abraham 
Lincoln. 

Star of Democracy, The. 

Tribute to Grant, A. See Nation’s Dead, The. 
Watterson, H: B.—Cricket, The. 

Watts, Alaric Alex.—Forget Thee, No, Never! 

He never Said He Loved Me. 

Maiden’s Soliloquy, A. 

Ten Years Ago. 

You Ask Me for a Pledge, Love. 

Watts, Alfred.—Burial of B6ranger, The. 

Watts. I:—Against Quarreling and Fighting. 

Ant, The. 

Ant or Emmet, The. See Ant, The. 

Busy Bee, The. 

Come, Holy Spirit], Heavenly Dove], 

Cradle Hymn, A. 

Cradle Song, A. See Cradle Hymn, A. 

Creator and Creatures, The. 

Day of Judgment, The. 

Example of Christ, The. 

Glorying in the Cross. 

Heavenly Canaan, The. See There is a Land of 
Pure Delight. 


571 




Watts 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Watts, I: {continued). 

“How fair is the rose!” See Rose, The. 

Hymn: “Lord, when I quit this earthly stage.” 

I Give Immortal Praise. 

Insignificant Existence. See Paraphrase from 
Miscellaneous Thoughts. 

Jesus shall Reign. See Psalm LXXII. 

Morning Hymn. See Morning Song, A. 

Morning Song, A. 

O God! our Help in Ages Past. 

O Happy Soul, that Lives on High. 

Paraphrase from Miscellaneous Thoughts. 

Psalm Nineteen. 

Psalm Forty-six. 

Psalm Sixty-five. 

Psalm LXXII. 

Psalm XC. 

Psalm XCVIII. 

Psalm C. 

Psalm CXVII. 

Psalm CXXI. 

Rose, The. 

Summer Evening, A. 

There is a Land of Pure Delight. 

Watts, J: G.—Kiss in the Dark, A. 

W atts-Dutton, Theodore.—Breath of Avon, The. 
Coleridge. ■ 

First Kiss, The. 

Ode to Mother Carey’s Chicken. 

Sonnet’s Voice, The. 

Toast to Omar Khayyiim. 

Wassail Chorus at the Mermaid Tavern. 

Waugh, Edwin.—Dule’s i’ this Bonnet o’ Mine, The. 
Owd Pinder. 

Sweetheart Gate, Th’. 

Willy’s Grave. 

Wauless, Andrew.—She Liked Him Rale Week 
Wayland, Fs.—Bible and the Iliad, The. 

Glory. 

Growth of International Sympathies. 

Mental Faculties, The. 

Object of Missions, The. 

Wayland, Heman Lincoln.—New Englander in His¬ 
tory, The. 

Puritans, The. 

Wayland, J: Elton.—Epilogue at Wallack’s, An. 
Wayland, Marion.—Who Shall be Queen of May? 
Wayne, C: Stokes.—Almost a Mormon. 

Best Policy, The. 

Bold for the Right. 

Double Play. 

Joe Fleming’s Thanksgiving. (Ad.). 

Ruggles & Co. 

Trapped. 

Weatherbee, Emily G.—Mother’s Hymns. 

My Mother’s Hymns. See Mother’s Hymns. 
Weatherly, F: E:—All the Same. 

Angel Court. 

Bells of Lynn, The. 

Bird in the Hand, A. 

Cat’s Tea-party, The. 

Cherries. 

Darby and Joan. 

Dog’s Confession, The. 

Douglas Gordon. 

Friend or Foe? 

God’s Music. 

London Bridge. 

Love’s Proving. 

Maids of Lee, The. See Bird in the Hand, A, 
Margery Daw. 

Men of Ware, The. 

Nancy Lee. 

Old City Church, The. 

Sea’s Love, The. 

Sir Cupid. 

Surgeon’s Child, The. 

Tommy’s Army. 

Usual Way, The. 

Weatherly, G:—Ere the Sun Went Down. 

Gleaners, The. 

“Killed!” 

Webb, Anna B.—Sword Drill, The. 

Webb, C. A. M.—Apple Seed, The. 

Webb, C: H: (“John Paul”).—Alec. Dunham’s Boat. 
Dum Vivimus Vigilamus. 

Gil, the Toreador. 

King and the Pope, The. 

"Last Night in Blue my Little Love was Dressed.” 
Little Mamma. 

Maiden’s Last Farewell, The. 

March. 

What a Little Boy Thinks about Things. 

With a Nantucket Shell. 


Webb, Frd’k G.—Dash for the Colors, The. 

Mad Actor, The. 

Tale of the Crimean War, A. 

Webb, J. Russell.—“Not to Myself Alone.” (At. also 
to S: W. Partridge.) 

Webb, Rebe S.—La Vesuviana. 

Webbe, C:—Against Indifference. 

Webber, Harry C.—What’s the Good. 

Webber, Jas. Plaisted.—Note for a Nosegay, A. 

Webster, Augusta.—Brook Rhine, The. 

Day is Dead. See Songs from Dramas. 

Deaths of Myron and Klydone, The. See In a 
Day. 

Happiest Girl in the World, The. 

In a Day. 

Love’s Silence. 

Message of Victory, The. See Songs from Dramas. 

News to the King. See Songs from Dramas. 

Songs from Dramas. 

Tell Me not of Morrows, Sweet. See Songs from 
Dramas. 

’Tween Earth and Sky. See Songs from Dramas. 

Webster, Dan’l.—Adams and Jefferson. 

Addition to the Capitol, The. 

Address at Bunker Hill. See Bunker Hill Monu¬ 
ment, The. 

Address before the New York Historical Society. 

Against Secession. See Constitution and the 
Union, The. 

Age of Improvement, The. See Bunker Hill 
Monument, The. 

America's Gifts to Europe. See Completion of 
the Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

America’s Greatness. See Adams and Jefferson. 

Anniversary Address. Nee Address before the 
New York Historical Society. 

Apostrophe to Washington. See Addition to the 
Capitol, The. 

Benefits of the Constitution. See Public Dinner 
at New York. 

Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Bunker Hill Monument. Nee also Completion of 
the Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Bunker Hill Monument Completed, The. See 
Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, 
The. 

Bunker Hill Speech. See Bunker Hill Monument, 
The. 

Century from Washington, A. See Character of 
Washington, The. 

Character of True Eloquence. See Adams and 
Jefferson. 

Character of Washington, The. 

Close of Defense of Dartmouth College. See Dart¬ 
mouth College Case, The. 

Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Compromise Bill of 1850, The. See Compromise 
Measures, The. 

Compromise Measures, The. 

Constitution, The. See Constitution and the 
Union, The. 

Constitution and the Union, The. 

Constitution and the LTnion, The. See also Com¬ 
promise Measures, The. 

Constitution not Unalterable, The. 

Constitution the Safeguard of Liberty, The. See 
Character of Washington, The. 

Crime its Own Detecter [or Betrayer]. See Mur¬ 
der of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Crime Revealed by Conscience. See Murder of 
Captain Joseph White, The. 

Dartmouth College Case, The. 

Declaration of Independence, The. See Adams 
and Jefferson. 

Dedication of Bunker Hill Monument. See Com¬ 
pletion of the Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Defence of the Kennistons. 

Departure of the Pilgrims for Holland. See First 
Settlement of New England, The. 

Duties of American Citizens. See Completion of 
the Bunker Hill Monument , The. 

Duty to Our Country. See Adams and Jeffer¬ 
son. 

Elements of the American Government. See Com¬ 
pletion of the Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Eloquence. See Adams and Jefferson. 

Eloquence of Action, The. See Adams and Jeffer¬ 
son. 

Eloquence of John Adams, The. See Adams and 
Jefferson. 

Evil of Disunion. See Character of Washington, 
The. 

Executive Power to be Dreaded. See Presiden¬ 
tial Protest, The. 


572 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Weems 


Webster, Dan’l ( continued). 

First Bunker Hill Monument Oration. See Bun¬ 
ker Hill Monument, The. 

First Settlement of New England, The. 

Foundation of Bunker Hill Monument. See Bun¬ 
ker Hill Monument, The. 

Fourth of July, The. See Addition to the Capi¬ 
tol, The. 

Fraudulent Party Outcries. See Natural Hatred 
of the Poor to the Rich, The. 

Future of America, The. See Adams and Jeffer¬ 
son. 

Future of America, The. See also First Settle¬ 
ment of New England, The. 

Glorious Constitution, The. See Public Dinner at 
New York. 

Guilt Cannot Keep its Own Secret. See Murder 
of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Hatred of the Poor to the Rich. See Natural 
Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, The. 

Independence. See Adams and Jefferson. 

Influence of Great Actions, The. See First Settle¬ 
ment of New England, The. 

Justice to the Whole Country. See Compromise 
Measures, The. 

Liberty and Knowledge. See Public Dinner at 
New York. 

Liberty and Union (One and Inseparable]. See 
Reply to Hayne, The. 

Lines in a Lady’s Album. , 

Lines on the Death of his Son Charles. 

Log-cabin, The. See Mass Meeting at Saratoga. 

Manama Mission, The. 

Mass Meeting at Saratoga. 

Massachusetts. See Reply to Hayne, The. 

Massachusetts and South Carolina. See Reply to 
Hayne, The. 

Massachusetts and the Union. See Compromise 
Measures, The. 

Matches and Overmatches. See Reply to Hayne, 
The. 

Memory of the Heart, The. 

Mr. Webster to Mrs. Paige, 1847. 

Moral Force against Physical. See Revolution in 
Greece, The. 

Moral Force of Public Opinion. See Revolution 
in Greece, The. 

Morning. See Mr. Webster to Mrs. Paige. 

Murder of Captain Joseph White, The. 

Murder Will Out. See Murder of Captain Joseph 
White, The. 

Murderer’s Secret, The. See Murder of Captain 
Joseph White, The. 

Murderer’s Self-betrayal, The. See Murder of 
Captain Joseph White, The. 

Name of Washington, The. See Character of 
Washington, The. 

Natural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, The. 

Nature of [True] Eloquence, The. See Adams and 
Jefferson. 

Ode to Tobacco. 

On Mr. Clay’s Resolutions. See Constitution and 
the Union, The. 

On Sudden Political Conversions. See Remarks 
on the Political Course of Mr. Calhoun in 1838. 

On the Death of my Son Charles. See Lines on 
the Death of his Son Charles. 

Opposition to Misgovernment. 

Oration at the Laying of the Corner-stone of the 
Bunker Hill Monument. See Bunker Hill 


Monument, The. 

Oration on the Death of Adams and Jefferson. 

See Adams and Jefferson. 

Our Duties to Our Country. See Adams and Jef¬ 
ferson. 

Peaceable Secession. See Constitution and the 
Union, The. 

Peroration of Webster’s Plymouth Rock Oration. 

See First Settlement of New England, The. 
Peroration of Webster’s Reply to Hayne. See Re¬ 


ply to Hayne, The. 

Philanthropic Love of Power. 

Platform of the Constitution, The. See Remarks 
on the Political Course of Mr. Calhoun in 1838. 

Plymouth Rock. See First Settlement of New 
England, The. 

Power of Conscience, The. See Murder of C aptain 
Joseph White, The. 

Power of Public Opinion, The. 

Presidential Protest, The. 

Public Dinner at New York. _ 

Public Opinion. See Revolution in Greece, 1 he. 

Remarks on the Political Course of Mr. Calhoun 
in 1838. 


Webster, Dan’l ( continued). 

Reply to Hayne[, The], 

Representative, The. See Presidential Protest, 

* The. 

Resistance to Oppression in its Rudiments. See 
Presidential Protest, The. 

Revolution in Greece, The. 

Right of Free Discussion. 

Sanctity of State Obligations. Sec Speech in Wall 
Street, 1840. 

Second Bunker Hill Monument Oration. See 
Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, 
The. 

Second Speech on Foot’s Resolution. See Reply 
to Hayne, The. 

Secret of Murder, The. See Murder of Captain 
Joseph White, The. 

South Carolina and Massachusetts. See Reply to 
Hayne, The. 

Speech in the Knapp Trial. See Murder of Cap¬ 
tain Joseph White, The. 

Speech in Wall Street, 1840. 

Spirit of Human Liberty. See Character of Wash¬ 
ington, The. 

Standard of the Constitution, The. 

Supposed Speech against the Declaration of In¬ 
dependence. See Adams and Jefferson. 

Supposed Speech of John Adams. See Adams 
and Jefferson. 

Supposed Speech of John Adams for [or on] the 
Declaration of Independence. See Adams and 
Jefferson. 

Supposed Speech of John Adams in Support of 
American Independence. See Adams and Jef¬ 
ferson. 

Sympathy with South American Republicanism. 
See Manama Mission, The. 

“That motionless shaft will be the most powerful 
of speakers.” See Bunker Hill Monument, 
The. 

To the Revolutionary Veterans. See Bunker Hill 
Monument, The. 

To the Survivors of the Battle of Bunker Hill. 
See Bunker Hill Monument, The. 

Tribute to Massachusetts. See Reply to Hayne, 
The. 

True Eloquence. See Adams and Jefferson. 

Twenty-second of February, The. See Washing¬ 
ton’s Birthday. 

Union of the States, The. See Character of Wash¬ 
ington, The. 

“War must go on, The.” See Adams and Jeffer- 
son. 

Washington. See Addition to the Capitol, The. 

Washington. See also Character of Washington, 
The. 

Washington and the Union. See Character of 
Washington, The. 

Washington’s Birthday. 

“We may hope that the growing influence of en¬ 
lightened sentiments. ’ ’ 

Webster, H: Kitchell.-—Difference, The. 

To the Faculty. 

Webster, J:—Action. (?) 

“Call for the robin-redbreast and the wren.” See 
White Devil, The. 

Devil’s Law-case, The. 

Dirge, A: “Call for the robin-reubreast and the 
wren.” See White Devil, The. K 1 

Dirge from “The White Devil. ’ ’ See White Devil, 
The. 

Duchess of Malfi, The. 

Famous History of Sir Thomas Wyatt, The. 

Hark, now Everything is Still. See Duchess of 
Malfi, The. 

Lady Jane Grey. See Famous History of Sir 
Thomas Wyatt, The. 

Land Dirge, A. See White Devil, The. 

Shrouding of the Duchess of Malfi, The. See 
Duchess of Malfi, The. 

Vanitas Vanitatum. See Devil’s Law-case, 
The. 

White Devil, The. 

Webster’8 Spelling Book. —Fable of the Boy that Stole 
Apples. 

Wedderburn, Jas.—Go, Heart. 

Leave me Not. 

Weeden, Howard.—Banjo of the Past, The. 

Borrowed Child, The. 

Weeks, Rob’t Kelly.—In May. 

Man and Nature. 

Medusa. 

Song for Lexington, A. 

Weems, Mason L.—Battle of Lexington, The. 


573 






Weir 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Weir, Arthur.—Christmas Lullaby, A. 

Dauntless. 

Little Miss Blue Eyes. • 

Little Trooper, The. 

Snowshoe Song, A. 

Snowshoeing Song. See Snowshoe Song, A. 
Voyageur Song. 

Weir, Harrison.—English Robin, The. 

Weiss, Susan A.—Mammy’s Story. 

Weitzel, Mrs. Sophie Winthrop [Shepherd],—From One 
Who Went Away in Haste. 

Laws and Law. 

Love’s Opportunity. 

Star at Dawn, The. 

Welby, Mrs. Amelia B. [Coppuck],—Eloquence. 

Old Maid, The. 

Twilight at Sea. 

Welch, Herbert.—Pity ’tis, ’tis True. 

Welch, Sarah.—Digger’s Grave, The. 

Welcker, Adair.—Convict’s Complaint, The. 
Meditations on Immortality. 

To the Stars and the Stripes from Abroad. 

Weld, Theodore Dwight.—Death or Liberty. 

Incident in the Life of Wendell Phillips, An. 
Weldon, C:—Poem of the Universe, The. 

Wellesley Magazine. —Song: “The poets sing that love 
is blind.” 

Wellington, Allie. See Rollins, Mrs. Alice [Well- 
ington]. 

Wells, Mrs. Anna M.—Cow-boy’s Song, The. 

Wells, Carolyn.—A. B. C. of Literature. 

Poster-girl, The. 

“There once was a writer named Wright.” 

Wells, C: Jeremiah.—Joseph and his Brethren. 

Patriarchal Home,The. See Joseph and his Brethren. 
Phraxanor to Joseph. See Joseph and his 
Brethren. 

Rachel. See Joseph and his Brethren. 

Triumph of Joseph, The. See Joseph and his 
Brethren. 

Wells, Eben Hale.—Battle of Cannae, The. 

Wells, K. G.—Arbor Day History. 

Wells, Lilian F.—Uncle Morton’s Gift. 

Wells, Nellie F.—Roadside Lesson, A. 

Welsh, Herbert.—Modern Pirates, The. 

Welsh, J. P.—Beautiful Sprig. 

Welsh, Maggie May.—Ode to the Trees. 

Welsh, Philip H.—By the Sea. 

Wentworth, T: See Strafford, Earl of. 

Werner, A.—In the Theatre. 

Wert, J. Howard.—Indian Warrior’s Last Song, The. 
Wesley, C:—Catholic Love. 

Christ our Example. 

Christ, the Refuge of the Soul. See Jesus, Lover 
of my Soul. 

Christmas Day. See Hark, the Herald Angels. 
Christmas Hymn. 

Death. 

Desiring to Love. 

Easter Hymn. 

For Believers. 

For One Retired into the Country. 

Friend of All. 

Hark! How all the Welkin Rings! See Christ¬ 
mas Hymn. 

Hark, the Herald Angels. 

Hymn of a Child. 

Jesu, my Strength, my Hope. 

Jesu[s], Lover of My Soul. 

Lord is Risen, The. See Easter Hymn. 

Thou God Unsearchable. 

True Use of Music, The. 

Wrestling Jacob. 

Wesley, J:—Divine Love. ( Tr. ) 

Hymn for Seriousness, An. 

“I am sick of opinions. I weary to hear them.” 
Love of God Supreme, The. See Divine Love. 
Moravian Hymn. 

Wesley, S:—On Butler’s Monument. 

Wesleyan Literary Monthly.- —Mutabile. 

Vagabonds. 

West, A.—White-throated Sparrow, The. 

West, Emma E.—-Young Lochinvar. 

West, J. Howard.—Dollie Harris at Greencastle, Pa. 
West, Marion.—Father of His Country. 

West, Paul.—Cumberbunce, The. 

Westcombe, A. L.—“If it was'not for the drink.” 
Westcott, H. J.—Bird’s Nest, The. 

Western Temperance Herald. —-Angel in a Saloon, An. 
Westley, G. Hembert.—Longing. 

Love. 

To My Dear Friend Aimi^e. 

Too Late We Met. 

When She Comes. 


Weston, E. P.—Vision of Immortality, The. 

Weston, F.—Martyr to Science, A; or, Wanted, a Con¬ 
federate. 

Westwood, T:—In the Golden Morning of the World. 
Kitten Gossip. 

Little Bell. 

Mine Host of “The Golden Apple.” 

My Little Lady. 

O Wind of the Mountain! 

Under My Window. 

Voices at the Throne, The. 

Wetherald, Agnes Ethelwyn.—At the Window. 

Hay Field, The. 

House of the Trees, The. 

Snow Storm, The. 

To February. 

Wind of Death, The. 

Wetherbee, Emily Greene.—My Mother’s Hymns. 
Wetherbee, W.—Bessie. 

Wetmore, Prosper M.—Lexington. 

Wetmore, Sidney W.—Der Nighd pehind Grisdmas 
[or Christmas]. 

Wever, Rob’t.-—In Youth is Pleasure. 

Wharton, Mrs. Edith Newbold [Jones],—Experience. 
Wharton, T:—Retirement. 

Wheatley, Phillis. See Peters, Mrs. Phillis [Wheat- 
ley]. 

Wheeler, Andrew Carpenter (“Nym Crinkle”).—Easter 
in a Hospital Bed. 

Wheeler, B: Jewitt.—Boy to the Schoolmaster, The. 
Wonderful Dog Story, A. 

Wheeler, Ella. See Wilcox, Mrs. Ella [Wheeler], 
Wheeler, G: P.—Two Answers, The. 

Wheeler, Ida Worden.—My Poems. 

Wheeler, Jessie H.—Signalman’s Story, The. 

Wheeler, Leonard.—Mad Mag. 

Wheeler, Preserved.—One Thanksgiving Day. 
Wheelman, The. —Morning Ride, A. 

Wheelock, Lucy.—Chorus of the Flowers. 

Christmas Tree, The. 

Wheelwright, W: B.—To -: “Her voice is one 

of command.” 

Widow, The. 

Whewell, W:—Physics. 

Whjcher, G: Meason.—Bacchylides. 

Whipple, Edwin Percy.—Bryant, Extract Concerning. 
Character of Washington, The. 

Croakers of Society and Literature. 

Power of Words, The. See Words. 

Sniveler, The. See Croakers of Society and Litera¬ 
ture. 

Words. 

Whipple, Wade.—Clear Case, A. 

Der Moon. 

Der Schleighride. 

Diffidence. See “Don’t be Tazin’ Me.” 

“Don’t be Tazin’ Me.” 

New Deacon, The. 

Parson Jingle.iaw’s Surprise. 

Whitcher, Mrs. FrancesMiriam [Berry],—Elder Sniffles’ 
Courtship. See Widow Bedott Papers, The. 
Hezekiah Bedott. See Widow Bedott Papers. The, 
Recipe for Potato Pudding. See Widow Bedott 
Papers, The. 

Widow Bedott Papers, The. 

Widow Bedott to Elder Sniffles. See Widow 
Bedott Papers, The. 

Widow Bedott’s Letter to Elder Sniffles, The. See 
Widow Bedott Papers, The. 

Widow Bedott’s Poetry, The. See Widow Bedott 
Papers T^he 

Widow’s Mistake, The. See Widow Bedott 
Papers T^he 

Whitcomb, Charlotte.—Glen, The. 

White, .—Darkey Debating Society, The. 

Examining de Bumps. 

Our Cousins. 

Saratoga Waiter, The. 

Soldier’s Return, The. 

Stage-struck Darkey, The. 

White, A. M., Jr.—At the North Avenue Fire. 

Christmas in Chicago. 

White, Andrew Dickson.—Dome of the Republic, The. 
White, Annie R.—Do not Tattle. 

Work and Wait. 

White, Blanco.—To Night. 

White. C.—Coopers. The. 

Virginia Mummy, The. 

White, E: Lucas.—Genius. 

Last Bowstrings, The. 

Whjte, Eliot.—Uncle Sam’s Great Bullfight. 

White, Emma Mortimer.—My Lover. 

White, Eugene R:—Of the Lost Ship. 

White, G. M.—Old Canteen, The. 






AUTHOR INDEX 


Whittier 


White, Gleeson.—Ballade of Playing Cards, A. 

Primrose Dame, A. 

Sufficiency. 

White, Harriet R.—Uffia. 

White, (H:) Kirke.—Death of the Duke d’Enghien, 
The. 

Description of a Summer’s Eve. 

Early Primrose, The. See To an Early Primrose. 
Gondoline. 

Hymn for Family Worship. 

Retirement. 

Solitude. 

Sonnet to my Mother. 

Star of Bethlehem, The. 

Summer Evening, A. See Description of a Sum¬ 
mer’s Eve. 

To an Early Primrose. 

To the Herb Rosemary. 

To Love. 

To my Mother. See Sonnet to my Mother. 

To the Harvest Moon. 

White, Jos. Blanco.—Night. See Night and Death. 

Night and Death. 

Sonnet to Night. See Night and Death. 

To Night. See Night and Death. 

White, Kirke. See White, (H:) Kirke. 

White, Lizzie.—Delsartian Physical Drill. 

White, R: E:—By the Cross of Monterey. 

Discovery of San Francisco Bay. 

Junipero Serra. 

Masterpiece of Brother Felix, The. 

Midnight Mass, The. 

Waiting for the Galleon. 

White, W: Allen.-—Court of Boyville, The. 

King of Boyville, The. See Court of Boyville, 
The. 

Whitehead, C:—As Yonder Lamp. 

Night. 

Whitehead, W:—Ben Hafed. 

Enthusiast, The. 

Life’s Conflict. 

Nora M’Guire’s Lovers. 

On the Beach. 

Snow, The. 

Summer Eve. 

Thebes. 

Whiting, C: Goodrich.—-Blue Hills beneath the Haze. 
Eagle’s Fall, The. 

Way to Heaven, The. 

Whiting, Lilian.—Mvstery, The. 

Whiting, Seymour W.—Alamance. 

Whiting, Theodore.—Sue Waters’s Housekeeping. 
Whitman, Mrs. Sarah Helen [Power].—After the Sum¬ 
mer Storm. 

Day of the Indian Summer, A. 

Lost Church, The. ( Tr .) 

Old Mirror, The. 

Song: "I bade thee stay. Too well I know.” 
Sonnet: “If thy sad heart, pining for human love. ” 
Sonnet: “Oft since thine earthly eyes have closed 
on mine.” 

Sonnet: "On our lone pathway bloomed no earth¬ 
ly hopes. ’ ’ 

Sonnet: “When first I looked into thy glorious 
eyes. ’ ’ 

Sonnets on Edgar Allan Poe. See Sonnet: “When 
first I looked into thy glorious eyes. ’ ’ 

Still Day in Autumn, A. 

To Edgar Allan Poe. See Sonnet: “When first I 
looked into thy glorious eyes. ’ ’ 

Trailing Arbutus, The. 

Whitman, Walt.—After an Interval. 

Bare-bosom’d Night. See Song of Myself. 

Beat! Beat! Drums! 

Beginners. 

“Behold a Woman!” See Faces. 

Bivouac on a Mountain Side. 

Broadway Pageant, A. 

Cavalry Crossing a Ford. 

Come up from the Fields, Father. 

Crossing Brooklyn Ferry. 

Dalliance of the Eagles, The. 

Darest Thou Now, O Soul. 

Death Carol. 

Dying Fireman, The. See Song of Myself. 
Expansion. See Broadway Pageant, A. 

Faces. 

Give Me the Splendid Silent Sun. 

Great are the Myths. See Leaves of Grass. Part 
II. 

Heroes. See Song of Myself. 

“I am an Acme of Things Accomplished.” See 
Song of Myself. , 

Imprisoned Soul, The. See Last Invocation, The. 

575 


Whitman, Walt ( continued ). 

Infinity. See Song of Myself. 

Last Invocation, The. 

Leaves of Grass. See Song of Myself. 

Leaves of Grass. Pt. II. 

Mannahatta. 

Microcosm, The. See Song of Myself. 
Mocking-bird, The. See Out of the Cradle End¬ 
lessly Rocking. 

My Captain. See O Captain, my Captain. 

My Portrait. 

Myself. See Song of Myself. 

Mystic Trumpeter, The. 

O Captain! My Captain! 

Old-fashioned Sea-fight, An. See Song of Myself. 
Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking. 

Oxen that Rattle the Yoke and Chain. See Song 
of Myself. 

Passage to India. 

Pensive and Faltering. 

Prairie States, The. 

Prayer of Columbus, The. 

Sailing the Mississippi at Midnight. 

Sea of Faith, The. See Passage to India. 
Sea-fight, A. See Song of Myself. 

Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Gray and Dim, A. 
Song of Myself. 

Still though the One I Sing. 

Talk to an Art Union. 

There was a Child Went Forth. 

This Compost. 

To the Man-of-war-bird. 

Two Veterans. 

Vigil Strange I kept on the Field [one Night]. 
Walt Whitman. See Song of Myself. 

Warble for Lilac-time. 

Whispers of Heavenly Death. 

You Sea! See Song of Myself. 

Whitmore, W: H:—Old State House, Boston (Re¬ 
stored 1882), The. 

Whitney, Mrs. Adeline Dutton [Train],—Behind the 
Mask. 

Big Shoe, The. 

Bird Talk. 

Busy and Happy. See Bird Talk. 

Equinoctial. 

February. 

Humpty Dumpty. See Mother Goose for Grown 
Folks. 

I will Abide in Thine House. i 

Jack Horner. See Mother Goose for Grown Folks. 
Kyrie Eleison. 

Larvae. 

Mother Goose for Grown Folks. 

Our Homemaker. 

Rags and Robes. See Mother Goose for Grown 
Folks. 

Released. 

Sparrows. 

Story of the Little Red Hin. 

Sunlight and Starlight. 

Up in a Wild. 

Victuals and Drink. See Mother Goose for Grown 
Folks. 

Violet, The. 

Whitney, Annie Weston/—Cat-tails. 

Loyal to a Trust. 

Whitney, E.—Cricket Songs. 

Whitney, Mrs. E. C.—Court of the Year, The. 
Whitney, Hattie.—Little Dutch Garden, A. 

When Girls Wore Calico. 

Winter Apples. 

Whitney, Jos. Ernest.—Drop of Ink, A. 

One at a Time. 

Whitney, S. N.—Voice of an Alumnus, The. 

WRiton, Mrs. -.—Thoughts. 

Whitson, J. M.—How Norman Won the Race. 
Whittaker, Frd’k.-—Custer’s Last Charge. 

Whittier, Eliz.—Charity. 

Lady Franklin. 

Wedding Veil, The. 

Whittier, Hope.—Hear It and Wish. 

Whittier, J: Greenleaf.—Abraham Davenport. 

Among the Hills. 

Amy Wentworth. 

“And present gratitude insures the future’s good. ’ ’ 
See Mv Triumph. 

Andrew Rykman’s Prayer. 

Angel of Patience, The. 

Angels of Buena Vista, The. 

Angels of Grief, The. 

April. 

Astrsea. 

At Last. 






/ 


Whittier AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Whittier, J: Greenleaf ( continued .) 

At Port Royal. 

Autograph, An. 

Ballot-box, The. See Eve of Election, The. 
Barbara Frietchie. 

Barclay of Ury. 

Barefoot Boy, The. 

Battle Autumn of 1862, The. 

Bayard Taylor. 

Beautiful, The. 

Belated. 

“Believe me still, as I have ever been.” 
Benedicite. 

Boy Captives, The. 

Brewing of Soma, The. 

Bright Days in Winter. See Dream of Summer, 
A. 

Brother of Mercy, The. 

Brown of Ossawatomie. 

Burns. [(On Receiving a Sprig of Heather in 
Blossom.)] 

Captains’ Well, The. 

Centennial Hymn. 

Christmas Carmen, A. 

Church Dedication. See Hymn for the Opening 
of Plymouth Church, St. Paul, Minnesota. 
Cobbler Keezar’s Vision. 

Common Question, The. 

Conductor Bradley. 

Corn-song, The. 

Democracy. 

Demon of the Study, The. 

Disenthralled, The. 

Dream of Summer, A. 

Eternal Goodness, The. 

Eve of Election, The. 

Expostulation. 

Farewell, The. 

Firelight. See Snow-bound. 

First Flowers. The. 

Fisher Song. See Fishermen, The. 

Fisherman, The. See Fishermen, The. 

Fishermen, The. 

Fitz-Greene Halleck. (Read at the Unveiling of 
His Statue in Central Park.) 

For an Autumn Festival. 

Forgiveness. 

Friend’s Burial, The. 

Funeral Tree of the Sokokis, The. 

Gift of Tritemius. The. 

Gone. 

Hampton Beach. 

“Handsome is that Handsome Does.” See Beau¬ 
tiful, The. 

Harvest Hymn. See For an Autumn Festival. 
Hope On. See Dream of Summer, A. 

Huskers, The. 

Hymn.—“O painter of the fruits and flowers.” 
Hymn for the Opening of Plymouth Church, St. 

Paul, Minnesota. 

Ichabod. 

“I’m sorry that I spelt the word.” See In School¬ 
days. 

In School-days. 

In the “Old South” [Church]. 

Indian Summer. See Eve of Election, The. 
Jack-in-the-Pulpit. (At.) See Smith, Clara. 
John Charles Fremont. See To John C. Fremont. 
King Volmer and Elsie. 

“King’s Missive,” 1661, The. 

Laus Deo. 

Library, The. 

Light that is Felt, The. 

Lines. (For the Agricultural and Horticultural 
Exhibition at Amesbury and Salisbury, Sept. 
28, 1858.) See Song of Harvest, A. 
Longfellow, Extract Concerning. 

Loved, not Lost, The. See Snow-bound. 

Mabel Martin. 

Mantle of St. John de Matha, The. 

Marguerite. 

Maud Muller. 

Mayflowers, The. 

Meeting, The. 

Mogg Megone. 

Moral Welfare, The. 

Mother. See Snow-bound. 

Mulford. 

My Birthday. 

“My heart was heavy, for its trust had been.” 

See Forgiveness. 

My Playmate. 

My Psalm. - 
My Soul and I. 


Whittier, J: Greenleaf ( continued ). 

My Triumph. 

New England in WTnter. See Snow-bound, 

Our Autocrat. 

Our Country. 

Our Countrymen in Chains. See Expostulation 
Our Master. 

Our State. 

Palestine. 

Palm-tree, The. 

Pilgrims, The. See Pilgrims of Plymouth, The. 
Pilgrims of Plymouth, The. 

Pipes at Lucknow, The. 

Poor Voter on Election Day, The. 

Prayer of Agassiz, The. 

Prayer Seeker, The. 

Prisoner for Debt, The. 

Prisoners of Naples, The. 

Proclamation, The: 

Proem. 

Prophecy of Samuel Sewall, The. 

Prophetess. See Snow-bound. 

Pumpkin, The. 

Randolph of Roanoke. 

Ranger, The. 

Raphael. 

Red Riding-hood. 

Red River Voyageur, The. 

Reformer, The. 

River Path, The. 

Rivermouth Rocks. See Wreck of Rivermouth, 
The. 

Robin, The. 

Ruth Bonython. See Mogg Megone. 

Sacred Cypress Tree, The. 

“Same old baffling questions! O my friend, The.” 
See Trust. 

“Scarcely Hope had shaped for me.” See Andrew 
Rykman’s Prayer. 

Seed-time and Harvest. 

“Self-ease is pain; they only rest.” See Voices, 
The. 

Ship-builders, The. 

Singer, The. 

Sister. See Snow-bound. 

Sisters, The. 

Sketches. See Among the Hills. 

Skipper Ireson’s Ride. 

Snow-bound: A Winter Idyl. 

Snowstorm, The. See Snow-bound. 

Song of Harvest, A. 

Song of the Negro Boatman. See At Port Royal. 
Spring. See Mogg Megone. 

Story of Ruth Bonython, The. See Mogg Megone. 
Swan Song of Parson Avery, The. 

Tauler. 

Telling the Bees. 

Thanksgiving Ode. See For an Autumn Festival. 
Three Bells, The. 

Thy Will be Done. 

To Children of Girard, Pa. 

To Her Absent Sailor. 

To John C. Fremont. 

To Lydia Maria Child. 

To my Sister. 

To William H. Seward. 

Trailing Arbutus, The. 

True Beauty. See Beautiful, The. 

Trust. 

Two Angels, The. 

Two Loves, The. 

Two Rabbis, The. 

Vanishers, The. 

Vaudois Missionary, The. See Vaudois Teacher, 
The. 

Vaudois Teacher, The. 

Vesta. 

Voice of Calm, The. See Brewing of Soma, 
The. 

Voice of the Reader, The. See Demon of the 
Study, The. 

Voices, The. 

Vow of Washington, The. 

Waiting, The. 

“We shape ourselves the joy or fear.” See 
Raphael. 

What the Birds Said. 

Whittier Alphabet, A. 

Wife, The. See Among the Hills. 

Witch’s Daughter, The. See Mabel Martin. 
“Within the master’s desk is seeU.” See In 
School-days. 

Wordsworth. 

World Transformed, The. See Snow-bound. 


576 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Williams 


Whittier, J: Greenleaf ( continued ). 

Worship. 

Worship of Nature, The. 

Wreck of Rivermouth, The. 

Yankee Gypsies, The. 

“Yet with hands by evil stained.” See Andrew 
Rykman’s Prayer. 

Whitton, Jos.—Crazy Nell. 

Whitworth, W: H:—Time and Death. 

Whytehead, Rev. T:—Mystic Veil, The. See Second 
Day of Creation, The. 

Second Day of Creation, The. 

To a Spider. 

Wichita Eagle.— Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep. 
Wichmann, Katie Belle.—What Hast Thou Done To¬ 
day. 

Wickes, Forsyth.—Verses. 

Wide Awake. —Rich Little Dolly, The. 

Widney, A. H.—Uncle Nathan’s Indian. 

Wiffen, Jeremiah Holme.—Jerusalem Delivered. (.Tr.) 
See Tasso. 

Sophronia and Olindo. ( Tr .) Nee Jerusalem De¬ 
livered. 

Wiggin, Mrs. Kate Douglas. See Riggs, Mrs. Kate 
D. W. 

Wilberforce, S:—Just for To-day. 

Wilbor, Elsie M.—Beruria. (TV.) 

Bread. 

Christ Child, The. 

Masque of the New Year, The. 

Stanzas to Eternity. 

Wilcox, Mrs. A. M. — Apostrophe to the Missis¬ 
sippi. 

Wilcox, Carlos.—God Everywhere in Nature. 

Wilcox, Mrs. Ella [Wheeler].—Answered Prayers. 
Barbarous Chief, The. 

Beautiful Land of Nod, The. 

Bedlam Town. 

"Better to mourn a blossom snatched away.” 
Bravest Sailor of All, The. 

Children’s Vow, The. 

“Death has Crowned Him [as] a Martyr.” 
Decoration Day. See Memorial Day, 1892. 
Dorothy’s Mustn’ts. 

Duet, The. 

Fishing. 

Five Little Brothers. 

Friendship. 

Gaining Ground. 

Gethsemane. 

God’s Work. 

Gossips, The. 

How Salvator Won. 

“I like cigars beneath the stars.” 

Justice, not Charity. 

Land of Nod, The. See Beautiful Land of Nod, 
The. 

Land of Nowhere, The. 

Laugh and the World Laughs with You. See Soli¬ 
tude. 

Life. 

Life’s Forest Trees. 

Life’s Journey. 

Little Girl, A. See Wanted—a Little Girl. 

Love is Enough. 

“Love is enough, let us not seek for gold.” See 
Love is Enough. 

Love Much. 

Love’s Coming. 

Maurine. 

Memorial Day, 1892. 

Mother-in-law, The. 

My Ships. See Maurine. 

Naughty Little Comet, A. 

New Year’s Resolve. 

Nowhere. See Land of Nowhere, The. 

Pin, A. 

Prime of Life, The. 

Princess’ Finger-nail, The. 

Queen’s Last Ride, The. 

Recrimination. 

Sign-board, The. 

Snowed Under. 

Solitude. 

Too Big to be Rocked. 

Tumbler of Claret, A. 

Two Glasses, The. ( Wr. at. to C. B. A.) 

Two Sinners. 

Waltz-quadrille, A. 

Wanted—-a Little Girl. 

Will. 

Woman. 

World, The. 

World as It Is, The. See Solitude. 


Wilde, Jane Francesca Speranza [Elgee]. Lady (“Spe- 
ranza”).—Brothers; Henry and John Shears, 
The. 

Famine Year, The. 

Voice of the Poor, The. 

Wilde, Oscar.—At the Grave of Keats. 

Ave Imperatrix. 

“For not in quiet English fields.” 

Gerald and His Mother. See Woman of no Im¬ 
portance, A. 

Grave of Keats, The. See At the Grave of 

Grave of Shelley, The. 

Guido Ferranti. 

Louis Napoleon. 

Queen Henrietta Maria. 

Requiescat. 

Serenade: “The western wind is blowing fair.” 
Woman of no Importance, A. 

Wilde, R: H:—Farewell to America, A. 

Life. See “My life is like the summer rose.” 

“My life is like the summer rose.” 

Stanzas: “My life is like the summer rose.” See 
“My life is like the summer rose.” 

To the Mocking-bird. 

Wilde, Mrs. W. R.—Man’s Mission. 

Wilder, J: Nichols.—Stand by the Flag! 

Wildman, Rounseville.—Owyhee Joe’s Story. 

Wiley, C: A.—Cought in the Maelstorm. 

Wiley, F. B.—To a Collection of Pastorals. 

Wilford, T: F— Bells, The. 

Burgomaster’s Death, The. See Bells, The. 
Wilkes, J:—Bold Predictions. 

Conquest of the Americans Impracticable. 

Wilkie, Fs. Banks.—That West-side Dog; or, Wil¬ 
liam Nye in Chicago. 

Wilkins, Mary E.— See Freeman, Mrs. Mary E. 
[Wilkins]. 

Wilkins, W:—Actaeon. 

Disillusion. 

Engine Driver’s Story, The. 

Magazine Fort, Phoenix Park, Dublin. 

Wilkinson, Andrews.—Plantation Pictures. 

Wilkinson, J. J. G.—Diamond, The. 

Turner. 

Wilkinson, W: Cleaver.—At Marshfield. See Webster: 
An Ode. 

Lowell, Extract Concerning. 

Webster: An Ode. 

Willard, Mrs. Emma [Hart].—Rocked in the Cradle of 
the Deep. 

Willard, Frances E.—Blue and the Gray, The. 

Fallacy of High License, The. 

Good, Great Name, A. 

Greatest Party, The. 

Home Protection. 

In Satan’s Council-chamber. 

Individuality of Conscience in the Voter. 

Law of Habit, The. 

Legitimate “Strike,” A. 

On Heights of Power. 

On Which Side are You? 

Parties. 

Saloons must Go! 

Union of North and South, The. 

Widening Horizon, The. 

Woman in Temperance. 

Women and Temperance Work. 

Worn-out Parties, The. 

Willett, E:—Outside the Fold. 

Willey, A.—National Constitution and Rum, The. 
William and Mary College Monthly. —To an Old Por¬ 
trait of a Little Girl. 

Williams Argo. —College Verse. 

Williams, Sir C: Hanbury.—Flattery. 

Williams, Dwight.—Chicago. 

Chicago in Flames. See Chicago. 

Down with the Traffic. 

Lottie Dougherty. 

New Emancipation, The. 

Sunset. 

Williams, Ernest Aye.—See Aye-Williams, Ernest. 
Williams, Fannie.—Heart’s-ease, The. 

Williams, Fs. C.—When Pa Takes Care of Me. 

Williams, Fs. Howard.—Answer, An. 

Electra. 

Love Came to Me. 

Song: “A bird in My Bower.” 

Walt Whitman. 

Williams, Gus.—Burlesque Temperance Speech. 

Dutch Oration on Women, A. 

Mygel Snyder’s Barty. 

Temperance Speech. See Burlesque Temperance 
Speech. 


577 






Williams 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Williams, Helen Maria.—To Hope. 

Trust in Providence. 

Whilst Thee I Seek. 

Williams, I:—Trust in God. 

Williams Literary Monthly. —Gipsy Song. 

Sea Song, A. 

Williams, Marie B.—First Violet, The. 

Williams, R. F., Jr.—Aunt’s Phoebe’s Remonstrance. 
Williams, R: Dalton.—Dying Girl, The. 

Munster War-song, The. 

Williams, S. M.—Comforting Reflections of a Nonen¬ 
tity. 

Williams, Sarah.—Omar and the Persian. 

Only Faithful. 

Queen Elizabeth. 

Williams, W. S.—War with Alcohol, The. 

Williams, Walter.—How the Captain Saved the Day. 
Williams, W:—Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah! 
Williamson, D. B.—Christmas Pictures. 

Willis, A. A.—“God bless the cheerful people—man, 
woman, or child.” 

Willis, Browne.—St. Martin’s Day. 

Willis, Mrs. L. M.—Little Child Shall Lead Them, A. 

Naaman, the Leper. 

Willis, Nathaniel Parker.—Absalom. 

“And the frost, too, has a melodious ministry.” 
Andre’s Last Request. 

Annoyer, The. 

April. 

Belfry Pigeon, The. 

Boy, A [or The]. See Torn Hat, The. 

Burial of Arnold, The. See Burial of the Cham¬ 
pion of his Class, etc. 

Burial of the Champion of his Class, at Yale Col¬ 
lege. 

Chamber Scene. 

Child Tired of Play. 

Come Out, Love. 

Confessional, The. 

David’s Lament for [or over] Absalom. See Ab¬ 
salom. 

Death of Harrison. 

Declaration, The. 

Dedication Hymn. 

Dying Alchemist, The. 

Going Home. See Lines on Leaving Europe. 
Hagar in the Wilderness. 

Healing [of] the Daughter of Jairus. 

"He did not notice that, I never spoke to her in the 
same key of voice. ’ ’ 

“I’ve thought of thee,—I’ve thought of thee.” 

See Confessional, The. 

January 1st, 1828. 

Jephtha’s Daughter. 

Lament for Absalom. See Absalom. 

Leper, The. 

Lines on Leaving Europe. 

Look not upon the Wine [when it is Red]. 

Love in a Cottage. 

Mary, the Mother of Jesus. 

My Mother. See Lines on Leaving Europe. 

New Year, The. See January 1st, 1828. 
Parrhasius and the Captive. See Parrhasius. 
Patriot King in Mourning, The. Nee Absalom. 
Pity of the Park Fountain, The. 

Poem delivered at Brown University in 1830. 
Saturday Afternoon. 

Scholar of Thebet Ben Khorat. 

“She rose from her untroubled sleep.” See 
Chamber Scene. 

Soldier’s Widow, The. 

Soliloquy of the Dying Alchemist. See Dying 
Alchemist, The. 

Tired of Play. See Child Tired of Play. 

To a Child. See To Laura W-, Two Years of 

Age. 

To Giulia Grisi. 

To Helen in a Huff. 

To Laura W-, Two Years of Age. 

To the Lady in the Chemisette with Black Buttons. 
Torn Hat, The. 

Unseen Spirits. 

Unwritten Music. 

What is Ambition? See Poem delivered at Brown 
University in 1830. 

White Chip Hat, The. 

Widow of Nain, The. 

You Know if It was You. 

Willis, Rebekah.—Sleeping May. 

Willmott, Rob’t Aris.—Child Praying, A. 

Wilmot, J:— See Rochester, Lari of. 

Wills, W: Gorman.—Charles the First. 

Cromwell and Henrietta Maria. See Charles the 
First. 


Willson, Arabella M. (“A. Gasper”).—Appeal to the 
“Sextant” for Air, An. 

To the “Sextant” [or Sexton]. See Appeal to the 
“Sextant” for Air, An. 

Willson, (Byron) Forceythe.—Boy Brittan. 

Estray, The. 

In State. 

No More. 

Old Sergeant, The. 

Voice, The. 

Willson, W: Lyne.—Tariff Reform. 

Wilson, Prof. -.—Effects of Spring. 

Trees. 

Wilson, Alex.—Blue-bird, The. 

Fisherman’s Hymn, The. 

Wilson, Bertha M.—Christmas Star, The. 

Chinese Wedding, A. 

Nigger Baby. 

Tragedy of Blind Margaret, The. 

Wilson, Mrs. C. B.—Answer to “The Hour of Death.” 
Wilson, Rev. D:—Bear Butte Mountain. 

Wilson, Mrs. E. V.—His Mother’s Songs. {At.) 

Lady Judith’s Vision, The. 

Love is over All. , 

Wilson, F. B.—Professor Puzzled, The. 

Wilson, H. L.—Elusive Dollar Bill, The. 

Wilson, H:—Country’s Greatest Evil, The. 

Wilson, Horace H.—Woman. (7V.) 

Wilson, J: (“Christopher North”).— Emblem of 
Peace, An. See Evening Cloud, The. 

Evening Cloud, The. 

“Mournful funeral slow proceeds behind. The.” 
Rose and the Gauntlet, The. {At. also to J: Ster¬ 
ling.) 

Work on Earth. 

Wilson, Lewis G.—Hylodes, The. 

Wilson, Mary Drew.—Tennis Drill. 

Wilson, Olivia G. L.—My Song. 

Wilson, Rob’t Burns.-—Ballad of the Faded Field. 

“Cut the Cables.” 

Dead Player, The. 

It is in Winter that We Dream of Spring. 

Passing of March, The. 

Remember the Maine. 

Song, A: “I do not ask—dear love—not I.” 

Such is the Death the Soldier Dies. 

Sunrise of the Poor, The. 

To a Crow. 

Wilson, Ruth.—Pansies, The. 

Wilson, Susan.—Painter of Seville, The. 

W’ilson, V. B.—Ticonderoga. 

Wilson, Wood Levette.—Debt in Two Costumes. 

Easter Buds. 

Wilstach, J: Augustine.—Beatrice Descending from 
Heaven. (TV.) See Divine Comedy, The. 
Buonconte di Montefeltro. (TV.) Nee Divine 
Comedy, The. 

Count Ugolino. (TV.) See Divine Comedy, The. 
Divine Comedy, The. (TV.) See Dante Alighieri. 
Exquisite Beauty of Beatrice. (TV.) See Divine 
Comedy, The. 

Wilster, Chr.—Sorrow. 

Wilton, R:—On a Photograph. 

To the Sacred Poets of America. 

Vanished Village, A. 

Winchell, Walter B.—Shakespeare’s Mark Antony. 
Winchelsea, Anne Finch, Countess of. —Fair Tree. See 
Tree, The. 

In Answer to Mr. Pope. 

Nocturnal Reverie, A. 

Ode to the Spleen, An. 

To the Nightingale. 

Tree, The. 

Wine, Milotus J.—Changing Servants. 

Wing, G. C., .Jr.—December Prayer, A. 

Winkworth, Catherine.—Veni Sancte Spiritus. (Tr.) 
Winrow. Jotham.—Mosaics. 

Winship, Albert E:—“It is said that when General 
Grant first took command.” 

Winslow, Helen Maria.—All for a Man. 

August. 

Baby Logic. 

Hope’s Song. 

Winslow, M. E.—Main Hazir Hun. 

Winter, G. M.—Love on the Links. 

Winter, W:—Adelaide Neilson. 

After All. 

Angel Death, The. See Angel of Death, The. 
Angel of Death, The. 

Arthur. 

Asleep. 

Beauty. 

Death’s Angel. See Angel of Death, The. 

Egeria. 


578 








AUTHOR INDEX 


Wolcott 


Winter, W: ( continued). 

Fidele. See Adelaide Neilson. 

Field of Culloden, The. See Old Shrines and Ivy. 

Golden Silence, The. 

I. H. B. 

My Queen. 

Night Watch, The. 

Old Shrines and Ivy. 

On the Verge. 

Passing Bell at Stratford, The. 

Relics. 

Right Standard. The. See Shadows of the Stage. 

Shadows of the Stage. 

Shakespeare’s England. 

Through the Darkness. 

Unwritten Poems. 

Wrecker’s Bell, The. 

Winthrop, E:—Inspiration of the Bible, The. 

Winthrop, Grace.—Singing Baby, The. 

Winthrop, Rob’t C:—Admonition to Coming Genera¬ 
tions. See Centennial Oration. 

American Age, The. See Centennial Oration. 

American Education. See Free Schools and Free 
Governments. 

American Example. See Hundredth Anniversary 
of the Surrender of Lord Cornwallis, The. 

Cause of the Union, The. See Flag of the Union, 
The. 

Centennial Oration. 

Character of Washington, The. See Completion 
of the National Monument to Washington, The. 

Completion of the National Monument to Wash¬ 
ington, The. 

Effect of American Example. See Centennial 
Oration. 

Flag of Our Country, The. See Flag of the Union, 
The. 

Flag of the Union, The. 

Franklin as a Christian. See Inauguration of the 
Statue of Franklin, The. 

Franklin as a Philanthropist. See Inauguration 
of the Statue of Franklin, The. 

Franklin as a Philosopher. See Inauguration of 
the Statue of Franklin, The. 

Franklin as a Printer. See Inauguration of the 
Statue of Franklin, The. 

Free Schools and Free Governments. 

Glorious Destiny of England, The. See Centen¬ 
nial Oration. 

Hundredth Anniversary of the Surrender of Lord 
Cornwallis, The. 

Inauguration of Franklin Statue, Boston. See 
Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin, The. 

Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin, The. 

John Hancock. See Centennial Oration. 

National Ensign, The. See Flag of the Union, The. 

National Monument to Washington. 

New England and Virginia. See Pilgrim Fathers, 
The. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The. 

Thomas Jefferson and John Adams. See Centen¬ 
nial Oration. 

Universal Education. See Hundredth Anniver¬ 
sary of the Surrender of Lord Cornw T allis, The. 

Washington Monument. See National Monument 
to Washington. 

Washington Monument Completed, The. See 
Completion of the National Monument to 
Washington, The. 

Washington Needle, The. See Completion of the 
National Monument to Washington, The. 

Who and what are Great Men? See Centennial 
Oration. 

Winthrop, Theodore.—But Once. 

Gallop of Three, The. 

Winton, Mrs. J. M.—At the Last. 

Better than Gold. (For si. diff. vers, see Smart, 
Alex.) 

Charity. 

Door to Memory’s Hall, The. 

Human Life. 

Over the River. (At.) See Wakefield, Mrs. 
Nancy A. W. [P.]. 

Will the New Year Come To-night, Mamma? (At. 
also to Cora Eager.) 

Wirt, W:—Blind Preacher, The. 

Burr and Blennerhassett. 

Colloquial Powers of Dr. Franklin. 

Culture, the Result of Labor. 

Decisive Integrity. 

Instigators of Treason, The. 

No Excellence without Labor. See Culture, the 
Result of Labor. 

Reply to Mr. Wickham in Burr’s Trial. 


Wirt, W: HIndustry and Eloquence. 

Wisconsin Farmer .—Little Girl’s Letter, A. 

Nell’s Letter. See Little Girl’s Letter, A. 

Wise, Dan’l.—Mind, the Glory of Man. 

Wister, Owen.—Ape and the Thinker, The. 

Wister, Mrs. Sarah Kemble [Butler].—Boat of Grass, 
The. 

Witham, W. S.—Righteous War, A. 

Wither, G:—Abuses Stript and Whipt. 

Admire not, Shepherd’s Boy. See Fair-Virtue, 
the Mistress of Philarete. 

At Sunsetting. 

Author’s Resolution in a Sonnet, The. See Shep¬ 
herd’s Resolution, The. 

Choice, The. 

Christmas. 

Christmas Carol, A. See Christmas. 

Eclogue. See Shepherd’s Hunting, The. 

Eclogue IV. See Shepherd’s Hunting, The. 
Fair-Virtue, the Mistress of Philarete. 

Fidelia. See Shepherd’s Resolution, The. 

Flower of Virtue, The. 

For a Widower or Widow. 

For Summer Time. See Hallelujah. 

Hallelujah. 

I Loved a Lass. 

In a Clear Starry Night. See Lord! When those 
Glorious Lights I See. 

Lord! When those Glorious Lights I See. 
Love-poems. See Fair-Virtue, the Mistress of 
Philarete. 

Lover’s Resolution, The. See Shepherd’s Reso¬ 
lution, The. 

Manly Heart, The. See Shepherd’s Resolution, 
The. 

Mistress of Philarete, The. See Fair-Virtue, the 
Mistress of Philarete. 

Muse, The. 

Pipe and Can. See Tobacco. 

Prayer of Old Age, The. See Hallelujah. 

Psalm CXLVIII. 

Rocking Hymn, A. 

Shall I, Wasting in Despair. See Shepherd’s Res¬ 
olution, The. 

Shepherd's Hunting, The. 

Shepherd’s Resolution, The. 

Shepherd’s Swain, A. See Fair-Virtue, the Mis¬ 
tress of Philarete. 

Song to Her Beauty, A. See Fair-Virtue, the Mis¬ 
tress of Philarete. 

Steadfast Shepherd, The. 

Stolen Kiss, A. See Upon a Stolen Kiss. 

Tobacco. 

Twelfth Day; or, The Epiphany. 

Upon a Stolen Kiss. 

Weakness. See Abuses Stript and Whipt. 

When We are upon the Seas. See Hallelujah. 
Widow’s Hymn, A. See For a Widower or Widow. 
Witheridge, Julia.—Just as She Told It. 

Withington, H.—True To-day, The. 

Withrow, W: H:—Cloud Castles. 

October. 

Wolcott, Dixie.—Laurie’s Apology. 

Violet’s Victory. 

Wolcott, Edwin O.—Great Britain and America. 
Wolcott, J: (“Peter Pindar”).—Actor, An. 

Advice to Young Women; or, The Rose and Straw¬ 
berry. 

Apology for Kings. 

Apple-dumplings and a King, The. See Apple- 
dumplings and George the Third, The. 
Apple-dumplings and George the Third, The. 
Barry’s Attack upon Sir Joshua Reynolds. 
Bienseance. 

Birth-day Ode. See Progress of Curiosity, The. 
Consolatory Stanza, A. 

Country Lasses, The. 

Economy. 

Edmund Burke’s Attack on Warren Hastings. 
Epitaph on Peter Staggs. 

Jewess and Her Son; The. 

King Canute and His Nobles. 

King of France and the Fair Lady, A. 

King of Spain and the Horse, The. 

Kings and Courtiers. 

Lex Talionis upon Benjamin West, The. 

Lines on Doctor Johnson. See On Dr. Johnson. 
Man may be Happy. 

Ode to the Devil. 

On a Stone Thrown at a Very Great Man. 

On an Artist. See Actor, An. 

On Dr. Johnson. 

On George the Third’s Patronage of Benjamin 
West. 


579 






Wolcott 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Wolcott, J: (“Peter Pindar”) ( continued ). 

On the Conclusion of His Odes. 

On the Death of Mr. Hone, R. A. 

Overdone Economy. See Economy. 

Petit Maitre, and the Man on the Wheel, The. 

Pig and Magpie, The. 

Pilgrims and the Peas, The. 

Praying for Rain. 

Progress of Curiosity, The; or, A Royal Visit to 
Whitbread’s Brewery. 

Razor-seller, The. 

Rival Broom Makers, The. (?) 

Roguery Taught by Confessions. 

Sleep. 

Sailor Boy at Prayers, The. 

Soldier and the Virgin Mary, The. 

Tender Husband, The. 

Tinker and Miller’s Daughter, The. (?) 

To a Fish. 

To a Fly. 

To Chloe. 

Tray’s Epitaph. 

Wolcott, Julia Anna.—“Oh, surely who will guide.” 
Our Christmas. 

Wolfe, C. Toler.—Deitsche Advertisement. 

Song of the Railroad. 

Wolfe, C:—After Corunna. See Burial of Sir John 
Moore, The. 

Burial of Sir John Moore, The. 

Burial of Sir John Moore at [or after] Corunna, 
The. See Burial of Sir John Moore, The. 
Defence of Poetry, A. 

If I had Thought thou Couldst have Died. See 
Lines Written to Music. 

Lines Written to Music. 

“O [or Oh] say not that my heart is cold.” 
“Slowly and sadly we laid him down.” See 
Burial of Sir John Moore, The. 

Sonnet Written during His Residence in College. 
To Mary. See Lines Written to Music. 

Wail of Jugurtha, The. 

Wolfe, General Jas.—Address of General Wolfe be¬ 
fore Quebec. See To the Army before Quebec. 
To the Army before Quebec [, 1759]. 

Wolverton, Mary L.—Frost-elves, The. 

Wood, Beverly R.—Marco’s Death. 

Wood, D: Ward.—-Value of Character. 

Wood, Dorothy.—Three Cunning Crabs, The. 

Wood, Eugene.—Aunt Susan’s Quilt. 

Wood, Helen J.—Love’s Letter-box. 

Wood, H: Firth.—About Our Folks. 

(Brooklyn) Bridge, The. 

Coney Island Down der Pay. 

Lost Puppy, The. 

Noses. 

Oh! Promise Me. 

Will You Love Me when I’m Bald? 

Wood, Jessie M.—Chase of the Laurel Wreath, The. 
Justice. 

Wood, J: Seymour (?).—Trick vs. Trick. 

Wood, Lydia M.—Woman’s Answer, A. 

Wood, M. Berry.—Wellesley in Autumn. 

Wood, Nellie.—Captured Bumble-bee, The. 

Wood, S:—Friends. 

Woodberry, G: E:—Agathon. 

America and England in Danger of War. See 
America to England. 

America to England. 

At Gibraltar. 

Child, The. 

Divine Awe. 

Homeward Bound. 

Love’s Rosary. 

My Country. 

O, Inexpressible as Sweet. 

O, Struck beneath the Laurel. 

On a Portrait of Columbus. 

Rose of Stars, The. 

Seaward. 

Secret, The. 

Siena. 

Silence of Love, The. See O, Inexpressible as Sweet. 
So Slow to Die. 

Sodoma’s Christ Scourged. See Siena. 

Song of Eros, in “Agathon.” See Agathon. 
When First I Saw Her. 

Woodbury, I. B.—Speed Away. 

Woodbury, Ida Vose.—-Lincoln’s Birthday. 

Woodland, Kate.-—Who is the Poet? 

Woodruff, Mrs. Julia Louisa Matilda [Curtiss],—That 
Little. 

There Shall be No Night There. 

Woods, Jas. Chapman.—Soul Stithy, The. 

World’s Death-night, The. 


Woods, Mrs. Kate [Tannatt],—Dan's Wife. 

Woods, Margaret L.—Genius Loci. 

Rest. 

To the Forgotten Dead. 

Young Windebank. 

Woods, Virna.—Last Night, The. 

Woodward, N. A.—Student and His Neighbors, The. 
Woodworth, Fs. Channing. — Chick-a-de-dee. See 
Snow-bird’s Song, The. 

Snow-bird’s Song, The. 

Woodworth, Mrs. Nelly Hart.—Hermit Thrush, The. 
Woodworth, S:—Bucket, The. See Old Oaken Bucket* 
The. 

Loves She Like Me? 

Needle, The. 

Old Oaken Bucket, The. 

Whiskprs Thp 

Woolley, J: G— Break the Bottle. 

Woolner, T:—Given Over. 

My Beautiful Lady. 

Woolsey, Sarah Chauncey(“Susan Coolidge”).—Answer 
to a Puzzle, An. 

Apple Blossoms. 

Bind-weed. 

Building. 

Christmas Chimes, The. 

Close at Hand. 

Cradle Tomb in Westminster Abbey, The. 
Discontent. 

Easter Song, An. 

Florentine Juliet, A. 

Flowers Know Their Time to Go, The. 

Forward. 

Ginevra. 

Good-bye, Sweet Day. 

Grown-up Birthday, A. 

Gulf Stream. 

He that Believeth Shall not Make Haste. 

Helen. 

How the Leaves Come Down. 

In the Mist. 

Laborare Est Orare. 

Little Christmas Tree, The. 

Love and Life. 

Marble Queen, The. 

Mrs. June’s Prospectus. 

My Rights. 

Of such as I Have. 

Old Stone Basin, The. 

One Little Star. 

Slow and Sure. 

Some Lover’s Dear Thought. 

Tempered. 

Time to Go. 

When. 

While We May. 

Woolsey, Theodore Dwight.—“Collegiate education 
has this distinction and privilege, A.” 

Eclipse of Faith, The. 

Woolson, Mrs. Abba Louisa [Goold].—Summer’s Day, A. 
W.oolson, Constance Fenimore.—“I Too.” 

Kentucky Belle. 

March. 

Only the Brakesman. 

Tom. 

Tom, the Hero. See Tom. 

Yellow Jessamine. 

Worden, Alonzo Teall.—German Professor on Hyp¬ 
notism, The. 

Just about These Days. 

Mullins the Agnostic. [At. also to C. M. Snyder.) 
Partridges. 

Trouble in the Choir. 

When Mandy Brings the Kids. 

Wordsworth, Christopher.—Giving to God. 

Wordsworth, Dorothy.—Cottager to her Infant, The. 
W ordsworth, Edith.—Flower Girl, The. 

Legend of King Nilus, The. 

Triumph of the Ricci, The. 

Wordsworth, W:—Acquittal of the Bishop. 

Admonition to a Traveller. 

Affliction of Margaret, The. 

After Rain. See Written in March. 

After-thought. 

Alfred [and His Descendants], See Ecclesiastical 
Sonnets. 

Alice Fell; or, Poverty. 

Among the Mountains. See Excursion. The. 
Apparition on the Lake. See Prelude, The. 

Ascent of Snowdon. See Prelude, The. 

Aspect s of Christianity in America. See Ecclesias¬ 
tical Sonnets. 

At Florence. ( Tr .) See To the Supreme Being. 
At the Grave of Burns. 


580 




AUTHOR INDEX 


Wordsworth 


Wordsworth, W: ( continued ). 

Blind Fiddler, The. 

Blind Highland Boy, The. 

Borderers, The, 

Boy of Egremond, The. See Force of Prayer, 
The. 

Boy Poet, The. See There was a Boy. 

By the Sea. See It is a Beauteous Evening, 
Calm and Free. 

Cave of Staffa. 

Character of the Happy Warrior, The. 

Charles the Second. 

Childless Father, The. 

Christmas Carol, The. See To the Rev. Dr. 
Wordsworth. 

Cloud-visions, See Excursion, The. 

Complaint of a Forsaken Indian Woman, The. 
Composed at Cora Linn. 

Composed at Neidpath Castle, the Property of 
Lord Queensberry. 

Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 
1802. 

Convention of Cintra. See Sonnet Composed 
while the Author was Engaged in Writing a 
Tract, etc. 

Cranmer. 

Daffodils[, The]. See I Wandered Lonely as a 
Cloud. 

Defile of Gondo. See Prelude, The. 

Departed. See "Slumber did my spirit seal, A.” 
Desideria. See Shock of Bereavement, The. 
Destiny. 

Devotional Incitements. 

Dion. 

Duty. See Ode to Duty. 

“Earth has not anything to show more fair.” See 
Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 
1802. 

Ecclesiastical Sonnets. 

Education of Nature, The. See Three Years She 
Grew. 

Edward VI. 

Elegiac Stanzas Suggested by a Picture of Peele 
Castle in a Storm. 

Ellen Irwin; or, The Braes of Kirtle. 

England. See London, 1802. 

England and Switzerland, 1802. See Thought of 
a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland. 
England, 1802. See Written in London, Septem¬ 
ber, 1802. 

English Channel. See September, 1802, near 
Dover. 

Evening on Calais Beach. See It is a Beauteous 
Evening, Calm and Free. 

Evening Star, The. 

Evening Voluntary. 

Excursion, The. 

Expostulation, and Reply. 

Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James 
Hogg. 

Faith and Freedom. See Destiny. 

Fidelity. 

First of May. See Ode: Composed on May 
Morning. 

First Swallow, The. (?) 

Flowers at Cave of Staffa. 

Force of Prayer, The. 

Fountain, The. [A Conversation.] 

French Army in Russia, The. 

Gains of Restraint, The. See Sonnet, The: 

"Nuns fret not,” etc. 

George III. See November, 1813. 

Glad Tidings. 

Glen-Almain, the Narrow Glen. 

God in Nature. See Excursion, The. 

Goody Blake and Harry Gill. 

Green Linnet, The. 

Gunpowder Plot. 

Happy Warrior, The. See Character of the Happy 
Warrior, The. 

Hart-leap Well. 

Her Eyes are Wild. 

Home. See I Grieved for Buonaparte. 

Honor. 

I Cannot Doubt that They Whom Ye Deplore. 

See Excursion, The. 

I Grieved for Buonaparte. 

“I travelled among unknown Men.” 

I Wandered Lonely [as a Cloud]. 

Ideal. See London, 1802. 

Idle Shepherd-boys, The. 

Imagination. See Excursion, The. 

Immortality. See Ode: Intimations of Immor¬ 
tality, etc. 


Wordsworth, W: (continued). 

In a Child’s Album. See To a Child. Written in 
Her Album. 

In March. See Written in March. 

Incident. (Characteristic of a Favourite Dog.) 

Indignation of a High-minded Spaniard. 

Influence of Natural Objects [in Calling Forth and 
Strengthening the Imagination]. See Prelude, 
The. 

Inner Vision, The. 

Inside of King’s College Chapel. See Ecclesias¬ 
tical Sonnets. 

Intimations of Immortality [from Recollections 
of Early Childhood], See Ode: Intimations 
of Immortality, etc. 

It is a Beauteous Evening, Calm and Free. 

John Wickliffe. See Ecclesiastical Sonnets. 

King Henry the Eighth. See Recollections of the 
Portrait of King Henry VIII., etc. 

Kitten and [the] Falling Leaves, The. 

Laborer’s Noonday Hymn, The. 

Laodamia. 

Last of the Flock, The. 

Laud. See Ecclesiastical Sonnets. 

Laurel, The. See Russian Fugitive, The. 

Lesson, A. 

Liberty. 

Lines Composed a few Miles above Tintern Abbey, 
[on Revisiting the Banks of the Wye], etc. 

Lines Composed at Grasmere on Tidings of the 
Approaching Death of Charles James Fox. 

Lines Composed near Tintern Abbey. See Lines 
Composed a few Miles above Tintern Abbey, 
etc. 

Lines Left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree, which 
Stands near the Lake of Esthwaite, etc. 

Lines Written at Grasmere on Tidings of the 
Approaching Death of Charles James Fox. See 
Lines Composed at Grasmere, etc. 

Lines Written in Early Spring. 

London,1802. 

London. 1802. See also Written in London, Sept., 
1802. 

Lost Love, The. See She Dwelt among the Un¬ 
trodden Ways. 

Love of Nature, The. See Lines Composed a few 
Miles above Tintern Abbey, etc. 

Lucy. (“A slumber,” etc.) See “Slumber did 
my spirit seal, A.” 

Lucy. (“I travell’d,” etc.) See "I traveled 
among unknown men.” 

Lucy. ("She dwelt,” etc.) See “She dwelt 
among the untrodden ways.” 

Lucy. ("Strange fits of passion I have 
known.”) 

Lucy. (“Three years,” etc.) See Three Years 
She Grew. 

Lucy Gray[; or, Solitude]. 

“Man is dear to man; the poorest poor.” 

March. See Written in March. 

Mary Queen of Scots. 

Memory. 

Michael [and His Son]. 

Milton. See London, 1802. 

"Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour." 
See London, 1802. 

Mind’s Eye, The. See Excursion, The. 

Mist Opening in the Hills. See Excursion, The. 

Moon among Trees, The. See Excursion, The. 

Morning after the Ball. See Prelude, The. 

Morning in London. See Composed upon West¬ 
minster Bridge, Sept. 3, 1802. 

Morning in the Mountains. 

Motherland, The. See “When I have borne in 
memory what has tamed." 

Mother’s Lament, A. See Affliction of Margaret, 
The. 

Mountain Ash, The. See Excursion, The. 

Mountain Echo, The. 

Mutability. 

My Heart Leaps up [when I Behold]. 

Nature and the Poet. See Elegiac Stanzas Sug¬ 
gested by a Picture of Peele Castle, etc. 

"Nature never did betray. ” See Lines Composed 
a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, etc. 

Night Piece, A. 

Nightingale, The. 

November, 1813. 

Nutting. 

Ode: Composed on May Morning. 

Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollec¬ 
tions of Early Childhood. 

Ode on Immortality. See Ode: Intimations of Im¬ 
mortality. etc. 


i 


581 




Wordsworth 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Wordsworth, W: ( continued ). 

Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recol¬ 
lections of Early Childhood. See Ode: Intima¬ 
tions of Immortality, etc. 

Ode to Duty. 

Old Man by the Brook, The. 

On a Picture of Peel Castle in a Storm. See Ele¬ 
giac Stanzas, Suggested by, etc. 

On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye. See Lines 
Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, 
etc. 

On the Beach at Calais. See It is a Beauteous 
Evening, Calm and Free. 

On the Death of James Hogg. See Extempore 
Effusion upon the Death, etc. 

On the Departure of Sir Walter Scott from Ab¬ 
botsford for Naples. 

On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic. 

Osmunda Regalis, The. 

Outline. See Recluse, The. 

Passing of the Elder Bards, The. See Extempore 
Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg. 

Pass of Kirkstone, The. 

Past Years of Home. 

Perfect Woman. See “She was a phantom of de¬ 
light.” 

Pet Lamb, The. 

Pilgrim Fathers, The. See Ecclesiastical Sonnets. 

Pillar of Trajan, The. 

Poems Composed [or Suggested during a Tour] in 
the Summer of 1833. 

Poetry. See Preface to Lyrical Ballads. 

Poet’s Epitaph, A. 

Poor Susan. See Reverie of Poor Susan, The. 

Portrait, A. See “She was a phantom of delight.” 

Preface to Lyrical Ballads. 

Prelude, The. 

Primrose of the Rock, The. 

Rainbow, The. See “My heart leaps up when I 
behold.” 

Reaper, The. See Solitary Reaper, The. 

Recluse, The. 

Recollections of the Portrait of King Henry VIII., 
Trinity Lodge, Cambridge. 

Redbreast Chasing the Butterfly, The. 

Resolution and Independence. 

Reverie of Poor Susan, The. 

Rob Roy’s Brave. 

Russian Fugitive, The. 

Ruth; or, The Influences of Nature. 

Sacheverel. 

Sailor’s Mother, The. 

Scale of Minds. 

Schill. 

“Scorn not the sonnet.” See Sonnet, The: 
“Scorn not,” etc. 

Sea Shell, The. See Excursion, The. 

Sea-shore, The. See Excursion, The. 

Seen, Loved, Wedded. See “She was a phantom 
of delight. ’ ’ 

September, 1802, near Dover. 

September, 1815. 

September, 1819. 

Seven Sisters, The; or, The Solitude of Bin- 
norie 

She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways. 

“She was a phantom [of delight].” 

Shock of Bereavement, The. 

Simon Lee, the Old Huntsman. 

Skating. See Prelude, The. 

Skeptic, The. See Borderers, The. 

Sleeplessness. See To Sleep. 

“Slumber did my spirit seal, A.” 

“Small service is true service while it lasts.” See 
To a Child. Written in Her Album. 

Snow. See French Army in Russia, The. 

Solitary Reaper, The. 

Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle upon the 
Restoration of Lord Clifford, the Shepherd, to 
the Estates and Honors of his Ancestors. 

Sonnet: “Alas, what boots the long, laborious 
quest. ’ ’ See What Boots the Quest? 

Sonnet: “It is a beauteous evening, calm and 
free.” See It is a Beauteous Evening, etc. 

Sonnet: “It is not to be thought of that the flood.” 
See Destiny. 

Sonnet, The: “Nuns fret not,” etc. 

Sonnet, The: “Scorn not the sound,” etc. 

Sonnet: “This world is too much with us.” See 
World is too Much with Us, The. 

Sonnet Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Lon¬ 
don, 1802. See Composed upon Westminster 
Bridge, Sept. 3, 1802. 


Wordsworth, W: ( continued ). 

Sonnet Composed while the Author was Engaged 
in Writing a Tract, Occasioned by the Conven¬ 
tion of Cintra. 

Sonnet: London, 1802. See London, 1802. 

Sonnet: To Toussaint L’Ouverture. See To Tous- 
saint L’Ouverture. 

Speak! 

Steamboats, Viaducts, and Railways. 

Stepping Westward. 

Sunset, The. See Excursion, The. 

“Sweet is the lore which Nature brings.” See 
Tables Turned, The. 

Tables Turned, The. 

“Thanks to the human heart by which we live.” 
See Ode: Intimations of Immortality, etc. 

There was a Boy. 

There was a Time. See Ode: Intimations of Im¬ 
mortality, etc. 

Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzer¬ 
land. 

Thoughts Suggested the Day Following, on the 
Banks of Nith, near the Poet’s Residence. 

Three Years She Grew [in Sun and Shower]. 

Throne of Death, The. 

Timothy. See Childless Father, The. 

Tintern Abbey. See Lines Composed a Few Miles 
above Tintern Abbey. 

To a Butterflv. 

To a Child. 'Written in Her Album. 

To a Distant Friend. See Speak! 

To a Highland Girl. (At Inversneyde upon Loch 
Lomond.) 

To a Skylark: “Ethereal Minstrel,” etc. 

To a Skylark: “Up with me,” etc. 

To Duty. See Ode to Duty. 

To H. C. 

To Hartley Coleridge. See To H. C. 

To Joanna. 

To Lady Fitzgerald, in Her Seventieth Year. 

To Milton. See London, 1802. 

To-[Miss Blackett], on Her First Ascent to the 

Summit of Helvellyn. 

To My Sister. 

To Sleep. 

To the Cuckoo. 

To the Daisy. 

To the Highland Girl of Inversneyde. See To a 
Highland Girl. 

To the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth. 

To the Skylark. See To a Skylark: "Ethereal 
minstrel, ’ ’ etc. 

To the Small Celandine. 

To the Supreme Being. (TV.) 

To Toussaint L’Ouverture. 

Toussaint L’Ouverture. See To Toussaint L’Ou¬ 
verture. 

Trosachs, The. 

True Dignity. See Lines Left upon a Seat in a 
Yew-tree, etc. 

Trust. 

Twin Peaks of the Valley. See Excursion, The. 

Two April Mornings, The. , 

Two Victories. See Song at the Feast of Brougham 
Castle, etc. 

Unknown Poets. See Excursion, The. 

“Up! Up! My friend, and quit your books.” See 
Tables Turned, The. 

Upon Westminster Bridget, Sept. 3, 1802]. See 
Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 
1802. 

Valedictory Sonnet to the River Duddon. See 
After-thought. 

Varying Impressions from Nature. See Lines 
Composed a Few Miles aboveTintern Abbey,etc. 

Venice. See On the Extinction of the Venetian 
Republic. 

View from Fox How, The. See Past Years of 
Home. 

Vision of Mist-splendours, A. See Excursion, The. 

Walton’s Book of Lives. See Ecclesiastical Son¬ 
nets. 

We are Seven. 

“We will grieve not. ’ ’ See Ode: Intimations of Im¬ 
mortality, etc. 

Westminster Bridge. See Composed upon West¬ 
minster Bridge, Sept. 3, 1802. 

What Boots the Quest? 

“When I have borne in memory what has tamed.” 

Wicliffe. See Ecclesiastical Sonnets. 

William the Third. See Ecclesiastical Sonnets. 

Within King’s College Chapel, Cambridge. See- 
Ecclesiastical Sonnets. 







AUTHOR INDEX 


Yeats 


Wordsworth, W: ( continued ). 

Woodland Walks. 

World, The. See World is too Much with Us, 
The. 

World is too Much with Us', The. 

“World is too much with us, late and soon, The.” 
See World is too Much with Us, The. 

World’s Ravages, The. See World is too Much 
with Us, The. 

W T ren’s Nest, A. 

Written in Early Spring. See Lines Written in 
Early Spring. 

Written in London, September, 1802. 

Written in March. 

Yarrow Revisited. 

Yarrow Unvisited. 

Yarrow Visited. 

“Yes, hope may with my strong desire keep pace.” 
(To Vittoria Colonna.) (TV.) 

Yew-trees. 

Work, H: Clay.—Marching through Georgia. 

Worsted, Mary V.—Reward of the Cheerful Candle, 
The. 

Worthley, Evelyn M.—Bird’s Cradle-song, A. 

Wotton, Sir H:—Character of a Happy Life, The. 

Description of the Country’s Recreations, A. See 
Verses in Praise of Angling. 

Elizabeth of Bohemia. See On His Mistress, the 
Queen of Bohemia. 

Farewell to the Vanities of the World, A. 

Happy Life, The [or A]. See Character of a Hap¬ 
py Life, The. 

In Praise of Angling. See Verses in Praise of 
Angling. 

Lord of Himself. See Character of a Happy Life, 
The. 

On a Bank as I Sat a-Fishing. 

On His Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia. 

Short Hymn upon the Birth of Prince Charles, 

Spring Idyll, A. See On a Bank as I Sat a-Fish¬ 
ing. 

Tears at the Grave of Sir Albertus Morton Wept 
by Sir H. Wotton. 

Tears Wept at the Grave of Sir Albertus Morton. 
See Tears at the Grave of Sir Albertus Morton 
Wept by Sir H. Wotton. 

Thoughts on the Forest. See Farewell to the 
Vanities of the World, A. 

To His Mistress (Elizabeth, Queen of Bohe¬ 
mia). See On His Mistress, the Queen of 
Bohemia. 

To his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia. See On 
His Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia. 

Upon the Death of Sir Albert[us] Morton’s 
Wife. 

Upon the Sudden Restraint of the Earl of Somer¬ 
set, then Falling from Favor. 

Verses in Praise of Angling. 

You Meaner Beauties. See On his Mistress, the 
Queen of Bohemia. 

Wotton, Sir J:—Damsetas’ Jig in Praise of his Love. (?) 

Wratislaw, Theodore.—Expectation. 

Music-hall, The. 

Vain Desire, A. 

Wray, J. Jackson.—Methodist Class-meeting, A. See 
Nestleton Magna. 

Nestleton Magna. 

Sister Agatha's Ghost. See Nestleton Magna, 

Wrigglesworth, J:—“I Will not Drink.” 

Wright, E. V.—How Father Carves the Duck. See 
When Father Carves the Duck. 

When Father Carves the Duck. 

Wright, Florence M.—Life’s Common Things. 

Wright, Harriet B.—Planting for the Future. 

Wright, J: D.—Orator’s Cause, The. 

Wright, Mary L.—White Lily, A. 

Wright, Merle St. Croix.—Cradle Song. 

Fate. 

Translation from Heine. 

Wright, Rev. R. Walter.—Easter Morn. 

Still Small Voice, A. 

Wright, W: Bull.—Brook, The. 

Wrighton, W. T.—Dearest Spot, The. 

Wrinkle. —Cheerful Song, A. 

Fame. 

How I Love My Books. 

Impressionistic. 

In Perpetuum. 

Omen, The. 

Our Goddess. 

Song to Her, A. 

“ Wrongfellow.”—Meerschaum. 

Wyatt, Mary L.—Sail on the Clouds, A. 


Wyatt, Sir T:—Appeal, An. See Lover Beseecheth 
his Mistress not to Forget, The. 

Appeal, The. See Earnest Suit to his Unkind 
Mistress not to Forsake Him, An. 

Blame not My Lute. 

Earnest Suit to his Unkind Mistress not to Forsake 
Him, An. 

Forget not Yet. See Lover Beseecheth his Mis¬ 
tress not to Forget, The. 

Lover Beseecheth his Mistress not to Forget, 
The. ’ 

Lover Complaineth of the Unkindness of his Love. 
The. 

Lover having Dreamed Enjoying of his Love, 
The. 

Lover Sheweth how he is Forsaken of such as 
He Sometime Enjoyed, The. 

Lover to His Lute, The. See Lover Complaineth 
of the Unkindness of his Love, The. 

Lover’s Appeal, The. See Earnest Suit to 
his Unkind Mistress not to Forsake Him, 
An. 

Of the Courtier’s Life, Written to John Poins. 

On his Return from Spain. 

Re-cured Lover Exulteth in his Freedom, The. 

Second Satire, The. See Of the Courtier’s Life, 
Written to John Poins. 

Supplication, A. See Lover Beseecheth his Mis¬ 
tress not to Forget, The. 

To His Lute. See Lover Complaineth of the 
Unkindness of his Love, The. 

Vixi Puellis Nuper Idoneus. See Lover Sheweth 
how he is Forsaken, etc. 

Wyeth, J: Allan.-—My Sweetheart’s Face. 

Wyeth, Mary E. C.—Gabe and the Irish Lady. 

Wylie, Rev. A. McElroy. — Need of Heroism To¬ 
day. 

Wyman, Benson N. — Ancient and Modern Ora¬ 
tory. 

W yman, Emma F.—Little Crosses. 

Wynne, Frances.—Lesson in Geography, A. 

Whisper! 

Wynter, Andrew.—Ode to My Pipe. 

“Wyoming Kit.”-—Cowboy’s Tale, The. 


Y 


Yale Record .—At the Race. 

Deception. 

Her Leghorn Hat. 

His Oath. See Uncertain Pledge, An. 

His Poem. 

It Was. 

Modest Poet, The. 

Phantasy. 

Priscilla. 

Snare and a Delusion, A. 

Summer Girl, The. 

Uncertain Pledge, An. 

Upon Her Lips. 

Way of It, The. 

“When the Sleeper Wakes.” 

Wonders of Genealogy, The. 

Yale, A. D. 2000. 

“Yankee.”—To a Child. 

Yates, Edmund.—Epigram: “All Saints.” 

Yates, J: H.—Fast Mail and the Stage, The. 

Model Church, The. 

No Mortgage on the Farm. 

Old Forsaken Schoolhouse, The. 

Old Man Goes to School, The. 

Old Man in the Model Church, The. See Model 
Church, The. 

Old Man in the Palace Car, The. 

Old Man in the Stylish Church, The. 

Old Ways and the New, The. 

School Begins To-day. 

There’s Danger in the Towm. 

Yeats, W: Butler.—Down by the Salley Gardens. 
Dream of a Blessed Spirit, A. 

Father Gilligan. 

Folk of the Air, The. 

Hosting of the Sidhe, The. 

Indian Song, An. 

Island of Sleep, The. See W’anderings of Oisin, 
The. 

Lake Isle of Innisfree, The. 

Lamentation of the Old Pensioner, The. 

Michael Robartes Remembers Forgotten Beauty. 
Old Song Resung, An. See Down by the Salley 
Gardens. 


583 







Yeats 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Yeats, W: Butler ( continued). 

Rose of the World, The. 

Song of the Old Mother, The. 

Stolen Child, The. 

Two Trees, The. 

Wanderings of Oisin, The. 

When you are Old. 

Where my Books Go. 

White Birds, The. 

Ybarra, T:—Appeal to the Goddess, An. 

Lay of Ancient Rome, A. 

Yeomans, C. W.—Ein Traumbild. 

“Write a Poem for the ‘Lit.’ ” . 

Yonkers Gazette.— Modern Shakespeare, The. 

York, Eva Rose.—I Shall not Pass this Way Again. 
York, S. A.—Repartee. 

Yorke, R:—Modern Elijah, A. 

Youl, E: [or J. L.]—Flowers, The. See Song of Spring. 
Song of Spring. 

Worship in the Wild-wood. 

Young, Rev. Alfred.—Slaughter House, The. 

Young, Andrew.—There is a Happy Land. 

Young, Rev. E. K.—Saloon and the Home, The. 
Young, Dr. E:—Aspiration. ^ See Night Thoughts. 
Complaint, The. See Night Thoughts. 
Consolation. See Night Thoughts. 

Death. See Night Thoughts. 

Death of Friends, The. See Night Thoughts. 
Hope. See Night Thoughts. 

Last Day [Book], The. 

Love of Fame the Universal Passion. 

Man. See Night Thoughts. 

Narcissa. See Night Thoughts. 

Nature. See Night Thoughts. 

Night. See Night Thoughts. 

Night Thoughts. 

Old Coquette, The. See Satire V.—On Women. 
On Procrastination. See Night Thoughts. 
Penitence. See Night Thoughts. 

Procrastination. See Night Thoughts. 

Pursuit of Frivolous Pleasures, The. See Night 
Thoughts. 

Revenge[,’ The]. 

Satire V.—On Women. 

Sleep. See Night Thoughts. 

Socrates. See Night Thoughts. 

Stream of Life, The. See Night Thoughts. 

Time. See Night Thoughts. 

Time’s Midnight Voice. See Night Thoughts. 

To the Right Hon. Mr. Dodington. See Love of 
Fame the Universal Passion. 

Under the Violets. 

Young Folks’ Rural. —Corporeal Punishment. 

Young, G: W.—Lips that Touch Liquor Must never 
Touch Mine, The. 

Ydung Idea, The. —Feathered Name-speakers. 

Young, W:—Bells, The. See Wishmakers’ Town. 
Bridal Pair, The. See Wishmakers’ Town. 
Conscience-keeper, The. See Wishmakers’ Town. 
Flower-seller, The. See Wishmakers’ Town. 
Judith. 


Young, W: ( continued). 

Pawns, The. See Wishmakers’ Town. 

Philomel to Corydon. 

Wishmakers’ Town. 

Younge, Leigh.—Fortunes of War, The. 

Youngs, Louise.—Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Pine 
Tree. 

Youth’s Companion .—At Bedtime. See Two Little 
Girls I Know. 

Aunt Polly’s “George Washington.” 

Bedtime. 

Bell of St. John’s, The. . 

Damaris Brown. 

Dolly’s Lesson. 

Egg a Chicken, An. 

First Letter, The. 

George Washington’s "Bufday.” 

Goosey Lucy’s New Year’s Calls. 

List of Our Presidents, A. 

Little Planter, A. 

Little Song, A. 

Mick Tandy’s Revenge. 

Miracle of the Egg, The. See Egg a Chicken, An. 
Month of May[, The], 

My Tree. 

New Year, The. 

North and South. 

Our First Thanksgiving Day. 

Pussy and the Poppies. 

Rob’s Mittens. 

Small Dress-making. 

Teaching Dolly. See Dolly’s Lesson. 

Thoughts for the New Year. 

True Heart, A. 

Two Little Girls I Know. 

Youth’s Penny Gazette .—Robin Redbreast’s Secret. 
Yriarte, Don Tomas de.—Ass and His Master, The. 
Country Squire, The. 

Eggs, The. 

Magpie and the Monkey, The. 

Yule, Sir H:—Birkenhead, The. 

Yule, Pamelia Vining.—Beautiful Artist, The. 

Warble thy Lays to me. 


z 

Z., X. Y.—Race, The. 

Zabriskie, F. N.—Poet’s Funeral, The. See Tribute to 
Longfellow, A. 

Tribute to Longfellow, A. 

Zangwill, Israel.—Despair and Hope. 

Zeagles, G:—Tale of the Atlantic Coast, A. 

Zedlitz, Jos. Christian von.—Napoleon’s Midnight Re¬ 
view. 

Zeliff, Emma.—Women’s Rights. 

Zion’s Herald .—Hunting Eggs. 

Little Girl that Grew Up, The. 

Zola, Emile.—Justice for Dreyfus. 

Zug, G: B.—To W T altz with Thee. 


584 




FIRST LINE INDEX 














































































































FIRST LINE INDEX 


A 

A babe sleeps under the lilac tree. See Purple Blos¬ 
soms. ( Cornell Era.) 

A baby lying on his mother’s breast. See Man’s Pillow. 
—Browne. 

A baby on a woman’s breast. See Four Kisses, The. 

—Vickers. 

A baby once cried for the moon. See Nursery Fable, A. 
—Wall. 

A baby was sleeping. See Angel’s Whisper, The.— 
Lover. 

A baby’s boot, and a skein of wool. See Unfinished 
Still.—Anon. 

A baby’s eyes ere speech began. See Etude R^aliste 
(Baby’s Eyes, A).—Swinburne. 

A baby’s feet, like sea-shells pink. See Etude R4aliste 
(Baby’s Feet, A).—Swinburne. 

A baby’s hands, like rosebuds furled. See Etude 
Realists (Baby’s Hands, A).-—Swinburne. 

A bachelor, old and cranky. See Worse than Marriage. 

(Boston Courier.) 

A bachelor squire of no great possession. See Ask 
Mamma.—Bell. 

A bale-fire kindled in the night. See Carlyle and 
Emerson.—Schuyler. 

A ball of fire shoots through the tamarack. See 
Scarlet Tanager, The.—Benton. 

A banquet-hall in a palace; drapeiy between open 
columns. See Banquet, The.—Tincker. 

A bard here dwelt, more fat than bard beseems. See 
James Thomson.—Lyttelton. 

A barefooted child on the crossing. See City Con¬ 
trasts.—Anon. 

A barking sound the shepherd hears. See Fidelity.— 
Wordsworth. 

A basin of barley broth make, make for me. See Bar¬ 
ley Broth. (Punch.) 

A battery is needed here at this particular point. See 
Field Battery, A.—Hamilton. 

A beam of light, from the infinite depths of the mid¬ 
night sky. See Beam of Light, A.—Rooney. 

A beardless disciple of Themis rises, and thus ad¬ 
dresses the court. See Cousin Sally Dilliard.— 
Jones. 

A beautiful babe in her cradle bed lay. See Smile and 
the Sigh, The.—Johnson. 

A beautiful bird at the casement sings. See Slumber 
Song. A.—Aiken. 

A beautiful boy with forehead fair. See Good All 
Day.—Anon. 

A beautiful, delicate, fragile vase. See Mended Vase, 
The.—Sims. 

A beautiful maiden was Echo. See Story of Echo.— 
Anon. 

A bed of ashes and a half-burned brand. See Morning 
in Camp.—Bashford. 

A beggar stood at the rich man’s door. See Two 
Beggars, The.—Anon. 

A beggar through the world am I. See Beggar, The.— 
Lowell. 

A being cleaves the moonlit air. See Hans Christian 
Andersen.—Gosse. 

A Bible canvasser, meandering along the street, halted 
before a tumble-down tenement. See His Time 
for Fiddling.—Lewis. 

A big boy could stand up here. See Short Speech, A.— 
Anon. 

A big, fat boy, named Robert Simpson. See Big Bob 
Simpson.-—Dane. 

A bird has little—only a feather. See Only a Little.— 
Goodale. 

A bird in my bower. See Song.—Williams. 

A bird sat in a maple tree. See Morning Bird, The.— 
Field. 

A bird was singing to its mate. See Fate.—Har- 
rison. 

A birdie with a yellow bill. See Time to Rise.— 
Stevenson. 

A bit of crape, hanging side by side with a strip of 
satin ribbon. See Sairy Jackson’s Baby.—Anon. 

587 


A bit of ground, a smell of earth. See T6te-&-t£te.— 
Chadwick. 

A blackbird was swinging. See Naughty Crow, The. 
—Richards. 

A blazing home, a blood-soaked hearth. See Comanche. 
—Miller. 

A blight, a gloom, I know not what. See Mood, A.— 
Aldrich. 

A blind boy stood beside the loom. See Blind Weaver, 
The.—Day. 

A blind man, once upon a time. See Blind Man and 
His Candle, The.—Saxe. 

A block of marble caught the glance. See Discipline. 
—Anon. 

A blood-red ring hung round the moon. See Indian 
Maid’s Lament, The.—Logan. 

A blossom grew in lonely glen. See Flower and the 
Song, The.—Anon. 

A blue robe on their shoulder. See Seven Fiddlers, 
The.—Evans. 

A bluebird lives in yonder tree. Nee To Miguel de 
Cervantes Saavadra.—Munkittrick. 

A bluebird met a butterfly. See Beware of the Flat¬ 
terer.—Anon. 

A boat beneath a sunny sky. See Of Alice in Wonder¬ 
land.—Dodgson. 

A bobolink and a chick-a-dee. Nee Bobolink and 
Chick-a-dee, The. (St. Nicholas.) 

A boding silence reigns. See Seasons, The (Thunder¬ 
storm, The).—Thomson. 

A boil is generally very small at first and a 
fellow hardly notices it. See Speech on Boils. 
—Anon. 

A book is good company. See “Book is good com¬ 
pany, A.”—Beecher. 

A book is not merely so much printed paper and the 
binding. See Books.—Beecher. 

A book of friends, who still are friends. See Photo¬ 
graphic Album.—Ryder. 

A book of verses underneath the bough. See Ru- 
b&iy&t of Omar KhayyJm (Omar Khayyam, Sel. 
jr.). —Fitzgerald. 

A book-agent importuned James Watson. See Mer¬ 
chant and the Book-agent, The.—Anon. 

A bookkeeper in a certain large city one day. See 
Saved by a Boy.—Meyers. 

A Boston master said one day. See Reason Why, The. 
—Anon. 

A bottle tree bloometh in Winkyway land. See Bot¬ 
tle Tree, The.—Field. 

A bow-shot from her bower eaves. See Lady of 
Shalott, The.—Tennyson. 

A boy and a girl went out to play. See Terrible Time, 
A.—Denton. 

A boy; as nursery records tell. See Clever Idiot, The. 

• —Anon. 

A boy crept slyly out of school. See Little Truant, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

A boy don’t have much comfort in life anyway. See 
Boy's Complaint, A.—Anon. 

A boy drove into the city, his wagon loaded down. 
See Little Black-eyed Rebel, The.—Carleton. 

A boy had a magnet. See Idle Magnet, The.—Bel¬ 
lamy and Goodwin. 

A boy I loved sweet Sally Pine. See Cupid Peeped in 
through the Blinds.—Dillmore. 

A boy is the spirit of mischief embodied. See What is 
a Boy?—Denison. 

A boy named Peter found once in the road. See Les¬ 
son of Mercy, A.—Cary. 

A boy named Simon sojourned in a dale. See Simple 
Simon.—Morgridge. 

A boy not over eleven years old. See To Mark 
Mother’s Grave.—Anon. 

A boy strolled through a dusty road. See Tree Plant¬ 
ing.—Butts. 

A boy was set a watch to keep. See Boy and Wolf.— 
Kavanaugh. 

A boy, you say, doctor? An’ she don’t know it yet? 
See Christmas Guest, A.—Stuart. 

A brace of sinners, for no good. See Pilgrims and the 
Peas, The.—Wolcott. 



A brave 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


A brave little bird that fears not God. See Meadow 
Lark, The.—Garland. 

A brave young prince a young princess adores. See 
Essence of Opera, The.—Anon. 

A breath can fan love’s flame to burning. See Breath, 
A.—De Vere. 

A brewer in a country town. See Brown Stout.—Anon. 

A bright little boy with laughing face. See To-morrow. 
—Anon. 

A British ship at anchor lay. See Nine Suitors, The.— 
Anon. 

A broad expanse of moonlight, mantling snow. See 
Moonlight on the Campus.—Pierce. 

A broad-breasted Queen among Nations. See Boston. 
—O’Reilly. 

A broad-minded selection of noble passages. See 
“Broad-minded selection of noble passages, A.” 
—Peaslee. 

A bumblebee, yellow as gold. See Meadow Talk.— 
Leslie. 

A bunch of dry, dead leaves. See Wonder Story, A.— 
Bacon. 

A bunch of golden keys is mine. See Golden Keys.— 
Anon. 

A burning summer sun had beaten down on the prairie 
for days. See Prairie Mirage, The. ( Detroit Free 
Press.) 

A business man had purchased. See Story of a New 
Hat.—Anon. 

A busy dream, forgotten ere it fades. See Life.— 
Anon. 

A butterfly basked on a baby’s grave. See Butterfly 
on Baby’s Grave, A.—Anon. 

A butterfly, wing-weary, came to find. See Wood 
Orchid, The. {College Folio.) 

A cabin beside the dry, red road, twisting and turning. 
See I Will not Leave You Comfortless.—Anon. 

A cabin on the mountainside hid in a grassy nook. 
See Connla’s Well.—Russell. 

“A caller! Who is it?” See Flowers of the May.— 
Anon. 

A calm, delightful autumn night. See Romance, A.— 
Field. 

A candle in the night. See Wisdom.—Richardson. 

A cannibal maid and her Hottentot blade. See How 
Three Were Made One.—Peale. 

A cannibal maiden loved too well a missionary good. 
See Love and Theology.—Anon. 

A cannon-ball rolling loosely in the cannon’s mouth is 
simply a piece of harmless metal. See Lead the 
Way.—Abbott. 

A canvas-back duck, rarely roasted, between us. See 
Per Aspera ad Astra.—-Baker. 

A capital ship for an ocean trip. See Walloping Win¬ 
dow-blind, The.—Carryl. 

A captain went to Gettysburg. See Lover without 
Arms, A.—Davenport. 

A careworn widow sat alone. See Unbolted Door, The. 
—Garrett. 

A carrot and turnip grew in the same ground. See 
Boasting Pair, A.—Richards. 

A cat I sing, of famous memory. See Caialectic 
Monody, A. ( Cruikshank’s Omnibus.) 

A cat or dog my First may be. See Madrigal.— 
Sabine. 

A cattle dealer stopped at the house of an Arkansas 
farmer. See Arkansas Farmer, The.—Anon. 

A century ago on sterile land. See First Battle of the 
Revolution, The.—Anon. 

A century since, out in the West. See Betty Zane.— 
English. 

A certain artist, I’ve forgot his name. See Spectacles, 
or Helps to Read.—Byrom. 

A certain colored brother had been holding forth to his 
little flock. See Ship of Faith, The.—Anon. 

A certain friend of mine, whose daily praise. See 
Masks.—Burton. 

A certain man had the good fortune to possess a goose. 
See Goose with the Golden Eggs, The.—ADsop. 

A certain man had two sons. See Prodigal Son, The. 
(Bible.) 

A certain pasha, dead five thousand years. See 
Turkish Legend, A.—Aldrich. 

A certain professor of elocution was announced to give 
an entertainment. See She Wanted to Learn 
Elocution.—Anon. 

A chaplain in our army. See Tom, the Drummer-boy. 
—Anon. 

A charming, delightful day! See Perfect Day, A.— 
Fitch. 

“A charming prospect, this, Master Coffin, but rather 
too much poetry.” See Pilot, The (Capture of the 
Whale, The).—Cooper. 


A charming woman, I’ve heard it said. See Charming 
Woman, A.—Saxe. 

A cheer and salute for the admiral, and here’s to the 
captain bold. See Men behind the Guns, The.— 
Rooney. 

A cheery little sprite I know. See By and By.—Boy- 
lan. 

A chicken is beautiful, and round, and full of cunning 
ways. See Chickens.—Hamilton. 

A chieftain, to the Highlands bound. See Lord 
Ullin’s Daughter.—Campbell. 

A child, as from school he was bounding by. See Only 
a Shaving.—Meredith. 

A child beside a rivulet. See Bring Back My Flowers. 
—Larcom. 

A child looked up in the summer sky. See Water- 
bloom, The.—Thaxter. 

A child most infantine. See Child of Twelve, A.—■ 
Shelley. 

A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with 
full hands. See Song of Myself (Leaves of Grass). 
—Whitman. 

A child should always say what’s true. See Whole 
Duty of Children.—Stevenson. 

A child sleeps under a rose-bush fair. See Rose-bush, 
The.—Caldwell. 

A child was singing at his play. See Hugo’s “Child at 
Play.”—Field. 

A child’s a plaything for an hour. See Parental Rec¬ 
ollections.—Lamb. 

A child’s round face in the tongs. See Face in the 
Tongs, A.—Larcom. 

A child-worlck, yet a wondrous world no less. See 
Child-world. The.—Riley. 

A choir of bright beauties in spring did appear. See 
Lady’s Song, The.—Dryden. 

A chronic distrust of the people pervades the book- 
educated classes. See Scholar in a Republic, The 
(Distrust of the People).—Phillips. 

A citizen, for recreation’s sake. See Citizen and the 
Thieves, The.—Anon. 

A City Auctioneer, one Samuel Stubbs. See Auctioneer 
and his Lawyer, The.—Smith. 

A city of young life astir for fame. See Oxford in 
1845.—Alexander. 

A clever French author made a book. See Sir Walter 
Scott in Westminster.—Hay. 

A cloud came over a land of leaves. See Cloud, The.— 
Anon. 

A cloud lay cradled near the setting sun. See Evening 
Cloud, The.—Wilson. 

A cloud of cinder-dotted smoke, whose billows rise 
and swell. See Fireman O’Rafferty.-—Lincoln. 

A cloud possessed the hollow field. See High Tide at 
Gettysburg, The.—Thompson. 

A cold coiled Tine of mottled lead. See Massasauga, 
The.—Garland. 

A collegiate education has this distinction and privi¬ 
lege. See “Collegiate education has this dis¬ 
tinction and privilege, A.’’—Woolsey. 

A comparison has been drawn between the events of the 
Revolution. See Murder of Lovejoy, The.— 
Phillips. 

A concert once by Mr. Spring. See Concert in the 
Wood, The.—Anon. 

“A conjunction connects the words or sentences be¬ 
tween which it stands. ” See Temptation Re¬ 
sisted.—Anon. 

A corn-stalk glanced down at some grasses. See Les¬ 
son, A.—Anon. 

A corrupt public sentiment produces dishonesty. See 
Public Dishonesty.—Beecher. 

A cottage hidden in the wood. See Whittier Alphabet, 
A.—Whittier. 

A cottage home with sloping lawn, and trellised vines 
and flowers. See Ruined Merchant. The.—Eager. 

A cottager leaned whispering by her hives. See On 
the Borders of Cannock Chase.—Ingelow. 

A counsel in the “Common Pleas.” See Farmer and 
the Counsellor, The.—Smith. 

A country boy by the old stone wall. See Sam.— 
Hardy. 

A country curate visiting his flock. See Lucky Call, 
The.—Anon. 

A country fellow and his son, they tell. See Country¬ 
men and the Ass, The.—Byrom. 

A country lad as he lay one day. See Acorn and the 
Pumpkin, The.—Anon. 

A country life is sweet! See Useful Plough, The.— 
Anon. 

A country maid was walking along with a can of milk 
upon her head. See Country Maid and Her Milk- 
can, The.—ASsop. 


588 








FIRST LINE INDEX 


A family 


A country meeting-house. A midsummer Sabbath. 
See Swallowing a Fly.—Talmage. 

A country schoolmarm, the other day, while working 
an example on the board. See Schoolboy’s 
Apples, The.—Anon. 

A country schoolmaster, height Jonas Bell. See 
Country Schoolmaster, The.—Anon. 

A country squire, of greater wealth than wit. See 
Country Squire, The.—Yriarte. 

A country that draws fifty feet of water. See Holland. 
—Butler. 

A cow is an animal with four legs on the under side. 
See Laura’s Composition on the Cow.—Anon. 

A cow lived in a pleasant field. See Mrs. Brindle’s 
Cowslip Feast.—Anon. 

A crash of boughs,—one through them breaking! See 
Lovers.—I ngelow. 

A crazy bookcase, placed before. See Epilogue to the 
Breakfast-table Series.—Holmes. 

A Creole boy from the West Indies brought. See 
Choosing a Profession.—Lamb. 

A cricket sang on the wide old hearth. See Aftermath. 
_—Banta. 

A crimson rosebud into beauty breaking. See Roses.— 
Anon. 

A crinkling, sun-specked stream, some kindly shade. 
See Izaak Walton’s Prayer.—James. 

A critic is now aware that his personal taste has no 
value. See “Critic is now aware,” etc.—Taine. 

A cross-eyed man in a long linen duster. See Irre¬ 
pressible, The.—Anon. 

A crowd of newsboys had gathered. See Snorkey’s 
Version of the Flood and the Ark.—-Anon. 

A crown of flowers rare I bring. See May Celebration. 
—Kavanaugh. 

A cuckoo sat on a tree and sang. See Song of Summer, 
A.—Anon. 

A cunning fish was nibbling sly. See Fatal Bait, A.— 
Kavanaugh. 

A cunning fox, caught in a trap. See Fox who Lost 
his Tail, The.—Kavanaugh. 

A cup fell in love with a saucer trim. See Rejected.— 
Anon. 

“A cup for hope!’’ she said. See Three Seasons.— 
Rossetti. 

A cup of coffee, eggs, and rolls. See Book-hunter, The. 
Sherman. 

A curate once courted a nice little miss. See After 
Grace.—Anon. 

A cypress-bough, and a rose-wreath sweet. See 
Death’s Jest Book (Athulf’s Song).—Beddoes. 

A dainty bit of satin. See My Christmas Card.— 
Fowler. 

A dainty, delicate swallow-feather. See Chimney Nest, 
The.—Dodge. 

A Danbury man named Reubens. See Anger and 
Enumeration.-—Bailey. 

A dandelion sprang on the lawn. See All Yellow.— 
Anon. 

A daring prince, of the realm Rangg Dhune. See Ses¬ 
sion with Uncle Sidney, A (Daring Prince, The).— 
Riley. 

A dark and dreary night; people nestling in their beds. 
See Martin Chuzzlewit (Wild Night at Sea, A).— 
Dickens. 

A darkened hut outlined against the sky. See Sunrise 
of the Poor, The.—Wilson. 

A day and then a week passed by. See Cardinal Bird, 
The.—Gallagher. 

A day of clouds and darkness! a day of wrath and woe! 
See Martyrdom of the Archbishop of Paris, The.— 
Neale. 

A day of golden beauty! Through the night. See Day 
of the Indian Summer, A.—Whitman. 

A day or two ago during a lull in business. See Two 
Boot-blacks, The.—Anon. 

A day will come, when you, France, you, Russia, you, 
Italy. See United States of Europe, The.—Hugo. 

A dead Soul lay in the light of day. See Judgment.— 
Channing-Stetson. 

A deadly feud existed. See Struggle on the Pass, The. 
—Anon. 

A dear little girl was Bessie Bo Peep. See Bessie Bo 
Peep of Engle Steepe.—Handford. 

A dear little girl with her brain in a whirl. See Spelling 
“Kitten.”—Anon. 

A dear little maid came skipping out. See Old Saw, 
An.—Thaxter. 

A dear old deacon in my State was cursed with a high 
license pulpit. See Deacon’s Sunday-school Ser¬ 
mon, The.—Ambrose. 

A death bed’s a detector of the heart. See Nigh 
Thoughts.—Young. 


A debtor is a man of mark. See Debtor, The.—Anon. 

A delicate pinch! Oh, how it tingles up. See Snuff.— 
Southey. 

A delightful change from the town’s abode. See Barn¬ 
yard Melodies.—Brooks. 

A despot gazed on sunset clouds. See Laurel-seed, 
The.—Horne. 

A dew-drop came, with a spark of flame. See Origin 
of the Opal.—Anon. 

A dewdrop falling on the wild sea wave. See Dew- 
drop, The.—Trench. 

A diagnosis of our hist’ry proves. See Rejected 
National Hymns, The.—Newell. 

A dinner party, coffee, tea. See Breakfast.-—Lamb. 

A dispute once arose between the Wind and the Sun. 
See Wind and the Sun, The.—.Esop. 

A distant gun announced that the boats had started. 
See Oxford Boat Race.—Coxe. 

A district school, not far away. See Smack in School, 
The.—Palmer. 

A dog made his bed in a manger, and lay snarling. 
See Fables.—,Esop. 

A dog once took between his teeth. See Dog and His 
Shadow, The.—Kavanaugh. 

A donkey lay him down to sleep. See Donkey’s 
Dream, The.—Anon. 

A donkey saw a war-horse bold. See Decorated Don¬ 
key, The.—Anon. 

A donkey whose talent for burden was wondrous. See 
Donkey and His Panniers, The.—Moore. 

A don’t object at all to war. See Exclusive’s Broken 
Idol, The.— {Punch.) 

A downcast, wretched sport am I. See Appeal to the 
Goddess, An.—Ybarra. 

A dramatist declared he had got. See Last Resort, 
The.—Halpin. 

A dream I had in the dead of night. See Tiger Bay.— 
Buchanan. 

A dream of beauty, dazzling bright. See Popping the 
Question.—Jones. 

A dreamer sat beneath a vine. See True Life.—Gilder- 
sleeve. 

A Dresden shepherdess was one day. See In a China 
Shop.—Heilman. 

A dress suit of faultless cut. See How Mr. Smiggles 
Went to a Public Dinner.—Turner. 

A drop fell on the apple-tree. See Summer Shower.—■ 
Dickinson. 

A drowsy drone; a garden sweet. See Old and the 
New, The.—Anon. 

A dryad’s home was once the tree. See On Sivori’s 
Violin.—Osgood. 

A dubious, strange, uncomprehended life. See Char¬ 
acter and a Question, A. ( Spectator , The.) 

A duck who had got such a habit of stuffing. See 
Notorious Glutton, The.—Taylor. 

A dude from Chicago went north one July. See Dude, 
A.—Smiley. 

A duel was lately fought in Texas by Alexander Shott 
and John S. Nott. See Mysterious Duel, A.— 

( Harper's Weekly.) 

A dull red line thro’ a gray-ribbed sky. See Winter* 
Dawn.—P. 

A dungeon’s glooms are round the maid, and the dark- 
browed men are nigh. See Joan of Arc in Prison. 
—Case. 

A Dutchman’s first experience with the ague. See 
Schake und Agers.—Brown. 

A dying buttercup cried to the sun. See Lesson, A.— 
Anon. 

A face of a summer ago. See Fate.—Wright. 

A faerv dwells in a cove by the sea. See Ladye’s Rock, 
The.—Armstrong. 

A fagot, a fagot, go fetch for the fire, son! See Grey 
Wolf, The.—Ramal. 

A fair lady once with her young lover walked. See 
Love’s Warning.—Kenealy. 

A fair little girl sat under a tree. See Good-night and 
Good-morning.—Houghton. 

A fair maid sat in her bower door. See Fause Lover, 
The.—Anon. 

A fair witch crept to a young man’s side. See Witch- 
bride, The.—Allingham. 

A fair-sized audience assembled last night. See Lec¬ 
ture by the New Male Star.—Gardener. 

A fairy has found a new fern. See New Fern, A.— 
“A.” 

A fairy was mending a daisy. See Wounded Daisy, 
The.—Anon. 

A fallacy lies at the root of the labor question. See 
Idleness a Crime.—Carrington. 

, A family of some pretensions, living on Nelson street. 
See Irrepressible Boy, The.—Anon. 


589 






A famous 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


A famous hen’s my story’s theme. See Hen, The.— 
Claudius. 

A famous king would build a church. See Two Church- 
Builders, The.—Saxe. 

A famous man is Robin Hood. See Rob Roy’s Grave. 
-—W ordsworth. 

A fancy parlor lamp am I, with decorated shade. See 
Parlor Lamp, The.—McLoughlin. 

A farmer once to London went. See Farmer’s Blun¬ 
der, The.—Anon. 

A farmer traveling with his load. See Lucky Horse¬ 
shoe, The.—Fields. 

A farmer went with his little son into the field to see if 
the corn were ripe. See Ear of Corn, The.—Bel¬ 
lamy and Goodwim 

A farmer, who owned a fine orchard, one day. See 
Good Rule, A.—Cary. 

A fashionable woman in a fashionable pew. See 
Fashionable. (Merchant Traveler.) 

A father and mother, with their two children. See 
Better Land, The.—Anon. 

A father said unto his hopeful son. See Pass.—Ware. 

A father sat by the chimney-post. See Good and 
Better.—Anon. 

A favorite picture rises up before me. See Millais’s 
“Huguenots.”—Anon. 

A fellah once told me that another fellah wrote a book 
before he was born. See Lord Dundreary on 
“Pwoverbs.”—Anon 

A fellow in a market town. See Razor Seller, The.— 
Wolcott. 

“A fellow’s mother,” said Fred the wise. See Fellow’s 
Mother, A.-—Anon. 

A fever scorched my body, fired my brain! See Fever 
Dream, A.—Harney. 

A few days afterward the Light of the Household went 
forth. See Basket of Flowers, A.—Stebbins. 

A few days ago a Boston girl, who had been attending 
the School of Philosophy. See Awfully Lovely 
Philosophy.—Anon. 

A few days ago I was returning home and had taken 
my seat in a train. See About a Brakeman.— 
Waite. 

A few days ago, Mr. Grumbledorf came home. See 
Dinner Discussion, A.—Anon. 

A few days ago there went out from our Brooklyn 
Navy Yard. See Wreck of the Huron.—Talmage. 

A few days ago young Gurley, whose father lives on 

C- street. See Stage-struck Hero, The.— 

Anon. 

A few evenings since, a Mr. Slocum was reading an 
account of a dreadful accident. See “Paper Don’t 
Say, The.”—Anon. 

A few faded rose-leaves. See Senior and the Rose, 
The.—Soule. 

A few months ago. See Song of a Summer Stream, 
The.—Havergal. 

A few months ago a daughter of a Nassau man. See 
Intensely Utter. ( Albany Chronicle.) 

A few sdeps, a few sdeps. See Charge of de “Dutch 
Brigade,” The.—Connolly. 

A few Sundays ago 1 stood on a hill in Washington. 
See Farmer and the Cities, The (Home in the 
Government, The).—Grady. 

A few suns more, and the Indian will live only in his¬ 
tory. See Indian Eloquence.—Anon. 

A few years ago my friend, Mr. Alexander Ireland. 
See Books and Libraries.—Lowell. 

A few years since, when the subject of temperance. 
See Squire’s Pledge, The.—Anon. 

A fickle heart! Let subtler poets sing. See Fickle 
Heart, A.—Carryl. 

A fiddler asked a lady once. See Witty Retort, A.— 
Anon. 

A fiend once met a humble man. See Poor Man and 
the Fiend, The.—Maclellan. 

A fiery sun throws shafts of red into a room of steel. 
See King’s Decree, The.—Shoemaker. 

A fig for St. Denis of France! See fjt. Patrick of Ire¬ 
land, My Dear!—Maginn. 

A figure all dirty and ragged. See Song of the Drunk¬ 
ard.—Hargreaves. 

A fire burned in the far recess of the cave; and over it 
was a small caldron. See Last Days of Pompeii 
(Witch’s Cavern, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

A flame went flitting through the wood. See Scarlet 
Tanager, The.—Mason. 

A flash of harmless lightning. See Humming-bird, 
The.—Tabb. 

A flash of light across the night. See Ulric Dahlgren. 
—Sherwood. 

A flash of rose in the east and west. See Springtime.— 
Griffin. 


A fleet with flags arrayed. See Ballad of the French 
Fleet, A.—Longfellow. 

A flight of fancy like a gleam. See Love’s Course.— 
Chapman. 

A floating, a floating. See Myth, A.—Kingsley. 

A flock of merry singing birds were sporting in the 
grove. See O’Linzoln Family, The.—Flagg. 

A flock of sheep that leisurely pass by. See To Sleep. 
—Wordsworth. 

A fly observed a lamb one day. See Fly and the 
Lamb.—Kavanaugh. 

A flying-fish, tired of her lot. See Flying-fish, The.— 
Florian. 

A fool, a fool!—I met a fool i’ th’ forest. See As You 
Like It.—Shakespeare. 

A fool there was, and he wrote a theme. See Literary 
Vampire, The. (Harvard Lampoon.) 

A foolish little maiden bought a foolish little bonnet. 
See What the Choir Sang about the New Bonnet. 
—Morrison. 

A footstep struck her ear. See Lady of the Lake, The 
(James Fitz-James and Ellen).—-Scott. 

A forethought of the fated reign of peace. See Battle- 
call of Anti-Christ, The.—Crofton. 

A form not always dark, but ever dread. See Evil 
Thought.—Rogd. 

A fox, in life’s extreme decay. See Fox at the Point 
of Death, The.—Gay. 

A fcjx was trotting on one day. See Sour Grapes.— 
Anon. 

A fragment of a rainbow bright. See Rainbow, The. 
—Keble. 

A! Fredome is a nobill thing! See Freedom.—Bar¬ 
bour. 

A Frenchman once—so runs a certain ditty. See 
Frenchman and the Flea Powder, The.—Anon. 

A Frenchman once, who was a merry wight. See 
Frenchman and the Rats, The.—Anon. 

A Frenchman’s idea of the modus operandi. See Eve 
and the Serpent.—Anon. 

A friend I met, some half-hour since. See New-made 
Honor.—Barham. 

A friend of mine, seeking for objects of charity. See 
Dying Boy, The.—Gough. 

A friend of mine was shaving. See Character Stories. 
—Anon. 

A friend stands at the door. See Psalm for New 
Year’s Eve, A (New Year’s Gifts, The).—Craik. 

A frog vas a-singing von day, in der brook. See “Don’d 
Feel too Big!”—Adams. 

A frosty chill was in the air. See “I Will Help You.” 
—Dixey. 

A gallant fleet sailed out to sea. See DeRoberval 
(Gallant Fleet, The).—Hunter-Duvar. 

A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! See My Gar¬ 
den.—Brown. 

A garret grows a human thing.—See Psalm-book in 
the Garret. The.—Taylor. 

A Gascon, who had long pursued. See Culprit and the 
Judge, The.—Smith. 

A gay little fly on a bright summer’s morn. See 
House Full of Wine, The.—Barker. 

A gay young spark who long had sighed. See Law¬ 
yer’s Strategem, The.—Anon. 

A generous tar, who long had been. See Sweets of 
Liberty, The.—Anon. 

A generation has passed since Daniel Webster’s death. 
See Webster as an Orator and Statesman.—Bartlett. 

A generation which vaunts its descent from the foun¬ 
ders of the Republic. See Royalty of Virtue, 
The.—Potter. 

A gentle Knight was pricking on the plaine. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Una and the Red Cross 
Knight).—Spenser. 

A gentle squire would gladly entertain. See Domestic 
Tutor’s Position, The.—Hall. 

A gentleman. Mr. President [or Mr. Chairman], speak¬ 
ing of Caesar's benevolent disposition. See Pass¬ 
ing of the Rubicon, The.—Knowles. 

A gentleman of courtly air. See Ballad of the Colors, 
The.—English. 

A gentleman once said to a physician. See Do Your 
Best.—Anon. 

A gentleman possessed a favorite spaniel. See Parson 
and the Spaniel. The.—Anon. 

A gentleman riding in an eastern railway car. See 
Inquiring Friend, An.—Anon. 

A gentleman, speaking of Caesar’s benevolent dispo¬ 
sition. See Passing of the Rubicon.—Knowles. 

A giant came to me when I was young. See Lost 
Genius, The.—Piatt. 

A giddy young girl was Victoria Grey. See Victoria 
Grey.—Hall. 


590 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


A is 


A gingham apron—please don’t stare. See One Sum¬ 
mer.—J. M. L. 

A girl is standing with careless feet. See Air Castles.— 
Bradner. 

A girl, who has so many wilful ways. See Her Like¬ 
ness.—Craik. 

A glamour’s thrown ’round brave men’s deeds. See 
Loyal Hearts.—Parker. 

A glorious tree is the old gray oak. See Oak, The.— 
Hill. 

A glowing flush was on her cheek. See Dairy Maid, 
A.—Anon. 

A golden bee a-cometh. See Merry Bee, A.—Skip- 
sey. 

A golden gillyflower to-day. See Gillyflower of Gold, 
The.—Morris. 

A golden glory lies along the hills. See In Summer¬ 
time.—Collier. 

A golden twinkle in the wayside grass. See Glow¬ 
worm and Star.—Piatt. 

A goldsmith stood within his stall. See Goldsmith’s 
Daughter, The.—Uhland. 

A good deal of interest was felt in the case of Gunn vs. 
Barclay. See Gunn’s Leg.—Anon. 

“A good, great name!’ ’ So speak the bells. See Good 
Great Name, A.—Willard. 

A good man suffers but to gain. See Captivity. 
The (Good Man Suffers but to Gain, A).—Gold¬ 
smith. 

A good memory’s a blessing, isn’t it, Bones? See How 
' to Cure a Bad Memory.—Anon. 

A good old-fashioned Christmas with the logs upon the 
hearth. See Christmas Day.—Brotherton. 

A good sword and a trusty hand! See Song of the 
Cornish Men.—Hawker. 

A good that never satisfies the mind. See Human 
F railty.—Drummond. 

A good time is coming—I wish it were here. See When 
Santa Claus Comes.—Anon. 

A good wife rose from her bed one morn. See Love 
Lightens Labor.—Anon. 

A goodly host one day was mine. See Mine Host of 
“The Golden Apple.”—Westwood. 

A governess wanted—well fitted to fill. See Wanted 
—A Governess.—Anon. 

A government cannot have too much of the kind of 
activity. See Liberty in Government.—Mill. 

A gown of haze hung round the sleepy sun. See Pot¬ 
ter’s Field, The.—Vickers. 

A grace though melancholy, manly too. See In Re¬ 
membrance of the Hon. Ernest Villiers.—Taylor. 

A grain of corn an infant’s hand. See Grain of Corn, A. 
—Anon. 

A grand crash—a shower of flying splinters. See They 
Met in Death. (Detroit Free Press.') 

A grandmother with placid face and locks of soft, white 
hair. See Grandmother’s Hour with the Hymns. 
—Lee. 

A granite cliff on either shore. See Brooklyn Bridge, 
The.—Proctor. 

A grasshopper once had a game of tag. See Game of 
Tag, A.—AnoQ. 

A grasshopper sat in an oak tree green. See Grass¬ 
hopper, The. ( Independent.) 

A grassy mound, a simple stone. See Unknown.— 
Gardner. 

A great deal has been said and written. See Elocution. 
—Gillespie. 

A great deal of talent is lost in the world. See Moral 
Courage.—Smith. 

A great law chief, whom God nor demon scares. See 
Sailor Boy at Prayers, The.—Pindar. 

A great life, dedicated to the welfare of the nation. See 
Grant, the Soldier and Statesman.—McKinley. 

A great man! ay, the greatest man, with Washington 
and Lincoln. See Great Man, A.—Long. 

A great man is always willing to be little. See Com¬ 
pensation (“Great man,” etc.).—Emerson. 

A great many puzzling things come up in the course of 
daily life. See Was it Right?— (Texas Siftings.) 

A great mastery—like that of Wellington or Bismarck. 
See Masters of the Situation.—Fields. 

A great, still Shape, alone. See Ireland.—Piatt. 

A green silk frock her comely shoulders clad. See 
Britannia’s Pastora's (Description of Walla, The). 
—Browne. 

A grey and tiny mouse. See Mouse. A.—Denton. 

A grim old king, whose blood leapt madly when the 
trumpets brayed. See Dying King, The.—Smith. 

A groan from a dim lit upper room. See Night Picture, 
A.—Cranch. 

A group of merry girls and boys. See Thankful Chil¬ 
dren.—Richards. 


A gun in the parlor, a kite in the hall. See There’s a 
Boy in the House.—Anon. 

A gun is heard at the dead of night. See Race for Life, 
A. —Molloy. 

A gu«t of wind whistled around the little house. See 
For Her Sake.—Griffith. 

A gypsy girl! Well I do vow. See Gipsy Fortune¬ 
teller, The.—Anon. 

“A gypsy! I.ow-born gypsy!’’ See Gypsy Bride, The. 
—Banks. 

A half-reclining form. See Summer Girl, The.— 
Grover. 

A halibut sang to his lady-love. See Halibut in Love, 
The.—Anon. 

A handful of moss from the woodside. See Pine Tree, 
The.—Anon. 

A happy bit hame this auld world would be. See We 
Are Brethren—Nicoll. 

A happy day at Whitsuntide. See Castle Ruins, The 
—Barnes. 

A happy mother stalk of corn. See Baby Corn.—Anon. 

A hard, stern man upon a sick-bed lay. See Little 
Reader, The.—“Olive Leaf.” 

A hard-working, industrious, God-fearing man. See 
Physician’s Story, A.—Munro. 

A harder lesson to learne continence. See Faerie 
Queene.The (Phaedriaand the Idle Lake).—Spenser. 

A harebell hung its wilful head. See Foolish Harebell, 
The.—Macdonald. 

A heap of bare and splintery crags. See Appledore.— 
Lowell. 

A heavier yoke than that the British king placed upon 
the neck. See New Declaration of Independence, A. 
—Fisk. 

A herald am I from the Land of Dreams. See Land of 
Dreams, The.—Sargent. 

A hermit there was, who lived in a grot. See Way to 
be Happy, The.—-Anon. 

A high class without duties to do is like a tree planted 
on precipices. See Past and Present (Aristocracy). 
—Carlyle. 

A Highland boy! why call him so? See Blind High¬ 
land Boy, The.—Wordsworth. 

A Highland family of some dignity. See Bobby.— 
Chambers. 

A Hindoo died; a happy thing to do. See Hindoo’s 
Death, The.—-Birdseye. 

A holy man returned from Palestine? See Palmer, The. 
—Proudfit. 

A home in a quiet country place. See Empty Nest, The. 
—Miller. 

A hoof-beat clatter down the road, a hundred years ago. 
See Joshua of 1776, The.—Rose. 

A hope risen like the Star in the East, has fixed the 
gaze. See Advent of the Ballot Reform, The.— 
Cleveland. 

A hop-toad came out. See Mr. Hop-toad.—Richards. 

A horseshoe nailed, for luck, upon a mast. See 
Augury.—Thomas. 

A host of angels flying. See Death of an Infant.— 
Smits. 

A house of sleepers—I alone unblest. See Insomnia.—• 
Thomas. 

A human form has many weaknesses. See Success.— 
Taylor. 

A hum-m-m! fellow-citizens. See Oration on the 
Crisis.—Anon. 

A hundred, a thousand to me; even so. See In the 
Round Tower at Jhanse.—Rossetti. 

A hundred noble wishes fill my heart. See Justice.— 
Richardson. 

A hundred years ago, our fathers announced this sub¬ 
lime declaration. See Plea for the Old South 
Church, Boston.—Phillips. 

A hundred years ago this morn. See Robin Burns.— 

Massey. 

A hundred years have rolled away. See Hundred 
Years Ago, A.—Anon. 

A hundred years upon the stair. See Death of the 
Clock, The.—Marsh. 

A hungry spider made a web. See Shining Web, The. 
— Anon. 

A huntsman, bearing his gun a-field. See Crow’s Chil¬ 
dren, The—Cary. 

A hurry of hoofs in a village street. See Paul Revere’s 
Ride.—Longfellow 

A is for adder. See Temperance Alphabet.—Anon. 

A is for Anthony Hope. See A B C of Literature.— 
Wells. 

A is for apt little Annie. See Some of the Children.— 
Bellows. 

A is for the apple-blossom. See Alphabet of Summer, 
The.—Dana. 


591 




A is 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


A is the maid of winning charm. See And the Ham¬ 
mock Swung On.—Grey. 

A jet of smoke issued from the bush. See It is Never 
too Late to Mend (Lark in the Gold Fields, The). 
—Reade. 

A jingle of bells and a crunch of snow. See'Ballade of 
Justification.—Carryl. 

A jolly dear soul is old Saint Nick. See Saint Nick. 
<Boston Budget.) 

A jolly fat friar loved liquor good store. See Gluggity 
Glug.—Colman. 

A jolly little army—I seem to hear their feet. See 
* ‘ Here We Are!’ ’—Butts. 

A jolly old fellow, whose hair’s snow white. See 
Santa Claus.—Anon. 

A jolly old sow once lived in a sty. See Three Little 
Pigs, The.—Scott-Gatty. 

A jolly party in a car. See Baby’s Dead.—Kavanaugh. 

A journeying to Emmaus. See Toward Emmaus.— 
Clark. 

A judge of one of the inferior courts of Illinois. See 
Charge to the Jury.—Anon. 

A jury of my countrymen have found me guilty. See 
Meagher’s Defense.—Meagher. 

A king is great, and the gods are high. See Sin of Sir 
Pertab Singh, The.—Pollock. 

A king lived long ago. See Pippa Passes (King, A).— 
Browning. 

A king of France upon a day. See King of France and 
the Fair Lady, A.—Wolcott. 

A king should listen when his subjects speak. See 
Father’s Curse, The.—Hugo. 

A kiss in the dark—ha! ha! nothing like it! See Kiss 
in the Dark, A.—Thompson. 

A kiss is not like the poems at all. See Kiss, A.—L. 

A kiss when I wake in the morning. See Mamma’s 
Kisses.—Anon. 

A kitten has no work to do. See Contentment.—Pea¬ 
body. 

A knight and a lady once met in a grove. See Sym¬ 
pathy.—Heber. 

A knight of gallant deeds. See Romaunt of the Page, 
The.—Browning. 

A knight there was, and that a worthy man. See 
Canterbury Tales, The (Knight, The)'.—Chaucer. 

A lad perched in the upper story of a barn. See False 
Kiss, The.—Anon. 

A ladder from the land of light. See Sunbeam, The.— 
Tabb. 

A ladder life is called. See Life is a Ladder.—Anon. 

A lady asked one of the children in her Sunday-school 
class. See Scripture Questions.—Anon. 

A lady declared that she never could see how the men 
could all smoke. SeeRemarkableLongevity.—Anon. 

A lady on one of the sugar plantations down South. 
See Good Measure.—Anon. 

A lady red upon the hill. See Waking Year, The.— 
Dickinson. 

A lady so fine came out of the woods. See Miss Willow. 
—Kennedy. 

A lady stands beside the silver lake. See Lake Sara¬ 
toga.—Saxe. 

A lake and a fairy boat. See Song for Music.—Hood. 

A land of settled government. See Land of Lands, The. 
—Tennyson. 

A lane of elms in June. See Forby Sutherland.—Mc- 
Crae. 

A large Spanish ship-of-war was en route from Spain to 
a port in the West Indies. See English Buccaneer, 
The.—Anon. 

A lark lived in a field of corn. See Lark and Her 
Young Ones, The.—Kavanaugh. 

A lark sprang up to meet the dawn. See Inspiration.— 
Lefevre. 

A late lark twitters from the quiet skies. See Mar- 
garitae Sorori.—Henley. 

A lawyer of Brittany, once on a time. See How the 
Lawyers Got a Patron Saint.—Saxe. 

A lawyer there was, whom I’ll call Mr. Clay. See War¬ 
rantee Deed, The.—Anon. 

A lazy girl who liked to live in comfort and do nothing. 
See New Fairy Story, A.—Labaulaye. 

A lazy lolling sort. See Dunciad, The.—Pope. 

A lesson in itself sublime. See Lesson Worth En¬ 
shrining, A.—Anon. 

A letter from my love to-day! See Ballad of Hell, A.— 
Davidson. 

A levee, as usual. Good day. See Sudden Fortune, 
A.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

A life of struggle, grief, and pain. See To a Poet Who 
Died of Want.—Uhland. 

A life on the ocean wave. See Life on the Ocean Wave, 
A.—Sargent. 


A light is out in Italy. See Mazzini.—Redden. 

A lighter scarf of richer fold. See Baby Zulma’s 
Christmas Carol.—Requier. 

A Limerick Irishman named Dennis, addicted to 
strong drink. See How Dennis Took the Pledge. 
—Anon. 

A line in long array where they wind betwixt green 
islands. See Cavalry Crossing a Ford.—Whitman. 

A line of light! it is the inland sea. See Mare Mediter- 
raneum.—Nichol. 

A lion cub, of sordid mind. See Lion and the Cub, 
The.—Gay. 

A literature, embodying the romance of the whole revo¬ 
lutionary and ante-revolutionary history. See 
Value of Literature to the Union.—Choate. 

A little basket cradle-bed. See Life.—Cowan. 

A little bird came whispering. See Little Bird’s Story, 
A.-—Denton. 

A little bird flew my window by. See Over the Hills 
and Far Away.—Craik. 

A little bird once met another bird. See Wooing.— 
Soule. 

A little bird sang in the dead of the night. See Song 
in the Night, The.—Buckham. 

A little bird sat in a cherry tree. See Gunner and the 
Bird, The.—Anon. 

A little bird sat on the edge of her nest. See Anxiety 
—-Macdonald. 

A little bird with feathers brown. See Little Bird, 
The.—Anon. i 

“A little bit queer”—my Mary! See Sent Back by 
the Angels.—Langbridge. 

A little blind girl wandering. See Brook, The.— 
Lord. 

A little boat in a cave. See Ranger.—-Anon. 

A little boy got out of bed. See Cock-a-doodle-doo. 
—Anon. 

A little boy had sought the pump. See To Whom Shall 
We Give Thanks?—Wade. 

A little boy in our street, I will not tell his name. 
See No Stockings to Wear.—Anon. 

A little boy named Thomas, ate. See Remorseful 
Cakes, The.—Field. 

A little boy once played so loud. See Extremes.— 
Riley. 

A little boy or girl coming late to school. See Things 
that I Do not Like to See.—Rook. 

A little boy sat at his mother’s knees, by the long 
western window. See Blackberry-bush, The.— 
Thaxter. 

A little boy was dreaming. See Little Dreamer, The. 
—Anon. 

A little boy who, strange to say. See Dappledun.— 
Cary. 

A little boy with crumbs of bread. See Rook and the 
Sparrows, The.—Lamb. 

A little brown bird sat on a stone. See Little Brown 
Bird, A.—Anon. 

A little brown birdie sat up in a tree. See Birds and 
the Children, The.—Sullivan. 

A little brown seed in the furrow. See Little Brown 
Seed in the Furrow, The.—Benham. 

A little chick one day. See Chicken’s Mistake, The.— 
Cary. 

A little child, a little meek-faced, quiet, village child. 
See Voices at the Throne, The.—Westwood. 

A little child I am indeed. See Little Efforts.—Anon. 

A little child lay on his bed. See Dying Child, The.— 
Greenwell. 

A little child one winter night. See Moon and the 
Child, The.—Jacque. 

A little cloud went slowly sailing. See Little Cloud 
Went Sailing, A.—Anon. 

A little crib beside the bed. See What is Life.—Anon. 

A little dinner party was in progress down below. 
See Cause and Effect.—Anon. 

A little dog I used to know. See'Spotty.—Anon. 

A little downy chicken one day. See Chicken’s Mis¬ 
take, The.—Cary. 

A little elbow leans upon your knee. See Tired Moth¬ 
ers.—Smith. 

A little face there was. See In Rama.—Townsend. 

A little fair soul that knew no sin. See Little Fair 
Soul. The.—Smedley. 

A little fairy comes at night. See Queen Mab.—Hood. 

A little farther on there is a brook. See Brooklet, The. 
—Simms. 

A little flower so lowly grew. See Lowly Life, The.— 
Massey. 

A little girl, accustomed to play. See Throwing 
Kisses.—Anon. 

A little girl am I, but yet I’m not too small. See 
Little Child Shall Lead Them, A.—Willis. 


592 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


A man 


A little girl one day, in the month of May. See Story 
of the Morning-glory Seed, The.—Eytinge. 

A little girl, with a happy look. See Little Children, 
Love One Another.—Fanny. 

A little gray hill-glade, close-turfed, withdrawn. See 
Marsyas.—Roberts. 

A little House of Life. See In Littles.—Oannett. 

A little kingdom I possess. See My Kingdom.— 
Alcott. 

A little knight and little maid. See In Fairy-land.— 
Larcom. 

A little lass with golden hair. See Lesson, A.—Anon. 

A little learning is a dangerous thing. See Essay on 
Criticism, An.—Pope. 

A little learning, scattered o’er. See Way of It, The. 

(Yale Record.) 

A little longer in the light, love, let me be. See Good¬ 
night in the Porch.—Lytton. 

A little love, of heaven a little share. See Sufficiency. 
—White. 

A little low-ceiled room. See Released.—Whitney. 

A little maid at Sunday-school. See Palestine.— 
Brooks. 

A little maid in a pale blue hood. See Little Maid’s 
Sermon, The.—Perry. 

A little maid of Astrakan. See Divan, The.—Stod¬ 
dard. 

A little maid, of summers four. See Dolly’s Mother, 
The.—Riley. 

A little maid upon my knee sighs wearily, sighs wearily. 
See True to Life.—Burnham. 

A little maid walked smiling on her way. See Easter 
Lilies.—Miller. 

A little maiden with golden curls. See Spirit of Sum¬ 
mer, The.—Kenyon. 

A little man bought him a big bass drum. See Family 
Drum Corps, A.—Douglas. 

A little man went hunting. See Mr. Bunting.—Denton. 

A little more toward the light. See Growing Gray.— 
Dobson. 

A little old fellow was peering about. See Child 
Angel, The.—Kohans. 

A little old woman before me. See Masquerade, A.— 
Anon. 

A little one played among the flowers. See How 
Happy I’ll Be!—Anon. 

A little past the village. See Wayside Inn, The.— 
Procter. 

A little pause in life—while daylight lingers. See 
Between the Lights.—Anon. 

A little peach in the orchard grew. See Little Peach, 
The.—Field. 

A little peasant maiden, scarce thirteen summers old. 
See Peasant Heroine, A.—-Burke. 

A little pull-back sought one day. See Pull-back, A. 
—Anon. 

A little Quaker maiden, with dimpled cheek and chin. 
See Little Quaker Sinner, The.—-Montgomery. 

A little rain and a little sun. See Growing.—Anon. 

A little roll of flannel fine. See My Boy.—Johnson. 

A little rose bloomed in the way. See Rose by the 
Wayside, The.—Drown. 

A little, rudely sculptured bed. See Cradle Tomb in 
Westminster Abbey, The.—Coolidge. 

A little Saint best fits a little Shrine. See Ternarie of 
Littles, upon a Pipkin of Jellie sent to a Lady, A. 
—Herrick. 

A little shadow make the sunrise sad. See Multum 
in Parvo.—Collins. 

A little song for bedtime, when robed in gown of white. 
See Ho, for Slumberland.—Rexford. 

A little spring [or stream! had lost its way. See Deed 
and a Word, A.—Mackay. 

A little sun, a little rain. See Earth and Man, The.—■ 
Brooke. • 

A little sunbeam in the sky. See Little Sunbeam, The. 
—Anon. 

A little tear and a little smile. See Running a Race.— 

C. W. F. 

A little thing a sunny smile. See In the Morning.— 
Hill. . , 

A little watchfulness over ourselves. See “Little 
watchfulness over ourselves, A.”—Epictetus. 

A little way below her chin. See On Some Butter¬ 
cups.—Sherman. 

A little way, more soft and sweet. See First Foot¬ 
steps.—Swinburne. 

A little way to walk with you, my own. See Little 
Way, A.—Stanton. 

A little while, a little love. See Little While, A.— 
Rossetti. 

A little while ago I stood by the grave of the old Napo¬ 
leon. See At the Tomb of Napoleon.—Ingersoll. 


A little while before the fall was done. See Little 
While before the Fall Was Done, A.—-Sherman . 

A little while (my life is almost set!). See Little While 
I Fain Would Linger Yet, A.—Hayne. 

A little while my love and I. See May Song, A.— 
Currie. 

A little white dove fluttered close to my pane. See 
Message, A.—H. 

A little window-garden plot. See Memorial Day.— 
Sidney. 

A little word in kindness spoken. See “Little word 
in kindness spoken, A.”—Colesworthy. 

A little work, a little play to keep us going—and so 
good day. See We Can Do so Little.—Du Maurier. 

A little yellow buttercup. See Buttercup, A.—K. C. 

A lively young turtle lived down by the banks. See 
Song of the Turtle and Flamingo.—Fields. 

A local clergyman was down-town one of the recent 
ultra-zero mornings. See Accommodating Office 
Boy, The.—Anon. 

A lonely little tadpole in the water blue. See Five 
Little Tadpoles.—Denton. 

A lonely way, and as I went my eyes. See Two Infini¬ 
ties.—Dowden. 

A long, rich breadth of Holland lace. See Old Flemish 
Lace.—Carpenter. 

A long time ago lived Procrustes. See Procrustes’ Bed. 
—Perry. 

A long while ago—you the date must suppose. See 
Gottingen Barber, The.—Carpenter. 

A lord of lyric song was born. See Thomas Moore.— 
Stoddard. 

A lovelorn lad wooed a coy maid once. See Sly Lit¬ 
tle Maid, A.—( Trinity Tablet.) 

A lovely little flow’ret. See Forget-me-not, The.— 
Anon. 

A lovely maiden came down the garden path amid the 
dewy roses. See Time Doeth All Things Well.— 
Harte. 

A lovely mom, so still, so very still. See May, 1840.— 
Coleridge. 

A lovely rose was nodding. See Rose’s Mite, The.— 
Hall. 

A lover gave the wedding ring. See Ring’s Motto, The. 
—Anon. 

A lover with his loved one sailed the sea. See With 
Sa’di in the Garden (“Lover with his loved one,” 
etc.)—-Arnold. 

A low, full sweep of instrumental string. See Sonnet.— 
(Cornell Widow.) 

A lull in the battle’s awful roar. See Our Drummer 
Boy.—Hildreth. 

A maid of many moods is Bess. See To Elizabeth.— 
McIntyre. 

A maid reclined beside a stream, at fall of summer day. 
See Forever and Forever.—Converse. 

A maid that paragons description. See Othello, the 
Moor of Venice.—Shakespeare. 

A maid who mindful of her playful time. See Sibyl, 
The.—Hake. 

A maiden blest, with loving eyes. See “Will Frank 
Buchanan Write?’ ’—Scott. 

A maiden once, of certain age. See Any One Will Do. 
—Anon. 

A maiden stood upon a shore. See Down the Stream. 
—Carey. 

A maiden there is, with blue eyes that tease. See 
Now, Wouldn’t You Like to Know?—Smith. 

A maiden’s crown of glory is her silken, rippling hair. 
See Why?—Anon. 

A man and a woman both ordered the same luncheon 
during the busy hour. See Matter of Words, A.— 
Anon. 

A man at a tavern had made so free. See Subject for 
Dissection, A.—Anon. 

A man by the name of Bolus (all ’at we’ll ever know.) 
See Man by the Name of Bolus, A.—Riley. 

A man came into the office of Judge X. the other day. 
See Dog Partnership Case, A.—Anon. 

A man cannot choose his own life. See “Man cannot 
choose his own life, A.’’—Braddon. 

A man cannot whip the world. See Things to Re¬ 
member.—Anon. 

A man comes mopin’ round you in a melancholy way. 
See Fellow with the Grippe, The.—Piner. 

A man does not plant a tree for himself. See “Man 
does not plant a tree for himself, A.’ ’—Smith. 

A man had once a vicious wife. See Troublesome Wife, 
The.—Anon. 

A man, he two sons. Son speakee he to fathel. See 
Chinaman’s Prodigal, The.—Anon. 

A man hobbled into the colonel’s office upon crutches. 
See S’posin’.—Anon. 


593 








A man 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


A man in his carriage was riding along. See Be Con¬ 
tent.—Anon. 

A man more kindly, in his careless way. See Portrait, 
A.—Duer. 

A man of middle age, fast getting grey. See Middle- 
aged Man and the Two Widows, The.—La Fon¬ 
taine. 

A man of taste is Robinet. See Ragged Robin.— 
Twamley. 

A man of wondrous clarity. See O’Flaherty and John 
Stubbs.—Foss. 

A man once built a lighthouse. See Lighthouse, The. 
—Anon. 

A man once lived, I have been told. See Old Man and 
Death, The.—Kavanaugh. 

A man once own’d a goose that laid. See Man and the 
Goose, The.—Kavanaugh. 

A man once own’d three animals. See Story of the 
Kinkankee.—Kavanaugh. 

A man once said to me: “I was a pretty hard case.” 
See How to Break the Chain.—Gough. 

A man once stood by the bedside of his dying wife. 
See Sketches by Boz (Drunkard’s Death, The). 
—Dickens. 

A man or woman without gold. See Poor Men vs. 
Rich Men.—Kavanaugh. 

A man overboard! What matters it? The ship does not 
stop. See Les Misdrables (Man Overboard, A).— 
Hugo. 

A man overboard! What matters it? The vessel 
does not halt. See Les Mis^rables (Billows and 
Shadows).—Hugo. 

A man prepared against all ills to come. See Christian 
Militant.—-Herrick. 

A man reached a long arm over the little crowd. See 
Condensed Telegram, The.—( Burlington Hawk- 
eye.) 

A man said unto his angel. See Kings, The.—Guiney. 

A man sat on a rock and sought. See Prehistoric 
Smith.—Proudfit. 

A man so various, that he seemed to be. See Absa¬ 
lom and Achitophel (Character of Zimri).—Dry- 
den. 

A man there came, whence none could tell. See 
Touchstone, The.—Allingham. 

A man told of a woman fair—a wondrous woman she. 
See Man’s Story, A.—Banks. 

A man unknown this volume gave. See On an In¬ 
scription.—Munby 

A man was once walking along one road, and a woman 
along another. See Nervous Woman, The.— 
Anon. 

A man went in a wood one day. See Gratitude of the 
World, The.—Anon. 

A man who had been walking for some time in the 
downward path. See Praying for Papa.—Anon. 

‘‘A man’s a man,” says Robert Burns. See New Ver¬ 
sion of ‘‘A Man’s a Man for a’ That. ”—Mackay. 

A man’s country is not a certain area of land. See 
Patriotism.—Curtis. 

A man’s value and progress in this life must be meas¬ 
ured. See ‘‘Man’s value and progress in this life 
must be measured. A.”—Murray. 

A mariner sat on the shrouds one night. See Drowned 
Mariner, The.—Smith. 

A master hand has drawn for you the picture of your 
returning armies. See New South, The.—Grady. 

A masterpiece excites no sudden enthusiasm. See 
Life of Goethe.—Lewes. 

A meadow for the little lambs. See Sweetest Place, 
The.—Putts. 

A melancholy Prussian. See Verse.—O. L. 

A member of the ZEsculapian line. See Newcastle 
Apothecary, The.—Colman. 

A merchant, whose labors a fortune had made. See 
Two Blacksmiths, The.—Anon. 

A merry, blue-eyed laddie goes laughing through the 
town. See Merry Blue-eyed Laddie, A.—Tomp¬ 
kins. 

A merry Christmas, uncle! See Christmas Carol, A 
(Two Views of Christmas).—Dickens. 

A merry evening party in an English country town. 
See Teddy 0|Toole’s Six Bulls.—Anon. 

A merry little maiden. See May Song, A.—Anon. 

A merry peal of marriage bells. See Bridal Feast, The. 
—Long. 

A merry shepherd lad was Jock. See Of Course.— 
Tompkins. 

A messenger from Glaucus desires to be admitted. 
See Last Days of Pompeii (Happy Beauty and the 
Blind Slave, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

A Methodist circuit-rider, traveling through Central 
Indiana on horseback. See He Didn’t Ask.—Anon. 


A middle-aged lady, with a black alpaca dress. See 
She Had Business with the Boss Mason.—Anon. 

A mien of modest loveliness. See Madame Roland. 
Anon. 

A mighty and a mingled throng. See Silent Multitude, 
The.—Hemans. 

A mighty elephant, that swelled the state. See Tit for 
Tat.—Anon. 

A mighty fortress is our God. See Mighty Fortress is 
Our God, A.—Luther. 

A mighty hand, from an exhaustless urn. See Flood 
of Years, The.—Bryant. 

A mighty king on his couch reclined. See King’s 
Temple, The.—Anon. 

A mighty man was Scyld, ruler of the Gar-Danes. 
See Beowulf, The Story of.—Rabb. 

A mighty pain to love it is. See Anacreontiques (Pain 
of Love, The).—Cowley. 

A mighty spirit is eclipsed—a power. See Monody 
on the Death of the Right Hon. R. B. Sheridan.— 
Byron. 

A mile and a-half, it may be two miles, southeast of 
Bethlehem. See Ben-Hur (Angel and the Shep¬ 
herds, The).—Wallace. 

A milkmaid, who poised a full pail on her head. See 
Milkmaid, The.—Taylor. 

‘‘A milk-weed, and a butter-cup, and cowslip,” said 
sweet Mary. See Her Dairy.—Newell. 

A million little diamonds. See Winter Jewels.— 
Butts. 

A mimic I knew, who, to give him his due. See Mimic, 
The.—Anon. 

A mind unnerved, or indisposed to bear. See Retire¬ 
ment (What to Read).—Cowper. 

A minister who does not believe. See Baptism De¬ 
fended.—Anon. 

A minor poet chased a laurel wreath. See Chase of the 
Laurel Wreath, The.—Wood. 

A minstrel am I of a single lay. See Main-hatch, The. 
—Burdette. 

A mischievous fairy. See My Little Tease.—Lyman. 

A miser, traversing his house. See Miser and the 
Mouse, The.—Anon. 

A mist was driving down the British Channel. See 
Warden of the Cinque Ports, The.—Longfellow. 

A moment of loving and laughter. See Unequal Game, 
An.—Anon. 

A moment pause, ye British fair. See Lesson of Water¬ 
loo, The.—Anon. 

A moment, scarcely more, I stood. See Waiting at 
the Church-door.—Miller. 

A moment then Lord Marmion stayed. See Marmion 
(Flodden Field).—Scott. 

A monarch sat, in serious thought, alone. See Rabbi 
and the Prince, The.—Harvey. 

A monk ther was, a fayre for the maistrie. See Can¬ 
terbury Tales, The (Monk and the Friar, The).— 
Chaucer. 

A monk when his rites sacerdotal were o’er. . See 
Philosopher’s Scales, The.—-Taylor. 

A monkey, once, whom fate had led to list. See Victim 
of Reform, The.—( Blackwood’s Magazine.) 

A monsieur from the Gallic shore. See Frenchman and 
the Sheep’s Trotters, The.—Prest. 

A monster of iron, steel and brass. See As the Pigeon 
Flies.—Lewis. 

A moonbeam floateth from the skies. See Heigho, 
My Dearie.—Field. 

A moonless night—a friendly one. See Running the 
Batteries.—Melville. 

A morning-glory bud, entangled fast. See Unto the 
Perfect Day.—Allen. 

A morrow must come on. See Prayer, A.—Aldrich 

A most characteristic and remarkable speech was de¬ 
livered by Franklin. See Inauguration of the 
Statue of Franklin, The (Franklin as a Christian). 
—Winthrop. 

A most mischievous sprite was abroad all last night. 
See Troublesome Visitor, A.—Rook. 

A moth belated, sun and zephyr kist. See To a Moth 
that Drinketh of the Ripe October.—Pfeiffer. 

A mother and child wandered in the wilderness. See 
Boys of the Bible.—Lloyd. 

A mother in the twilight. See Shepherd’s Story, The. 
—Burrell. 

A mother was singing her boy to sleep. See God is 
Everywhere.—Ballam. 

A mother’s love, how sweet the name! See Mother’s 
Love, A.—Montgomery. 

A mountain pass so narrow that a man. See Gual- 
berto’s Victory.—Donnelly. 

A mountain shepherd boy am I. S ee Song of the 
Mountain Shepherd Boy.—LThland. 


594 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


A poor 


A mouse saw his shadow on the wall. See Four Out¬ 
lines.—Anon. 

A moving form or rigid mass. See Song of the Screw. 
—Anon. 

A Mubid related, how one day the king. See Shah- 
Nameh (Raja of India Sends a Chessboard to 
Nushirvan, The).—Robinson. 

A Munson street man, being told that there were sev¬ 
eral pieces of tinware which needed mending. 
See Domestic Economy.—Bailey. 

A must wead Uncle Tom—a wawk. See “Swell’s” 
Homage to Mrs. Stowe, A.— (Punch.) 

A mute companion at my side. See To My Shadow.— 
Higginson. 

A naked house, a naked moor. See House Beautiful, 
The.—Stevenson. 

A narrow home, but very still it seemeth. See Narrow 
House, The.-—Anon. 

A nation’s real honor consists in the practice of virtue. 
See True Honor of a Nation, The.—Prince. 

A nation’s voice, a nation’s voice. See Nationality.-— 
Davis. 

A native grace. See Seasons, The: Autumn.—Thom¬ 
son. 

A negro came before a justice of the peace and signed a 
pledge. See How Old Erasmus Doctored his 
Temperance Pledge.—Anon. 

A nervous old gentleman, tired of trade. See Removal, 
The.—Anon. 

A new holiday is a boon to Americans. See Arbor 
Day.—Curtis. 

A new Western town. See Double Bed, The.—Anon. 

A newer garden of creation. See Prairie States, The. 
—Whitman. 

“A nice devil’d biscuit,” said Jenkins, enchanted. 
See Deviled Biscuit.— -(Punch.) 

A nice little dinner at Ormolu’s. See Ormolu’s Tene¬ 
ment House.—O’Brien. 

A nice way to begin a man’s career. See Trapped.— 
Wayne. 

A night, a day, another night had passed. See Easter 
Poem, An.—Riche. 

A night had passed away among t he hills. See Morn¬ 
ing among the Hills.—Percival. 

A night: mysterious, tender, quiet, deep. See Com¬ 
mon Inference, A.—Stetson. 

A night of danger on the sea. See ‘ ‘ Now! ”—Havergal. 

A night time, black and lowering. See Count Me.— 
Murray. 

A nightingale made a mistake. See Singing Lesson, 
The.—Ingelow. 

A nightingale once lost his voice from too much love, 
and he who flees. See House of a Hundred 
Lights, The (Youth and Age).—Torrence. 

A nightingale that all day long. See Nightingale and 
the Glow-worm, The.—Cowper. 

A nine day’s wonder had Tattlerstown. See Abner’s 
Second Wife.—Fossett. 

A noble man is one who stands for nobleness. See 
Abstract of a Response to a Toast, “Noblesse 
Oblige.”—Anon. 

A noble man, ordained and broadly planned. See 
Dead Leader, The.—Jones. 

A noble range it was, of many a rood. See Garden 
and Summer House, A.—Hunt. 

A noble ship lay at anchor in the Bay of Tangier. See 
Our Gunner’s Shot.—-Anon. 

A nobler want of man is served by nature, namely, the 
love of beauty. See Beauty.—Emerson. 

A noisette on my garden path. See Shadow Rose, 
The.—Rogers. 

A noted criminal was to die—to hang. See Fra Fonti. 
—Meyers. 

A nymph there was in Arcadie. See Alpheus and 
Arethusa.—Daly. 

A old tramp slep’ in our stable wunst. See Old Tramp, 
The.—Riley. 

A page who seemed of low degree. See Game Knut 
Played, The.—English. 

A painter, who wanted a picture of Innocence. See 
Portraits, The.—Anon. 

A painter wrought him a noble dream, deep-toiling day 
and night. See Rib, The.—McGaffey. 

A pair of hazel eyes I know. See My Sweetheart.—- 
R. W. K. 

A pair of steady rooks. See Death of Master Tommy 
Rook, The.—Cook. 

A pair of very chubby legs. See Coming Man, The.— 
Anon. 

A pale and soul-sick woman with wan eyes. See Age, 
The.—Clarke. 

A pale Italian peasant. See At the Shrine.—Mun- 
kittrick. 


A pansy on his breast she laid. See For Thoughts.— 
Thaxter. 

A paradise of sunny skies. See Southland.—Case. 

A paradise on earth is found. See Muses’ Elysium, 
The (Description of Elizium, The).—Dray¬ 
ton. 

A parrot, from the Spanish main. See Parrot, The.— 
Campbell. 

A parson in a country town, while preaching. See 
Test of Patience, The.—Anon. 

A parson, who a missionary had been [who had a col¬ 
porteur been]. See Clerical Wit.—Anon. 

A passenger going West from Detroit by rail. See 
Beating a Conductor. (Detroit Free Press.) 

A path across a meadow fair and sweet. See Two 
Paths.—Dorr. 

A pause in the din of battle! See Battle of German¬ 
town, The.—Lippard. 

A peacock came, with his plumage gay. See ’Tis Not 
Fine Feathers that Make Fine Birds.—Anon. 

A peasant stood before a king, and said. See Ahab 
Mohammed.—Legare. 

A pen—to register; a key. See Memory.—Words¬ 
worth. 

A pensive photograph. See To a Portrait.—Symons. 

A perfect artist hath been here; the scene. See Sun¬ 
set, A.—Brown. 

A perfect thought will always clothe itself in appro¬ 
priate language. See Thought and Language.— 
Anon. 

A perilous life, and sad as life may be. See Fisherman, 
The.—Procter. 

A picture-frame for you to fill. See With a Hand¬ 
glass.—Stevenson. 

A pilgrim am I, on my way. See Pilgrim, The.— 
Palfrey. 

A pilgrim once (so runs an ancient tale). See Two 
Gates, The.—Conant. 

A pillar of fire by night. See Song of Sherman’s 
Army, The.—Halpine. 

A pink and crimson sunset cloud. See Life’s Common 
Things.—Wright. 

A pinsion-claim agent! Will, then, sor. See How 
Mickey Got Kilt in the War.—Anon. 

A pious ostler who did much repent. See Roguery 
Taught by Confession.—Wolcott. 

A pious parson, good and true. See Thankful Parson, 
A.—Anon. 

A pious rabbi, forced by heathen hate. See Four 
Misfortunes, The.—Saxe. 

A pipe, a book, a cozy nook. See Bachelor’s Views, A. 
—Hail. 

A pitcher of mignonette. See Pitcher of Mignonette, 
A.—Bunner. 

A place in thy memory, dearest! See Place in Thy 
Memory, A.—Griffin. 

A plague upon the people fell. See Victim, The.— 
Tennyson. 

A plague upon them! Wherefore should I curse them? 
See King Henry VI., Pt. II. (Hate and Revenge). 
—Shakespeare. 

A plain man who knew nothing of the curious trans¬ 
mutations. See Burr and Blennerhassett.—Wirt. 

A pledge we make no wine to take. See Pledge, The. 
—Anon. 

A plenteous place is Ireland for hospitable cheer. See 
Fair Hills of Ireland, The.—Ferguson. 

A plump little robin flew down from a tree. See 
Robin and the Chicken, The.—Anon. 

A poet could not sleep aright. See Vision of Poets, A. 
—Browning. 

A poet in one mood in all my lays. See Changeless.— 
Meynell. 

A poet loved a star. See Possession.;—Bulwer-Lytton. 

A poet writ a song of May. See First Song, The.— 
Burton. 

A poetical atmosphere, an aroma, hung about Long¬ 
fellow. See Longfellow, Extract Concerning.— 
Frothingham. 

A poet’s cat, sedate and grave. See Retired Cat. The. 
—Cowper. 

A poet’s pipe am I. See Poet’s Pipe, A.—Shepherd. 

A poet’s soul has sung its way to God. See Dead 
Singer, The.—Townsend. 

A poor, coarse-featured old woman lived on the line of 
the Baltimore & Ohio Railway. See Old Woman’s 
Railway Signal, The.—Burritt. 

A poor little bird trilled a song in the west. See 
Going Home in the Morning.—Douglas. 

A poor little girl in a tattered gown. See He Doeth 
His Alms to be Seen of Men.—Anon. 

A poor man went to hang himself. See One Good Turn 
Deserves Another.— (Punch.) 


595 






A poor 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


A poor old cottage tottering to its fall. See My Old 
Home.—O’Leary. 

A poor old king with sorrow for my crown. See Lear. 
—Hood. 

A poor sequestered stag. See As You Like It.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

A poor wayfaring man of grief. See Stranger and His 
Friend, The.—Montgomery. 

A portal of the arena opened. See Constantius and 
the Lion.—Croly. 

A portly prince, and goodly to the sight. See Hind and 
the Panther, The (Buzzard, The).—Dryden. 

A potsdam, les totaux absteneurs. See Vers Nonsen- 
siques.—DuMaurier. 

A pound of butter, a dozen of eggs, a quart of molasses 
—yes, that’s it. See Mamma’s Little Market- 
woman.—Rook. 

“A pound of jumps!” The clerk [or and IT looked in 
surprise. See Mercantile Transaction, A.—Hum¬ 
phrey 

A pound of tea at one-and-three. See Going on an 
Errand.—Anon. 

A practical, plain young girl. See Model American 
Girl, The..—Pinkley. 

A precocious little rascal was noticed on Jefferson Ave¬ 
nue the other day. See Clergyman Had to Ex¬ 
plain, The.—Anon. 

A pretty girl—a summer night. See “No Fellow.”— 
Anon. 

A prtty little cloud away up in the sky. See Little 
Lazy Cloud, The.—Anon. 

A pretty, piquant, pouting pet. See Symphony in 
Smoke, A. ( Harper's Bazar.) 

A prince in the east had taken a widow’s field away 
from her. See Eternal Burden, The.—Anon. 

A principal object, in his late political movements. 
See Constitution and the Union, The (Platform of 
the Constitution, The).—Webster. 

A prologue? Well of course the ladies know. See 
Prologue.—Holmes. 

A public haunt they found her in. See Girl of Pompeii, 
A.—Martin. 

A pure, sweet spirit, generous and large. See Henry 
Wadsworth Longfellow.-—Story. 

A purple cloud hangs half-way down. See Before Sun¬ 
rise in Winter.—Sill. 

A Python I should not advise. See Python, The.— 
Belloc. 

A quaint little maid went tripping along. See Little 
Maid’s Prayer at the Shrine of St. Valentine, The. 
—Anon. 

A quaint old box with a lid of blue. See Little Brown 
Curl, The.—Anon. 

A queer little doll in a very long dress. See Queer 
Doll, A.—Anon. 

A quiet and comfortable hotel in the charming hamlet 
of Bethlehem. See Pleasures of the Telephone.— 
Anon. 

A quiet home had Parson Gray. See Parson Gray.— 
Goldsmith. 

A quiet house, just off the road. See What Farmer 
Green Said.—Watson. 

A rabbi once, by all admired. See Rabbi’s Present. 
(Cornhill Magazine.) 

A radiant bouquet. See Birth of the Rainbow, The. 
—Denison. 

A railroad train was rushing along at almost lightning 
speed. See Behind Time.—Hunt. 

A raindrop is a little thing. See Trifles.—Colesworthy. 

A rare old print of Shakespeare—-his works—in boards 
of brown. See Annetta Jones—Her Book.—Stan¬ 
ton. 

A rat! a rat! dead for a ducat! See Rats.—McIntosh. 

A rather monotonous life, sir? Well, yes, I just reckon 
you’re right. See Watchman’s Story, A.— 
Nicholls. 

A rather unusual sensation has been excited in the 
village. See Out of the Hurly Burly (“Morning 
Argus’’ Obituary Department, The).—-Clark. 

A raven sat upon a tree. See Sycophantic Fox and 
the Gullible Raven. The.—Carryl. 

A red glass makes everything seen through it red. See 
Hint, A.—Eliot. 

A red rose, drooping to the ground. See Forgiveness. 
—Anon. 

A regiment in the motion and the rattle of a drum. 
See Drum, A.—Waterloo. 

A requiem!—and for whom? See Mozart’s Requiem.— 
Hemans. 

A revenue from America, transmitted hither? See 
Speech on Moving his Resolutions for Concilia¬ 
tion with America (Magnanimity in Politics).— 
Burke. 


A rhyme of good Death’s Inn! See Rhyme of Death’s 
Inn, A.—Reese. 

A rich man sat by his chamber window. See Charity’s 
Meal.—Anon. 

A rich man walked abroad one day. See Heart’s 
Charity, The.—Cook. 

A rich old bachelor once asked. See “Yours Truly, 
Sir. ’’—Anon. 

A right noble philosophy has taught us that God has 
divided the world. See Appeal to Ireland.— 
Meagher. 

A river went singing adown to the sea. See Song of the 
River.—Ryan. 

A robin came one day in spring. See Robin’s Return. 
—Richards. 

A robin had come to bid me good-by. See Robin’s 
Farewell.—Richards. 

A robin sat upon a limb. See What Robin Said.— 
Richards. 

A robin was sitting high up in a tree. See Mother 
Robin.—Richards. 

A rock there is whose homely front. See Primrose of 
the Rock, The.—Wordsworth. 

A Rockland young man, until quite recently, was 
courting a fat girl. See Awful Squirt, An. ( Rock¬ 
land Courier.) 

A rocky channel from the harbor led. See Deepening 
the Channel.—Eaton. 

A roguish old lawyer was planning new sin. See 
Lawyer and the Chimney-sweeper, The.—Anon. 

A rollicking mastodon lived in Spain. See Rollicking 
Mastodon, The.—Macy. 

A Roman, an orator, and a triumvir, A. See Shake¬ 
speare’s Mark Antony.—Winchell. 

A rose and sunflower in the garden grew. See Rose 
and the Sunflower, The.—Anon. 

A rose, as fair as ever saw the North. See Vision of the 
Rose.—Browne. 

A rose in my garden, the sweetest and fairest. See 
Gossips, The.—Wilcox. 

A rose leaned over a woodland pool. See Woodland 
Tragedy, A.—Bates. 

A rose of perfect red, embossed. See Nilsson.— 
Lanier. 

A rose’s crimson stain. See Roses of Memory.—Gor¬ 
don. 

A rosy, merry maiden she. See Modern Youth, A.— 
Goodhue. 

A round little man with eyes of blue. See February. 
—Anon. 

A roundel is wrought as a ring or a star-bright sphere. 
See Roundel, The.—Swinburne. 

A ruddy drop of manly blood. See Friendship.—Em¬ 
erson. 

A ruined city! In the heart. See Lost Mexican City, 
The.—McLellan. 

A ruined rose—I hold it so. See Rondeau.—Anon. 

A rush, a roar, a gleam, a glow. See Christmas Week. 
—Stilwell. 

A rushlight that had grown fat and saucy. See Far¬ 
thing Rushlight, The.—Hisop. 

A Russian sailed over the blue Black Sea. See Soldier, 
Rest!—Burdette. 

A rustle and stir ’mid the tall meadow grasses. See 
Mayonette River. The. ( Tulane Collegian.) 

A rustle of robes as the anthem. See Little Maid’s 
“Amen,” A. ( Gospel Expositor.) 

A sabbath well-spent brings a week of content. See 
Well-spent Sunday, The.—Hale. 

A sad, strange tale it is, and long to tell. See Fra 
Luigi’s Marriage.—H. H. 

A safe stronghold our God is still. See Safe Strong¬ 
hold, A.—Luther. 

A sailor once, bis pockets filled with gold. See Vat 
Have I Got to Pay?—Freeman. 

A saintly voice fell on my ear. See Voice, The.—Will- 
son. 

A sallow-faced man dressed in faded and insufficient 
garments. See Horseradish.—Anon. 

A sanguinary pirate sailed upon the Spanish Main. 
See Mrs. Jones’ Pirate.—Clark. 

A sapient looking Fayetteville darkey, oscillating be¬ 
tween twenty and twenty-five summers. See 
“De Pervisions, Josiar.”—Anon. 

A scent of guava-blossoms and the smell. See At Set 
of Sun.—Townsend. 

A scientific association in one of the smaller towns. 
See Not Victims of Money Microbes.—Anon. 

A sculptor is the sun, I know. See Anemone.—Sher¬ 
man. 

A sea-captain, who was asked by his wife to look at 
some pianos. See Mariner’s Description of a 
Piano, A.—Anon. 


596 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


A stillness 


A seat for three, where host and guest. See Seat 
for Three, A.—Crane. 

A second wedding! Pray, good friends, how’s this? See 
Poem for a Silver Wedding, A.—Anon. 

A seed fell into the ground; it died. See Easter Lily, 
An.—Hawks. 

A seed of the beautiful mistletoe was separated. See 
Oak and the Mistletoe Seed, The.—Anon. 

A seedy old beggar asked alms of me. See If Things 
Was Only Sich!”—Shillaber. 

A sense of an earnest will. See Small Things.—Milnes. 

A sensitive plant in a garden grew. See Sensitive Plant, 
The.—Shelley. 

A sentinel angel, sitting high in glory. See Woman’s 
Love, A.—Hay. 

A shabby fellow chanced one day to meet. See Actor, 
An —Wolcott. 

A shadie grove not far away they spied. See Faerie 
Queene, The (Trees).—Spenser. 

A shell lies silent on a lonely shore. See St. Cecilia.— 
O’Brien. 

A shepeheards boy (no better doe him call). See 
Shepheardes Calender, The (January).—Spenser. 

A shining hour with golden plumes. See Hours, The. 
—Gordon. 

A ship lost at sea for many days suddenly sighted a 
friendly vessel. See Solution of the Southern 
Problem, The.—Washington. 

“A ship,” they cry, ‘‘on the Millhead rock! See Mid 
the Breakers.—Aye-Williams. 

A shoal of idlers, from a merchant craft. See Pelters 
of Pyramids.—Horne. 

A short time after my wife and I were settled in our 
pleasant little country home See Rudder Grange 
(Our First Experience with a Watch-dog).—Stock- 
ton. 

A short time ago a delegation of eminently learned and 
scientific men. See Scientific Party, A.—Brown. 

A short time since and he who is the occasion of our 
sorrows. See Death of Alexander Hamilton.— 
Nott. 

A shrewd and wealthy old landlord, away down in 
Maine. See Frenchman and the Landlord, The.— 
Anon. 

A shy little mayflower, I weave my nest. See At 
Dame Nature’s Feet.—Denton. 

A sight in camp in the daybreak gray and dim. See 
Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Gray and Dim, A. 
—Whitman. 

A silly young cricket accustomed to sing. See Ant 
and the Cricket, The.—Anon. 

A silver birch-tree like a sacred maid. See Recollec¬ 
tion.—Carpenter. 

A simple child, that lightly draws its breath. See We 
are Seven.—Wordsworth. 

A simple ring with a single stone. See Pearl; a Girl, A. 
—Browning. 

A simple-hearted child was he. See Little Child, The. 
—Paine. 

A single buttercup I found. See Belated.—Whittier. 

A single star how bright. See Morning Star, The.— 
Hedge. 

A single step, that freed me from the skirts. See 
Excursion, The (Vision of Mist-splendours, A).— 
Wordsworth. 

A singular illustration of the extent to which theory 
often fails. See Professor in Shafts, The.-—Kel¬ 
logg. 

A sky all blue, a field of green. See May.—Harrison. 

A slanting ray of evening light. See Squire’s Pew, 
The.—Taylor. 

A slave to crowds, scorch’d with the summer’s heats. 
See Paulus the Lawyer.—Lindsay. 

A slim, young girl, in lilac quaintly dressed. See 
Portrait, A. (Trinity Tablet.) 

A slumber did my spirit steal. See Departed.— 
Wordsworth. 

A small door at the right of the pulpit opened. See 
Study in Nerves, A.—Anon. 

A small, impalpable world. See Soap-bubble, A.— 
Knowles. 

A small Scotch boy was summoned to give evidence 
against his father. See Scotch Witness, A.—Anon. 

A smile, and then the sun comes out. See Smiles and 
Tears.—Sherman. 

A smile from you. my lady dear. See Spring Ron¬ 
deau, A.—Kirk. _ . 

A smiling look she had, a figure slight. See Tomb in 
Ghent, A.—Procter. 

A smith upon a summer’s day. See Smith and the 
King, The.—Carpenter. 

A snowdrop bloomed on a window ledge. See De¬ 
filed.—Clarke. 


A snow-man stands in the moonlight gold. See Snow¬ 
man, The.—Goodfellow. 

A sober occasion this, brother Currie! See Reading 
the Will.—Sargent. 

A sodden gray in the chilly dawn. See March.— 
Anon. 

A soldier at Loretto’s wondrous chapel. See Soldier 
and the Virgin Mary, The.—Wolcott. 

A soldier lay wounded on a hard-fought field. See 
South and her Problems, The (New South, The). 
—Grady. 

A soldier of the Cromwell stamp. See Heredity.— 
Aldrich. 

A soldier of the Legion lay dying in Algiers. See 
Bingen on the Rhine.—Norton. 

A soldier, so at least the story goes. See Irish Drum¬ 
mer, The.—Anon. 

A solemn sabbath stillness lies along the Mudville 
lanes. See O’Reilly’s Billy Goat.—Lincoln. 

A solitary ship, in mid-ocean. See Voyage and a 
Haven, A.—Hoey. 

A song for May, whose breath is sweet. See Song for 
May, A.—Itexford. 

‘‘A song for our banner!” the watchword recall. See 
Flag of Our Union, The.—Morris. 

A song for the beautiful trees. See Forest Song.— 
Venable. 

A song for the girl I love. See Song for the Girl I 
Love, A.—Langbridge. 

A song for the old. See New Year, The.—Cooper. 

A song for the plant of my own native West. See 
Maize, The.—Fosdick. 

A song for them one and all. See Song for the Fleet, 
A.—Scollard. 

A song lay silent in my pen. See Song, The.—Ers- 
kine. 

A song of a boat. See Songs of Seven (Seven Times 
Seven).—Ingelow. 

A song of a white throne circled. See Life.—Gilmore. 

A song of the man who sneezes. See Hay-Fever.— 
Anon. 

A song to a maid with eyes like stars. See Song to 
Her, A.—Wrinkle. 

A song to the oak, the brave old oak. See Brave Old 
Oak, The.—Chorley. 

A song! What songs have died. See Song for the Ask¬ 
ing, A.—Ticknor. 

A sonnet is a moment’s monument. See House of 
Life, The.—Rossetti. 

A soul from earth to heaven went. See True Boston¬ 
ian [at Heaven’s Gate], A.— (Somerville Journal.) 

A soul inhuman? No, not human all. See Napoleon 
—Gilder. 

A sound came booming through the air! See Saint 
Pancras Bell.—Brooks. 

A sound of uprising. See Last Battle, The.—Murray. 

A Southern divine, who had removed to a new field of 
labor. See Brother Watkins.—Gough. 

A sower went forth to sow. See Sower, The.—Gilder. 

A spade! a rake! a hoe! Nee Lay of the Laborer, The. 
—Hood. 

A spaniel. Beau, that fares like you. See On a Spaniel 
Called “Beau” Killing a Young Bird.—Cowper. 

A sparrow flew to my window one day. Nee Only a 
Sparrow.—Richards. 

A sparrow, perched upon a bough. See Might Makes 
Right.—( National Preceptor.) 

A spirit of beauty walks the hills. See Return of 
Spring, The.—Taylor. 

A spirit speeding down on All Souls’ Eve. See One 
Forgotten, The.—Sigerson. 

A splendid house! The greatest bargain in the city. 
See Two Opinions of One House.—Dallas. 

A squad of regular infantry. See Triumph of Order, 
A.—Hay. 

A stage-struck hero while at home. See Stage-struck 
Hero, The.—Anon. 

A stands for alcohol, deathlike its grip. See Temper¬ 
ance Alphabet.—Anon. 

A star is gone! a star is gone! See Fallen Star. The.— 
Darley. _ 

A star leant down and laid a silver hand. See These 
Three.—Crawford. 

A steady and a skillful toiler. See Merry Soap-boiler, 
The.—Anon. 

A stealing glory, still, intent, and sure. See Star at 
Dawn, The.—Weitzel. 

A steed, a steed of matchlesse speed. See Cavalier s 
Song, The.—Motherwell. 

A step, a single step. See Excursion, The (Cloud- 
visions).—Wordsworth. 

A stillness crept about the house. See Ballad of the 
Brides of Quair, The.—Knox. 


597 






A stitch 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


A stitch is always dropping in the everlasting knitting. 
See What One Boy Thinks.—Spofford. 

A stormy night on the southern coast at the close of 
an autumn day. See John Harding.—Jarvis. 

A story is told of a clothing merchant. See Selling a 
Coat.-—Anon. 

A story is told of two artist lovers. See Veiled Picture, 
The.—Anon. 

A story, my child? Well, there’s none that I know. 
See Joe’s Search for Santa Claus.—Bachellet. 

A story worth telling our annals afford. See How 
Burlington was Saved.—Mair. 

A stranded soldier’s epaulet. See Silver Bird’s Nest, 
The.—Anon. 

A stranger came one night to Yussouf’s tent. See 
Yussouf.—Lowell. 

A stranger came to Nagold town. See Postilion of 
Nagold, The.—Catlin. 

A stranger craves admittance to your Highness. See 
Saracen Brothers, The.—( Harper’s Monthly.) 

A stranger journeyed through the town. See Sacri¬ 
legious Gamesters, The.—Cook. 

A stranger preached last Sunday. See Borrioboola 
Gha.—Goodrich. 

A stranger to your clime, O men of Greece! See Lord 
Byron to the Greeks.—Lamartine. 

A stream of tender gladness. See Shadow River.— 
Johnson. 

A street there is in Paris famous. See Ballad of Bouil¬ 
labaisse, The.—Thackeray. 

A stretch of hill and valley, swathed thick in robes of 
white. See Winter Nights at Home, The.—Lin¬ 
coln. 

A strolling preacher, once upon a time. See Grateful 
Preacher, The.—Saxe. 

A strong and majestic oak had fallen. See Melendy 
Prize Oration, The.—Douglas. 

A strong and mighty angel. See Mantle of St. John de 
Matha, The.—Whittier. 

A strong wind blew, a chill wind blew. See Acorn 
Lesson, An.—Bates. 

A student sat in his room alone. See Ein Traumbild. 
—Yeoman? 

A sturdy fellow, with a sunburnt face. See Romance 
in the Rough, A.—Martin. 

A sudden conflict rises from the swell. See Sacheverel. 
—W ordsworth. 

A sumach tall. See United.—O’Neill. 

A summer sunbeam, peeping through a window-pane 
one day. See Three Sunbeams.—Jones. 

A sun that entices, a breeze that beguiles. See Hail, 
Bonny September!—Goodale. 

A sunbeam comes a-creeping. See Song of Luddy- 
Dud, The.—Field. 

A sunny shaft did I behold. See Zapolya (Glycine’s 
Song).—Coleridge. 

A supercilious nabob of the East. See Modest Wit, A. 
—Osborne. 

A swallow in the spring. See Perseverance.—An¬ 
dros. 

A sweet, acidulous, down-reaching thrill. See Ode on 
a Jar of Pickles.—Taylor. 

A sweet, attractive kind of grace. See Sir Philip Sid¬ 
ney.—Royden. 

A sweet disorder in the dress. See Delight in Disorder. 
—Herrick. 

A sweet little baby brother. See Little Flo’s Letter.— 
Rexford. 

A tadpole sat on a cold, gray stone. See Tale of a Tad¬ 
pole, The.—Anon. 

A tailor, thought a man of upright dealing. See Of a 
Precise Tailor.—Harrington. 

A tale I will tell of a priest and his mare. See Priest 
and His Mare, The.—Anon. 

A tale of the siege of Lucknow, though the years have 
rolled away. See Siege of Lucknow, The.— 
Clark. 

A tall fir whispered in the wood. See Secret, A.— 
Howard. 

A tear bedews my Delia’s eye. See Dying Kid, The. 
—Shenstone. 

“A temple to friendship,” cried Laura, enchanted. 
See Temple to Friendship, A.—Moore. 

A tender child of summers three. See Light that is 
Felt, The.—Whittier. 

A tender lily raised its head. See Easter Song, The.— 
Steele. 

A terrible and splendid trust. See Ways of War.— 
Johnson. 

A terrific storm was raging on the wild coast. See 
Dynmouth Fisherman, The.—-Anon. 

A’ the boys of merry Lincoln. See Hugh of Lincoln.— 
Anon. 


A thieving fellow, naturally sly. See Rival Broom 
Makers, The.—Wolcot. 

A thing of beauty is a joy forever See Endymion.— 
Keats. 

A thingamajig met a thingamaree. See Ninkum Land, 
The. (Portland Oregonian.) 

A thirsty little violet. See Violet’s Prayer, The.— 
Richmond. 

A thoughtful mind, when it sees a nation’s flag. See 
National Flag, The (American Flag, The).— 
Beecher. 

A thousand godsent melodies found birth. See 
Gaetano Donizetti.—Saltus. 

A thousand hearts are great within my bosom. See 
King Richard III. (Courage).—Shakespeare. 

A thousand knights have reined their steeds. See 
Calais Sands.—Arnold. 

A thousand martyrs I have made. See Libertine, The. 
—Behn. 

A thousand miles from land are we. See Stormy 
Petrel, The.—Procter. 

A thousand silent years ago. See Praxiteles and 
Phryne.—Story. 

A thousand sounds and each a joyful sound. See 
Omnipresence.—Hale. 

A thousand voices fill my ears. See Lost Voice, A.— 
Bourdillon. 

A thousand years ago "we met. See Three Wishes, The. 
—Horn. 

A throat of thunder, a tameless heart. See Cyclone at 
Sea, A.—Hayne. 

A tiger prowling in a forest. See Brahmin and the 
Tiger, The.—Anon. 

A tight pair of pants, a shirt of which the bosom shone 
like a bald head. See How He Paralyzed the 
Chef.—Anon. 

A tiny girl from a tiny class. See For a Tiny Girl.— 
Anon. 

A tiny, jumping apple seed. See California Flea, The. 
—Brooks. 

A tiny little polliwog. See Polliwog, The.—Anon. 

A tiny rap fell on the door. See “Papa Says so, Too.’’ 
—Lewis. 

A tiny shell. See Serving.—Cooper. 

A tiny shoot peeped out of the ground. See How it 
Came.—Dayre. 

A tomb where legal ghouls grow fat. See In the Rec¬ 
ord Room, Surrogate’s Office.—Baker. 

A touch, a kiss! the charm was snapped. See Day¬ 
dream, The (Revival, The).—Tennyson. 

A touch, a tender word, no more. See “Touch, a ten¬ 
der word,” etc.—Anon. 

A touch sets free the prisoned rage. See Camp-fire, The. 
—Clemons. 

A tract of land, swept by the salt sea-foam. See Jew’s 
Cemetery on the Lido, The.—Symonds. 

A tramp went up to a cottage door. See Dog and the 
Tramp, The.—Best. 

A transient calm the happy scenes bestow. See 
Thales’ Reasons for Leaving London.—Johnson. 

A transition from an author’s book to his conversation. 
See Transition from an Author’s Book to His Con¬ 
versation, A —Johnson. 

A traveler, from journeying. See Household Jewels, 
The.—Anon. 

A traveler, journeying through the backwoods. See 
'Way Down in Ole Virginy.—Head. 

A traveler through [or onl a dusty road strewed acorns 
on the lea. See Little and Great.—Mackay. 

A traveler wended the wilds among. See Quaker and 
the Robber, The.—Lover. 

A tree-toad dressed in apple-green. See Indignant 
Polly Wog.—Eytinge. 

A troop of soldiers waited at the door. See Maiden 
Martyr, The.—Anon. 

A trouble, not of clouds, or weeping rain. See On the 
Departure of Sir Walter Scott from Abbotsford 
for Naples.—Wordsworth. 

A truer love the Muses never sung. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals (Poet’s Ambition, The).—Browne. 

A trusty statesman once was sent. See “He is a 
Brick.’’—-Anon. 

A tumbled down and hurt his arm against a bit of 
wood. See Nonsense Alphabet.—Lear. 

A turn and we stand in the heart of things. See By 
the Fireside.—Browning. 

A turtle sat upon a leafless tree. See Rosalynde; or, 
Euphues’ Golden Legacy (Montanus’Sonnet—II.). 
—Lodge. 

A twangling harp for Mary. See Miller and His Son, 
The.—Ramal. 

A vast host started from Rameses under Moses. See 
People Delivered, A.—Geikie. 


598 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


A working 


A verse to thee, dear one, I send. See Two Verses.— 
Powell. 

A very amusing anecdote is told of an Irishman. See 
Pat’s Secret.—Anon. 

A very fair Christian is good Mrs. Brown. See Mrs. 
Brown and Mrs. Green.—Banks. 

A very good-natured but extremely uncertain crowd 
had assembled to view the race. See Winners by 
Their Own Lengths.—Connor. 

A very little boy am I. See What I Know.—Anon. 

A very old dame in a very small cot. See Cup of Tea, 
A.—Anon. 

A very phoenix, in her radiant eyes. See Harmony of 
Love, The.—Lodge. 

A vessel was voyaging over the sea. See Thirty-nine 
Lovers, The. ( London Graphic.) 

A vicious goat, one day, had found. See Goat and the 
Swing, The.—Trowbridge. 

A view of present life is all thou hast! See Live while 
You Live.—McKnight. 

A viewless thing is the wind. See Love is Strong.— 
Burton. 

A village cart and a pretty girl. See Wishes.—Banks. 

A village pedagogue announced one day. S ee Snuff¬ 
boxes, The.—Anon. 

A village school room—this the scene. See Lesson, 
The.—-Dodge. 

A vine was growing beside a thrifty oak. See Vine and 
the Oak, The.—Anon. 

A violet grew in the meadow-grass. See Fringed Gen¬ 
tian.—Ford. 

A violet in her lovely hair. See Violet in her Hair. A. 
—Swain. 

A virgin most pure, as the prophets do tell. See Vir¬ 
gin Most Pure, A.—Anon. 

A voice by the cedar tree. See Maud.—Tennyson. 

A voice, from long expecting thousands sent. See Ac¬ 
quittal of the Bishop.—Wordsworth. 

A voice from the sea to the mountains.. See Great 
Voices, The.-—Brooks. 

A voice resounds like thunder-peal. See Watch on the 
Rhine, The.—Schneckenburger. 

A waggish cobbler once, in Rome. See Cobbler’s 
Secret, The.—Kavanaugh. 

A wagon-maker I will be. See United Workmen. 
The. * 

A wail from beyond the desert! See Lament, A.— 
Frothingham. 

A wanderer far in the gloomy night. See Beyond. 
Anon. 

A wanderer is a man from his birth. See Future, The. 
—Arnold. 

A wanderer, Wilson, from my native land. See Ode to 
Rae Wilson, Esquire.—Hood. 

A warrior hung his plumed helm. See Challenge, The. 
O’Brien. 

A warrior so bold, and a virgin so bright. See Alonzo 
the Brave and the Fair Imogine.—Anon. 

A wasp met a bee that was just buzzing by. See Wasp 
and the Bee, The.—Anon. 

A waste of land, a sodden plain. See Blue and the 
Gray, The.—Flagg. 

A weakness seizes on my mind—I would more pudding 
take. See Sick Child, The. (Punch.) 

A wealthy gentleman in Herefordshire. See One- 
legged Goose, The.—Planche. 

A wealthy old father had three grown-up sons. See 
Son’s Wish, The.—Anon. 

A wealthy young squire of Tamworth, we hear. See 
Golden Glove, The.—Anon. 

A weapon that comes down as still. See Weapon that 
Comes Down as Still, A.—-Pierpont. 

A wearied pilgrim T have wander’d here. See On 
Himself.—Herrick. 

A wearily wan little face. See Nobody Cares.—Anon. 

A weary, cowering figure. See Woolen Doll, The.— 
Hows. 

“A weary lot is thine, fair maid.” See Rokeby (Rover, 
The).—Scott. 

A weary weed, tossed to and fro. See Gulf-weed.— 
Fenner. 

A weaver sat one day at his loom. See Weaver, The.— 
Anon. 

A wee bird came to our ha’ door. See Wae’s me for 
Prince Charlie.—Glen. 

A wee little nut lay deep in its nest. See Chestnut 
Burr, The.—Anon. 

A wee little worm in a hickory-nut. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A (“It”).—Riley. , 

A week ago, and I am almost glad. See Happiest Girl 
in the World, The.—Webster. 

A week ago to-day, when red-haired Sally. See Done 
For.—Cooke. 


A welcome, friends, assembled here. See Salutatory.— 
Crosby. 

A welcome warm awaits thee. See To the First Robin. 
—Washburn. 

A well there is in the west country. See Well of St. 
Keyne, The.—Southey. 

A well-known citizen of Hartford, Connecticut. See 
Inquiring Yankee, An.—Anon. 

A werry funny feller is de ole plantation mule. See 
Solium Fac’, A.—Anon. 

A wet sheet and a flowing sea. See Wet Sheet and a 
Flowing Sea, A.—Cunningham. 

A whiff o’ good Virginia tobacco. See Cheerful Song, 
A.—Wrinkle. 

A while their route they silent made. See Lord of the 
Isles, The (Lake Coriskin).—Scott. 

A whisper on the heath 1 hear. See Spring.—Love- 
man. 

A whisper woke the air. See Calumny.—Osgood. 

A white rat having been caught in some stables. See 
R ats.—Loudon. 

A white rose had a sorrow. See Betrayal of the Rose, 
The.—Thomas. 

“A wicked action fair to do.” See Boy and the Sky¬ 
lark, The.—Lamb. 

A wicked one lies buried here. See Epitaph on a 
Candle. (Punch.) 

A wicked thing, Athenians, a wicked thing is a calum¬ 
niator. See Oration on the Crown, The (Demos¬ 
thenes not Vanquished by Philip).—Demosthenes. 

A wide plain, where the broadening Floss hurries on. 
See Mill on the Floss, The.-—Eliot. 

A wide, uncovered piazza ran along the front. See 
Mourning Veil, The.—Harbour. 

A widow bird sate mourning for her love. See Widow 
Bird, The.—Shelley. 

A widow sat in her quiet room. See Story which the 
Ledger Told, The.—Smith. 

A widow—she had only one! See Widow’s Mite, The. 
—Locker-Lampson. 

A wild and warlike Zulu chief. See On Afric’s Golden 
Sands. (University Herald.) 

A wild canyon out in the mountain side. See Touch of 
Nature, A.—Bushnell. 

A wind blew up from Pernambuco. See Ballad of the 
“Laughing Sally.” The.—Roberts. 

A wind came up out of the sea. See Daybreak.— 
Longfellow. 

A wind of April softly stole. See Song of the Pine, 
The.—Buckham. 

A wind sways the pines. See Dirge in Woods.—Mere¬ 
dith. 

A wind that dies on the meadows lush. See Dreamer, 
The.—Furlong. 

A wink from Hesper falling. See Is it Good-bye?—- 
Henley. 

A winning wile. See Condensed Novel, A.—Anon. 

A wise man said, hundreds of years ago. See Mimick¬ 
ing Others.—Anon. 

A wolf he pricks with eyes of fire. See Supper, The.— 
Ramal. 

A woman got into a suburbaii car. See Her First 
Baby.—Anon. 

A woman on whose face deep lines had traced the 
words, “Old without age.” See Boy in a Dime 
Museum, A. (Arkansaw Traveler.) 

A woman panting, trembling, out of breath. See Too 
Late.—Kavanaugh. 

A woman stood by the river. See River. The.— 
Anon. 

A woman to the holy father went. See Scandal.— 
Johnson. 

A woman watched the falling snow. See Shadows on 
the Snow.—Jones. 

A wonder stranger ne’er was known. See Suffolk 
Miracle, The.—Anon. 

A wonderful man! A wonderful man! See Moses at 
the Fair.—Coyne. 

A wonderful story I will tell. See Only a Chicken.— 
Hall. 

A woodman, fisher, and a swain. See Muses’ Elysium, 
The (Contest, A).—Drayton. 

A woodpecker and a dove had been visiting a peacock. 
See Woodpecker and the Dove, The.—Bellamy 
and Goodwin. 

A word, but one; one little, kindly word. See Princess, 
The.—Tennyson. 

A word of encouragement to the Sabbath school 
teacher. See Grace of Fidelity, The.—Niccolls. 

A word with you, dear children, all. See Taste it not. 
—Anon. 

A working smith all other trades excels. See St. 
Clement’s Day Rhyme.—Anon. 


599 




A worthy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


A worthy New England deacon once described a 
brother. See Pilgrims, The.—Whittier. 

A worthy pious clergyman of late. See Parson and 
the Widow, The.—Anon. 

A worthy squire of sober life. See Woman’s Curiosity. 
—Anon. 

A wrinkled, crabbed man they picture thee. See 
Winter.—Southey. 

A Yankee in a restaurant. See Yankee and the Butter, 
The.—Anon. 

A Yankee ship and a Yankee crew. See Constitution’s 
Last Fight, The.—Roche. 

A Yankee, walking the streets of London, looked 
through a window. See Gape-seed.—Bungay. 

A year ago, a year ago. See Year Ago, A.—Strang- 
ford. 

A year ago how often did I meet. See Samuel Hoar.— 
Sanborn. 

A young girl of sixteen, lithe, fair and fresh. See Oh, 
Sir!—Ayres. 

A young John Phoenix tells how it was. See How He 
Whipped Him.—Anon. 

A young man, about twenty-five for twenty-one] years 
old, was sitting. See He Had Faith.—Anon. 

A young man of eighteen or t wenty. See Clever Trick, 
A.—Anon. 

A young man, or rather a boy, for he was not seventeen 
years of age. See Strong Temptation, A.— 
Anon. 

A young officer (in what army no matter) See Noble 
Revenge.—De Quincey. 

A young rose in the summer time. See Gentle Words. 
—Stuart. 

A young wife stood at the lattice-pane. See Sun and 
Rain.—Anon. 

A young-eyed seer, amid the leafy ways. See Keats.— 
Livingston. 

A youngster at school, more sedate than the rest. See 
Pity for Poor Africans.—Cowper. 

A youth in apparel that glittered. See Content.— 
Crane. 

A youth, light hearted and content. See Two Locks of 
Hair, The.—Pfizer. 

A youth went out to serenade. See Serenade, The: 
“A youth went out.”—Anon. 

A youth who determined to alter his station. See 
How to Choose a Wife.—Anon. 

A youth, who had to Sais in the land. See Veiled 
Statue at Sais, The.—Martin Schiller. 

A youth with shining locks of gold. See Has It Come 
to This?—Reimer. 

“Abby, Abby, they’re a-comin’l” See Fifer and 
Drummer of Scituate, The.—Palfrey. 

Abdallah sat at his mornipg meal. See Eastern 
Apologue, An.—Anon. 

Abdel-Hassan o’er the desert journeyed with his 
caravan. See Abdel-Hassan.—Anon. 

Abel, why don’t you read us something out of the paper. 
See Uncomfortable Predicament, An*—Anon. 

Abide with me; fast falls the eventide. See Abide 
with Me.—Lyte. 

“Abide with me; fast fails the eventide.” See “Abide 
with Me.”—Thayer. 

Abijah Dunn! Abijah Dunn! See House not Made 
with Hands, A.—Marble. 

Abject, stooping, old, and wan. See Beggar Man, The. 
—Lamb. 

Aboard o’ the good ship Margaret Ann. See Sentence 
of Death on the High Seas.—Matthison. 

Abou Ben Adhem, may his tribe increase. See Abou 
Ben Adhem.—Hunt. 

About a mile outside the city gate. See Execution of 
Ugo Bassi.—King. 

About Glenkindie and his man. See Glenkindie.— 
Scott. 

About half-past eleven o’clock on Sunday night. See 
Bewitched Clock, The.—Anon. 

About her head or floating feet. See My Father’s 
Child.—Bloede. 

About midnight some on the roof cried out. See Ben- 
H ur.—W allace. 

About my darling’s lovely eyes. See Difficulty, The.— 
Heine. 

About the big post-office door. See “Limpy Tim.”— 
Harley. 

About the room the Christmas greens. See God Bless 
Our School.—Anon. 

About the sweet bag of a bee. See Bag of the Bee, 
The.—Herrick. 

About the time of Christmas. See Jane Conquest.— 
Anon. 

About the year 1800, Centre Street in the City of New 
York. See No. 5 Collect Street.—Pardessus. 


About three months ago I made up my mind. See My 
Boarding Houses.—Thatcher. 

About to enter, fellow citizens, upon the exercise of 
duties. See Inauguration Address, March 4, 1801 
(Inaugural Address).—Jefferson. 

About two thousand years before the Christian era. 
See Seeking a Country.—Carrington. 

About Yule, when the wind blew cool. See Young 
Waters.—Anon. 

Above all things, raillery decline. See Raillery.— 
Stillingfleet. 

Above me sail the shadow ships. See Shadow Ships.— 
Hall. 

Above the city of Berlin shines soft the summer day. 
See King's Ride, The.—Hooper. 

Above the frozen floods gay feet keep time. See 
Skaters, The.—Leach. 

Above the pines the moon was slowly drifting. See 
Dickens in Camp.—Harte. 

Above the seas of gold and glass. Nee Eucharist of 
Affliction.—Howe. 

Above them spread a stranger sky. See Indian’s 
Welcome to the Pilgrim Fathers, The.—Sigourney. 

Above us the cold, silent stars. See Cry for Life, A.— 
Harding. 

Above yon sombre swell of land. See Plough, The.— 
Horne. 

Abraham Lincoln stands in no need of a vindicator or 
a eulogist. See In Memory of Lincoln.—Baldwin. 

Abram and Zimri owned a field together. See Abram 
and Zimri.—Cook. 

Absence, hear thou my protestation. See same .— 
Donne. 

Absent from thee, I languish still. See Song: “Absent 
from thee,” etc.—Rochester. 

Absent or present, still to thee. See To Samuel Rogers, 
Esq.—Byron. 

Abstain from all appearance of evil. See Temperance 
Alphabet. A.—Lloyd. 

Abstracted, contemplative air. See Robin, The.— 
Harkee. 

Accept my love, as true a heart. See same. —Prior. 

Accept, thou shrine of my dead saint. See Exequy on 
his Wife.—King. 

Accordin’ to app’intment, the women folks all met at 
the Piney Grove meetin’ house. See Piecing the 
Preacher’s Quilt.—Plowman. 

"According to the most authentic records, my dear 
children,” said grandfather. See Grandfather’s 
Chair (Pine Tree Shillings, The).—Hawthorne. 

Ach! that I cannot speak your tongue so good. See 
My Boy Fritz.—Murray. 

Across a chasm of eighteen hundred years. See same. 
—Napoleon. 

Across in my neighbor’s window. See Baby over the 
Way, The.—Gladden. 

Across the blue sky together. See Disappointment.— 
Kellogg. 

Across the brown and wintry morn. See "Shot through 
the Heart.”—Porter. 

Across the eastern sky has glowed. See Crowing of the 
Red Cock. The.—Lazarus. 

Across the English meadows sweet. See Elia.— 
McPhelim. 

Across the fields like swallows fly. See Across the 
Fields.—Crane. 

Across the gardens of life they go. See Love and 
Time.—Lloyd. 

Across the German Ocean. See Little Gottlieb.—Cary. 

Across the gloom the gray moth speeds. See Mignon. 
—Peck. 

Across the grass I see her pass. See Milkmaid, The.— 
Dobson. 

Across the heath and down the hill. See Miller and 
the Maid, The.—Scott. 

Across the hills the screeching blue jays fly. See In 
the San Joaquin.—Hutchinson 

Across the level table-land. See Mabel Martin.— 
Whittier. 

Across the lonely [narrow—C.] beach we flit. See Sand¬ 
piper, The.—Thaxter. 

Across the moorlands of the Not. See Moorlands of 
the Not.—Anon. 

Across the mountains the mist hath drawn. See 
Soldier’s Tent, The.—Vacaresco. 

Across the narrow [wrong lonely] beach we flit. See 
Sandpiper, The.—Thaxter. 

Across the noisy street. See Ballad of the Thrush, The. 
—Dobson. 

Across the pathway, myrtle-fringed. See Story of the 
Gate.—Robertson. 

Across the peach-blow sky of spring. See Our Flag at 
Apia.—King. 


600 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Against 


Across the pearly distance. See Autumn Haze.—Mun- 
kittrick. 

Across the pleasant valley our royal ranks their lines 
displayed. See Hero of the Rank and File, The.— 
Scanlan. 

Across the rapid stream of seventy years. See Bridge 
of Life, The.—Anon. 

Across the roaring board in Helgafell. See Death of 
Arnkel. The.—Gosse. 

Across the sea a land there is. See Earthly Paradise, 
The (Land across the Sea, A).-—Morris. 

Across the sombre prairie sea. See Prairie.—-Bates. 

Across the sunlit Scottish hills. See Child Martyr, The. 
—Anderson. 

Across the swiffling waves they went. See Cruise of 
the “P. C.” The.—Anon. 

Across the winter’s gloom. See Easter. — Sher¬ 
man. 

Across this sea I sail and do not know. See In Mid¬ 
ocean.—Moulton. 

Ad astra, de profundis. See ’Tis Ever Thus.—Mun- 
kittrick. 

Adam never knew what ’twas to be a boy. See What 
Adam Missed.—Anon. 

Adam the goodliest man of men since born. See Para¬ 
dise Lost (Scene in Paradise, A).—Milton. 

Adams and Jefferson, I have said, are no more. See 
Adams and Jefferson.—Webster. 

Add bright buds and sun and flowers. See Out-of-door 
Arithmetic.—Anon. 

Adieu! Adieu! See Tribute to an Old Shoe, A.— 
Anon. 

Adieu, adieu! my native shore. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage (Childe Harold’s Farewell to England). 
—Byron. 

Adieu, dear, amiable youth! See Epistle to a Young 
F riend.—Burns. 

Adieu, fair isle! I love thy bowers. See Farewell to 
Cuba.—Brooks. 

Adieu, farewell, earth's bliss! See In Time of Pestilence. 
—Nashe. 

Adieu, kind Life, though thou hast often been. See 
Departure.—Smith. 

Adieu to Belashanny, where I was bred and born. See 
Winding Banks of Erne, The.—Allingham. 

Adieu to France, my latest glance. See DeRoberval 
(Adieu to France).—Hunter-Duvar. 

Adieu! To God! See Adieu.—Gilmore. 

Adieu to these! Niagara, thy roar. See Wanderer, 
The.—Stewart. 

Admiral. Admiral, sailing home. See Homing, The.— 
Rooney. 

Admire not, shepherd’s boy. See Fair Virtue, the 
Mistress of Philarete (“Admire not,” etc.).— 
Wither. 

Admiring nature in her wildest grace. See Beauties of 
Nature, The.—Burns. 

Adolfo Rodriguez was the only son of a Cuban farmer. 
See Death of Rodriguez. The.—Davis. 

Adown beside an old^tone wall. See Four Pictures.— 
Durfee. 

Adown the crags o’ high Montrine. See To Allie.— 
Brown. 

Adown the darkened hall at twelve she crept. See 
Prophetic Mirror, A.—Smith. 

Adown the leafy lane we two. See Memory, A.—Mac- 
Aleese. 

Advance our waving colours on the walls. See King 
Henry VI., Pt. I. (Relief of Orleans). — Shake¬ 
speare. 

Advance, then, ye future generations! We would hail 
you. See First Settlement of New England (Pero¬ 
ration of Webster’s Plymouth Rock Oration).— 
Webster. 

Ae fond kiss and then we sever! See Ae Fond Kiss.— 
Burns. 

Afar in the desert I love to ride. See Afar in the 
Desert.—Pringle. 

Afar off confused sounds salute the quiet air. See 
Norwegian Wedding March of Crieg, in Verse, 
The.—Johnson. 

Afar the hunt in vales below has sped. See Orion 
(Meeting of Orion and Artemis).—Home. 

Afar, where the rugged Northland. See First Christ¬ 
mas Tree, The.—Goodwin. 

Affection’s charm no longer gilds. See Personified 
Sentimental, The.—Harte. 

Afore Sue went ter town ter school. See New-fashioned 
Singin’.—Smith. 

"Afraid in the dark? Not I,” said the owl. See 
Who’s Afraid in the Dark.—Anon. 

Afraid? Of whom am I afraid? See Needless Fear.— 
Dickinson. 


After a three days’ march he came to an Indian encamp¬ 
ment. See Courtship of Miles Standish (Miles 
Standish’s Encounter with the Indians).—Long¬ 
fellow. 

After a while—a busy brain. See Human Life.— 
Winton. 

After all. one country, brethren! See One Country.— 
Stanton. 

After all our doubts, our suspicions and speculations. 
See Speech on the Compromises of the Constitu¬ 
tion (American Constitution, The).—Hamilton. 

After an interval, reading, here in the midnight. See 
After an Interval.—Whitman. 

After awhile is a beautiful day. See After Awhile.— 
Anon. • 

After dark vapours have oppressed our plains. See 
Sonnet: “After dark vapours,” etc.—Keats. 

After dear old grandma died. See Little Homer’s 
Slate.—Field. 

After dinner the Widder Doodle went upstairs and 
laid down for a nap. See Josiah Allen’s Wife as 
a P. A. and P. I. (Study in Dialect, A).—Holley. 

After her bath, yet early in the day. See Jeptha's 
Daughter.—Ramsay. 

After I had solaced my mind with the comfortable 
part of my condition. See Robinson Crusoe (Get¬ 
ting Supplies from the Wreck).—Defoe. 

After long winter days, ’twill bring. See Charade for 
Little Folks.—Cleveland. 

After many strains and heaves. See Hudibras.—But¬ 
ler. 

After many years of domestic trouble. See Exiles in 
Egypt, The.—Carrington. 

After my death I wish no other herald. See King 
Henry VIII.—Shakespeare. 

After sorrow’s night. See same. —-Gilder. 

After supper the little ones said their prayers to their 
mother. See Emigrant’s Story, The.—Trowbridge. 

After the darkness, light! See same. —Anon. 

After the expulsion from Paradise of Adam and Eve. 
See Paradise Regained, The Story of.—Rabb. 

After the eyes that looked, the lips that spake. See 
Dedicatory Ode for the Gettysburg National 
Cemetery.—Taylor. 

After the fall of Troy Agamemnon returned to Argos. 
See Odyssey, Story of the.—Rabb. 

After the hard and hurried march. See Once at Battle 
Eve.—Krout. 

After the last heavy snowstorm. See Tale of the Big 
Snow, A.—Bizarre. 

After the rain goes by. See Rainbow, The.—Sherman. 

After the tempest in the sky. See Rainbow, The.— 
Lamb. 

Again has come the springtime. See November and 
April (April).—Longfellow. 

Again I hear that creaking step. See My Familiar.— 
Saxe. 

Again I sit within the mansion. See Phantom, The.— 
Taylor. 

Again rejoicing nature sees. See same. —Burns. 

Again returned the scenes of youth. See Marmion 
(Dreams).—Scott. 

Again the Lord of life and light. See Christ Risen.— 
Barbauld. 

Again the violet of our early days. See Spring.— 
Elliott. 

Again they muster from the far-off hillside. See After 
Vacation.—Anon. 

Again thy birthday dawns, O man beloved. See 
Lincoln’s Birthday.-—Woodbury. 

Again to the battle, Achaians! See Song of the Greeks. 
—Campbell. 

Again wake the song to the nation’s defenders. See 
Nation’s Defenders, The.—Butterworth. 

Again we come this day to greet. See Arbor Day.— 
Short. 

Again we lift the veil amid our tears. See Patriotic 
Sentiments.—Greenleaf. 

Again you stand at the parting of the ways. See New 
Year; or, Which Way, The.—Abbott 

Against all chambermaids, of whatsoever age or 
nationality, I launch the curse of bachelordom! 
See Mark Twain’s Opinion of Chambermaids.— 
Clemens. 

Against her mouth she pressed the rose. See Her 
Roses.—Innsly. 

Against the boundless night. See To a Firefly.— 
Bryant. 

Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence. See 
Against Foreign Entanglements.—Washington. 

Against the prisoner at the bar, as an individual. See 
Murder of Captain Joseph White, The (Crime its 
Own Detector).—Webster. 


601 






Against 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Against the sunset glow they stand. See Millet and 
Zola.—Crewe 

Agatha! Agatha! Here in the desolate shadows. 
See Agatha.—Kernan. 

Agenor, hail! See Ion Cion, a Tragedy).—Talfourd. 

Ages ago, when the world was grand. See Fate of Sin 
Foo, The.—Peck. 

Ages long since, upon the desert waste. See Chalced¬ 
ony.—G reenough. 

Ages will come and go; nations will rise and fall. See 
Illustration, An.—Krohn. 

Aggie, have you learned your piece? See Anniversary 
Meeting, The. 

Agnes, thou child of harmony, now fled. See Whither. 
■—Goetz.* 

Ah! Ah! Eet ees ze same, all ze time.— See “Ze Day¬ 
light Veel Coam.”—Anon. 

Ah, Albert, so you are awake at last See Traveler, 
The.—Anon. 

Ah Almon Keefer! what a boy you were. See Almon 
Keefer.—Riley. 

Ah, be not false, sweet Splendor! See Ah. be not 
False.—Gilder. 

Ah, be not vain, in yon flower bell. See Dewdrop, 
The.-—Skipsey. 

Ah, Ben. say how or when. See Ode for Ben Jonson, 
An.—Herrick 

Ah. blessedness of work! The aimless mind. See 
Work—Block. 

Ah, bring it not so grudgingly. See Ah, Bring it Not. 
—Radford. 

Ah, broken is the golden bowl, the spirit flown forever! 
See Lenore.—Poe. 

Ah, Chloris, could I now but [or that I now couldl sit. 
See To a Very Young Lady.—Sedley. 

Ah, Clemence! when I saw thee last. See La Grisette. 
-—Holmes. 

Ah, Colin! Canst thou leave thy sweetheart true? 
See Shepherd’s Week, The (Tuesday).—Gay. 

Ah, could you see me weep in anguish sore? See 
Appeal, An.—Henniker. 

Ah, County Guy, the hour is nigh. See County Guy.— 
Scott. 

Ah, dear God, when will it be day? See From Exile.— 
Anon. 

Ah, dear' How my heart palpitates. See Advertising 
for a Husband.—McBride. 

Ah, did you once see Shelley plain? See Memorabilia. 
—Browning. 

Ah, dinna chide the mither! See Dinna Chide the 
Mi t her.—Sangster. 

Ah, distinctly I remember, it was in the bleak Decem¬ 
ber. See Raven, The.—Poe. 

Ah, don’t be sorrowful, darling. See Old Folks.— 
Anon. 

Ah, fading joy, how quickly art thou past! See Song: 
“Ah, fading joy.”—Dryden. 

Ah, Faustus, now hast thou but one bare hour to live! 
See Faustus’ Last Speech on Earth.—Marlowe. 

Ah, fine! It was that April time when gentle winds 
were blowing. See Kathie Morris.—Anon. 

Ah, for this weary life! See “Love, without Thee.”— 
Aidfi 

Ah, gentle shepherd, thine the lot to tend. See Fleece, 
The.—Dyer. 

Ah, God, for a man with heart, head, hand. See 
Maud (Prayer. The).—Tennyson. 

Ah, good evening to you. So you’ve brought the 
proof then, eh? See Not in the Programme.— 
Coller 

Ah, happy hills! Ah. pleasing shade! See On a 
Distant Prospect of Eton College.—Gray. 

Ah! he is a cute one, he is. See Stage Land (Stage 
Detective and Peasants, The).—Jerome. 

Ah, he is dead! A strange, sad story clings. See 
Dauntless.—Weir. 

"Ah, here it is! I’m famous now.” See First Appear¬ 
ance in Type.—Anon. 

Ah, here we are! Don’t leave us out. See Give the 
Youngsters a Chance;—Anon. 

Ah, here we are! What good seats! See Ann Jane’s 
Mother at a Classical Concert.—Anon. 

Ah, here’s the little round thing my papa talks into. 
See Telephone Message, A.—Anon. 

Ah, how sweet it is to love. See same. —Dryden 

Ah, how the colder pulse still starts. See Life’s 
Mysteries.—Cary. 

Ah, I remember Stillwater as it were yesterday. See 
Arnold at Stillwater.—English. 

Ah! I remember well (and how can T?). See Hymen’s 
Triumph (Early Love).—Daniel. 

Ah! if it should be Bill come from his voyage. See 
Bill Jepson’s wife.—Meyers. 


“Ah, if we only knew,’’ he said. See George Du 
Maurier.-—Ketchum. 

Ah! I’m feared thou’s come too sooin. See To a Daisy. 
—Hartley. 

Ah, it is very hard to live in this way. See Test, The.— 
McBride. 

Ah, Jack it was, and with him little Jill. See Jack and 
Jill.—Morgridge. 

Ah, Juliet, if the measure of thy joy. See Romeo and 
Juliet.—Shakespeare 

Ah, June is here, but where is May? See Unfulfillment. 
—Bushnell. 

“Ah, know you not,” said Martha’s beau. See Mattie’s 
Retort.—Anon. 

Ah, lassie fair! thine eyes of blue. See Ah. Lassie Fair! 
—Tenney. 

Ah! leave the smoke, the wealth, the roar. See To 
Theocritus, in Winter—Lang. 

Ah, leave to other maidens. See To the Silent One.— 
Geibel. 

Ah, liberty! how like thou art. See Empty Bottle, 
The.—Aytoun. 

Ah! list the music of the whistling wings. See Sport. 
—Anderson. 

Ah, listen to this, brothers. See In Nonsense Land.— 
Denton. 

Ah! little flower, upspringing, azure-eyed. See Fruition¬ 
less. —Coolbrith. 

Ah, little ranting Johnny. See To J. H.-—Hunt. 

Ah! little they know of true happiness, they whom 
satiety fills. See Labor Song.—MacCarthy. 

Ah! long ago since I or thou. See Before and After. 
—Brown. 

Ah! love, impute it not to me a sin. See To One Ex¬ 
cusing his Poverty.—Blunt. 

Ah, love! let us be true. See Dover Beach.—Arnold. 

Ah, love, the teacher we decried. See Pure Hypothesis 
A.—Kendall. 

Ah love! thy love is like the flowers. Nee Thorn, A.— 
Anon. 

Ah, love, thy sweet, strange grace. See There is a 
Time—J. C. B. 

Ah, lovely appearance of death! See Death. — 
Wesley. 

Ah, me! for aught that ever I could read Nee Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream (“Ah me! for aught,” etc.). 
Shakespeare. 

Ah me! full sorely is my heart forlorn. See School¬ 
mistress, The.—Shenstone. 

Ah, me! how dark the discipline of pain. See President 
Garfield.—-Longfellow. 

Ah, me' how fair I thought her. See When I was Ten 
and She was Fifteen.—Anon. 

Ah, me! I know how like a golden flower. See Grande 
Ronde Valley, The.—Higginson. 

Ah, me! It’s no use wishing—none at all. See Mr. 
Caudle’s Wedding Dinner.—Jerrold. 

Ah me! this is a sad and silent city. See Hymn of the 
Churchyard.—Bethune. 

Ah me! those old familiar bounds! See Ode On a Dis¬ 
tant Prospect of Clapham Academy.—Hood. 

Ah, moment not to be purchased. See Sunshine of the 
Gods, The.—Taylor. 

Ah, mon eher Lord Dundr^rie. See Lord Dundreary 
and the French Widow.—Anon. 

Ah! my heart is weary waiting. See Summer Longings. 
—MacCarthy. 

Ah! my Lord, leave me not. See Leave me Not.— 
Wedderburn. 

Ah. my Perilla! dost thou grieve to see. See To Per- 
illa.—Herrick. 

Ah! my swete swetyng [or my sweet sweetingl. See 
My Swete Swetyng.—Anon 

Ah, never doubt that my love is true. See Unspoken. 
—Adcock. 

Ah night! blind germ of days to be. See Ballad of 
High Endeavor. A.—Anon. 

Ah! not because our soldier died before his field was 
won. See Raglan.—Arnold. 

Ah, only love I have ever known. See Passing Song, A. 
—Carryl. 

Ah, painful-sweet! how can I take it in! See We Two. 

: —Preston. 

Ah, Patrick, how are you, my friend and fellow citizen? 
See Irish Voter, The.—Kent. 

Ah! poor intoxicated little knave. See To a Fly Taken 
Out of a Bowl of Punch.—Pindar. 

Ah! sad are they who know not love. See Two songs 
from the Persian, II.—Aldrich. 

Ah! say you so, bold sailor. See Herald Crane, The.— 
Garland. 

Ah, see the fair chivalry come, the companions of 
Christ! See Te Martyrum Candidatus.—Johnson. 


602 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Alas 


“Ah!” sighed the imprisoned bird, “how unhappy were 
I in my eternal night.” See Complaint of the Bird 
in a Dark Room.—Richter. 

Ah! Sir Harcourt, had you been here a month ago. See 
London Assurance (Scene from ‘‘London Assur¬ 
ance”).—Boucicault. 

Ah, Sir Lancelot, there thou liest. See Sir Lancelot.— 
Mallory. 

Ah, Sunflower, weary of time. See Ah, Sunflower.— 
Blake. 

Ah! sure, thin, love is bloind; fur w'hin Oi courted me 
Mary Ann. See Automatic Woman. The.—-Milne. 

Ah, sweet content! where is thy mild abode? See Son¬ 
net.—Barnes. 

“Ah, sweet Kitty Neil, rise up from that [or your] 
wheel.” See Kitty Neil.-—Waller. 

Ah, sweet! thou little knowest how. See Serenade: 
“Ah, sweet! ” etc.—Hood. 

Ah, the buxum girls that helped the boys. See Money 
M usk.—T ay lor. 

Ah, the moon is watching me! See Rising, Watching 
Moon, The.—Anon. 

Ah! the morning is gray. See Chimney-tops.—Douglas. 

Ah, the post! By the way, Tom, I should like to favor 
you with a few ideas. See Poisoned.—Amcott. 

Ah, the quaint and curious carving. See When my 
Mother Tucked me in.—Garland. 

Ah, the world hath many a Homer. See Jack Horner. 
—Whitney. 

Ah, then how sweetly closed those crowded days! See 
Boyhood.—Allston. 

Ah, there be souls none understand. See Ship in 
the Desert, The ("Ah, there be souls,” etc.).— 
Miller. 

“Ah! thou, too, sad Alighieri.” See Balder (Dante, 
Shakespeare. Milton).—Dobell. 

Ah, to be in England. See Home Thoughts, from 
Abroad.—Browning. 

Ah. ’twas long, long years ago, my boy. See Long 
Ago, The.—McCutchen. 

Ah, was it nobly done of him. See Deserted—De 
Fonblanque. 

Ah, well, another day’s labor in this dingy old school¬ 
room is ended. See “Boarding ’Round.”—Case. 

Ah, well do I remember how, in the happy olden days. 
See Mammy’s Story.—Weiss. 

Ah, well, mother, I don’t suppose T can ever quite re¬ 
place my good, faithful Maggie. See How Mrs. 
Gaskell Did not Hire a Cook.—Anon. 

Ah! were she pitiful as she is fair. See Fawnia.— 
Greene. 

Ah! what a weary race my feet have run. See To the 
River Loddon.—Warton. 

Ah! what a wondrous age is this. See Phrenology.— 
Demorest. 

Ah. what avails the sceptred race. See Rose Aylmer. 
—Landor. 

Ah! what can ail thee, w-retched wight. See La Belle 
Dame sans Merci.—Keats. 

Ah, what can ever be more stately and admirable to 
me than mast-hemmed Manhattan? See Crossing 
Brooklyn Ferry.—Whitman. 

Ah! what if the mind. See Day-dreams.—Allen. 

Ah! what inventive skill has man displayed. See 
War’s End.—Bell. 

Ah, what is love? It is a pretty thing. See 
Mourning Garment, The (Shepherd’s Wife’s Song, 
The).—Greene. 

Ah! what pleasant visions haunt me. See Secret of the 
Sea. The.—Longfellow. 

Ah! what would this world be to us. Nee Children, The. 
—Longfellow. 

Ah! when shall all men’s good. See Golden Year, The. 
—Tennyson. 

Ah! when the infinite burden of life descendeth upon us. 
See Children of the Lord’s Supper.—Longfellow. 

Ah! when will all be ended? See Life and Death of 
Jason (“Ah! when,” etc.).—Morris. * 

Ah! whence yon glare. See Queen Mab (War).— 
Shelley. _ . 

Ah! who can tell how hard it is to climb. See Minstrel, 
The (Fame).—Beattie. 

Ah, with the grape my fading life provide. See 
Rub&iyfit of Omar Khayyam (Omar Khayyiim, 
Set. fr.).— Fitzgerald. 

Ah, yes! I do remember, ’twas just ten years last 
June. See New Year’s Story, A.—Challen. 

Ah, yes—poor Jack; I mind him once. See Poor Jack. 
—Cowan. 

Ah, yes, the fight! Well, messmates, well. See Sea- 
fight, The.—Anon. 

Ah Yet was only a poor little heathen. See Ah let s 
Christmas.—Davis. 


Ah! you are fair, I must confess. See Dresden Shep¬ 
herdess, A.—Houghton 

Ah, you mistake me, comrades, to think that my heart 
is steel! See Arnold at Stillwater.—English. 

Aha! a traitor in the camp. See To a Usurper.—Field. 

Aha, this is my birthday! See Sword, The.-—Berquin. 

Ahasuerus reigned. Kinglier king. SeeVashti.—Dorr. 

Aho! Aho! Love’s horn doth blow. See Bride’s 
Tragedy, The (Love Goes a-Hawking).-—Beddoes. 

“Ahoy; and O-ho; and it’s who’s for the ferry?” See 
Twickenham Ferry.—Marzials. 

Aided by a thousand men from Platsea. See Athens: 
Its Rise and Fall (Marathon).—Buiwer-Lytton. 

Aim at perfection in everything. See Aim at Perfec¬ 
tion.—Chesterfield. 

Aim at the attainment of clear and accurate habits of 
thought. See Desirable Objects of Attainment.— 
Stoughton. 

“Aim not too high at things beyond thy reach.” See 
Fortune My Foe.—Graves. 

Ain’t you ’shamed, you naughty dolly? See Washing 
Dolly’s Clothes.—Anon 

Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon. See Airly Beacon.— 
Kingsley. 

Airy, fairy Lilian. See Lilian.—Tennyson. 

Alabama.—February 22 is Arbor Day in this State. 
See How Arbor Day is Observed in Various 
States.—Anon. 

Alack! alas! alack! ah me. See Woful Tale of Jotham 
Brown, The.—Dowe. 

Alack! I am afraid they have awak’d. See Macbeth. 
—Shakespeare. 

Alack! why am I sent for to a king. See King 
Richard II.—Shakespeare. 

Alack-a-day! what a world of troubles and trials. See 
Glad Surprise, A.—Joy. 

Aladdin was the son of a poor tailor. See Aladdin, or 
the Wonderful Lamp.—Anon. 

“Alas, alas, how the north wind grieves!” See Bare 
Boughs and Buds.-—Thaxter. 

Alas! alas! my reign is o’er. See Old Year Out and 
New Year In, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Alas for the oak of our fathers, that stood. See Oak 
of Our Fathers, The.—Southey. 

Alas! for them, their day is o’er. See Centennial 
Ode (Indians).—Sprague. 

Alas, Fra Giacomo. See Fra Giacomo.—Buchanan. 

Alas! how bitter are the wrongs of love! See same. — 
Anon. 

Alas! how easily things go wrong. See Sweet Peril.— 
Macdonald. 

Alas! how few of nature’s faces are left to gladden us. 
See same. —Dickens. 

Alas! how hardly things go right! See Right and 
W rong.—Anon. 

Alas! how light a cause may move. See Lalla Rookh 
(Light of the Harem).—Moore. 

Alas, how soon the hours are over. See Plays.—Landor. 

Alas! I am the unhappiest of men! See Ugliest of 
Seven, The.—Townsend. 

Alas, in how- many places is the forest. See Spare the 
Trees.—Michelet. 

Alas! little Kitty—do give her your pity! See Kitty. 
—Douglas. 

Alas! my child, where is the pen. See Hen, The.— 
Herford. 

Alas (my lord), my haste was all too hot. See Steel 
Glass, The (Epilogus).—Gascoigne. 

“Alas! no one loves me,” a little maid sighed. See If 
You Want to be Loved.—Denton. 

Alas! so all things now do hold their peace! See Com¬ 
plaint by Night of the Lover not Beloved, A.— 
Surrey. 

Alas! that men must see. See Love and Death.— 
Deland. 

Alas, that [the—C.] moon should ver beam. See 
Water Lady, The.—Hood. 

Alas, that my heart is a lute. See My Heart is a Lute. 
—Lindsay. 

Alas! the breast that inward bleeds. See Giaour, 
The.—Byron. 

Alas, the [ur. that] moon should ever beam. See 
Water Lady, The.—Hood. 

Alas the songs!—the songs of Love and Youth. See 
Alas the Songs.—De I.ys. 

Alas! the weary hours pass slow. See Countersign, 
The.—Anon. 

Alas! they had been friends in youth. See Christabel 
(Quarrel of Friends, The).—Coleridge. 

Alas, ’tis true 1 have gone here and there. See Son¬ 
nets (CX.).—Shakespeare. 

Alas, unhappy land; ill-fated spot. See Dirge of the 
Moolla of Kotal.-—I.anigan. 


603 




Alas 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Alas! what boots the long, laborious quest? See Son¬ 
net: “What boots.” etc.—Wordsworth. 

Alas! what errors are sometimes committed. See 
Shadow on the Blind, The.—Anon. 

Alas, what need you be so boisterous-rough? See 
King John (Arthur in King John).—Shakespeare. 

Alas! what pity ’tis that regularity. See Elder 
Brother, The (Toby Tosspot).—Colman. 

Alas! who knows or cares, my love. See Laura’s Song. 
—Brown. 

Albert, I wish you would give me seventy-five cents. 
See How the Money Goes.—Anon. 

Alexander Ypsilanti sat in Muncac’s lofty tower. See 
Alexander Ypsilanti.—Anon. 

Alexis, here she stay’d: among these pines. See Spring 
Bereaved, III.—Drummond. 

Alice Lee stood waiting her lover one night. See Lips 
that Touch Liquor Shall never Touch Mine, The. 
—Glazebrook. 

Alike all ages; dames of ancient days. See Traveller, 
The.—Goldsmith. 

Alike, beneath thine eye. See Bryant Alphabet, A.— 
Bryant. 

All alone in my room at last. See After the Wedding 
—Keese. 

All along the valley, stream that flashest white. See 
In the Valley of Cauteretz.—Tennyson. 

All are architects of Fate. See Builders, The.—Long¬ 
fellow. 

All are but parts of one stupendous whole. See Essay 
on Man, An (Order of Nature, The).—Pope. 

All are not taken! there are left behind. See Conso¬ 
lation.—Browning. 

All are players of destiny, playing roles in the drama of 
life. See Stage of Destiny, The.—Claxton. 

All around our house, up against the sky. See Over 
the Hill.—Hastings. 

All bathed in pearl and amber light. See Ballade of 
Nicolete.—Tomson. 

All beautiful things bring sadness. See Sonnet. 
—Trench. 

“All’board!” “Sphee-ee-chee—sphee-ee-ahoof.” See 
Bill the Engineer.—Bettersworth. 

All bones but yours will rattle when I say. See Sea- 
serpent, The.—Planche. 

All business men and women—-for women require to be 
good “men of business.” See Tide at the Flood, 
The.—Craik. 

All creature that ever God creat. See Hope of Immor¬ 
tality, The.—Lyndesay. 

All dainty meats I do defy. See Smoker, The.—• 
Anon. 

All day, all night, I hear the jar. See Loom of Life, 
The.—-Anon. 

All day and all day, as I sit at my measureless turning. 
See Mother’s Song, The.—Cloud. 

All day and many days I rode. See Wish, A.—Gar¬ 
land. 

All day I slowly pendulate ’twixt Sever Hall and Gore. 
See Grind’s Dream, The.—Gotthold. 

All day in exquisite air. See Larks —Tynan-Hinkson. 

All day long roved Hiawatha. See Song of Hiawatha, 
The (Death of Minnehaha, The).—Longfellow. 

All day long the river flowed. See Daniel Periton’s 
Ri de.—Tourg^e. 

All day long the storm of battle through the startled 
valley swept. <See Drummer-boy’s Burial. The. 
( Harper's Magazine .) 

All day long they come and go. See Pittypat and 
Tippytoe.—Field. 

All day long, with a vacant stare. See Joe.—Laighton. 

All day she hurried to get through. See Mis’ Smith — 
Paine. 

All day Sunday at anchor. See Innocents Abroad, 
The (Getting under Way).—Clemens. 

All day the gusty north wind bore. See Snow-bound. 
—-Whittier. 

All day the low-hung clouds have dropped. See April 
Day, An.—Southey. 

All day the sky had worn a lurid hue. See Saved.— 
Bates. 

All day the stormy wind has blown. See Take Heart. 
—Procter. 

All day the sun drops gold, the grassy mead. See 
Sun-gold.—Merrill. 

All day the waves assailed the rock. See Waves.— 
Emerson. 

All day the wild strains of Oriental music had been 
echoing. See Russia the Enigma of Europe.— 
Grosvenor. 

All day Theseus marched, and all th’ ensuing night. 
See Canterbury Tales, The (Palamon and Arcite). 
—Chaucer (Dryden). 


All day work in the shops. See Bread and Wine.— 
Cutter. 

All days which are notable should be remembered. 
See Lincoln’s Birthday.—Swing. 

All done for effect! She thinks I shall admire her 
spirit! See Fauntleroy and the Earl.—Burnett. 

“All Europe soon must feel the sway.” See Battle of 
Lepanto, The.—Anon. 

All eyes were on Enceladus’s face. See Hyperion 
(Hyperion’s Arrival).—Keats. 

“All folks, hev some soft spot.” See Pa’s Soft Spot.— 
Ellsworth. 

All folks who pretend to religion and grace. See 
Place of the Damned. The.—Swift. 

All for a pretty girlish face. See Long Years Ago.— 
Anon. 

All glorious as the rainbow’s birth. See Song.— 
Massey. 

All good people, you that have thus far come to pity 
me. See King Henry VIII. (Buckingham’s Ad¬ 
dress).—Shakespeare. 

All good-night! all good-night! See All Good-night.— 
Anon. 

All great ages have been ages of belief. See Worship 
(All great ages,” etc.).—Emerson. 

All great leaders have been inspired with a great belief. 
See Atlantic Cable, The.—Fields. 

All great men, and especially philosophers and states¬ 
men. See How to Read.—Denison. 

“All green things on the earth, bless ye the Lord." 
See Benedicite.—Brackett. 

All grim and soiled and brown with tan. See Re¬ 
former, The.-—Whittier 

All hail, friends and neighbors, I’ve opened a shop. 
See Honest Rumseller’s Advertisement, An.— 
McWright. 

All hail! Holy Mary, our hope and our joy! See Irish 
Reaper’s Harvest Hymn, The.—Keegnn. 

All hail the dawn of a new day breaking. See Justice, 
not Charity.—Wilcox. 

All hail the lovely golden rod. See Golden Rod, The.— 
Beed. 

“All hail the power of Jesus’ name!” See Coronation. 
—Perronet. 

All hail this day—glad arbor day! See For Arbor Day. 
—Adams. 

All hail! thou noble land. See America to Great 
Britain.—Allston. 

All hail to our glorious ensign. See National Banner, 
The.—Everett. 

All hail to the day when the Brittons came over. See 
Flag of Old England, The.—Howe. 

All hail to the ruins, the rocks, and the shores! See 
Ocean, The.—Montgomery. 

All hail! unfurl the stripes and stars. See God Save 
Our President.—Janvier. 

All hale! thou mighty annimil—all hale! See Sunnit to 
the Big Ox, A.—Anon. 

All heaven and earth are still—though not in sleep. 
See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Night). — 
Byron. 

All holy influences dwell within. See Children Band, 
The.—De Vere. 

All houses wherein men have lived and died. See 
Haunted Houses.—Longfellow. 

All human things are subject to decay. See Mac- 
Flecknoe.—Dryden. 

All in a misty morning. See Wiltshire Wedding, The. 
Anon. 

All in a moment, through the gloom were seen. See 
Paradise Lost (March of the Rebel Angels).—Mil- 
ton. 

All in flight the virgins scatter’d. See Odyssey, The 
(Odysseus’ Speech to Nausicaa).—Chapman. 

All in our marriage garden. See Our Wee White Rose. 
—Massey. 

All in solitude and silence. See Anita.—Camp. 

All in the April morning. See Sheep and Lambs.— 
Hinkson. 

All in the days of long ago. See Difference, The.— 
Webster. 

All in the downs the fleet was moored. See Sweet 
William’s Farewell to Black-eyed Susan.—Gay. 

All in the leafy darkness, when sleep had passed me by. 
See Care.—Cloud. 

All in the merry month of May. See Barbara Allen’s 
Cruelty.—Anon. 

All is best, though oft we doubt. See Samson Ago- 
nistes.—Milton. 

All is finished, and at length. See Building of the Ship, 
The.—Longfellow. 

All is of God' If He but wave his hand. See Two 
Angels, The.—Longfellow. 


604 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


All 


All June I bound the rose in sheaves. See One Way of 
Love.—Browning. 

All love, at first, like gen’rous wine. See Love.— 
Butler. 

All men are worms, but this no man. In silk. See 
On Court-worms.—Jonson. 

All moveless stand the ancient cedar-trees. See In the 
Dark.—Arnold. 

All my daily tasks were ended. See Single Head of 
Wheat, The.—Eldred. 

All my past life is mine no more. See Love anjl Life.— 
Rochester. 

All my stars forsake me. See Song of the Night at 
Daybreak.—Meynell. 

All nature is but art, unknown to thee. See Essay on 
Man. An (Epistle I).—Pope. 

All nature seems at work. Slugs leave their lair. See 
Work without Hope.—Coleridge. 

All nature sings wildly the song of the free. See Flag 
in Nature, The.—Smith. 

All new dishes fade. See Apple Pie. (Punch.) 

All night I watched awake for morning. See Dawn- 
angels.—Darmesteter. 

All night, in the pauses of sleep, I heard. See After 
the Storm.—Kimball. 

All night long and every night. See Young Night 
Thought.—Stevenson 

All night long through the starlit air and the stillness. 
See Cattle of his Hand. The.—Underwood. 

All night the booming minute gun. See Wreck, The. 
—Hemans. 

All night upon the guarded hill. See Defense of Law¬ 
rence, The.—Realf. 

All o’ dese here doin’s don’t suit me. See Ebo.— 
Gordon. 

All of the woe of the world, its hideous squalor and sin. 
See Frances E. Willard.—Slosson. 

All of us in one you’ll find. See On the Five Senses.— 
Swift. 

All other joys of life he strove to warm. See Modern 
Love (AH Other Joys).—Meredith. 

All our knowledge of facts is worthless unless boys and 
girls have the life. See Patriotic Words for the 
Young.—Hale. 

All our little heartaches. See Jesus Knows.—Anon. 

All our praises why should lords engross. See Moral 
Essays (Man of Ross, The).—Pope. 

All outward wisdom yields to that within. See Spirit 
of the Pine, The.—Taylor. 

All people that on earth do dwell. See Psalm C.— 
Kethe. 

All pomps and gorgeous rites, all visions old. See 
Dante Gabriel Rossetti.—Gosse. 

All praise, all honor, to the valiant men. See Women 
of the War.—Thomas. 

All praise to thee, my God. this night. See Evening 
Hymn.—Ken. 

All precious things discovered late. See Day-dream, 
The (Arrival, The).—Tennyson. 

’’All quiet along the Potomac,” they say. See Picket 
Guard, The.—Beers. 

All readers are not critical. There are still some who 
are willing to be pleased. See Books and Reading. 
—Southey. 

All ready! Off with the ropes! We move out from 
the dock. See Wreck of an Ocean Steamship, The. 
—Davenport. 

All right activity is amiable. See Emerson Alphabet, 
An.—Emerson. 

All right! Don’t worry. I’ll look after him. See 
Making him Feel at Home.—Locke. 

All round the house is the jet-black night. See North¬ 
west Passage (Shadow March).—Stevenson. 

All round the room my silent servants wait. See My 
Books.—Procter. 

All seemed delighted, though the elders more. See 
Floretty’s Musical Contribution.—Riley. 

All shod with steel. See Skating.—Wordsworth. 

All shores about and afar lie lonely. See Casquettes. 
—Swinburne. 

All silent now the clash of war. the Roman hosts have 
won. See Scipio.—Keplinger. 

All sobbing, shrieking, swirls the gale. See Peace Hath 
her Victories.—Rice. 

All sorts of vot’ries. that profess. See Marriage.— 
Butler. 

All summer I’ve worn a shocking hat. See To Phyllis 
Returned to Town.—Jenkins. 

All summer long the people knelt. See At the Presi¬ 
dent’s Grave.—Gilder. 

All that a man can do in this world is to live honestly. 
See Success and Failure.—Anon. 

All that I know. See My Star.—Browning. 


All that is said of the peril of riches. See Wealth and 
Work.—Anon. 

All that springeth from the sod. See Resurrection.— 
Tabb. 

All that there is in what we call to-day is in the life of 
thought. See True To-day, The.—Withington. 

All that thou are not, makes not up the sum. See In 
Absence.-—Tabb. 

All the bells of heaven may ring. See Child’s Laughter, 
A.—Swinburne. 

All the birdies went to school. See Pine Tree Academy, 
The.—Scharff. 

All the breath and the bloom of the year in the bag of 
one bee. See Summum Bonum.—Browning. 

All the buds and bees are singing. See May.—-Anon. 

All the earth is wrapt in snow. See Chickadee.— 
Anoni 

All the evils which afflict the country are imputed to 
opposition. See Opposition to Misgovernment.— 
- Webster. 

All the flowers of the spring. See Vanitas Vanitatum. 
Webster. 

All the heavy days are over. See Dream of a Blessed 
Spirit. A.—-Yeats. 

All the lion in Macdonald’s nature was roused See 
Napoleon and his Marshals (Macdonald’s Charge 
at Wagram).—Headley. 

All the long August afternoon. See In August.— 
Howells. 

All the morning the trains from New Haven. See 
Harvard-Vale Foot-ball Match, A.—Post. 

All the names I know from nurse. See Flowers, The. 
—Stevenson. 

All the ocean isles and islets. See Kalevala (Waina- 
moinen’s Sowing).—Porter. 

All the older people in Milton remember that 6th of 
July, 1862. See Back in War Days.—Phelps. 

All the politics of the great. See Politicians.—Butler. 

All the republics in the world’s history have failed but 
one. See Republic of New England.—O’Reilly. 

All the rich treasures of the past are appropriated by 
Christianity. See same. —Cocker. 

All the seasons I like, as they pass along. See What I 
Like.—Doolittle. 

All the storm has rolled away. See On the Bridge.— 
Ropes. 

All the trees they are so high. See Trees They Are so 
High. The.—Anon. 

All the triumphs of truth and genius. See On Mit- 
ford’s History of Greece (Influence of Athens, 
The).—Macaulay. 

All the words that I utter. See Where My Books Go. 
—Yeats. 

“All the world is a stage,” so wise Shakespeare has said. 
See Tickle His Hand with a Ten Dollar Bill.—Anon. 

All the world over, I wonder, in lands that I never have 
trod. See Meditations of a Hindu Prince.—Lyall. 

All the world’s a fraud. See All the World’s a Fraud. 
Anon. 

All the world’s a stage. See As You Like It (Seven 
Ages of Man).—Shakespeare. 

All their pipes were still. See Britannia’s Pastorals 
(Praise of Spenser, The).—Browne. 

All their wealth and vast possessions. See Richest 
Prince. The.—Korner. 

All things are Thine; no gift have we. See Church 
Dedication. Whittier. 

All things bright and beautiful. See same. —Alexander. 

All things can never go badly wrong. See If the Heart 
be True.—MacDonald. 

All things change except barbers, the ways of barbers, 
and the surroundings of barbers. See About 
Barbers.—Anon. 

All things have something more than barren use. See 
same. —Smith. 

All things journey; sun and moon. See Spanish 
Gypsy, The (Song of the Zincali).—Eliot. 

All things that are. See Merchant of Venice (Out and 
Inward Bound).—Shakespeare. 

All things that are on earth shall wholly pass away. 
See Love of God. The.—Rascas. 

All things that pass. See Passing and Glassing.— 
Rossetti. 

All things visible around us are aggregations of atoms. 
See Poetry of Science (Wonders of an Atom, The). 
—Hunt. _ » 

All this costly expense. See Two Points of View.— 
Kimball. 

All this haste made not his staid faith so free. See 
Odyssey, The (Odysseus Reveals himself to his 
Father).—Chapman. 

All this is my body. See Human Body Lesson in 
Rhyme.—Badlam. 


605 





All 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


All this time I had gone on loving Dora harder than 
ever. See David Copperfield (Child-wife, The). 
—Dickens. 

All thoughts, all passions, all delights. See Love.— 
Coleridge. 

All through night’s wearying darkness snowy flakes. 
See Stepping in Father’s Tracks.—Upham. 

All through the castle of High-bred Ease. See Prin¬ 
cess’ Fingernail, The.—Wilcox. 

All through the golden w'eather. See Song of Autumn, 
A.—Rodd. 

All through the season they were seen. See Modern 
Flirtation, A.—Anon. 

All through the smiling, resting land. See Sword, The. 
—Booth. 

All through the sultry hours of June. See My Thrush. 
—Collins. 

All through the town, upon fences, bar-posts. See 
Dime Supper, A.—Hewitt. 

All true work is sacred. See Past and Present (Sacred¬ 
ness of Work, The).—Carlyle. 

All unconscious I beheld her. See Fate.—Chadwick. 

All under the leaves and the leaves of life. See Seven 
Virgins, The.—Anon. 

All underneath the restless sea. See Lost Friend, The. 
—Gale. 

All up and down in shadow-town. See Shadows, The. 
—Sherman. 

All upon a summer day. See Make-believe.—Cary. 

All victory is struggle, using chance. See Progress.— 
Anon. 

All was false and hollow. See Paradise Lost.—Milton. 

All was still along Point Cedar, for the farming must be 
done. See Two Girls of 1812.—Anon. 

All were quite gracious in their plaudits of Bud’s 
Fairy. See Delicious Interruption, A.—Riley. 

All without is harsh and shrill. See Saint’s Tragedy, 
The (Saint Elizabeth).—Kingsley. 

All worldly shapes shall melt in gloom. See Last Man, 
The.—Campbell. 

All writers on education agree. See Education.— 
Colfax. 

All ye that lovely lovers be. See Harvestmen a-Sing- 
ing.—Peele. 

All ye who have gained the haven of safe days. See 
To All in Haven.—Marston. 

All ye who love the springtime—and who but loves it 
well. See Dawning o’ the Year, The.—Blake. 

All ye woods, and trees, and bowers. See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The (To Pan).—Fletcher. 

All yesterday I was spinning. _ See Dream, A.—Procter. 

All you that to feasting and' mirth are inclined. See 
Old Christmas Returned.—Anon. 

“Allah, Allah!” cried the sick man. See Here am I.— 
Clarke. 

Allas! Custance! thou hast no ohampioun. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The (Tale of the Man of Lawe, The).— 
Chaucer. 

Allas! my worthy maister honorable. See Lament for 
Chaucer.—Hoccleve. 

Allen-a-Dale has no fagot for burning. See Rokeby 
(Allen-a-Dale).—Scott. 

All’s for the best! be sanguine and cheerful. See All’s 
for the Best.—Tupper. 

All’s over, then does truth sound bitter. See I.ost 
Mistress, The.-—Browning. 

“Almirv! Almiry Ann! Ef you kin hear me you’d 
better come.” See Almiry Ann.—Anon. 

Almost afraid they led her in. See Transfigured.— 
Piatt. 

Almost every one must have heard of the gentleman 
who cuts portraits. See Frenchman’s Patent 
Screw, The.—Anon. 

Almost every other evinin’, jest as reg’lar as the clock. 
See Sister Simmons.—Lincoln. 

Almost time for the pretty white daisies. See Almost 
Time.—Anon. 

Aloft he guards the starry folds. See Eagle of the 
Blue, The.—Melville. 

Aloft upon an old basaltic crag. See Kane.—O’Brien. 

Alone! Alone! See Alone.-—Anon. 

Alone, alone, all, all alone. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The.—Coleridge. 

Alone, at home, I dwell, content and free. See Old 
Books, Fresh Flowers.—Boulmier. 

Alone, from earlier than I know. See Princess, The 
(Tribute to Motherhood, A).—Tennyson. 

Alone I sit at eventide. See Our Native Birds.—Dole. 

Alone I stand. See Nightfall.—Ellsworth. 

Alone I stay, for I am lame. See Board School Pas¬ 
toral, A.—Kendall. 

Alone I walk the morning street. See Morning Street, 
The.—Piatt. 


Alone I walked the ocean strand. See Name in the 
Sand, A.—Gould. 

Alone, in prison, and condemned to die. See Daugh¬ 
ter’s Love and Heroism, A.—Fabes. 

Alone in the dreary, pitiless street. See Nobody’s 
Child.—Cade. 

Alone in this impenetrable forest! See Christian For¬ 
giveness.—Anon. 

Alone, ’midst living works of mighty dead. See 
Among My Books.—Rosslyn. 

Alone, through gloomy forest shades, a soldier went by 
night. See Fall of d’Assas, The.—Hemans. 

Alone thy spirit went, thy thoughts alone. See To 
Philip Massinger, “A Stranger.”—Russell. 

Alone! to land alone upon.that shore! See From the 
Shore of Eternity.-—Faber. 

Alone, unwedded, past her prime. See Little Story, A. 
—Aldrich. 

Alone with Christ in this sequester’d place. See Epi¬ 
taph in Fahan Churchyard.—-Alexander. 

Alone with Thee, my God! alone with Thee! See 
Alone w r ith God.—Anon. 

Along a river-side, I know not where. See Washers of 
the Shroud, The.-—Lowell. 

Along Ancona’s hills the shimmering heat. See Pop¬ 
pies in the Wheat,—Jackson. 

Along in November, when chill was the weather. See 
Twin Ballots, The.—Anon. 

Along its front no sabres shine. See Holmes Alphabet, 
A.—Holmes. 

Along the aisle where prayer was made. See Prayer- 
seeker, The.—Whittier. 

Along the broad high-road, in the neighborhood of a 
great city, walked a sick old man. See Alms, An. 
—T ourgenie ff. 

Along the country roadside, stone on stone. See 
Stone Walls.—Lippman. 

Along the crowded path they bore her now. See Old 
Curiosity Shop, The.—Dickens. 

Along the frozen lake she comes. See Our Skater 
Belle.—Anon. 

Along the garden ways just now. See Love Sym¬ 
phony, A.—O’Shaughnessy. 

Along the grass sweet airs are blown. See New Year’s 
Burden, A.—Rossetti. 

Along the hollow reaches, where the ripples curve on 
the sand. See Mad Luce.—Anon. 

Along the margin of the world. See Soldiers of the 
Sun.—Sherman. 

Along the narrow sandy height. See Snowbirds.— 
Lampman. 

Along the oasis the slender palms. See Legend of 
Arabia, A.—Anon. 

Along the orchard’s fragrant way. See Changelings.— 
M. F. B. 

Along the Paris streets the dead carts rumble. See 
Tale of Two Cities, A (Sydney Carton’s Death). 
—Dickens. 

Along the pastoral ways I go. See Holiday, A.— 
Reese. 

Along the roadside, like the flowers of gold. See 
Among the Hills.—Whittier. 

Along the shore the slimy brine-pits yawn. See 
Witch’s W'help, The.-—Stoddard. 

Along the street. See Eve of Election, The (Ballot- 
box, The).—Whittier. 

Along the valley’s narrow gorge. See How the Fifty- 
first Took the Bridge.—Nones. 

Along the wayside path she comes. See One of Many. 
—Bateham. 

Along this lane, green-walled and starred with flowers. 
See Chatterton at Bristol.—Russell. 

Alow and aloof. See Windy Night, The.—Read. 

Already, close by our summer dwelling. See Invitation 
to the Country, An.—Bryant. 

Already evening! in the duskiest nook. See Evening. 
—Meredith. 

Alter? when the hills do. See Constant.—Dickin¬ 
son. 

Although a curtain of the salt sea-mist. See Farewell 
to Salvini.—Bunner. 

Although I am one of the most powerful nations. See 
Nuts to Crack, No. II.—Denton. 

Although I enter not. See At the Church Gate.— 
Thackeray. 

Although I’m but a little child. See Helping Rule, A. 
—Denton. 

Although she had just married a lawyer. See Mrs. 
Bacon, Lawyer.—Anon. 

Although some fits of small contest. See Hudibras 
(Amantium Irae).—Butler. 

Although the ladies with such beauty blaze. See 
Country Lasses, The.—Pindar. 


606 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


An 


Although the temperance cause has been in progress 
many years. See Two Revolutions.—Lincoln. 

Always I see her in a saintly guise. See Dead Wife. 
The.—Riley. 

Always wuz abusin’ him. See Didn’t Think o’ Losin’ 
Him.—Stanton. 

A’m gettin’ drowsy, an’ a’ll no be able tae follow ye 
sune. See Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush (Death 
of the Country Doctor, The).—Maclaren. 

Am I a king that I should call my own. See From My 
Arm-chair.—Longfellow. 

“Am I my brother’s keeper?” See Modern Cain, The. 

—Edwards. 

Am I the mao? That rang within my head last night. 
See Becket (Selected Scenes).—Tennyson. 

Am I the slave they say? See Soggarth Aroon.— 
Banim. 

Am not I the fairest flower? See Gifts for All.—Den¬ 
ton. 

Amarantha, sweet and fair. See To Amarantha, that 
She would Dishevel Her Hair.—Lovelace. 

Amaryllis, Chloris, Phyllis. See Their Turn.—K. H. A. 

Amaz’d he stands, nor voice nor body stirs. See Sor¬ 
row.—Daniel. 

Amazed, confused, its fate unknown. See Jove and 
the Souls.—Swift. 

“Amazin’ Grace,” said Mrs. Pilsbury, as she sat with 
her daughter. See Yours, Truly.—Anon. 

Amazing, beauteous change! See same. — Doddridge. 

Ambitious Nile, thy banks deplore. See De Rosis 
Hibernis.— Gosse. 

America! dear brother land! See Greeting from Eng¬ 
land. (London Chronicle.) 

America has abstained from interference in the con¬ 
cerns of others. See Mission of America, The.— 
Adams. 

America has furnished to Europe proof of the fact that 
popular institutions. See Completion of the Bunker 
Hill Monument, The (America’s Gifts to Europe). 
—Webster. 

America has furnished to the world the character of 
Washington. See Completion of the Bunker Hill 
Monument, The (Second Bunker Hill Monument 
Oration).—W ebster. 

America! Mine! Ay, comrades, and thine. See Amer¬ 
ica.—McCann. 

America, my lords, cannot be reconciled to this coun¬ 
try. See First Step to Reconciliation with 
America, The.—Chatham. 

American nationality, compared with that of Europe 
and the east. See Nashville Exposition, The.— 
McKinley. 

“Americanism” of the right sort we cannot have too 
much. See Americanism.—Lodge. 

Americans' The saviour of your country has obtained 
his last victory. See Eulogy on Washington.— 
Paine, 

Americans the world over have been proud of their 
country. See Treason of Benedict Arnold.— 
Anon. 

Americus, as he did wend. See Noble Tuck-man, The. 
Ingelow. 

Amid my bale I bathe in bliss. See Strange Passion of 
a I.over, A.—Gascoigne. 

Amid the chapel’s chequered gloom. See Heliotrope. 
—Peck. 

Amid the clouds of battle smoke. See He’ll See it 
when he Wakes.—Lee. 

Amid the dim ferment of Caen and the world. See 
French Revolution, The (Charlotte Corday).— 
Carlyle. 

Amid the heavenly bodies once was found. See Cow- 
pens.—Sabine. 

Amid the loud ebriety of war. See Birkenhead, The. 
—Yule. 

Amid the myriad troubles that meet us day by day. 
See Plea for Castles in the Air. A.—Gough. 

Amid the smoke of cities did you pass. See To 
Joanna.—W ordsworth. 

Amidst the agitating throes of the Old World. See 
European Struggles for Freedom.—Johnson. 

Amidst the fairest mountain tops. See Cynthia.— 
Dyer. 

Amidst the gay life, the beautiful forms, the brilliant 
colors. See Charm of Voice.—Anon. 

Amidst the massive sideboard’s burnished wealth. 
See Little Tin Plate, A. 1 —Walch. 

Among green, pleasant meadows. See same. — 
Herder. 

Among her curls with wanton glee. See Deception. 
(Yale Record.) 

Among my books—what rest is there. See Among my 
Books.—Peck. 


Among my tender vines I spy. See Little Foxes.— 
Morrell. 

Among my various pursuits in life. See When I was 
a Baker.—Thatcher. 

Among professors of astronomy. See Comet, The.— 
Hood. 

Among so many can He care? See I will Abide in 
Thine House.—Whitney. 

Among the achievements of Sir Charles Napier. See 
Colors of the Regiment, The.—Robertson. 

Among the beautiful pictures. See Pictures of Memory. 
—Cary. 

Among the convicts working on the trans-Siberian 
railroad was a white-haired old man. See Convict 
and Soldier.—Anon. 

Among the dwellings framed by birds. See Wren’s 
Nest, A.—Wordsworth. 

Among the evils of intemperance. See Intemper¬ 
ance.—Channing. 

Among the few pleasures which reward the traveler. 
See Arctic Aurora, An.—Anon. 

Among the fine old kings that reign. See Royal Race, 
A.—McCarroll. 

Among the flowers of field and wood. See Pine Trees’ 
Choice, The.—Denton. 

Among the gray old rounded hills. See Olive Trees of 
Palestine. (Hours at Home.) 

Among the great ideas of the age, we are authorized in 
reckoning. See Battle of Bunker Hill (Peace 
Congress of the Union. The).—Everett. 

Among the hills of India. See Red Thread of Honour, 
The.—Noble. 

Among the inspiring pictures that history has given 
us. See “Little David” of Nations, The.—Dun¬ 


can. 

Among the joys, ’tis one at eve to sail. See Bor¬ 
ough, The (Evening Sail, The).—Crabbe. 

Among the legends of our late civil war. See Bounding 
the United States.—Fiske. 

Among the many memorable words. See Last Hours 
of “Webster.—Everett. 

Among the maple-buds we hear the tones. See April. 
—Mifflin. 

Among the merry little children. See Little Highland 
Shepherdess.—Vannan. 

Among the mountain passes of the Blue Ridge and the 
Alleghanies. See Washington’s Training.—Up- 
ham. 

Among the myriad ideas which bound man’s life. See 
Liberty.—Brush. 

Among the myrtles as I walkt. See Mrs. Eliz. Wheeler. 
—Herrick. 

Among the passengers bound for Vicksburg upon a 
Mississippi steamer were a Georgian and his wife. 
See Indignant Woman’s Raid on a Gambler, An.— 
Anon. 

Among the people who first settled in United States. 
See Cuba and Armenia.—Lodge. 

Among the poppies by the well. See Parting in Dream¬ 
land, A.—Symonds. 

Among the priceless gems and treasures rare. See 
Pastel.—Saltus. 

Among the sand-hills. See Wild Rabbit, The.—Anon. 

Among the Sinai monks the Brother John. See John 
of Mt. Sinai.—Frisbie. 

Among the sunny memories of my own school-days 
there glow's. See Schoolboys’ Strike, The.-—Bur- 
dett. 

Among the thistles on the hill. See Little Sorrow.— 
Douglas. 

Among the thousand, thousand spheres that roll. See 
Alcyone.—Mace. 

Among the various good and bad qualities incident to 
our nature. See Bashful Man, The.—Smith. 

Among the vicissitudes incident to life, no event 
could have filled me with greater anxieties. See 
Washington’s Inaugurals, Apr. 30, 1789.—Wash¬ 
ington. 

Among their graven shapes to whom. See Fitz- 
Greene Halleck.—Whittier. 

Among those aw-ful forms in elder time. See Don 
Garzia.—Rogers. _ . 

Among their fancies tell me this. See Kiss, The.— 


Herrick. 

kmongst the great inventions of this age. See More 
Hullahbaloo.—Hood. 

In accommodation train on a distant railroad was 
dragging along. See Remarkable Honeymoon 
Trip, A.—Lee. 

kn acorn from the bough where it had hung. See How 
the Oak Grew.—Bates. 

^n aged colored man rose to a standing position and a 
point of order. See It’s My Nature.—Anon. 


607 






An 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


An aged man who loved to doze away. See “Aged 
man who loved to doze away, An.”—Landor. 

An aged man, without an enemy in the world. See 
Murder of Captain Joseph White, The (Power of 
Conscience, The).—Webster. 

An American frigate—a frigate of fame. See Paul 
Jones’ Victory.—Anon. 

An amusing scene occurred in Justice Young’s court¬ 
room. See Mr. O’Hoolahan’s Mistake.—Anon. 

An ancient chestnut’s blossoms threw. Nee Alciphron 
and Leucippe.—Landor. 

An ancient hallway, generous and square. See When 
George was King.—Pickering. 

An ancient story I’ll tell you anon. See King John and 
the Abbot of Canterbury. ( Percy’s Reliques.) 

An angel came and cried to him by night. See Bishop 
Patterson.-—Smedley. 

An angel face:—Rits sunny wealth of hair. See “Angel 
face:—its sunny wealth of hair, An.” — Os¬ 
good. 

An animal, my first, with horns. See Newness.— 
Sabine. 

An archfiend arrived in our world and he built an in¬ 
visible caldron of temptation. See Archfiend of 
Nations, The.—Talmage. 

An ardent spirit dwells with Christian love. See Bor¬ 
ough, The (Practical Charity).—Crabbe. 

An arm of aid to the weak. See Arm of Aid to the 
Weak, An.—Houghton. 

An ashen gray touched faint my night-dark room. 
See Veiled Presence, The.—Rand. 

An ass’s hoof alone can hold. See On Burning a Dull 
Poem.—Swift. 

An attorney was taking a turn. See Briefless Barrister, 
The.—Saxe. 

An Austrian army, awfully arrayed. • See Siege of Bel¬ 
grade, The.—Anon. 

An eagle had soared above the clouds. See Eagle 
and the Spider, The.—Krilof. 

An easy task it is to tread. See Path of Independence, 
The.—Anon. 

An easy thing, O Power Divine. See Things I Miss, 
The.—Higginson. 

An editor is Mr. Squibbs. See Ye Editor’s Perplexi¬ 
ties.—Anon. 

An’ ef you’s wanting fishes, you mus’ dig your wums 
an’ ketch ’em. See Safest Plan, The. ( Scribner’s 
Monthly.) 

“An egg a chicken! Don’t tell me!” See Egg a 
Chicken, An.—( Youth’s Companion.) 

An emigrant ship with a world aboard. Sec God 
Knows.—Anon. 

An empty sky, a world of heather. See Divided.— 
Ingelow. 

An engineer there was, and he spake to a gang 
of hiskind one day. See Zwischen Trinken.— 
Ayars. 

An engineer’s story, in form regulation. See How an 
Engineer Won His Bride.—Johnston. 

An English farmer was one day at work in the fields. 
See Obeying Orders.—Anon. 

An English lad, who, reading in a book. See Keats.— 
Reese. 

An enterprising saloon-keeper on Grand River avenue. 
See His Flying-machine.—Anon. 

An enthusiastic French student of Shakespeare. See 
Frenchman on Macbeth, A.—Anon. 

An envious dog laid down one day. See Dog in the 
Manger, The.—Kavanaugh. 

An exquisite incompleteness, blossom foreshadowing 
fruit. See Girlhood.—Anon. 

An exquisite invention this. See Love-letters Made 
in Flowers.—Hunt. 

An eye with the piercing eagle’s fire. See Thaddeus 
Stevens.—Cary. 

An heritage of hopes and fears. See Soul, The.— 
Cawein. 

An honest man was Deacon Ray. See Honest Deacon, 
The.—( New Orleans Times-Democrat.) 

An hour, and this majestic day is done. See Night.— 
Whitehead. 

An hour before sunset, on the evening of a day in the 
beginning of October, 1815. See Les Miserables 
(Jean Valjean and the Bishop).—-Hugo. 

An’ how is yer little Bridget gittin’ on wid her 
schoolin’?” See Her Shpacial-i-ty.—Anon. 

An idle attorney besought a brother. See On an Il'.- 
read Lawyer.—Saxe. 

“An idle straw to drift and whirl at mercy of the 
wind?” See Society Flirtation.—Banks. 

An igstrawnary tail I vill tell you this veek. See 
Wofle New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary 
Brown, The.—Thackeray. 


An immortal instinct, deep within the spirit of man, is 
a sense of the beautiful. See Poetry.—Poe. 

An infant is a selfish sprite. See Broken Doll, The.— 
Lamb. 

An infant on its mother’s breast. See Life.—Coe. 

An Irishman sticks up for Robinson’s circus. See 
Character Stories.—Anon. 

An Irishman traveling, though not for delight. See 
Irish Traveler, The.—Anon. 

An Irishman, walking down the street. See Character 
Stories.—Anon. 

An officer stood at the crossing one day. See Sad Fate 
of a Policeman, The.—Anon. 

An old and crippled gate am I. See Front Gate, The. 
—Anon. 

An old and crippled veteran to the War Department 
came. See Scott and the Veteran.—Taylor. 

An old castle towers o’er the billow. See Fineen the 
Rover.—Joyce. 

An old church in Belgium decided to repair its proper¬ 
ties. See Hard-earned Wages.—Anon. 

An old clock, that had stood for fifty years in a farm¬ 
er’s kitchen. See Discontented Pendulum, The. 
—Taylor. 

An old farm-house with meadows wide. See Two Pic¬ 
tures.—Green. 

An old gentleman whose style was Germanized. See 
Signs and Omens.—Anon. 

An old German out West, who had a horse stolen from 
his barn. See Dutch Advertisement.—Anon. 

An old hen sat on turtle’s eggs. See Old Hen, An.— 
M. M. D. 

An old lady sat in her old arm-chair. See Prayer and 
Potatoes.—Peltree [or Petteel. 

An old maid knelt beneath a maple tree. See Old 
Maid’s Prayer, The.-—Anon. 

An old maid sat in her rocking chair. See Soliloquy, 
A.—Forbes. 

An old man in a lodge within a park. See Chaucer.— 
Longfellow. 

An old man lived all alone, all alone. See Obstinate 
Old Man, An.—Horton. 

An old man sat by a fireless hearth. See Miser, The.— 
Cutter. 

An old man sits in his garden chair. See Land of the 
Afternoon.—Anon. 

An old man stood in the New Year’s night at the win¬ 
dow. See Two Roads, The (New Year’s Dream, 
A ). —Richter. 

An old Quaker lady, in the time of the crusade. See 
Women and Temperance Work.—Willard. 

An old song made by an aged old pate. See Old 
Courtier, The.—Anon. 

An old turkey gobbler strutted around. See Thanks¬ 
giving Turkey.—Riley. 

An old wife sat by her bright fireside. See There’s but 
One Pair of Stockings to Mend To-night.—Anon. 

An old wooden school-house, worn, battered, and 
brown. See Debating Society, The.-—Hall. 

An opinion has long prevailed, Fathers, that, in public 
prosecutions. See Verres Denounced.—Cicero. 

An opulent lord of Ispahan, in luxury lolled on a silk 
divan. See Daughter of the Desert, The.—Harvey. 

An orphan maid—your patience! you shall have. See 
Tales of the Hall (Entanglement, An).—Crabbe. 

An orphan’s curse would drag to hell. See Rime of 
the Ancient Mariner, The.—Coleridge. 

An Orpheus! an Orpheus! Yes, faith may grow bold. 
See Blind Fiddler, The.—Wordsworth. 

An outlandish knight came from the North lands 
See Outlandish Knight, The.—Anon. 

An owl once wooed a nightingale. See Owl and Nigh-l 
ingale. The.—Kavanaugh. 

An oyster rushed wildly. See Tragic Parting, A. 

(Detroit Tribune.) 

An’ plaze, yer honor, would ye be after giving employ¬ 
ment. See Mike Gets a Job.—Anon. 

An’ [or andl shure [or surel I was tould to come here to 
for come to or come till or come intilll your Honor. 
See Mary O’Connor, the Volunteer’s Wife.—Deni¬ 
son. 

An’ so you kinder wanter know w’y I broke off with 
Sal? See Fancy Work Maiden, The.—Foss. 

An’ sure I was tould to come till [or to] yer Honor. 
See Mary O’Connor, the Volunteer’s Wife.—Deni¬ 
son. 

An’ the thought of us each was the boat, och. how- 
ever’d she stand it at all. See Misther Denis’s 
Return.—Barlow. 

An thou were my ain thing. See same. —Ramsay. 

An ugly catterpillar once uplooking. See Butterflys’ 
Revenge, The.—Alger. 


608 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


And 


An undergraduate had unconsciously strayed into the 
garden of a certain D. D. See Proper Distinction. 
—(The Jest Book.) 

An unlettered clergyman wanting a place. See Welsh 
Classic, A.—Ballard. 

Anacreon of the meadow. See Bobolink, The.— 
Anon. 

Anacharsis went into the Archons’ court at Athens. 
See Scholar in a Republic, The (Scholar’s Distrust, 
The).—Phillips. 

Ancient of days, who sittest, throned in glory. See 
Ancient of Days.—Doane. 

And after he has come to hide. See Compensation. 
—Cary. 

And all is well, though face and form. See All is Well. 
—Tennyson. 

And also, beau sire, of other things. See House of 
Fame, The (Poet, The).—Chaucer. 

And answer made King Arthur, breathing hard. See 
Idylls of the King (Passing of Arthur, The).— 
Tennyson. 

And Ardennes waves above them her green leaves. 
See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Unreturning 
Brave, The).—Byron. 

And are ye sure the news is true? See Sailor’s Wife, 
The.—Mickle lor Adaml. 

And are you there, old Pas! in troth, I never thought. 
See Arcadia (Nico and Dorus).—Sidney. 

And as a lovely maiden, pure and chaste. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals (Metamorphosis, A).—Browne. 

And as for me, though than I kon but lyte. See Le- 
gende of Goode Women (Prologue).—Chaucer. 

And as I sat, over the light blue hills. See Endymion 
(Bacchus).—Keats. 

And, as imagination bodies forth. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream.—Shakespeare. 

And as the moisture, which the thirsty earth. See 
Nosce Teipsum (Soul Compared to a River, The). 
—Davies. 

And as within a landscape that doth stand. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals (Landscape, A).—Browne. 

And at night the Septette of Beethoven. See Home 
Comfort.—Kingsley. 

And Balaam lifted up his eyes, and he saw Israel abid¬ 
ing in his tents. See Balaam’s Prophecy in Be¬ 
half of Israel.— Bible. 

And be these juggling fiends no more believed. See 
Macbeth.—Shakespeare. 

And canst thou, mother, for a moment think. See To 
My Mother.—White. 

And certainly they say, for fine behaving. See Monks 
and the Giants, The.—Frere. 

And Constance, then is safe!—Heaven bless thee, 
father! See Raimond Released.—Hemans. 

And dearer I, the pink, must be. See Pink, The.— 
Goethe. 

And didst thou love the race that loved not thee? See 
Better Way, The.—Ingelow. 

And do I see some cause a hope to feed. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Sonnet LXVI).—Sidney. 

And do our loves all perish with our frames? See 
Husband’s and Wife’s Grave, The (Immortality). 
—Dana. 

And do you ask me, “What is Life?” See What is 
Life.—( Blackwood's Magazine. ) 

And do you think of me. See Love Letter, A.—Anon. 

And does that blessed Book of books, which none. 
See Bible in Harmony with Temperance, The.— 
Anon. 

And don’t you think your father will reply to your last 
letter. See Billet Doux, The.—Anon. 

And doth not a meeting like this make amends. See 
And Doth not a Meeting like this.—Moore. 

“And even our women,” lastly grumbles Ben. See 
Girl of All Periods, The.—Patmore. 

And ever when the moon was low. See Mariana.— 
Tennyson. 

And every village graveyard will have its green 
mounds. See same. —Putnam. 

And first as to the character of war, or that part of our 
nature. See Character of War, The.—Anon. 

And five of us those summer days. See To Barbary 
Land.—Mitchell. 

And forth [or foorth] they passe, with pleasure forward 
led. See Faerie Queene, The (In Praise of Trees). 
—Spenser. 

And grummer, grummer, grummer. See Old Conti¬ 
nentals, The.—Anon. 

And has it come to this? Are we so humbled, so low. 
See On the Greek Revolution (Sympathy with the 
Greeks).—Clay. 

And has the Spring’s all glorious eye. See Tell-tale 
Flowers.—Clare. 


“And hast thou nerve enough?” he said. See Raising 
the Devil.—Barham. 

And hast thou sought thy heavenly home. See Casa 
W appy.—Moir. 

“And have these rebels dared complain, and murmur 
to their king?” See William Tell and His Son.— 
Nott. 

And he said, A certain man had two sons. See Prodi¬ 
gal Son, The.— Bible. 

And he showed me a pure river of water of life, clear as 
crystal. See Revelation, XXII.-— Bible. 

And he took up his parable, and said. See Numbers 
(Balaam’s Parables).— Bible. 

And her lips (that show no dulness). See Fair Virtue, 
the Mistress of Philarete (Song to Her Beauty, A). 
—Wither. 

And here his course the chieftain staid. See Lady of 
the Lake, The.—Scott. 

And here the hermit sat, and told his beads. See Hill¬ 
side Cot, The.—Channing. 

“And how could you dream of meeting?” See Tele-, 
pathy.—Lowell. 

And I made a rural pen. See Piper, The (“And I 
made.” etc.).—Blake. 

And I paused, held my breath in such silence, and lis¬ 
tened apart. See Saul (David Singing before 
Saul).—Browning. 

And I shall sleep; and on thy side. See Rivulet, The. 
—Bryant. 

And I “was smart ” and all the springs. See Myself.— 
Arey. 

And if he should come again. See Ylen’s Song.— 
Hovey. 

And if so be that lechis done the faile. See Dietary, 
The, or, Rules for Health.—Lydgate. 

And if the wine you drink, the lip you press. See 
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayy&m (Phantom Caravan, 
The).—Fitzgerald. 

And if we do but watch the hour. See Mazeppa,— 
Byron. 

And in a launde, upon an hille of floures. See Parle- 
ment of Foules, The.—Chaucer. 

And in that twilight hush, God drew their hearts. See 
same. —Larcom. 

And in the frosty season, when the sun. See Prelude, 
The (Skating).—Wordsworth. 

And is it even so? And are our brethren at such pains 
to note the infirmities of our natural temper. See 
Talisman, The (Richard to the Princes of the Cru¬ 
sade;.—-Scott. 

And is the swallow gone? See Departure of the Swal¬ 
low, The.—Howitt. 

And is there care in heaven? And is there love? See 
Faerie Queene, The (Ministry of Angels, The).— 
Spenser. 

And is there then no earthly place. See Eternal Lon¬ 
don —Moore. 

And is this all you have observed? I think. See Vir- 
ginius.—Knowles. 

And is this—Yarrow?—This the stream. See Yarrow 
Visited.—Wordsworth. 

And it came to pass, after these things. See Parable 
against Persecution, A.—Franklin. 

And it came to pass, when Ahab saw Elijah. See 
Elijah and the Prophets of Baal.— Bible. 

And it has come to this. My son John, and his wife 
Eleanor. See Saved from the Poor House.— 
Anon. 

And it’s me recipe for cake, yer aft her wantin’, is it? 
See Mrs. Murphy's Recipe for Cake.-—Smith. 

And like a dying lady lean and pale. See Moon, The.— 
Shelley. 

And like a silver clarion rung—“Excelsior.” See Ex¬ 
celsior.—Longfellow. 

And lo, a voice from Italy! See Pompeii.—Anon. 

And, lo; leading a blessed host comes one. See 
Commemoration Ode (Lincoln).—Monroe. 

And, lo, the universal air. See Eugene Aram.—Hood. 

And longer had she sung—but, with a frown. See 
Passions, The: An Ode for Music (Revenge).— 
Collins. 

And mightier grew the joy to meet full-faced. See 
Swimming.—Swinburne. 

And must I always say my prayers before going to bed? 
See Anxious Inquirer, An.—Anon. 

And near the pyramids, more wondrous and more awful 
than all else. See Sphynx, The.—Kinglake. 

And ne’er did Grecian chisel trace. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Canto I.).—Scott. 

And no one saw, while it was dark. See Strange Ves¬ 
sel, The.—Stafford. 

And now all nature seem’d in love. See On a Bank as 
I Sat a-Fishing.—Wotton. | 


609 







And 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


And now approached their fleet from India, fraught. 
See Attempt at Berghen, The.—Dryden. 

And now behold your tender nurse, the air. See 
Orchestra; or A Poeme of Dauncing (Dancing of 
the Air, The).—Davies. 

And now, dear friends, our task is done. See Epilogue. 
—-Anon. 

And now I want to say a word. See Happiest Time in 
Life, The.—Storrs. 

And now in the forest the woodman doth stand. See 
Plea of the Tree, The.—Benedict. 

And now, Mr. President, instead of speaking of the 
possibility or utility of secession. See Consti¬ 
tution and the Union, The (On Mr. Clay’s Resolu¬ 
tions).—Webster. 

And now tell me, Sarah, how do you like your sewing- 
machine? See Buying a Sewing-machine.—Anon. 

And now the bell—the bell. See Old Curiosity Shop, 
The (Little Nell’s Funeral).—Dickens. 

And now the end of Ahab’s house had come. See 
Death of Jezebel, The.—Anon. 

And now the slowly fading light. See Winter Gloam¬ 
ing.—Lincoln. 

And now the sun was growing high and warm. See 
Hyperion (Paul Fleming Resolves).—Longfel¬ 
low. 

And now, thou sketch and outline of a man. See Bal¬ 
thazar and the Quack.—Tobin. 

‘‘And now, Tom, my boy,” said the squire. See Tom 
Brown’s School Days (Away to School).—Hughes. 

And now, unveil’d, the toilet stands displayed. See 
Rape of the Lock (Toilet, The).—Pope. 

And now we only ask to serve. See same. —Townsend. 

And, O beloved voices, upon which. See Futurity.— 
Browning. 

And oftentimes excusing of a fault. See King John.— 
Shakespeare. 

And oftentimes, to win us to our harm. See Macbeth. 
—Shakespeare. 

And oh, to think the sun can shine. See Adelaide 
Neilson.—Winter. 

And on her lover’s arm she leant. See Day-dream, 
The (Departure, The).—Tennyson. 

And one by one, through a hole in the wall. See Darius 
Green and his Flying Machine.—Trowbridge. 

And only to think, Bessie, we’re all alone in the house. 
See Actions Speak Louder than Words.—Anon. 

And panoplied alike for war or peace. See Victoria.— 
Austin. 

And passing here through evening dew. See Peasant’s 
Return, The.—Barnes. 

And Paul stood in the midst of the Areopagus, and said. 
See Acts of the Apostles (Paul at Athens).— Bible. 

And peace has its own peculiar victories. See True 
Grandeur of Nations, The (Peace).—Sumner. 

And perched the glittering, icy boughs, among. See 
same. —G. H. D. 

And pray, what ill wind blows you here? See Bond- 
man, The (Homeless Old Man, The).—Caine. 

“And pray, who are you?” See Tax-gatherer, The.— 
Tabb. 

“And pray, who may you be?” asked de Cheauvelins 
with a sneer. See Secret Dispatches, The.—Anon. 

And present gratitude. See same. —Whittier. 

And Prevye thought, rejoycing of hym-self. See Court 
of Love, The.—Chaucer. 

And said I that my limbs were old. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel (“And said I,” etc ).—Scott. 

And shall the mortal sons of God. See same. —Elliot. 

And she is dead! and she is dead! See Mormon Widow¬ 
er’s Lament, The.—Anon. 

And shure [or sure] I was tould to come in till yer 
honor. See Mary O’Connor, the Volunteer’s Wife. 
—Denison. 

And so, as I fling back to my mind the pictures of the 
war. See Retrospect, A.—Hubbard. 

And so, Don Gomez, you think we ought to dismiss the 
proposition of this worthy Genoese? See Queen 
Isabella’s Resolve.—Sargent. 

And so he is to wed. Alas! ’twas only in July. See 
False, Fickle Man! Anon. 

And so here’s Rugby, sir, at last, and you’ll be in plenty 
of time for dinner. See Tom Brown’s School 
Days (At Rugby).—Hughes. 

And so I am a subscriber. See Telephone at Home, 
The.—Anon. 

And so, I say, Delia, that although the matter is re¬ 
garded. See Desperate Encounter, A.—Meyers. 

And so, like most young poets, in a flush. See Aurora 
Leigh (Ferment of New Wine, The).—Browning. 

And so our royal relative is dead. See Dirge Concern¬ 
ing the Late Lamented King of the Cannibal Is¬ 
lands, A.—Croffut. 


And so she smiles! Nor frown nor pout. See Effigy, 
The.—P. P. S. 

And so she’s engaged to be married. See Awkw r ard.— 
Goodwin. 

And so, smiling, we went on. See Little Hatchet Story, 
The.—Burdette. 

And so the new Juliet charms you—;her beauty has set 
you ablaze? See Juliet.—Austin. 

And so thou say’st, my brother, to-morrow the end shall 
be. See Double Sacrifice, The.—Austin. 

And so you are going to encourage intemperance by 
setting out wine this evening. See Maud’s Com¬ 
mand; or. Yielding to Temptation.—McBride. 

And so your sister will be here to-day, Tom. See Tom’s 
Practical Joke.—Rook. 

And soon straight up the hill there rode. SeeMarmion 
(Death of Marmion, The).—Scott. 

And. sooth to say, yon vocal grove. See September.— 
Wordsworth. 

And still I changed; I was a boy no more. See same. — 
Ingelow. 

And still there came that silver tone. See Old Age.— 
Pierpont. 

And sure [or shure] I was tould to come in till yer 
honor. See Mary O Connor, the Volunteer’s Wife. 
—Denison. 

And the first gray of morning fill’d the east. See 
Sohrab and Rustum.—Arnold. 

And the frost, too, has a melodious ministry. See 
same. —Willis. 

And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden. 
See Tree of I.ife, The.— Bible. 

And the newspaper is also the great agency of progress. 
See same. —Bonney. 

And Thebes, how fallen now! Her storied gates. See 
Thebes.—Whitehead. 

And their hearts yearned for the dear old mountains. 
See Cheiron, the Centaur.—Anon. 

And then he drew a dial from his poke. See As You 
Like It.—Shakespeare. 

And then it started, like a guilty thing. See Hamlet 
(Ghosts of the Dead).—Shakespeare. 

And then there came beauty and joy in one. See Epic 
of Hades, The (Aphrodite).—Morris. 

And there are such things as friends that pass away? 
See Past Friends.—Faber. 

And there came messengers, vassals, to Ruydiez of 
Bivar, bringing him tribute. See Cid, The (Siege 
of Zamora, The).—Southey. 

And there, in that ripe summer-night, once more. See 
Little Jack Janitor.—Riley. 

And there they sat, a popping corn. See Popping Corn. 
Anon. 

And there two runners did the sign abide. See 
Earthly Paradise, The (Atalanta’s Race). — 
Morris. 

And there were in the same country Shepherds. See 
Good Tidings.— Bible. 

And there, where the smooth, wet pebbles be. See 
Sirens, The.—Lowell. 

And these few precepts in thy memory. See Hamlet 
(Polonius to Laertes).—Shakespeare. 

And they have thrust our shattered dead away in for¬ 
eign graves. See Martyrs of the Maine, The.— 
Hughes. 

And they serve men austerely. See Celestial Love, The 
—Emerson. 

“And this is freedom,” cried the serf, “at last.” See 
Bondage.—Saltus. 

And this is life; to live, to love, to lose! See same. — 
Anon. 

And this is Louisburg! whose moss-grown ruin. See 
Louisburg.—Huntington. 

And this is love! until this hour. See In the Garden.— 
Buchanan. 

And this is the end of it all! it rounds the year’s com¬ 
pleteness. See Only.-— (Argosy, The.) 

And this is the way the baby woke. See Way the Baby 
Woke, The.—Riley. 

And this man is now become a god. See Julius Caesar. 
—Shakespeare. 

And this, O Spain, is thy return. See Columbus in 
Chains.—.T ewsbury. 

And this thought will be our comfort. See same. —Mur¬ 
ray. 

And those are the last, Rachel? See Mrs. Willis’s Will. 
—Souvestre. 

And thou art dead, as young and fair. See same. — 
Byron. 

And thou art gone, most loved, most honored friend! 
See On the Late S. T. Coleridge.—Allston. 

And thou hast stolen a jewel, Death. See Babe Chris- 
tabel.—M assey. 


610 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


Another 


And thou hast walk’d about (how strange a story!). 
See Address to the Mummy in Belzoni’s Exhibition. 
—Smith. 

And thou, remembered Sagamore. See Sagamore, The. 
—Shillaber. 

And thou, too, gone! one more bright soul away. See 
To the Memory of Sydney Dobell.—Blackie. 

And thou! whom earth still holds, and will not yield. 
See Ode to England, An (Wordsworth).—Lord. 

And thou wouldst know this wicked world? See To a 
Would-be New Woman.—Metcalfe. 

And thus all-expectant abiding, I waited not long, for 
soon. See He Heard her Sing.—Thomson. 

And thus from morn till eve he cried. See Charcoal 
Man, The.—Trowbridge. 

And thus their studies they pursued:—On Sunday. 
See Boarding-school Curriculum.—Hood. 

And truth, you say, is all divine. See Realism.— 
Benson 

And up 1 roos three houres after twelfe. See Flower 
and the Leaf, The.—Chaucer. 

And was it I, long, long ago, who sat within the door 
and spun? Sec Witch, The.—Cloud. 

And was it thine, the light whose radiance shed. See 
Beata Beatrix.—Waddington. 

And we might trust these youths and maidens fair. 
See Festus (Youth, Love, and Death).—Bailey. 

And we, poor waifs, whose life-term seems. See same. 
—Hayne. 

And well our Christian sires of old. See Marmion 
(Old English Christmas, The).—Scott. 

And what are things eternal?—Powers depart. See 
Excursion, The (God in Nature). — Words¬ 
worth. 

“And what became of the chair?” inquired Clara. See 
Grandfather’s Chair (Sunken Treasure, The).— 
Hawthorne. 

And what did dainty Babie Bell. See Babie Bell.— 
Aldrich. 

“And what have you been doing.” See Growing.— 
Sangster. 

And what is so rare as a day in June? See Vision 
of Sir Launfal, The (June).—Lowell. 

“And what room is this?” asked Mrs. Chrysler. See 
Flat Story, A.—Anon. 

And what was it, fellow-citizens? See Eulogy on 
Lafayette (Oration on Lafayette).—Everett. 

And what will I do? See Molly Carew.—Lover. 

And when I seek the chamber where she dwelt. See 
Mary.—Tennyson-Turner. 

And when—its force expended. See White Squall, 
The (After the Storm).—Thackeray. 

And when the stream. See Excursion, The.—Words¬ 
worth. 

And when with joyous heart they ’gan prepare. See 
Chancellor’s Garden, The.—Courthope. 

And whence, then, came these goodly stones ’twas 
Israel’s pride to raise? See Spiritual Temple, The. 
—Anon. 

“And where have you been, my Mary?” See Fairies of 
the Caldon Low, The.—Howitt. 

“And where is he?” Not by the side. See Where is 
He?—Neele. 

“And where now, Bayard, will thy footsteps tend?” 
See Bayard Taylor.—Whittier. 

“And wherefore do the poor complain?” See Com¬ 
plaints of the Poor, The.—Southey. 

And wherefore should these good news make me sick? 
See King Henry IV., Pt. II.—Shakespeare. _ 

And while some books, like steps, are left behind us. 
See same. —Beecher. 

“And whither would you lead me then?” See Rokeby 
(Friar of Orders Gray).—Scott. 

“And why do you throw down your hoe by the way.” 
See Waiting for Something to Turn Up.—Cary. 

“And why?" said Bob, with a scornful look. See Bob 
and the Bible.—Anon. 

“And why’s the ra’son ye’ll not be my wife, Kathlie?” 
See Mick Tandy’s Revenge. ( Youth’s Com¬ 
panion.) 

And Willy, my eldest born, is gone, you say, little 
Annie? See Grandmother’s Apology, The.— 
Tennyson. , 

And wilt thou leave me thus? See Earnest Suit to 
his Unkind Mistress not to Forsake him, An.— 
"W yatt 

"And ye sail walk in silk attire.” See Siller Croun, 
The.—Blamire. 

And ye who fill the places we once filled. See Mon- 
turi Salutamus.—Longfellow. 

And yet, do you not think, that who so could. See 
Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our 
History, The (Pilgrim Fathers, The).—Choate. 


And yet, for chastisement of these regrets. See Pre¬ 
lude, The (Morning after the Ball).—Wordsworth. 

And yet I cannot reprehend the flight. See Sonnets 
to Delia (Beauty, Time, and Love).—Daniel. 

And yet I know past all doubting, truly. See Divided. 
—Ingelow. 

And you have lost your little boy? See Where Honey¬ 
suckles Grow.—McNabb. 

And you really think you have succeeded? See Na¬ 
ture versus Education.—Anon. 

“And you, Sir Poet, shall you make, I pray.” See 
Poet and the Child, The.—Howells. 

And you, ye stars. See Empedocles on Etna (Song of 
Empedocles, The).—Arnold. 

“And you, ye storms, howl out his greatness! See 
Goodness and Greatness of God.—Spurgeon. 

Andre’s story is the one overmastering romance of the 
Revolution. See Andr4 and Hale.—Depew. 

Andromeda, by Perseus saved and wed. See Aspects 
Medusa.—Rossetti. 

Andy Rooney was a fellow who had the most singu¬ 
larly ingenious knack of doing everything thB 
wrong way. Sec Handy Andy’s Little Mistakes. 
—Lover. 

Ane Lyoun at his pray wery foirrun. See Taill of the 
Lyoun and the Mous, The.—Henryson. 

Anear the centre of that northern crest. See City of 
Dreadful Night, The (Melencolia).—Thomson. 

Angel, king of streaming morn. See Sun.—Rowe. 

Angel of pain, I think thy face. See Angel of Pain, 
The.—Holm. 

Angel spirits of sleep. See Spirits.—Bridges. 

Angelic aeronaut, airy and active. See Snow-flakes and 
Snow-drifts.—Gale. 

Angels and ministers of grace, defend us! See Hamlet 
(Hamlet to the Ghost).—Shakespeare. 

Angels have fallen ere thy time; by pride. See Lady 
of Lyons, The (Claude Melnotte’s Apology ana 
Defence).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Angels of growth, of old in that surprise. See Ideals. 
—Wasson. 

“Angelus Domini nuntiavit Maria!” See Songs my 
Mother Sung, The.—Wakeman. 

Angry words are lightly spoken. See Angry Words.— 
Anon. 

Anigh a frozen mere a cottage stood. See Dream that 
Came True, The.—Ingelow. 

“Ann Rafferty,” said the judge. “Here, yer Honor.” 
See Ann Rafferty’s Evidence.—Shields. 

Anna, I wish you to understand that you must keep 
your place. See Aunt Susan Jones.—Anon. 

Annan Water’s wading deep. See Annan Water.— 
Anon. 

Annie and Rhoda, sisters twain. See Sisters, The.— 
Whittier. 

Announced by all the trumpets of the sky. See Snow 
Storm, The.—Emerson. 

Anoint my eyes that I may see. See Prayer, A.— 
Perry. 

Anon out of the earth a fabric huge. See Paradise 
Lost.—Milton. 

Anonymous—nor needs a name. See Anonymous.— 
Tabb. 

Another authenticated ghost story. See Did You 
Ever See a Ghost?—Meyers. 

“Another Daring Burglary!” read Mrs. Banford. See 
Banford’s Burglar-alarm.—Anon. 

Another day is numbered with the past. See At Even¬ 
ing.—Anon. 

Another day its course hath run. See Evening Hymn 
for a Child.—Pierpont. 

Another day! Oh, holy calm. See Another Day.— 
Arnold. 

Another flagon, old friend? Of course. See Told at 
“The Flagon.”—Coller. 

Another general shout. See Julius Caesar (Cassius’ 
Complaint of Caesar).—Shakespeare. 

Another guest that winter night. See Snow-bound 
(Prophetess).—Whittier. 

Another hand is beckoning us. See Gone.—Whit¬ 
tier. 

Another hero of those youthful years. See Noey Rix- 
ler.—Riley. 

Another King! they grow like Hydra’s heads. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I.—Shakespeare. 

Another lamb, O Lamb of God, behold. See Con¬ 
fided.—Tabb. 

Another little wave. See Baby, The.—Anon. 

Another mizzling, drizzling day! See My Letters.— 
Barham. 

Another name is added to the roll of those whom the 
world will not willingly let die. See Eulogy on 
General Grant.—Beecher. 


611 






I 


Another AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Another night, and yet no tidings come. See Parting 
of King Philip and Marie, The.—Marston. 

Another patient, I suppose. See Dr. Brown.—Good- 
fellow. 

Another star ’neath Time’s horizon dropped. See 
Lowell Alphabet, A.—Lowell. 

Another then: “Ah, be thy cherished aim.” See Di¬ 
vine Comedy, The (Buonconte di Montefeltro).— 
Dante. 

Another year! another year! See One More Year.— 
Norton. 

Another year has passsed away. See Our Anniver¬ 
sary.—Cornell. 

Another year passed over—gone. See Another Year. 
—O’Hagan. 

Another year’s come ’round again. See Resolved.— 
G. A. P. 

Anstice and Amalie watching late. See In the Jac¬ 
querie.—Simcox. 

Answer me, burning stars of night! where is the spirit 
gone? Sec Invocation.—Hemans. 

A’n’t the stars purty? See At the Hospital Window. 
—Smith. 

Antoine Philarey, after many years. See Marriage 
Tour, A.—Pardessus. 

“Antoine,” said Mirabeau, returning gay. See Equal¬ 
ity at Home.—Anon. 

Any callers to-day, Tom? See Intelligence Office, The. 
—Anon. 

“Any fellah feelth nervouth.” See Lord Dundreary 
Proposing.—Skill. 

“Any grist for the mill?” See Water-mill, The.— 
“Aunt Effie.” 

“Any one can hang a curtain.” See Burton’s Cur¬ 
tains.—Meyers. 

Any one who has mingled to any extent in the society 
of the present day. See Selfishness of Society.— 
Denison. 

Any shentleman vot vill go round pehind your face. 
See Vas Bender Henspecked?—Von Boyle. 

Appeared the princess with that merry child Prince 
Guy. See Athulf and Ethilda.—Taylor. 

Applause to that blest son of foresight. See Night 
Thoughts.—Young. 

Apple blossoms in the orchard. See June.—Mason. 

Apprehensions of the imputation of the want of firm¬ 
ness. See On the Bank Veto (True Patriotism). 
—Clay. 

Approach, thou craven, crouching slave! See Exhor¬ 
tation to the Greeks.—Byron. 

April, April, laugh thy girlish laughter. See Song. 
—Watson. 

April brought the blossoms out. See Cherries.— 
Sherman. 

April brought you to us, dear. See To Our Baby.— 
Anon. 

April cold with dropping rain. See April and May.— 
Emerson. 

April flowers were in the hollows; in the air were April 
bells. See Lincoln’s Last Dream.—Butterworth. 

April is here! See In April.—Rexford. 

April the 19th, 1775, was the fatal day marked out by 
the mysterious Heaven. See Battle of Lexington, 
The.-—-Weems. 

Apron on and dash in hand. See Churning Song, The. 
—Dinsmore. 

Arabella Atkins was her name. See Voyage of Ara¬ 
bella, The.-—Deland. 

Arabella was a school-girl. See Arabella and Sally Ann. 
—Carson. 

Arbor day, which is here regarded. See Arbor Day 
H istory.—W ells. 

Arbutus, thou dost faintly swing. See Arbutus.— 
Anon. 

Arches on arches! as it were that Rome. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Coliseum, The).—Byron. 

Archibald Campbell, the engine-driver, was a decent, 
honest, well-meaning man. See Railway Chase, 
The.—Macrae. 

Archibald Edward Theophilus Jones. See What might 
Happen.—Carson. 

Archie’s wife? Yes, dear, but where’s Archie. See 
Archie’s Mother.—Thorpe. 

Archons of Athens, topped by the tettix, see, I return! 
See Pheidippides.—Browning. 

Are all content? See Damon to the Syracusans.— 
Banim. 

Are bank-notes equivalent to the legal standard coin 
of the realm? See Bank-notes and Coin.—Can¬ 
ning. 

Are the noises in the woods the voices of the birds 
talking about school? See Bird Talk.—Good- 
fellow. 


Are the posts of our frontier to remain forever in the 
possession of Great Britain? See British Treaty, 
The.—Ames. 

“Are there any more of those [or these] letters?” See 
Six Love-letters.—Anon. 

Are there favoring ladies above thee? See Valse Jeune. 
—Guiney. 

“Are there no real good Injuns?” See Cowboy’s Tale, 
The.—“Wyoming Kit.” 

Are there not lofty moments when the soul. See Kath- 
rina.—Holland. 

Are there not times, patricians, when great states. See 
Catiline (Catiline to his Friends, etc.).—Croly. 

Are they shadows that we see? See Eidola.—Dan¬ 
iel. 

Are we a nation? Then must we have that essential, 
indestructible unity. See Are We a Nation? (Our 
Nation and Flag).—Sumner. 

Are we all here? Then let us open our school by sing¬ 
ing. See Schoolday.—Hunt. 

Are we all met? See Midsummer’s Night’s Dream 
(Clown’s Second Rehearsal, The).—Shakespeare. 

Are we so low, so base, so despicable, that we may not 
express our horror. See On the Greek Revolu¬ 
tion (On Recognizing the Independence of 
Greece, 1824).—Clay. 

Are ye all there? Are ye all there. See Stars in My 
Country’s Sky.—L. H. S. 

Are you a family man, Johnson? See Bones on Family 
Discipline.—Anon. 

Are you a judge of wines, Johnson? See Mr. Johnson 
on Wine.—Anon. 

“Are you a lampoon man? Not really!” See Critic, 
The.—Batchelder. 

Are you a musician, Johnson? See De Lay ub de Last 
Minstrel.—Anon. 

Are you alone? Of course, I am alone. See Sisterly 
Confidence.—Broughton. 

Are you filled with wonder, Jacqueminot? See Jacque¬ 
minot.—Knowles. 

Are you fond of a game of chess, Bones? See Chess and 
Whist.—Anon. 

Are you fond of animals, Johnson? See Johnson’s Bed¬ 
fellows.—Anon. 

Are you fond of lawyers, Johnson? See Lawyers and 
Donkeys.—-Anon. 

Are you fond of mottoes, Tambo? See One for Every¬ 
body.—Anon. 

Are you fond of rowing, Johnson? See How to Make a 
Boat Fast.—Anon. 

Are you fond of your Sunday, Tambo? See Day of 
Rest, The.—Anon. 

Are you glad, my big brother, my deep-hearted oak? 
See Are You Glad.—Dandridge. 

Are you lost, dear child? See Lost Princess, The.— 
Anon. 

Are you married, Tambo? See Tambo on Matrimony. 
—Anon. 

Are you not glad, Jenny is to have a doll’s party, Susy? 
See Doll’s Sash, The.—Anon. 

Are you ready, are you ready, for the coming of the 
Lord. See Are You Ready?—Eisenbeis. 

“Are you ready for your steeplechaise, Lorraine, Lor¬ 
raine, Lorrde?” See Lorraine.—Kingsley. 

Are you ready, O Virginia. See Call to the Colors, The. 
—Guiterman. 

Are you the boy who called me names the other day? 
See Kindness and Cruelty.—Anon. 

Are you tir’d? See Rosamond at Woodstock.—Swin¬ 
burne. 

Arethusa arose from her couch of snows. See Are- 
thusa.—Shelley. 

Argos was besieged! The Lacedemonians thundered 
at its gates. See Telesilla.—Anon. 

Ariel to Miranda: Take. See To a Lady, with a 
Guitar.—Shelley. 

Ariosto tells a pretty story of a fairy, who, by some 
mysterious law of her nature. See Milton (Dis¬ 
trust of Liberty).—Macaulay. 

Arise, arise, arise! See Ode to the Assertors of Liberty, 
An.—Shelley. 

Arise! for the day is passing. See Now.—Anon. 

“Arise, my maiden, Mabel.” See Mabel on Midsum¬ 
mer Day.—Howitt. 

Arise, my slumbering soul! arise. See Soul and Coun¬ 
try.—Mangan. 

Arise, O soul, and gird thee up anew. See Challenge, 
A.—Kenyon. 

Arise, oh my country! arise in thy glory. See My Coun¬ 
try.—Amonson. 

Arise! ’tis the day of our Washington’s glory. See 
Crown our Washington.—Butterworth. 


612 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


As 


Aristotle has said that poetry is the most philosophic. 
See Poetry.—Wordsworth. 

Arm, arm, arm, arm! the scouts are all come in. See 
Mad Lover, The (Joy of Battle, The).—Fletcher. 

Around, above the world of snow. See February.— 
Bensel. 

Around her shrine no earthly blossoms blow. See 
Madonna dell’ Acqua, The.—Buskin. 

Around my love and me the brooding hills. See Lyn- 
mouth.—O ’Shaughnessy. 

Around Sebago’s lonely lake. See Funeral Tree of the 
Sokokis, The.—Whittier. 

Around the board the guests were met, the light above 
them beaming. See Dream of the Reveler, The.— 
Mackay. 

Around the globe, through every clime. See Stained 
by the Blood of Heroes.—Anon. 

Around the lovely valley rise. See Midsummer.— 
Trowbridge. 

Around the stove at the village inn. See How Tom 
Saved the Train.—Birdseye. 

Around the tomb, O bard divine. See On Anacreon.— 
Moore. 

Around the world the fame is blown. See Man Who 
Rose from Nothing, The.—M’ Lachlan. 

Around this [or the] lovely valley rise. See Midsummer 
—Trowbridge. 

Arrah! hold your whist, now, Whinny. See Biddy 
McGinnis at the Photographers.—Anon. 

Arrah' Nellie f or Noral, don’t look like a thunder cloud, 
darlint. See Penitent. A.—Anon. 

Arrah. now, an’ is it yourself, Pat Noonan? See Miss 
Milligan’s Party.—Dane. 

Arras, blacksmith and armorer, stood at the door of his 
hut. See Archbishop’s Christmas Gift, The.— 
Barr. 

Arrayed—a half-angelic sight. See Christening, The. 
—Lamb. 

Arrayed in snow-white pants and vest. See Ain’t he 
Cute.—Anon. 

Art is long and time is fleeting. See Psalm of Life, A 
(Life).—Longfellow. 

Art is true art when art to God is true. See Fra 
Angelico.—Egan. 

Art reigned incarnate in thy lofty soul. See Mario.— 
Saltus. 

Art thou a statist in the van? See Poet’s Epitaph, A. 
—Wordsworth. 

Art thou a type of beauty, or of power. See Passion 
Flower.—DeVere. 

Art thou already weary of the day? See Art Thou 
already Weary.—Kemble. 

Art thou not sweet. See Bird Song.—MacLean. 

Art thou pale for weariness. See To the Moon.— 
Shelley. 

Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers? See 
PPasant Corned / of Patient Grissell, The (Sweet 
Content).-—Dekk^r. 

Art thou some winged sprite, that, fluttering round. 
See To a Maple Seed.—Mifflin. 

Art thou the bird whom man loves best? See Red¬ 
breast Chasing the Butterfly, The.—Words¬ 
worth. 

Art thou the same mysterious traveller? See Address 
to the Comet.—Anon. 

Art thou the same, thou sobbing winter wind? See Art 
Thou the Same.—Tatnall. 

Art thou weary, art thou languid? See Art Thou 
Weary.—St. Stephen. 

Art tired? There is rest remaining. See “Art Tired?’’ 
—Ingelow. 

Artemidora, Gods invisible. See Death of Artemidora, 
The.—Landor. 

Article I.—The style of the Confederacy shall be, "The 
United States of America.” See Articles of Con¬ 
federation, The.—Anon. 

Art’s use; what is it but to touch the springs. See Art. 
—Parker. 

Arthur and the rest of the children. See Santa Claus 
in Spite of Himself.—Raymond. 

As a beam o’er the face of the waters may glow. See 
Grief.—Moore. 

As a bell in a chime. See same. —Johnson. 

As a fond mother, when the day is o’er. See Nature. 
—Longfellow. 

As a friend to the children commend me the Yak. See 
Yak, The.—Belloc. 

As a king’s daughter, being in person sought. See 
Nosce Teipsum (Soul Compared to a Virgin Wooed 
in Marriage, The).—Davies. 

As a little boy played in the street one day. See 
Retribution.—Anon. 

As a little child at play. See Soap Bubbles.—Anon. 


As a maid so nice. See Decision, A.—Eno. 

As a symbol of the Republic, a sign and instrument of 
great power. See Symbols of the Republic.— 
Chapin. 

As a twig trembles, which a bird. See She Came and 
Went.—Lowell. 

As a young lobster roamed about. See Lobsters, The. 
(Punch.) 

As after noon, one summer’s day. See Cupid Mis¬ 
taken.^—Prior. 

As an unperfect actor on the stage. See Sonnets, 
XXIII.—Shakespeare. 

As angels sport amid the stars. See Flowers, The.— 
Bacon. 

As Annie was carrying the baby one day. See Ques¬ 
tion, A.—Anon. 

As Artemus was once traveling in the cars. See Mark 
Twain Tells an Anecdote of A. Ward.—Clemens. 

As, at a railway junction, men. See Sic Itur. — 
Clough. 

As at early dawn the stars shine forth even while it 
grows light. See National Flag, The (Our Flag). 
—Beecher. 

As at their work two weavers sat. See Two Weavers, 
The.—More. 

As aw hurried throo th’ toan to mi wark. See Bite 
Bigger.—Anon. 

As beautiful Kitty one morning was tripping. See 
Kitty of Coleraine.—Shanly. 

As “Brudder Yerkes” took his stand beside the desk. 
See Brudder Yerkes’s Sermon.—Ludlow. 

As by his notes a bird is known. See Proverbs.— 
Rook. 

As by some tyrant’s stern command. See Lawyer’s 
Farewell to his Muse, The.—Blackstone. 

As by the instrument she took her seat. See Vir- 
tuosa.—Townsend. 

As by the shore at break of day. See same. —Moore. 

As careful merchants do expecting stand. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals (Song of Tavy, The).-—Browne. 

As center-rush he was our pride. See Our Hero.— 
Romaine. 

As chimes that flow o’er shining seas. See Far-away. 

-—Sigerson. 

As Death was journeying through the land. See 
Death’s Choice.—Halse. 

As Dick and Bryan were at play. See Models, The.— 
Turner. 

As doctors give physic by way of prevention. See 
For My Own Monument.—Prior. 

As Don Quixote and Sancho Panza were riding, they 
perceived some thirty or forty windmills. See 
Don Quixote and the Windmills.—Cervantes. 

As Dot sat by the fire one night. See Dot’s New Leaf. 
—Richards. 

As doth his heart who travels far from home. See To 
a Young Child.—Scudder. 

As down the distant halls of time we turn our eyes 
to-day. See Adown the Wars.—Sherwood. 

As down through the meadow our Charley-boy. See 
Charley’s Butterfly.—Anon. 

As dozing I sat in my chair by the fire. See Visit to 
Hades, A.—Bates. 

As due by many titles, I resign. See Resignation and 
Despair.—Donne. 

As dyed in blood the streaming wines appear. See 
Woodbines in October.—Bates. 

As flake by flake, the beetling avalanches. See Ode to 
F ranee.—Lowell. 

As flame streams upward, so my longing thought. See 
He Made Us Free.—Egan. 

As flow the rivers to the sea. See Inheritance.— 
Russell. 

As fly the shadows o'er the grass. See Irish Wolf¬ 
hound, The.—MacCarthy. 

As Frances was playing and turning around. See 
Dizzy Girl, The.—Turner. 

As from the East unto the utmost West. See To the 
Sacred Poets of America.-—Wilton. 

As from the house your mother sees. See To Any 
Reader.—Stevenson. 

As from the sultry town, oppressed. See Character, 
A.—Irwin. 

As Genius from Parnassus took her flight. See Ad¬ 
dress, in the Character of “Hope.”—Anon. 

As Gertrude skipt from babe to girl. See Gertrude’s 
Necklace.—Locker-Lampson. 

As God appeared to Solomonan d Joseph in dreams 
to urge. See His Choice and His Destiny.— 
Bristol. 

As Harris and I sat, one morning, at one of the small, 
round tables. See Tramp Abroad, A (Guessing 
Nationalities).—Clemens. 


613 







As 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


As he leans over the vessel’s side. See Night in the 
Mediterranean, A.—Anon. 

As he that makes his mark is understood. See Bad 
W riters.—B utler. 

As heaven and earth are fairer. See Hyperion.-—Keats. 

As here within I watch the fervid coals. See To 
Bayard Taylor beyond Us.—Hayne. 

As hills seem Alps, when veiled in misty shroud. See 
Kings of Men.—Reade. 

As Huldy Brown stood at her kitchen table. See 
Huldy’s Pumpkin Pies.—Balch. 

As I a fare had lately past. See Muses’ Elysium, The 
(Ferryman, Venus, and Cupid, The).—Drayton. 

As I a rhymer. See Expectoration, An.—Coleridge. 

As I am sitting in the sun upon the porch to-day. See 
Fire-hangbird’s Nest, The.—Field. 

As I approached a pond, a few days ago, where some 
negroes were cutting ice. See Go-morrow, or 
Lot’s Wife.—Anon. 

As I came down from Lebanon. See same. —Scollard. 

As I came down Mount Tamalpais. See same. — 
Urmy. 

As I came down the street to-day. See Thankful 
Hearts.—Denton. 

As I came round the harbor buoy. See Long White 
Seam, The.—Ingelow. 

As I came wandering down Glen Spean. See Emi¬ 
grant Lassie, The.—Blackie. 

As I gaed doun by yon house-en. See Twa Corbies, 
The.—Anon. 

As I in hoary winter’s night. See Burning Babe, 
The.—Southwell. 

As I lay a-thynkynge, a-thynkynge, a-thynkynge. See 
As I Lay a-Thynkynge.—Barham. 

As I lay awake in the night. See Midnight Train, The. 
—Nichols. 

As I lay awake in the white moonlight. See Gnomies, 
The.—Ramal. 

As I lay in my bed. See Lisle’s Dream.—Richards. 

As I loitered through the village. See Blowing Bub¬ 
bles.—Munday. 

As I roved out, at Faha, one morning. See Maid of 
Cloghroe, The.—Anon. 

As I rowled on my side-car to Santry Fair. See 
Changing Her Mind.—Graves. 

As I rummaged through the attic. See My Trundle 
Bed.—Anon. 

As I sat at the caft% I said to myself. See Dipsychus 
(Spectator ab Extra).—Clough. 

As I sat by my study table. See Where Baby Joy 
Comes from.—Calthorp. 

As I sat down to breakfast in state. See Country 
Clergyman’s Trip to Cambridge, The.—Macaulay. 

As I sit and watch at the window-pane. See Hide and 
Seek.—Cary. 

As I sit at my desk by the window. See Mignonette. 
—Bartlett. 

As I sit on a log here in the woods among the clean¬ 
faced beeches. See Choir Practice.—Crosby. 

As I sit within the rood-loft, and the thunder-tones are 
pealing. See Romance of the Rood-loft, A.— 
Clarke. 

As I speak to you to-day, I wish to tell you of a sol¬ 
dier. See South and Her Problems, The.—Grady. 

As I stand by the cross on the lone mountain’s crest. 
See Two Ships, The.—Harte. 

As I stood by yon roofless tower. See Vision, The.— 
Burns. 

As I strolled on the beach with the fair Isabella. See 
Flirtation.—Anon. 

As I walked by myself and talked to myself. See 
Song on King William III.—Anon. 

As I walked by myself I talked to myself. See All the 
Same in the End.—Ross. 

As I walked by myself, I talked to myself. See 
also Colloquy with Myself, A.—Barton. 

As I walked over the hill one day. See Nursery Song. 
—Carter. 

As I was coming down the street. See Spendthrift 
Doll, The.—Sweet. 

As I was going for a walk. See Who Was She?— 
Anon. 

As I was going to Bethlehem-town. See Bethlehem- 
town.—Field. 

As I was going to market-town. See Timely Hint, A. 
—Anon. 

As I was going up the street one day. See Blue.— 
Rutledge. 

As I was rambling one day about the Moorish halls. 
See A'hambra, The (Moonlight on the Alhambra). 
—Irving. 

As I was strolling down a woodland way. Nee Down 
a Woodland Way.—Howells. 


As I was taking a walk, I noticed two little boys on 
their way to school. See Better Whistle than 
Whine.—Anon. 

As I was walking all alane. See Twa Corbies, The.— 
Anon. 

As I was walking all alone [or by my lane]. See Wee, 
Wee Man, The.—Anon. 

As I was walking up the street. See O Mally’s Meek, 
Mally’s Sweet.-—Burns. 

As I was wandering through a wood. <See Voices of 
the Wildwood.—Cummins. 

As I was yesterday morning walking with Sir Roger. 
See Spectator, The (Will Wimble).—-Addison. 

As I wer readen ov a stwone. See Readen ov a Head- 
stwone.—Barnes. 

As I were in Cupid’s garden. See Cupid’s Garden.— 
Anon. 

As I yield to the influences of this occasion. See 
Political Duties and Responsibilities of University 
Men.—Cleveland. 

As if it were but yesterday. See Boy in Blue, The.— 
Long. 

As in all great and crowded fairs. See Courtiers.— 
Butler. 

As in some foreign realm of nether kind. See Sug¬ 
gested by Plato’s Bust in the Logic Room.— 
Molloy. 

As in the good ship Annabel. See Johnny Cox.— 
Graves. 

As in the rainbow’s many-coloured hues. See Brit¬ 
annia’s Pastorals (Colour Passage, A).—Browne. 

As in the sunshine of the mom. See Butterfly and the 
Snail, The.—Gay. 

As innocence went forth one day. See Robe of Inno¬ 
cence The.—Anon. 

As inward love breeds outward talk. See Angler’s 
Song, The.—Basse. 

As it befell in midsummer time. See Sir Andrew 
Barton.—Anon. 

As it befell one summer morning. See To Joanna.— 
Wordsworth. 

As it began to dawn, you know. See Song of Manila, 
The.—Sterne. 

As it fell one holy day, hay down. See Little Musgrave 
and Lady Barnard.—Anon. 

As it fell out on a long summer’s day. See Fair 
Margaret and Sweet William.—Anon. 

As it fell out upon one day. See Lazarus.—Anon. 

As it fell upon a day. See Cynthia (Nightingale, 

_ The).—Barnfield. 

As it is written. There is none righteous, no, not one. 
See Need of Christ, The.—Anon. 

As Johnny walked out one day. See As Johnny Walked 
Out.—Anon. 

As Joseph was a-walking [or a-waukin’]. See Christmas 
Carol.—Anon. 

As late the trades' unions, by way of a show. See 
Epigram.—Smith. 

As little children in a darkened hall. See Waiting.— 
Crandall. 

As little I.izette was out walking one day. See Little 
Lizette.—Alcorn. 

As Lochinvar rode through the glinting. See Lochin- 
var.—Anon. 

As long as the three great problems, which Victor Hugo 
mentions. See True Nobility.—Anon. 

As Lucy went a-walking one wintry morning fine. 
See As Lucy Went a-Walking.—Ramal. 

As Mailie an’ her lambs thegither. See Death and 
Dying Words of Poor Mailie, The.—Burns. 

As Memnon’s marble harp, renowned of old. See 
Pleasures of Imagination, The (Delights of Fancy). 
—Akenside. 

As men beneath some pang of grief. See Poem Read 
at the Founding of the Gettysburg Monument.— 
Halpine. 

As Mr. Pickwick contemplated a stay of at least two 
months. See Pickwick Papers. The (Most Extraor¬ 
dinary Calamity that Befell Mr. Winkle, A).— 
Dickens. 

As morning dawned and the poets slowly climbed. See 
Story of the Divine Comedy, The (Purgatory, 
The).—Rabb. 

As mother saw her calmly stand. See Trundle-bed 
Theology.—Brown. 

As my wife and I, at the window one day. See My 
Wife and I.—Anon. 

As near Porto Bello lying. See Ballad of Admiral 
Hosier’s Ghost.—Glover. 

As needy gallants, in the scriv’ner’s hands. See Satire 
on the Dutch.—Dryden. 

As nestling at thy feet in peace I lay. See Mother 
England.—Thomas. 


614 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


As 


As noble Sir Arthur one morning did ride. See Sir 
Arthur and Charming Mollee.—Anon. 

As none but kings have power to raise. See Apology 
for Plagiaries, An.—Butler 

As o’er his furrowed fields, which lie. See Seedtime 
and Harvest.—Whittier. 

As o’er the hill we roam’d at will. See Wanderers.— 
Calverley. 

As o’er the laughter-moving page. See Cervantes.— 
Bryant. 

As oft I fill my faithful pipe. See Edifying Reflections 
of a Tobacco Smoker.—Anon. 

As on my bed at dawn I mus’d and pray’d. See Lattice 
at Sunrise, The.—Turner. 

As on the gauzy wings of fancy flying. See Iron Gate, 
The.—Holmes. 

As on this pictured page I look. See Piscator and 
Piscatrix.—Thackeray. 

As once Cineas of Epirus stood among the senators of 
Rome. See Roman Senate and the American 
Congress, The.—Kossuth. 

As one advances up the slow ascent. See Solitude— 
Savage. 

As one by one those autumn leaves descending. See 
Lesson of the Leaves, The.—Anon. 

As one dark morn I trod a forest glade. See Forest 
Glade, The.—Turner. 

As one that for a weary space has lain. See Odyssey, 
The.—Lang. 

As one who cleaves the circumambient air. See Timon 
of Archimedes.—Loomis. 

As one who cons at evening o’er an album all alone. 
See Old Sweetheart of Mine, An.—Riley. 

As one who, destined from his friends to part. See To 
My Books on Parting with Them.—Roscoe. 

As one who follows a departing friend. See Last Days. 
—Stoddard. 

As one who held herself a part. See Sister.—Whit¬ 
tier. 

As one who strives from some fast steamer’s side. See 
O. M. B.—Brown. 

As one would stand who saw a sudden light. See 
Love’s Outset.—Parker. 

As other men have creed, so have I mine. See same .— 
Tilton. 

As passed the rector of All Saints one day. See Little 
Turncoats.—Peck. 

As Pat, an odd joker, with a Yankee more sly. See 
Pat and the Yankee.—Banks. 

As Peter sat at heaven’s gate. See St. Peter’s Polite¬ 
ness.—Anon. 

As pilot well expert in perilous wave. See Faerie 
Queene, The (Cave of Mammon, The).—Spenser. 

As pussy sat washing her face by the gate. See Cat’s 
Bath, The.—Anon. 

“As regards impromptu speeches,’’ said Woodtick 
Williams. See Jim Onderdonk’s Sunday School 
Oration.—Nye. 

As Richard and I sat together one day. See Hole in 
the Patch, The.—Anon. 

As, rising on its purple wing. See Giaour, The (Tran¬ 
sient Beauty).—Byron. 

As sailors watch from their prison. See Love of the 
Past, The. ( Spectator , The.) 

As Sally sat upon the ground. See Worm, The.— 
Turner. 

As shadows, cast by cloud and sun. See Star of Beth¬ 
lehem, The.—Bryant. 

As ships, becalmed at eve, that lay. See Qua Cursum 
Ventus.—Clough. 

As Sir Launfal made morn through the darksome gate. 
See Vision of Sir Launfal, The (Sir Launfal and the 
Leper).—Lowell. 

As slow our ship her foamy track. See As Slow Our 
Ship.—Moore. 

As some fair violet, loveliest of the glade. See Province 
of Woman, The.—More. 

As some mysterious wanderer of the skies. See same. 
—Stockard. 

As soon as a stranger is introduced into any company. 
See Wealth.—Emerson. 

As soon as I get a tin cup of water from the spring. 
See April Fool, An.—Anon. 

As soon as Mrs. Olcott was well rid of Mrs. Hawley. 
See First Christmas Tree in New England. (St. 
Nicholas .) 

As soon as the colonists had fully decided to separate 
from the British. See Birthday of the Stars and 
Stripes.—Anon. 

As soon as winter’s snow and sleet. See Monarch of 
the Old Regime, A.—Michael. 

As soon as you’re up, shake blanket and sheet. See 
Health Alphabet.—Anon. 


As soon seek roses in December—ice in June. See 
English Bards and Scotch Reviewers.—Byron. 

As sunset’s glow illumed the sea. See In Memory of 
Charles Dickens.—Remak. 

As sunshine and rain. See Make the Best of It.— 
Anon. 

As sweet as a song on a summer’s eve. 'See On a 
Summer’s Eve.—G. 

As the barometer foretells the storm. See Morituri 
Salutamus (Age).—Longfellow. 

As the bear is a heavy, clumsy creature. See Robinson 
Crusoe (Friday’s Frolic with a Bear).—Defoe. 

As the bee is to the rose. See Summer Friends.— 
Brougham. 

As the breath of the dew to the tender plant. See 
Kind Words.—Anon. 

As the chain gang was shuffling past it was stopped. 
See Lucky Jim.—Long. 

As the chameleon who is known. See Chameleon, 
The.—Prior. 

As the chill’d robin, bound to Florida. See You Know 
if it was You.—-Willis. 

As the cloud to the wind I am docile to thee. See 
Persian Love Song.—Lindsay. 

As the day’s last light is dying. See Bird of Passage.— 
Fawcett. 

As the dead year is clasped by the dead December. 
See New Year’s Resolve.—Wilcox. 

As the flight of a river. See Absent, yet Present.— 
Lytton. 

As the highly colored birds do not fly around. See 
same. —Swing. 

As the insect from the rock. See Making of Man, The. 
—Chadwick. 

As the light beyond draws nearer. See Schiller’s Dying 
Vision.—Maehar. 

As the little white hearse went glimmering by. See 
Little White Hearse, The.—Riley. 

As the marsh-hen secretly builds on the watery sod. 
See Marshes of Glynn, The.—Lanier. 

As the parson sat at his books one day. See Minister’s 
Quarter Pay-day, A.—Anon. 

As the rock in the ocean, the pine on the plain. See 
Be Strong.—Eager. 

As the sun was sinking toward the horizon. See Les 
Mis^rables (John Valjohn and the Savoyard).— 
Hugo. 

As the time for cold weather approached. See Raising 
a Beard.—Anon. 

As the transatlantic tourist. See Doves of Venice, 
The.—Hutton. 

As the twilight’s gray was swallowed. See Aurora 
Borealis, The.—Foran. 

As the wind at play with a spark. See Louisa May 
Alcott.—Moulton. 

As the year roll’d itself round again to meet the day. 
See Enoch Arden (Farewell of Enoch Arden, The). 
—Tennyson. 

As the youthful Paris presses. See Puffs Poetical 
(Paris and Helen).—Aytoun. 

As there I left the road in May. See Surprise, The.— 
Barnes. 

As they sat in the parlor the conversation was more 
connected. See Man Behind, The (Ike Papson’s 
Courtship).—Denison. 

As this advice, if it ever see the light, will not do so till 
I am no more. See Advice to My Country.— 
Madison. 

As this my carnal robe grows old. See Hallelujah 
(Prayer of Old Age, The).—Wither. 

As Thomas was cudgel’d one day by his wife. See 
Cudgeled Husband, The.—Swift. 

As those we love decay, we die in part. See On the 
Death of a Particular Friend.—Thomson. 

As thou these ashes, little brook! See John Wickliffe. 
—Wordsworth. 

As though there were a tie. See McFingal.—Trum¬ 
bull. 

As thro’ the land at eve we went. See Princess, The 
(As thro’ the Land).—-Tennyson. 

As through the void we went I heard his plumes. See 
Doors. The.—Mifflin. 

“As thy day thy strength shall be!” See Daily 
Strength.—Havergal. 

As time passed away the poor creature Smike paid 
bitterly. See Nicholas Nickleby (Nicholas Nickle- 
by Leaving the Yorkshire School).—Dickens. 

As time past onwards, day by day. See Manita. 
—M’Donnell. 

As to a bird’s song she were listening. See Deaf.— 
Bunner. 

As Tommy and his sister Jane. See Poisonous Fruit.— 
Turner. 


615 





As 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


As trees grow thickly together in the forest. See 
Pruning Trees.—Sanford. 

As twilight fades upon the west. See To a Friend.— 
Drown. 

As two men upon a field. See Iliad, The (Victory of 
Hector).—Homer. 

As two proud ships upon the pathless main. See Fate. 
—Anon. 

As unto blowing roses summer dews. See Love against 
Love.—Wasson. 

As unto the bow the cord is. See Song of Hiawatha, 
The (Hiawatha’s Wooing).—Longfellow. 

As virtuous men pass mildly away. See Valediction 
Forbidding Mourning, A.—Donne. 

As vonce I valked by a dismal swamp. See Let Us 
Alone.—Brownell. 

As want of candor really is not right. See Apology for 
Kings.—Pindar. 

As we cover the graves of the heroic dead with flowers. 
See Speech for Decoration Day.-—Ingersoll. 

As we feel upon our brows the fresh breath of a new 
life. See Liberalism.—Anon. 

As we go to the Spartans to learn the possibilities of 
physical culture. See Culture of the Moral Virtues 
—Baldwin. 

As we proceeded, the timid approach of twilight 
became more perceptible. See Uses of Astronomy, 
The (Morning).—Everett. 

As we rush, as we rush in the train. See In the Train.— 
Thomson. 

As we sallied forth, every dog in the establishment. 
See Sir Walter Scott and His Dogs.—Irving. 

As we speed out of youth’s sunny station. See Life’s 
Journey.—Wilcox. 

As we the withered ferns. See Ballade of Dead Friends. 
—Robinson. 

As we were falling back upon Malvern Hill. See Some¬ 
body’s Boy.—Anon. 

As wearied traveler o’er the burning sands. See Place 
of Rest, The.—Durant. 

As when a maid, taught from her mother wing. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals (Music Lesson, The).— 
Browne. 

As when a man along piano keys. See To John Boyle 
O’Reilly.—Bensell. 

As when a woodman on the greeny lawns. See Brit¬ 
annia’s Pastorals (Comparison, A).—Browne. 

As when far off the warbled strains are heard. See 
Sonnet: “As when far off,” etc.—Coleridge. 

As when, O lady mine. See Sonnet: “As when,” etc.— 
Michelangelo. 

As when, on Carmel's sterile steep. See Little Cloud, 
The.—Bryant. 

As when on closing of a well-spent life. See Address on 
Closing a Performance.—Anon. 

As when on some great mountain-peak we stand. See 
Glimpses.—Jackson. 

As when the sea breaks o’er its bounds. See Hudibras. 
—Butler. 

As when the weary traveler gains. See Home in View. 
-—Newton. 

As when with downcast eyes we muse and brood. See 
Friendship.—Tennyson. 

As William and Thomas were walking one day. See 
Boys and the Apple Tree, The.—Taylor. 

As with gladness men of old. See Epiphany.— 
Dix. 

As withereth the primrose by the river. See Palinode, 
A.—Bolton. 

As wonderful things are hidden away. See Seed, The. 
—Anon. 

As ye came from the holy land. See same. —Anon. 

As yonder lamp in my vacated room. See As Yonder 
Lamp.—Whitehead. 

As you all know, comrades especially, I was but one of 
those leaders. See Veterans, The.—Sherman. 

As you came from the holy land. See Pilgrim to 
Pilgrim.—Raleigh. 

As young as I am, I have observed these three swashers. 
See King Henry V. (Soliloquy on Character).— 
-—-Shakespeare. 

As your chairman evidently does not know. See 
Political Stump Speech.—Parker. 

Asenath Martyn was slightly built and undersized. 
See Fall of the Pemberton Mill, The.—Phelps. 

Ask God to give thee skill. See Sympathy.—Hamil¬ 
ton. 

Ask me no more; the moon may draw the sea. See 
Princess, The (Ask Me no More).—Tennyson. 

Ask me no more where Jove bestows. See Song: “Ask 
me no more.” etc.—Carew. 

Ask me not which of all my songs is thine! See Thy 
Song.—Mace. 


Ask me why I send you here. See Primrose, The.— 
Carew. 

Ask not the cause why sullen spring. See Song to a 
Fair Young Lady, Going out of the Town in the 
Spring.—Dryden. 

Ask nothing more of me, sweet. See Oblation, The.— 
Swinburne. 

Ask thyself at evening, what that is immortal have I 
done to-day? See same. —Lavater. 

Ask you where the place of religious might is. See 
same. —Robertson. 

Ask why I love the roses fair. See Reason Why, The.— 
Anon. 

Asleep at last! For fourscore years. See Oliver 
Wendell Holmes.—Hayne. 

Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep. See Asleep in Jesus.— 
Mackay. 

Assist me. ye friends of old books and old wine. See 
One Volume More.—Scott. 

A-strolling out one morning. See Naughty Plornet, A. 
—Richards. 

Astronomers and star-gazers this year. See On the 
Death of Burbage.—Middleton. 

Astronomers estimate that some of the most distant 
stars. See Magnificent Distances.—Anon. 

Astronomy is no feast of fancy, with music and poetry. 
See Study of Astronomy, The.—Mitchell. 

At a certain town-meeting the question came up. See 
Thrilling Appeal, A.—Anon. 

At a certain town-meeting the question of licensing 
certain persons to sell liquor was discussed. See 
Woman’s Plea, A.—Anon. 

At a dinner in London a short time ago. See After- 
dinner Story, An.—Anon. 

At a distance down the street, making music with their 
feet. See Drum, The.-—Anon. 

At a frown they in their glory die. See Sonnets, XXV. 
—Shakespeare. 

At a pleasant evening party I had taken down to 
supper. See Ferdinando and Elvira; or, The 
Gentle Pieman.—Gilbert. 

At a pot-house bar, as I chanced to pass. See What 
the Trumpeter Said.—Evans. 

At Abbeville I resolved to pass the night. See Mr. 
Rogers and Monsieur Denise.—Matthews. 

At about 3 p. m., of August 9, 18—, we reached, in a 
drenching thunder-storm. See Ascent of Japan’s 
Sacred Mountain, Fusi-Yama.—Soper. 

At Alexandria’s water-gate. See Seven Wonders of the 
World, The.—Bellamy and Goodwin. 

At an early age, St. Dolly. See Fireside Saints, The.— 
Jerrold. 

At anchor in Hampton Roads we lay. See Cumber¬ 
land, The.—Longfellow. 

At anchor they’re riding. See Dream of the Boats, 
The.—W albridge. 

At Bannockburn the English lay. See Bannockburn. 
—Burns. 

At Beauty’s bar as I did stand. See Arraignment of a 
Lover, The.—Gascoigne. 

At Carmel's mount the prophet laid. See Harvest 
Hymn.—Prentice. 

At Cato’s-Head in Russel Street. See On the Fly-leaf 
of a Book of Old Plays.—Learned. 

At Cheltenham, where one drinks one’s fill. See My 
Partner.—Praed. 

At church I sat within her pew. See Exclamatory.— 
Anon. 

At cool of day, with God I walk. See Eventide.— 
Mason. 

"At dawn,” he said, “I bid them all farewell.” See 
Volunteer, The.—Cutler. 

At dead of night, when mortals lose. See Ungrateful 
Cupid, The.—Hughes. 

At dinner she is hostess, I am host. See Modern Love 
(Hiding the Skeleton).-—Meredith. 

At early dawn I marked them in the sky. See Pelican 
Island, The (Pelican, The).—Montgomery. 

At early dawn I once had been. See Dawning of the 
Day, The.—Walsh. 

At early morn, a valiant knight. See Call of Duty, 
The.—Robbins. 

At Eastertide, in gown of blue. See At Eastertide.— 
Adams. 

At eleven o’clock the crowd at Tynwald had grown to 
a vast concourse. See Deemster, The (Cut off 
from the People).—Caine. 

At end of love, at end of life. See At End.—Moul¬ 
ton. 

At Eutaw Springs the valiant died. See Eutaw 
Spr i ngs.—F reneau. 

At evening in the port she lay. See Psyche.— 
Beers. 


61(5 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


At 


At evening when I go to bed. See Daisies, The.— 
Sherman. 

At evening, when the lamp is lit. See Land of Story 
Books, The.—Stevenson. 

At exactly fifteen minutes to eight. See Her Fifteen 
Minutes.—Masson. 

At first a dusky wreath they seem to rise. See Seasons, 
The (Coming of the Kain, The).—Thomson. 

At first her name was Susie. See Social Scale. The.— 
S. L. T. 

At first sight it may seem that religious principles were 
entirely ignored. See Great American Republic a 
Christian State, The.—Gibbons. 

At Flores in the Azores Sir Richard Grenville lay. See 
Revenge, The.—Tennyson. 

At Glendalough lived a young saint. See St. Kevin.— 
Lover. 

At God’s right hand sits one who was a child. See 
Mary, the Mother of Jesus.—Willis. 

At her easel, brush in hand. See Contrast, A.—Don¬ 
nelly. 

At her fair hands how have T grace entreated. See 
How can the Heart Forget Her.—Anon. 

At home or away, in alley or street. See Some Mother's 
Child.—Keeler. 

At husking time the tassel fades. See At Husking 
Time.—Johnson. 

At Jesus’ feet a young disciple fell. See Waiting.— 
L. D. S. 

At last! At last! Oh, joy! Oh, victory! See In 
Than ksgi ving.—Conway. 

At last beloved Nature! I have met. See Elusive 
Nature.—Timrod. 

At last, Dolly—thanks to a potent emetic. See Fudge 
Family in Paris, The (Letters from Miss Biddy 
Fudge).—Moore. 

At last he stopped six papers left. See Newsboy’s 
Debt, The.—Anon. 

At last I am alone! Everything goes well. See 
Burgomaster’s Death, The.—Wilford. 

At last I am blest with a lover! See My Lover.— 
White. 

At last I have secured a quiet hour for reading. See 
Turning the Tables.—Anon. 

At last I see my little maid full grown. See Spanish 
Gypsy, The.—Eliot. 

At last I’m through, and I am awful glad, too. See 
Samantha’s Talk.—Jones. 

At last, it seems, Fve found a quiet nook. See Poetry, 
Prose and Fact.— Kavanaugh. 

At last Maggie’s eyes glanced down on the books that 
lay on the window shelf. See Mill on the Floss, 
The (Maggie and Thomas it Kempis).—Eliot. 

At last my fondest dreams are to be realized. See Way 
to Freedom, The.—Smith. 

“At last,” my wife said to me, “I am to have a good 
servant.” See Our New Servant.—Barrie. 

At last, one bitter night, he \or the old convict] sunk 
down on the doorstep faint and ill. See Sketches 
by Boz (Drunkard’s Death, The).—Dickens. 

At last that speckle hen has gone. See Old Grimes’ 
Hen.—Barron. 

At last the cottage was rented. See Aunt Polly Green. 
—Vickers. 

At last the Emancipation Proclamation came. See 
Emancipation Proclamation, The.—Schurz. 

At last the golden oriental gate. See Faerie Queene, 
The (Sunrise).—Spenser. 

At last the hour is come! Once more I breathe 1 
move—I feel. See l.aureame: the Marble Dream. 
—Banks. 

At last the toil encumbered days are over. See Indian 
Summer.— Irvine. 

"At last, ’tis finished'” cried the Spanish painter. 
See Picture of the Last Supper.—Boyd. 

At last’tis gone, the fever of the day. See Intra Muros. 
Gillington. 

At last we are free, all hail, Hymenauis. See Notes 
of a Honeymoon.—Dobson. 

At last young April, ever frail and fair. See April, 
Ever Frail and Fair.—Holmes. 

At least one position ought to be no longer questioned. 
See Newest Promises and Perils of the Temperance 
Reform (Our Duty).—Cook. 

At least to pray is left—is left. See Prayer.—Dick¬ 
inson. 

At length brave Michael Dwyer and his undaunted 
men. See Michael Dwyer.—Sullivan. 

At length, fellow soldiers, we enter on the last of our 
battles. See Alexander the Great to his Men.— 
Curtius. 

At length he draws near his end. See Death of Coper¬ 
nicus, The.—Everett. 


At length Mr. Dombey, one Saturday. See Dombey 
and Son (Scene at Doctor Blimber’s).—Dickens. 

At length Moscow, with its domes and towers and 
palaces, appeared in sight. See Napoleon and his 
Marshals (Burning of Moscow, The).—Headley. 

At length, Romans, we are rid of Catiline! See Catiline 
Expelled.—Cicero. 

At length they came whore, stern and steep. See Lady 
of the Lake, The (Fitz-James and Roderick Dhu). 
—Scott. 

At Mantua in chains the gallant Hofer lay. Nee 
Andrew Hofer.-—Mosen. 

At Mantua long had lain in chains. S“e Death of 
Hofer, The.—Mosen. ( Diff. tr. oj loreyoino.) 

At mid forenoon yesterday, a man who was crossing 
Woodward Avenue. See Why He Waited to 
Laugh.—( Detroit Free Fress.) 

At midnight, in a chicken coop. See Little Folks, The. 
—Stone. 

At midnight, in his guarded tent. Nee Marco Bozzaris. 
-—Halleck. 

At midnight, in the month of June. See Sleeper, The. 
—Poe. 

At mither’8 knee I waitin’ stood. See Mither’s Knee, 
A.—Anon. 

At morn unto my window sill. See St. Valentine’s 
Day.—Valentine. 

At morn, when first the rosy gleam. See Bob White.— 
McDonald. 

At morning Susie Bell and 1. See How Sad.—Mc- 
Nabb. 

At my good inn. The World, you may have rest. See 
Life’s Greeting.—Green. 

At Nebra, by the Unstrut. See Inn of Care, The.— 
Waddington. 

At night what things will stalk abroad. See Lux in 
Tenebris.—Tynan-Hinkson. 

At night when sick folk wakeful lie. See Dead Coach, 
The.—Hinkson. 

At no point in his administration does Washington 
appear. See Washington’s Foreign Policy.—Mc¬ 
Kinley. 

At Noey’s house- when they arrived with him. See 
Noey's House, At.-—Riley. 

At noon a shower had fallen, and the clime. See Song 
of an Angel.—Tennyson. 

At noon of an autumnal day more t han two centuries 
ago. See Endicott and the Red Cross.—Haw¬ 
thorne. 

At noon, within the dusty town. See Birch Stream.— 
Averill. 

At one house I saw the women upstairs. See Census- 
taker’s Experience, A.—Anon. 

At one in the morning. See Morning Songs.—Thomas. 

At one of the public meetings addressed by Mr. 
Beecher. See Eulogy on Henry Ward Beecher.— 
Parker. 

At Paris, hard by the Maine barriers. See Chronicle 
of the Drum, The. — Thackeray. 

At Paris it was, at the opera there. See Aux I taliens.— 
Lytton. 

At Paris some time since, a murdering man. See 
Petit Maitre and the Man on the Wheel, The.— 
Pindar. 

At Paris we have come back to the time of secret 
executions. See Secret Executions. —Hugo. 

At present we behold only t he rising of our sun of 
empire. See America’s True Greatness.—Seward. 

At Quatre Bras, when the fight ran high. See Lay of 
the Brave Cameron, The.—Blackie. 

At setting [or set of] day and rising morn. See Gentle 
Shepherd, The (“At setting,” etc.).—Ramsay. 

At Shelley’s birth. See To Shelley.—Tabb. 

At Straisund, by the Baltic Sea. See Musician’s Tale, 
The.—Longfellow. 

At summer eve, when heaven’s aerial bow. See 
Pleasures of Hope The (Hope).—Campbell. 

At table yonder sits the man we seek. See At the 
Mermaid Inn.—Hildreth. 

At ten a blithesome little maid. See Her Laugh—in 
Four Fits.— (Washington Foul.) 

At that awful hour of the Passion. See Aspen.—Anon. 

At that moment a low but fearful sound arose from 
the forest. See Last of the Mohicans, The (Race 
for Life, A).—Cooper. 

At the approach of extreme peril. See Wallenstein 
(II eroism).— ('oleridge. 

At the Arbor Day exercises held in April. See Historic 
Tree of Chicago, The.—( Chautauquan .) 

At the bar-room door sat drunken Jim. See “Buy 
Your Cherries.”—Rowe. 

At the close of the day Bishop Brnno took his way. 
See Bishop Benno and the Frogs.—Baring-Gould. 


617 





At 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


At the close of the d?iy, when the hamlet is still. See 
Hermit, The.—Beattie. 

At the close of the day, when the year was a-dying. 
See Feather’s Message, A.—Dixon. 

At the corner of Wood Street, when daylight appears. 
See Reverie of Poor Susan, The.—Wordsworth. 

At the dawn of civilization. See History.—Froude. 

At the debatin’ club last night we all discussed a cure. 
See No Hope for Literature.—Foss. 

At the devil’s booth all things are sold. See Vision of 
Sir Launfal, The (“At the devil’s booth,” etc.).— 
Lowell. 

At the end of life a man finds himself rich. See same. 
—Tilton. 

At the first of the month I grow morbid and sad. See 
On Bills.—Burr. 

At the foot of the mountain height. See Rustic 
Bridal, The —Longfellow. 

At the forging of the sword. See Sword, The.—Craw¬ 
ford. 

At the gate of old Granada, when all its bolts are 
barr’d. See Lamentation for Celin, The.—Lock¬ 
hart. 

At the head of a stretch of swiftly running water the 
river widened. See Race with the Flames, The. 
—Murray. 

At the heart of our country the tyrant was leaping. 
See Washington’s Name.—Percival. 

At the keyboard still he lingered. See Organist, The.— 
Barr. 

At the king’s gate the subtle noon. See Coronation.— 
Jackson. 

At the ladder’s foot we will bear in mind. See Climb- 
■ ing.—Denton. 

At the last, tenderly. See Last Invocation, The.— 
Whitman. 

At the mid hour of night, when stars are weeping, I 
fly. See At the Mid Hour of Night.—Moore. 

At the midnight, in the silence of the sleep time. See 
Asolando (Epilogue).—Browning. 

At the midsummer, when the hay was down. See 
Four Years.—Craik. 

At the north end of Cross Court there yet stands a 
portal. See My First Play.—Lamb. 

At the opening of the session, in the fall of 1872. See 
Eulogy on Charles Sumner.—Schurz. 

At the opening of the session of Congress in 1872, 
Charles Sumner re-introduced two measures. See 
Eulogy on Charles Sumner (Battle Flags, The). 
—Schurz. 

At the postern gate of day. See Midsummer Madrigal, 
A.—MacFarlane. 

At the present moment I can see only one question in 
the state. See Parliamentary Reform (Public 
Opinion and the Sword).—Macaulay. 

At the professors’ ball to-night. See Old Story, The.— 
Anon. 

At the proposal of the Russian imperial government. 
See Monroe Doctrine, The.—Monroe. 

At the shepherd’s doorway stands his little son. See 
Lamb that was Missed, The.—Anon. 

At the time of that disastrous warfare, in which Wash¬ 
ington rose upon the ruins. See Stamp Act, The 
—Grimshaw. 

At the time of the outbreak of the Crimean War I 
was sergeant. See Heroes of Inkerman.—Over- 
ton. 

At the time that Congress was debating upon the bill. 
See Isaac Rosenthal on the Chinese Question. 
—( Scribner’s Monthly.) 

At the top of his mind the devout scholar has a holy of 
holies. See same. —Alger. 

At the wedding of Shon Maclean. See Wedding of 
Shon Maclean, The.—Buchanan. 

At this moment, in every part of the American Union. 
See Our Expanding Republic (Schools Take Part, 
The).—Watterson. 

At this moment, in spite of Triplet’s precaution. See 
Mrs. Woffington’s Portrait.-—Reade. 

At this moment the gates opened and ushers began to 
issue forth. See Kenilworth (Raleigh).—Scott. 

At this second appearing td take the oath of the 
presidential office. See Second Inaugural Address. 
—Lincoln. 

At times a little brawl. See Little Brawl, A.— 
Bremer. 

At Trin. Col. Cam.—which means, in proper spelling. 
See Collegian and the Porter, The.—Planche. 

At twilight, in old Hospital St. Luke. See Willie’s 
Signal for Jesus.—Anon. 

At two o’clock Sam and Andy brought the horses up 
to the posts. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Escape, 
The).—Stowe. 


At Wapping I lauded and called to hail Mog. See 
Jack at the Opera.—Dibdin. 

At West Point Grant was graduated without honor. 
See Legacy of Grant, The.—Depew. 

At what precise minute that little airy musician. See 
That we should Rise with the Lark.—Lamb. 

At Yeni-Djami, after Rhamadan. See Chibouque.— 
Saltus. 

At your service, sirs.—Ha. Lopez? See Spanish 
Gypsy, The (Scene from, etc.).—Eliot. 

Athenians, I must remind you that you left behind 
you no more such ships in your docks. See 
Address of Nicias to LI is Troops.—Thucydides. 

Athwart the sky a lowly sigh. See London.—David¬ 
son. 

Athwart the sod which is treading for God the poet 
paced with his splendid eyes. See Judgment in 
Heaven, A.—Thompson. 

Atri in Abruzzo, a small town. See Bell of Atri, The. 
—Longfellow. 

Attend, all ye who list to hear our noble England’s 
praise. See Armada, The.—Macaulay. 

Attend my words and listen. See Quest of the Three 
Kings, The.—Murray. 

Attend you, and give ear awhile. See Honour of 
Bristol, The.—Anon. 

Attending services not long ago in an elegant church 
edifice. See Choir’s Way of Telling It, The. 
(Good Housekeeping.) 

Audacious maid, when thee I meet. See Ad Impuden- 
tissimam.—Anon. 

August, month when summer lies. See August.— 
Sherman. 

Auld Daddy Darkness creeps frae his hole. See Auld 
Daddy Darkness.—Ferguson. 

‘‘Aun’ Chloe, haint we a’mos’ dar yit?” See He was 
almost There.—Anon. 

Aunt Grace never saw us children, nor a lot of others 
in the family. See Toot Makes a Match. — 
Hart. 

Aunt Hitty, otherwise Mrs. Silas Tarbox, was as cheery 
and loquacious a person. See Aunt Hitty Tarbox. 
—Wiggin. 

“Aunt, I think you’re a drefful stupid.” See Laurie’s 
Apology.—Wolcott. 

Aunt Jane, a colored woman, stood in the doorway. 
See George Washington’s “Bufday.” ( Youth’s 
Companion.) 

Aunt Mary, may I go to the top of the house and fly 
my kite? See Obeying Pleasantly.—Anon. 

Aunt Nellie had [or has! fashioned a dainty thing. See 
Baby in Church.—Gow. 

Aunt Peggy, coming down from her place in the coun¬ 
try to visit a niece in the city. See Aunt Peggy 
and High Art.—Dallas. 

Aunt Prue was a little particular. See Youthful Ex¬ 
periences.—Anon. 

Aunt Sylvia was an old domestic in the family of Mr. 
Coleman. See Aunt Sylvia’s First Lesson in 
Geography.—Anon. 

Auntie, I think you must be tired of that everlasting 
knit, knit, knit. See Art Critic, The.—Rook. 

Aunty, did you hear what Uncle John said to-day, 
when we were out? See What are Little Boys 
Good Far.—Anon. 

Austin Landon’s love affairs arose out of the very 
theatre at Chucksford. See Fallen Star, A.— 
Pinero. 

Authority intoxicates. See Authority.—Butler. 

Authors is things that write about everything they 
don’t know about. See Tommie’s Composition 
on Authors.—Anon. 

Autumn has come, so bare and gray. See Wanderings 
of the Birds, The.—Anon. 

Autumn nights grow chilly. See Mozart at the Fire¬ 
side.—Thaxter. 

Autumn’s sighing. See same. —Read. 

Autumn was cold in Plymouth town. See Her Picture. 
—Cortissoz. 

Autumn winds are sighing. See Harvest-time.—Von 
Salis. 

Aux fils des preux! ye sons of fame I See Norman Bat¬ 
tle-song, The.—Anon. 

Avarice is the besetting sin of the age. See Post 
Nummos Virtus.—Spaulding. 

Avaunt! and quit my sight. See Macbeth (Macbeth 
to the Ghost).—Shakespeare. 

Ave Maria! blessed be the hour. See Don Juan 
(Twilight).—Byron. 

Ave Maria! o’er the earth and sea. See Don Juan 
(Evening).—Byron. 

’Ave you ’eard o’ the Widow at Windsor. See Sons of 
the Widow, The.—Kipling. 


618 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Baby 


Avenge, O Lord, thy slaughtered saints, whose bones. 
See On the Late Massacre in Piedmont.—Milton. 

Avid of life and love, insatiate vagabond. See Ver¬ 
laine.—Carman. 

Aw, I daresay you’ll hardly cwedit the story I’m going 
to tell. See Gallant Wescue, A.—Sapte. 

“Awa’ wi’ ye, Tammy man, awa' wi’ ye to the schule.” 
See Tammy’s Prize.—Anon. 

Awake, ASolian lyre, awake. See Progress of Poesy, 
The.—Gray. 

Awake! and to horse, my brothers. See Guerillas, The. 
Wallis. 

Awake! arise! the hour is late! See Longfellow Al¬ 
phabet, A.—Longfellow. 

Awake, arise! The south wind sighs. See Song of the 
Exmoor Hunt, A.—Graves. 

Awake, arise, you dead men all—dead women waken 
you. See Hallow E’en.-—Hopper. 

Awake! awake! all living things that be. See Wish- 
maker’s Town (Bells, The).—-Young. 

Awake! awake! my gallant friends. See Battle of 
Tippecanoe, The.—Anon. 

Awake, awake, my lyre! See Supplication, A.—Cow¬ 
ley. 

Awake, awake, O gracious heart. See Valentine, A.— 
Sherman. 

Awake, for light is growing. See Morning.—Marvin. 

Awake, my country, the hour is great with change! 
See Ode for the Canadian Confederacy, An.— 
Roberts. 

Awake, my heart, to be lov’d, awake, awake! See 
Awake, My Heart.—Bridges. 

Awake, my soul, and with the sun. See Morning Hymn. 
—Ken. 

Awake, my soul, stretch every nerve. See same .— 
Doddridge. 

Awake! nor longer sleep. See War with Alcohol, The. 
—Williams. 

“Awake,” said the sunshine, “ ’tis time to get up.” 
See Spring Song.—Anon. 

Awake!—the crimson dawn is glowing. See Thirty-first 
of May.—Tennyson. 

Awake!—the starry midnight hour. See Serenade, A; 
Set to Music by the Chevalier Neukomm. — 
Procter. 

Awake thee, my lady-love. See Sylvia; or, The May 
Queen (Call, The).—Darley. 

Awake, thou wintry earth. See Easter Hymn, An.— 
Blackburn. 

Awake thy cloud-harp, angel of the rain! See Angel 
of the Rain.—Kimball. 

Awake, ye drowsy blossoms, at the voice of Puck. See 
Queen of a Night, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Awake, ye forms of verse divine! See National Paint¬ 
ings, The.—Drake. 

Away and away, o’er the deep-sounding tide. See 
Skater’s Song.—Anon. 

Away! away! See Complaint, The.—Akenside. 

Away!—away!—and on we dash! See Mazeppa.— 
Byron. 

“Away, away,” cried the stout Sir John. See Song of 
the North, A.—Doten. 

Away, away in the Northland. See Legend of the 
Northland, A.—Cary. 

Away—away o’er the feathery crest. See Fisherman’s 
Song, The.—Davis. 

Away! away! our fires stream bright. See Skating 
Song, A.—Peabody. 

Away! away! the king’s highway. See Vagabonds. 
(Wesleyan Literary Monthly.) 

Away! away! through the sightless air. See Song of 
the Lightning.—Cutter._ 

Away! away! to the mountain's brow. See Sir Rupert 
the Fearless.—Barham. 

Away back in the twenties, sum seventy-odd year ago. 
See Ghost of Lone Rock, The.—Howard. 

Away, delights! go seek some other dwelling. See 
Away, Delights!—Fletcher. 

Away, far off in China, many, many years ago. See 
Cho-Che-Bang and Chi-Chil-Bioo. ( Graham's 
Magazine.) 

Away from the town, in the safe retreat. See Lesson 
in Geography, A.—Wynne. 

Away from the wine-cup, away, my boy. See Away 
from the Wine-cup, Away! ( New York Weekly.) 

Away, haunt thou not me. See In a Lecture-room. 

Away in a manger, no crib for a bed. See Cradle 
Hymn.—Luther. 

Away in the dim and distant past. See Sunset. 
Cary. 

Away in the old cathedral. See King and the Poet, 
The.—Kerner. 


Away! let naught to love displeasing. See Winifreda. 
—Anon. 

Away! the moor is dark beneath the moon. See 
Stanzas—April, 1814.—Shelley. 

Away to the green, ye vil age swain! See Village 
Dance, The. ( Cornell Widow.) 

Away up high in the placid sky. See Bicycling in the 
Sky.—Tubbs. 

Away up in the heavy heart of Maine there is a mighty 
lake. See Sisterly Scheme, A.—Bunner. 

Away with melancholy! See Kriss Kringle. Sherman. 

Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of roses. See 
Lachin Y Gair.—Byron. 

Aw’d by her own rash words she was still, and her eyes 
to the seaward. See Andromeda (Andromeda 
and the Sea-nymphs).—Kingsley. 

Awf’lest boy in this-here town. See Elmer Brown.— 
Riley. 

Awful baddest Bunny ever, ever knew. See Bunny 
Did It.—Anon. 

Awful is the duel between man and the age in which he 
lives. See Last of the Barons, The (Despondent 
Inventor, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Ay, an old story, yet it might. See Legend, A.— 
Kendall. 

Ay, ay, O ay—the winds that bend the brier! See 
Idylls of the King (Tristram’s Song).—Tennyson. 

‘‘Ay, ay, sir; they’re smart seamen enough, no doubt.” 
See Little Stow-away, The.-—Anon. 

Ay, but 1 know. See Twelfth Night; or, What You 
Will (Unrequited Love).—Shakespeare. 

Ay, but to die, and go we know not where. See 
Measure for Measure (Life and Death).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Ay, down to the dust with them, slaves as they are! 
See Lines on Naples.-—Moore. 

Ay, Dwainie!-—My Dwainie! See Dwainie.—Riley. 

Ay, here stands the poplar, so tall and so stately. See 
Poplar, The.—Barham. 

Ay, lad, look on yon ocean, now, you see it’s calm and 
still. See As “Old Giles” Saw It.—Cohen. 

Ay, lay them to rest on the prairie. See After the 
Battle.—Christie. 

Ay, let it rest! And give us peace. See Gospel of 
Peace, The.—Roche. 

Ay me, poor soul, w'hom bound in sinful chains. See 
Dialogue between the Soul and the Body, A.— 
A. W. 

“Ay, not at home, then, didst thou say? See Call on 
Sir Walter Raleigh, A.—Piatt. 

Ay, note that potter’s wheel. See Rabbi Ben Ezra 
(Potter’s Wheel. The).—Browning. 

Ay, Oliver! I was but seven, and he was eleven. See 
Echo and the Ferry.—Ingelow. 

Ay, Proteus, but that life is altered now. See Two 
Gentlemen of Verona, The (Love Complaining).— 
Shakespeare. 

Ay, tear her tattered ensign down! See Old Iron¬ 
sides.—Holmes. 

Ay, this is freedom!—these pure skies. See Hunter of 
the Prairies, The.—Bryant. 

Ay, thou art welcome, Heaven’s delicious breath. See 
October.—Bryant. 

Ay! Unto thee belong. See Theocritus.—Fields. 

Aye! Plymouth is fair—no goodlier spot. See Puri¬ 
tan’s Dilemma, The.—Crosby. 

“Aye, squire,” said Stevens, “they back him at 
evens.” See How We Beat the Favourite.— 
Gordon. 

“Ayr gurgling kiss’d his pebbled shore. See lo 
Mary in Heaven.—Burns. 

Azaleas—whitest of white! See White Azaleas.— 
Kimball. 


B 

B. G. Northrop says: “The observance of Arbor Day 
has already led to the plantirg. See Arbor Day: 
Its Educating Influence.—Anon. 

Baby and I were going to Uncle Brown’s to spend the 
day. See Blue Sky Somewhere.—Vara. 

Baby Bunting tumbled down. See Cured in a Minute. 
—Anon. 

Baby bye, here’s a fly. See Fly, The. Tilton. 

Baby is a sailor boy. See Baby is a Sailor.—Anon. 
Baby is clad in her nightgown white. See Ten Little 
Toes.—Anon. 

Baby mine, with the grave, grave face. See Baby 
Mine. Locker-Lampson. 

Baby, ope your sunny eyes. See In the Morning. 
Denton. 


619 




Baby 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Baby sat on the window-seat. See Baby and Mary.— 
Anon. 

Baby, see the flowers. See In a Garden.—Swinburne. 

Baby sleeps, so we must tread. See Don’t Wake the 
Baby.—Anon. 

Baby Tommy stroked them gently. See Pussy-Wil¬ 
low.—Anon. 

Baby wee, baby wee! See How the Babies Grow.— 
Carroll. 

Baby, what do the blossoms say. See Flower Bed, The. 
—Anon. 

Baby’s brain is tired of thinking. See Boston Lullaby, 
A.—FT che. 

Bacchus by the lonely ocean. See Rhododaphne (Ven¬ 
geance of Bacchus, The).—Peacock. 

Bacchus must now his power resign. See Drinking 
Song, A.—Carey. 

Bachelor’s Hall! what a quare lookin’ place it is. See 
Bachelor’s Hall.—Finley. 

Back and forth the shuttles go. See Snow-weaver, The 
—Sherman. 

Back flies my soul to other years. See Songstress, The. 
—Shipsey. 

Back from a tedious holiday he comes. See Domestic 
Event, A.—Fertiault. 

Back from the front there came. See Before Vicks¬ 
burg.—Anon. 

Back from the trebly crimsoned field. See Wanted— 
a Man.—Stedman. 

Back in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was 
monarch. See Rejected Natonal Hymns, The, I.— 
Newell. 

Back, ruffians, back! nor dare to tread. See Polish 
Boy, The.—Stephens. 

Back to the flower-town, side by side. See In Memory 
of Walter Savage Landor.—Swinburne. 

Backward, turn backward, O Time in your flight. See 
Rock Me to Sleep.—Allen. 

Bacon says: “Reading makes a full man, writing an 
exact man, speaking a ready man.” See Public 
Speech.—Bellows. 

Bad was the wife of Barney O’Linn. See Barney 
O’Linn and the Leeches.—Anon. 

Bah! that’s the third umbrella gone since Christ¬ 
mas. See Mrs. Caudle’s Umbrella Lecture.— 
lerrold. 

Balder, the white sun-god, has departed! See Balder. 
—Anon. 

Balmy zenhyrs, lightly flitting. See Drury’s Dirge.— 
—Smith. 

Baloo, loo. lammy, now baloo, my dear. See Lullaby, 
A.—Nairn. 

Balow, my babe, lye stil and sleipe! See Lady Anne 
Bothwell’s Lament.—Anon. 

Bambino in his cradle slept. See Bambino.—Field. 

Banging of the hammer, whirling of the plane. See 
Music of Labor, The.—Anon. 

Banished from Rome! What’s banished but set free. 
See Catiline (Catiline’s Defiance).—Croly. 

Bankrupt—our pockets inside out. See To George 
Peabody.—Holmes. 

Banner of England, not for a season, O banner of 
Britain, hast thou. See Defence of Lucknow, 
The.—Tennyson. 

Barbarians must we always be? See On Observing a 
Vulgar Name on the Plinth of an Ancient Statue. 
—Landor. 

Barb’d blossom of the guarded gorse. See Song of 
Winter, A.—Pfeiffer. 

Bard! to no brave chief belonging. See Fight of the 
Forlorn, The.—Darley. 

Bards of passion and of mirth. See Ode.—Keats. 

Barefooted boys scud up the street. See Sudden 
Shower, A.—Riley. 

Barnes, the pedagogue, is a worthy man. See Swal¬ 
lowed Frog, The.—Anon. 

Barnes, the schoolmaster in a suburban town. See 
Spirited Object Lesson. A.—Anon. 

Barnet ’s boy left a sack of flour at Archibald’s last even¬ 
ing. See Something Split.—Anon. 

Bartholomew Benjamin Bunting. See Singular Sang¬ 
froid of Baby Bunting, The.—Carryl. 

Base-ball was something. See Cap’n Peleg Bun¬ 
ker Describes a Game of Base-ball.—Under¬ 
hill. 

Basil Wolgemuth lay asleep on his couch. He had 
outwatched midnight and was very weary. See 
Rosicrucian, The.—Craik. 

Basking in peace in the warm spring sun. See Romance 
of the Carpet, The.—Burdette. 

Bathed in unfallen sunlight. See same. —Bonar. 

Bathsheba came out to the sun. See Telling the Bees. 
—Reese. 


Battles nor song can from oblivion save. See Immor¬ 
tality.—Reese. 

Bayard Taylor and the school he represents. See 
same. —Anon. 

Be a merchant, I will freight thee. See Gifts of For¬ 
tune and Cupid, The.—Dekker. 

Be brief, be pointed; let your matter stand. See Ad¬ 
vice to an Advocate.—Story. 

Be calm in arguing, for fierceness makes. See Argu¬ 
ment.—Anon. 

Be careful that you do not commend yourself. See 
same. —H ale. 

Be content with thy lot. See Content.—Anon. 

“Be faithful, Don!” the farmer called, that sultry sum¬ 
mer morn. See Path of the Cyclone, The.— 
Thorne. 

Be firm, be bold, be strong, be true. See Dare to 
Stand Alone.—Anon. 

Be gentle to the new-laid egg. See How to Deal with 
New-laid Eggs.—Anon. 

Be good, be good, my bright-eyed boy. See Be Good. 
Anon. 

Be happy now with him, and love him who loves thee. 
See To a Daughter on Her Marriage.—Hugo. 

Be in time for every call. See Be in Time.—Anon. 

Be it not mine to steal the cultured flower. See Simple 
Nature.—Romanes. 

Be it right or wrong, these men among. See Nut- 
brown Maid, The.—Anon. 

Be jabers, an’ wasn’t that mighty foine actin’ up last 
wake down at the village? See Mr. Worth’s 
Farm Hands.—Anon. 

Be kind and tender to the frog. See Frog, The.— 
Belloc. 

Be kind to the panther! for when thou wert young. 
See Panther, The.—Anon. 

Be kind to thy father—for when thou wert young. 
See Be Kind.—Anon. 

Be like the promontory, against which the waves con¬ 
tinually break. See Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius 
(Fortitude).—Antoninus. 

Be mine, and I will give thy name. See same. —Ben¬ 
nett. • 

“Be mine,” said the ardent young Sawmilegoff. See 
Russian Courtship, A.—Anon. 

“Be my fairy, mother.” See Wish, A.—Terry. 

Be near when I am dying. See same. —Baker. 

Be not afraid to pray—to pray is right. See Prayer.— 
Coleridge. 

Be not gloomy! catch the sunshine! See Catch the 
Sunshine.—Rook. 

Be not much troubled about many things. See Light. 
—Cary. 

Be not swift to take offense. See Let it Pass.—Anon. 

Be patient, O be patient! Put your ear against the 
earth. See Patience.—Linton. 

Be pure as the flower, little child! See White Bios 
som. The.—Anon. 

Be seated, pray. A grave appeal. See Virtuoso, A.— 
Dobson. 

Be still, my child! remain in statu quo. See Lawyer’s 
Lullaby, The.—Coggsw'ell. 

Be then thine own home, and in thyself dwell. See 
Verses to Sir Henry Wootton.—Donne. 

Be thou a bird, my soul, and mount and soar. See Be 
Thou a Bird, my Soul.—A. G. C. 

Be thou blest, Bertram! and succeed thy father. See 
All’s Well that Ends Well (Mother's Blessing).— 
Shakespeare. 

Be thy dread of sin and sorrow. See Shun the Bowl.— 
Barker. 

Be true, be true! whate’er beside. See Truth.—Tup- 
per. 

Be true, O poet, to your gift divine! See Gifted for 
Giving.—Burleigh. 

Be useful where thou livest, that they may. See Be 
Useful.—Herbert. 

Be wise to-day, ’tis madness to defer. See Night 
Thoughts (On Procrastination).—Young. 

Be ye in love with April-tide? See same. —Scollard. 

Be you to others kind and true. See Golden Rule, The. 
(New England Primer.) 

Be young—forever—through the centuries. See Curse 
from “C’laudian,” The.-—Herman and Wills. 

Be your words made, good sir, of Indian ware. See 
Astrophel and Stella, Sonnet XCII.—Sidney. 

Bear it on tenderly. See O’Connell’s Heart.—Dorsey. 

Bear lightly on their foreheads, Time! See Philosophy 
of Short, The.-—Mackay. 

Beat! beat! drums!—blow, bugles! blow! See Beat! 
Beat! Drums!—Whitman. 

Beat on, proud billows; Boreas blow. See Loyalty 
Confined.—L’Est range. 


620 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Before 


Beat the broad gates, a goodly hollow sound. See 
Deserted Mansion, A.—Hall. 

Beating heart! we come again. See At Her Window. 
Locker-Lampson. 

Beauties, have ye seen this toy? See Venus’ Runaway. 
Jonson. 

Beautiful are the mountains. See same.- —Gallaher. 

Beautiful belles, O! beautiful belles. See Beautiful 
Belles.—Anon. 

Beautiful bow in heaven above. See Rainbow and its 
Emblems, The.—Anon. 

Beautiful child! by thy mother’s knee. See My Beau¬ 
tiful Child.—Sigourney. 

Beautiful cloud! with folds so soft and fair. See To a 
Cloud.—Bryant. 

Beautiful dudes! O! beautiful dudes! See Beautiful 
Dudes.—Anon. 

Beautiful Evalena, will you be mine? See Snarl’s Chil¬ 
dren.—Anon. 

Beautiful Evelyn Hope is dead! See Evelyn Hope.— 
Browning. 

Beautiful face of a child. See Three Portraits of 
Prince Charles.—Lang. 

Beautiful faces are those that wear. See Beautiful 
Things.—Allerton. 

Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth was 
Mount Zion. See Destruction of Jerusalem, The. 
—Budlong. 

Beautiful ground on which -we tread. See Beautiful 
Things.—Anon. 

Beautiful hands are those that do. See Beautiful 
Hands.—Swing. 

Beautiful in her majestic grandeur. See Elm, The.— 
H. H. B. 

Beautiful in her solitary grandeur. See Battle of Ger¬ 
mantown. The (Heroes of the Land of Penn).— 
Lippard. 

“Beautiful!” mebby it be, bairn. See Tale of the 
Yorkshire Coast, A.—Anon. 

Beautiful must be the mountains whence ye come. 
See Nightingales.—Bridges. 

Beautiful rose of such fragrance rare. See Voices of 
the Flowers. (Sunny Side.) 

Beautiful shadow of Thetis’s boy! See Invocation to 
the Spirit of Achilles.—Byron. 

Beautiful! Sir, you may say so. See Chiquita.— 
Harte. 

Beautiful snow! beautiful snow! See Beautiful Snow. 
—Sigourney. 

Beautiful spoils! borne off from vanquished death! 
See Rose Aylmer’s Hair, Given by Her Sister.— 
Landor. 

Beautiful spring-time! bright, blooming roses. See 
Beautiful Spring-time.—Anon. 

Beautiful, sublime, and glorious. See Sea, The.— 
Barton. 

Beautiful things there are coming this way. See Next 
Summer.—Anon. 

Beautiful vision! how bright it rose. See Reign of 
Peace, The.—Thornton. 

Beautiful was the night. Behind the black wall of the 
forest. See Evangeline (Moonlight on the Prairie). 
—Longfellow. 

Beautiful world! though bigots condemn thee. See 
Beautiful World.—Blackie. 

Beauty, alas! where wast thou born? See Do Me 
Right, and Do Me Reason.—Lodge. 

Beauty and majesty are fallen at odds. See Cynthia 
(Sonnet from Cynthia).—Barnfield. 

Beauty and rags were the portion possessed. See 
Peronella.—Anon. 

Beauty, arise, show forth thy glorious shining! See 
Pleasant Comedy of Patient Grissell, The (Beauty, 
Arise!)—Dekker. 

Beauty clear and fair. See Elder Brother, The (To 
Angelina).— Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Beauty may be the path to highest good. See Straight 
Road, The.—Anon. 

Beauty sat bathing by a spring. See Beauty Bathing. 
—Munday. 

Beauty still walketh on the earth and air. See 
Beauty.—Smith. 

Beauty, sweet love, is like the morning dew. See 
Sonnets to Delia (“Beauty, sweet love,” etc).— 
Daniel. 

Beaver roars hoarse with melting snows. See Biglow 
Papers (Hosea Biglow’s Lament).—Lowell. 

Because, dear Christ, your tender, wounded arm. See 
Brier.—Johnson. 

Because I breathe not love to everie one. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Love’s Silence).—Sidney. 

Because I could not stop for Death. See Chariot, The. 
—Dickinson. 


Because I hold it sinful to despond. See Courage.— 
Thaxter. 

Because I oft in dark abstracted guise. See Astrophel 
and Stella, Sonnet XXVII.—Sidney. 

Because I seek Thee not, oh seek Thou me! See Help 
Thou My Unbelief!-—Moulton. 

Because 1 wear the swaddling-bands of Time. See 
Child’s Plea, The.—Palfrey. 

Because of one dear infant head. See Mater Dolorosa. 
—Hahn. 

Because of the failure of the Athenian opposition to 
Philip of Macedon. See Oration on the Crown.— 
Demosthenes. 

Because the shadows deepen’d verily. See At the 
Last.-—Marston. 

Because thou com’st, a tired guest. See Arab Wel¬ 
come. An.—Aldrich. 

Because thou hast the power and own’st the grace. 
See Sonnets from the Portuguese, XXXIX.— 
Browning. 

Because we once drove together. See Un Bacio Dato 
non Mai Perduto,—Story. 

Because you have no golden hoard. See For Love’s 
Sweet Sake.—Matheson. 

Because you passed, and now are not. See Ballad of 
Heroes, A.—Dobson. 

Bedad, an I think that Misther Stafford is one of the 
quarest min. See Ivery Inch a Gintleman, I. 
—McBride. 

Bedtime's come fu’ little boys. See Negro Lullaby.— 
Dunbar. 

Been out in the lifeboat often? Ay, ay, sir, oft 
enough. See Lifeboat, The.—Sims. 

Bees don’t care about the snow. See Bees.—Sherman. 

Bees in the meadow. See Bees in the Meadow.— 
Anon. 

Bee-ull! Bee-ull! O Bee-ull! my gracious. SeeWakin’ 
the Young Uns.—Boss. 

Before all hearts and minds. See Death of Henry 
Clay.—Butler. 

Before all other titles, Franklin placed that of his 
chosen craft. See Inauguration of the Statue of 
Franklin, The (Franklin as a Printer).—Winthrop. 

Before all this, “much ado about nothing.” See 
Beatrice.—Anon. 

Before and behind, before and behind. See Before 
and Behind.—Lawrence. 

Before attempting to recite this blood-curdling story. 
See Ghost Story, A.—Twain. 

Before Grenada’s fated walls, encamped in proud 
array. See Moor’s Revenge, The.—Mickiewiez. 

Before her flew Affliction, girt in storms. See Spirit 
of Homer, The (Procession of Time, The).—Chap¬ 
man. 

Before Him weltered like a shoreless sea. See Judg¬ 
ment Day.—Howells. 

Before his lion-garden gate. See Glove, The.—Schil¬ 
ler. 

Before I close my eyes in sleep. See Evening Prayer, 
An.—Barton. 

Before I see another day. See Complaint of a For¬ 
saken Indian Woman, The.—Wordsworth. 

Before I sigh my last gasp, let me breathe. See Will, 
The.-—Donne. 

Before I trust my fate to thee. See Woman’s Ques¬ 
tion, A.—-Procter. 

Before I was famous I used to sit. See Pipes and 
Beer.—Fawcett. 

Before Jehovah’s awful throne. See Psalm C.— 
W atts. 

Before my eyes she flits in grace. See Reveries of a 
Bachelor.—N ichols. 

Before my love and I had met. See St. Valentine’s 
Magic Wand.—Waterfield. 

Before proud Rome’s imperial throne. See Carac- 
tacus.—Barton. 

Before the beginning of years. See Atalanta in Caly- 
don (Making of Man, The).—Swinburne. 

Before the bright sun rises over the hill. See Gleaner, 
The.—Taylor. 

Before the firelight's genial glow. See Phyllis’s Slip¬ 
pers.—Richmond. 

Before the people crowned Prince Arthur king. See 
Idylls of the King (Elaine).—Tennyson. 

Before the starry threshold of Jove’s court. See 
Comus, a Mask.—Milton. 

Before the stout harvesters falleth the grain. See 
Summer Shower, The.—Read. 

Before the upturning of Southern society by the Re¬ 
construction Acts. See Separate as Billows, but 
One as the Sea.—Stephens. 

Before the wine-shop which o’erlooks the beach. See 
Shipwrecked.—Copee. 


621 






Before 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Before this present golden age of writers, a Grub- 
street Garreteer existed. See Poet and the 
Alchemist, The.—Smith. 

Before thy stem smooth seas were curled. See Greet¬ 
ing to “The George Griswold.” ( Pvnch.) 

Before us in the sultry dawn arose. See Slave, The.— 
Horne. 

Before Vespasian’s regal throne. See Death of Gau- 
dentis.—Annie. 

Before we say good-by, I want to tell you that I love 
you all very much. See Epilogue for a Tot.— 
Anon. 

Begin, O men of Athens, by not despairing of your 
situation. See Philippics (Against Philip).—De¬ 
mosthenes. 

Beginning and the end, first following last. See Ivy 
Poem.—Anon. 

Begone, you, sir! Here, shepherd, call your dog. See 
Shepherd Dog of the Pyrenees, The.—Murray. 

Begotten, and born, and dying with noise. See On a 
Cannon.—Swift. 

Behave yoursel’ before folk. See same. —Rodger. 

Behind a screen of western hills. See Evening on the 
Campus.—Field. 

Behind him lay the gray Azores. See Columbus.— 
Miller. 

Behind Jacques Cartier’s hills the sun sinks low. See 
Death of Wolfe, The.—Anderson. 

Behind our books we trembling cower. See In Ethics. 
—E. H. W. 

Behind them slowly sank the western world. See Her 
World.—Miller. 

Behind us at our evening meal. See Common Ques¬ 
tion, The.—Whittier. 

Behind yon hills where Lugar flows. See My Nanie, 
O.—Bums. 

Behold! a giant am I! See "Windmill, The.—Long¬ 
fellow. 

Behold a hag whom Life denies a kiss. See Oppor¬ 
tunity.—Caweir. 

Behold a pupil of the monkish gown. See Alfred and 
His Descendants.—Wordsworth. 

Behold a silly for simple], tender babe. See New 
Prince, New Pomp.—Southwell. 

Behold a woman! See same. —Whitman. 

Behold a wonder for theatric story! See Prologue to 
“The Apprentice.”—Anon. 

“Behold another singer!” Criton said. See “Song, to 
the Gods, is Sweetest Sacrifice.”—Fields. 

Behold her, single in the field. See Solitary Reaper, 
The.—W ordsworth. 

Behold him, priests, and though he stink of sweat. 
See Steel Glass. The (Piers Ploughman).—Langland. 

Behold His Satanic Majestic in cabinet council assem¬ 
bled. See In Satan’s Council-chamber.—Willard. 

Behold, how short a span. See Shortness of Life, The. 
—Quarles. 

Behold, I have a weapon. See Othello, the Moor of 
Venice (Othello’s Remorse).—Shakespeare. 

Behold in awful march and dread array. See Cam¬ 
paign, The (Marlborough at Blenheim).—Addison. 

Behold in us three parties known as “Supers.” See 
“Supers.”—Newton. 

Behold it! Listen to it! Every star had a tongue. See 
Flag of the Union, The (National Ensign, The).— 
Winthrop. 

Behold, my lords. See Winter's Tale, The.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Behold, out walking in these valleys. See Ode: “Be¬ 
hold, out walking,” etc.—Barnes. 

Behold the bright and smiling spring! See Message 
of the Seasons, The.—Anon. 

Behold the flood-tide of the year. See Midsummer.— 
Judd. 

Behold the foe of Grubb Street’s lettered fools. See 
Pope.—Betts. 

Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither 
do they reap. See St. Matthew (Trust in God). 
— Bible. 

Behold, the grave of a wicked man. See Why?— 
Crane. 

Behold! the maize fields set their pennons free. See 
Late Autumn.—Thomson. 

Behold the man! ye crowned and ermined train. See 
On Washington’s Farewell Address.—Honevwood. 

Behold the mansion reared by dfedal Jack. See 
Modern House that Jack Built, The.—Anon. 

Behold the monarch of the woods. See Monarch of 
the Woods.—Anon. 

Behold the portal: open wide it stands. See Garden 
where there is no Winter, The.—Block. 

Behold the pupil of the monkish gown. See Alfred.— 
Wordsworth. 


Behold the rocky wall. See Two Streams, The.— 
Holmes. 

Behold the sea. See Sea, The.-—Emerson. 

Behold the spider in his cell! Spider, The.—Ruggles. 

Behold the sun, that seem’d but now. See At Sun¬ 
setting.—Wither. 

Behold the western evening light! See Autumn Even¬ 
ing, The.—-Peabody. 

Behold the wonders of the mighty deep. See Sea, The. 
—Anon. 

Behold the world’s great wonder. See Hymn to the 
Sun.—Darley. 

Behold the wreath which decks the warrior’s brow. 
See Warrior’s Wreath, The.— (National Preceptor.) 

Behold the young, the rosy spring. See Spring.—Ana¬ 
creon. 

Behold these woods, and mark, my sweet. See Pas¬ 
toral Courtship, A.—Randolph. 

Behold! they come, those sainted forms. See Centen¬ 
nial Ode (Fathers of New England, The).—Sprague. 

Behold! this ruin! ’twas a skull. See To a Skeleton.— 
Anon. 

Behold this tree, my sisters. See Tree of Spiritual 
Blessings, The.—Cornell. 

Behold twa auld wives seated at the fireside drinking 
the blackest of tea. See Twa Courtin’s, The.— 
Kennedy. 

Behold we have gathered together our battleships, 
near and far. See Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin.— 
Cawein. 

Behold yon simple building near the crossing of the 
• village road. See New England’s Fairest Boast. 

-—Prentiss. 

Beholding youth and hope in mockery caught. See 
Sun’s Shame, The.—Rossetti 

Being asked by an intimate party. See His Answer 
to Her Letter.—Harte. 

Being weary of love, I flew to the grave. See Pretty 
Rose-tree, The.—Moore. 

Being your slave, what should I do but tend. See 
Sonnets, LVII.—Shakespeare. 

‘Believe in me.” the prophet cried. See Infallibility. 
—Collier. 

Believe me, Bess, when I declare. See Legal Attach¬ 
ment, A.—Anon. 

Believe me, if all those endearing young charms. See 
same. —Moore. 

Believe me still, as I have ever been. See same. — 
Whittier. 

Believe not those who tell you that poetry will seduce 
the youthful mind from severe occupations. See 
Defence of Poetry, A.—Wolfe. 

Belinda was a cautious little maid. See Pickpocket, 
The.—Anon. 

Belle, I’ve sought you all the morning. See On the 
Beach.—Anon. 

Bells of the past, whose long-forgotten music. See 
Angelus, The.—Harte. 

Beloved, do you pity not my doleful case. See Lament 
of the Mangaire Sugach.—Walsh. 

Beloved, gaze in thine ow*h heart. See Two Trees, The 
—Yeats. 

Beloved, it is morn! See same. —Hickey. 

Beloved, my beloved, when I think. See Sonnets fror 
the Portuguese. XX.—Browning. 

Beloved, on the shore of this gray world. See To Celia 
Thaxter.—Field. 

Beloved, the briefest words are best. See Four Words. 
—Allen. 

Beloved, those who moan of love’s brief day. See Per¬ 
fect Love.—Lampman. 

“Beloved, we are met to solemnize the funeral of Mr. 
Prockter.” See Funeral Sermon on the Death of 
a Good Man.—Anon. 

Below lies one whose name was traced in sand. See My 
Epitaph.—Gray. 

Below me in the garden there. See Two Kisses.— 
Powell 

Below the bottom of the great abyss. See Satan.— 
Crashaw. 

Below there in the orchard. See Love’s Letter-box.— 
Wood. 

Belshazzar is king! Belshazzar is lord! See Bel¬ 
shazzar.—Procter. 

Belshazzar Smith had a very bad and very dangerous 
habit. See Belshazzar Smith’s Cure for Som¬ 
nambulism.—Anon. 

Belubbed fellow-trabelers, in holdin’ forth to-day. 
See Half-way Doin’s.—Russell. 

Ben Battle was a soldier bold. See Faithless Nelly 
Gray.—Hood. 

Ben Bluff was a whaler, and many a day. See Ben 
Bluff.—Hood. 


622 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Between 


Ben Bobstay, a tar of the jolly old sort. See True¬ 
hearted Ben.—Anon. 

Ben Brust was driving his sheep from Newark. See 
Tale of a Leg, A.—Miller. 

Ben Fisher had finished his hard day’s work. See 
Home Picture, A.—Gage. 

Ben Fisher had finished his harvesting. See Ben 
Fisher.—Gage. 

Ben Hadad, king of Syria, with all Damascus’ hosts. 
See God’s Ragamuffin Army.—Taylor. 

Ben Hazzard’s hut was smoky and cold. See Ben 
Hazzard’s Guests.—Marshall. 

Ben Isaac walked in solitude one day. See Ben 
Isaac’s Vision.—Lawrence. 

Ben Levi sat with his books alone. See Rabbi’s Vision, 
The.—Brown. 

Be’n to that ole settlers’ meetun! See Ole Settlers’ 
Meet un.—Dawson. 

Ben won’t be home till Saturday night. See Honest 
and Honorable.—Coale. 

Bend low, O dusky night. See To-night.—Moulton. 

Bender vas somedimes a pooty smart man. See Ben¬ 
der Buys a Delephone.—Anon. 

Beneath a laurel, two fair streams between. See 
Vision of the Fawn, The.—Petrarch. 

Beneath a palm-tree by a clear, cool spring. See 
Lesson of Mercy, A.—Murray. 

Beneath a shady elm tree. See Selling the Baby.— 
Carleton. 

Beneath a shivering canopy reclined. See Noontide.— 
Leyden. 

Beneath an arch of velvet-blue. See El Camilo.— 
Irving. 

Beneath an Indian palm a girl. See Palm [or Palm- 
treel and the Pine, The.-—Houghton. 

Beneath our consecrated elm. See Under the Old Elm 
(Washington).—Lowell. 

Beneath the burning brazen sky. See Ute Lover, The. 
Garland. 

Beneath the deep and silent midnight sky. See Father 
and Child.—Gilder. 

Beneath the ever dense and leafy gloom. See Death- 
fire, The.—Stephens. 

Beneath the forest’s skirts I rest. See West Wind, The. 
—Bryant. 

Beneath the glory of a brighter sun. See New Thana- 
topsis.—Holcombe. 

Beneath the hot midsummer sun. See His Mother’s 
Song.—Anon. 

Beneath the lilac-tree. See Lyric, A.—Hulme. 

Beneath the low hung night cloud. See Three Bells, 
The.—Whittier. 

Beneath the meadow bridge, whose arch was dry. See 
Rivals, The.—Clare. 

Beneath the Memnonian shadows of Memphis, it rose 
from the slime. See Reed, The.—Carpenter. 

Beneath the midnight moon of May. See Night 
Watch, The.—Winter. 

Beneath the moonlight and the snow. See My Birth¬ 
day.—Whittier. 

Beneath the rule of men entirely great. See Pen, The. 
Lytton. 

Beneath the shade a spreading beech displays. See 
Autumn; or, Iiylas and vEgon.—Pope. 

Beneath the shadow of dawn’s aerial cope. See Hope 
and Fear.—Swinburne. 

Beneath the south side of a craigy bield. See Gentle 
Shepherd, The (Patie and Roger).—Ramsay. 

Beneath the summer moon, the city lies. See Hilda.— 
Rayhill. 

Beneath the surface there is wealth. See Beneath the 
Surface.—Fox. 

Beneath the tall, white light-house strayed the chil¬ 
dren. See Under the Light-house.—Thaxter. 

Beneath the warrior’s helm behold. See On an Intaglio 
Head of Minerva.—Aldrich. 

Beneath these fruit-tree boughs that shed. See 
Green Linnet, The.—Wordsworth. 

Beneath these poppies buried deep. See Epitaph on a 
Well-known Poet (Robert Southey).—Moore. 

Beneath this crag. See Cencl. The (Italian Ravine, 
An).—Shelley. 

Beneath this starry arch. See On, On Forever.— 
Martineau. _ . 

Beneath this stone two David Hallidays. See Epi¬ 
taph.—Anon. ... 

Beneath this stony roof reclined. See Inscription in 
a Hermitage.—Warton. 

Beneath this verdant hillock lies. See On a Usurer.— 
Swift. 

Beneath those buttressed walls with lichen grey. See 
Below the Old House.—Scott. 

Beneath thy spell, O radiant summer sea. See Sea s 
Spell, The.—Spalding. 


Beneath your lattice, love, I sing. See Too-too Ser¬ 
enade. A.—Anon. 

Beneathe an ancient oake one daye. See Enchanted 
Oak, The.—Herford. 

Benedict Arnold sailed from our shores. See Benedict 
Arnold (Arnold the Traitor).—Lippard. 

“Bennie, shut the gate! Shut it, I tell you!” See 
Parental Discipline.—Anon. 

Benny watched his grandmamma. See His Idea of 
It.—Best. 

Bereft of patriotism, the heart of a nation will be cold, 
and cramped, and sordid. See Patriotism.— 
Meagher. „ 

Berlubbed Brederen and Sistern: De mem’ry ob man 
am mighty treacherous and onreliable. See Negro 
Sermon on Memory, A.—Anon. 

Beshrew the coin’d gold—and so take heed. See 
Golden-rod.—Hunt. 

Beshrew your heart, for sending me about. See 
Romeo and Juliet.—Shakespeare. 

Beside a massive gateway, built up in years gone by. 
See Waiting by the Gate.—Bryant. 

Beside a window sits the maid, a harp within her hand. 
See Mounted Knight, The.—Anon. 

Beside her ashen hearth she sat her down. See For¬ 
tunate One, The.—Monroe. 

Beside her mother sat a darling child. See Mother and 
her Child, The.—Anon. 

Beside my window, in the early spring. See Early 
Work.—Bolton. 

Beside that tent and under guard. See Gerbnimo. 
McGaffey. 

Beside the church door, a-weary and alone. See 
Purest Pearl, The.—Anon. 

Beside the covered grave. See To the Memory of 
Pietro d’Alessandro.—Lushington. 

Beside the engine-driver grim. See Night Ride on the 
Engine, A.—Shaw. 

Beside the landsman knelt a dame. See Manor Lord, 
The.—Houghton. 

Beside the Moldau’s rushing stream. See Beleag¬ 
uered City, The.—Longfellow. 

Beside the pounding cataracts. See City of the End 
of Things The.—Lampman. 

Beside the still waters! O, infinite peace! See Still 
Waters.—Richards. 

Besidfe the toilsome way. See Angel of Patience, The. 
—Anon. 

Beside the wall, and near the massive gate. See Sac¬ 
rilege.—Collier. 

Beside yon straggling fence that skirts the way. See 
Deserted Village, The (Village Schoolmaster, The). 
—Goldsmith. 

Bess went t'o church, one sultry day. See “Please, 
Preacherman, Can I Go Home.”—Anon. 

Bessie wanted to learn a text. See Bessie’s Text.— 
Anon. 

Best and brightest, come away! See Invitation, The. 
—Shelley. 

Best of all I love my mamma. See Those I Love.— 
Rook. 

Betsey and I are out once more—we’ve had a tearing 
fight. See Betsey and I are Out Once More.— 
Anon. 

Better be with the dead. See Macbeth.—Shakespeare 

Better keep on with the wet bandages and hot foot¬ 
bath. See Her First Shot.—Anon. 

Better than gold in the miser’s grasp. See Better than 
the Miser’s Gold.—Pinkley. 

Better than grandeur, better than gold. See Better 
than Gold.—Smart. 

Better than grandeur, better than gold. See Better 
than Gold.—Winton. ( Diff. vers, of foregoing.) 

Better to mourn a blossom snatched away. See same. 
—Wheeler. 

Better to smell a violet than sip the careless wine. See 
Better Things.—Hunt. 

Better to smell the violet cool, than sip the glowing 
wine. See Better Things.—MacDonald. 

Better trust all and be deceived. See Faith.—Kem¬ 
ble. 

Better? Yes, madam, thank you; I am a great 
deal better to-day. See In the Hospital.— 
Tassin. 

Betty Bouncer kept a stall. See To See Her Pipe 
Awry.—C. F. 

Betty, what in the world are you doing? See Widow 
Muggins—Her Opinions of Cooks, Suitors, and 
Husbands, The.—Bonfield. 

Between Adam and me the great difference is. See 
Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party. 
Moore. 

Between five and six dense darkness prevailed. See 
Guenn.—Howard. 


623 








Between 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Between nose and eyes a strange contest arose. See 
Nose and the Eyes, The.—Cowper. 

Between the acting of a dreadful thing. See Julius 
Caesar (Crime).—Shakespeare. 

Between the broad fields of wheat and corn. See 
Stranger on the Sill, The —Read. 

Between the dark and the daylight. See Children’s 
Hour, The.—I.ongfellcw. 

Between the dreamy waltzes. See De Trop.—L. W. 

Between the falling leaf and rose-bud’s breath. See 
Term of Death, The.—Piatt. 

Between the hands, between the brows. See Love- 
lily.—Rossetti. 

Between the mountains and the sea. See Santa Bar¬ 
bara.—Browne. 

Between the roadside and the wood. See Wind¬ 
flower, A.—Carman. 

Between the showers I went my way. See Between 
the Showers.—Levy. 

Between the songs and silences of the flicker on the 
fence. See Flicker on the Fence, The.—McManus. 

Between the sunken sun and the new moon. See same. 
—Hayne. 

Between the trees a hammock swings. See Snare and a 
Delusion, A. ( Yale Record.) 

Between two golden tufts of summer grass. See Lying 
in the Grass.—Gosse. 

Between two hawks, which flies the higher pitch. See 
King Henry VI., Part I.—Shakespeare. 

Bewailing in my chamber thus alone. See King’s 
Quair, The.—James the First. 

Beware! The Israelite of old, who tore. See Warning, 
The.—Longfellow. 

Bewitching, beauteous, cruel Jane McSparrow! See 
Doctor in Love, The.—McFarland. 

Bewitching devotee. See To a Sister of Charity.— 
Alexander. 

Beyond a hundred years and more. See Pope at 
T wickenham.—Kent. 

Beyond, beyond the mountain line. See Dreams.— 
Alexander. 

Beyond the bourn of mortal death and birth. See 
At Last.-—-Trask. 

Beyond the cheerless Arctic Circle. See One Advan¬ 
tage of Volapiik.—McG. ,1. 

Beyond the farthest glimmering star. See same. — 
Prentice. 

Beyond the light-house, standing sentinel. See Jubi¬ 
late.—Anon. 

Beyond the low marsh-meadows and the beach. See 
Pines and the Sea, The.—Cranch. 

Beyond the north wind lay the land of old. See To 
Dr. John Brown.—Swinburne. 

Beyond the purple, hazy trees. See Used-to-be, The. 
Riley. 

Beyond the Rhine King Gunther, with many a well- 
arm’d rank. See Nibelungen Lied (How Brunhild 
was Received at Worms).—Lettsom. 

Beyond the sea, I know not where. See Viverols.— 
Jordan. 

Beyond the smiling and the weeping. See same. — 
Bonar. 

Beyond the sunny Philippines. See Eggs, The. 
—Yriarte. 

Beyond the vague Atlantic deep. See Envoy to an 
American Lady, An.—Houghton. 

Beyond these chilling winds and winter skies. See 
Heaven.—Wakefield. 

Biblical criticism is very fashionable. See That Old 
Book.—Anon. 

Bid me to live, and I will live. See To Anthea, who 
may Command Him Anything.—Herrick. 

Bid that your king Leonidas should come. See Leoni¬ 
das.—Murray. 

Biddy Machree was a gentlewoman—at least. See 
Paddy’s Courting.—Eaton. 

Biddy Moriarity was a virago of the most abusive type. 
See Daniel O’Connell’s Humor.—Anon. 

Biggsby and his wife went around to the Crosby’s 
the other night. See Wives in a Social Game.— 
Anon. 

Bije Bean wnz born upon a farm. See Right Man for 
the Place, The.—Foss. 

Bill Jones was going to get married a day or two ago. 
See Dutchman’s Answer, A.—Anon. 

Bill More and I, in days gone by. See Politics.— 
Douglass. 

Bill Nye has had an attack of the servant girl. See 
Bill N.ve’s Hired Girl.—Nye. 

Bill, this jam is tip-top, isn’t it? See Scintillate.—Anon. 

Billie went a-fishing. Se* Billie.—Richards. 

“Billiger! Hark!” Mrs. McSwat sat straight up in bed. 
See Her Daring Protector.—Anon. 


Billings is an unlucky man. See Predestination.— 
Anon. 

Billy’s dead and gone to glory. See Billy’s Rose.— 
Anon. 

Bind fast thyself with silvery ties. See Right Build¬ 
ing.— Duncan. 

Bind us the morning, mother of the stars. See Thefts 
of the Morning.—Thomas. 

‘‘Bing, him, bang, borne!” sang the bell to himself. 
See Owl and the Bell, The.—Macdonald. 

Bird of the heavens! whose matchless eye. See 
American Eagle, The.—Thompson. 

Bird of the wilderness. See Skylark, The.—Hogg. 

Birdie, birdie, will you, pet? See Bird, The.—Allingham. 

Birdie, little birdie. See He Careth.—Tennyson. 

Birdie, up in your cage so gay. See Captive Bird, The. 
—Anon. 

Birdies with broken wings. See same. —Anon. 

Birds all the sunny day. See Nest Eggs.—Stevenson. 

Birds are singing round my window. See Birds.— 
Stoddard. 

Birds in the high hall-garden. See same. —-Tennyson. 

Birds in their little nests agree. See Our Dead Heroes. 
—Train. 

Birds in their nests are softly calling. See Lullaby.— 
Mitchell. 

Birds, joyous birds of the wandering wing. See Birds 
of Passage.—Anon. 

Birds on the boughs before the buds. See April and 
May.—Thaxter. 

Birds that were gray in the green are black in the yel¬ 
low. See September.—Harrison. 

Birds, the free tenants of land, air and ocean. See 
Pelican Island, The (Birds).—Montgomery. 

Bishop Potts, of Salt Lake City. See Out of the Hurly 
Burly (Story of Bishop Potts, The).—Clark. 

Bite deep and wide, O axe, the tree. See Axe of the 
Pioneer, The.—Crawford. 

Black bees on the clover-heads drowsily clinging. 
See Summer’s Day, A.—Woolson. 

Black Cuffy had come with the bluebirds’ train. See 
Serenade, The: “Black Cuffy had come.”—Anon. 

Black it stood as night. See Paradise Lost (Satan’s 
Encounter with Death).—Milton. 

Black riders came from the sea. See Black Riders, 
The.—Crane. 

Black Tragedy lets slip her grim disguise. See Masks. 
—Aldrich. 

Blackboard, with ruler and rubber before me. See 
After the German.—Baker. 

Blackened and bleeding, helpless, panting, prone. 
See Chicago.—Harte. 

Blame not my lute! for he must sound. See Blame 
not My Lute.—Wyatt. 

Blame not my verse if echoes of church bells. See 
Preface.—F aber. 

Bland as the morning breath of- June. See Dream 
of Summer, A. Whitt ier. 

Blank, blank, blank. See With a Golfer’s Apologies to 
Tennyson.—( Punch Bowl.) 

Blaze, with your serried columns! I will not bend the 
knee. See Seminole’s Defiance, The.—Patten. 

Blazon Columbia’s Emblem. See Columbia’s Em¬ 
blem.—Proctor. 

Bleak were the hills and the cold wind was sweeping. 
See Pauper’s Child, The—Moore. 

Bleak winds of the winter, sobbing and moaning. See 
Outcast, The.—Ritter. 

Bless me! it is eight o’clock! See Won by Strategy.— 
Anon. 

Bless my heart! You’ve come at last. See Plighted.— 
A. D. 1887.—Brotherton. 

Bless the dear old verdant land. See same. —Mac- 
Carthy. 

Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me. 
See Psalms of David, CUT.— Bible. 

Bless the Lord, O my soul; O Lord, my God, thou art 
very great. See Psalms of David, CIV.— Bible. 

Blessed are the dead whose memory is perpetuated by 
the flower service of a grateful people. See Deco¬ 
ration Day Address.—Anon. 

Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom 
of heaven. See St. Matthew (Beatitudes).— Bible. 

‘‘Blessed are the poor in spirit there. I’ll just remem¬ 
ber that. See Sermon Time.—Lincoln. 

‘‘Blessed be nothing'” an old woman said. See 
Nothing.— (.Harper’s Bazar.) 

Blessed is the country whose soldiers fight for it. See 
Abstract of a Grand Army Speech.—Anon. 

Blessed is the man that walketh not. See Psalms 
of David, I.— Bible. 

Blessed is the nation whose God. See Psalms of David. 
XXXIII— Bible. 


624 







FIRST LINE INDEX 


Born 


Blessed old Santa Claus, king of delights. See Letter 
to Santa Claus.—Miller. 

Blessings, blessings on the beds. See Little Children. 
—Cary. 

Blessings light on him who first invented sleep! See 
Don Quixote (Sleep).—Cervantes. 

Blessings on thee, little man. See Barefoot Boy, The. 
—Whittier. 

Blessings on thee, little man. See “Festina Lente.”— 
Burdette. 

Blest as the immortal gods is he. See Blest as the 
Immortal Gods.—Sappho. 

Blest be the tie that binds. See Blest be the Tie.— 
Fawcett. 

Blest be Thy love, dear Lord. See same. —-Austin. 

Blest infant bud, whose blossom-life. See Burial of 
an Infant, The.—Vaughan. 

Blest land of Judea! thrice hallowed of song. See 
Palestine.—Whittier. 

Blest of God, the God of nations. See Columbia’s 
Jubilee.—Putnam. 

Blest pair of Sirens, pledges of Heaven’s joy. See At 
a Solemn Musick.—Milton. 

“B’lieve I met ye on the keers. Jones yer name?” 

See Senator’s Grandmother, The.—Stapleton. 
Blifkins had leased a house. See Blifkins the Ruralist. 
—Shillaber. 

Blind as the song of birds. See Lines to a Blind Girl. 
—Read. 

Blind Thamyris, and Blind Mseonides. See Ode to the 
Human Heart.—Blanchard. 

Blindfolded and alone I stand. See Not as I Will.— 

- Jackson. 

Blissful, they turned them to go: but the fair-tressed 
Pallas Athenfi. See Andromeda (Pallas in Olym¬ 
pus).—Kingsley. 

Blithe playmate of the Summer time. See To a Hum¬ 
ming-bird in a Garden.—Murray. 

Blockhead! Would you keep me knocking two hours 
at the door? See Fractious Man, The.—Brueys. 
Blonde or brunette? Shall Ethel fair. See Which? 
—Nichols. 

Blossom of the almond-trees. See Almond Blossom.— 
Arnold. 

Blow, blow, thou winter wind. See As You Like It 
(“ Blow, blow,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

Blow, blustering wind! thy loud alarms. See ‘‘Has 
not Since been Heard of.”—Anon. 

Blow, golden trumpets, sweet and clear. See Easter 
Music.—Deland. 

Blow high, blow low, let tempest tear. See Con¬ 
stancy.—Dibdin. 

Blow, northern wind, send See Old Love Song.— 
Anon. 

Blow, northern winds! See December.—Hopkins. 
Blow, slow, fresh fount, keep time with my salt tears. 
See Echo’s Song.—Jonson. 

Blow softly, thrush, upon the hush. See Veery- 
thrush, The.—Taylor. 

Blow, wind, blow. See Christmas Song, A.—Bennett. 
Blow, wind, blow! See Winter Night.—Butts. 

Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! See King Lear. 
—Shakespeare. 

Blown in the morning, thou shalt fade ere noon. See 
Rose, A.—Fanshawe 

Blows the wind to-day, and the sun and rain are flying. 

See Whaups, The.—Stevenson. 

Blue, blue is the summer sky. See Candida.—Gould. 
Blue crystal vault and elemental fires See Narayena: 
Spirit of God.—Jones. 

Blue dusk, that brings the dewy hours. See Toad, A. 
—Fawcett. 

Blue gulf all around us. See Burial of the Dane, The. 
—Brownell. 

Blue hills beneath the haze. See same. —Whiting. 

Blue skies, cool skies. See Autumn Song.—M. E. C. 
Blue-bells, blue-bells, gently ringing. See Blue-bells. 
—Crocker. 

Blue-bells, on blue hills, where the sky is blue. See 
Harebells.—Hickey. 

Blue-bird, joyous blue-bird. See Blue-bird.—Anon. 
Blue black like the breast of the gusty sea. See 
Promise of Spring, The.—Merrill. 

Bluff Harry the Eighth was out hunting one day. See 
Abbot of Waltham, The.—Anon. 

Blush, happy maiden, when you feel. See same. — 

Blythe bell, that calls to bridal halls. See Thought, A. 
—Landor. 

Blyther than the burnie. See same. —-Hubbard. 

Boat o’ Dreams! Boat o’ Dreams! See Boat o’ 
Dreams.—Palmer. 

Boatman, boatman! my brain is wild. See Comfort. 
—Anon. 


Bob Miller was a nice young man. See To Master 
Robbie Miller.—Moulton. 

Bob Scratcherty was a parishioner of mine. See 
Turning the Points.—Overton. 

Bob Southey! you’re a poet—poet-laureate. See 
Don Juan (Dedication).—Byron. 

‘‘Bobby Shaftoe’s gone to sea.” See Bobby Shaftoe. 
—Greene. 

‘‘Bobolink! Oh, Bobolink!” See Recitation for a 
Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

Bobolink shall play the violin. See Birds’ Orchestra, 
The.—Thaxter. 

Bobolink, that in the meadow. See Bobolink, The.— 
Hill. 

‘‘Body, I pray you, let me go!” See Struggle, The.— 
Dandridge. 

Bold, amiable, ebon outlaw, grave and wise! See To 
a Crow.—Wilson. 

Bold knights and fair dames, to my harp lend an ear. 
See Count Albert and Fair Rosalie.—Scott. 

Bold Robin Hood is a forester good. See Friar Tuck. 
—Hamp. 

Bone and Skin, two Millers thin. See Epigram on 
Two Monopolists.—Byrom. 

Bones and Tambo, I have a question for both of you. 
See Five Senses, The.—Anon. 

Bones! Bones.—What’s de matter now? See Water¬ 
melon Talk.—Anon. 

Bones, did you ever bear arms in defense of your 
country? See Naval Service.—Anon. 

Bones, did you ever hear about Daniel going into the 
den if lions? See About Daniel.—Anon. 

Bones, do you ever go to the theatre? See Bones on 
the Theatre.—Anon. 

Bones, do you know, I real’y think you loved Miss 
Snowdrop. See Brudder Pones in Love.—Anon. 

Bones, have vou any cash to-night? See Guess Again. 
—Anon. 

Bones, have you been to school much? See Bones at 
School.—Anon. 

Bones, how long is it since you returned from your trip 
through the Dominion of Canada? See Bones as 
an Artist.—Anon. 

Bones, I frequently see your name written in various 
places. See Notoriety.—Anon. 

Bones, I have got a chimney that smokes very badly. 
See How Bones Cured a Smoky Chimney.—Anon. 

Bones, I hear you are studying very hard now. See 
Bones’ Discovery.—Anon. 

Bones, I hear you have got a new boarding-house. 
See Spread Eagle Oratory.—Anon. 

Bones, my dear boy, I’m a little short. See Bones not 
to be Caught.—Anon. 

Bones, that was a most remarkable feat which you 
accomplished yesterday. See Burnt Corkers.— 
Sargent. 

Bones, what has become of the accomplished young 
lady you said was your intended? See Brudder 
Bones’ Duel.—Anon. 

Bones, who was that young lady I saw you with to-day? 
See Brudder Bones’ Sweetheart.—Anon. 

Bonie lassie, will ye go. See Birks of Aberfeldy, The. 
—Bums. 

Bonivard failed in his efforts to free Geneva. See 
Bonivard.—-Dumas. 

Bonnie Bessie Lee had a face fu’ o’ smiles. See Bonnie 
Bessie Lee.—Nicoll. 

Bonnie wee Eric! I have sat beside the evening fire. 
See Bonnie Wee Eric.—Havergal. 

Bonnie wee thing! cannie wee thing. See Bonnie Wee 
Thing.—Burns. 

Bonny [or Bonnie] Kilmeny gaed up the glen. See 
Queen’s Wake, The (Kilmeny).—Hogg. 

Book lamin’ is a daisy thing for the chap what’s got 
the brains. See ‘‘Book I.arnin’.”—Turk. 

Books rule thy mind, so let it be! See Triolet to her 
Husband.—Fertiault. 

Boom, cannon, boom to all the winds and waves! See 
Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration, July 
21, 1865 (Our Country Saved).—Lowell. 

Boontown station at the noon hour. A waiting train. 
See He Let her Know.—Short. 

Boot, saddle, to horse and away! See Boot and Sad¬ 
dle.—Browning. 

Bordered by bluff and meadow, reflecting a golden day. 
See Catholic Psalm, The.—Hubbard. 

Borgia, thou once wert almost too august. See On 
Lueretia Borgia’s Hair.—Landor. 

Bom and bred in a castle of France. See Simon de 
Montfort, Earl of Leicester. —Lincoln. 

Bom free, thus we resolve to live. See Oath of Free¬ 
dom, The—Hope. 

Bom in stormy times, William Penn. See Penn’s 
Monument.—Burdette. 


625 










Born 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Born in the country. See Joys and Sorrows of Eggs.— 
Beecher. 

Born in yon blaze of Orient sky. See Song to May.— 
Darwin. 

Born on the day he died, the eleventh of June. See 
On Sir Kenelm Digby.—Anon. 

Born, sir, in a land of liberty; having early learned its 
value. See France and the United States.— 
Washington. 

Born to the purple, lying stark and dead. See Des¬ 
tiny.—Lazarus. 

Born was I to be old. See Anacreontic.—Herrick. 

Borne on the wavelets of thy fluent notes. Sec To My 
Canary Bird.—Martin. 

Boston has seen sad days before now. See Slave of 
Boston, The.—Parker. 

Both thou and I alike, my Bacchic urn. See On an 
Urn.—Garnett. 

Both young men and maidens, old men and children. 
See “Children’s Day” Service, A.—Denton. 

“Bother!” was all that John Clatterby said. See Boy 
and the Boot, The.— (Hearth and Home.) 

Boucher was a grasshopper, and painted. See Story 
of Rosina, The.—Dobson. 

Bound and bordered in leaf-green. See Book of Joyous 
Children, The.—-Riley. 

Bound upon th’ accursed tree. See same. —Mil man. 

Bounding like a football. See Our Darling.—Anon. 

“Bout three years ago, afore I got this berth as I’m 
in now.” See Little Stowaway, The.—Anon. 

Bowed by the weight of centuries he leans. See Man 
with the Hoe, The.—Markham. 

Bowing thyself in dusk before a Book. See Biblio- 
latres.—Lowell. 

Boy. See Brief Tragedy, A.—Anon. 

Boy, at all times tell the truth. See Truth.—Anon. 

Boy Britton, only a lad, a fair-haired boy, sixteen. 
See Boy Britton.—Willson. 

Boy, I detest these modern innovations. See Per- 
sicos Odi.—Merrill. 

Boy, what sign is it when a man of spirit grows melan¬ 
choly? See Love’s Labour's Lost (Armado and 
Moth).—Shakespeare. 

Boys and gals, no, it’s jest boys. See Scene in the Bob- 
town School.—McBride. 

Boys and girls, “hear me for one cause, and be silent 
that you may hear.” See Recess Speeches.— 
McBride. 

“Boys are men that have not got as big as their 
papas.” See Girl’s Essay on Boys, A.—Anon. 

Boys, I am going to address a few words to you. See 
Girl’s Address to Boys, A.—Anon. 

Boys, I have something to tell you after school. See 
True Manliness.—M. L. R. 

Boys, I have only a few words to say to you. See 
Address to School-boys, An.—Anon. 

“Boys, I won’t drink without you drink what I do.” 
See Drinking a Tear.—Anon. 

Boys of spirit, boys of will. See Boys Wanted.—Anon. 

Boys, take another! To-night we’ll be gay. See 
“Swore Off.”—Fort. 

Boys, we want you—our country wants. See Boys 
We Want, The.—Sargent. 

Boys will quarrel, and when they quarrel will some¬ 
times fight. See Tom Brown’s School Days (Fight¬ 
ing).—Hughes. 

“Brace up!” We like that slang phrase. See Brace 
Up.—Anon. 

Brahma, creator of the universe, though all powerful, 
could mot revoke a promise once made. See 
Ramayana, The Story of the.—Rabb. 

Brave as a falcon and as merciless. See To Manon— 
Comparing her to a Falcon.—Blunt. 

“Brave Captain! canst thou speak? What is it thou 
dost see?” See After the Battle.—Anon. 

Brave comrades! all is ruined! See Catiline (Cati¬ 
line’s Last Harangue to His Army).—Croly. 

Brave flowers—that I could gallant it like you. See 
Contemplation upon Flowers, A.—King. 

Brave hearts still’d on the Maine, a last good-night! 
See Maine, The.—Dichter. 

Brave Jack Chiddy! Oh, well, you may sneer. See 
Jack Chiddy.—Anderson. 

Brave Morris saw the day was lost. See Sword 
Bearer, The.—Boker. 

Brave Percy, fare thee well! See King Henry VI., 
Part I.—Shakespeare. 

Brave racer, who hast sped the living light. See 
Torch Race, The.—Cone. 

Brave Schill! by death delivered. See Schill.— 
Wordsworth. 

Brave singer of the coming time. See Good Time 
Going, A.—Holmes. 


Brave Sir Count Ricci, in feudal days of yore. See 
Triumph of the Ricci, The.—Wordsworth. 

Bravely thy old arms fling. See To an Elm.—Tuck- 
erman. 

Bravest of brave sweet blossoms in all of the garden 
row. See Chrysanthemums.—Dodge. 

Bravo, Jonathan! Now’s your time. See New To¬ 
reador, The.—( London Fun.) 

Break! Break! Break! O voice, on my old top C. See 
Bitter Cry of the Outcast Choir Boy, The. 
— {Punch.) 

Break, break, break! on thy cold gray stones, O sea. 

See Break. Break, Break!—Tennyson, 

Break down the American home, and the fabric of free 
government goes down with it. See Saloon and 
the Home, The.—Young. 

Break, Fantasy, from thy cave of cloud. See Vision of 
Delight, The (Fantasy).—Jonson. 

Break forth, break forth, O Sudbury towm. See 
Lydia.—Reese. 

Break not his sweet repose. See Soldier’s Grave, A.— 
Albee. 

Break off, break off, I feel the different pace. See 
Measure, The.—Milton. 

Break thou my heart, ah, break it. See Arab Song.— 
Stoddard. 

Break Thou the bread of life. See Bread of Life, The. 
—Lathbury. 

Break up camp, drowsy world! See Battle Poem, A. 

-—-Taylor. 

Break up the Union of these States. See Ship of 
State, The.—Lunt. 

Breakfast is ready. See Two Families in One Room 
—Anon. 

Breakfast, Mr. A? No; I have cooked none. See 
Frightened Woman, A.—Dallas. 

Breaking from under that thy cloudy veil. See Upon 
Combing Her Hair.—Herbert. 

Breaking suddenly through the cedar thicket. See 
Tragedy in the Sunshine, A.— {Detroit Free Press.) 
Breaks the joyful Easter dawn. See Easter Dawn.— 
Larcom. 

Breath is what we breathe. If we didn’t have breath 
we couldn’t breathe. See Tommy’s Essay on 
Breath.—Anon. 

Breath o’ the grass. See Sospiri di Roma (Susurro). 
—Sharp. 

Breathe balmy airs, ye fragrant flowers. See Breathe 
Balmy Airs.—Smith. 

Breathe, trumpets, breathe slow notes of saddest wail¬ 
ing. See Requiem.—Lunt. 

Breathes there the man with soul so dead. See 
Lay of the Last Minstrel (Breathes there the 
Man).—Scott. 

Breathing the summer-scented air. See My Walk to 
Church.—Powers. 

Breddern an’ Sistern: I’se gwine to gib you what I 
hope will prove to you. See Brudder Brown on 
‘ ‘ Apples. ”—Anon. 

Breezes in the tree-tops high. See Lullaby.—Car¬ 
penter. 

Brekekekex! coax! coax! O happy, happy frogs! See 
Musical Frogs, The.—Blackie. 

Brent’s your brow, my lady Elspat. See Lady Elspat. 
—Anon. 

“Brethren,” said the aged minister. See Minister’s 
Grievances, The.—Anon. 

“Brethren, the words of my text are; ‘Old Mother 
Hubbard, she went to the cupboard.’” See 
Model Discourse, A.—Anon. 

Bridget, I am going out for a few hours. See Brid¬ 
get’s Investment.—Rook. 

Brief is Erinna’s song, her lowly lay. See Erinna.— 
Lang. 

Brief was the reign of pure poetic truth. See Donne. 
—Coleridge. 

Bright as among the stars the star of all. See Iliad, 
The (Hector Slain by Achilles).—Homer. 

Bright be the skies that cover thee. See To Laura 
W—-, Two years of Age.—Willis. 

Bright books: perspectives on our weak sights. See 
To Flis Books.—Vaughan. 

Bright breaks the warrior o’er the ocean wave. See 
Ocean Wanderer, The.—Anon. 

Bright Eyes, Light Eyes! Daughter of a Fay! See 
Faery Foster-mother, The.—Buchanan. 

Bright flag at yonder tapering mast. See Lines on 
Leaving Europe.—Willis. 

Bright flower, whose home is everywhere! See To the 
Daisy.—Wordsworth. 

Bright is the moon that hangs aloft. See Spirit of 
Liberty, The.—Oberholtzer. 

Bright little dandelion. See Dandelion.—Anon. 

626 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


Busk 


Bright little dandelion. See also Dandelion (Bright 
Little Dandelion).—Anon. 

Bright on the banners of lily and rose. See Welcome 
to the Nations.—Holmes. 

Bright scarlet poppies growing in the wheat. See 
One Day.—Bensel. 

Bright shadows of true rest! some shoots of blisse. 
See Son-Dayes.—Vaughan. 

Bright shines the sun, but brighter after rain. See 
Gold of Hope, The.—Burton. 

Bright star of beauty, on whose eyelids sit. See Son¬ 
net : To the Lady L. S.—Drayton. 

Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art. See 
Last Sonnet.—Keats. 

Bright was the morn, the waveless bay. See Perry’s 
Victory on Lake Erie.—Percival 

Brighter than the sunshine on a stormy April day. 
See Sunshine in the House.—Burnham. 

Brightest and best of the sons of the morning! See 
Epiphany—Heber. 

Bright-faced maiden, bright-souled maiden. See Pes¬ 
simism.—( Blackwood’s.) 

Bring flowers, to strew again. See Ode for Decoration 
Day.—Peterson. 

Bring flowers to strew in the conqueror’s path! See 
Bring Flowers.—Hemans. 

Bring flowers, ye grateful millions of the land. See 
Decoration Ode.—Davis. 

Bring flowers, young flowers, for the festal board. See 
Bring Flowers.—Hemans. 

“Bring forth the horse!” Alas! he showed. See 
How the Old Horse Won the Bet.—-Holmes. 

“Bring forth the Horse!” The horse was brought. 
See Mazeppa.—Byron. 

‘Bring forth the steed!” It was a level plain. See 
Alexander Taming Bucephalus.—Benjamin. 

Bring from the craggy haunts of birch and pine. See 
Song: “Bring From the Craggy Haunts,” etc.— 
Todhunter. 

Bring her here, my little Alice. See Jemima Brown.— 
Anon. 


Bring him not here where our sainted feet. See Little 
Church around the Corner, The.—Lancaster. 

Bring in the trailing forest moss. See Christmas 
Green.—Larcom. 

Bring it from the oaken press : full fifty years ago. See 
Wedding-gown, The.—Pierce. 

Bring me a cup of good red wine. See Rinaldo.— 
Peterson. 

“Bring me lilies,” cried Prince Eric—kingly Eric, 
tall and fair. See Prince Eric’s Christ-maid.— 
Banks. 

Bring me my dead. See Tennyson.—Huxley. 

Bring me wine, but wine which never grew. See 
Bacchus.—-Emerson. 

Bring no jarring lute this way. See Woodland Grave, 
A.—De Tabley. 

Bring novelist, your note-book! bring, dramatist, youi 
pen! See Women of Mumbles Head, The.— Scott. 

Bring snow-white lilies, pallid heart-flushed roses. See 
Pantheist’s Song of Immortality, The.—Naden. 

Bring the comb and play upon it! See Marching Song. 
—Stevenson. 

Bring the good old bugle, boys! we’ll sing another song. 
See Marching through Georgia.—Work. 

Bring y-u evs from my L >rd? SeeK- ilw r(h (Amy 
R bs rt a d Richard Varn-y).—Sc + t. 

Britannia’s gallant streamers. See Yankee Thunders. 
—Anon. 

Broad bars of sunset-slanted gold. See Ballad of the 
Faded Field.—Wilson. 

Broad over the grisly canon the noontide hot and red. 
See Race for Life, A.—Marsh. 

Broad the forest hood [wr. spread] on the sloping [wr. J 
hills of Linteged. See Rhyme of the Duchess May. 
—-Browning. 

Broadly considered, O’Connell’s eloquence has never 
been equaled in modern times. See Da F! O’Con¬ 
nell (Daniel O’Connell tha Orator).—Phillips. 

Broke down, have ye, stranger? See Little Heroine, 


^_Locke. 

Broncho Dan halts midway of the stream. See Health 
at the Ford, A.—Rogers. 

Bronson Alcott, of Boston, told Joseph Cook, and 
Joseph Cook told everybody he met. See School¬ 
master’s Conquest, The.—Anon. 

Brook, would thou couldst flow. See Brook Song. 
Morse. 

Brother Alumni: In your name I salute and wel¬ 
come the guests. See Address of Welcome at an 
Alumni Dinner, An.—Anon. 

Brother! awake from thy long lethargy. See Purpose. 


—Anon. 


“Brother Edward has been much better: his cough is 
abating.” See They Say.—Anon. 

Brother Gardner was yesterday whitewashing the 
back end of an old house. See Wounded in the 
Corners.—Anon. 

Brother, listen to what we say. See Speech of Red 
Jacket.—Red Jacket. 

Brother of mine, good monk with cowled head. See 
Thomas a Kempis.—Reese. 

Brother Roosevelt’s phrase, “gave their young lives,” 
is a common one enough. See Student Heroes of 
Our War, The.—Eliot. 

Brother, thou art gone before us. See Hymn 
“Brother, thou art gone,” etc.—Milman. 

Brother Toper, sit you down. See Brother Toper.— 
Kirk. 

Brother Will has said his piece. See Charlie’s Speech. 
—Doolittle. 

Brothers, spare awhile your liquor, lay your final tumb¬ 
ler down. See Dirge of the Drinker, The.—Aytoun. 

Brothers, the day declines. See Evening Hymn of the 
Alpine Shepherds.—Beattie. 

Brown books of mine, who never yet. See Final 
Word, A.—Dobson. 

Brown earth-line meets gray heaven. See In Novem¬ 
ber.—Aldrich. 

Brown eyes, straight nose. See Polly.—Rands. 

Brown of Ossawatomie spake on his dying day. See 
Brown of Ossawatomie.—Whittier. 

Brush your hair carefully. See Visitation.—Palmer. 

Brutus hath riv’d my heart. See Julius Csesar.— 
Shakespeare. 

Bryant had a wonderful memory. See Bryant, Ex¬ 
tract Concerning.—Bigelow. 

Bryant, whose songs are thoughts that bless. See 
William Cullen Bryant.—Halleck. 

Bryght as the stern of day begouth to schyne. See 
Goldyn Targe, The.—Dunbar. 

Bud, come here to your uncle a spell. See Home-made 
Fairy-tale, A.—Riley. 

Bud into blossom, flower into fruit. See Song: “Bud 
into blossom,” etc.—Cole. 

Bud was the blackest, fattest, and most contented 
little darkey I ever saw. See Bud’s' Charge.— 
Van Norman. 

Buds and bells! Sweet April pleasures. See Flowers. 
—Havergal. 

Bugles! And the Great Nation thrills and leaps to 
arms. See Call of the Bugles, The.—Hovey. 

Build a little fence of trust. See Trust.—Butts. 

Build high your white and dazzling palaces. See To 
F ebruary.—W etherald. 

“Build me my tomb,” the raven said. See Raven’s 
Tomb, The.—Ramal. 

“Build me straight, O worthy master!” See Building 
of the ship. The.—Longfellow. 

Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul. See 
Chambered Nautilus, The.—Holmes. 

Build up a column to Bolivar. See Bolivar.—Procter. 

“Bunches of grapes,” says Timothy. See Bunches of 
Grapes.-—Ramal. 

Bunny, lying in the grass. See Battle Bunny (Mal¬ 
vern Hill).—Harte. 

Bunyan is almost the only writer that ever gave to the 
abstract. See John Bunyan.—-Macaulay. 

Burg Niedeck is a mountain in Alsace, high and strong. 
See Toy of the Giant’s Child, The.—Chamisso. 

Burgoyne is rushing on in quest of blood. See Defeat 
of Burgoyne, The.—Case. 

Buried to-day. When the soft green buds are burst¬ 
ing out. See Buried To-day.—Craik 

Burley and bluff, in St. John’s vacant place. See Sir 
Robert Walpole.—Bu.w r-Lytton. 

Burley, dozing humble-bee. See Humble-bee, The.— 
Emerson. 

Burn and destroy the idols of party you have wor¬ 
shiped. See same. —Dougherty. 

Burning, burning, burning for ever, by night and day. 
See Glacier Bed, The.—Blake. 

Burning, burning, burning is the sand. See Lost on 
the Desert.—Meyers. 

Burning sands, and isles of palm, and the Mamelukes’ 
fierce array. See Little Jean.—Barr. 

Bury Bgranger! Well, for you. See Burial of B6r- 
anger, The.—-Watts. 

Bury the Great Duke. See Ode on the Death of the 
Duke of Wellington.—Tennyson. 

Busily, busily, to and fro. See Memory-bridges, The. 
Lippmann. 

Business? Well, it hain’t be’n what ye’d call rushin , 
so’s to speak. See Jolly Brick, A.—Phelps. 

Busk ye, busk ye, my bonnie, bonnie bride. See Braes 
of Yarrow, The.—Hamilton. 


627 






Busy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Busy and happy young housewives are we. See Little 
Housekeepers.—Rook. 

“Busy bee! Busy bee!” See Busy Bee, The.—Anon. 

Busy, curious, thirsty fly. See Fly, The.—Oldys. 

Busy lives, like running water, are generally pure. See 
Busy Lives.—Anon. 

Busy-body, busy-body. See To a Honey-Bee.—Cary 

But a revulsion wrought in the brain and bosom of 
Elspie. See bo h.e of Tober-na-Vuoiich, Th 
(F.lspieand Philip).—Clough. 

“But adoration! Give me something more.” See Old 
Coquette, The.—Young. 

But all our praises why should lords engross. See 
Moral Essays (Man of Ross, The).—Pope. 

But all through life I see a cross. See same. —Grange. 

But are ye sure the news is true? See There's Nae 
Luck about the House.—Mickle. 

But as some muskets so contrive it. See McFingal.— 
Trumbull. 

But away and away on the midnight blue. See Flight 
of the Wild Swans, The.—Faber. 

“But by the piper that played before Moses, it’s more 
whipping nor gingerbread.” See Why my Father 
left the Army.—MacCabe. 

But chief at sea, whose every flexile wave. See Sea¬ 
sons, The.—Thomson. 

But chief, surpassing all—a cuckoo clock! See Cuckoo 
Clock, The.—Bowles. 

But do not go—I like to have you near me. See 
Modern Psyche, A.—Hall. 

But do we truly mourn our soldier dead? See For 
Decoration Day.—Hughes. 

Bui Enoch yearned to see her face again. See Enoch 
Arden (At the Window).—Tennyson. 

“But er I bere thee moche ferre.” See Hous of Fame, 
The.—Chaucer. 

But fare you weel, auld Nickie-ben! See Address to 
the Deil (To the Devil).—Burns. 

But flattery never seems absurd. See Painter Who 
Pleased Nobody and Everybody, The.—Gay. 

•But for mine own part, my lord, I could be well con¬ 
tented to be there.” See King H -nry IV.. Pt. I. 
(Hotspur’s Soliloquy on the Contents of a Letter). 
—Shakespeare. 

But for ye speken of such gentillesse. See Canterbury 
Tales (Gentility).—Chaucer. 

But fortune, like some others of her sex. See Fanny 
(Fortune) —Halleck. 

But happy they! The happiest of their kind! See 
Seasons. The (Connubial Life).—-Thomson. 

But hark! A distant sound that grows. See Vision of 
Poe s. A (Children Gathering Palms).—E. B. 
Browning. 

But hark! A rap comes gently to the door. See 
Cotter’s Saturday Night, The.—Burns. 

But hark! Upon the air what bells are pealing? See 
Christmas Chimes, The.—Anon. 

But he, Leander, almost half across. See Hero and 
Leander.—Hunt. 

But heard are the voices. See Past and Present (Heard 
are the Voices).—Carlyle. 

But here the herald of the self-same mouth. See 
Island, The (Sublime Tobacco).—Byron. 

But hush! The voice from the little bed. See 
Tommy’s Death-bed.—Anon. 

But I behold a fearful sign. See Indian’s Prophesy, 
The.—Bryant. 

But I can’t pay the rent this morning. See Soldier’s 
Return, The.—Griffith. 

But I remember, when the fight was done. See K ng 
H< nrv IV., Pt. I. (Hotspur’s Description of a Fop). 
—-Shakespeare. 

“But I say this land is mine—is mine!” See Agnes 
Hotot.—Fobes. 

But I wol turne againe to Ariadne. See Legende of 
Goode Women (Ariadne).—Chaucer. 

But if I live with Idas, then we two. See Marpessa. 
—Phillips. 

But if you would contemplate nationality as an active 
virtue. See American Nationality (National Life). 
—Choate. 

But insincerity is very troublesome to manage. See 
Truth and Integrity.—Tillotson. 

But Justice had no sooner Mercy seen See Christ’s 
Victory in Heaven.—Fletcher. 

But lo! the dome — the vast and wondrous dome. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (St. Peter’s Church at 
Rome).—Byron. 

But look! O’er the fall see the angler stand. See 
Angler, The.—Read. 

“But, mamma, now,” said Charlotte, “pray, don’t you 
believe.” See Vulgar Little Lady, The.— Taylor. 

“But man is higher than his dwelling-place.” See 
same. —Paul. 


"But, Mr. Speaker, we have a right to tax America.’’ 
See Right to Tax America, The.—Burke. 

But more important than the quest of professional 
knowledge. See Temper and Aim of the Scholar, 
The.—Gladstone. 

But north looked the dictator. See Death of Hermin- 
ius.—Macaulay. 

But now our quacks are gamesters, and they play. See 
Borough, The (Quack Medicines).—Crabbe. 

But now the struggle is over; I can survey the field 
and measure the losses. See Voice of Despair, 
The.—Talbot. 

But now the sun had pass’d the height of Heaven. 
See Incremation, The.—Arnold. 

But now while the scapegoats leave our flock. See 
Holy Cross Day.—Browning. 

But of much conver e perhaps. See Paradise Lost — 
Milton. 

But oh, the night! Oh, bitter sweet! Oh, sweet! See 
Au r L gh (Romney and Aurora).—Browning. 

But oh, ’twas hard to have him go. See same. — 
Gardiner. 

But one short week ago the trees were bare. See First 
Spring Day, The.-—Todhunter. 

But, poortith Peggy is the warst of a’. See Gentle 
Sh nhe d. Th (Jenny and Peggy).—Ramsay. 

But scarce again his horn he wound. See Lady of th<» 
Lake, The.—Scott. 

But see—he starts—what heard he then? See 
1 . 11a R o.vh (Gheber’s Bloody Glen, The).— 
Moore. 

But see! Look up—on Flodden bent. See Marmion 
(Battle of Flodden, The).—Scott. 

But see our statesman when the steam is on. See 
Lord John Russell.—fcu.wer-Lytton. 

But she, in response, “Mark yon ship far away ” See 
Lu- I (Parting before Sebastopol, The).—Lytton. 

But, sirrah, henceforth. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
(“But, sirrah,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

But slighted as it is, and by the great. See Task, 
The (Early Love of the Country and of Poetry).— 
Cowper. 

But soft! What light through yonder window breaks 1 
See Romeo and Juliet (Soliloquy of Romeo in the 
Garden).—Shakespeare. 

But some one perhaps may say, “Are you not 
ashamed.” See Plato’s Apology for Socrates.— 
Plato. 

But sometimes these optical instruments. See Grand¬ 
mother’s Spectacles.—Talmage. 

But soon the steeples called good people al! to church. 
See Christmas Carol, A (Bob Cratchit’s Dinner).— 
Dickens. 

But souls that of his own good life partake. See 
Euthanasia.—More. 

But, Susie, you know you are wrong. See Peacemaker, 
A.—Denton. 

But tell us, do you hear whether Antonio have had 
any loss. See Merchant of Venice, The (Shylock 
for the Jews).—Shakespeare. 

But that I am forbid. See Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

But that the soul is noble. See Sphinx.—Lowell. 

But the consul’s brow- was sad. See Horatius at the 
Bridge.—Macaulay. 

But the Deacon swore, as deacons do. See Deacon’s 
Masterpiece, The.—Holmes. 

But the Dutch went and the English came. See First 
English Thanksgiving in New York, The.—Anon. 

But the gentleman inquires why he was made the 
object of such a reply. See Reply to Hayne. The 
(Matches and Overmatches).—Webster. 

But the higher departments of moral and religious 
t hought. See same. —Minton. 

But the majestic river floated on. See Sohrab and 
Rustum (Oxus).—Arnold. 

But the rain is gone by, and the day’s dying out in 
splendour. See Winter Evening.—Tynan-Hink- 
son. 

But then I sigh, and with a piece of scripture. See 
King Richard III.—Shakespeare. 

But then, Sir, the balance of powe 1- ! See Balance of 
Power, The.—Canning. 

But then the thrushes sang. See Aurora Leigh (“But 
then,” etc.).—Browning. 

But there is a limit, both to the necessity and the 
capacity of this power of invention. See same. — 
Minton. 

But there is one in folly farther gone. See Course of 
Time, The (Miser. The).—Pollok. 

But those that write in rhyme still make. See Hudi- 
bras.—Butler. 

But thou, Clitumnus! in thy sweetest wave. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Temple of Clitumnus). 
—Byron. 


628 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


By 


But though the Grekes hem of Troye in shetten. Sec 
Troilus and Criseyde (Troylus and Criseyde).— 
Chaucer. 

But time would fail to attempt to catalogue the grand 
women. See same. —-Livermore. 

But Truth shall conquer at the last. See Triumph of 
Truth.—Mackav. 

But vain the magic lay, the warbling lyre. See 
Stanzas on the Death of Thomas Gray.-—Anon. 

But was it thou—I think. See Heine’s Grave.—Arnold. 

But wele awaye, si is myn herte wo. See De Regimine 
Principum.—Occleve. 

But what makes you think Stella can help you, Grace? 
See Appointment, The.—Denton. 

But what praise couldst thou bestow on a deserving 
woman. See Othello, the Moor of Venice (Act II., 
Sc. 1).—Shakespeare. 

But what the highe God woll spare. See Confessio 
Amantis (Story of Constance, The).—Gower. 

But where to find that haopiest spot below. See 
Traveller, The (BetterCountry, The).—Goldsmith. 

But wherefore do you droop? why look so sad? See 
King John (Exhortation to Courage).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

But wherein shall art work? Shall beauty lead. See 
Art (II.).—Parker. 

But who can speak, what accents can relate. See On 
the Death of Washington.—Dwight. 

But who comes, brushing the floor. See Italy.—Rogers. 

But who the melodies of morn can tell? See Minstrel, 
The (Summer Morn, A).—Beattie. 

“But why do you go?” said the lady. See Lord Walter’s 
Wife.—Browning. 

But William answer’d short. See Dora.—Tennyson. 

But William said, "He don't deserve.” See Battle of 
the Boyne, The.-—Anon. 

But winter has jet brighter scenes—he boasts. See 
Winter.—Bryant. 

But j'esterday he was, and lo! to-day. See Eugene 
Field.—Ham. 

But. yesterday she plaj-ed with childish things. Sec 
Dead Child, The.—Barlow. 

But you don’t laugh, Coldstream! Come man, be 
amu=ed, for once in your life! You don’t laugh. 
See Nothing in It.—Mathews. 

Buttercup nodded and said good-by. See August.— 
Thaxter. 

Buttercup, poppy, forget-me-not. See same. —Field. 

Buttercups and daisies.—»See same. —Howitt. 

Buttercups and daisies in the meadow. See Fairy 
Gold.—Todhunter. 

Buttercups by roads and hedges. See Buttercups.— 
Crocker. 

Butterfly, flutter by. See. To a Butterfly.—Clarke. 

Buy a paper, plaze! She is frozen, almost. See Jerry. 
—Dickinson. 

Buzz, quoth the blue fly. See same.—Jonson. 

Buzz! buzz! buzz! See Song of the Bee, The.—Douglass. 

Buzz! quoth the Blue-fly. See same.—Jonson. 

“Buzz,” said the busy bee; “Buzz,” said the fly. See 
Bee and the Fly, The.—Robinson. 

Buzzing and gay in the early dawn. See Blue-bottle 
Fly, The.—Anon. 

Buzzing, buzzing, buzzing, my golden-belted bees. 
See Bees of Mj^ddelton Manor, The.—Probjm. 

By a clear well, beside a lonely road. See Ministry of 
Hassan, The.—Akers. 

By a clear well, within a little field. See Of Three 
Girls and Their Talk.—Boccaccio. 

By a dim shore, where water darkening. See Reed- 
player, The.—Scott. 

By a fountain where I lay. See Grace of Beauty, The. 
—Dowland. 

By Alpine lake, ’neath shady rock. See A. B, C.—Anon. 

By Alpine road, beneath an old fir-tree. See Edel¬ 
weiss.—Dickinson. 

Bj r ancient legend we are told. See Gray Mare the 
Better Horse, The.—Kavanaugh. 

‘By and By” is a very bad boy. See Little Foes of 
Little Boys.—Anon. 

By Babylon’s still waters we sat down and wept. See 
Patriot’s Cry, The —Carrington. 

By Bary Alle is like the sul. See Song for a Catarrh, 
A. (Punch.) 

By birth I’m a slave, yet can give you a crown. See 
Enigmas, Two.—Prior. 

By broad Potomac’s silent shore. See George Wash¬ 
ington.—Anon. 

By cliffs grown gray, as men grow gray. See River, 
The.—Spencer. 

Bj r Coblentz on a rise of gentle ground. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Death of General Marceau). 
—Byron. 


By cool Siloam’s shady rill. See First Sunday after 
Epiphany.—Heber. 

By copse and hedgerow, waste and wall. See Knap¬ 
weed.—Benson. 

B>- dape is Jodes See Man with a Cold in his Head, 
The.—Anon. 

By dint of much elbowing we made our way into a 
crowded booth. See Adventure, An.—Edwards. 

By efforts of patriotism alone can this great and grow¬ 
ing republic be preserved. See Reverence for 
Law.—Hopkinson. 

By energy I mean application, attention, activity. See 
Energy.—Stephens. 

By every road round Goderville the countrymen with 
their wives. See String, The.—Maupassant. 

By fair Festiniog, ’mid the Northern Hills. See 
Maiden’s Lake, The.—Morris. 

By fair sufferers we mean about ninety-nine out of 
everj r hundred. See Fair Sufferers.—Anon. 

By feathers green, across Casbeen. See Phoenix, The. 
—Benson 

“Bj r hammer and hand all arts do stand. See Honor to 
the Hammer.—( London Economist.) 

By happy chance we saw. See Excursion, The.— 
Wordsworth. 

By heaven! it is a splendid sight to see. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage.—Byron. 

By him lay heavy Sleep, the cousin of Death. See 
Sleep.—Sackville. 

By Jordan’s stream the hosts of Israel paused. See 
Moses on Pisgah.—Wallace. 

By Jove, this room is in a pretty state! See Who Did 
It?—( Boston Post.) 

By little and little, the old man drew back towards the 
inner chamber. See Old Curiosity Shop, The 
(Death of Little Nell).—Dickens. 

By Logan streams that rin sae deep. See Logan 
Braes.—Mayne. 

By memory inspired. See same. —Anon. 

Bj t my troth, Nerissa, my little body is aweary of this 
great world. See Merchant of Venice, The (Collo¬ 
quy between Portia and Nerissa Regarding the 
Suitors).—Shakespeare. 

By mv valor, then. Sir Lucius, forty yards is a good 
distance See Rivals. The (Duel. The).—Sheridan. 

By myself walking. See Hypochondriacus.—Lamb. 

By Nature’s law, what may be, may be now. See 
Night Thoughts (Procrastination).—Young. 

By Nebo’s lonelj' mountain, on this side Jordan’s wave. 
See Burial of Moses, The.—Alexander. 

By night he spread his white rugs down. See Winter’s 
Acrobats.—Sherman. 

By night I am a princess fair. See Nights and Days.— 
Fox. 

By none but me can the tale be told. See White Ship, 
The. -Rossetti. 

By our camp fires rose a murmur. See Battle of 
F ontenoy.—Dowling. 

By some fern-banked mossy stream. See Summer's 
Day, A.—Pier. 

By some mischance—how, none can tell. See Fox and 
the Goat, The.—Kavanaugh. 

By something form’d, I nothing am. See On a 
Shadow in a Glass.—Swift. 

By studj-ing my lady’s eyes. See My Lady’s Eyes.— 
Anon. 

B>' teune Mershe ant Averil. See Alison.—Anon. 

By that lake, whose gloomy shore. See some.- —Moore. 

B> f the banks of Chattanooga, watching with a soldier’s 
heed. See Battle above the Clouds, The.—Brown. 

By the beard of the Prophet the Bashaw swore. See How 
We Burned the “Philadelphia.”—Eastman. 

By the bed the old man, waiting, sat in vigil sad and 
tender. See Old Wife, The.—Brown. 

B>' the blue Patapsco’s billowy dash. See There’s 
Life in the Old Land Yet.-—Randall. 

By the blue taper’s trembling light. See Night-piece 
on Death, A.—Parnell. 

By the delicious warmness of thy mouth. See Gentle 
Shepherd, The (Patie and Peggy).—Ramsay. 

By the early morning light, a woman in the dress of a 
nun. See Romola (Romola and Savonarola).— 
Eliot. 

By the embers so low, in a room dark and dreary. See 
Court of the Year, The.—Whitney. 

By the flow of the inland river. See Blue and the 
Gray, The.—Finch. 

By the foot of old Keeper, beside the bohreen. See 
Fionula.—Le Fanu. 

By the glimmer of green and golden. See Passing 
Year, The.—Anon. 

By the hope within us springing. See Battle, The.— 
Moore. 


C29 






AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


By 


By the imagination I understand that energy. See 
Place of the Imagination in the Art of Expression, 
The.—Behrends. 

By the introduction of Christianity a tribune was 
erected. See Christian Orator, The.—Villemain. 

By the merest chance in the twilight gloom. See What 
My Lover Said.—Greene. 

By the moon we sport and play. See Maydes Meta¬ 
morphosis, The (Song of the Fairies).—Lyly. 

By the next returning spring. See Ode to Miss Carteret, 
The.—Philips. 

By the old Moulmein Pagoda, lookin’ eastward to the 
sea. See Mandalay.—Kipling. 

By the pleasant fire they sat one night. See True 
Worth.—Anon. 

By the rude bridge that arched the flood. See Concord 
Hymn.—Emerson. 

By the shore a plot of ground. See Ruined Chapel, 
The.—Allingham. 

By the shores of Gitchee Gaumee. See Song of 
Hiawatha, The (Hiawatha’s Childhood).—Long¬ 
fellow. 

By the shrouded gleam of the western skies. See 
Keenan’s Charge.—Lathrop. 

By the side of a murmuring stream an elderly gentle¬ 
man sat. See Elderly Gentleman, The.—Canning. 

By the side of all antagonisms, higher than they See 
American Nationality.—Choate. 

By the splendor in the heavens and the hush upon the 
sea. See Das Krist Kindel.—Riley. 

By the still lake margin I saw her lie. See Shelter.— 
Calverley. 

By the time baby was ten months old she had learned 
many things. See Queer Word, A.—Anon. 

By the waters of Life we sat together. See Old Man’s 
Idyl, An.—Realf. 

By the wayside, on a mossy stone. See Old.—Hoyt. 

By thine own soul’s law learn to live. See To Thine 
Own Self be True.—Beatty. 

By this time the piece was reloaded. .See Death of the 
Savage, The.—Cooper. 

By this, lamenting Philomel had ended. See Lucrece. 
—Shakespeare. 

By what law fell King Charles? See Cromwell on the 
Death of Charles the First.—Lytton. 

By yon castle wa’, at the close of the day. See There’ll 
never be Peace till Jamie Comes Hame.—Burns. 

By yonder sandy cove where, every day. See Wounded 
Curlew, The.—Thaxter. 

By-lo, baby-bunting! See Mother Goose Lullabies.— 
Anon. 

c 

C stands for children, who always are ready. See 
Holiday Acrostic, A.—Lloyd. 

Ca’ the yowes to the knowes. See same. —Burns. 

“Ca-a-ash!” calls the Ribbon-clerk in Lacy’s drygoods 
store. See Cash.—Anon. 

Cables entangling her. See Lady at Sea, The.—Hood. 

Cadwalader Fry had a mind to try. See Cadwalader 
Fry and His Theory.—Meyers. 

Csesar sends health to Cato. See Cato (Caesar’s Mes¬ 
sage to Cato).—Addison. 

Caesar’s arms have thrown down all distinction. See 
Cato (Death of Cato).—Addison. 

Call for the robin-redbreast and the wren. See Dirge. 
—Webster. 

Call in the messengers sent from the Dauphin. See 
King Henry V. (Henry V.’s' Audience of French 
Ambassadors).—Shakespeare. 

Call it not vain; they do not err. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel (Poet, The).—Scott. 

Call me, if you will, religion. See Breath of the Spirit, 
The.—Anon. 

Call me no more. See Lachrimse; or, Mirth Turned to 
Mourning.—Herrick. 

Call me not dead when I, indeed, have gone. See 
same. {Scribner’s.) 

Call me not King, but Harold. See Harold.—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Call me their traitor! Thou injurious tribune! See 
Coriolanus (Anger).—Shakespeare. 

Call the watch! Call the watch! See Loss of the 
Hornet, The.—Anon. 

Called by a power they must obey. See Glen Ellis 
Falls.—Longfellow. 

Calling a boy up in the morning can hardly be classed 
under the head of pastimes. See Calling a Boy in 
the Morning.—Bailey. 

Calling, the heron flies athwart the blue. See Creek- 
road, The.—Cawein. 


Calm and still light on yon great plain. See In 
Memoriam (Landscape).—Tennyson. 

Calm as an under-current, strong to draw. See 
William the Third.—Wordsworth. 

Calm as that second summer which precedes. See 
Charleston.—Timrod. 

Calm at his station the bridge-tender stood. See 
Albert Drecker.—Hyatt. 

Calm Death, God of crossed hands and passionless 
eyes. See Death.—Pellew. 

“Calm is now that stormy water—it has learned to 
fear my wrath. See Xerxes at the Hellespont.— 
Trench. 

Calm is the morn, without a sound. See In Memoriam 
(Autumn).—Tennyson. 

Calm me, my God, and keep me calm. See Inner Calm, 
The.—Bonar. 

Calm on the bosom [or spirit] of thy God. See Siege of 
Valencia, The (Dirge, A).—Hemans. 

Calm on the listening ear of night. See Christmas 
Song.—Sears. 

Calme was the day, and through the trembling ayre. 
See Prothalamion.—Spenser. 

Calumniators of Catholicism, have you read the history 
of your country? See On Charges against Roman 
Catholics.—Sheik 

Cam’ ye by Athol, lad wi’ the philabeg. See Bonnie 
Prince Charlie.—Hogg. 

Came, on a Sabbath noon, my sweet. See At Altenahr. 
—Ashe. 

Came the morning of that day. See Sumter.—Stedman. 

Can a little child like me? See We Thank Thee.— 
Dodge. 

Can any mortal mixture of earth’s mould. See Comus 
(Music).—Milton. 

Can any pleasure in life compare? See Old Ace.— 
Brooks. 

Can anybody tell why, when Eve was manufactured 
out of one of Adam’s ribs. See Reason W’hy, 
The.—Anon. 

Can anything be more absurd and untenable than the 
argument of the learned gentleman. See Universal 
Religious Liberty.—O’Connell. 

Can anything be so elegant as to have few wants and 
serve them one’s self. See same. —Emerson. 

Can anything that I have said, Mr. Speaker, subject me 
to be branded. See On an Attempt to Coerce Him 
to Resign.—Pitt. 

Can freckled August—drowsing warm and blonde. See 
Rain-crow, The.—Cawein. 

Can I find something to eat here and lodgings? See 
Intensity.—Anon. 

Can I get breakfast, sir? See Honesty the Best Policy. 
—Anon. 

Can I not sin, but thou wilt be. See To his Conscience. 
—Herrick. 

Can I see another’s woe. See On Another’s Sorrow.— 
Blake. 

Can I see your master? See Imaginary Sick Man, The. 
—Moliere. 

Can I tell you the name of the woman who passed? 
See Mad Marie.—Anon. 

Can T, who have for others oft compiled. See On My 
Dear Son, Gervase Beaumont.—Beaumont. 

Can it be right to give what I can give? See Sonnets 
from the Portuguese, IX.—Browning. 

Can it be that a man like this is dead? See Long¬ 
fellow, Extract Concerning.—Savage. 

Can it be that it is snowing? See May.—Park. 

Can the depths of the ocean afford you not graves. See 
Munster War Song, The.—W’illiams. 

Can you an answer give in rhyme? See Repartee.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Can you count the stars that brightly. See Can You 
Count the Stars? —Anon. 

Can you listen to a heart-thrilling story. See Lotty’s 
Message.—Murdoch. 

Can you put the spider’s web back in place. See 
Questions.—Lawrence. 

Can you read in the heart of a rose, love. See Rose’s 
Message, The.— Abbott. 

Can you see her, O my brother? See Twins in the 
Turret, The.—Bocock. 

Canada, Canada, land of the maple. See Dominion 
Day.—Reade. 

Canopied with shadows and attended by the fair moon. 
See Night and Morning.—Boyd. 

Canst thou count the stars that nightly. See Canst 
Thou Count the Stars?—Anon. 

Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased. See 
Macbeth.—Shakespeare. 

Can’t I teach her? Let me see. See Teaching Dolly to 
Walk.—Anon. 


630 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Children 


“Can’t-do-it” sticks in the mud. See Try.— Anon. 

Canute was by his nobles taught to fancy. See King 
Canute and His Nobles.—Wolcott. 

“Cappen,” said Sam the other day to pa, “have you 
had your pictur’ taken yet? See Slowlys at the 
Photographers, The.—Dallas. 

Captain Graham [or Gray, or Grey! the men were 
sayin’ [or saying]. See Drummer Boy, The.— 
Anon. 

Captain of the Western Wood. See Madrono.—Harte. 

Captain or Colonel, or Knight in arms. See When the 
Assault was Intended to the City.—Milton. 

Captain Sword got up one day See Captain Sword.— 
Hunt. 

Captives to winter’s cruel king. See May-children.— 
Sherman. 

Cardenio’s fortunes ne’er miscarried. See Water- 
cure, The.—Dobson. 

Care keeps its hold with constant clasp. See Chickadee 
The.—Thaxter. 

Care-charmer Sleep, son of the sable Night. See Son¬ 
nets to Delia (Care-charmer Sleep).—Daniel. 

Care-charming sleep, thou easer of all woes. See Val- 
entinian (Care-charming Sleep).—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. 

Carest thou not? O thou that givest life? See same .— 
Anon. 

Careful observers may foretell the hour. See Descrip¬ 
tion of a City Shower, A.—Swift. 

Careless I climbed that path, and just behind. See 
Example.—Hanks. 

Careless seems the great Avenger, history’s pages but 
record. See Present Crisis, The.—Lowell. 

Carol, Carol, Christians. See Christmas Carol.—Coxe. 

Carry him out and put him away. See Last Taps.— 
Roberts. 

"Cars stop twenty minutes!” called our Conductor 
Richardson. See Bessie Kendrick’s Journey.— 
Preston. 

Carthage! O love thee! thou hast run. See Marius 
amidst the Ruins of Carthage.—Praed. 

Carve no stone above her head. See On the Death of 
Mrs. Holland.—Earl. 

Carved by a mighty race, whose vanished hands. See 
Sphinx Speaks, The.—Saltus. 

Carved by an angel in this marble white. See Lines 
Found in the Hand of the Statue of Night at 
Florence in the sixteenth Century.—Strozzi. 

Casey was dying and sent for a lawyer to make his 
will. See Hear him Rave.—Anon. 

Casey’s little boy was one the neighbors didn’t like. 
See Casey’s Little Boy.—Waterman. 

Cast by the bright wings of a seraph—the snow. See 
Response to Beautiful Snow, A.—Hancock. 

Cast on the water by a careless hand. See Cocoa-tree, 
The.—Stoddard. 

“Cast out the beam from thine own eye.” See Dot’s 
Version of the Text.—Kellogg. 

“Cast thy bread upon the water.” See Casting Bread 
upon the Waters.—Goodfellow. 

Castara, weep not, tho’ her tomb appear.— See Castara 
(To Castara. upon the Death of a Lady).—Habing- 
ton. 

Casting our eyes over the history of nations. See True 
Grandeur of Nations, The.—Sumner. 

Caudle, love, do you know. See Caudle’s Wedding- 
day.—Jerrold. 

Caught by an advertising sell. See Mrs. Dove’s 
Boarding-house.—Barber. 

Cavalier music! Shirley Chase. See Shirley Chase.— 
Collins. 

“Cavalry, charge!” Not a man of them shrank. See 
Cavalry Charge, The.-—Lathrop. 

Caw! Caw! Caw! I am a poor old crow. See Caw! 
Caw! Caw!—Carswell. 

"Caw! Caw!” says the crow; “Spring has come 
again I know.” See Spring Voices.—Anon. 

C^ad mile fiiilte! child of the Ithian! See Cead Mile 
Fiiilte, Elim!—Griffin. 

Cean duv deelish, beside the sea. See Cean Duv 
Deelish.—Sigerson. 

Cease, rude Boreas, blustering railer! See Storm, The. 
—Stevens. 

Cease, warring thoughts, and let his brain. See 
Lullaby, A.—Shirley. 

Ceaselessly the weaver, Time. See Weaver, The.— 
Burleigh. 

Celebrate the Arbor Day. See Arbor Day March.— 
Beauchamp. 

Centrick, in London noise. See Elder Brother, The.— 
Colman. 

Centuries ago, on the rock-bound coast of Massachu¬ 
setts. See New England Civilization.—Frye. 


Centuries since there flourished a man. See Bitter 
Sweet (Bluebeard). Holland. 

Ceres, most bounteous lady, thy rich leas. See Tem¬ 
pest, The (Insubstantial Pageant, An).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Certainly, No. 1 Crawlin Place was a dingy abode at 
any time. See They Sang for it.—Anon. 

Chafed and worn with worldly care. See Prayer for 
Saturday Evening.—Anon. 

Channing! My Mentor whilst my thought was young. 
See Channing.—Alcott. 

Chaos, of old, was God’s dominion. See Night.— 
Mifflin. 

Chaplain, I am dying, dying. See Dying Soldier, The. 
—Cox. 

Character is a fortune. See Value of Character.— 
Wood. 

Charity Peekskill was a pretty nice gal. See Heze- 
kiah’s Proposal.—Anon. 

Charles — for it seems you wish to know. See Gage 
d’Amour, A.—Dobson. 

Charles was a very wayward youth. See Charley, the 
Story-t eller.—Anon. 

Charlie, didn’t you say you could make a speech five 
minutes long without any preparation? See 
Charlie’s Speech.—Anon. 

Charm me asleep and melt me so. See To Music, to 
Becalm his Fever.—Herrick. 

Charmed to escort you, I’m sure. See Where Was I?— 
Griffith. 

Charmer, on a given straight line. See Collegian to his 
Bride, The.— {Punch.) 

Charming as is the merry prattle of innocent childhood 
See Papa and the Boy.—Harbour. 

Charming Clorinda, ev’ry note. See Robin Hood, 
Songs fr. —MacNally. 

Charybdis, whirling, roaring, drew. See Charybdis.— 
Bolton. 

Check! I see! See Which Was the Hero?—Graham. 

Check! This ivory symbol of royalty is now defended 
by the castle. See Slang versus Dictionary.—Anon. 

Cheeks as soft as July peaches See Baby May.— 
Bennett. 

“Cheep, cheep,” said some little snow-birds. See 
What the Snow-birds Said.—Anon. 

Cheer up and bear up! Life should be gay. See Cheer 
Up.—Anon. 

Cheered with the view, man went to till the ground 
See Death.—Porteus. 

Cheeriest room, that morn, the kitchen. See Flying 
Jim’s Last Leap.—Banks. 

Cheerily with us that great November morn. See 
Inkerman.—Trench. 

Cherish kindly feelings, children. See Cherish Kindly 
Feelings.—Kidder. 

Cherry pie! Cherry pie! Pie! I cry. See Cherry Pie. 
— (Punch.) 

Cherry Valley’s finest raiment. See When My Cousin 
Comes to Town.—Bourke. 

Cherry-ripe, ripe, ripe, I cry. See Cherry-ripe.— 
Herrick. 

Chicken-skin, delicate, white. See On a Fan.—Dobson. 

Chide mildly the erring. Kind language endears. 
See Chide Mildly the Erring.—Bradbury. 

Chief ot our aunts -—not only I. See To Auntie.— 
Stevenson. 

Chieftains, forego! See Lady of the Lake, The 
(Douglas).—Scott. 

Child, amidst the flowers at play. See Hour of Prayer, 
The.—Hemans. 

Child Dyring has ridden him up under oe. See Child 
Dyring.—Scott. 

Child, I warn thee in all wise. See Svmon’s Lesson of 
Wisdom for all Manner of Children.—Symon. 

Child in thy beauty, empress in thy pride. See Budget 
of Paradoxes, A.—Martley. 

Child, is thy father dead? See Song.—Elliott. 

Child of a day, thou knowest not. See Child of a Day 
—Landor. 

Child of sin and sorrow. See Exhortation.—Hastings. 

Child of the later days, thy words have broken. See 
Answer of “Belzoni’s” Mummy.—Anon. 

Child of the sun! pursue thy rapturous flight. See To 
the Butterfly.— Rogers. 

Child Waters in his stable stood. See Child Waters.— 
Anon. 

Child, weary of thy baubles of to-day. See Human 
Plan, The.—Crandall. 

Child with the hungry eyes. See Beggars.—Higginson. 

Childe Maurice was a handsome young man. See 
Childe Maurice.—Anon. 

Children are what the mothers are. See Children.— 
Landor. 


631 







Children 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Children, behold the Chimpanzee. See Chimpanzee, 
The.— Herford. 

Children, do not talk about each other. See Do Not 
Tattle.—White. 

Children, do you ever. See My Other Me.—Litchfield. 

Childien, do you hear the music. See Message for the 
Children, A.-—Denton. 

Children, do you know the story. See Our First 
Thanksgiving Day.— (Youth’s Companion.) 

Children, do you love each other? See Golden Rule, 
The.—Anon. 

Children, do you see the wine. See Touch it Never.— 
Anon. 

Children, have you seen the budding? See Forest 
Trees.—Anon. 

Children, I want to see if you can tell me why children 
and all others should not only be temperate? See 
Reasons Why.—Anon. 

Children indeed are we—children that wait. See We 
Are Children.—Buchanan. 

Children, keep up that harmless play. See Children 
Playing in a Churchyard.—Landor. 

Children love to hear of children! See Story by the 
Fire, A.—Greenwell. 

Children love to listen to stories. See Dream Children: 
A Reverie.—Lamb. 

Children of the Heavenly King. See same.- —Cennick. 

“Children should be seen and not heard.” See Harry’s 
Lecture.—Rook. 

Children, thank God for these great trees. See 
Children, Thank God.—Anon. 

Children, that lay their pretty garlands by.— See 
Resigning.—C'raik. 

Children, we are having a nice time this afternoon. 
See Alice’s Party.—Doolittle. 

Children, what becomes of the pins. See Pins.—Anon. 

Children, who read my lay. See Short Sermon,A.—Cary. 

Children, you are very little. See Good and Bad 
Children.—Stevenson. 

Chill the winter, cold the wind. See Solace in Winter. 
—Sigerson. 

Chilly Dovebber with its boadigg blast. See Belag- 
cholly Days.—Anon. 

Chime! Chime! The bells are tolling for matin 
service. See Annunciata.—Fanton. 

Chiming a dream by the way. See I Met a Maiden 
To-day.—Henley. 

“Chirp! Chipper! Twitter! Trill!” See Choosing a 
Building Spot.—Braddock. 

Chisel in hand stood a [or the] sculptor boy. See Life 
Sculpture.—Doane. 

“Chivalry is dead among us.” See Story of George Lee. 
—Aide. 

Chloe, we must not always be in heaven. See To 
C'hloe.—W olcott. 

Chloe, what brings you here?—Quick, let me know. 
See Outlaw, The.—Joy. 

Chloe, why wish you that your years. See To Chloe. 
—Cartwright. 

Chloe’s a Nymph in flowery groves. See Chloe Divine. 
—D’Urfey. 

Chloris, yourself you so excel. See To Chloris.— 
Waller. 

Choose the darkest part o’ the grove. See GSdipus 
(Incantation).—Dryden. 

Choose yo’ pardners, time’s er-flying. See Nicker- 
demus Quadrille.— ( Texas Siftings.) 

Christ died for all: and on the hearts of all. See 
Christmas Outcasts.—( New York Sun.) 

Christ, efter his glorious Ascentioun. See Monarchic, 
The.—I.yndesay. 

Christ fits his ministers through manifold experience 
of sorrow and pain. See same. —Taylor. 

Christ God, who savest man, save most. See Count 
Gismond.-—Browning. 

Christ of Judea, look Thou in my heart. See Credo. 
—Gilder. 

Christ the Lord is risen to-day. See Easter Hymn.— 
Charles Wesley. 

Christ to the young man said: "Yet one thing more.” 
See Hymn for My Brother’s Ordination.—Long¬ 
fellow. 

Christ was born upon this night. See Christmas Eve. 
—(London Public Opinion.) 

Christ was many ages in advance of the world. See 
same. —Swing. 

Christian earnestness in life. See Earnest Views of 
Life.—Phelps. 

Christianity is strong in its unity, strong in its simpli¬ 
city. See same. —Anon. 

Christianity is the true conserving and developing 
power. See True Power of a Nation, The.— 
Chapin. 


Christianity now stirs men’s thoughts more than ever. 
See same. —Anon. 

Christians, awake, salute the happy morn. See 
Christmas Carol.—Byron. 

Christians, do not expect that the apostle will flatter. 
See Eulogium upon St. Paul.—Bossuet. 

Christina; maiden of heroic mien! See To Christina 
of Sweden.—Milton. 

“Christine! May we come in and see you tonight, 
Christine?” See Almost a Tragedy.—Thaxter. 

Christmas again! How swiftly Time rolls by! See 
Christmas Again.—Anon. 

Christmas Eve everywhere but on the West End. See 
“Bucks.”—Spearman. 

Christmas Eve! What magic there is in the very 
sound of those two words! See Little Charlie’s 
Christmas.—Anon. 

Christmas is bounded on the north by Happiness. See 
Christmas Bounded.—Anon. 

Christmas is here; winds whistle shrill. See Mahogany- 
tree, The.—Thackeray. 

Christmas joys are more complete. See Christmas 
Good-night, A.—Denton. 

Christmas knows a merry, merry place. See Wassail 
Chorus at the Mermaid Tavern.—Watts-Dunton. 

Christmas morning sees Mrs. Timothy Brady on her 
unsteady way. See Mrs. Brady’s Conundrum.— 
Anon. 

Christmas, New Year, the Fourth of July. See Thanks¬ 
giving Dinner, A.—Stephens. 

Christmas, the one universal holiday of the world. See 
Through the Loopholes.—Harryman. 

Christmas time has come again. See At Christmas 
Time.—Denton. 

Christmus cornin’, Christmus cornin’. See Christmus 
Cornin’.—Anon. 

Christopher, Christopher! Where art thou? See From 
the Old World to the New.—Hadley. 

Christopher Columbus—or, in his native tongue, 
Christofero Colombo. See Columbus.—Dana. 

Church of the living God! in vain thy foes. See same. 
—Garrison. 

Cider I will not sip. See Children’s Vow, The.—Wil¬ 
cox. 

Circling on high, in cloudless sky. See On the Plains. 
—Brooks. 

Citizens of a great, free, and prosperous country. See 
Centennial Celebration of Concord Fight (Minute- 
men of ’75, The).—Curtis. 

Citizens—The foreigner is about to inflict on France 
the most cruel injury. See Prussian Armistice, 
The.—Gambetta. 

Citizens, this is the twenty-first of September. See 
New Republic, The.—Gambetta. 

City about whose brow the north winds blow. See 
Ottawa.—Scott. 

City of God, how broad and far. See City of God, The. 
—Johnson. 

City of God! Jerusalem. See Crucifixion, The.— 
—Croly. 

City of God, oh, how bright and how fair. See 
Heavenly Foundations.—Gaylord. 

Clang, clang! the massive anvils ring. See Song of the 
Forge, The.—Anon. 

Clang! There’s a call for engine “K.” See Fire!— 
Flowers. 

Clanging, dinging, slowly swinging. See Curfew 
Chimes, The.—Collins. 

Clarissa laughs, I plead in vain. See Clarissa Laughs. 
—Milne. 

Classmates, this is Arbor day, and we mean to plant 
a tree. See Choosing a Tree.—Benedict. 

Classmates, we stand with sublime connections with 
the past. See Ivy Oration (I.).—Anon. 

Clear and cool, clear and cool. See Water Babies, 
The (Song of the River).—Kingsley. 

Clear Ankor, on whose silver-sanded shore. See To 
the River Ankor.—Drayton. 

Clear as the silver call. See Christmas Carol.—Anon. 

Clear had the day been from the dawn. See Fine Day, 
A.—Drayton. 

Clear, placid Leman! thy contrasted lake. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Night and Tempest).— 
Byron. 

Clear the brown path, to meet his coulter’s gleam. See 
Plowman, The.—Holmes. 

Clem Berry, a negro who was formerly a stage runner 
in Virginia City. See He Woke the Dead.—Anon. 

Clemont was whiling the hours away. See Clemont’s 
Day Dream.—Richards. 

Cleon hath a million acres. See Cleon and I.—Mackay. 

Cleopatra, who thought they maligned her. See same. 
—Mackintosh. 


632 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Come 


Clergymen while speaking in the pulpit. See same. 
—Swing. 

Clerk Colvill and his lusty dame. See Clerk Colvill; 
or. The Mermaid.—Anon. 

Clerk Saunders and May Margaret. See Clerk Saun¬ 
ders.—Anon. 

Click, click, click. See Song of the Type.—Anon. 

Climb the old tower, watchman. See Old Man’s Ship 
Comes Home, The.—Brown. 

Climb to my knee, little boy, little boy. See Sunset 
Land.—Lincoln. 

Climbin’ the Mesa Grande. See Jim, Arizona, 1885.— 
Lummis. 

Climbing the Pincian Hill’s long slope. See Little 
Assunta.—Thaxter. 

Climbing up the hillside beneath the summer stars. 
See Man in Nature.—Thayer. 

Clime of the brave! the high heart’s home. See New 
England.—Prentice. 

Clime of the unforgotten brave! See Giaour, The 
(Greece).—Byron. 

Cling to thy home! if there the meanest shed. See 
Home.—Leonidas. 

Clink—clink—clink! goes our windlass. See Outward 
Bound.—Allingham. 

Clink, clink, fill up your glasses. See Toast, A.— 
Stone. 

Clippity-clip! clippity-clip! O, we will take a jolly trip! 
See Merry Journey, A.—Kavanaugh. 

Close beside the river Hudson stood a fortress large 
and strong. See Mad Anthony’s Charge.—• 
Easton. 

Close by his banner, William the Conqueror pitched 
his pavilion. See Harold (Search for Harold’s 
Body, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Close by the threshold of a door nail’d fast. See 
Colubriad, The.—Cowper. 

Close by those meads, for ever crown’d with flowers. 
See Rape of the Lock (Age of Queen Anne, The). 
—Pope. 

Close his eyes, his work is done! See Dirge for a 
Soldier.—Boker. 

Close on the edge of a midsummer dawn. See Shadow 
of the Night, A.—Aldrich. 

“Close up in front, and steady, lads!” See Death of 
Burnaby, The.—Cockin. 

Close up the ledger, Time! See Reckoning with the 
Old Year.—Foxwell. 

Close your gates, O priests of Janus! close your brazen 
temple gates! See Caractacus.—Duganne. 

Closer, closer, let us knit. See Pleasure at Home.— 
Anon. 

“Closing with the Doxology in long meter,” said the 
minister. See Church Scene, A.-—Anon. 

Clothed in purple and fine linen, Princess Imra from 
her tower. See Princess Imra and the Goatherd. 
—Banks. 

Clothed with state, and girt with might. See Psalm 
XCIIL—Sidney. 

Clouds drave along across the trembling sky. See 
Grant.—Gunsaulus. 

Cloudy argosies are drifting down into the purple 
dark. See Silent Land, The.—McLean. 

Cloven with shovel and with hoe, pierced by axes and 
by spades. See Ramayana (Descent of the Gan¬ 
ges, The).—Milman. 

Clowns are capering in motley, drums are beating, 
trumpets blown. See Curtain Falls, The.— 
Verey. 

Cocking his tail, a saucy prig. See Pig and the Magpie, 
The.—Pindar. 

Coesper erat; tunc lubriciles ultravia circum. See 
Mors Iabrochii.—Anon. 

Cold blew the wind along the street. See What a 
Christmas Carol Did.—Harcourt. 

Cold Care and I have run a race. See Apple Blossoms. 
—Phelps. 

“Cold,” cried the wind on the hill. See Cold.— 
Roberts. 

Cold in the earth—and the deep snow piled above 
thee. See Remembrance.—Bronte. 

Cold on the lawn the dewdrops lie. See November.— 
A. J. F. 

Cold! so cold! and the night looks down. See De¬ 
serted.—Anon. 

Cold winter ice is fled and gone. See Summer.—Anon. 

“Cold winter is over.” See All Happy in Spring.— 
Richards. 

Colder grow my hands and feet. See Bertha in the 
Lane.—E. B. Browning. 

Coldly, sadly descends. See Rugby Chapel.—Arnold. 

Cold’s the wind, and wet’s the rain. See Shoemaker’s 
Holiday, The (Troll the Bowl!).—Dekker. 


Collisions four. See Epitaph on a Locomotive. 
-— {Punch.) 

Colonel Arden, who has come to town. See Pursuit 
of Legal Advice under Difficulties, a Family 
Scene, The.—Hook. 

Colonel Hooper’s business had kept him in Badger City. 
See Colonel’s Experiment, The.—Lisenbee. 

Col. James Dinwiddie was known as the courtliest 
gentleman.—See Ole Mistis.—Moore. 

Colonel Quagg and his anvil were, one April evening, 
in fierce dispute about a red-hot horseshoe. See 
Conversion of Colonel Quagg.—Sala. 

Col. Will Middleby, who has just returned from the 
Indian Territory. See Only Five Minutes to 
Live.—( Arkansas Traveler.*) 

Colonos! can it be that thou hast still. See Colonos.— 
Alford. 

Columbia beside the ocean stands. See Where Colum¬ 
bia Stands.—Hall. 

Columbia, Columbia, to glory arise. See Columbia.— 
Dwight. 

Columbia! first and fairest gem. See Columbia.— 
Gilmore. 

Columbia’s shores are wild and wide. See Columbia.— 
Chapman. 

Columbus came to thee and called thee new! See 
America.—Straton. 

Columbus, on his rolling bark, surveyed the distant 
land. See Columbian Legend. A.—Mason. 

Columbus stood upon the deck. See How Columbus 
Found America.—Dodge. 

“Combien m’aimez-vous?” See Tit for Tat.—Anon. 

“Come a little nearer, doctor—thank you!—let me 
take the cup.” See Old Sergeant, The.—Willson. 

Come about the meadow. See What May Happen to 
a Thimble.—“B.” 

Come, all who love a merry jest, and listen while I tell. 
See Squire’s Bargain, The.—Traquair. 

Come, all ye Christian people, and listen to my tail. 
See Lamentable Ballad of the Foundling of Shore¬ 
ditch, The.—Thackeray. 

Come, all ye jolly sailors bold. See Arethusa, The.— 
Hoare. 

Come, all ye jolly shepherds. See When the Kye 
Come Hame.—-Hogg. 

Come all ye who list to hear our noble England’s 
praise. See Spanish Armada, The.—Macaulay. 

Come all ye Yankee sailors, with swords and pikes ad¬ 
vance. See “Constellation” and the “Insurgente.” 
The.—Anon. 

Come, all you sailors of the southern waters. See 
Phantoms All.—SpofTord. 

Come along, dad. See Restless Youth, The.—Anon. 

“Come and fight,” said the pale young gentleman. 
See Pip’s Fight.—Dickens. 

Come and kiss me, mistress beauty. See Charles II.— 
Sladen. 

Come and let me make thee glad. See Builder, The. 
—Sherman. 

Come and see my baby dear. See Doctor’s Visit. 
—Anon. 

“Come and sit beside me, Elsie—put your little wheel 
away.” See Elsie’s Child.—Dorr. 

Come, Anthea, let us two. See Wake, The.—Herrick. 

Come, arouse thee up, my gallant horse, and bear 
thv rider on. See Song of the Cossack to His 
Horse.—Beranger. 

Come as artist, come as guest. See Welcome to Boz, 
A.—Venable. 

Come as the winds come when forests are rended. 
See Pibroch of Donald Dhu (Summons, The).— 
Scott. 

Come, away, away! See Julius Caesar.—Shakespeare. 

Come away! bring on the bride. See Little French 
Lawyer, The (Bridal Song).—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. 

Come away, come away, death. See Twelfth Night; 
or, What you Will (Dirge).—Shakespeare. 

Come away! come, sweet love! See same. —Dowland. 

Come back and bring my life again. See Come Back. 
—Herbert. 

Come back, come back, behold with straining mast. 
See Songs in Absence (Come Back).—Clough. 

Come back, come back together. See Little Red 
Riding Hood.—Landon. 

Come back to us, dear little Lady Disdain. See To 
Millicent Abroad.—Sanborn. 

Come back to your mother, ye children, for shame. 
See City Men in the Country.—Holmes. 

Come, bring with a noise. See Ceremonies for Christ¬ 
mas.—Herrick. 

Come, brother, turn with me from pining thought. 
See Soul, The.—Dana. 


633 






Come 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Come, brothers! rally for the right! See Bonnie Blue 
Flag, The.— Ketchum. 

Come, buy my dolls, my pretty dolls. See Buy my 
Dolls.—Anon. 

Come cats and kittens everywhere. See Elegy on De 
Marsay.—Stephen. 

Come, cheerful day, part of my life to me. See Sic 
Transit.—Campion. 

Come, cheerily, men, pile on the rails. See Stone¬ 
wall Jackson’s Way.—Palmer. 

Come, child, and see our pet raccoon. See Raccoon, The. 
—Anon. 

Come, children, and listen; I’ll tell you in rhyme. See 
Which Side are You On? —(Our Youth.) 

Come, children, dear, and listen to me. See Fox and 
Geese.—Ford. 

Come, come away! the spring. See Merry Beggars, 
The.—Brome. 

Come, come, Mister Peacock, you must not be proud. 
See Peacock, The.—Anon. 

‘Come, come,” said Tom’s father, “at your time of 
life.” See On Taking a Wife.—Moore. 

Come, come, you must have another cup, with just a 
flavor o’ gin. See Mrs. Jones’ Lodger.—Coller. 

Come, Corporal Joe! See At the Camp-fire. — 
Meader. 

Come cuddle close in daddy’s coat. See Fairy Folk, 
The.—Bird. 

Come, cuddle your head on my shoulder, dear. See 
Beautiful Land of Nod, The.—Wilcox. 

Come dance, elfins, dance; for my harp is in tune. 
See same. —Anon. 

Come, dear children, let us away. See Forsaken Mer¬ 
man, The. Arnold. 

Come, dear old comrade, you and I. See Bill and Joe. 
—Holmes. 

Come dine with me, come dine with me. See Mutton 
Chops.— (Punch.) 

Come, Dolly Toodlekins, I’m going to take your picture. 
See Taking Dolly’s Picture.—Goodfellow. 

Come! don’t refuse sweet Nicotina’s aid. See Motto 
for a Tobacco Jar.—Anon. 

Come down from the heights, my bird. See Warble 
Thy Lays to Me.—Yule. 

Come down, O maid, from yonder mountain height. 
See Princess, The (Come Down, O Maid).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Come down to our house, I have something to show 
you. See My Baby Brother.—Howard. 

Come down, ye graybeard mariners. See Cry from 
the Shore, A.—Cortissoz. 

Come, draw your arm-chair closer, wife, there’s some¬ 
thin’ I’ve got to say. See Day before Thanks¬ 
giving, The.—Pixley. 

Come drink to the toast that I give ye. See Toast, The. 
—Marsh. 

Come, Eddie, let’s play go to church. See Playing 
Church.—Anon. 

Come erlong, you blessed baby. See Mammy Gets 
the Boy to Sleep.—Jones. 

Come, fair maiden, to my snow-sledge. See Kalevala, 
The (Wooing of the Maid of Beauty).—Crawford. 

Come, Father of the Hamlet! grasp again. See Ex¬ 
cursion to the Mountains, An.—Elliott. 

Come! fill a fresh bumper—for why should we go. See 
Ode for a Social Meeting.—Holmes. 

Come fleetly, come fleetly, my hookabadar. See Cos- 
simbazar.—-Leigh. 

Come, follow, follow me. See Fairy Queen, The.— 
Anon. 

Come for arbutus, my dear, my dear. See Come for 
Arbutus.—Oberholtzer. 

Come! for thy day, thy wasted day, is closing. See 
same. —Anon. 

Come forth, all ye blossoms' See West Wind.— 
Sylva. 

‘Come forth!” my catbird calls to me. See Nightin¬ 
gale in the Study, The.—Lowell. 

Come from my First—ay come! the battle dawn is nigh. 
See Charade on the Name of Campbell, the Poet.— 
Praed. 

Come from the woods with the citron flowers. See 
Bride of the Greek Isle, The.—Hemans. 

Come, gather round me, children. See Story of a Black¬ 
bird.—Cary. 

Come, gather round, my boys, to-night. See Siege of 
the Alamo.—Saxon. 

Come, gentle sleep! attend thy votary’s prayer. See 
Sleep.—W olcott. 

Come, gentle spring! ethereal mildness, come. See 
Seasons, The (Spring).—Thomson. 

Come, gentle spring! ethereal mildness, come! See 
Spring. A New Version.—Hood. 


Come gie’s a sang, Montgomery cried. See Tulloch- 
gorum.—Skinner. 

Come girls, let’s have a doll’s party. See Bound Girl, 
The.—Anon. 

Come, golden evening, in the west. See Evening in 
the Alps.—Montgomery. 

Come, good-night, my dolly dear. See Dolly’s Bed¬ 
time.—Anon. 

Come, happy morn, serene and fair. See Christmas 
Morn.—Bishop. 

Come, Harvey, let us sit awhile and talk about the 
times. See Our Whippings.—Field. 

Come hea an’ put dis apron on. See Afore yo’ Daddy 
Comes.—Mitchell. 

Come, hear how brave old Columbus. See Ideal India, 
The.—Ryman. 

Come, hearken, lassies, to my voice. See Good Advice. 
—Rook. 

Come here, come here, and dwell. See Song of Wood- 
nymphs.—Procter. 

Come here! come here! cousin Mary and see. See 
Peach Blossoms.—Gould. 

Come here, good people, great and small, that wander 
far abroad. See My Bath.—Blackie. 

Come here, little Robin, and don’t be afraid. See 
Come here. Little Robin.—Anon. 

“Come here, my boy, hould up your head.” See Irish 
Schoolmaster, The.—Sidney. 

Come here, my sleepy darling, and climb upon my knee. 
See On the Road to Dreamtown.—Rexford. 

Come here, pet, and sit down by the fire! See Petti¬ 
coat Government.—Chapman. 

Come here. Sis, and sit down beside me. See This 
Means You, Girls.— (Peck’s Sun.) 

“Come here, thou worthy of a world of praise.” See 
Odyssey, The (Song the Sirens Sung, The).— 
Homer. 

Come here, you lazy, good for nothing boy. See 
Every-day occurrence, An.—Smith. 

Come here, you nignoramus! See Dolly’s Lesson. 
— (Youth’s Companion.) 

Come hither, all sweet maidens soberly. See On a 
Picture of Leander.—Keats. 

Come hither and behold this lady’s face. See Laura 
Sleeping.—Moulton. 

Come hither and listen; a tale I’ll relate. See Apple 
Seed. The—Webb. 

Come hither, boy, we’ll hunt to-day. See Bookworm, 
The.—Beza. 

Come hither, come hither, and view the face. See 
Spring Morning.—Moir. 

Come hither, Evan Cameron! See Execution of Mont¬ 
rose. The.—Aytoun. 

Come hither, Hubert ! O my gentle Hubert. See 
King John (Dialogue between King John and 
Hubert).—Shakespeare. 

Come hither, lads, and hearken. See Day is Coming, 
The.—Morris. 

Come hither, lyttel childe, and lie upon rpy breast to¬ 
night. See Medieval Eventide Song.—Field. 

Come hither, Marco, I would ask. See Four Queens, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

Come hither, my heart’s darling. See Husband’s Peti¬ 
tion, The.—Aytoun. 

Come hither, my Wither. See Sultan of My Books, 
The.—Gosse. 

Come hither, neighbor Seacoal. See Much Ado about 
Nothing.—Shakespeare. 

Come hither, shepherd’s swain! See Fancy and De¬ 
sire.—Oxford. 

Come hither, Sleep, from Chio’s isle! See Mother’s Song, 
The.—M’Kenzie. 

Come hither toward me, my handmaidens. See Our 
Country’s Wealth.—Rook. 

“Come hither, you madcap darling!” I said to my four- 
year-old. See Lesson of Obedience, The.—Banks. 

Come, hoist the sail, the fast let go! See Pleasure- 
boat, The.—Dana. 

Come, Holy Ghost, our souls inspire. See Veni Creator 
Spiritus.— (Tr. by) Dryden. 

Come, Holy Ghost! thou fire divine! See Veni Sancte 
Spiritus.—Robert II. 

Come, Holy Spirit, Heavenly Dove. See same. —Watts 

Come home! Why wilt thou linger in the scenes of earth. 
See Spirit’s Call, The.—Anon. 

Come, Howard, from the gloom of the prison and the 
taint of the lazar-house. See same. —Chapin. 

Come, hurry there! mind, waste no time! See Mag¬ 
dalen.—Wakeman. 

Come! hurry up, Jim; don’t you see the moon is coming 
out? See Saved.—Joy. 

“Come in, come in, sir; it’s blowin’ a perfect gale to¬ 
night.” See Hard Times.—Anon. 


634 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Come 


Come in. Deacon Tompkins; your duty has led you to 
call here, you say. See Deacon’s Call, The.— 
Kimball. 

Come in. Hallo, Tom! you’re just the fellow. See 
Choosing a Declamation.—Anon. 

Come in, honey; how yo’ do? See Auntie’s Educa¬ 
tion.-—McNabb. 

Come in, O Judy, is it you? See Mrs. Wright’s Con¬ 
versation with her Irish Acquaintance.—Anon. 

Come in the evening, or come in the morning. See 
Welcome, The.—Davis. 

Come! in this cool retreat. See New Zealand Regret, 
A.—Montgomery. 

Come into great-grandmother’s garden, my dears. 
See Great-grandmother’s Garden.—Jacques. 

Come into the garden, Maud. See Maud (“Come 
into,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

Come, John, sit down by me, it frets my soul. See 
Failure.—Quiet. 

“Come, Johnnie Miller, tak these doggies.” See Child 
is Father to the Man, The.—Bigg. 

‘Come kiss me sweet sun,” the violet said. See Sun 
and the Violet, The.—Petit. 

Come, lassies and lads, take leave of your dads. See 
May-pole, The.—Anon. 

Come learn with me the fatal song. See Woodnotes 
(Mighty Heart, The).-—Emerson. 

Come, leave the loathed stage. See Ode to Himself.— 
Jonson. 

Come, let us now resolve at least. See Reconcilement, 
The.—Sheffield. 

Come, let us plant the apple-tree. See Planting of the 
Apple-tree, The.—Bryant. 

Come, let us ponder; it is fit. See “Poveri! Poveris!” 
—Miller. 

Come, let us reason; heed what we say. See Paving 
the Streets.-—McVean. 

Come, let us rejoice. See Siege of Savannah, The. 
—( Rivington’s Gazette.) 

Come, let us to the castle. See Othello, the Moor of 
V enice.—Shakespeare. 

Come, let’s begin to revel it out. See Revels.—Anon. 

Come, list and hark. See Rape of Lucrece, The (Song 
of the Bell).—Heywood. 

Come, listen all unto my song. See How Cyrus Laid 
the Cable.—Saxe. 

Come, listen all, while I relate. See Farmer’s Well, 
The.—Anon. 

Come, listen all who wish to learn. See Idees Napo- 
leoniennes.—-Aytoun. 

Come, listen, little boys and girls, while I a tale relate. 
See Once.—Lampton. 

Come, listen, my men, while I tell you again. See 
Hunting of the Snark, The.—Carroll. 

Come listen, O Love, to the voice of the dove. See 
Voice of the Dove, The.—Miller. 

Come listen to another song. See Old Scottish Cava¬ 
lier, The.—Aytoun. 

Come listen to me, you gallants so free. See Robin 
Hood and Allen-a-Dale.—Anon. 

Come, listen to my song, it is no silly fable. (JFr.) 
See How Cyrus Laid the Cable.—Saxe. 

Come; listen to my story, while. See Nets and Cages. 
—Moore. 

Come listen to the Story of brave Lathrop and his Men. 
See Lamentable Ballad of the Bloody Brook, The. 
—Hale. 

Come listen, you newcomers. See Inkerman.—Lush- 
ington. 

Come, little babe, come silly soul. See Sweet Lullaby, 
A.—Breton. (?) 

Come, little children, come with me. See Easy Les¬ 
sons.—Cary. 

Come, little infant, love me now. See Young Love.— 
Marvell. 

“Come, little leaves,” said the wind one day. See 
Wind and the Leaves, The.—Cooper. 

Come, little people, and listen here. See Santa and 
His Reindeer.—Anon. 

Come, live with me, and be my love. See Bait, The. 
—Donne. 

Come live with me and be my love. See Passionate 
Shepherd to His Love, The.—Marlowe. 

Come, look out here, Louise and Kate. See Cousin 
Bell’s Visit.—Anon. 

Come, lovely and soothing Death. See Death Carol. 
—Whitman. 

Come, lovely tube, by friendship blest. See To a Pipe 
of Tobacco.—( Gentleman’s Magazine.) 

Come, mamma, tie on my hood, it is time to go to 
school. See How Daisy Went to School.—Anon. 

Come, Micky and Molly and dainty Dolly. See Flitch 
of Dunmow, The.—Southesk. 


Come, mother, set the kettle on. See How Jamie 
Came Home.—Carleton. 

Come, my Celia, let us prove. See Venetian Song.— 
Jonson. 

Come, my friend, and in the silence and the shadow 
wrapt apart. See Christine.—Read. 

Come, my lad, and sit beside me; we have often talked 
before. See Story of a Stowaway, The.—Scott. 

Come, my little one, with me. See Shut-eye Train, 
The.—Field. 

Come, my little Robert, near. See Cleanliness.— 
Lamb. 

Come, my Mignonne, let us go. See Rose, The.— 
Ronsard. 

Come, my way, my truth, my life. See Call, The.— 
Herbert. 

Come, my wife, put down the Bible. See Lost Babies, 
The.—Anon. 

Come nearer, my spotted leopard, and cool with your 
tongue my hand. See Cleopatra’s Protest.— 
Keyes. 

Come not again! I dwell with you. See Flown Soul, 
The.—Lathrop. 

Come not in terrors clad, to claim. See To Death.— 
Southey. 

Come not, when I am dead. See same. —Tennyson. 

Come, now a roundel, and a fairy song. See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream (Fairies’ Lullaby, The).— 
Shakespeare. 

Come, now, my incredulous friends. See Triumph of 
F aith.-—Buckminster. 

Come, O thou Traveler unknown. See Wrestling 
Jacob.—W esley. 

Come o’er the sea. See same. —Moore. 

Come, oh come! in pious lays. See Psalm cxlviii.— 
Wither. 

Come on, Cobe, there’s light a plenty. See Fishin’.— 
Arkwright. 

Come on, come on, and where you go. See Pleasure 
Reconciled to Virtue (ls< song). —Jonson. 

Come on. come on; yon are pictures out of doors. See 
Othello, the Moor of Venice.—Shakespeare. 

Come on, Frank, don’t sit poring over that old paper. 
See “Making an Orator.”—Denton. 

Come on, Ned, let’s play in the parlor. See Keeping 
House.—Anon. 

Come on, sir, here’s the place—stand still. See King 
Lear (Dover Cliffs).—Shakespeare. 

Come, on thy swaying feet. See Spirit of the Fall, 
The.*— Dandridge. 

Come one, come all, this rock shall fly. See Fitz- 
James’s Defiance.—Scott. 

“Come out and hear the waters shoot, the owlet hoot, 
the owlet hoot.” See Apprenticed.-—Ingelow. 

Come out here, George Burks. Put that glass down. 
See Sim’s Little Girl.-—Hartwell. 

Come out in the garden and walk with me. See Last 
Talk, The.—Anon. 

Come out, love—the night is enchanting! See Come 
Out, Love.—Willis. 

Come over, come over the river to me. See Charlie 
Machree.—Hoppin. 

Come, pensive Nun, devout and pure. See II Pen- 
seroso.—Milton. 

Come, Pepita, Phyllis, Griselda, Jeannette. See May 
Day.—Burdette. 

Come, Phyllis, the reign of the winter is past. See 
March.—Burdette. 

Come pitie us, all ye who see. See Dirge for Dorcas.— 
Herrick. 

Come plant the Oak, the grand old Oak. See Plant the 
Oak.—McMullen. 

Come, play in my garden! See Manitou’s Garden.— 
Larcom. 

Come! pledge again thy heart and hand. See Song 
for July 12th, 1S43.—Frazer. 

Come, poet, come! See same.—Clough. 

Come, raise we a Temple of purpose divine. See Help¬ 
less Gray Head, The.—Jerrold. 

Come, rest in this bosom, my own stricken deer. See 
Come, Rest in this Bosom.—Moore. 

Come right in an’ set down. I was jest wishin’ I had 
somebody to talk to. See Sally Ann’s Experi¬ 
ence.—Hall. 

“Come right in. How are you, Fred?” See Idyl of 
the Period, An.—Baker. 

Come right in, Susv dear, you need not be afraid of 
old Hector. See Genteel and Polite.—McCon- 
aughy. 

Come, Robert and Henry, come, Lily and May! See 
Nutting.—Anon. 

“Come, Rosy, come!” I heard the voice and looked. 
See Crazy Nell.—Whitton. 


635 






Come 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Come, rosy Day! See Love Song of Henri Quatre, A. 
—Arnold. 

Come, said Jesus’ sacred voice. See Come unto Me.— 
Barbauld. 

Come, see the Dolphins’ anchor forged—’tis at a white 
heat now. See Forging of the Anchor, The.— 
Ferguson. 

Come, seeling night. See Macbeth (Night).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Come, send round the wine, and leave points of belief. 
See Come, Send Round the Wine.—Moore. 

Come, seniors, come, and fill your pipes. See Cannon 
Song.—Peck. 

Come, shepherds, we’ll follow the hearse. See Cory- 
don, a Pastoral.—Cunningham. 

Come, sign the pledge! O thou whose hand. See 
Come, Sign the Pledge.—Frazer. 

Come, Silence, thou sweet reasoner. See Silence.— 
Morse. 

Come sing, come sing, of the great Sea-king. See Sea- 
king, The.—Procter. 

Come, Sir Dandelion, so old and gray. See Sir Dande¬ 
lion.—Goodfellow. 

Come sit close by my side, my darling. See Diamond 
Wedding, The.—Anon. 

Come, sit down by me, Charlie. See Who Works the 
Hardest ?—Anon. 

Come, Sleep, and with thy sweet deceiving. See 
Invocation to Sleep.—Fletcher. 

Come, Sleep! but mind ye! if you come. See To 
Sleep.—Landor. 

Come, sleep, O sleep! the certain knot of peace. See 
Astrophel and Stella, Sonnet XXXIX.—Sidney. 

Come, soldiers, arouse ye! See Dead Comrade, The.— 
Gilder. 

Come, sons of summer, by whose toil. See Hock-cart 
or Harvest Home, The.—Herrick. 

Come, spur away. See Ode to Master Anthony Staf¬ 
ford, An.—Randolph. 

Come, stack arms, men; pile on the rails. See Stone¬ 
wall Jackson’s Way.—Palmer. 

Come, stand we here within this cactus-brake. See 
Sicilian Night, A.—Lefroy. 

Come, sweet lass. See Come, Sweet Lass.—D’Urfey. 

“Come, take up your hats, and away let us haste.” 
See Butterfly’s Ball, The.—Roscoe. 

Come, tell me dearest mother, what makes my father 
stay? See Sorrowful Lamentation of Callaghan, 
Greally, and Mullen.—Anon. 

Come, tell us the name of the rebelly erew. See 
Patriot Mother, The.—Anon. 

Come, then, a song; a winding gentle song. See Tor- 
rismond (In a Garden by Moonlight).—-Beddoes. 

Come, then, as ever, like the wind at morning! See 
Invocation to Youth.—Binyon. 

Come then, my friend! my genius! come along. See 
Essay on Man, An (Poet’s Friend, The).—Pope. 

Come, then, tell me, sage divine. See On a Sermon 
against Glory.—Akenside. 

Come, then, tobacco, new-found friend. See Ode to 
Tobacco.—W ebster. 

Come, Thou Fount of every blessing. See same. — 
Robinson. 

Come, thou goddess far and free. See L’Allegro.— 
Milton. 

Come, thou monarch of the vine. See Antony and 
Cleopatra (“Come, thou,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

Come thou, my oftimes sadly labored muse. See 
Arbor Day Poem.—Pride. 

Come thou, who art the wine and wit. See His Wind¬ 
ing Sheet.—Herrick. 

Come to Licoo! the sun is riding. See Song of the 
Tonga-Islanders.—Anon. 

Come to me, angel of the weary hearted! See To 
Sleep.—Osgood. 

Come to me, dearest [or darling], I’m lonely without 
thee. See Exile to His Wife, The.—Brennan. 

Come to me in my dreams and then. See Longing.— 
Arnold. 

Come to me in the silence of the night. See Echo.— 
Rossetti. 

Come to me, O my meerschaum. See Meerschaum.— 
Wrongfellow. 

Come to me, O my mother! come to me. See Home¬ 
sick.—Gray. 

Come to mv home in the wildwood. See My Home 
in the Wildwood.-—-Anon. 

Come to the bridal chamber, Death. See Patriot’s 
Death. The.—Halleck. 

Come to the crowning of the King. See ’Sixty-four 
and ’Sixty-five.—Anon. 

Come to the forest, the bright sun is shining. See 
Come to the Forest.—Anon. 


Come to the home of the friendly mosquito. See 
Delights of Camp-life.—Anon. 

Come to the river’s reedy shore. See River Song.— 
Sanborn. 

Come to the scenes of peace. See same. —Bowles. 

Come to the terrace, May—the sun is low. See Sonnet 
in Dialogue, A.—Dobson. 

Come unto these yellow sands. See Tempest, The 
(Ariel’s Songs).—Shakespeare. 

Come up from the fields, father; here’s a letter from 
our Pete. See Come up from the Fields, Father. 
—Whitman. 

Come up here, O dusty feet! See Fairy Bread.— 
Stevenson. 

“Come, wake up!” said the Snowdrop. See Snow¬ 
drop’s Call, The.—Richards. 

Come walk with me along this willowed lane. See 
May.—Cornwell. 

Come! walk with the world and go down to the desti¬ 
tute homes of the poor. See Charity.—Straton. 

Come, Walter Savage Landor, come this way. See 
Landor.—Albee. 

Come, we shepherds, who have seen. See Hymn of 
the Nativity, A.—Crashaw. 

Come, we shepherds, whose blest sight. See At Beth¬ 
lehem.—Crashaw. 

Come, when no graver cares employ. See To the Rev. 
F. D. Maurice.—Tennyson. 

Come when the leaf comes, angle with me. See 
Angler’s Invitation, The.—Stoddart. 

Come when the ray of early morn is glowing. See 
“Come unto Me.”—Benson. 

Come while the afternoon of May. See Expectation.— 
Wratislaw. 

Come! Why, halloa, that you, Jack? See Legend of 
St. Valentine, A.—Baker. 

“Come, wife,” says good old Farmer Gray. See 
Under the Wagon.—Anon. 

Come, will you join our Band of Hope? See Dialogue 
for Bands of Hope.—Crocker. 

Come, Winnie, come; the clock strikes eight. See 
Frog Story, A.—Anon. 

Come with a smile, when come thou must. See Angel 
Death, The.—Winter. 

Come with me, lady fair. See Barcarole.—E. G. B. 

Come with me, my friends, a moment more. See 
Against the Fugitive Slave Law.—Parker. 

Come, worthy Greek! Ulysses, come. See Ulysses and 
the Siren.—Daniel. 

Come, ye disconsolate, where’re ye languish. See 
Come, Ye Disconsolate.—Moore. 

Come, ye lofty, come, ye lowly. See Come, Ye Lofty. 
—Gurney. 

Come, ye thankful people, come. See Thanksgiving 
Hymn.—Alford. 

Come ye unto the summer woods. See Summer 
Woods.—Howitt. 

Come, ye sinners, poor and wretched. See Come, and 
Welcome, to Jesus Christ.—Hart. 

Come, young folks all, and learn my rhyme. See List 
of Our Presidents, A.—( Youth’s Companion.) 

Comes a cry from Cuban water. See Cuba Libre.— 
Miller. 

Comes little Maud, and stands by my knee. See My 
Lost Baby.—Anon. 

Comes something down with eventide. See Eventide 
-—Burbidge. 

Comes the lure of green things growing. See Afoot.— 
Roberts. 

Cometh sunshine after rain. See Joy after Sorrow.— 
Gerhardt. 

Comfort one another. See same. —Sangster. 

Comfort thee, O thou mourner, yet awhile! See To 
the Sister of “Elia.”—Landor. 

Comfortably ensconsed in a settee at the railroad sta¬ 
tion. See It Was All a Mistake.—Anon. 

Coming, clean from the Maryland-end. See Told by 
“The Noted Traveler.”—Riley. 

Coming, coming always! See Rags and Robes.— 
Whitney. 

Coming down Twelfth Street, yesterday, we met Jacob 
Schneider. See Dot Surprise Party.—Anon. 

Coming home from my office. See Burial of the Cat, 
The.—Hutchinson. 

Coming to Jesus is the desire of the heart after Him. 
See same. —Hall. 

Commencement Day! All hail the one great college 
holiday! See Commencement Day.—Porter. 

Commend me to the friend that comes. See Friend of 
My Heart, The.—Anon. 

Commerce and industry are the best mines of a nation. 
See Original Maxims of George Washington.— 
Washington. 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Crabbed 


Common sense was eminently a characteristic of 
Washington. See Character of Washington, The. 
—Everett. 

Companion of my lonely hours. See Old Pipe of 
Mine.—Gormley. 

Compel, me, Lord, to bear Thy Cross! See Simon’s 
Burden.—Terry. 

Complexion like the winter snow. See Hymns An¬ 
cient and Modern.—Raymond. 

Comrade, will you give me a lift? See Joseph II. and 
the Grenadier.—Anon. 

Comrades, fill the banquet cup. See Banquet Song, A. 
—Grover. 

Comrades! join the flag of glory. See same. —Anon. 

Comrades known in marches many. See Song of the 
Soldiers.—H alpine. 

Comrades, leave me here a little, while as yet ’tis early 
morn. See Locksley Hall.—Tennyson. 

Comrades of the Grand Army of the Republic. See 
To the Grand Army of the Republic.—Reed. 

Comrades, our ranks are getting thin, our numbers less 
arid iess. See Our Ranks are Getting Thin.— 
Eissenbeis. 

Condemn’d to Hope’s delusive mine. See On the 
Death of Mr. Robert Levett, a Practiser in Physic. 
—Johnson. 

Conductor Bradley (always may his name). See 
Conductor Bradley.—Whittier. 

Confederates, listen to the words which God. See 
William Tell (Address to the Swiss).—Schiller. 

Congreve! the justest glory of our age! See To Mr. 
Congreve.—Toilet. 

Conn’s master, the young Irish nobleman. See 
Shaugraun, The (O’Kelley Cabin, The).—Bouci- 
cault. 

Conscript Fathers, a camp is pitched against the 
Roman Republic. See First Oration against 
Catiline (Against Catiline).—Cicero. 

Conscript Fathers: I do not rise to waste the night in 
words. See Catiline (Catiline’s Defiance).—Croly. 

Consider, for a moment, what it is to cast a vote. See 
Ballot, The.—Chapin. 

Consider how large a portion speech makes up. See 
Idle Words.—Peabody. 

Consider our Constitution. Dwell long upon its cost. 
See Our Constitution.—Bolton. 

Consider the lilies of the field, whose bloom is brief. 
See Consider.—Rossetti. 

Consider the scene and the matchless heroism. See 
Trenton’s Cheer to the Caliope, The.—Anon. 

Consider the sea’s listless chime. See Sea-limits, The. 
—Rossetti. 

Consolers of the solitary hours. See Consolers, The.— 
S. G. W. 

Contemplate all this work of time. See Contemplate 
all this work.—Tennyson. 

Content! the good, the golden mean. See Content.— 
Anon. 

Contented I: then will I sing his laye. See Shep- 
heardes Calendar, The (April: Colin’s Lay of 
Elisa).—Spenser. 

Contented river! in thy dreamy realm. See To the 
Housatonic at Stockbridge.—Johnson. 

Contrast, O men of Athens, your conduct with that of 
your ancestors. See Philippics (Degeneracy of 
Athens, The).—Demosthenes. 

Contrive me, Vulcan, such a cup. See Bowl, The.— 
Wilmot. 

Conversation calls into light. See Conversation.— 
Anon. 

“Coo! Coo! Coo!” says Arn&, calling the doves at 
Mendon. See Doves at Mendon, The.—Dorr. 

Cooks who’d roast a sucking-pig. See Poetical Cook¬ 
ery-book, The (Roasted Sucking-pig).— (Punch.) 

Cool, and palm-shaded from the torrid heat. See 
Pipe-player, The.—Gosse. 

Cooper, whose name is with his country’s woven. See 
To a Portrait of Red Jacket.—Halleck. 

Cope sent a challenge frae Dunbar. See Johnnie Cope. 
—Skirving. 

Cora, come here. See Generosity.—Anon. 

Corn in the big crib, and money in the pocket. See 
Toast, A: “Peace and Plenty.”—Anon. 

Corns are two kinds, vegetable and animal. See 
School-boy on Corns, A.—Anon. 

Cornwallis led a country dance. See Dance, The.— 
Anon. 

“Corporal Green!” the orderly cried. See Roll-call.— 
Shepherd. 

Corrected and revised the Ten Commandments. See 
Bill of Items, A.—Anon. 

Corydon, arise, my Corydon. See Phillida’s Love- 
call.—Ignoto. 


Cospatrick has sent o’er the faem. See Cospatrick.— 
Anon. 

Could anything be a subject of more just alarm to 
America. See Speech on American Taxation.— 
Burke. 

Could but this be brought into your ken. See To a 
Writer of the Day (Technique).—Mitchell. 

Could I call around me in one vast assembly the tem¬ 
perate young men. See Appeal to Young Men.— 
Beecher. 

Could I command, with voice or pen. See Charity.— 
Montgomery. 

Could I have borne it? I often think. See Could I 
Have Borne It?—Dustin. 

“Could I have only a few pesos to pay for lessons.” 
See Offering for Cuba, An.—Bell. 

Could I obtain a hearing of the young men and young 
women who thus seek the city. See same. —- 
Beecher. 

Could I pass those lounging sentries. See Death-bed 
of Bomba, King of Naples.— (Punch.) 

Could love for ever. Nee Stanzas: ‘‘Could love,” etc. 
—Byron. 

Could she come back who has been dead so long. See 
Vingtaine (Separation).—Bunner. 

Could we but draw back the curtains. See If We 
Knew.—Anon. 

Could we but know the land that ends our dark, uncer¬ 
tain travel. See Undiscovered Country, The.— 
Stedman. 

Could ye come back to me, Douglas, Douglas. See Too 
Late.—Craik. 

Could you have heard the kingfisher scream and scold 
at me. See Kingfisher, The.—Thaxter. 

Could you have seen the violets. See Daisy.—Warren. 

Couldst thou, Great Fairy, give to me. See Pines, 
The.—SpofFord. 

Couldst thou look as dear as when. See One Dear 
Smile.—Moore. 

Count each affliction, whether light or grave. Nee 
Sorrow.—De Vere. 

Count Geierflug, the brightest minister of the realm, 
had breathed his last. See Humming Top, The. 
—Anon. 

Count Ludwig rode through the forest deep. See 
Count Ludwig and the Wood-spirit.—Craik. 

Count me over the chosen heroes of this earth. See 
Heroes.—Gough. 

Count not thy life by calendars; for years. See Long 
Life.-—Kennedy. 

Count the flashes in the surf. See Song for Music.— 
Gosse. 

Countess, I see the flying year. See To My Mistress.— 
Locker-Lampson. 

Countless ages ago a Traveler, much worn with journey¬ 
ing. See Traveler and the Temple of Knowledge, 
The.—Harraden. 

Countrymen and Brethren—I would gladly have de¬ 
clined an honor to which I find myself unequal. 
See American Independence.—Adams. 

Courage and hope, true heart! See Message of the 
Snowdrop, The.—-Anon. 

Courage, brave heart, nor in thy purpose falter. See 
To Those Who Fail.—Barlow. 

Courage, brother! do not stumble. See Trust in God. 
—Macleod. 

Courage, considered in itself or without reference to 
its causes. See Courage.—Channing. 

“Courage!” he said, and pointed toward the land. See 
Lotos-eaters, The.—Tennyson. 

Courage is one and the same thing everywhere. See 
Heroic Courage.—Brooks. 

Courage is universally recognized as the manliest of all 
human attributes. See Courage.—Porter. 

Courage, man; the hurt can not be much. See 
Romeo and Juliet.—Shakespeare. 

Courage! Nothing can withstand. See Courage.— 
Procter. 

Courage—the highest gift that scorns to bend. See 
Courage.—Farquhar. 

Courteous Reader—I have heard that nothing gives 
an author so great pleasure. See Way to Wealth, 
The.—Franklin. 

Courting iz a luxury, it iz sallad, it iz ise water, it iz a 
beveridge. See Courting.—Shaw. 

“Cousin Edward, what do these scientists mean ” See 
Astronomical.— (Daily Graphic.) 

Cover them over with beautiful flowers. See Cover 
Them Over.—Carleton. 

Coward—of heroic size. See Grizzly.—Harte. 

Cowards most insolent appear. See Wolf and the Kid, 
The.—Anon. 

Crabbed age and youth. See same. —Shakespeare. 


637 









Crack 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Crack! Crick! Cra-ack! Confound them! See Jas¬ 
mine Flower, The.—Saint-Juirs. 

Crackle and blaze. See Winter Song, A.—Bennett. 

Cradled in the camp, Bonaparte was to the last hour. 
See Napoleon Bonaparte (Analysis of the Char¬ 
acter of Bonaparte).—Phillips. 

Cradled within the arms of night. See By the Fire¬ 
light.—Ascher. 

Cranks, my son, the world is full of them. See Word 
of Cranks.—Anon. 

Creation sleeps. ’Tis as the general pulse. See 
Night Thoughts (Time’s Midnight Voice).— 
Young. 

Creator Spirit, by whose aid. See Veni Creator 
[Spiritual.—Dryden. 

Creep into thy narrow bed. See Last Word, The.— 
Arnold. 

Cries little Miss Fret. See Miss Laugh and Miss Fret. 
—Anon. 

Crimson clover I discover. See Clover.—Goodale. 

Crimson sunset burning o’er the tree-fringed hills. 
See Why the Cows Came Late.—Hoynton. 

Crimson-colored, fresh and fragrant were thy leaves 
long years ago. See To a Rose.—Ransom. 

Crimsoning the woodlands dumb and hoary. See 
Transfiguration.—Piatt. 

Crisp and hard lay the snow beneath. See “Three’s a 
Crowd.”—(Fassar Miscellany.) 

Criticism is neither hostility nor scorn. See Right 
Standard, The.—Winter. 

Critics are like a kind of flies, that breed. See Critics. 
—Butler. 

Crom Cruach and his sub-gods twelve. See Burial of 
King Cormac, The.—Ferguson. 

Cromwell, I did not. think to shed a tear. See King 
Henry VIII. (Wolsey’s Farewell to Cromwell).— 
Shakespeare. 

Cromwell, our chief of men, who, through a cloud. See 
To the Lord General Cromwell.—Milton. 

Cross-eyed cats don’t live on cheese. See Think it 
Over.—That cher. 

Crouched about each other closely, measuring each 
glance morosely. See Cobra, The.—Hageman. 

Crouching low, but not with fear. See Thief on the 
Cross, The.—-Vickers. 

Crouching on the icy pavement. See Little Dot.— 
Anon. 

Crow, you’re very wicked! See Lecture to the Crow, 
A.—-Anon. 

Crowded into the long benches of the court room. See 
Reasonable Doubt, A.—Bushnell. 

Crowned monarch by sunlight and lichens gray. See 
In the Rock.—Sargent. 

Crush the dead leaves under thy feet. See same. — 
Anon. 

Cuckoo: Cuckoo! Cuckoo! Cuckoo! See Parrot and 
the Cuckoo, The.—Anon. 

Cupid abroad was ’lated in the night. See Sonnet. 
—Greene. 

Cupid and my Campaspe played. See Campaspe 
(Apelles’ Song).—Lyly- 

Cupid, as he lay among. See Wounded Cupid, The.— 
Herrick. 

Cupid laughs, nor seems to care. See Wish, A.— 
A. 

Cupid’s bow is lying broken. See O Mores! — 
Thomas. 

Curious, the ways of these folk of humble and hardy 
condition. See Dorothy (Country Kisses).— 
Munby. 

Curly Locks! Curly Locks! wilt thou be mine? See 
Curly Locks.—Riley. 

Curly-haired Carl! Were a blithesomer mate. See 
Carl.—Anon. 

Curse on these taxes—one succeeds another. See Wat 
Tyler.—Southey. 

Cursed be the verse, how well soe’er it flow. See 
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot (Scandal).—Pope. 

Cursed by the gods and crowned with shame. See 
Wife of Loki, The.—Elliot. 

Cushions gay on every chair. See Cushions.—Anon. 

Cut off even in the blossoms of my sin. See Hamlet. 
—Shakespeare. 

“Cut the cables!” the order read. See “Cut the 
Cables.”—Wilson. 

“Cynthia! Cynthia! won’t you tell us a story?” See 
Mr. Slocum.—Church. 

Cynthia, to thy power and thee. See Maid’s Tragedy, 
The (Bridal Song).—Fletcher. 

Cyriack, this three years’ day these eyes, tho’ clear. 
See To Cyriack Skinner (1655).—Milton. 

Cyriack, whose grandsire, on the royal bench. See To 
Cyriack Skinner (1656).—Milton. 


D 

Da monka not feel ver’ well in Newa Yorka. See 
Monk’s Adventures, The.—Kerr. 

Daddy! Daddy! What d’yer think! See Christmas 
Star, The.—Wilson. 

Daddy Flick was a queer old Dick. See Daddy 
Flick’s Spree.—Proudfit. 

Daddy Neptune one day, to Freedom did say. See 
Tight Little Island, The.—Dibdin. 

Daffy-down-dilly came up in the cold. See Brave 
Little Flower, The.—Warner. 

Daft Jean. See Daft Jean.—Dobell. 

Daily living seemeth weary. See Duty.—Sheldon. 

Daily the fishers’ sails drift out. See Beside the Sea. 
—Higginson. 

Daily the sun swung above the rounded dome of 
Mount Carbon to the east. See Death of Little 
Hacket.—Denison. 

Dainty little maiden, whither would ye wander? See 
City Child, The.—Tennyson. 

Dainty little stockings hanging in a row. See Christ¬ 
mas.—( The Nursery.) 

Dainty maid, fair maid, your name I fain would know. 
See Mystery, A.—Metcalfe. 

Dainty pussy willows. See Pussy Willow, The.— 
Anon. 

Daisies, bright daisies, keep nodding at me. See 
Daisy, The.—Rude. 

Daisy is “the eye of day.” See Daisy.—Newman. 

Daisy time has come again. See Daisy Time.—For¬ 
rester. 

Damaris Brown is a wooden doll. See Damaris Brown. 
— (.Youth’s Companion.) 

Damascus is the oldest city in the world. See Innocents 
Abroad (Damascus).—Clemens. 

Dame Hickory, Dame Hickory. See Dame Hickory. 
—Ramal. 

“Dame, how the moments go.” See Bride’s Toilette, 
The.—Cortissoz. 

Dame Justice, weighting long the doubtful right. See 
Lawyers and Laws.—Pope. 

Dame Nature gives a party. See Nature’s Party.— 
Coddington. 

Dame Nature once in godlike mood. See Nature’s 
Poem.—Palmer. 

Dame Nature ordered every bird and beast. See 
Thistle and the Rose, The (Dame Nature Crowns 
the Scottish Lion King of Beasts).—Dunbar. 

Dame Nature years and years ago. See Marigolds.— 
Hartley. 

Damon come drive my flocks this way. See Clorinda 
and Damon.—Marvell. 

Dan Phaethon—so the histories run. See Phaethon; 
or, The Amateur Coachman.—Saxe. 

Dance, little leaflets, dance. See Leaflets, The.— 
Brown. 

Dance to the beat of the rain, little Fern. See Fern 
Song.—Tabb. 

Dancer of air. See Humming-bird, The.—Clarke. 

Dancing, tripping, light as air. See La Vesuviana.— 
Webb. 

Dangerous rocks, which touching but my gentle ves¬ 
sels. See Merchant of Venice, The.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Daniel Doogan has this day lodged information. See 
Seizure, The.—Brown. 

Daniel, have you ever thought about getting married? 
See Beer Drinker’s Courtship, A.—McBride. 

Daniel Webster needs no monument of bronze. See 
Webster the Successor of Washington.—Bing¬ 
ham. 

Dan’l wuz- er good Christyun man wat lived in de 
Bible. See Uncle Bob’s Story of Daniel.— 
Anon. 

Dans l’aleove sombre. See L’ange Qui Veille.— 
Hugo. 

Daphnis is mute, and hidden nymphs complain. See 
Theocritus.—Egan. 

Dar! shet yo’ black eyes. Sambo! See Sambo’s Lul¬ 
laby.—Anon. 

Dar was singin’, dar was dancin’, in de cabins long ago. 
See Old Slave’s Lament, The.—Anon. 

Dar wuz a hous’ by itself in an ole fiel’. See De 
Preacher and de Hants.—Hayne. 

Darby, dear, we are old and gray. See Darby and 
Joan.—Weatherly. 

Dare forsake what you deem wrong. See Dare.— 
Anon. 

Dare to be honest, good, and sincere. See Dare to Do 
Right.—Anon. 

Dare to be right! See same. —Anon. 


638 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Dead 


Dare you haunt our hallowed green? See Fairies’ 
Dance, The.—Anon. 

Darest thou now, O soul. See same. —Whitman. 

Dark and dreary was the night. See Potato Bug, A.— 
Anon. 

Dark angel, with thine aching lust. See Dark Angel, 
The.—Johnson. 

Dark as the clouds of even. See Black Regiment, The. 
•—Boker. 

Dark brown is the river. See Where go the Boats?— 
Stevenson. 

Dark, dark is the night; not a star in the sky. See 
Sinking of the Ships, The.—Collison. 

Dark, deep, and cold the current flows. See Plaint.— 
Elliott. 

Dark fell the night, the watch was set. See Alfred the 
Harper.—Sterling. 

Dark is the night! how dark! no light, no fire. See 
Gambler’s Wife, The.—Coates. 

Dark Lily without blame. See Scot to Jeanne d’Arc, 
A.—Lang. 

Dark the day, but bright the heart. See same .— 
Goodale. 

Dark, thinned, beside the wall of stone. See In Time 
of Grief.—Reese. 

Dark to me is the earth. Dark to me are the heavens. 
See Desolate City, The.—Blunt. 

Dark tresses made rich with all treasures. See “Pop- 
pcea.”—Mulvaney. 

Darkening the azure roof of Nero’s world. See Do- 
mine, Quo Vadis?—-Watson. 

Darkness and death? Nay, Pioneer, for thee. See 
Walt Whitman.—Williams. 

Darkness closed upon the country and upon the town. 
See History of the United States (Revolutionary 
Alarm. The).—Bancroft. 

Darkness has settled down in the shadowy Wyoming 
Valley. See Ray’s Ride.—King. 

Darkness is thinning; shadows are retreating. See 
Darkness is Thinning.—St. Gregory. 

Darkness was deepening o’er the seas, and still the 
hulk drove on. See Beacon Light, The.—Pardoe. 

“Darling,” he said, “I never meant.” See Two 
Truths.—Jackson. 

Darlings of the forest! See Trailing Arbutus, The.— 
Cooke. 

Dar’s a grave on de oder side ob de creek. See “Yal- 
ler” Dog’s Love for a Nigger, A.—Thatcher. 

“Dar’s bressing in baptizing drops.” See Daddy 
Worthless.—Champney. 

Dar’s er mighty se’us question dat de folkses can’t 
decide. See Uncle Nathan’s Creed.—Anon. 

Dar’st thou, Cassius, now. See Julius Csesar.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Dat ole Aun’ Tempy—she wot live. See Conjure 
Woman, The.—Anon. 

Dat war a trick our C’lumbus played. You’s heered 
hit, haint you, now? See Our C’lumbus.— 
Meyers. 

Dat’s de cutes’ pickaninny. See Dat Yaller Gown.— 
Turner. 

Daughter of Egypt, veil thine eyes. See Song: 
“Daughter of Egypt,” etc.—Taylor. 

Daughter of God! that sitt’st- on high. See Ode to 
Peace.—Tennant. 

Daughter of Jove, relentless power. See Hymn to 
Adversity.—Gray. 

Daughter of Venice, fairer than the moon! See To an 
Old Venetian Wine-glass.—Mifflin. 

Daughter to that good Earl, once President. See To 
the Lady Margaret Ley.—Milton. 

Daughters of Time, the hypocritic Days. See Days.— 
Emerson. 

Dave was a coward and every one knew it. See Cow¬ 
ard, The.—Matthews. 

David and his three captains bold. See David in the 
Cave of Adullam.—Lamb. 

David Drummond’s destiny. See Weary Coble o’ 
Cargill, The.—Anon. 

Dawn lingers silent in the shade of night. See Play¬ 
mate Hours, The.—Higginson. 

Dawn of a pleasant morning in May. See Lee to the 
Rear.—Thompson. 

Day and night my thoughts incline. See Jar, The.— 
Stoddard. 

Day after day her nest she moulded. See Swallow s 
Nest, The.—Arnold. 

Day after day. week after week, from dawn of morn¬ 
ing to near eve. See Through the Dark Forest. 
Stanley. _ . , . , , , , 

Day by day the Organ-builder in his lonely chamber 
wrought. See Legend of the Organ-builder, The. 
—Dorr. 


Day dawned;—within a curtained room. See History 
of a Life.—Procter. 

Day! Faster and more fast. See Pippa Passes (New 
Year’s Day at Asolo).—Browning. 

Day has awakened all things that be. See Daybreak. 
—Shelley. 

Day hath put on his jacket, and around. See Even¬ 
ing.—Holmes. 

Day, in melting purple dying. See Song of Egla.— 
Brooks. 

Day is dead, and let us sleep. See Day is Dead.— 
Webster. 

Day is dying! Float, O song. See Spanish Gypsy, 
The (Day is Dying).—Eliot. 

Day is dying in the west. See Dying Day, The.— 
Lathbury. 

Day, like our souls, is fiercely dark. See Battle Song. 
—Elli tt. 

Day of glory! welcome day! See “Fourth of July.”— 
Pierpont. 

Day of my life! Where can she get? See “Good¬ 
night, Babette!”—Dobson. 

Day of vengeance, without morrow! See Dies Irse. 
—Celano (Dix). 

Day of wrath, O day of mourning! See Dies Irse. 
—Celano (Irons). 

Day of wrath, that day of burning. See Dies Irse. 
—Celano (Coles). 

Day set on Norham’s castled steep. See Marmion 
(Norham Castle).—Scott. 

Day was breaking, when at the altar of the temple 
stood. See Leper, The.—Willis. 

Day will return with a fresher boon. Se Song of 
Faith, A.—Holland. 

Day with dewy eve was blending. See Taken On 
Trial.—Barlow. 

Days of absence, sad and dreary. See Days of Ab¬ 
sence.—Rousseau. 

Days of my youth. See same. —Tucker. 

Day-stars! that ope your eyes with [or at] morn to 
twinkle [or that ope your frownless eyes to twin¬ 
kle]. See Hymn to the Flowers.—Smith. 

Dazzled thus with height of place. See Upon the 
Sudden Restraint of the Earl of Somerset, then 
Falling from Favor.—Wotton. 

D’clar’, Miss Dixie beat ’em all. See Old-time Break¬ 
down, An.—Kavanaugh. 

“De Bruce! I rose with purpose dread.” See Lord of 
the Isle, The (Abbot’s Blessing on the Bruce, 
The).—Scott. 

De cloud is scattered all away. See Uncle Ned’s 
Banjo Song.—Anon. 

De door on de latch, and nobody at home. See Bones’ 
Dream.—Anon. 

De gray owl sing fum de chimbly top. See Plantation 
Ditty, A.—Stanton. 

De man he killed vasn’t killed at all. See Charge of 
a Dutch Magistrate.—Anon. 

De massa of de sheepfol’. See De Sheepfol’.—Greene. 

“De mortuis nil nisi bonum.” When. See Written 
on the Night of his Suicide (Vale).—Realf. 

De night’s a-comin’ on, honey. See De Tired Pickan- 
ninny’s Star-song.—Baillie. 

De night-time cornin’ an’ de daylight scootin’. See 
Evening Song on the Plantation.—Macon. 

De place T get born, me, is up on the reever. See 
Habitant, The.—Drummond. 

De room wha’r de squire’s co’t sat was packed to 
suffication. See Why Uncle Ben Back-slid.— 
Bingham. 

“De soun’ of a hoss-fiddle,” says Brudder Gardiner. 
See Brudder Gardiner on Music.—Anon. 

De stars is shinin’out de sky de brightes’ eber seen. 
See Uncle Gabe at the Corn-shucking.—Macon. 

De tex,’ my b’lubbed bred’rin. See Discontented 
Leader, The.—Kathrina. 

De times is mighty stirrin’ ’mong de people up ouah 
way. See How Lucy Backslid.—Dunbar. 

De Zion Chu’ch has had anudder racket in de folk 
See New Deacon, The.—Whipple. 

Deacon Giles was a man who loved money. See 
Deacon Giles’s Distillery.—Cheever. 

Deacon Grimes called the other day upon Mrs. Butter- 
wick. See Butterwick’s Weakness.—Anon. 

Deacon Smith’s wagon stopped one morning before 
Widow Jones’ door. See Buying a Cow.— 
Anon. 

Dead beneath the stars he lay. See Dead Astronomer, 
The.—Chapin. 

Dead! dead! And now before. See Sir John A. Mac¬ 
Donald.—Bengough. 

Dead! dead! in sooth his marble brow is cold. See 
Dean Stanley.—Hayne. 


639 







Dead 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dead! dead in the fulness of his manly strength. See 
“No Saloons up There.”—( Baltimore Methodist.) 

“Dead!” did you say? “I had not heard.” See 
Glance Backward, A.—Blanchard. 

Dead heat and windless air. See August Weather. 
—Tynan-H inkson. 

Dead is Columba, the world’s arch. See Saint Columba. 
—Johnson. 

Dead, is he—in a pauper’s bed. See Roadside Preacher, 
The.—Larcom. 

“Dead!” is it possible? He, the bold rider. See Cus¬ 
ter’s Last Charge.-—Whittaker. 

Dead is the roll of the drums. See Abraham Lincoln. 
—Brownell. 

“Dead on the field of honor!” This, too, is the record 
of thousands of unnamed men. See Dead on the 
Field of Honor.—Chapin. 

Dead! one of them shot by the sea in the east. See 
Mother and Poet.—Browning. 

Dead Princess, living Power, if that, which lived. See 
To the Princess Alice.-—Tennyson. 

Dead. The dead year is lying at my feet. See New 
Year’s Eve—Midnight.—Macdonald. 

Dead was Gerard the fair, the girl-mouthed, the gay. 
See Death of Roland.—Buchanan. 

Dead, with his harness on him. See John Mitchel.-—- 
O’Reilly. 

Dead, with their eyes to the foe. See Melville and 
Coghill.—Lang. 

Deah frens, I’se glad ter'see yo’ heah, I knows yo’ll 
think it funny. See Sable Sermon.—Jones. 

Deal gently with me, O my friends. See Love, the 
Best Monument.—Anon. 

Deal gently with us, ye who read! See same .— 
Holmes. 

Dear Abraham: The Catholic not respect an oath! 
See Letters of Peter Plymley on No Popery, The. 
—Smith. 

Dear Alice! you’ll laugh when you know it. See Tal¬ 
ented Man, The.—Praed. 

Dear and blessed dead ones, can you look and listen. 
See Question.—Moulton. 

Dear and desired above all things that are. See De 
Profundis.—Anon. 

Dear and great angel, wouldst thou only leave. See 
Guardian-angel, The.—Browning. 

Dear Anna, when I brought her veil. See Wedding 
Veil. The.—Whittier. 

‘Dear baby spoke to-day,” she cried. See Incon¬ 
sistent Sex. The.—Heaton. 

Dear banner of my native land! ye gleaming, silver 
stars. See Flag of Washington, The.—Gillett. 

Dear Belle, I went to church last night. See Changed 
Her Mind.—Anon. 

Dear Bob, I’m going to be married. See Jack’s Letter 
to Bob.—Foster. 

Dear Brother Ben, I take my pen. See Speckled Hen, 
The.—Denison. 

Dear Brother Jacob: I’ve been round. See A-Vis- 
itin’ the School.—Anon. 

Dear Brother John: We got here safe. See Farmer 
Stebbins at Ocean Grove.—Carleton. 

Dear Century Plant: I love thy bismuthed face. See 
Funny Old Clown, The.—Burdette. 

Dear child! whom sleep can hardly tame. See To a 
Child.—Sterli n g. 

Dear Chloe, how blubbered is that pretty face! See 
Better Answer, A.—Prior. 

Dear Chloe, while the busy crowd. See Fireside, The. 
—Cotton. 

Dear chorister, who from those shadows sends. See 
To the Nightingale.—Drummond. 

Dear common flower, that grow’st beside the way. 
See To the Dandelion.—Lowell. 

Dear cosmopolitan—I know. See Familiar Epistle, 
A.—Dobson. 

Dear country mine! far in the viewless west. See Dear 
Country Mine.—Gilder. 

Dear Cousin John—-We got here safe—my worthy 
wife an’ me. See Farmer Stebbins on Rollers.— 
Carleton. 

Dear Cousin: There is little chance of our speedy 
meeting. See Baby’s Correspondence.—Carter. 

Dear dead! they have become. See Memory of the 
Dead, The.—Faber. 

Dear, dear, dear. See Thrush’s Song, The.—Mac- 
gillivray. 

Dear dear! here it is Saturday-morning. See Unappre¬ 
ciated genius.—Millie M. Olcott. 

Dear, dear! how very unfortunate this is. See Deaf 
as a Post.—Anon. 

Dear, dear! I wonder what’s got in de men? See 
Lixey.—Anon. 


Dear, dear me! What a long, miserable Thanksgiving 
day I have spent. See Joe Fleming’s Thanks¬ 
giving.—Wayne. 

Dear! dear! what a dust! See Management; or, the 
Folly of Fashion.—Boyd. 

Dear Dennis, my darlint, I take up my pen. See Pat’s 
Letter.—Anon. 

Dear, did you know how sweet to me. See Vain De¬ 
sire, A.—Wratislaw. 

Dear doctor, whose blandly invincible pen. See To 
O. W. Holmes.—Hayne. 

Dear Dod, pwease to bwess my mamma. See Jimmie’s 
Prayer.— (Bouton Transcript.) 

Dear Elm, it is of thee. See Dear Elm, it is of Thee.— 
Anon. 

Dear eyes, set deep within the shade. See Protesta¬ 
tion, The.—Image. 

Dear Fannie, this is so kind of you, to give me a nice 
long day of your company. See Amateur Farm¬ 
ing.—Anon. 

Dear Fanny! nine long years ago. See To My Daughter. 
—Hood. 

Dear father, I am almost afraid to venture my noble 
charger to-day. See Helen Mactrever.—Kent. 

Dear Father: Once you said, “My son.” See 
Senior’s Plea, A.—Underwood. 

“Dear Father: Please excuse,” he wrote. See His 
Letter—Hereford. 

Dear fellow, when our college days are over. See Col¬ 
lege Days.—Hunneman. 

Dear folks, all the other flowers are surly. See 
Quarrel of the Flowers, The.—Anon. 

Dear friend, I pray thee, if thou wouldst be proving. 
See Friendship.—Wilcox. 

Dear Friend, whose presence in the house. See Cana.— 
Clarke. 

Dear friends, all things must have an end. See Epi¬ 
logue.—Bob o’ Link. 

Dear friends and parents, gathered here. See Vale¬ 
dictory.—Anon. 

Dear friends, before you go away. See Epilogue: 
“Dear friends,” etc.—Anon. 

Dear friends: My essay is to-night. See Graduating 
Essay, A.—Dodge. 

Dear friends: We have now finished what we have to 
say. See Closing Address.—Anon. 

Dear friends, we thank you for your condescension. 
See Prologue for a Performance by Boys.— 
Anon. 

Dear friends, who read the world aright. See Words¬ 
worth.—Whittier. 

Dear friends with joy we welcome you. See Welcome 
for School Entertainment .—Hedrich. 

Dear, from thine arms then let me fly. See Song: 
“Dear, from thine arms,” etc.—Rochester. 

Dear girl! I wish I knew her well. See My Zoological 
Flame.—Linsey. 

Dear Grandma: I am writing you a letter. See 
Writing to Grandma.—Anon. 

Dear Grandma, I will try to write. See Little Girl’s 
Letter, A.—( Wisconsin Farmer.) 

Dear Grannie is with us no longer. See Granny’s 
Trust.—Anon. 

Dear, had the world in its caprice. See Respecta¬ 
bility.—Browning. 

Dear harp of my country! in darkness I found thee. 
See Dear Harp of my Country.—Moore. 

Dear Harry, I will not dissemble. See I Wonder what 
Maud will Say?—Peck. 

Dear hearts, you were waiting a year ago. See Two 
Waitings, The.—Chadwick. 

Dear Honeysuckle! in the silent eve. See To the 
Herald Honeysuckle.—Pfeiffer. 

Dear Huldy: I must tell you ’bout the way that our 
new deacon. See Deacon Thrush in Meeting.— 
Anon. 

Dear, if you love me, hold me most your friend. See 
Sonnet.—Miller. 

Dear, I’ll tell you how I love you. See How I love 
Her.—Newton. 

Dear is my little native vale. See Italian Song, An.— 
Rogers. 

Dear, it is hard to stand. See Wistful.—Anon. 

Dear, it is twilight-time, the time of rest. See Rue.—• 
Anon. 

“Dear Jack,” said Kate, with eyes of blue. See 
Modest Poet, The.— (Yale Record.) 

Dear Jack, your letter came to-day. See April Fools. 
—Masterson. 

Dear Jesus! ever at my side. See Nearest Friend, The. 
—Faber. 

Dear John, the sun is setting now. See Setting Sun, 
The.—Anon. 


640 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Death 


“Dear Jones,” I will not do as he. See Signs of the 
times—Dodge. 

Dear Joseph, five and-twenty years ago. See Epistle 
to Joseph Hill, Esq. An.—Cowper. 

Dear lady, I a little fear. See Lines Written in a Lady’s 
Album below the Autograph of John Adams.— 
Webster. 

Dear, let me dream of love. See Prayer, A.—Image. 

Dear little bare feet. See Little Bare Feet.—Anon. 

Dear little birdie. See Little Birdie.—Anon. 

Dear little boys whose birthday comes. See Some¬ 
thing to Remember.—Anon. 

Dear little bright-eyed Willie. See Planting Himself 
to Grow.—Anon. 

Dear little children, where’er you be. See To the 
Children.—Cary. 

Dear little Dorothy, she is no more! See Dorothy.— 
Lathrop. 

Dear little fair and fragrant flower. See On Receiving 
a White Pink.—Viola. 

Dear little girl, chiding the morning long. See Answer 
to a Puzzle, An.—Coolidge. 

Dear little girl of the long ago. See To an Old Por¬ 
trait of a Little Girl.— {William and Mary Col¬ 
lege Monthly.) 

Dear little Madge went out one day. See What they 
Said.—Rook. 

“Dear little singing bird out in the tree.” See Pray, 
Love, Work and Sing.—Anon. 

Dear little Violet. See Calling the Violet.—Larcom. 

Dear Lord and Father of mankind. See Voice of Calm, 
The.—Whittier. 

Dear Lord! kind Lord! See Prayer Perfect, The.—Riley. 

Dear Lord, let me recount to Thee. See “It Is Fin¬ 
ished.’ ’—Rossetti. 

Dear Lord, receive my son, whose winning love. See 
On My Dear Son, Gervase Beaumont.—Beaumont. 

Dear Lord, thy table is outspread. See Master’s In¬ 
vitation, The.—Randolph. 

Dear love, for nothing less than thee. See Dream, 
The.—Donne. 

Dear Love, I sometimes think how it would be. See 
same. —Goodwin. 

“Dear Madam, I pray,” quoth a magpie, one day. 
See Magpie and the Monkey, The.—Yriarte. 

Dear maid, let me speak. See Conjugal Conjugations. 
—Bellaw. 

Dear maiden, when the sun is down. See To My 
Promised Wife.—Walsh. 

Dear mamma, may we speak to you? See Josie’s 
Fault.—Anon. 

Dear marshes, by no hand of man. See Flood-time 
on the Marshes.—Stein. 

Dear me, a servant of all-work has a miserable life. 
See Terrible Secret, A.—Coyne. 

“Dear me,” cried a busy bee. See Busy Bee.— 
Anon 

“Dear me! dear me!” buzzed a little bee. See Bee and 
the Butterfly, The.—Anon. 

Dear me! dear me! here’s a pretty mess to be in. See 
When the Cat’s Away the Mice will Play.—Anon. 

Dear me! I am so very busy. See “Playing Grownup.” 
—Denton. 

Dear me! I can’t work at all this morning. See 
Family Flurry, A.—Anon. 

Dear me! I do not know what I want. See Eh! What 
is It?—Anon. 

Dear me! I wish time wouldn’t go quite so fast. See 
What is Christmas?—Denton. 

Dear me, it’s time to go to bed. See Pickwick Papers, 
The (Mr. Pickwick in the Wrong Room).—Dickens. 

Dear me! When we think of what we might do and 
don’t do. See Aunt Betsy on Marriage.—Dallas. 

Dear me, who would ever imagine that this is the 
Fourth of July. See Old-fashioned Fourth. An.— 
Anon. 

“Dear me, you’re so red!” cried the white rose. See 
White Rose and the Poppy, The.—Hannah. 

Dear Miss Goose: Accept apologies profuse. See 
Packet of Letters, A.—Herford. 

Dear Mr. Delsarte! See Delsartean Plea, A.—( Boston 
Courier.) 

Dear mother, dear mother, the church is cold. See 
Little Vagabond, The.—Blake. 

Dear mother, how pretty the moon looks to-night. 
See New Moon, The.—Follen. 

“Dear mother Tda, harken ere I die.” See (Enone; 
or, The Choice of Paris.—Tennyson. 

Dear mother, if you just could be. See Lesson for 
Mamma, A.—Dayre. 

Dear my friend and fellow-student., I would lean my 
spirit o’er you. See Lady Geraldine’s Courtship. 
—Browning. 


Dear Nature’s child, he nestled close to her! See 
Emerson.—Kinney. 

Dear Ned, no doubt you’ll be surprised. See Cooking 
and Courting.—Anon 

Dear Nell, ’tis good-bye, your train’s nearly due. See 
Her Answer.-—Anon. 

Dear Nellie: I turn to your love, in my trouble. See 
Young Wife’s Lament, The.—Anon. 

“Dear Nelly: Come the night before.” See Christmas 
Ballad, A.—Dennison. 

Dear Newspaper: I am a little girl just nine years 
old. See Little Mabel at Long Branch.—Anon. 

Dear! O! dear! Who could have imagined such an end 
to my pet flirtation. See Runaway Match, A.— 
Anon. 

Dear old pipe, my oldest friend. See Conditioned. 
(Brunonian.) 

Dear ole untie, I dot oor letter. See Baby’s Letter.— 
Anon. 

Dear papa, has anything occurred? pray, what is it? 
See Charles O’Malley (Miss Judith Macan).— 
Lever. 

Dear papas and mammas, and brothers and sisters. 
See Epilogue.—Anon. 

Dear piece of fascinating clay! See To the Tobacco 
Pipe.—( The Meteors.) 

Dear Priscilla, quaint, and very. See Rhyme for 
Priscilla, A.—Sherman. 

Dear Pussy, I love you and I’s your true friend. See 
Confession.—Anon. 

Dear rain, without your help, I know. See Mamie’s 
R equest.—Anon. 

Dear Ray:—Gold is money, and money is gold. See 
Comical Dun, A.—McKeever. 

Dear singer of our fathers’ day. See To John Green- 
leaf Whittier.—Ward. 

Dear sir:—Ve haf received your letter. See What 
They Wanted.—Anon. 

Dear sir: You wish to know my notions. See Biglow 
Papers, The (Candidate’s Letter, The).—Lowell. 

Dear sister! while the wise and sage. See To My 
Sister.—Whittier. 

Dear Sitty Kuzzin:—As yo’ve bin a-payin’. See 
Uncle John Writes to His City Cousin.—Buchanan. 

Dear Teacher:—I have been requested by the young 
persons of this school. See Presentation Speech, 
—Anon. 

Dear Thomas, did’st thou never pop. See Simile, A.— 
Prior. 

Dear to the loves and to the Graces vowed. See Mary 
Queen of Scots.—Wordsworth. 

Dear Uncle Jim, this garden ground. See Historical 
Associations.—Stevenson. 

Dear Uncle Sam has many girls. See Nicknames of 
the States.—Johnson. 

Dear vernal flowers, they bloom again. See Pierian 
Spring, The.—Burdette. 

Dear, when the sun is set. See Joy.—Lathrop. 

Dear, when you see my grave. See Despair.—Lathrop. 

Dear wife, last midnight, whilst I read. See Dib- 
din’s Ghost.—Field. 

Dear wife, there is no word in all my songs. See To 
My Wife, Mildred.—Le Gallienne. 

Dear yesterday, glide not so fast. See Gondolieds.— 
Jackson. 

Dearest, do not you delay me. See Serenade.— 
Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Dearest, how hard it is to say. See Peace of Christmas¬ 
time, The.—Field. 

Dearest love! believe me. See Dearest Love! Believe 
Me.—Pringle. 

Dearest love, do you remember. See When this Cruel 
War is Over.—Sawyer. 

Dearest Phyllis, pray remember, when you’re making 
up the list. See Christmas Letter, A.—Challiss. 

Dearest, this one day our own. See Love’s Silence.— 
Webster. 

Dearest wife, I’ve raised thy pillow. See Answer to 
I am Dying.—Laurie. 

Death, be not proud. See Death.—Donne. 

Death came out of the black night’s deep. See Sink¬ 
ing of the Maine, The.— (St. Louis Republic.) 

Death could not come between us two. See Deep 
Waters —-Sutphen. 

Death in this tomb his weary bones hath laid. See 
Death’s Epitaph.—Freneau. 

Death is a dialogue between. See Dialogue, A.— 
Dickinson. 

Death is but life’s renewal; but the pause. See 
Death.—Rives. 

Death is here, and death is there. See Death.—Shelley. 

Death sent his messengers before. See Prince of 
Peace, The.—Anon. 


641 











Death 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Death stands above me, whispering low. See Death 
Undreaded.—Landor. 

Death, though already in the world, as yet. See 
Legend of the Dead Lambs, The.—Lytton. 

Death, thou'rt a cordial old and rare. See Stirrup- 
cup, The.—Lanier. 

Death was full urgent with thee, sister dear. See 
Consolations in Bereavement.—Newman. 

Death! was the helmsman's hail. See Skeleton in 
Armor, The.—Longfellow. 

Death’s but one more to-morrow. Thou art gray. 
See Of One who Seemed to have Failed. — 
Mitchell. 

December: a winter storm raging; a city enshrouded 
in snow. See Bill and Belle.—Fitch. 

December 8. 1837, witnessed a memorable scene. See 
Incident in the Life of Wendell Phillips, An.— 
Weld. 

December is here, and the end of the year. See 
December.—Richards. 

December snows piled high the frozen earth. See 
Overflow of Great River, The.—Peck. 

December’s come and with her brought. See Decem¬ 
ber.—Sherman. 

Deem, if thou wilt, that I am all, and worse. See 
Remonstrance, A.—Meredith. 

Deem not devoid of elegance the sage. See Sonnet 
Written on a Blank Leaf of Dugdale’s Monasticon. 
—Warton. 

Deem not that they are blest alone.Blessed are See 
They that Mourn.—Bryant. 

Deep down within a mountain vale, where guardian 
peaks arise. See Vigilants, The.—Jones. 

Deep! I own I start at shadows. See Shadows.— 
Lantern. 

Deep in a rose’s glowing heart. See Sent with a Rose 
to a Young Lady.—Stanton. 

Deep in Canadian woods we’ve met. See Dear Old 
Ireland.—Sullivan. 

Deep in the forest’s heart a voice. See Cuckoo, The.— 
Sill. 

Deep in the heart of the forest the lily of Yorrow 
is growing. See Lily of Yorrow, The. —Van Dyke. 

Deep in the past I peer, and see. See Ballade of the 
Bookworm.—Lang. 

Deep in the shady sadness of a vale. See Hyperion 
( Saturn).—Keats. 

Deep in the shelter of the cave. See Neighbors of the 
Christ Night.—Smith. 

Deep in the valley the village lay dreaming. See 
Little White Angel of Connemaugh, The.—Hage- 
man. 

Deep in the wave is a coral grove. See Coral Grove, 
The.—Percival. 

Deep in the wood’s sequestered shade. See Mocking¬ 
bird, The.—Anon. 

Deep indeed must be the sorrow which prohibits the 
President of the United States. See Welcome to 
the Nations.—Morton. 

Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there. 
See Raven, The.—Poe. 

“Deep locked in the ocean the secret lies.” See Pilot’s 
Bride, The.—Vickers. 

Deep on the convent-roof the snows. See St. Agnes’ 
Eve.—Tennyson. 

Deep within the tangled wildwood. See Wild Thorn 
Blossoms.—Cutler. 

Deeper than all sense of seeing. See Right Living.— 
Anon. 

Deesa man liva in Italia a gooda longa time ago. See 
Christopher Columbus.—Anon. 

Defeating oft the labours of the year. See Seasons, 
The (Storm in Harvest).—Thomson. 

Defiled is my name full sore. See Lament of Anne 
Boleyn on the Eve of her Execution.—Boleyn. 

Degenerate Douglas! oh, the unworthy lord! See 
Composed at Neidpath Castle, the Property of 
Lord Queensberry.—Wordsworth. 

Delayed till she had ceased to know. See Too Late.— 
Dickinson. 

Delighted to see you, Mrs. Darling. See Widow Bedott 
Papers (Recipe for Potato Pudding).—Whitcher. 

Delightful change from the town’s abode. See Barn¬ 
yard Melodies.—Brooks. 

Delightful task! to rear the tender thought. See Sea¬ 
sons, The (Soul Culture).—Thomson. 

Delivers in such apt and gracious words. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost.—Shakespeare. 

Dem folks in de Norf is de beatin’est lot! See Norvem 
People.—R ussell. 

DeMauprat’s new home—too splendid for a soldier! 
See Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy (Scene from 
“Richelieu”).—Bulwer-Lytton. 


Democracy!—Socialism! Why profess to associate. See 
Democracy Adverse to Socialism. — Tocque- 
ville. 

Deprived of root, and branch, and rind. See May- 
pole, A.—Swift. 

Der boet may sing off “Der Old Oaken Bookit.” See 
Dot Long-handled Dipper.—Adams. 

Der Breitmann mit his gompany. See Breitmann in 
Maryland.—Leland. 

Der key to mine deory vas a monkey, und dot vas 
abarent mit you all. See Carl Pretzel’s Lecture 
on Man.—Anon. 

Der many wrecks of human peobles. See Indem- 
beran ce.—Pret zel. 

Der meat-chopper hanged on der vhitevashed vail. 
See Der Shoemaker’s Poy.—Anon. 

Der mule shtood on der steamboad deck. See same. — 
Burdette. 

Der night vas dark as anydhing. See Zwei Lager.— 
Adams. 

Der noble Ritter Hugo. See Ballad “Der noble 
Ritter Hugo.”—Leland. 

Der schiltren dhey vas poot in ped. See Mine Schild- 
hood.—Adams. 

Dere am a great many tings made to sell dat am not ub 
much use. See Gloves Were never Made to Sell. 
—Anon. 

Dere vas an oldt voman, und vot do you t’ink? See 
Victuals and Drink.—Anon. 

Dere vhas a leedle vomans once. See Dutchman’s 
Dog Story, A.—Brown. 

Dere’s a d’eat bid, blat bump on my follid. See Mis¬ 
chievous Daisy.—Matthews. 

Dere’s a ting dat hab been puzzling me, Johnson. See 
Jail-bird, A.—Anon. 

Descend, ye Nine! descend and sing. See Ode on 
St. Cecilia’s Day.—Pope. 

Deserted by the waning moon. See All’s Well.— 
Dibdin. 

Deserted nest, that on the leafless tree. See Deserted 
Nest, The.—Howe. 

“Deserter!” Well, Captain, the word’s about right. 
See Deserter, A.—Barr. 

Design, or chance, makes others wive. See Of the 
Marriage of the Dwarfs.—Waller. 

Despair of all, and hope for none! See Despair and 
Hope.—Zangwill. 

Despairing beside a clear stream. See Colin’s Com¬ 
plaint.—Rowe. 

Despised by the world and unblest with a wife. See 
Peter Longpocket.—Anon. 

Deth hez done a cruel thing lately. See Artemus 
W ard.—Billings. 

Devil’s Elbow was clean gone wild! See Race at 
Devil’s Elbow, The.—Buckham. 

Dey is times in life when Nature. See When de Co’n 
Pone’s Hot.—Dunbar. 

“Dey must not pass!” was the warning cry of the 
Austrian sentinel. See Scene on the Austrian 
Frontier. A.— (Punch.) 

Dhere vas many qveer dings in dis land off der free. 
See Mine Moder-in-law.—Anon. 

Dhere vas vot you call a maxim. See Der Deutscher’s 
Maxim.—Adams. 

Dhere vasn’d someding haf so shweed. Se Der 
Schleighride.—Whipple. 

Dhree shkaders vent ofer mit Cendral Park. See 
Dhree Shkaders.—Anon. 

Diaphenia like the daffodowndilly. See Diaphenia. 
—Constable. 

Dick Dawdle had land worth two hundred a year. See 
Come and Go.—Sharpe. 

Dick kept the fashionable saloon in town. See Dick 
Johnson’s Picture.—Anon. 

Dickens has painted many portraits of villainy. See 
Two of Dickens’ Villains.—Elliott. 

Dickey-bird baby in the nest sleeps. See Dickey-bird, 
The.—Anon. 

Did anybody have such a bad time as I do? See Two 
Runaways, The.—Edwards. 

Did Chaos form,—and water, air, and fire. See Gene¬ 
sis.—Ingham. 

Did I ever tell you about Smiley’s dog? See Jumping 
Frog, The (That Dog of Jim Smiley’s).-—Clemens. 

Did I ever tell you how it happened that I didn’t live 
and die an old maid? See Mrs. Beau’s Court¬ 
ship.—“Clara Augusta.” 

Did I ever tell you my first experience as a teacher of 
elocution? See Private Rehearsal, A.—Anon. 

Did ! know Comnct Joe? Yes, I knew him. See Con¬ 
vict Joe.—^Murdoch. 

Did it ever strike you how utterly in=ane it is. See 
Superstition.—Thatcher. 


642 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Do 


Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost (Perjury Excused).—Shakespeare. 

Did they dare—did they dare, to slay Owen Roe 
O’Neill? See Lament for the Death of Eoghan 
Ruadh O’Neill.—Davis. 

Did ye [or you] hear of the Widow Malone. See 
Widow Malone, The.—Lever. 

Did you always walk in your sleep, Jimmy? See 
Somnambulist, The.—Anon. 

Did you eber see de wild beasts, Johnson? See Which 
Would you Rather?—-Anon. 

Did you eber travel, Johnson? See Bones as a Trav¬ 
eler.—Anon. 

Did you ever, any of you, see the sun rise? See Pro¬ 
logue for a Boy.—Anon. 

Did you ever drive a cow to pound? See Episode in 
the Life of Miss Tabitha Trenoodle.—Belgravia. 

‘Did you ever get a letter?” See First Letter, The.— 
( Youth’s Companion.) 

Did you ever go a courtin’? or to court? See Hannah 
Tripe in Court.—Anon. 

Did you ever go courting your sweetheart. Bones? See 
Bones on Courting.—Anon. 

Did you ever have a very bad cold, with a total irreso¬ 
lution to submit to water-gruel processes? See 
Cold in the Head, A.—Lamb. 

Did you ever hear how Budge and Tod. See Land of 
Nod, The.—Blinn. 

Did you ever hear of Columbus? See Song of the 
States, A.—Anon. 

Did you ever hear of Jehosaphat Boggs. See Boggs’s 
Dogs.—Anon. 

Did you ever hear of the Drummer Boy of Mission 
Ridge, who lay. See Drummer Boy of Mission 
Ridge, The.—Sherwood. 

Did you ever hear tell of old Timothy Tuff? See Tim 
Tuff.—Capem. 

Did you ever hear two married women take leave of 
each other? See “Good-bye.”—Anon. 

Did you ever love a maid? See Determination.— 
Fitch. 

Did you ever! No, I never! See Menagerie, The.— 
Honeywell. 

Did you ever notice how inclined most people are? 
See In a Horse Car.—Semple. 

Did you ever pause before a painting? See Realism of 
Dickens, The.—Lathrop. 

Did you ever see a battery take position? See Sup¬ 
porting the Guns.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

Did you ever see little John Peter? ' See Spoiled Face, 
The—W. O. C. 

Did you ever see two girls get together to study of an 
evening? See How Girls Study.—McDonald. 

Did you ever stop to think or ask what causes the 
color in the sky? See What Makes the Sky Blue? 
—Anon. 

Did you ever think how different the world would be. 
See Flowers and Foliage.—Anon. 

Did you have to eat the bread crust. See Bread 
Crusts.—Anon. 

Did you hear about my disamination, Johnson? See 
Bones’ Examination.—Anon. 

Did you hear about the crocodile and Tommy Bow¬ 
line? No? See Tommy and the Crocodile.— 
Meyers. 

Did you hear of the curate who mounted his mare? 
See Priest and the Mulberry-tree, The.—Pea¬ 
cock. 

Did you hear of the fight at Corinth? See Eagle of 
Corinth, The.—Brownell. 

Did you [or ye] hear of the Widow Malone? See 
Widow Malone.—Lever. 

Did you ne’er think what wondrous beings these? See 
Birds of KiUingworth, The (Song of Birds).— 
Longfellow. 

Did you never, in walking in the fields, come across a 
large, flat stone? See Autocrat of the Breakfast- 
table, The (Letting in Light).—Holmes. _ 

Did you say you wished to see me, sir? step in; ’tis a 
cheerless place. See Poor-house Nan.—Blinn. 

Did you see me riding out de oder day? See Bones as 
a Doctor.—Anon. 

Did you see the snowy castle? See Cloud Castles.— 
Withrow. 

Did you think I could forget it? See Silver Wedding. 
The.—Stowe. 

Didn’t know Flynn,—Flynn of Virginia? See In the 
Tunnel.—Harte. 

‘‘Didn’t the fox never catch the rabbit, Uncle Remus?” 
See Uncle Remus. His Songs and His Sayings 
(Uncle Remus’ Tar-baby).—Harris. 

Didn’t you feel cross when you heard that old bell? 
See First Week of School, The.—Denton. 


Didn’t you little fellows say you wanted to learn to 
debate? See Young Debaters, The.—McBride. 

Didn’t you know, Birdie. I’se dot a new dollie? See 
Little Folk’s Opinions.—McBride. 

“Didst ever see a hanging?” “No, not one.” See 
Phantoms of St. Sepulchre, The.—Mackay. 

Didst hear the sound of music? See Veiled Priestess, 
The.—Case. 

* * Didst thou hear, the talk ran that he had not died at 
all.” See Light of the World, The (Pontius 
Pilate).—Arnold. 

Didst thou not praise me, Gaultier, at the ball? See 
Francesca da Rimini.—Aytoun. 

Die down, O dismal day! and let me live. See Son¬ 
net.—Gray. 

Die when you will, you need not wear. See To-. 

—Moore. 

“Died, Lottie Dougherty,” to-day. See Lottie 
Dougherty.—-Williams. 

Dies I raj, Dies Ilia! See Dies Ira.—Celano. 

Different species of trees move their leaves very differ¬ 
ently. See Walk among Trees, A (Motion of the 
Leaves, The).—Beecher. 

Dimbled [or dimpled] scheeks mit eyes off plue. See 
Mine Vamily.—Adams. 

“Dimes and dollars! dollars and dimes!” See Dimes 
and Dollars.—Mills. 

Diminutive puerile ultramarine. See Little Boy Blue. 
—Anon. 

Dimpled and flushed and dewy pink he lies. See 
Baby.—Eastman. 

Dimpled cheeks and scarlet lips. See Chansonette.— 
Graves. 

Dimpled [or dimbledl scheeks, mit eyes off plue. See 
Mine Vamily.—Adams. 

Ding dong, ding dong, ding dong. See School-bell, 
The.—Denton. 

“Ding dong!” quoth the bell, “I’ve a story to tell.” 
See Rape of the Bell, The.—Moore. 

Diogenes, surly and proud. See In Praise of Wine.— 
Anon. 

Dip down upon the northern shore. See In Memoriam 
(April Days).—-Tennyson. 

Dip! dip! Softly slip. See Canoe Song.—Champney. 

Dire need of a cook made me acquainted with Tilly 
Bones. See Tilly Bones.—Bellamy. 

Dire rebel though he was. See Philip van Artevelde. 
—Taylor. 

Dis meetin’ will come to ordah. If we are gwine to do 
anything to-night. See First Meeting of the 
Cucumber Hill Debating Club, The.—Anon. 

Dis must be de place; every tree and shrub am familiar 
to me. See Soldier’s Return, The.—White. 

Disarmed with so genteel an air. See In Answer to 
Mr. Pope.—Winchilsea. 

Disasters come not singly See Song of Hiawatha, 
The (Disasters).—Longfellow. 

Discharged again! Yes, I am free. See Warden, Keep 
a Place for Me.—Arkwright. 

Disguise upon disguise, and then disguise. See Soul 
unto Soul Glooms Darkling.—Moore. 

Dish is vat a eoundry! I gets to feel pad pefore I am 
dere one, two, t’ree week. See Dakin’ a Shweat. 
—Seymour. 

Dismiss your apprehension, pseudo bard. See At 
Shakespeare’s Grave.—Browne. 

Distracted with care. See Despairing Lover, The.— 
Walsh. 

Divinely shapen cup, thy lip. See On a Greek Vase.— 
Sherman. 

Divinest Spenser, heaven-bred happy muse! See 
Britannia’s Pastorals (Edmund Spenser).— 
Browne. 

Diwectly after the season is over in town, I always go 
into the countwy. See Dundreary in the Country. 
—Anon. 

Dixon, a Choctaw, twenty years of age. See Savage, 
A.—O’Reilly. 

Do all the good you can. See Do Good.—Anon. 

Do angels wear white dresses, say? See Questions of 
the Hour.—Piatt. 

Do be calm, father! See Tobias Turniptop in General 
Court.—Anon. 

Do good, do good, there’s ever a way. See Do Good. 
—Anon. 

“Do I look like a debauchee?” See Blifkins, the 
Bacchanal.—Shillaber. _ 

Do I love her? See Indecision.—Anon. 

Do I love thee? Ask the bee. See Do I Love Thee?— 
Saxe. 

Do? like the things in the garden; oh. See When It 
Rains.—Anon. 

Do not all Earth and Sea. See Sisyphus.—Mackay. 








Do 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Do not as some ungracious pastors do. See Hamlet.— 
Shakespeare. 

Do not crouch to-day and worship. See Present, The. 
—Procter. 

Do not drop in for an after-loss. See Sonnets, XC. 
—-Shakespeare. 

Do not fear to put thy feet. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The (Song, The).—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Do not lift him from the bracken. See Widow of 
Glencoe, The.—Aytoun. 

Do not quarrel with each other. See Little Brother, 
Little Sister.—-Richards. 

Do not sing that song again. See same. —McDer¬ 
mott. 

Do not then tolerate a power. See Declaration of 
Rights.—Grattan. 

Do not think of your faults. See Faults and Virtues. 
—Ruskin. 

Do not trust him, gentle lady. See Gipsy’s Warning, 
The.—Flotow and St. Georges. 

Do not waste your pity, friend. See Wasted Sympa¬ 
thy, A.—Howells. 

Do not write. I am sad, and would my life were o’er. 
See Parted.—Desbordes-Valmore. 

Do sit down, Chassie! and do not be so impatient. See 
That Awful Girl!—Kavanaugh. 

Do stop! You make me angry, Bob! See Naughty 
Bob.—Anon. 

Do tell me, sister Marian, that’s a dear. See Cross 
Purposes.—Anon. 

Do tell us, Emma, what you have summoned us here 
for. See Curing a Pedant.—Anon. 

Do the duty that lieth nearest thy hand. See Do the 
Duty that Lieth Nearest Thy Hand.—Anon. 

Do the young people ever think they will be old? See 
Old Folks—-Anon. 

Do thy little do it well. See Holiness.—Anon. 

Do we have any accidents here, sir? Any children 
run over, you say? See Crippled for Life.— 
Nicholls. 

Do we have many accidents here, sir? See Bridge 
Keeper’s Story, The.—Eaton. 

Do we heed the homely adage, handed down from days 
of yore? See Let Every One Sweep before His 
Own Door.—Anon. 

Do what conscience says is right. See Do Right.— 
Anon. 

Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers? See 
Cry of the Children, The.—Browning. 

“Do ye loike spring poethry, Mrs. McGlaggerty?” the 
widow began. See Mrs. MaGoogin on Spring 
Bonnets and Spring Poetry.—Jenkins. 

“Do you—ahem!—do you ever print any art items? 
See Western Artist’s Accomplishments, A.— 
Anon. 

Do you ask have I wooed before, love? See Ever So 
Long Ago.—Anon. 

Do you ask me our duty as scholars? See Duty of the 
American Scholar.—Curtis. 

Do you ask what the birds say? The sparrow, the 
dove. See Answer to a Child’s Question.— 
Coleridge. 

“Do you call that manners, Jacob? Is that the way 
to bow? See Not Guilty?—-Hatton. 

Do you eber go to law, Johnson? See Tambo and his 
M other-in-law. —Anon. 

“Do you entertain any ill-will toward the prisoner?” 
See False Witness Detected.—Knowles. 

Do you ever lie awake at night? See Voices of the 
Night.—Kerr. 

Do you ever think, sweet Kitty? See Stealing Roses. 
—Gaddess. 

Do you fear the force of the wind. See Do you Fear 
the Wind?—Garland. 

Do you feel sometimes in your dreaming. See Do You? 
—Anon. 

Do you find out the likeness? See Big Shoe, The.— 
Whitney. 

Do you follow the plow as a matter of choice? See 
Room at the Top.—Branson. 

Do you hear an ominous muttering as of thunder 
gath’ring round? See It is Coming.—-Mosher. 

Do you hear the ocean moaning. See What the Wild 
Waves Said.—( University Herald.) 

Do you hear the scandal-mongers passing by. See 
Scandal-mongers.—Anon. 

Do you know Daisy? She’s a pretty nice little girl. 
See Balky Horse, The—Denton. 

Do you know Freddie? He’s the nicest boy I ever 
saw. See About Freddie.—Denton. 

Do you know how empires find their end? See Na¬ 
tional Injustice.—Parker. 

Do you know how many stars. See same. —Anon. 


Do you know much about de sculptists? See Tambo 
on the English Language.—Anon. 

Do you know of the dreary land. See River Fight, The. 
Brownell. 

“Do you know,” said Dandelion, growing stiff and 
sullen. See Dandelion and Clover-top.—Smith. 

Do you know that some one really said. See What 
Boys are Good For.—Goodfellow. 

Do you know the olden story. See Christmas Time.— 
Spangenberg. 

“Do you know the prisoner well?” asked the attorney. 
See Hard Witness, A.—Anon. 

Do you know what it is when the clouds creep onwards. 
See Death of Hope.—Evered. 

Do you know what it means, you boys and girls. See 
Memorial Day.—Anon. 

Do you know what Jane Sterling says? See Music.— 
Anon. 

Do you know what made my voice so melodious? See 
Suggestion.— (The Jest Book.) 

Do you know what’s in my potet? See Johnny’s 
Pocket.—Anon. 

Do you know where the crocus blowes? See First 
Crocus, The.—Sherwood. 

Do you know where the summer blooms all the year 
round? See Land of Nowhere. The.—Wilcox. 

Do you know why the snow. See Bedtime. (Youth’s 
Companion.) 

Do you know you have asked for the costliest thing. 
See Woman’s Question, A.—Lathrop. 

Do you love me, Mistress Prue? See To Prue.— 
Houghton. 

Do you often go to the country, Tambo? See Set 
Fair.—-Anon. 

Do you pay much attention to de ladies, Johnson? 
See Above Two Feet.—Anon. 

Do you recall that night in June. See Danube River, 
The.—Aid (5. 

Do you remember, dear, a night in June. See By the 
Gaspereau.—Lockhart. 

Do you remember, father. See Whip-poor-will, The. 
—VanDyke. 

Do you remember, long ago. See After Aughrim.— 
Geoghegan. 

Do you remember me? or are you proud? See Ianthe’s 
Question.—Landor. 

Do you remember, my sweet, absent son. See Child’s 
Wish Granted, The.—Lathrop. 

Do you remember that most perfect night. See Love 
and Prudence.—Story. 

Do you remember when first we met? See “Free Puff, 
A.”—Gray. 

Do you remember, when we came from school. See 
“Across the Lot.”—C. S. 

Do you remember when you heard. See Won’t You.— 
Bayly. 

Do you see how the Old Year hides his eyes? See King 
is Dead, Long Live the King, The.—Moulton. 

Do you see that bird on the apple-tree. See Feathered 
Name-speakers. (Young Idea, The.) 

Do you see that ugly cur there, that wall-eyed looking 
beast? See Moose Hunt, The.—Anon. 

Do you see this little hatchet? See One Little Hatchet. 
—Denton. 

“Do you see this lock of hair?” See Care of God, The. 
—Anon. 

Do you sometimes feel discouraged. See How to be 
H appy.—Anon. 

Do you suppose the blades of grass. See Questions. 
—J. M. L. 

Do you think, dear little children. See Christmas.— 
Anon. 

Do you think I am pretty? The boys tell me so. See 
Which Shall it be.—“Bob o’ Link.” 

Do you think I could forget it? See Silver Wedding, 
The.—Stowe. 

Do you think my pet squirrel will go quite away. See 
Mary and her Pet Squirrel.—Anon. 

Do you think what a metaphysician. See Say!— 
Melroy. 

Do you understand algebra? See Philosopher and the 
Ferryman, The.—Anon. 

Do you want some day to be great, boys? See Read 
This, Boys.—Anon. 

Do you want to know who I am, and why all these 
dolls are here? See Doll's Hospital, The.— 
Anon. 

Do you want to peep into Bedlam Town? See Bedlam 
Town.—Wilcox. 

Do you wish to know the reason. See Reason Why, 
The.—Anon. 

Do you wonder what I am seeing. See Coast-guard, 
The—Miller. 


644 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Dot 


Do your best, your very best. See Do your Best.— 
Anon. 

Doan’ look for infallibility in de human race. See 
Brother Gardner on de Human Race.—( Detroit 
Free Press.) 

Doan' you go, chile. See Sistah Lize.—Cook. 

Dr. Edward Everett Hale addressed the Twentieth 
Century Club last night. See Dr. Hale on Emer¬ 
son.—( Boston Herald.) 

Doctor, if you can wait. I’ll tell you the tale of my life. 
See First Quarrel, The.—Tennyson. 

Dr. Liverwort stepped quietly from the sick-chamber. 
See Clear Case, A.—Whipple. 

Doctor Mac Lure did not lead a solemn procession. See 
Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush (Doctor of the Old 
School, A).—Watson. 

Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes says. See Other Fellow, 
The.—Smith. 

Dr. Willard was a man about six feet four inches high. 
See Hypochondriac, The.—-Valentine. 

Doeg, though without knowing how or why. See 
Absalom and Achitophel (Doeg and Og).—Dry- 
den. 

Does a man ever give up hope, I wonder. See Truth 
at Last.—Sill. 

Does a two-year-old baby pay for itself up to the time 
it reaches that interesting age? See Does a Two- 
year-old Baby Pay?—Anon. 

Does any man dream that a Gael can fear? See Ballad 
of Athlone, A.—De Vere. 

Does it make a boy any more of a man. See True 
Manliness.—Anon. 

“Does Mr. Sawyer live here?’’ See Pickwick Papers, 
The (Jack Hopkins’ Story).—Dickens. 

Does my nose look crooked? See Nose out of Joint, 
A.—Goodfellow. 

Does the pearl know, that in its shade and sheen? See 
Does the Pearl Know?—Hay. 

Does the road wind uphill all the way? See Uphill.— 
Rossetti.' 

Does the snow fall at sea? See Snow-song, A.—Van 
Dyke. 

Does yo’ see dem yaller roses dingin’ to de cabin wall. 
See Grandfather’s Rose.—Denison. 

Doff thy new spectacles. See Boston Lullaby, A.— 
Anon. 

Doge,—for such you still are, and by the law. See 
Marino Faliero (Doge’s Sentence, The).—Byron. 

Dolly knows what’s the matter—Dolly and I. See 
Homesick.—-Anon. 

Dolly, you’re a sad disgrace. See Dolly’s Bath.— 
Anon. 

Dolly’s wet her feet. See Housekeeper’s Troubles, A.— 
Anon. 

Domestic love! Not in proud palace halls. See 
Domestic Love.—Croly. 

Don Crambo once there was who had for wife. See Don 
Crambo.—Meyers. 

Don Ditto was as brave a knight. See Legend of Don 
Ditto and the Dutchmen.—Anon. 

Don Juan has ever the grand old air. See Don Juan.— 
Foote. 

Don Pedro loved the Donna Inez. See Don Pedro and 
Fair Inez.—Meyers. 

Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, issuing from a forest. 
See Don Quixote and the Huntress.—Cervantes. 

Don Surly to aspire the glorious name. See Don 
Surly.—Jonson. 

Don’d ask me, blease, dis efening, friends. See I Kin 
nod Trink Tonighd.—Anon. 

Dong—dong—the bells rang out. See Fire-bell’s Story, 
The.—Catlin. 

Don’t be afraid of the dark. See Don’t be Afraid.— 
Craik. 

Don’t be frightened. Sec Elsie’s Burglar.—Anon. 

Don’t be in a hurry to answer yes or no. See Don’t 
be in a Hurry.—-Anon. 

Don’t be sorry, mo’ners, when de sun don’t shine. See 
Don’t be Sorry.—Anon. 

Don’t crowd and push on the march of life. See Room 
Enough for All.—Anon. 

Don’t cry, Johnnie. See How Johnnie Stopped Crying. 
—Anon. 

Don’t ever go hunting for pleasures. See Sermon for 
Young Folks. A.—Cary. 

Don’t fire too high. See Rural Lesson in Rhetoric, A. 
—Anon. 

Don’t go out tonight, Joe. Please don’t go. See 
Drunkard’s Repentance, A.—Pratt. 

Don't go to the theatre, lecture or ball. See Write 
Them a Letter To-night.—Anon. 

Don’t grow old too fast, my sweet! See Mother s 
Song.—Anon. 


Don’t kill the birds, the pretty birds. See Don’t Kill 
the Birds.—Colesworthy. 

Don’t look for the flaws as you go through life. See 
Current of Life, The.—Anon. 

Don’t say that you think me courageous, for that’s an 
assertion I doubt. See Hunting a Madman.— 
Nicholls. 

Don’t talk of September! See Hunting Season, The.— 
Bayly. 

Don’t talk ov housen all o’ brick. See Girt Wold 
House o’ Mossy Stwone, The.—Barnes. 

Don’t talk to me, Belinda; it’s no use. See Go, A.— 
Meyers. 

Don’t talk to me of Olympus’ maids. See Little 
Woman, The.—Barnes. 

Don’t talk to me of parties, Nan; I really cannot go. 

See Conflicting Claims.—Beers. 

“Don’t tell me ‘there’s room at the top.’ ” SeeTragedy, 
A.—Knox. 

Don’t think, dear friends, ‘that I’m too small. See 
Throwing Kisses.—Anon. 

Don’t think too much of finery. See Polly’s Lecture 
to Dolly.—Anon. 

Don’t worry, dear; the bleakest years. See Don’t 
Worry.—Anon. 

Don’t you hear it humming, humming? See Vacation. 
—Denton. 

Don’t you hear the children coming. See School 
Called.—-Taylor. 

Don’t you hear the tramp of soldiers? See One 
beneath Old Glory.—Anon. 

Don’t you remember lame Sally, Joe Jones. See Joe 
Jones.—Anon. 

Don’t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt. See 
Ben Bolt.—English. 

Don’t you talk to me about women as though they 
were timid and weak. See Mother’s Daring, A.— 
Nicholls. 

“Don’t you think it’s a pity, Levy.” See Made to Fit. 
—Anon. 

Don’t you think me rather bold? See Brag.—“Bob o’ 
Link.” 

“Don’t you think, Minerva,” said Mr. Backenstots, 
anxiously. See Who Should Wipe the Dishes.— 
Kelly. 

Don’t you think skating is dreadful good exercise? 
See Mrs. Smart Learns How to Skate.—“Clara 
Augusta.” 

“Don’t you think that,” I asked the coachman. See 
David Copperfield (Death of Steerforth, The).— 
Dickens. 

Don’t you want to hear me talk trees. See Autocrat 
of the Breakfast-table, The (Talks on Trees).— 
Holmes. 

Don't you wish you were in my place, Stewart? See 
Counting the Chickens before they Were Hatched. 
—Anon. 

Dorinda’s sparkling wit and eyes. See Song: “Dorin- 
da’s sparkling,” etc.—Dorset. 

Dorinda’s youthful spouse. See Widow, The.— 
Gellert. 

“Dorothea,” said grandma, “before I was your age I 
had pieced two bed-quilts. See Dorry Learns to 
Sew.—Dayre. 

Dorothy goes with her pails to the ancient well in the 
courtyard. See Dorothy: A Country Story (Doro¬ 
thy;.—Munby. 

Dorothy’s daintily dressed for the dance. See Fancy- 
dress Ball, The.—Denison. 

Dose efening clouds vas sedding fast. See Shoo Flies. 
—Anon. 

Dosh Tinley was an enterprising darkey. See Uncle 
Edom and t he Flurridy Nigger.—Andrews. 

Dosn’t thou ’ear my ’erse’s legs, as they canters awaiiy? 

See Northern Farmer (New Style).—Tennyson. 
Dost deem him weak that owns his strength is tried. 
See Strong, The.—Cheney. 

Dost thou hear, Columbia, O my mother? See 
American to His Mother, An.— {Boston Journal.) 
Dost thou look back on what hath been. See “Dost 
Thou Look Back?”—Tennyson. 

Dost thou not hear, amid dun, lonely hills? See 
^Eolian Harp, An.—Field. 

Dost thou not know God’s country, where it lies? See 
God’s Country.—Auringer. 

Dost thou not perceive how this body wastes away. 

See Divine Providence in Nature.—Chrysostom. 
Dost thou remember that place so lonely? See Dost 
Thou Remember?—Moore. 

Dot dog he vas dot kind of dog. See Der Dog und der 
Lobster.—Sertrew. 

Dot is five and Jack is ten. See Puzzling Example, A. 
—Anon. 

645 




Dot 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Dot is qualidy vich is berfecdly requiside in dis world. 
See Cheeg.—Anon. 

Dot vinder dime, dot’s came again; der ground vas 
hard mit freeze. See Dot Vinder Dime.—Anon. 

Doth it not thrill thee, poet? See Passionate Reader 
to His Poet, The.—Le Gallienne. 

Doth Life survive the touch of Death? See Life or 
Death.—E. B. 

Doth then the world go thus; doth all thus move? See 
same. —Drummond. 

Doth thy heart stir within thee at the sight. See 
Orchard Blossoms.—Hemans. 

Doubt thou the stars are fire. See Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

Doubtless the law of honor is only half Christian. See 
War and Peace.—Robertson. 

Dove that found birth within an eagle’s nest. See 
Napoleon II., Duke of Reichstadt.—Saltus. 

Down and up, and up and down. See Work.—Cary. 

Down below, the wild November whistling. See Up 
Above and Down Below.—Alexander. 

Down by a shining water well. See My Kingdom.— 
Stevenson. 

Down by the clear river’s side they wandered. See 
Decoration Day.—Hussey. 

Down by the gate of the orchard. See Spring Whistles. 
—Larcom. 

Down by the salley gardens my love and I did meet. 
See Old Song Resung, An.—Yeats. 

Down by the wall where the lilacs grow. See Little 
Planter, A.—( Youth’s Companion.) 

Down by yon garden green. See Laird of Waristoun, 
The.—Anon. 

Down came the rain with steady pour. See Murder 
of Darnley, The.—Aytoun. 

Down deep in a hollow, so damp and so cold. See 
Philosopher Toad, The.—Nichols. 

Down Dee-side came Inverey whistling and playing. 
See Baron of Brackley, The.—Anon. 

Down, dogs 1 Down, down! Lie there, red deer. See 
Esau and Jacob.—Murray. 

‘Down, down,’ cried Mar. See Lady of the Lake, The 
(Battle of Beal an’ Duine).—Scott. 

Down, down, Ellen, my little one See Apr&s.—Munby. 

Down drop the painted leaves. See Autumn is Ended. 
—Hartzell. 

Down from a sunken doorstep to the road. See 
Romance.—Howells. 

Down from the blue the sun has driven. See Indian 
Summer.—M ’Lachlan. 

Down from the hill, up from the glen. See I Want 
Mamma.—( Harper’s Weekly.) 

Down from yon distant mountain height. See Boy and 
the Brook, The.—Longfellow. 

Down in a field one day in June. See Discontent.— 
Jewett. 

Down in a garden olden. See Rose’s Cup, The.— 
Sherman. 

Down in a green and shady bed. See Violet, The.— 
Taylor. 

Down in a street by the river’s side. See Cripple Ben. 
—Catlin. 

Down in Coomer’s Alley. See Sally.—Meyers. 

Down in de bight deen meadow. See Daisy’s Faith.— 
Mathews. 

Down in my solitude under the snow. See Crocus’ 
Soliloquy, The.—Gould. 

Down in the bleak December bay. See Mayflower, 
The.—Ellsworth. 

Down in the darkness, deep in the darkness. See Here 
and There.—Cary. 

Down in the deep. See Wary Trout, The.—Anon. 

Down in the depths. See Ocean’s Dead, The.—Ford. 

Down in the glen. See Two of a Kind.—Arndt. 

Down in the narrow alley there was the noise of 
quarreling children. See Out of Muhlqueen’s 
Alley.—Provost. 

Down in the valley, deep, deep, deep. See Where They 
Grow.—Anon. 

Down in the valley were gathered, one day. See 
Trees’ Choice, The.—Carter. 

Down in the wide gray river. See Fishing Song.— 
Cooke. 

Down in yon garden sweet and gay. See Willy 
Drowned in Yarrow.—Anon. 

Down lay in a nook my lady’s brach. See Philip 
van Artevelde.—Taylor. 

Down on the north wind sweeping. See Inhospitality. 
—Thaxter. 

Down on the shadowed stream of time and tears. See 
Christ and the Mourners.—Conway. 

Down swept the chill wind from the mountain peak. 
See Vision of Sir Launfal, The (Brook in Winter, 
The).—Lowell. 


Down the bright streams the fairies float. See Last 
Voyage of the Fairies, The.—Adams. 

Down the broad hillside toward Jerusalem. See 
Woman’s Love.—Anon. 

Down the dark future, through long generations. See 
Arsenal at Springfield, The.—Longfellow. 

Down the deep, the miry lane. See Summer Evening, 
A.—White. 

Down the dimpled greensward dancing. See Gambols 
of Children, The.—Darley. 

Down the goldenest of streams. See Mater Amabilis.— 
Lazarus. 

Down the green hillside fro’ the castle window. See 
Lady Jane.—Anon. 

Down the hard, frozen road that leads to the city. See 
Uncle Newton—a Pinchtown Pauper.—Gordon. 

Down the lane, and across the fields. See Doris.— 
Harper. 

Down the Little Big Horn. See same. —Brooks. 

Down the long hall she glistens like a star. See Venus 
of the Louvre.—Lazarus. 

Down the long lanes of Arcadie. See Chase, The.— 
Roberts. 

Down the picket guarded lane. See “How are You, 
Sanitary?”—Harte. 

Down the placid river gliding. See Incident of the 
War, An.—Kimball. 

Down the rippling, dancing river. See On the River.— 
Long. 

Down the road to Sally’s. See same. —Marsh. 

Down the room now swiftly gliding. See At the Ball.— 
Dunham. 

Down the Savoy valleys sounding. See Church of 
Brou, The.—Arnold 

Down the vista of the ages. See Endless Procession, 
The.—Anon. 

Down the wintry mountain. See Highland Cattle.— 
Mulock. 

Down the world with Mama! See Wander-lovers 
The.—Hovey. 

Down through our crowded lanes and closer air. See 
Epitaph in the Cathedral of Derry.—Alexander. 

Down through the snow-drifts in the street. See Boy, 
The.—Field. 

Down to the stream they flying go. See Shibboleth.— 
Cleveland. 

Down to the vale this water steers: how merrily it goes! 
See Old Man by the Brook, The.—Wordsworth. 

Down to the wharves, as the sun goes down. See My 
Ship.—Allen. 

Down under the ground, deep leagues adown. See In 
the Tenth Circle.—( Dartmouth Literary Monthly.) 

Down where the long, dark, wooden bridge. See 
Leagued with Death.—Anon. 

Down with the rosemary and bayes. See Candlemas 
Eve.—Herrick. 

Down with the traffic! Down, we say! See Down 
with the Traffic.—Williams. 

Down-adown-derry. See same. —Ramal. 

Down-trickling, soft and slow. See River, The.— 
Plumptre. 

Downward sinks the setting sun. See Good Night.— 
Anon. 

Dow’s Flat, that’s its name. See Dow’s Flat—1856.— 
Harte. 

Dozing, and dozing, and dozing! See Cat-questions.— 
Larcom. 

Drake he was a Devon man an’ ruled the Devon seas. 
See Drake’s Drum.—Newbolt. 

Drake, he’s in his hammock, an’ a thousand mile away. 
See Drake’s Drum.—Newbolt. 

Draper in his last book tries to prove. See same. —( New 
York Sun.) 

Draw down the curtains close, O heart! See L’Envoy. 
—Randolph. 

Draw nigh with reverence, Canada. See Alexander 
Mac ken zie.—MacLeod. 

Draw oop dem bapers, lawyer, und make ’em shtrong 
und lawful. See Baitsy and I Are Oudt.—Warren. 

Draw oud der bapers, lawyer. See Betsy und I Hafe 
Bust Up.—Burdette. 

Draw round my bed. Is Anselm keeping back? See 
Bishop Orders His Tomb, The.—Browning. 

Draw up the papers, lawyer, and make ’em good and 
stout.— See Betsy and I Are Out.—Carleton. 

Drawn by horses with decorous feet. See Going Home. 
—Taylor. 

Dreams come true, and everything. See In the Haunts 
of Bass and Dream.—Thompson. 

Dreary, dreary, Fundy’s mists are sweeping. See 
When Dora Died.—Chandler. 

Drecker, the draw-bridge keeper, opened wide. See 
Draw-bridge Keeper, The.—Abbey. 


646 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Early- 


Drifting away from each other. See Drifting Away.— 
Gray. 

Drifting in our frail canoe. See Drifting.—Chamberlin. 

Drifts away the murky night. See Two Rag Men.— 
Burdette. 

Drink, and fill the night with mirth! See Drinking 
Song, A.—Procter. 

Drink, comrades, drink! Give loose to mirth! See 
Death of Cleopatra, The.—Horace. 

Drink! Drink! Drink! See same. —Upham. 

Drink! Drink! To whom shall we drink? See Old 
Man’s Carousal, The.—Paulding. 

Drink, friends, the parting hour draws nigh. See 
Prohibition Song of Good Fellowship.—Sigourney. 

Drink to me only with thine eyes. See To Celia.— 
Jonson. 

Drink to-day, and drown all sorrow. See Bloody 
Brother, The (Drink To-day).—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. 

Drive the nail aright, boys. See Persevere.—Anon. 

Driven wild with rum, he turned into the street. See 
Drunkard’s Death, The.—Jones. 

Driver peeping through his little window and address¬ 
ing stout lady. See Paying Her Fare.—Dallas. 

Driving the cows from the upper meadow. See 
Country Courtship.—Kelly. 

Droo as I leeve, most every day. See “Dot Funny 
Leedle Baby.”—Adams. 

Drop, drop, slow tears. See same. —Fletcher. 

Drops of perspiration fell from Mammy Washington’s 
black face. See When I am Weak then I am 
Strong.—Sherman. 

Drough der streeds of Frederickdown. See Parody 
on “Barbara Frietchie.”—Anon. 

Drowsy sunshine, noonday sunshine, shining full on 
sea and sand. See Lost on the Shore.—Lee. 

Dru as I leev, most efry day. See Fred Englehardt’s 
Baby.—Adams. 

Drum, drum, drum, der-um, drum, drum. See 
Drummer of Company G, The.—Meyers. 

Drunk and senseless in his place. See Ramon.— 
Harte. 

Drunkenness is the greatest evil of this nation. See 
Our National Curse.—Talmage. 

Dry be that tear, my gentlest love. See Dry be that 
Tear.—Sheridan. 

Dubious is such a scrupulous good man. See Conversa¬ 
tion.—Cowper. 

“Dudley!” she exclaimed, “Dudley, and art thou come 
at last?” See Kenilworth (Countess Amy and Her 
Husband, The).—Scott. 

Dumb Mother of all music, let me rest. See Sonnet 
in a Garden.—Peabody. 

Dumpsy-frumpsy, patty-pan. See Dumpsy-Frumpsy. 
—Kavanaugh. 

Duncan Gray cam here to woo. See Duncan Gray.— 
Bums. 

During a certain voyage. See Truth in the Ship’s Log. 
—Anon. 

During a pause from a breathless dance. See Capric¬ 
iousness.—Cooper. 

During his march to conquer the world, Alexander, the 
Macedonian. See Lord Helpeth Man and Beast, 
The.—Coleridge. 

During my residence in the country I used frequently 
to attend at the old village church. See Widow 
and her Son, The.—Irving. 

During Sir Charles Napier’s campaign against the 
robber tribes of Upper Scinde. See Pass in the 
Indian Hills, The.—Robertson. 

During the contest of opinion through which we have 
passed. See Inauguration Address, March 4, 
1801 (Party Spirit and Good Government).— 
Jefferson. 

During the last day of May, 1793, one of the Parisian 
regiments. See Ninety-three (Children of the 
Bonnet Rouge, The).—Hugo. 

During the Revolutionary War, Fort Henry, an 
American border outpost. See Heroism of Eliza¬ 
beth Zane, The.—Anon. 

During the summer season a man may expect to be 
suddenly called at any moment. See Putting 
Down the Window.—Anon. 

During the throes and convulsions of the ancient world. 
See Inauguration Address, March 4,1801 (Republic 
the Strongest Government, A).—Jefferson. 

During the whole of one of last summer’s hottest days. 
See Courteous Mother, A.—Hunt. 

During the winter of 1777-8, Washington went into 
winter quarters at Valley Forge. See Washington 
at Valley Forge.—Parker. 

During this time the sea was becoming more agitated. 
See Pilot, The (Pilot, The).—Cooper. 


During this tyme Eneas gan aduert. See HCneid, The 
(Tribes of the Dead, The).—Virgil. 

Dust as we are, the immortal spirit grows. See Prelude, 
The (Apparition on the Lake).—Wordsworth. 

Dust, dust, dust! And the more I dust, the more dust 
I make. See All at Sea.—Fiske, Vandenhoff and 
Burnham. 

Dust on my mantle! Dust! See August.—Gallagher. 

D’ye moind the new tathe arn me? See Biddy O’Brien 
Has the Toothache.—Savage. 

“D’ye see it, pard?” See Light from Over the Range, 
The.—Anon. 

D’ye see that peculiar object there, standing against 
the lamp? See Idiot’s Gallantry, An.—Nicholls. 

Dying, and loth to die, and long’d to die. See Queen 
Elizabeth.—Williams. 

D’you remember Hiram Cawkin. See Enj’yin’ Poor 
Health.—Horton. 

Dyspepsia is no longer the test of scholarship. See 
Place of Athletics in College Life, The.—Depew. 


E 

Each care-worn face is but a book. See Strangers, The. 
—Very. 

Each day and every day. See same. —Anon. 

Each day, beloved, I think I love thee more. See For 
Thee Alone.—Anon. 

Each day when the glow of sunset. See Are the 
Children at Home?—-Sangster. 

Each flower holds up. See For You.—Bungay. 

Each golden note of music greets. See Moonlight 
Song of the Mocking-bird.—Hayne. 

Each hour will behold this tide of foreign emigration. 
See Best Policy in regard to Naturalization.— 
Levin. 

Each life has one grand day. See Life’s Triumph.— 
Collier. 

Each little flower that opens. See All Things Bright 
and Beautiful.—Keble. 

Each man’s chimney is his golden mile-stone. See 
Golden Mile-stone, The.—Longfellow. 

Each moment holy is. See same. —Gilder. 

Each month hath praise in some degree. See To the 
Month of September.—Davies. 

Each nation master at its own fireside. See Nationality. 
—Ingram. 

Each of us is like Balboa: Once in all our lives do we. 
See Rare Moments.—Phelps. 

Each one’s his faults, to which he still holds fast. See 
Drunkard and His Wife, The.—La Fontaine. 

Each shining light above us. See Light of Love, The. 
—Hay. 

Each sorrowful mourner, be silent! See Each Sorrowful 
Mourner.—Prudentius. 

Each thin hand resting on a grave. See One in Blue 
and One in Gray.—Anon. 

Eagle of Austerlitz, where were thy wings? See Louis 
Napoleon.—Wilde. 

Eagle of flowers! I see thee stand. See Sun Flower 
The.—Montgomery. 

Earl Gawain wooed the Lady Barbara. See Lady 
Barbara.—Smith. 

Earl March look’d on his dying child. See same. — 
Campbell. 

Earl Richard once upon a day. See Earl Richard.— 
Anon. 

Earl Sigurd, he rides o’er the foam-crested brine. See 
Earl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve.—Boyesen. 

Early in foreign fields he won renown. See Absalom 
and Achitophel (Character of the Duke of Mon¬ 
mouth).—Dryden. 

Early in May up got the jolly rout. See “Cotswold 
Eclogue,” The.—-Randolph. 

Early in the morning. See To Grandpapa, on His 
Seventieth Birthday.—Anon. 

Early on a pleasant day. See Mocking-bird’s Song, 
The.—Drake. 

Early on a sunny morning, while the lark was singing 
sweet. See Fetching Water from the Well.— 
Anon. 

Early on an August morning a doe was feeding on 
Basin Mountain. See Mountain Tragedy, A.— 
Warner. 

Early on the morning of the 23d, intelligence was 
brought King Robert. See Battle of Bannock¬ 
burn, The.—Aguilar. 

Early one day in leafy June. See Trust not to Appear¬ 
ances.—Anon. 

Early one fine morning, as Terence O’Fleary was hard 
at work. See How Terry Saved His Bacon.—Anon. 


647 




Early 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Early they came, yet they were come too late. See 
Love’s Opportunity.—Weitzel. 

Early they took Dun-Edin’s road. See Marmion 
(Camp, The).—Scott. 

“Early to bed and early to rise.” See Little French for 
a Little Girl, A.—Anon. 

Early to her slumber. See Mabel Gray.—Richards. 

Ears thou hast two and mouth but one. See Three 
Pairs and One.—Riickert. 

Earth gets its price for what Earth gives us. See Vision 
of Sir Launfal, The (June).—Lowell. 

Earth has not anything to show more fair. See Com¬ 
posed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 1802. 
—Wordsworth. 

Earth, let thy softest mantle rest See Horace Greeley. 
—Stedman. 

Earth now is green, and heaven is blue. See To the 
Spring.—Davies. 

Earth, ocean, air, beloved brotherhood! See Alastor; 
or. The Spirit of Solitude.—Shelley. 

Earth, of man the bounteous mother. See Husband¬ 
man, The.—Sterling. 

Earth to earth, and dust to dust. See Dust to Dust.— 
Croly. 

Earth, whereon his feet have pressed. See Spiritus 
Intactus.—Cole. 

Earth, with her ten thousand flowers. See God is 
Love.—Anon. 

Earth, with its dark and dreadful ills. See Dying 
Hymn.—Cary. 

Easier it were to give my life to thee. See Love that 
Availeth.—Salmon. 

Easter lilies, pure and white. See Easter Lilies.— 
Crofts. 

Eastward of Zanesville, two or three. See Traveler’s 
Story, The.—Riley. 

Ebbed and flowed the muddy Pei-Ho by the Gulf of 
Pechi-Li. See Blood is Thicker than Water.— 
Rice. 

Ebenezer Eastman, of Gilmanton, is dead. See Mary 
Butler’s Hide.—Taylor. 

Ebenezer Webster, father of Daniel, was a farmer. 
See Daniel Webster’s First Plea.—Anon. 

Echo, I ween, will in the woods reply. See Gentle 
Echo on Woman, A.—Swift. 

Echo, mysterious nymph, declare. See Echo and the 
Lover.—Anon. 

Echo was a beautiful nymph, fond of the woods. See 
Echo and Narcissus.—Bulfinch. 

Economy’s a very useful broom [ter. boon]. See 
Economy.—Wolcott. 

Edith, the silent stars are coldly gleaming. See Edith. 
—Channing. 

Education, then, briefly, is the leading human souls 
to what is best. See Stones of Venice, The (Edu¬ 
cation ).—R uski n. 

“Edward has been much better since he has been living 
with me.” See Hearsay.—Anon. 

Edward, I may just as well say plainly. See Unwel¬ 
come Guest, The.—McBride. 

E’en as a lovely flower. See Du Bist wie Eine Blume. 
—Heine. 

E’en in the spring and play-time of the year. See 
Task, The (Woodland in Spring, The).—Cowper. 

E’en like two little bank-dividing brooks. See Divine 
Rapture. A.—Quarles. 

E’en [or even! such is time, that takes in [nr on] trust. 
See Verses Found in His Bible.—Raleigh. 

Ef gran’paw was a soldier now. See Winning Company 
A.—Anon. 

Ef here ain’t a terbacker spit, right on my nice new 
mat. See Old Woman’s Complaint, An.—Roys. 

Ef I could only get him! Are you sure you haven’t 
met him? See That Boy Jim.—Deas. 

Eferywhere, no matter vhere you vas. See Der 
Loddery Dicket.—Pretzel. 

Efter that I the lang wynterio nycht. See Dreme, The. 
—Lyndesay. 

Eftsoons they heard* a most melodious sound. See 
Faerie Queene, The.—-Spenser. 

Egeria! sweet creation of some heart! See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage.—Byron. 

Eh! give you a lift? Why, surely, jump in, sir, along 
o’ me. See Valentine, The.—Brine. 

Eh! Oh! Eh! What have 1 done to merit these 
cruel sufferings. See Franklin and the Gout.— 
Franklin. 

Eh? What? What do you say? See Santa Claus 
Outwitted.—Denton. 

Eh? Why am I keeping that old crippled mare? See 
Bess.—Chandler. 

Eight bells! Eight bells! Their clear tone tells. See 
All’s Well.—Butler. 


Eight, nine, ten, eleven? Zounds. See Waiting for an 
Interview.—Colman. 

Eight o’clock and no Bones. See Brudder Bones as a 
Carpet-bagger.—Anon. 

Eight volunteers, on an errand of death! See Eight 
Volunteers.—Bailey. 

Eight years ago to-night. See New Americanism.— 
Watterson. 

Eighteen hundred and sixty-two. See Fredericksburg. 
—W. T. W. 

Eighteen to-day, an’ she’s pleasant to see. See Lariat 
Jim.—( Cleveland Plain Dealer.) 

Eighty and nine with their captain. See Charge by the 
Ford, The.—English. 

Eighty years have passed, and more. See Under the 
Washington Elm, Cambridge.—Holmes. 

Eileen of four. See Clock’s Song, The.—Lathrop. 

Electric essence permeates the air. See Acrostic, An.— 
F. A. 

Eleven men of England. See Red Thread of Honour, 
The.—Doyle. 

Eleven o’clock! By Jove! Only an hour. See His 
Wedding Morn.—Griffith. 

Eleven o’clock! Eleven o’clock! Ah! at last! See 
Oak in a storm. An.—Dreyfus. 

Eli, Eli, lama sabacthani? See God and the Soul (At 
the Ninth Hour).—Spalding. 

Elijah Brown, the cobbler, was enamored of the muse. 
See Elijah Brown.—Anon. 

Eliza Jane, two lovers had. See Art and Nature.— 
Anon. 

Elizabeth, alack, Elizabeth! See Elizabeth.—Reese. 

Elizabeth, I beg of you, don’t be so foolish. See From 
Punkin Ridge.—McBride. 

Elizabeth, my cousin, is the sweetest little girl. See 
Mustard and Cress.—Gale. 

Ellen was fair, and knew it, too. See Coquette 
Punished, A.—Anon. 

Eloquence comes, if it comes at all. See Adams and 
Jefferson (Eloquence of Action, The).—Web¬ 
ster. 

Eloquence is a gift which in our time enjoys an influence 
See Orator, The.—Bismarck. 

Elswitha knitteth the stocking blue. See Elswitha.— 
Barry. 

Elvira, don’t for a moment think of dejecting Mr. 
Sparrowgrove. See Peleg and Patience.—Anon. 

Emblem Tree of the Empire State! See Tree of State, 
The.—Rude. 

Emerson has fitly said in true sentiment. See Inde¬ 
pendent Character.—Anon. 

Emerson’s faith in America is justified. See Emerson, 
Extract Concerning.—Cooke. 

Emerson’s writings call for thought. See Emerson 
Extract Concerning.—Scudder. 

Emily, you do not mean to say that our engagement is 
at an end? See Broken Promises.—Anon. 

Employed in the service of my country abroad. I first 
saw the Constitution. See American Constitution 
Tested, The.—Adams. 

Empty the throne-chair stood. See Cockatoos, The— 
Thaxter. 

En garde, messieurs, too long have I endured. See En 
Garde, Messieurs.—Lindsey. 

Enamoured architect of airy ryhme. See same. — 
Aldrich. 

Enchanter of Erin, whose magic has bound us. See 
For the Moore Centennial Celebration.—Holmes. 

Enchantress, touch no more that strain! See Music 
and Memory.—Albee. 

Encinctured with a twine of leaves. See Child in the 
Wilderness, The.—Coleridge. 

"Encore! Encore!” Though the danger’s past. See 
Encore! Encore!—Anon. 

England, I stand on thy imperial ground. See At 
Gibraltar.—W oodberry. 

England may as well dam up the waters of the Nile 
with bxdrushes. See Supposed Speech of James 
Otis.—Child. 

England, queen of the waves, whose green inviolate 
girdle enrings thee round. See England.—Swin¬ 
burne. 

England! Since Shakespeare died no loftier day. See 
same. —Stedman. 

England, thy strides are written on thy fields. See 
Written in Conway Castle.—Faber. 

England, with all thy faults, I love thee still. See 
Task, The (England).—Cowper. 

England’s hold of the colonies. See Speech on Moving 
his Resolutions for Conciliation with America 
(England and her Colonies).—Burke. 

"England’s sun, bright setting o’er the hills so far 
away.” See Un Potpourri d’Elocution.—Rosaire. 


648 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Every 


England’s sun was brightly [or slowly] setting o’er the 
hills so far away. See Curfew Must not Ring 
To-night.—Thorpe. 

English literature is rich in autobiography. See Auto¬ 
biography, An.—Brooks. 

Enoch, poor man, was cast away and lost. See Enoch 
Arden.—Tennyson. 

Enough; and leave the rest to Fame. See Epitaph, 
An.—Marvell. 

Enough is known to show that there is no such. See 
Life on the Moon.—Howe. 

Enough! The lie is ended. God only knows the 
land. See Restitution.—Bengough. 

Enough! We’re tired, my heart and I. See My 
Heart and T.—Browning. 

Ensanguined man is now become, etc. See Seasons, 
The (Plea for the Animals).—Thomson. 

Enter not into the path of the wicked. See Proverbs 
(Preventive “No,” A).— Bible. 

Entombed within a nation’s reverent love See 
same. —Crapsey. 

Envoys of Rome, the poor camp of Spartacus is too 
much honored by your presence. See Spartacus 
to the Roman Envoys in Etruria.—Sargent 

Envy and Avarice, one summer day. See Envy and 
Avarice.—Hugo. 

Ephesus was upside down. See Christian Citizenship. 
Phillips. 

Ere cherries ripe and strawberries be gone. See New 
Cry, The.—Jonson. 

Ere last year’s moon had left the sky. See My Bird.— 
Judson. 

Ere Murfreesboro’s thunders rent the air. See Battle 
of Murfreesboro, The.—Cornwallis. 

Ere our dear Saviour spoke the parting word. See 
Peace.—Dorr. 

Ere peace and freedom, hand in hand. See Song of 
the Union.—Cummings. 

Ere sin could blight or sorrow fade. See Epitaph on 
an Infant.—Coleridge. 

Ere the steamer bore him eastward, Sleary was engaged 
to marry. See Post that Fitted, The.—Kipling. 

Ere their arrival Astrophell had done. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals (Praise of Sydney, The).—Browne. 

Ere yet in Virgil I could scan or spell. See “Hie me, 
Pater Optime, Fessam Deseris.”-—Robinson. 

Ere you left the room this morning. See Did You 
Think to Pray?—Anon. 

Erewhile, on England’s pleasant shores, our sires. See 
Yew, The.—Bryant. 

Ermine or blazonry, he knew them not. See Andrew. 
—Parsons. 

Erratic soul of some great Purpose, doomed. See 
Comet, The.—Sangster. 

Erwacht! Ein Sehiff ist in Sturmes Not! See In 
Sturmes Not.—Schanz. 

Escape me? See Life in a Love.—Browning. 

Esteemed, admired, beloved, farewell! See Anne 
Clough.—Gosse. 

Eternal ruler of the ceaseless round. See Prayer for 
Unity, A.—Chadwick. 

Eternal source of every joy! See For New-Year’s Day. 
—Doddridge. 

Eternal spirit of the chainless mind! See Prisoner of 
Chillon, The.—Byron. . 

Ethel asked me for a verse. See Conditionally.—Collins. 

Ethel, I love you, let it suffice. See Difficult Love- 
making.—Carleton. 

Ethereal Minstrel! Pilgrim of the sky! See To a Sky¬ 
lark .—W ordsworth. 

Ettrick Forest is a fair forest. See Outlaw Murray, 
The.—Anon. 

European guides know about enough English. See 
Innocents Abroad (Mark Twain’s Description of 
European Guides).—Clemens. 

European Toryism has long regarded us as a vulgar 
young giant. See Cause of Bunker Hill, Ihe. 

Eva after this, declined rapidly. See Uncle Tom’s 
Cabin (Eva’s Death).—Stowe. . 

Even as tender parents lovingly. See Child in the 
Street, The.—Piatt. 

Even at their fairest still I love the less. Sec Dream 
of flowers, A.—Coan. . , , 

Even from this brief review it is manifest that the 
nation is resolutely facing to the front. See In¬ 
augural Address (“Even from this brief, etc.) 
_arfield. 

“Even in a palace life may be led well!” See Even in a 
Palace.—Arnold. , , . , „ 

Even is come; and from the dark park, hark, bee 
Nocturnal Sketch. A.—Hood. 


Even [nr e’en] such is time, that takes in trust. See 
Verses Found in his Bible.—Raleigh. 

Even thus, methinks, a city rear’d should be. See 
Written in Edinburgh.—Hallam. 

Evening beamed upon the Highlands. See Maiden’s 
Mishap, The.—Anon. 

Evening exhibitions, rare up to that period and given 
only exceptionally. See Quo Vadis (Fight with 
the Aurochs, The).—Sienkiewicz. 

Evening Express! Times! Times! Evening Express! 
See News of the Day.—Anon. 

Evening is falling to sleep in the west. See Falling to 
Sleep.—Anon. 

Evening was falling, cold and dark. See Goodest 
Mother, The.—Anon. 

Events, with trumpet-call, summon us to our post. See 
same. —James. 

Ever a current of sadness deep. See Music.—Hemans. 

Ever absent, ever near. See Separation.—Kazinezi. 

Ever eating, ever cloying. See On Time.-—Swift. 

Ever let the fancy roam. See Fancy.—Keats. 

Ever since I arrived at the state of manhood. See 
Capture of Ticonderoga, The.—Allen. 

Ever since I’ve come down from Peekskill I’ve in¬ 
tended for to write to Miss Griffin. See Charity 
Grinder and the Postmaster General.—Dallas. 

Ever since my uncle in California left me three hun¬ 
dred thousand dollars. See Froward Duster, The. 
—Burdette. 

Ever since that whirlwind of the Lord called the 
Women’s Crusade. See Dramshop or the Re¬ 
public, The.—Lathrop. 

Ever would I fain be reading. See Book, The.—Hensel. 

Evermore all the days are long, and the cheerless skies 
are gray. See Gray Day, The.—Burdette. 

Every age and every nation has its distinguished men. 
See Intellectual Improvement, an Aid to Works 
of the Imagination.—Anon. 

Every age, through being beheld too close. See 
Aurora Leigh (Simile, A).—Browning. 

Every calling is constantly making a silent, invisible 
draft. See same .—( The Nation.) 

Ev-er-y child who has the use. See Some Geese.-— 
Herford. 

Every country and every period must be judged by its 
treatment of women. See Higher Education for 
Women.—Depew. 

Every day a Pilgrim, blindfolded. See Love, the 
Pilgrim.—Ai'dd. 

Every day brings a ship. See Letters.—Emerson. 

Every drunkard clothes his head with a mighty scorn. 
See Drunkard, The.—Taylor. 

Every educated man is aware of a profound popular 
distrust. See Leadership of Educated Men, The. 
—Curtis. 

Every encroachment, great or small, is important 
enough. Nee Presidential Protest, The (Resistance 
to Oppression in its Rudiments).—Webster. 

Every evening, after tea. See Teeny-Weeny.—Field. 

Every flower is sweet to me. See same. —May. 

Every kindness done to others in our daily walk. See 
same. —Stanley. 

Every lily in the meadow. See Be Patient.—Anon. 

Every lover has a keepsake. See Keepsakes.—Anon. 

Every man must patiently bide his time. See Hy¬ 
perion (Success).—Longfellow. 

Every man or woman who feels the responsibility of 
making the best use of opportunities. See Utiliz¬ 
ing Our Failures.—Abott. 

Every member of the Bangs family. See Bangs 
Family Tell a Story, The.—Foss. 

Every monument to Washington is a tribute to patriot¬ 
ism. See Washington and the Nation.—McKinley. 

Every nation is like a clock. See National Clock. The. 


— King. 

E-v-e-r-v night! See Bill Arp on the Rack.—Anon. 
Every night beside the gate. Nee Ladye Maude.— 
Fabbri. . 

Every night from even to morn. See To the Nightin¬ 
gale.—Davis. 

Every night my prayers I say. See System.-—Steven- 


nt 111. 

Every one by instinct taught. See Pelican Island, The 
(Coral Reef. The).—Montgomery. 

Every one is familiar with Tennyson’s story of th eLady 
of Shallott. See Lady of Shallott, The.—Phelps. 

Every one must recollect the tragical story of young 
Emmett. Sec Broken Hearts.—Irving. 

Every one thinks some face fairer. See I Love my 
Love.—Sawyer. 

Every race that ever has been has had to stand the 
baptism of fire. See Siege of Cuautla, The.—I.ogan. 


649 




Every 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Every seat in the house was filled. See At the Opera. 
—Jessop. 

Every solid statement of fact is argument. See Cor¬ 
ruption of Municipal Government, The.—Park- 
hurst. 

Every spring hundreds of our countrymen go west¬ 
ward. See Beyond the Mississippi.—Richardson. 

Every time the question of amnesty has been intro¬ 
duced. See Amnesty of Jefferson Davis, The.— 
Blaine. 

Every time you miss, or fail. See Up Higher.—Smiley. 

Every valley drinks. See Winter Rain.—Rossetti. 

Every wedding, says the proverb. See Groomsman 
to his Mistress, The.—-Parsons. 

Everybody has heard of St. Patrick. See Last Ser¬ 
pent, The.—Croker. 

Everybody has heard of the Cave of St. Cyprian at 
Salamanca. See Alhambra, The (Legend of the 
Enchanted Soldier, The).—Irving. 

Everybody knows, Mr. Speaker, what has been the 
policy of this Government. See Hazards of Our 
National Prosperity.—Smith. 

Everybody’s got a nose, but they ain’t all alike. See 
Noses.—Wood. 

Everything pleased my neighbor, Jim. See My Neigh¬ 
bor Jim.—Pearre. 

Everything which helps a boy’s power of observation 
helps his power of learning. See Eyes and No 
Eyes.—Kingsley. 

Everywhere, everywhere, Christmas to-night! See 
Christmas Carol, A.—Brooks. 

Everywhere to-day we’re hearing. See Christmas Joy. 
—-Denton. 

Evil, if rightly understood. See On the Origin of Evil. 
—Byrom. 

Exactly, how did it? I really can’t tell. See How It 
Came to Be.—Anon. 

Exactly three hundred years ago, great religious 
changes were taking place in England. See Ten- 
hours Bill, The.—Macaulay. 

Examination day! How many little hearts. See Ex¬ 
amination Day.—Doolittle. 

Examples of greatness and goodness before us bid us 
work. See Opportunity for Work.—Russell. 

Excellence is not matured in a day. See Cost of Writing 
Well.—Anon. 

Excellent Brutus, of all human race. See Brutus.— 
Cowley. 

Excuse a blind old soldier if too eager in his quest. See 
Sherman’s March.—Brooks. 

Excuse me, ladies and gentlemen, if I am late. See 
Journey to What’s its Name, A.—Anon. 

Exegi momumentum aere perennius. See “Non Omnis 
Moriar.”—Flaccus. 

Exert thy voice, sweet harbinger of spring! See To 
the Nightingale—Winchelsea. 

Existence has become almost a different thing since 
it began with some of us. See World Without 
and Within, The.—Talfourd. 

Experienced men of the world know very well that it is 
best. See Compensation.— Emerson. 

Extent of country, in my conception, ought to be no 
bar. See Extent of Country No Bar to Union.— 
Randolph. 

Extremely small or of giant size. See Modem Book, 
The.—M. R. 

Exultation is the going. See Setting Sail.—-Dickinson. 

Eye of the garden, queen of flowers. See To the Rose. 
—Davies. 

Eyes, hide my love, and do not show. See Hymen’s 
Triumph (Song: Eyes, Hide My Love).—Daniel. 

Eyes of blue and hair of gold. See Mother’s World.— 
Alden. 

Eyes that are clear as the sparkling air. See Football 
Girl, The.—Walker. 

Eyes that are saucy but tender. See Intrusion, An.— 
Brewer. 

Eyes that we look into—so. See Spears of Kan-Mar, 
The.—Roberts. 


F 

Facing the ocean, guardian of our land. See Halifax. 
—Fairbanks. 

Faculty, students and friends: I have almost the 
temerity to say. See President’s Address, A.— 
Anon. 

“Fadder, de shentlemans vat puys te tiamond engage¬ 
ment ring yesterday.” See Why not, If he Paid 
the Shot.—Anon. 

Faded and fair, in an old arm-chair. See Grand¬ 
mother Gray.—Boutelle. 


Fading, fading, ever fading! See Fading.—Howland. 

Faery elves, whose midnight revels, by a forest side. 
See Paradise Lost.-—Milton. 

Fail—yet rejoice, because no less. See Light and Shade 
(“Fail—yet rejoice,” etc.).—Procter. 

Failed! Jim Miserton failed! You don’t mean to say 
it’s so? See Failed.—Thompson. 

Fain I would, but O I dare not. See Fain I Would.— 
Ferrabosco. 

Fain would I change that note. See In Laudem 
Amoris.—Anon. 

Fain would I climb the heights that lead to God. See 
“Fain Would I Climb.”—Moulton. 

Fain would I have thee barter fates with me. See To 
a Seabird.—Watson. 

Fain would I wake you, sweet. See Wake, Gently 
Wake.—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Faint, faint, and clear. See Wind-swept Wheat, The 
—De Vere. 

Faint grew the yellow buds of light. See Om.— 
Russell. 

Faint not and falter not, nor plead. See To Children 
of Girard, Pa.—Whittier. 

Fainter her slow step falls from day to day. See Child 
of Earth, The.—Norton. 

Faintly as tolls the evening chime. See Canadian 
Boat-song, A.—Moore. 

Fair Amoret is gone astray. See Amoret.—Congreve. 

Fair and fair, and twice so fair. See Arraignment of 
Paris. The (Fair and Fair).—Peele. 

Fair are the flowers and the children, but their subtle 
suggestion is fairer. See Indirection.—Realf. 

Fair as the dawn of the fairest day. See By the 
Autumn Sea.—Hayne. 

Fair as the woman whom the prophet old. See Ox¬ 
ford and Her Chancellor.—Alexander. 

Fair bird, whose silvery pinions sweep. See Sea-gull, 
The.—MacNeill. 

Fair Catherine from her bower-window. See Young 
Redin.—Anon. 

Fair chance held fast is merit. Once a king. See 
Boy and the Ring, The.—Anon. 

Fair daffodils, we weep to see. See To Daffodils.— 
Herrick. 

Fair Ellen Irwin, when she sate. See Ellen Irwin; or, 
The Braes of Kittle.—Wordsworth. 

Fair flower, that dost so comely grow. See Wild 
Honeysuckle, The.—Freneau. 

Fair flowers that bloom so richly. See Flowers in 
Winter.—Smith. 

Fair Gertrude lives at Farmington. See Gertrude.— 
Scranton. 

Fair Greece' sad relic of departed worth! See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Greece).—Byron. 

Fair in the country of Arden. See Cassamen and 
Dowsabel.—Drayton. 

Fair insect, that, with thread-like legs spread out. 
See To a Mosquito.—Bryant. 

Fair is each budding thing the garden shows. See 
Old-fashioned Garden, The.—Hayes. 

Fair is my love and cruel as she’s fair. See Son¬ 
nets to Delia (Beauty, Time, and Love, I.).— 
Daniel. 

Fair is the castle up on the hill. See Hushaby, Sweet 
My Own.—Field. 

Fair is thy face, Nantasket. See Nantasket.—Ames. 

Fair Isabella with her two brothers dwelt. See Isa¬ 
bella; or, The Pot of Basil.—Keats. 

Fair Katharine, and most fair. See King Henry V. 
(Henry the Fifth’s Wooing).—Shakespeare. 

Fair lady Isabel sits in her bower sewing. See Lady 
Isabel and the Elf-knight.—Anon. 

Fair lady, when you see the grace. See To a Lady 
Admiring Herself in a Looking-glass. — Ran¬ 
dolph. 

Fair lady with the bandaged eye! See Ode to Fortune. 
—Halleck and Drake. 

Fair laughs the morn, and soft the zephyr blows. See 
Bard, The.—Gray. 

Fair lies the day on Gilead (my father’s land and 
mine). See Jephtha’s Daughter.—Marsh. 

Fair little spirit of the woodland mazes. See Dead 
Singer, A.—Logan. 

Fair Luna shines bright. See Sailing.—Paine. 

Fair maid, had I not heard thy baby cries. See To a 

v Lofty Beauty from her Poor Kinsman.—Cole¬ 
ridge. 

Fair maiden, thou didst wait for me. See Saint Val¬ 
entine’s Eve.—McGaffey. 

Fair maiden, when I look at thee. See To a Fair 
Maiden.—Landor. 

Fair our fleet as Castle Sweyn. See Lay of Norse- 
Irish Sea-kings.—Sigerson. 


650 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Far 


Fair pledges of a fruitful tree. See To Blossoms.— 
Herrick. 

Fair Portia’s counterfeit? What demi-god. See 
Merchant of Venice, The (Portia’s Picture).— 
Shakespeare. 

Fair Queen, away! To their charger speak. See 
Queen of Prussia’s Ride, The.—Smith. 

Fair quiet, have I found thee here. See Garden. 
The (Poet’s Retirement, The).—Marvell. 

Fair Roslin chapel, how divine. See Roslin and Haw- 
thornden.—Van Dyke. 

Fair ship, that from the Italian shore. See In Me- 
moriam (“Fair Ship,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

Fair sight! for a crew of Englishmen true. See Wreck 
of the “Northern Belle,” The —Arnold. 

Fair sir, to you my maiden intuitions. See Valentine 
to a Man of Worth.—Church. 

Fair star, new-risen to our wondering eyes. See 
Bacchylides.—Whitcher. 

Fair stood the wind for France. See To the C'ambro- 
Britons and their harp- His Ballad of Agincourt. 
—Drayton. 

Fair streamlet, running. See Mountain Streamlet, 
The.—Mackay. 

Fair summer droops, droop men and beasts therefore. 
See Fading Summer.—Nash. 

Fair tree! for thy delightful shade. See Fair Tree!— 
Winchelsea. 

Fair were our visions! Oh, they were as grand. See In 
the Land where We Were Dreaming.—-Lucas. 

Fair Willie and his Esmeralda. See Willie and His 
Esmeralda.—Thatcher. 

Faire daffodils, we weep to see. See To Daffodils.— 
Herrick. 

Fairest of earth! if thou wilt hear my vow. See Court¬ 
ship and Matrimony. (Punch.) 

Fairest of stars, last in the train of night. See Para¬ 
dise Lost (Song of Praise).—Milton. 

Fairest, when by the rules of palmistry. See Sonnet. 
—Browne. 

Fairfax, whose name in arms through Europe rings. 
See On the Lord General Fairfax.—Milton. 

Fairy spirits of the breeze. See Unwritten Poems.— 
Winter. 

Faith and fixt. hope these pages may peruse. See On 
Certain Books.—Turner. 

Faith! Ann Hooligan, an’ I don’t deny. See Biddy’s 
Trials among the Yankees.— (Harper’s Bazar.) 

Faith, here’s another hole! ah, thin, it’s shocking 1 See 
Babes in the Wood, The.—Anon. 

Faith spread her wings to seek the realms of day. See 
Love and Faith.—Machar. 

Faith thus dislodged from ancient schools and creeds. 
See Consequences of the Reformation.—Lytton. 

“Faithful boys make faithful men.” See Good Name, 
A.—Anon. 

Faithful love till death enduring. See My Fatherland. 
—Fallersleben. 

Faithful reports of them have reached me oft! See 
Isles, The.—Roberts. 

Faithless, perverse, and blind. See LTnbelief.—Cary. 

Fall in, fall in, old soldiers. „ See Fall In.-—Sherwood. 

Fallen? how fallen? States' and empires fall. See On 
the Defeat of Henry Clay.—Lord. 

Fallen that mighty form. See Phillips Brooks.— 
Ingham. 

Falleth now from off a tree. See Emblems.—Coe. 

Falling all the night-time. See Snowflakes.—Cheney. 

Falling from the antique chair-back till its length 
trailed o’er the floor. See Mother’s Easter Scarf, 
The.—Banks. 

False diamond set in flint! hard heart in haughty 
breast! See Fatima and Raduan.—Bryant. 

False love, and hast thou play’d me this. See Wav- 
erley (Davie Gellatley’s Song).—Scott. 

False Sir John a-wooing came. See May Colvin.— 
Anon. 

False though she be to me and love. See Song.—Con¬ 
greve. 

False world, good night! since thou hast brought. See 
Farewell to the World, A.—Jonson. 

False world, thou ly’st: thou canst not lend. See 
Vanity of the World, The.—Quarles. 

Falsely the mortal part we blame. See Ode to the 
Spleen, An.—Winchelsea 

Fame is the spur that the clear spirit doth raise. See 
Lycidas (Fame).—Milton. 

Fame, like a wayward girl, will still be coy. See On 
Fame.—Keats. 

Fame, wisdom, love, and power were mine. See All is 
Vanity, saith the Preacher.—Byron. 

Famed for contemptuous breach of sacred ties. See 
Windsor Poetics.—Byron. 


Fancies are but streams. See Fancies.—Ford. 

Fancy many forms assumes! See Phantasy.—Garvie. 

Fanny, beware of flattery. See Flattery.—Williams. 

Far adown the silent ocean. See Coral Insect, The.— 
Anon. 

Far are the Gaelic tribes and wide. See Dead An¬ 
tiquary O’Donovan, The.—McGee. 

Far away from the earth on which we dwell. See First 
Revolution of the Heavens Witnessed by Man, 
The.—Mitchel. 

Far away from the world’s busy haunts and its din. 
See Truth and Falsehood.—Kavanaugh. 

Far away the camp fires burn; we can see their ruddy 
light. See Far Away the Camp Fires Burn.— 
Anon. 

Far away under skies of blue. See Lily and the Lin¬ 
den, The.—Crosby. 

Far back in days of childhood stood a grove of stately 
pines. See Pines, The.—Anon. 

Far, far away, beyond a hazy height. See October in 
Tennessee.—Malone. 

Far, far from here. See Empedocles on Etna (Song 
of Callicles in Sicily).—Arnold. 

Far from the ball-room’s crowded throng. See Yale, 
A. D. 2,000.— (Yale Record..) 

Far from the churchyard dig his grave. See Grave¬ 
stone, A.—Allingham. 

Far from the crowd they stand apart. See V-A-S-E, 
The.—Roche. 

Far from the glorious light of day. See Prisoner of the 
Bastile, The.—Warner. 

Far from the loud sea-beaches. See Visit from the Sea, 
A.—Stevenson. 

Far from the sun and summer gale. See Progress 
of Poesy.—Gray. 

Far from the world, O Lord, I flee. See Retirement.— 
Cowper. 

Far have I clambered in my mind. See Love and 
Humility.—More. 

Far in a valley of peace and rest. See Four Scenes.— 
Pomeroy. 

Far in a wild, unknown to public view. See Hermit, 
The.—Parnell. 

Far in the bosom of the deep. See Lighthouse, The. 
—Scott. 

Far in the corner on the stairs. See Thorn that Guards, 
The—T. G. P. 

Far in the depths of a sombre wood. See Ballade.—• 
Stylites. 

Far in the east by Gange’s tide. See Reason Why, 
The.—Anon. 

Far in the night, yet no rest for him! See At Noon 
and Midnight.—Riley. 

Far in the woods I found a vine, so sweet. See Para¬ 
ble, A.—Jackson. 

Far in the woods, the fresh green woods in May. See 
Far in the Woods in May.—Thomas. 

Far lifted from the city’s jar and fret. See Ben 
Hafiz, the Muezzin.—Savage. 

Far off a young State rises, full of might. See Farther. 
—Piatt. 

Far off, among the norland hills. See After the Sum¬ 
mer Storm.—Whitman. 

Far off, he (Zerbino) saw that something shining lay. 
See Death of Zerbino, The.—Rose. 

Far off in the north the bright lights glow. See Fin¬ 
land Love-song.—Anon. 

Far off in the waste of desert sand. See Jim-jam 
King of the Jou-jous, The.—Start. 

Far off? Not far away. See In the Twilight.—Cot- 
terell. 

Far on yon heath so lone and wild. See Love Keeping 
Watch.—Hinds. 

Far out at sea—the sun was high. See Genius.— 
Horne. 

Far out beyond our sheltered bay. See Steering Home. 
—Sullivan. 

Far over in Norway’s distant realm. See Christmas 
Sheaf, The.—Tomlinson. 

Far through fragrant forest, lawn and lea. See April 
Flower-song.—Kellock. 

Far through the Delphian shades. See Storm of 
Delphi, The.—Hemans. 

Far to the south lies the fairest and richest domain of 
this earth. See At the Boston Banquet (Southern 
Negro, The).—Grady. 

Far town-ward sounds a distant tread. See Rokeby 
(Buccaneer, The).—Scott. 

Far up above the city. See Chimes of Amsterdam, 
The.—Pauli. 

Far up on a mountain side a little brook flows. See 
Address before the Order of Elks, An.—Anon. 


651 





Far 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Far up on Katahdin thou towerest. See To a Pine- 
tree.—Lowell. 

Far up the heights, thou nobly planned of God. See 
Frances E. Willard Exercise.—Phillips. 

Far up the lonely mountain-side. See Georgia Vol¬ 
unteer, A.—Townsend. 

Far up the sides of the rock bound cliff. See For the 
Chief’s Daughter.—Anon. 

Fare thee well ! and if for ever. See Fare Thee Well.— 
Byron. 

Fare thee well, dear Alma Mater. See Ivy Song.— 
Anon. 

Fare thee well, love, fare thee well. See Dying Girl 
to her Lover, The.—Praed. 

Fare thee well, thou lovely one! See Fare Thee Well, 
Thou Lovely One!—Moore. 

Farewell, a long farewell, to all my greatness. See 
Henry VIII. (Wolsey’s Fall).—Shakespeare. 

Farewell, beloved France, to thee. See Farewell to 
France.—Mary Queen of Scots. 

Farewell; but whenever you welcome the hour. See 
same. —Moore. 

Farewell, dear child, I have no song to give thee. See 
Farewell Advice.—Kingsley. 

“Farewell! farewell!” is often heard. See Good By.— 
Anon. 

Farewell, farewell, my dream is o’er. See Parting 
Words.—Anon. 

Farewell, farewell, my own dear land. See American’s 
Farewell, The.—Vickers. 

Farewell! farewell! the voice you hear. See Farewell.— 
Scott. 

Farewell, farewell to thee, Araby’s daughter! - See 
Lalla Rookh (Araby’s Daughter).—Moore. 

Farewell! God knows when we shall meet again. See 
Romeo and Juliet (Potion Scene, The).—-Shake¬ 
speare. 

Farewell, great painter of mankind. See On William 
Hogarth—In Chiswick Churchyard.—Anon. 

Farewell, high thought, and pride of noble mind! See 
Mary Stuart.—Schiller. 

Farewell! if ever fondest prayer. See same. —Byron. 

Farewell! It is no sorrowful word. See Farewell.— 
Thompson. 

Farewell, life! my senses swim. See! Stanzas.— 
Hood. 

Farewell! My blessing with you. See Hamlet (Polonius 
to Laertes).—Shakespeare. 

Farewell, my more than fatherland! See Farewell 
to America, A.—Wilde. 

Farewell, my youth! for now we needs must part See 
Ave atque Vale.—Watson. 

Farewell, O my Laughing Water! See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The.—Longfellow. 

Farewell? Oh, no! It may not be. See Ruth and 
Naomi.—Peabody. 

Farewell, old year; we walk no more together. See 
Farewell to the Old Year.—Doudney. 

Farewell rewards and fairies. See Farewell to the 
F airies.—Corbet. 

“Farewell, sweet, my bride!” the gallant knight cried. 
See Knight’s Vow, The.—Lane. 

Farewell' the doom is spoken. All is o’er. See Lost 
Tribune, The.—Sigerson. 

Farewell! thou are too dear for my possessing. See 
Sonnets, LXXXVII.—Shakespeare. 

Farewell, thou busy world, and may. See Retirement, 
The.—Cotton. 

Farewell to Lochaber! and farewell, my Jean. See 
Lochaber no More.—Ramsay. 

Farewell to my Eppie. See Kilmarnock’s Lament.— 
Anon. 

Farewell to pleasant Dilston Hall. See Derwent- 
water’s Farewell.—Anon. 

Farewell to such a world' Too long I press. See 
Among the Redwoods.—Sill. 

Farewell to the land, where the gloom of my glory. See 
Napoleon’s Farewell.—Byron. 

Farewell, we must forget. See Rosemary and Rue.— 
Jefferson. 

Farewell, ye dungeons dark and strong. See McPher¬ 
son’s Farewell.—Burns. 

Farewell, ye lofty spires. See Last Farewell, The.— 
Emerson. 

Farewell, ye mountains, ye beloved glades. See Joan 
of Arc’s Farewell to Home.—Schiller. 

Farragut, Farragut, old hea-t of oak. See Farragut.— 
Meredith. 

Fascinated by the perfection of the man, we are loath 
to break the mirror of admiration. See Washing¬ 
ton and the Nation.—Daniel. 

Fashioned from lacquer and bronze and shell. See 
Chin Wee.—Warner 


Fast and furious falls the snow. See Battle of Eylau, 
The.—McLellan. 

Fast asleep lies little May. See Fast Asleep.—Anon. 

Fast falls the snow, 0, lady mine! See To F. C., 20th 
February, 1875.—Collins. 

Fast flows the wine, and faster. See Toast-master, 
The.—Anon. 

Fasten the chamber! See Bluebeard’s Closet.— 

Cooke. 

Faster, faster, O Circe, goddess. See Strayed Rev¬ 
eller, The.—Arnold. 

Faster than fairies, faster than witches. See From 
a Railway Carriage.—Stevenson. 

Fate! fortune! chance! whose blindness, hostility or 
kindness. See Death.—Smith. 

Fate! I have asked few things of thee. See Prayer to 
Fate, A.—Landor. 

Father Blake was more familiarly known by the name 
of Father Phil. See Father Phil’s Collection.—- 
Lover. 

Father Burke was the priest who made a slip of the 
tongue in preaching about the five thousand 
loaves. See Mickey Feeny and the Priest.— 
Anon. 

Father, by Thy love and power. See Evening.—Anon. 

Father calls me William, sister calls me Will. See 
Jest ’fore Christmas.—Field. 

Father Foley, a parish priest, was a clergyman, much 
beloved by his own flock. See Widow O’Brien’s 
Toast.—Anon. 

Father, Harry Martin is going to leave the academy. 
See Justice.—Clement. 

Father, hold Thou my hands. See Make Thy Way 
Mine.—Klingle. 

Father! I have been here at the council-house for some 
time. See To the Secretary of War, 1824.— 
PushmfltciliSp 

Father, I know that all my life. See Thy Will be 
Done.—W aring. 

Father, I scarcely dare to pray. See Last Prayer, A — 
Jackson. 

Father, I will not ask for wealth or fame. See Higher 
Good, The.—Parker. 

Father in Heaven, hallowed be Thy name. See Lord’s 
Prayer in Verse, The.—Anon. 

Father in Heaven! Immortal Godhead, Deity pro¬ 
found. See Father in Heaven.-—Ashbury. 

Father in Heaven! My soul is dark with sin' See 
Light.—Turner. 

Father, in Thy mysteriou. presence kneeling. See 
For Divine Strength.—Johnson. 

Father Matthew, the apostle of temperance in Ireland. 
See Yellow Pocket, The.—Anon. 

Father of all! in death’s relentless claim. See same. — 
Holmes. 

Father of all! in every age. See Universal Prayer, 
The.—Pope. 

Father of earth and Heaven! I call Thy name! See 
Battle Hymn.—Korner. 

“Fatherof lakes!” thy waters bend. See Lake Superior. 
—Goodrich. 

Fatherof Light! great God of Heaven. See Prayer 
of Nature, The.—Byron. 

Father Roach was a good Irish priest. See Father 
Roach.—Lover. 

Father' the little girl we see. See Little Aglae to 
her Father.—Landor. 

“Father!” The old man shut his mouth tight and 
went on harnessing. See Revolt of Mother, The.— 
Wilkins. 

Father, Thy wonders do not. singly stand. See Spirit- 
land, The.—Very. 

Father Time was swiftly working. See Overdrawn 
Accounts.—Pelham. 

Father Time, your footsteps go. See Tn Time’s Swing. 
—Larcom. 

Father, to Thee I cry! See Korner’s Battle Hymn.— 
Korner. 

Father, what is a white lie? See White Lies.—Anon. 

“Father'” “What is it?” See Revolt of Mother, 
The.—Wilkins. 

Father, whate’er of earthly bliss. See same. — 
Steele. 

Father, who keepest the stars in thy care. See 
Domine, Cui Sunt Pleiades Curse.—Roberts. 

“Father, who travels the road so late?” See Candidate, 
The.—Anon. 

Father! whose hard and cruel law. See Death of Grant, 
The.—Bierce. 

Father will have done. See Worsted Stocking, The.— 
Anon. 

Fathered by March, the daffodils are here. See 
Daffodils.—Reese. 


652 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Fill 


Fathers, mothers, see us now. See What We Learn 
at School.—Anon. 

Fathers of the oratory. See Wonderful Whalers, The. 
— Anon. 

Faultless in his glory’s presence! See Faultless.— 
Johnson. 

Faustina hath the fairest face. See Madrigal—Tn 
Praise of Two.—Anon. 

Fawn-footed Nannie, where have you been? See 
Little Nannie.—Larcom. 

Fayre is my love, when her fayre golden heares. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “Fayre,” 
etc.).—Spenser. 

Fear death?—to feel the fog in my throat. See Pros¬ 
pice.—Browning. 

Fear hath a hundred eyes that all agree. See Gun¬ 
powder Plot.—Wordsworth. 

Fear nr< more the heat o’ the sun. See Cymbeline 
(Dirge from Cymbeline).—Shakespeare. 

Fear not, O little flock, the foe. See Swedish Battle- 
song.—Altenburg. 

February—fortnights two. See February.—Sherman. 

Fee, faw, fum! bubble and squeak! See Holy Cross 
Day.—Browning. 

Feed on, my flocks, securely. See Damelus’ Song to 
His Flock.—Constable. 

Feel more ’an ever like a fool. See Ol’ Pickett’s Nell.— 
Kimball. 

Feelin’ a hand on my arm, I turns round: and who 
should T see. See Talking Latin.—Haliburton. 

Feeling the way, and all the way uphill. See Feeling 
the Way.—Phelos. • 

Feels and owns in carols rude. See Ode on the Pleasure 
Arising from Vicissitude.—Gray. 

Fel’ cit’zens o’ de county of Fluvanna-—T ain’t yah 
faw to make a noration on uvvyting in ginnul, an’ 
’nufhn in puhticlar. See Jes’ Nail Dat Mink to de 
Stable Do’.—Anon. 

Fell from aloft, in the restless sea. See Fell from 
Aloft.—Thomas. 

Fella citizens in general an’ yo’ folks particrally. See 
Disco’se by a Colored Man.—Anon. 

Feller citizens and other people which are a sittin’ 
around here upon these fences. See Speech by 
Billy Higgins on the Destruction of His Rambo 
Apple Tree.—Anon. 

Feller citizens, gentlemen and ladies, Mr. President. 
See Speech of the Hon. Perverse Peabody on the 
Acquisition of Cuba.—Anon. 

Feller citizens: I hev riz up before you for the pur¬ 
pose of makin’ a stump speech. See Stump 
Speech, A.—Anon. 

Fe'ler citzens: I jest think I’m as good as anybody 
else. See Peter Peabody’s Stump Speech.— 
Anon. 

Feller-citizens.—I’ve bin honored with an invite to 
norate. See Artemus Ward’s Fourth of July 
Oration.—Browne. 

Feller-citizens of Pine Holler. See Hezekiah Stubbins’ 
Oration, July 4th.—Anon. 

Feller-fellers and citizens generally: I rise to address 
you on the subject of the kuming eel-eckshun. 
See Flection Stump Speech.—Sharpley. 

Fellow-citizens! As it is the hour named for the meet¬ 
ing. See Town Meeting, The.—-Anon. 

Fellow-citizens! Clouds and darkness are round about 
him! Memory of Abraham Lincoln, The (On 
the Assassination, etc.).—Garfield. 

Fellow-citizens, I congratulate you. See Washington’s 
Birthday Oration.—Anon. 

Fellow citizens: I join in this argumentation as the 
lion with his mate. See Stump Speech.—Anon. 

Fellow-citizens, I will detain you no longer. See Adams 
and Jefferson (Duty to Our Country).—Webster. 

Fellow-citizens: In performance of the duty assigned 
to me on this occasion. See Garfield Statue, 
The.—Cleveland. 

Fellow citizens- It is no ordinary cause that has 
brought together. Sec Relief to Starving Ireland 
(Appeal in Behalf of Ireland).—Prentiss. 

Fellow-citizens, let us seize this occasion to renew to 
each other. See National Monument to Washing¬ 
ton.—Winthrop. 

Fellow-citizens of my native state See Appeal to the 
Patriotism of South Carolina, An.—Jackson. 

Fellow-citizens of the female sect: I suppose you are 
not looking for and expectin’ a speech from me. 
See Deborah Doolittle’s Speech on Women’s 
Rights.—Anon. 

Fellow-citizens of the United States, citizens of the 
old Thirteen. Nee Hundredth Anniversary of the 
Surrender of Lord Cornwallis, The (American Ex¬ 
ample).—Winthrop. 


Fellow-citizens of the United States: In compliance 
with a custom. See First Inaugural Address.— 
Lincoln. 

Fellow-citizens: This is the ever adorable, commemor- 
able, and patriotic Fourth of July. See Fourth 
of July Oration.—Anon. 

Fellow-citizens:—This is the patriot’s holy day. See 
Centennial Speech.—Barrows. 

Fellow citizens: We have met here. See Speech by 
Obadjah Partington Swipes.—Anon. 

Fellow-citizens: We stand to-day upon an eminence. 
See Inaugural Address.—Garfield. 

Fellow-citizens. Were I to echo the plaintive mur¬ 
murs. See Blessed Are the Dead.—Smarius. 

Fellow-citizens: What contemplations are awakened 
in our minds as we assemble here. See Addi¬ 
tion to the Capitol, The (Apostrophe to Washing¬ 
ton).—Webster. 

Fellow-citizens: What is this country? See Speech 
at Union Square. N. Y., April 2fi, 1861.—Baker. 

Fellow-citizens: Would vou like to know what a boy 
of my size can do? See What a Small Boy can 
Do.—Anon. 

Fellow commissioners:—When we were welcomed in 
Independence Hall. See Our Centennial Cele¬ 
bration.—Cleveland. 

Fellow-countrymen:—At this second appearing to 
take the oath of the Presidential office. See Sec¬ 
ond Inaugural Address.—Lincoln. 

Fellow-Irishmen—It would be the extreme of affecta¬ 
tion in me. See Repeal of the Union.—O’Connell. 

Fellow scholars:—Another year of our school life is 
finished. See For a School.—Anon. 

Fellow-soldiers and confederated chiefs! I grant you. 
See Telemachus to the Allied Chiefs —Fenelon. 

Fellow-trees of Michigan, to organize this meeting. 
See Convention of Michigan Trees, A.—'Beal. 

Fellow-women, I am here to-night to discuss a cause 
that’s human. See Priscilla Prim’s Views on 
Woman’s Rights.—Anon. 

Ferns, beautiful ferns. See Ferns.—Anon. 

Few boys have grandpas as good as mine. See My 
Grandpa.—Anon. 

Few have learned to speak this word. See No.— 
Anon. 

Few, in the days of early youth. See World I am 
Passing Through, The.—Child. 

Few men of hero-mould. Nee John Bright.—Gum- 
mere. 

Few, who at ease their member’s speeches read. See 
Successful Politician, The.—Lytton. 

Few women are possessed of thorough executive 
ability or marked business qualification. See 
Clearing up Technicalities.—Anon. 

Fhairshon swore a feud. See Massacre of the Mac- 
pherson.—Aytoun. 

“Fiat!” The flaming word. Nee Annunciation, The.— 
Tabb. 

Fickle custom! Nothing stays! Nee Spinning Wheel, 
The.—Carmen. 

Fie on ambition! fie on myself. See King Henry 
VI.. Pt. II. (Death of Jack Cade).—Shakespeare. 

Fie on the sleights that men devise. See Pastoral 
Song between Phillis and Amaryllis, A.—Con¬ 
stable. 

Field flowers, sweet field flowers. Nee Field Flowers.— 
\non. 

Fierce burns our fire of driftwood: overhead. See 
Night in Camp.—Bashford. 

Fierce, fiery warriors fought upon the clouds. See 
Julius C®sar.—Shakespeare 

Fierce flocks of sea gulls, with huge wdngs of w'hite. 
See To the Flying Squadron.—Anon. 

Fierce raged the combat—the foemen pressed nigh. 
See Bois Ton Sang, Beaumanoir.—Osgood. 

Fifteen years ago a cloud of gloom o’erhung our coun¬ 
try. See Battle of Gettysburg.-—Ward. 

Fifteen years ago Michigan attempted to stretch a 
railroad. See Defense of Alleged Conspirators 
against the Michigan Central Railroad Company. 
—Seward. 

Fifty leagues, fifty leagues—and I ride, and I ride. 
See D’Artagnan’s Ride.—Morris. 

Fifty years ago, in a rude garret, near the loneliest 
suburbs. See Benedict Arnold (Traitor’s Death¬ 
bed. The).—I ippard. 

Fifty years of age and still unmarried! See Marrying 
a Poetess.—Anon. 

Fight, gentlemen of England! fight, bold yeomen! See 
King Richard III. (Richmond to his Troops). 
—Shakespeare. 

Fill, comrades, fill the bowl right well. See DeRober- 
val (OhmVwa).—Hunter-Duvar. 


653 





Fill 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Fill high each glass with wine, my boys. See Our 
Goddess.—( Wrinkle.) 

Fill high your bowl with fusel oil! See Name Your 
Poison.—Sennott. 

Fill me once more the foaming pewter up! See Mid¬ 
night Meditation, A.—Aytoun. 

Fill mv wine-glass brimming high. See Old Amon¬ 
tillado.—M. E. W. G. 

Fill the bumper fair! See same. —Moore. 

Fill up the glass!—but let it be. See To Absent Friends. 
—Anon. 

Filled is life’s goblet to the brim. See Goblet of Life, 
The.—Longfellow. 

Filled with weariness and pain. See My Vesper Song. 
—Butler. 

Filter, the most may admire thee, though not I. See 
To Sir Annual Filter.—Jonson. 

Find all his having and his holding. See Hudibras.— 
Butler. 

Finding Francesca full of tears, I said. See Obituary. 
—Parsons. 

Fine knacks for ladies! cheap, choice, brave, and new. 
See Pedlar, A.—Dowland. 

Fingers on the holes, Johnny. See Music Lesson, A.—- 
Japp. 

Finis coronal opus. The completion crowns the work. 
See Completion of the National Mouument to 
Washington, The (Washington Monument Com¬ 
pleted, The).—Winthrop. 

“Finish’d!” a disappointed artist cries. See On the 
Conclusion of his Odes.—Pindar. 

Fire! fire! fire! See same. —Anon. 

Fire! fire in Allentown! See Old Braddock.—Cheney. 

Fire in nature is not a substance. See same .— 
Jacobus. 

Fired at the sound, my genius spreads her wing. See 
Traveller, The.—Goldsmith. 

Firmly catch and swiftly pull. See College Rowing- 
song, A.—W. J. H. 

First a soft and gentle tinkle. See Piano-music.— 
Anon. 

First April, she with mellow show'rs. See Succession 
of the Four Sweet Months.—Herrick. 

First came General Washington. See Our Presidents. 
—Richards. 

First came the primrose. See Chanted Calendar, A.-— 
Dobell. 

First catch your clams, along the ebbing edges. See 
Clam-soup.—Croffut. 

First catch your lover. See Useful Precepts for Girls. 
—Anon. 

First comes January. See Farmer’s Round, The.— 
Anon. 

First comes the baby boy so sweet. See Boys will be 
Boys.—Kavanaugh. 

First, find our truth, and then. See Way, The.— 
Shurtleff. 

First he danced a solemn measure. Nee Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The (Hiawatha’s Wedding-feast).—Long- 
• fellow. 

First I salute this soil of the blessed river and rock. 
See Pheidippides.—Browning. 

First I thought, almost despairing. See Endurance.— 
George Macdonald. 

First, I would give thee—nay, I may and will. See 
Woman’s Gifts, A.—De Vere. 

First in our regard, as it is first in the whole nobility 
of trees. See Walk among Trees, A (“ First in our 
regard,” etc.).—Beecher. 

First in the list behold the caustic Dean. See Swift.— 
Coleridge. 

First in the ranks see Joan of Arc advance. See 
English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (Robert 
Southey).—Byron. 

First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of 
his countrymen. See Funeral Oration on the 
Death of General Washington (Washington’s 
Birthday).—Lee. 

First likes the whole, then separate what he sees. See 
Cymon and Iphigenia.—Dryden. 

First of all the violet, with an eye. See Flowers.— 
Cornwall. 

First party (opening conversation): “ ’Ave you 
’eard.” See Art of Conversation, The.— (Punch.) 

First shall the heavens want starry light. See Rosa- 
lynde: or, Euphues’ Golden Legacy (Poet’s Vow, 
A).—Lodge. 

First, somebody told it. See What Became of a Lie.— 
Kidder. 

First take a willow bough. See How to Make a 
Whistle.—Anon. 

First the fine, faint, dreamy motion. See Song, A: 
“ First the fine,” etc.—Gale 


First the grain, and then the blade. See Earth’s 
Tribute.—Tabb. 

First, three boys easily found. See Game of Marbles, 
A.—Mitchell. 

First time he kissed me, he but only kissed. See Son¬ 
nets from the Portuguese, XXXVIII.—Browning. 

First William the Norman. See English History in 
• Rhyme.—Anon. 

First, worship God; he that forgets to pray. See 
Precepts.—Randolph. 

Fisherman Jim lived on the hill. See Fisherman 
Jim’s Kids.—Field. 

Fisherman John is brave and strong. See Old Story, 
An.—Anon. 

Fit theme for song, the sylvan maid. See Madam 
Hickory.—Larremore. 

Fitz Sophocles Simmons was down at the heel. See 
Beautiful Mind, The.—Anon. 

Five and seven and two and four. See Little Boy’s 
Speech, A.—Anon. 

“Five cents a glass!” does any think. See Price of a 
Drink, The.—Pollard. • 

"Five hundred pounds or more I’ve saved.” See Little 
More, A.—Anon. 

Five little brothers set out together. See Five Little 
Brothers.—Wilcox. 

Five little girls sat down to talk. See Choosing Occu¬ 
pations.—Anon. 

Five little pussy-cats, invited out to tea. See Cats’ 
Tea-party, The.—Weatherly. 

Five little squirrels up in a tree. See Finger Ex¬ 
ercise, A.—Denton. 

Five little white heads peeped out of the mold. See 
Five Little White Heads.—Learned. 

Five minutes past eight, and the preacher not here. 
See Sermon, The.—Anon. 

Five mites of monads dwelt in a round drop. See 
Five Lives.—Sill. 

Five months ago that beautiful building. See Two 
Lives.—Vickers. 

Five villages are all that remain. See Appeal of the 
Missagans.—Anon. 

Five years ago, in an obscure village of Ohio, a poet 
died. See Edward Rowland Sill.—Anon. 

Five years have past; five summers, with the length. 
See Lines, composed a few miles above Tintern 
Abbey.—W ordsworth. 

Flag of our country brave. See Our Flag.—Anon. 

Flag of the free heart’s hope and home! See American 
Flag, The.—Drake. 

Flag of the heroes who left us their glory. See Union 
and Liberty.—Holmes. 

Flag of the rainbow, and banner of stars. See Flag of 
the Rainbow.—English. 

Flakes of snow, with sails so white. See Little Ships 
in the Air.—Rand. 

Flash was a white-foot sorrel, an’ run on No. 3. See 
Flash, the Fireman’s Story.—Carleton. 

Fie fro [or fly from] the pres [or press] and duelle [or 
dwell] with soothfastnesse [or sothfastnesse.] See 
Good Counseil of Chaucer.—Chaucer. 

Fled are those times, when in harmonious strains. See 
Village as it Is, The.—Crabbe. 

Fled foam underneath us and round us, a wandering 
and milky smoke. See Island of Sleep, The.— 
Yeats. 

Fled now the sullen murmurs of the north. See 
Farmer’s Boy, The.—Bloomfield. 

Flee as a bird to your mountain. See Flee as a Bird.— 
Dana. 

Fleet, fleet and few, ay, fleet the moments fly. See 
Two Sonnet-songs, II.: Orpheus and the Mariners 
Make Answer.—Marzials. 

Fleet the Tartar’s reinless steed. See French Army in 
Russia, 1812-13 (Snow).-—Wordsworth. 

Fleet-flying gem, of burnished crest. See Captive 
Humming-bird, The.—Hart. 

Fleetly hath passed the year; the seasons came. See 
New Year, The.—Willis. 

Fling out our banner to the breeze. See Fourth of July 
1876.—Fox. 

Fling out the banner! Let it float. See Banner of the 
Cross, The.—Doane. 

Flitting fancy, blithe and free. See Flirtation.—Camp. 

Floating away like the fountains’ spray. See Smoking 
Away.—Finch. 

Flood tide. “All strangers leave the ship.” See 
Sailor’s Story, The.—Vickers. 

Flora hath been all about. See Second Pastor’s Song, 
The.—Breton. 

Flora, well met, and for thy taken pain. See Ar¬ 
raignment of Paris, The (Handiwork of Flora, 
The).—Peele. 


654 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


For 


Flow down, cold rivulet, to the sea. See Farewell, A.— 
Tennyson. 

Flow gently, sweet Afton, among thy green braes. See 
Sweet Afton.—Burns. 

Flow on forever, in thy glorious robe. See Apos¬ 
trophe to Niagara.—Sigourney. 

Flower in the crannied wall. See same. —Tennyson. 

Flower of the deep red zone. See Sermons in Stones.— 
Cary. 

Flower of the medlar. See Pastoral, A. —Marzials. 

Flower of the moon. See Night-blooming Cereus, The. 
—Monroe. 

Flower of the waste! the heathfowl shuns. See On a 
Sprig of Heath.—Grant. 

Flower of youth, in the ancient frame. See Judith.— 
Young. 

Flower, that I hold in my hand. See Tuberose.— 
Block. 

Flowers are fresh, and bushes green. See Blighted 
Love.—De Camoens. 

Flowers for our dead. See For Our Dead.—Scollard. 

Flowers for the mourned ones, fresh in their bloom. 
See Ode for Decoration Day.—Phelps. 

Flowers I would bring if flowers could make thee 
fairer. See Flowers I would Bring.—De Vere. 

Flowers nodding gaily, scent the air. See Duet, A.— 
Moore. 

Flowers open, smile. See same. —Anon. 

Flowers that have died upon my Sweet. See Song of 
Angiola in Heaven.—Dobson. 

Flowers to the fair: to you these flowers I bring. See 
To a Lady, with Some Painted Flowers.—Bar- 
bauld. 

“Floy,” said Paul, “what is that?” See Dombey and 
Son (Death of Little Paul).—Dickens. 

Flung to the heedless winds. See Martyr’s Hymn, The. 
—Luther. 

Flush with the pond the lurid furnace burn’d. See 
Steam Threshing-machine, The.-—Turner. 

Fluttering spread the purple pinions. See Lines by a 
Person of Quality.—Pope. 

Fly by steam force the country across. See Railroad 
Nursery Rhyme.— (Punch.) 

Fly drunkenness, whose vile incontinence. See Drunk¬ 
enness.—Randolph. 

Fly, envious Time, till thou run out thy race. See On 
Time.—Milton. 

Fly far from me. See Tecumseh (Iena’s Song) — 
Mair. 

Fly from [or fle fro] the press [or pres] and dwell [or 
duelle] with soothfastness [or sothfastnesse]. See 
Good Counseil of Chaucer.—Chaucer. 

Fly further off, my lord, fly further off. See Julius 
Cresar.—Shakespeare. 

Fly hence, shadows, that do keep. See Lover’s 
Melancholy, The (Awakening Song).—Ford. 

Fly, little letter. See same. —W. C. C. 

Fly not yet—'tis just the hour. See Fly not Yet.— 
Moore. 

Fly to the desert, fly with me! See Lalla Rookh 
(Fly to the Desert).—Moore. 

Fly to the mountain! Fly! See Conemaugh.—Ward. 

Fly, white butterflies, out to sea. See White Butter¬ 
flies.—Swinburne. 

Flying through the cloudy sea. See So the Snow Comes 
Down.—Butts. 

Foil’d by our fellow men, depress’d, outworn. See 
Immortality.—Arnold. 

Fold away all your bright-tinted dresses. See Woman’s 
War Mission.—Anon. 

Fold thy hands, thy work is over. See Lady Franklin. 
—Whittier. 

Fold thy little hands in prayer. See Child Praying, A. 
—Willmott. 

Fold up thy hands, my weary soul. See Rest.—Cooke. 

Fold ye the ice-cold hands. See Rest at Eventide.— 
McGee. 

Folks has been to town, and Sahry fetched ’er home a 
pet canary. See Canary at the Farm, A.—Riley. 

Folks think I’m such a tiny tot. See My Speech.— 
Goodfellow. 

Folkses, do you think I look very green? See Bess.— 
Anon. ... 

Follow a shadow, it still flies you. See Song: That 
Women are but Men’s Shadows.—Jonson. 

Follow thy fair sun, unhappy shadow! See In Imagine 
per Transit Homo.—Campion. 

Follow your saint, follow with accents sweet! See 
Follow Your Saint.—Campion. 

Fool, stand back, the king is dying. See King is Dying, 
The.—Kenyon. 

Foolish prater, what dost thou. See Swallow, Ihe. 
Cowley. 


Foolish things are frowns and sneers. See Frowns and 
Sneers.—Anon. 

“Fools! for ye know not what ye say.” See Burning 
Ship, The.—McNaughton. 

Foot-sore, weary, o’er the hills. See Mendicants.— 
Everett. 

For a cap and bells our lives we pay. See Vision 
of Sir Launfal, The (June Weather).—Lowell. 

For a jug of barley water. See Barley Water.— (Punch.) 

For a kiss or two, confess. See Lacon and Thyrsis.— 
Herrick. 

For a name unknown, whose fame unblown. See Why. 
—-Carman. 

“For a’ that,” sang Burns, “a man’s a man.” See 
Catholicity.—Anon. 

For ages on our river borders. See First Flowers, The. 
—Whittier. 

For all that God, in mercy, sends. See Give Thanks.— 
Anon. 

For all the higher arts of construction. See Mathe¬ 
matics and Physics.—Spencer. 

For all the kindreds and tribes and tongues of men. 
See Uses of Astronomy, The (Eternal Clockwork 
of the Skies).—Everett. 

For all was blank, and bleak, and gray. See Prisoner 
of Chillon, The.—Byron. 

For aught that ever I could read. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream (Course of True Love, The).— 
Shakespeare. 

For both armies the opening was difficult, uncertain, 
hesitating, and threatening. See Les Miserable? 
(Battle of Waterloo, The).—Hugo. 

For bud and for bloom and for balm-laden breeze. See 
Hymn for Thanksgiving.—Adams. 

For close designs and crooked councils fit. See 
Absalom and Achitophel (Character of the Earl 
of Shaftesbury).—Dryden. 

For comradeship my first is ever noted. See Palaver.— 
Sabine. 

For courage and dash there is no parallel in history. 
See Yankees in Battle, The.—Evans. 

For days the peaks wore hoods of cloud. See Septem¬ 
ber Violet, A.—Johnson. 

For death must come, and change, and. though the 
loss. See Vingtaine (Tmmutabihs).—Bunner. 

For do but note a wild and wanton herd. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The (Power of Music, The).— 
Shakespeare. 

For eight days now rumors of perfidy, of corruption, 
have been bruited. See Defense against the 
Charge of Corruption.—Mirabeau. 

For eighty days the fort of Lucknow had held out. See 
Relief of Lucknow, The.—Anon. 

For England when, with favoring gale. See Heaving 
of the Lead, The.—Dibdin. 

For ever, Fortune, wilt thou prove. See same .— 
Thomson. 

For ever hallowed be this morning fair. See Glad 
Tidings.—Wordsworth. 

For every shooting star, he claimed a kiss. See She 
Showed him Stars.-—Anon. 

For every sunny hour. See same .—Anon. 

For faults and follies London’s doom shall fix. See 
Nostradamus’s Prophecy.—Marvell. 

For flowers that bloom about our feet. See We Thank 
Thee.—Emerson. 

For forty years the meeting-house at Riverdale had 
been. See Obstinate Music-box, The.—Ford. 

For four years our little fleet has been riding in harbor. 
See Culture and Service.—Anon. 

For, from the rising of the sun even unto the going down. 
See Short Missionary Service, A.—Denton. 

For full seven years had Charlemagne tarried in Spain. 
See Song of Roland, Story of the.—Rabb. 

For gold could Memory be bought. See Memory.— 
Lamb. 

For government, though high, and low, and lower. 
See King Henry V. (Commonwealth of the Bees, 
The).—Shakespeare. 

For her gait, if she be walking. See Love’s Reasons. 
—Browne. . . . 

For his religion it was fit. See Hudibras (Religion of 
Hudibras, The).—Butler. 

For I trust, if an enemy’s fleet came yonder round by the 
hill. See Maud (“For I trust,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

For in many things we offend all. See St. James 
(Tongue. The).—Bifile. 

For ft so falls out. See Much Ado about Nothing. 
—Shakespeare. 

For knyghthode is not the feates of warre. See 
Pastime of Pleasure, The (Character of a True 
Knight, The).—Hawes. 


655 




For 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


For lack of gold she’s left me, O. See For Lack of 
Gold.—Austin. 

For lo! no sooner has the cold withdrawn. See Joy of 
Spring.—Hunt. 

For lo! the living God doth bare his arm. See Com¬ 
memoration Ode (Democracy).—Monroe. 

For lo, the winter is past; the rain is over and gone. 
See Flower Service, A.—Denton. 

For mamma I can make the fire. See What Little 
Folks can Do.—Moore. 

For man there still is left one sacred charter. See 
Sanctuary within the Breast, The.—Smith. 

For man to tell how human life began. See Paradise 
Lost (Adam’s Account of his Creation).—Milton. 

For many a mile the tawny mountains heaved. See 
Wicklow Scene, A.—Savage-Armstrong. 

For many blessings I to God upraise. See God and 
the Soul (Nature and the Child).—Spalding. 

For many, many days together. See Riding Together. 
—Morris. 

For many years I have studied minutely the career. 
See Character of Washington, The.—Lodge. 

For many years it has been a matter of wonder to me. 
See Alcoholic and the Tobacco Habit, The.— 
Dow. 

For many years the heroic Hineas, who escaped from 
falling Troy to seek the shores of Italy. See 
jLneid, The Story of the.—Rabb. 

For mart and street you seem to pine. See To His 
Books.—Horace. 

For me the jasmine buds unfold. See Song.— 
Coates. 

For me you left, my dearest, best. See Two Christmas 
Eves.—N esbit. 

For miles and miles the prairie stretches in a long, 
monotonous roll. See Two Gray Wolves.— 
Fanton. 

For months and years, with penury and want. See 
Loss of the Emigrants, The.—O’Reilly. 

For my part, I regard any one who reproaches his 
fellow-man. See Oration on the Crown, The 
(Fortune of /Lschines).—Demosthenes. 

For myself, I can truly say that. See Land of Our 
Forefathers, The.—Everett. 

For myself, I propose, sir, to abide by the principles. 
See Compromise Measures, The (Constitution and 
the Union, The).—Webster. 

For myself, if things go badly in London, the magic 
wand of the unknown will be shivered in his grasp. 
See Reflections of Sir Walter Scott.—Scott. 

For nearly eleven months I have been away from 
France. See Justice for Dreyfus.—Zola. 

For nearly fifty years no spot in any of these states 
had been the scene of battle. See Strewing 
Flowers on the Graves of Union Soldiers (Immor¬ 
tality of True Patriotism).—Garfield. 

For nearly two hundred years license has had possession 
of the entire field. See Testimony of Experience, 
The.—Anon. 

For nine years a fleet of one thousand one hundred and 
eighty-six ships. See Iliad, The Story of the.— 
Rabb. 

For not in quiet English fields. See same.-— Wilde. 

For, O America, our country!—land. See America.— 
Bates. 

For olders to speak a piece. See Little Girl’s Speech, 
A.—Anon. 

For on every side beneath. See Odyssey, The (Pal¬ 
ace of Alcinous, The).—Homer. 

For once I have done right. I always used to think if I 
stuck to it. See Adventures of Jimmy Brown 
The (Ghost Scene, The).—Alden. 

For one long term, or ere her trial came. See Inscrip¬ 
tion for the Door of the Cell in Newgate, where 
Mrs. Brownrigg was Confined.— {Anti-Jacobin.) 

For one whole week I have “wasted my sweetness on 
the desert air” of Columbusville. See Receiving 
Calls.—Brown. 

For our Christ’s saik, I am richt weill content. See 
Ane Satyre of the Threi Estaitis.—Lyndesay. 

‘For our martyr’d Charles I pawn’d my plate.” See 
Old Cavalier, The.—Doyle. 

For physic and farces. See On Dr. Hill’s Farce.— 
Garrick. 

For sale a poet’s quills and pen. See For Sale — 
Duffield. 

For sale a very fine line of hearts. See Bargains in 
Hearts.—Hosford. 

For Scotland’s and for freedom’s right. See Bruce and 
the Spider.—Barton. 

For sixty days and upward a storm of shell and shot 
See Vicksburg.—Hayne. 


For some time past, Mr. Speaker, has the Old World 
been fed from the New. See Speech on Moving 
his Resolutions for Conciliation with America (En¬ 
terprise of American Colonists).—Burke. 

For Summer’s bloom and Autumn’s blight. See 
Bitter-sweet (Thanksgiving Ode, A).—Holland. 

For ten years Robert Browning has stood in a position. 
Nee Robert Browning.—( Philadelphia Press.) 

For that brave sun, the father of the day. See 
Orchestra; or, A Poeme on Dauncing (Antinous 
Praises Dancing before Queen Penelope). — 
Davies. 

For the dead and for the dying. See Pro Mortuis.— 
Blood. 

For the dear love that kept us through the night. See 
Matins.—Burleigh. 

For the handsome kingfisher go not to the tree. Nee 
Kingfisher, The.—Howitt. 

For the hay and the corn and the wheat that is reaped. 
See Giving Thanks.—Anon. 

For the second time in this generation. See Eulogy 
on Garfield.—Blaine. 

For the tender beech and the sapling oak. See Song: 
“For the tender,” etc.—Peacock. 

For the wealth of pathless forests. See Thanksgiving, 
A.—Larcom. 

For the wheels were just as strong as the thills. See 
One-hoss Shay, The.—Holmes. 

For them, O God, who only worship thee. See Wor¬ 
ship.—Lord. 

For there are two heavens, sweet. See same. —Hunt. 

For they alone have need of sorrow. See same .— 
Clemmer. 

For thirty years, secluded from mankind. See In¬ 
scription for the Apartment in Chepstow Castle, 
where Henry Marten was Imprisoned.—Southey. 

For thou wert born of woman! Thou didst come. See 
Nativity, The.—Milman. 

For three long days have I wandered through this 
forest. See Where Thou Goest I Will Go.— 
Anon. 

For three whole days across the sky. See After Rain. 
—Lampman. 

For threescore years and ten. See Read to Sleep.— 
Preston. 

For thrice ten years the paladin’s hand and brain. 
See Milton.—Betts. 

For time is like a fashionable host. See Troilus and 
Cressida (One Touch of Nature).—Shakespeare. 

For to whom can I dedicate this poem. See Epistle to 
the Whigs.—Dryden. 

For toil that is a medicine for woe. See Thanksgiving 
Prayer, A.—Smith. 

For twenty days the ranks in gray. See Dollie Harris 
at Greencastle, Pa.—West. 

For twenty years and over our good parson had been 
toiling. See Our Traveled Parson.—Carleton. 

For twenty years old Jack Baldwin. See Old Jack in 
the Well.—Anon. 

For two years I had been an ensign in the Paulovsky 
Regiment. See Imperial Secret, An.-—Dumas. 

For two years it had been notorious in the square. 
See Courting of T’nowhead’s Bell, The.—Barrie. 

For weeks an impatient crowd of admirers had fol¬ 
lowed the various reports. See Foot-ball Game, 
The.—Copland. 

For weeks the clouds had raked the hills. See Among 
the Hills.—Whittier. 

For who would bear the whips and scorns of time. 
See Hamlet (“For who would bear,” etc.).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

For why, who writes such histories as these. See 
Books.—Higgins. 

For William Freeman as a murderer I have no com¬ 
mission to speak. See Plea for William Freeman, 
A.—Seward. 

For wonderful indeed are all his works. See Para¬ 
dise Lost ( Wisdom and Goodness of God, The). 
—Milton. 

For years I’ve seen the frothy lines go thund’rin’down 
the shore. See Light-keeper, The.—Lincoln. 

For years the slave endured his yoke. See Boat of 
Grass, The.—Wister. 

For your own sake?, brethren, for God’s sake, let your 
thought rise. See same. —Liddon. 

Forbear, bold youth; all’s heaven here. See To One 
Persuading a Lady to Marriage.—Philips. 

’Fore God, his grace is bold, to trust these traitors. 
See King Henry V.—Shakespeare. 

Foreigners have funny expressions, haven’t they, 
Johnson? See Striking Expressions.—Anon. 

Forenoon and afternoon and night,—Forenoon. See 
Life.—Sill. 


656 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Friends 


Foreseen in the vision of sages. See National Ode: 
Read at the Celebration in Independence Hall, 
Philadelphia, July 4, 1876 (America).—Taylor. 

Forest trees have always “haunted me like a pas¬ 
sion.” See Trees.—For a Class Exercise.—Anon. 

Forever am I conscious, moving here. See Undis¬ 
covered Country, The.—Aldrich. 

Forever and ever the reddening leaves. See Forever. 
—Anon. 

Forever past the days of gloom. See Loyal Legion, 
The.—Halpine. 

“Forever with the Lord.” See At Home in Heaven.— 
Montgomery. 

Forget not the field where they perish’d. See Forget 
not the Field.—Moore. 

Forget not yet the tried intent. See Lover Beseecheth 
His Mistress not to Forget, The.—Wyatt. 

“Forget thee?” If to dream by night. See Forget 
Thee?—-Moultrie. 

Forget thee,—-no, never! Why cherish a thought. See 
Forget Thee,—No, Never!—Watts. 

Forgiveness Lane is old as youth. See Forgiveness 
Lane.—Dickinson. 

Form as amiable sentiments as you can of nations, 
communities of men, and individuals. See 
Benevolence and Charity.—Steele. 

Form so neat, tres petite. See Bessie.—Wetherbee. 

Form’d half beneath, and half above the earth. See 
Two Enigmas.—Prior. 

Forsake me not, my God. See God’s Support and 
Guidance.—Anon. 

Forsake me not so soon; Castara, stay. See Castara 
(To Castara, in a Trance).—Habington. 

Forsaken of all comforts but these two. See same .— 
Ayton. 

Forth from his dark and lonely hiding-place. See 
Fears in Solitude.—Coleridge. 

Forth from his tent, the patriarch Abraham stept. 
See Bismillah.—Proudfit. 

Forth from the chaos of party factions. See Wish 
Dearer than .the Crown, The.—Braidon. 

Forth from the pass in tumult driven. See Flight.— 
Scott. 

Fortune her gifts may variously dispose. See Essay on 
Man, An.—Pope. 

Fortune smiles, cry holiday! See Praise of Fortune, 
The.—Dekker. 

Fortune will not come with seeking. See Four¬ 
leaved Clover.—Anon. 

Forty Little Urchins. See Teaching Public School.— 
Anon. 

Forty Viziers saw I go. See Fair Circassian, The.— 
Garnett. 

Forty years ago, when afar and asunder. See Forty 
Years Ago.—Bowen. 

Forty years of experience and observation have taught 
me. See Country’s Greatest Evil, The.—Wil¬ 
son. 

Forward and back and forward went he thus. See 
Thames, The.—Chapman. 

“Forward!” he heard again from the deep, guttural 
voice. See Death of Garcia, The.—Stoddard. 

“Forward!” the brave old captain said. See Battle of 
Inkerman, The.—Bungay. 

Found dead,—dead and alone. See Found Dead.— 
Laighton. _ 

Found in the garden, dead in his beauty. See Burial of 
the Linnet. The.—Ewing. 

Fountain of Mercy! God of love! See same. —Flower- 
dew. . 

Fountains that frisk and sprinkle. See Made in the 
Hot Weather.—Henley. 

Foul canker of fair, virtuous action. See To Detrac¬ 
tion.—Marston 

Four and thirty years ago. See Rab and his Friends. 
—Brown. 

Four and twenty bonny boys. See Hugh of Lincoln. 
—Anon. 

Four and twenty Highland men. See Eppie Morrie. 
Anon. 

Four and twenty snowflakes came tumbling from the 
sky. See Disappointed Snowflakes, The.—Anon. 

Four babies lay in their cradles new. See Seasons, 
The Riclicr 

Four be the elements. See Song for Punch Drinkers. 
— (Punch.) 

Four children sat around a wood fire. See Mice at 
Play.—Forrest. 

Four days after the king’s departure. Nehushta was 
wandering in the gardens. See Zoroaster (Mas¬ 
sacre of Zoroaster, The).—Crawford. 

Four hundred thousand men. See Nation’s Dead, The. 
—Anon. 


Four hundred years and more ago. See Drummer-boy 
of Kent, The.—Anon. 

Four little feet pattering on the floor. See Early 
Christmas Morning.—Peck. 

Four little mouths agape forever. See Orioles, The.— 
Anon. 

Four little sunbeams came earthward one day. See 
Four Sunbeams, The.—M. K. B. 

Four old cats sat down to tea. See Cat-tails.—Whitney. 

Four score and ten of us. See Poor Old Maids.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Four seasons fill the measures of the year. See Human 
Seasons, The.—Keats. 

Four straight brick walls, severely plain.' See Quaker 
Graveyard, The.—Mitchell. 

Four things a man must learn to do. See Four Things. 
—Van Dyke. 

Four years!—and didst thou stay above. See Geist’s 
Grave.—Arnold. 

Four years old when the blackberries come! See Hal’s 
Birthday.—Larcom. 

Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought 
forth upon this continent a new nation. See 
Address at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Get¬ 
tysburg.—Lincoln. 

Fourteen fair barges in a row. See Queen Hynde 
(Boat-race, The).—Hogg. 

Fourteen small broidered berries on the hem. See 
What the Sonnet Is.—Lee-Hamilton. 

Fra bank to bank, fra wood to wood I rin. See 
Sonet.—Boyd. 

Frae fields where Spring her sweets has blawn. See 
Ode to the Gowdspink.—Fergusson. 

Fragrant air everywhere. See Fragrant Air.—Anon. 

Fragrant odor of the dawn. See Morning in August.— 
Morse. 

Framed in the cavernous fireplace sits a boy. See Old 
Thought, An.—Luders. 

Frank Forethought was a very careful fellow. See 
Bachelor and the Bride, The.—Anon. 

Frank Hayman dearly loved a pleasant joke. See 
Frank Hayman.—Taylor. 

Frank-hearted hostess of the field and wood. See 
Under the Willows.—Lowell. 

Franklin as a philosopher stands before us as dis¬ 
tinctly. See Inauguration of the Statue of Frank¬ 
lin, The (Franklin as a Philosopher).—Winthrop. 

Franklin is dead! Restored to the bosom of the 
Divinity. See Eulogium on Franklin, June 11, 
1790.—Mirabeau. 

Fraulein, the young schoolmistress, to her pupils said 
one day. See Little Christel.—Bradley. 

Fred, did you ever notice how few people. See Good 
Manners.—Anon. 

Fred will be here to the minute. See Splendid Beau, 
A.—Anon. 

Freddie saw some fine ripe cherries. See Freddie and 
the Cherry-tree.—“Aunt Effie.” 

Fredericksburg is not a large city, and yet it is rich in 
incidents. See Fredericksburg.—Bryan. 

Free ’ittle toad-stools. See Little Mushrooms, The.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Freedom’s first champion in our fettered land. See 
Garrison.—Alcott. 

Freemen of Athens! Fellow citizens! Freemen by 
birth! See Clito’s Address to the Men of Athens. 
—Anon. 

Fresh from the fountains of the wood. See Valley 
Brook, The.—Bryant. 

Fresh hope and cheer. See Flower’s Easter Message. 
The.—Poulsson. 

Fresh Spring, the herald of love’s mighty king. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Whilst it is Prime). 
—Spenser. 

Fresh with all airs of woodland brooks. See With a 
Copy of Herrick.—Gosse. 

Freshly the cool breath of the coming eye. See Heal¬ 
ing of the Daughter of Jairus.—Willis. 

Fret not thyself because of evildoers. See Psalms 
of David, XXXV11 —Bible. 

Fret, till your proud heart break. See Julius Csesar 
(Brutus to Cassius).—Shakespeare. 

Friend after friend departs. See same. —Montgomery. 

Friend, come thou like a friend. See Psalm for New 
Year’s Eve, A (Address to the New Year).— 
Craik. 

Friend of all who seek Thy favor. See Friend of All.— 
Wesley. 

Friend of my soul, this water sip. See Temperance 
Song.— (Punch.) 

Friends and Feller-Citizens: My feelin’s on a ’casion 
like this. See Major Jones’ Fourth of July Ora¬ 
tion.—Anon. 


657 




Friends 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Friends and fellow-citizens: Called upon to under¬ 
take the duties of the first executive office of our 
country. See Inauguration Address, March 4, 
1801.—Jefferson. 

Friends and Fellow-citizens: In looking forward to 
the moment. See Farewell Address.—Washington. 

Friends and fellow-citizens of this conflictuous com¬ 
munity. See Racy Stump Speech, A.—Anon. 

Friends and Fellow-citizens: The period for a new 
election of a citizen. See Farewell Address.— 
Washington. 

Friends and Fellow-sufferers: I come not here to talk. 
See Holiday Gobbler’s Address, The.—Anon. 

Friends and Neighbors: Having just opened a com¬ 
modious shop. See Rum-seller’s Invitation, The. 
—Anon. 

Friends, Countrymen, and Brethren:—By these and by 
every other appellation. See Address to the Peo¬ 
ple of England.—Lee. 

Friends, hear the words my wandering thoughts would 
say. See On Southey’s Death.—Landor. 

Friends, I come not here to talk. Ye know too well. 
See Rienzi’s Address to the Romans.—Mitford. 

Friends, in this world of hurry. See same. —Kingsley. 

“Friends,” listen to the “Annals of.” See Tale the 
Titles Told, The.—Davis. 

Friends of faces unknown, and a land. See Only a 
Curl.—Browning. 

Friends of the Muse, to you of right belong. See 
Strong Heroic Line, The.—Holmes. 

Friends, parents, and children, merry welcome to all! 
See Queen of the School.—Anon. 

Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears. 
See Julius Caesar (Antony’s Oration over Caesar). 
—Shakespeare. 

Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears. 
See Rehearsal, The.—-McBride. 

Friends, whom she looked at blandly from her couch. 
See Myrtis.—Landor. 

Friendship doth bind, with pleasant ties. See Friend¬ 
ship, Love, and Truth.—Anon. 

Friendship, like love, is but a name. See Hare with 
Many Friends, The.—Gay. 

Friendship needs no studied phrases. See Friendship. 
—Anon. 

Frightened? No, that ain’t the word, sir. See Terri¬ 
ble Race, A.—Rae-Brown. 

Fringing cypress forests dim. See Sassafras.—Peck. 

Fritz has had more trouble with his neighbor. See 
Fritz’s Troubles.—Anon. 

‘Froebelism,” or the Kindergarten system of educa¬ 
tion. See same. — Bittinger. 

From a chimney on the roof. See Capers et Caper.— 
Ware. 

From a dungeon permitted to go. See Convict’s Com¬ 
plaint, The.—Welcker. 

From a field of death and carnage. See Soldier’s 
Cradle-hymn, The.—-McGuire. 

From a junto that labor for absolute power. See 
Emancipation from British Dependence.—Fre¬ 
neau. 

From a munster vale they brought her. See Dying 
Girl, The.—Williams. 

From a vision of fright. See Unrest.—Cornwell. 

From agross der rifer, at broke of tay. See Carl 
Pretzel’s Ride.—-Pretzel. 

From agross der rifer, ad der broke of day. See 
Schneider’s Ride.—Phillips. 

From all that dwell below the skies. See Psalm 
CXVIL—Watts. 

From Austin, Texas, fast the north-bound train. See 
Dolly and Me.—Kavanaugh. 

From beauteous Windsor’s height and storied halls. 
See Sonnet: Written after seeing Windsor Castle. 
—Wart on. 

From breakfast on through all the day. See Land of 
Nod, The.—Stevenson. 

From British rule the States are free, at length. See 
My Country.—Bradbury. 

From Caesar to Bismarck and Gladstone. See Lincoln 
the Immortal.—-Anon. 

From childhood Joe had loved his faithful Meg. See 
Joe and Meg.—Anon. 

From childhood’s hour I have not been as others were. 
See same. —Poe. 

From college and from chapel spires. See Tribute to 
Longfellow, A.—Zabriskie. 

From Cuban shores in ceaseless pain. See Remem¬ 
bered.—Gordon. 

From dawn to dark they stood. See “Our Left.”— 
Ticknor. 

From day to day came a heavy roar. See Tilghman’s 
Ride from Yorktown to Philadelphia.—Pyle. 


From dusk till dawn the livelong night. See Betsy’s 
Battle Flag.—Irving. 

From each age in every story shines one figure-head 
sublime. See Woman’s Power.—Cloud. 

From early childhood, even as hath been said. See 
Excursion, The (Sunrise, The).—Wordsworth. 

From early youth war has my mistress been. See 
Soldier, A.—Baillie. 

From 1806, the period of my entrance upon this noble 
theater. See Valedictory Address to the Senate. 
—Clay. 

From 1829 till 1839, for a period of ten years, O’Connell 
stood in the British Parliament. See O’Connell. 
—Burke. 

From Europe Mr. Sumner returned late in the fall of 
1872. See Eulogy on Charles Sumner (American 
Battle Flags).—Schurz. 

From falling leaf to falling leaf. See October.— 
Radford. 

From far away, from far away. See My Letter.— 
Litchfield. 

From far-off snowy mountains, whose brows the 
cloudlets fan. See Cold-water Cross.—Anon. 

From gold to gray. See Eve of Election, The.— 
Whittier. 

From Greenland’s icy mountains. See Missionary 
Hymn.—Heber. 

From gross der rifer, ad broke of day. See Schneider’s 
Ride —Gooft. 

From Guadiana comes he not, he comes not from 
Xenil. See Bull-fight, The.—Lockhart. 

“From hand to mouth,” he gaily said. See From 
Hand to Mouth.—Anon. 

From harmony, from heavenly harmony. See Song 
for St. Cecilia’s Day, A.—Dryden. 

From Heaven I fall, though from earth I begin. See 
On Snow.—Swift. 

From her earliest history, the policy of this country. 
See Education.—Mann. 

From her own fair dominions. See Beyond.—Trow¬ 
bridge. 

From him did forty million serfs, endowed. See 
Sonnet: Czar Alexander the Second.—Rossetti. 

From his brimstone bed at break of day. See Devil’s 
Thoughts, The.—Coleridge and Southey. 

From homes of the East and the West. See Columbia 
and the Boys.—Denton. 

From India’s burning clime I’m brought. See Fan, A. 
—Swift. 

From Leamington to Stratford-on-Avon. See Recol¬ 
lections of a Gifted Woman.—Hawthorne. 

From little matters let us pass to less. See Rhvmed 
Lesson, A: Urania (Rhymed Lesson, A).—Holmes. 

From little signs, like little stars. See Angel in the 
House, The (Honoria’s Surrender).—Patmore. 

From low to high doth dissolution climb. See Muta¬ 
bility.—W ords worth. 

From morn till noon the golden glow. See Outcast’s 
Dream, The.—Bell. 

From morning till night it was Lucy’s delight. See 
Chatterbox, The.—Taylor. 

From mouldering Abbey’s dark Scriptorium brought. 
See Over the Threshold of My Library.-—Drury. 

From my lips in their defilement. See same. —Damas- 
cenus. 

From Nazareth to Bethlehem. See Nativity, The.— 
Hopkins. 

From nine in the morning till six at night. See Hand- 
organ Man’s Little Girl, The.—H. H. 

From Oberon, in fairy-land. See Merry Pranks of 
Robin Good-fellow, The.—Anon. 

From off the hills the golden glow is fading, day by 
day. See Robin’s Flight, The.—Bates. 

From one end to the other of the great boot-room. 
See Purpose, A.—Pearson. 

From out Cologne there came three kings. See Three 
Kings of Cologne, The.—Field. 

From out his hive there came a bee. See Waiting for 
the May.—Anon. 

From out of the dreamland ere glow of the dawn. See 
Morning Sprite, The.—Collester. 

From out the cold house of the North. See Men of 
the North, The.—Allison. 

From out the grave of one whose budding years. See 
Lachrymatory, The.—Turner. 

From out the wood I watched them shine. See 
Haunted.—Ramal. 

From pain and peril, by land and main. See Cap¬ 
tain’s Well, The.—Whittier. 

From past'regret and present faithlessness. See Whom 
but Thee.—Scudder. 

From plains that reel to southward, dim. See Heat.— 
Lampman. 


658 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Gamarra 


From proud Atlantic’s surging waves. See Starry 
Flag, The.—Bates. 

From Rhegium to the Isthmus. See Cranes of Ibycus, 
The.—Schiller. 

From romp upon the Autumn hills. See Turning.— 
Bronson. 

From rosy lips we issue forth. See Words.—Barbauld. 

From saffron to yellow, from purple to gray. See 
Summer Picture, A.—Anon. 

From Salisbury church to Wilton House so grand. 
See Apology for Kings.—Pindar. 

I rom school, and ball, and rout, she came. See Among 
the Hills (Wife, The).—Whittier. 

From Shediac, the Canadian. See Glory of the North¬ 
west.—Burdette. 

From shuddering trees the painted leaves. See 
Chickamauga.—Ferris. 

From some dim height of being, undescribed. See 
Shall I Look Back?—Anon. 

From some sweet home, the morning train. See 
School Girl, The.—Venable. 

From Stirling Castle we had seen. See Yarrow 
U nvisited.—W ordsworth. 

From the alcove, screened with its tropic palms. See 
Le Depart.—Wallace. 

From the bonny bells of heather. See Heather Ale: 
A Galloway Legend.—Stevenson. 

From the Book of Judges, as I read. See Old Wine in 
New Bottles.—Burdette. 

From the day on which an accommodation takes place 
between England and America.— See American 
Independence (Necessity of Independence, The). 
—Adams. 

From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn. 
See Nephelidia.—Swinburne. 

From the desert I come to thee. See Bedouin Song.— 
Taylor. 

From the drear wastes of unfulfilled desire. See 
Disappointment.—Collier. 

From the elm tree’s topmost bough. See Robin’s 
Come.—Caldwell. 

“From the far blue heaven.” See Fragment, A.—Anon. 

From the flying train, behold. See Golden Rod, The. 
—( Vick’s Magazine.) 

From the forests and highlands. See Hymn of Pan.— 
Shelley. 

From the four quarters of the year. See Holiday 
Convention, The.—Rook. 

From the genius of our government, the pathway to 
honorable distinction. See same.— Garfield. 

From the glittering staff unfurled. See Paradise 
Lost.—Milton. 

From the glorious heaven where the angels are. See 
God is Love.—Allen. 

From the hills of the west, as the sun’s setting beam. 
See Hebrew Minstrel’s Lament, The.—( New 
England Magazine.) 

From the low prayer of want and plaint of woe. See 
Benevolence.—Beattie. 

From the madding crowd they stand apart. See 
V-A-S-E, The.—Roche. 

From the mint two bright new pennies came. See Two 
Pennies, The.—Anon. 

From the misty shores of midnight, touched with 
splendors of the moon. See Tennyson.—Van Dyke. 

From the most fixed principles of human nature. See 
Apostrophe to the Volunteers, The.—Hall. 

From the ocean half a rood. See Among the Sand 
Hills.—Alexander. 

From the oriels, one by one. See In the Library.— 
Scollard. 

From the plains of far Judea. See Be Ye Ready.— 
W alter. 

From the quaint old farm-house, nestling warmly. See 
Coasting New Year’s Eve.—Anon. 

From the quickened womb of the primal gloom. See 
Light.—Palmer. 

From the recesses of a lowly spirit. See same. — 
Bowring. . 

From the Rio Grande’s waters to the icy lakes of 
Maine. See Buena Vista.—Pike. 

From the sharp ridges of the hill. See Marmion (Flod- 
den Field).—Scott. 

From the soft south the constant bird comes back. 
See On Homeward Wing.—Moulton. 

From the strong will and the endeavor. See Seaweed 
(Drifting).—Longfellow. 

From the sunny morning. See Hymn: ‘‘From the 
sunny,” etc.—Anon. 

From the time of our old revolution. See That Things 
are no Worse, Sire.—Jackson. 

From the time that theology received from the Greek 
mind. See Nature of Christ, The.—Beecher. 


Froni the top of my head to my tiny toes. See Body, 
The.—Anon. 

From the town of Bellizona, several hundred years ago. 
See Judge of Bellizona, The.—Reithard. 

From the tragic-est novels at Mudie’s. See Dora 
versus Rose.—Dobson. 

From the window of the chapel softly sounds an organ’s 
note. See Sunday Afternoons.—Lincoln. 

From the workshop of the Golden Key there issued 
forth a tinkling sound. See Cheerful Locksmith, 
The.—Charles Dickens. 

From their folded mates they wander far. See Black 
Sheep.—Burton. 

From these downy flakes of snow. See Juggler, The.— 
Sherman. 

From this carved chair wherein I sit to-night. See 
Voice of D. G. R., The.—Gosse. 

From this quaint cabin window I can see. See By the 
Pacific.—Bashford. 

From thy whole life take all the sweetest days. See 
Question, A.—Egan. 

From Tuscane came my lady’s worthy race. See Descrip¬ 
tion and Praise of his Love Geraldine.—Surrey. 

From upland slopes I see the cows file by. See Even-' 
ing.—Lampman. 

From w r hat abysses of the unfathom’d sea. See Ode 
to the Great Sea-serpent on his Wonderful 
Reappearance.— {Punch.) 

From what dripping cell, through what fairy glen. See 
Abhrain an Bhuideil.—Le Fanu. 

From women’s eyes this doctrine I derive. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost.—Shakespeare. 

From words, which are but pictures of the thought. 
See Ode to the Royal Society, The.—Cowley. 

From you have I been absent in the spring. See 
Sonnets, XCVIII.—Shakespeare. 

From you, Ianthe, little troubles pass. See Ianthe.— 
Landor. 

Fronting us all, in a niche in the wall. See Owl in 
Church.—Jeffrey. 

Frowned the Laird on the Lord: “So, red-handed I 
catch thee?” See Muckle-mouth Meg.—Browning. 

Frowning, the mountain stronghold stood. See Lost 
Colors. The.—Ward. 

Full fathom five thy father lies. See Tempest, The 
(Sea Dirge, A).—Shakespeare. 

Full knee deep lies the winter snow. See Death of 
the Old Year, The.—Tennyson. 

Full little knowest thou that hast not tried. See At 
Court.—Spenser. 

Full many a glorious morning have I seen. See Son¬ 
nets, XXXIII.—Shakespeare. 

Full many a project that never was hatched. See 
Humpty Dumpty.—Whitney. 

Full many a quiet, modest man. See Junior’s Foxy 
Friends, The.—Walker. 

Full merrily rings the millstone round. See Song of the 
Elfin Miller.—Cuningham. 

Full oft doth Mat. with Topaz dine. See Earning a 
Dinner.—Prior. 

Full on his forehead fell the expiring light. See 
Benjamin Harrison.—Russell. 

Full on this casement shone the wintry moon. See 
Eve of St. Agnes, The (Flight, The).—Keats. 

Full tender beamed the light of love down from his manly 
face. See Two Other Hearts.—( London Tobacco.) 

Full-armed I fought the Paynim foe. See Silent 
Watch, The.—Brown. 

Full-flowered summer lies upon the land. See Love’s 
Calendar.—Anon. 

Funerals were not an exciting novelty. See Within the 
Fold.—Anon. 

Fur out ter sea the island lies. See Sailor Santa Claus, 
A.—Stapleton. 

Furl that banner, for ’tis weary. See Conquered 
Banner, The.—Ryan. 

Furth of the see, with this, the dawing springis. See 
JEneid, The (Dido’s Hunting).—Virgil. 


G 

Gaily bedight, a gallant knight. See Eldorado.— 
Poe. 

Gallant and gay in their doublets gray. See Swallows, 
The.—Arnold. 

Gallants, attend, and hear a friend. See Battle of the 
Kegs, The.—Hopkinson. 

Galliant gents and lovely ladies. See Ballad of Eliza 
Davis, The.—Thackeray. 

Gamarra is a dainty steed. See Blood Horse, The.— 
Procter. 


659 






Game 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Game there was none. See Saved by a Rattlesnake.— 
Anon. 

Gane were but the winter cauld. See same. —Cunning¬ 
ham. 

“Gargon! You— you snared along with this cursed 
crew.” See Hero of the Commune, The.—Preston. 

Garlands upon his grave. See Charles Sumner.— 
Longfellow. 

Gather all kindreds of this boundless realm. See Poet, 
The.—Mathews. 

Gather the garlands rare to-day. See Memorial Day.— 
Warman. 

Gather up the money that the working-classes have 
spent for rum. See Rum the Worst Enemy of the 
Working-classes.—Talmage. 

Gather we here to plant the fair tree. See Planting 
the Tree.—Waterbury. 

Gather ye Rosebuds while ye may. See To the Virgins, 
to Make Much of Time.—Herrick. 

Gathering brands from the burning. See God’s Work. 
—Wilcox. 

Gaunt in the midst of the prairie. See Chicago.— 
O’Reilly. 

Gaunt, rueful knight, on raw-boned, shambling hack.— 
See Don Quixote.—Betts. 

Gay, guiltless pair. See Winged Worshipers.— 
Sprague. 

Gay hope is theirs, by fancy fed. See On a Distant 
Prospect of Eton College.—Gray. 

Gay lilies on the virgin breast. See Pansies.—Hood. 

Gay little dandelion. See Little Dandelion.—Bost- 
wick. 

Gay was the throng that poured through the streets — 
See Song of the Market-place, The.—Buckham. 

Gayly and gayly rang the gay music. See That Waltz 
of von Weber.—Perry. 

Gayly have we passed the time. See Good-bye.— 
Peck. 

Gayly through the mountain glen. See Haunted 
Spring, The.—Lover. 

Gaze not at me, my poor unhappy bird. See Ode to 
Mother Carey’s Chicken.—Watts. 

Gazing where the setting sun-rays. See Gates Ajar.— 
Ruth. 

Gem of the crimson-colour’d even. See To the Even¬ 
ing Star.—Campbell. 

Genera! Sherman tells the story of his experience in 
Georgia See Review of the Grand Army, The.— 
Anon. 

General—-The House of Representatives of the United 
States, impelled alike by its own feelings. See 
Address to La Fayette.—Clay. 

General Wolfe, the English commander, saw that he 
must take Quebec. See Capture of Quebec, The.— 
McCabe 

Generation after generation has rolled away. See 
Astronomy.—Mitchell. 

Gengulphus comes from the Holy Land. See Lay of St. 
Gengulphus, A.—Barham. 

Genius and its rewards are briefly told. See To Charles 
Dickens.—F orster. 

Genteel in personage. See Maiden’s Choice, The.— • 
Carey. 

Genteel it is to have soft hands. See Gentility.—Anon. 

Gentle and generous, brave hearted, kind. See Com¬ 
fort of the Trees, The.—Gilder. 

Gentle and grave, in simple dress. See William 
Wordsworth.—Palgrave. 

Gentle lady! See Sea Captain’s Story, The.—Lytton. 

Gentle, modest little flower. See To Phoebe.—Gilbert. 

Gentle nymphs be not refusing. See Britannia’s 
Pastorals (Carpe Diem).—Browne. 

Gentle severity, repulses mild. See Sonnet from 
Petrarch.—Higginson. 

Gentlefolks, in my time, I’ve made many a rhyme. See 
Sir Sidney Smith.—Dibdin. 

Gentlemen, a most auspicious omen salutes and cheers 
us this day. See Twenty-second of February, The. 
—Webster. 

Gentlemen appear to me to forget that they stand on 
American soil. See Speech on the War of 1812.— 
Clay. 

Gentlemen, both the capitalist and the labourer have 
been gainers. See Corn Laws.—Macaulay. 

Gentlemen have passed the highest eulogiums on the 
American War. See American War Denounced, 
The.—Pitt. 

Gentlemen have said that it was I who inspired the 
Hungarian people. See Heroism of the Hungarian 
People.—Kossuth. 

Gentlemen here assembled: It seems to me that the 
time has come. See Farmer’s Meeting, A.— 
McBride. 


Gentlemen:—I address the men who govern us, and 
say to them. See Against Curtailing the Right of 
Suffrage.—Hugo. 

Gentlemen: I am now about to speak the last words of 
hope or defence. See Address to the Jury.—Leslie. 

Gentlemen: I feel very highly the honor you have 
done me. See Debate, A.—Anon. 

Gentlemen, I have had my day. See Speech at Bristol, 
Previous to the Election, 1780 (To the Electors 
of Bristol).—Burke. 

Gentlemen! I would not be disrespectful. See Dame 
Partington and the Atlantic Ocean.—Smith. 

Gentlemen—if you still have any doubt as to the guilt 
or innocence of the defendant. See Description 
of Mr. Rowan.—Curran. 

Gentlemen, it is a most extraordinary case. In some 
respects it has hardly a precedent. See Murder 
of Captain Joseph White, The (Speech in the 
Knapp Trial).—Webster. 

Gentlemen:—It is a post of singular honor which you 
occupy to-day. See Republican Press, The.— 
McKinley. 

Gentlemen, it is no part of my Christianity to "send 
the mother who bore me into eternal bondage.” 
See Love of Justice.—Parker. 

Gentlemen, it is not because I would prevent religious 
instruction. See Necessity of Religion.—Hugo. 

Gentlemen, let us come at the pith of this debate. See 
Republic or a Monarchy, A?—Hugo. 

Gentlemen, my task is done. See Matt F. Ward’s Trial 
for Murder.—Crittenden. 

Gentlemen of the Board of Trustees:—We meet you 
with our greeting and our farewell. See For a 
College.—Anon. 

Gentlemen of the graduating class of the Yale Law 
School. See Ideal Lawyer, The.—Griggs. 

Gentlemen of the Jury:—If there is a culprit here, it is 
not my son. See Death Penalty, The.—Hugo. 

Gentlemen of the Jury—It is true that the offence 
charged. See Defence of the Kennistons.-—Web¬ 
ster. 

Gentlemen of the jury. It is with feelings of no 
ordinary communion. See Bombastic Appeal to a 
Jury.—Anon. 

Gentlemen of the Jury:—The Scripture saith, “Thou 
shalt not kill.” See Western Lawyer’s Plea 
against the Fact, The.—Anon. 

Gentlemen, one great object of the Revolution of Feb¬ 
ruary. See In Defence of Universal Suffrage, May 
20, 1850.—Hugo. 

Gentlemen say the Catholics have got everything but 
seats in Parliament. See Against Religious 
Distinctions.—Curran. 

Gentlemen, Sir, have been charged with giving birth 
to sedition. See Against the Stamp Act.— 
Chatham. 

Gentlemen: The Prime Minister (Lord Beaconsfield), 
in a recent address. See Empire and Liberty.— 
Gladstone. 

Gentlemen, the question for debate this evening. See 
Debating Society, The.—Valentine. 

Gentlemen, there is one point of view in which this 
case seems to merit your most serious attention. 
See Defence of M. Peltier for a Libel on Napoleon. 
—Mackintosh. 

Gentlemen —This is a most extraordinary case. See 
Murder of Captain Joseph White, The (Crime its 
Own Detector).—Webster. 

Gentlemen:—Thought, which the scholar represents. 
See Duty of the American Scholar.—Curtis. 

Gently! Gently! Down! Down! See Sylvia; or. The 
May Queen (Chorus of Spirits).—Darley. 

Gently Lord, oh, gently lead us. See In Sorrow.— 
Hastings. 

Gently now! gently now! slumber falls on ev’ry brov. 
See Christmas Folk and the Children.—Hadley. 

Gently o’er'the meadows prigging. See Alarming 
Prospect.—( Punch. ) 

Genuine abolitionism is not a hobby, got up for personal 
or associated aggrandizement. See Abolitionism 
—Garrison. 

Geoffrey Barron of Clonmel. See Geoffrey Barron.— 
Tynan. 

Geoffrey, surnamed Winthrop, sat in the depot at 
Chicago. See Romance in Words Frequently 
Mispronounced, A.—Anon. 

Geology may seem to be audacious in its attempts to 
unveil the mysteries of creation. See Geology.— 
Dana. 

Georga Washingdone vos a vera gooda man. See 
Georga Washingdone.—-Anon. 

"George Ferguson, what does this mean?” See Those 
Other Letters.—Anon. 


660 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Give 


“George,” said his father, with a countenance more in 
sorrow than in anger. See New Version of a 
Certain Historical Dialogue, A.—Burdette. 

George Washington was once a boy. See same. —Anon. 

“George Washington was the father of his country.” 
See Boy’s Composition on Washington, A.— 
Anon. 

“George Washin’ton!” From down the hill the answer 
floated up. See Aunt Polly’s “George Washing¬ 
ton.”—( Youth’s Companion.') 

Gertrude really seems very long. See “Cupid among 
the Strawberries.”—Mowat. 

Get at the root of things. See same. —Anon. 

Get into some good library and read. See same. — 
Murphy. 

Get leave to work. See Aurora Leigh (“Get leave to 
work”).—-Browning. 

Get money (honestly, if’t can be done). See Death’s 
Head, The.—Freeman. 

Get not your friends by bare compliments. See Friend¬ 
ship.—Socrates. 

Get thee behind me, even as, heavy-curl’d. See “Retro 
Me, Sathana.”—-Rossetti. 

Get up, get up, for shame; the blooming Morn. 
See Corinna’s Going a-Maying.—Herrick. 

Get up, little sister, the morning is bright. See Spring 
Morning. A.—Hastings. 

Get up, our Anna dear, from the weary spinning wheel. 
See Fairy Thorn, The.—Ferguson. 

Ghosts of dead soldiers in the battle slain. See Guns 
of Peace.—Craik. 

Giant aggregate of nations, glorious whole, of glorious 
parts. See America an Aggregate of Nations.— 
Tupper. 

Gift of the living God to mortal man. See Dawn of the 
Century.—Thorne. 

Gile Machree. See Gile Machree.—Griffin. 

Gin a body meet a body. See Cornin’ through the 
Rye.—Anon. 

Gingerly is good King Tarquin shaving. See Puffs 
Poetical (Tarquin and the Augur) —Aytoun. 

Girl of the red mouth. See same. —MacDermott. 

Girl Peepsy to the baby sang. See Peepsv.—Larcom. 

Girlie on the stairway, mother up above. See On the 
Stairway.—Anon. 

Girls are a nuisance in a family where there is a boy 
See Boy’s Idea of Girls, A.—Durkee. 

Girls, are you ready for the examination? See Lost 
Opportunity, The.—Anon. 

Girls didn’t wear a tailor-suit. See In Mamma’s Day.— 
Curley. 

Girls! girls! what do you suppose has happened? See 
Slight Misunderstanding, A —Anon. 

Girls, I noticed on Sunday that none of you were at all 
sociable. See New Sunday-school Scholar, The.— 
Cornell. 

Girls. I’m engaged to the best. See Consensus of the 
Competent, A.—Lummis. 

Girls is a queer kind of varmint. See Boy’s Essay on 
Girls, A.—Anon. 

Girls play with dollies. See Boys and Girls.—Anon. 

Girls, what do you think? My beahtiful’ipenknife is 
lost. See Lost Knife, The.—Anon. 

Girt round by sunburnt meadows newly moved. See 
Picture, A.—Anon. 

Girt round with rugged mountains. See Legend of 
Bregenz, A.—Procter. 

Git wa’ dar, Cuff! Don’t yer neber git nuff? See 
Watermelon Season, The.—Baldwin. 

Git yo pardners, fust kwattilion. See Old Fiddling 
Josey.—Russell. 

Gitaut, the Norman marquis, sat in his banquet hall. 
See Last Banquet, The.—Renaud. 

Give a man a horse he can ride. See Sunday up the 
River (Gifts).—Thomson. 

Give all to love; obey thy heart. See Give All to Love. 
—Emerson. 

Give! as the morning that flows out of heaven. See It 
is More Blessed.—Cooke. 

Give Beauty all her right. See Measure of Beauty, 
The.—Campion. 

Give him this money, and these notes, Reynaldo. See 
Hamlet (Scene from “Hamlet”).—-Shakespeare. 

Give honor and love for evermore. See Peter Cooper. 
—Miller. 

“Give me a chance,” an acorn said See Chance, A.— 
Anon. 

Give me a cottage on some Cambrian wild. See Retire¬ 
ment.—White. 

“Give me a fillet, Love,” quoth I. See Love and Life. 
—Lippman. 

Give me a man with an aim. See Better to Climb and 
Fall.—Anon. 


“Give me a motto,” said a youth. See This, too, will 
Pass Away.—Saxe. 

Give me a nook and a book. See Nook and a Book, A. 
—Freeland. 

“Give me a piece of your candy!” See Bite, The.— 
Anon. 

Give me a race that is run in a breath. See Hundred- 
yard Dash, The.—-Lindsey. 

Give me a spirit that on life’s rough sea. <See Master 
Spirit, The.—Chapman. 

Give me another horse—-bind up my wounds. See 
King Richard III. (Soliloquy of King Richard III.). 
—Shakespeare. 

“Give me but two brigades,” said Hooker, frowning at 
fortified Lookout. See Battle of Lookout Moun¬ 
tain, The.—Boker. 

Give me more love or more disdain. See Give me More 
Love.—Carew. 

Give me my cup, but from the Thespian well. Nee Ode 
to Sir William Sidney on his Birthday.—Jonson. 

Give me, my love, that billing kiss. See Kiss, The.— 
Moore. 

Give me my scallop-shell of quiet. See His Pilgrimage. 
—Raleigh. 

Give me, O friend, the secret of thy heart. See Rosa 
Rosarum.—Darmesteter. 

Give me of every language, first my vigorous English. 
See English Language, The.—Story. 

“Give me of your bark, O birch-tree!” See Song of 
Hiawatha, The (Hiawatha’s Sailing).—Longfellow. 

“Give me rest, give me rest,” said a merry child. See 
Give me Rest.—Grishman. 

Give me some music; music, moody food. Nee Antony 
and Cleopatra (Cleopatra and the Messenger).— 
Shakespeare. 

Give me that, growth which some, perchance, deem 
sleep. Nee Sonnet: “Give me that,” etc.—Lowell. 

Give me the hand that is kind, warm and ready. See 
Give me the Hand.—Barnaby. 

Give me the old songs. See Old, The.—Anon. 

Give me the room whose every nook. See Library, 
The.—Sherman. 

Give me the splendid silent sun with all his beams full- 
dazzling. See Give me the Splendid Silent Sun.— 
Whitman. 

Give me the thoughts of long dead years. See Decem¬ 
ber Prayer, A.—Wing. 

Give me the town; let others go. See Give me the 
Town.—Ritchie. 

Give me three grains of corn, mother. See same. — 
Edwards. 

Give me thy joy in sorrow, gracious Lord. See Thy 
Joy in Sorrow.—Townshend. 

Give me thy love, and I will ask. See To Lucy.—Hen¬ 
derson. 

Give me thyself! It were well to cry. See Thyself.— 
Symonds. 

Give me to die unwitting of the day. See Mors 
Benefica.—Stedman. 

Give me your hand. Came you from old Bellario? 
See Merchant of Venice. The (Trial Scene).— 
Shakespeare. 

Give pardon, blessed soul! to my bold cries. See 
Sonnet Prefixed to Sidney’s Apology for Poetry — 
Constable. 

Give place, ye lovers, here before. See Praise of his 
Love, A.—Howard. 

Give place, you ladies, and begone! See Praise of his 
Lady, A.—Heywood. 

Give thanks, all ye people, give thanks to the Lord. 
See Give Thanks, All Ye People.—Anon. 

Give the children holidays. See name. —Anon. 

“Give the Christians to the lions!” was the savage 
Roman’s cry. See Christian Maiden and the 
Lion, The.—Durivage. 

Give the speedway to the cruiser. See Harbor Mine, 
The.—McK. 

Give thy thoughts no tongue. See Hamlet (Polonius’ 
Advice to Laertes).—Shakespeare. 

Give to barrows, trays, and pans. See Art.—Emerson. 

Give to the wind thy fears. See same. —Gerhardt. 

Give up the Union? Never! See Shall We Give up 
the Union? (Give up the Union?).—Dickinson. 

Give us a call; we keep cool [or good) beer. See Give 
Us a Call.—Anon. 

“Give us a song!” the soldiers cried. See Song of the 
Camp, The.—Taylor. 

Give us light amid our darkness. See Children’s 
Appeal, The.—Howitt. 

Give us that grand word, “ woman,” once again. See 
Woman.—Wilcox. 

Give us the words that are old. See Long-felt Want, 
The.—Anon. 


661 





Give 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Give us your hand, Mr. Lawyer; how do you do 
to-day? See How Betsy and I Made Up.—Carle- 
ton. 

Give words, kind words, to those who err. See same. — 
Sigourney. 

“Give your children food, 0 Father!” See Song of 
Hiawatha, The.—Longfellow. 

Given the character of a man and the conditions of 
life around him. See Memorial Address on General 
George H. Thomas.—Garfield. 

Glad is the ground of the tender florist grene. See 
Prologues to the dEneid (Spring).—Douglas. 

Glad that you thus continue your resolve. See Taming 
of the Shrew, The.—Shakespeare. 

Gladly to-night when for the last time. See Common¬ 
wealth of Massachusetts, The.—Russell. 

Glamis thou art, and Cawdor; and shalt be. See Lady 
Macbeth’s Soliloquy.—Shakespeare. 

Glancing in the moonlight. See Don’t you Wish you 
Knew!—A. H. B. 

Glasgerion was a harper gude. See Glasgerion.—Anon. 

Glasgerion was a kings owne sonne. See Glasgerion.— 
Anon. 

Glass antique, ’twixt thee and Nell. See Nell Gwynne’s 
Looking-glass.—Blanchard. 

Glaucus. an Athenian, has been adjudged guilty. See 
Last Days of Pompeii, The.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

“Glaucus, the Athenian, thy time has come.” See 
Last Days of Pompeii (Vesuvius and the Egyp¬ 
tian).—-Bulwer-Lytton. 

Gleaming in the dew-drop, singing in the summer 
rain. See Apostrophe to Water (Water).—Arring¬ 
ton. 

Glide soft, ye silver floods. See Britannia’s Pastorals 
(Lament for his Friend. A).—Browne. 

Glimmers gray the leafless thicket. See Song-sparrow, 
The.—Lathrop. 

Glooms of the live-oaks, beautiful-braided and woven. 
See Marshes of Glynn, The.—Lanier. 

Gloomy and dark was the winter. See Pierre La 
Forge’s Dream.—Mink. 

Glories, pleasures, pomps, delights, and ease. See 
Broken Heart, The (Calantha’s Dirge).—Ford. 

Glorious as the spectacle was. See History of England 
(Coronation Pageant of Anne Boleyn, The).— 
Froude. 

Glorious New England! Thou art still true to thine 
ancient fame. See Address on the Landing of the 
Pilgrims (New England).—Prentiss. 

“ Glorious news! Dr. Cure-all promises a positive and 
speedy remedy.” See Dr. Cure-all Smith. 

Glorious things of thee are spoken. See Psalm 
LXXXVIL—Newton. 

Gloriously the morn awakened. See De Lord Am 
Coming.—Murray. 

Glory and honor and fame and everlasting laudation. 
See Sherman.—Gilder. 

Glory! glory! hallelujah! Christ is risen to heights 
supreme. See Risen with Christ.—Anon. 

Glory of warrior, glory of orator, glory of song. See 
Wages.—Tennyson. 

Gloucester, ’tis true that we are in great danger. See 
King Henry V.—Shakespeare. 

Go and catch a falling star. See Song: “Go and 
catch,” etc.—Donne. 

Go away! go along, I say! No boys here! See David 
Cc>pperfield (Aunt Betsey and Little Davy).— 
Dickens. 

Go back! How dare you follow me beyond. See 
Hagar.—Nicholson. 

Go back to Cuba? No! no! Gentle priest. See Cuban 
Refugee, The.—Anon. 

Go bow thy head in gentle spite. See To a Lily.— 
Legare. 

“Go, boy, and light the torch! the night.” See Fisher¬ 
man’s Hut, The.—Brooks. 

Go, Cupid, and my sweetheart tell. See Valentine, A. 
—Field. 

Go, feel what I have felt. See Woman’s Answer on 
Being Accused of Being a Maniac on the Subject 
of Temperance, A.—Anon. 

Go fetch to me a pint o’ wine. See My Bonnie Mary.— 
Burns. 

Go, flag the train, boys, flag the train! See Flag the 
Train. —Chisholm. 

Go for a sail this mornin’?—This way, yer honor, please. 
See In the Harbor.—Sims. 

Go, for they call you, shepherd, from the hill. See 
Scholar-Gypsy, The.—Arnold. 

Go forth, defenders of your country. See Farewell to 
Departing Volunteers, A.—Hall. 

Go forth in life, O friend, not seeking love. See Go 
Forth in Life not Seeking Love.—Lynch. 


Go forth into the many mansions of the house of life 
See Scholar, the Jurist, the Artist, the Philan¬ 
thropist, The (Incentives to Duty).—Sumner. 

Go forth to the battle of life, my boy. See Battle of 
Life, The.—Anon. 

Go forth under the open sky and list. See Nature.— 
Anon. 

Go from me. Yet I feel that I shall stand. See Son¬ 
nets from the Portuguese, VI.—Browning. 

Go, happy Rose, and interwove. See To the Rose.— 
Herrick. 

Go, heart, unto the lamp of light. See Go, Heart.— 
Wedderburn. 

Go! leave me, priest; my soul would be. See Extreme 
Unction.—Lowell. 

Go—let others praise the Chian See Wine of Cyprus. 
—Browning. 

Go, little book, and to the world impart. See To His 
Book.—Walsh. 

Go, little book! the world is wide. See Goe, Little 
Booke.—Lowell. 

Go, lovely rose! See same. —Waller. 

Go, Lyra, and from out thy bugle’s throat. See May 
Court in Greenwood.—Case. 

Go not away from us; stay, O Rabiah, son of Mukad. 
See Rabiah’s Defense.—Higginson. 

Go not, sweet sister, from our home of peace. See 
Sisters, The.—Hunt. 

Go not to the hills of Erin. See Wind on the Hills, 
• The.—Sigerson. 

Go now! and with some daring drug. See Temper¬ 
ance; or, The Cheap Physician.—Crashaw. 

Go out beneath the arched heavens, at night, and say, 
if you can “There is no God.” See Existence of a 
God, The.—Anon. 

Go patter to lubbers and swabs, do ye see. See Poor 
Jack.—Dibdin. 

Go, pretty child, and bear this flower. See To H>s 
Saviour, a Child; a Present by a Child.—Herrick. 

Go, pretty Rose, and to her tell. See I.’Envoi.;— 
Reed. 

Go, Rose, and in her golden hair. See To a Rose.— 
Sherman. 

“Go!” said the angry weeping maid. See Rings and 
Seals.—Moore. 

Go scatter, yes scatter the beautiful flowers. See Tn 
Memoriam.—Denton. 

Go, sit by the summer sea. See Deceitfulness of Love. 
—Anon. 

Go, soul, the body’s guest. See Lie, The.—Raleigh. 

Go stand at night upon an ocean craft. See Illusions. 

-—Johnson. 

Go, thou gentle whispering wind. See Prayer to the 
Wind, A.—Carew. 

Go thou into thy closet, shut thy door. See Sonnet 
Sequence, A.—Macdonald. 

Go thou thy way. I do not seek to share. See From 
Afar.—Anon. 

Go, time and tide, go as you will. See All the Year 
Round.—Hutchinson. 

Go to dark Gethsemane. See Gethsemane.—Mont¬ 
gomery. 

Go to the western gate, Luke Havergal. See Luke 
Havergal.—Robinson. 

Go to thy rest, fair child! See Go to Thy Rest.— 
Sigourney. 

Go to work! Nothing is more salutary to the human 
soul than the direct work of saving man. See 
same. —Beecher. 

Go vay, Becky Miller, go vay. See Becky Miller.— 
Anon. 

Go way, fiddle! folks is tired o’ hearin ’ you a-squawkin’. 
See Christmas Night in the Quarters (De Fust 
Banjo).—Russell. 

“Go, weed in the garden, till half after ten.” See Boy 
and the Bird, The.—Rexford. 

Go where glory waits thee. See same. —Moore. 

Go where the waters fall. See Waterfall, The.-—Keble. 

Go ye and read at length the mystic lore. See Elo¬ 
quence of Nature, The.—Smith. 

Go, youth beloved, in distant glades. See Forget Me 
Not.—Opie. 

Goats have broken out in our street violently, variously 
and promiscuously. See How Paul Won His 
Goat.—Borden. 

God always has in training some commanding genius. 
See Columbus.—Depew. 

God be thanked, the meanest of his creatures. See 
One Word More. To E. B. B.—Browning. 

God bless my little one! how fair. See My Little One. 
—Fawcett. 

God bless our fathers’ land! See International Ode.— 
Holmes. 


662 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Gold 


God bless our native land! See God Save the State.— 
Brooks. 

God bless our star-gemmed banner. See Freedom’s 
Standard.—Anon. 

God bless the cheerful people—man, woman or child.— 
See same. —Willits. 

God bless the king!—I mean the faith’s defender. See 
Jacobite Toast.—Byrom. 

God bless the little feet that now can never go astray. 
See My Darling's Shoes.—Anon. 

God bless the little stockings all over the land to-night. 
See Christmas Eve.—Anon. 

“God bless the man who first invented sleep.” See 
Early Rising.—Saxe. 

God called the nearest angels who dwell with Him 
above. See Two Angels, The.—Whittier. 

God called up from dreams a man into the vestibule of 
heaven. See. Astronomer’s Vision, The.—Mitchell. 

God can and does render sinners happy in spite of their 
sins. See same. —-Hodge. 

God cares for every little child. See. God Loves Me.— 
Anon. 

God does not send us strange flowers every year. See 
Violet, The.—Whitney. 

God draws a cloud oxer each gleaming morn. See 
Rich in the Lord.—Cobbe. 

God dreamed—the suns sprang flaming into space.—- 
Set Creation.—Bierce 

God first made man of common clay. See Perfecti¬ 
bility.—Thayer 

God gixe us men! A time like this demands. See 
True Men.—Holland. 

God gives not kings the style of gods in x-ain. See To 
Prince Henry.—James I of England. 

God has given the land to man, but the sea he has re¬ 
served to himself. See God’s Ownership of the 
Sea.—-Swain. 

God has made this world very fair. See same. —Anon. 

God has stamped upon our very humanity. See 
Freedom and Patriotism.—Dewey. 

God hath a presence, and that you may see. See God 
in Everything.—Cook. 

God hath sent His angels. See Easter Angels.— 
Brooks. 

God hath so many ships upon the sea. See King’s 
Ships, The.-—Spencer. 

“God helping me,” cried Columbus, “though fair or 
foul the breeze.” See Columbia’s Banner.— 
Procter. 

God holds the key of all unknown. See His Care.— 
Parker. 

God is a name my soul adores. See Creator and 
Creatures, The.-—Watts. 

God is good, each perfumed flower. See God is Good. 

-—Follen. 

God is love! His mercy brightens. See God is Love. 
—Bowring. 

God is not very far away. See Child’s Thoughts about 
God, A.—Lawrence. 

God is our refuge and strength. See Psalms of David, 
XLVI.— Bible. 

God is the refuge of His saints. See Psalm XLVI.— 
Watts. 

God keep you, dearest, all this lonely night. See God 
Keep You.—De Vere. 

God let never so old a man. .See Old Robin of Por- 
tingale.—Anon. 

God Lyaeus, ever young. See Valentinian (Song to 
. Bacchus).—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

God made a little gentian. See Fringed Gentian.— 
—Dickinson 

God made my lady lovely to behold. See How My 
Song of Her Began.—Marston. 

God made the country, and man made the town. See 
Task, The (Sofa, The).—Cowper. 

God made the little bird to sing. See What I was 
Made For.—Anon. 

God made the present earth as the home of man. See 
Literary Attractions of the Bible.—Hamilton. 

God made the sky that looks so blue. See Works of 
God, The.—-Taylor. 

God make my life a little light. See Child’s Prayer, A. 
—Edwards 

God makes sech nights, all white an’ still. See 
Biglow Papers, The (Courtin’, The).—Lowell. 

God might have bade the earth bring forth. See Use 
of Flowers, The.—Howitt. 

God moves in a mysterious way. See Light Shining 
out of Darkness.—Cowper. 

God never meant that we should call this home. See 
same. —M. E. K. 

God of our fathers, known of old. See Recessional.— 
Kipling. 


God of science and of light. See House of Fame, The 
(Prayer to Apollo).—Chaucer. 

God of the beautiful! God of the free. See Earnest 
Cry, An.—Gage. 

God of the free! upon thy breath. See Psalm of the 
Union, A.—Wallace. 

God of the granite and the rose. See Divinity.— 
Anon. 

God of the thunder! from whose cloudy seat. See 
Jewish Hymn in Babylon.—Milman. 

God prosper long our noble king. See Chevy-Chase.— 
Sheale. (?) 

God rest ye. merry gentlemen! let nothing you dismay. 

See Christmas Carol, A.—Craik. 

God said: ‘ ‘ Let there be light!” See Press, The.—Elliot. 
God save our native land. See same .—Seelye. 

God save the king, not from those things. See God 
Save the King!—Garrison. 

God save our gracious king! See God Save the King. 
—Carey. 

God scatters love on every side. See Incident in a 
Railroad Car. An (God’s Love).—Lowell. 

God sees me all the day. See God Sees Me.—Anon. 
God send the land deliverance. See Death of Parcy 
Reed, The.—Anon. 

God send us peace, and keep red strife away. See At 
Fredericksburg.—O’Reilly. 

God sends his teachers unto every age. See Rhaecus. 
-—Lowell. 

God sent his singers upon earth. See Singers, The.— 
Longfellow. 

God sets some souls in shade, alone. See Sunlight and 
Starlight.—Whitney. 

God shield ye, heralds of the spring! See Return of 
Spring.—Ronsard. 

“God,” sing ye meadow streams, with gladsome voice. 
See Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni 
(God in Nature).—Coleridge. 

God spake in a voice of thunder. See New Birth, The. 
—Merivale. 

God spake three times and saved Van Elsen’s soul. 
See Van Elsen.—Scott. 

God speaks. Life beats within the brain. See 
Ecclesiastes.—Clarke. 

God the Father! be Thou near. See Evening Hymn, 
The.—Anon. 

God, to whom we look up blindly. See Poet’s Jour¬ 
nal, The (Prayer, A).—Taylor. 

God who created me. See Prayers.—Beeching. 

God, who gave iron, purposed ne’er. See Fatherland. 
—Arndt. 

God, who the universe doth hold. See Psalm XXIII. 
—Davison. 

God with His million cares. See Dawn and Dark.— 
Gale. 

God ye hear not, how shall ye hear me? See John 
Knox’s Indictment of the Queen.—Swinburne. 
God’s love and peace be with thee. See Benedicite.— 
Whittier. 

God’s order, “Light,” when all was void and dark. See 
Press Ex-angel, The.—O’Reilly. 

God’s providence has raised up a leader. See Lincoln: 

a Man Called of God.—Thurston. 

God’s will is—the bud of the rose for your hair. See 
We Two.—Piatt. 

Godfrey Gordon Gustavus Gore. See Shut the Door. 
—Anon. 

Godlike beneath his grax^e divinities. See Druid, The. 
—Tabb 

Goe, happy Rose, and interwove. See Rose, The.— 
Herrick. 

Goe, soule, the bodie’s guest. See Lie, The (Lye, The). 
—Raleigh. 

Goethe in Weimar sleeps, and Greece. See Memorial 
Verses.—Arnold. 

Going down town in a Fourth Ax’enue car the other 
day. See How Pat Stopped the Car.—Anon. 
Going east, sir? Yes. See Competing Railroads, The. 
—Anon. 

Going home from the house of God. See Little 
Christel.—Rands. 

“Going north, madam?” See No JRoom for Mother. 
—(Lockport Express.) 

Going out to fame and triumph. See Going Out and 
Coming In.—Moore. 

Going—the great round sun. See Going and Coming. 
—Jenks. 

Gold! gold! gold! gold! See Miss Kilmansegg and her 
Precious Leg.—Hood. 

Gold! gold! gold! How fiercely it surges and sxveeps 
along. See Gold.—-Anon. 

Gold on her head, and gold on her feet. See Eve of 
Crecy, The.—Morris. 


663 




Golden 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Golden autumn comes again. See Autumn.—Anon. 

Golden head so lowly bending. See Now I Lay Me 
Down to Sleep.—Anon. 

Golden slumbers kiss your eyes. See Pleasant Com¬ 
edy of Patient Grissell, The (Lullaby).—Dekker. 

Golden volumes! richest treasures! See Lines Imitated 
from Rantzau.—D’lsrael'. 

Goldenhair climbed upon grandpapa’s knee! See Little 
Goldenhair.—Smith. 

Goldilocks sat on the grass. See Brothers and a Ser¬ 
mon (Goldilocks).—Ingelow. 

“Goliath Johnsing, why you so late?” See Return of 
the Hoe, The.—( Drake’s Magazine .) 

Gone are her bird notes, thin she sings, and flat. See 
Diva, The.—Batchelder. 

Gone art thou? gone, and is the light of day. See To 
the Dead.—Scott. 

Gone at last. See Old Admiral, The.—Stedman. 

Gone! brother, lover, son! See Woman’s Part, The.— 
Christie. 

Gone, gone—sold and gone. See Farewell, The.— 
Whittier. 

Gone is the freshness of my youthful prime. See 
Gone.—Mackay. 

Gone—my lord! See Idylls of the King (Guinevere). 
—Tennyson. 

“Gone!” said the poet, “and about to be forgotten.” 
See Star’s Monument, The (Gone).—Tngelow. 

Gone were but the winter cold. See Spring of the 
Year, The.—Cunningham. 

Good advice for every one. See Work, Work Away.— 
Pinkley. 

Good afternoon, folks, pray how do you do? See 
Little Speech, A.—Rook. 

Good afternoon, Harry. See Going to the Corner.— 
Denton. 

Good afternoon, Kate. See Good and not Stupid.— 
Anon. 

Good afternoon, Miss Robbins. Come to see the 
funer’l pass, I s’pose. See Photograph Album, 
The.—Bevier. 

Good afternoon. Mrs. Gossip. You are in good time, 
I see. See Tea Party, The.—Anon. 

Good and great God! can I not think of Thee. See To 
Heaven.—Jonson. 

Good boys and girls should never say. See Memory 
Gems.—Anon. 

“Good Christians, rise, this is the morn.” See Christ¬ 
mas Morning.—Greenwell. 

Good Christmas bells, I pray you. See Ballad.—De 
Mille. 

Good Dan and Jane were man and wife. See Faith 
and Works.—Anon. 

Good day and happiness, dear Rosalind. See As You 
Like It (Orlando’s Wooing).—Shakespeare. 

Good day. Is this Pygmalion’s studio? See Pygma¬ 
lion and Galatea.—Gilbert. 

Good day, Joe. See Parrot, The.—Anon. 

Good day, Mirtillo. See Pastoral upon the Birth of 
Prince Charles, A.—Herrick. 

Good day. Neighbor Stephen. See Where there’s a 
Will there’s a Way.—Anon. 

Good day, Sister Martha! See Hannele.—Hauptmann. 

Good Deacon Roland—-“may his tribe increase.” See 
I nasmuch.—F ord. 

Good Elnathan went from Slocum. See Cenotaph, A. 
—Dana. 

Good evening, Frau Fischer. See Extracting a Secret. 
—Crawford. 

Good evening, Marie! See La Jeune Malade.— 
Hunt. 

Good evening, Mr. Dash. See Trying to Keep up the 
Appearance of a Gentleman.—Garrett. 

Good evening, Professor. See Professor Puzzled, The. 
—Wilson. 

Good evening, venerable father! Will you direct me. 
See Two Ways of Life.—H. C. H. 

“Good for nothing,” the farmer said. See What the 
Burdock Was Good For.—Anon. 

Good friends, I believe one thought fills every mind 
present here. See Zenobia (Speeches of Zenobia 
and her Council).—Ware. 

Good friends, sweet friends, let me not stir you up. 
See Julius C®sar (Antony on the Death of Csesar). 
—Shakespeare. 

Good gentle friends, there comes a time. See Golden 
Wedding, The.—Minshall. 

Good gracious me! What have T done? See Little 
Angels.—Hollinger. 

Good Halifax and pious Wharton cry. See On the 
Church’s Danger.—Swift. 

Good Hamlet, cast thy nighted color off. See Hamlet 
(Grief).—Shakespeare. 


Good, honest Parson John M’Knock. See Pastor 
M’Knock’s Address.—Anon. 

Good Junipero, the Padre, slowly read the king’s com¬ 
mands. See Discovery of San Francisco Bay.— 
White. 

Good Junipero the Padre, when ’twas dying of the 
day. See By the Cross of Monterey.—White. 

Good Junipero the Padre with Portala stood one day. 
See Wa'ting for the Galleon.—White. 

Good King Arthur gave orders for hunting. See 
Idylls of the King (Enid) —Tennyson. 

Good little boys should never say. See Politeness.— 
’ Turner. 

Good Lord Scroope to the hills is gane. See Hughie the 
Graeme.—Anon. 

Good Luck is the gayest of all gay girls. See Good 
Luck and Bad Luck.—Hay. 

Good marnin’ lor good mornin’l, sorr 1 Oi come to say 
about the advertisement. See Pat Answers the 
Advertisement.—Anon. 

Good marnin’ to yer, Mrs. O’Brien. See Mary Ann’s 
Escape.—Smith. 

Good master, turn your face this way. See Her Lad¬ 
die’s Picture.—Brainerd. 

Good master, you and I were born. See Decanter of 
Madeira to George Bancroft, Greeting, A.— 
Mitchell. 

Good men and true! in this house who dwell. See 
Croppy Boy, The.—McBarney. 

Good mistletoe, I wish to say. See In Olden Style.— 
—Barron. 

Good-mornin’ docthur. See Quackery.-—BonPeld. 

“Good mornin’, Miss Katie,” cried young Dickie Fee. 
See Tit for Tat.—Anon. 

Good mornin’, sir, Mr. Printer: how is your body to¬ 
day? See Makin’ an’ Editor outen o’ Him.— 
Carleton. 

Good mornin’ Tor good marnin’l. sorr! Oi come to say 
about the advertisement. See Pat Answers the 
Advertisement. Anon. 

Good mornin’ till yez, yer honor! And are yez the 
gintlemon. See Advertisement Answered, The.— 
Thorn. 

Good morning, Cousin Laura! I have a word to say to 
you. See True Bravery.—Anon. 

Good morning, dear friends! I’m a clever young bee. 
See Bee’s Sermon, The—Anon. 

Good morning. Dr. Gregory. See Case of Indigestion. 
A.—Anon. 

Good morning, doctor; how do you do? See Hypo¬ 
chondriac, The.—Valentine. 

Good morning. Dr. Twist. I’m sure it is a pity. See 
Different Ways of Saying Yes.—Anon. 

Good morning, Dolores! You’re looking quite bright! 
See Pepita, the Gipsy Girl of Andalusia.—Anon. 

Good morning, Emily. See Economy is Wealth.— 
Anon. 

Good morning, Ernest. What are you doing? See 
Like an Indian.—Denton. 

Good-morning, fair maid, with lashes brown. See To 
Grown-up Land 

Good morning, Fanny. See Dead Bird, The.— 
Anon 

Good morning, gentlemen. See Temperance Dialogue. 
—Murray. 

Good morning! good morning, sir! See Will You Ad¬ 
vertise?—Anon. 

Good morning, Jennie, where are you going? See In¬ 
vitation, The.—Denton. 

Good morning. Jenny. How is that lamb, my uncle? 
See Sea of Troubles, A.—Baker. 

Good morning, Joe. See Joe’s Way of Doing Chores.— 
Denton. 

Good morning^John. Where is your craft bound for so 
early? See Tobacco Pledge, The.—Ralston. 

Good morning, ma’am. Good morning. Will you 
tell me your name and errand? See Obtaining 
Help in the Country.—Anon. 

Good morning, madam. Ts the head of the family at 
home? See Taking the Census.—Anon. 

“Good morning, merry sunshine!” See name. —Anon. 

Good morning, Mr. Dolrums. See Hypochondriac, The. 
—Anon. 

Good morning, Mr. Doughty. See Premature Proposal, 
The.—Anon. 

Good morning, Mr. Nineteenth Century. See Keeping 
the Birthday.—Denton. 

Good morning, Mr. Superintendent! Here is another 
youngster. See Reformation.—Niles. 

Good morning. Mr. Thompson! See Patent Right 
Agent. The.—Anon. 

Good morning, Mrs. Smith. See Wonderful Scholar, 
The.—Anon. 


664 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Granddad 


Good morning, Polly Ann; I thought I’d run across 
to-day. See Olden Times, The.—Kavapaugh. 

Good morning. Ray, ’tis after eight. See Youthful 
Dissipation.—Anon. 

Good morning, sir! how do you do? See Frenchmen’s 
Malady, The.—Anon. 

Good morning, sir; I was just coming over to have a 
word with you. See Justice and Mercy.—Gar- 
dette. 

Good morning to you all. Have any of you heard. 
See Village Scare, The.—Smith. 

Good morning to you, Annie, dear. See Midshipman, 
The.—Nichols. 

Good morning. Tom. Going to school to-day? See 
Two Friends, The.—Atkeson. 

Good morning, you’re just the one. See Weed and the 
Boy, The.—Denton. 

“Good morning, world!” on the window seat. See 
Good-morning.—Bingham. 

“Good morrow, good morrow, my bright-eyed lad.” 
See Grown-up Land.— (St. Nicholas.) 

“Good morrow, little rose-bush.” See Sweet Red 
Rose, The.—Stacy. 

“Good morrow, lovely lady, is thy noble lord with 
thee?” See Craven Knight, The.—Anon. 

“Good morrow, my Lord!” in the sky alone. See Sir 
Lark and King Sun: a Parable.—MacDonald. 

Good morrow to the day so fair. See Mad Maid’s 
Song, The.—Herrick. 

Good morrow to thy sable beak. See Black Cock, 
The.—Baillie. 

Good Muse, rock me asleep. See Sweet Pastoral, A.— 
Breton. 

Good name in man and woman, dear my lord. See 
Othello (Good Name).—Shakespeare. 

Goodnight! Be thy cares forgotten quite! See Good 
Night!—Anon. 

Good night, dear friend! I say good night to thee. 
See Good Night.—Benedict. 

Good night, dear friends, for now we close. See Good 
Night.—Richards. 

Good night, dear heart! What! dost thou surely deem. 
See Farewell, A.—-Duchess of Sutherland. 

“Good night, dear Maudie,” I softly said. See Maude 
and the Cricket.—Anon. 

Good night! Good night! Ah, good the night. See 
Good Night.—Anon. 

Good night! Good night! Far flies the night. See 
Good Night.—Hugo. 

“Good night,” he said, and he held her hand. See 
Challenge, A.—Harvey. 

Good night! I have to say good night. See Palabras 
Cariiiosas.—Aldrich. 

Good night, little shivering grasses! See November 
Good-night, A.—Beers. 

Good night, little star. See Little Star.—Anon. 

Good night, pretty Sun, good night! See Good-night. 
—Day re. 

“Good night,” said the robin. See Birds’ Good-night, 
The.—Richards. 

“Good night!” she said, and laid her head upon his 
manly breast. See Not All Imagination.—Anon. 

“Good night. Sir Rook!” said a little lark. See Lark 
and the Rook, The.—Anon. 

Good night, sweetheart! It can’t be ten, I know. 
See Parting Lovers, The.—Day. 

Good night! the sun is setting. See Good-night.—Anon. 

Good night to all the world! there’s none. See Good¬ 
night.—Sands. 

Good night, to each weary, toil-worn wight! See 
Good Night.—Korner. 

Good oars, for Arnold’s sake. See Pax Paganica.— 
Guiney. 

Good old earth, be thou my wine. See My Wine.— 
Kirk. 

Good old Elder Lamb had labored for a thousand 
nights and days. See Elder Lamb’s Donation.— 
Carleton. 

Good old Mother Fairie. See To Mother Fairie.— 
Cary. 

Good people all, of every sort. See Vicar of Wake¬ 
field, The (Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog).— 
Goldsmith. 

Good people, all with one accord. See Elegy on the 
Glory of her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize, An.—Gold¬ 
smith. 

Good pipe, old friend, old black and colored friend. 
See Gypsies of the Dane’s Dike (Geordie to his 
Tobacco-pipe).—Phillips. 

Good reader, if you e’er have seen. See Nonsense.— 
Moore. 

Good Saint Valentine, I pray. See Diana’s Valentine. 
—Bridges. 


Good speed, for I this day. Herrick. See To the 
Lark.—Herrick. 

Good tidings every day. See Gospel of Mystery, The.— 
Holm. 

Good Uncle iRiley sent the lad a box of little tools. 
See As the Twig is Bent.—Cleveland. 

“Good wife, what are you singing for? You know 
we’ve lost the hay.” See We’ve Always Been Pro¬ 
vided For.—Anon. 

Good-by, dear eyes; a little while. See Good-by.— 
Anon. 

Good-bye, Doctor,—your orders will be obeyed. See 
Quiet Smoke, A.—Neall. 

Good-by, good-by! I have no chain to hold you. See 
Vale!—Anon. 

“Good-by in fear, good-by in sorrow.” See Good-by. 
—Rossetti. 

Good-by, little birdie! See Nell and her Bird.— 
Dodge. 

“Good-by, mother; don’t worry about me.” SeeWrong 
Road, The.—Adams. 

Good-by: nay, do not grieve that it is over. See Fare¬ 
well, A.—-Monroe. 

Good-by, O love, once more I hold your hand. See 
Parting Words.—Marston. 

Good-by, sweet day, good-by! See Good-by, Sweet 
Day.—Thaxter. 

Good-by, Sweetheart. See same. —Clemmer. 

Good-by! the comedy’s over. See First Snow, The.— 
Dietz. 

“Good-bye, baby.” Baby looked up from her break¬ 
fast with a wondering smile. See Why.—S. P. B. 

Good-bye, chile! I ain’t here for long. See In de 
Mornin’.—Case. 

Good-bye, God bless you, God bless you each day. 
See Class Song.—Anon. 

Good-bye! good-bye! How hard to say. See Good¬ 
bye.—Anon. 

Good-bye, good-bye to Summer! See Robin Red¬ 
breast.—Allingham. 

“Good-bye,” I said, to my conscience. See Conscience 
and Remorse.—Dunbar. 

Good-bye, little children, I’m going away. See Frog’s 
Good-bye, The.—Anon. 

Good-bye, old house! the hurry and the bustle. See 
Good Bye, Old House.—Pomeroy. 

Good-bye, Old Year, we’ve had our times of Bin and 
play. See Child’s Good-bye to the Old Year, A.— 
Anon. 

Good-bye, proud world! I’m going home. See Good¬ 
bye.—Emerson. 

Good-bye, sweet summer day. See Good-bye, Sweet 
Day.—C'oolidge. 

Good-bye, wits and poets—the volume we close. See 
L’Envoi.—Anon. 

Goodness airth! Julia Ann! who’s that ’ere a-coming? 
See How They Kept a Secret.—Augusta. 

Goodness, is the greatest of all the virtues and digni¬ 
ties of the mind. See Goodness and Greatness.— 
Bacon. 

“Goorri, wife,” says goot oldt farmer Gray. See Dot 
Beetle Tog under de Vagon.—Anon. 

Goot evenings, shentlemens und ladies. See Little 
Fritz.—Vickers. 

Gorbo, as thou earnest this way. See Daffodil.— 
Drayton. 

Gosh! But Phoebe did look sweet! See Knittin’ at 
the Stockin’.—Bellaw. 

“Got any boys?” the marshal said. See Puzzled 
Census-taker, The.—Saxe. 

“Got one? Don’t say so! Which did you get?” See 
Best Sewing-machine, The.—Anon. 

Government we hold to be the creature of our need. 
See Union and its Government, The.—Simms. 

Governor Bellingham, in a loose gown and cap. See 
Elf-child and the Minister, The.—Hawthorne. 

Grace and Peace in Christ, my darling little son. See 
Martin Luther’s Letter to his Son.—Luther. 

Graceful may seem the fairy form. See Household 
Woman, The.—Gilman. 

Gracie wuz alius a careless tot. See Diverted Tragedy, 
A.—Riley. 

Grade’s kitty, day by day. See Gracie’s Kitty.— 
Anon. 

Grand are the days we celebrate. See Story of the 
Days, The.—Anon. 

Grand is the leisure of the earth. See Scholar and 
Carpenter (God’s Time).—Ingelow. 

Grand the expanse of the heavens, but grander the 
thoughts they suggest. See God’s Wonders.— 
Martyn. 

Granddad sat outside the door. See Granddad’s 
Polka.—Meyers. 


665 






Grandfather 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Grandfather is old. His back is bent. See Grand¬ 
father’s Reverie.—Parker. 

Grandfather Watts used to tell us boys. See Grand¬ 
father Watts’s Private Fourth.—Bunner. 

Grandfather’s barn! I shall never forget. See 
Grandfather’s Barn.—Rexford. 

Grandfather’s house was a gray old building. See 
Grandfather’s House.—McGuire. 

Grandfather’s “summer sweets” are ripe. See Grand¬ 
father’s “Summer Sweets.”—Lincoln. 

Grandma, grandma, do you believe in dreams? See 
Two Interpreters of Dreams, The.—Herbert. 

Grandma Gruff said a curious thing. See Reason, 
The.—Anon. 

Grandma offered a prize the other day to us children. 
See Grandma’s Spectacles.—Goodfellow. 

Grandma remembers Washington. See Great-grand¬ 
mamma and I.—Watson. 

Grandma says we little witches. See Where Did They 
Go?—( Our Little Ones.) 

Grandma sits in her easy chair. See Knitting.— 
Cutter. 

Grandma told me all about it! See Minuet, The.— 
Dodge. 

Grandma was nodding, I rather think. See Rogue, A. 
—Anon. 

Grandmamma sits in her quaint arm-chair. See 
Beautiful Grandmamma. — ( Standard of the 
Cross.) 

Grandma’s eyes are dim and grandma’s hair is sprin¬ 
kled. See Grandma that’s Just Splendid, A.— 
Opper. 

Grandma’s shadow on the wall. See Silhouettes.— 
Pillsbury. ■ t 

Grandmother sits in her old arm-chair. See Coin¬ 
cidence, A.—Cooper. 

Grandmothers are very nice folks. See Johnny’s 
Opinion of Grandmothers.—Anon. 

Grandmother’s mother! her age, I guess. See Doro¬ 
thy Q.—Holmes. 

Grandpa sits in his oaken chair. See Sixteen and 
Sixty.—Anon. 

Grandpa was holding his pet on his lap. See Grandpa 
and Pet.—Richards. 

Grandpapa looked at his fine new chair. See Just 
what I Wanted.—Anon. 

Grandpapa questions; “Now couldn’t those boys.” 
See Some Opinions.—Anon. 

Grandpapa’s hair is very white. See Grandpapa.— 
Craik. 

Grandpapa’s spectacles cannot be found. See Grand¬ 
papa’s Spectacles.—Anon. 

“Granny, whar you gwine?” See same. —Anon. 

Granny’s come to our house. See Granny.—Riley. 

Grant him admittance. See Columbus at the Court of 
Spain.—Boyd. 

Grant is one of the few men in history who did more 
than was expected. See Eulogy on General 
Grant, A.—Newman. 

Grasped by a mighty power and, fearless, hurled. See 
Prophet, The.—Perkins. 

Grate ingine! you have eradicated fire machines. See 
Owed to the Steem Engine.—Skwirt. 

Grateful is sleep while wrong and shame survive. See 
Reply to “Lines Found in the Hand of the Statue 
of Night at Florence.”—Angelo. 

Grave authors say and witty poets sing. See Bache¬ 
lor’s Reasons for Taking a Wife, The.—Anon. 

Gray distance hid each shining sail. See Jubilate.— 
Arnold. 

Gray is the sky but naught care I. See Song. 
—W. T. R. 

Gray o’er the pallid links, haggard and forsaken. See 
Farm on the Links, The.—Watson. 

Gray winter hath gone, like a wearisome guest. See 
September in Australia.—Kendall. 

Great actions and striking occurrences, having excited 
a temporary admiration. See First Settlement of 
New England, The (Influence of Great Actions, 
The).—Webster. 

Great and understanding nation. See To America in 
1876.—Tupper. 

Great are the myths—I, too, delight in them. See 
Great are the Myths.—Whitman. 

‘Great battle! Times extra!” the newsboy cried. 
See News of a Day, The.—Bolton. 

Great big dog. See Tale of a Dog and a Bee.—Anon. 

Great Caesar—how my head aches! I must have been 
on a terrible tear last night! See Revelations of 
a Pocket.—Anon. 

Great disasters are upon us and upon the whole 
country. See Restoration of the Union, The.— 
Stephens. 


Great Doctor Parr, the learned Whig. See Brief Puff 
of Smoke, A.—Selim.—( Eclectic Magazine.) 

Great fabric of oppression. See Protestant Ascend¬ 
ency.—O’Hagan. 

Great Garibaldi, through the streets one day. See 
Respect the Burden.—Mulock. 

Great, glowing blossoms, holding in their hearts. See 
Jacqueminot Roses.—Clarke. 

Great God! greater than greatest! See Night 
Thoughts (Penitence).—Young. 

Great God! whose sceptre rules the earth. See Divine 
Ejaculation.—Quarles. 

Great, good, and just! could I but rate. See Upon the 
Death of King Charles I.-—Montrose. 

Great in life, Garfield was great in death. See Me¬ 
morial Address on the Life and Character of James 
A. Garfield (Death of Garfield, The).—Blaine. 

Great indeed, is the task assigned to woman. See 
same. —( Blarhwood’s .) 

Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised. See 
Psalms of David, XLVIII.— Bible. 

Great is the sun, and wide he goes. See Summer Sun. 
—Stevenson. 

Great King William spread before him. See William 
the Conqueror.—Mackay. 

Great king, within this coffin I present. See King 
Richard II.—Shakespeare. 

Great, learned, witty Ben, be pleased to light. See 
Invective Written by Mr. George Chapman 
against Mr. Ben Jonson, An.—Chapman. 

Great lords, wise men ne’er sit and wail their loss. 
See King Henry VI., Pt. III. (Battle of Tewks¬ 
bury).—Shakespeare. 

Great Master! teach us how to hope in man. See 
Honor All Men.—Lowe. 

Great men grow greater by the lapse of time. See 
Daniel O’Connell.—O’Reilly. 

Great Monarch of the World! from whose arm springs. 
See Majesty in Misery.—Charles I. 

Great mustering there is of Moors and Christians 
through the land. See Cid, The (Count Raymond 
and My Cid).—Ormsby. 

Great nature is an army gay. See same. —Gilder. 

Great? Nay, the man is never great. See Great Man, 
A.—Dallas. 

Great Ocean! strongest of creation’s sons. See Course 
of Time, The (Ocean).—Pollok. 

Great Sovereign of the earth and sea. See Europa.— 
Thayer. 

Great spirits now on earth are sojourning. See Ad¬ 
dressed to Haydon.—Keats. 

Great thoughts in crude, unshapely verse set forth. 
See On Reading ——.—Aldrich. 

Great truths are dearly bought. The common truth. 
See How We Learn.—Bonar. 

Great was the grief amongst the village school-boys. 
See Tom Brown’s School Days (Tom Brown Start¬ 
ing for Rugby).—Hughes. 

Great, wide, beautiful, wonderful World. See Won¬ 
derful World, The.—Rands. 

Great woods gird me now around. See Blackbird’s 
Song, The.—Sigerson. 

Greatest twain among the nations. __ See England and 
America.—Sangster. 

Greece is a little land, with no mountains of majestic 
height. See Poor and Little Greece.—Shepard. 

Green be the turf above thee. See On the Death of 
Joseph Rodman Drake.—Halleck. 

Green blood fresh pulsing through the trees. See 
April—and Dying.—Aldrich. 

Green earth has her sons and her daughters. See 
same. —Swinburne 

Green grew the reeds and pale they were. See Sym¬ 
bols.—Thompson. 

Green fields of England! whereso’er. See Green 
Fields of England.—-Clough. 

Green grow the rashes, O. See same. —Burns. 

Green grows the laurel on the banks. See Life’s 
Incongruities.—Phelps. 

Green, in the wizard arms. See Banshee, The.— 
Todhunter. 

Green is the plane-tree in the square. See London 
Plane-tree, A.—Levy. 

Green leaves panting for joy with the great wind rush¬ 
ing through. See Summer Day, A.—Beeching. 

Green little vaulter in the sunny grass. See To the 
Grasshopper and Cricket.—Hunt. 

Green waves, green waves, whose thunder woke. See 
Turn of the Tide, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Green were the meadows with last summer’s store. 
See Merry Christmas Time, The.—Arnold. 

Green willow! over whom the perilous blast. See 
Drooping-willow, The.—Landon. 


666 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


Hail 


Greeted me at early day. See May Morning.—Sproat. 

Grey, grey morn o’er the hollow dark is creeping. See 
Alma.—Lushington. 

Grief fills the room up of my absent child. See King 
John (“Grief fills,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

Grief hath been known to turn the young head gray. 
See Young Gray Head, The.—Southey. 

Grieve not with sighing. See To My Soul.—Fleming. 

“Griffith, dinna ye ken I canna be troubled wi’ ye?” 
See Griffith Hammerton.—Vetrepont. 

Grim war has slain its millions. See Drink’s Doings.— 
Anon. 

Grind, Billie, grind! And so the war’s begun? See 
At the Grindstone; or, A Home View of the 
Battle-field.—-Buchanan. 

Griper Greg of the village of Willoughby Waterless. 
See Griper Greg.—-Anon. 

Grisild is deed, and eek hir pacience. See Canterbury 
Tales, The (Clerkes’ Tale, The).—C'haucer. 

Grow as the trees grow. See Growth.—Bugbee. 

Grow greener, grass, where the river flows. See Love 
Extravaganza, A.—Mackay. 

Grow old along with me' See Rabbi Ben Ezra.— 
Browning. 

Grow thou and flourish well. See Class Tree, The.— 
Thomas. 

Grown to man’s stature! O my little child! See 
Twenty-one.—Dorr. 

Guard, my child, thy tongue. See Rhyme Six Hun¬ 
dred Years Ago, A.—Anon. 

Guard the tongue, and guard it wisely. See Guard the 
Tongue.—Anon. 

Guarding the mountains around. See Masque of 
Pandora, The (Voices of the Forest).—Longfellow. 

Guards! who at Smolensko fled. See Louis Napoleon’s 
Address to his Army.—Aytoun. 

Gude Lord Graeme is to Carlisle gane. See Graeme 
and Bewick.—Scott. 

Guess I’ve never told you, sonny, of the strandin’ and 
the wreck. See Tale of the Kennebec Mariner.— 
Day. 

Guess what he had in his pocket. See What Was It? 
—Dayre. 

Guest discovered removing coat and hat. See At a 
Dinner Party.—Anon. 

Guest from a holier world. See To My Soul.—Laigh- 
ton. 

Guide me, O thou great Jehovah! See same. —Wil¬ 
liams. 

Guido, ay, Guido of Ravenna. See Francesca da 
Rimini.—Boker. 

“G-u-n,” said Gracie to Willie. See Spelling in the 
Nursery.—Marble. 

Gunther and Hagan, the warriors fierce and bold. See 
Nibelungen Lied (How Siegfried was Slain).— 
Anon. 

Gusty and raw was the morning. See Fight of Paso 
Del Mar, The.—Taylor. 

Guvener B. is a sensible man. See Biglow Papers, 
The (What Mr. Robinson Thinks).—Lowell. 

G’way and quit dat noise, Miss Lucy. See When 
Malindy Sings.—Dunbar. 

Gwenwynwyn withdrew from the feasts of his hall. 
See Llyn-y-Dreiddiad-Vrawd.—Peacock. 


H 

H was an indigent hen. See same. —Porter. 

Ha! Bully for me, again, when my turn for picket is 
over. See Brier-wood Pipe, The.—Shanly. 

Ha! do I see right?—You weep! Is that the happy tem¬ 
per that you boast? See Parthenia.—Anon. 

Ha, ha! capital! So your uncle left for Richmond. 
See Sudden Arrival, A.—Hay. 

Ha-ha, ha-ha! what do I care. See Maniac, The.— 
Beebe. 

Ha! ha! ha! Yesterday I was a poor man. See Pub¬ 
lic Worrier, The.—Anon. 

Ha! Ha! Well, governor, how are ye? See Lady Gay 
Spanker.—Boucicault. 

“Ha, ha! well met,” said Twist; “as I’m alive.’ See 
Party Caucus, The.—Durant. 

Ha! ha! we’ve stemmed the stream. See Oaks, The. 
Johnson. 

Ha! ha! you fonnee feylow! by gar you are de von 
great rog. See Fox and the Ranger. The.—Lover. 

Ha! here comes Mr. Paul Pry. See Paul Pry (Paul 
Pry at Doubledot’s).—Poole. 

Ha, steward! How are you. my old boy? How do 
things go on at home? See How to Break Bad 
News.—Anon. 


Ha! whare ye gaun, ye crawlin’ ferlie? See To a Louse. 
—Burns. 

Habits are stubborn things. See Force of Habit, The. 
—Anon. 

Hack and Hew were the sons of God. See Hack and 
Hew.—Carman. 

Had a Declaration of Independence been made seven 
months ago. See Predictions Concerning the 
Fourth of July.—Adams. 

Had Grant died at the tan-yard, or from behind the 
counter. See General Grant.—Anon. 

Had I a heart for falsehood framed. See Song: “Had 
I a heart,” etc.—Sheridan. 

Had I a pound of tender steak. See Stewed Steak. 
— (Punch.) 

Had I been there, when Christ, our Lord, lay sleeping. 
See Child’s Easter, A.—Slosson. 

Had I but earlier known that from the eyes. See In 
Love’s Own Time.—Michelangelo. 

Had I but known, long years ago. See Had I but 
Known.—Scott. 

Had I but plenty of money, money enough and to spare. 
See Up at a Villa—Down in the City.—Browning. 

Had I the power to cast a bell. See Bell, A.—Seollard. 

Had I two loaves of bread—ay, ay! See Beauty.— 
Rand. 

“Had I wist,” quoth Spring to the Swallow. See Had 
I Wist.—Swinburne. 

Had it not rained on the night of the 17th of June, 1815. 
See Les Mis^rables (Battle of Waterloo, The).— 
Hugo. 

Had it pleased Heaven. See Othello, the Moor of 
V eni ce.—Shakespeare. 

Had the great truths waited until the majority voted 
in their favor. See same. —Cassel. 

Had this effulgence disappeared. See Evening Volun¬ 
tary.—Wordsworth. 

“Had, too!” “Hadn’t neither!” See She “Dis- 
plains” It.—Riley. 

Had we but world enough, and time. See To His Coy 
Mistress.—Marvell. 

“Had we not best buy a cradle, Tor the baby, Mary 
dear?” See Parson’s Cradle, The.—Diehl. 

“Hadst thou stayed, I must have fled!” See Legend 
Beautiful, The.—Longfellow. 

Haf you seen mine leedle Shonny? See Shonny 
Schwartz.—Adams. 

Hail! abode of peace and quiet. See Midnight Epi¬ 
sode, A.—Anon. 

Hail and welcome, brave son of Norway. See Nansen. 
—Gravsted. 

Hail, Artaxominous! yclept the Great! See Bombastes 
Furioso.—Rhodes. . 

Hail, beauteous Dian, queen of shades. See To Diana. 
—Heywood. 

Hail, beauteous stranger of the grove! See To the 
Cuckoo.—Logan. 

Hail Columbia! happy land! See Hail Columbia.— 
Hopkinson. 

Hail! fair queen, adorned with flowers. See Return of 
May, The.—Hemans. 

Hail, first of the spring. See Hepatica, The.—Rand. 

Hail, Freedom! Thy bright crest. See National 
Hymn.—Crawford. 

Hail! hail! hail to the beautiful May. See Welcome to 
May.—Anon. 

Hail, happy Genius of this ancient pile! See On Lord 
Bacon’s Birthday.—Jonson. 

Hail, happy saint, on thine immortal throne. See On 
the Death of the Rev. George Whitefield.—Wheat- 
ley. 

Hail, heroes of the battle! Hail, men who wore the 
shield! See Mien Who Wore the Shield, The.— 
Sherwood. 

Hail! Ho! See Sea-song from the Shore, A.—Riley. 

Hail, holy Light, offspring of Heaven first-born! See 
Paradise Lost (Invocation to Light).—Milton. 

Hail May! with fair queen and May-pole. See May.— 
Anon. 

Hail, old patrician trees, so great and good! See Of 
Solitude.—Cowley. 

Hail, sister springs. See Weeper, The.—Crashaw. 

Hail, sovereign of the worlds of floods. See Ode to 
Niagara.—Anon. . 

Hail the flower whose early bridal makes the festival 
of Spring. See Arbutus.—Goodale. 

Hail thou most sacred venerable thing! See Hymn to 
Darkness.—Norris. 

Hail thou once-despised Jesus! See same .—Bakewell. 

Hail to Hobson! hail to Hobson! hail to all the valiant 
set! See Men of the “Merrimac,” The.—Scol- 
lard. 


667 





Hail 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Hail to our banner brave. See Our Banner.—Tilden. 

Hail to our Keltic brethren, wherever they may be. 
See Salutation to the Kelts.—McGee. 

Hail to the brightness of Zion’s glad morning. See Lat¬ 
ter Day, The.—-Hastings. 

Hail to the chief who in triumph advances! See Lady 
of the Lake, The (Song of Clan Alpine).—Scott. 

Hail to the Czar Alexander! See On the Freeing of the 
Serfs.—Proctor. 

Hail to the elm! the brave old elm! See Elm, The.— 
Dodge. 

‘Hail to the King!” See Ingd, the Boy-king.— 
Boyesen. 

Hail to the land whereon we tread. See New England. 
—Percival. 

Hail to the Lord’s Anointed. See Psalm LXXII.— 
Montgomery. 

Hail to the merry Autumn days, when yellow corn¬ 
fields shine. See Village Coquettes, The (Round). 
—Dickens. 

Hail to the pride of the forest—hail. See Maple-tree, 
The.—Moodie. 

Hail to the Sabbath Day. See Sabbath Day, The.— 
Bulfinch. 

Hail to the trees! See Song of the Trees.—Miller. 

Hail to thee, blithe spirit. See To a Skylark.—Shelley. 

Hail to thy returning festival, old Bishop Valentine ! 
See Valentine’s Cay. —Lamb. 

Hail to your lordship! See Hamlet (Scene from 
‘ ‘ H amlet”).—Shakespeare. 

Half a bar, half a bar. See Charge on “Old Hundred,” 
The.—Anon. 

Half a league, half a league. See Charge of the Light 
Brigade at Balaklava, The.—Tennyson. 

Half an hour till train time, sir. See Bill Mason’s 
Bride.—Anon. 

Half kneeling yet, and half reclining. See Queen’s 
Vespers, The.—De Vere. 

Half loving-kindliness and half disdain. See To My 
Cat.—Watson. 

Half-raised upon the dying couch, bis hand. See 
Boy’s Last Request, The.—Anon. 

Half-sleeping, by the fire I sit. See Over the Range.— 
Mills. 

Half-way down to the shore, Evangeline waited in si¬ 
lence. See Evangeline.—Longfellow. 

Hallo! I really believe this is for me! See Birthday 
Box, The.—-Anon. 

Halio! I’m glad you all are here. See Curiosity.—Anon. 

Hallo, Will! At it as hard as ever. See Good Library 
Gone up in Smoke, A.—Trafton. 

Hallo! youngster, do you live in this neighborhood? 
See Farmer Boy and the City Dude, The.—Anon. 

“Halloo, below there!” When the signal man heard 
my voice. See Signal Man, The.—Dickens. 

Halloo, Bill! which way so fast? See Too Good to 
Attend Common School.—Doolittle. 

Halloo, John! where are you going with that big book. 
See Going to be an Orator.—Forbes. 

Halloo, Rob! Do you know it is nearly school-time? 
See Energy and Industry.—Kavanaugh. 

Halloo! what old cove is this coming up the road? See 
Uncle’s Reception, The.-—Anon. 

Hallow the threshold, crown the posts anew! See On 
the Queen’s Return from the Low Countries.— 
Cartwright. 

Halt! Arthur Bonnicastle, you are arrested. See 
Arthur Bonnicastle (Brought to Trial for 
“Blovvin’ ”).—Holland. 

Halt! Attention! Right about face! See Military 
Discipline.—Anon. 

Halt! Who passes, friend or foe? See same.—A. H. S. 

Hame, hame, hame! oh hame I fain wad \or would] be. 
See Hame, Hame, Hame!—Cunningham. 

Hamelin town’s in Brunswick. See Pied Piper of 
Hamelin, The.—Browning. 

Hamilton yielded to the force of an imperious custom. 
See Criminality of Duelling.—Nott. 

Hand in hand, through the city . treets. See Thanks¬ 
giving Eve.—Anon. 

Hand me the bastin’ thread. See Mrs. Tubbs at the 
Sewing-circle.—I .ocke. 

“Hand me the bowl, ye jovial band.” See Victim, The. 
—Anon. 

Handsome? I hardly know. Her profile’s fine. See 
Countrywoman of Mine, A.—Eastman. 

Handsome is that handsome does. See Beautiful, 
The (“Handsome is,” etc.).—Whittier. 

Hang out our banners on the outward walls. See 
Macbeth.—-Shakespeare. 

Hang there, my verse, in witness of my love. See 
As You Like It (Forest of Arden, The).—Shake¬ 
speare. 


Hang up the baby’s stocking. See same. —Anon. 

Hannibal’s Address to His Army. See Carthage in 
Peril.—Livy. 

Hans and Fritz were two Deutschers who lived side by 
side. See Hans and Fritz.—Adams. 

Hans Baum, the cobbler, lived in a quaint little town. 
See Little Carl.-—Botsford. 

Hans Bleimer shtood by dot burning shkip. See 
Hans Bleimer’s Mool.—Brown. 

Hans Brietmann choined de Toorners. See Hans 
Brietmann and the Turners.—Leland. 

Hans Brietmann gife a barty—dey had piano blayin’. 
See Hans Brietmann’s Party.—Leland. 

Hans, dot vater pipe gifs no vater—alretty. See Mr. 
Eisseldorf and the Water Pipe.—Anon. 

Hans Dunderkopf stood on the stack. See Dutchman’s 
Equal Rights, The.—Nelson. 

Hans geebs a millinery shtore py Shtate shtreet out. 
See Tiamondts on der Prain.—Anon. 

Hans Schnitzerl made a velocipede. See Schnitzerl’s 
Velocipede,—Leland. 

Hans Schoppenmeier geebs a millinery shtore py 
Shtate shtreet out. See Tiamondts on der Prain. 
—Anon. 

Hans was in a terrible sweat. See How a Dutchman 
was Done.—Anon. 

“Hans, what do you think of Signs and Omens?” See 
Hans Sourcrout. on Signs and Omens.—Anon. 

“Hans, what keepit you oud so lade to-night?” See 
Hans’s Midnight Excuses.—Anon. 

Han’som, stranger? Yes, she’s purty and ez peart ez 
she kin be. See Engineer’s Story, The.—Hall. 

Happening to pass through Mount V. See De Pen 
and de Swoard.—Anon. 

Happy and free are a married man’s reveries. See 
Married Man and the Bachelor, The.—Anon. 

Happy are they and charmed in life. See On the Slain 
at Chickamauga.—Melville. 

Happy are they who kiss thee, morn and eve. See 
Happy are They Who Kiss Thee.—De Vere. 

Happy art thou, whom God does bless. See Garden,-- 
The.—Cowley. 

Happy, happier far than thou. See To Corinne.—He- 
mans. 

Happy insect! ever blest. See Soliloquy, A.-—Harte. 

Happy insect! what can be. See Grasshopper, The. 
—-Anacreon. 

“Happy, oh, happy, so happy, so happy!” See Verse. 
—(Mount Holyoke.) 

Happy song-sparrow, that on woodland side. See 
Fringilla Melodia, The.—Hirst. 

Happy songster, perched above. See On the Grass¬ 
hopper.—Anacreon. 

Happy the man, that when his work is done. See 
Contentment.—Field. 

Happy the man who has the town escaped! See Coun¬ 
try Life.—Goethe. 

Happy the man who so hath Fortune tried. See 
Mano: a Poetical History (Of Temperance in For¬ 
tune).—Dixon. 

Happy the man, who, void of cares and strife. See 
Splendid Shilling, The.—Philips. 

Happy the man whose wish and care. See Ode on 
Solitude.—Pope. 

Happy the nation whose God is Jehovah. See Na¬ 
tion’s Strength, A.— Hible. 

Happy those early days when I. See Retreat, The.— 
Vaughan. 

Happy was it for America, happy for the world. See 
Lesson of the Revolution, The.—Sparks. 

Happy were he could finish forth his fate. See Pas¬ 
sion of My Lord of Essex, A.—Devereux. 

Happy, ye leaves, when as those lily hands. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (To His Book. Of 
His Lady).—Spenser. 

Hard by a poet’s attic lived a chemist. See How to 
have just What We Take.—Smith. 

Hard, hard, indeed, was the contest for freedom. See 
Tribute to Washington.—Harrison. 

Hardly ever that a body. See Music of the Past, The. 
—Anon. 

Hardy, thy brain is valient, ’tis confest. See To 
Brainhardy.—.Tonson. 

Hari Chunder Mukerji, pride of Bow-Bazar. See 
“What Happened.”—Kipling. 

Hark! a-down the village street. See Hunko!—Den¬ 
ton. 

Hark! ah, the nightingale! See Philomela.—Arnold. 

Hark at the lips of this pink whorl of shell. See Qua¬ 
train, A.—Sherman. 

Hark! forth from the abyss a voice proceeds. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Death of the Princess 
Charlotte).—Byron. 


668 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Have . 


Hark' from bracket, shelf, and hall. See What o’ 
Clock.—Denton. 

Hark, hark! down the century’s long reaching slope. 
See Yorktown Centennial Lyric.—Hayne. 

Hark! Hark! Hark! See Chicago in Flames. Wil¬ 
liams. 

Hark! Hark! my children, hark! <Sce What do They 
Say?—Anon. 

Hark! Hark! my soul: angelic songs are swelling. 
See Pilgrims of the Night, The.—Faber. 

Hark! Hark! o’er the city alarm bells ring out. See 
Fire-fiend, The.—Clenn. 

Hark’ Hark! the lark at heaven’s gate sings. See. 
Cymbeline (Aubade).—Shakespeare. 

Hark! Hark! what does the fir-tree say? See Fir- 
tree. The.—Clark. 

Hark! hear ye the sounds that the winds on their opin¬ 
ions. See American Patriot’s Song, The.-—Anon. 

Hark! Hear you not that long shrill strain? See Hid¬ 
den Songster, The.—Anon. 

Hark, beard ye not that trumpet sound. See Hotel in 
the Storm, A.—Stickney. 

Hark, heard ye not those hoofs of dreadful note? See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (“Hark, heard ye 
not,” etc.).—Bjron. 

“Hark! hearest thou that shout? They are growling 
over their human blood,” said Olinthus. See 
Last Days of Pompeii (Glaucus and the Lion).— 
Bui wer-Lvt ton. 

Hark' how all the welkin rings! See same. —Wesley. 

Hark, how T’ll bribe you. See Measure for Measure 
(Prayers).—Shakespeare. 

Hark how the mower Damon sung. See Damon the 
Mower.—Marvell. 

Hark’ I hear the tramp of thousands. See Reveille?, 
The.—Harte. 

Hark! is Santa Claus coming? See Christmas Panto¬ 
mime.—( Popular Educator.) 

Hark! is that a horn I hear. See Horn, The.—Rama!. 

Hark! it is the spring time. See Spring Time, The.— 
Rutherford. 

Hark! I've a secret to whisper! See Edith’s Secret.— 
Ludlum. 

Hark! my maiden, and I’ll tell you. See Fortune-tel¬ 
ler and Maiden.—Gaddess. 

Hark, my soul! it is the Lord. See Lovest Thou Me?— 
Cowper. 

Hark! Now everything is still. See Shrouding of the 
Duchess of Malfi, The.—Webster. 

“Hark!” says the Morning-glory. See Morning- 
glory.—Anon. 

Hark! some wild trumpeter, some strange musician. 
See Mvstic Trumpeter, The.—Whitman. 

Hark! Spring is coming. Her herald sings, Cuckoo! 
See In the Month when Sings the Cuckoo.—Austin. 

Hark! the bells of Christmas ringing. See Christmas 
Bells.—Taylor. 

Hark, the Christmas bells are ringing. See Christmas 
Bells.—Anon. 

Hark! the clarion March wind! its wild, defiant greet¬ 
ing. See Waiting for Easter.—Proctor. 

Hark! the cock crows, and yon bright star. See New 
Year, The.—Colton. 

Hark! the cry of Death is ringing. See Scourge of War, 
The.—Burleigh. 

Hark! the faint bells of the sunken city. See Sunken 
City, The.—Mueller. 

Hark, the glad sound! the Saviour comes. See Hark, 
the Glad Sound.—Doddridge. 

Hark! the herald angels sing. See Christmas Day.— 
Wesley. 

“Hark! the minute gun is booming.” See Lover's 
Sacrifice, The.—Anon. 

Hark! the rattling roar of the musketeers. See Cavalry 
Charge, The.—Taylor. 

Hark, the robins sweetly sing. See Spring Song.—Nor- 
ton. 

Hark the sleigh-bells! how they jingle. See Sleigh- 
bells, The.—Anon. 

Hark the trumpet of an angel, and behold a vision dire! 
See Hymn of the Avenger, The.—Denison. 

Hark! the warbling choir sings. See “Robin Hood,” 
Songs from.—MacNally. 

Hark—through the wild night’s darkness rings out a 
terrible cry. See One of the Heroes.—Rexford. 

Hark! ’tis our northern nightingale that sings. See 
White-throated Sparrow, The.—West. 

Hark, ’tic the bluebird’s venturous strain. See Blue¬ 
bird, The.—Aldrich. 

Hark! ’tis the twanging horn! O’er yonder bridge. 
See Task, The (Post, The).—Cowper. 

Hark to the measured march! The Saxons come! 
See Address of Caradoc the Bard.—Bulwer. 


Hark, to the shrill trumpet calling. See Soldier’s 
Burial, The.—Norton. 

Hark to the solemn bell. See same. —Anon. 

Hark! what a sound, and too divine for hearing. See 
Saint Paul.—Myers. 

Hark! .... what booming. See Arcana Sylvarum 
—De Kay. 

Hark, where my blossomed pear tree in the hedge. See 
Home Thoughts from Abroad (“Hark, where,” 
etc.).—Browning. 

Harm is done by everything which tends to vulgarize 
religion. See same. —Anon. 

Harmony is the ideal of the universe. See True Social¬ 
ism, The.—Morgan. 

Harness me down with your iron bands. See Song of 
Steam, The.—Cutter. 

Haro! Haro! Judge now betwixt this woman and 
me. See Appeal to Harold, The.—Bunner. 

Haroun, the Caliph, through sunlit street. See Power. 
—Collier. 

Harp of Mennon! sweetly strung. See Battle of Alex¬ 
andria, The.—Montgomery. 

Harry, don’t you wish there were fairies nowadays? 
See Christmas Eve Adventure, A.—Clement. 

Harry has a little dog. See Harry’s Dog.—Anon. 

“Harry, where have you been all morning?” See 
Fishing.—Baker. 

Harvest is home. The bins are full. See Country 
Thanksgiving, A.—Anon. 

Has any one seen my Fair. See Cressid.—Perry. 

Has Hi ham a Hinglisman. See Jewels of My Aunt, 
The.—Meyers. 

Has our love all died out? See Brother Jonathan’s 
Lament for Sister Caroline (Union, The).—Holmes. 

Has summer come without the rose? See Song: 
“Has Summer come,” etc.—O’Shaughnessy. 

Has the gentleman donef Has he completely done? 
See Reply to Mr. Corry.-—Grattan. 

Has the learned gentleman, who has been so eloquent. 
Sec Reply to Macaulay’s “Reform Irresistible.”— 
Croker. 

Has the reader any distinct idea of what clouds are? 
See Modern Painters (Clouds, The).—Ruskin. 

Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? 
See Boys, The.—Holmes. 

Has your cousin arrived yet, Mary? See Very Bash¬ 
ful.—Anon. 

Hash iz made out ov kast-off vit.tles. See Receipt for 
Hash.—Billings. 

Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star? See 
Hymn before Sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouni.— 
Coleridge. 

Hast thou a lamp, a little lamp. See Lamp, The.— 
Greene. 

Hast thou ever known the feeling. See Belfrey of 
Ghent, The.—Maguire. 

Hast thou forgotten me? The days are dark. See 
Hast Thou Forgotten Me?—Holdsworth. 

Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? See 
Forbearance.—Emerson. 

Hast thou no right to joy. See Ode on Conflicting 
Claims.—Dixon. 

“Hast thou seen that fwr. my) lordly castle. See 
Castle by the Sea, The.—Uhland. 

Hast thou seen the down in the air. See Lute Song 
in “The Sad One,” The.—Suckling. 

Haste not! rest not! calmly wait. See Haste Not. 
Rest Not.—Goethe. 

Haste thee, nymph, and bring with thee. See L’Alle- 
gro.—Milton. 

Hastening northward, a message to bear. See Robin’s 
Message.—Hall. 

Hath not the dark stream closed above thy head. See 
Tears of the Poplars, The.—Thomas. 

Hath not thy heart within thee burned. See Medita¬ 
tion.—Bulfinch. 

Hath this world, without me wrought. See Question¬ 
ings.—Hedge. 

Hats off! Along the street there comes. See Flag 
Goes by, The.—Bennett. 

Haul in der plank, full speed ahead. See Hold Dot 
Fort, for Ve vos Coming.—Dunkerfoodle. 

Have a cigar, Edgar? Prime Havanas. See Not 
Worth Knowing.—Anon. 

Have a cigar?—No, I thank you. I don’t smoke. See 
Does it Pay to Smoke?—Anon. 

Have any one of you seen my kitty? See Lost Kitty, 
The.—Rook. 

Have done with care, my hearts! aboard amain. See 
Farewell to Sir John Norris and Sir Francis Drake, 
A.—Peele. 

Have I dreamed? or was it real. See Epimetheus.— 
Longfellow. 


669 






Have 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Have I not been nigh a mother. See Bertha in the 
Lane.—Browning. 

Have little care that life is brief. See Envoy.—Car¬ 
man. 

“Have other lovers—say, my love.” See Unsatisfac¬ 
tory.-—Myers. 

Have the courage to face a difficulty. See Moral 
Courage.—Anon. 

Have ye not seyn som tyme a pale face. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The (Emperor’s Daughter Stands 
Alone, An).—Chaucer. 

Have you a desire to see. See Have you a Desire?— 
Hausted. 

Have you a dog—a frisky dog. See Our Dog.—Daven¬ 
port. 

Have you a family, Tambo? See Too Many Daugh¬ 
ters.—Anon. 

Have you been at Carrick, and saw you my true-love 
there? See Have You been at Carrick.—Walsh. 

Have you been to walk, John? See Bird’s Nest, The.— 
Anon. 

Have you been to walk, Susy? See Blind Man, The.— 
Anon. 

Have you brought my boots, Jemima? _ Leave them 
at my chamber door. See Getting Up.—Leigh. 

“Have you called on the Browns yet?” See Un¬ 
timely Call, An.— (New York Sun.) 

Have you cut the wheat in the blowing field. See 
Thanksgiving.—Barr. 

Have you e’er a new song. See Limerick I.asses The. 
—Graves. 

Have you e’er seen my speckled hen. See Old Speckled 
Hen.—Ruggles. 

Have you ever been down to Dolly-town? See 
Dolly-town.—Anon. 

Have you ever heard of the many roads. See Boads 
to Wrinkle Town, The.—Lambert. 

Have you ever heard of the sugar-plum tree? See 
Sugar-plum Tree, The.—Field. 

Have you ever heard of the wonderful land. See Land 
of Make-believe, The.—Anon. 

Have you ever heard the wind go “ Y-o-o-o-o-o-o-o?” 
See Night Wind, The.—Field. 

Have you ever seen a boy. See ' ‘ Where’s My Hat. ”— 
Denton. 

Have you ever seen this aunt of papa’s? See Yankee 
Aunt, The.—Anon. 

Have you ever seen those marble statues in some pub¬ 
lic square or graden? Nee same. —Robertson. 

Have you ever thought of the weight of a word. See 
Weight of a Word, The.—Anon. 

Have you ever traveled much, Bones. See Huggin’ 
Lamp-posts.—Anon. 

Have you ever tried to make. See Making a Cake.— 
Denton. 

Have you ever watched a rill. See Gentle Words.— 
Taylor. 

Have you got a brook in your little heart? See same. 
—Dickinson. 

Have you got any Aunt Maria? An’ does she know 
all about ghosts? See My Aunt Maria.—McCol¬ 
lum. 

Have you heard about my papa’s ship? See When the 
Ship Comes in.—Denton. 

Have you heard any news, Mrs. Talket? See Un¬ 
buried Woman, The.—-Anon. 

Have you heard how a girl saved the lightning express? 
See Kate Shelly—Hall. 

Have you heard of a collier, of honest renown? See 
Patient Joe.—Anon. 

Have you heard of Mistress Whitby? ’Mong the ladies 
of the land.— -See Case of Pedigree, A.—Anon. 

Have you heard of our fighting Twenty-first. See 
Dash for the Colors, The.—Webb. 

Have you heard of Santa Rita? See Hymn to Santa 
Rita.—Adee. 

Have you heard of the Apple of Discord? .See Apple 
of Discord, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Have you heard of the Kaiserblumen. See Kaiser- 
blumen. The.—Thaxter. 

Have you heard of the land called Phussandphret. 
See Phussandphret.—Anon. 

Have you heard of the wonderful one-hoss shay. See 
Deacon’s Masterpiece, The.—Holmes. 

Have you heard the bad news, boys? See People will 
Talk.—Buckingham. 

Have you heard the dreadful news, Bella, about Ida 
Rue? See How the Story Grew.—Anon. 

Have you heard the news from Crawfordsville? See 
“District No. 9.”—Imbrie. 

Have you heard the olden storv. See Dragon Drink, 
The.—Murray. 

Have you heard the song of the daisy fair? See 
Motion Song—Daisy Fair.—Chase. 


Have you heard the story floating. See Easter Joy.— 
Denton. 

Have you heard the story of Deacon Brown. See 
Story of Deacon Brown, The.—Anon. 

Have you heard the story that gossips tell? See John 
Burns of Gettysburg.—Harte. 

Have you heard the tale of the Aloe Plant. See 
Through Death to Life.—Harbaugh. 

Have you heard the waters singing. See Little May.— 
Miller. 

Have you no pity in your heart? Is there no tender¬ 
ness in your nature? See From a Future Novel.— 
Anon. 

Have you not heard the poets tell. See Baby Bell.— 
Aldrich. 

Have you not noted, in some family. See Birth-bond, 
The.—Rossetti. 

Have you read in the Talmud of old. See Sandalphon. 
—Longfellow. 

Have you seen an [or the] apple orchard in the 
spring? See Apple Blossoms.—Martin. 

Have you seen but a bright lily grow. See Celebration 
of Charis, A (So Sweet is She).—Jonson. 

Have you seen Erasmus? See Walking Encyclopedia, 
The.—Anon. 

Have you seen my hat, Ruth? See Place for Every¬ 
thing and Everything in its Place, A.—Anon. 

Have you seen my sister dear? See My Little Sister.— 
Anon. 

Have you seen the famous clock at Berne? See 
“Clock at Berne, The.”—-Grundy. 

Have you trials and temptations? See Our Favourite 
Hymn.—(Term. University Mag.) 

Havin’ lived next door to the Hobart place f’r goin’ 
on thirty years.—See Cyclopeedy, The.—Field. 

Having a natural love for music and desiring to culti¬ 
vate my voice. See My First Singing Lesson.— 
Brown. 

Having carefully drawn the curtains of his bed. See 
Pickwick Papers, The (Pickwick in the Wrong 
Bedroom).—Dickens. 

Having interr’d her infant-birth. See Ode upon a 
Question Moved whether Love should Continue for 
Ever, An.—Herbert. 

Having often received an invitation from my friend. 
See Spectator, The (Sir Roger at his Country 
House).—Addison. 

Having recently had my saloons closed up in Kansas 
and Iowa. See What License Legalizes.—Anon. 

Having restricted universal suffrage and the right of 
public meetings. See Liberty of the Press.— 
Hugo. 

Having selected the place in which you wish to plant. 
See Few Rules for Tree Planters, A.—Anon. 

Having this day my horse, my hand, my lance. See 
Astrophel and Stella, Sonnet XLI.—Sidney. 

Having turned out the last patient with his hand to his 
cheek. See Victory for the Dentist.—Anon. 

Hay! hi! there! Boy! come y’ere, boy. See Myste¬ 
rious Darkey, The.—Anon. 

Haymakers, rakers, reapers, and mowers. See Sun’s 
Darling, The (Rustic Song).—Dekker. 

“Haz yer eny stomped antelopes fur sale, boss?” See 
Darky’s Ideal Wife, A.—Harrison. 

Hazard, a careless fellow, known. See How to Save 
a Thousand Pounds.—Anon. 

He ain’t much of a dog to look at. See Jack.—Anon. 

He ain’t no gold laced “Belvidere.” See “Reg’lar 
Army Man, The. ”—Lincoln. 

He alone remains unshaken. See Leonidas (Address of 
Leonidas) .—^Glover. 

He ate and drank the precious words. See Book, A.— 
Dickinson. 

He boarded a car at Thirty-ninth street. See Be¬ 
wildered Conductor, A.—Head. 

He boarded the train at Rochester, and came to the 
only vacant seat. See Her Name was Smith.— 
Anon. 

He bought two gaudy, scarlet coats. See His Finish. 
— (Life.) 

He bowed the. heavens, also, and came down. See 
Psalms of David.— Bible. 

He brought a lily white. See Child, The (To His 
M other).—T abb. 

He called aloud for Miriam Lane, and said. See 
Enoch Arden.—Tennyson. 

He called so loud that all the hollow deep of hell re¬ 
sounded. See Paradise Lost (Moloch).—Milton. 

He came across the meadow-pass. See Old Story, 
The.—O’Hagan. 

He came in busy hours. See Triumph of Cupid, The. 
—Merrick. 

Tie came in semblance of a dove. See Holy Spirit, 
The.—Auber. 


670 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


He 


He came in with an interrogation-point in one eye. 
See Our Visitor and What he Came for.—Anon. 

He came into my office with a portfolio under his arm. 
See Book Canvasser, The.—Adeler. 

He came into the office of a West End undertaker. 
See He Didn’t Want a Coffin.—Anon. 

He came into the store with a face full of misery. See 
Tragedy at Dodd’s Place, The.—Dallas. 

He came to call me back from death. See Eurydice.— 
Bourdillon. 

He came to the bower of her I love. See Inside Track, 
The.—Burdette. 

He came to town one winter day. See “Leadville 
Jim. ”—Fink. 

He came too late!—Neglect had tried. See He Came 
too Late.—Bogart. 

He came too late! the toast had dried. See He Came 
too Late!—Anon. 

He came unlook’d for, undesir’d. See Phantasmion 
(He Came Unlooked for).—Coleridge. 

He cares for me! Why do I fret. See Lord Careth, 
The.—( Sunday Magazine.) 

He caught his chisel, hastened to his bench. See 
Death of Azron, The.—Rollins. 

He ceas’d, but while he spake, Rustum had risen. See 
Sohrab and Rustum (Combat, The).—Arnold. 

“He chases shadows,” sneered the Bristol tars. See 
First Voyage of John Cabot, The.—Anon. 

He chose a mournful muse. See Alexander’s Feast. 
—Dryden. 

He clasps the crag with hooked hands. See Eagle, The. 
—Tennyson. 

He comes along the great highway. See Our Scarlet 
King.—Bowman. 

He comes in the night! He comes in the night! See 
Santa Claus.—Anon. 

He comes not! I have heard of those who seemed. 
See Blot in the ’Scutcheon, A (Death of Mil¬ 
dred, The).—Browning. 

He comes right down the chimney. See How He Does 
It.—Anon. 

He comes, the happy warrior. See Sinfonia Eroica. 
—James. 

He comes with herald clouds of dust. See Superior 
Nonsense Verses.—Anon. 

He could raise scruples dark and nice. See Hudibras 
(Argumentative Theology).—Butler. 

He crawls along the mountain walls. See On the 
Heights.—Foote. 

He crawls to the cliff and plays on a brink. See Sea- 
child, The.—Cook. 

He cried aloud to God: “The men below.” See 
Genius.—White. 

He crouches, and buries his face on his knees. See 
Last of his Tribe, The.—Kendall. 

He devoted one hour every other Tuesday. See Presi¬ 
dent Washington’s Receptions.—Sullivan. 

He did not notice that I never spoke to her in the same 
key of voice. See same. —Willis. 

He didn’t know much music. See Mocking-bird, The. 
—Stanton. 

He does suffer so with his trousers. See Stage Land 
(Sailor, The).—Jerome. 

He does well who does his best. See Tired Out.— 
—Anon. 

He doesn’t like study, it “weakens his eyes.” See 
Queer Boy, A.—Salter. 

He dressed himself from top ter toe. See Courtin’ 
Call, A.—Anon. 

He entered the hardware store. See Man Who Felt 
Sad, The.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

He examined the situation and found it an unheard of 
one. See Les Mis^rables (Jean Valjean).—Hugo. 

He fareth in a joyous wise. See Ladye of the Lab, 
The—Field. 

He filled the crystal goblet. See Veteran and Recruit. 
—Hazewell. 

He first deceased, she for a little tried. See Upon the 
Death of Sir Albertus Morton’s Wife.—Wotton. 

He follows the hero all over the world. See Stage 
Land (Comic Man, The).—Jerome. 

He found a woman in the cave. See Thalaba.— 
Southey. ♦ 

He gather’d blue forget-me-nots. See I.overs.—Anon. 

He gathered cherry-stones, and carved them quaintly. 
See Art Master, An.;—O’Reilly. 

He got to Paris late at night. See Je suis Americain.— 
Anon. 

He grasped his ponderous hammer; he could not stand 
it more. See Blacksmith of Limerick, The.—Joyce. 

He had been born a destined work to do. See Abraham 
Lincoln (On the Assassination of Lincoln).— 
Taylor. 


He had been missing from the “Potomac.” See What 
Ailed “Ugly Sam.”—Anon. 

He had been sick at one of the hotels for three of four 
weeks. See Last Station, The.— (Detroit Free 
Press.) 

He had been to town-meeting. See Goin’ Somewhere. 
—Quad 

He had been trying all the winter through. See Pro¬ 
posal, The.—Vandegrift. 

He had black eyes, with long lashes. See Boy Lost.— 
Anon. 

He had bowed down to drunkenness. See Disen¬ 
thralled, The.—Whittier. 

He had fished in the Aroostook. See Freshman’s 
Vacation, The.— (University Herald.) 

He had flirted at Bar Harbor and at Narragansett 
Pier. See All for a Man.—Winslow. 

He had halted under an awning. See In the Same 
Line.—Anon. 

He had hinted at diamonds, a fan by Watteau. See 
Her Present.—F. 

He had no times of study, and no place. See Festus 
(Poet of Nature, The).—Bailey. 

He had not said that he would come. See How did 
she Know.—Anon. 

He had now entered the skirts of the village. See Rip 
Van Winkle.—Irving. 

He had played for his lordship’s levee. See Child 
Musician, The.-—Dobson. 

He had worn a colored blazer on the Nile. See She 
Still Wins.—( Tech, The.) 

He hadn’t been there for fifteen years. See When 
Grandfather Went to Town.—Meyers. 

He has arrived! Arrived at last! See Tragedy of 
Blind Margaret, The.—Wilson. 

He has come before the daffodils. See First Swallow, 
The.—Wordsworth. 

He has conn’d the lesson now. See Fairy Song.— 
Praed. 

He has done the murder. See Murder of Captain 
Joseph White, The (Secret of Murder. The).— 
Webster. 

He has lost his wife. But he knows. See Stage Land 
(Good Old Man, The).—Jerome. 

He has ta’en some twenty gentlemen, along with him 
to go. See Cid, The (Cid and the Leper, The).— 
Anon. 

He hath not guessed Christ’s agony. See Written be¬ 
neath a Crucifix.—Aldrich. 

He! He! He! Johnson, can you tell why fishermen 
possess extraordinary powers? See Fishy Joke, 
A.—Anon. 

He hides within the lily. See Consider the Lilies, How 
They Grow.—Gannett. 

He in whose ear the sea-shell sings. See Sea Song, A. 
—(Williams Literary Monthly.) 

He is a noble looking boy. See My Brother Jean.— 
Anon. 

He is a roguish little elf. See Dandelion.—Brown. 

He is an industrious colored man, living in a small 
cabin. See Uncle Reuben’s Baptism.—Anon. 

He is come! he is come! a monarch he. See King 
Christmas.—Graham. 

He is come to ope. See King Richard II. — Shakespeare. 

He is coming! he is coming! Like a bridegroom from 
his room. See Execution of Montrose, The.— 
Aytoun. 

He is coming, he is coming, my true-love comes home 
to-day! See Regiment’s Return, The.—Cutler. 

He is dead, I will tell all as it happened. See Chariot 
Race, The.—Sophocles. 

He is dead! the beautiful youth. See Killed at the 
Ford.—Longfellow. 

He is fallen! We may now pause before that splendid 
prodigy. See Napoleon Bonaparte.—Phillips. 

He is gone: better so. We should know who stand 
under. See Deserter from the Cause, The.—Mas¬ 
sey. 

He is gone—is dust. See Wallenstein (Dirge from 
Wallenstein).—Coleridge. 

He is gone, O my heart, he is gone. See Alone by the 
Bay.—Moulton. 

He is gone on the mountain. See Lady of the Lake. 
The (Coronach).—Scott. 

He is my friend. For many and many a year I have 
looked to him. See Charles Sumner Attacked in 
the Senate.—Burlingame. 

He is not at home yet. See Extracting a Secret.— 
Crawford. 

He is not Noah’s son, nor any old Levite. See Who is 
this Wonderful Prophet ?—Anon. 

“He is so very peculiar.” See Peculiar Neighbor, The. 
—Spaulding. 


671 




He 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


He is the freeman whom the truth makes free. See 
Task, The (Freeman, The).—Cowper. 

He is the happy man whose life even now. See Task. 
The (Happy Man, The).—Cowper. 

He is the happy wanderer, who goes singing. See 
Happy Wanderer, The.—Addleshaw. 

He is the only man in the play. See Stage Land 
(Detective, The).—Jerome. 

He is very old, and very long. See Stage Land (Law¬ 
yer, The).—Jerome. 

He jests at scars that never felt a wound. See Romeo 
and Juliet (Balcony Scene).—Shakespeare. 

He killed the noble Mudjokivis. See Modern Hiawa¬ 
tha, The.—Anon. 

He kin pik up a libbin’ wharebber he goes. See De 
Yaller Chinee.—Anon. 

He kissed me—and I know ’twas wrong. See Penance. 
—Anon. 

He kissed me ’neath the mistletoe. See Triolet: “He 
kissed me,’ ’ etc.—Craven. 

He kissed me, oh, how often! See He Kissed Me.— 
Anon. 

He knelt alone on the cold grey stone. See Vision of 
St. Dominic, The.—Anon. 

He knelt beside her pillow, in the dead watch of the 
night. See Asleep.—Winter. 

“He knows it was me, then, wot hollered?” See “T’m 
Glad he Knows.”—Brown. 

He lay upon his dying bed. See Sword of Bunker Hill, 
The.—Wallace. 

He leant, at sunset, on his spade. See Answer of the 
Gardener, The.—Piatt. 

He leaves the earth, and says, enough and more. See 
Come Morir.—S. G. W. 

He left a load of anthracite. See What was his Creed? 
—Anon. 

He left the upland lawns and serene air. See Milton.— 
Myers. 

He lies low in the levelled sand. See At the Grave of 
Walker.—Miller. 

He lies on the grass, looking up to the sky. See Deaf 
and Dumb.—“A.” 

He lived and died, and all is passed away. See Record 
of a Life, The.—Gray. 

He lives within the hollow wood. See Charcoal-bur¬ 
ner, The.—Gosse. 

He liveth long who liveth well! See same. —Bonar. 

He lost the game; no matter for that. See Better 
Way, A.—Anon. 

He loved her, having felt his love begin. See Con¬ 
trast, The.—Cone. 

He loves not well whose love is bold! See My Queen. 
—Winter. 

He loves to hear. See Julius Caesar.—Shakespeare. 

He, making speedy way through spersed ayre. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Cave of Sleep, The).— 
Spenser. 

He marched his men into the field. Sei Captain 
General, The.—Anon. 

He might have won the highest guerdon that heaven 
to earth can give. See Saturninus.—Conway. 

He must be young in years, in wisdom old. See 
Wanted—a Pastor.—Anon. 

He never has talked of the war-time and battle. See 
Old Artillerist, The.—-Nicholson. 

He never said he loved me. See same. —Watts. 

“He niver plants but he always rapes.” See Crow, 
The.—Anon. 

He nothing common did, or mean. See Horatian Ode 
upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland, A (Death 
of Charles I„ The).—Marvell. 

He pass’d unquestioned through the camp. See King 
Henry V. and the Hermit of Dreux.—Southey. 

He paused, and in the pause she crept an inch. See 
Idylls of the King (Arthur’s Farewell).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

He paused for a moment in the doorway, shading his 
byes with his hand. See Old Benedict Arnold.— 
Phelps. 

He peeps in through the key-hole. See Sand-man, 
The.—Cooper. 

He planted an oak in his father’s park. See Sower 
and his Seed, The.—Lecky. 

He prayeth best, who loveth best. See Rime of the 
Ancient Mariner, The (He Prayeth Best).—Cole¬ 
ridge. 

He prayeth well, who loveth well. See Rime of the 
Ancient Mariner, The (“He prayeth well,” etc.).— 
Coleridge. 

He preached but little; argued less. See Father John. 
—Anon. 

He put his acorn helmet on. See Culprit Fay, The 
(Fairy in Armor, A).—Drake. 


(He) quickly arms him for the field. See Nymphi- 
dia: The Court of Fairy (Arming of Pigwiggen, 
The).—Drayton. 

He raised the cup to his pure, sweet lips. See Fatal 
Glass, The.—Case. 

He rests from toil; the portals of the tomb. See Fran¬ 
cis Parkman.—Holmes. 

He rides at their head. See College Colonel, The.— 
Melville. 

He rides away at early light. See Heart’s Call, The.— 
Thomas. 

He rises and begins to round. See Lark Ascending, 
The.—Meredith. 

He rose at dawn and, fired with hope. See Sailor Boy, 
The.—Tennyson. 

He said that he was not our brother. See same. — 
Banim. 

He said that it was stupid. See Metamorphosis. 
—(Princeton Tiger.) 

He sang of God, the mighty source. See Song to 
David, A (Song of David, The).—Smart. 

He sang one song and died. See Singer of One Song, 
The.—Beers. 

He sang so wildly, did the boy. See Mother’s Love.— 
Burbidge 

He sang the airs of olden times. See Blind Psalmist, 
The.—Kinney. 

He sat aloft on the rocky height. See Great White 
Owl. The.—Thaxter. 

He sat among the woods; he heard. See ASsop.— 
Lang. 

He sat at the dinner table there. See His Mother’s 
Cooking.—Hadley. 

He sat in musing mood on the top rail of a worm fence. 
See Uncle Pete and Marse George.—Anon. 

He sat in silence on the ground. See Ivan the Czar.— 
Hemans. 

He sat in the parlor with Ray. See Interrupted Pro¬ 
posal, An.—Meyers. 

He sat on a bicycle as straight as an icicle. See She 
Wanted to Hear it Again.—Anon. 

He sat one winter ’neatfi a linden tree. See Life- 
drama, A (Minor Poet, A).—Smith. 

He sat the quiet stream beside. See Greek Idyl, A.— 
Collins. 

He saw her lift her eyes. See In School Days.—Anon. 

He says: “Shure” and “Bedad.” See Stage I,and 
(Irishman, The).—Jerome. 

He scrupled not to eat. See Paradise Lost.—Milton. 

He sees when their footsteps falter, when their hearts 
grow weak and faint. See He Giveth His Be¬ 
loved Sleep.—Anon. 

He seized her in the dark and kissed her. See It Was. 
—(Yale Record.) 

He sendeth sun, he sendeth shower. See Father, 
Thy Will be Done.—Adams. 

He sent her twelve Jacqueminot roses. See Unfortu¬ 
nate Phrase. An.—F. S. 

He sent it to the Courant. See His Poem.—( Yale 
Record.) 

He sermonized industriously in his didactic w’ay. See 
Abraham and Ephraim.—Foss. 

He shambled awkward on the stage, the while. See 
Paganini.—Landor. 

He sits at last among his peers. See Browning.— 
Morton. 

He sleeps as he should sleep,—among the great. See 
Grave of Charles Dickens. The.—Anon. 

He sleeps at last—a hero of his race. See Dead Sol¬ 
dier, A.—Montgomery. 

He sleeps not here; in hope and prayer. See Profes¬ 
sor at the Breakfast-table, The (Robinson of 
Leyden).—H olmes. 

He slipped into an ice-cream saloon. See Inquisitive 
Customer, An.—Anon. 

He smiled blandly as he halted for a moment. See 
Canvassing under Disadvantages.-—Quad. 

He sot by der fire a-dhinkin’. See He vas Dhinkin’.— 
Gooft. 

He sought Australia’s far-famed isle. See Digger’s 
Grave, The.—Welch. 

He speaks not well who doth his time deplore. See 
Heroic Age, The.—Gilder. 

He spoke, and as he ceased he wept aloud. See 
Sohrab and Rustum.—Arnold. 

He spoke, and Sohrab kindled at his taunts. See 
Sohrab and Rustum (Death of Sohrab).—Arnold. 

He spoke of Burns; men rude and rough. See Inci¬ 
dent in a Railroad Car, An.—Lowell. 

He spreads his wings like banners to the breeze. See 
Albatross, The.—Thaxter. 

He sta,nds at the door of the church peeping in. See 
Little Pat and the Parson.—Anon. 


672 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


He 


He stands before his glass in doubt. See Idyl, An. 
—(Harvard Lampoon.) 

He stole from my bodice a rose. See Asking.—Anon. 

He stole just one kiss. See Triolet.—Culbertson. 

He stood among the group of men at the door. See 
Strategy of Dave, The.—Bishop. 

He stood at the ticket window, slowly unrolling an 
old-fashioned leather wallet. See Railroad Clocks. 
—Anon. 

He stood before the Sanhedrim. See Religion and 
Doctrine.—Hay. 

He stood before the village store. See Veteran, A.— 
Irving. 

He stood in the station, she at his side. See Our Rail¬ 
roads.—Anon. 

He stood on the track, young Jimmy. See Coming 
from the Picnic.—Banner. 

He stood so close beside her chair, and looked down in 
her eyes. See Her Lover.—-Hazlett. 

He stood the last—the last of all. See Last Drunkard, 
The.—Anon. 

He stood upon the world’s broad threshold; wide. 
See Wendell Phillips.—Lowell. 

He stood with a foot on the threshold. See True Vic¬ 
tory.—-Maitland. 

He stopped at the wayside well. See Wayside Well, 
The.—Learned. 

He strove, and yet he laboured not. See Poet’s Epi¬ 
taph.-—Spingarn. 

He struggled to kiss her; she struggled the same. See 
Original Love Story, An.—Anon. 

He swore he “loved her dearly.” See Verse.—( Cornell 
Widow.) 

He that depends upon your favors. See Coriolanus. 
—Shakespeare. 

He that did sing the motions of the stars. See Or¬ 
pheus’ Song.—Greene. 

He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High 
shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. 
See Psalms of David, XCI.— Bible. 

He that has light within his own clear breast. See 
Comus (Light).—Milton. 

He that holds fast the golden mean. See Content¬ 
ment.—Horace. 

He that is by Mooni now. See Mooni.—Kendall. 

He that is down needs fear no fall. See Pilgrim’s Pro¬ 
gress (Shepherd Boy Sings in the Valley of Hu¬ 
miliation, The).—Bunyan. 

He that is valiant and dares fight. See Hudibras 
(Honour).—Butler. 

He that is weary, let him sit. See Employment.— 
Herbert. 

He that kills himself to avoid misery, fears it. See 
Maid of Honor, The.—Massinger. 

He that lacks time to mourn, lacks time to mend. See 
Philip van Artevelde.—Taylor. 

He that loves a rosy cheek. See Disdain Returned.— 
Carew. 

He that many bokes redys. See Books.—Anon. 

He that of such a height hath build his mind. See To the 
Lady Margaret, Countess of Cumberland.—Daniel. 

He that only rules by terror. See Captain. The.— 
Tennyson. 

He therefore turning softly like a thief. See Enoch 
Arden.—Tennyson. 

He thought he saw a banker’s clerk. See Sylvie and 
Bruno.—Carroll. 

He thought he saw a buffalo. See Strange Wild Song. 
A.—Carroll. 

He thought he saw an elephant. See Strange Wild 
Song, A (Some Hallucinations).—Carroll. 

He thought to serenade his love. See Beneath her 
Window.—Anon. 

“He told me,” said the modest maid. See Modest 
Maid, The.—Moris. 

He took a thousand islands and he didn’t lose a man. 
See Dewey in Manila Bay.—Risley. 

He took in both hands her lovely head. Sec Wedded. 
_31ake 

He took me out to see the stars. See Applied As¬ 
tronomy.—Tiffany. 

He took the children by the hand. See Children in 
the Wood, The.—Anon. 

“He touched her hand, and the fever left her. See 
Master’s Touch, The.—Anon. 

He tripp’d up the steps with a bow and a smile. See 
Jacobite on Tower Hill, The.—Thornbury. 

He turned and tossed upon his bed. See Nightmare 
of a Freshman Sign Swiper.—Flagg. 

He visited all Europe—not to survey the sumptuous¬ 
ness of palaces. See John Howard.—Burke. 

He walks beside his mother. See Manly, Loving Boy, 
A.—Anon. 


He wandered down, an Orpheus wilder-souled. See 
Beethoven.—Stringer. 

He wanted to knovfr how God made the worl’! See He 
Wanted to Know.—Foss. 

He wants a merry rattle. See Little Boy’s Wants, A. 
—Lawrence. 

He warn’t no long faced man o’ prayer. See Father 
John.—Arkwright. 

He was a big, red-faced Dutchman, and, as he entered 
our office door. See “Took Nodice.”—Anon. 

He was a bold Theosophist. See Astral Romance, An. 
—Drake. 

He was a brisk, waspish, little old gentleman. See 
Knickerbocker History of New York (William 
the Testy).—Irving. 

He was a Dreamer of the Days. See Mr. Hammond’s 
Parable—The Dreamer.—Riley. 

He was a famous actor,—the glory of his time. See 
Mad Actor, The.—Webb. 

He was a lad with dimpled chin. See He and She.— 
Richards. 

He was a lowly missionary. See Rev. Oleus Bacon, 
D. D.—In Memoriam.—Anon. 

He was a man! Well I remember the day I waited 
upon him. See Andrew Jackson.—Lippard. 

He was a man who stole the livery of the court of 
heaven. See Course of Time, The (Hypocrite, 
The).—Pollok. 

He was a mighty rolling river. See He and She.— 
Anon. 

He was a new boot-black, but already seemed quite at 
home. See “Whar’s de Kerridge?”—( Virginia 
City Chronicle.) 

He was a poet, sure a lover, too. See ‘‘I stood tip¬ 
toe upon a little hill” (Endymion).—Keats. 

He was a rat and she was a rat. See Old Rat’s Tale, 
An.—Anon. 

He was a scholar, and a ripe and good one. See King 
Henry VIII.—Shakespeare. 

He was a very courteous man. See How He Lost 
Her.— (.Somerville Journal.) 

He was a wonderful hand to moralize, husband was. 
See Widow Bedott Papers, The (Hezekiah Be- 
dott).—Whitcher. 

He was an ingenuous lad, with the callow simplicity 
of a theological college still untouched. See Be¬ 
side the Bonnie Brier Bush (His Mother’s Ser¬ 
mon).—Watson. 

He was an old man, and he had a bit of conductor’s 
pasteboard stuck in his hat. See He Didn’t Want 
the 'Scription.—-Anon. 

He was an old man who boarded the train at a small 
station in western New York. See Going Down 
to Mary’s.—Anon. 

He was a-weary, but he fought his fight. See Written 
on the Night of his Suicide (“He was a-weary,” 
etc.).—Realf. 

He was black as the ace of spades, you see. See 
George Washington.—( Harper’s Young People!) 

He was brisk, waspish, little, old gentleman, who had 
dried and withered away. See William the 
Testy.—Irving. 

He was coming from the altar when the tocsin rang 
alarm. See Defense of the Bride, The.—Rohlfs. 

He was feeble and old and his figure was drooping. 
See Christmas Gift, A.—Proudfit. 

He was handsome, kind and gentle. See Give me 
Back my Boy.—Garnet. 

He was idle as a boy, he was shiftless as a youth. See 
Army Overcoat. The.—Archibald. 

He was in logic a great critic. See Hudibras (Logic of 
Hudibras).—Butler. 

He was in love with truth and knew her near. See 
Walt Whitman.—Morris. 

He was in the Thirty-first. It was during the Soudan¬ 
ese war. See In his Way a Hero.—Pugh. 

He was indeed eloquent. See Character of Henry 
Clay.—Seward. 

He was jes’ a plain, ever’-day, all-round kind of a jour. 
See Jim.—Riley. 

He was little more than a baby, and played on the 
streets all day. See Bijah.— Lewis. 

He was not all unhappy. See same. —Tennyson. 

He was of that stubborn crew. See Hudibras (Re¬ 
ligion of Hudibras, The).—Butler. 

He was old and weather-beaten, and his clothes were 
the same. See Old Fisherman, The.—Anon. 

He was simply an average boy. See Average Boy, 
The.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

He was six years old and his name was Bill. See Bill, 
—Adeler. 

He was six years old, just six that day. See Little 
Boy’s Vain Regret, A.—Thomas. 


673 




He 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


He was small and black—a child of an inferior race. 
See Modern Elijah, A.—Yorke. 

He was standing on the corner. See Christmas-tide 
Shadow, A.—Howard. 

He was tall and straight as a mountain pine. See 
Saved from Suicide.—Anon. 

He was tall, solemn and dignified. See Solemn Book- 
agent, The.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

He was the biggest fool on earth, and looked it, too! 
See Silly Billy.—Brooks. 

He was the boy of the house, you know. See Boy of 
the House, The.—Blewett. 

He was the Chairman of the Guild. See Meeting of 
the Clabberhuses, The.—Foss. 

He was the “devil,” that boy Jim. See That Boy 
Jim.—Stanton. 

He was the first always, Fortune. See Envy.—Proc¬ 
ter. 

He was tired of being shackled. See Broken Chains. 
—Cox. 

He was uneducated, as that term goes to-day. See 
Greatness of his Simplicity.—Delano. 

He was up in mathematics. See All-round Intellectual 
Man, An.—Masson. 

He was very fond of her—loved her, perhaps. See 
Rival Sweetheart, The.—Bull. 

He was writing a note to his mother. See At Board¬ 
ing-school.-—Chahoon. 

He wasn’t a good-lookin’ feller. See Jack.—Stanley. 

He wasn’t obliged to do it; a man had been paid 
before. See Ringer of the Chimes, The.—Ewing. 

He wasn’t one of these shiny, good-looking chaps. 
See Uncut Diamond, An.—Anon. 

He wears a clean collar, and smokes. See Stage Land 
(Villain, The).—Jerome. 

He went his way to rest with weary feet. See Chat- 
terton.—Russell. 

He went into the bush and passed. See Waif, The.— 
Smith. 

He went to the war with a general’s hat. See Like 
Washington.—Anon. 

He who ascends to mountain tops shall find. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Ambition).—Byron. 

He who but yesterday would roam. See Epitaph for 
a Sailor Buried Ashore.—Roberts. 

He who checks the child with terror. See Reprove 
Gently.—Anon. 

He who died at Azan [unr. Aziml sends. See After 
Death in Arabia.—Arnold. 

He who has once been happy is for aye. See With 
Esther.—Blunt. 

He who hath bent him o’er the dead. See Giaour, 
The (Aspect of Death).—Byron. 

He who knows the history of the human family. See 
Manual Training and Intellectual Development.— 
Anon. 

He who loves truly, grows in force and might. See 
Ideal Love.—Angelo. 

He who plants a tree plants a hope. See Plant a Tree. 
—Larcom. 

He who plants aiT oak -looks forward. See Forest 
Trees.—Irving. 

He who sits at home and dreads. See Victor,The.—Anon. 

He who thinks before he drinks. See Think before 
You Drink.—Anon. 

He who through the lapse of years. See Coward, A. 
— {Inlander.) 

He who would echo Horace’s lays. See Horace.— 
Sargent. 

He who would start and rise. See Epitaph for a Hus¬ 
bandman, An.—Roberts. 

. He will come straight. Look, you lay home to him. 
See Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

He wills we may not read life’s book aright. See 
Light.—Kimball. 

He wore a brace of pistols the night when first we met. 
See Bandit’s Fate, The.— {Punch.) 

He wore a pair of tattered pants. See “Little Jack.” 
—Hall. 

He works in rings, in magic rings of chance. See 
Turner.—Wilkinson. 

He worried the cat, he played rat-tat-tat. See Irre¬ 
pressible Boy, An.—Anon. 

He wrought at one great work for years. See Ballad 
of Heaven, A.—Davidson. 

He wrought with patience long and weary years. See 
Artist, The.—Grissom. 

Headless, without an arm, a figure leans. See On a 
Cast from an Antique.—Pellew. 

Heads that think and hearts that feel. See Heads, 
Hearts, and Hands.—Bungay. 

Heah I is, brederen an’ sistahs. See Uncle George 
was There.—Anon. 


Heah, yo Rastus, shet yo’ little sleepy haid. See 
Coon’s Lullaby, The.—Anon. 

Health is nerve, and nerve is man. See same. — 
Beecher. 

Heap cassia, sandal-buds and stripes. See Paracelsus 
(Song from “Paracelsus”).—Browning. 

Heap high the coals until the fire. See Love’s Sacri¬ 
fice.—Anon. 

Heap high the farmer’s wintry hoard! See Corn-song, 
The.—Whittier. 

Heap on more wood!—the wind is chill. See Marmion 
(Christmas in the Olden Time).—Scott. 

Hear a bird chirp in the sun. See Snow Song.— 
Larcom. 

Hear, gentle friends! ere yet, for me. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Douglas to the Populace of Stirling).— 
Scott. 

Hear him in senates, second-rate at best. See O’Con¬ 
nell.—L ytton. 

Hear me, Brahma, bending lowly! See Pariah, The.— 
Goethe. 

Hear me, O God! A broken heart. See Hymn, 
A; “Hear me,” etc.—Jonson. 

Hear me this once, my husband; you who deem. See 
Wife’s Confession, A.—Fane. 

Hear now a legend of the days of old. See Sella.— 
Bryant. 

Hear now this fairy legend of old Greece. See Rhce- 
cus.—Lowell. 

Hear, sweet spirit, hear the spell. See Remorse 
(Song: “Hear, sweet spirit,” etc.).—Coleridge. 

Hear the clatter of those feet. See District Telegraph 
Boy, The.—Magee. 

Hear the fluter with his flute. See Amateur Flute- 
player, The.—Anon. 

Hear the loud alarum bells. See Bells, The.—Poe. 

Hear the mellow wedding-bells—golden bells! See 
Bells, The.—Poe. 

Hear the quail in yonder glen. See Summer Song.— 
Anon. 

Hear the sledges with the bells—silver bells! See 
Bells, The.—Poe. 

Hear the tolling of the bells. See Bells, The.—Poe. 

Hear the voice of the Bard. See Hear the Voice.— 
Blake. 

Hear the warbling of the cats. See Cats, The.—Anon. 

Hear then my counsel; hear the word divine. See 
Doing for Others.—Schaeffer. 

Hear through the morning drums and trumpets sound¬ 
ing. See Jackson at New Orleans.—Rice. 

Hear what God the Lord hath spoken. See Future 
Peace and Glory of the Church, The.—Cowper. 

Hear what Highland Nora said. See Nora’s Vow.— 
Scott. 

Hear, ye ladies that despise. See Valentinian (Power 
of Love).—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Heard you, O little children. See King Midas.— 
Thaxter. 

Ileard’st thou over the Fortress wild geese Hying and 
crying? See Ban-shee, The.—Allingham. 

Hearing a confused noise. See Lodge Night.—Anon. 

Hearing that the noted Mormon. Orson G. Pratt, and 
family. See Interviewing Mrs. Pratt. —{Denver 
Tribune.) 

Hearken, child-, unto a story! See Children in the 
Moon.—Anon. 

Hearken in your ear.' See Biglow Papers, The (Mason 
and Slidell: a Yankee Idyll).—Lowell. 

“Hearken unto the statutes and the judgments which 
I shall give you! See Deuteronomy (First Civil 
Code, The).— Bible. 

Hearken while I sing. See King Christian the Dane.— 
Anon. 

Hearken, ye bards who err by rigid rules. See To 
Bryant on his Birthday.—Boker. 

Hear’st thou, Mars! See Coriolanu.s (Coriolanus at 
Antium).—Shakespeare. 

Heart affluence in discursive talk. See In Memoriam. 
—Tennyson. 

Heart all full of heavenly haste, too like the bubble 
bright. See Florentin.—Guiney. 

Heart hunger is for me and you. See Verses.—Pifer. 

Heart of earth, let us be gone. See Song of the Wulf- 
shaw Larches.—Rhys. 

Heart of the patriot touched by Freedom’s kindling 
breath. See Women of the Revolution.-—Blake. 

Heart so light, eye so bright. See Patriotic Song.— 
Kinkel. 

Heart, we will forget him! See same. —Dickinson. 

Hearts are galleries, wide and long. See Heart’s 
Pictures, The.—Bice. 

Hearts, like doors, can ope with ease. See Useful 
Little Words.—Anon. 


674 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Her 


Hearts more or less, I suppose we have. See same. — 
Beecher. 

Hearts often die bitter deaths before. See Heart 
Deaths.—Anon. 

Heave at the windlass!-—Heave O, cheerly, men! See 
Windlass Song.—Allingham. 

Heaven doth with us as we with torches do. See 
Measure for Measure (Each and All).— Shake¬ 
speare. 

Heaven from all creatures hides the book of fate. See 
Essay on Man, An.—Pope. 

Heaven is mirrored, love, deep in thine eyes. See 
Aidenn.—Trask. 

Heaven is not reached at a single bound. See Grada- 
tim.—Holland. 

Heaven is open every day. See Way to Heaven, The. 
—Whiting. 

Heaven opened wide her ever-during gates. See 
Paradise Lost (Raphael’s Account of the Creation). 
—Milton. 

Heaven overarches earth and sea. See same. —Ros¬ 
setti. 

Heaven!’tis delight to see how fair. See Song: 
“Heaven 1 ’tis delight,” etc.—Charles, Duke of 
Orleans. • 

Heaven, what an age is this! vhat race. See Conten- 
tation.—Cotton. 

Heavenly fair Urania’s son. See Fpithalamium.— 
Sheppard. (?) 

Heavier the cross, the nearer heaven. See Heavier 
the Cross.—Schmolke. 

Heavy and solemn a cloudy column. See Battle, The. 
—Schiller. 

Hecca’s done guv me de shake. See Song without 
Music.—Bellaw. 

Hector and the guard entered. See Triumph through 
Faith.—Newberry. 

Hector left in haste. See Iliad, The (Parting of Hector 
and Andromache, The).—Homer. 

He’d nothing but his violin. See Brave Love.—Dallas. 

Heed her not, O Cuhoolin, husband mine. See Fand 
(Speech of Emer, The).—Larminie. 

Heed not the idle assertion. See Literary Pursuits and 
Active Business.—Everett. 

Heed the old oracles. See Woodnotes (Undersong, 
The).—Emerson. 

Heedless she strayed from note to note. See Waiting 
Chords, The.—Thayer. 

Heigh-ho! Am I homesick, or am I not? See Dr. 
Arnold’s Prescription.—Anon. 

Heigh-ho! daisies and buttercups. See Songs of Seven 
(Seven Times Four).—Ingelow. 

Heigh-ho! Now I can take one long breath. See 
Just Graduated.—Max. 

Heigh-ho! such a stupid novel! I like something thrill¬ 
ing. See Visit to the Oil Regions, A.—Anon. 

Heigh-ho! What frolics we might see. See Once-on-a- 
Time.—Miller. 

Heigho! I wonder how I shall like boarding-school! 
See New Boy, The.—Graham. 

Heigho! It is about, time that Monsieur Poitrine was 
here.— See Tootle, Tootle, Too.—Sedgwick. 

Heiner, mine peau—so putty like snow. See Honez 
Joseph Unglesteiner.—Anon. 

“Heigho,” yawned one day King Francis. See Glove, 
The.—Browning. 

Helen, thy beauty is to me. See To Helen.—Poe. 

Hell is the infinite terror of the soul, whatever that 
may be. See same. —Robertson. 

Hello, Al! I say, Al, are you deaf? See First of April. 
—Anon. 

Hello! boys, hold on a minute. See Two Ways of 
Spending “The Fourth.”—Denton. 

Hello, Eddie! Where are you going? Sec Bold for 
the Right.—Wayne. 

Hello, Fred, where are you going? See Honor Thy 
Father and Thy Mother.—Denton. 

Hello, Harry! what have you got in that bag? See 
Honesty is the Best Policy.—Smith. 

Hello, Johnnie; what are you doing? See Johnnie’s 
Poetry.—Smith. 

Hello, thar, stranger! Whar yer frum? See Young 
Tramp, The.-—Adams. 

Helmet and plume and sabre, banner and lance and 
shield. See Losing Side, The.—Legge. 

Helot, drink—nor spare the wine. See Helot, The. 
—Crawford. 

Help me, mister! Lend a hand! See Boy and the 
Pedant, The.—Anon. 

“Help one another,” the snowflakes said. See Help 
One Another.—Hunting. . 

Help us to win, O Lord, on sea and land. See War 
Prayer.—M. J. H. 


Hem!—So, Mr. Caudle; I hope you have enjoyed your¬ 
self at Greenwich. See Mr. Caudle has been k to 
Greenwich Fair.—Jerrold. 

Hence, all ye [or you] vain delights. See Song: 
‘‘Hence, all ye,” etc.—Fletcher. 

Hence away, thou syren; leave me. See Steadfast 
Shepherd, The.—Wither. 

Hence, heart, with her that must depart. See Bequest 
of his Heart, A.—Scott. 

Hence! home, you idle creatures, get you home! See 
Julius Caesar (Scene from “Julius Caesar”).— 
Shakespeare. 

Hence, let me haste. See Seasons, The (“Hence, let 
me,” etc.).—Thomson. 

Hence,-ioath&i Melancholy. See L’Allegro.—Milton. 

Jlence, lying world, with all thy care. See For One 
Retired into the Country.—Wesley. 

Hence, rude Winter! crabbed old fellow. See Glee for 
Winter, A.—Domett. 

Hence, vain deluding joys. See II Penseroso.—Milton. 

Hence with passion, sighs and tears. See Love’s Ec¬ 
stasy.—Heywood. 

“Henceforward, woman, rise. See Drama of Exile, A 
(Tribute to Woman, A).—Browning. 

“Henri Heine”—’tis here! See Heine’s Grave.— 
Arnold. 

Henry W. Grady told us, and told us truly. See New 
Americanism, The.—Watterson. 

Henry was every morning fed. See Child and the 
Snake, The.—Lamb. 

Heow dew yeou dew, boys and gals. See About the 
Billikinses.—Anon. 

Hepsy has just come back from the state convention. 
See Hepsy at the State Convention.—Crocker. 

Her aged hands are worn with works of love. See To 
One Being Old.—Mitchell. 

Her arms across her breast she laid. See Beggar Maid, 
The.—Tennyson. 

Her beaming eyes of deepest blue. See Phantasy. 
—(Yale Record.) 

Her blue eyes shine with heavenly light. See Romance 
of a Rose.—McLaughlin. 

Her brother was a man of Yale. See Crimson and the 
Blue, The.—Loring. 

Her casement like a watchful eye. See Balder’s Wife. 
—Cary. 

Her chariot ready straight is made. See Nymphidia: 
The Court of Fairy (Queen Mab’s Visit to Pigwig- 
gen).—Drayton. 

Her dimpled cheeks are pale. See Southern Girl, A. 
—Peck. 

Her eyes are depths .of dark delight. See Veronica.— 
Craik. 

Her eyes are homes of silent prayer. See In Memoriam 
(Mary).—Tennyson. 

Her eyes are wild, her head is bare. See Her Eyes are 
Wild.—Wordsworth. 

Her eyes be like the violets. See Anne.—Reese. 

Her eyes that shine with tender light. See Brief De¬ 
scription, A.—Romaine. 

Her eyes the glow-worme lend thee. See Night Piece. 
To Julia, The.—Herrick. 

Her eyes were bright and merry. See Frivolous Girl, 
The.—( Steubenville Herald.) 

Her face is hushed in perfect calm. See Child’s Por¬ 
trait, A.—Dawson. 

Her face was sad, yet oh how sweet! See Bric-a-brac. 
—Cahill. 

Her face was very fair to see. See Our Sister.— 
Powers. 

Her fairy form, her modest face. See She Referred 
him to her Pa.—( Somerville Journal.) 

Her father loved me; oft invited me. See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice (Course of Love, The).— 
Shakespeare. 

Her finger was so small, the ring. See Ballad upon a 
Wedding, A.—Suckling. 

Her fingers shame the ivory keys. See Amy Went¬ 
worth.—-Whittier. 

Her fittest triumph is to show that good. See same. — 
Lowell. 

Her form was the perfection of childish beauty. See 
Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Little Eva).—Stowe. 

Her fur was whiter than the falling snow. See Miaou- 
letta.—Dallas. 

Her gold hair fallen about her face. See History.— 
Roberts. 

Her hair is like a golden clue. See Robin Hood, 
Songs fr. —MacNally. 

Her hair was tawny with gold, her eyes with purple 
were dark. See Court Lady, A.—Browning. 

Her hair was yellow, her cheeks were red. See Rich 
Little Dolly, The.— {Wide Awake.) 


675 






Her 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Her hands are cold; her face is white. See Under the 
Violets.—Holmes. 

Her harp is of the newest make. See Fin de Si6cle 
Angel, The.—-Anon. 

Her heart she locked fast in her breast. See Secret 
Combination, The.—Butler. 

Her height ? Perhaps you’d deem her tall. See My 
Sweetheart.—Peck. 

Her house is all of Echo made. See Fame.—.Tonson. 

Her lamp the glow-worm lend thee! See To Julia.— 
Herrick. 

Her languid pulses thrill with sudden hope. See Hope. 
—Lazarus. 

Her last night was a busy one. As she said herself, 
there was much to be done. See History of 
England (Death of Mary Stuart).—Froude. . 

Her last words at parting, how can I forget. See Her 
Last. Words at Parting.—Moore. 

Her leghorn hat has rows on rows. See Her Leghorn 
Hat.—( Yale Record.) 

Her lips were so near. See Explanation, An.— 
Learned. 

Her little feet! Beneath us ranged the sea. See Her 
Little Feet.—Henley. 

Her little glove, I dare aver. See Her Little Glove.— 
Knowles. 

Her little hand in his he took. See Modern Instance, 
A.—( Red and Blue.) 

Her little violin. See Little Dago Girl, The.—Meyers. 

Her long black hair danced round ber like a snake. 
See Herodias.—O’Shaughnessy. 

Her love, she said, in coldest tones, was dead. See 
Dead Love.—Anon. 

Her majesty comes when the sun goes down. See Her 
Majesty.—-Abbot. 

Her Master gave the signal, with a look. See Sweet 
Nature’s Voice.—Munby. 

Her mother died when she was young. See Kempion. 
—Anon. 

Her mother only killed a cow. See Witch’s Daughter, 
The.—Whittier. 

Her name was quite familiar to the Hottentots and 
Zulus. See Only a Woman.—-Masson. 

Her name was Sarah Jane Donovan. See Singing 
Baby, The.—Winthrop. 

Her pretty feet. See Upon her Feet.—Herrick. 

Her prow was bright with an evil light. See Demon 
Ship, The.—Mifflin. 

Her rosv cheeks are pressed to mice. See Tmtaliz- 
ing.—Stone. 

Her satin fan is wondrous white. See Her Satin Fan. 
—Goodwin. 

Her soft voice, singularly heard. See Angel in the 
House, The (Going to Church).—Patmore. 

Her suffering ended with the day. Sec Death-bed, A. 
—Aldrich. 

Her that yer Honor was spakin’ to? Whin, yer Honor? 
last year See To-morrow.—Tennyson. 

Her true beauty leaves behind. See Fair Virtue, the 
Mistress of Philarete (Love Poems, III.).— 
Wither. 

Her voice is one of command. See To-.—Wheel¬ 

wright. 

Her voice—like rich and mellow notes. See Sweet 
Sixteen.—Banks. 

Her voice was like a song of birds Set Child, A.— 
Gilder. 

Her washing ended with the day. See Wife, The.— 
Cary. 

Her ways were gentle while a babe. See Sinless Child, 
The.—Smith. 

Her ways were rather frightened, and she wasn't much 
to see. See Humble Romance, A.—Tompkins. 

Her window opens to the bay. See To Her Absent 
Sailor.—Whittier. 

Her wmsome smile! It beams on me. See Her Win¬ 
some Smile.—Munroe. 

Her wonted smiles are turned to frowns. See Lenton 
Maid, The.—Kennedy. 

Here, a little child I stand. See Grace for a Child.— 
Herrick. 

Here a pretty baby lies. See Upon a Child.—Herrick. 

Here, a sheer hulk, lies poor Tom Bowling. See Tom 
Bowling.—Dibdin. 

Here a solemn fast we keep. See Epitaph upon a 
Virgin, An.—Herrick. 

Here, all of you—look, here is Lady Gay Spanker com¬ 
ing across the lawn. See Lady Gay Spanker.— 
Boucieault. 

Here am I, for what end God knows, not I. See Co¬ 
lumbus.—-Lowell. 

Here am I starting alone upon the wearisome journey. 
See Journey of Life, The.—Smith. 


Here are bonnie flowers. See Note for a Nosegay, A.— 
Webber. 

Here are crocuses, white, gold, grey! See O Dear Me! 
—Ramal. 

Here are old trees, tall oaks and gnarled pines. See 
Antiquity of Freedom, The.—Bryant. 

Here are questions on physics and grammar. See 
Boy’s Complaint, The.—Anon. 

Here are sweet peas, on tiptoe for a flight. See “ I 
stood tiptoe upon a little hill” (Sweet Peas).— 
Keats. 

Here are the houses of the dead. Here youth. See 
Greenwood Cemetery.—Wallace. 

Here are the needs of manhood satisfied! See On the 
Heights.—Dowden. 

Here at school we gather daily. See Work and Play.— 
Anon. 

Here, at the change of ways, the steel steed halts. See 
Junction, The.—Fairbanks. 

Here at the country inn. See Forefather, The.—Bur¬ 
ton. 

Here at the fountain’s sliding foot. See Garden, The. 
—Marvell. 

Here at the halfway House of Life I linger. See To 
Harriett.—iBuchanan. 

Here awa’, there awa’, wandering Willie. See Wan¬ 
dering Willie.—Burns. 

Here be grapes whose lusty blood. See Faithful Shep¬ 
herdess, The (Satyr, The).—Fletcher. 

Here bring your purple and gold. See Flowers for the 
Brave.—Thaxter. 

Here burns my candle out; ay, here it dies. See King 
Henry VI., Pt. III. (Battle of Towton).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Here, Charmian, take my bracelets. See Cleopatra.— 
Story. 

Here comes Jack. See King Henry IV., Pt. I.— 
Shakespeare. 

Here continueth to rot the body of Francis Chartres. 
See Epitaph upon Colonel Chartres.—Arbuthnot. 

Here doth Dionysia lie. See Epitaph on Dionysia.— 
Anon. 

Here, e’en the sturdy democrat may find. See Library, 
The.—Saxe. 

Here, ever since you went abroad. See Absence — 
Landor. 

Here falls no light of sun or stars. See Taliesin - A 
Masque.—Hovey. 

Here find the poet’s scrip—his ready pen. See Bayard 
Taylor.—-Betts. 

Here for the world to see men brought their fairest. 
See Tower of Flame, The.—Gilder. 

Here—for they could not help but die. See Epitaph 
—Freneau. 

Here from the brow of the hill I look. See Old Mill, 
The —English. 

‘‘Here gran’ma, here’s a present, it has come a distance 
too. See Grandma’s Shamrocks.—Sutton. 

‘‘Here, guards!” pale with fear, Dionysius cries. See 
Damon and Pythias.—Peter. 

“Here haply, too, at vernal dawn.” See Humble Peti¬ 
tion of Bruar Water, The.—Burns. 

Here Havard, all serene, in the same strains. See 
Characters of Actors.-—Churchill. 

“Here he is, Jenny! what there is of him.” See Gabe 
and the Irish Lady.—Wyeth. 

Here, here, oh here, Eurydice. See Orpheus to Beasts. 
—Lovelace. 

Here Holy Willie’s sair worn clay. See Epitaph on 
Holy Willie.—Burns. 

Here I am, a little creature. See Speech for a Very 
Small Girl.—Kavanaugh. 

Here I am, and how do you do? See Month of May. 
—( Youth's Companion.) 

Here I am, darling, at home in time for dinner after 
all. See Silent Partnei - , The.—Matthews. 

Here I am, most four feet high. See Little Boy’s Plea, 
A.—Auion. 

“Here I am,” said the New Year. See New Year’s 
Talk, A.—Richards. 

Here I come creeping, creeping everywhere. See 
Voice of the Grass, The.—-Boyle. 

Here I keep a-workin’ and a-dustin’—a-workin’ and 
a-dustin’. See All the Comforts of a Home.— 
Crosby. 

Here I stand awaiting them. See Floral Offerings.— 
Anon. 

Here I’d come when weariest! See Of His Choice of a 
Sepulchre.—Lang. 

Here I’m sitting, stitching, darning. See “In the 
Garret are Our Boys.”—-Anon. 

Here, in my rude log cabin. See Battle of New Or¬ 
leans, The.—English. 


676 





FIRST LINE INDEX . 


Here 


Here, in my snug little fire-lit chamber. See Alone by 
the Hearth.—Arnold. 

Here in the country's heart. See Country Faith, The. 
—Gale. 

Here in the dark what ghostly figures press! See In 
Tesla’s Laboratory.—Johnson. 

Here, in this leafy place. See Before Sedan.—Dobson. 

Here, in this little Bay. See Magna est Veritas.—Pat¬ 
more. 

Here in this room where first we met. See Meeting 
after Long Absence.—Perry. 

Here in this sequester’d close. See Garden Song, A.— 
Dobson. 

Here in this wild, primeval dell. See Pipe of Pan, The. 
—Allen. 

Here is a cruel Psamtek. see. See Story of the Cruel 
Psamtek, The.—Anon. 

Here is a lily and here is a rose. See Decoration Day. 
—Best. 

Here is a little boy. See Strange Little Boy, The.— 
Anon. 

Here is a problem, a wonder for all to see. See Dust.— 
Thaxter. 

Here is a saloon, gilded, glazed, embossed, polished, 
and fairly phosphorescent. See Break the Bottle. 
-—Woolley. 

Here is a story, which in rougher shape. See Aylmer’s 
Field.—Tennyson. 

Here is a thing that happened. Like wild beasts in a 
den. See Halbert and Hob.—Browning. 

Here is Franco. Now for a song. See Fortune Teller, 
The.—M. D. S. 

Here is money to pay for your book, Robert. See 
Please Do not Speak So.—Anon. 

Here is my altar, naked, and I am a Priestess! See 
Beauty of Piety, The.—Edgarton. 

Here is my hand. Nee Fallen.—Montgomery. 

Here is one leaf reserved for me. Nee Verses Written 
in an Album. —Moore. 

Here is the breath of the sea. See Richard Hakluyt’s 
Men.—Rice. 

Here is the old church. No v I shall see it all. See 
Pictures of Memory. — Reade. 

Here is the place; right over the hill. See Telling the 
Bees.—Whittier. 

Here is the poem of me, the entertainer of children. 
See New Hey Diddle Diddle.—( I.nndori Clarion.) 

Here is your grand menageiie. See Carl’s Menagerie. 
—( The A 7 nr sera.) 

Here it comes sparkling. See Cataract of Lodore, The. 
—-Southey. 

Here it is! The same ungodly mess T have to straighten 
up.— See How I Made My Fortune.— Kavanaugh. 

Here. Jakie, I’ve just been and borrovved Mrs. Brown’s 
r >eipe book. See Watermelon Pickles.—( Detroit 
Free Press.) 

Here, Jennie, is a nice hood I found on Fifih Avenue. 
See Lost and Found.—Brewster. 

Here, John, you drive the cows up, while yer mar brings 
out the pails. See Why He wouldn’t Fell the Farm. 
—Dayton. 

Here Johnson lies, a sage by all allowed. See On the 
Death of Dr. Johnson.—Cowper. 

Here let us leave him; for his shroud the snow. Nee On 
a Grave at Grindelwald.—Myers. 

Here lot us stand—windows, and roofs, and leafs. See 
Death of Robespierre, The.—Brownell. 

Here lies a common man. His horny hands. See 
Mortis Dignit.as.—Burton. 

Here lies Factotum Ned at last. See On Factotum Ned. 
—Moore. 

Here lies Fred. See Fpitaph on Prince Frederick.— 
Anon. . 

Here lies good Witticus, whose jests. See V\ it s 

Epitaph, A.—Anon. 

Here lies Johnny Pidgeon. See On John Dove. 
Burns. 

Here lies our good Edmund, whose genius was such. 
See Retaliation, The (Edmund Burke). Gold¬ 
smith. , . 

Here lies our mutton-loving king. See Epigram 
Written on the Bed Chamber Door of Charles It.— 
Rochester. . . 

Here lies our Sovereign Lord the King. See Epitaph 
on Charles IT.—Rochester. 

Here lies sweet. Isabell in bed. See Ephibol on My 
Dear Love Isabella.—Fleming. 

Here lies the noble warrior that never blunted sword. 
See Epitaph on the Earl of Leicester.—Ra'eigh. 

Here lies, whom hound did ne’er pursue. See Epitaph 
on a Hare.—Cowper. 

Here !ieth one, who did most truly prove. See On the 
Oxford Carrier.—Milton. 


Here lingering, Jessie. See Jessie’s Book. — La.rcom. 

Here lived the soul enchanted. See Poe’s Cottage at 
Fordhan,.—Boner. 

Here Love, the slain, with Love, the slayer, lies. See 
Play of King I.ear, The.—Wat®on. 

Here might I pause and bend in reverence. See Scale 
of Minds.—Wordsworth. 

Here now I stand, upon life’s outer verge. See Close 
to Ninety.—-Bryant. 

“Here, O lily-white lady mine.” See Handsel Ring, 
The.—Houghton. 

Here of a truth the world’s extremes are met. See At 
the Grave of Dante Gabriel Rossetti.—Bell. 

Here on this blessed Thanksgiving night. See Bitter¬ 
sweet (Hymn, The).—Holland. 

Here on this verdant spot, where Nature kind. See 
Chase, The (Bk. II).— Somerville. 

Here,’passenger, beneath this shed. See Epitaph on a 
laving Author.—Cowley. 

Here pause. These graves are all too >oung as yet. 
See A donate.—Shelley. 

“Here, Pedro, while I quench these candles, hold.” 
See Murillo’s Trance.—Preston. 

“Here, Phoebe, sweet Phoebe, sweet, sweet.” See 
Little Advice, A.—Lonergan. 

Here pitch our tents, even here in Boswell field. See 
King Richard III.—Shakespeare. 

Here rest the great and good. Here they repose. See 
Graves of the Patriots, The.—Percival. 

Here rest the relics of a friend below. See Tray’s 
Epitaph.—Pindar. 

Here rests, and let no saucy knave. Nee Epitaph on 
the Tombstone Erected over the Marquis of Angle- 
sea’s Leg.—Canning. 

Here rests his head upon the lap of earth. See Elegy 
Written in a Country Churchyard.—Gray. 

“Here rests in God.” 'Tis all we read. Nee In a Grave¬ 
yard.—Anon. 

Here rests the heart whose throbbing shook the earth! 
See At Luther’s Grave, Wittenburg.—Gilder. 

Here room and kingly silence keep. See By the Pacific 
Ocean.—Miller. 

Here she lies, a pretty bud. See Upon a Child that 
Died.—Herrick. 

Here she was wont to go, and heie, and here! See Sad 
Shepherd, The (,'Eglamour’s Lament).—Jonson. 

Here side by side sit the Blue and the Gray. See Blue 
and the Gray, The.—Willard. 

Here Sidney lies, he whom perverted law. See Epitaph 
on Algernon Sidney.—Southey. 

Here, sit ye down ’longside of me: I’m getting old and 
gray. See Fight of Lookout, The.—Cary. 

Here, soldiers, you must either conquer or die. See 
History of Rome (Hannibal to his Army).— 
Livy. 

Here sparrows build upon the trees. See My Early 
» Home.—Clare. 

Here stands a good apple tree. See Apple-howling 
Songs, Two.—Anon. 

Here summoned by traditions sweet. See Alma Mater. 
—Anon. 

Here, sweep these foolish leaves away. See Mid¬ 
summer.—Holmes. - 

Here the glacier ground the stone. Sen Yosemite.— 
Cook. 

Here the San Antonio river. See Legend of the 
Missions, A.-—Harby. 

Here the sisters nine we see. See Nine Muses, The.— 
Bellamy and Goodwin. 

Here their portraits hang together. See Thae Auld 
Laird’s Secret.—Braden. 

Here they are, sir. See Stealing Apples.—Vinton. 

Here they give me greeting. See Changeling Grateful, 
A.—Peabody. 

Here through this deep defile he needs must pass. See 
William Tell (William Tell in Wait, for Gessler).— 
Schiller. 

Here unmolested, through whatever sign. Nee Task, 
The jPoet in the Woods, The).—Cowper. 

Here we come with our dollies dear. See Little 
Mothers, The.—Anon. 

Here we go to the branches high! See In the Swing.— 
Bumstead. . . 

Here we have been sitting as quiet as mice. See 
Pungent.—Anon. 

Here we sit side by side, one behind another, all in 
rows. See Riding on a Rail.—Dallas. 

Here we stop for the night. See Mouse-hunting.— 
Dodge. 

Here, where [wr. when! precipitate spring, with one 
light bound. See Fiesulan Idyl.—Landor. 

Here where the sunlight. See Sospiri di Roma (White 
Peacock, The).—Sharp. 


677 




Here 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Here, where the world is quiet. See Garden of Proser¬ 
pine, The.—Swinburne. 

Here where the under earth his head. See Etsi Cranes, 
Ego Non.—Myers. 

Here with my beer I sit.— See Cigars and Beer.— 
Arnold. 

Here writ was the world’s history by his hand. See 
Raleigh’s Cell in the Tower.—Rossetti. 

Here y’ are? Black your boots, boss. See Bootblack, 
The.—Anon. 

Here, you policeman, just step inside. See Retribu¬ 
tion.—Proudfit. 

Hereafter, when these things shall be history. See 
Declaration of Irish Rights (Wrongs of Ireland).— 
Grattan. 

Herein is love: to take this strange, sweet thing. See 
Herein is Love.—Best. 

Here’s a big washing to be done. See Housekeeper’s 
Soliloquy, The.—Gage. 

Here’s a hand to the boy who has courage. See Our 
Heroes.—Cary. 

Here’s a health to ane I lo’e dear. See Jessy.— 
Burns. 

Here’s a health to the girl with hair of gold. See Girl 
of Our Town, The.—R. R. K. 

Here’s a health to them that’s awa. See same. — 
Burns. 

Here’s a lesson all should heed. See Try, Try Again. 
—Anon. 

Here’s a letter from Robin, father. See Ship-boy’s 
Letter, The.—Anon. 

Here’s a lyric for September. See September.—Sher¬ 
man. 

Here’s a man, sir, come after the footman’s place. See 
Footman Wanted, A.—Colmari. 

Here’s a precept, young man, you should follow with 
care. See Three Lovers, The.—Anon. 

Here’s a pretty fix to be in. See Unwilling Witness, 
The.—Anon. 

Here’s a pretty go! Elected to Parliament. See 
Nicholas Nickleby (Mr. Gregsbury and the Depu¬ 
tation) .—Dickens. 

Here’s a song for Old Dobbin, whose temper and worth. 
See Old Dobbin.—Cook. 

Here’s Autumn, with her horn of plenty. See Autumn. 
—Anon. 

Here’s his ragged "roundabout.” See Little Coat, The. 
—Riley. 

Here’s the garden she walked across. See Garden 
Fancies.—Browning. 

Here’s the gold cup all bossy with satyrs and saints. 
See Melting of the Earl’s Plate.—Thornbury. 

Here’s the price for them ’ere chickens, marm. See 
Aunt Debby’s Speculation.—McConaughy. 

Here’s the spot. Look around you. Above, on the 
height. See Caldwell of Springfield.—Harte. 

Here’s to him that grows it. See Haymaker’s Song, 
Thp.— Austin. 

Here’s to the boy who’s not afraid. See Boys We Need, 
The.—Anor. 

Here’s to the end of the century, lads. See T.ast. Party, 
The.—( Cornell Widow.) 

Here’s to the hearts that love us. See “Hearts of 
Gold.”—Anon. 

Here’s to the hero of Moultrie. See Our Colors at Fort 
Sumter.—Aldrich. 

Here’s to the maiden of bashful fifteen. See School 
for Scandal, The (Let the Toast Pass).—Sheridan. 

Here’s to thee, old apple tree. See Apple-howling 
Songs, Two.—Anon. 

“Herman,” said a Poydras street merchant clothier. 
See Teaching him the Business.—Anon. 

“Herman,” said Hoffenstein, as he glanced over a 
book. See How' to Get Rich.—Anon. 

Heroes and martyrs! They are the men of the hour. 
See Heroes and Martyrs.—Chapin. 

Heroes have gone out; quacks have come in. See 
On Heroes and Hero Worship (“Heroes have 
gone,” etc.).—Carlyle. 

Heroic deeds are not, as some apostles of the common¬ 
place. See Plain Tale of 1893, A.—( New York 
Tribune.) 

Heroism and history are related as cause and effect. 
See Heroism and Hi=torv.—Bateman. 

Herr Schnitzerl made a philosopede [or velocipede]. 
Nee Schnitzerl's Thilosopede.—Leland. 

He’s a blacksmith, proud of his lot. Nee Ten Pound 
Ten.—Bungay. 

‘He’s a rare man.” See Brothers, and a Sermon 
(Wreck of "The Grace of Sunderland”).—Inge- 
low. 

He’s dead and gone! He’s dead and gone! See 
Ranger’s Grave.—Southey. 


He’s devotion itself all the summer. See Nothing but 
Leaves.—M. H. G. 

He’s drunk! I say, it’s too much to stand. See 
Uncle Deal’s Lecture.— Coale. 

He’s gane, he’s gane! Lie’s frae us torn. See Elegy 
on Captain Matthew Henderson.—Burns. 

“He’s gone at last, old Niger’s dead.” See Niger.— 
Lessing. 

Lie’s gone,—gone for two days. See Masked Ball, The. 
—Anon. 

He's juist as sweet as sw r cet can be. See Oor Wee 
Laddie.—Lyle. 

He’s smart—our boarder’s smart, they say. See Art 
Critic, An.—-Foss. 

Hester PryDne w r ent, one day, to the man«ion of 
Governor Bellingham. See Elf-child and the 
Minister, The.—Hawthorne. 

“Lle.v, Bud! O Bud!” rang out the gleeful call. See 
Loehrs and the Hammonds, The.—Riley. 

Lley? I wa’n’t a sayin’ nauthin’. See Railway 
Matinee, The.—Burdette. 

“Hey, Johnny McGinnis, where are ye/.?” See Pyro¬ 
technic Polyglot.—Baker. 

Hey, laddie hark, to the merry, merry lark. See 
Master Sky-lark (Skv-lark’s Song. The).—Bennett. 

Hey nonny, no! Men are fools that wish to die. See 
Hey Nonny, No!—Anon. 

Hey! Now the day dawns. See Night is Near Gone, 
The.—Montgomery. 

Hey, now the day’s dawning. See Night is Nigh Gone. 
—Montgomery (Cunningham). 

“Hey, Swipesey! Kid Sixey’s got hurted.” See Kid 
Sixey’s Christmas.— Penney. 

Lley, you swelled-up turkey feller! See November’s 
Come.—Lincoln. 

Hey-o, Lucy! See Anti-slang Society, The.— Anon. 

Heyo 1 you niggers, dah, I like to know. See Sunday 
Fishin’.— Robertson. 

Hi and whoop-hooray, boys! See On the Sunny Side. 
—Riley. 

Hi, blackey! See Quack Doctor, The.—Anon. 

Hi, chillun! w'hat on earf dis mean dat yo’ doan’ ansah 
me? See My Chillun’s Pictyah.—Culbertson. 

“Hi, Harry Holly, halt, and tell.” See Our Folks.— 
Lynn. 

Hid by the garret’s dust, and lost. See Forgotten 
Books, The.—Collier. 

Hidden by the shady tangle. See Linishcd Nest, A.— 
Anon. 

Hide and seek! Two children at play. See Hide and 
Seek.—Goddard. 

Hide me, mother. My fathers belong’d to the church 
of old. See Wreck, The.—Tennyson. 

Hie away, hie away! See Waverley (Hie Away).—Scott. 

Hie upon hielands [or high upon highlands]. See 
Bonnie George Campbell.—Anon. 

Hierusalem, my happy home. See New Jerusalem, 
The.—-Dickson. 

Lligh above all a cloth of state was spred. See Faerie 
Queene, The (House of Pride, The).—Spenser. 

High above hate I dwell. See Sanctuary.—Guiney. 

High above us, slowly sailing. See Clouds, The.— 
Anon. 

High and low, the spring winds blow. See How the 
Wind Blows!—Anon. 

High at the window in her cage. See Caged Bird, A.— 
Jewett. 

Lligh grace, the dower of queens; and therewithal. 
See Her Gifts.—Rossetti. 

High grew' the snow beneath the low-hung sky. See 
Axe, The.—Craw-ford. 

High hopes that burn [or burned] like stars sublime. 
See To-day and To-morrow.-—Massey. 

High in the breathless hall the minstrel sate. See 
Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle upon the 
Restoration of Lord Clifford, the Shepherd, etc 
—Wordsw-orth. 

High license puts no restriction upon the buyer. See 
Demerits of High I icense, The.—Seelye. 

High o’er the black-backed skerries, and far. See 
Light-house, The.—Anon. 

High o’er the snow-capped peaks of blue and stars are 
out to-night. See Jem’s Last Ride.—Stansbury 

High on a bright and sunny bed. See Poppy, The.— 
Taylor. 

High on a leaf-carv’d ancient oaken chair. See Old 
Baron, The.—Miller. 

High on a t hrone of royal state, which far. See Para¬ 
dise Lost (Satan).—Milton. 

High on the apple-tree was a lovely, pink apple- 
blossom. Nee Apple-blossom, An.—Anon. 

High on the branch of a walnut tree. See Squirrel’s 
Arithmetic, The.—Anon. 


678 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Historically 


High on the Palatine Hill, within the cool courts of 
his palace. See Calpurnia.—Boyesen. 

High on the rocky steep did once a gray old castle 
stand. See Brothers, The.—Holley. 

High on the top of an old pineRree. See Little Doves, 
The.—Anon. 

High on the world did our fathers of old. See Under 
the Stars and Stripes.— Cawein. 

High time, high time the cows were home. See After 
the Cows.—Cheney. 

High towered the palace and its massive pile. See 
Zophieljor, The Bride of Seven (Palace of the 
Gnomes).—Brooks. 

High up in the tower of the old moss-covered church. 
See Village Bell, The.—Anon. 

High up within yon gray old tower. See Old Church 
Bell, The.—Longfellow. 

High t 0 r hie] upon Highlands [or Hielands], See Bon¬ 
nie George Campbell.—Anon. 

High walls and huge the body may confine. See 
Sonnet Written in Prison.—Garrison. 

High-born Helen, round your dwelling. See Helen.— 
Lamb. 

Higher, higher, purified by suffering fire. See Aspira¬ 
tion.— Birkhead. 

Higher, higher, will we climb. See True Aspiration 
of Youth, The.—Montgomery. 

Higher! It is a word of noble import. See Higher.— 
Anon. 

High-lying, sea-blown stretches of green turf. See 
Beds of Fleur-de-lys, The.—Gilman. 

High-spirited friend. See Noble Balm, The.—Jonson. 

Highway, since you my chief Parnassus be. See As- 
trophel and Stella, Sonnet LXXXIV.—Sidney. 

Hillo, hillo, hillo, hillo! See Snowshoe Song, A.— 
Weir. 

Him have I seen!—oh, sigh to cheer. See Wagoner of 
the Alleghanies, The.—Read. 

Him only in all London must she see to bid good-bye. 
See Mr. Graham and Lady Clementina.—Mac¬ 
Donald. 

Hiram was a quiet, peaceable sort of a Yankee. See 
Yankee and the Dutchman’s Dog, The.—Anon. 

His arm was round my shoulder laid. See Hour of 
Trial, An.—Anon. 

His arms with strong and firm embrace her dainty 
form infold. See Uncertain Pledge, An.—( Yale 
Record.) 

His biography is written in blood and tears. See 
Lincoln, the Tender-hearted. —Bolton. 

His body lies upon the shore. See Richard Somers.— 
Eastman. 

His book is successful, he’s steeped in renown. See 
Poet of Fashion, The.—Smith. 

His broad-brimmed hat pushed back with careless 
air. See Vaquero.—Miller. 

His brow is seamed with line and scar. See Portrait 
of a Warrior, The.—Ramal. 

Ilis cap was too thick, and his coat was too thin. See 
Grumbler, The.—Goodale. 

His cherished woods are mute. See At Chappaqua.— 
Benton. 

His Christ came unto him, and from the pain. See 
Judas the Second.—Saltus. 

His dagger concealed for the stroke. See Hostage, 
The.—Schiller. 

His echoing axe the settler swung. See Settler, The.— 
Street. 

His engagement is ended at last. See Too Much of It. 

-—Birdseye. 

His eye was stern and wild. His cheek was pale and 
cold as clay. See His Eye was Stern and Wild.— 
Anon. 

His face is truly of the Roman mould. See Character, 
A.—Bates. 

His falchion flashed along the Nile. See Napoleon 
at Rest.—Pierpont. 

His feet were shod with music and had wings. See 
Milton.—Mifflin. 

His figure, when he first appeared in Parliament, was 
strikingly graceful and commanding. See Lord 
Chatham’s Eloquence.—T. B. Macaulay. 

His first mustache was just in bud. See Football 
Maiden, The.—( Lake Forest Student.) 

His footprints have failed us. See Dead in the Sierras. 
—Miller. 

His form was fair, his cheek was health. See Death 
and the Drunkard.—Anon. 

His fourscore years and five. See Whittier.—Sangster. 

His full name was Percival William Williams. See 
Wee Willie Winkie.—Kipling. 

His golden locks Time hath to silver turn’d. See 
Farewell to Arms, A.—Peele. 


His Grace of Marlborough, legends say. See Tradition 
of Conquest.—Piatt. 

His grandeur he derived from heaven alone. See Poem 
upon the Death of his Late Highness, Oliver, 
Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland, 
A (On the Death of Oliver Cromwell).—Dryden. 

His hair was black, his eye was blue. See Shule Agra 
—Anon. 

His hand at last! By his own fingers writ. See Hope 
Deferred.—Anon. 

His heart a maiden robbed him of. See Fair Exchange. 
A.—Birdseye. 

His home is yonder in the sky. See Archer, The.— 
Sherman. 

His kiss is sweet, his word is kind. See Boatman of 
Kinsale, The.—Davis. 

His laurels fresh from song and lay. See Our Autocrat. 
—Whittier. 

His learning such, no author, old or new. See Ben 
Jonson’s Commonplace Book.—Falkland. 

His life was private; safely led, aloof. See Characteri¬ 
zation, A.—Taylor. 

His listening soul hears no echo of battle. See Nellie.— 
Field. 

His little dimpled hands were crossed. See Child’s 
Prayer, The.—Anon. 

His locks are whitened with the snows of nigh a 
hundred years. See Myles O’Hea.—Kickham. 

His love enwrapped her as a robe. See Mistress of the 
Manse, The.—Holland. 

His love was mine no more, mother, I saw it in his 
eyes. See Tale of a Temptation!—Horton. 

His loving heart had never learned. See Pierrot’s 
Valentine.—Goodman. 

His Majesty, Satan, one morning awoke. See Devil' 
in Search of a Wife, The.—Porter. 

His mercies are new every morning. See Sunrise 
among the Hills.—Craik. 

His name is George, generally speaking. See Stage 
Land (Stage Hero, The).—Jerome. 

His name was Alexander Bartholemew McKay. See 
Buster, The.—Foss. 

His name was Johnny—Johnny Bohn. See Message 
from Bony, A.—Anofi. 

His name was Schlausheimer, vot mendedt furnitoor. 
See Schlausheimer Don’t Conciliate.—Von Boyle. 

His name was William Mullins. See Agnostic, The. 
—Snyder. 

His petticoats now George cast off. See George and 
the Chimney-sweep.—Taylor. 

His port I love; he’s in a proper mood. See Douglas 
(Scene from Douglas, A).—-Home. 

His presence makes the spring to blush. See Ubique. 
—(Hamilton Literary Monthly.) 

His puissant sword unto his side. See Hudibras 
(Hudibras’ Sword and Dagger).—Butler. 

His real name was Philip Garner, but the Bar X Ranch 
knew him only as “Boots.” See “Boots.”—Anon. 

His science is inexpressibly subtle, directly taught him 
by his Maker. See Stones of Venice, The (Man 
of Genius, The).—Ruskin. 

His sorrow was my sorrow, and his joy. See Brother 
and Sister.—Eliot. 

His soul extracted from the public sink. See Scurri¬ 
lous Scribe, The.—Freneau. 

His steed was old, his armor worn. See Cardamon.— 
Beers. 

His step was unsteady and his hands trembled. See 
Little Tom.—Lewis. 

His study! With what authors is it stored. See 
Moral Essays.'—Pope. 

His thoughts are whirling, whirling. See Madman, 
The.—Denison. 

His tongue was touched with sacred fire. See Henry 
Ward Beecher.—Phelps. 

His verse was carved in ivory forms undying. See 
Leconte de Lisle.—Gosse. 

His was the swiftest foot, the merriest eye. See 
Promoted.—Bacon. 

His way in farming all men knew. See At Marshfield. 

-—Wilkinson. 

His window is over the factory flume. See Widow 
Brown’s Christmas.—Trowbridge. 

His words seemed oracles. See Effect of Oratory on a 
Multitude.—Croly. 

His work is done, his toil is o’er. See Faithful unto 
Death.—Titherington. 

Hist, hist, ye winds, ye whispering wavelets, hist! See 
Two Sonnet-songs. I.: The Sirens Sing.—Marzials. 

Hist! I see the stir of glamour far upon the twilight 
wold. See Vision of Battle, A.—Dobell. 

Historically speaking, there is no more pernicious 
saying. See Man and the Cause, The.—Lodge. 


679 




History 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


History does not disclose a greater statesman than 
Edmund Burke. See Edmund Burke.—Prindle. 

History is a great romance. See American Ideals.— 
Anon. 

History is full of battles. See Battle of Bennington, 
The.—Phelps. 

Hither! hither! O, come hither! See Sylvia; or. The 
May Queen (Osm^’s Song).—Darley. 

Hither, meadow gossip, tell me. See same. —Beach. 

Hit’s a mighty fur ways up the Far’well Lane. See 
My Honey, My Love.—Harris. 

Ho, a song by the fire! See Dartmouth Winter-song.— 
Hovey. 

Ho, ancient bully, beaten to your knees. See Nikol- 
son’s Nek.—Russell. 

Ho! City of the gay! See Return of Napoleon from St. 
Helena, The.—Sigourney. 

Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters. 
See Isaiah (Ho, Every One that Thirsteth!).— 
Bible. 

“Ho, for a frolic,” said Johnny the stout. See Johnny 
the Stout.—Anon. 

Ho! for the hills in summer! See Berrying Song.— 
Larcom. 

Ho, girls, for a frolic! The sleigh’s at the gate. See 
Old-time Sleigh-ride, The.—Anon. 

Ho! ho! At last I’ve found you. See Death’s 
Triumph.—Anon. 

Ho! it’s come, kids, come! See Billy and his Drum.— 
Riley. 

Ho! Moro, Moro, my dog, where are you? See Dumb 
Savior, The.—Bryan. 

Ho! pony. Down the lonely road. See Army Corre¬ 
spondent’s Last Ride.—Townsend. 

Ho, pretty bee, did you see my croodlin’ doo? See 
Croodlin’ Doo.—Field. 

Ho! pretty page, with the dimpled chin. See Age of 
Wisdom, The.—Thackeray. 

Ho, reapers of life’s harvest. See same. —Anon. 

Ho, sailor of the sea! See How’s My Boy?—Dobell. 

Ho, skipper on the sea-shore! See Troll-man, The.— 
Hewins. 

Ho! the old snow-man. See Uncle Mart’s Poem.— 
Riley. 

Ho, there! fisherman! hold your hand! See Second 
Mate, The.—O’Brien. 

Ho, thou art a tardy comer. See To a Conservatory 
Flower.—Newcomer. 

Ho! thou traveler on life’s highway. See Hold the 
Light.—Anon. 

“Ho! to the top of the towering wall!” See Bricklayers, 
The.—Barnes. 

Ho! watchman, ho! See Watchman’s Call, The.— 
Anon. 

Ho! why dost thou shiver and shake. See Gaffer 
Gray.—Holcroft. 

Ho, woodsmen of the mountain-side. See Cry to Arms, 
A.—Timrod. 

Ho! ye wardens of the bells. See New Year’s Chime, 
A.—Anon. 

Ho! ye who at the anvil toil. See No Work the 
Hardest Work.—Orne. 

Hoarse Maevius reads his hobbling verse. See Epi¬ 
grams.—Coleridge. 

Hobbledy Hops, he made some tops. See Hobbledy 
Hops.—Anon. 

Hobnelia, seated in a dreary vale. See Shepherd’s 
Week, The (Thursday, or the Spell).—Gay. 

Hobson went toward death and hell. See Hobson and 
his Men.—Loveman. 

Hodge held a farm, and smiled content. See Case 
Altered, The.—Anon. 

Hold back thy hours, dark Night, till we have done. 
See Maid’s Tragedy, The (Wedding Song).— 
Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Hold diligent converse with thy children. See same. — 
Doudney. 

Hold fast to the dear old Sabbath. See Hold Fast to 
the Dear Old Sabbath.—Vickers. 

Hold hard, Ned! Lift me down once more. See 
Sick Stock-rider, The.—Gordon. 

Hold high the woof, dear friends, that we may see. 
See On a Piece of Tapestry.—Santayana. 

Hold on. Harry, and help me eat this watermelon. See 
“Only Cooning.”—Denton. 

Hold on, stranger? Turn out yonder close to the wall. 
See Orthod-ox Team, The.—Brooks. 

Hold the lantern aside, and shudder not so. See 
Searching for the Slain!—Anon. 

Hold to your ear the beautiful shell. See Sea-shell, 
The.—H. W. 

Hold you the watch to-night? See Hamlet.—Shake¬ 
speare. 


Hold your tongue, you foolish fellow! See News¬ 
telling Bore, The.—Anon. 

Holding aloft the bloody knife, he exclaimed. See 
Vindication of Virginius.—Kellogg. 

Holiness on the head. See Aaron.—Herbert. 

Hollow-eyed and pale, at the window of a jail. See 
Drummer’s Bride, The.—Anon. 

Holy Bible, book divine. See same.— Burton. 

Holy Father, cheer our way. See Light at Evening¬ 
time.—Robinson. 

Holy, holy, holy. Lord God Almighty! See Hymn 
for Trinity Sunday.—Heber. 

Holy of England, since my light is short. See On 
First Entering Westminster Abbey.—Guiney. 

Home again, home again, from a foreign shore! See 
Home Again.—Pike. 

Home from college came the stripling. See College 
Training, A.—Lincoln. 

Home from the observatory. See Stella.—Crandall. 

Home, home, can I forget thee. See Home, Can I 
Forget Thee!—Anon. 

Home! It is a charmed word. See Home.—Tal- 
mage. 

Home of my childhood! I cannot forget thee. See 
Home of My Childhood.—Anon. 

Home of the Percys’ high-born race. See Alnwick 
Castle.—Halleck. 

Home once more! Home from California! See 
Returned Brother, The.—McBride. 

Home they brought her lap-dog dead. <See same .— 
Brooks. 

Home they brought her sailor son. See Recognition, 
The.—Sawyer. 

Home thev brought her warrior dead. See Princess, 
The (Home they Brought, etc.).—Tennyson 

Home they brought him, slain with spears. See Prin¬ 
cess, The (Home).—Tennyson. 

Home thou return’st from Thames, whose Naiads 
long. See Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the 
Highlands of Scotland, An.—Collins. 

Honest Davy, the teamster, lives down by the mill. 
See Davy, the Teamster.—Thomson. 

Honest little Peter Grey. See Peter Grey.—Cary. 

Honest Stradivari made me. See Violin’s Complaint, 
The.—Thayer. 

Honesty, capacity, and industry. See National 
Progress.—McKinley. 

Honey-sweet, sweet as honey smell the lilies. See 
Summer-sweet.—Tynan-Hinkson. 

Honor and shame from no condition rise. See Essay 
on Man, An (Greatness).—Pope. 

Honor is the acquisition and preservation of the 
dignity of our nature. See Duelist’s Honor, The. 
—England. 

Honor is the subject of my story. See Julius Caesar 
(Cassius against Caesar).—Shakespeare. 

Honor to the people of Massachusetts, who for twenty- 
three years kept in the Senate. See Eulogy on 
Charles Sumner.—Schurz. 

Honored be the hero evermore. See Martyr of the 
Arena, The.—Sargent. 

Hooker’s across! Hooker’s across! See Hooker’s 
Across.—Boker. 

Hoot! ye little rascal! Ye come it on me this way. 
See Christmas Baby, The.—Carleton. 

Hope humbly, then; with trembling pinions soar. See 
Essay on Man, An.—Pope 

Hope is like a harebell, trembling from its birth. See 
same. —Rossetti. 

Hope, is this thy hand. See Fickle Hope.—Morris. 

Hope leads the child to plant the flower, the man to 
sow the seed. See Hope.—Adams. 

Hope, of all passions, most befriends us here. See 
Night Thoughts (Hope).—Young. 

Hope smiled when your nativity was cast. See Flowers 
on the Top of the Pillars at the Entrance of the 
Cave.—Wordsworth. 

Hopes grimly banished from the heart. See Exiles.— 
Hayne. 

Hoping it’s no harm, I’ve come to interview you. See 
Mark Twain and the Reporter.—Clemens. 

Horace still charms with graceful negligence. See 
Essay on Criticism, An (Horace).—Pope. 

Horatio, I am dead. See Hamlet (Reputation).— 
Shakespeare. 

Horatio, of ideal courage vain. See Feigned Courage. 
—Lamb. 

Horatio, thou art e’en as just a man. See Hamlet 
(Friendship).—Shakespeare. 

“Horatius Flaccus, B. C. 8.” See To Q. H. F.— 
Dobson. 

Horny hands and swarthy face. See Blacksmith of 
Bottledell, The.—Thompson. 


680 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


How fair 


Horrible dens, sir, aren’t they? See Magic Wand, The. 
—Sims. 

Hortense is haughtye, and no smile. See Hortense.— 
Urquhart. 

Hot coffee in an old oyster can. See Army Bean, The. 
—Anon. 

Hot in the parching sunlight the Tartar city lay. See 
“Old Glory” at Pekin.—Brown. 

Hot philosophers. See Philosophy.—Marston. 

Hour by hour, with skillful pencil, wrought the artist. 
See Roman Legend, A.—Harvey. 

Hour of an empire’s overthrow. See Belshazzer.— 
Croly. 

Houses, indeed! I calls ’em reg’lar ram-shackle nut¬ 
shells. See Mrs. Brown on Modern Houses.— 
Sketchley. 

How absurd are the sophisms and predictions by which 
the advocates of existing abuses. See Example of 
America, The.—Jeffrey. 

How absurd it is! How utterly absurd! See Water 
Color, A.—Anon. 

How all occasions do inform against me. See Hamlet 
(Soliloquies from Hamlet).—Shakespeare. 

How amiable are thy tabernacles, O Lord of Hosts. 
—See Psalms of David, LXXXIV.— Bible. 

How are songs begot and bred? See Songs.—Stoddard. 

How are thy servants blest, O Lord! See Ode: “How 
are Thy servants,” etc.—Addison. 

How are ye, boys? No, thank ye, Bill, nothing to 
drink to-day. See Signing the Pledge.—Anon. 

How are you so cheerful. See School-mistress, The.— 
Larcom. 

How, as a spider’s web is spun. See To Jessie’s 
Dancing Feet.—Ellwanger. 

How beautiful appear on the mountains. See Isaiah 
(Joyful Messenger, The).— Bible. 

How beautiful is night! See Thalaba the Destroyer 
(Night in the Desert).—Southey. 

How beautiful is the rain! See Rain in Summer.— 
Longfellow. 

How beautiful is youth! How bright it gleams. See 

» Morituri Salutamus (“How beautiful,” etc.).— 
Longfellow. 

How beautiful she was, the little maiden. See Laleet. 
—Martin. 

How beautiful the world is! The green earth covered 
with flowers. See Fireside Colloquy.—Leather- 
man. 

How beautiful this night! The balmiest sigh. See 
Queen Mab (Night).—Shelley. 

How beautiful to live as thou didst live! See Tennyson 
—Coates. 

How big was Alexander, pa? See same. —Anon. 

How bird-like o’er the flakes of snow. See Christ- 
kindlein.—Ruckert. 

How bitter sounds their frigid worldliness! I loathe it 
all. See B. B. Romance, The.—Fawcett. 

How bleak and drear the earth would seem. See No 
Flowers.—Anon. 

How blessed, how beautiful is the rain ! See Rain, The. 
—Anon. 

How blessed is he who leads a country life. See To My 
Honoured Kinsman, John Dryden.—Dryden. 

How blest has my time been, what joys have I 
known. See Happy Marriage, The.—Moore. 

How bold the imagination and how strong. See 
Carven Shores, The.—Rand. 

How brief this drama of our life appears! See same. — 
Anon. 

How bright are the honors which await those. See 
Tribute to Our Honored Dead, A.—Beecher. 

How bright the unfading evergreen. See Unfading 
Evergreen, The.—Anon. 

How calm, how beautiful comes on. See Lalla Rookh 
(Calm).—Moore. 

How calm they sleep beneath the shade. See Green¬ 
wood Cemetery.—Kennedy. 

How calmly sinks the parting sun! See Sabbath 
Evening.—Prentice. 

"How came,” T asked a little maid. See How the 
Dimples Came.—Anon. 

How came I here? Is it caprice or chance? See Don 
Carlos.—Schiller. 

How came she by that light? See Macbeth (Lady 
Macbeth, Sleep Walking Scene).—Shakespeare. 

How can I cease to pray for thee? See Somewhere.— 
Dorr. 

How can I sing of my mistress’s chiding? See Dirge 
of the Householder, The.—Powell. 

How can it be that I forget. See Recollection.— 
Aldrich. 

How can ye, being evil, speak good things? See St. 
Matthew (Idle Words).— Bible. 


How ceaseless is thy flow, O sire of streams. See 
Apostrophe to the Mississippi.—Wilcox. 

How changed is here each spot man makes or fills! See 
Thyrsis.—Arnold. 

How cold are thy baths, Apollo. See Jugurtha.— 
Longfellow. 

How could I, sweet, have sung another song? See 
Dance Song.—Adams. 

How cracked and poor his laughter rings. See Old 
Beau, The.—Fawcett. 

How dark it grows! The griev’d light of day. See 
Burden of Night, The.—Elliot. 

How de do, mister? How de do? See Scene in a 
Photograph Gallery.—Anon. 

How de do, Mrs. Sinclair? Thanks, awfully. See 
Afternoon Tea, An.—Griffith. 

How dear to dis heart vas my grandschild, Loweeza. 
See Dot Leedle Loweeza.—Adams. 

How dear to my for this] heart are the scenes of my 
childhood. See Old Oaken Bucket, The.—'Wood- 
worth. 

How dear to my heart are the scenes of my childhood. 
See Old Oaken Bucket (Parody), The.—Anon. 

How dear to my heart is the loud-smelling onion. See 
Moss-Covered Onion, The.—Thatcher. 

How delicious is the winning. See Song: “How del - 
cious,” etc.—Campbell. 

How delighted Fanny will be! See Bonnet for My 
Wife, A.—Meyers. 

How delightful it is to be in the country! See Viola’s 
Answer.—McBride. 

How delightfully cozy the parlor now looks. See 
Aline’s Love Song.—Anon. 

How desolate were nature, and how void. See God 
Everywhere in Nature.—Wilcox. 

How did we beat the captain’s colt. See How We 
Beat the Captain’s Colt.—Rae-Brown. 

How difficult, alas! to please mankind. See Praying 
for Rain.—Wolcott. 

How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. See 
Sonnets from the Portuguese, XLIII.—Browning. 

How do the leaves grow. See Lesson of the Leaves.—- 
Anon. 

How do the rivulets find their way? See Unseen.— 
Ames. 

How do the robins build their nests? See What Robin 
T old.—Cooper. 

How do we know what hearts have vilest sin? See 
Judge Not.—Anon. 

How do you do. See I’m a man.—Anon. 

How do you do, Cornelia? I heard you were sick. 
See Aunty Doleful’s Visit.—Dallas. 

How do you do? Does any one ob you folks want a 
situation? See Stage-struck Darkey, The.— 
White. 

How do you do? Hallo! whar’d yeou cum from? See 
Just from the City.—McBride. 

How do you know that she cannot hear? See How 
Do You Know?—Hutchinson. 

How do you like the new teacher, boys? See S. P. C. A., 
The.—Anon. 

How do you like to go up in a swing. See Swing, The. 
—Stevenson. 

How does the tide come? Not all in one rising. See 
Slow and Sure.—Coolidge. 

How does the water come down at Lodore? See 
Cataract of Lodore, The.—Southey. 

How does your lordship? See Princes in the Tower, 
The.—-Hey wood. 

How doth the busy nurseryman. See Seedsman, 
The.—Burdette. 

How doth the little busy bee. See Baby of the Future, 
The.— (Outlook.) 

How doth the little busy bee. See Busy bee, The.— 
Watts. 

Flow doth the little busy mule. See Busy Mule. The — 
Anon. 

How dreary would the meadows be. See Suppose.— 
Carv. 

How d’ye do, big folks? I’ve come to say. See Little 
Mischief.—Anon. 

How d’ye do, dear? I’ve been awaiting your appear¬ 
ance. See Lost and Won.—Chapman. 

How eloquent is silence! See Silence.—Anon. 

How fades that native breath. See Sweets that Die.— 
Mitchell. 

How fading are the joys we dote upon! See Parting, 
The.—Norris. 

How fair is the rose! See same. —Watts. 

How fair thou art, O little book. See “Owed” to My 
Pocket-book.—Anon. 

How fair thou art the poets long have known See 
Sonnet, The.—Ilerbin. 


681 





How falls 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


How falls it, oriole, thou hast come to fly. See To an 
Oriole.—Fawcett. 

How far, how very far it seemed. See Brushwood. 
—Read. 

How far [or long], O Catiline, wilt thou abuse our 
patience? See First Oration against Catiline 
(Catiline Denounced).—Cicero. 

How far to Oaklands now, sir? Well, I should think 
it were five mile quite. See Sal Parker’s Ghost.— 
Coller. 

How fares it with the happy dead. See In Memoriam. 
—Tennyson. 

How fares my lord? See Douglas (Norval).—Home. 

How fares my lord? speak, Beaufort. See King 
Henry VI., Pt. II. (Death of Cardinal Beaufort). 
—Shakespeare. 

How fares your majesty? See King John.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

How fast you write, Lynn. See Poor Work don’t Pay. 
—Rook. 

How fine has the day been! how bright was the sun! 
See Summer Evening, A.—Watts. 

How fresh, O Lord, how sweet and clean. See Flower, 
The.—Herbert. 

How frightfully energetic you are, riding so early, 
after dancing till three! See What’s in a Name? 
—Gay. 

How glorious fall the valiant, sword in hand. See 
Youthful Valor.—Tyrtaeus. 

How glows each patriot bosom that boasts a Yankee 
heart. See “United States” and “Macedonian,” 
The (I.).—Anon. , 

How gracefully the young Bertine. See Romance of 
a Year, The.—Sherwood. 

How grateful the relief which the friend of mankind, 
the lover of virtue, experiences. See Glory of 
Washington, The.—Brougham. 

How great he is. decked in gold and gems. See 
Naaman, the Leper.—Willis. 

How happy could I be with either. See Beggar's 
Opera (“ How happy,” etc.).—Gay. 

How happy is he born and taught. See Character of 
a Happy Life, The.—Wotton. 

How happy was I when I saw her lead. See From the 
Daphnaida.—Spenser. 

How hard a thing it is to part. See Loss, A.— (Judy.) 

How hard is fortune. Changeful hearts like these. 
See Pride against Pride.—Marston. 

How hard, when those who do not wish. See Art of 
Book-keeping, The.—Blanchard. 

How hardly here and there a hackney coach. See 
Morning in London.—Swift. 

How he fell from heaven they fabled. See Paradise 
Lost (Distance).—Milton. 

How humble, yet how hopeful he could be! See 
Abraham Lincoln (Patriot President, The). — 
Taylor. 

How I do wish I was a man. See Little Things.— 
Anon. 

How I ever came to do it, I don’t know. See My 
First and Last Appearance.—Turner. 

How I hate to see him there. See My Rival.— 
Chandler. 

How L love the hour of twilight. See Door to Memo¬ 
ry’s Hall, The.—Winton. 

How I love those dear old wrinkles. See To My 
Mother.—-Anon. 

“How I should like a birthday!” said the child. See 
Stevenson’s Birthday.—-Miller. 

How ill this taper burns! Ha! who comes there? 
See Julius Csesar.—Shakespeare. 

How in Heaven’s name did Columbus get over. See 
Columbus Crossing the Atlantic.—Clough. 

“How in the world did I happen to bloom.” See 
Goldenrod.—Anon. 

How infinite and sweet. Thou everywhere. See I.abo- 
rare est Orare.—Woolsey. 

How infinitely superior must appear the spirit and 
principles of General Washington. See Foreign 
Policy of Washington, The.—Fox. 

How is the boy this morning? Why do you shake 
your head? See Road to Heaven, The.—Sims. 

How is the spirit of a free people to be formed. See 
Our National Character.—Everett. 

How it blows! How it rains! I’ll not turn out to¬ 
night. See Cigarette Rings.—Sterry. 

How it sings, sings, sings. See Song of the Sea Wind, 
The.—Anon. 

How kind and thoughtful father is. See Happy 
Christmas, A.—Anon. 

How languisheth the primrose of Love’s garden! See 
On Phillis’ Sickness.—Lodge. 

How large unto the tiny fly. See Fly, The.—Ramal. 


How like a fawning publican he looks! See Merchant 
of Venice, The (Shylock’s Soliloquy and Address). 
—Shakespeare. 

How like a Winter hath my absence been. See Son¬ 
nets, XCVII.—Shakespeare. 

How like her! but ’tis she herself. See In the Mile 
End Road.—Levy. 

How like the leper, with his own sad cry. See Buoy- 
bell, The.—Turner. 

How little fades from earth when sink to rest.— 
See Shakespeare.—Sterling. 

How little flattering is a woman’s love! See Philip 
van Artevelde.—Taylor. 

How little recks it where men die. See Place where 
Men should Die, The.—Barry. 

How long before the snow comes? See same. —Denton. 

How long, great God, how long must I. See Aspi¬ 
ration, The.—Norris. 

How long he sat—this Caisar of the stage. See Death 
of Louis Napoleon.—Cranch. 

How long it seems since that mild April night. See 
Seaward.—Thaxter. 

How long I’ve loved thee, and how well. See Love’s 
Wisdom.—Deland. 

How long [or far], [0 Catiline,] wilt thou abuse our 
patience. See B irst Oration against Catiline (Ora¬ 
tion against Catiline).—Cicero. 

How long, O lion, hast thou fleshless lain? See Lion’s 
Skeleton, The.—Turner. 

How looks Appledore in a storm? See Appledore in 
a Storm.—Lowell. 

How many a mighty mind is shut. See Germs of 
Greatness.—Cook. 

How many a time have I. See Swimming.—Byron. 

How many acts are there in a tragedy? Five, I 
believe. See Tragedy, A.—Talmage. 

How many colonies have been more wisely and hu¬ 
manely and liberally administered. See Centen¬ 
nial Oration (Effect of American Example).—Win- 
throp. 

How many colors here do we see set. See Spectrum, 
The.—Monkhouse. 

How many deeds of kindness. See Deeds of Kindness, 
—Anon. 

“How many in your family? ’ the census-taker said. 
See Out of her Reckoning.—Anon. 

“How many miles to Baby-land?” See Baby-land.— 
Cooper. 

How many new years have grown old. See Old Lover, 
An.—Jones. 

How many paltry, foolish, painted things. See I 
Give Thee Eternity.—Drayton. 

“How many?” said our good captain. See Balder 
(Sea Ballad).—Dobell. 

How many strive to force a way. See Forcing a Way. 
—Anon. 

How many summers, love. See Poet’s Song to his 
Wife, The.—Procter. 

How many thousands of my poorest subjects. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. II. (Henry the Fourth’s So¬ 
liloquy on Sleep).—Shakespeare. 

How many times, as through the rooms I hasten. See 
same. —Gates. 

How many times do I love thee, dear? See Torris- 
mond (How Many Times).—Beddoes. 

How many verses have I thrown. See Verses Why 
Burnt.—Landor. 

How many voices gaily sing. See How Many Voices. 
—Landor. 

How many went from happy homes. See same. — 
Anon. 

How much a man is like his shoes! See Man and his 
Shoes.—r Anon. 

How much do I love thee? See How Much Do You 
Love Me?—Townsend. 

How much so ever in this life’s mutations. See same. 
—Anon. 

How much the heart may bear, and yet not break) 
See Endurance.—Allen. 

How must the soldier’s tearful heart expand. See 
Miss Nightingale.—Smith. 

How near me came the hand of death. See For a 
Widower or Widow.—Wither. 

How near one to the other is every part of the world. 
See President McKinley’s Last Address.—Me 
Kinley. 

How near to good is what is fair. See same. —Jon«on. 

How neatly all the seeds are laid. See Little Seed- 
cells, The.—Anon. 

How nice the windows look this evening. See Ben, 
the Orphan Boy.—McBride. 

How now!—An’t please your grace. See King 
Henry VIII. (Queen Catherine).—Shakespeare. 


682 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


How that 


How now, Shylock; what news among the merchants? 
See Merchant of Venice, The.—Shakespeare. 

How now, spirit! whither wander you? See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream (Puck and the Fairy).— 
Shakespeare. 

How now, what news with you? See King Richard 
III.—Shakespeare. 

How oft I’ve watched thee from the garden croft. 
See Orion.—Turner. 

How oft, when thou, my music, music play’st. See, 
Sonnets, CXXVIII.—Shakespeare. 

How often in the summer-tide. See Across the Fields 
to Anne.—Burton. 

How often is that upstart of a Hunker coming here 
now to see our Mildred? See Tale of a Dog, The. 
—Anon. 

How often, when life’s summer day. See Friends.— 
Landor. 

“How old art thou?” said the garrulous gourd. See 
Gourd and the Palm, The.—Anon. 

“How old I am! I’m eighty years!” See Carcas¬ 
sonne.—Nadaud (Sherwood). 

How old may Phillis be, you ask. See Phillis’s Age.— 
Prior. 

How orient is Thy beauty’ How divine' See Sonnet: 
“How orient,” etc.—Quarles. 

How peacefully the sunlight fell. See Late October.— 
Jordan. 

How plainly I remember all! See Schoolroom Idyl, 
A.—Going. 

How pleasant it is at the end of the day. See Way to 
be Happy.—Taylor. 

How pleasant ’tis the courtier clan to see! See Kings 
and Courtiers.—Wolcott. 

How pleasant the life of a bird must be. See Birds in 
Summer.—Howitt. 

How pleasant to know Mr. Lear! See Lines to a 
Young Lady.—Lear. 

How pleasant were the songs of Toobonai. See Island, 
The.—Byron. 

How poor, how rich, how abject, how august. See 
Night Thoughts (Man).—Young. 

How pretty is each little star. See Stars.—Anon. 

How pretty our room will look, dear F.llen. See 
Jealousy.—Anon. 

How prone we are to hide and hoard. See Lavender 
—Anon. 

How pure and frail and white the snowdrops shine. 
See Annunciation, The.—Proctor. 

How pure at heart and sound in head. See In Memo- 
nam (Spiritual Companionship).—Tennyson. 

How sadly in these latter days. See Ballade of the 
Alumna.—Child. 

How schweed to dhink of home. See Home Again.— 
Anon. 

How seldom, friend, a good great man inherits. See 
Good Great Man, The.—Coleridge. 

How shall I a habit break? See How?—O’Reilly. 

How shall I bless thee? Human love. See To My Dear 
Son.—Dufferin. 

How shall I know thee in the sphere which keeps. 
See Future Life, The.—Bryant. 

How shall I tell of the ages. See Christmas.— 
Sidney. 

How shall I then begin, or where conclude. See 
Poem upon the Death of his Late Highness, 
Oliver, Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and 
Ireland (Oliver Cromwell).—Dryden. 

How shall we honour the young. See Haworth 
Churchyard.—Arnold. 

How shall we know it is the last good-by? See Last 
Good-by, The.—Moulton. 

How shall we learn to sway the minds of men. See 
Sincerity the Soul of Eloquence.—Goethe. 

How shall we tell an angel. See Angels.—Hall. 

How should I choose to walk the world with thee. 
See In Snow-time.—Anon. 

How should I your true love know? See Hamlet 
(“How should I,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

How should little maidens grow. See To a Little 
Maid.—Anon. 

How silent comes the water round that bend. See 
“I stood tiptoe upon a little hill” (Minnows).— 
Keats. 

How silently, how silently. See O Little Town of 
Bethlehem (“How silently,” etc.).—Brooks. 

How simply fall the simple words. See God Bless 
You.—Anon. 

How sleep the brave, who sink to rest. See Ode 
Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746.— 
Collins. 

How slight a thing may set one’s fancy drifting. See 
Honey Dripping from the Comb.—Riley. 


How slowly creeps the hand of Time. See Church¬ 
yard, The.—Buchanan. 

How small a tooth hath mined the season’s heart. 
Sec Frost.—Thomas. 

How small of all that human hearts endure. See 
Lines Added to Goldsmith’s Traveller.—Johnson. 

How snowdrops cold and blue-eyed harebells blend. 
See Loves of the Plants.—Darwin. 

How soft the pause! the notes melodious cease. See 
Written at Killarney.-—Tighe. 

How soon hath Time, the subtle thief of youth. See 
On His Being Arrived at the Age of Twenty- 
three.—Milton. 

How spake of old the Royal Seer? See Vanitas 
Vanit at um.—Thackeray. 

How splendid is the Jewish bride. See At the Altar.— 
Dallas. 

How stands the glass around? See same. —Anon. 

How steadfastly she worked at it! See Cradle, The.— 
Dobson. 

How still and peaceful is the grave. See Funeral 
Hymn.—Montgomery. 

How still it is among these ancients oaks! See Oaks 
of Monte Luca, The.—Longfellow. 

How still she was. She only knew. See Sea of Fire 
The.—Miller. 

How still the morning of the hallowed day! See 
Sabbath, The.—Grahame. 

How still the room is! But a while ago. See In 
Death.—Bradley. 

How strange a thing a lover seems. See Angel in 
the House, The (Paradox, The).—Patmore. 

How strange are the freaks of memory! See Ember 
Picture, An.—Lowell. 

How strange it is that, in the after age. See Praeterita 
ex Instantibus.—Lighthall. 

How strange it seems, with so much gone of life. See 
Snow-bound (Loved, not Lost, The).—Whittier. 

How strange it will be, love. See How Strange it will 
Be.—Holliday. 

How strange the new, soft silence in the air! See 
First Snow, The.—Bridges. 

How strong they are, those subtile spells. See Helio¬ 
trope.—Anon. 

How stupid it is without Ned. See Rural Felicity.— 
Anon. 

How sweet I roamed from field to field. See Song: 
“How sweet I roamed,” etc.—Blake. 

How sweet in winter time we feign the spring. See 
same. —Anon. 

How sweet is the shepherd’s sweet lot! See Shepherd, 
The.—Blake. 

How sweet is the twilight hour. See Twilight.— 
Goodfellow. 

How sweet it is to instruct the infant mind! See 
Young Schoolma’am’s Soliloquy, The.—Anon. 

How sweet it is, when mother Fancy rocks. See 
Woodland Walks.—Wordsworth. 

How sweet it was to breathe that cooler air. See 
Soldier’s Return, The.—Bloomfield. 

How sweet it were, hearing the downward stream. 
See Lotus-eaters, The.—Tennyson. 

How sweet it were, if without feeble fright. See Angel 
in the House, An.—Hunt. 

How sweet the answer Echo makes. See Echo.— 
Moore. 

How sweet the chime of the Sabbath bells! See Creeds 
of the Bells, The.—Bungay. 

How sweet the harmonies of afternoon! See Black¬ 
bird, The.—Tennyson. 

How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank. See 
Merchant of Venice, The (Music).—Shakespeare. 

How sweet the name of Jesus sounds. See same. — 
Newton. 

How sweet the tuneful bells responsive peal! See 
Written at Ostend.—Bowles. 

How sweet thy modest light to view. See To the 
Evening Star.—Leyden. 

How sweet to my ears are the names of my childhood. 
See Pennsylvanian’s Lament, The.—( Omaha 
World .) 

How sweetly doth My Master sound!—My Master! 
See Odor, The.—Herbert. 

How sweetly keen, how stirred the air! See Anni¬ 
versary, An.—Johnson. 

How sweetly on the autumn scene. See Hawkbit 
The.—Roberts. 

“How sweetly.” said the trembling maid. See Lalla 
Rookh (Linda to Hafed).—Moore. 

How swift and silent pass the ages. See Word for 
Each Month, A.—Jillson. 

How that north wind whistled and stung the other 
day. See “Shiner” and the Waifs, The.—Anon. 


683 




How the 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


How the band plays to-night, all those lovely Strauss 
airs. See To-morrow at Ten.—Perry. 

How the bayonets gleamed and glistened. See Bunker 
Hill.—Holmes. 

How the blithe Lark runs up the golden stair. See 
Skylark, The.—Tennyson. 

How the earth burns! Each pebble under foot. See 
Oasis of Sidi Khaled.—Blunt. 

How the leaves sing to the wind! See In the Golden 
Birch.—Roberts. 

How the rain pours down. See Age of Progress. The. 
—Anon. 

How then? Can honor set a leg? See King Henry 
IV., Pt. I. (Falstaff’s Honor).—Anon. 

How they are provided for upon the earth (appearing 
at intervals). See Beginners.—Whitman. 

How they go by—those strange and dreamlike men! 
See Wayfarers.—E. S. H. 

How they praised and they applauded. See Very 
Provoking.—Eytinge. 

How thick about the window of my life. See At the 
Window.—Wet herald. 

How things has changed since I was a girl! See Miss 
Splicer Tries the Toboggan.—“Clara Augusta.” 

How tired one grows of a rainy day. See Rainy Day, 
A.—-Anon. 

How to labor and find it sweet. See Labor and Life. 
—Morse. 

How to live happiest? how avoid the pains. See Art 
of Preserving Health, The.—Armstrong. 

How to thy sacred memory shall I bring. See. On the 
Death of Waller.—Behn. 

How truly fortunate the age and country in which we 
live. See Speech-making.—Anon. 

How vain are mortal man’s endeavours? See Quid- 
nunckis, The.—Gay. 

How vain, how fleeting, how uncertain are all those 
gaudy bubbles. See Knickerbocker History of 
New York (Uses of History, The).—Irving. 

How vainly men themselves amaze. See Garden, The. 
—Marvell. 

How various and innumerable. See Rabble; or, Who 
Pays, The.—Butler. 

How very sad it is to think. See Poor Brother.— 
Anon. 

How very warm it is here! See Circumstances Alter 
Cases.—Anon. 

How we, poor players on Life’s little stage. See Self¬ 
ish Prayer.—Moulton. 

How well we loved, in Summer solitude. See Summer. 
—Mifflin. 

How will it dawn, the coming Christmas Day? See 
Christmas Day.—Kingsley. 

How wilt thou cheer me, age, when, year by year. 
See Gifts of Age, The.—Anon. 

How winneth Liberty? By sword and brand. See 
Libert y.—Thomas. 

How wonderful is Death! See Queen Mab (To Ianthe, 
Sleeping).—Shelley. 

How would the centuries long asunder. See Hero- 
worship.—Scott. 

“How would Willie like to go.” See Land of Thus- 
and-so. The.—Riley. 

How yet resolves the governor of the town? See 
King Henry V. (Reduction of Harfleur, The).— 
Shakespeare. 

How young and fresh am I to-night. See Nature.— 
Jonson. 

How your sweet face revives again. See He and She; 
or, A Poet’s Portfolio (O Filia Pulchra!).—Story. 

Howard, let’s—let’s—let’s play Bluebeard! See Little 
Bluebeard.—Anon. 

Howe’er it be, it seems to me. See Lady Clara Vere 
de Vere (How to be Noble).—Tennyson. 

However early in the morning you seek the gate of 
access, you find it already open. See Access to 
God.—Hamilton. 

However his military fame may excite the wonder of 
mankind. See Washington as a Civilian.—Ames. 

However. I still think, with all due deference. See 
Beppo (Matrons and Maids).—Byron. 

However viewed, and wherever found. See Great 
National Scourge, The.—Anon. 

“How’s your father?” came the whisper. See Con¬ 
versational.—Anon. 

Howsoe’er the tale be spread. See Rhyme of Robin 
Puck, A.—Cone. 

Hrothgar rejoined, helm of the Scyldings. See Gren- 
del’s Mother.—Hall. 

Hues of the rich unfolding morn. See Morning.— 
Keble. 

Hug me closer, closer, mother. See Little Bessie.— 
Anon. 


Huge, fleecy clouds, like stately ships, drift by. See 
Buzzard’s Point.—Vickers. 

Hugh Falcon learned this happy truth one day. See 
Little Nellie in the Prison.—Hayne. 

Hugh Gordon’s iron mill employs. See Hugh Gordon’s 
Iron Mill.—Durant. 

Hullo, Bob Wren! See Spring Meeting, A.—( Harper’s 
Young People.) 

“Hullo, old chap! How’s the leg to-night?” See 
Tim’s Madonna.—Renninger. 

Hum—Nine o’clock. Take this copy. See Editor’s 
Trials, An.—Anon. 

Human Critters, Hemale Humbugs, an’ Female Wic- 
tims,—Straighten up, and listen to ole Aunty 
Chloey. See Burlesque Oration on Matrimony.— 
Anon. 

Human glory is often fickle as the winds. See Abra¬ 
ham Lincoln’s Place in History.—Newman. 

Human hopes and human creeds. See Washer¬ 
woman’s Song, The (Constant Friend, The).— 
Ware. 

Human lives are silent teaching. See Man’s Mission.— 
Wilde. 

Humanity, delighting to behold. See French Army 
in Russia, The.—Wordsworth. 

Humble we must be. See Humility.—Herrick. 

Humming-bird. See Humming-bird Song.—Sherman. 

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall. See Humpty Dump- 
ty.—Whitney. 

Hundreds of stars in the lovely [or pretty! sky. See 
Only One.—Cooper. 

Hung be the heavens with black, yield day to night! 
See King Henry VI., Pt. I.—Shakespeare. 

Hunting is the noblest exercise. See Time Vindicated. 
—Jonson. 

Hurrah! boys, hurrah! fling our banner to the breeze! 
See Banner of the Stars, The.—Raymond. 

Hurrah, boys! What’s the use in moping? See Game 
of Choice.-—Clark. 

Hurrah for me, Catspaw! See False Faces.—Coates. 

Hurrah for Merrie England now! See Battle of In- 
kerman. The.—Massey. 

Hurrah, for our flag! See Our Flag.—Rook. 

Hurrah for the Fourth av July. See same. —Dickin¬ 
son. 

Hurrah for the Fourth of July! See Independence 
Day.—Rook. 

Hurrah' hurrah! avoid the way of the Avenging Childe. 
See Avenging Childe, The.—Lockhart. 

Hurrah! the seaward breezes. See Fisherman, The.— 
Whittier. 

Hurrah! what a storm was a-brewing. See Chronicle 
of the Drum, The.—Thackeray. 

Hurry up. Jane, or your table will not be set. See 
Jane’s Legacy.—Brewster. 

Husband and wife, no converse now ye hold. See 
Husband’s and Wife’s Grave, The.—Dana. 

Hush, bonnie, dinna greit. See Balow, My Bonnie.— 
Field. 

Hush, bye baby! Don’t you talk loud, Lily, or you’ll 
wake Dolly. See All about Two Dolls.—Anon. 

Hush, hark, that knell! See Fire, The.—McDermott. 

Hush! hear you how the night wind keens around the 
craggy reek? See Lay of the Famine, A.—Anon. 

“Hush! hush!” said the little brown thrush. See 
Frightened Birds.—Anon. 

“Hush, Joanna! ’tis quite certain. ” See Quarrel, The. 
—Mackay. 

Hush! lightly tread; the weary eyes now close. See 
Asleep.—Bates. 

Hush, little one, and fold your hands. See Oh, Little 
Child—Field. 

Hush, my dear! Lie still and slumber. See Cradle 
Hymn.—Watts. 

“Hush!” said the leaves. See Summer Shower, A.— 
Anon. 

Hush! the waves are rolling in. See Old Gaelic Lullaby. 
—Anon. 

Hush! the world is in a dream. See Apple Blossoms.— 
Jones. 

Hush thee, hush. See Lullaby.—R. D. H. 

Hush thee, sweet baby. See Lullaby.—Davidson. 

Hushaby, baby, thy cradle is green. See Mother 
Goose Lullabies.—Anon. 

Hushed are the pigeons cooing low. See Christmas 
Silence, The.—Deland. 

Hushed are those lips, their earthly song it ended. See 
My Mother’s Hymns.—Wetherbee. 

Hushed is the din of tongues: on gallant steeds. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Bull-fight, The).— 
Byron. 

Hushed is the voice of scorn. See Easter Morn.— 
Wright. 


684 





FIRST LINE IN^DEX I am 


Hushed was the evening hymn. See Child Samuel, 
The.—Burns. 

Hushed were his Gertrude’s lips, but still their bland. 
See Oneyda’s Death Song. The.—Campbell. 

“Huzza!” From box and balcony. See Bull, The.— 
Johnson. 

Huzza! Hodgson, we are going. See Lisbon Packet, 
The.—Byron. 

Hyacinth Rondel, the very latest new poet, sat one 
evening not long ago in his elegant new chambers. 
See Woman’s Half-profits, The.—Le Gallienne. 

"Hybnodism,” the German Professor said thought¬ 
fully. See German Professor on Hypnotism, 
The.—Worden. 

Hyd, Absolon, thy gilte tresses clere. See Balade: 
“Hyd, Absolon,” etc.—Chaucer. 

Hyder iadle diddle dell. See Hvder Iddle.—Anon. 

Hymen, late, his love-knots selling. See Who’ll Buy 
my Love-knots?—Moore. 

Hymettus’ bees are out on filmy wing. See Sunflower 
to the Sun, The.—Stebbins. 

Hypocrisy will serve as well. See Hypocrisy.— 
Butler. 

Hyuh, Jack! ole boy, come hyer an' lay down. See 
Trapper’s Last Trail, The.—Morris. 


I 

I, a Princess, King-descended, decked with jewels, 
gilded, drest. See Royal Princess, A.-—Rossetti. 

I address the men who govern us and say to them. 
See Against Curtailing the Right of Suffrage.— 
Hugo. 

I affirm, O Romans, that Appius Claudius is the only 
man. See History of Rome (Virginius as Trib¬ 
une Refuses the Appeal of Appius Claudius).— 
Livy. 

I agree with the honorable gentleman who spoke last. 
See American Taxation.—Burke. 

I ain’t a politician, and never was. I vote for Mr. 
Union. See Artemus Ward’s Advice to Hus¬ 
bands.—Anon. 

I ain’t afeard uv snakes, or toads, or bugs, or worms, 
or mice. See Seein’ Things.—Field. 

I ain’t anybody in particular. See Love on the Half¬ 
shell.—Proudfit. 

I am a bluebird; on branches bare. See Flock of 
Birds, A.—Chase. 

I am a bold fellow. See Young Dandelion, The.—-Craik. 

I am a Cheap Jack. See Doctor Marigold (Cheap Jack, 
The).—Dickens. 

I am a decent, hard-workin’, persecuted man. See 
Burglar’s Grievances, The.—Kyle. 

I am a fisherman, ho, ho, ho. See Little Fisherman, 
The.—Denton. 

I am a friar of orders gray. See same. —O’Keefe. 

I am a Gypsy, you see, friends. See Bundle of Loves, 
A.—Gaddess. 

I am a jovial cobbler, bold and brave. See Jovial 
Cobbler of St. Helen’s, The.—Anon. 

I am a leaf from the tall elm tree. See Autumn Leaves, 
The.—Anon. 

I am a little boy. about so many years old. See 
What a Little Boy Thinks about Things.—Paul. 

I am a little boy, of very little height. See Myself.— 
Gusun. 

I am a little boy, you see. See Speech for a Boy 
Four or Five Years Old.—Kavanaugh. 

I am a little country girl. See Four-year-old, A.— 
Anon. 

I am a little daisy right from the dewy earth. See 
Daisy and Snow-drop.—Anon. 

I am a little man and I wear a little hat. See Love- 
scrape, The.—Kavanaugh. 

I am a little peasant girl. See Pretty Pictures, The.— 
Anon. 

I am a little snow-drop. See What the Snow-drop 
Said.—Anon. 

I am a lone, unfathered chick. See Orphan Born.— 
Burdette. 

I am a lonely bachelor, my name is Jacob Gray. See 
Lament of Jacob Gray, The.—McBride. 

I am a merry little girl. See Recitation for a Very 
Small Girl.—Kavanaugh. 

I am a peevish student, I. See Melancholia.—Anon. 

“I am a pebble! and yield to none!” See Pebble and 
the Acorn, The.—-Gould. 

I am a Prussian! see my colors gleaming. See Prus¬ 
sian National Anthem.—Anon. 

I am a scallywag—that is the truth of it. See Scally¬ 
wag.—Le Row. 


I am a statue of marble. See Statue’s Story, The.— 
Dallas. 

I am a tiny tot. See Opening Address.—Anon. 

I am a very little boy. See Tiny Boy’s Speech, A.— 
Anon. 

I am a very little girl. See Only Five.-—Anon. 

I am a very little thing. See Speech for a Small Boy. 
—Kavanaugh. 

I am a wandering wave of the glorious sea. See Song 
of the Sea.—Anon. 

1 am a white falcon, hurrah! See Falcon, The.—Stod¬ 
dard. 

I am a woful suitor to your honor. See Measure for 
Measure (Sister Pleads for a Brother’s Life, A).— 
Shakespeare. 

I am a woman,—therefore I may not. See Woman’s 
Thought, A.—Gilder. 

I am afraid I’m a little late this morning. See Vice 
Versa.—Goodfellow. 

I am afraid ’taint no sort o’ use, my trying to be 
learned. See Pursuit of Knowledge under Diffi¬ 
culties.—-Anon. 

I am all alone in my chamber now. See Little Boy that 
Died, The.—Robinson. 

I am all out of sorts; I am miserable, I am wretched. 
See Haunted by a Song.—Anon. 

I am all right! Good-bye, old chap! See One Day 
Solitary.—Trowbridge. 

I am always very well pleased with a country Sunday. 
See Spectator, The (Sir Roger de Coverley’s Sun¬ 
day).—Addison. 

I am amazed at the attack which the noble Duke has 
made on me. See Reply to the Duke of Grafton. 
—Thurlow. 

I am an acme of things accomplished. See Song of 
Mysdf (“I am an acme,” etc.).—Whitman. 

I am an officer of the army, stationed at a large, 
rambling post. See True Story of a Brie Cheese, 
The.—French. 

I am an old maid, with gray hair and wrinkled, care¬ 
worn face. See My Valentine.—Hopkins. 

I am an old man, but I know a thing or two. See 
Old Man’s Address to Young Wives, An.—Anon. 

I am, and therefore these. See I am.—Rand. 

I am apt to fancy I have contracted a new acquaint¬ 
ance. See Beau Tibbs, his Character and 
Family.—Goldsmith. 

I am as black as black can be. See What the Coal 
Says.—Anon. 

I am as brown as brown can be. See Brown Girl, The. 
—Anon. 

I am as I am, and so will I be. See Re-cured Lover 
Exult eth in his Freedom, The.—Wyatt. 

I am astonished, shocked, to hear such principles con¬ 
fessed. See American War, The (Horrors of Sav¬ 
age Warfare).—Chatham. 

I am aware of the difficulties 1 have to encounter. See 
Necessity of Reform in Parliament.—Grey. 

I am aware that other cities have claimed the pre¬ 
cedence. See City of New York, The.—Coudert. 

I am aware that the ballot-box. See Ballot-box, The. 
—Chapin. 

I am aware that there is a prejudice against any man. 
See What Intemperance Does.—Anon. 

I am but a little daisy, the children know me well. 
See Daisy, The.—Anon. 

I am but clay in Thy hands, but Thou art the all-lov¬ 
ing artist. See I in Thee, and Thou in Me.— 
Cranch. 

I am but constant as yon constant rocks. See Con¬ 
stancy.—Thomas. 

“I am but dust!” See “Though He Slay!”— 
Tourgee. 

“I am by promise tied.” See Lady of the Lake, The 
(Fitz-James and Roderick Dhu).—Scott. 

I am Captain Dave, you know. See Morning Chat"A. 
—Denton. 

I am charged with pride and ambition. See Zenobia 
(Zenobia’s Defence).—Ware. 

I am coming, I am coming! See Voice of Spring, The. 
—Howitt. 

I am coming, little maiden! See Spring is Coming.— 
Howitt. 

I am content, I do not care. See Careless Content.— 
Byrom. 

I am delighted to see you here. See Rivals, The.— 
Sheridan. 

I am desirous of establishing some kind of relation¬ 
ship. See New Englander as a Citizen, The.— 
Anon. 

I am desolate. See Love’s Despair.—Sigerson. 

“I am down in the mouth. I am out at the pockets!” 
See Wo-begone Lover, A.—Anon. 


685 





I am 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I am dying, Egypt, dying. See Antony and Cleopa¬ 
tra.—Lytle. 

I am enjoined by oath to observe three things. See 
Merchant of Venice, The (Casket Scene, The).— 

I am Ethell, the Son of Conn. See Bard Ethell, The. 
—De Vere. 

I am familiar to all as the American Elm. See Voices 
of the Trees.—Benedict. 

I am far from miaintaining that science is a sufficient 
guide in religon. See True Science and Religion. 
—Hitchcock. 

I am “Father Time.” You have seen me before. See 
Time.—Denton. 

I am for gold—her golden hair. See My Politics.— 
Pierce. 

I am fresh from the conflict—I’m drunk with the 
blood. See Indian Brave, The.—Smith. 

I am getting quite, lonely without you. See Eugene 
Field to his Children.—Field. 

I am glad that the debate has come in again. See 
Presiding Officer’s Address at a Public Debate, 
The.—Aqon. 

I am glad the holidays are over. See .Esthetic Craze, 
The.—McGill. 

I am glad to again be in the city of Buffalo and ex¬ 
change greetings with her people. See President 
McKinley’s Last Speech.—McKinley. 

I am glad to see so many candedates here to-day. See 
“Teacher Wanted.”—Crosby. 

I am God’s little lamb. See Child-song, A.—Mason. 

I am going to give this orange. See My Best Friend.— 
Rook. 

I am growing old, and it is time I had some one to 
take care of me. See Something to our Advan¬ 
tage.—McBride. 

I am half sorry I consented to Tom’s mischievous 
plan. See Indian Raid, An.—Graham. 

I am he that walks with the tender and growing night. 
See Song of Myself (Bare-bosom’d Night).—Whit¬ 
man. 

I am here. And if this is what they call the world. 
See Baby’s Soliloquy, A.—Anon. 

I am here by command of silent lips to speak once and 
for all. See Affairs in Cuba.—Thurston. 

I am here from the North, the frozen North. See 
Song of the North Wind.—Anon. 

I am here to join my fellow-citizens in the congratula¬ 
tions which befit this occasion. See Columbian 
Exposition Opened, The.—Cleveland. 

I am holy while I stand. See To Silvia.—Herrick. 

I am hoping that this will reach you upon your birth¬ 
day. See Eugene Field to his Children.—Field. 

I am hoping that you had a pleasant Christmas. See 
Eugene Field to his Children.—Field. 

“I am hungry,” said the Grave. See Death and the 
Grave.—Anon. 

I am immortal! I know it! I feel it! See Dryad 
Song.—Fuller. 

1 am in earnest, Radcliffe. See Fair Fight, or the 
Wife’s Allowance, A.—Kavanaugh. 

I am in Rome! Oft as the morning ray. See Rome.— 
Rogers. 

I am Jack who built the house. See Some Very 
Famous People.—Denton. 

I am jet black, as you may see. See On Ink.—Swift. 

I am just a little fellow, and I can’t say much. See 
Willie’s Speech.—Anon. 

I am kneeling at the threshold, so weary, faint, and 
sore. See Kneeling at the Threshold.—Guthrie. 

“I am learning how to sew,” said an eager little maid. 
See Little Seamstress, A.— (St. Nicholas.) 

I am little Mother Goose. See Little Mother Goose.— 
Denton. 

I £^n lodged in a house that affords me conveniences 
and comforts. See What a Common Man may 
Say.—Anon. 

I am lying in the tomb, love. See Lament.—Noel. 

I am mamma’s “Blue Eyes.” See Blue Eyes and 
Brown Eyes.—Denton. 

I am met with the objection, “What good will the 
Monument do?” See What Good will the Monu¬ 
ment Do?—Everett. 

“I am Miss Catherine’s book.” See Pen and the 
Album, The.—Thackeray. 

I am monarch of all I survey. See Verses Supposed 
to be Written by Alexander Selkirk.—Cowper. 

I am musing amid the clover. See Summer Eve.— 
Whitehead. 

I am my mamma’s blue eyes. See Best of All, The.— 
Denton. 

I am my papa’s little pet. See Speeches for Tots 
(Speech fora Very Small Child).—Anon. 


I am nae Poet, in a sense. See Epistle to John La- 
praik, An.—Burns. 

I am Nicholas Tachinardi, hunchbacked, look you, and 
a fright. See Hunchbacked Singer, The.— 
Anon. 

I am no love for you, Margaret. See Fair Margaret’s 
Misfortunes.—Anon. 

I am not a prosperous man. See Compensation.— 
Turner. 

I am not daunted, no, I will engage. See Gebir (Shell, 
The).—Landor. 

I am not here to make a speech. See How to Speak 
a Piece.—Davenport. 

I am not [old]—I cannot be old. See Song of Seventy, 
The.—Tupper. 

I am not ignorant, my Lords, that the extraordinary 
construction of law. See Appeal to Lord Avon- 
more.—Curran. 

I am not one of those, sir, who esteem any tribute of 
regard. See Reply to Hayne, The (Matches and 
Over-matches).—W ebster. 

I am not one of those, sir. who would hold out to the 
People vain hopes. See On Preliminary Reform. 
—Russell. 

I am not what I was yesterday. See Butterfly, The.— 
James. 

I am of a band. See “Are You a Mason?”-—Magill. 

I am old and blind! See Milton’s Prayer of Patience. 
—Howell. 

I am only a faded primrose, dvipg for want of air. See 
Bunch of Primroses, A.—Sims. 

I am only a leaf. My home is one of the great trees. 
See Story of a Leaf, The.—Rickoff. 

I am only a little child, and I am afraid I cannot 
speak. See Prologue for a Tiny Tot.-—Anon. 

I am only a little sparrow. See Song of the Sparrow, 
The.—Anon. 

I am only four years old. See Little One’s Speech, 
The.—Anon. 

I am, or rather was, a minister, and was settled. See 
My Double, and how He Undid Me.—Hale. 

I am Policeman 12,004. See Policeman’s Story, The. 
—Birdseye. 

I am proud of being an original Smith. See Smith 
Family, The.—Anon. 

I am quite small to go to school. See Recitation for 
a Boy Three Years Old.—Kavanaugh. 

I am requested to open our performances by a saluta¬ 
tory address. See Salutatory Address.—Anon. 

“I am,” said he, “that spirit Elysian.” See Tears of 
Peace, The (Spirit of Homer, The).—Chapman. 

I am sick of opinions. I weary to hear them. See 
same. —Wesley. 

I am sitting alone by the desolate hearth-stone. See 
Cherished Letters.—Miller. 

I am six years old and I like to play. See Woman¬ 
hood.—Rook. 

I am small, it is true, but great on the stump. See 
Take up the Collection.—Anon. 

I am so glad, dear mother, that I have now time to 
help you.—See Country Cousins.—Anon. 

I am so glad, Nellie, that we are good friends again. 
See flow the Quarrel Began.—Rook. 

I am so glad our Anniversary day has come again. 
See Opening Dialogue.—Anon. 

I am so glad, so very glad. See So Glad.—Denton. 

I am so glad you have come, dear Clara. See Country 
Cousins, The.—Garrett. 

I am so happy, so happy all over. See Summer Vaca¬ 
tion.—Kimball. 

I am so sleepy, sister, I do wish mamma and papa 
would come. See Lost Child. The.-—Anon. 

I am so small, I am afraid. See Speech for a Tiny Lit¬ 
tle Girl.—Anon. 

I am so very near asleep. See Goodnight.—Goodfel- 
low. 

I am so very sorry about my Sophie May. See Three 
Little Mothers.—Denton. 

I am so weak, dear Lord, I cannot stand. See Enough. 
—Havergal. 

I am somethin’ of a vet’ran, just a-turnin’ eighty year 
See Too Progressive for Aim.—Sheldon. 

I am sorry she is out! Tell the brougham to remain. 
See Change of System, A.—Paul. 

I am sorry to tell you the butcher has sent to say that 
his bills must be paid. See Shocking Mistake, A. 
—Pickering. 

I am spring. They call me beautiful spring. See 
Four Seasons, The.—Boyd. 

I am Spring, whose joyous hand. See Seasons, The.— 
Anon. 

I am Storm—the King! See Storm—the King.— 
Finch, 


686 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


I beg 


I am struck with the fact that Bismarck, the great 
statesman of Germany. See same. —Garfield. 

‘I am sure, my dear niece, you will be delighted to 
hear that your cousin Emily.” See Matrimonial 
Tiff, A.—Pickering. 

I am sure you can’t expect great things. See Willie’s 
Speech.—Doolittle. 

I am that sort of a tradesman known all over London 
as a Cheap Jack. See Doctor Marigold.—Dickens. 

I am that which began; out of me the years roll. See 
Hertha.—Swinburne. 

I am the American Eagle. See Eagle Screams, The.— 
Anon. 

I am the breath of Tethra, voice of Tethra. See Sword 
of Tethra, The.—Larminie. 

I am the Burthen-bearer,—I. See Brushwood.—Read. 

I am the Death who am come to you. See Address of 
Death to Tomas de Roiste, The.—Hyde. 

I am the East wind. See Song of the Winds, The.— 
Allen. 

I am the expiation. See Field of Wagram, The.— 
Rostand. 

I am the goddess who presides at every being’s birth. 
See Parcae, The.—Kavanaugh. 

I am the herald of a band of brothers. See Pro¬ 
logue; “1 am the herald of,” etc.—Anon. 

I am the honeysuckle. See Chorus of the Flowers.— 
Wheelock. 

1 am the king of strife and calm. See King Coal to 
Uncle Sam.—Burns. 

I am the little New Year, ho, ho! See New Year, The. 
—( Youth’s Companion.) 

I am the Lord thy God who brought thee out of the 
land of Egypt. See Exodus (First Constitution, 
The).— Bible. 

I am the mashed fireman with breast-bone broken. 
See Song of Myself (Dying Fireman, The).— 
Whitman. 

I am the month of the ice and snow. See Darling of 
the Year, The.—-Anon. 

I am the more indignant at the designs of these infi¬ 
dels. See Infidelity not Friendly to Freedom.— 
Phillips. 

I am the mown grass, dying at your feet. See Mori- 
tura.—Davidson. 

I am the North wind, cruel and cold. See Four Winds, 
The.—Denton. 

I am the radiant Morning Star! See Three Missions, 
The.—Rogers. 

“I am the Resurrection and the Life!” See Only True 
Life, The.—Durant. 

I am the Rock, presumptuous Sea. See Rock and the 
Sea, The.—Stetson. 

I am the rustic golden rod. See Golden Rod, The.— 
Goodwin. 

I am the smallest boy in school. See Good Night.— 
Kavanaugh. i 

I am the smallest, tiniest mite. See Epilogue.—“Bob 
O’Link.” 

I am the spirit astir. See Autochthon.—Roberts. 

I am the spirit of the morning sea. See Ode: “I am 
the spirit,” etc.—Gilder. 

I am the Spring. I come with smiles of gladness. 
See Seasons, The.—Anon. 

I am the sun—-the bright warm sun. See Sun and 
his Satellites, The.—Anon. 

I am the tender voice calling “Away.” See Dana.— 
Russell. 

I am the Twenty-second of February. See Our Holi¬ 
days.—Lloyd. 

I am the Virgin; from this granite ledge. See Way- 
side Virgin, The.—-Mitchell. 

I am thirteen years old and Jill is eleven and a quarter. 
See “Day of Judgment, The.”—Phelps. 

I am this fountain’s God. Below. See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The (River God to Amoret, The).— 
Fletcher. 

I am thy father’s spirit. See Hamlet (Ghost in Ham¬ 
let, The).—Shakespeare. 

I am thy grass, O Lord. See Trust.—Reese. 

I am tired of planning and toiling. See Cry of the 
Dreamer, The.—O’Reilly. 

I am told they triumph.much in this conviction. See 
Appeal to the Jury.—Phillips. 

I am undone- there is no living, none. See All’s 
Well that Ends Well (Love’s Memory).—Shake¬ 
speare. _ ... 

I am very fond of pets. I just love all kinder animals. 
See Billy’s Pets.—Kyle. 

I am very fond of the briny deep. See Salt-water 
Adventures.—Thatcher. 

I am very tired. We will rest here a moment. See 
True Charity.—De Genlis. 


I am very young and little. See “My Three Little 
Texts. ”—Anon. 

I am waiting for the shadows round me lying. See 
Sometime.—Blaisdell. 

I am waiting, humbly waiting. See Waiting on the 
Lord.—Crane. 

I am War. The upturned eyeballs of piled dead men 
greet my eye. See War.—Foss. 

I am watching for the early buds to wake. See First 
Spring Flowers.—-Howland. 

I am weary of long, dull books, love. See Philoso- 
phia Amoris.—G. L. R. 

I am weary wandering from room to room. See 
Hunchback, The (Helen and Modus).—Knowles. 

I am weary with my groaning. See Washington’s 
Vision.—Selkrig. 

I am where snowy mountains round me shine. See 
Genoa.—F aber. 

I am Winter, and ice and snow. See Four Seasons, 
The.—Anon. 

I am Winter. When I come. See Time and the Sea¬ 
sons.—Denton. 

I am! yet what I am who cares, or knows? See Las- 
ciate Ogni Speranza.—Clare. 

I and Clive were friends—and why not? power is pow¬ 
er, my boy. See Lord Clive.—Browning. 

I and my cousin Wildair met. See Praise-God Bare- 
bones.—Cortissoz. 

I appeal to any white man to say, if ever he entered 
Logan’s Cabin hungry. See Logan, a Mingo 
Chief, to Lord Dunmore.—Logan. 

I appeal to History! Tell me, thou reverend chroni¬ 
cler of the grave. See Permanency of Empire, 
The.—-Phillips. 

I appeal to your sober senses; I appeal also to your 
love of freedom. See Appeal for Ireland.—Grattan. 

I arise from dreams of Thee. See Indian Serenade, 
The.—Shelley. 

I ask, in what page of the Constitution you find the 
power of laying an embargo. See Against the 
Embargo, 1808.—Quincy. 

I ask no kind return of love. See Prayer for indiffer¬ 
ence.—Greville. 

I ask not for thy love, O Lord. See same. —Romanes. 

I ask not how the suffering came. See Fraternity.— 
Aldrich. 

I ask not that my bed of death. See Wish, A.— 
Arnold. 

I ask now, Verres, what you have to advance against 
this charge. See Verres Denounced (Cicero 
against Verres).—Cicero. 

I ask the young man who is just forming his habits of 
life. See Opposite Examples.—Mann. 

I ask thee for my home, my fate, my all! See Riche¬ 
lieu; or, The Conspiracy.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

I ask what He would have this evil do for me? See 
Bitter-sweet.—Holland. 

I ask you to-day to consider well. See American 
Citizenship, its Privileges, Rights and Duties.— 
Galvin. 

I asked a bee that was flitting by. See My Question. 
—Anon. 

I asked a blushing rose. See Purpose.—Barrett. 

I asked a maid with a fair young face. See Two An¬ 
swers, The.—Wheeler. 

I asked a sweet robin, one morning in May. See 
Robin’s Song, The.—Anon. 

I asked an aged man, a man of cares [or with hoary 
hairs! See What is Time?—Marsden. 

I asked of Echo, t’other day. See Ego et Echo.— 
Saxe. 

I asked the heavens “What foe to God had done.” 
See Crucifixion, The.—Montgomery. 

I asked the New Year for some message sweet. See 
Message of the New Year, The.—Anon. 

I asked the Sun, “Can’st tell me what love is?” See 
same. —( Galaxy , The.) 

I attended a stance of mesmerism a few years ago. 
See Juggler, The.—Kyle. 

I awoke from the dreams of the night. See Shadows 
on the Curtain.—Dewart. 

I bade thee stay. Too well I know. See Song.—Whit¬ 
man. 

I bear an unseen burden constantly. See Burden of 
Love, The.—-Salters. 

I bear dis cross dis many a mile. See Chant of the 
Cross-bearing Child. The.—Riley. 

I beg pardon, sir, but maybe I’m under a mistake. 
See Gridiron, The.—Anon. 

I beg the pardon of these flowers. See With Lilacs.— 
Crandall, 

I beg you come to-night and dine. See Maecenas Bids 
his Friend to Dine.—Anon. 


687 




I beg 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I beg your pardon, misters. See Up Thar Behind the 
Sky!—Munyon. 

I begin by admiring an aggregate, made up of excel¬ 
lences and triumphs. See Daniel Webster’s Elo¬ 
quence.—Choate. 

I beliebe, Johnson, you are fond ub de fair sex. See 
Girls of the Period, The.—Anon. 

I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey- 
work of the stars. See Song of Myself (Micro¬ 
cosm. The).—Whitman. 

I believe I have the worst memory. See Memory- 
tricks.—Anon. 

I believe I’d like to be a nurse. See Choice of Occu¬ 
pation. (For girls.) —Anon. 

I believe if I should die. See Love’s Belief.—Anon. 

I believe, if there is one word that grown-up folks are 
more found of using. See Don’t.—Rook. 

I believe in the existence of one Mr. Alcohol. See 
Drunkard’s Ten Commandments, The.—Anon. 

I believe it! ’Tis Thou, God, that givest. See Saul. 
—Browning. 

I believe now that my true welfare, and that of others, 
is possible only when I labor. See My Religion.— 
Tolstoi. 

I believe that a leaf of grass is no less than the jour¬ 
ney-work of the stars. See Microcosm, The.— 
Whitman. 

I believe that no people ever yet groaned under the 
heavy yoke of slavery. See American Liberty. 
—Adama. 

I believe that saloon-keepers are morally and socially 
just as good. See Vote the Traffic Down.—St. 
John. 

I believe that the breweries and the saloons are just 
as good and just as bad as the men running them. 
See Citizen and the Saloon System, The.—Dickie. 

I believe there is no permanent greatness to a nation. 
See National Greatness.—Bright. 

I believe there is nothing in nature which so enlaces 
one’s love. See Water in Landscape.—Mitchell. 

I bend above the moving stream. See Solitude and 
the Lily.—Horne. 

I beside the blue-gate lying. See After the Soiree.— 
F. R. D. B. 

I bless Thee, Lord, for sorrows sent. See Made Per¬ 
fect through Suffering.—Johnson. 

I b’lieve I’ll sell the farm, Jane Ann, and buy a house 
in town. See Selling the Farm.—Anon. 

I bloom but once, and then I perish. See II Fior degli 
Eroici Furori.—Symonds 

I bought a dandy outfit. See City Sportsman, The.— 
Hills. 

I breathe, I move, I live! See Perdita.—Jones. 

I breathe a prayer one day. See Empty Prayer, An.— 
Penfield. 

I bring a garland for your head. See Song for the 
Lute.—Gosse. 

I bring fresh showers for the thirsting flowers. See 
Cloud, The —Shelley. 

I bring my hymn of thankfulness. See Thanksgiving, 
A.—Cooke. 

I bring this crown. See May Celebration.—Anon. 

I bring you these little song-blossoms. See same. — 
Larcom. 

I broke one day a slender stem. See Spray of Honey¬ 
suckle, A.—Bradley. 

I brought this card from the General Agency Office, 
sir. See Nicholas Nickleby (Nicholas Nickleby 
Seeking a Situation).—Dickens. 

I build my nest on the mountain’s Crest. See Song of 
the American Eagle.—Anon. 

I built my castle upon the sea-side. See St. Margaret’s 
' Eve.—Allingham. 

I burn no incense, hang no wreath. See Votive Song. 
—Pinkney. 

I cahnt endure the stoopid, wude. See Unpardonable 
Sin, The.—Anon. 

I call that mind free which masters the senses. See 
Spiritual Freedom.—Channing. 

I call that [the Book of Job], aside from all theories 
about it. See On Heroes and Hero Worship (“ I 
call*that,” etc.).—Carlyle. 

I call the war with our brethren in America an unjust 
and felonious war. See Conquest of the Americans 
Impracticable.—-Wilkes. 

I call thee coward? I’ll see thee hanged ere. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I. (Prince Henry and Falstaff). 
—Shakespeare. 

I call upon those whom I address to stand up for the 
nobility of labor. See Nobility of Labor.— 
Dewey. 

I call upon you. fathers, by the shades of your ances¬ 
tors. See Appeal for Liberty, An.—Story. 


I call you bad, my little child. See Bad Child’s Book 
of Beasts, The.—Belloc. 

I called him the Old Man, but he wuzn’t an old man. 
See Old Man, The.—Field. 

I called on dreams and visions to disclose. See Skep¬ 
tic, The.—Wordsworth. 

I called on Love and I said. See Recompense, The.— 
Anon. 

I came, but she was gone. See Bride, The.—Sigourney. 

I came, but they had passed away. See Weary Soul, 
The.—Anon. 

I came in light that I might behold. See Parable of 
the Spirit, A.—Goodchild. 

I came into the city and none knew me. See Upper 
Chamber, An.—Bannerman. 

I came not here to seek for fame. See Our Flag.—Anon. 

I came to a great city. See Beethoven.—Gilder. 

I came to a laund of white and green. See Cuckoo 
and the Nightingale, The.—Chaucer. 

I came to town the other day. See My Daughter Jane. 
—Flowers. 

I came to-night to try to preach. See Boy’s Sermon, 
The.—Anon. 

I came upon a drawer to-day. See Sic Passim.— 
Ardagh. 

I can afford to despise critics so long as I am conscious. 
See Self-respect.—Cato. 

I can almost see to the land of light. See Seeing 
Through.—Anon. 

lean as well be hang’d. See Julius Caesar (“ I can as 
well,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

I can bear it no longer—this diabolical invention. 
See Book of Snobs, The (Snobs).—Thackeray. 

I can do the question easy enough, but when it comes 
to proving it, that’s too much. See Proving the 
Question.—Anon. 

I can get that boy to drink this glass of wine. See 
Noble Answer, A.—Anon. 

I can never picture to you the rich red nose. See 
Discourse by the Rev. Mr. Bosan.—Eggleston. 

I can picture her now. See same. —G. D. 

I can ride a horse. See What I can Do.—Denton. 

‘‘I can scarcely hear,” she murmured, ‘‘for my heart 
beats low and fast.” See Hush.—Procter. 

I can see him pale and slender. See Nathan Hale.— 
Cone. 

I can see you’re a gentleman. See Told at the Tavern. 
—Havens. 

I can tell just how it happened, though it’s fifty years 
ago. See For a Warning.—Le Row. 

‘‘I can!” Yes, sir—we know you can! See ‘‘I Can!” 
—Anon. 

I cannot always trace the way. See God is Love.— 
Anon. 

I cannot be a Washington. See Something Better.— 
Denton. 

I cannot boast of learning deep. See Comforting 
Reflections of a Nonentity.—Williams. 

I cannot, cannot say. See Under the Cross.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

I cannot change as others do. See Constancy.—Roch¬ 
ester. 

I cannot check my thought these days. See Vagrant, 
A.—Pollard. 

I cannot choose but think upon the time. See Brother 
and Sister.—-Eliot. 

I cannot choose; I should have liked so much. See 
Martha or Mary?—Mason. 

I cannot conceive anything more excellent. See Study 
of Eloquence, The.—Cicero. 

I cannot count the ways my soul has tried. See Sub¬ 
mission .—Allen. 

I cannot describe the horror and disgust which I felt 
at hearing Mr. Percival. See False Notions of 
Government Vigor.—Smith. 

‘‘I cannot do much,” said a little star. See Best that 
I Can, The.—Anon. 

I cannot doubt that they whom ye deplore. See Ex¬ 
cursion, The ("I cannot doubt,” etc.).—Words¬ 
worth. 

I cannot eat but little meat. See Jolly Good Ale and 
Old— Still. 

I cannot endure the thought that Christ’s children 
should be less free. See same. —Beecher. 

I cannot find Thee! Still on restless pinion. See 
Quest, The.—Scudder. 

I cannot forbear recalling how many names and events 
wreathing like garlands. See Pilgrim Commem¬ 
oration, The.—Long. 

I cannot forget my Joe. See Poor French Sailor’s 
Scottish Sweetheart, A.—Cory. 

I cannot heal thy green gold breast. See To the Hum¬ 
ming-bird.—Very. 


688 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


I deem 


I cannot look above and see. See Clouds, The.—Cros- 
well. 

I cannot make him dead! See My Child.—Pierpont. 

I cannot, my lords, I will not, join in congratulation 
on misfortune and disgrace. See American War, 
The (Speech on the American War).—Chatham. 

I cannot paint a single line of her dear head. See 
Portrait, The.—Bowman. 

I cannot paint what then I was. See Lines Com¬ 
posed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, etc. 
(Varying Impressions from Nature).—Words¬ 
worth. 

I cannot put the heavy shot. See Specialist, A.— 
Easton. 

I cannot rest or walk these halls by night. See Well 
of Death, The.—Anon. 

I cannot say, and I will not say. See Away.—Riley. 

I cannot say, beneath the pressure of life’s cares to¬ 
day. See Amen!—Browning. 

I cannot sing the old songs. See Songs without 
W ords.—Burdette. 

I cannot sing to thee as I would sing. See Ecstasy.— 
Mackay. 

I cannot speak, I’ve got a cough. See Bad Cold, A.— 
McBride. 

I cannot speak of the New England town-meeting 
without recalling its great genius. See Cen¬ 
tennial Celebration of Concord Fight (Father of 
the Revolution, The).—Curtis. 

I cannot stand in this generous presence. See Signifi¬ 
cance of the Span! | v i War, The.—Long. 

I cannot tell the spell (hat binds thine image. See 
same. —Ketchum. 

I cannot tell you, Genevieve, how oft it comes to me. 
See Old Reading Class, The.—Carleton. 

I cannot tell you much to do. See What not to Do.— 
Anon. 

I cannot think but God must know. See same. —Holm. 

I cannot think of them as dead. See My Dead.—Hos- 
mer. 

I cannot think that thou shouldst pass away. See 
Sonnet: “I cannot think,” etc.—Lowell. 

I cannot vouch my tale is true. See Romance of Nick 
Van Stann, The.—Saxe. 

I can’t imagine what keeps John so late! See Burglar 
Alarm, The.—Graham. 

I Can’t” is a sluggard, too lazy to work. See “I 
Can’t” and “I Can.”—Butler. 

I can’t just tell what’s come to her, an’ yet I think it’s 
clear. Dreaming of Home.—Stanton. 

I can’t make out for the life of me, what ails my eyes 
to-night. See Sunset in the Orchard.—Osgood. 

I can’t quite thread my needle yet. See Little Seam¬ 
stress, The.—Anon. 

‘‘I can’t take that nickel,” said a horse-car conductor. 
See Mutilated Currency Question, The.—( Brook¬ 
lyn Eagle.) 

I can’t tell much about the thing, ’twas done so power¬ 
ful quick. See Railroad Crossing, The.—Strong. 

I care not for these ladies. See Amaryllis.—Campion. 

I care not, Fortune, what you me deny. See Castle of 
Indolence, The (Freedom of Nature).—Thomson. 

I care not how you have been blest. See My Lover.— 
—Anon. 

I care not, though it be. See My Little Saint.—Norris. 

I care nothing for passing renown. See same. —Chal¬ 
mers. 

I, Catherine, am a Douglas born. See King’s Tragedy, 
The.—Rossetti. 

I celebrate myself and sing myself. See Song of 
Myself (Myself).—Whitman. 

I challenge not the oracle. See Sundered.—Morse. 

I chanced, one afternoon, to pass. See When I Was 
Young.—Anon. 

I chant projected a thousand blooming cities. See 
Expansion.—Whitman. 

I charge you, O winds of the West. See Love Trilogy, 
A.—Blind. 

I charm thy life. See Curse of Kehama, The. 
—Southey. 

I chatter over stony ways. See Brook, The.— 
Tennyson. 

I climbed the dark brow of the mighty Helvellyn. 
See Helvellyn.—Scott. 

I Colyn Clout. See Colyn Cloute.—Skelton. 

I come before you with this beautiful flag in my hand. 
See Our Flag.—Anon. _ 

I come from busy haunts of men. See Cynic of the 
Woods, The.—Martin. 

I come from haunts of coot and hern. See Brook, The. 
—Tennyson. 

I come from nothing; but from where. See Modern 
Poet, The.—Meynell. 


I come from the depths of the mountain. See Moun¬ 
tain Brook, A.—Judkins. 

I come from the distant frozen zones. See Seasons, 
The.—Home. 

I come half voiceless here and bring. See At my 
Father’s Grave.—Hayne. 

I come, I come! ye have called me long. See Voice of 
Spring, The.—Hemans. 

I come mid frost and snow to usher in the New Year. 
See Twelve Months, The.—Johnson. 

I come not here to talk. You know too well. See 
Rienzi’s Address to the Romans.—Mitford. 

I come now to the war of 1812—-a war which I well 
remember. See On Mr Foot’s Resolution in 
the U. S. Senate, Jan. 21, 1830 (South during the 
War of 1812, The).—Hayne. 

I come to add the final reason why the workingman. 
See Consolations of Literature, The.—Choate. 

I come to visit thee agen. See To a Cyclamen.—Lan- 
dor. 

I come, ye lovely wild-wood groves. See In the Woods. 
—M’Pherson. 

“I come your sin-rid souls to shrive.” See Father 
F rancis.—Pollock. 

I confess I feel a degree of disgust. See Arraignment 
of Ministers.—Burke. 

I confess it, I am keenly sensitive to “skyey influences.” 
See Yankee Gypsies.—Whittier. 

I confess the pictures of the mere industrial value. 
See Higher Views of the Union.—Phillips. 

I congratulate you, my [brave] countrymen and fellow- 
soldiers.— See To the Army before Quebec.— 
Wolfe. 

I congratulate you to-day. See Our Country.—Har¬ 
rison. 

I conjure you, by that which you profess. See Mac¬ 
beth.—Shakespeare. 

I consider that a conversation by telephone. See 
Telephonic Conversation, A.—Clemens. 

I [continued in the churchyard, reading the various. 
See Rosamund Gray (In the Churchyard).— 
Lamb. 

I could a tale unfold, whose lightest word. See Hamlet. 
-—Shakespeare. 

I could have stemmed misfortune’s tide. See Wife, 
The.—Dinnies. 

I could not bear to see those eyes. See Protest, The.— 
Lowell. 

I could not speak what yet I often wished to say. See 
Unlocked.—Fitch. 

I could not waste myself. I had to make my own way 
in the world. See same. —St. John. 

T could resign that eye of blue. See Resignation.— 
Moore. 

I count my time by times that I meet thee. See same. 
—Gilder. 

I count my treasures o’er with care. See Christmas 
Treasures.—Field. 

I count this thing to be grandly true. See Grada- 
tim (Only in Dreams).—Holland. 

I, country-born an’ bred, know where to find. See 
Biglow Papers, The (Biglow Papers, No. 6).— 
Lowell. 

I crave, dear Lord. See Ike Walton’s Prayer.—Riley. 

I crossed the Forum to the foot of the Palatine. See 
Coliseum, The.—Longfellow. 

I dance and dance! Another faun. See Dancers, The. 
Field. 

I dare not ask a kiss. See To Electra.—Herrick. 

I dare not think that thou art by, to stand. See In¬ 
finity.—Savage. 

“I dare not!” Were those cowardly words. See 
Courage.—Anon. 

I dealt the “game” for twenty years. See Gambler’s 
Last Deal, The.—Preston. 

I declare how unfortunate it is. See Aunt Jemima’s 
Money.—Bellows. 

I declare it vas too bad. I hav’n’t seen my Carl for 
dree weeks. See All in der Family.—McDermott 
and Trumble. 

I declare, Jeremiah, it’s perfectly ridiculous that you 
haven’t stepped off yet! See Syke’s Predicament. 
—Anon. 

I declare, John, you’re the stupidest man to-day I ever 
saw. See Going to See the Actors.—Anon. 

I declare! my head seems bursting. See Soliloquy by 
a Girl of the Period.—Anon. 

I declare that it’s nothing but ignorant stuff. See 
Popular Error, A.—Starkie. 

I declare, wife, that was an awful accident. See Paper 
Don’t Say, The.—Anon. 

I deem his faith the best. See True Faith, The.—Bur¬ 
leigh. 


689 






I deem 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I deem it a very great honor to have been invited by 
the Suffolk Bar Association. See Address at the 
Unveiling of the Statue of Rufus Choate.—Choate. 

I deemed thy garments, O my Hope, were grey. See 
Hope Overtaken.—-Rossetti. 

I dell you all apout vot dook blace mit me lasht sum¬ 
mer. See How “Sockery” Set a Hen.—Anon. 

I dells you, now, vot happen voss. See Mr. Sprechel- 
heimer’s Mistake.—Crane. 

I dess dere’s somfin de matter, dere’s mice on de pan¬ 
try shelf. See In Trouble.—Pollard. 

I devise to end my days in a tavern drinking. See 
Jovial Priest’s Confession, The.—Hunt. 

I did but look and love awhile. See Enchantment, 
The.—Otway. 

“I did not bite that pear,” she said. See Transposed. 
—Anon. 

I did not choose thee, dearest. It was love. See To 
Manon, on his Fortune in Loving Her.—Blunt. 

I did not even know her name. See Flirtation on the 
Cars, A.—( University of Chicago Weekly.) 

I did not read books the first summer; I hoed beans. 
See Walden (Sounds).—Thoreau. 

I did not take the temporary editorship of an agricul¬ 
tural paper without misgivings. See How I 
Edited an Agricultural Paper.—Clemens. 

I did not think that I should find them there. See 
Clerks, The.—Robinson. 

I did not want to make a speech. See Speech for a 
Boy.—Anon. 

I did not want to speak to-night. See Speech for a 
Ten-year-old Boy.—Anon. 

I did not write the line that has been tampered with 
hastily. See Letter to Mr. Johnson (Printer).— 
Cowper. 

I didn’t have one bit o’ fear. See When Ma Was Near. 
—Anon. 

I didn’t know you were back. See Dolly Dialogues 
(Matter of Duty, A).—Hope. 

I didn’t mean to hurt you, I am very sorry. See Sweet 
Answer, A.-—Anon. 

I didn’t take it, indeed, not I. See Dog’s Confession, 
The.—W eatherly. 

I died, they wrapped me in a shroud. See Dream of 
Death, A.—Jennison. 

I dined with a friend in the East, one day. See Sun¬ 
beam, The.—Anon. 

I dink dot der didle of dis bieces. See Dissibation.— 
Anon. 

I do affirm that thou hast saved the race. See Delay. 
—Bates. 

I do believe though I have found them not. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (“I do believe,” etc.).— 
Byron. 

I do confess, in many a sigh. See Lying.—Moore. 

I do confess, the over-forward tongue. See On His 
Majesty’s Recovery from the Small-pox.—Cart- 
right. 

I do confess thou’rt smooth and fair. See To His For¬ 
saken Mistress.—Ayton. 

I do confess thou’rt sweet, yet find. See I do Confess 
Thou’rt Sweet.—Ayton. 

I do not ask—dear love—not I. See Song, A.—Wilson. 

I do not ask, O Lord, that life may be. See Per Pacem 
ad Lucem.—Procter. 

I do not believe in violent changes, nor do I expect 
them. See Democracy.—Lowell. 

I do not call him an early riser who. See Sketch of 
the ‘ ‘Old Coaching Days,” A.—Poole. 

I do not come to weep above thy pall. See Elegy on 
the Death of Dr. Channing.—Lowell. 

I do not count the hours I spend. See Waldeinsam- 
keit.—Emerson. 

I do not dread an alter’d heart. See Foreboding, A.— 
Currie. 

I do not know that the hands are weak. See Patriotic 
Recitations.—Anon. 

I do not know what I want. See Eh! What Is It?— 
Kavanaugh. 

I do not know why in the year 1899 this Republic. 
See Our Duty to the Philippines.—McKinley. 

I do not like to hear him pray. See Bad Prayers.— 
Alcott. 

I do not like to mind the sheep. See Some Noted 
Characters.—Denton. 

I do not love thee for that fair. See same. —Carew. 

I do not love thee less for what is done. See Masque 
of Pandora, The (“I do not love,” etc.).— 
Longfellow. 

I do not love thee!—no! I do not love thee! See I Do 
not Love Thee.—Norton. 

I do not murmur, nay, I thank Thee, God. See Judas 
Maccabaeus.—Longfellow. 


I do not own an inch of land. See Strip of Blue, A.— 
Larcom. 

I do not propose to dwell on the special relations of 
Daniel Webster to Dartmouth College. See 
Statue of Webster.—Chamberlain. 

I do not rise to fawn and cringe to this House. See 
On the Irish Disturbance Bill.—O’Connell. 

I do not rise to waste the night in words. See Cati¬ 
line (Catiline’s Defiance).—Croly. 

I do not say, elect this candidate or that candidate. 
See Appeal for the Cause of Liberty, An.—Har¬ 
rington. 

‘‘I do not see any peculiarity about your people.” 
See Arkansas Traveller, The.—( Arkansaw Travel¬ 
ler.) 

I do not see why God should e’en permit some things 
to be. See Amen (“I do not see,” etc.).— 
Browning. 

I do not stand up in this presence. See Blue and the 
Gray, The.—Lodge. 

I do not think I should exaggerate if I said. See 
Eloquence of O’Connell, The.—Phillips. 

I do not think it best. See Short Temperance Speech 
A.—Anon. 

I do not think it is quite just. See Speech for a Boy. 
—Kavanaugh. 

I do not think she loves me yet. See Eleanor.—Boynton. 

I do not understand. Why am I here? See Deme¬ 
trius.—Runcie. 

I do not wonder that great earls value their trees. See 
Historic Trees.—Smith. 

I do really believe I shall be glad when the holi¬ 
days are over. See Through Children’s Eyes.— 
Anon. 

I do remember an apothecary. See Romeo and 
Juliet.—Shakespeare. 

I do remember me that in my youth. See Manfred 
(Coliseum, The).—Byron. 

I do wish it would quit raining. See Playing Fourth 
of July.—Burlingame. 

I do wonder what time the two o’clock train leaves. 
See Scene in a Railway Station.—McBride. 

I don’d [or don’t] lofe you now von schmall little bit. 
See Go Vay, Becky Miller, Go Vay!—Anon. 

I don’d vas preeching voman’s righdts. See Der Oak 
und der Vine.—Adams. 

I don’t appwove this hawid waw. See Swell’s Solilo¬ 
quy on the War, A.—Anon. 

‘‘I don’t ask you for more than a guinea,” said Mrs. 
Hilary. See Dolly Dialogues (Slight Mistake, A). 

• —Hope. 

I don’t believe I can ever do it! See Valentine, The.— 
Anon. 

I don’t believe in telling fibs. See Her Dilemma.— 
McVey. 

I don’t believe, Nell, there ever was such a thing as a 
ghost. See Seeing a Ghost.—Crouch. 

I don’t belong to the ’Stablished Church. See Three 
Parsons, The.—Anon. 

I don’t care, Charlie, if you are my only brother. See 
Hiring Help.—Crosby. 

I don’t expect to do great things here. See Artemus 
Ward’s Mormon Lecture.—Browne. 

I don’t go much on “loyalty” in these degenerate days. 
See Modern Loyalty.—Anon. 

I don’t go much on religion. See Little Breeches.— 
Hayt 

I don’t know any greatest treat. See Parterre, The.— 
Palmer. 

I don’t know how it is that boys. See Speech for a 
Boy of Eight or Nine.—Kavanaugh. 

I don’t know much about this kind of thing. See At 
the Rug Auction.—Baldwin. 

“I don’t know what day of the month it is!” See 
Christmas Carol, A (Scrooge Fulfils his Vow).— 
Dickens. 

I don’t know what upon airth has come over John. 
See Storm, The.—Anon. 

I don’t know who makes New England weather. See 
New England Weather.—Clemens. 

I don’t know why I has to tote. See “Pa Never Does.” 

-—Anon. 

I don’t know why Josiah doesn’t come. See Josiah’s 
First Courting.—Anon. 

‘ ‘I don’t like grandma at all,” said Fred. See Cause for 
Complaint.—Anon. 

I don’t like horses that will not spring. See What I 
Don’t Like.—Anon . 

I don’t like John Jayne. See Acting Drunk.—Mc¬ 
Bride. 

I don’t like Mr. Travers as much as I did. See Adven¬ 
tures of Jimmy Brown, The (Jimmy Brown’s 
Steam Chair).—Alden. 


690 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


I give 


I don’t like your chopped music any way. See Poet 
at the Breakfast-table, The (Fashionable Piano 
Music).—Holmes. 

I don’t [or don’d] lofe you now von schmall little 
bit. See Go Vay, Becky Miller, Go Vay.— 
Anon. 

I don’t see my advertisement. Oh, here it is. See 
Satisfied All Round.—Anon. 

I don’t see what I’ve done to hurt her. See ’Toinette’s 
Philip (Mouse, The).—Jamison. 

I don’t see why the big folks all. See Mud Cakes.— 
Anon. 

I don’t think I feel much older; I'm aware I’m rather 
gray. See Archbishop and Gil Bias, The.— 
Holmes. 

I don’t want to compel you. See My Neighbor’s Call. 
-—Peck. 

I don’t want to hear naughty words. See Naughty 
Words.—Anon. 

I don’t want to 'pear oncanny. See Hayseed’s Im¬ 
pression of the Snap Shot Man, The.—Anon. 

“I don’t want to play in your yard.” See same. — 
Anon. 

I don’t wear dresses any more. See Almost a Man.— 
Anon. 

I doubt whether two young birds could have known 
less. See David Copperfield (Housekeeping).— 
Dickens. 

I doubt whether we can select an illustration of the 
mechanical progress. See Printing Press, The.— 
Chapin. 

I dream of Flo, and memory, fleeting light. See I 
Dream of Flo.—Davis. 

I dream of it, tossing about in my skiff. See Little 
Brown Cabin, The.—Larcom. 

I dreamed I saw a little brook. See Vision of Children, 
A.—Ashe. 

I dream’d that I woke from a dream. See Song.—Mac¬ 
donald. 

I dreamed a dream: I dreamt that I espied. See 
Shadow, The.—Clough. 

I dreamed a dream in the midst of my slumbers. See 
Bachelor Sale, The.—Anon. 

I dreamed a dream next Tuesday week. See My 
Dream.—Anon. 

I dreamed so dear a dream of you last night! See 
Forgiven.—Jackson. 

I dreamed that, as I wandered by the way. See Ques¬ 
tion, The.—Shelley. 

“I dreamed that we were lovers still.” See Reunited 
Love.—Blackmore. 

I dreamed two spirits came—one dusk as night. See 
Two Spirits, The.—Kenyon. 

I dreamt a dream! What can it mean? See Angel, 
The.—Blake. 

I dreamt it! such a funny thing. See What the 
Prince of I Dreamt.—Cholmondeley-Pennell. 

I drew her head. See Kathrina.—Holland. 

I drew it from its china tomb. See Dead Letter, A.— 
Dobson. 

I drove my old horse, Dobbin, full slowly toward the 
town. See Passing of the Horse.—Anon. 

I du believe in Freedom’s cause. See Biglow Papers, 
The (Candidate’s Creed, The).—Lowell. 

I dug, beneath the cypress shade. See Grave of Love, 
The.—Peacock. 

I dunno what’s the reason thet about this season. 
See Just about These Days.—Wordene. 

I dwell on a beautiful island. See Island of Home, 
The.—Bailey. 

I dwelt alone. See Eulalie.—Poe. 

I earnestly hope that this resolution will be adopted 
by the house. See Tomb of Washington, The.— 
Savage. 

I entered, upon a day, at the house of my friend (the 
grocer). See “Estrangement.”—Coggswell. 

I envy not Endymion now no more. See Aurora, 
Sonnets from.—Alexander. 

I envy not, in any moods. See In Memoriam. 
—Tennyson. 

I explain the silvered passing of a ship at night. See 
I Explain.—Crane. 

I fain would ask thee to forget. _ See same. —Anon. 

I fear no power a woman wields. See same. —Mc- 
Gaffey. 

I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden. See To -: I 

fear thy kisses, etc.—Shelley. 

I feed a flame within, which so torments me. See 
Hidden Flame.—Dryden. 

I feel a newer life in every gale. See Reign of May, 
The.—Percival. 

I feel a poem in my heart to-night. See Embryo.— 
Townsend. 


I feel so vexed with Ben that I really must. See 
Book of Thanks, The.—Anon. 

I feel that I am admired by all the young ladies. See 
Vanity Vanquished.—McBride. 

I feel that the honor which you have conferred upon 
me. See Toast—to the Ladies, A.—Oswald. 

I feel that thou art near, mother. See Soldier’s 
Mother, The.—Anon. 

I feel the breath of the summer night. See Summer 
Night, A.—Stoddard. 

I feel the usual diffidence that should characterize. 
See After Dinner Speech before the Harvard Club 
of New York.—Howland. 

I feel, when I have sinned, an immediate reluctance to 
go to Christ. See same. —McCheyne. 

I fell asleep, and slept an hour or two. See Legende 
of Goode Women, The (Queen Alcestis and the 
God of Love).—Chaucer. 

I fell in love with Arabella Appleby when I was very 
young. See My Sweetheart’s Baby Brother.—- 
Dallas. 

I fell in love with Phyllis Brown. See Amateur Pho¬ 
tography.—Dole. 

I felt in no mood for entertaining. See “Good Night.” 
—Kaylor. 

I fill my pipe ’mid thoughts of thee. See I Fill my 
Pipe.—A. M. S. 

I fill this cup to one made up. See Health, A.— 
Pinkney. 

I find myself compelled to believe that science is a 
rule or law of God. See Value of Science.— 
Cooper. 

I find that one of the most serious objections. See 
Out of the Hurly Burly (Catching the Morning 
Train).—Clark. 

I fint ’at ’is worl’ is too bad for nuffin’. See Tommy’s 
Twials.—Anon. 

I first came to understand anything. See Man with¬ 
out a Country, The.—Hale. 

I flare from a slender candle small. See Candle¬ 
light’s Lament, The.—( Punch Bowl.) 

I flatter myself that I have now got into a business 
which suits me. See Closing of the “Eagle,” 
The.—McBride. 

I flung me round him. See Water-nymph and the 
Boy, The.—Noel. 

I flunked to-day, “I’m not prepared.” See I Flunked 
To-day.—Terhune. 

I for fame have no desire. See Fame.— (Wrinkle.) 

I for thy sake was pierced with heavy sorrow. See 
Good Friday.—Savonarola. 

I fought under Lee and Stonewall. See Enlisted.— 
Hall. 

I found a flower in a desolate plot. See Black Wall¬ 
flower, The.—Kemble. 

“I found a Rome of common clay,” imperial Caesar 
cried. See Burning of Chicago, The.—Taylor. 

I found a yellow flower in the grass. See Summer 
Sanctuary, A.—Ingham. 

I found beside a meadow brooklet bright. See Kin¬ 
ship.—McKnight. 

I found fault, some time ago, with Maria Ann’s cus¬ 
tard pie. See Husband’s Experience in Cooking, 
A.—Anon. 

I found him openly wearing her token. See Con¬ 
quest, A.—Pollock. 

I found my friend in his easy chair. See My Friend’s 
Secret.—Shillaber. 

I found my old dolls in the attic to-day. See My 
Dolls.—Davis. 

I found the phrase to every thought. See Utterance. 
—Dickinson. 

I found them in a book last night. See Souvenir, A.— 
Anon. 

I gaed to spend a week in Fife. See Annuity, The.— 
Out ram. 

I gave into a brown and tirf'd hand. See Christmas 
Roses.—Smith. 

I gave my life for thee. See same. —Havergal. 

I gave my love a fan before she knew. See Love’s 
Gifts.-—Anon. 

I gave my soldier-boy a blade. See Soldier Boy, The. 
—Maginn. 

I gazed upon the glorious sky. See June.—Bryant. 

I geeps me von leetle schtore town Proadway. See 
Mr. Schmidt’s Mistake.—;Adams. 

I get so tired ’cause I’m only just me. See “Just Me.” 
—Denton. 

I give immortal praise. See same. —Watts. 

I give my heart to thee, O mother-land. See I Give 
my Heart to Thee.—O’Grady. 

I give thee all, I can no more. See Stewed Duck and 
Peas.— (Punch.) 


691 






I give 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I give thee treasures hour by hour. See Then.— 
Cooke. 

I glanced through the curtain’s fold. See June in 
January.—Munkittrick. 

I go to concert, party, ball—what profit is in these? 
See My Rival.—Kipling. _ • 

I go to knit two clans together. See Wedding of the 
Clans, The.—De Vere. 

I go to prove my soul. See Paracelsus (“I go to prove,” 
etc.).—Browning. 

I goes to Utica last week, and I meets a frint. See 
Dutchman’s Cheese, The.—Anon. 

I got a position to take the census. See Census 
Enumerator, The.—Thatcher. 

I got acquainted very quick. See Getting Acquainted. 

—Dayre. 

I got me flowers to strew Thy way. See Easter.— 
Herbert. 

I got soom leedle schokes to tell. See Dot Dutchman 
in der Moon.—Thorpe. 

I got to thinkin’ of her, both her parents dead and 
gone. See So I Got to Thinkin’ of Her.—Riley. 

I got to thinkin’ of him—as sometimes a feller will. 
See James Whitcomb Riley.—Burdette. 

I gratefully acknowledge your courtesy, veterans and 
members. See Memorial Day.—Long. 

I grew assured, before I asked. See Angel in the 
House, The (Sweet Meeting of Desires).—Pat¬ 
more. 

I grieve to say it, but our people, I think, have not 
generally agreeable voices. See Autocrat of the 
Breakfast-table, The (Human Voice, The).— 
Holmes. 

I grinda de org’ and I plays de fid’. See Race Preju¬ 
dice.—Anon. 

I groan as I put out my nets on the say. See Island 
Fisherman, An.—Tynan-Hinkson. 

“I guess I haf to gif up my delephone already.” 

See Dutchman’s Telephone, The.—( Detroit Free 
Press.) 

“I guess I haf my telephone took out of my house.” 

See “Shake’s Telephone.”—Lewis. 

I guess this’s er right place—hie! See Reformed Mor¬ 
mon Tippler, The.—McBride. 

I habe been studying geology lately, Johnson. See 
Bones as Geologist.—Anon. 

I had a beautiful garment. See Moth-eaten.— 
Sangster. 

I had a chair at every hearth. See Lamentation of 
the Old Pensioner, The.—Yeats. 

I had a dove and the sweet dove died. See Dove, 
The.—Keats. 

I had a dream!—my spirit was unbound. See Dream, 
The.—Browning. 

I had a dream, one glorious, summer night. See 
Beauty.—Winter. 

I had a dream, which was not all a dream. See Dark¬ 
ness.—Byron. 

I had a flock of chickens. See My Poultry Yard.— 
Anon. 

I had a fortune left to me a short time ago, Johnson. 

See Bones in Luck.—Anon. 

I had a friend once, and she was to me. See same. — 
Anon. 

I had a garden when I was a boy. See Purple Asters. 

—Eaton. 

I had a hat—it was not all a hat. See Old Hat, The.— 
Anon. 

I had a little chamber in the house. See Aurora 
Leigh (Aurora’s Home).—Browning. 

I had a little daughter. See Changeling, The.— 
Lowell. 

I had a little yellow bird. See same. — (St. Nicholas.) 

I had a love in soft south land. See Love from the 
North.—Rossetti. 

“I had a lover once,” she sighed. See Her Perfect 
Lover.—Bridges. 

I had a message to send her. See Sent to Heaven.— 
Procter. 

I had a schoolmate who had come into school. See 
Lesson in Reading, A.—Hunt. 

I had a silver buckle. See Buckle, The.—Ramal. 

I had a singular dream last night. See Dream of the 
“Fat Contributor.”—Griswold. 

I had a treasure in my house. See Lost and Found.— 
Mason. 

I had a true-love, none so dear. See Fortune’s Wheel. 

—De Tabley. 

I had a vision. All the years. See Vision, A.— 
Gates. 

I had an improved back yard. See London Bee Story 
A.—Quiz. 

I had an uncle once,—a man. See Uncle, The.—Bell. 

692 


I had come from the city early. See Reductio ad 
Absurdum.—Baker. 

I had for some time entertained a strong conviction. 
See Out of the Hurly Burly (My First Political 
Speech).—Clark. 

1 had found out a sweet green spot. See Lily of the 
Valley, The.—Percival. 

I had found the secret of a garret-room. .See Aurora 
Leigh (Poets, The).—Browning. 

I had gone on a visit to Holmesdale, a little town in 
the North of England. See Race for Life, A.— 
Anon. 

I had heard it was considerable of a store. See My 
Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s (Josiah Allen’s 
Wi f e at A. T. Stewart’s Store).—Holley. 

I had heard the muskets’ rattle of the April running 
battle. See Grandmother’s Story of Bunker Hill 
Battle.—Holmes. 

I had lately the pleasure of making a visit. See 
Visit to Thompkinsville University, A.—Anon. 

I had left school and lived with my grandmother in a 
big, gloomy house, all alone. See I Love You.— 
Anon. 

I had my birth where stars were born. See My Birth. 
—Savage. 

I had never had chances of schools and learning, you 
see. See Robert.—Bishop. 

I had never seen him before. See My First Interview 
with Artemus Ward.—Clemens. 

I had no time to hate. See No Time to Hate.—Dick¬ 
inson. 

I had position high and holy. See Confession of a 
Drunkard.—Anon. 

I had rather as a forgiven child, with all the pros¬ 
pects of the future. See same. —Brooks. 

I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. (Rhymers).—Shakespeare. 

I had rather you were beside me, love. See Lover to 
his Lady-love, A.—Hastings. 

I had ridden over hurdles up the country once or twice. 
See Open Steeplechase. The.—Anon. 

I had seen him in battle, and he was a man. See 
Tragedy of Sedan, A.—Rohlfs. 

I had six Moorish nurses, but the seventh was not a 
Moor. See Moor Calaynos, The.—Lockhart. 

I had sworn to be a bachelor, she had sworn to be a 
maid. See Platonic.—Ferrett. 

I had told him, Christmas morning. See Little Ben¬ 
nie.—Ketchum. 

I had two friends a while ago. See De Gustibus.— 
Erskine. 

I hae naebody now, I hae naebody now. See I Hae 
Naebody Now.—Hogg. 

I hae seen great anes, and sat in great ha’s. See My 
ain Fireside.-—Hamilton. 

I haf just arrive’ in New York from ze steamaire. 
See Frenchman’s Dilemma, The.—McNulty. 

I haf von funny [or a vunny] leedle poy. See Leedle 
Yawcob Strauss.—Adams. 

I hafe [or have] forgodden my nodes. See Oration on 
the “Labor” Question.—Anon. 

I hail the merry autumn days. See Merry Autumn 
Days.—Dickens. 

I hain’t no great detective, like yer read about,—the 
kind. See Matildy’s Beau.—Lincoln. 

I hain’t nothin’ agin boys, as sich. See Aunt Melissy 
on Boys.—Trowbridge. 

I hain’t noth’n ag’in’ that po’tion. See By Ned!— 
Anon. 

I halted at a pleasant inn. See Way-side Inn—an 
Apple-tree, The.—Anon. 

I hardly know how to begin what I’ve started out to 
tell. See Jamie.—Meyers. 

I hate French! See French Lesson, The.—Anon. 

I hate my geography lesson! See Geography Demon, 
The.—Anon. 

I hate those pants that mother makes. See Small 
Boy’s Loquitur.—Anon. 

“I hate you, I hate you!” the maiden said. See 
Woman’s Hate, A.—Anon. 

I have a few words to say to you now. See Aunt 
Melissa’s Money.—Anon. 

I have a friend; that is, he isn’t a friend, but. See 
Patents Applied for.—Thatcher. 

I have a glove, ’twas once I think. See Treasures.— 
Kavanagh. 

I have a hot and youthful blood. See Sore Disap¬ 
point ment.—Koehner. 

I have a kitty, and, what do you think? See Wink. ; — 
—Kendali. 

I have a little comforter. See My Little Brown Pipe. 
—Barr. 

I have a little doggy. See My Doggie.—Anon. 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


I have 


I have a little dolly. See My Dolly.—Anon. 

I have a little friend. See My Little Friend.—East¬ 
man. 

I have a little kinsman. See Discoverer, The.— 
Stedman. 

I have a little kitty. See Kitty.—Anon. 

I have a little lady. See Little Lady, The.—Reviere. 

I have a little mistress. See Canary’s Story, The.— 
E. V. S. 

I have a little pony. See Tale of a Pony.—Anon. 

I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me. 
See My Shadow.—Stevenson. 

I have a love, a bright-eyed love. See My Love.— 
Fox. 

I have a lovely grandma. See Grandma’s Pocket.— 
Richards. 

I have a mistress, for perfection rare. See Devout 
Lover, A.—Randolph. 

I have a name, a little name. See Pet Name, The.— 
Browning. 

I have a new bonnet; I’ll go up to church. See Church 
Reveries of a School-girl.—Taylor. 

I have a question now to ask. See Which would You 
Rather Be?—Anon. 

I have a secret I would like. See Robin Redbreast’s 
Secret.—Anon. 

I have a secret to tell you. See Secret, A.—Moor- 
house. 

I have a son, a little son, a boy just five years old. 
See Three Sons, The.—Moultrie. 

I have a store of goodly things. See Comforter, The. 
—Kirk. 

I have a strain of a departed bard. See Life-drama, 
A (Forerunners).—Smith. 

I have a tiny prisoner. See Little Prisoner, The.— 
Denton. 

I have a wondrous house to build. See Building of 
the House, The.—-Mackay. 

I have almost forgot the taste of fear. See Macbeth. 
—Shakespeare. 

I have always loved dogs. See My Dog “Sport.”— 
Street. 

I have always thought it strange that good, pious, 
well-meaning folks. See Leap-year Mishaps.— 
Anon. 

I have an almost feminine partiality for old china. 
See Old China.—Lamb. 

I have an orange, too, like May’s. See Ned’s Best 
Friend.—-Rook. 

I have another life I long to meet. See Incomplete¬ 
ness.—Feuillet. 

I have asked that dreadful question of the hills. See 
Ion.—Talfourd. 

I have been accused of ambition in presenting this 
measure. See Ambition of a Statesman.—Clay. 

I have been always wonderfully delighted with fables. 
See same. —Addison. 

I have been asked to say a few words. See At the 
Unveiling of the Gray Memorial.—Lowell. 

I have been back to my home again. See Some Old 
School-books.—Anon. 

I have been charged with being the author in some 
instances. See Conservative Innovator, The.— 
Haskisson. 

I have been charged with that importance in the 
efforts to emancipate my country. See On 
being Found Guilty of High Treason (Last 
Speech of Robert Emmet, The).—Emmet. 

I have been exceedingly touched latterly by the kind¬ 
ness which I have received. See International 
Arbitration.—Lowell. 

I have been here before. See Sudden Light.—Ros¬ 
setti. 

I have been in the meadows all the day. See Irrepa¬ 
rableness.—Browning. 

I have been introduced to you as an experienced agri¬ 
culturalist. See Mark Twain as a Farmer.— 
Clemens. 

I have been lately informed by the proprietor of The 
World. See Letter to the Earl of Chesterfield.— 
Johnson. 

I have been looking on, this evening, at a merry com¬ 
pany of children. See Recollections of My 
Christmas Tree.—Dickens. 

I have been out to-day in field and wood. See Field 
Preaching.—Cary. 

I have been requested to repeat. See Wayback Tem¬ 
perance Lecture.—Risley. 

I have been requested to say something which may be 
of benefit to young men. See Success in Life.— 
Childs. 

I have been seeking an opportunity of conversing with 
you. See Spoiled Child, The.—Anon. 


I have been somewhat criticised. Nee Lost Arts. The. 
—Phillips. 

I have been studying the horn. See High Art— 
Music.—Adeler. 

I have been the victim of a somewhat singular 
persecution for several weeks past. See Out of 
the Hurly Burly (Avalanche of Drugs, An).— 
Clark. 

I have been to a land, a Border Land. See Border 
Land.—Anon. 

“I have been told,” said Mr. Dubious. See What a 
Thirty-ton Hammer Can Do.—Anon. 

I have been wandering where the daisies grow. See 
Content.—Almon-Hensley. 

I have beheld, ere now, at break of day. See Divine 
Comedy, The (Beatrice).—Dante. 

I have beheld ere now, when dawn would pale. See 
Divine Comedy, The (Beatrice Descending from 
Heaven).—Dante. 

I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided. 
See Speech before the Virginia Convention.— 
Henry. 

I have closed my books and hidden my slate. See 
Vacation Song.—-Bates. 

I have come before you this beautiful Sabbath 
afternoon. See Speech on Temperance, A.— 
Colfax. 

I have come from the land of ice and snow. See 
Santa Claus Reception.—Halifax. 

“I have determined to die,” he said, as he entered 
the drug-store. See Obliging Druggist, The.— 
Anon. 

I have done at length with dreaming. See Waking.— 
Mason. 

I have done one braver thing. See Undertaking, The. 
Donne. 

I have entered the lists with the actual ruler of Europe. 
See Napoleon the Little.—Hugo. 

I have faith in the future, because I have confidence 
in the present. See Future of the United States, 
The.—King. 

I have fancied sometimes the Bethel-bent beam. See 
Old Village Choir, The—Taylor. 

I have fled from her; have refused the rose. See 
Paolo and Francesca.—Phillips. 

I have [or hafe] forgodden my nodes. See Oration on 
the “Labor” Question.—Anon. 

I have found a nest full of pretty eggs. See Bird’s 
Nest, The.—Westcott. 

I have found [out] a gig-gig-gift [wr. gig-gig-girl] 
for my fuf-fuf-fair. See Invitation to the Zoologi¬ 
cal Gardens, An.— [Punch.) 

I have found violets. April hath come on. See 
April.—Willis. 

I have given the matter a great deal of thought. See 
Don’t Marry a Drunkard to Reform Him.— 
McBride. 

I have got a leedle boy. See Leedle Yawcob Strauss. 
—Adams. 

I have got a letter. See Bessie’s Letter —Anon. 

I have got a new-born sister. See Choosing a Name.— 
Lamb. 

I have got home from the shop earlier than usual this 
evening. See Obtaining a Promise.—McBride. 

I have had for friends and allies. See Retrospect, A.— 
Hugo. 

I have had ladies say to me, “Mr. Solitary, you really 
are looking for perfection. ” See Simon Solitary’s 
Ideal Wife.—Dallas. 

I have had playmates, I have had companions. See 
Old Familiar Faces, The.—Lamb. 

I have heard a robin singing. See First Robin, The.— 
Richards. 

I have heard it said that, when one lifts up his voice 
against things that are. See Fate of the Reformer, 
The.—Brougham. 

I have heard much and read somewhat of this gentle¬ 
man. See Retributive Justice.—Corwin. 

I have heard of a boy who lived long ago. See Queer 
Hole, A.—Anon. 

I have heard that guilty creatures, sitting at a play. 
See Hamlet (Stage, The).—Shakespeare. 

I have heard that nothing gives an author so great 
pleasure. See Poor Richard’s Almanac.—Frank¬ 
lin. 

I have in memory a little story. See Uncle Joe.— 
Anon. 

I have just been learning the lesson of life. See Under 
the Daisies.—Griswold. 

I have just dreamed a dream. See Convict’s Solilo¬ 
quy the Night before Execution.—Trafton. 

I have just received from Washington, D. C. See 
What I Saw in Washington.—Thatcher. 


693 






I have 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I have known a country society which withered away. 
See Evils of Gossip.—Anon. 

I have known cities with the strong-armed Rhine. 
See Aged Cities.—Faber. 

I have labored for the continuance of the union. See 
Union of the States, The.—Randolph. 

I have learned of dear Kriss Kringle. See West.— 
Anon. 

I have learned to look on Nature. See Lines Com¬ 
posed a Fetf Miles above Tintern Abbey, etc.— 
Wordsworth. 

I have led her home, my love, my only friend. See 
Maud.—Tennyson. 

I have long felt that it was necessary—that it was in¬ 
evitable we should meet face to face. See Ad¬ 
dress to the Chambers of Peers.—Trelat. 

I have looked upon the earth with eyes of manhood 
near two-score years. See Miser’s Excuse, The. 
—Jerrold. 

I have lost, and lately, these. See Upon the Loss of 
his Mistresses.—Herrick. 

I have lost my way, good friend. See Irish Courtesy. 
—Anon. 

I have lov’d flowers that fade. See Elegy.—Bridges. 

I have loved thee, Elsinore. See Elsinore.—Gould. 

I have marked a thousand blushing apparitions. 
See Much Ado about Nothing.—Shakespeare. 

I have never said much about my sister Lizzie. See 
Adventures of Jimmie Brown, The (Jimmy 
Brown’s Attempt to Produce Freckles).—Alden. 

I have no appetite at all, not a bit! See Epicure, 
The.—Anon. 

I have no foolish fad for pets. See Fad Obsolete, 
The.—Andrews. 

I have no hope that does not dream of thee. See 
Ancestress, The.—Landon. 

‘ ‘ I have no name. ” See Infant Joy.—Blake. 

I have no wit, no words, no tears. See Better Resur¬ 
rection, A,—Rossetti. 

I have not allowed myself, sir, to look beyond the 
Union. See Reply to Hayne, The (Peroration). 
—Webster. 

I have not blamed him; I shall not blame. See House 
on the Hill, The.—-Fawcett. 

I have not seen John Greenleaf Whittier. See Whit¬ 
tier, Extract Concerning.—Bright. 

I have not told my garden yet. See Secret, The.— 
Dickinson. 

I have observed that a reader seldom peruses a book. 
See Spectator, The (Spectator’s Account of Him¬ 
self, The).—Addison. 

I have often heard it said. See Salutatory (2).— 
Denton. 

I have often laughed at the way an Irish help. See 
Paddy’s Dream.—Anon. 

I have read in a worn old volume. See Two Mystics.— 
Anon. 

I have read, in an Eastern tradition. See Roadside 
Lesson, A.—Wells. 

I have read, in some old marvelous tale. See Be¬ 
leaguered City, The.—Longfellow. 

I have read of late a great many articles in the artistic 
magazines. See High Art and Economy.—Kyle. 

I have reason to believe that Mrs. Subtle’s grand pro¬ 
ject is a marriage with my uncle. See Paul Pry 
(Not Quite).—Poole. 

I have said, what I solemnly believe. See Dissolution 
of the Union.—Clay. 

I have seen a curious child. See Excursion, The 
(Sea Shell, The).—Wordsworth. 

I have seen a fiercer tempest, known a louder whirl¬ 
wind blow. See Homeward Bound.—Procter. 

I have seen a lark rise from his bed of grass. See 
Prayer.—Taylor. 

“I have seen,” said the maid, “often seen in my 
dreams. ” See Ideal and the Real, The.—Jones. 

I have seen the first robin of spring, mother dear. See 
Little Mary’s Wish.—Blinn. 

I have seen the frail ivy. See Safety in the Rock.— 
Gillilan. 

I have seen the sea lashed into fury and tossed into 
spray. See same. —Garfield. 

I have ships that went to sea. See Ships at Sea.— 
Coffin. 

I have something in my pocket. See Guess what’s 
in my Pocket.—Anon. 

I have something more to say about trees. See Auto¬ 
crat of the Breakfast-table, The (Old Hemlock, 
An).—Holmes. 

I have something nice to tell you. See Gracie’s Cake. 
—Goodfellow. 

I have something sweet to tell you. See same. —Os¬ 
good. 


I have sometimes thought in my loneliest hours. See 
Rainbow, The.—Anon. 

I have somewhere read in a thoughtful book. See 
Unseen yet Seen.—Anon. 

I have sought to counsel you in your perplexities. See 
same. —Markham. 

I have stay’d too long from your grave, it seems. See 
At her Grave.—O’Shaughnessy. 

I have subdued at last the will to live. See Sanyassi, 
The.—Hamerton. 

I had such a wonderful, wonderful dream. See Gin¬ 
gerbread Land.—Anon. 

I have summoned an assembly that I may remind you 
of your resolutions. See History of the Pelo¬ 
ponnesian War, The (Speech of Pericles).— 
Thucydides. 

I have tasted each varied pleasure. See Wealth is 
not Happiness.—Norton. 

I have taught your young lips the good words to say 
over. See On the Lord’s Prayer.—Lamb. 

I have the courage to be gay. See Scholar and Car¬ 
penter (I Have the Courage, etc).—Ingelow. 

I have the honor to be your most obedient, humble 
servant. See Hypochondriac, The.—Anon. 

I have, thou gallant Trojan, seen thee oft. See Troilus 
and Cressida (Nestor to Hector).—Shakespeare. 

I have touch’d the highest point of all my greatness. 
See King Henry VIII. (Be Just, and Fear not).— 
Shakespeare. 

I have tucked away my dollies. See Dreaming, 
Sweetly Dreaming.—Richards. 

I have two friends—two glorious friends—two better 
could not be. See Two Friends, The.—Leland. 

I have two nights watched with you. See Macbeth 
(Sleep-walking Scene).—Shakespeare. 

I have two sons, wife. See Two Sons.—Buchanan. 

I have ventured to put into verse. See Quart of Milk 
A.—Banks. 

I have wandered many miles to-day. See Growing 
Old.—Chase. 

I have watch’d thee with rapture, and dwelt on thy 
charms. See Lines Addressed to ... . when we 
Parted for the Last Time.— (Punch.) 

I have wept a million tears. See Man to the Angel, 
The.—Russell. 

I have wandered in former days at the patience of the 
antediluvian world. See Life before the Flood.— 
Cowper. 

I have woven shrouds of air. See Earth Spirit, The. 
—Channing. 

I haven’t been able to write anything for sometime. 
See Adventures of Jimmy Brown, The (Jimmy 
Brown’s Prompt Obedience).—Alden. 

I haven’t much religion: least not enough to spare. 
See I Haven’t Much Religion.—Scott. 

I heahs a heap o’ people talkin’, ebrywhar I goes. See 
Mahsr John.—Russell. 

I hear a dear, familiar tone. See same. —Cary. 

I hear a distant clarion blare. See Adieu.—Arm¬ 
strong. 

I hear a loud protest against war. See England 
against War.—Beecher. 

I hear a voice you cannot hear. See same. —Tickell. 

I hear again the tread of war go thundering through 
the land. See Albert Sidney Johnston.—Sher¬ 
wood. 

I hear. Bones, you have got a baby. See Bones and 
his Baby.—Anon. 

I hear, from many a little throat. See Return of the 
Birds, The.—Bryant. 

I hear her rocking the baby. See Rocking the Baby.— 
Morris. 

I hear in my heart, I hear in its ominous pulses. See 
Wild Ride, The.—Guiney. 

I hear no more the locust beat. See Summer Remin s- 
cence, A.—Shepherd. 

I hear sho much dalk yoost now goncerning der noble 
ard of selfdevence. See Der Schwartz Egsber- 
ience mit a Bogsing Lesson.—Anon. 

I hear that the prisoner in this case is named Dickey 
Swivel. See American Sam Weller, An.—Anon. 

I hear the bells at eventide. See End of the Day, The. 
—Scott. 

I hear the low voice call that bids me come. See Come 
unto Me.—Moulton. 

I hear the low wind wash the softening snow. See 
Flight of the Geese, The.—Roberts. 

I hear the noise about thy keel. See In Memoriam. 
—Tennyson. 

I hear the patter of childish feet. See Home and 
Mother.—Anon. 

I hear the soft September rain in tone. See Lover and 
Friend Hast Thou Put Far from Me.-—Moulton. 


694 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


I know 


I hear the sound at midnight of the tramp of many 
feet. See Hymn of Our Armies, A.—Auringer. 

I hear the wondrous lyre. See De Profundis.—Stewart.. 

1 hear thee speak of a Western land. See Out West.— 
Anon. 

“I hear thee speak of the better land.” See Better 
Land, The.—Hemans. 

I hear thy full-voiced note, thy flight of song. See 
Mendicant, The.—Burdette. 

I hear thy solemn anthem fall. See Memory.—Ghan- 
ning. 

I hear you, little bird. See Joy of the Morning.— 
Markham. 

I heard a gentle maiden, in the spring. See Time, 
Hope, and Memory.—Hood. 

“I heard a great big lion in the bush.” See same. — 
Anon. 

I heard a man of many winters say. See Dream of 
Autumn, A.—Tennyson. 

I heard a sick man’s dying sigh. See Twenty-eight 
and Twenty-nine.—Praed. 

I heard a story the other day, and I’ve shaped it into 
a rhyme. See City Tale, A.—Miles. 

I heard a thousand blended notes. See Lines written 
in Early Spring.—Wordsworth. 

I heard a very brilliant thing said the other day by a 
boy. See Appeal to Young Men, An.—Garfield. 

I heard a young man in a railway carriage tell his own 
story. See Appeal for Prohibition, An.—Gough. 

I heard along the early hills. See Fairies Dancing, 
The.—Ramal. 

I heard an angel singing. See I Heard an Angel.— 
Blake. 

I heard an angel speak last night. See Curse for a 
Nation, A.—Browning. 

I heard him, Joe, I heard him. See Last Look, A.— 
Sims. 

I heard it. Who told you? See Fashionable Call, A. 
—( Harper's Bazar.) 

I heard last night a little child go singing. See Casa 
Guidi Windows (Juliet of Nations).—Browning. 

I heard the bells of Bethlehem ring. See Birds of 
Bethlehem, The.—Gilder. 

I heard the bells on Christmas Day. See Christmas 
Bells.—Longfellow. 

I .heard the bluebird singing. See Song of Spring, A.— 
Bacon. 

I heard the dogs howl in the moonlight night. See 
Dream, A.—Allingham. 

I heard the robin singing. See He Careth for Us.— 
Newell. 

I heard the trailing garments of the Night. See Hymn 
to the Night.—'Longfellow. 

I heard the voice of Jesus say. See “Come unto 
Me. ”—Bonar. 

I heard two robins singing in the wood. See Of Course 
They Met.—Anon. 

I heard Uncle Joel talking loudly with a man carrying 
a peddler’s outfit. See Uncle Joel on Peddlers. 
—(Albany Argus.) 

I held her hand, the pledge of bliss. See Test, The.— 
Landor. 

I held it truth, with him who sings. See In Memo- 
riam.—Tennyson. 

I here present your Highness. See Epistle Dedicatory 
to His Royal Highness Prince Posterity.—Swift. 

I here return, with many thanks. See On Returning 
a Copy of Halleck’s Poems.—Chandler. 

I hev been readin' about the crusaders. See Arresting 
the March of Intemperance.—McBride. 

I hev called this meetin’ as you know, fur the purpose 
of laying our heads together. See Striking the 
Blow.—Anon. 

I hold her hands. The lamp’s soft ray. See He Held 
her Hands.—Anon. 

I hold him great, who for love’s sake. See Max¬ 
imus (“ I hold him great,” etc.).—Procter. 

I hold it better far that one should rule. See Through 
• Toil.—Hinds. 

I hold that Christian grace abounds. See My Creed.— 
Cary. 

I hold that we are wrong to seek. See Silence of Love, 
The.—Drummond. 

I hope I don’t disturb you. See Darius Green Paro¬ 
died.—Anon. 

I hope nobody saw me as I came around the corner. 
See Hannah Beasley.-—Thatcher. 

I hope that in all that relates to personal firmness 
See Public Virtue.—Clay. 

I hope that young scamp I met in the woods this after- 
non. See Fairy Queen’s Decision, The.—Boyd. 

I hope we shall finish the clothing for Widow Jones. 
See Everlasting Talker, The.—Anon. 


I hope, when we go down to dinner. See During the 
Quarrel.-—Anon. 

“I hope you’ll not accuse me.” See Bee and the 
Rose, The.—Anon. 

I hung my verses in the wind. See Test, The.— 
Emerson. 

I hunted for flowers, and cried when I found. See 
Jack Frost.— (The Independent.) 

I idle stand that I may find employ. See Idler, The.— 
Very. 

I impeach him in the name of the Commons of Great 
Britain in Parliament assembled. See Impeach¬ 
ment of Warren Hastings (Peroration).—Burke. 

I in these flowery meads would be. See Angler’s 
Wish, The.—Walton. 

I intended an Ode, and it turn’d to a Sonnet. See 
Rose-leaves (Urceus Exit).—Dobson. 

I invent a bran-new joke. See New Joke, The.— 
Easton. 

I isn’t ’feard of nuffin, I isn’t. See End Gag.—Anon. 

I jess kind o' feel so lonesome that. I don’t know what 
to do. See In the OP Tobacker Patch.—Lapius. 

I journey through a desert drear and wild. See same. 
—Anon. 

I joy not peace, where yet no war is found. See Heca- 
tompathia (Passion XL.).—Watson. 

I jumped in a hammock. See My Ride.—Goodfellow. 

I just believe I’ll run away. See Sudden Change of 
Mind, A.—Denton. 

I just believe I’ll run away. See also Terrible Threat, 
A.—Denton. 

I just had to telephone for Bessie. See Ghost in the 
Closet, The.—Denton. * 

I just knew it when we swept. See Aurora Leigh 
(Journey South, The).—Browning. 

I keeps dem chickens for mine vife. See Dem shick- 
ens.—Denison. 

I kin hump my back and take the rain. See Fall- 
Crick view of the Earthquake, A.—Riley. 

I kin saw you, you shly leedle raskel. See Dot Shly 
Leedle Raskel.—Anon. 

I kissed the bride; while the other men. See Her 
Wedding.—Anon. 

I kissed the cook. Ah, me, she was divine. See I 
Kissed the Cook.—Anon. 

I knew a boy whose feet had trod. See Dying Boy, 
The.—Anon. 

I knew a lass, her eyes were blue. See Change of 
Local Coloring, A.—Anon. 

I knew a little boy. See Love Your Brother.—Anon. 

I knew a little girl.-—you? Oh! no. See How did it 
happen ?—Anon. 

I knew a maiden fair and sweet. See Fashion’s Folly. 
—Chamberlain. 

I knew a man whose [or and hisl name was Horner. 
See Grumble Corner and Thanksgiving Street.— 
Anon. 

I knew a palm tree upon Capri. See Under the Palms. 
—Curtis. 

I knew a widow very poor. See Faith in God.— 
Hawks. 

I knew by his looks what he’d come for. See Popping 
the Question.—Grant. 

I knew by the smoke, that so gracefully curled. See 
Ballad Stanzas.—Moore. 

I knew he cut his classes, and I’d heard him flunk in 
history. See Change of Heart, A.—Stadtmuller. 

I knew it the first of the summer. See Platonic.— 
Anon. 

I knew she lay above me. See White Jessamine, The. 
—Tabb. 

I know a bank whereon the wild thyme blows. See 
Midsummer Night’s Dream (Violet Bank, A).— 
Shakespeare. 

I know a boy, and who he is. See Be a “Try” Boy. 
—Anon. 

I know a dingy corner where a wicked spider clings. 
See Spider and the Fly, The.—Anon. 

I know a duke; well, let him pass. See Two Men I 
Know.—Anon. 

I know a floweret passing fair. See Fairest Flower, 
The.—Goethe. 

I know a forest vast and old. See Forest Scene, A.— 
May. 

I know a funny fellow, with locks of golden yellow^ 
See Laughing Philosopher, A.—Cooper. 

I know a funny little boy. See Boy that Laughs, 
The.—Cooper. 

I know a funny little man. See Mr. Nobody.—Anon. 

I know a green bank where anemones grow. See 
Nature’s Secret.—Canning. 

I know a house so full of noise. See Mamma’s Boy.-— 
Anon. 


695 




I know 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I know a little animal. See Frog in the Throat, A.— 
Goodfellow. 

I know a little fellow whose face is fair to see. See 
Best Beauty, The.—Anon. 

I know a little garden-close. See Life and Death of 
Jason (Nymph’s Song to Hylas, The).—Morris. 

I know a little girl. See Two Little Girls I Know. 
—( Youth’s Companion.) 

I know a little maiden who is always in a hurry. 
See Always in a Hurry.—Leonard. 

I know a little saying. See Never out of Sight.— 
Anon. 

I know a maiden fair to see. See Beware!—Long¬ 
fellow. 

I know a meadow stream not far away. See Mutabile. 
—(Wesleyan Literary Monthly.) 

I know a naval officer, the bravest fighting man. See 
Bravest Sailor of All, The.—Wilcox. 

I know a nice new play, James. See Illustrated Story, 
An.—Rook. 

I know a nunnery which no man heeds. See White 
Alder, The.—( Trinity Tablet.) 

I know a place where a river wide. See Under the 
Old Oak—a Garland.—Durfee. 

I know a place where the sun is like gold. See Four- 
leaf Clover.—Higginson. 

I know a rich girl dat vants to get married. See Cun¬ 
ning Jew, The.—Anon. 

I know a sanctuary glen. See Glen, The.—Whitcomb. 

I know a secret, such a one. See Serf’s Secret, The.— 
Moody. 

I know a story, fairer, dimmer, sadder. See My 
Babes in the Wood.—Piatt. 

I know a thing that’s most uncommon. See On a 
Certain Lady at Court.—Pope. 

I know a way of hearing what the larks and linnets 
say. See Song in the Dell, The.—Carryl. 

I know a winsome little maid. See Two Maidens.— 
Cannon. 

I know a woman wondrous fair. See Model Woman, 
The.—Anon. 

I know as well as you she is not fair. See Constant 
Lovers, The.—Anon. 

I know, blue modest violets. See Origin of Violets.— 
Anon. 

I know exactly what I’d do. See What They Will Do. 
—Denton. 

I know full well what saith Saint Paul. See In an Un¬ 
known Tongue.—Chadwick. 

I know him by his falcon eye. See Poor Indian, The. 
—Anon. 

I know, I know where violets blow. See God’s Will. 
—Munger. 

I know—I sigh when I think of it. See Religion of 
Revolutionary Men.—Lamartine. 

I know I’m too old to learn, wife; my lessons and tasks 
are done. See Old Man Goes to School, The.— 
Yates. 

I know it must be winter (though I sleep). See Win¬ 
ter Sleep.—Thomas. 

I know it will not ease the smart. See Oh! to See Him 
Once Again.—Butler. 

I knows it’s mighty weak in me to cry. See Before the 
Toy Shop Window.—-Bangs. 

I know more than Apollo. See same. —Tom o’ Bed¬ 
lam. 

I know my soul hath power to know all things. See 
Man.—Davies. 

I know my wife weeps tears of blood. See Drunk¬ 
ard’s Thirst, The.—Anon. 

I know myself the best beloved of all. See same. — 
Rollins. 

I know no field in which a wise statesmanship. See 
University and True Patriotism, The.—Anon. 

I know not by what methods rare. See Prayer.— 
Hickok. 

I know not how to call you light. See To La Sans- 
coeur.—Roscoe. 

I know not if moonlight or starlight. See Song from a 
Drama.—Stedman. 

I know not if or dark or bright. See Trust.—Alford. 

I know not of what we ponder’d. See Companions.— 
Calverley. 

I know not that the men of old. See Men of Old, The. 

-—Houghton. 

I know not the way I am going. See Heavenly Guide, 
The.— Anon. 

I know not what it presages. See Lorelei, The.— 
Heine. 

I know not what my heart has lost. See Ripened 
Fruit.—O’Hagan. 

I know not what sly little fairy. See Fable, A.—( Pop¬ 
ular Educator.) 


I know not what the future hath of marvel or sur¬ 
prise. See Eternal Goodness.—Whittier. 

I know not what the future holds, but this I know. 
See Opportunity.—Ketchum. 

I know not what will [or shall] befall me: God hangs a 
mist o’er my eyes. See Not Knowing.—Brai- 
nard. 

I know not whence it rises. See Lore-lei, The.—Heine. 

I know not which I love the most. See same.- —Cary. 

I know not who the maid may be. See So Sweet.— 
Anon. 

I know not who thou art, thou lovely one. See To 
the Lady in the Chemisette with Black Buttons. 
—Willis. 

I know of a child—a godly young child. See Some 
Children of the Bible.—Rook. 

I know of a dear, delightful land. See Make Believe 
Land.—Anon. 

I know of a jeweled casket. See Golden Key, The.— 
Anon. 

I know of a street on the edge of the town. See Mari¬ 
gold Lane.—M. E. W. 

I know only two ways in which societies can perma¬ 
nently be governed. See Parliamentary Reform 
(Public Opinion and the Sword).—Macaulay. 

I know she loves me, though with scorn. See Love up 
to Date.—Howard. 

I know something about you, my boy, and I see that 
you are in distress. See Bread on the Waters.— 
Anon. 

I know something, but I sha’n’t tell. See Secret, The. 
—Anon. 

I know something—do you? See What They Knew.— 
Smith. 

I know that all beneath the moon decays. See same .— 
Drummond. 

I know that death is God’s interpreter. See Death the 
Revealer.-—Smythe. 

I know that deep within your heart of hearts. See 
Woman’s Complaint, A.—( Advance , The.) 

I know that I am dying, Mate; so fetch the Bible here. 
See Out at Sea.—Fletcher. 

I know that my Redeemer liveth. See same. —Anon. 

I know that some men look upon the temperance cause 
as bigotry. See Fountain of Crime, The.—Horton. 

I know that these poor rags of womanhood. See 
Afterward.—Currie. • 

I know that virtue to be in you, Brutus. See Julius 
Caesar (Cassius Instigating Brutus against Caesar). 
—Shakespeare. 

I know that your attendance here to-night is not given 
to me alone. See Spanish-American War, The.— 
Chidwick. 

I know the hand that is guiding me through the shadow 
to the light. See same .—( British Evangelist.) 

“I know the nicest secret.” See Bessie’s Secret.— 
Anon. 

I know the song that the bluebird is singing. See 
Bluebird, The.—Miller. 

I know thee not, O spirit fair! See Artist’s Prayer, 
The.—Lighthall. 

I know they are rosy, children. See Your Faces.— 
Anon. 

I know thou hast gone to the place of thy rest. See 
To the Departed.—Anon. 

I know ’twas not the proper thing to do. See At the 
Masquerade.—Anon. 

I know very well, Hannibal, that it was the hope of 
your return. See History of Rome, The (Scipio 
Declines Hannibal’s Overtures for Peace).—Scipio. 

I know well the common censure by which objections 
to the various futilities. See Definite Training.— 
Ruskin. 

I know what it is to live in a cabin—a little log cabin, 
hid under the trees. See Granger’s Wife, The.— 
Donovan. 

‘‘I know what silence means!” See Silence.—Anon. 

I know what will happen, sweet. See You and I.— 
Sullivan. 

"I know what you’re going to say,” she said. Ste 
Candor.—Bunner. 

I know what you’ve come for. See Mrs. Harwood’s 
Secret.—Oliphant. 

I know where Krishna tarries in these early days of 
spring. See Song of Krishna, A.—Arnold. 

“I know where the timid fawn abides.” See Retribu¬ 
tion.—Bryant. 

I know who won the peace of God. See King Ailill’s 
Deat h.—Stokes. 

I know why you have gone from me. See My Little 
Boy.—Anon. 

I know you, Lion of Gray St. Mark. See To the Lion 
of St. Mark.—Miller. 


696 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


I love 


I knowed a man, which he lived in Jones. See More in 
the Man than in the Land.—Anon. 

"I knows a vomans vot got a pearls from an oyster 
oud.” See same. —Anon. 

I knows what you mean. I’m a dyin’. See Dying Street 
Arab, The.—Barr. 

I labor under a species of distress. See Bashful Man, 
The.—Smith. 

I lang hae thought, my youthfu’ friend. See Epistle 
to a Young Friend.—Burns. 

I lately lived in quiet ease. See Love is Like a Dizzi¬ 
ness.—Hogg. 

I lay condemned within the murderer’s cell. See 
Beneath the Beam.—Manning. 

I lay down a very plain proposition, and it is this. See 
Established Church of Ireland, The.—Sheil. 

I lay i’ the bosom of the sun. See Echo Club, The 
(Palabras Grandiosas).—Taylor. 

I lay in silence, dead. A woman came. See Another 
W ay.—Bierce. 

I lay in sorrow, deep distress’d. See same. —Mackay. 

I lay me down to sleep. See In the Hospital.—How¬ 
land. 

I lay my finger on Time’s wrist to score. See What 
Have I Done?—Fearing. 

I lay on deck, fast bound with cords, disarmed. See 
William Tell (William Tell Describes his Escape). 
—Schiller. 

I lay on Delos of the Cyclades. See Ship, The.— 
Mifflin. 

I lay on the rocks and watched the sea. See By the 
Sea.—Welsh. 

I lean from the window at morning. See My Birds.— 
Anon. 

I lean upon no broken reed. See Hold Thou Me.— 
Bonar. 

I leaned out of window, I smelt the white clover. See 
Songs of Seven (Seven Times Three).—Ingelow. 

I learn’d his greatness first at Lavington. See Cardinal 
Manning.—De Vere. 

I learnt to love that England. Very oft. See Aurora 
Leigh (Beauty of England, The).—Browning. 

I leave, and unreluctant, the repast. See Siddons and 
her Maid.—Landor. 

I leave behind me the elm-shadowed square. See 
Outward Bound.—Aldrich. 

I leave thee, beauteous Italy! no more. See Farewell 
to Italy.—Landor. 

I left the little town behind. See Circus Boy, The.— 
Thomson. 

I left thee last, a child at heart. See Rosalind’s 
Scroll.—E. B. Browning. 

I lent my love a book one day. See An Experience 
and a Moral.—Cozzens. 

I lie in heavy trance. See Moments.—Houghton. 

I lie on the mountains as sweet and as mild. See 
Sunbeam, The.—Anon. 

I lift my eyes against the sky. See I Know not Why. 
—Rosenfeld. 

I lift my heavy heart up solemnly. See Sonnets from 
the Portuguese, V.—Browning. 

I lift this sumach-bough with crimson flare. See 
Torch Light in Autumn —Piatt. 

I lifted off the lid with anxious care. See On Receipt 
of a Rare Pipe.—W. H. B. 

I like a church, I like a cowl. See Problem, The.— 
Emerson. 

I like cigars beneath the stars. See same. —Wilcox. 

I like Dicky. He has a nice round freckled face. See 
Dicky’s Christmas.—Anon. 

I like my other clo’es fust rate. See My Other Clo’es. 
—Anon. 

I like not, Julia, this your country life. See Hunch¬ 
back, The.—Knowles. 

I like not lady-slippers. See Tiger-lilies.—Aldrich. 

I like pretty maids flushed with joy. See Wealth.— 
Branch. 

I like that ancient Saxon phrase, which calls. See 
God’s Acre.—Longfellow. 

I like that old sweet legend. See Little Mud-sparrows, 
The.—Phelps. 

I like the gentle oc-to-pus. See Arma Virumque.— 
Kellock. 

I like the hunting of the hare. See Old Squire, The.— 
Blunt. 

I like the man who faces what he must. See Inevitable, 
The.—Bolton. 

“I like to ask you if dere vhas some license to keep a 
dog.” See He Pays License on a Dog.—Anon. 

I like to feed my pussy. See My Pussy.—Anon. 

I like to see a handsome boy. See Emma’s Ideal.— 
Richards. 

I like to see a pretty girl. See Guy’s Ideal.—Richards. 


I like winter, because it snows. See Good In All.— 
Denton. 

I listen’d to the music broad and deep. See Love and 
Music.—Marston. 

I little see, I little know. See Psalm of Trust, A.— 
Hosmer. 

I liv’d with visions for my company. See Sonnets 
from the Portuguese, XXVI.—Browning. 

I live for Love, for Love alone. See Castle in the Air, 
The.—Stoddard. 

I live for those who [or that] love me. See My Aim. 
—Banks. 

I lived first in a little house. See Bird’s Experience, 
A.—Anon. 

I lived in a continual, indefinite, pining fear. See 
Everlasting No, The.—Carlyle. 

I loathe all books. I hate to see. See Warning, A.— 
Lovell. 

I loathe ye in my bosom. See Seminole’s Reply, The. 
_ —Patten. 

I loiter here within this ancient town. See Annapolis 
Royal.—Blackadder. 

I long for household voices gone. See Eternal Good¬ 
ness, The.—Whittier. 

I long have been puzzled to guess. See Superfluous 
Man, The.—Saxe. 

I long have had a quarrel set with Time. See Two 
Highwaymen, The.—Blunt. 

I look to Thee in every need. See Looking unto God. 
—Longfellow. 

I look to-day far down the aisles of memory’s happy 
past. See Old School-house, The.—McBride. 

I look upon thy happy face. See To a Child.—Mont¬ 
gomery. 

I look’d upon his brow, no sign. See Crescentius.— 
Maclean. 

I looked across the bay. See My Beacon.—Miller. 

I looked and saw your eyes. See Three Shadows.— 
Rossetti. 

I looked far back into other years, and lo! in bright 
array. See Mary, Queen of Scots.—Bell. 

I looked in the brook and saw a face. See Brook, The. 
—Field. 

I looked one night, and there Semiramis. See Look 
into the Gulf, A.—Markham. 

I looked where the roses were blooming. See Grass 
and Roses.—Clarke. 

I lost the brook as it wound its way. See Lost and 
Found.—Anon. 

I love all things the seasons bring. See Violet, The.— 
Procter. 

I love, and have some cause to love, the earth. See 
Delight in God Only.—Quarles. 

I love, and he loves me again. See Nymph’s Passion, 
A.—Jonson. 

I love and love not; Lord, it breaks my heart. See 
Dost Thou not Care?—-Rossetti. 

I love at eventide to walk alone. See Summer Moods. 
—Clare. 

I love confinement in thy bonds. See Marigold.— 
—Candee. 

I love contemplating—apart. See Napoleon and the 
British Sailor.—Campbell. 

I love freedom better than slavery. See Freedom.— 
Baker. 

I love it, I love it, and who shall dare. See Old Arm 
Chair, The.—Cook. 

I love my adversary’s leg to kick. See Gory Gambols. 
—(Lehigh Burr.) 

I love my books as drinkers love their wine. See My 
Books.—Bennoch. 

I love my country’s pine-clad hills. See My Country. 
—“Hesperion.” 

I love my God, my country, kind and kin. See Festus 
(Country and Patriotism).—Bailey. 

I love my kitty—handsome cat. See What We Love. 
—Morton. 

I love my lady; she is very fair. See My Beautiful 
Lady.—W oolner. 

I love my little brother. See Her Soliloquy.—Opper. 

I love my papa, that I do. See Recitation.—Kava- 
naugh. 

I love my pussy cat, her coat is so warm. See My 
Pussy Cat.—Anon. 

I love old women best, I think. See Old Jane.—Ashe. 

I love poetry, because Jesus Christ loved it. See Pro¬ 
fession of Faith.—Pascal. 

I love the breath of fresh, damp earth. See Life’s 
Day.—Gaddess. 

I love the cheerful summer time. See Summer Time.— 
Anon. 

I love the fair lilies and roses so gay. See same. — 
Goodale. 




I love 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I love the flowers that come about with spring. See 
Field Sweet-brier, The.—Cary. 

I love the forest; I could dwell among. See Forest, 
The.—Milnes. 

I love the luscious grapes that cling. See Something 
to Hate.—Anon. 

I love the navy. When I speak of the navy, I mean 
the sailor. See Against Whipping in the Navy.— 
Stockton. 

I love the north, where the bold rocks rise. See Jog 
Alaskar Nordue.—Sickel. 

I love the old melodious lays. See Proem.—Whittier. 

I love the proud grandeur of the old forest trees. See 
Echo.—Hall. 

I love the spring, the gentle spring. See Child’s Love, 
A.—Anon. 

I love the state of Maine better than any spot in the 
wide, wide world. See State of Maine, The.— 
Frye. 

I love thee as the flow’rets fair. See I Love Thee.— 
Oxenford. 

I love thee as the good love heaven. See Spanish 
Student, The.—Longfellow. 

I love thee, cat; I love thy pleasant ways. See 
Cataracket, A.—Burdette. 

I love thee—I love thee 1 See I Love Thee.—Hood. 

I love thee in the spring. See Thoughts on the Forest. 
—Pabodie. 

I love thee, love thee, Giulio! See Parting Lovers.— 
Browning. 

I love thee, Mary, and thou lovest me. See Chemist 
to his Love, The.— {Punch.) 

I love thee, pretty nursling. See Ground Laurel, 
The—Gould. 

I love thee, puzzling little May. See Is Love Blind? 
—(Punch Bowl.) 

I love thee when thy swelling buds appear. See Tree, 
The.—Very. 

I love thee; why, I cannot tell. See I Love Thee.— 
Baines. 

"I love, thou lovest, he, she, or it loves; we love, you 
love, they love.” See Courtships of Adulphus 
M’Duff, The.—Anon. 

I love Thy Kingdom, Lord. See same. — Dwight. 

I love thy singing, sacred as the sound of hymns. See 
Sabbath Morning in the Country.—Bailey. 

I love to belieye that no heroic sacrifice is ever lost. 
See Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union 
Soldiers (Inspiration of Sacrifice, The).—Garfield. 

I love to get the breakfast. See What Girls Love to 
Do.—Anon. 

I love to hear a cheerful voice. See Cheerful Voice, 
The.—Anon. 

I love to hear thine earnest voice. See To an Insect.— 
Holmes. 

I love to lie in the clover. See O Lark of the Summer 
Morning.—Anon. 

I love to look on a scene like this. See Saturday 
Afternoon.—-Willis. 

I love to see the little goldfinch pluck. See Lessons 
from Birds and Bees.—Hurdis. 

I love to steal awhile away. See Private Devotion.— 
Brown. 

I love to wander through the woodlands hoary. See 
Still Day in Autumn, A.—Whitman. 

I love, too, to be loved; all loving praise. See Woman’s 
Answer, A.—Procter. 

“I love you, dear!” and saying this. See I Love You, 
Dear.—Crofts. 

“I love you, dear.” There is no phrase so worn and 
old. See “I Love You, Dear.”—Anon. 

"I love you, mother,” said little John [or Ben], See 
Which Loved Best?—Anon. 

I love you—not because your lips. See To-. 

—Baker. 

I loved a lass, a fair one. See I Loved a Lass.— 
Wither. 

I loved her dearly years ago. See After the Wedding. 
—Anon. 

I loved him in my dawning years. See Life’s Love, A. 
—Anon. 

I loved him long, and I loved him well. See Out in 
the Sobbing Rain.—Shaw. 

I loved him not, and yet now he is gone. See Maid’s 
Lament, The.—Landor. 

I loved him so; his voice had grown. See Grandsire, 
The.—Field. 

I loved my Art. I loved it when the tide. See I 
Loved My Art.—-Parker. 

I loved thee for that dear, deep, lovingness. See 
same. —Armstrong. 

I loved thee long and dearly. See Florence Vane.— 
Cooke. 


I loved thee once; I’ll love no more. See To an Incon¬ 
stant One.—Ayton. 

I loved them so. See My Lambs.—Anon. 

I made a footing in the wall. See Prisoner of Chillon, 
The.—Byron. 

I made a posie [or posy] while the day ran by. See 
Life.—Herbert. 

I made a song for my dear love’s delight. See Song’s 
Worth, A.—Spalding. 

I made another garden, yea. See I Made another 
Garden.—O’Shaughnessy. 

I made me a beautiful castle. See Foundations.— 
Schultze. 

I made myself a little boat. See Voyage with the 
Nautilus, The.—Howitt. 

I made myself a poet in the place. See In his Own 
Country.—Field. 

I made the cross myself whose weight. See Little 
Parable, A.—Aldrich. 

I made up my mind the other day. See My Wife’s 
Husband.—Risley. 

“I mark the hours that shine,” so runs the legend 
graven. See Bright Hours.—Husted. 

I marked all kindred Powers the heart finds fair. See 
Love Enthroned.—Rossetti. 

I married a widow who had a grown daughter. See 
Strangely Related.—Anon. 

I marvell’d why a simple child. See Only Seven.— 
Leigh. 

I may be an enthusiast, but I cannot but give utter¬ 
ance to the conceptions of my own mind. See 
America the Child of Destiny.-—Clay. 

I may give these flowers to none but thee. See Last 
Days of Pompeii (Nydia and lone).—Bulwer-Lyt- 
t.on. 

I may not do a landscape. See Impressionistic. 
— (Wrinkle.) 

I may not rightly call thy name. See Avis. — 
Holmes. 

I may say to you, my brethering [or breethering], that 
I am not . an edecated man. See Harp of a 
Thousand Strings, The.—Anon. 

I mean by a heroic age and race. See Age of the 
Pilgrims, the Heroic Period of our History, The 
(Heroic Age, The).—Choate. 

I meant to write a valentine. See same. —Anon. 

I meet thy pensive, moonlight face. See Lost Love, 
A.—Lyte. 

I merely rise here to make mention. See Imaginative 
Invention, An.—Kavanaugh. 

I met a dear creature, it matters not where. See Love 
under Difficulties.—Anon. 

I met a little cottage girl. See We Are Seven.— 
Wordsworth. 

I met a little Elf-man, once. See Little Elf, The.— 
Bangs. 

I met a little woman with a very winning look. See 
Very Humane.—Douglas. 

I met a sailor in the woods. See Englishman, The.— 
Ramal. 

I met a traveler from an antique land. See Ozyman- 
dias.—Shelley. 

I met a youth whose brow was sad. See Rarest Pearl, 
The.—Fiester. 

I met at eve the Prince of Sleep. See I Met at Eve.— 
Ramal. 

I met her on a Pullman car. See My Mistake.— 
E. P. G. 

I met her on the stairs one night. See His Sister.— 
Anon. 

I met my brother at the train. See Incident of ’04, 
An.—Anon. 

I met Sophie Ramsey when I was out this morning. 
See Chatterbox, The.—Anon. 

I met Sut one morning, weaving along in his usual 
rambling, uncertain gait. See Sut Lovingood’s 
Shirt.—Anon. 

I met the Old Year in the night. See Oblivion’s 
Gate.—Larned. 

I met the waiter in his prime. See Waiter, The. 
— (Punch.) 

I met you, dear, I met you; I can’t be robbed of that. 
See Pair of Fools, A.-—Stephen. 

I ’mid the hills was born. See Harold the Valiant.— 
Stebbins. 

I might have just the mostest fun. See Don't.— 
Waterman. 

I might not, if I could. See Lines by a Medium.— 
Anon. 

I might 1 unhappy word—O me, I might. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Sonnet XXXIII.).—Sidney. 

I mind it weel, in early date. See To the Guid 
Wife of Wauchope House.--Burns. 


698 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


I own 


I mind me in the days departed. See Deserted Gar¬ 
den, The.—Browning. 

I mind me of a pleasant time. See Once upon a Time. 
■—Southey. 

I mind me of the Shepherd’s saw. See Rowfant 
Library, The.—Lang. 

I mourn no more my vanished years. See My Psalm. 
—Whittier. 

I murder hate, by field or flood. See Poet’s Choice, 
The.—Burns. 

I mus’ take a good smoke, old woman, an’ den go. 
See Sara’s Conversion.—Anon. 

I must away to wooded hills and vales. See Summer 
Longing, A.—Arnold. 

I must complete the inventory of my present collec¬ 
tion of curiosities. See Kiss in the Dark, A.— 
Anon. 

I must confess I love old books! See Old Books.— 
Anon. 

I must go furnish up. See Breeding Lark.—Boar. 

I must have my bitters this morning, as I feel kind of 
squeamish. See Banishing the Bitters.—Mc¬ 
Bride. 

I must make haste. Harry will be calling me. Set- 
In Imminent Peril.—Griffith. 

I must not forget the suddenly changing seasons. See 
Seasons in Sweden, The.—Longfellow. 

I tpust not grieve my love, whose eyes would read. 
See Sonnets to Delia (Beauty, Time and Love, VIA 
—Daniel. 

I must not say that thou wert true. See Indifference. 
—Arnold. 

I must not speak an angry word. See Be Considerate. 
—Anon. 

I must not think of thee; and, tired yet strong. See 
Renouncement.—Meynell. 

I must say, Fanny, that for a servant you give your 
tongue many liberties. See Game of Chess, A.— 
Meyers. 

I must with plainness speak my fixed resolve. See 
Iliad, The (Reply of Achilles to the Envoys of 
Agamemnon, etc.).—Homer, 

I, my dear, was born to-day. See On My Birthday, 
July 21.—Prior. 

I nebber breaks a colt afore he’s old enough to trabbel. 
See Sermon for the Sisters, A.—Russell. 

I nebber tole you what I know about nabbigation, did 
I? See Brudder Bones on de Raging Canawl.— 
Anon. 

I need not dwell upon the mournful and tragic event 
by virtue of which I am here. See Our Recent 
Diplomacy.—Hay. 

I need not now dwell on the waste and cruelty of war. 
See War System of the Commonwealth of Nations, 
(Horrors of War, The).—Sumner. 

I need not occupy your time by describing minutely 
what I mean by a Yankee fireside. See Yankee 
Fireside, The.—Hill. 

I need not praise the sweetness of his song. See To 
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.—Lowell. 

I need not say to you, young ladies. See Brief Re¬ 
marks to a Class of Young Ladies on Graduation 
Day by a Visitor.—Anon. 

I need not your needles—they’re needless to me. See 
Baker's Reply to the Needle-peddler, The.-—Anon. 

I ne’er could any lustre see. .SeeSong:“I ne’er could,” 
etc.—Sheridan. 

I ne’er imagined. Love, that thou. See I Never Knew 
it, Love, till Now.—Juan II. 

I ne’er my Donald shall see again. See He Told Me 
So.—Grossmith. 

I never build a song by night or day. See My Com¬ 
rade.—Markham. 

I never but once found anything here in excess of my 
expectations. See Oyster Yarn, An.—Anon. 

I never came upon a nest, of eggs, secreted by the hen 
most conscientiously. See Beecher on Eggs.— 
Beecher. 

I never cast a flower away. See same. —Southey. 

I never could see the use of babies. See How Jimmy 
Tended the Baby.—Anon. 

I never drank of Aganippe well. See Astrophel and 
Stella (Sonnet LXXIV).—Sidney. 

I never expected to speak with pride about the “solid 
South.” See Union of North and South, The.— 
Willard. 

I never gave a lock of hair away. See Sonnets from 
the Portuguese, XVIII.—Browning. 

I never gossip, as you know. See Way of the World, 
The.—Anderson. 

I never had a happier time. See One Saturday.— 
Robinson. 

I never heard the name before. See South.—Anon. 


I never, in the whole course of my professional experi¬ 
ence. See Pickwick Papers (Address of Serjeant 
Buzfuz).—Dickens. 

I never intended to fall in love. See How it was to 
Be.—Anon. 

I never kin forget the day. See Josiar.—Anon. 

1_ never knew how dear thou wert. See Song.—Warfield. 

“I never like to go to school.” See Lazy Lew.—Anon. 

I never look'd that he should live so long. See Philip 
van Artevelde (John of I,annoy).—Taylor. 

“I never loved you much,’ she said. See I.ove on 
Deck.—Barlow. 

1 never made a speech before, and cannot sav I shall 
make more. See First Speech in Public.—Anon. 

I never made a speech before, but that’s no reason 
why. See Speech for a Young Girl.—Anon. 

I never pray’d for Dryads, to haunt the woods again. 
See Invocation, An.—Cory. 

I never realized what this country was and is. See 
Back from the War.—Talmage. 

I never saw a moor. See Chartless.—Dickinson. 

I never saw a purple cow. See Purple Cow, The.— 
Burgess. 

I never saw an angel. See Earth's Angels.—Anon. 

I never was a man of feeble courage. See Thunder 
Storm, The.—Prentice. 

I never was at a baby show afore and it seems kind of 
funny. See Rumpus, A.—McBride. 

I never was naturally vicious. See Popular Song, 
The.—Lincoln. 

I never yet heard music, howev’r sweet. See Preface 
to “The Finding of the Book and Other Poems." 
—Alexander. 

I never yet knew, Soldiers, that in fight. See Catiline 
to his Army, near Fiesulse.—Jonson. 

I note this morning how the sunshine falleth. See 
R et rospect ion.—F reeman. 

I now’ address you on a question the most vitally con¬ 
nected with the liberty. See Habeas Corpus Act, 
The.—Curran. 

I now attend a public school. See School-girl’s Trou¬ 
bles, A.—Marsh. 

I now- will introduce to you my daughters twelve. 
See Opening Recitation.—Kavanaugh. 

I object to high license, first, because the scheme is 
acceptable to the liquor interest. See Why I 
Object to High License.—Turner. 

I observed a locomotive in the railroad yards one day. 
See Sand.—Anon. 

I often sit and wish that I. See Flying Kite.—Sher¬ 
man. 

I often sit and wonder why. See Why?—Richards. 

I often think each tottering form. See Youth and Age. 
—Anon. 

I often tried in vain to find. See New Simile for the 
Ladies, A.—Sheridan. 

I once had a little brother. See Pictures of Memory. 
—Cary. 

I once had a sweet little doll, dears. See Water 
Babies, The (My Little Doll).—Kingsley. 

I once knew a woman and her face would be a-bloomin’. 
See Don’t Fret.—Burdette. 

I once knew all the birds that came. See Long Ago.— 
Field. 

I once saw a poor fellow, keen and clever. See Wis¬ 
dom and Wealth.—Khemnitzer. 

I once spent a few weeks at the house of Mr. Dunder- 
burg Jenkins. See Dunderburg Jenkins’s “Forty 
Graf” Album.—Kyle. 

I once took a fancy to fathom the brains. See Fath¬ 
oming Brains.—Bates. 

I once was guest at a nobleman’s wedding. See No¬ 
bleman’s Wedding, The.—-Allingham. 

I once was a stranger to grace and to God. See Jeho¬ 
vah Tsidkenu.—McCheyne. 

I only know she came and went. See Mosaic Poetry. 
—Ahon. 

I opened the book before me. See Mark of the Rose, 
The.—Kingsbury. 

I opened the yard gate and looked out into the empty 
street. See David Copperfield (Wreck, The).— 
Dickens. 

I ought to be kinder always. See Some Lover’s Dear 
Thought.—Woolsey. 

I overheard two matrons grave, allied by close affinity. 
See Kindred Quacks.— (Punch.) 

I owe an apology to the Irish Members for stepping in. 
See Suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act.— 
Bright. 

I owe to smoking, more or less. See Confession of a 
Cigar Smoker.—Anon. 

I own a mule. It is the first mule I ever had. See My 
Mule.—Crowl. 


699 




I own 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I own I like not Johnson’s turgid style. See On Dr. 
Johnson.- 1 —Wolcott. 

I pace the sounding sea-beach and behold. See Milton. 
—Longfellow. 

I paced upon my beat. See Lines on a Late Hospi- 
cious Ewent.—Thackeray. 

I pass’d her one day in a hurry. See White Chip Hat, 
The.—Willis. 

I passed by a garden, a little Dutch garden. See Little 
Dutch Garden, A.—Whitney. 

I picked him out as an insurance man. See "Fat 
Contributor” on Insurance Agents, The.—Gris¬ 
wold. 

I picture her there in the quaint old room. See 
Dreaming in the Trenches.—McCabe. 

I pin a gandidate for des aldermens mid dis vard. See 
Touching Appeal, A.—Blinkerhausen. 

I pitch my tent in a small town in Injianny. See Arte- 
mus Ward on Woman’s Rights.—Brown. 

I pity any one who does not love classical music. See 
Classical Music.-—Kyle. 

I pity bashful men, who feel the pain. See Conversa¬ 
tion (Excessive Modesty).—Cowper. 

I pity the man who has never in his best moods. See 
same. —Brooks. 

I pity the unbeliever—one who can gaze upon the 
grandeur. See Unbeliever, The.—Chalmers. 

I pity you from my heart, you have lost a treasure. 
See Country Cousin, The; or, The Rough Diamond. 
—Buckstone. 

I played with you ’mid cowslips blowing. See Love 
and Age.—Peacock. 

I plucked it in an idle hour. See Passion Flower, The. 
—Howarth. 

I plucked some simple flowers in the early morning 
hours. See To a Collection of Pastorals.— 
Wiley. 

I pondered long upon my choice. See Don’t Hesitate. 
—Anon. 

I poured out a tumbler of claret. See Tumbler of 
Claret, A.—Wheeler. 

I praised the speech, but cannot now abide it. See Of 
the Warres in Ireland.—Harrington. 

I pray that, risen from the dead. See Grandma’s 
Prayer.—Field. 

I pray that time full many years may bring. See 
Afterglow.—Blanden. 

I pray thee call not this society. See Disappointment. 
—Lowell. 

I pray thee, Love [or leave], love me no more. See To 
His Coy Love.—Drayton. 

"I pray you, damsels, tell me whither went.” See 
Iliad, The (Hector’s Farewell to Andromache).— 
Homer. 

I pray you, do not turn your head. See In an Atelier. 
—Aldrich. 

I pray you, in your letters. See Othello.—-Shake¬ 
speare. 

I pray you, is Signior Montanto returned from the 
wars, or no? See Much Ado about Nothing. 
—Shakespeare. 

I pray you, pardon me, Elsie. See How it Happened. 
—Hay. 

I pray you, what’s asleep? See As the Day Breaks.— 
McGaffey. 

I prayed for riches, and achieved success. See An¬ 
swered Prayers.—Wilcox. 

I prayed to God, He heard my prayer. See Conva¬ 
lescent.—Anon. 

I prefer to substitute for the official title. See Our 
Country.—Harrison. 

I presume you have all occasionally dipped into the 
sort of literature. See Good Little Boy and the 
Bad Little Boy, The.—Kyle. 

"I prithee,” quoth the gentle youth unto the winsome 
maiden. See In November.—Anon. 

I prithee send me back my heart. See Song: “I 
prithee send,” etc.—Suckling. 

I prize it, I love it, this jack-knife of mine! See Knife 
of Boyhood, The.—Upham. 

I profess, sir, in my career hitherto, to have kept 
steadily in view. See Reply to Hayne, The (Lib¬ 
erty and Union).—Webster. 

I put by [vrr. away] the half-written poem. See 
Lost Kiss, The.—Riley. 

I put thy hand aside, and turn away. See Farewell, 
A.—De Vere. 

I questioned: Why is evil on the earth? See Answer, 
An.—Williams. 

I ran across what first struck me as a very singular 
genius. See Railroad Car Scene, A.—Anon. 

I read a legend of a monk who painted. See Monk’s 
Vision, The.—( Boston Pilot.) 


I read before my eyelids dropt their shade. See 
Dream of Fair Woman, A.—Tennyson. 

I read last night of the Grand Review. See Second 
Review of the Grand Army.—Harte. 

I read not long ago, how all the tide. See Ganges, The. 
—McGuire. 

I read, O friend, no pages of old lore. See Chrysalis of 
a Bookworm, The.—Egan. 

I read of the Emperor Conrad the Third. See Love’s 
Strategy.—Sharpe. 

I read on de paper mos’ ev’ry day, all about Jubilee. 
See Habitant’s Jubilee Ode, The.—Drummond. 

I read somewhere that a swan, snow-white. See 
Watch of a Swan, The.—Piatt. 

I read that once in Africa. Nee King Cophetua and the 
Beggar-maid.—Anon. 

I read the marble-lettered name. See Grave in Holly¬ 
wood Cemetery, Richmond, A.—Preston. 

I read the sentence or heard it spoken. See Prime of 
Life, The.—Wilcox. 

I read to her, one summer day. See Lesson in Myth¬ 
ology, A.—Hall. 

I reads aboudt- dot vater mill dot runs der life-long 
day. See Der Vater Mill.—Adams. 

I reads in Yowcob’s shtory book. See Der Shpider und 
der Fly.—Adams. 

I really believe I am tired. I’ll set down my basket 
and rest. See Jewels She Lacked, The.—Anon. 

I really take it very kind. See Truth in Parentheses. 
—Hood. 

I received your kind letter, with your excellent advice. 
See Letter to Samuel Mather.—Franklin. 

I received yours of the 15th inst. See Letter to Ben¬ 
jamin Webb;—Franklin. 

I recently noticed this paragraph in a city paper. See 
Miss Witchazel and Mr. Thistlepod.—Burdette. 

I recently went to a fair given by the Little Busy Bee 
Missionary Society. See Little Busy Bees, The. 
—(Detroit Free Press.) 

I reckon I git your drift, gents. See Banty Tim.— 
Hay. 

I reckon yeou’ll be done milkin’ purty soon, won’t 
yeou? See Another Arrangement.—McBride. 

I recollect a nurse called Ann. See Earliest Recollec¬ 
tion.—Locker. 

I regret, gentlemen, that this question of the abolition. 
See Death Penalty, The.—Hugo. 

I remarked, on a former occasion. See Jere Lloyd on 
"Phrenology.”—Anon. 

I remember a song whose numbers throng. See Old 
Sweet Song, The.—Anon. 

I remember Big Ben Bolton and the little Leontine. 
See Big Ben Bolton.—Hall. 

I remember going to the British Museum one day. 
See Three Men in a Boat (Imaginary Invalid, The). 
—Jerome. 

I remember grandma’s garden as it was long time ago. 
See Grandma’s Garden.—Anon. 

I remember, I remember the hoops my best gal wore. 
See Hoop Skirt, The.—Anon. 

I remember, I remember, the house where I was born. 
See I Remember, I Remember.—Hood. 

I remember, I remember when I was a little boy. See 
Nursery Reminiscences.—Barham. 

I remember it all so very well, the first of my married 
life. See Inventor’s Wife, An.—Ewing. 

I remember it well; ’twas a morn dull and gray. See 
Macdonald’s Raid.—Hayne. 

I remember meeting you. See All Sorts.—Anthony. 

I remember once riding from Buffalo to the Niagara 
Falls. See Power of Habit, The.—Gough. 

I remember the dear little girl. See Little Tambourine- 
girl, The.—Larcom. 

I remember well the agonizing stupidity of a journey. 
See Traveling under the Care of a Gentleman.— 
Hamilton. 

I remember well the way. See His New Suit.—Kiser. 

I remember, when a youngster, all the happy hours I 
spent. See Best Spare Room, The.—Lincoln. 

I remember when the fight was on. See Corporal of 
C’hancellorsville, The.—Paxton. 

I reside at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful 
James. See Society upon the Stanislaus, The.— 
Harte. 

I rested on the breezy height. See Above St. Ir4n4e. 
—Scott. 

I reverently believe that the Maker. See Mark Twain 
on the Weather.—Clemens. 

I ride on the mountain tops, I ride. See Joy of the 
Hills, The.—Markham. 

I rise, gemmen an’ ladies, for de purpose of calling de 
meetin’ to order. See Possum-Run Debating 
Society, The.—Anon. 


700 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


I saw 


I rise in the dawn, and I kneel and blow. See Song of 
the Old Mother, The.—Yeats. 

I rise, my Lords, to declare my sentiments on this most 
solemn and serious subject. See Speech on a 
Motion for an Address to the Throne.—Chatham. 

I rise to make this short oration. See Oration for a 
Boy, An.—Kavanaugh. 

I rode a horse, a dappled bay. See Ballad of a Little 
Fun, The.—Thompson. 

I said I would not speak to-night. See Speech for a 
Small Boy.—Anon. 

I said, if I might go back again. See Woman’s Con¬ 
clusions, A.—Cary. 

I said, “My heart, now let us sing a song.” See Wed¬ 
ding Song, A.—Chadwick. 

I said my pleasure shall not move. See Our Thrones 
Decay.—Russell. 

I said one year ago. See New Year Ledger, The.— 
Barr. 

“I,” said the duck, “I call it fun.” See Who Likes the 
Rain?—Bates. 

I said, then, dearest, since ’tis so. See Last Ride 
Together, The.—Browning. 

I said to Lettice, our sister Lettice. See Lettice.— 
Craik. 

I said to Sorrow’s awful storm. See Soul’s Defiance, 
The.—Stoddard. 

I said to the rose, “The brief night goes.” See Maud 
(“I said,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

I said to Time, "This venerable pile.” See From an 
Italian Sonnet.—Rogers. 

I said, when evil men are strong. See Song at the 
Feast of Brougham Castle (Two Victories).— 
Wordsworth. 

I said when I began that I was a trophy. See Drunk¬ 
ards not All Brutes.—Gough. 

I said your beauty shamed the rose’s blush. See To 
Phyllis.—Terhune. 

I sail’d from the Downs in the Nancy. See Tar for All 
Weathers, The.—Dibdin. 

I sailed by Tenodos, in sight of Troy. See Taking of 
Sebastopol, The.—Parsons. 

I sang the budding spring away. See Cricket, The.— 
Burdette. 

I sat alone with my conscience. See Conscience and 
Future Judgment.—Anon. 

I sat an hour to-day, John. See Old School House, 
The.—Anon. 

I sat and watched him as he softly rocked. See In the 
Chimney Corner.—Lewis. 

I sat and watched the flags to-day. See Flag at Half- 
mast, The.—Cooke. 

I sat at Berne, and watched the chain. See Below the 
Heights.—Pollock. 

I sat at the opera—round me there floated. See 
Drama of Three, A.—Anon. 

I sat at my wheezy organ. See Old Organ, The.— 
Booth. 

I sat at work one summer day. See Prince’s Feather. 
—Bradley. 

I sat beside the streamlet. See Remember or Forget. 
—Aid (5. 

I sat by my window one night. See Musings.—Long¬ 
fellow. 

Tsat in the evening cool. See Forgiveness.-—Anon. 

I sat in the shade of the ingle; she sat a little apart. 
See Knitting.—Dallas. 

I sat me down at leisure. See Pity ’tis, ’tis true.— 
Welch. 

I sat unsphering Plato ere I slept. See Fall of a Soul, 
The.—Symonds. 

I sat upon a windy mountain height. See Sunset on 
the Cunimbla Valley, Blue Mountains.—Sladen. 

I sat with Doris, the shepherd-maiden. See Doris: A 
Pastoral.—Munby. 

I sat with Love upon a woodside well. See Willow- 
wood.—Rossetti. 

I sat within my wagon on a heated summer day. See 
Quarrel of the Wheels.—English. 

I sat within the temple of her heart. See Living 
Temple, A.—Sangster. 

I sauntered lately through the street. See Weird 
Warble, A.—Newton. 

I saw a cow-hide in the grass. See Odd See-saws.— 
Anon. 

I saw a famous fountain in my dream. See Vision of 
Repentance, A.—-Lamb. 

I saw a little bumble bee. See Bumble Bee, The.— 
Goodfellow. 

I saw a little girl. See Heart’s Fine Gold, The.— 
Bourne. 

I saw a man, by some accounted wise. See What is 
the Use?—Ellsworth. 


I saw a new world in my dream. See I Saw a New 
World.—Rands. 

I saw a pale young orphan boy. See Charity.—Anon. 

I saw a picture once by Angelo. See Unpraised Picture, 
An.—Burton. 

I saw a poor old woman on the bench. See By the 
Saltp(5trif‘re.—Ashe. 

I saw a pretty cottage stand. See What I Saw.— 
Akers. 

I saw a ship a-sailing. See Romance.—Setoun. 

I saw a smith stand with his hammer, thus. See King 
John.—Shakespeare. 

I saw a young bride in her beauty and pride. See 
Passing under the Rod.—-Dana. 

I saw an arm&l champion ride. See Two Champions, 
The.—Anon. 

I saw de signs of an early spring last night, Johnson. 
See Signs of an Early Spring.—Anon. 

I saw Eternity the other night. See World, The.— 
Vaughan. 

I saw fair Chloris walk alone. See Chloris in the Snow. 
—Anon. 

I saw five little fishes. See Fish Family, The.— 
Putnam. 

I saw her first on a day in spring. See Idyl, An.—Buck. 

I saw her going to the game. See Varium et Mutabile. 
—Sawyer. 

I saw her in childhood. See Agnes.-—Lyte. 

I saw her in the festive halls, in scenes of pride and glee. 
See Lady of the Earl, The.-—Anon. 

I saw her last night at a party. See Mourner S, la Mode, 
The.—Saxe. 

I saw her often as I passed. See Five versus Twenty- 
five.—Anon. 

I saw her once, once only, long ago. See Sonnet: “I 
saw her once,” etc.—Anon. 

I saw her when Life’s tide was high. See Life’s Morn¬ 
ing, Noon and Evening.—L. M. D. 

I saw him beat the surges under him. See Tempest, 
The.—Shakespeare. 

“I saw him kiss your cheek!” “’Tis true.” See 
Angel in the House, The (Sly Thoughts).— 
Patmore. 

I saw him kiss your hand before you saw me. See 
Country Girl, The, Scenes from.-—Anon. 

I saw him last on this terrace proud. See On the 
Death of George the Third.—Smith. 

I saw him, Lucy, only once. See Noble Stranger, The. 
—Anon. 

I saw him on the battle-eve. See Flight of Xerxes, 
The.—Jewsbury. 

I saw him once before. See Last I.eaf, The.-—Holmes. 

I saw him standing in the crowd. See He never Told 
a Lie.—Anon. 

I saw, I saw the lovely child. See same.—Myers. 

I saw in dreams a mighty multitude. See No Death.— 
Marston. 

I saw in Siena pictures. See Sodoma’s Christ Scourged. 
—Woodberry. 

I saw it all in Fancy’s glass. See Torch of Liberty, 
The.—Moore. 

I saw it in the visions of the night. See My Heart’s 
Treasure.—Nicholson. 

I saw Love stand. See Forgiven?—Gillespy. 

I saw my lady weep, and Sorrow proud to be advanced 
so. See I Saw my Lady Weep.—Anon. 

I saw my lady weeping, and Love did languish. See 
Sweet Lamenting.—Anon. 

I saw my pussy run up a tree. See How Pussy was 
Left.—K ichards. 

I saw my wife pull out the bottom drawer. See In the 
Bottom Drawer.—Anon. 

I saw not they were strange, the ways I roam. See 
After Music.—Peabody. 

I saw old Autumn in the misty morn. See Ode: 
Autumn.—Hood. 

I saw old Time, destroyer of mankind. See Time and 
Death.—Whitworth. • 

I saw on earth another light. See Light from Within, 
The.—Very. 

I saw Teddy Reagan the other day. See Tim Murphy’s 
Irish Stew.—Anon. 

I saw the city’s terror. See Rescue of Chicago, The.— 
Look. 

I saw the consecrated water fall. See Christening, 
The.—Townsend. 

I saw the curl of his waving lash. See Reflections of a 
Proud Pedestrian.—Holmes. 

I saw the Master of the Sun. See Sun God, The.— 
De Vere. 

I saw the moon rise clear. See Finland Love-song.— 
Moore. 

I saw the twinkle of white feet. See Hebe.—Lowell. 


701 





I saw 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I saw the woods and fields at close of day. See Task, 
The (Snow).—Cowper. 

I saw the young bride, in her beauty and pride. See 
Under the Rod.—Dana. 

I saw thee, Netley, as the sun. See Netley Abbey.— 
Barham. 

I saw thee when, as twilight fell. See I Saw Thee.— 
Palmer. 

I saw them kissing in the shade and knew the sum of all 
my lore. See House of a Hundred Lights, The 
(Young Lovers, The).—Torrence. 

I saw them standing in a wood. See Love's Young 
Dream.—Waithman. 

I saw these dreamers of dreams go by. See Gold 
Seekers, The.—Garland. 

I saw 7 three ships come sailing in. See I Saw Three 
Ships.—Anon. 

I saw three witches. See same. —Ramal. 

I saw through the grates of a prison door. See Rum 
Maniac, The.;—Fenno. 

Psaw thy beauty in its high estate. See To a Magnolia 
Flower in the Garden of the Armenian Convent at 
Venice.—Mitchell. 

I saw Time in his workshop carving faces. See Time.— 
Scott. 

I saw to-night the man I loved three little years ago. 
See With Clearer Vision.—Perry. 

I saw—'twas in a dream the other night. See Monte- 
fiore.—Bierce. 

I saw' two clouds at morning. See Epithalamium.— 
Brainard. 

I saw r two dusty little shoes. See What the Little 
Shoes Said.—Anon. 

I saw' w'here in the shroud did lurk. See On an Infant 
Dying as Soon as Born.—Lamb. 

I saw wife pull out the bottom drawer of the old family 
bureau this evening. See In the Bottom Drawer. 
—Anon. 

“I saw you take his kiss.” ’Tis true. See Angel in the 
House, The (Sly Thoughts).—Patmore. 

I saw you toss the kites on high. See Wind, The.— 
Stevenson. 

I saw you was at the lecture last night, Samantha. See 
My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s (Woman’s 
Rights).—Holley. 

I saw young Harry with his beaver on. See King 
Henry IV., Part I.—Shakespeare. 

I sawe to me appeare. See Pastime of Pleasure, The 
(Description of La Belle Pucel).—Hawes. 

I say, as one who never feared. See Beard and Baby. 
—Field. 

I say, Bob! Well, you and the rest of the boys go and 
get your excuses. See Mother’s Way.—Anon. 

I say, boys, I call Frank Barrett just the meanest boy 
in the school. See Peacemaker, The.—Anon. 

1 say, brover Horace, I learn you give Meriky. See 
Meriky’s Conversion.—Pickering. 

I say, Debby. See Tom’s Proposal.—Anon. 

I say, give me a bite. See Generosity.—Anon. 

I say, I wonder why fellahs ever wide in horse cars? 
See Swell in a Horse Car, The.—Kyle. 

I say it under the rose. See Thalia.—Aldrich. 

I say, John, do you see that old gal coming up the road. 
See Old Aunt, The.—Anon. 

I say, Johnson, were you eber a salt-sea-sailor-man? 
.See Bones’ Experience at Sea.—Anon. 

I say, Johnson, you hab heard of a good many queer 
things in your time, haben’t you? See Oldest 
Woman on Record, The.—Anon. 

I say, Kate, what are you going to do when you leave 
school? See After School, What?—Anon. 

I say, Mrs. Green, if you want peace with the world. 
See Other People’s Children.—F,. R. A. 

I say to thee, do thou repeat. See Kingdom of God, 
The.—Trench. 

I say without reserve, speaking merely in the abstract. 
See Freedom of the Press. The.—Erskine. 

I see a dusk and awful figure rise. See Manfred (Ap¬ 
parition, The).—Byron. 

I see a gray coon in de corn. See Piccaninny Lullaby. 
—Anon. 

1 see a nest in a green elm tree. See Child and the 
World, The.—Anon. 

I see a schooner in the bay. See Memory.—Scott. 

I see a tiny fluttering form. See Southern Snow Bird, 
The.—Hayne. 

I see before me now a traveling army halting. 
See Bivouac on a Mountain Side. — Whit¬ 
man. 

I see before me the gladiator lie. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage (Gladiator, The).—Byron. 

I see black dragons mount the sky. See Shapes and 
Signs.—Mangan. 


I see bold Longstreet’s darkening host. See Garfield 
at Chattanooga.—( Boston Transcript.) 

I see her face in the distance. See Love on the Links. 
-—Winter. 

I see her where the budding May. See Hawthorn. 
-—(All the Year Round.) 

I see him sit, wild-eyed, alone. See Last Aboriginal, 
The.—Sharp. 

I see it is a trick. See Dora.—Tennyson. 

I see men’s judgments are. See Antony and Cleopatra 
(“I see men’s,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

I see no more the gray an’ blue. See Bravest of the 
Brave.—Burdette. 

I see old Dobbin through the fence. How weak he 
looks and old. See Old Dobbin.—Keese. 

I see the cloud-born squadrons of the gale. See Storm 
in the Distance, A.—Hayne. 

I see the moon and the moon sees me. See Lady Moon. 
—Houghton. 

I see the star-lights quiver. See Flight from the 
Convent, The.—Tilton. 

I see thee ever in my dreams. See Karamanian Exile, 
The.—Mangan. 

I see thee pine like her in golden story. See Coleridge. 
—Watts. 

I see thee still. Thou art not dead. See Remem¬ 
brance, A.—Clarke. 

I see them—crowd on crowd they walk the earth. See 
Dead, The.—Very. 

I see you, on the zigzag rails. See “Bob White.”— 
Cooper. 

I seldom ponder the “future life.” See Ideal Future, 
An.—Harcourt. 

I send my heart up to thee, all my heart. See In a 
Gondola.—Browning. 

I send thee a shell from the ocean beach. See With 
a Nantucket Shell.—Webb. 

I send thee pansies while the year is young. See 
Pansies.—Doudney. 

I sent a ring—a little band. See To Helene on a Gift- 
ring Carelessly Lost.—Darley. 

I sent for Radcliffe; was so ill. See Remedy worse 
than the Disease. The.—Prior. 

I sent her a spoon. See Sic Semper.—Graves. 

I sent my sou! through the invisible. See Rubftiy&t 
of Omar Khayydm (Moving Finger Writes, The). 
—Fitzgerald. 

I serve the strongest! So spake Offerus. See Legend 
of St. Christopher, The.—Anon. 

I served in a great cause. See same. —Traubel. 

I set off for Rome on a journey to Russia in the midst 
of winter See Travels of Baron Munchausen ( Ad¬ 
venture of Baron Munchausen with his Horse).— 
Raspe. 

I shall certainly expire. See Soft Black Overcoat 
with a Velvet Collar. A.—Meyers. 

I shall come and live in the Louvre, I think. See 
Description of the Venus of Milo.—Thackeray. 

I shall go out when the light comes in. See Death at 
Daybreak.—Aldrich. 

I shall hear of ingratitude. I name the argument to 
despise it. See Declaration of Irish Rights (Na¬ 
tional Gratitude).—Grattan. 

I shall lack voice. See Coriolanus.—Shakespeare. 

I shall never forget a lesson which I received. See 
Not Ashamed of Ridicule.—Anon. 

I shall not acknowledge that the honorable member 
goes before me. See Reply to Hayne, The (Mas¬ 
sachusetts and South Carolina).—Webster. 

I shall not occupy time by discussing the huge mass of 
suppositions. See Life and Voyages of Christopher 
Columbus (Discovery of America, The).—Irving. 

I shall not paint them. God sees them, and I. See 
Angel Faces.—Mulock. 

I shall not pass this way again. See same —York. 

I shall not soon forget that sight. See Raphael.— 
Whittier. 

I shall now endeavor to be two people at once. See 
Dentist and Patient.—Kyle. 

I shall steer my bark where the waves roll dark. See 
Beyond.—Anon. 

I shall tell you of two little fellows who bore that name. 
See Fritz.—Diehl. 

I shall treat the topic I have selected without any 
attempt to lead the way. See Self-made Man in 
American Life, The.—Cleveland. 

I shan't be able to stand this sort of life much longer. 
See his First Brief.—Daryl. 

I shan’t keep still. I’ve just as much right. See Bob 
and his Sister.—Denton 

I shan’t stand it! I won’t! I do declare! See Child- 
philosophy.—Duncan. 


702 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


I stood 


I share with you all the pleasure and gratitude which 
Americans so far away. See Speech at Hamburg 
July 4.—Grant. 

I shiver, Spirit fierce and bold. See At the Grave of 
Burns.—Wordsworth. 

I shot a rocket in the air. See Enough.—Anon. 

I shot an arrow into the air. See Arrow and the Song, 
The.—Longfellow. 

I should be much for open war, O Peers. See Paradise 
Lost (Belial’s Address Opposing War).—Milton. 

I should be surprised, indeed, if, while you are doing us 
wrong. See Irish Aliens and English Victories. 
—Sheil. 

I should come early every day. See Rules of School.— 
Anon. 

I should like to be a great author. See Choosing a 
Trade.—Anon. 

I should like to rise and go. See Travel.—Stevenson. 

I should think myself a criminal if I said anything to 
chill. See Young Scholar, The.—Warner. 

I shouldn’t like to say, I’m sure. See Song: “I shouldn’t 
like,” etc.—Baker. 

I shtood on der pridge py Brooklyn. See (Brooklyn) 
Bridge, The.-—Wood. 

I sift the snow on the mountains below. See Cloud. 
The.—Shelley. 

I sighed as the soul of April fled. See Inconstancy.— 
McDonald. 

I sing because I love to sing. See Why I Sing.—Anon. 

I sing beneath your lattice, love. See Sensible Sere¬ 
nade, A.—L. M. L. 

I sing no splendid deed of fame. See Little Cloak, 
The.—Barr. 

I sing not of beauties of nature. See Ball Room Mad¬ 
rigal, A.—Nichols. 

I sing of a maiden. See Carol: “I sing,” etc.—Anon. 

I sing of a whistle, a whistle of worth. See Whistle, 
The.—-Burns. 

I sing of brooks, of blossoms, birds and bowers. See 
Argument of the Hesperides, The.—Herrick. 

I sing of the life of the wild sea-gulls. See Sea-gulls.— 

. Page. 

I sing that charming thing. See Sloth, The.—Kimball- 
Gardiner. 

I sing the birth was born to-night. See Hymn on the 
Nativity of My Saviour, A.—-Jonson. 

I sing the hymn of the conquered, who fell in the 
Battle of Life. See He and She; or, A Poet’s Port¬ 
folio (Io Victis).—Story. 

I sing the oyster, virgin theme. See Apostrophe to 
the Oyster, An.—Gesnard. 

I sing the poppy, the frail, snowy weed. See Poppy.— 
Barr. 

I, singularly moved. See Winter.—Patmore. 

I sit all alone with my pipe by the fire. See Bachelor’s 
Soliloquy, A.—( Cigar and Tobacco World.) 

I sit at the wheel of life to spin. See Life’s Loom.— 
Lee. 

I sit before my fire alone. See Summer Reminiscence, 
A (‘‘I sit,” etc.).—Shepherd. 

I sit beneath the apple-tree. See Apple Blossoms.— 
Phelps. 

I sit beside my darling’s grave. See To God and 
Ireland True.—O’Leary. 

I sit here and the earth is wrapped in snow. See 
Twilight Fancy, A.—Goodale. 

I sit upon the mountain-top. See Because.—Anon. 

I sit where the leaves of the maple. See Time to Be, 
The.—Cary. 

I sit within my little room. See From my Window.— 
Ames. 

I sit within my room and joy to find. See Presence, 
The.—Very. 

I slept and dreamed that life was Beauty. See Duty.— 
Hooper. 

I slept in an old homestead by the sea. See Chimney 
Swallows.—Powers. 

I smile to see how you devise. See Proper Sonnet, A.— 
Anon. 

I sneered when I heard the old priest complain. See 
Night before Execution, The.—Anon. 

I softly sink into the bath of sleep. See Sleeping and 
Dreaming.—Holland. 

I sometimes doubt whether the obligation of the state 
to the scholar. See Scholar and the state, The.— 
Black. 

I sometimes feel the thread of life is slender. See 
Thoughts for the New Year.—( Youth’s Com¬ 
panion. ) 

I sometimes have thought in my loneliest hours. See 
Rainbow, The.—Anon. 

I sometimes hold it half a sin. See Grief Unspeakable. 
—Tennyson. 


I sometimes quote the United States of America. See 
American Merchant Vessels.—Cobden. 

I sometimes wonder that if death should come. See 
Which Could I Spare?—Brotherson. 

I sought Thee round about, O Thou my God. See 
Search after God.—Heywood. 

I sought to find some fancied bond.~ See Valentine, A. 
—Holmes. 

I sought to hold her, but -within her eyes. See Angel 
at the Ford, The.—Dawson. 

I speak the words of truth and soberness. See Greatest 
Party, The.—Willard. 

I speak to Time and to Eternity. See Marino Faliero 
(Dying Speech of Marino Faliero).-—Byron. 

I spied John Mouldy in his cellar. See John Mouldy 
—Ramal. 

I s’pose I hain’t progressive, but I swan, it seems to 
me. See When Nathan Led the Choir.—Lincoln. 

I s’pose it’s about time we was gitting to work. See 
Goose Hollow Farmers’ Club.—McBride. 

I sprang to the saddle and Joris and he. See Ride 
from Ghent to Aix, The.—Beaumont. 

I sprang to the stirrup, and Joris and he. See How 
They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix. 
—Browning. 

I spurn your gilded bait, O king; my faith you cannot 
buy. See General Joseph Reed; or,The Incor¬ 
ruptible Patriot.—Jones. 

I stand and count the flying years upon my fingers 
See Soldier’s Retrospect.—Sherwood. 

I stand and wait, while all around me lies. See Waiting. 
—Coe. 

I stand at last on Ludgate’s famous hill. See Ludgate 
Hill—A Mystery.— {Punch.) 

I stand before the judgment throne of heaven. See 
Choice of Arms, The.—Leuville. 

I stand between the Future and the Past. See Mortal 
and Immortal.—Waterston. 

I stand by every word I utter when I sing. See same — 
Sterling. 

I stand here to say the experience of all these years. 
See Constitutional Prohibition the Great Remedy. 
—Finch. 

I stand in a darkened room. See Arthur Bonnicastle 
(Death of the First-born).—Holland. 

I stand in the doorway and wait for his coming. See 
My Lover.—M’Curdy. 

I stand in the middle of Jonathan’s house. See Song 
of the Chimney.—Anon. 

I stand on the brink of a river. See Vision, A.—A. M. 
E. 

I stand upon the hill and hear. See Old Year and the 
New, The.—Rexford. 

I stand upon the hoary mountain of old Time. See 
Infelicissime.—( Nassau Magazine.) 

I stand upon my native hills again. See At the 
Old Flome Again.—Bryant. 

I stand upon the summit of my life [or years]. See 
Thalatta.—Brown. 

I stand within a garden, where the fairest flowers 
bloom. See Thomas Buchanan Read.—Janvier. 

I started from home one Sunday evening. See Jim: 
A Hero.—Overton. 

I stepped into my room one day. See Proof Positive. 
—Anon. 

I still keep open Memory’s chamber; still. See Mem¬ 
ory.—Rosslvn. 

I stole a kiss! What could I do? See Thief’s Apology, 
A.—St. John. 

I stood and saw my mistress dance. See On Her 
Dancing.—Shirley. 

I stood and saw the angel of the dawn. See Two 
Angels, The.—MacFarlane. 

I stood and watched a school boy group. See Keep 
the Mill a-Going.— English. 

I stood and watched my ships go out. See Sad Ven¬ 
tures.— ( Boston Cultivator.) 

I stood at eve when the sun went down. See ’Ostler 
Joe.—Sims. 

I stood at Rimmel’s window, and I saw that there 
were signs. See Valentine, A.—Sims. 

I stood beneath a hollow tree; the blast it hollow blew. 
See All Hollow.—Anon. 

I stood beside my window one stormy winter day. 
See same. —Leslie. 

I stood beside the grave of him who blazed. See Church 
hill’s Grave.—Byron. 

I stood by the open casement. See Celestial Army, 
The.—Read. 

I stood in gladness—for life’s highest joy. See Life’s 
Wea vi n g. —Colcord. 

I stood in that cathedral old, the work of kingly power. 
See Tomb of Charlemagne, The.—Taylor. 


703 





I stood 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I stood in the crowded street, the winter sun shone 
brightly. See Better than Diamonds.—Anon. 

I stood in Venice, on the Bridge of Sighs. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Venice).—Byron. 

I stood on a tower in the wet. See New Year, The.— 
Tennyson. 

I stood on the bridge at midnight. See Bridge, The.— 
Longfellow. 

I stood on the crest in the sunlight. See Timber Line. 
—DeLan. 

I stood on the shore of the beautiful sea. See Secret, A. 
—Denton. 

I stood on the shore of the beautiful sea. See also 
Sorrow of the Sea, The.—Anon. 

I stood, one Sunday morning. See London Churches. 
—Houghton. 

I stood tiptoe upon a little hill. See same. —Keats. 

I stood to hear that bold Sentence of grit. See Earth 
to Earth.—-Field. 

I stood to-day in that great square of fountains. See 
At the Council.—-De Tabley. 

I stood upon the hills, when heaven’s wide arch. See 
Sunrise on the Hills.—Longfellow. 

I stood upon the ocean’s briny shore. See Agnes, I 
I.ove Thee.—Anon. 

I stood upon the pebbly strand. See same. —Anon. 

I stood with my hand in my friend’s warm hand. See 
Lines to a Friend.—-Bensel. 

I stood within a vision’s spell. See Niagara.—Anon. 

I stood within the cypress gloom. See Implora Pace. 
—Hildreth. 

I strolled beside the shining sea. See Cumberbunce, 
The.—West. 

I strove with none, for none was worth my strife. See 
On His Seventy-fifth Birthday.—Landor. 

I struck the board, and cried, “No more.” See Collar, 
The.—Herbert. 

I studied my tables over and over, and backward and 
forward, too. See Mortifying Mistake, A.— 
Pratt. 

I study Evolution. See Relapse.—Field. 

I suppose every husband is subject to what might be 
called “sudden fits.” See Mr. and Mrs. Bowser’s 
Family Jar.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

I suppose I may come in? See Monsieur Jacques.— 
Barnett. 

I suppose if all the children. See All the Children.— 
Anon. • 

I suppose it’s myself that you’re making allusions to. 
See At the Atlantic Dinner.—Holmes. 

I suppose you all think you know what I am going to 
say. See Prologue.—Anon. 

I suppose you go to church, Johnson?—Anon. 

I suppose you think me rather small to stand up here 
and make a speech. See Presentation Speech.— 
Anon. 

I suppose you wish me to act as your second. See 
Tramp Abroad A (French Duel, The).—Clemens. 

I suppose we’re going home pretty soon. See Being 
Thankful.—Denton. 

I swing to the sunset land. See Prairie Greyhounds. 
—Johnson. 

I take life jest as I find it. See Thankful Soul, A.— 
Stanton. 

I take my chaperon to the play. See Chaperon, The. 

—Bunner. 

I talk with you of foolish things and wise. See Entre 
Nous.—Jewett. 

I talked about you, dear, the other night. See Noc¬ 
turne of Consecration, A.—Roberts. 

I talked with a stalwart young seaman last week on 
Ratcliff Highway. See Brave Woman, A.— 
Nicholls. 

I tan’t see what our baby boy is dood for anyway. See 
Little Dora’s Soliloquy.— (St. Nicholas.) 

I tell thee, Dick, where I have been. See Ballad upon 
a Wedding, A.—Suckling. 

“I tell ye it’s nonsense,” said Farmer Ben. See Far¬ 
mer Ben’s Theory.—Anon. 

I tell yer, boys, you’ve got to stop yer noise over there. 
See Scene in a Backwoods School.—McBride. 

I tell you, Bill Vinton, you can’t cheat me that way. 
See Reclaimed Father, The.—McBride. 

I tell you, Emma, it is your duty to do something. See 
Woman’s Rights.—Anon. 

I tell you, hopeless grief is passionless. See Grief.— 
Browning. 

I tell you, I will not have the king killed. See “Gen¬ 
tlemen, the King!”—Barr. 

I tell you, Imogine, that it is simply ruinous. See 
Fifty Dollar Milliner’s Bill, A.—Booth. 

I [or I’ll] tell you, Kate, that Lovejoy cow. See Love- 
joy Cow, The.—Morse. 


I tell you, Maria Jane, I know my business. See Mrs. 
Thompson’s Nephew.—Anon. 

I tell you mother, I cannot stand it any longer. See 
He Was never Known to Smile.—Barnard. 

I tell you no! I won’t comply, and its my business to 
talk and command. See Dorcas and Gregory.— 
Molifire. 

I tell you, pard, in this Western wild. See Sergeant’s 
Story, The.—Anon. 

I tell you plain, if I don’t try. See Jim’s Story.— 
Tomer. 

“I tell you,” said Robbie, eating his peach. See 
Number One.—Talbot. 

I thank all who have lov’d me in their hearts. See 
Sonnets from the Portuguese, XLI.—Browning. 

I thank God as heartily as any one that human slavery 
has gone forever. See At the Boston Banquet 
(Negro Problem, The).—Grady. 

I thank thee. Lord, that I am straight and strong. See 
For All These.—Tompkins. 

I, that am rudely stamped and want love’s majesty. 
See King Richard III. (Duke of Gloster, The).— 
Shakespeare. 

I that in heill wes and glaidness. See Lament for the 
Makaris quhen He Was Seik, The.—Dunbar. 

I, the poet, mussed my hair. See Advice.—L. L. II. 

I think a great many professors of religion are just like 
backgammon boards. See same. —Bethune. 

I think a stormless night-time shall ensue. See World’s 
Death-night. The.—Woods. 

I think, as [or when] I read that sweet story of old. 
See Of Such is the Kingdom of Heaven (Child’s 
Desire, The).—Luke. 

I think. Bones, you said you were a married man? 
See Bones’ Wife.—Anon. 

I think he had not heard of the far towns. See St. 
John Baptist.—O’Shaughnessy. 

I think I am the most unfortunate man. See Hard 
Luck.—Thatcher. 

I think I do not exaggerate when I say. See Cen¬ 
tennial of the Birth of O’Connell, The.—Phillips. 

I think I have it now. See Missed his Chance.— 
Graham. 

I think I know what Cupid is. See Discovery in Biol¬ 
ogy, A.-—Leverett. 

I think I must have caught cold. See Mr. Perkins at 
the Dentist’s.—Bailey. 

I think I now have the matter neatly arranged. See 
Wise Selection, A.—Anon. 

“I think I want some pies this morning.” See Greedy 
Ri chard.—Taylor. 

I think I will write to Old Santa. See Myrtle’s Letter. 
—Richards. 

I think if I should cross the room. See Room’s Width, 
The.—Ward. 

I think if thou couldst know. See If Thou Couldst 
Know.—Procter. 

I think I’ll be a blacksmith. See Choice of Occupa¬ 
tion. _ (For bops.) —Anon. 

I think it is over, over. See In Harbor.—Hayne. 

I think it really mean—don’t you? See Complaint, A. 
—Jenks [or Pennypacker]. 

I think it was Spring—but not certain I am. See 
Epicurean Reminiscences of a Sentimentalist.— 
Hood. 

I think it’s berry hard on dis child. See Barking up 
the Wrong Tree.—Anon. 

I think it’s not an easy task. See Little Boy’s First 
Recitation, A.—Anon. 

I think it’s real mean of people, to put me down on 
the program. See Oration for a Six Year Old 
Boy, An.—Anon. 

I think myself happy, King Agrippa, because I shall 
answer for myself. See Acts of the Apostles 
(Paul’s Defence before Festus and Agrippa).— 
Bible. 

I think not on my father. See All’s Well that Ends 
Well (True Love).-—Shakespeare. 

I think of thee when nightingale’s sweet songs. See 
I Think of Thee.—Matthisson. 

I think of thee, when the bright sunlight shimmers. 
See Loved One ever Near, The.—Goethe. 

I think on thee in the night. See I Think on Thee.— 
Hervey. 

I think, Sir, the country calls upon us loudly and im¬ 
peratively. See Compromise Measures (Justice 
to the Whole Country).—Webster. 

I think that an angel, when nobody knew. See How 
the Flowers Came.—Anon. 

I think that every mother’s son. See What to Drink. 
—Anon. 

I think that he loved me! at least, he said. See After 
All!—Butt. 


704 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


I walked 


I think that none of us can understand. See Holmes, 
Extract Concerning.—Eliot. 

I think that the world was finished at night. See 
Thoughts.—Whiton. 

I think that we retain of our dead friends. See Re¬ 
membrance.—Boner. 

I think the pity of this life is love. See Life’s Pity.— 
Anon. 

I think the song that’s sweetest. See Ideal, The. 
.—( Hall’s Journal of Health.) 

I think there are some maxims. See Old Maxims.— 
Cary. 

I think there was chilens enough. See Big Enough 
Family, A.—-( Columbus Morning News.) 

I think this is the jolliest day in all the year. See 
Something to be Thankful For.—Denton, 

“I think this is the result of a burn.” See Hole in the 
Carpet , The.—Anon. 

I think till I weary with thinking. See Hindoo 
Sceptic, The.—( Spectator , The.) 

I think true love is never blind. See True Love.—Cary. 

I think we are too ready with complaint. See Cheer¬ 
fulness.—Browning. 

I think we cannot too sharply draw the line between 
what really is our duty. See Victims and Vic¬ 
timizes.—Craik. 

I think we shall have callers, Mattie dear. See Morn¬ 
ing Calls.—Anon. 

I think, when I read that sweet story of old. See 
Of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.—I.uke. 

I think you remember a man we knew, who went by 
the name of “Prince.” See “Prince.”—Pember¬ 
ton. 

I thought as I watched in the dawning. See Mes¬ 
senger Hours, The.—-Parkinson. 

I thought T must be dreaming. See Unspoken Ques¬ 
tion, The.—Anon. 

I thought I’d come into the shop for awhile. It is 
lonely in the house. See Shoemaker’s Troubles, 
A.—Anon. 

I thought I’d jist run in fur a minute and hev a little 
talk. See Curing the Borrowers.—McBride. 

I thought it meant all glad ecstatic things. See Love’s 
Meaning.—Perry. 

I thought it was the little bed. See Half-waking.— 
Allingham. 

“I thought, Mr. Allan, when I gave my Bennie to his 
country.” See Soldier’s Reprieve, The.—Robbins. 

I thought myself indeed secure. See At the Door.— 
Field. 

I thought of death beside the lonely sea. See Life and 
Death.—Scott. 

I thought of Thee, my partner and my guide. See 
After-thought.—W ordsworth. 

I thought once how Theocritus had sung. See Son 
nets from the Portuguese, I.—Browning. 

I thought our love at full, but I did err. See Sonnet: 
‘‘I thought our love,” etc.—Lowell. 

I thought that I would like to build. See Difficulties. 
—Denton. 

I thought to find some healing clime. See Answered. 
—Cary. 

I thought to meet no more, so dreary seem’d. See 
Burial of the Dead.—Keble. 

I thought to pass away before, and yet alive I am. 
See May Queen, The (Conclusion).—Tennyson. 

I thought to work for him. “Master,” I said. See 
same. —Anon. 

I thought when I’d learned my letters. See Little 
Boy’s Troubles, A.—Perry. 

“I thought you had given up betting on the horse¬ 
races,” said Mrs. De Tompkins. See She Earned 
her Half.—Babcock. 

I thought you was to school! See Little Prudy (Play¬ 
ing “Hookey”).—May. 

I, Timothy Doolan, of Barrydownderry, in the County 
Clare.—See Timothy Doolan’s Will.—-Anon. 

I tink I hear my brudder say. See Stars Begin to 
Fall.—Anon. 

I told a little artless child. See Just Like God.— 
Viroe. 

I told Hezekiah—that’s my man. See Aunt Parsons’s 
Story.— (Presbyterian Journal.) 

I told my secret to the sweet wild roses. See Couldn’t 
Keep a Secret.— (All the Year Round.) 

I tole yu, Petah, you’d orte ben dah. See One-legged 
Duck, The.—Smith. 

I too am changed—I scarce know why. See Ten 
Years Ago.—-Watts. 

I too have suffered. Yet I know. See Excuse.— 
Arnold. 

“I too, like them, from Lacednemon spring.” See 
Leonidas (Polydorus and Maron).—Glover. 


I too remember, in the after years. See Niobe. 
—Tennyson. 

I took a prism and on the floor I threw. See My 
“Shine.”—Anon. 

I took a sea-weed in my hand. See Sea-weed.—Drom- 
goole. 

I took it for a fairy vision. See Comus.—Milton. 

I took mine Katarina down. See Katarina Sees a 
Game of Foot-ball.—Anon. 

I took my heart in my hand. See Twice.—Rossetti. 

I took that glass marble, mamma. See Johnny’s Con 
fession.—Anon. 

I travell’d among unknown men. See same. —Words¬ 
worth. 

I tried to improve my mind one afternoon. See Mrs. 
Smith Improves her Mind.—Dallas. 

I tripped along a narrow way. See Forthfaring.—■ 
Howells. 

I trust in God; whatever ills. See My Faith.—Anon. 

I trust that at length, the time is come. See Negro 
Slavery.—Brougham. 

I trust your lordships will not believe that. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings (Impeachment of 
Mr. Hastings, The).—Sheridan. 

I try to knead and spin, but my life is low the while. 
See In Leinster.—Guiney. 

I turned and thought I saw myself. See Roadside 
Path, The.—Killian. 

I understand the large hearts of heroes. See Song of 
Myself (Heroes).—Whitman. 

I understand you was at the grand opera last night. 
See How Hans Yager Enjoyed the Opera.— 
Anon. 

I used to go to bed at night. See Bed during Exams. 
—Vail. 

I used to marry a good many folks. See Pike County 
Wedding, A.—Anon. 

I useter beg my old gra’ma. See Dimes for Turnips’ 
Blood.—Anon. 

I vant some invormashun, shust so quickly vot I can. 
See Der Coming Man.—Adams. 

I vant to dold you vat it is, dots a putty nice play. 
See Schneider Sees Leah.—“Uncle Schneider.” 

I venture to prophesy, there are those now living who 
will see this. See Return of British Fugitives.— 
Henrv. 

I very much regret that it should have been thought 
necessary to suggest to you. See Murder of 
Captain Joseph White, The (Murder Will Out). 
—Webster. 

I vill now make a few remarks on demperance. See 
Burlesque Temperance Speech.—Williams. 

I, Virgin of the Snows, have liv’d. See Jungfrau’s 
Cry, The.—Brooke. 

I vork in my studio one day, ven one gentleman. See 
Popular Americans.—Anon. 

I wadna gi'e my ain wife. See My Ain Wife.—Laing. 

I wait and watch; before my eyes. See Waiting, The. 
—Whittier. 

I waited in the little sunny room. See Eve’s Daughter. 
—Sill. 

I waited more than two hours without having an 
opportunity to cross the river. See Women of 
Sego, The.—Park. 

I waited till the twilight. See same. —Swain' 

I wake! Ah! would that I could sleep again! See 
same. —“Montebello. ” 

I wake! I feel the day is near. See Chanticleer.— 
Thaxter. 

I waked; the sun was in the sky. See On Waking from 
a Dreamless Sleep.—Fields. 

I walk along the crowded streets, and mark. See 
Mystery of Life in Christ, The.—Prentiss. 

I walk down the Valley of Silence. See Song of the 
Mystic, The.—Ryan. 

I walk’d along a stream, for pureness rare. See Eng¬ 
land’s Parnassus.—-Marlowe. 

I walked alone in the darkness. See Doubting.— 
Downey. 

I walked beside a dark gray sea. See Sea-mews in 
Winter Time.—Ingelow. 

I walked beside the evening sea. See Ebb and Flow. 
—Curtis. 

I walked entranced. See Vision of Connaught in the 
Thirteenth Century, A.—Mangan. 

I walked in the lonesome evening. See Across the 
Sea.—Allingham. 

I walked one day with Phyllith. See Chappie’s La¬ 
ment.—Greenslet. 

I walked through Ballinderry in the spring-time. See 
Lament for Thomas Davis.—Ferguson. 

I walked with him one melancholy night. See Lyci- 
das.—Aldrich. 


705 








I walked 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I walked with the beautiful Marcelline. See Tell her 
So.—Anon. 

I wander lonely o’er the earth. See My Fire.—Pal¬ 
mer. 

I wander’d by the brook-side. See Brook-side, The.— 
Houghton. 

I wander’d in a lonely glade. See Walk in Spring, A.— 
Montgomery. 

I wander’d lonely as a Cloud. See Daffodils.—Words¬ 
worth. 

I wandered lonely where the pine trees made. See 
Trailing Arbutus, The.—Whittier. 

I wandered through a dreary land. See Love that 
Lives for Aye, The.—Peck. 

I wandered through the night alone. See Face, A.— 
Washburn. 

I wandered where a curious crowd. See Day Old 
Bet was Sold, The.—Gassaway. 

I want free life and I want fresh air. See I.asca.— 
Desprez. 

I want no array of figures, I want no official documents. 
See Legislative Union, The.—Peel. 

“I want something to do.” See Enlisting as Army 
Nurse.—Alcott. 

I want to be a farmer See What I Would Be.— 
Heywood. 

I want to be a soldier! a soldier! a soldier! See Boy 
Patriot, The.—Riley. 

I want to be a soldier, and with the soldiers stand. 
See same. —Childs. 

“I want to be an angel.” See How to be an Angel.— 
Anon. 

I want to buy a doll, a very pretty doll! See Two 
Dolls, The.—Boyd. 

“I want to get up,” the Snowdrop said. See First 
Snowdrop, The.—Dana. 

I want to introduce my dog. See My Dog.—Rook. 

I want to know. Judge. See Is Freedom a Lie?— 
Munyon. 

I want to say a word to the young men. See Word to 
Young Men, A.—Gough. 

I want to show you something. See New Toy, The.— 
Rook. 

I want to talk to you of the attitude. See Use and 
Abuse of Property, The.—Roosevelt. 

I want to teach my dolly—her ig’rance is obsurd. See 
Dolly’s Lesson.—Anon. 

I want to tell you a little story about an old lady. See 
Story of the Old Arm-chair, The.—Thatcher. 

I want to tell you about my thorn-apple tree. See 
Sermon from a Thorn-apple Tree, A.—Miller. 

I want to tell you all about the walk I took with Ned. 
See Two Ways of Telling the Same Thing.—Duf- 
fey. 

I want you—Oh! I want you,now and ever! Seel 
Want You.—Anon. 

“I want you to go to bed.” said Mr. Meeklamore. See 
Unfinished Manuscript, The.—Anon. 

I want you to take a picter o’ me, and my old woman 
here. See Old Farmer Grey Gets Photographed. 
—Anon. 

I wanted you when skies were red. See Unanswered. 
—Dickinson. 

I wants a piece of cal’co [or talito]. See Mattie’s 
Wants and Wishes.—Gordon. 

I wants to mend my wagon. See “Gran’ma al’as 
Does. ”—Poe. 

I warn, like the one drop of rain. See Voice of the 
Void, The.—Lathrop. 

I was a boy once, and I was a caution. See My Ma¬ 
tilda Jane.—Anon. 

I was a boy ten years old when the troops marched 
away. See Blue and the Gray, The.—Lodge. 

I was a collector of donations. See Charity Collec¬ 
tor, The.—Vickers. 

I was a member of the Delphian Club. See Dry Ex¬ 
periment, A.—Neal. 

I was a mother, and I weep. See Armenian Mother, 
The.—Field. 

I was a normal graduate, primful of methods and with 
no experience. See My First School.—Anon. 

I was a stricken deer that left the herd. See Task, 
The (Autobiographical).—Cowper. 

I was walking along, comfortable and quiet, with a 
jar of jelly. See Her First Steam-engine.—Dallas. 

I was a wandering sheep. See Lost but Found.— 
Bonar. 

I was a wide awake little boy. See Fourth of July 
Record, A.—Rice. 

‘I was always so poor in Greek.” See His Father 
Took him Home.—S. J. R. 

f was an English shell. See English Shell, An.—Ben¬ 
son. 


I was an English workin’ man. See Jumberlo Tom.— 
Overton. 

I was as happy as a young ambitious girl. See My 
Great Mistake.—Golden. 

I was as light of heart the next morning as any of my 
brother workmen. See Beauty of Nature.—Mil¬ 
ler. 

I was asking for something specific and perfect for my 
city. See Mannahatta.—Whitman. 

I was bitten severely by a little dog. See Our Dogs.— 
Brown. 

I was born as free as the silvery light. See Man.— 
Coates. 

I was born in a land across the seas, nearly five hundred 
years ago. See Ten Famous Women.—Lloyd. 

“I was born in Indiany, ” says a stranger, lank and 
slim. See Like his Mother Used to Make.—Riley. 

I was born in St. Louis, Missouri, September 3, 1850. 
See Story of his Life.—Field. 

I was born of a bud in spring time. See Voice of a 
Leaf, The.—Chambers. 

I was busily engaged the other day in writing an 
article. See Telephone Conversation, A.—Gregg. 

I was climbing up a mountain path. See Obstacle, An. 
—Stetson. 

I was coming down the street just now. See Few 
Remarks on Pants, A.—Thatcher. 

I was courting a beautiful girl one night. See Goddess 
of Slang, The.—Anon. 

I was delving in the garret and I came upon it there. 
See Old Arithmetic, The.—Anon. 

I was detained over Sunday in Barnjbury, and on 
Sunday morning I resolved to go to church. See 
Banks’ Babies.—Anon. 

I was dozing comfortably in my easy-chair. See How 
We Hunted a Mouse.—Jenkins. 

I was foretold your rebel sex. See Deposition from 
Love, A.—Carew. 

I was going down the walk. See Who was She?— 
Anon. 

I was going into town the other morning. See Piece 
of Red Calico, A.—Scroggin. 

I was happy that day. See Written Lesson, A.— 
Chamberlain. 

I was hoein’ in my corn-field, on a spring day, just at 
noon. See Farmer and Wheel; or, The New Loch- 
invar.—Carleton. 

I was ill of an epidemic vile fever. See same. — 
Sterne. 

I was in a Cedar Rapids sleeper. See Songs in the 
Night.—( Burlington Hawkeye.) 

I was in a saloon the other day and drank four beers. 
See Good Bet, A.—Anon. 

I was in Margate last July, I walk’d upon the pier. 
See Misadventures at Margate.—Barham. 

I was just a little thing. See Ganderfeather’s Gift.— 
Field. 

I was just off to spend a fortnight with my old friend 
Colonel Gunton, in Norfolk. See Little Joke, A.— 
Hope. 

I was loung’n amongst m’ pillows. See Lullaby.— 
Higginson. 

I was made to be eaten. See Song of the Corn, The.— 
Anon. 

I was not asleep. See Happiness and Duty.—Swain. 

I was not born to Helicon, nor dare. See To Ben Jon- 
son.—Randolph. 

I was not patient in that olden time. See Patient.— 
Anon. 

“I was on the Merrimac”— “No more,” the listener 
cried. See I Was on the Merrimac.—Anon. 

I was one day traveling in Calabria. See Night of 
Terror, A.—Courier. 

I was one evening on the Ohio, when the river had 
been swollen. See Fate of European Kings, 
The.—Meagher. 

I was one of a party of five in the inside of a stage¬ 
coach. See Female Tenderness.—Jerrold. 

I was one of many men. See Habet.—Hooker. 

I was out in the country. See Rain and Sunshine.— 
Cary. 

I was out last night in the orchard, a-thinkin’ of Mary 
Jane. See Mary Jane and I.—Rothwell. 

I was quick in the flesh, was warm, and the live heart 
shook my breast. See Resurrection, A.—Cone. 

I was seized with an ambition to appear in public 
once. See My First Recital.—Eaton. 

I was sitting alone toward the twilight. See Voice 
in [or of] the Twilight , The.-—Johnson. 

I was sitting in my study. See Papa’s Letter.— 
Anon. 

I was sitting in my study. See Preparing a Flunk.— 
Anon. 


70G 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


I wish 


I was sitting in the twilight. See Little Charlie’s Big 
Story.— (Springfield, Mass., Republican.) 

I was smoking a cigarette. See Duet, The.—Wilcox. 

I was so small they lifted me to see. See Then and 
Now.—M’Guire. 

I was so tired of Jack, poor boy. See Jack and I.— 
Anon. 

I was so very much afraid. See Dolly’s Vaccination. 
—Goodfellow. 

I was sorry to see you in that state last night, Tambo. 
See Tambo on Chess.—Anon. 

I was standing alone on a rocky height. See How I 
Won My Wife.—Eaton. 

I was standing in a file of cabs. See Cabman’s Story, 
The.—Henry. 

I was takin’ off my bonnet. See Darwinism in the 
Kitchen.—Anon. 

I was the chief of the race—he had stricken my father 
dead. See Voyage of Maeldune, The.—Tennyson. 

I was the last new boy at school. See Nobody There. 
—Anon. 

I was thy neighbor once, thou rugged pile! See 
Elegiac Stanzas Suggested by a Picture of Peele 
Castle in a Storm.—Wordsworth. 

I was to preach for Brother Anderson. See Brother 
Anderson’s Sermon.—Beecher. 

I was unwilling to interrupt the course of this debate. 
See Walpole’s Attack on Pitt.—Walpole. 

I was up the next morning before the October sun¬ 
rise. See Lorna Doone (October Morning, An).— 
Blackmore. 

I was visiting a gentleman who lived in the vicinity of 
Los Angeles. See Mule and the Bees, The.—■„ 
Malone. 

I was walking in Savannah, past a church decayed and 
dim. See Funeral, The.—Carleton. 

I was wandering in a beautiful and romantic country. 
See Hill of Science, The.—Aiken. 

“I was with Grant”—the stranger said. See Aged 
Stranger, The.—Harte. 

I was young, and my horse was strong. See Aunt 
Phillis’s Guest.—Gannett. 

I watch afar the moving Mystery. See Flying Mist, 
The.—Markham. 

I watch her in the corner there. See Arachne.— 
Cooke. 

I watch his wings in thickets dim. See Red Bird, 
The.—Hayne. 

I watch the drowsy night expire. See Faces in the 
Fire.—Anon. 

I watch the golden billows awaiting the sickles keen. 
See Harvest, The.—( Good Housekeeping.) 

I watch the leaves that flutter in the wind. See Leaves 
at my Window.—Piatt. 

1 watch the mowers, as they go. See Midsummer. 
—Trowbridge. 

I watch the printer’s clever hand. See Revised 
Proofs.—M’Evoy. 

I watch the ships by town and lea. See I Watch the 
Ships.—Eaton. 

I watch them from the window. See Winter Birds.— 
Cooper. 

I watch’d her as she stooped to pluck. See On the 
Bri nk.—Calverley. 

I watched her face, suspecting germs of love. See 
Angel in the House, The (Honoria).—Patmore. 

I watched the dear little blossoms. See Cherry Time. 
—Dayre. 

I watched the Lady Caroline. See Lovelocks.— 
Ramal. 

I wear these three colors to-day. See Good Country, 
A.—Denton. 

I weep for Adonais—he is dead! See Adonais.—Shel- 
ley. 

I weep those dead lips, white and dry. See Linen 
Bands.—Thompson. 

I weigh not fortune’s frown or smile. See Contented 
Mind, A.—Sylvester.. 

I well remember a certain evening. See Speech De¬ 
livered in the House of Commons on the 2nd of 
March, 1831, A (Reform Bill, The).—Macaulay. 

I went a roaming through the woods alone. See 
Nightingale, The.—Symonds. 

I went into a bakery the other day and ordered two 
hundred cream puffs. See Cream Puff Story, The. 
—Anon. 

I went to dig a grave for Love. See Love’s Change.— 
Aldrich. 

I went to her who loveth me no more. See Song: 
"I went,” etc.—O'Shaughnessy. 

I went to sleep; and now I am refreshed. See Dream 
of Gerontius, The.—Newman. 


I went to the garden of love. See Garden of Love 
The.—Blake. 

I went to Washington the other day; and I stood 
on the Capitol Hill. See Before the Bay State 
Club (Homes of the People, The).—Grady. 

T were wunst a sailor, yer honor knows. See Jim 
Lord’s Cat.—Nicholson. 

I who essayed to sing in earlier days. Nee Vision of 
Immortality, The.—Weston. 

I, who was always counted, they say. See Over the 
Hill from the Poor-house.—Carleton. 

I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree. See 
Lake Isle of Innisfree, The.—Yeats. 

“I will be a little helper.” See Be a Helper.—Anon. 

I will detain you with only just a few words—just a 
few thousand words. See General Grant’s Eng¬ 
lish.—Clemens. 

I will go back to the great sweet mother. See Disap¬ 
pointed Lover, The.—Swinburne. 

I will go forth ’mong men, not mailed in scorn. See 
same. —Smith. 

I will go home! See Honeymoon, The.”—Tobin. 

I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence 
cometh my help. See Psalms of David, CXXI.— 
Bible. 

I will make you brooches and toys for your delight. 
See Romance.—Stevenson. 

I will not abate one word of the stern creed that 
brought the Pilgrim Fathers. See Pilgrim Char¬ 
ter and Covenant, The.—Russell. 

I will not ask if thou canst touch.' See To a Rich 
Young Widow.— (Punch.) 

“I will not die.” A feeble voice comes forth. See 
Three Voices, The.—Hahn. 

“I will not drink!” The words were grand. See “I 
will not Drink.”—Wrigglesworth. 

I will not faint, but trust in God. See In Palience.— 
Rossetti. 

I will not fear. See God is Near.—Anon. 

I will not have the mad Clytie. See Flowers.—Hood. 

I will not join in congratulation on misfortune and dis¬ 
grace. See American War, The (War with 
America, The).—Chatham. 

I will not let thee go. See same. —Bridges. 

I will not let you say a woman’s part. See Woman’s 
Answer, A.—Procter. 

I will not look for him, I will not hear. See Woman’s 
Pride, A.—Hay. 

I will not rail, or grieve when torpid eld. See Age.— 
Garnett. 

I will not speak of war in itself. See same. —Phil¬ 
lips. 

I will not tell thee why the land. See I will not Tell. 
—Ramsa'y. 

I will paint her as I see her. See Portrait, A.—Brown¬ 
ing. 

I will paint you a sign, rumseller, and hang it above 
your door. See Sign-board, The.—Wilcox. 

I will rise, I will go from the places that are dark 
with passion and pain. See Seaward.—Wood- 
berry. 

“I will,” said Peter, “ if Bobby Toombs won’t be too 
hard on me. ” See Doctor’s Diploma in Court, A. 
—Anon. 

I will shut these broken toys away. See Mother Love. 
—Clemmer. 

I will sing, if ye will hearken. See Laird o’Logie, The. 
—Anon. 

I will sing you a song of that beautiful land. See 
Home of the Soul.—Phillips. 

I will speak the words of Freedom. See Freedom.— 
Baker. 

I will speak to him like a saucy lackey. See As You 
Like It (Meeting of Orlando and Rosalind, The). 
—Shakespeare. 

I will suppose now that the opposition made to this 
resolution. See Welcome to Louis Kossuth.— 
Seward. 

I will tell you a tale that will make you turn pale. See 
Gambler’s Tale, The.—McGuire. 

I will tell you the tale of the terrible fire. See Tale of 
the Terrible Fire.—Anon. 

“I will write little Ethel some verses.” See St. Val¬ 
entine’s Eve.—Burlingame. 

I wind my watch in the low lamp-light. See Winding 
my Watch.—Anon. 

I wise for the puwpose of making one or two wemarks. 
See Meeting of Liquor Dealers, A.—McBride. 

I wish a little boy like me. See Roger’s Wish.— 
Richards. 

I wish Albert would wake up. See Traveler, The.— 
Anon. 


707 





I wish 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I wish Alice and Harry would come back with those 
flowers. See Blue and the Gray, The.—Anon. 

I wish I could be a soldier. See Little Girl’s Wish, A. 
—Baer. 

I wish I could express my thanks for all the kindnesses 
of to-day. See Response of a College Professor to 
a Complimentary Resolution.—Anon. 

I wish I could find a suitable motto. See Language 
of Flowers, The.—Anon. 

I wish I could remember that first day. See Monna 
Innominata (First Meeting, The).—Rossetti. 

I wish I could speak my speech well. See Albert’s 
Rehearsal.—Anon. 

I wish I could welcome the spring, bonnie bird. See 
Robin, The.—Cook. 

I wish I had a dozen pairs. See Perplexed House¬ 
keeper, The.—Anon. 

I wish I knew my letters well. See Child’s Troubles, 
A.—Anon. 

I wish I lived in a caravan. See Pedlar’s Caravan, 
The.—Rands. 

“I wish I was a little fish.” See Playing Barber.— 
Anon. 

I wish I was a snow-white lamb. See I Wish.—Anon. 

I wish I was rich, mamma. See Clara’s Gifts.—Anon. 

“I wish I were a cat.” See Kitty’s Wish.—Anon. 

I wish I were a fairy bright. See Five Wishes, The.— 
Kavanaugh. 

I wish I were a snowflake meek. See In Perpetuum. 
— (Wrinkle.) t 

I wish I were a woman. See Wishes, The.—-Anon. 

I wish I were by that dim Lake. See same. —Moore. 

I wish I were eloquent to-day. See Centennial Ad¬ 
dress.—Hirsch. 

I wish I were the little key. See Child’s Wish, A.— 
Ryan. 

I wish I were where Helen lies. See Burd Helen.— 
Anon. 

I wish I’d been the lily that Jesus talked about. See 
Children’s Wishes, The.—Chatfield. 

I wish I’d lived and been a boy. See When Grandpa 
was a Boy.—Denton. 

I wish Larry would come back with the news. See 
O’Quirk’s Sinecure.—Kernel. 

I wish me and my chum had muzzled our goat with 
a pillow. See Royal Bumper Degree, The. 
— (Peck’s Sun.) 

I wish my arm would get well. It does not hurt me 
now. See Boat, The.—Anon. 

I wish my hair cut. See Jones at the Barber’s Shop. 
— (Punch.) 

I wish my seam was finished! See Place for Every¬ 
thing, and Everything in its Place, A.—Anon. 

I wish, my sweet, thou wert a rose. See Wishes.— 
Halloran. 

I wish people would let my things alone! See Turning 
the Tables.—Graham. 

“I wish,” said greedy Howard, with a wide and beam¬ 
ing smile. See Howard’s Wish.—Anon. 

I wish Sophie would come before those Americans 
arrive. See Prairie Princesses, The.—Anon. 

I wish that I could have my wish to-night. See 
Shakespeare.—Blood. 

I wish that my big brother’s here. See My Big Brother. 
—(New fork World.) 

I wish that when you died last May. See May and 
Death.—Browning. 

“I wish the beautiful sun would shine.” See Sunshine. 
—Dayre. 

I wish those folks had stayed in their way down East 
home. See From Down East.—McBride. 

I wish to say a few words on temperance. See Boy’s 
Temperance Speech, A.—Anon. 

I wish to tell in humble rhyme. See Drunkard’s Wife, 
The.—Cooper. 

I wish to tell you all to-day of a very queer table. See 
Queer Table, A.-—Anon. 

I wish we could banish epithets. See Our Country.— 
Harrison. 

I wish we could pay some of these annoying clothing 
Jews back in their own coin. See Queer Fit, A. 
—Anon. 

I wish you a merry Christmas, Kate. See Christmas 
Dialogue.—Anon. 

I wish you boys and girls would be quiet. See Pre¬ 
paring for a Picnic.—Anon. 

I wish you could see her, our little Miss Trot! See 
Little Miss Trot.—Rexford. 

I wish you were a pleasant wren. See Child’s Talk in 
April.—Rossetti. 

I wish you wouldn’t bother me so. See Worth before 
Show.—Butler. 


I with borrowed silver shine. See On the Moon.— 
Swift. 

I with whose colors Myra drest her head. See Myra.— 
Brooke. 

I woke before the morning, I was happy all the day. 
See Good Boy, A.—Stevenson. 

I won a noble fame. See Sir Marmaduke's Musings.— 
Tilton. 

I wonder could I dare to trace. See Christmas Legend 
A.—Anon. 

I wonder, dear, if you had been. See Conjecture, A.— 
Richardson. 

I wonder do you feel to-day. See Two in the Cam- 
pagna.—Browning. 

I wonder ef all wimmin air. See Lizzie and the Baby. 
—Field. 

I wonder if A1 received any letters this morning. See 
Putting on Airs.—Anon. 

I wonder if anybody will call to see us to-day. See 
Morning Call, The.—Anon. 

“I wonder if Brougham thinks as much as he talks.” 
See Epigram.—Vox et Praeterea Nihil.— (London 
Punch.) 

I wonder if ever a song was sung. See I Wonder.— 
Anon. 

I wonder if ever the angel of death. See Nameless 
Guest, The.—Harvey. 

I wonder if he’ll be here soon. Jotham is a nice peirt 
feller. See United at Last.—McBride. 

I wonder if Miss Saunderson will be there. See 
Academy Episode, An.—Neish. 

I wonder if old Santa Claus will come to-night! See 
Little Jo.—McGuire. 

I wonder if, some future day. Nee My Great-aunt’s 
Portrait.—Anon. 

T wonder if the angels. See To the End.—Rossetti. 

I wonder if the little birds. See What’s the Matter?— 
H. K. P. 

I wonder if this can be the right path. See To the 
Palace of the King.—Smith. 

T wonder if this day seemed like. See Prince and his 
Mistress.—Denton. 

“I wonder if this is heaven.” See One Flower for 
Nelly.—Thorpe. 

I wonder if you know him? See Naughty Little Fred. 
—Anon. 

“I wonder, James,” said Mrs. Meek. See Mr. Meek’s 
Dinner.—Anon. 

I wonder now if anyone. Nee Boy’s Rights.—May. 

I wonder, oh! I wonder what makes ve sun go wound. 
See Little Boy’s Wonder, A.—Anon. 

I wonder, sometimes, why I have not dimes. See 
Dimes! Oh, Dimes! Give Me Dimes.—Anon. 

I wonder what day of the week. See Untimely 
Thought, An.—Aldrich. 

I wonder what hour the clock struck just now. See 
Close Shave, A.—“Bob o’Link.” 

I wonder what makes papa tell such stories about hid¬ 
ing the schoolmaster’s rattan. See I Wonder.— 
Anon. 

I wonder what mother will say to that. See Day of 
Misfortunes, The.—Anon. 

I wonder what spendthrift chose to spill. See March. 
—Thaxter. 

“I wonder what the baby thinks.” See Baby’s 
Thoughts, The.—Larcom. 

I wonder what the clover thinks. See Song of Clover, 
A.—Holm. 

I wonder what the foreman of the jury has had for 
breakfast. See Pickwick Papers, The (Pickwick 
Trial, The).—Dickens. 

I wonder what the mischief was in her, for the mistress 
was niver contrairy. See St. Patrick’s Martyrs. 
—Anon. 

I wonder what this man is doing? See Fly’s Cogita¬ 
tions, A.—Anon. 

I wonder, when I’m bigger. See Which is Best?— 
Anon. 

I wonder who w-wote me this letter. See Sam’s Let¬ 
ter.—Anon. 

I wonder why fellahs ever wide in horse-cars. See 
Delancey Stuyvasant and the Horse-car.—Kyle. 

I wonder why Joseph is so long away'. See Saved.— 
Anon. 

I wonder why still the dear fairies stay. See Search 
for the Fairies, A.—Denton. 

I wonder why this world’s good things. See I Wonder 
Why.—Anon. 

I wonder where Hans kapes himself. See How Pat 
Sold a Dutchman.—Anon. 

I wooed her in the summer months. See Summer 
Girl, The.— (f ale Reco'd.) 


708 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


If all 


I worship thee, sweet will of God! See Will of God 
The.—Faber. 

I would all womankind were dead. See Lay of the 
Lover’s Friend, The.—Aytoun. 

I would be quiet, Lord. See Quietness.—Dorr. 

I would be willing to choose my friend by the quality 
of his laugh. See Personality and Uses of a 
Laugh, The.—Anon. 

I would build a cloudy house. See House of Clouds, 
The.—Browning. 

I would flee from the city’s rule and law. See City 
Man’s Dream of the Country.—Foss. 

I would have gone; God bade me stay. See Weary 
in Well Doing.—Rossetti. 

I would I had been island-bom. See Ballade of Is¬ 
lands, A.—Robinson. 

I would I had thy courage, dear, to face. See To the 
Same—on her Lightheartedness.—Blunt. 

I would I were a note. See Be Content.—Anon. 

I would I were a spider. See To a Spider-web.— 
Ferris. 

I would I were an excellent divine. See same.— 
Breton. 

I would I were on yonder hill. See Shule Aroon.— 
Anon. 

I would I were that portly gentleman. See Poet Ex¬ 
presses his Feelings Respecting a Portrait in 
Delia’s Parlor, The.—Southey. 

I would I were where Helen lies. See Helen of Kirk- 
connell.—Anon. 

“I would if I could,” though much it’s in use. See 
“I Would if I Could.”—Anon. 

‘‘I would like to have an advertisement inserted.” See 
Can this be True?—Anon. 

I would not always reason. The straight path. See 
Those Glorious Stars.—Bryant. 

I would not breathe, when blows Thy mighty wind. 
See Spirit, The.—-Very. 

I would not call thee back unless. See Recalled.— 
Preston. 

I would not, could I, make thy life as mine. See Vain 
Wish, A.—Marston. 

I would not die in May. See Month of Mars, The.— 
Taylor. 

I would not die in springtime. See Last Summons, 
The.—Anon. 

I would not divorce faith from reason. See same. — 
Anon. 

I would not enter on my list of friends. See Task, The 
(Humanity).—Cowper. 

I would not for ten thousand worlds be that man. See 
same. —Doddridge. 

I would not give my Irish wife. See Irish Wife, The.— 
McGee. 

I would not listen to the wind to-day. See Voice of 
the Wind. The.—Jones. 

I would not live alway; I do not ask to stay [or I ask 
not]. See I Would not Live Alway.—Muhlenberg. 

I would not live alway—live alway below! See I 
Would not Live Alway.—Muhlenberg. 

I would not loose a single silvery ray. See Love’s 
Autumn.—Hayne. 

I would select as a symbol of our Republic. See Dis¬ 
trict School, The.—Chapin. 

I would that all men my hard case might know. See 
Behold the Deeds!—Bunner. 

I would that thou might always be. See To Laura 
W—Two Years of Age.—Willis. 

I would that we were, my beloved, white birds. See 
White Birds, The.—Yeats. 

I would that we were only readers now. See Too Many 
Books.-—Leighton. 

I would the fount of Castaly. See Fount of Castaly, 
The.—O’Connor. 

I would thou wert not fair, or I were wise. See I 
Would Thou Wert not Fair.—Breton. 

I would unto my fair restore. See Of Joan’s Youth.— 
Guiney. 

I wouldna gie a copper plack. See same. —Barry. 

I wouldn’t be a girl like you. See Dialogue for a Little 
Boy and Girl.—Kavanaugh. 

‘‘I wouldn’t hev believed it if I hadn’t had the news 
from Mistress Pettibone.” See Spinster Thur- 
ber’s Carpet.—Phelps. 

I write. He sits beside my chair. See New Poet, A.— 
Canton. 

I write. My mother was a Florentine. See Aurora 
Leigh (Motherless).—Browning. 

I write my name as one. See Autograph, An.— 
Whittier. 

I write to offer you my heart. See Street-car Romance, 
A.—Ames. 


I wrote lots of trash about Cupid. See Convent, The 
—Carry 1. 

I wrote my name upon the sand. See Carving a Name. 
—Alger. 

I wrote some lines once on a time. See Height of the 
Ridiculous, The.—Holmes. 

I wrought them like a targe of hammered gold. See 
On His “Sonnets of the Wingless Hours.”—Lee- 
Hamilton. 

I wud knot dye in Wintur. See same. —Anon. 

I wus mighty good-looking’ when I wus young. See 
“Specially Jim.”—Morgan. 

I youst to bin a doketor vonce. See Doketor’s Drab¬ 
bles, A.—Warren. 

Iberian! palter no more! by thine hands, thine alone, 
they were slain! See To Spain—a Last Word.— 
Thomas. 

Ice everywhere! The skater’s iron heel. See Decem¬ 
ber.—Cornwell. 

Ichot a burde in boure bryht. See Blow, Northern 
Wind.—Anon. 

Icily sweeps December’s blast. See Lydia’s Ride.— 
Frost. 

I’d a dream to-night. See Mother’s Dream, The.— 
Barnes. 

I’d always shine on holidays. See Were I the Sun.— 
Anon. 

I’d been away from her three years—about that. See 
Faithful Lovers, The.—Anon. 

“I’d draw the knot as tight as a man can draw. See 
Rondel, A.—Mack. 

I’d give, Girl (were I but a king). See Extravaganza. 
An.—Hugo. 

I’d just love to write a book, wouldn’t you, Inez? See 
Writing a Book.—Denton. 

I’d like to be a p’liceman. See Boy Decides, The.— 
Mark. 

I’d like to go away the day, ma’am; the work is all done, 
ma’am. See Corpse’s Husband, The.—Anon. 

“I’d like to play with your kitty,” he said. See Fas¬ 
tidious.—Sterling. 

I’d like to see Old Santa Claus. See What Janie Thinks. 
—Richards. 

“I’d like to see the President,” a timid woman said. 
See True Story of Abraham Lincoln.—Anon. 

I’d never dare to walk across. See Invisible Bridge, 
The.—Burgess. 

I’d not complain of Sister Jane, for she was good and 
kind. See Sister’s Cake.—Field. 

I’d rather be a daisy. See Song of the Daisy.—Glover. 

I’d rather have habits than clothes. See same. —Bur¬ 
gess. 

I’d rather take a whipping now. See Boy’s Apology, 
A.—Anon. 

I’d read three hours. Both notes and text. See 
Dialogue from Plato, A.—Dobson. 

I’d rid from far-back Texas in the spring o’ ’49. See 
In the Elevator.—Meyers. 

I’d rock my own sweet childie to rest in a cradle of 
gold on a bough of the willow. See Irish Lullaby. 
—Graves. 

I’d rather be a little boy. See Johnny’s Choice.— 
Richards. 

I’d rather be a little girl. See Alice’s Choice.— 
Richards. 

I’d wandered, for a week or more. See Retrospection. 
—Baker. 

Id was droo der sdreeds of Fredericksdown. See 
Barbara Frietchie (Parody). —Anon. 

I’d wed you without herds, without money or rich 
array. See Cashel of Munster.—-Ferguson. 

Ida, I’ve been reading such a nice book to-day. See 
Ghost in the Kitchen, The.—Anon. 

If a brother meet a brother. See If a Brother.—Anon. 

If a girl were to fall in love with you, Corporal. See 
Cross Firing.—Anon. 

If a leaf rustled, she would start. See White Moth, 
The.—Quiller-Couch. 

If a man’s mind be thoroughly alive, he cannot be con¬ 
tent. See same. —Parker. 

If a sheet of paper on which a key has been laid. See 
Silent Influence.—Anon. 

If a string is in a knot. See Useful Possession, A.— 
Anon. 

If all be true that I do think. See Reasons for Drink¬ 
ing.—Aldrich. 

If all God’s world a garden were. See To Florence.— 
Miller. 

If all our life were one broad glare. See Joy of Incom¬ 
pleteness, The.—Bessemeres. 

Tf all our youth, sprang from whatever nationality. 
See Patriotic Sentiments.—Patterson. 


709 






If all 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


If all the good we wish for you. See Birthday Wish, 
A.—Denton. 

If all the harm that women have done. See Thought, 
A.—Stephen. 

If all the land were apple-pie. See If.—Anon. 

If all the ships I have at sea. See My Ships.—Wilcox. 

If all the skies were sunshine. See if all the Skies.— 
VanDyke. 

If all the trees in all the woods were men. See Cacoe- 
thes Scribendi.—Holmes. 

If all the trees were cherry-trees. See Puzzling Ques¬ 
tion, A.—-Anon. 

If all the voices of men called out warning you. See 
If All the Voices of Men.—Traubel. 

If all [or that] the world and love were young. See 
Reply to Marlowe, A.—Raleigh. 

If all the world was apple-pie. See Nursery Rhymes, 
IV.—Anon. 

If all the world were right. See If All the World.— 
Radford. 

If all the world were sought full far. See Praise of 
Princess Mary, A.—Heywood. 

If all the world were upside down. See Upside Down. 
—Cooper. 

If all these boys could be Presidents. See “If.”— 
Denton. 

If any doctor, after feeling my pulse. See Under¬ 
ground Jottings.—Turner. 

If any little word of mine. See Pleasant Words.—Anon, 

If anybody had told me when I was first born that I 
would marry to a widower. See My Opinions and 
Betsey Bobbet’s (Samantha Smith Becomes Josiah 
Allen’s Wife).—Holley. 

If anything unkind you hear. See When to Make 
Haste.—Anon. 

If aught of oaten stop, or pastoral song. See Ode to 
Evening.—Collins. 

If aught that stumbles in my speech. See Abstemia. 
—Burgess. 

If bees stay at home. See Prophets of the Hive, The. 
—Anon. 

If boys should get discouraged. See Keep Trying.— 
Anon. 

If by any device or knowledge. See To a Child.—Pal- 
grave. 

If Candlemas Day be fair and bright. See Candlemas. 
—Anon. 

If classical history has been found to be, is now, and 
shall continue to be. See Standard of the Con¬ 
stitution, The.—Webster. 

If cordial friendship can ever exist between two com¬ 
munities. See United Country, A.—Hoar. 

If crost with all mishaps be my poor life. See Sonnets 
from the Poems.—Drummond. 

If death be final, what is life. See Life and Death.— 
Cranch. 

If doughty deeds my lady please. See same. —Graham. 

If down his throat a man should choose. See Unsus¬ 
pected Fact, An.—Cannon. 

If, dumb too long, the drooping Muse hath stay’d. 
See To the Earl of Warwick on the Death of Mr. 
Addison.—Teckell. 

If echoes from the fitful past. See Abstrosophy.— 
Burgess. 

If ever I see on bush or tree. See If ever I See.— 
Child. 

If ever, O men of Athens, the people of Greece felt the 
rigor of your rule. See Philippics (Venality 
the Ruin of Greece).—Demosthenes. 

If ever there lived a Yankee lad. See Darius Green 
and his Flying-machine.—Trowbridge. 

If ever you should come to Modena. See Ginevra.— 
Rogers. 

If every boy and every girl. See If! If!—Anon, 

If every man’s internal care. See Without and With¬ 
in.—Metastasio. 

If flowers could always bloom at eve. See same. —Anon. 

If from the public way you turn your steps. See 
Michael.—Wordsworth. 

If He could doubt on his triumphant cross. See 
Calvary.—Howells. 

If he had come in the early dawn. See Cycle, A.— 
Brooke. 

If he walked he could not keep beside. See Hunch¬ 
back, The.—Cary. 

If Heaven would hear my prayer. See Love’s Prayer. 
—Hay. 

If I a small bird were. See Absence.—Taylor. 

If I am pushed to the wall, and forced the speak my 
opinion. See “Measures not Men.”—Canning.— 

If I, athirst by a stream, should kneel. See Drifting 
Petal, A.—Fenollosa. 


If I knew what the tree-tops say. See If I but Knew. 
—Leigh. 

If I can stop one heart from breaking. See Not in 
Vain.—Dickinson. 

“If I could but drag myself.” See Ivanhoe (Storm¬ 
ing of the Castle, The).—-Scott. 

If I could choose my paradise. See No and Yes.— 
Ashe. 

If I could frame for you in cunning words. See Songs 
in Sleep.—Richards. 

If I could have my dearest wish fulfilled. See You.— 
Anon. 

If I could hold your hands to-night. See Longings.— 
Anon. 

If I could know. See Evelyn.—Johnson. 

If I could love thee, Love, a little more. See Half¬ 
hearted.—Macmillan. 

If I could only.change this world to suit me. See If.— 
Richards. 

If I could paint you friend, as you stand there. See 
Foot-ball Player, A.—Lefroy. 

If I could pass as swiftly as a thought. See If.—Anon. 

If I could see with a midge’s eye. See Midges in the 
Sunshine.—Anon. 

If I could stand for a moment upon one of your high 
mountain tops. See Freedom.—Anon. 

If I could trust mine own self with your fate. See 
Monna Innominata (Trust).—Rossetti. 

If I could write a book made sweet with thee. See 
Book of Gold, A.—-Piatt. 

If I desire with pleasant songs. See same. —Bur- 
bidge. 

If I foreswear the art divine. See Exile’s Devotion, 
The.—McGee. 

If I had an eagle’s wings. See All Mother.—Turner. 

Tf I had been made a rooster. See “If. ”—Anon. 

If I had but ten thousand a year, Gaffer Green. See 
Ten Thousand a Year.—Kavanaugh. 

If I had known in the morning. See Our Own.— 
Sangster. 

If I had taken the advice of my sister. See My Wife.— 
Thatcher. 

If I had thought thou couldst have died. See Lines 
Written to Music.—Wolfe. 

If I had told her in the spring. See Old, Old, Story, 
The.—Anon. 

If I had wit and beauty. See Ideal, An.—Denison. 

If I have anything to do. See Good Rule, A.—Anon. 

If I knew it now, how strange it would be. See Saint’s 
Messenger, The.—-Graniss. 

If I knew the box where the smiles are kept. See If I 
Knew.—Anon. 

If -I last so long as Methuselah I shall never forgive 
myself. See Martin Relph.—Browning. 

If I lay waste, and wither up with doubt. See W’hat 
Shall I Profit?—Howells. 

If I leave all for thee, wilt thou exchange. See Sonnets 
from the Portuguese, XXXV.—Browning. 

If I may trust the flattering eye of sleep. See Romeo 
and Juliet (Romeo’s Presage).—Shakespeare. 

“If I may trust your love,” she cried. See Tantalus; 
Texas.—Miller. 

If I mistake not, thou art Harry Monmouth. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I. (Battle of Shrewsbury).— 
Shakespeare. 

If I must die. the earth is inarticulate to sing. See 
Youth.—Lodge. 

If I read Irish history aright, misfortune and calamity. 
See Ireland to be Ruled by Irishmen.—Gladstone. 

If I shall ever win the home in heaven. See Daniel 
Gray.—Holland. 

If I should ask who won, to-day. See I Did It—not, 
“I Done It.”—Anon. 

If I should die to-night and you should come to my 
cold corpse and say. See If I should Die To-night. 
—King. 

If I should die to-night, my friends would look upon 
my quiet face. See If I should Die To-night.— 
Meyers. 

If I should see. See As Ye Would.—Bradt. 

If I stood here to-night to tell the story of Napoleon. 
See Toussaint L’Ouverture.—Phillips. 

If I this night, at set of sun. See I W’onder.—Anon. 

If I tonight were lying dead. See When I am Dead.— 
Anon. 

If I was ten years old, or some where near. See Line 
for a very Little Girl or Boy.—Denton. 

If I were a bird I would warble a song. See If I Were 
a Bird.—Anon. 

If I were a boy again, endowed with the same wild 
passion for plucking watermelons. See If I were 
a Boy again.—Nye. 


710 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


If she 


If I were a cloud in heaven. See Lise.—Cooke. 

If I were a flower, fair. See “If I Were a Flower. ”— 
Denton. 

If I were a girl, a true hearted girl. See Ideal Girl, 
The.—Anon. 

If I were a leaf on a tree. See Valentine, A.—Reiley. 

If I were a Prof, at O. S. U. See If.—J. 

If I were a railway hrakeman. See Getting Even.— 
Burdette. 

If I were a rose on the garden wall. See “If I were a 
Rose. ”—Anon. 

If I were a rose, this would I do. See This Would I 
Do.—Runcie. 

If I were a sunbeam. See same. —Larcom. 

If I were a voice, a persuasive voice. See If I were a 
Voice.—Mackay. 

If I were as cold and as brazen as the bonfire on the 
top of the monument. See Make your Wills.— 
Anon. 

If I were asked my favorite poet among living Ameri¬ 
can women. See Ella Wheeler Wilcox.—Faxon. 

If I were big and tall to-day. See What Little Dick 
Would Do.—Denton. 

If I were blind, and Thou should enter. See Love’s 
Power.—Pollard. 

If I were called to point out the most alarming s : ns of 
to-day. See same.—Crosby. 

If I were called upon to prescribe a course of policy. 
See Against Foreign Conquest.—Clinton. 

“If I were dead, you’d sometimes say, Poor Child!” 
See If I were Dead.—Patmore. 

If I were dear old Santa Claus. See New Santh Claus, 
A.—Menaid. 

If I were given wishes three. See Three Wishes.— 
Simon. 

If I were in your places, girls. See Grandma’s Ad¬ 
vice to the Girls.—Anon. 

If I were king, my pipe should be premier. See If I 
were King.—Henley. 

If I were Lord of Tartary. See Tart ary.—Ramal. 

“If I were only a kitten.” • See If.—( Our Little Ones.) 

If I were to tell you the story of Napoleon. See Tous- 
saint L’Ouverture.—Phillips. 

If I were told that I must die to-morrow. See When.— 
Woolsey. 

If I were very sure. See Coup de Grace, The.—Sill. 

If I were you and went to school. See If I Were You. 
—Anon. 

If I were you, dear little girl. See Christmas Gifts.— 
Anon. 

If I were you, when ladies at the play, sir. See Tu 
Quoque.—Dobson. 

If I were your little baby. See Romany Song.— 
Leland. 

“If I’d nothing to do,” said Farmer John. See Far¬ 
mer John.—Anon. 

If I’m not to leave the house without being insulted. 
See Trouble about Miss Prettyman.—Jerrold. 

If in Ireland, a country that ought to team with 
abundance. See England’s Misrule of Ireland.— 
Shiel. 

If in my soul, dear. See King and Slave.^—Procter. 

If in our ideas of the fine arts we include all those em¬ 
bellishments. See Art of Reading Well, The.— 
Ellis. 

If in the field I meet a smiling flower. See Sonnet. 
—Montgomery. 

If, in the month of dark December. See Written after 
Swimming from Sestos to Abydos.—-Bryon. 

If in the years that come such thing should be. See 
Ideal Memory.—Dawson. 

If it be true that any beauteous thing. See Sonnet: 
‘‘If it be true,” etc.—Michelangelo. 

If it were done, when ’t.is done, then ’twere well. See 
Macbeth (Macbeth’s Soliloquy).—Shakespeare. 

If it were land, oh, weary feet could travel. See 
Separation.—Aldrich. 

If it were only a dream. See “Father, The.”—Sav- 
age-Armstrong. 

If it were only June! See June.—Grant. 

If it were really true that you were living. See If it 
were True.—Anon. 

If it will feed nothing else, it will feed my revenge. 
See Merchant of Venice. The (Shylock).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

If I’ve a present upon the tree. See My Present.— 
Anon. 

If I’ve got to call this misery life, the sooner I am out 
of it the better. See Patent Medicine.—Crosby. 

If Jesus Christ is a man. See Celestial Passion, The 
(Song of a Heathen, The).—Gilder. 

if Jove would give the leafy bowers. See same. — 
Clodia. 


If life awake and will never cease. See same. —Hol¬ 
land. 

If life be as a flame that death doth kill. See Rhyme 
of Life, A.—Stoddard. 

If light should strike through every darkened place. 
See Light and Love.—( Academy , The.) 

If love is blind, how can it be. See Not Blind.—H. 
M. H. 

If love make me forsworn, how shall I swear to love? 
See Love’s Labour’s Lost (Biron’s Canzonet).— 
Shakespeare. 

If love were dhudeen olden. See Another Match.— 
( Cope’s Tobacco Plant). 

If love were what the rose is. See Match, A.—Swin¬ 
burne. 

If Marshall had been only what I suppose. See Chief 
Justice Marshall.—Phelps. 

If men cared less for wealth and fame. See World 
Would be the Better for It, The.—Anon. 

If mine I could but call thee. See same.— Anon. 

If Mother Nature patches the leaves of trees and vines. 
See Pine Needles.—Hayne. 

If music and sweet poetry agree. See Sonnet to his 
Friend Maister.—Barnfield. 

If music be the food of love, I am rejoiced to find. 
See Food of Love.—Romaine. 

If music be the food of love, play on. See Twelfth 
Night; or. What You Will (Music).—Shakespeare. 

If my best wines mislike the taste. See Quits.—Al¬ 
drich. 

If Napoleon’s fortune was great, his genius was trans¬ 
cendent. See Napoleon Bonaparte.—Phillips. 

If no kindly thought or word. See In the Heart.— 
Cooper. 

If no one ever marries me. See same. —Alma-Tadema. 

If not now soft airs may blow. See Absence.— 
Blaikie. 

If old Bacchus were the speaker. See Wine of Cyprus 
—Browning. 

If older boys can make a speech. See We Little 
Boys.—Anon. 

If on the clustering curls of thy dark hair. See My 
Love.—Percival. 

If on this sad, this solemn occasion, I should endeavor 
to move your commiseration. See Funeral Ora¬ 
tion by the Dead Body of Hamilton.—Morris. 

If one could have that little head of hers! See Face, 
A.—Browning. 

If one find a four-leaf clover. See Four-leaf Clover.— 
Houghton. 

If one had never seen the full completeness. See Plea 
for Charity.—-Cary. 

If one in prison may not tell his wrong. See Lament 
of Richard during his Imprisonment.—Aytoun. 

If one should give me a heart to keep. See Keeping 
a Heart.—O’Shaughnessy. 

If one were called upon to select the most glittering 
of the instances of military heroism. See Age of 
the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History, The 
(Heroism of the Pilgrims, The).—Choate. 

If only a single rose is left. See If Only thou Art True. 
—Barlow. 

If only in dreams may man be fully blest. See First 
Kiss, The.—Watts-Dunton. 

If only once the chariot of the Morn. See Glory of 
Nature, The.—Tennyson. 

If only you were here to-night. See If Only You 
Were Here.—Benedict. 

If other little girls can speak. See Loving Little Girl, 
The.—Rook. 

If our two children had lived perhaps she wouldn’t 
have got so bad. See Premature Proposal, The.— 
Bradley. 

If our virtues did not go forth of us. See Measure for 
Measure.—Shakespeare. 

“If Peepy had lived,” the mother sighed. See Peepy 
is not Dead.—Kernighan. 

If, Pilgrim, chance thy steps should lead. See Our 
Ladye of the Snow.—M'Gee. 

If recollecting were forgetting. See With Flowers.— 
Dickinson. 

If rightly tuneful bards decide. See Amoret.—Aken- 
side. 

If sadly thinking, with spirits sinking. See Deserter’s 
Meditation, The.—Curran. 

If shame can on a soldier’s vein-swoll’n front. See 
King Stephen.—Keats. 

If she be made of white and red. as all transcendent 
beauty shows. See same. —Horne. 

If she be made of white and red her faults will ne’er 
be known. See Love’s Labour’s Lost (Rhyme of 
White and Red, The).—Shakespeare. 


711 




If she 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


If she but knew that I am weeping. See If She but 
Knew.—O’Shaughnessy. 

If she knew that I am Cupid. See same. —D. D. P. 

If silence is ever golden, it must be here, amid the 
graves. See Strewing Flowers on the Graves of 
Union Soldiers (Decoration Day Address at Arling¬ 
ton).—Garfield. 

If sin be in the heart. See Peace.—Richardson. 

If, sitting with his for this] little worn-out shoe. See 
If.—Anon. 

If Sleep and Death be truly one. See In Memoriam 
(Time and Eternity).—Tennyson. 

If snarls should hide in the sunshine. See Snarls and 
Scowls.—Denton. 

If solitude hath ever led thy steps. See Queen Mab 
(Sunset).—Shelley. 

If, some day, I should seek those eyes. See Presage.— 
Thaxter. 

If some great angel spoke to me to-night. See Work. 
—(All the Year Round.) 

If something waits, and you should now. See Now.— 
Cary. 

If spirits walk, love, when the night climbs slow. See 
“If Spirits Walk.”—Jewett. 

If Spring has Maids of Honor. See Arbutus, The.— 
Anon. 

If still they live, whom touch nor sight. See Inverted 
Torch, The (If Still They Live).—-Thomas. 

If stores of dry and learned lore we gain. See Memory 
of the Heart, The.—Webtser. 

If suddenly upon the street. See Love.—Richardson. 

If that heart could throb and if those lips could speak. 
See Message from the South, A.—Washington. 

If that the world and love were young. See Reply 
to Marlowe, A.—Raleigh. 

If the apple grow on the apple-tree. See Protesta¬ 
tions.—Mackay. 

If the butterfly courted the bee. See Topsy-turvy 
World.—Rands. 

“If the dishes would only wash themselves!” See 
About Dish-washing.—Denton. 

If the evening’s red and the morning’s gray. See 
Weather Rule, A.—Anon. _ , 

If the home life is inharmonious, nothing can go well. 
See same. —Anon. 

If the Indians had the vices of savage life. See 
Indians, The (American Indians, The).—Story. 

If the Master came this way. See Children’s Friend, 
The.—Jacques. 

“If the oak is out before the ash.” See Few Old 
Proverbs, A.—Anon. 

If the old woman who lived in a shoe. See If Ifs and 
Ands.—Anon. 

If the quick spirits in your eye. See Persuasions to 
Joy: a Song.—Carew. 

If the red slayer think he slays. See Brahma.—Emerson. 

If the road grow dark before you reach. See Through 
the Darkness.—Winter. 

If the shadow this body casts. See Soul Shadow.— 
Knowles. 

If the sinner persists in rejecting Christ, the ruin of his 
soul. See same. —Phelps. 

If the sunshine never crept. See All the Good We 
Can.—Cooper. 

If the water runneth, it holdeth clear, sweet, and 
fresh. See Mental Activity.—Barrow. 

If the weary world is willing, I’ve a little word to say. 
See Lightning-rod Dispenser, The.—Carleton. 

If the weather is fair to-day. See Butterfly and the 
Bee, The.—Anon. 

If the world seem cold to you. See Three Old Saws. 
—Larcom. 

If there be a man on earth. See Portrait Gallery (Dis¬ 
honest Politician, The).—-Beecher. 

If there be any one can take my place. See Monna 
Innominata (Abnegation).—Rossetti. 

If there be any one line of policy in which all political 
parties agree. See Moral Power the Most For¬ 
midable.—McLean. 

If there be graveyards in the heart. See God Bless 
You, Dear, To-day!—Bennett. 

If there be memory in the world to come. See Star’s 
Monument, The (‘‘If there be memory,” etc.).—■ 
Ingelow. 

If there be nothing new, but that which is. See 
Sonnets, LIX.—Shakespeare. 

If there be on earth one nation more than another. 
See Stability of our Government, The.—Sprague. 

If there be one state in the union, Mr. President. See 
On Mr. Foot’s Resolution in the U. S. Senate, Jan. 
21, 1830 (South during the Revolution, The).— 
Hayne. 


If there ever was a time, this is the hour for Americans 
• to rouse themselves. See British Aggressions.— 
Quincy, Jr. 

If there is a man in this assembly who thinks. See 
Philippics (Philip of Macedon).—Demosthenes. 

If there is a thing upon the earth. See “I Told You 
So. ”—Anon. 

If there is any one democratic principle known among 
men. See Our Platform.—Cuyler. 

If there is any one in our age. See Whittier, Extract 
Concerning.—Underwood. 

If there is anything in the world I hate. See Mrs. 
Caudle Needs Spring Clothing.—Jerrold. 

If there is one grand trumpet-call that inspires the 
Women’s Christian Temperance Union. See 
“Thy Kingdom Come. ”—Somerset. 

If there is one thing more than another calculated to 
throw a man into gnashing-of-the-teeth. See He 
Tried to Tell his Wife.—Anon. 

If there is one thing more than another I am fond of 
it is chickens. See Fowl Proceeding, A.—Thatcher. 

If there seemed coldness in my glance. See Love’s Con¬ 
fession.—Swain. 

If there should come a time, as well there may. See 
same.—(All the Year Round.) 

If there were dreams to sell. See Dream-pedlary.— 
Beddoes. 

If there were no fire-crackers. See About Fire-crackers. 
—Denton. 

If there were three peaches on the table, Johnny. See 
Trials of a Schoolmistress, The.— (New York Sun.) 

If there’s a hole in a’ your coats. See On Captain 
Grose’s Peregrinations through Scotland.—Burns. 

If there’s a thing in all creation. See Speech for a 
School Exhibitation.—Anon. 

If there’s anything in the world I hate. See Mrs. 
Caudle Urging the Need of Spring Clothing.— 
Jerrold. 

If this be all, for which I’ve listened long. See Word 
With a Skylark, A.—Piatt. 

If this fair rose offend thy sight. See White Rose, The. 
—Congreve and Somerville. 

If this great world of joy and pain. See Trust.— 
Wordsworth. 

If this little world to-night. See Proem.—Herford. 

If this were all—if from life’s fitful rays. See Here¬ 
after.—Ramsay. 

If this were all—Oh! if this were all. See Rain in the 
Heart.—Anon. 

If thou be one whose heart the holy forms. See True 
Dignity.—Wordsworth. 

If thou but frown on me, or stir thy foot. See King 
John (Threatening).—Shakespeare. 

If thou couldst know thine own sweetness. See same. 
Palgrave. 

If thou hast ever felt that all on earth. See Reliance 
on God.—Casket. 

If thou hast known anywhere amid a storm. See 
Chamouni.—Dobell. 

If thou must love me, let it be for nought. See Son¬ 
nets from the Portuguese, XIV.—Browning. 

If thou shouldst bid thy friend farewell. See Counsel.— 
Davis. 

If thou shouldst ever come by choice or chance. See 
Ginevra.—Rogers. 

If thou survive my well contended day. See Sonnets, 
XXXII.—Shakespeare. 

If thou thinkest twice before thou speakest once, thou 
will speak twice the better for it. See Think be¬ 
fore You Speak.—Penn. 

If thou wert by my side, my love. See Lines addressed 
to Mrs. Heber.—Heber. 

If thou wert false to me, what could I do? See If Thou 
Wert False.—Salmon. 

If thou wert lying cold and still and white. See Re¬ 
conciliation.—Mason. 

If thou wert only, love, a tiny flower. See Love 
Thought, A.—Nichol. 

If thou wilt ease thine heart. See Death’s Jest Book 
(Dirge for Wolfram).—Beddoes. 

If thou wilt shut thy drowsy eyes. See Armenian 
Lullaby.—Field. 

If thou would’st stand on Etna’s burning brow. See 
Our Traveller.—Pennell. 

If thou would’st view fair Melrose aright. See Lay of 
the Last Minstrel (Melrose by Moonlight).— 
Scott. 

If thy sad heart, pining for human love. See Sonnet: 
“II thy sad heart,” etc.—Whitman. 

If Time be of all things the most precious, wasting 
Time must be the greatest prodigality. See Way 
to Wealth, The (Time).—Franklin. 


712 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


I’ll 


If to be absent were to be. See To Lucasta Going Be¬ 
yond the Seas.—Lovelace. 

If to do were as easy as to know what were good to do. 
See Merchant of Venice, The (Portia, in the Mer¬ 
chant of Venice).—Shakespeare. 

If to embody in a breathing word. See Poetry (“If to 
embody,” etc.).—Holmes. 

If transmigration e’er compel. See Paradise of Birds, 
The (In Praise of Gilbert White).—Courthope. 

If ’twere done, when ’tis done, then 'twere well. See 
Macbeth (Macbeth’s Soliloquy).—Shakespeare. 

If two may read aright. See To Willie and Henrietta. 
—Stevenson. 

If war must come—if the bayonet must be used. See 
Pretext of Rebellion, The.—Douglas. 

If we are the friends of freedom, personal and political. 
See On the Civil War in America.—Bright. 

If we consider man [simply] in a commercial point of 
view. See Ten Hours Bill, The (On Limiting the 
Hours of Labor).—Macaulay. 

If we had but known, if we had but known. See If 
We Had but Known.—Anon. 

If we knew the cares and crosses. See Have Charity. 
—Anon. * 

If we knew the woe and heart-ache. See If We Knew; 
or. Blessings of To-day.—Smith. 

If we knew what forms were fainting. See If We 
Knew.—Anon. 

If we knew what friends who greet us. See If We 
Knew.—Haynard. 

If we sit down at set of sun. See Our Daily Reckon¬ 
ing.—( Mail and Erpress.) 

If we were to adopt the language which is prescribed 
to us. See Irish Grievances.—Sheil. 

If we were to suggest one thing. See “How Mother 
Did It.”—Anon. 

If we wholly perish with the body. See Immortality. 
—Massillon. 

If we wish men to practise virtue, it is worth while try¬ 
ing. See Uses of Poetry and Art.—Mill. 

If we would benefit the African at the South. See 
North and the African, The.—Beecher. 

If we would but check the speaker. See If We Would. 
—Anon. 

If. when I kneel to pray. See Prayer.—Richardson. 

If when the day has been sped with laughter. See 
Who Knows?—Kerr. 

If wisdom’s height is only disenchantment. See Word 
to the Wise, A.—Duer. 

If wisdom’s ways you’d wisely seek. See Five Things 
to Observe.—Anon. 

If with light head erect I sing. See Inspiration.— 
Thoreau. 

If women could be fair, and yet not fond. See Renun¬ 
ciation, A.—Vere. 

If women had their way, and they intend to have it. 
See Worn-out Parties, The.—Willard. 

If yonder flag, hanging in graceful folds. See Voice 
of the Flag, The.—Anon. 

If you are a man, with man’s respect for woman. See 
Getting Letters.—Anon. 

“If you are innocent,” said a lawyer to his client. See 
No Chance for an Alibi.—Anon. 

If you are tempted to reveal. See Good Rule, A.— 
Anon. 

If you are versed in fairy lore. See Grimalkin.— 
Sabine. 

If you be that May Margaret. See May Margaret.— 
Marzials. 

If you bear in mind that the aim of deliberative elo¬ 
quence. See Eloquence of Revolutionary Periods, 
The.—Choate. 

If you become a nun, dear. See Nun, The.—Hunt. 

If you cannot on the ocean. See Your Mission.—Anon. 

If you could know the life of one of those poor lepers 
of Boston. See Children of the Poor, The.—Parker. 

If you could pluck earth’s emerald. See Her Answer. 
—Chapman. 

If you cross the hill by my father’s mill. See Tit for 
Tat.—Anon. 

If you do, you’re a fool, that’s all. See Oil on the Brain. 
—McKeever. 

If you ever go to races I think that you’ll agree. See 
Horse that Wins the Race, The.—Anon. 

If you expect great things of me. See Four-year-old, 
The.—Doolittle. 

If you go back to the forks of the road. See Which 
Road?—Anon. 

If you go over desert and mountain. See Fountain 
of Tears, The.—O’Shaughnessy. 

If you had a little brother who was just a perfect muff. 
See Wouldn’t You?—Anon. 


If you happen to mean anything wonderful wicked. 
See Aunt Maria at the Eden Musee.—Smith. 

If you have a friend worth loving. See Sermon in 
Rhyme, A.—Anon. 

If you have gentle words and looks, my friends. See 
same.—(Sunday Magazine.) 

If you have occasion to use a wheelbarrow, leave it. 
See Essay on the Wheelbarrow.—Anon. 

If you mark, my lord. See same. —McCarthy. 

If you my valentine would be. See Man Behind it to 
the Theater Bonnet, The.—Anon. 

If you or I had been consulted as to which of all the 
stars. See World We Live In, The.—Talmage. 

“If you please,” and, “thank you.” Nee Two Helpers. 
—Denton. 

“If you please, sir.” See Assisting a Poetess.—Anon. 

If you searched the country o’ Carlow, ay, and back 
again. See Old Pedlar Carthy from Clonmore.— 
McCall. 

If you sit down at set of sun. See Well Spent.—Eliot. 

If you tried and have not won. See Don’t Give Up.— 
Cary. 

If you want to be respected. See Never Break a 
Promise.—Anon. 

“If you want to hear ‘Annie Laurie’ sung come to my 
house to-night.” See Singer’s Climax, The.— 
Anon. 

If you want to know of Santa Claus. See North.— 
Anon. 

If you want to succeed in the world you must make 
your own opportunities. See same. —Gough. 

If you were coming in the fall. See same. —Dickinson. 

“If you were me, and I were you.” See “If.”—Anon. 

If you wish to make a pudding in which every one de¬ 
lights. See Christmas Pudding, The. {Punch.) 

If you wish to win bright laurels. See same. —Lucette. 

If you would contemplate nationality as an active 
virtue. See American Nationality (Nationality). 
—Choate. 

If you would have a good tyke. See Perfect Grey¬ 
hound, The.—Anon. 

If you would like to see the height of hospitality. See 
Donovans, The.—Fahy. 

If you would make men honest or pure. See same. — 
Anon. 

If you would see Venice as she is. See Venice.—Sul¬ 
livan. 

If your health is not quite right. See Panacea, A.— 
Ryder. 

If your lips would keep from slips. See Good Advice 
to Talkers.—Anon. 

If your researches. See Rum’s Devastation and Des¬ 
tiny.—Sullivan. 

If you’re told to do a thing. See Obedience.—Cary. 

If you’re waking call me early, call me early, mother 
dear. See May Queen, The (New Year’s Eve). 
—Tennyson. 

“If you’re waking call me early, call me early, mother 
dear. See Putting his Armor On.—Burdett. 

If you’ve any task to do. See Resolution.—( Harper’s 
Magazine.) 

If you’ve tried and have not won. See Don’t Give up. 
—Cary. 

If yuh wants to know what’s good, des lis’en. See 
How to Eat a 'Possum.—Anon. 

If Zeus chose us a King of the flowers in his mirth. See 
Song of the Rose.—Browning. 

“I’ll be the goodest little girl.” See “Wash Dolly up 
Like That.”—Ames. 

I’ll call thy frown a headsman, passing grim. See To 
My Lady.—Boker. 

“I’ll choose this tree of mine!” See Chosen Tree, The. 
“Estelle.” 

I’ll come in the evening, I’ll come in the morning. See 
Reply to “The Welcome.”—Fox. 

I’ll do it, by jingo!.I’ll do it. See Darling Jennie.— 
Griffith. 

Ill does it become me, 0 Senators of Rome! See Regu- 
lus to the Roman Senate.—Sargent. 

I’ll example you with thievery. See Timon of Athens 
—Shakespeare. 

Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey. See Deserted 
Village, The (National Decay).—Goldsmith. 

I’ll have it, I tell you! Curse you—there’ See Mon¬ 
ster Diamond, The.—O’Reilly. 

“I’ll hie me down to yonder bank.” See What the 
Little Things said.—Crosby. 

I’ll love thee evermore. See Eileen A Roon.-—O’Daly. 

I’ll make a picture of puss and you. See Pussy’s 
Picture.—Rook. 

I’ll never forget as long as I live. See Stock-broker, 
The.—Thatcher. 


713 






I’ll 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I’ll not believe I am not loved. See Maiden’s Soliloquy, 
A.—Watts. 

I’ll not believe the dullard dark. See Rubric.— 
Peabody. 

“I’ll sing,” said the poet, “a song on Spring.” See 
Spring Poet, The.—Berte. 

I’ll sing you a good old song. See Fine Old English 
Gentleman, The.—Anon. 

I’ll sing you a song about a young girl. See But the 
Villain Still Pursued Her.—Anon. 

I’ll sing you a song, and a merry, merry song. See 
Ballad of Jenny the Mare, The.—Fitzgerald. 

I’ll sing you a song, not very long. See True to Poll.— 
Bumand. 

I’ll sing you a Song of the Sea. See Song of the Sea, A. 
—Fuller. 

I’ll sing you now a Deitchen song, ’bout Hans Von 
Krouplegheet. See Fine Old Dutch Gentleman, 
The.—Anon. 

I’ll take some sugar and gin, if you please. See One 
Night with Gin.—Anon. 

I’ll tell, in simple way, how I employ my life. See 
Bon Jour, Bon Soir.—Anon. 

I’ll tell thee everything I can. See Ways and Means.— 
Carroll. 

I’ll tell you a story: but pass the “jack.” See Romance 
of Britomarte, The.—Gordon. 

I’ll tell you a story, children. See Butcher-bird, The. 
—Thaxter. 

I’ll tell you a story, mamma. See Story, A.—Anon. 

I’ll tell you a story that’s not in Tom Moore. See 
“Please to Ring the Belle.”—Hood. 

I’ll tell you all my story now, and ask you what you 
think. See Flossie Lane’s,Marriage.—Anon. 

I’ll tell you how I speak a piece. See Way to Do It, 
The.—Dodge. 

I’ll tell you how the Christmas came. See Little 
Rocket’s Christmas.—Brown. 

"I’ll tell you how the leaves come down.” See How 
the Leaves Came Down.—Coolidge. 

I’ll tell you how the sun rose. See Day, A.—Dickin¬ 
son. 

I’ll [or I] tell you, Kate, that Lovejoy cow. See Love- 

• joy Cow, The.—Morse. 

I’ll tell you, sir, a mighty quare story. See Paddy, 
the Piper.—Lover. 

I’ll tell you something, darling [or dear little] Belle [or 
says little Belle]. See Bug-a-boo, The.—Hadley. 

I’ll tell you two fortunes, my fine little lad. See 
Telling Fortunes.—Cary. 

I’ll tell you what I heard that day. See Upon the Hill 
before Centreville.—Boker. 

“I’ll try” is a soldier. See Good Company.—( Harper’s 
Young People.) 

I’ll try to be good. See When I’m a Big Girl.— 
Richards. 

I’ll woo thee, world, again. See Worldly Treasures.— 
Bailey. 

I’ll wreath my sword in myrtle bough. See Harmo- 
dius and Aristogeiton.—Callistratus. 

I’ll write, for I’m witty, a popular ditty. See Susan 
Van Doozen.—Lincoln. 

Illinois is proud and happy. See John A Logan.— 
Peck. 

Illustrious monarch of Iberia’s soil. See Columbus to 
F erdinand.—-M ason. 

I’m a beautiful red, red drum. See Drum, The.— 
Field. 

I’m a bird that’s free. See Aretina’s Song.—Taylor. 

I’m a boy. I’m not so big as some folks. See Boy’s 
Story, The.—Rexford. 

I’m a broken hearted Deutscher. See Puzzled Dutch¬ 
man, The.—Adams. 

I’m a careless potato, and care not a pin. See Potato, 
The.—Moore. 

I’m a gay and pretty fellow. See Autumn Leaf, An.— 
Fosdick. 

I’m a gay tra, la, la. See Swiss Air.—Harte. 

I’m a genius; don’t you doubt.it! I wuz in a village 
bred. See Genius, A.—Johnson. 

I’m a grumpy old bachelor. See Bachelor’s Grow), 

A.—Anon. 

I’m a gwine to tell you ’bout de cornin’ ob de Saviour. 
See In dat Great Gittin’-up Momin’.—Bristol. 

I’m a king among men, and no monarch of old. See 
Song of the Printing Press, The.—Davenport. 

I’m a left-over doll, and I grieve to relate. See 
Lament of a Left-over Doll, The.—Anon. 

I’m a little Robin Redbreast. See Robin Redbreast’s 
Secret.—Anon. 

I’m a little temperance boy. See Temperance Boy. 
The.—(S. S. Advocate.) 


I’m a married man; Busby’s a single man. See 
Buzby’s Coat.—Vickers. 

I’m a merry little maid. See Naming the Tree.— 
Rude. 

I’m a poor little kitty. See Sad Case, A.—Bates. 

I’m a pretty little thing. See Daisy, The.—Anon. 

I’m a showman by purfession, gents, so please to gather 
round. See Penny Showman, The.—Newton. 

I’m a simple, wee white daisy. See Daisies.—Crocker. 

I’m a strange contradiction. I’m new, and I'm old. 
See Riddle, A (A Book).—More. 

I’m a temperance boy! See Speech for a Very Little 
Boy.—Anon. 

I’m a tight Irish boy and from Dublin I came. See 
Paddy Fagan’s Pedigree.—Anon. 

I’m a very little baby. See Baby’s Reflections, A. 
—(London Figaro.) 

I’m afraid you will think I’m awfully bold. See 
Forgetfulness.—Anon. 

“I’m after [or afther] axin’, Biddy dear ’’[or “my dear”]. 
See “Don’t be Tazin’ Me.”—Whipple. 

I’m an old man; I’m sixty years. See Carcassonne.— 
Nadaud (Browne). 

I’m anxious to tell you a bit of my mind. See Leave 
the Liquor Alone.—Anon. 

I’m awfully glad there’s no one here. See Slight Mis¬ 
calculation, A.—Griffith. 

I’m awfully sorry for poor Jack Roe. See Mother’s 
Room.—Anon. 

I’m banished to the garret now: my busy days are o’er. 
See Old Cradle, The.—Griffith. 

I’m but a little child. See Hymn.—M. H. S. 

I’m but a little fellow now. See I’ll be a Man.—Anon. 

I’m but a little girl, you see. See But Little Folks.— 
Kunkler. 

I’m but a little lad, you know. See Wilford’s Piece.— 
Richards. 

I’m dreadful busy workin’. See Little Housekeeper, 
The.—Anon. 

I’m dreadfully tired of having my hair. See Eddie 
Visits the Barber.—Anon. 

I’m far frae my hame, an’ I’m weary aftenwhiles. See 
My Ain Countrie.—Demarest. 

I’m feelin’ mighty rocky, lookin’ rocky, too, I guess. 
See If He’s Busted.—-Anon. 

I’m fifty. I’m fair, and without a gray hair. See 
Widder Budd.—Anon. 

I’m five years old to-day. See Maud’s Birthday.— 
Anon. 

I’m fond of the good old apple tree. See Old Apple 
Tree, The.—Anon. 

I’m glad I am a husbandman. See Labor Song.— 
Anon. 

I’m glad I have a good sized slate. See Harry’s Arith¬ 
metic.— [St. Nicholas.) 

I’m glad I’ve found my speller. Grannie said if I’d 
study my lesson. See Spelling Lesson, The.— 
Anon. 

I’m glad my hair ain’t yellow. See Getting to be a 
Man.—-Kiser. 

I’m glad that I am not to-day. See Something to be 
Thankful For.—Denton. 

I’m glad that it suited you, schoolma’am, to spend a 
few days here with Kate. See Worried about 
Catherine.—Carleton. 

I’m glad vacation’s over, and school is called again. 
See School Begins To-day.—Yates. 

“I’m glad we got here early, Nell.” See In Church 
During the Litany.-—Anon. 

I’m glad you dropped in this evening, Jim. See 
Reclaimed Brother; or the Chain of Roses, The.— 
McBride. 

I’m glad you’ve come. You’re the very boy I wanted 
to see. See Signing the Pledge.—Clement. 

“I’m goin’ to die,” says the widder Green. See 
Widder Green’s Last Words.—Anon. 

I’m going back to gran’pa’s. See Little Bov’s Lament, 
The.—Anon. 

“I’m going down to cheer a flower.” See Raindrops, 
The.—Anon. 

“I’m going now to run away.” See Little Boy who 
Ran Away, The.—Perry. 

I’m going to a felon’s cell. See Felon’s Cell, A.— 
Anon. 

I’m going to be a wise man. See Speech for a Little 
Boy.—Manning. 

“I’m going to be the housekeeper.” See How Hazel 
Kept House.—Richards. 

“I’m going to die,” says the Widder Green. See 
"Widder Green’s” Last Words.—Anon. 

I’m going to grandma’s. See How do I Look?— 
Bohne. 


714 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


I’m 


I’m going to have a party. See Model Tea Party, A.— 
Donny. 

I’m going to the shore to dig. See Catching a Whale.— 
Goodfellow. 

I’m going to write a letter to our oldest boy, who went. 

; See Father’s Letter.—Field. 

I’m growing old; I’ve sixty years. See Carcassonne. 
—Nadaud (Thompson). 

I’m growing very old. This weary head. See St. 
John the Aged.—Anon. 

I’m hastening from the distant hills. See Brook Song, 
A.—Field. 

I’m heartless, you say. See Heartless.—Smith. 

I’m here at last, how strange to all. See But Once a 
Year.—Denton. 

I’m in love, but I’ve never told her. See Margery 
Daw.—Weatherly. 

I’m in love with you. Baby Louise! See Baby Louise. 
—Eytinge. 

I’m just a country maiden. See Country Girl, A.— 
Goodfellow. 

I’m just a little boy, you know. See Willie’s Breeches. 
—Salsbury. 

‘I’m just discouraged,” said Mr. Brown. See Tommy 
Brown.—Hardy. 

“I’m just now in the country for a stay.” See Town 
and Country.—Anon. 

I’m keeping store; I’ve heaps of things. See Keeping 
Store.—Goodfellow. 

I’m keeping them all for the sake of my darlings. See 
Old Letters.—Anon. 

I’m king of the road. I gather. See His Majesty.— 
Brown. 

“I’m licensed to sell; get out of my shop.” See "Get 
Out of my Shop.”—Munson. 

I’m like the tiny tree. See Child and Tree.—Holbrook. 

I’m little, but I’m spunky, too. See I’m Little, but 
I’m Spunky.-—Kavanaugh. 

I’m little Crocus. See Early Miss Crocus.—Goodfel¬ 
low. 

I’m little Robin Redbreast, sir. See Robin Redbreast’s 
Secret.— (Youth’s Penny Gazette.) 

I’m looking for a little girl. See Little Mollie Whimper. 
—Denton. 

“I’m losted! Could you find me, please?” See Her 
Name.—Burnham 

I’m mamma’s little baby. See Papa’s Best Girl.— 
Richards. 

I’m my mother’s little helper. See What a Little Girl 
Can Do.—Anon. 

I’m my mother’s little man. See Little Chief, The.— 
Anon. 

I’m nine years old! an’ you can’t guess how much I 
weigh, I bet! See Happy Little Cripple, The 
(Little Hunchback, The).—Riley. 

I’m not a chicken; I have seen. See September Gale, 
The.—Holmes. 

"I’m not a drunkard.” See Why Should I Sign the 
Pledge?—Henry. 

“I’m not afraid of anything.” See Brave Little Maid, 
The.—Anon. 

I’m not afraid of worms, or bugs, nor spiders. See 
Brave Little Mary.—Denton. 

I’m not going to contradict you, Caudle. See Mrs. 
Caudle Has Taken Cold.—Jerrold. 

I’m not too young for God to see. See God Sees Me.— 
Anon. 

I’m not where I was yesterday. See On the Death of 
-.—Houghton. 

I’m not worth much in pocket. See What A Little 
Boy is Worth.—Anon. 

I’m nothing but a baby, and I guess I’m pretty small. 
See Baby’s Remarks.—Anon. 

‘I’m nothing but a little acorn.” See Little Acorn.— 
Huntington. 

‘I’m of no use,” said a little brown seed. See Little 
Brown Seed, Thq.—Lothrop. 

I’m old, my dears, and shrivel’d with age and work and 
grief. See Bumboat Woman’s Story, The.— 
Gilbert. 

I’m one and one, and one and two. See My Age.— 
Anon. 

I’m only a little [or very little] girl, but I think I have 
as much right See Naughty Girl’s Life in a Hotel, 
A.—Anon. 

I’m only a little sparrow. See Song of the Sparrow.— 
Anon. 

I’m only a mite. See Epilogue for a Tot.—Anon. 

I’m only a [very] little girl, but I think I have just as 
much right to say what I want to. See Naughty 
Girl’s Life in a Hotel, A.—Anon. 

m only des’ a ’ittle boy. See When I Dit Drowed.— 
Anon. 


I’m Phil, and I have a complaint. See Phil’s Com¬ 
plaint.—Rook. 

I’m pretty nearly certain that "was bout two weeks 
ago. See Thanksgiving Dream A —Lincoln. 

I'm ready for the party. See Bessie’s First Party.— 
Locke. 

I’m riding away to Washington See Going to Wash¬ 
ington.—Goodfellow. 

I’m shtandin’ in the mud, Biddy. See Irish Picket, 
The.—Kerr. 

“I’m sick of mustn ts,” said Dorothy D. See Doro - 
( thy’s Mustn’ts.—Wilcox. 

I’m singing of you when the darkness is falling. See 
Singing of You.—-Anon. 

I’m sittin’ on the stile, Mary. See Lament of the Irish 
Emigrant.—Dufferin. 

I’m sitting alone by the fire. See Her Letter.— 
Harte. 

I’m sitting alone in my silent room. See Christmas 
Carol, A.—Rya,n. 

I’m sitting at dusk ’neath the old beechen tree. See 
Smoker’s Reverie, The.—Anon. 

I’m sitting musing in my room. See Were It Only 
Now.—Bell. 

I’m six years old, every day of it. My name is Thomas. 
See What Tommy Dislikes.-—Anon. 

I’m so glad you dropped in this afternoon for a cup of 
tea. See Leap Year Farce, A.—Rogers. 

I’m so tired of winter. I want to go out and play in the 
yard. See Edith’s Complaints.—Anon. 

I’m sorry that I spelt the word. See In School-days 
(“I’m sorry,” etc,).—Whittier. 

I’m such a lonely little girl. See Marion’s Lament.—■ 
Richards 

I’m sure I don’t know why myfather brought this 
verdant Yankee. See Jeduthan and Jane.—Anon. 

I’m taught p-l-o-u-g-h. See O-u-g-h.—Loomis. 

I’m tellin’ this jest ez I heard it, y’ know. See Davy 
and Goliar.—Penney. 

I’m thankful that the sun and moon. See Lines by an 
Old Fogy.—Anon. 

I’m the captain, big and bold. See Little Army, The. 
—Rook. 

I’m the ghost of an old continental. See Ghost of an 
Old Continental, The.—Brooks. 

I’m the Man in the Moon. On this green Earth below 
See Courting of Mother Goose, The.—Castle. 

I’m the pumpkin, ripe and big. See Perfect Feast, A. 
—Denton. 

I’m thinkin’ of the goolden head. See Play Softly 
Boys.—O ’ Hare. 

“I’m thinkin’ ” said Mr. Finn to his son Mickey, as 
they sat on the back stoop after supper. See 
Mickey Coaches his Father.—Jarrold. 

I’m thinkin’, wife, of neighbor Jones, that man of 
stalwart arm. See Forty-acre Farm, The.— 
Anon. 

I’m thinking, Charles, ’tis just a year. See Wife’s 
Appeal, The.—Greenwood. 

I’m thinking on thy smile, Mary. See Lament of the 
Widowed Inebriate.—Duganne. 

I’m thinking that tonight, if not before. See Young 
Gray Head. The.—-Southey. 

I’m thist a little cripple boy, an’never goin’ to grow. 
See Happy Little Cripple, The.—Riley. 

I’m tired of being a little girl. See I Wish I Were a 
Bird.—-Anon. 

I’m tired of dolls. Let’s talk. See Choosing Voca¬ 
tions.—Anon. 

“I’m tired of leather dolls,” said Belle. See New Kind 
of Doll, A.—Jack. 

I’m twins, I guess, ’cause my Ma say. See Little- 
Girl-Two-Little-Girls.—Riley. 

I’m up and down, and round about. See On a Circle.— 
Swift. 

I’m very glad I did not live. See Sixty Years Ago.— 
Rook. 

I’m very glad the spring is come, the sun shines out so 
bright. See Walk in Spring, A.—Stoddart. 

I’m very happy where I am. See same. —Boucicault. 

I’m very small, as you can see. See Speech for a Small 
Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

I’m very small, as you can see. See also Speech for a 
Very Little Girl.—Kavanaugh. 

I’m very small, as you perceive. See Midget’s Greet¬ 
ing, The.—Anon. 

I’m very small but I have learn’d. See Speech for a 
Very Small Child.—Kavanaugh. 

I’m very young but what of that? See I’m Very 
Young.—Anon. 

I’m very young for a soldier. See Ambition.—Anon. 

I’m ’vited to the wedding. See Doll’s Wedding, The.— 
Allyn. 


715 







I’m 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


I’m wearin’ awa, John [or Jean], See Land o’ the Leal, 
The.—Nairn. 

I’m weary wandering from room to room. See Hunch¬ 
back, The (Helen and Modus).—Knowles. 

I’m with you once again, my friends. See I’m with 
You Once Again.—Morris. 

Image of beauty, when I gaze on thee. See Janus.— 
Russell. 

Imageries of dreams reveal a gracious age. See Age of 
a Dream, The.—Johnson. 

Imagination fondly stoops to trace. See Deserted 
Village, The.—Goldsmith. 

Imagine a chain of Federal forts. See Storming of 
Mission Ridge, The.—-Taylor. 

Imagine, O learned Apelles, that it is now the tenth 
hour of the Roman day. See Revels of the 
Caesars, The.—Edwards. 

Imagine to yourselves a Demosthenes. See Perfect 
Orator, The.—Sheridan. 

Imagine two superb racing yachts. See Yacht Race, 
The.— (N. Y. Herald.) 

Immortal Amaranth, a flower which once. See Para¬ 
dise Lost (“Immortal Amaranth,” etc.).—Milton. 

Immortal Love, forever full. See Our Master.— 
Whittier. 

Immortal morn, all hail' See Discovery Day.—Butter- 
worth. 

Immortal Newton never spoke. See On a Full-length 
Portrait of Beau Marsh.—-Chesterfield. 

Imperial bloom, whose every curve we see. See White 
Camellia, A.—Fawcett. 

‘Imperious Caesar dead and turned to clay.” See 
Ruined Library, A.—Pollock. 

Important as I deem it to discuss, on all proper occa¬ 
sions. See Right of Free Discussion.—Webster. 

Impossible the eagle’s flight. See Proof, The.—Lar- 
com. 

Imputations of British influence have been uttered. 
See British Influence, 1811.-—Randolph. 

In a bower a widow dwelt. See Beauty, Wit and 
Gold.—Moore. 

In a branch of willow hid. See To a Caty-did.— 
Freneau. 

In a certain part of the sea, very many leagues from 
here. See Margaret: A Pearl. —Field. 

In a certain small town on the Mississippi. See 
Daddy’s Boy.—Anon. 

In a chamber, grand and gloomy, in the shadow of the 
night. See Stigma, The.—Janvier. 

In a chariot of light from the regions of day. See 
Liberty Tree.—Paine. 

In a church which is furnish’d with mullion and gable. 
See Epigram: “All Saints.”-—Yates. 

In a city of churches and chapels. See Madonna of 
the Entry, A.—Machar. 

In a [vrr\ the] J coign of the cliff, between lowland 
and highland. See Forsaken Garden, A.—Swin¬ 
burne. 

In a costly palace Youth goes clad in gold. See Ballad 
Noting the Difference of Rich and Poor, A.— 
Lamb. 

In a crowded room I seemed to .stand. See After 
Reading Austin Dobson.—E. 

In a dark and dismal alley, where the sunshine never 
came. See Tommy’s Prayer.—Nicholls. 

In a dark and dungeon room. See Death of Osceola, 
The.—Street. 

In a dark enchanted forest where the red man loved to 
roam. See Toccoa, the Beautiful.—Rogers. 

In a Devonshire lane, as I tottered along. See How 
Marriage is Like a Devonshire Lane.—Marriott. 

In a dirty old house lived a Dirty Old Man. See Dirty 
Old Man, The.—Allingham. 

In a dream of the night I was wafted away. See 
Cameronian’s Dream, The.—Hyslop. 

In a drear-nighted December. See Stanzas: "In a drear- 
nighted,” etc.—Keats. 

In a gallery in the city of Brussels is a portrait. See 
Ivy Oration.—Anon. 

In a glad hour Lucina’s aid. See Cadenus and Va¬ 
nessa.—Swift. 

In a glittering glory of diamond dew. See Bugle, The. 
—Irving. 

In a golden cage hung a gold canary. See Cat and 
Canary.—Bates. 

In a grey cave, where comes no glimpse of sky. See 
Waiting.—Hinkson. 

In a harbour grene aslepe whereas I lay. See In Youth 
is Pleasure.—Wever. 

In a home-nest of peace and joy. See Under the Apple 
Tree.—Allen. 

In a hovel dark and drear bends a mother, pale with 
fear. See Prohibition’s Might.—Bruce. 


In a huge and smoky foundry. See Bell of St. John's, 
The.—Anon. 

In a humble farm-house, in the town of Salisbury, 
N. H., Daniel Webster was born. See Character 
of Webster.—Bayard. 

In a humble room, in one of the poorest streets of 
London. See Malibran and the Young Musician. 
—Anon. 

In a land for antiquities greatly renowned. See 
Toad’s Journal, The.—Taylor. 

In a land of the West, that is far, far away. See 
King Dollar.—English. 

In a large, lofty room of The Turrets lay, on a sofa. 
See Miss Eva’s Visit to the Ogre.—Elmslie. 

In a little bird’s-nest of a house. See Buried Gold.— 
Cary. 

In a little brown house. See Shall the Baby Stay?— 
Anon. 

In a little German village. See Blacksmith of Ragen- 
bach, The.—Murray. 

In a little house that stood. See Nervous Little Man, 
The.—Douglas. 

In a little roadside cottage, half hid by shrubs and 
vines. See Rusty Sword, The.—Vickers. 

In a long vanished age, whose varied story. See City 
of the Living, The.—Anon. 

In a moment, Evelyn. I will read this one extract to 
you. See Where’s My Hat?—Meyers. 

In a new country a man must possess at least three 
virtues .See Country Life.—Ingersoll. 

In a parlor neat and cozy. See How I Kissed Her. 
—Ritchie. 

In a pioneer’s cabin out west, so they say. See Betty 
and the Bear.—Anon. 

In a quaint German town, rich in legend and ruin. 
See Too Zealous by Half.—Anon. 

In a quaint Queen Anne chair. See Skein of Zephyr, 
A.—Anon. 

In a queer old Irish village. See Strange Request, 
The.—Johnson. 

In a quiet cemetery in Southern Germany is a grave¬ 
stone inscribed. See Carl Springel.—Anon. 

In a quiet little Ohio village, many years ago. See 
How Hezekiah Stole the Spoons.—Anon. 

In a quiet water’d land, a land of roses. See Dead at 
Clonmacnois, The.—Rolleston. 

In a railroad train in Scotland was an old lady with a 
large hand satchel. See same. —Anon. 

In a row of tenement houses. See Blue Alsacian 
Mountains.—Thatcher. 

In a secluded and mountainous part of Styria. See 
King of the Golden River, The.—Ruskin. 

In a small cabin in a California mining town. See 
Santa Claus in the Mines.—Anon. 

In a small chamber, friendless and unseen. See 
William Lloyd Garrison.—Lowell. 

In a small, pretty village in Nottinghamshire. See 
Country Squire, The.—Anon. 

In a small, quiet country town. See Two Stammerers, 
The.—Anon. 

In a solitary house on Wandsworth Common. See 
Remarkable Instance of Presence of Mind.—Anon. 

In a stifling pit a miner worked. See Coal Digger, 
The'—O’Donnell. 

In a still room at hush of dawn. See Eavesdropper, 
The.—Carman. 

In a tangled, scented hollow. See Sleep.—-Tooker. 

In a tenement house on the west side. See Tenement 
House Guest, A.—Garrison. 

In a time of great mental awakening, of unparalleled 
scientific discovery. See Liberalistic Temper, 
The.—Anon. 

In a tiny country villa lived our Blobbs, but all alone. 
See Sad Story of Blobbs and his Pullet, The.— 
Anon. 

In a tower swinging high to the stars of China’s sky. 
See Great Bell of Pekin, The.—O’Donnell. 

In a [w. green] valley, centuries ago. See Petrified 
Fern, The.—Branch. 

In a valley of this restless mind. See Quia Amore. 
Langueo.—Anon. 

In a veil of white vapor, hushed stars moving through. 
See Bride o’ the Sun, The.—Bishop. 

In a very humble cot. See Washerwoman’s Song, 
The.—Ware. 

In a village of Bank-swallows. See Bank-swallows, 
The.—Anon. 

In a wet day the rain gathered in blobs on the road. 
See How Gavin Birse Put it to Mag Lownie.— 
Barrie. 

In acquired knowledge, the superiority must be 
allowed to Dryden. See Parallel between Pope 
and Dryden.—Johnson. 


716 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


In former 


In Adam s Fa/1. See Theology.—( New England 

Primer.) 

In after days, when grasses high. See In After Days.— 
Dobson. 

In all climates spring is beautiful. See Hyperion 
(Spring).—Longfellow. 

In all countries, in all ages, have aristocrats implacably 
pursued. See Against the Nobility and Clergy 
of Provence.—Mirabeau. 

In all our decisions and actions, it would be well for 
us. See same. —Emerson. 

In all the dungeons of the Old World. See Ignorance 
a Crime in a Republic.—Mann. 

In all the earth no marvel was. See Light of Asia, The 
(Great Renunciation, The).—-Arnold. 

In all the eastern hemisphere. See Fall of J. W. 
Beane, The.—Herford. 

In all the land, range up, range down. See Langley 
Lane.—Buchanan. 

In all this Cuban business there is one man stands out. 
See Message to Garcia.—Hubbard. 

In an ocean, ’way out yonder. See Dinkey-bird, The. 
—Field. 

In an old abbey town, a long, long while ago. See 
Pickwick Papers, The (Goblins, The).—Dickens. 

In an old churchyard stood a stone. See She Always 
Made Home Happy.—Anon. 

In ancient times, as story tells. See Baucis and Phile¬ 
mon.—Swift. 

In and out, in and out. See At the Window.—Anon. 

In any such moral struggle as temperance reform 
involves. See “Come out from among Them.”— 
Lathrop. 

In April come he will. See Cuckoo, The.—Anon. 

In April the koo-coo can sing her note by rote. See 
Cuckoo’s Voice, The.—Heywood. 

In Arcady, wherever that may be. See Fall of Cory- 
don, The.—W. B. A. 

In Armoryke, that cleped is Briteyne. See Canterbury 
Tales, The (Frankeleynes Tale, The).—Chaucer. 

In arms the Austrian phalanx stood. See Patriot’s 
Password, The —Montgomery. 

In as few words as possible I wish to lay before the 
nation. See Great Beef Contract, The.— 
Clemens. 

In Athens, when all learning centred there. See 
Statue, The.—Anon. 

In attempting to coerce her American colonies. See 
History of the United States (Great Britain and 
her American Colonies).—Bancroft. 

In Autumn’s silent twilight, sad and sweet. See After 
Many Days.—Marston. 

In batting, hold your bat upright. See Golden Rules 
for the Young.—( Boy’s Own Paper, The.) 

In battle line of sombre gray. See Spirit of the Maine, 
The.—Jenks. 

In Being’s floods, in Action’s storm. See Faust (Speech 
of the Erdgeist in “Faust”).—Carlyle. 

In Brentford town, of old renown, there lived a Mr. 
Bray. See Duel, The.—Hood. 

In Broad Street buildings (on a winter night). See 
Gouty Merchant and the Stranger, The.—Smith. 

In building up natur’ he thought the Creator. See 
Pessimistic Philosopher, The.—Anon. 

In bursts of yellow, vital and intense. See October 
Trees.—Abercrombie. 

In candent ire the solar splendor flames. See ^Estiva¬ 
tion.—Holmes. 

In cap and gown I saw her go. See In Cap and Gown. 
—Anon. 

In Carnival we were, and supp’d that night. See 
Versailles.—Brooke. 

In certain brains there is an inborn might. See Genius. 
—Coates. 

In childhood, when with eager eyes. See Trance of 
Time, The.—Newman. 

In childhood’s Unsuspicious hours. See Epicurean.— 
Linton. 

In Christ I feel the heart of God. See Our Christ.— 
Larcom. 

In Clementina’s artless mien. See Sixteen.—Landor. 

In college verse, both Love and Fun. See College 
Verse.— ( William’s Argo.) 

In Common Prayer our hearts ascend. See With a 
Prayer-book.—Adams. 

In company one evening. See Who Would be a Boy 
Again?—Anon. 

“In conclusion,” continued the ape, sadly, "permit me 
to say things are woefully disproportioned. See 
Overheard at the Zoo.—Snyder. 

In considering the many instrumentalities through 
which an institution of the higher learning rises. 
See Situation of a University, The.—Capen. 


In Corsica’s far distant isle. See Corsican Vendetta; 
or. Love’s Triumph, The.—Anon. 

In Count Fiilek’s halls there’s wild revel and gay. See 
Lady of Gedo, The.—Safford. 

In courts and palaces he also reigns. See Paradise 
Lost.—Milton. 

In cycles past, when here on earth before. See 
Affinity.—Anon. 

In darker [or darkest] days and nights of storm. See 
Hymn.—Parker. 

In days gone by brave knights would vie. See Semper 
Idem.—Hale. 

In days gone by, St. Valentine. See To St. Valentine. 
—Reese. 

In days of yore, when the world was young. See 
Jupiter and the Bee.—.Esop. 

In days when George the Third was king. See Miss 
Nancy’s Gown.—Cooke. 

In days which antedate the Huns. See Hamilton— 
Sabine. 

In dealing with the liquor traffic, there are three 
classes. See Bible and the Liquor Traffic, The.— 
St. John. 

In deeds of love exce 1 ! excel! See Church Bells.— 
Anon. 

In der shweed long ago I dinked I vas shmard. See 
In der Shweed Long Ago.—Gooft. 

In dim green depths rot ingot-laden ships. See 
Sunken Gold.—Lee-Hamilton. 

In discourse more sweet. See Paradise Lost.—Mil- 
ton. 

In distant countries have I been. See Last of the 
Flock, The.—Wordsworth. 

In dramatic writing the difference between the Grecian 
and Roman. See Dramatic Styles.— (Black¬ 
wood’s Magazine.) 

In each green leaf a memory let lie. See With Roses.— 
Lloyd. 

In early days, ere Common Sense. See Mushroom 
Hunt, The.—Halpin. 

In early youth, as you may guess. See Young 
Gazelle, The.—Parke. 

In eastern lands they talk of flowers. See same .— 
Percival. 

In eddying course when leaves began to fly. See 
Echo and Silence.—Brydges. 

In Eden, ere yet innocence of heart. See Table Talk 
(Past and Future of Poetry, The).—Cowper. 

In 1898 the army of the United States. See Our 
Pledge to Puerto Rico.—Littlefield. 

In eighteen hundred sixty-one. See Substitute, The. 
—Baskett. 

In either hand the hastening angel caught. See 
Paradise Lost (Departure from Paradise, The). 
—Milton. 

In England a Tory member of Parliament said to me. 
See Home Rule for Ireland.—Depew. 

In Esop, we are told, a boy. See Boy and his Mother 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

In Essex County the Puritan founded his first town. 
See Puritan of Essex County, The.—Lodge. 

In Europe, three centuries ago, the cause of the people 
took form. See Major-General John Sedgwick 
(Spirit of Puritanism, The).—Curtis. 

In every strain of affectionate and discriminating 
admiration. See Wendell Phillips (Eulogy on 
Wendell Phillips).—Curtis. 

In every temple, heritage and hall. See Jerusalem De¬ 
livered (Sophronia and Olindo).—Wiffin. 

In every village marked with little spire. See School¬ 
mistress, The (Village School Mistress, The).— 
Shenstone. 

In facile natures fancies quickly grow. See Persever¬ 
ance.—Vinci. 

In fair Naples, just at noonday. See Flower Girl, 
The.—Wordsworth. 

In Farmingtown a maiden dwelt. See Unfaithful 
ness.—McBride. 

In finding herself once more by the side of Ivanhoe. 
See Besieged Castle, The.—Scott. 

In five minutes after the explosion there were scores 
at the mouth of the pit. See In the Pit.—Burnett. 

In Fleet-street dwelt, in days of yore. See Magpie, 
The.—Anon. 

In flickering light and shade the broad stream goes. 
See September Days.—Arnold. 

In Florence, years ago, there dwelt a youth. See 
Ringer’s Vengeance, The.—Abbey. 

In form and feature, face and limb. See Twins, The.— 
Leigh. 

In former times there ruled, as governor of the Al¬ 
hambra. See Alhambra, The (Governor and the 
Notary, The).—Irving. 


717 





In front 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


In front of my pew sits a maiden. See Broken Wing, 
The.—Anon. 

In front the awful Alpine track. See Stanzas in 
Memory of the Author of “Obermann.”—Ar¬ 
nold. 

In frosty array St. Valentine’s Day. See Martin’s 
Reward.—Richards. 

In full-flown dignity see Wolsey stand. See Vanity 
of Human Wishes, The (Rise and Fall of W’olsey, 
The).—Johnson. 

In future I am going to be careful what I do. See 
Dolly Dialogues, The (Retribution).—Hope. 

In genial mood, while at our pastoral banquet thus we 
sate. See Excursion, The (Twin Peaks of the 
Valley).—Wordsworth. 

In genial spring, beneath the quivering shade. See 
Angling.—Pope. 

In Germantown, near Philadelphia, several years ago. 
See How Jake Schneider Went Blind.—Anon. 

In getting evidence of improvement or deterioration. 
See Prohibition in Atlanta (Business Side of Pro¬ 
hibition, The).—Orady. 

In going to my naked bed as one that would have slept. 
See Amantium Ir®.—Edwardes. 

In golden youth, when seems the earth. See Geth- 
semane.—Wheeler. 

In good condition, cheap, on account of Competition. 
See For Sale, a Horse.—Taylor. 

In good King Charles’ golden days. See Vicar of 
Bray, The.—Anon. 

In Granada bells were ringing. See First Thanks¬ 
giving, The.—Butterworth. 

In gray antiquity there lived a man. See Opal Ring, 
The.—Lessing. 

In gray Spielburg’s dreary fortress buried from the 
light of day. See Antonio Oriboni.—Preston. 

In green old gardens, hidden away. See In Green Old 
Gardens.—Currie. 

In half-forgotten days of old. See Earthly Paradise, 
The (Writing on the Image, The).—Morris. 

In harvest time, when fields and woods. See Oppor¬ 
tunity.—Anon. 

In heaven a spirit doth dwell. See Israfel.—Poe. 

In heaven signs! See Harold.—Tennyson. 

In heavy sleep the Caliph lay. See Caliph and Satan, 
The.—Clarke. 

In her boudoir, faintly perfumed by some faint and 
subtle vapor. See Wooing of Lady Amabel, The. 
—Anstey. 

In her ear he whispers gaily. See Lord of Burleigh, 
The.—Tennyson. 

“In Herkimer County there never was seen.” See 
Mournful Story, A.—Anon. 

In him Demosthenes was heard again. See Table 
Talk (Lord Chatham).—Cowper. 

In his admirable series of studies of twentieth-century 
problems. See National Duties.—Roosevelt. 

In his deportment, shape and mien appeared. See 
Laodamia.—Wordsworth. 

In his dim chapel day by day. See Organist, The.— 
Lampman. 

In His glory! When the spheres. See Kyrie Eleison.— 
Whitney. 

In his mouth nations spake; his tongue might be. See 
On the Death of Lord Hastings.—Dryden. 

In his own image the Creator made. See Man.— 
Landor. 

In his recent work on “American History from an 
English standpoint.” See Abraham Lincoln.— 
Smith. 

In his room alone and silent. See Vision of Handel, 
The.—Blatchford. 

In his tower sat the poet. See Rose, The.—Lowell. 

In his wind-shaken tent the soldier sits. See At 
Christmas-time.—Anon. 

In holy night we made the vow. See Vow, The.— 
Meleager. 

In honour to thy memory, blessed shade! See St. 
Martin’s Day.—Willis. 

In hood of blue ’s soft, warm embrace. See In Hood 
of Blue.—Anon 

In hope to ’scape the law, do naught amiss. See Of 
Circumspection.—Chapman. 

In Ipswich town, not far from sea. See Heartbreak 
Hill.—Thaxter. 

In Ireland, ferr over the sea. See Syr Cauline.—Anon. 

In its summer pride array'd. See Funeral Ode on the 
Death of the Princess Charlotte.—Southey. 

In January, when down the dairy the cream and 
clabber freeze. See Country Sleighing.—Sted- 
man. 

In Junior year, ah, fancies light. See In Junior Year. 
—Barney. 


In Koln, a town of monks and bones. See Cologne.— 
Coleridge. 

In leathern volume, old and quaint. See Knight and 
the Page, The.—Howe. 

In letters large upon the frame. See What’s in a 
Name?—Munkittrick. 

In life’s rosy morning. • See Never Say Fail.—Anon. 

In lighter vein,—blue eyes and rosy lips. See “In 
Lighter Vein.”—Adams. 

In little Daisy’s dimpled hand. See Lost Penny, The. 
—Evans. 

In London city was Beichan born. See Young Beichan 
and Susie Pye.—Anon. 

In London once I lost my way in faring to and fro. See 
Plain Direction, A.—Anon. 

In London, thirty years ago. See Old May Day.— 
Anon. 

In looking forward to the moment which is intended 
to terminate the career. See Farewell Address.— 
Washington. 

In loopy links the canker crawls. See Indifference.— 
Anon. 

In Love, if Love be Love, if Love be ours. See Idylls 
of the King (Vivien’s Song).—Tennyson. 

In lowly dale, fast by a river’s side. See Castle of 
Indolence, The.—Thomson. 

In Lyons, on the mart of that French town. See 
Stranger’s Alms, The.—Abbey. 

In man or woman—but far most in man. See Task, 
The (Affectation in the Pulpit).—Cowper. 

In Manchester a maiden dwelt. See Love and Murder. 
—Anon. 

In man’s capacity for education we seem to see an 
original gift. See Man’s Capacity for Education. 
—Ellis. 

In many a lecture, many a book. See Time Spent in 
Dress.—Lamb. 

In many respects, the nations of Christendom collect¬ 
ively are becoming somewhat analogous. See 
Growth of International Sympathies.—Wayland. 

In marble Sebastopol the bells to chapel call. See 
Inkermann.—Mackay. 

In martial sports I had my cunning tried. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Sonnet LIII.).—Sidney. 

In mathematics he was greater. See Hudibras.— 
Butler. 

In Mather’s Magnalia Christi. See Phantom Ship, The. 
—Longfellow. 

In May the valley lilies ring. See Flower Dances.— 
Anderson. 

In May, when sea-winds pierced our solitudes. See 
Rhodora, The.—Emerson. 

In meadows deep with hay, I see. See Even-time.— 
Thomson. 

In medi®val Rome, I know not where. See Mori- 
turi Salutamus.—Longfellow. 

In melancholic fancy. See Hallo, my Fancy.—Cle- 
land. 

In mellowing skies the mated robins sing. See Plant¬ 
ing the Oak.—Butterworth. 

In men whom men condemn as ill. See Judge Not.— 
Miller. 

In merry mood here roaming. See Roaming.—Anon. 

In mid whirl of the dance of Time ye start. See Exit. 
—Watson. 

In midst of wild green pasture-lands, cut through. 
See Monks’ Magnificat, The.—Nesbit. 

In Milwaukee, a day or two ago, during a slight lull in 
business. See Two Bootblacks, The.—-Anon. 

In moods of transient mournfulness. See Loneliness. 
—Hayne. 

In moss-prankt dells which the sunbeams flatter. See 
Lovers and a Reflection.—Calverley. 

In mother’s room still stands the chair. See In 
Mother’s Room.—Lincoln. 

In mourning, in mourning, the kingdom appears. See 
Death of Queen Mary, The.—Anon. 

In multitudes of cases, perhaps in the greater part of 
them. See same. —Dix. 

In my collection framed of curios. See Master’s Pen— 
A Confession, The.—Anon. 

In my first years and prime not yet at height. See 
Sonnets from the Poems.—Drummond. 

In my garden I spend my days; in my library I spend 
my nights. See Among my Books.—Smith. 

In my heart are many chambers through which I wan¬ 
der free. See In My Heart.—Reade. 

In my poor mind it is most sweet to muse. See Child¬ 
hood.—Lamb. 

In my school-days, when I had lost one shaft. See 
Merchant of Venice, The.—Shakespeare. 

In my sleep I was fain of their fellowship, fain. See 
Sunrise.—Lanier. 


718 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


In Spenser’s 


In Norfolk Bay, long years ago, where waved. See 
American Exile, An.—Brown. 

In northwestern Ohio there is a settlement called 
Africa. See Blessed Are de Peacemakers.— 
Dension. 

In numbers, and but these few. See Ode on the Birth 
of Our Saviour, An.—Herrick. 

In obedience to instructions, I should never dare to 
disregard. See Nominating General Grant.— 
Conkling. 

In obedience to your will, I rise your humble organ. 
See Funeral Oration on the Death of General 
Washington.—Lee. 

In olden time, and when Christianity had not inter¬ 
fered with it. See Suicide; or, The Sin of Self- 
destruction.—Talmage. 

In olden time—in ages long since flown. See Princess 
and the Rabbi, The.—-Gardner. 

In olden times a castle stood, so high and stately, 
too. See Minstrel’s Curse, The.—Uhland. 

In olden times when a flood or an earthquake, or any 
other great disaster came. See Dragon, The.— 
Anon. 

In one dread night our city, saw, and sigh’d. See 
Reopening of the Drury Lane Theater. — 
Byron. 

In one of bonnie Scotland’s homes. See Gowans 
under her Feet.—Gibson. 

In one of our Down-east churches. See He Loved to 
Steal.—Anon. 

In one of the large and rich cities of China there once 
lived a tailor named Mustapha. Nee Aladdin; or, 
The Wonderful Lamp.—Anon. 

In one of the >outh side Chinese Sunday-schools. See 
Chinese Version of .Tonah and the Whale, A.— 
Head. 

In one rich drop of blood, ah, what a sea. See One 
Country—One Sacrifice.—Gilder. 

In order to lead a religious life in the world. See 
Latent Principles of Religion.—Caird. 

In other days—my thoughts retrace. See To a Picture. 
—Milholen. 

In other lands monumental arches and columns of 
victory celebrate territorial conquest. See Wash¬ 
ington Arch in New York, The.—Curtis. 

4 ‘In our admiration for the manhood of General Grant.” 
See Grant’s Place in History.—Anon. 

In our period, no young man and no young woman can 
hope to succeed in any vocation. See Success in 
Life.—Anon. 

In our walks we see, almost daily, unhappy matches. 
See Wrangling Pair, The.—Valentine. 

In Paco town and in Paco tower. See Ballad of Paco 
Town.—Seollard. 

In Palestine long years ago. See Two Brothers, The. 
—Talmud. 

In palmy days of old, when Greece and Rome held 
sway. See Carnival of Sports, A.—Minster. 

In Paris, monologues are the fashion. Some are 
in verse. See Romance of a Hat.—Latimer. 

In pastures green? Not always. See He Leadeth Me. 
—Barry. 

In peace love tunes the shepherd’s reed. See Lay of 
the Last Minstrel.—Scott. 

In performance of the duty assigned to me on this 
occasion. See Garfield Statue, The.—Cleve¬ 
land. 

In petticoat of green. <See Phyllis.—Drummond. 

In praise of little children I will say. See Laus Infan- 
tium.—Canton. 

In praise of thee my lips I ope. See Lines to a Trans¬ 
fer Check.—-( Harvard Lampoon.) 

In preserving among the sons that spirit of patriotism. 
See Reverence for the Flag.—Porter. 

In pride of wit, when high desire of fame. See To his 
Fair Idea.—Drayton. 

In proceeding to answer the argument of the gentle¬ 
man. See Reply to Mr. Wickham in Burr’s Trial. 
—Wirt. 

In promulgating your esoteric coagitations. See 
Don’t Use Big Words.—Anon. 

In Pumpkin town there lived a girl as fair as any rose. 
See Mournful Tale, A.—McBride. 

In purple and fine linen. See Royalty.—Knowles. 

In quantity if not in quality there is something novel 
in both. See Newest Promises and Perils of the 
Temperance Reform, The (Promises and the 
Perils, etc.).—Cook. 

In radiant youth we walk among the flowers. See 
“Memento Mori.”—Peterson. 

In regal quiet deep. See same.— Ingelow. 

In Roman households, when their dear ones died. See 
Adelaide Anne Procter.—Arnold. 


In Rose Hill, Chicago, stands a monument to the Boys 
in Blue. See Heroes and the Flowers, The.— 
Taylor. 

In Rotten Row a cigarette I sat and smoked, with no 
regret. See In Rotten Row.—Henley. 

In ruling well what guerdon? Life runs low. See 
Two Old Kings, The.—De Tabley. 

In running the mind along the long list of sincere and 
devout Christians. See Great Minds in Their Re¬ 
lations to Christianity.—Erskine. 

In rural occupation there is nothing mean and debasing. 
See Charms of Rural Life. The.—Irving. 

In Sana, O, in Sana, God, the Lord. See Prince;Adeb. 
—Boker. 

In Scarlet towne, where I was borne. See Barbara 
Allen’s Cruelty.—Anon. 

In Scharfenstein at noon of night awakes a dreadful 
din. See Legend.of Hesse, A.—Dingelstedt. 

In schools of wisdom all the day was spent. See 
Mother’s Jewels, The.—Trench. 

In Scotland there was a baby born. See Hind Horn.— 
Anon. 

In search from “A” to “Z” they passed. See Her 
Name.—Anon. 

In secret aisle the abbey’s walls beneath. See Mar- 
mion (Constance de Beverley).—Scott. 

In se'enteen hunder an’ forty-nine. See On Andrew 
Turner.—Burns. 

In selecting for our topic “The Spirit that Should 
Accompany Our Republican Institutions.” See 
Spirit that Should Animate, The.—Anon. 

In September last the daughter of a Towsontown man. 
See Cultured Daughter of a Plain Gro.cer, The.— 
Anon. 

In seventeen hundred and fifty-nine. See Hawke.— 
Newbolt. 

In seventeen hundred thirty-two George Washington 
was born. See Washington’s Life.—Bryant. 

In seventeen hundred thirty-two, this very' month and 
day. See February Twenty-second.—Allison. 

In seventeen hundred seventy-eight. See King of 
Spain and the Horse, The.—Pindar. 

In 1777, within a few days of one year after the Dec¬ 
laration. See National Flag, The (Our Flag).— 
Beecher. 

In shadowy calm the boat. See Hope.—Stewart. 

In shining groups, each stem a pearly ray. See Ghost- 
flowers.—Higginson. 

In shirts of check and tallowed hair. See Money Musk. 
—Taylor. 

In Siberia's wastes. See Siberia.—Mangan. 

In sight of home, the dear old home! See Mother’s 
Lullaby. —Short. 

“In silence, and at night, the Conscience feels.” See 
Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy (Cardinal’s Soliloquy, 
The).—Bulwer-Lytton 

In silence I must take my seat. See Table Rules for 
Little Folks.—Anon. 

In silence mighty things are wrought. See Silence.— 
Lynch. 

“In sin conceived,” you tell us, “condemned for the 
guilt of birth. ” See Snake and the Baby, The.— 
Arnold. 

In ’67 Jake Poole was staging the route from Gallatin 
to Helena, in Montana. See Stage-driver’s Story, 
The.—Anon. 

In slumber as the morning broke. See Dream of the 
Spanish Admiral, The.—Dorman. 

In slumbers of midnight the sailor-boy lay. See 
Sailor-boy’s Dream, The.—Dimond. 

In sober mornings, do not thou rehearse. Nee When He 
Would Have his Verses Read.-—Herrick. 

In Soil the dearest and the best. See Song for Tree- 
planting.—Underwood. 

In some forgotten ruler’s reign. See Brother Antonio. 
—Allen. 

In somer when the shawes be sheyne. See May in the 
Green-wood.—Anon. 

In sooth he was a mighty King. See King’s Fool, 
The."—Livingston. 

In sooth I have forgotten, for it is long ago. See 
Hilda’s Little Hood.—Boyesen. 

In sooth,- I know not why I am so sad. See Merchant 
of Venice, The (Scene from “The Merchant,” etc.). 
—Shakespeare. 

In sorrow bowed. See Loss of the College Pump, 
The.—Coolidge. 

In speaking of a person s faults. See Be Careful what 
You Say.—Anon. 

In speaking of the sons of New England. See Tribute 
to General Sherman, A.—Porter. 

In Spenser’s gallery of portraits among many that are 
richly warm in coloring. See “Una. ”—Anon. 


719 





In spite 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


In spite of all the learned have said. See Indian 
Burying-ground. The.—Freneau. 

In spite of censorship, in spite of the Index. See same. 
—Hugo. 

In spite of my physician, who is, entre nous, a fogy. 
See My Cigar.—Gundry. 

In spite of outward blemishes, she shone. See Kitty 
Clive.—Churchill. 

In spring I found the violet. See Gentian.—Brown. 

In spring, when branches of woodbine. See Trailing 
Arbutus.—Abbey. 

In Spring [wr. In the spring], when the green gits 
back in the trees. See When the Green Gits Back 
in the Trees.—Riley. 

In stalwart contrast, large of heart and frame. See 
Lord Melbourne.—Lytton. 

In stifling mows the men became oppressed. See 
August Afternoon, An.—Irvine. 

In such a night, when every louder wind. See Noc¬ 
turnal Reverie, A.—Winchelsea. 

In summer, on the headlands. See Neckan, The.— 
Arnold. 

In summer, when the days were long. See Summer 
Days.—Call. 

In summer when the shaws be sheen. See Robin 
Hood and the Monk.—Anon. 

In sunny girlhood’s vernal life. See Portrait, A.— 
Ashbey-Sterry. 

In sunset’s light o’er Afric thrown. See Traveller at 
the Source of the Nile, The.—Hemans. 

In sweet dreams softer than unbroken rest. See Mem¬ 
ory.—Tennyson. 

In tangled ’wreaths, in clustered gleaming stars. See 
Yellow Jessamine.—Woolson. 

In tattered old slippers that toast at the bars. See 
Cane-bottomed Chair, The.—Thackeray. 

“In teacup-times!” The style of dress. See Rondeau 
to Ethel, A.-—Dobson. 

In tempus old a hero lived, qui loved puellas deux. 
See Ich bin dein.—Anon. 

In 1066, the Normans invaded England, and the bat¬ 
tle of Hastings broke. See Normans, The.— 
Tracy. 

In Tennessee, the dogwood tree. See Tennessee.— 
Brooks. 

In that delightful land which is washed by the Dela¬ 
ware’s waters. See Evangeline (Meeting of Evan¬ 
geline and Gabriel, The).—Longfellow. 

In that enchanted hour. See Love’s Reminiscences.— 
Dallas. 

In that hour, which of all the twenty-four is most 
emblamatical of heaven. See same. —Robertson. 

In that narrow Venetian street. See Saint Christo¬ 
pher.—Howells. 

In that soft midland where the breezes bear. See 
Rodney’s ride.—Brooks. 

In the academy I attended, elocution was taught. 
See My Experience in Elocution.—Neal. 

In the Acadian land, on the shores of the Basin of 
Minas. See Evangeline.—Longfellow. 

In the ages of faith, before the day. See Ave Maria.— 
Austin. 

In the ancient republics of Greece and Rome. See 
Industry and Eloquence.—Wirt. 

In the ancient town of Bruges. See Carillon.—Long¬ 
fellow. 

In the Arctic Ocean near the coast of Norway is situ¬ 
ated the famous Maelstrom or whirlpool. See 
Caught in the Maelstrom.—Wiley. 

In the art of speaking, as in all other arts. See 
Eloquence and Logic (On Eloquence).—Preston. 

In the autumn of 1830 I attended a Methodist camp¬ 
meeting. See Flood and the Ark, The.—Anon. 

In the backwoods of Ohio, in the days of long ago. 
See When the Circuit Rider Came.—Adams. 

In the barn the tenant cock. See Morning.—Cun¬ 
ningham. 

In the beautiful age of fairy mirth. See Story of the 
Gentians, The.—Anon. 

In the beautiful city of Worms, in Burgundy, dwelt 
the maiden Kriemhild. See Nibelungen Lied, 
The Story of the.—Rabb. 

In the beautiful month of October, I made a foot 
excursion. See Outre-Mer (Valley of the Loire, 
The).—Longfellow. 

In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the 
sea. See Battle Hymn of the Republic.—Howe. 

In the best chamber of the house. See Bottom 
Drawer, The.—Barr. 

In the big soft easy-chair. See Tete-fi-tete with 
Phyllis.—Smith. 

In the bitter gloom of a winter’s morn. Se$ Two.— 
Anon. 


In the bitter waves of woe. See Ultima Veritas.— 
Gladden. 

In the black furrow of a field. See Hare, The.—Ramal. 

In the bleak midwinter. See Christmas Carol, A.— 
Rossetti. 

In the bosom of one of those spacious coves. See 
Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The.—Irving. 

In the brave old days of the Table Round. See Knight 
and the Lady, The.—Trowbridge. 

In the bright October morning. See Church of Brou, 
The (Hunters, The).—Arnold. 

In the broad light of the day my grim visage I hide. 
See King Alcohol’s Soliloquy.—Sawyer. 

In the brown of her eyes. See Auf Wiedersehen.— 
Candee. 

In the busiest haunts of Florence. See Duomo, The.— 
Anon. 

In the busy active duties of every day life. See We 
Do not Stop to Think.—Anon. 

In the centre of the great city of London. See Little 
Britain.—Irving. 

In the chamber anext me the corpses sleep. See 
Tried.—Ragsdale. 

In the chapel of Henry the Seventh. See Two Queens 
in Westminister.—Morford. 

In the church of San Marco is the pulpit from which 
Savonarola spoke. See Savonarola.—Punshon. 

In the church-yard, up in the old high town. See 
Nine Graves in Edinbro.—Russell. 

In the city of Genoa, over the sea. See Christopher 
C—-—-.—Anon. 

In the city of Sevilla. See Lady of Sevilla, The.— 
Chanter. 

In the city of Venice, blank-blank Anno Domini. See 
Modern Version of the Merchant of Venice, A.— 
Barber. 

In the fa— C .] coign of the cliff, between lowland and 
highland. See Forsaken Garden, A.—Swinburne. 

In the coiled shell sounds Ocean’s distant roar. See 
Tutelage, The.—Bell. 

In the Convent of St. Joseph, high above the Pinchon 
Pass. See Friar’s Christmas, The.—Blake. 

In the crimson of the morning, in the whiteness of the 
noon. See Coming of His Feet, The.—-Allen. 

In the crimson sunset of the spring. See Hylas, The.— 
Thaxter. 

In the cross of Christ I glory. See same. —Bowring. 

In the dark silence of her chambers low. See What 
March Does.—Smith. 

In the dark Thuringian forest stood a castle tall and 
grim. See Wizard’s Spell, The.—Douglas. 

In the darkness and chill of the night. See Funeral, 
A.—Knowles. 

In the darkness deep. See Song of the Turnkey, The. 
—Smith. 

In the day or night. See Shadow Pictures.—Sherman. 

In the day the sun is darkened. See At Last.— 
Brooke. 

In the days of old. See Modern Pirates, The.— 
Welch. 

In the days of the long gone by. See Song to the 
Queen, The.—Anon. 

In the days that tried our fathers. See Poems Re¬ 
ceived in Response to an Advertisement for a 
National Anthem (National Anthem by Gen. Geo. 
P. M-).—Newell. 

In the days when great giants and ogres there were. 
See Charm, The.—Egbert. 

In the Dean’s porch a nest of clay. See In the Cathe¬ 
dral Close.—Dowden. 

In the decline of Mr. Burke’s life, when he was living 
in retirement. See Edmund Burke and his Son’s 
Horse.—Anon. 

In the deep shadow of the porch. See Bind-weed.— 
Coolidge. 

In the deepening shades of the twilight stood a maiden 
young and fair. See Down the Track.—Thorpe. 

In the deepest dearth of midnight, while the sad and 
solemn swell. See Fire-fiend, The.—Gardette.l^dS 

In the desert of the Holy Land I strayed. See Sonnet: 
“In the desert,” etc.—Anon. 

In the deserted, moon-blanch’d street. See Summer 
Night, A.—Arnold. 

In the Diamond Shaft worked Gentleman Jim. See 
Gentleman Jim.—O’Connell. 

In the dim conservatory. See Procrastination.— 
Anon. 

In the dirge we sung o’er him no censure was heard. 
See On the Death of Mr. Perceval.—Moore. 

In the door of the mill stood Richard Lee. See Taking 
Toll.—Anon. 

In the dough! In the dough! This is the way we 
make it go. See Cakes and Pies.—Hayward. 


720 







FIRST LINE INDEX 


In the 


In the down-hill of life, when I find I’m declining. 
See In the Down-hill of Life.—Collins. 

In the drear-nighted December. See December.— 
Keats. 

In the drinking-well. See Aunt Eliza.—Streamer. 

In the dusk of a summer evening. See How the Ques¬ 
tion Came Home.—Anon. 

In the dusk of the forest shade. See Men, The.—Bell. 

In the early days of Methodism. See Nestleton Magna 
(Methodist Class-meeting, A).—Wray. 

In the early morning-shine. See Life’s Hebe.—Thom¬ 
son. 

In the early spring-time. See same. —Anon. 

In the early summer of this year, there came to 
Chicago. See Chicago’s Greeting to Atlanta and 
the South Land.—Revell. 

In the earth—the earth—thou shalt be laid. See 
Warning and Reply.—Bronte. 

In the efforts of the people, of the people struggling for 
their rights. See People Triumphant, The.— 
Everett. 

In the embers shining bright. See Cradle Song — 
Gilder. 

In the evening, I sit near my poker and tongs. See 
Cricket on the Hearth, The.—Anon. 

In the ever-memorable year of our Lord 1609, on a 
Saturday morning. See Knickerbocker History 
of New" York (Discovery of the Hudson River, 


The).—Irving. 

In the fair garden of celestial peace. See Lines to 
the Memory of “Annie.”—Stowe. 

In the far distant times of legend and story. See 
Legend of King Nilus, The.—Wordsworth. 

In the far off land of Norway. See Sparrows, The.— 
Thaxter. 

In the farm-house porch the farmer sat. See Two of 
Them.—Anon. 

In the fields, where long ago. See Christmas Hymn, 
A—Anon. 

In the first drowsy heat of August noon. See Early 
Goldenrod.—Judd. 

In the first place, and as a matter of the greatest 
necessity. See Vanity Fair (How to Live Well 
on Nothing a Year).—Thackeray. 

In the forest, high up on the steep shore. See Last 
Dream of the Old Oak Tree, The.—Anderson. 

In the freezing cold and the blinding snow. See St. 
Martin and the Beggar.—Sangster. 

In the frosty season, when the sun. See Skating.— 
Wordsworth. . 

In the fullness of time a republic rose up in the wilder¬ 
ness of America. See Growth of the American 
Republic.—Bancroft. 

In the gap of Dunlo. See Paddy Blake’s Echo.— 
Lover 

In the garden of death, where the singers whose names 
are deathless. See In Memory of Barry Corn¬ 
wall.—Swinburne. 

In the gleam and gloom of the April weather. -See 
Mayflower, The.—Lincoln. 

In the gleaming light of the Old Regime. See Coureur- 
de-Bois, The.—Baylis. 

In the gloaming of the gleaming I was gloaming 
through the gleam. See In the Gloaming.— 
Thatcher. 

In the gloomy ocean bed. -See Kearsarge, The. 
Roche. 

In the golden gleam of dawn. See Tides, The.— 
Anon. 

In the golden morning of the world. See same. — 
Westwood. 

In the golden reign of Charlemagne the king. See 
Rhotruda.—Tuckerman. 

In the good old days when I was young. See How 
the Cats Went to Boarding-school.—Anon. 

In the grass by a lowly doorway. See Rescue. The.— 
Riche. 

In the gray dawning across the wild white lake See 
March.—Woolson. 

In the gray of Easter even. See In the Breaking of 
the Day.—Mace: , 

In the gray old Flemish city. See Young Van Dyck, 
The.—Preston. 

In the great drama of the rebellion there were two 
acts. See Memory of Abraham Lincoln, The 
(Abraham Lincoln).—Garfield. 

In the greenest of our valleys. See Haunted Palace, 


In the grim old light-house tower, with his daughter, 
lived “Old Grey.” See Keepers of the Light, 
The.—Douglas. . _ „ , 

In the groined alcoves of an ancient tower. See second 
Volume, The.—Bell. 


In the Guiteau trial, Mr. Porter, commenting on Mr. 
Reed’s reference to Charlotte Corday. See 
Guiteau the Assassin.—Porter. 

In the hall the coffin waits, and the idle armourer 
stands. -See Laus Deo.—Dobell. 

In the hand—fluttering fearfully. See “Bird in the 
Hand is Worth Two in the Bush, A.”—Anon. 

In the happy time a coming there’ll be nothing to pro¬ 
voke, See Jingles of the Street.—Anon. 

In the hard winter of 1783 and 1784. See Brave 
Peasant, The.—Anon. 

In the heart of a man. See Song of Growth, A.— 
Roberts. 

In the heart of a seed, buried deep, so deep. See 
Little Plant, The.—Anon. 

In the heart of Helen woke. See Iliad, The (Helen at 
the Scffian Gates).—Bryant. 

In the heart of the busy city. See Old Stone Basin, 
The.—Co'olidge. 

In the heart of the Hills of Life, I know. See My 
Springs.—Lanier. 

In the heart of the white summer mist lay a green little 
piece of the world. See Karma.—Canton. 

In the heart there lay buried for years. See Greater 
Memory.—O’Shaughnessy. 

In the high turret chamber sat the sage. See Death 
as the Fool.—Marzials. 

In the highlands, in the country places. See In the 
Highlands.—Stevenson. 

In the hollow tree, in the old gray tower. See Owl, 
The.—Procter. 

In the hollows of the mountains. -See Oven-bird, 
The.—Bolles. 

In the hour I first beheld thee. See Haunting Eyes.— 
Norton. 

In the hour of death, after this life’s whim. See 
Dominus Illuminatio Mea.—Anon. 

In the hour of my distress. See Litany to the Holy 
Spirit.—Herrick. 

In the hour of peril Liberty called for defenders. See 
Soldier’s Return, The.—Tuttle. 

In the hour of twilight shadows the Puritan looked 
out. See Pilgrim’s Vision, The.—Holmes. 

In the hour when coldest. See Morn of Inkerman, 
The.—Lushington. 

In the house of Too Much Trouble, lived a lonely little 
boy. See House of Too Much Trouble, The.— 
Paine. 

In the hush of early morning. See Merry Christmas.— 
Anon. 

In the hush of the autumn night. See Voice of the 
Sea, The.—Aldrich. 

In the Indian-summer twilight. See Grandma’s 
Talk.—Kavanaugh. 

In the Kingdom of Sham. See Kingdom of Sham, 
The.—Jones. 

In the land of Brittany, and long ago. See Only a 
Jew.—Anon. 

In the light of the moon, by the side of the water. 
See My Daughter Louise.—Greene. 

In the little hamlet of Daisyoak. See Cicely Croak.— 
Dowd. 

In the little Japanese village of Yowcuski. See 
Mysterious Portrait, The.—Japy. 

In the little southern parlor of the house you may 
have seen. See Opening of the Piano, The.—(At¬ 
lantic Monthly.) 

In the lone tent, waiting for victory. See Queen Hen¬ 
rietta Maria.—Wilde. 

In the long pageant of man’s destiny. See Christ- 
Child Alone, The.—Kimball. 

In the loud waking world I come and go. See Nihil 
Humani Alienum.—Coan. 

In the low-raftered garret, stooping. See Dorothy 
in the Garret.—Trowbridge. 

In the Mammoth Cave, where the light of day never 
enters. See same. —Bittinger. 

In the march of nations our country has kept step. 
See Compromise of Principle.—Beecher. 

In the meantime, the preparations for the trial had 
proceeded rapidly. See Warren Hastings (Open¬ 
ing Scene).—Macaulay. 

In the merrie moneth of Maye [or merry month of 
May] in a morn by break of day. See Phillida 
and Corydon.—Breton. 

In the merry hay-time we raked side by side. See 
Lines.—Paul. 

In the merry month of May comes our gladsome 
Arbor Day. See Song to Mother Earth, A.— 
Kellogg. 

In the middle of the month of October, in the year of 
1066. See Child’s History of England, A (Death 
of Harold).—Dickens. 


721 




In the 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


In the midnight calm and holy, when the world has 
sunk to rest. See Rum Evil, The.—( Irish World.) 

In the midst of sunny waters, lo! the mighty ship of 
State. See “Death has Crowned Him as a 
Martyr. ”—Wilcox. 

In the mild silence of the voiceless night. See Mid¬ 
night Hymn, A.—Anon. 

In the month of June, when the world is green. See 
Solstice (Summer Solstice, The).—Thomas. 

In the month of December, when naked and grim. 
See Solstice (Winter Solstice, The).—Thomas. 

In the morning light trills the gay swallow. See 
Snow-bird, The.—Anon. 

In the morning of our life. See Life Maxims.— (.Popu¬ 
lar Educator.) 

In the Morning of Time, when his fortunes began. 
See Woman and the Weed.—Lang. 

In the morning when the sun. See Off to School We 
Go.—Richards. 

In the morning, when we rise. See In the Morning.—* 
Rook. 

In the mysterious economy of Nature. See Nature.— 
Everett. 

“In the name of God, Amen.” See same. —Breckin- 
bridge. 

In the name of the Commons of England. See Im¬ 
peachment of Warren Hastings.—Burke. 

In the name of the Empress of India, make way. See 
Overland Mail, The.—Kipling. 

In the night, gray, heavy clouds muffled the valleys. 
See Peaks, The.—Crane. 

In the night she told a story. See Love’s Thread of 
Gold.—Ingelow. 

In the old and ruined mansion. See Haunted Cham¬ 
bers.—Anon. 

In the old church-yard at Fredericksburg. See same. 
—Loring. 

In the old churchyard of his native town. See Burial 
of the Poet, The.—Longfellow. 

In the old colony days, in Plymouth the land of the 
Pilgrims. See Courtship of Miles Standish, The.— 
Longfellow. 

In the old days (a custom laid aside). See Abraham 
Davenport.—Whittier. 

In the old days, while yet the church was young. See 
Macarius the Monk.—O’Reilly. 

In the old Liberty Hall at Philadelphia hangs an an¬ 
cient bell. See Scream from the American Eagle 
in Dakota, A.—-Anon. 

In the old marble town of Kilkenny. See Ninety- 
ei ght.—Campion. 

In the oldest of our alleys. See Banished Bejant, The. 
—Murray. 

In the opening scene of Aristophanes’ Comedy of the 
“Clouds.” See Old and New, The.—Anon. 

In the Orient afar. See East.—Anon. 

In the other gardens. See Autumn Fires.—Stevenson. 

In the palmy days of the old volunteer fire department. 
See “Presentation of the Trumpet, The.”—Anon. 

In the past, many mission field were so free from the 
drink curse. See World’s Problem, The.—Leavitt. 

In the pasture’s rude embrace. See Golden-rod.— 
Goodale. 

In the pleasant land of Canaan, dwelt the giant Offero. 
See Legend of St. Christopher, The.-—Fletcher. 

In the primitive days of our grandfathers’ time. See 
Hole in the Floor, The.—Hardy. 

In the principality of Hohenlohe. See Blacksmith of 
Ragenbach, The.—Anon. 

In the prison cell I sit. See Tramp, Tramp, Tramp.— 
Root. 

In the procession that followed good deacon Jones. 
See Deaf as a Post.—Anon. 

In the quarries should you toil. See Make Your Mark. 
—Barker. 

In the quiet nursery chambers. See Prayers of Chil¬ 
dren.—Anon. 

In the rain with her train. See Lady with a Train, The. 
—Anon. 

In the ranks of the Austrian you found him. See 
Forced Recruit, The.—Browning. 

In the rarest of English valleys. See Bunch of Cow¬ 
slips, A.—Anon. 

In the region of clouds, where the whirlwinds arise. 
See Castle in the Air, The.—Paine. 

In the regular evening meeting. See Deacon’s Prayer, 
The.—Stoddart. 

In the Rheingan standeth Aix. See Minndsingers Lied, 
The.—Duvar. 

In the rift of the rock He has covered my head. See 
Rift of the Rock, The.—Herbert. 

In the room below the young man sat. See Young 
Man Waited, The.—Cooke. 


In the room of this grief-shadowed present. See Flood 
of Years, The.—Bryant. 

In the rosy light trills the gay swallow. See Snowbird, 
The.—Butterworth. 

In the royal path. See Joseph and his Brethren 
(Triumph of Joseph, The).—Wells. 

In the rush of the merry morning. See Merry Christ¬ 
mas.—Anon. 

In the rushing rue de Chatham. See Tale of the East 
(Side), A.—Albro. 

In the scale of pleasure, the lowest are the sensual de¬ 
lights. See Sensual Delights Lowest.—Anon. 

In the school at Whilomville it was the habit. See 
Making an Orator.—Crane. 

In the search after true dignity, you may point me to 
the sceptred prince. See Dignity in Labor.— 
Hall. 

In the secret council chambers of a Masonic lodge. See 
Centennial Speech.—Albertson. 

In the shadowy aisle she kneeling. See At Vespers. 
—Van Wagenen. 

In the silence of the morning, through the softly-shin¬ 
ing mist. See Still Small Voice, A.—Wright. 

In the silent midnight watches. See Heart’s Song, The. 
—Coxe. 

In the smoke of my dear cigarito. See same. —Von K. 

In the snowing and the blowing. See Spring.—Dodge. 

In the snowy moonlit midnight. See Dream of Sister 
Agnes, The.—Anon. 

In the soft falling [or softly fading! twilight. See 
Creeping up the Stairs.—McFetridge. 

In the solemn stillness of the winter nights. See Frost- 
elves, The.—Wolverton. 

In the south of San Francisco there is even a greater 
range of color. See Madrona, The.—Somers. 

In the spring a young man’s fancy. -See In Spring. 
—(Princeton Tiger.) 

In the spring of 1859 I accepted a proffered editorial 
position. See Showing Off an Elocutionist.— 
Griswold. 

In the spring of 1861. See Soldier Bird, The.—Anon. 

In the spring of 1493, while the court was still as Bar¬ 
celona. See Return of Columbus, The.—Prescott. 

In [the] spring when the green gits back in the trees. 
See When the Green Gits back in the Trees.—Riley. 

In the stagnant pride of an outworn race. See San¬ 
tiago.—Janvier. 

In the still air music lies unheard. See Master’s Touch, 
The.—Bonar. 

In the still, star-lit night. See same. —Stoddard. 

In the stormy waters of Galloway. See Ferry of Gal¬ 
loway, The.—Cary. 

In the streets of Constance was heard the shout. See 
Death of Huss, The.—Austin. 

In the struggle of life, when fortune shall frown. See 
Mother’s Angel, The.—Dyer. 

In the Summer even. See Night Sea, The.—Spofford. 

In the summer of 1887, Victoria, Queen of England. 
See England and the United States.—Depew. 

In the summer of the year 1860. See Texas Story, A. 
—Donovan. 

In the sweet May time, so long ago. See May Days.— 
Anon. 

In the sweet shire of Cardigan. See Simon Lee, the 
Old Huntsman.—Wordsworth. 

In the tall elm-tree sat the robin bright. See Robin, 
The.—Thaxter. 

In the tempest of life, when the wave and the gale. 
See Look Aloft.—Lawrence. 

In the time when herds and flowers. See Caelica 
(Caelica and Philocell).—Brooke. 

In the time when the little flowers are born. See Black 
Ranald.—Cary. 

In the transformation of opinion which is impercepti¬ 
bly affecting all. See same. —Stanley. 

In the twilight hour of this memorable day. See Ivy 
Oration.—Anon. 

In the twilight in his sanctum sat the editor alone. See 
Running the Weekly.—Burdette. 

In the valley of Craft, a dressmaker lived, a smiling, 
angelic young lady. See Happy Couple, A.— 
McBride. 

In the valley of Shanganagh, where the songs of sky¬ 
larks teem. See Valley of Shanganagh, The.— 
Martley. 

In the valley of the Pegnit.z, where across broad meadow 
lands. See Nuremberg.—Longfellow. 

In the very night which followed old Sir Ensor’s funeral. 
See Lorna Doone (Snow-storm, The).—Blackmore. 

In the village of Mont Cheri. See Wedding Gift, The. 
—Foster. 

In the village of S-, Perthshire. See Gowk’s 

Errant, and what Cam’ o’t.—Ferguson. 


722 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Inducements 


In the war of 1812, when an attack was being made 
upon Fort Henry. See Story of the “Star- 
Spangled Banner.”—Anon. 

In the way that He shall choose. See Chosen Lessons. 
—Havergal. 

In the weird old days of the long agone. See City of 
Is, The.—Savage. 

In the west country by the sea. See Honk! Honki— 
Burk. 

In the west, the weary Day. See In Reverie.—Kimball. 

In the wet dusk silver sweet. See Memory of Earth, 
The.—Russell. 

In the white moonlight, where the willow waves. See 
Graveyard Rabbit , The.—Stanton. 

In the white-flower’d hawthorn brake. See Earthly 
Paradise, The (Antiphony).—Morris. 

In the whole realm of nature there is never found an 
unanswerable instinct. See same. —Clark. 

In the wild autumn weather, when the rain was on the 
sea. See Love and Death.—Mulholland. 

In the winged cradle of sleep I lay. See Cradle Song. 
—Thaxter. 

In the winter when the snowdrift stood against the 
cabin door. See Kate Maloney.-—Dagonet. 

In the wonderful century which saw at its beginning. 
See Boston, Mass., and Charleston, S. C.—Courte¬ 
nay. 

In the worst inn’s room, with mat half-hung. See 
Moral Essays (Death of the Duke of Buckingham, 
The).—Pope. 

In the year eighteen and nine we took. See Benedic¬ 
tion, The.—Harrison. 

In the year 1774, being much indisposed. See Treat¬ 
ment of his Hares, The.—Cowper. 

In the year 1762 a miser by the name of Foscue, in 
France. See Miser Fitly Punished, The.—Os¬ 
borne. 

In the year that’s come and gone. Love, his flying 
feather. See In the Year that’s Come and Gone. 
—Henley. 

In the year 1270, Louis the IXth of France. See 
Modern Knighthood.—Anon. 

In thee I fondly hoped to clasp. See same. —Byron. 

In their dark house of cloud. See Bells at Midnight, 
The.—Aldrich. 

In their ragged regimentals. See Carmen Bellicosum. 
—McMaster. 

In these days of rapid national growth. See Love of 
Country.—Brown. 

In these restrained and careful times. See Impression. 
—Gosse. 

In Thibet once there reign’d, we’re told. See Little 
Grand Lama, The.—Moore. 

In thickest fight triumphantly he fell. See General 
Albert Sidney Johnston.—Jervey. 

In this country, most young men are poor. See 
Thoughts for Young Men.—Mann. 

In this dim world of clouding cares. See Angels.— 
Massey. 

In this fair straager’s eyes of gray. See Absence.— 
Arnold. . 

In this glad hour, when children meet. See Christmas 
Gathering.—Ware. . 

In this lone, open glade I lie. See Lines Written in 
Kensington Gardens.—Arnold. 

In this May-month, by grace. See Asian Birds. 
Bridges. 

In this red wine, where Memory’s eyes seem glowing. 
See Toast to Omar Khayy&m.—Watts-Dunton. 

In this situation of this Assembly-groping, as it were 
in the dark. See God Governs.—Franklin. 

In this still place, remote from men. See Glen-Al- 
main, the Narrow Glen.—Wordsworth. 

In this world of pain and pleasure. See Take Courage. 
—Anon. . 

In this world, the Isle of Dreams. See White Island, 
• The.—Herrick. 

In this world with its wild whirling eddies and mad 
foam oceans. See Past and Present (Await the 
Issue).—Carlyle. .... 

In those happy days, a well-regulated family always 
rose with the dawn. See Knickerbocker History 
of New York (Tea Parties in Old Times).—Irving. 

In these high heavens, wherein the fair stars flower. 
See Song of the Stars, The.—Moulton. 

In thy coach of state. See Crowned Poet, A. Aldrich. 

In thy hammock gently sleeping. See Baby Dear. 
Lover. .. 

In thy western halls of gold. See Ode to Apollo. 

In thy white bosom love is laid. See Song.—Blaikie. 

In time of yore when shepherds dwelt. See Olden Love- 
making.—Breton. 


In token that thou shalt not fear. See Baptismal 
Hymn.—Alford. 

In torrid heats of late July. See Ballade of the Book- 
hunter.—Lang. 

In truth, a monument to Shakespeare, cui bono? See 
Monument to Shakespeare, A.—Hugo. 

In twenty years no change comes o’er. See In Twenty 
Years.—Kavanaugh. 

In Uladh, near Magh Inis, lived a chief. See Saint 
Patrick and the Imposter.—DeVere. 

In vain all the knights of the Underwald woo’d her. 
See High born Lady, The.—Moore. 

In vain he seeks for beauty that excelleth. See Love’s 
Perfections.—Anon. 

In vain men tell us time can alter. See Age and Song. 
—Swinburne. 

In vain the common theme my tongue would shun. 
See Never or Now.—Holmes. 

In vain the cords and axes were prepared. See Ship¬ 
wreck, The.—Falconer. 

In vain through history we search. See Old Tennant 
Church.—Bungay. 

In vain to me the smiling mornings shine. See Sonnet 
on the Death of Mr. Richard West.—Gray. 

In vain we call old notions fudge. See International 
Copyright.—Lowell. 

In vain you tell your parting lover. See same. —Prior. 

In Yassar’s halls a tutor young. See Mathematical. 
—(Lehigh Burr.) 

In venturing to invite the attention of the House to the 
state of the law. See International Copyright, An. 
—Talfourd. 

In Virgine the sultry Sun ’gan sheene. See Excellent 
Ballad of Charity, An.—Chatterton. 

In visions of the night. See Solomon’s Wise Choice.— 
Tarbox. 

In what a strange bewilderment do we. See Morn.— 
Jackson. 

In what dark silent grove. See Castara (Cogitabo pro 
Peccato Meo).—Habington. 

In what rich harmony, what polished lays. See Music 
of Nature.—Pierpont. 

In what torn ship soever I embark. See Hymn to 
Christ, A.—Donne. 

In winter T get up at night. See Bed in Summer.— 
Stevenson. 

In winter, once, an honest traveler wight. See Guide 
Post, The.—Anon. 

In winter, when the wind I hear. See Four Winds, 
The.—Sherman. 

In words as fashions, the same rule, etc. See Essay on 
Criticism, An.—Pope. 

In wreaths of smoke, blown waywardwise. See In 
Wreaths of Smoke.—Holman. 

In Xanadu did Kubla Khan. See Kubla Khan.— 
Coleridge. 

In years bygone, before the famous Rockaway Pavilion 
was built. See How a Frenchman Entertained 
John Bull.—Anon. 

In years to come I ask thee not to say. See To-. 

—Innsly. 

In yellow and in saffron it is dressed. See Wellesley 
in Autumn.—Wood. 

In yon dense wood full oft a bell. See Lost Church, 
The.—Uhland (Tilney). 

In yonder dim and pathless wood. See Lost Church, 
The.—Uhland (Whitman). 

In yonder grave a Druid lies. See Ode on the Death 
of Thomson.—Collins. 

In youth exalted high in air. See On a Pen.—Swift. 

In youth, when blood was warm and fancy high. See 
Mask of Death, The.—Hayne. 

In youth’s glad morning hour. See Planting for the 
Future.—Wright. 

Inaudible move day and night. See God and the 
Soul (Silence).—Spalding. 

Inconstant! Oh, my God! See Inconstant.—Anon. 

Indeed he seems to me. See Idylls of the King (Albert 
the Good).—Tennyson. 

Indeed, ma’am, I traversed half the town in search of 
it. See Rivals, The (Scene from “ The Rivals’’). 
—Sheridan. 

Indeed, this very love which is my boast. See bon-, 
nets from the Portuguese, XII.—Browning. 

Indeed wife, it is a matter of hourly congratulation to 
me. See Misfortune of Civil War, The.—Swander. 

Independence and liberty, the great political objects 
of all communities. See Arts and Letters. Ev- 

Independence Day! The booming cannon. See In¬ 
dependence Day.—Parmely. 

Inducements! Can it be necessary to offer these? See 
Inducements to Earnestness in Religion.—James. 


723 




Indulgent 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Indulgent friends, you now have heard us thro’. See 
Closing Address.—Anon. 

Infatuation!—madness!—to risk so vast a sum! See 
Yankee Tar’s Return, The.—Anon. 

Inglorious friend! most confident I am. See Sonnet 
to a Clam.—Saxe. 

Inhuman man! curse on thy barb’rous art. See On 
Seeing a Wounded Hare Limp by Me.—Bums. 

Injurious charmer of my vanquished heart. See Val- 
entinian (Song).—Rochester. 

Inland my life is set. See Seaward.—Gillespy. 

Inland, within a hollow vale, I stood. See English 
Channel.—Wordsworth. 

Inmate of a mountain-dwelling. See To-(Miss 

Blackett), on her First Ascent to the Summit of 
Helvellyn.—Wordsworth. 

Innocent child and snow white flower! See Child and 
the Lily, The—Bryant. 

Innocent eyes not ours. See All Things Wait Upon 
Thee.—Rossetti. 

Innocent spirits, bright, immaculate ghost! See From 
Generation to Generation.—Howells. 

Innumerable are the calamities which flow from an in¬ 
terruption of justice. See On Behalf of the Peo¬ 
ple of Boston, in Support of the Memorial of De¬ 
cember 18, 1765.—Adams. 

Inquirer, cease! petitions yet remain. See Vanity of 
Human Wishes, The (Wise Man’s Prayer, The).— 
Johnson. 

Insect or blossom? Fragile, fairy thing. See Mari¬ 
posa Lily, The.—Coolbrith. 

Insensible to high heroic deeds. See Patriotism and 
Freedom.—Baillie. 

Inside a squalid chamber. See Miser’s Fate, The.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Inside its zig-zag lines the little camp is asleep. See 
Magazine Fort, Phoenix Park, Dublin.—Wilkins. 

Inside the city’s throbbing heart. See St. Michan’s 
Churchyard.—Kavanagh. 

Inspiring auspices, this day, surround us and cheer us. 
See Washington’s Birthday.—Webster. 

Instead of trumpet and of drum. See Hudibras (Mar¬ 
tial Music).—Butler. 

Intemperance creates in man an ungovernable appetite. 
See Destroyer, The.—Scudder. 

Intemperance cuts down youth in its vigor. See 
Effects of Intemperance, The.—Anon. 

Intemperance is not a mere local affair. See Reform 
Will Go On, The.—Anon. 

Intemperance is the strangest and most unaccountable 
mystery. See Unaccountable Mystery, An.— 
Denton. 

Intemperance lays a foundation for all the moral evils. 
See What is Temperance?—Coles. 

Intemperance of party, wherever found. See Intem¬ 
perance of Party.—Gaston. 

Intemperance wipes out God’s image. See same. — 
Gough. 

Interr’d beneath this marble stone. See Jack and 
Joan.—Prior. 

Into a famous toy shop. See Schemer, A.—Warren. 

Into a ward of the whitewashed walls. See Some¬ 
body’s Darling.—La Conte. 

Into all lives some rain must fall. See Some Sweet 
Day.—Bates. 

Into her chamber went. See Child’s Prayer, The.— 
Reed. 

Into my heart a silent look. See Love at First Sight.— 
Lytton. 

Into our home one blessed day. See New-born Babe, 
The.—Morris. 

Into the caverns of the sea. See Joy Enough.—East¬ 
man. 

Into the Devil tavern. See Three Troopers, The.— 
Thornbury. 

Into the great vestibule of heaven. See Dream of the 
Universe, A.—Richter. 

Into the heaven of Thy heart, 0 God. See Immortal. 
—Larcom. 

“Into the inmost Temple thus I came.” See Faerie 
Queene, The (Wooing of Amoret).—Spenser. 

Into the Land of Song, my boys. See Land of Song, 
The.—Marvin. 

Into the night she steamed away. See Sinking the 
Merrimac.—Cone. 

Into the noiseless country Annie went. See Into the 
Noiseless Country.—Parsons. 

Into the path of sin. See same. —Anon. 

Into the Silent Landl See Song of the Silent Land.— 
Von Salis. 

Into the silver night. See Revelation.—Gosse. 

Into the skies one summer’s day. See Thought, The. 
—Rands. 


Into the sunshine, full of the light. See Fountain, The. 
—Lowell. 

Into the thick of the fight he went, pallid and sick and 
wan. See General Wheeler at Santiago.—Gor¬ 
don. 

Into the town of Conemaugh. See Man Who Rode 
to Conemaugh, The.—Bowen. 

Into the west of the waters on the living ocean’s foam. 
See Homeward Bound.—Woodberry. 

Into the woods my Master went. See Ballad of Trees 
and the Master, A.—Lanier. * 

Into the world he looked with sweet surprise. See 
Into the World and Out.—Piatt. 

Io! they come, they come! garlands for every shrine! 
See Return from Battle, The.—Anon. 

Iphigeneia, when she heard her doom. See Iphigeneia 
and Agamemnon.—Landor. 

Ireland is now our royal care. See Apollo’s Edict.— 
Swift. 

Ireland is the Gethsemane of Europe. See same .— 
Redpath. 

Ireland never was contented. See Ireland.—Landor. 

Irish stew, Irish stew! See Irish Stew.— (Punch.) 

Iry an’ Billy an’ Joe! See Iry and Billy and Joe.— 
Riley. 

I’s a little Alabama Coon. See Little Alabama Coon. 
—Starr. 

Is all done now? See Jack’s Nap.—Anon. 

Is all our company here? See Midsummer Night’s 
Dream (Clown’s First Rehearsal, The).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Is Heaven a long way off, mother? See Little Girl’s 
Lament, The.—Greenwell. 

Is it a dream? An I once more a child? See In the 
Old Country Church.—Dole. 

Is it anybody’s business. See same. —Anon. 

Is it come? they said, on the banks of the Nile. See 
Is it Come?—Browne. 

Is it cure me, docthor, darlin’? an ould boy of siventy- 
four. See Wreck of the Aideen, The.—Graves. 

Is it in a hurry yez aire, Mr. Clarrigon. See Serious 
Mishap, A.—Smith. 

Is it indeed so? If I lay here dead. See Sonnets 
from the Portuguese, XXIII.—Browning. 

Is it love when your heart beats faster. See Is it 
Love?—-Anon. 

“Is it my lead?” asked the first. See Ladies’ Whist- 
Club, The.—Anon. 

Is it not better at an early hour. See On Living Too 
Long.—Landor. 

Is it not well, my brethren? They whose sleep. See 
Fifteenth of February, The.—Russell. 

Is it nothing to you, O Christians. See Is it Nothing 
to You?—Anon. 

Is it parting with the roundness. See Growing Old.— 
Sangster. 

Is it possible? Is’t so? See Wallenstein (Wallenstein’s 
Soliloquy).—Schiller. 

Is it raining, little flower? See Is it Raining.—Butts. 

Is it so far from thee. See Chamber over the Gate, 
The.—Longfellow. 

Is it so small a thing. See Empedocles on Etna (Hymn 
of Empedocles).—Arnold. 

Is it strange, then, that some tears fall on the pages of 
his Bible. See Uncle Tom’s C bin (Uncle Tom’s 
Testament).—Stowe. 

Is it, that life has sown her joys so thick. See Night 
Thoughts (Stream of Life, The).—Young. 

Is it the palm, the cocoa-palm. See Palm-tree, The. 
—Whittier. 

Is it the shrewd October wind. See Gone.—Howells. 

Is it this sky’s vast vault or ocean’s sound. See 
Monochord, The.—Rossetti. 

Is it thus, O Shane the haughty! Shane the valiant! 
that we meet. See Shane’s Head.—Savage. 

“Is it true?” that’s the doubtful suggestion. See 
Yes!—-Jessop. 

Is it true, then, my girl? did you mean it.—See Yes?— 
Bunner. 

Is it where the spiral stairway. See Heaven.— 
Holmes. 

Is it worth while that we jostle a brother.' See Is it 
worth while?—Miller. 

Is it you, Jack? Old boy, is it really you? See Old 
Chums.—Cary. 

Is it you, that preached in the chapel there looking over 
the sand? See Despair.—Tennyson. 

Is life worth living? Yes, so long. See Is Life Worth 
Living.—Austin. 

Is love a dream? In truth, they tell me so. See 
Love’s Waking.—Anon. 

Is Love contagious?—I don’t know.— See Where 
Ignorance is Bliss.—Anon. 


724 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


It began 


See Emigrant’s Return, The.— 


Is my father alive? 

Anon. 

Is Nature weak? Do her enchantments fail? See 
Restitution.—Anon. 

Is not he the wisest man who rids his brow of wrinkles? 
See same. —Anon. 

Is not the field, with lively culture green. See 

CasUe of Indolence, The (Address to the Indolent) 
— Ihomson. 

Is not thilke the mery moneth of May. See Shep- 
heardes Calender, The (Description of Maying) — 
Spenser. 

Is she not come? The messenger was sure See 
Tristram and Iseult.—Arnold. 

Is she to be buried in Christian burial, that wilfully 
seeks her own salvation? See Hamlet (Grave¬ 
yard Scene).—Shakespeare. 

Is such a busy little housekeeper. See Busy Little 
Housekeeper, The.—Richards. 

I s —Field*^ ee *- an ute the Great (Canute the 

T +h rF" ,V> ! 1StreSS Dorry? See At the “ReH T » 
Is the house turned topsy-turvy; oee inat Boy.— 

Anon. 


Is the present condition of Europe, peace? See No 
Peace without Liberty.—Kossuth. 

Is the President of the Divorce Court here? See 
Appeal, An.—Anon. 

Is the road very dreary? Patience yet! See Bide A 
Wee, and Dinna Fret.—S. E. G. 

Is then the dreadful measure of your cruelty not yet 
complete? See Pizarro (Las Casas Dissuading 
from Battle).—Sheridan. 

Is there a cross word that tries to be said? See Don’t 
Say It.—Anon. 

Is there a God, then, above us? See Is There a God?—• 
Cameron. 


Is there a lady in the land. See Girl’s a Girl for A’ 
that, A.—Anon. 

Is there a way to forget to think? See Vagabonds, 
The.—T ro wbridge. 

Is there a whim-inspired fool. See Bard’s Epitaph, 
A.—Burns. 

‘' Is there any news of the war? ” she said. See Reading 
the List.—Anon. 

Is there ever a man in all Scotland. See Johnnie 
Armstrong.—Anon. 

Is there for honest poverty. See same. —Burns. 

Is there in the whole long year. See Good-bye, A.— 
Denton. 

Is there no God? The White rose made reply. See 
No God.—Richardson. 

Is there no grand, immortal sphere. See Art Thou 
Living Yet?—Clark. 

Is there no secret place on the face of the earth. See 
Moneyless Man, The.—Stanton. 

Is there not an amusement, having an affinity with the 
drama. See Recitation.—Channing. 

Is there one desires to hear. See Fand (Epilogue).— 
Larminie. 

Is there room among the angels. See Is there Room 
in Angel Land?—Anon. 

Is there such a thing as eternal fidelity? See Is Fideli¬ 
ty Eternal?—Strongfeldt. 

Is there, when the winds are singing. See Mother’s 
Hope, The.—Blanchard. 

Is thine hour come to wake, O slumbering Night? See 
In San Lorenzo.—Swinburne. 

Is thinking an art to be acquired? See Art of Think¬ 
ing, The.—Anon. 

Is this a dagger which I see before me. See Macbeth 
(Macbeth before the Murder of Duncan).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Is this a fast, to keep the larder lean. See To Keep a 
True Lent.—Herrick. 

Is this a life, to break thy sleep. See Easy Life, The. 
—Herrick. 

Is this,a time for selfish intrigues, and the little dirty 
traffic for lucre and emolument! See Against 
Political Jobbing, 1794.—Sheridan. 

Is this a time to be cloudy \wr. gloomy) and sad. 
See Gladness of Nature, The.—Bryant. 

Is this all the love that he bore me, my husband, to 
publish my face. See Queen Vashti’s Lament.— 
Reade. 

Is this the ground where generations lie. See Vanished 
Village, A.—Wilton. 

Is this the man by whose decree abide. See Imperator 
Augustus.—Rodd. 

Is this the office of Cupid’s Express? See Traced.— 
Brewer. 


See “Bud of Promise” Racket, 


See 


“Is this the place?” 

The.—Anon. 

“Is this the region, this the soil, the clime ’ 
Paradise Lost (Satan).—Milton. 

Is this the tel’graph office?” See Telegram, The.— 
(Good Housekeeping.) 

Is this thy place and city, this thy throne. See Hebrew 
Capital Despoiled, The.—Heber. 

Is thy cruise for cruse) of comfort wasting [or failing!? 
Rise and share it with another. See Unfailing 
Cruise, The).—Charles. 

Is thy face like thy mother’s, my fair child! See 
Childe Harold s Pilgrimage (Harold the Wanderer) 
—Byron. 

Is true freedom but to break. See Stanzas on Freedom 
—Lowell. 

Is us too many chillun, pa? Us don’t count but eight 
See ‘Too Many Chillun, Pa?”—Anon. c 

Is water nigh?” The plainsmen cry. See 
Water, The.—Garland. 

-ittle lor little] sorrowful [or sowwowful] 
baby. See New Baby, The.—Anon. 

I’se boun’ to see my gal to-night. See On the Road.— 
Dunbar. 

I’se got a baby sister. See New Sister, The.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

I’se gwine dis ebenin’ fo’ ter preach ob dose infernal 
vandals. See Sable Theology.—Iedgarj. 

I’se gwine to tell the story for you folks as wasn’t dah. 
See Cake Walk, The.—-Anon. 

I’se on’y a pore ole nigger, an’ long ’go parst my prime. 
See Gabe’s Christmas Eve.—Meyers. 

Ismeno, before the King presents himself, alone. See 
Jerusalem Delivered (Sophronia and Olindo).— 
Tasso. 

Isn’t it a pity there should ever be. See Our Watch 
Words.—Denton. 

“Isn’t it pretty?” said a little old man, as he wheeled 
a baby carriage. See White Hearse, The.— 
Anon. 

Isn’t it very sad, Cornelia, about those poor people. 
See Two Ways of Doing Good.—McConaughy. 

Isn’t it wonderful, when you think. See Wonderful.— 
Cutler. 


Isn’t this Joseph’s son?”—ay, it is He; See Jesus the 
Carpenter.—Liddell. 

Issaker, I’d like to know, what’s come across the meetin’ 
See Church Kitchen, The.—Eisenbeis. 

“Is’t as bad as yir lookin', Doctor? Tell’s the truth.” 
See Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush (Death of the 
Country Doctor, The).—Watson. 

Is’t come to this? What shall the cheeks of fame. 
See Scots Apostasie, The.—Cleiveland. 

It a’ cam’ richt at las’, just as I ken’d it wud. See 
Fence o’ Scripture Faith, The.—Braden. 

It aches awfully, and what a fellow’s to do without a 
mother. See Going to the Dentist’s.—Ober- 
holtzer. 

It ain’t helfy to woke little boys up so quick! See 
“Thust Only a Dweam.”—Bennett. 

It aint jest the story, parson, to tell in a crowd like 
this. See “Teamster Jim. ”—Burdette. 

It aint no use to grumble and complain. See Wet 
Weather Talk.—Riley. 

It ain’t the funniest thing a man can do. See First 
Settler’s Story, The.—Carleton. 

It a’n’t accordin’ to natur’ for folks to turn right 
askew. See Nathan’s Case. ( Sunday School 
Times.) 

It appears as if there were a sort of match, or trial of 
skill. See Tea-kettle and the Cricket, The.— 
Dickens. 

It appears I am cited here because I have returned. 
See Caius Gracchus, Cited before the Censors, 
Appeals to the Peonle.—Knowles. 

It appears th^t a gentleman by the name of Smith had 
recently moved. See Bill Smith.—Adler. 

It appears to be a measure of party to run down the 
fame of Mr. Pitt. See Vindication of Mr. Pitt.— 
Canning. 

It appears to me that I heard you say you always had 
hard luck when you played cards. See Brudder 
Bones in Hard Luck.—Anon. 

It appears to some persons, that a great deal too much 
use is made of the symbol. See Mass Meeting at 
Saratoga (Log-cabin, The).—-Webster. 

It befell at Martinmas. See Captain Car; or, Edom 
o’ Gordon.—Anon. 

It began with Aunt Anabel having a headache. See 
Scorching versus Diamonds.—Phelps. 


725 






It bought 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


It bought a stick of candy. See Story of a Cent, The.— 
Lawrence. 

It came upon the midnight clear. See same. —Sears. 

It came upon us by degrees. See Babie Bell.—Aid- 
rich. 

It can be reported of Ulysses S. Grant, as it was once 
said of George Washington. See One of the Com¬ 
mon People.—Hamilton. 

It cannot be denied, but by those who would dispute 
against the sun. See Adams and Jefferson (Future 

. of America, The).—Webster. 

It cannot be that He who made. See Reincarnation. 
—Sickels. 

It chanced a farmer, with his son. See Bridge of Truth, 
The.—Anon. 

It chanced of late a shepherd’s swain. See Fiction 
how Cupid Made a Nymph Wound herself with 
Arrows, A.—Anon. 

It chanced ffiat S'liWllD‘ah? 0 ,?,.'.?.} own • See " ,l ' 

Monks and the Pilgrim, The.—Anon. 

It chanced to me upon a time to sail. See My Native 
Land.—O’Reilly. 

It chanced upon a winter’s day. See Pairing Time 
Anticipated.—Cowper. 

It comes again, the blessed day. See Mother’s Ex¬ 
cuse, A.—Lippincott. 

It comes from childhood land. See Vesper Sparrow, 
The.—Thomas. 

It comes in darkness as the others came. See New 
Year, The.—Cameron. 

It comes! This strange bird from a distant clime. 
See Humming Bird, The.—Mair. 

It comes to me when healths go round. See Thy 
Name.—Hoffman. 

It comforts me through all my days. See My Garden 
Wall.'—Morton. 

It does appear to me that if the loftiest of the lofty 
spirits. See Temperance Pledge, The:^—Mar¬ 
shall. 

It does seem as if some one ought to be able to answer 
this question. See Inquisitive Prince, The.— 
Denton. 

It doesn’t seem—now, does it, Jack—as if poor Brown 
were dead. See Dead Student, The.—Carleton. 

It don’t seem hardly right, John. See Jonathan to 
John.—Lowell. 

It.fades! it shifts! and now appears.. See Aurora 
Borealis, The.—Gould. 

It fell about the Lammas tide. See Battle of Otter- 
burn, The.—Anon. 

It fell about the Martinmas. See Edom o’ Gordon.— 
Anon. 

It fell in the ancient periods. See Uriel.—Emerson. 

It fell on a day, and a bonnie simmer day. See Bon¬ 
nie House o’ Airlie, The.—Anon. 

It fell upon a holy-day. See Little Musgrave and the 
Lady Barnard.—Anon. ■ 

It fell upon a Wednesday. See Brown Robyn’s Con¬ 
fession.—Anon. 

It flows through old hushed Egypt and its sands. See 
Nile, The.—Hunt. 

It follows now you are to prove. See Pleasure Recon¬ 
ciled to Virtue (3rd song).—Jonson. 

It fortifies my soul to know. See “With whom is no 
Variableness, neither Shadow of Turning.”— 
Clough. 

It had been a circus day. See Address of Spottycus.— 
Anon. 

It had been a day of triumph in[or at] Capua. See 
Spartacus to the Gladiators at Capua.—Kellogg. 

It had been raining in the valley of the Sacramento. 
See .Tovita; or, The Christmas Gift.-—Harte. 

It had happened that amongst our nursery collection 
of books was the Bible. See In the Nursery.— 
DeQuincey. 

It had pleased God to form poor Ned. See Idiot 
Boy, The.—Southey. 

It had rained all night. Water lay here and there in 
the hollows of the plain, as in basins. See Les 
Misdrables (Battle of Waterloo, The).—Hugo. 

It hangs ’mong a hundred others. See Story of a 
Picture, A.—Forrester. 

It happed that I came on a day. See Duchesse 
Blanche.—Chaucer. 

It happened at Bonn. One moonlight winter’s eve. 
See Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata.—Anon. 

It happened on a summer’s day. See Castle-builder, 
The.—La Fontaine. 

It happened once that a young Yorkshire clown. See 
Yorkshire Angling.—Anon. 


It happened one morning that little Bo-peep. See 
Little Bo-peep and Little Boy Blue.—Peck. 

It happened ’way back in the fifties. See Dead Man s 


Gulch.—Vickers. 

It hardly seems that he is dead. See Dead I riend, A. 
—Gale. 

It has been imputed to me by the noble Earl, on my 
left. See Worth of Present Popularity.—Mans¬ 
field. 

It has been maintained that the genius which con¬ 
stitutes. See Military Qualifications Distinct 
from Civil.—Sergeant. 

It has been obse’ved, Mr. Speaker, by several gentle¬ 
men. See How Patriots May be Made.—Wal- 

It has been said by a noble lord. See Motives of 


Action.—Mansfield. 

It has been said by Mr. Flood, that “the pen would 
fall from the hand.” Wlinpic against Flood 

&K ^^^^-H^hTgreatest — ^ 

It has been well said tnai me great moral victories 
and defeats.—See Culture in Emergencies.— 
Anon. 

“It has come at last, old comrade, it has come at last.” 

See Soul of the Violin, The.—Merrill. 

It has come, it has come at last! See Top Landing, 
The.—Meyers. 

It has frequently been observed that genius and mad¬ 
ness are nearly allied. See Mad—Quite Mad.— 
Praed. - , 

It has lengthened life; it has mitigated pain. See 
Bacon’s Philosophy.—Macaulay. 

It has long been known to surgeons that, when a limb 
has been cut off. See Ghost of a Sensation, 
The.—Mitchell. 


It has not been an unfrequent charge against Macau¬ 
lay. See Macaulay.—Punshon. 

It has often occurred to me that the conditions under 
which we live at the present day. See Mark 
Twain on the 19th Century.—Clemens. 

It hath been said for all who die. See For All Who 
Die.—Anon. 

It having been announced to me, my young friends. 
See Advice to a Fire Company.-—Anon. 

It hung in the sun, the little house. See Shining Lit¬ 
tle House, The.—Hunt. 

It ill becomes me, Senators of Rome, me, Regulus. 
See Regulus before the Roman Senate.—Sar¬ 
gent. 

It is a beauteous evening, calm and free. See same .— 
Wordsworth. 

It is a beautiful truth that all men contain. See Talk 
to an Art Union.:—Whitman. 

It is a bleak day. Hear the rain, how he pours, and 
the hail. See Tramp Abroad, A (Tale of the Fish¬ 
wife and its Sad Fate).—Clemens. 

It is a bright summer day in the valley. See Drops.— 
Robertson. 

It is a careless pretty may, down by yon riverside. 
See Faithless Knight, The.—Allingham. 

It is a celebrated thought of Socrates. See Spectator, 
The (Mountain of Miseries, The).—Addison. 

It is a cloudless summer day. See Fourth of July, 
1776, The (Signing of the Declaration, The).— 
Lippard. 

It is a common saying that religion has nothing to do 
with politics. See same.-— Robertson. 

It is a dang'rous thing; it makes a man a coward. See 
King Richard III. (Conscience).—Shakespeare. 

It is a dear delight for the soul to have trust in the 
fidelity of another. See same. —( Harper's Maga¬ 
zine.) 

It is a fact that ninety-nine per cent of all the genuine 
temperance work. See No Surrender! No Com¬ 
promise !—Peck. 

It is a fair, even-handed, noble adjustment of things. 
See Christmas Carol, A (Christmas Party at 
Scrooge’s Nephew’s, The).—Dickens. 

It is a fine summer morning. See Three Men in a 
Boat (Signing of Magna Charta, The).—Jerome. 

It is a fitting opportunity to advert to the fact that a 
revival of religion.—See same .—( Southwestern 
Presbyterian.) 

It is a glad picnic party. The Sabbath-school has gone 
out. See Day in the Woods, A.—Burdette. 

It is a grave thing when a State puts a man among her 
jewels. See Idols.—Phillips. 

It is a great pleasure to think of the young people 
assembling. See Words from the Tree.—Con¬ 
way. 


726 






It is 


FIRST LINE INDEX 


Jt is a great thing to live in such a period as this. See 
Responsibilities of Young Men, The.—Clark. 

It is a happy day for Rome. See Zenobia (Aurelian 
and Zenobia).—Ware. 

It is a happy world after all. See Happy World, A.— 
Paley. 

It is a legitimate source of pleasure See Teaching of 
the Colleges, The.—Low. 

It is a little American clock, which I got as a present 
two years ago. See Mending the Clock.—Barrie. 

It is a little singular, as fond as I am of dogs. See 
Mr. Perkins Buys a Dog.—Bailey. 

It is a man’s chief blessedness that there lie in his 
nature infinite possibilities of growth. See 
Never-ending Progress.—Spaulding. 

It is a marvelous phantasy, thou speakest of. See 
Damon and Pythias.—Banin. 

It is a mere wild rose-bud. See Token, The.—Lowell. 

It is a most extraordinary thing, but T never read a 
patent advertisement. See Three Men in a Boat 
(Victim v.r o>*- ,T —»r,ri Seven Fatal Mala¬ 
wi is a peddifHT’J®, ro . n c „ ome schools of eloquence. See 
Two Schools of Eloquence.—Choate. 

It is a pity and a shame—alas! alas! I know it is. 
See Class Meeting, 1875.—Holmes. 

It is a place where poets crowned may feel the heart’s 
decaying. See Cowper’s Grave.—Browning. 

It is a principle amply borne out by the history of the 
great and powerful nations of the earth. See 
First Settlement of New England, The (Advan¬ 
tages of Adversity to the Pilgrim Fathers).— 
Everett. 

It is a principle never to be forgotten, that it is not by 
absolute. See Parliamentary Reform (Govern¬ 
ment Should Grow with the People, A).—Macaulay. 

It is a private citizen whom we commemorate. See 
Wendell Phillips (Eulogy of Wendell Phillips).— 
Ctirtis. ■ L 

It is a rare privilege, sir, to have had a part, however 
humble, in this work. See New South, The.—- 
Grady. 

It is a remarkable age in which we live. See Hope of 
the Nation, The.—Schurman. 

It is a remarkable fact that for the past twenty-five 
years. See American Shipbuilding.—Blaine. 

It is a sair thing to be misjudged. See same.— Mac¬ 
donald. 

It is a singidar fact that Longfellow is more popular. 
See Longfellow, Extract concerning.—Stoddard. 

It is a singular fact that the freer a nation becomes. 
See Daniel O’Connell (Necessity of Outside Agita¬ 
tion, The).—Phillips. 

It is a strange thing how little in general people know 
about the sky. See Modern Painters ( Sky, The). 
—Ruskin. 

It is a tiny thing, I ween. See Mandolin, The.—R. C. 

It is a trying thing to me. See Speech for a Small 
Boy.—Anon. 

It is a valuable exercise to copy passages of literature. 
See Commit to Memory.—Brooks. 

It is a vile weed, poisons the blood. See Where there’s 
a Will there’s a Way.—May. 

It is a withered rose. See White Rose, The.—O’Con¬ 
nor. 

It is Abou el Mahr, the gallant Sheik of A1 Azeed. 
See Abou el Mahr and his Horse.'—Anon. 

It is absolutely necessary for the oration. See Oratory. 
—Maury. 

It is admitted that the dog has intelligence. See On 
Dogs and Cats.—Dumas. 

It is all like a dream. See Hero-President, The.—Por¬ 
ter. 

It is all very well for the poets to tell. See Answer to 
“Five o'Clock in the Morning.”—Anon. 

It is almost time for Walter to come. See Slight Mis¬ 
take, A.—Anon. 

It is almost time that Theodore was home from school. 
See Starting in Life.—Anon. 

It is an ancient mariner. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The.—Coleridge. 

It is an ancient mariner. See Survival of the Fittest, 
The.—Ives. 

It is an ancient miller. See Rime of the Ancient Miller. 
—Burdette. 

It is an August day, 1620. See Negro in American 
History, The.—Laird. 

It is an old garret with big brown rafters. See Rain in 
the Garret.—Mitchell. 

It is an unanswerable argument of a very refined age. 
See Relations of Booksellers and Authors, The.— 
Swift. 


It is as a writer of humorous poetry. See Holmes, 
Extract Concerning.—Kennedy. 

It is bad enough to see a bachelor sew on a button. See 
How a Married Man Sews on a Button.—Bailey. 

It is better to die, since death comes surely. See Sir 
Hugo’s Choice.—Roche. 

It is both a curious and unnatural condition of public 
sentiment. See Business Man’s Political Obliga¬ 
tions, A.—Anon. 

It is buried and done with. See Farewell.—Symonds. 

It is but a short time since poor Jenny Malone. See 
Jenny Malone.—Anon. 

It is claimed that these appeals for imperialism have 
the sympathy of the American people. See Against 
Imperialism.—Hoar. 

It is coming—it is coming—be the weather dark or 
fair. See Grand Old Day, The.—Carleton. 

It is dark and lonesome here. See Lover, The.—Stod¬ 
dard. 

It is dearer to me than earth’s treasures. See Her 
Photograph.—McHale. 

* v v ~ g 01 wu <->f crun. See Laus Deo. 

—Whittier. 

It is downright tyranny, and I will not submit to itt 
See Strategy.—Graham. 

It is easy to accuse books, and bad ones are easily 
found. See Books.:—Emerson. 

It is enough that in this burdened time. See It is 
Enough.—Parker. 

It is evening; and I sit in the same chair. See David 
Copperfield (Death of Dora).—Dickens. 

It is evening. The howling of the wind. See Violin 
Fantasy, A.—Fletcher. 

It is ever the contest that pleases us, and not the vic¬ 
tory. See same. —Hamilton. 

It is ever to be kept in mind that a good name. See 
Good Name, A.—Hawes. 

It is finished! Man of Sorrows! See Crucifixion, The. 
—Hedge. 

It is fit to take some notice of the various terrors. See 
Attempts to Bias Judgment in Case of Wilkes.— 
Mansfield. 

It is Friday, and the minister of Arkland. See Rev. 
John Smith of Arkland Prepares his Sermon, The. 
—Crockett. 

It is generally better to deal by speech. See Of Nego¬ 
tiating.—Bacon. 

It is good to strive against wind and rain. See Mood, 
A.—Troubetzkoy. 

It is good-by, my lad? See Troop-ship Sails, The.— 
Chambers. 

It is gratifying to see such deep interest in tree-plant¬ 
ing. See Tree Planting.—Headley. 

It is growing dark. See Rizpah.—Reade. 

It is hard to say farewell to a hope that has cheered us. 
See same. —Murray. 

It is high noon of an August day. See Wild Prairie 
Fire, A.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

It is impossible for me to settle myself to regular em¬ 
ployment. See Cold in the Head, A.—Kava- 
naugh. 

It is impossible for us adequately to conceive the bold¬ 
ness of the measure. See Free Schools.—Mann. 

It is in battle, Antietam, some. See Colonel’s Story, 
The.—Rogers. 

It is in Winter that we dream of Spring. See same. — 
Wilson. 

It is, indeed, the Queen’s Year. See Queen’s Year, 
The.—I. N. F. 

It is, indeed, time that literature should experience 
some of the blessings of legislation. See Reality 
of Literary Property.—Talfourd. 

It is just as you say, Neighbor Green. See Good Wife, 
The.—Anon. 

It is long Tom Yeo of the town of Padstow. See Mer¬ 
maid of Padstow, The.—Garnett. 

It is midnight. Hark! the old clock whirs. See Dying 
Child, The.—Vickers. 

It is most true that eyes are formed to serve. See 
Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet V.).—Sidney. 

It is much that a scholarly teacher publishes. See 
Influence of the Great Teacher, The.—Anon. 

It is my First to-day, and so I think I’ll stay. See 
Bleak House.—Sabine. 

It is my lady; O, it is my love! See Romeo and Juliet. 
—Shakespeare. 

It is natural for man to indulge in the illusions of hope. 
See War Inevitable, The.—Henry. 

It is natural in every man. See Means of Acquiring 
Distinction.—Smith. 

It is natural that the gratitude of mankind. See Ora¬ 
tion on Washington.—Ames. 


727 






It is 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


It is nearly a hundred years ago. See Romance of a 
Rose, The.—Perry. 

It is needless I should tell you. See Decoration Day 
—Ironquill. 

It is nice and quiet, and it talks pretty. See Stage 
Land (Child, The).—Jerome. 

It is night. A great steamer is proudly gliding. See 
Lost Steamer, The.—Hall. 

It is night. Nature has bowed to the inevitable. See 
Belshazzar’s Feast.—Sellers. 

It is no joy to me to sit. Nee Autumn’s Processional 
( October).—Craik. 

It is no use for one to try. See Money is King.—Kav- 
anaugh. 

It is no very uncommon thing in the world. See Gen¬ 
tleman, The.—Steele. 

It is not beauty I demand. See same. —Darley. 

It is not because your heart is mine. See Because — 
Procter. 

It is not, Celia, in our power. See To a Lady Asking 
how Long he Would Love Her.—Etherege. 

It is not death, that sometime in a sigh. See Death — 
Hood. . , 

It is not death to die. See same.— Bethune. 

It is not easy at this time to comprehend the impulse. 
See Colonization of America, The.—Prescott. 

It is not enough to secure a lodging in the attic. See 
London House-tops.—Lytton. 

It is not every day that is Washington’s birthday. See 
Washington’s Birthday.—Anon. 

It is not every one that wears a human form. See 
True Manliness.—Eddy. 

It is not for men long to hinder the march of human 
freedom. See March of Freedom, The.—Parker. 

It is not growing like a tree. See To the Immortal 
Memory and Friendship of that Noble Pair, Sir 
Lucius Cary and Sir Henry Morrison.—Jonson. 

It is not known to everyone that a tree. See Tree’s 
Record of its Life, A.—(Vic&’s Magazine.) 

It is not life upon Thy gifts to live. See Life.—Very. 

It is not mere poetry to talk of the “voices of summer.” 
See Unwritten Music.—Willis. 

It is not mine to run. See Not Mine.—Dorr. 

It is not poetry that makes men poor. See Poets.— 
Butler. 

It is not repealing this or that act of Parliament. See 
Repeal Claimed by Americans as a Right.—Chat¬ 
ham. 

It is not so much what you say. See Words and Tones. 
—Anon. 

It is not that my lot is low. See Solitude.—White. 

It is not the best way in which to teach the truth of 
future punishment. See same. —Cook. 

It is not the deed we do. See Common Offering,The.— 
Kimball. 

It is not the fear of death. See Andre’s Last Request. 
—Willis. 

It is not the lark’s clear tone. See What Makes the 
Summer?—Holley. 

It is not the least of the glories of our period. See 
Higher Education, The.—Anon. 

It is not the least of the just claims. See Meaning of 
Victory, The.—Devens. 

It is not the slander of an evil tongue that can defame 
me. See Philippic against Flood (Reply to Mr. 
Flood).—Grattan. 

It is not the waters of a mighty river. See Retribution. 
—Anon. 

It is not to be thought of that the flood. See Destiny. 
—Wordsworth. 

It is not yours, O mother, to complain. See Mother and 
Son.—Stevenson. 

‘It is nothing to me,” the beauty said. See Nothing 
and Something.—Butterbaugh. 

It is now a long time, Conscript Fathers. See First 
Oration against Catiline (Separation from Trai¬ 
tors).—Cicero. 

It is now long since women arrogated. See Sesame and 
Lilies (Lady, The).—Ruskin. 

It is now sixteen or seventeen years since I saw the 
Queen of France. See Marie Antoinette, Queen 
of France.—Burke. 

It is now some ten years since I first spent a summer. 
See Mrs. Walker’s Betsy.—Bostwick. 

It is now time to open the meeting. See Dew-drop 
Inn, The.—Vickers. 

It is of greatest concernment in the church. See De¬ 
meanor of Books, The.—Milton. 

It is often said that reckless victims of intemperance 
are brutes. See Drunkards not all Brutes.— 
Gough. 

It is only a glass of cider. See Only a Glass of Cider. 
—Richmond. 


It is only a glove, Ted, a lady’s glove. See Only a 
Glove.—Anon. 

It is only a knot of ribbon white. See White Ribbon, 
The.—Crocker. 

It is our privilege and duty to compliment the faculty 
of this school. See Address to a School Graduat¬ 
ing Class by a Clergyman.—Anon. 

It is perfect! My lord Cardinal must grant my 
request. See Cardinal’s Godson, The.—Kava- 
naugh. 

It is pleasant to think, just under the snow. See 
Under the Snow.—Hempstead. 

It is positively false to call us frantic. See Chorus of 
Anglomaniacs.—Fawcett. 

It is quite plain that I belong. See Smallest Grade, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

It is rarely indeed that the queen Nehushta deigns to 
visit her servant. See Zoroaster (Suffering of Ne¬ 
hushta, The).—Crawford. 

It is recorded, in the annals of the most democratic 
republic. See Dome of the Republic. The.— 

It is rather a pleasant coincidence „ 
well to England.—Phelps. " 

It is related of General Scott. See Belligerent Non- 
com-batants.—Sherman. 

It is remarkable how closely the history of the apple- 
tree. See Wild Apples.—Thoreau. 

It is sad, indeed, to reflect on the disasters. See First 
Settlement of New England, The (Sufferings of the 
Pilgrims).—Everett. 

It is sad to see the light of beauty fade away. See 
Festus (Waning Spirit).—Bailey. 

It is said, somewhere at twilight. See Bell of the An¬ 
gels, The.—Anon. 

It is said that at the battle of Shiloh. See same .— 
Heckman. 

It is said that it is impossible to civilize Africa. See 
Civilization of Africa.—Everett. 

It is said that the bill ought to pass, because the law 
must be enforced. See Against the Force Bill.— 
Calhoun. 

It is said that when General Grant first took command. 
See Patriotic Sentiments. 

It is seldom pleasant to tell on one’s self. See How I 
was Sold.—Clemens. 

“It is six,” the swallows twittered, “and you’re very 
late in rising.” See Marriage of the Flowers, The. 
Byers. 

It is somewhere recorded of a certain traveler. See 
Tides are Rising, The.—Anon. 

It is still a city of flowers and waters; the “rivers of 
Damascus.” See Innocents Abroad, The (Damas¬ 
cus).—Clemens. 

It is still night. See Daybreak in the camp.—Anon. 

It is success that colors all in life. See Success.— 
Thomson. 

It is summer, a party of visitors are just crossing. See 
Scene at Niagara Falls.—Tarson. 

It is summer, says a fairy. See Roses.—Anon. 

It is talked of Now! Was talked of Yesterday! See 
Boa and the Blanket, The.— (Punch.) 

It is Thanksgiving morning, and near, and far away. 
See Waiting for the Children.—Anon. 

It is the ancient and constitutional right of this people. 
See Right of Free Discussion.—Webster. 

It is the bittern’s solemn cry. See Solitude.—Peter¬ 
son. 

It is the concurring judgment of political thinkers. See 
Washington and the Constitution.—Harlan. 

It is the custom of your board, and a noble one it is. 
See Washington.—Phillips. 

It is the day when he was born. See Arthur Henry 
Hallam.—Tennyson. 

It is the dead of night. See Marriage of Tirzah and 
Ahirad, The.—Macaulay. 

It is the deed and the memorable last words we think 
of. See Martyr-spy, The.—Warner. 

It is the evening hour. See God’s Rest.—Anon. 

It is the everlasting glory of Stratford-upon-Avon. 
See Shakespeare’s England.—Winter. 

It is the first mild day of March. See To My Sister.— 
Wordsworth. 

It is the fourth day of July, 1776. See Fourth of 
July, 1776, The (Unknown Speaker, The).— 
Lippard. 

It is the glory of this man that his character outshone. 
See Bryant, Extract Concerning.—Bellows. 

It is the harvest moon! on gilded vanes. See Harvest 
Moon, The.—-Longfellow. 

It is the hour when Arno turns. See Song of Arno, A. 

—Channing-Stetson. 


728 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


It scares 


It is the hour when from the boughs. See Parisina 
(Twilight).—Byron. 

It is the miller’s daughter. See Miller’s Daughter, The. 
—Tennyson. 

It is the morning of Saturday, the twenty-second of 
July, 1403. See Battle of Shrewsbury, The.— 
Brooks. 

It is the most ridiculous thing in the wold, Flo! See 
Love and Stratagem.—Graham. 

It is the peculiar good fortune of this country. See 
Washington’s Fame.—Robbins. 

It is the poet Uhland, from whose wreathings. See 
Uhland.—Butler. 

It is the popular cry now that the age of orators has 
passed. See Orator’s Cause, The.—Wright. 

It is the pretty waiter girl. See Waiter Girl.—Anon. 

It is the property of the religious spirit. See same. — 
Emerson. 

It is the quiet worker that succeeds. See same .— 
Anon. 

It is the same infrequent star. See Star of Calvary, 
The.—Hawthorne. 

It is the season now to go. See same. —Stevenson. 

It is the 27th of August, 1794. See Fourth of July, 
1776, The (Death of Robespierre, The).—Lippard. 

It is thy voice that floats above the din. See same .— 
Doudney. 

It is time for that stupid fellow to be back. See Handy 
■Andy and the Squire.—Anon. 

It is time May was here! See May’s Five Dollar Note. 
—Anon. 

It is time my friends were here. See Dandy and the 
Boor, The.—Anon. 

It is time to be old. See Terminus.—Emerson. 

It is to be all bathed in tears. See What it is to Love. 
—Barbauld. 

It is told in Buddhi-theosophic schools. See Tran¬ 
scendentalism.—( Times of India.) 

It is too bad; never was there a woman so tormented. 
See Trusting Too Far.—Garrett. 

“It is too bad,” said Mr. Robert Carter. See Hero of 
the Day, The.—Anon. 

It is too clear a brightness for man’s eye. See What 
is Love?—Breton. 

It is treason to read. See Among My Books.—Hous¬ 
ton. 

It is true that the offense charged in the indictment. 
See Defense of the Kennistons.—Webster. 

It is two miles ahead to the foot-hills. See Skeleton’s 
Story, The.—Anon. 

It is unkind and improper to exult over a triumph. 
See same. —Anon. 

It is useless and more than foolish to enter into pre¬ 
fatory remarks. See Add Ryman’s Celebrated 
Fourth of July Oration.—Anon. 

It is very aggravating. See Truth about Horace, The. 
—Field. 

It is very good fun to take off your clothes and go in 
swimming. See John Spicer on Clothes.—Diaz. 

It is very nice to think. See Thought, A.—-Stevenson. 

It is well, may be so, to bear losses. See same.— Miller. 

It is well that in our year, so busy, so secular. See 
American Nationality.—Choate. 

It is when the east wind blows. See Our Willows. 
—(Hours at Home.) 

It is wholly inconceivable to me how princes. See 
Princes.—Ruskin. 

It is with difficulty. Gentlemen, that I can repress an 
emotion of indignation. See In Reply to Those 
Who Denied the National Assembly the Legitimate 
Powers of a National Convention.—Mirabeau. 

It is with great grief that I appear before your Excel¬ 
lency. See On the Stamp Act.—Otis. 

It is worth every man’s while to study the important 
art. See Happy Life, A.—Smiles. 

It is your throw, my dear. See Extremes Meet.— 
Graham. 

It isn’t enough _that flowers bloom. See Vacation 
Days.—Sidney. 

It isn’t much fun a-living. See Boy’s Belief, A.— 
Anon. 

It isn’t polite to call them fools. See Song of Degrees, 
A.—Vandegrift. 

It isn’t that I’ve got a thing agin’ you, Parson Peak. 
See Reason Why, The.—Terry. 

It isn’t the thing you do, dear. See Sin of Omission, 
The.—Sangster. 

It kindles all my soul. See It Kindles All My Soul.— 
Casimer. 

It .lay upon a pillow white. See Bit of Lace, A.— 
(Red and Blue.) 

It left upon her tender flesh no trace. See Woman’s 
Death-wound, A.—Jackson. 


It little profits that an idle king. See Ulysses.—Ten¬ 
nyson. 

It looked extremely rocky for the Boston for Mud- 
ville] nine that day. See Casey at the Bat.— 
Thayer [or Murphy], 

It looks now as if there might be a turnin’ point in my 
life. See Amariah and his Boys.—Anon. 

“It makes me shudder,” she cried as she emerged 
from Monsieur Martin’s menagerie. See Passion 
in the Desert, A.—Balzac. 

It makes no difference that you have seen forty or 
fifty springs. See Month of Apple Blossoms, The. 
—Beecher. 

It makes the blood tingle and the cheeks glow to read. 
See Two Banners of America, The.—Johnson. 

It matters little where I was born. See What Does it 
Matter.—Anon. 

It matters very little what immediate spot may have 
been. See Washington.—Phillips. 

It may be asked, perhaps, Supposing all this to be 
true, what can we do? See Revolution in Greece, 
The (Moral Force of Public Opinion).—Webster. 

It may be glorious to write. See Incident in a Rail¬ 
road Car, An (“It may be glorious,” etc.).— 
Lowell. / 

It may be in the evening. See Watch.—Anon. 

It may be, sir, as that you’re right, tho’ I don’t 
think you be. See Sailor’s Yarn, A.—Davis. 

It may be so—perhaps thou hast. See To the Por¬ 
trait of “A Gentleman.”—Holmes. 

It may be through some foreign grace. See Katie.— 
Timrod. 

It may be we shall know in the hereafter. See It May 
Be.—Addleshaw. 

It may be weeds I’ve gathered too. See It May Be 
Weeds.—Anon. 

It may interest the reader to know how they “put 
horses to.” See Tramp Abroad, A.—Clemens. 

It may not be amiss to remark that it was the identical 
“Greek Slave.” See Sculpin.—Anon. 

It may not be—go maidens, go. See Sated One, The. 
— (Punch.) 

It may not be! I watch in vain. At dawn, at noon, 
at eve. See Recalled to Life.—Cornwall. 

It may not be our lot to wield. See It May not Be.—■ 
Anon. 

It must be by his death; and for my part. See Julius 
Cassar.—Shakespeare. 

It must be disheartening work learning a musical in¬ 
strument. See Three Men in a Boat (Trials of the 
Musical Amateur).—Jerome. 

It must be nearly time for them to be home from 
the picnic. See Picnic Party, The.—Graham. 

It must be right sometimes to entertain. See Love’s 
Justification.—Michelangelo. 

It must be so—Plato, thou reason’st well. See Cato 
(Cato’s Soliloquy).—Addison. 

It must be so! stomach, thou reasonest well. See 
Original Parody, An.—Anon. 

It must be the farewell bell, yet how it eludes me. 
See For Another’s Sake.—Denton. 

It must have been a noble spectacle to have seen the 
ship sail out of port. See Loss of the San Fran¬ 
cisco, 1853.—Chapin. 

It never dies,—a mother’s holy love. See Things that 
never Die.—-Jewell. 

It never pays to fret and growl. See It never Pays.— 
Anon. 

It now. kind friends, devolves on me. See Valedictory. 
—Kavanaugh. 

It oft times has been tbld. See “Constitution” and 
“Guerri^re.”—Anon. 

It once might have been, once only. See Youth and 
Art.—Browning. 

It owned not the color that vanity dons. See My 
Grandmother’s Fan.—Peck. 

It ’peared to me I wa’nt no use out in the field to-day. 
See Over the Orchard Fence.—Shellman. 

It rains, but on a dripping bough. See Song in the 
Storm, The.—Buckham. 

“It rains! it rains! oh dear! oh dear!” See “It Rains.” 
—Ruggles. 

It really is a comfort to have those children out of the 
way. See Daily Governess, The.—Anon. 

It really provokes me, Louisa, to see you wasting so 
much precious time. See Too Fine and Too 
Plain.—Anon. 

It rose upon the sordid street. See Music in the 
Street.—Anon. 

It says in the copy-book “Wine is a Mocker.” See 
Unwelcome Intrusion, An.—Anon. 

It scares me, my friends, to speak to you to-night. 
See Welcome.—Anon. 


729 





It seemed 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


It seemed a particularly happy and appropriate cir¬ 
cumstance. See Boy Orator of Zepata City, The. 
—Davis. 

It seemed to be but chance, yet who shall say. See 
May 30, 1893.—Bangs. 

It seemed to me as though I had been suddenly aroused 
from my slumber. See Glass Railroad, The.— 
Lippard. 

It seems a day. See Nutting.—Wordsworth. 

It seems a pity that the glory of these bright May 
days. See Mr. Perkins Helps to Move a Stove.— 
Bailey. 

It seems as if newspaper wares were made to suit a 
market. See Monstrous Relations in Newspa¬ 
pers.—Ames. 

It seems comfortable here at home after a hard day 
among the “Bulls and Bears.” See All Right "At 
Last.—Traft on. 

It seems no work of man’s creative hand. See Petra. 
—Burgon. 

It seems quite funny to reflect. See Lines to a Mon¬ 
key.—longer. 

It seems to be the fate of some measures to be praised, 
but not adopted. See Speech on the Internal 
Improvement Bill.—Calhoun. 

It seems to me but yesterday. See How We Played 
‘ ‘ King William. ’’—Ewing. 

It settles softly on your things. See Dust, The.— 
Hall. 

It silently fell in the gloom and the night. See First 
Snow. The.—Benton. 

It singeth low in every heart. See Auld Lang Syne.— 
Chadwick. 

It sings to me in sunshine. See Segovia and Madrid.— 
Cooke. 

It slaps and laps at the city’s wharves. See River of 
Commerce, The.—O. L. 

“It snows!” cries the school-boy, “Hurrah!” and his 
shout. See It Snows.—Hale. 

It snows! it snows! from out the sky. See It Snows.— 
Gould. 

It snows! yes, it snows! and the children are wild. See 
It snows!—It snows!—*-( Mother Truth’s Melo¬ 
dies.) 

It sometimes happens that a man, traveler or fisher¬ 
man. See Caught in the Quicksand.—Hugo. 

It sometimes happens that two friends will meet. See 
same.—(Sunday Afternoon.) 

It stands alone, on the brow of a little hill. See My 
Elm Tree.—Rickoff. 

Tt stands at the bend where the road has its end. See 
Little Old House by the Shore, The.—Lincoln. 

It stands in a sunny meadow. See Old House in the 
Meadow, The.—Anon. 

It stands in a winding street. See Book-stall, The.— 
Scollard. 

It stands in the Comitium. See Horatius at the 
Bridge.—Macaulay. 

It stands in the corner-yet, stately and tall. See Ye 
Golde-headed Cane.—Knowles. 

It stands in the lonely Winterthal. See Deserted Mill, 
The.—Schnezler. 

It stands in the stable-yard, under the eaves. See Old 
Sedan Chair, The.—Dobson. 

It suppresses duration, it suppresses space, it sup¬ 
presses suffering. See same. —Hugo. 

It swings upon the leafless tree. See Snow-filled 
Nest, The.—Cooke. 

It trailed on a sheltered hillside. See Arbutus, The.— 
Anon. * 

It trembled off the keys,—a parting kiss. See Her 
Music.—Dickinson. 

It vas der goot shkiff Hezberus. See “Der Wreck of 
der Hezberus. ”—Phaster. 

It vas her! O, it vas mein luf! See Romeo and 
Juliet.—Anon. 

It vas in a half-starved garret-house dot a mudder and 
a daughter lay. See Dot Loaf of Bread.—Pretzel. 

It wan’t so very long ago, ’bout forty year, I guess. 
See Grandpa’s Courtship.—Clark. 

It was a balmeous day in May, when spring was spring¬ 
ing high. See Ballad of the Green Old Man, The. 
—Leland. 

It was a beauteous lady richly dressed. See Allan 
Percy.—Norton. 

It was a beautiful Sunday morning in early summer. 
See Mission of a Song, The.—Hoffner. 

It was a beauty that I saw. See Perfect Beauty.— 
Jonson. 

It was a bitter cold night. See Coming Home. Anon. 

It was a blind beggar, had long lost his sighte. See 
Beggar’s Daughter of Bednall Greene, The.— 
Anon. 


It was a bonny simmer morn, anither sic as this. See 
Scotch Jeanie’s Story.—Anon. 

It was a bright and cheerful afternoon. See Summer 
and Winter.—Shelley. 

It was a bright and lovely summer’s morn. See Two 
Pictures, The.—Anon. 

It was a calm, still Sabbath eve. See Spirit’s Birth, 
The.—Anon. 

It was a charmingly mild and balmy day. See Philoso¬ 
pher in the Apple Orchard, The.—Hope. 

It was a Christmas morning, the bells tolled loud and 
clear. See Lady Judith’s Vision, The.—Wilson. 

It was a clear case of negligence on the part of the 
engineer. See Farmer Boffin’s Equivalent.— 
Anon. 

It was a close, warm, breezeless summer night. See 
Prelude, The (Ascent of Snowdon).—Wordsworth. 

It was a cloudy, dismal day, and I was all alone. See 
Sheltered.—Jewett. 

It was a cold winter ivening that I received. See 
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The (Dr. 
Lanyon’s Narrative).—Stevensen 

It was a custom of the ancient Egyptians. See 
Completion of the National Monument to Wash¬ 
ington, The (Washington Needle, The).—Winthrop. 

It was a day of great excitement in the courtroom. 
See Charlie and the Possum.—Edwards. 

It was a day of sun and rain. See At Fontainebleau.— 
Symons. 

It was a dim, quiet room in an old-fashioned New 
York house. See Tenor, The.—Bunner. 

It was a dismal and a fearful night. See On the Death 
of Mr. William Hervey.—Cowley. 

It was a dreary day in Padua. See Countess Laura. 
—Boker. 

It was a fearful night; [the] pale lightning. See 
Night’s Adventure, A.—Anon. 

It was a fearful time when the steamboat Tyro was 
lost. See Door of Heaven, The.—Anon. 

It was a formidable business Hooker and his brigades 
had in hand. See Capture of Lookout Mountain, 
The.—Taylor. 

It was a friar of orders gray. See Friar of Orders 
Gray, The.—Anon. 

It was a gala day on the avenue. See Kit; or. Faithful 
unto Death.—Anon. 

It was a gallant cavalier of honor and renown. See 
Cavalier’s Choice, The.-—Goethe. 

It was a gallant sailor man. See Two Anchors, The.— 
Stoddard. 

It was a game called Yes and No. See Christmas 
Carol, A.—Dickens. 

It was a glorious night The moon had sunk. See 
Three Men in a Boat (Dark Forest of Sorrow, 
The).—Jerome. 

It was a gorgeous temple, form’d. See Saint and Sin¬ 
ner.—Kavanaugh. 

It was a gruesome butcher. See Ballad of the Butcher 
and the Dear Little Children, The.—Anon. 

It was a happy lot to unite so many attractive quali¬ 
ties. See Eulogy of John Bright, A.—Gladstone. 

It was a hungry pussy cat, upon Thanksgiving morn. 
See Thanksgiving Fable, A.—Herford. 

It was a jolly Miller lived on the River Dee. See 
Jolly Miller, The.—Riley. 

It was a laboring bark that slowly held its way. See 
Mary Queen of Scots.—Bell. 

It was a large red brick house. See House with the 
Cross, The.—Snedeker. 

It was a lass, for love a-seeking. See It was a Lass.— 
Wilkins. 

It was a litter, a litter of five. See Bagman’s Dog, 
The.—Barham. 

It was a lodge of ample size. See Lady of the Lake, 
The (Lodge, The).—Scott. 

It was a long time ago, one winter’s eve. See Old 
Woman’s Love Story.—Anon. 

It was a lovely day in autumn. See Some Polite 
Dogs.—Thaxter. 

It was a lovely sight to see. See Christabel.—Cole¬ 
ridge. 

It was a lover and his lass. See As you Like It (It 
was a Lover, etc.).—Shakespeare. 

It was a maiden beauteous. See Modern and Medi$- 
val Ballad of Mary Jane, The.—Anon. 

It was a matter of talk. See Socks for John Randall. 
—Phelps. 

It was a night in harvest time. See Country Court¬ 
ship, A.—O’Connor. 

It was a noble Roman. See Will aqd the Way, The.— 
Saxe. 

It was a pitiful mistake, an error sad and grim. See 
Only Once.—Anon. 


730 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


It was 


It was a purty good idee tew organize a S’ciety. See 
Society for Doing Good, A.—McBride. 

It was a rat-trap of an old house. Its walls bulged. 
See Out of the Bottle.—Dallas. 

It was a regular scarecrow man. See Scarecrow, The. 
—Mather. 

It was a robber’s daughter, and her name was Alice 
Brown. See Gentle Alice Brown.—Gilbert. 

It was a rule at Thornton Hall. See Back-log, The; 
or, Uncle Ned’s Little Game.—Randolph. 

“It was a sad funeral to me,” said the speaker. See 
“Died Poor.”—Anon. 

It was a Sergeant old and gray. See Picciola.— 
Newell. 

It was a starry night in June, the air was soft and still. 
See Battle of Bunker Hill.—Cozzens. 

It was a still autumnal day. See We Walked among 
the Whispering Pines.—Boner. 

It was a story the pilot told, with his back to his 
hearers. See Pilot’s Story, The.—Howells. 

It was a strange sensation that came o’er me. See 
Wallenstein (Astrological Tower, The).—Schiller. 

It was a sultry noon and Jeffersonville was brisk [or 
and in the Jeffersonville courthouse]. See Trial 
of Ben Thomas, The.—Edwards. 

It was a summer eve, and underneath. See Reminis¬ 
cence.—Anon. 

It w T as a summer evening. See Battle of Blenheim, 
The.—Southey. 

It was a summer holiday, as bright as ever shone. 
See Little Eloise.—Fletcher. 

It was a tall young oysterman lived by the river-side. 
See Ballad of the Oysterman, The.—Holmes. 

It was a time of sadness, and my heart. See Changed 
Cross, The.—Hobart. 

It was a two-story framed house, shingled instead of 
clap-boarded. See Lyman Beecher’s First Home. 
—Beecher. 

It was a warm evening in the early fall. See Uncle 
Edom and the Yankee Book-agent.—Andrews. 

It was a w r ee bit housie. See Wren’s Nest, The.— 
Fleming. 

It w'as a w'icked Nephew bold. See Ballad of the 
Wicked Nephew.—Fields. 

It w'as a wild and wintry Sunday morning in mid¬ 
ocean. See Overboard!—Elmer. 

It was a wise custom among the Roman people. See 
Abraham Lincoln.—Anon. 

It was a young maiden went forth to ride. See 
Equestrian Courtship.—Hood. 

It was about noon on a sultry day. See Not Guilty.— 
Anon. 

It was about the feast of Christmas-tide. See Angel, 


The.—Anon. 

It w'as about the middle of February, when Vendale 
and Obenreizer. See Mountain Tragedy, The.— 
Dickens. 

It was about A’ule, when the wind blew cool. See 
Young Waters.—Anon. 

It was “after taps,” a sultry, Southern-summer night. 
See Tobe’s Monument.—Kilham. 

It was after the din of the battle. See After the Bat¬ 
tle.—Mosby. 

It was almost morning. Already the black curtain. 
See Jerry, the Bobbin-boy,—-Anon. 

It was almost time for winter to come. See Kind Old 
Oak, The.—Anon. 

It was always the time for a laugh, when the name. 
See “Lily’s” Thanksgiving, The.—Phelps. 

It was an Amateur Dram. Ass. See Amateur Orlando, 
The.—Lanigan. 

It was an English ladye bright. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel (Albert Graeme’s Song).—Scott. 

It was an English summer day. See Duty’s Reward.— 
Anon. . 

It was an established custom on the annual exhibition 
day. See Jack Hall’s Boat-race.—Grant. 

* 1 It was an eve of autumn’s holiest mood. ” See Course 
of Time, The (“It was an eve,” etc.).—Pollok. 

It was an evening of summer, when the wheat was in 
the ear. See War-horn of the Elkings, The.— 
Morris. 

It was an honest fisherman. See Cold-water Man, 
The.—Saxe. 

It was an old distorted face. See Behind the Mask. 
Whitney. 

It was an old log schoolhouse standing back from the 
country road. See Old Log Schoolhouse, The.— 

It was an old, old, old, old lady. See “One, Two, 
Three. ”—Bunner. 

It was as calm as calm could be. See Becalmed at Sea. 
—Cowan. 


It was as fine a spectacle as anyone could see. See 
Ballotville Female Convention, The.—Anon. 

It was as true of Wendell Phillips as of the Chevalier 
Bayard. See Wendell Phillips.—Curtis. 

It was at a charity fair, and he had come there at the 
special request of his “cousin.” See Victim of 
Charity, A.—Anon. 

It was at dusk of an autumn day. See One of Christ’s 
Little Ones.—Anon. 

It was at Spirit Lake, at the very limit of the pier. See 
Star-gazing.—Anon. 

It was at the beginning of the Egyptian era in America. 
See Wendell Phillips.—Beecher. 

It was at the corner of Woodward Avenue and Con¬ 
gress Street. See Man Who Apologized, The.— 
(Detroit Free Press.) 

It was autumn. Hundreds had wended their way 
from pilgrimages. See Loss of the “Arctic.”— 
Beecher. 

It was brave young Parson Webster. See Fighting 
Parson, The.—Blood. 

It was but yerterday, my love, thy little heart beat 
high. See Lament of Anastasius.—Peabody. 

It was buying an apron I was, ma’am. See Nurse 
Winnie Goes Shopping.—Johnson. 

It was carnivale time. The merriment of this famous 
festival. See Marble Faun, The (Frolic of the 
Carnivale, A).—Hawthorne. 

It was Christmas eve! See Curate’s Story, The.— 
Jerome. 

It was Christmas eve; a snow storm passed. See 
Saint Anthony.—Latimer. 

It was Christmas Eve. Above the broad river. See 
Mr. Kris Kringle.—Mitchell. 

It was Christmas eve, and lonely. See Orphan’s 
Dream of Christmas, The.—Anon. 

It was Christmas eve in a California Mining town in 
1858. See First Piano in the Mining Camp, The. 
—Anon. 

It was Christmas Eve'in the year “fourteen.” See 
Under the Snow.—Collyer. 

It was Christmas in the city: people hurried to and 
fro. See Christmas. Angel’s Message, The.— 
Coffey. 

It was Christmas Morn. See “Love is Over All.”— 
Wilson. 

It was Christmas time and over the world. See 
Brother Jim.—McNabb. 

It was close upon the hour of midnight. Sec Hour of 
Horror, An.—Anon. 

It was cold that New Year’s Day. See Mr. Piper’s 
Mittens.-—Turner. 

It was Commencement at one of our colleges. Se* 
Second Trial, A.—Kellogg. 

It was dark before the jury retired to consider of their 
verdict. See Acquittal of the Bishops, The.— 
Macaulay. 

It was Decoration Day, some years ago. See Mar¬ 
guerite.—Schroeder. 

It was down by Santiago. See On the Calendar.— 
Anon. — 

It was downe in the yeast part of the city. See Butch¬ 
er’s Boy and the Baker’s Girl, The.—Anon. 

It was dreary and desolate weather. See Childless.— 
Davis. 

It was during holiday week. See Old Jack Watt’s 
Christmas.—Anon. 

It was during the famous battle of Chickamauga. 
See True Courage.—Anon. 

It was during the summer of '63 with the Army of the 
Cumberland. See Little Black Phil.—Belknap. 

It was Earl Haldan’s daughter. See Ballad of Earl 
Haldan’s Daughter.—Kingsley. 

It was early in the summer, and the school was near its 
close. See How they Caught the Panther.— 
Hough. 

It was early Sunday morning, in the year sixty-four. 
See Kearsarge and Alabama.—Anon. 

It was eight bells ringing. See Fighting Temeraire, 
The.—Newbolt. 

It was eight o’clock at night. The besieged, at the 
given signal. See Last Night of Misolonghi, The. 

•—Grosvenor. 

It was 1801. At this time Europe concluded the Peace 
of Amiens. See Toussaint L’Ouverture (Napoleon 
Bonaparte and Toussaint L’Ouverture).—Phillips. 

It was evening in the country. See His Love.—Anon. 

It was evident that something of great importance was 
in contemplation. See Pickwick Papers, The. 
Mr. Pickwick’s Proposal to Mrs. Bardell).— 
Dickens. 

It was fifteen years since Silas Marner had first come 
to Raveloe. See Silas Marner.—Eliot. 


731 




It was 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


It was fifty years ago. See Fiftieth Birthday of Agas¬ 
siz, The.—Longfellow. 

It was fine Christmas weather. See Mrs. Brownlow’s 
Christmas Party.—( Every Other Saturday.) 

It was forty years ago in the merry month of May. 
See Birkenhead, The.—Griswold. 

It was frosty winter season. See Philomela, the 
Lady Fitzwater’s Nightingale (Philomela’s Second 
Ode).—Greene. 

It was glad New Year’s morn, and from far and from 
near. See New Year’s Deed, A.—Smith. 

It was her first sweet child, her heart’s delight. See 
same. —Turner. 

It was here in Indianner. See Hoosier and his Han- 
ner. The.—Fink. 

It was here in the wilds of the Wissahichon, on the day 
of battle. See Bible Legend of the Wissahickon, 
The.—Ragsdale. 

It was high noon on the Saranac and a brighter day 
was never seen. See Honor of the Woods, The.— 
Murray. 

It was his greatest pride in life that he had been a soldier. 
See Soldier of the Empire, The.—Page. 

It was in a grocer’s window that she saw a simple sign. 
See Simple Sign, A.—Anon. 

It was in a pleasant deepo, sequestered from the rain. 
See Ballad of Charity, The.—Leland. 

It was in ancient Italy a deadly hatred grew. See 
Romeo and Juliet (Altered).—Anon. 

It was in and about the Martinmas time. See Bonny 
Barbara Allan.—Anon. 

It was in Arcady. The Council of State. See How to 
Curtail the Liquor Traffic.—Anon. 

It was in eighteen hundred—yes—and nine. See 
Benediction, The.—Copp^e. 

It was in one of my balloon ascents. See My Balloon 
Ascent.—Anon. 

It was in the Californias,—beauteous, flowery, sunset 
land. See Alameda.—Stewart. 

It was in the days when Claverhouse. See Jamie 
Douglas.—Anon. 

It was in the gray of the early morning, in the season 
of Lent. See Fireman’s Prayer, The.—Cornwell. 

It was in the Indian summer-time, when life is tender 
brown. See Masher, The.—Leland. 

It was in the mid-splendor of the reign of the Emperor 
Commodus. See Doom of Claudius and Cynthia, 
The,—Thompson. 

It was in the sweet June afternoon the busy housewife 
sat. See Jenny’s White Rose.—Allen. 

It was in the valley of Shenandoah. See Confederate 
Sergeant, The.—Anon. 

It was intill a pleasant time. See Earl Mar’s Daugh¬ 
ter.—Anon. 

It was just a very merry fairy dream! See Pixy 
People, The.—Riley. 

It was just at sundown, and Lily was sitting on the 
porch. See Lily Servosse’s Ride.— -Tourgtie. 

It was late in mild October, and the long autumnal 
rain. See Huskers, The.—Whittier. 

It was just at the dawn of day. See Maid of Orleans, 
The.—Sagerbeer. 

It was long ago it happened, ere ever the signal gun. 
See How He Saved St. Michael’s.—Stansbury. 

It was long before the cable stretched across the ocean. 
See Missing Ship, The.—Gough. 

It was long past the noon when I pushed back my 
chair. See Through the Solitudes.—Savage-Arm- 
strong. 

It was many and many a year ago. See Annabel Lee. 
—Poe. 

It was May, 1896. The city sat like a queen. See 
Sherman Tornado, The.—Anon. 

It was Maytime. See Happiest Hour, The.—Tenny¬ 
son. 

It was midnight, deep and still, in the mansion of Mrs. 
Partington. See Mouse-hunting.—Shillaber. 

It was Mr. Stokes begun it, that spring Jeremiah was 
committee. See Firetown’s New Schoolhouse.— 
Phelps. 

It was my fortune a while ago for the first time in my 
life. See Law and Faith and Freedom.—Hoar. 

It was natural that when Gid Bronxon realized he had 
his way to make. See How the Derby Was Won. 
—Robertson. 

It was near a thicky shade. See Mourning Garment, 
The (Description of the Shepherd and his Wife, 
The).—Greene. 

It was near Flat Rock, Lunenberg County, Virginia. 
See Debil, Mighty Debil.—Anon. 

It was near midnight; the moon, lessened by its de¬ 
cline. See Execution of Lady de Winter, The.— 
Dumas. 


It was nearly two hours before daybreak. See Oliver 
Twist (Murder of Nancy Sikes, The).—Dickens. 

It was Ned Thornton’s eighteenth birthday. See 
Brave Aunt Katy.—Eyster. 

It was never imported from France. See Ballade of 
Laura’s Fan.—( Harvard Lampoon.) 

It was New Year’s night. See Two Roads, The.— 
Richter. 

It was night, and softly o’er the sea of Galilee. See 
Healing the Daughter of Jarius, The.—Willis. 

It was night in Egypt. The deep blue of the southern 
sky. See Napoleon at the Pyramids.—Graff. 

It was night in the great city, and Pleasure was restless 
on the Streets. See Fantasy, A.—( Detroit Free 
Press.) 

It was night on the deep, and the dancing wave. See 
What the Diver Saw.—Durant. 

It was night. The boarding house was wrapt in tene¬ 
brous gloom. See Story of a Bedstead, The.— 
Anon. 

It was night; the pulse of human life that through the 
day. See Echoes from Bethlehem.—Anon. 

It was no relief from temporal evils that the Apostle 
promised. See same. —Butler. 

It was noon in the Crescent City. See Sergeant Pren¬ 
tiss’ First Plea.—Bachman. 

It was noontide. The sun was very hot. See Mar¬ 
garet Gray.—Lamb. 

It was not anything she said. See same. —Anon. 

It was not at all like those you see of ordinary men. 
See Uncle Nate’s Funeral.—Anon. 

It was not his olive valleys and orange groves. See 
Patriotism (Nations and Humanity).—Curtis. 

It was not in a feudal castle, or in medi®val days. 
See Mazurka of Chopin’s, A.—Richardson. 

It was not in the winter. See Ballad: “It was not 
in the winter. ”—Hood. 

It was not like your great and gracious ways! See 
Departure.—-Patmore. 

It was not many centuries since. See Meeting of the 
Dryads, The.—Holmes. 

It was not the fault of the landlady. See Ethelinda’s 
Recitations.—Anon. 

It was not until I came on Table Rock and looked. 
See American Notes (Niagara Falls).—Dickens. 

It was not until the late civil war. See Thanksgiving 
Day.—Anon. 

It was nothing but a rose I gave her. See Sigh, A.— 
Spofford. 

It was now June. The snow was rapidly disappearing. 
See Sudden Transformation from Winter to Sum¬ 
mer.—Kennan. 

It was odd, very odd.—See That Ten Dollars.—Anon. 

It was o’er! The trust I cherished. See To A. M. 
Olar.—Dallas. 

It was on a cold winter evening that I received. See 
Dr. Lanyon’s Narrative.—Stevenson. 

It was on a moonlight night that Pennypacker. See 
Extraordinary Phenomenon, An.—Anon. 

It was on a Sabbath morn, and George Murgatroyd 
had just turned over to sleep. See Fearful 
Fright, A.—Anon. 

It was on Friday morning, the 12th of October. See 
Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus 
(Columbus Landing in the New World).—Irving. 

It was on the first day of May, in the bright and glor¬ 
ious. See Trials of a Columbian Guard.—Head. 

It was on the Mount Citharon, in the pale and misty 
mom. See Actfeon.—Wilkins. 

It was on the night of April 14, 1865. that the shot was 
fired. See Vengeance of the Flag, The.—Ester- 
brooke. 

It was on the Western Frontier. See Clown’s Baby, 
The.—Janvier. 

It was one morning this last April that a blue-bird lit 
on my window-sill. See Old Quarrel, An.—Bay¬ 
lor. 

It was one of the most picturesque moments in the his¬ 
tory of Rome. See Ulysses S. Grant.—Higgin- 
son. 

It was one of the solemn days along the alley. See 
Newsboy’s Funeral, A.—Anon. 

It was one of those grand cathedrals. See Face in the 
Cathedral, The.—Lawson. 

It was one Sunday, as I was traveling through the 
county of Orange. See Blind Preacher, The.— 
Wirt. 

It was only a [little] blossom. See Only.—Perry. 

It was only a little thing for Nell. See Little Things. 
—Anon. 

It was “only” a match, a splinter of pine. See Only. 
—Storrs. 

It was only a simple ballad. See Only a Song.—Anon. 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


It would 


It was only a tiny seed. See Only a Little Thing.— 
Handy. 

It was only the clinging touch. See Child, The.— 
Woodberry. 

It was our Sabbath eve. By set of sun. See Light 
of the World, The (Resurrection, The).—-Arnold. 

It was our wedding-day. See Possession.—Taylor. 

It was [out] on the Western Frontier, See Clown’s 
Baby, The.—Janvier. 

It was over the sea, in the land of tea. See Little 
Tee-Hee.—Fink. 

It was rumored abroad that the presiding elder. See 
Methodist Camp Meeting, A.—Head. 

It was Sabbath evening. See Domestic Mutual Im¬ 
provement.—Stewart. 

It was Saturday night, and the widow of the pine cot¬ 
tage. See Righteous never Fqrsaken, The.—Anon. 

It was Saturday night, and two children small. See 
Love One Another.—Anon. 

It was six men of Indostan. See Blind Men and the 
Elephant, The.—Saxe. 

It was some thirty years ago. See Plumber’s Revenge, 
The.—Anon. 

It was Spring the first time that I saw her. See 
Master’s Johnny’s Next-door Neighbor.—Harte. 

It was such a funny story! [how] I wish you could 
have heard it. See Funny Story, The.—Pollard. 

It was such a pretty nest, and in such a pretty place. 
See Sandpiper’s Nest, The.—Thaxter. 

It was Sunday afternoon. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin 
(Little Evangelist, The).—Stowe. 

It was Sunday. Mr. Skinner was very tired. See 
Happy Family, A.—Anon. 

It was Sunday night in the old stone church. See 
How the Revival Came.—Bidwell. 

It was Sunday, Sunday the tenth of November, St. 
Martin’s Day. See Story of a Short Life, The.— 
Ewing. 

It was ten minutes before train time. See She Waved. 
—Anon. 

It was terribly cold; it snowed and was already almost 
dark. See Little Match-girl, The.—Andersen. 

It was Thanksgiving Day, but the wildest flight of 
fancy. See One Thanksgiving Day.—Wheeler. 

It was that fierce contested field when Chickamauga 
lay. See Thomas at Chickamauga.—Sherwood. 

It was that hushed, expectant hour ere yet. See 
Cuba’s Maiden Martyr.—Harding. 

It was that they loved the children. See Four-o’clocks. 
—Quimby. 

It was the autumn of the year. See Left Behind.— 
Allen. 

It was the beginning of the end. The last tie of the 
mighty Union Pacific. See Owyhee Joe’s Story.— 
Wildman. 

It was the calm and silent night! See Christmas 
Hymn, A.—Domett. 

It was the Cedar Rapids sleeper. See Champion 
Snorer, The.—( Burlington-Hawkeye. ) 

It was the charming month of May. See Chloe.—Burns. 

It was the cloister Grabow, in the land of Usedom. 
See Greediness Punished.—Rfickert. 

It was the close of a day in the early part of December. 
See Fiddle Told, The.—Franklin. 

It was the closing of a summer’s day. See Karl the 
Martyr.—Anon. 

It was the day of the great games in Rome. See 
Threads from the Woof (Rose of Rome, A).—Gal- 
pin. 

It was the day of the Squire’s annual banquet to his 
tenants. See Bob, Son of Battle (Black Killer, 
The).—Ollivant. 

It was the eve of Christmas, the snow fell slowly down. 
See Tale of Christmas Eve, A.—Anon. 

It was the fairy of the place. See Three Counsellors, 
The.—Russell. 

It was the first night of “The Sultana. ” See Her First 
Appearance.—Davis. 

It was the great Yale-Harvard game of baseball. See 
Professor’s Ball Game, The.—Irwin. 

It was the holy twilight hour, and clouds in crimson 
pride. See Last Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots.— 
Clark. 

It was the idle Margaret, with hands and face so fair. 
See Miss Margaret.—Shaw. 

It was the middle of the night. See Christmas Cat, 
The.—Sherman. 

It was the morning of a festival, and the rays of the 
rising sun. See Power of Love, The.—Anon. 

It was the morning of the international race. See 
International Race, The.—DeLeon. 

It was the night before Thanksgiving, and two people 
were unhappy. See Sully the Rooster.—Anon. 


It was the night before the first great rodeo of the sea¬ 
son. See Bull of Bashan, A.—Knapp. 

It was the pleasant harvest-time. See Mabel Martin 
(Witch’s Daughter, The).—Whittier. 

It was the prettiest, daintiest, little piece of muslin. 
See Kitty’s Christmas Offering.—-Anon. 

It was the schooner Hesperus. See Wreck of the 
Hesperus, The.—Longfellow. 

It was the season when there falls no night. See 
Death of Guinevere, The.—Koopman. 

It was the season when through all the land. See 
Birds of Killingworth, The.—Longfellow. 

It was the 7th of October, 1777. Horatio Gates stood 
before his tent. See Benedict Arnold (Black 
Horse and his Rider, The).—Lippard. 

It was the stormiest rehearsal of the season. See 
Franz.—Hawks. 

It was the summer after the great election. See Matri¬ 
monial Adventures of Dick Macnamara, The.— 
Maxwell. 

It was the time I was lost in crassin’ the broad 
Atlantic. See Pat and the Gridiron.—Lover. 

It was the time when lillies blow. See Lady Clare.— 
Tennyson. 

It was the very witching time of night that Ichabod 
pursued. See Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The (Ride 
of Ichabod Crane, The).—Irving. 

It was the very witching time of night, when King 
Bibellus. See Origin of Shoes, The.—Burk. 

It was the wild midnight,—a storm was in the sky. 
See Death of Leonidas.—Croly. 

It was the Winter wild. See On the Morning of 
Christ’s Nativity (Hymn, The).—Milton. 

It was three slim does and ten-tined buck in the 
bracken lay. See Revenge of Hamish, The.— 
Lanier. 

It was thy fear, or else, some transient wind. See 
Cathedral.—Congreve. 

It was Tuesday, January the 26th, 1830. See Descrip¬ 
tion of Webster’s Speech in Reply to Hayne.— 
March. 

It was twenty and a hundred years, O blue and rolling 
sea! See Marmara.—Barton. 

It was two rival drummers. See Rival Drummers.— 
Anon. . 

It was under the burning influence of revenge. See 
Rob Roy (Death of Morris).—Scott. 

It was upon a cold winter night that Andy appeared in 
the kitchen. See Settin’ up with Peggy McKeag. 
—McCook. 

It was upon a holiday. See Shepheardes Calender, 
The (Chase after Love).—Spenser. 

It was upon an April morn. See Heart of the Bruce, 
The.—Aytoun. 

It was very cold, the snow fell. See Little Match-girl, 
The.—Andersen. 

It was very late Saturday night. See Mr. Bosbyschell’s 
Confession.—Anon. 

It was very singular how absent-minded and inatten¬ 
tive the operator was. See Telegraphic Signal, 
The.—Barnard. 

It was when the heats of noon died gradually away 
from the earth. See Last Days of Pompeii (Witch’s 
Cavern, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

It was whispered one morning in heaven. See How 
the Gates Came Ajar.—Bostwick. 

It was Wopsenonic, the warrier. See Wopsenonic.— 
Boyd. 

It was wrought in silken letters. See Our Mother’s 
Sampler.—Anon. 

It was years ago. We were busy. See Told in the 
Stalls.—-Tucker. 

It waved o’er our fathers. See Flag, The.—Anon. 

It were better, O Athenians, to die ten thousand 
deaths. See Philippics (Against Bribery).— De¬ 
mosthenes. 

“It were in the Boma Pass, time of the Kaffir War.” 
See Little Bugler’s Alarm, The.—Glanville. 

It were not hard to suffer by His hand. See Ugo Bas- 
si’s Sermon in a Hospital.—King. 

It whizzed and whistled along the blurred. See Song 
of the Bullet.—Riley. 

It will be almost universally conceded that no other 
language. See Bible Reading.—Shoemaker. 

It will be rare, rare, rare! See Sad Shepherd, The 
CEglamour’s Lament).—Jonson. 

It would be a dreadful thing to me to lose my sight. 
See Blindness.—Beecher. 

It would be an important step towards the reconcilia¬ 
tion. See On Being Suspected of Receiving 
Overtures from the Court.—Mirabeau. 

It would be the extreme of affectation in me to suggest. 
See Repeal of the Union.—O’Connell. 


733 




It would 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AXD RECITATIONS 


It would have been evident to even the most careless. 
See That Fire at the Nolans’.— (Li/e.) 

It would in some measure relieve embarrassment. See 
On Receiving the Master’s Degree from Harvard. 
—Washington. 

It wuz a calm, fair morn. The sun streamed meller 
and golden. See Trying the “Rose Act.”—Holley. 

Italia, mother of the souls of men. See On the Monu¬ 
ment Erected to Mazzini at Genoa.—Swinburne. 

Italian lakes, transparent blue. See Return, The.— 
Greene. 

It’s a bonnie, bonnie warl’ that we’re livin’ in the noo. 
See Palace o’ the King, The.—Mitchell. 

It’s a burning shame—so it is-—the cross old cur¬ 
mudgeon ! See How She Cured Him.—Anon. 

It’s a day without a sermon. See Day without a 
Sermon, A.—Richards. 

It’s a horrible thing, of course. See God Wills It So— 
A plea.—-Anon. 

It’s a month to-day since they brought me. See 
Nellie’s Prayer.—Sims. 

It’s a purty hard thing for a fellow that’s young. See 
Pa’s Mem’ry.—Richards. 

“It’s a staving night for a supper; a hot supper, too.” 
See How Tim’s Prayer Was Answered.—Anon. 

It’s a wonderful world we’re in, my dear. See Life’s 
Paths.—Lincoln. 

It’s all very well for a boy who can yell. See Under 
Two Flags.—Tompkins. 

It’s all very well for preachin’. See Pledge at Spunky 
Point, The.—Hay. 

It’s alone in the dark of the old wagon shed. See Old 
Carryall, The.—Lincoln. 

It’s an owercome sooth for age an’ youth. See Friends. 
—Stevenson. 

It’s astonishing what mean miserable creatures boys 
are. See Backward Glance, A.—Denton. 

It’s curious, isn’t it, Billy. See Fate of a Fast Young 
Man, The.—Anon. 

It’s "Dorothy, where’s Dorothy?” See Ballad of 
Dorothy, A.—Ketchum. 

It’s easy to talk of the patience of Job. Humph! Job 
hed nothin’ to try him! See Inventor’s Wife, 
The.—Corbett. 

Its edges foamed with amethyst and rose. See Great 
Breath, The.—RuSsell. 

It’s getting on ter winter now; the nights are crisp and 
chill. See "Widder Clark, The.”—Lincoln. 

“It’s growing late,” said the honey bee. See Farewell. 
—( Harper's Young People.) 

It’s hame, and it’s hame, name fain wad I be. See 
Loyalty.—Cunningham. 

It’s hard to live a saint on whey. See Hard Lines.— 
Anon. 

It’s June ag’in, an’ in my soul I feel the fillin’ joy. See 
Picnic Time.—Field. 

It’s just a bit of a story, sir. See W T e Two.—Anon. 

It’s Lamkin was a mason good. See Lamkin.—Anon. 

Its masts of might, its sails so free. See Wreck, The.— 
Ruskin. 

It’s moighty glad I am there’s only one train more. 
See Dynamite Plot, A.—Meyers. 

“It’s my brother again,” said the girl with the ostrich 
boa. See Case of Spoons and Brother Tom, A.— 
Anon. 

It’s narrow, narrow make your bed. See Fair Annie. 
—Anon. 

It’s no in titles or in rank. See Good Heart.—Burns. 

"It’s no use talkin’,” said Mike. See Mike Hooter’s 
Bear Story.—Hall. 

It’s noon when “Thirty-five” is due. See Engineers’ 
Making Love, The.—Burdette. 

It’s O my heart, my heart. See In Blossom Time.— 
Coolbrith. 

It’s of no use, Kate, I can never consent to such a plan. 
See My Wife’s Mother.—Anon. 

“It’s only a little grave,” they said. See Little Grave, 
The.—Anon. 

It’s only we. Grimalkin, both fond and fancy free. 
See Ride to Cherokee, The.—Carpenter. 

It’s Patrick Dolin meself [or myself], and no other. 
See Patrick Dolin’s Love Letter.—Starkey. 

It’s planning for a month ahead, and purchasing with 
care. See What Vacation Is.—Dodge. 

It’s putty plane to my mind that we earnt to have 
Peas. See Artemus Ward’s Trip to Richmond.— 
Browne. 

Its seeds were in the clearing sown. See Orchard, 
The.—Kelso. 

Its shadow makes a sheltered place. See Wayside 
Calvary, A.—Aldrich. 

It’s strange how little boys’ mothers. See Little Bird 
Tels, A.—Anon. 


It’s tellin’ my story, ye’re askin’? See Kitty Malone.— 
True. 

It’s the flag of France, the flag of France I see! See 
Kinship of the Celt, The.—Clarke. 

“It’s thru for me, Katy, that I never seed the -like of 
this people afore.” See Biddy’s Troubles.—Anon. 

It’s too bad, there! Everybody says it’s too bad. See 
Hoyden, The.—Frost. 

It’s two blue eyes, with their lashes long. See Con¬ 
quest.—( Cornell Widow.) 

It’s vera weel throughoot the day. See It’s vera Weel. 
—Dunbar. 

“It’s very hard, kind friends, for me.” See Recita¬ 
tion: “It’s very hard,” etc.—Kavanaugh. 

“It’s very odd, dear Chloe, to me.” See Arcadian 
Flirtation, An.—Anon. 

It’s we two, it’s we two, it’s we two, for aye. See 
Like a Laverock in the Lift.—Ingelow. 

It’s well I ran into the garden. See Reminding the 
Hen.—Chandler. 

It’s when the birds go piping and the daylight slowly 
breaks. See Happy Household, The.—Field. 

Ivan Petrokoffsky of the twenty-first division. See 
Lay of the Conscription, A.—Anon. 

I’ve a baby sister. See Baby Sister.—Ruggles. 

I’ve a friend whom I visit. See Recitation for a Very 
Little Girl.—Chase. 

I’ve a great deal to do, a great deal to do. See Song 
of the Wind, The.—Anon. 

I’ve a home in Elfin land. See Fairy Land.—Case. 

I’ve a letter from thy sire. See Sailor’s Wife, The.— 
Mackay. 

I’ve a mistress, passing fair. See To Narcissa.—Train. 

I’ve a rare bit of news for you, Mary Malone. See 
Mulligan’s Gospel.—Herbert. 

I’ve a story that I'll tell. See Kitty Bell.—Richards. 

I’ve a story to tell of naughty Jack Grey. See Jack 
Grey.—Anon. 

“I’ve always noticed,” said Mrs. Partington on New 
Year’s Day. See Mrs. Partington’s Reflections on 
New Year’s Day.—Shillaber. 

I’ve answered tin advertoisements in two days. See 
Tribulations of Biddy Malone, The.—Vickers. 

I’ve been among the mighty Alps, and wandered 
through their vales. See Vulture of the Alps, 
The.—Anon. ► 

I’ve been a-thinkin’; and I think. See Payin’ Honest 
Debts.—Anon. 

I’ve been goin’ thar, le’s see. See “Hangin’ On.”— 
Stanton. 

I’ve been in love some scores of times.- See Latest 
Comfort, The.—Hay. 

I’ve been lingerin’ by the Tomb. See Artemus Ward 
at the Tomb of Shakespeare.—Brown. 

I’ve been married two years to John and such years as 
they have been! See Sudden Blow, A.—Anon. 

I’ve been off on a journey; I jes’ got home to-day. See 
When the Sunflowers Bloom.—Paine. 

I’ve been poring o’er my books. See How I Love My 
Books.— (Wrinkle.) 

I’ve been reading “Enoch Arden.” See Thoughts of 
“Enoch Arden.”—Anon. 

I've been roaming! I’ve been roaming. See I’ve Been 
Roaming.—Darley. 

I’ve been round this country from Texas to Maine. 
See Tramp’s Philosophy, A.— (Merchant Traveler.) 

I’ve been sick. See Little Tommie’s First Smoke.— 
Anon. 

I’ve been soft in a small way. See Rose of Kenmare. 
The.—Graves. 

I’ve been thinkin’ of it over, an’ it ’pears to me to-day. 
See Reunited.—Stanton. 

I’ve been thinking of home, of "my Father’s house.” 
See Thoughts of Home.—Anon. 

I’ve been thinking, sister Mary, of our old home on the 
hill. See Doctor’s Choice, The.—-Ball. 

I’ve been thinking some, Keziah. See Patchwork 
Philosophy.—Anon. 

I’ve been to Quaker meeting, wife, and I shall go again. 
See Simple Church, The.—-Anon. 

I’ve been to school. See Speeches for Tots (Speech for 
a Very Little Child).—Anon. 

I’ve begun to pack a box. See Packing the Knowledge 
Box.—Goodfellow. 

I’ve bin a member most my days, an’ I’m not a-tirin’ 
yit. See Meetin’ House is Split, The.—Eisenbeis. 

I’ve boken my slate. See Margaret’s Broken Slate.— 
Anon. 

I’ve borne full many a sorrow; I’ve suffered many a 
loss. See Heaviest Cross of All, The.—Conway. 

I’ve brought back the paper, lawyer, and fetched the 
parson here. See Betsey Destroys the Paper.— 
Locke. 


734 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


January 


“I’ve come”—and then he took her hands. See 
Diffidence.—Anon. 

“I’ve come to see the Count of Hentzau,” said Rassen- 
dyll, as he crossed the threshold. Sec Queen’s 
Letter, The.—Hope. 

I’ve come to see the May-day. See May Celebration. 
—Kavanaugh. 

I’ve conned the daintiest of poets lyrical. See To a 
Modern Girl.—Douglas. 

I’ve cried until L’m almost sick. See Bird’s Funeral, 
The.—Anon. 

“I’ve done now,” said Sam, with slight embarrassment. 
See Pickwick Papers, The (Sam Weller’s Valen¬ 
tine).—Dickens. 

I’ve got a good joke on Mariar. See Good Joke on 
Maria, A.—Anon. 

I’ve got a letter, parson, from my son away out west. 
See Billy, he’s in Trouble (Bill’s in Trouble).— 
Anon. 

I’ve got a little secret. See Minnie’s Secret.— 
Richards. 

I’ve got a little yaller dog, a wuthless kind of chap. 
See “Yap.”—Lincoln. 

I’ve got an awful piece of news. See Mind Your Own 
Business.—McBride. 

I’ve got an older sister. See Sis’s Beau.—Richards. 

I’ve got him, at last, in the focus. See Lines on a 
Grasshopper.—Anon. 

I’ve got orders, positive orders, not to go there. See 
Orders not to Go.—Anon. 

“I’ve got such a cold I cannot sing.” See W'hat the 
Frogs Sing.—Cary. 

I’ve got the dearest dolly. See Nicest One, The.— 
Anon. 

I’ve got two hundred soldiers. See Tommy’s Army.— 
Weatherly. 

“I’ve gotter go,” she said, “and see if little Bob’s 
tucked in.” See Is Little Bob Tucked In?— 
Foss. 

I’ve had a dreadful, dreadful time. See Why is It.— 
Denton. 

I’ve had another offer, wife—a twenty acres more. 
See Land Poor.—Donovan. 

I’ve had my share of pastime, and I’ve done my share of 
toil. See Sick Stockrider, The.—Gordon. 

I’ve half a mind to register an oath that I’ll never have 
my hair cut again! See Box and Cox (Rival 
Lodgers, The).—Morton. 

I’ve heard a good joke of an Emerald Pat. See Paddy 
[or Pat] and his Musket.—Anon. 

I’ve heard a song about the frogs. See Toad, The.— 
Ruggles. 

I’ve heard about a little boy. See W r ho is It?— 
Denton. 

I’ve heard the grown-ups say. See Not a Born Orator. 
—Denton. 

I’ve heard them lilting, at the [or our] ewe-milking. 
See Flowers o’ the Forest, The.—Elliott. 

I’ve jined the church; I’ve seen enough of worldly fuss 
and foolin’. See Joner Swallowin’ a Whale.— 
Eisenbeis. 

I’ve just been making the loveliest tarts. See Royal 
Tarts, The.—Denton. 

I’ve just been thinking, boys, of late. See By and By. 
—Anon. 

I’ve just been up to town to see my daughter, Laura 
Belle. See Visiting Laura Belle.—Kiser. 

I’ve just bin down ter Thompson’s, boys. See Mother’s 
Doughnuts.—-Adams. 

I’ve just come in from the meadow, wife, where the 
grass is tall and green. See Old Ways and the 
New, The.—Yates. 

I’ve kep’ summer boarders for years and allowed. 
See Uncle Jotham’s Boarder.—Slosson. 

I’ve learned to say some words in French. See Per¬ 
plexing Question.—Anon. 

I’ve lost de key of my desk, Johnson. See Picking 
Locks.—Anon. 

I’ve made a discovery, Johnson. See Bones’ Discovery. 
—Anon. 

I’ve maked b’lieve I was mamma. See Making 
B 'lieve.—Anon. 

“I’ve often told you.” See Whims.—Bower. 

I’ve painted an old hen as black as a crow. See 
Recitation for a Very Little Girl.—Chase. 

I’ve painted Shakespeare all my life. See Unfortunate 
Likeness, An.—Gilbert. 

I’ve plucked the berry from the bush, the brown nut 
from the tree. See Sing on, Blithe Bird.— 
Motherwell. 

I’ve put me on my old blue coat I wore at Gettysburg 
See Veteran, A.—Meyers. 


I’ve run all the old parties over. See All Things to 
t All Men.—Burdette. 

Eve runned away. See Almost a Runaway.—Denton. 

1 ve sat at her feet by the hour. See Engaged.— 
Pennypacker. 

“I’ve seen the clouds of crimson war above my country 
lower.” See Dying Patriot’s Request, The.— 
Brosnan. 

I’ve something to say to the mothers to-night. See 
Little Girl’s Lecture to Mothers, A.—Anon. 

I’ve sought for Cupid by day and by night. See 
Captive, The.—Carry!. 

I’ve started a telephone. I mean I’ve had one put up 
in the office. See That Telephone.—-Jerome. 

I ve stayed here watching all the folks. See Little 
Boy’s Speech, A.—Anon. 

I’ve taught me other tongues. See Childe Harold’s Pil¬ 
grimage (Love of England).—Byron. 

I’ve taught thee Love’s sweet lesson o’er. See 
Sylvia; or, The May Queen (Romanzo to Sylvia). 
—Darley. 

I’ve thought of thee, I’ve thought of thee. See Confes¬ 
sional, The (“I’ve thought of thee,” etc.).—Willis. 

I’ve travelled from the coast of Maine. See Summer 
Campaign, A.—Scranton. 

I’ve tried it over and over. See Knitting.—Anon. 

I’ve two pretty little kittens; one is brown and one is 
gray. See Demon Kittens, The.—Anon. 

I’ve wander’d east, I’ve wandered west. See Jeanie 
Morri son.—Motherwell. 

I’ve wandered to the village, Tom, I’ve sat beneath 
the tree. See Twenty Years Ago.—Anon. 

I’ve watch’d you now a full half-hour. See To a 
Butterfly.—Wordsworth. 

I’ve watched him stroll with Raleigh by the wood. 
See Spenser.—Betts. 

I’ve wished and wished for Santa Claus. See Coming 
of Santa Claus, The.—Denton. 

I’ve worked in the field all day, a-plowin’ the “stony 
streak.” See Gone with a Handsomer Man.— 
Carleton. 

Ivory sticks and painted face. See Grandmamma’s 
Fan.—Tupper. 


J 

Jack and Joan, they think no ill. See Fortunati 
Nimium—Campion. 

Jack, dressed withe most scrupulous care, is shown 
into the parlor. See Popping the Question.— 
Fezandie. 

Jack Frost peeped in at the window. See Jack Frost. 
—Anon 

Jack. I hear you’ve gone and done it. See Similar 
Case. A.—( Acta Columbiana.) 

Jack in the Pulpit preaches to-day. See Jack in the 
Pulpit.—Smith. 

Jack Parker was a cruel boy. See Result of Cruelty, 
The—Turner. 

Jackanapes was always very friendly with Tony 
Johnson. See Jackanapes.—Ewing. 

Jacob! I do not like to see thy nose. See Pig, The.— 
Southey. 

Jacob Johnson, the publisher, having refused to advance 
Dryden a sum of money. See Force of Satire, The. 
—(Jest Book , The.) 

Jaffar. the Barmecide, the good vizier. See Jaffar.— 
Hunt. 

Jake Poole was staging the route from Gallatin to 
Helena, in Montana. See Stage Driver’s Story, 
The.—Anon. 

James A. Garfield’s father dying before the boy was 
two years old. See Memorial Address on the 
Life and Character of James A. Garfield (Garfield’s 
Early Life).—Blaine. 

James Wainwright was fireman of engine No. 32. See 
In the Tunnel.—Anon. 

James went to the door of the kitchen and said. See 
Rudeness.—Turner. 

Jamie’s feet are restless and rough. See Out of the 
Way.—Dowd. 

“Jane Eyre,” “Beneath the Greenwood Tree.” See 
Novel Poem, A.—Anon. 

Jane Jemina! what? My dear Jane Jemina, don’t be 
so abrupt. See Row in the Kitchen, A.—Mc¬ 
Bride. 

Jane Jones keeps a whisperin’ to me all the time. See 
Jane Jones.—King. 

January, bleak and drear. See January.—Sherman. 

January brings the snow. See Months, The.— 
Browning. 




735 




J anuary 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


January comes the first of all. See Months, The.— 
Hadley. 

January darkness and light reign alike. See Death 
of Our Almanac, The.—Beecher. 

January! January! though cold, you have no law. See 
Rhyme of the Year, A.—Anon. 

January, worn [or wan] and gray. See Year’s Twelve 
Children, The.—Anon. 

Janus am T, oldest of potentates. See Janus and 
January.—Longfellow. 

Jarl Sigurd, he rides o’er the foam-crested brine. See 
Jarl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve.—Boyesen. 

Jason White has come ter town. See Tin Peddler, 
The.—Lincoln. 

Jays in the orchard are screaming, and hark! See 
Down in the Strawberry Bed.—Scollard. 

Jean Anderson, my joy, Jean. See same. —Rankin. 

Jean Valjean, whose soul the good bishop had bought 
from evil. See Les Mis4rables (Jean Valjean’s 
Sacrifice).—Hugo. 

Jeannie Marsh of Cherry Valley. See Jeannie Marsh.— 
Morris. 

Jehoshaphat reigned over Judah in peace. See 
Jehoshaphat’s Deliverance.—Taylor. 

Jem, are you hungry? See Joyful Surprise, A.— 
Kavanaugh. 

“Jennie!” mother cries, “Jennie!” See Going after the 
Cows.—Anon. 

Jenny Brown had as pretty a house of her own. See 
Robin’s Nest, The.—Cary. 

Jenny Dunleath coming back to the town? See Jenny 
Dunleath.—Cary. 

Jenny kissed me when we met. See Jenny Kissed Me. 
—Hunt. 

Jenny Wren fell sick. See Nursery Rhymes, I.— 
Anon. 

Jeremiah Pimpkin was an honorable citizen. See 
Pimpkin versus Bodkin.—Anon. 

Jericho Bob, when he was four years old. See Jericho 
Bob.—King. 

Jerrold was in France, and with a Frenchman who was 
enthusiastic. See Anglo-French Alliance, The.— 
—(Jest Book, The.) 

Jerusalem, my happy home. See Heavenly Jerusalem, 
The.—Anon. 

Jerusalem, the beautiful! See same. —Hofford. 

Jerusalem, the golden. See same. —St. Bernard. 

Jerusalem valley, about twenty miles long and five 
miles in width. See What we Did with the Cow. 
—Ufford. 

Jes’ a little bit o’ feller, I remember still. See Who 
Santy Claus Wuz.—Riley. 

Jes’ fly roun’ now, Evalena Diana. See Master of the 
Situation.—Anon. 

Jes’ turn de back log ober, an’ draw yer stool up nigher. 
See Cabin Philosophy.—Anon. 

Jess and Jill are pretty girls. See Ring Posy, A.— 
Rossetti. 

Jessie is both young and fair. See Jessie.—Harte. 

Jessie, Jessie Cameron. See Jessie Cameron.— 
Rosetti. 

Jest about the time when Fall. See Ingin Summer.— 
McClasson. 

Jest a-wearyin’ for you. See Wearyin’ for You.— 
Stanton. 

Jest keep the heart a-beatin’ warm. See Plain Spoken 
Philosophy.—Newell. 

Jest rain and snow, and rain again. See First Blue¬ 
bird, The.—Riley. 

Jesu \or Jesus'!, lover of my soul. See same. — 
Wesley. 

Jesu, my strength, my hope. See same. —Wesley. 

Jesu, wilt Thou mind Thee. See Far from Home and 
Country.—Townsend. 

Jesus, and shall it ever be. See “Ashamed of Me.”— 
Grigg. 

Jesus bids us shine. See Little Lights.—Anon 

Jesus, T my cross have taken. See same. —Lyte. 

Jesus, I would be like thee. See Little Child’s Prayer, 
A.—Anon. 

Jesus is our Shepherd. See Our Shepherd.—Havergal. 

Jesus, Jesus, the day is almost done. See Hymn at 
Nicrhtfall.—Richardson. 

“Jesus, lover of my soul.” See Incident of the Johns¬ 
town Flood, An.—Moore. 

“Jesus, Lover of my soul." See same. —Hall. 

Jesus [or Jesu], lover of my soul. See same. —Wesley. 

Jesus, Master, whom I serve. See same. —Havergal. 

Jesus shall reign where’er the sun. See Psalm LXXII. 
—Watts. 

Jesus, tender Shepherd, hear me. See Child’s Evening 
Prayer, A.—Duncan. 


Jesus, there is no dearer name than Thine. See Jesus.— 
Parker. 

Jesus these eyes have never seen. See Unseen, not 
Unknown.—Palmer. 

Jever stump y’r toe? M-m, don’t it hurt! See 
Noth’n’ ’t All.—Anon. 

Jim Bowker, he said, ef he’d had a fair show. See 
Jim Bowker.—Foss. 

“Jim has a future front of him.” See Future in Front 
of Him, A.—Foss. 

Jim wan’t no good to fish and shoot. See Young 
Musician, The.—Floss. 

Jim was a fisherman ; up on the hill. Nee Jim’s Kids.— 
Anon. 

Jim was my friend, till one unhappy day. See Lucky 
Jim.—Anon. 

Jim Woppit would never have been elected city marshal 
of Red Hoss Mountain. See Wooing of Miss 
Woppit, The.—Field. 

Jimmieboy had come to town for the winter. See 
Afternoon in a Hotel Room, An.—Bangs. 

Jimmy Hoy was a County Cork boy. See Jimmy Hoy. 
—Lover. 

Jingle, jingle, clear the way. See Sleigh Song.—Pettee. 

Jist after [or afther] the war, in the year ’9S. See 
Shamus O’Brien.—Le Fanu. 

Jo is very glad to see his old friend. See Bleak House 
(Death of Little Jo).—Dickens. 

Joanna scolds my Kitty every day. See Kitty Didn’t 
Mean to.—Anon. 

Joe Beall’ud set upon a keg. See He’d Had no Show.— 
Foss. 

Jog on, jog on, the foot-path way. See Winter’s Tale, 
The (Jog on. Jog on).—Shakespeare. 

John Adams lies here, of the parish of Southwell. See 
On a Carrier who Died of Drunkenness.—Byron. 

John Alcohol, my foe, John. See John Alcohol.-— 
Anon. 

John Anderson, my jo, John. See John Anderson, My 
Jo.—Burns. 

John, are you sure that you told George? See Always 
too Late.—Anon. 

John Brown had land and gold enough, they say. See 
Shadow from an Insane Asylum, A.—Durant. 

John Brown in Kansas settled, like a steadfast Yankee 
farmer. See How Old Brown Took Harper’s 
Ferry.—Stedman. 

John Brown of Ossawatomie spake on his dying day. 
See Brown of Ossawatomie.—Whittier. 

John Brown’s body lies a-mould’ring in the grave. See 
Glory Hallelujah! or, John Brown’s Body.—Anon. 

John Bull can inform Jonathan what are the inevitable 
consequences. See Taxes the Price of Glory.— 
Smith. 

John Bull for pastime took a prance. See Nongtong- 
paw.—Dibdin. 

John Bull was a choleric old fellow. See Quarrel of 
Squire Bull and his Son Jonathan, The.— 
Paulding. 

John Carter stood at his own door with a coil of rope 
in his hand. See Delayed in Transmission.— 
Quiller-Couch. 

John Davison [or Davidson] and Tibbie [or Tib], his 
wife. See John and Tibbie Davison’s Dispute.— 
Leighton. 

John Day, he was the biggest man. See History of 
John Day.—Hood. 

John Dobbins was so captivated. See Eggs and the 
Horses, The.—Anon. 

John Gilpin is a citizen. See Railway Gilpin, The. 
— (Punch.) 

John Gilpin was a citizen. See Diverting History of. 
John Gilpin, The.—C’owper. 

John Hillier and his six sons, soldiers in the old Conti¬ 
nental army. See Little Regiment, The.—Anon. 

John, I say, John, you rascal, where are you? See 
Backward.—Anon. 

John James Godfrey was hired by the Hayblossom 
Mining Company. See Mark Twain’s Mining 
Story.—Clemens. 

John loved his young wife as the flower loves dew. 
See Jealous Wife, The.—Brooks. 

John Mann had a wife who was kind and true. See 
Good Old Way, The.—Anon. 

John Maynard was well known in the lake district. 
See Pilot—a Thrilling Incident, The.—Gough. 

John Peabody, a Connecticut grocer, came on to New 
York. See Tough Snuff Story, A.—Paul. 

John, said I, as we stood looking at each other across 
the boat. See Crossing the Carry.—Murray. 

“John,” said Mrs. Sanscript to her husband one evening 
last week. See Warning to Woman.—Anon. 


736 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Just 


John!—sir?—Is Mr. Marcus in his room? See It’s a 
Poor Rule that Won’t Work Both Ways.—Anon. 

John Smith, a young attorney just admitted to the bar. 
See First Client, The.—Russell. 

John Smith!—Here, sir. See Corporal Punishment. 
—(Young Folks' Rural.) 

John Thomas is one of the good old stock, and is content 
to be a negro. See Old-time Negro, An.—Smith. 

John Thomson fought against the Turks. See John 
Thomson and the Turk.—Anon. 

John Umph knew it was Christmas-time. See Snow 
Twins, The.—Power. 

John was on honest farmer lad. See Somehow.—Anon. 

Johnnie rose up in a May morning. See Johnnie of 
Breadislee.—Anon. 

Johnnie, will you tell us what great event we are cele¬ 
brating to-day? See Primary Class, The.— 
Denton. 

Johnny, come here and look at the cat. See Johnny’s 
Lesson. —Anon. 

Johnny Judkins was a vender. See Johnny Judkins.— 
Adams. 

Johnnv swinging on a gate. See Awful Fly, An.— 
W. T. 

Johnny’s sisters numbered three. See Johnny’s Sisters. 
—Richards. 

Johnson, a fellow was trying to stuff me dat when it am 
night here it am day in China. See Earth’s Axis, 
The.—Anon. 

Johnson, can you tell me how many feet dere am in one 
yard? See Figures sometimes Lie.—Anon. 

Johnson, did you eber go on a fishing excursion? See 
Dreamers, The.—Anon. 

Johnson, did you eber read about de earth moving 
around de sun? See Information Wanted.— 
Anon. 

Johnson, did you hear a serenade in your neighborhood 
last night? See Bones Serenades his Sweetheart. 
—Anon. 

Johnson, hab you got a dog? See Tambo’s Dog.— 
Anon. 

Johnson, I hear dat you hab for some time been keeping 
bery late hours; am dat true? See Very Much 
Astonished.—-Anon. 

Johnson, I read in de paper to-day dat a gal is going 
to sue a feller for kissin’ her. See Suing for 
Damages.—Anon. 

Johnson, I want to speak to you. See Where He 
Struck It.—Anon. 

Johnson! Johnson! Well, brudder Bones! See End 
Gag, An.—Anon. 

Johnson, may I be permitted to propose a proposer to 
you? See Bones and the Ladies.—Anon. 

Johnson, would you like to be a lawyer? See Mr. 
Johnson on Lawyers.—Anon. 

Johnson, you can tell lots of things, can’t you? See 
How to Keep a Bee-hive.—Anon. 

Johnson, you didn’t hear of my marriage? See Bones 
Keeping a Hotel.—Anon. 

Jolly old Kriss, what a fellow you are. See To Kriss.— 
Anon. 

Jolly old Saint Nicholas. See same. —Anon. 

Jolly shepherd, shepherd on a hill. See Damajtas’ Jig 
in Praise of his Love.—Wotton. 

Jonadab, the son of Rechab. See Father’s Counsel, 
The.—Murray. 

Jonah, have you never thought of getting married. 
See Leaving Jonah —McBride. 

Jones was a kind, good-natured man as one might wish 
to see. See Playing Drunkard.—Smith. 

Jorasse was in his three-and-twentieth year. See 
Jorasse.—Rogers. 

Jose Olivio, young, lithe and strong. See French 
Market, The.—W. P. J. 

Joseph! did you hear the king? See Richelieu; 
or. The Conspiracy (Richelieu).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Joseph, have you no thoughts of taking to yourself a 
wife? See Rejected.—Anon. 

Josephus Macduffus Florentinus Bran. See Nickel 
Plstcd_ Jotigs 

Josh Billings relateth his first experience with the gong 
thusly. See Josh Billings on “Gongs. ’ Shaw. 

Josh Wattles is a-comin’ to-night. See Dad Says so, 
Anyhow.—McBride. 

Josiah had to go to Jonesville to mill yesterday. See 
Sweet Cicely (For a’ That; or, Selling a Feller).— 
Holley. 

Joy came in youth as a humming bird. See Song. 
Almon-Hensley. . 

Joy for the sturdy trees. See Tree Planting. Smith. 

Joy holds her court in great Belshazzar’s hall. See 
Belshazzar’s Feast.—Hughes. 


Joy! joy forever! My task is done. See Exultation.— 
Moore. 

Joy, joy in London now! See Death of Wallace, The.— 
Southey. 

Joy! joy! The day is come at last, the day of hope and 
pride. See Muster of the North, The.—Duffy. 

“Joy of my life! full oft for loving you.” See Amoretti 
and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “Joy of my life,” 
etc.).—Spenser. 

Joy of the morning. See Sixty and Six.—Higginson. 

Joy of the Spring time! See Sisyphus.—Burdette. 

Joy to Philip! he this.day. See Going into Breeches. 
—Lamb. 

Joy to the thought of our own, own tree. See Dedica¬ 
tory Exercises.—Benedict. 

Joy to the toiler!—him that tills. See Joy to the Toiler. 
—Anon. 

Joy to the world! the Lord is come. See Psalm 

XCVIII—Watts. 

Joyful chimes are ringing. See Christmas Song, A.— 
Ryan. 

Jubilant the music through the fields a-ringing. See 
World Music.—Bushnell. 

Judge Mexford, one of the sternest jurists. See Mr. 
Haynes’s Able Argument.—( Arkansaw Traveller.) 

Judge not; the workings of his brain. See Judge Not.— 
Procter. 

Judge of the earth, to whom. See Prayer for the 
Nation.—( Boston Transcript ) 

Judge Pitman is the only man in the world of whom I 
know anything. See Out of the Hurly Burly 
(.Judge Pitman on Various Kinds of Weather).— 
Clark. 

Judging from the past, what have we not a right to 
expect in the future? See Prospects of California, 
The.—Bennett. 

Julia was blest with beauty, wit and grace. See Julia. 
—Coleridge. 

Julius, I wants to ax you a question. See Two Left.— 
Anon. 

Julius, suppose you gib a cat all de milk she can lap. 
See End Gag.—Anon. 

July, for you the songs are sung. See July.—Sher¬ 
man. 

July the first, of a morning clear, one thousand six 
hundred and ninety. See Boyne Water, The.— 
Anon. 

June laid down her knives upon the scrubbing board. 
See How June Found Massa Linkum.—Phelps. 

June leaves are green; pink is the rose. See Who 
Knows.—Morse. 

June 20.—I’ll have a lot to write, now. See Three 
Leaves from a Boy’s Diary.—Gregory. 

Just a bit of drift-wood gray. See Boat-building in 
Spain.—Ledyard. 

Just a few crocus leaves. See Leaves from Father- 
land.—Handford. 

Just a glimpse (the air is clearer), they are nearer, 
nearer, nearer. See Grandmother’s Story of 
Bunker Hill Battle.—Holmes. 

Just a manger, rude and low. See First Christmas 
Night, The.—Denton. 

Just a note that I found on my table. See Sic Transit. 
—Anderson. 

Just a saunter in the twilight. See This is All.— 
Churchill. 

Just a simple little picture of a sunny country road. 
See Meadow Road, The.—Lincoln. 

Just a sprig of Scottish heather, in a letter where the 
tears. See Scotch Heather.—Manville. 

Just a tiny blue-eyed maid. See Spring.—Veley. 

Just after the season, in the year '82. See Montravers 
O’Brien.—Thatcher. 

Just after the Wilderness Battle, when the bugles had 
blown retreat. See Memorial Day.—Collier. 

Just after we left the Horticultural Buildin’, I says to 
Josiah. See Josiah Allen’s Wife at a Fashionable 
Restaurant.—Holley. 

Just an even hundred men answered “Here!” See 
Last Roll-call, The.—Lewis. 

Just as Gilliatt was making up his mind to resign him¬ 
self to sea urchins. See Combat With the 
Octopus, The.—Hugo. 

Just as God leads me, I would go. See German Trust 
Song.—Lampertus. 

“Just as I am,” Thine own to be. See Boy’s Hymn, 
A.—Farningham. 

Just as I am, without one plea. See Just As I Am.— 
Elliott. . 

Just as I expected, Mrs. T.! I told you that it would be 
so. See Mutual Development Society, The.— 
Swander. 


737 




Just 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Just as morn was fading amid her misty rings. See 
Kriss Kringle.—Aldrich. 

Just as of old, Babette, long, long ago. See For 
Memory’s Sake.—Jefferson. 

Just as the earliest flowers began to blow. See Keats. 
—Betts. 

Just as the spring came laughing through the strife. 
See John Pelham.—Randall. 

“Just as we go to press,’’ announced the New Boston 
Clarion. See How Ben Fargo's Claim was 
Jumped.—Morgan. 

Just before Eckson and his wife started on their bridal 
tour, Eckson said. See It Was not a Success.— 
Anon. 

Just beyond the toiling town. See Little Parable, A.— 
Minot. 

Just beyond this field of clover, in a pasture rough and 
rocky. See Sermon in Flowers, A.—Davis. 

Just before twelve o’clock. See At the Stamp Window. 
—Anon. 

Just come from heaven, how bright and fair. See 
First and Last.—Spofford. 

Just ere the darkness is withdrawn. See “Sleep and 
his Brother Death.”—Hayne. 

Just fair enough to be pretty. See Bonnie Lasses.— 
Anon. 

Just for a day you crossed my life’s dull track. See 
Glimpse. The.—Watson. 

Just for a handful of silver he left us. See Lost Leader, 
The.—Browning. 

Just for one day, my heart, of all the year See 
Valentine. A.—McM. 

Just in the dubious point, where with the pool. See 
Seasons, The (Angling).—Thomson. 

Just in thy mould and beauteous in thy form. See 
My Brigantine.—Cooper. 

Just listen! Those children are at it again. See War 
of the Months, The.—“Bob o’Link.” 

Just lost when I was saved! See Called Back.— 
Dickinson. 

Just now I ’ve ta’en a fit of rhyme. See Epistle to James 
Smith (Writing Verses).—Burns. 

Just now there pass before me. See As in a Looking- 
glass.—Dinkelspiel. 

Just one kiss—two faces met. See Price, The.— 
Pollock. 

Just one more kiss for good-night, mamma. See 
Brave Little Girl, A.—Anon. 

Just our rapture to enhance. See Her\Y Riel.—Brown¬ 
ing. 

Just read this letter, old friend of mine. See Lost 
Letter, A.—Scott. 

Just take a trifling handful, O philosopher! See Sky¬ 
making.—Collins. 

Just think of it' The Mayor and Council. See 
Sparrow Must Go, The.—St. John. 

Just three years old, the maid will be, tomorrow. See 
ltebekah.—Everett. 

“Just tired out.” the neighbor said. See Tired Out. 
—i All the Year Round.) 

Just to let thy Father do. See Secret of a Happy Day, 
The.—Havergal. 

Just to trust, and yet to ask. See Hour of Comfort, 
The.—Havergal. 

Just when each bud was big with bloom. See Birth.— 
Stillman. 

Just when the winter lingers, loth to go. See Easter 
Exercise.—Hadley. 

Just where the Treasury’s marble front. See Pan in 
Wall Street.—Stedman. 

Just within the fortress of the Alhambra. See Alham¬ 
bra, The (Legend of the Moor’s Legacy).—Irving. 

Justinian, Emperor and Augustus, bent. See Building 
of S. Sophia, The.—Baring-Gould. 

Jutland was the native land of the Anglo-Saxons. See 
Mission of the Anglo-Saxons, The.—Walsh. 

Juxtaposition, in fine: and what is juxtaposition? See 
Amours de Voyage (Juxtaposition).—Clough. 


K 

Kacelyevo’s slope still felt. See Last Redoubt, The.— 
Austin. 

Kaiumers was the first king of Persia. See Shah- 
Nameh, The Story of the.—Rabb. 

Kamal is out with twenty men to raise the border side. 

See Ballad of East and West, A.—Kipling. 

Kansas has abolished the saloon. See Prohibition in 
Kansas.—Ingalls. 

Karl Kraemer had not walked for two years. See 
Christ Child, The—Wilbor 


Kate, have you seen the new scholar? See Fine 
Feathers.—Anon. 

Kate, how shall I say, “Come to me?” See Kate’s 
French Lesson.—Anon. 

Kate Ketchem, on a winter’s night. See Kate 
Ketchem.—Cary. 

Kathleen Mavourneen! the gray dawn is breaking. See 
Kathleen Mavourneen.—Crawford. 

Katie an’ me ain’t ingaged anny moor. See Katie 
an’ Me.—Cooke. 

Katie takes her milking pail. See Twilight Pastoral, 
A.—Anon. 

Katrina’s hair so truly does appear. See Katrina.— 
Anon. 

Ivaty, dot poy of ours—dot Peely, is an awful ferry 
shmard poy. See Smart Boy, A.—Anon. 

Keen gleams the wind, and all the ground. See Peace. 
—DeKay. 

Keen is the breath of the waning year. See Hunting 
Song.—Walker. 

Keen was the air; the sky was very light. See Garden 
Fairies.—Marston. 

Keep a guard on your words, my darlings. See “Little 
Children.”—Anon. 

Keep back the one word more. See Reserve.—Reese. 

Keep good company or none. See Maxims to Guide 
a Young Man.—Anon. 

Keep it before the people! See same. —Duganne. 

Keep me, I pray, in wisdom’s way. See Bibliomaniac’s 
Prayer. The.—Field. 

Keep me very near to Jesus. See Light Shall be at 
Eventide.—Evans. 

Keep out of debt and you will meet.— See Keep Out of 
Debt.—Kavanaugh. 

Keep the record clean, young man! See Keep the 
Record Clean.—Requa. 

Keep those banners red and gory. See Keep Those 
Banners.—Summers. 

Keep watch of your words, my darlings. See Watch 
Your Words.—Anon. 

Keep ye’er eye on th’ Pops, Jawn. See Mr. Dooley 
on a Populist Convention.—Dunne. 

Keep your eye on your neighbors. See To Make 
Mischief.-—Anon. 

Keep your undrest, familiar style. See Angel in the 
House, The (Love Ceremonious).—Patmore. 

Ken ye aught of brave Lochiel? See Young Airly.— 
Anon. 

Kentish Sir Byng stood for his king See Marching 
Along.—Browning. 

Kentucky, O Kentucky, I love your classic shades. 
See To Kentucky.—Anon. 

Ketch, my good fellow, you have a neat hand. See 
Reflections in the Pillory.—Lamb. 

“Kill me if you will, but spare my life!” See Billy 
the Bilk; or. The Bandits of the Bowery.— 
Anon. 

“Killed at-.” What matters where? See 

“Killed.”—Weatherly. 

Kin you tell dis pore old darkey jes’ how fur’ tis to de 
sky? See Uncle Eph’s Heaven.—Brooks. 

Kinder like a stormy day, take it all together. See 
Rainy Day, A.—Lincoln. 

Kind friends, and [dear] parents, we welcome you here. 
See Lines for an Exhibition.—Anon. 

Kind friends, at your call I’m come here to sing. See 
Too Much Nose.—Anon. 

Kind friends, distinguished far and wide for Webster- 
like precision. See Finished Education.—Anon. 

Kind friends, I’m glad to meet you here. See What 
Whiskey Did for Me.—Carswell. 

Kind friends, we welcome you to-day. See Greeting. 
—Anon. 

Kind friends, will you listen to an outcast’s tale? See 
Outcast, The.—Anon. 

Kind Friends: Within our school-room walls we gladly 
see you meeting. See Close of school.—Morgan. 

Kind friends, within our school-room walls we gladly 
you are meeting. See Closing Day.—Anon. 

Kind friends, you see us mustered here. See Pro¬ 
logue.—-“Bob o’Link.” 

Kind friends, your attention I ask. See Sneezing Man 
The.—Florence. 

Kind hearts are [the] gardens. See Kind Words.— 
Anon. 

Kind lady, I attend your fair commands. See Descrip¬ 
tion of the Chase.—Knowles. 

“Kind masters and misses, whoever you be.” See 
Last Dying Speech and Confession of Poor Puss, 
The.*—Taylor. 

Kind of curyus fixin’—when. See In the Spring.— 
McGlasson. 


738 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Ladies 


Kind teachers, friends, and classmates dear. See 
_ Opening Address.—Cornell. 

‘Kind traveler, do not pass me by.” See Rover’s 
Petition.—Fields. 

Kind was my friend who, in the Eastern land. See 
Crescent and the Cross, The.—Aldrich. 

Kind words are the music of the world. See same. — 
Faber. 

Kindness to animals is, like every other good thing, 
its own reward. See Nothing Lost in Nature.— 
Hamilton 

King Almanzor of Granada, he hath bid the trumpet 
sound. See Bull-fight of Gazul, The.—Lockhart. 

King Bruce of Scotland flung himself down. See 
Robert Bruce and the Spider.—Cook. 

King Canute was weary-hearted; he had reigned for 
years a score. See King Canute.—Thackeray. 

King Charles, and who’ll do him right now? See Give 
a Rouse.—Browning. 

King Cupid sang his song of love. See Cupid’s Easter 
Composition.—-Anon. 

King David’s limbs were weary. See Absalom (Patriot 
King in Mourning, The).—-Willis. 

King Death was a rare old fellow! See King Death.— 
Procter. 

King Edward dwelt at Havering, at Bowser. See King 
and the Nightingales, The.—Mackay. 

King Erik’s daughter grew tall and fair. See Gyda of 
Varsland.—Culbertson. 

King Ferdinand alone did stand one day upon the hill. 
See Garci Perez de Vargas.—Lockhart. 

King Francis was a hearty king, and loved a royal sport. 
See Glove and the Lions, The.—-Hunt. 

King Frederick, of Prussia, grew nervous and ill. See 
Court of Berlin, The.—( Frankfort Yeoman.) 

King Frost comes and locks me up. See Brook’s Song, 
The.—Butts. 

King Henry sat upon his throne. See Bernardine du 
Born.—Sigourney. 

King James one day was hunting. See Tables Turned. 
—Anon. 

King James the Sixth on removing to London. See 
Language of Signs, The; or, Two Sides to a Story. 
—Anon. 

King Jamie hath made a vow. See Flodden Field.— 
Anon. 

King Leir [or Lear] once rulGl in this land. See King 
Leir and his Three Daughters.—Anon. 

King of England. Petitioning for pity is most weak. 
See Wat Tyler (Wat Tyler’s Address to the King). 
—Southey. 

King of kings! and Lord of lords' See Chorus.-—Mil- 
man. 

King Philip had vaunted his claims. See Ballad to 
Queen Elizabeth. A.—Dobson. 

King Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane. See 
King Robert of Sicily.—Longfellow. 

King Saloman looked from his donjon bars. Nee Curse 
of Hungary, The.;—Hay. 

King Solomon stood in the house of the Lord. See 
Dead Solomon, The.—Dorgan. 

King Solomon, though filled with earthly vanity. See 
Solomon and the Sparrow.—Joachimsen. 

Kings, queens, lords, ladies, knights, and damsels great. 
See Faerie Queene, The (House of Busyrane).— 
Spenser. 

Kiss me but once, and in that space supreme. ■ See 
Love’s Kiss.—Hay. 

Kiss me softly and speak to me low. Nee Kiss me 
Softly.—Saxe. 

Kiss me, though you make believe. See Make Believe. 
—Cary. 

“Kiss me, Will,” sang Marguerite. See No Kiss.— 
Elliott. 

Kissing her hair, I sat against her feet. See Kissing 
her Hair.—Swinburne. 

Kissing is indulged in by everybody. See Art of Kiss¬ 
ing, The.—Anon. 

Kit, the recording angel wrote. See Kitty’s “No. — 
Bates. 

Kitchen maids are so often bothered in their household 
duties. See Peter Mulrooney and the Black Filly. 
—Anon. 

Kitten, kitten, two months old. See Kitten Gossip.— 
Westwood. 

Kitty, don’t sit there looking at me. See Diligent Bes¬ 
sie.—Rook. 

“Kitty, kitty, you mischievous elf.” See Both Sides. 
—Hamilton. 

Kitty, my pretty, white kitty. See Kitty.—Anon. 

Kiver up yo’ haid, my little lady. See Lullaby: 
“Kiver up,” etc.—Dunbar. 


Kneel not, oh! friend of mine, before a shrine. See 
Kneel at no Human Shrine.—Kent. 

Kneeling, fair in the twilight gray. See Learning to 
Pray.—Dodge. 

Kneeling, white-robed, sleepy eyes. See Little Mar¬ 
gery.—Joy. 

“Knight, as sister’s love for brother, must be mine for 
thee.”— See Knight of Toggenburg, The.—Schiller. 

Knight of the Eastern seas, thy fadeless fame. See 
Admiral Dewey.—Marshall. 

Knightly Rider of the Knee. See Rider of the Knee.—• 
Riley. 

Knitting is the maid o’ the kitchen, Milly. See Kitchen 
Clock, The.—Cheney. 

Knocking, knocking, ever knocking! See Knocking.— 
Stowe. 

Know. Celia, since thou art so proud. See Ingrateful 
Beauty Threatened.—Carew. 

Know I not who thou mayest be. See At the Hacienda. 
—Harte. 

Know that our city has the greatest name in all the 
world. See History of the Peloponnesian War, 
The (Glory of Athens).—Pericles. 

Know then this truth (enough for man to know). See 
Happiness.—Pope. 

Know ye not that ye are the temple of God. See Wis¬ 
dom of the Ages.—Anon. 

Know ye the land where the cypress and myrtle. See 
Bride of Abydos, The.—Byron. 

Know ye the willow-tree whose gray leaves quiver. 
See Willow-tree, The.—Thackeray. 

Know you me, Duke? Know you the peasant boy? 
See St. Pierre to Ferrardo.-—Knowles. 

Knowest thou but joy. See Song, A.—Remsen. 

Knowing the heart of man is set to be. See Know¬ 
ing the Heart of Man.—Daniel. 

Knowledge and wisdom, far from being one. See 
Task, The (Knowledge and Wisdom).—Cowper. 

Knowledge—who hath it? Nay not thou. Nee Knowl¬ 
edge.—Aldrich. 

Knows he that never took a pinch. See To My Nose.— 
Forrester. 

Knows he who tills this lonely field. See Dirge.— 
Emerson. 

Know’st thou the land where bloom the citron bowers. 
See Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship (Mignon’s 
Song).—Goethe. 

Know’st thou the land where the lemon tree blows. 
See Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship (Mignon’s 
Song).—Goethe. 

“Kommen zie hier, Pilly,” cried Christian. See Billy’s 
First and Last Drink of Lager.—Anon. 

Krinken was a little child. See Krinken.—Field. 

Kulnasatz. my reindeer. See same. —Anon. 

Kyng James the First, the patroun of Prudence. See 
Testament and Complaynt of the Papingo, The. 
—Lyndesay. 


L 

La! Sakes! I’ll never forgit them oxen, no never! See 
Them Oxen.—Raymond. 

Labor is heaven’s great ordinance for human improve¬ 
ment. See Nobility of Labor (Labor).—Dewey. 

Labor is man’s great function. See Duty of Labor, 
The.—Anon. 

‘ ‘ Labor is worship,” the robin is singing. See Labor.—• 
Osgood. 

Labor, labor—honest labor. See Labor.—Anon. 

Lacking samite and sable. See Christmas Carol.— 
Probyn. 

Lackyng my love, I go from place to place. See Amo- 
retti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “Lackyng my 
love,” etc.).—Spenser. 

Ladies an’ gemmen, boys an’ gals, also fellah citizens. 
See Colored Man’s Disco’se on Different Subjects, 
A.—Anon. 

Ladies an’ gentamen: I stand here in front befora you 
to-day. See Italian’s Account of George Wash¬ 
ington, An.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: Allow me to offer you the 
sincere thanks. See Interrupted Recitation, An. 
—Kavanaugh. 

Ladies and gentlemen: Allow me to present to you 
Mr. Michael Hoolahan. See Hoolahan on Educa¬ 
tion.—Kyle. 

Ladies and gentlemen, and others, I have much. 
See Burlesque Lecture on “Sound.”—Anon. 

Ladies—and—gentlemen- By—the request of the-^- 
Chairman of the—Comit-tee. See Mark Twain 
Introduces Himself.—Clemens. 


739 







Ladies 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Ladies and gentlemen, especially the gentlemen. See 
Art Artistic.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen, excuse my seedy looking plight. 
See Tight Times.—Kavanaugh. 

Ladies and gentlemen, friends and delegates; Manfully 
and womanfully. See Convention of Realistic 
Readers.—Braden. 

Ladies and gentlemen, girls and boys: I want you to 
understand. See Prologue.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: Hear me for my cause. See 
Miss January Jones’ Lecture on Woman’s Rights. 
—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen, I am a young man. I have been 
brought up regardless of expense. See Salu-Ta- 
Tat-U-A-R’y.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen, I am about to give you a 
tragedy. See Revenge, The.—Fezandid. 

Ladies and gentlemen: I am small, it is true, but great 
on the stump. See Take up the Collection.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen—I beg pardon. See Mr. Diffi¬ 
dent’s Speech.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: I come to greet each welcome 
guest. See Salutatory Speech for a Boy of Ten.— 
Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: I could holler—I’m gay. See 
Mr. Styx Rejoices on Account of a New Well 
Spring.—-Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen, I have in my possession a num¬ 
ber of wax figures. See Wax Figures, The.— 
Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: I have the pleasure. See 
Advance of Science, The.—Sapte. 

Ladies and gentlemen: I presume you have all heard. 
See Anatomical Tragedian, The.—Kyle. 

Ladies and gentlemen, I regret that I cannot respond. 
See Encore.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen [or gintlemen]: I see so many 
foine lookin’ people. See Irish Philosopher, The. 
—MacCabe. 

Ladies and gentlemen:, If you will give me your atten¬ 
tion. See Boy’s Rights.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: It is my most agreeable duty 
to welcome you. See Dedication of a School Build¬ 
ing.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen, I’ve come. See Speech for a 
Very Little Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

Ladies and gentlemen, let me ask. See Prologue.— 
“Bob o’Link.” 

Ladies and gentlemen: Manner means way. See Six 
Kinds of Manners.—Diaz. 

Ladies and gentlemen; Members of the Faculty. See 
Presentation Oration.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: My name is Puff Stuff. See 
Lecture on Patent Medicines, A.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen; nearly [or over] four hundred 
years ago. See Little Boy’s Lecture, A.—Thayer. 

Ladies and gentlemen—Of course you know my name 
and office. See Barmecide’s Feast, The.—Dalton. 

Ladies and gentlemen: Our performances are now 
about to commence. See Salutatorian’s Difficul- 
ities, The.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: Over [or nearly] four hundred 
years ago the mighty mind of Columbus. See 
Little Boy’s Lecture, A.—Thayer. 

Ladies and gentlemen: Permit me to join you. See 
Centennial Speech.—Blake. 

Ladies and gentlemen: Should you be dissatisfied 
with anything here to-night. See Artemus Ward’s 
Panorama—“Among the Mormons.”—Browne. 

Ladies and gentlemen: The animal to which I invite 
your attention. See Lecture on Homet-ology, A. 

-—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: The class of Ninety-seven ex¬ 
tends to you a most cordial welcome. See Salu- 
tory Delivered at Princeton University.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: The inauguration of George 
Washington. See Centennial Speech.—Gunsaulus. 

Ladies and gentlemen: The inauguration of George 
Washington. See Centennial Speech.—Thurston. 

Ladies and gentlemen: We have formed a society 
for the purpose of improving ourselves. See Break¬ 
ing up the Exhibition.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen: When, four years ago, the 
tidings of our struggle. See Russia the Antag¬ 
onist of the United States.—Kossuth. 

Ladies and gentlemen: You need not shudder in an¬ 
ticipation. See Prologue.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemen, Zachariah Popp was a wealthy 
man. See Zachariah Popp’s Courtship and Mar¬ 
riage.—Anon. 

Ladies and gentlemens of dis grand convention: I 
have been invited here. See Dutch Oration on 
Women, A.—Williams^ 


Ladies and gents: We give to you. See Introductory 
Address.—-Anon. 

Ladies and gintlemen I or gentlemen]: I see so many 
foine-looking people sittin’ before me. See Irish 
Philosopher, The.—MacCabe. 

Ladies and gintlemins. In the foreground over there 
yez’ll observe Vinegar Hill. See Irishman’s Pano¬ 
rama, The.—Burdette. 

Ladies like variegated tulips show. See Moral Essays. 
—Pope. 

Ladies, though to your- conquering eyes. See same. — 
Etherege. 

Ladies, we are all assembled. See School Committee 
The.—Towle. 

Lady Alice, Lady Louise. See Blue Closet, The.— 
Morris. 

Lady Alice was sitting in her bower window. See Lady 
Alice.—Anon. 

Lady and gentlemen fays, come buy! See Sylvia; 
or, The May Queen (Nephon’s Song).—Darley. 

Lady Anne Dewhurst on a crimson couch. See Daugh¬ 
ters of Philistia.—Smith. 

Lady Clara Vere de Vere. See same.— Tennyson. 

Lady fair, hanging there. See To a Picture.—Anon. 

Lady, I loved you all last year. See Song of Impossi¬ 
bilities, A.—Praed. 

Lady! in this night of June. See Night in June, A.— 
Austin. 

“Lady Jane, O Lady Jane!” See Gage, The.—Ramal. 

Lady Margaret sits in her bower door. See Young 
Akin.—Anon. 

Lady Marjorie, Lady Marjorie. See William and Mar¬ 
jorie.—Anon. 

Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving? See 
Lady Moon.—Houghton. 

Lady Queen Anne sits in the sun. See Lady Queen 
Anne.—Kavanaugh. 

Lady Teazle, Lady Teazle, I’ll not bear it! See School 
for Scandal, The (Quarrel Scene).—Sheridan. 

Lady, there is a hope that all men have. See Poet’s 
Hope, A.—Channing. 

Lady, when I behold the roses sprouting. See Dilem¬ 
ma, A. —Anon. 

Lady-bird! lady-bird! fly away home. See Little Lady¬ 
bird, The.—Southey. 

Ladybug, ladybug, haste away home! See Ladybug, 
Ladybug.—Anon. 

Laid in my quiet bed in study as I were. See No Age 
Content with his own Estate.—Surrey. 

Laid on thine altar, O my Lord divine! See same. 
—(New York Observer.) 

Laid out for dead, let thy last kindness be. See To 
Robin Redbreast.—Herrick. 

Lamar and his Rangers camped at dawn. See Christ¬ 
mas Camp on the San Gabr’el, A.—Barr. 

Lamb of God, I look to thee. See Christ Our Example. 
—Wesley. 

“Lamb of God, who takest away.” See Little Saint 
Cecilia.—Holmes. 

Lament him, Mauchline husbands a’. See On a Wag 
in Mauchline.—Burns. 

Lament, lament. Sir Isaac Heard. See On a Tuft- 
hunter.—Moore. 

Lamkin was as good a mason. See Lamkin.—Anon. 

Land of languor and of beauty, where the tawny sun¬ 
set blending. See Cuba, 1898.—Vynne. 

Land of the West! though passing brief the record of 
thine age. See Tribute to Washington.—Cook. 

Land of unconquered Pelayo! land of the Cid Cam- 
peador! See Surrender of Spain, The.—Hay. 

Land which the Norman would make his own! See 
Ballad of the Bier that Conquered, The.—De 
Vere. 

Land-locked I lie, in idleness. See Rondeau.—Bates. 

Landlord, can you give me a nice clean room. See In¬ 
vestigate.—Denison. 

“Language!—the blood of the soul," Sir!” See Pro¬ 
fessor at the Breakfast-table, The.—Holmes. 

Lanty was in love, you see. See Won’t You Follow 
Me.—Lover. 

Lark, high up in the summer sky. See Lark’s Song, 
The.—Anon. 

Lars Porsena of Clusium. See Horatius.—Macaulay. 

Las’ Sunday while I’se settin’ on de bench beside de 
do.’ See Uncle Ike’s Roosters.—Fredericks. 

Las’ time ’at Uncle Sidney come. See Boys’ Candi¬ 
date, The.—Riley. 

Lasd Duesday nide, aboud dwelve o’glock. See Keno! 
—Neville. 

Lashed to his flagship’s mast. See Blaine of Maine.— 
Ironquill. 

Last April when the winds had lost their chill. See 
Dover Cliff.—Home. 


740 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Lean 


Last autumn, when winter was taking. See Venture¬ 
some Buds, The.—A. C. 

Last, came Joy’s ecstatic trial. See Ode to the Passions. 
—Collins. 

Last Christmas Miss Burdock’s admirer presented her. 

See Burdock’s Music-box.—Anon. 

Last fall I desired to add to my rare collection a large 
hornet’s nest. See Bill Nye on Hornets.—Anon. 
Last left of the mortal Immortals, art thou too taken 
at last. See In Memoriam—Alfred, Lord Tenny¬ 
son.—Warren. 

Last May a braw wooer cam down the lang glen. See 
Last May a Braw Wooer.—Burns. 

Last Monday afternoon the eleven Boblink boys. See 
Burdock’s Goat.—Anon. 

Last night a mighty poet passed away. See Per- 
pet ui ty.—Scollard. 

Last night a zealous Irishman in town. See Neophyte. 
—Ware. 

Last night Alicia wore a Tuscan bonnet. See Alicia’s 
Bonnet.—Pullen. 

Last night, among his fellow roughs. See Private of 
the Buffs, The.—Doyle. 

Last night, and there came a guest. See Hinc Rise 
Lachrymae (Hence these tears).—Dixon. 

Last night, as my dear babe lay dead. See Dead Babe, 
The.—Field. 

Last night beneath the foreign stars I stood. See 
Common Grave, The.—Dobell. 

Last night I held a little hand. See Hard to Beat.— 
Thompson. 

Last night I searched the garret for a long-forgotten 
book. See My Old Rag Doll.-—Crocker. 

Last night in blue my little love was dressed. See same. 
—Webb. 

Last night ’mid tears, a sorry shower. See Willie’s 
Tears.—Anon. 

Last night, my darling, as you slept. See Some Time. 
—Field. 

Last night the angry sun dropped down. See Message 
of the Dove, The.—Nesbit. 

Last night the blush rose clustered. See Under the 
Rose.—Glen. 

Last night the nightingale waked me. See Last Night. 
—Marzials. 

Last night, the stork came stalking. See Stork, The. 
—Field 

Last night they held a meetin’, makin’ a gineral search. 

See Deacon, Me and Him, The.—Eisenbeis. 

Last night, when all the village. See Old Year, The. 
—(Little Corporal.) 

Last night, when my tired eyes were shut with sleep. 
See Gazelle, A.—Stoddard. 

Last night, whiles that the curfew bell ben ringing. 

See “Lollyby, Lolly, Lollyby.”—Field. 

Last night, within the little curtained room. See So 
She Refused Him.—( Boston Transcript.) 

Last night vou came and woke me from a sleep. See 
Last Night.—Scott 

Last of a stalwart time and race gone by. See To 
Alexandec H. Stephens.—Playne. 

Last spring I found a pumpkin seed. See John’s 
Pumpkin.—Archibald. 

Last summer I made up my mind to have. See Quiet 
Summer Resort, A.—Thatcher. 

Last Thanksgivin’-dinner we. See Gustatory Achieve¬ 
ment, A.—Riley. 

Last time I parted from my Dear. See Parting and 
Meeting Again.—Scott. 

Last, to the chamber where 1 lie. See North-west 
Passage (In Port).—Stevenson. 

Last week I received orders to go to the Britannia 
public house. See Five Minutes with a Mad Dog. 
—Pocklington. 

Last week my dolly had a nawful sick spel. See Tot’s 
Correspondence.—Anon. 

Last year I knew not how to live. See This Year.— 
Kelley. •, 

Last year I trod these fields with Di. See Mrs. Smith. 
—Lampson. 

Last year I was yours for a look or a word. See 
Woman’s Answer, A.—Wood. 

Lastlv came Winter cloathed all in frize. See Faerie 
Queene, The (Winter).—Spenser. 

Lat never a man a wooing wend. See King Henry.— 
Anon. 

Late afternoon. Car full of business men going home. 

See Scene in a Street Car.—Dallas. 

Late at e’en, drinking the wine. See Dowie Dens of 
Yarrow, The.—-Anon. 

Late at morning's prime I roved. See Hidden Rose- 
tree. A.—Power. 


Late, late, so late! and dark the night and chill! See 
Idylls of the King (Late, Late, so Late!).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Late, late, yestreen I saw the new moon. See Dejec¬ 
tion : an Ode.—Coleridge. 

Late lies the wintry sun a-bed. See Winter-time.— 
Stevenson. 

Late one evening I was sitting, gloomy shadows round 
me flitting. See Mysterious Rappings.—Shil- 
laber. 

Late travelling along in London way. See Coxcomb 
A—Hall. 

Lately, alas! I knew a gentle boy. See Sympathy.— 
Thoreau. 

Lately an equipage T overtook. See First Sight of 
Green Fields, The.—Lamb. 

Lately on yonder swelling bush. See Bud, The.— 
Waller. 

Lately our songsters [wr. poets) loitered in green lanes. 
See same. —Landor. 

Laties and shentlemans; Ven a man knows somedings 
he speaks mit hees sendiments. See Professor 
Dinkelspiegelmann on the Origin of Life.—Anon. 

Latin and Greek are useful, as they inure children. See 
Study of Latin and Greek.—Smith. 

Laud the first spring daisies. See Song of Spring.— 
Youl. 

Laugh, and the world laughs with you. See Solitude. 
—-Wilcox. 

Laugh at their whims and rigid tenets as we may. See 
Pilgrim Ancestors, The.—-Robinson. 

Laughing is strictly an amuzement, altho some folks 
make a bizzness ov it. See Josh Billings on 
Laughing.—Billings. 

Laughingly thou comest. See June.—Meigs. 

Laughter! ’tis the poor man’s plaster. See Laughter.— 
Anon. 

Launch thy bark, mariner. See Mariner’s Hymn.— 
Southey. 

Launched upon ether float the worlds secure. See 
Authori ty.—Huntington. 

Laura, my darling the roses have blushed. See Laura, 
My Darling.—Stedman. 

“Laura,” said George, with an eager, restless yearn¬ 
ing in his gaze. See He Had to Speak.—Anon. 

Laureate of the Gentle Heart! See To Austin Dobson. 
—Gilder. 

Laurels, bring laurels, sheaves on sheaves. See Tra¬ 
falgar Day.—Nesbit. 

Lawdy! fLawzy—C.J don’t I rickollect. See Waitin’ 
fer the Cat to Die.—Riley. 

Lawrence of vertuous Father vertuous Son. See To 
Mr. Lawrence.—Milton. 

Laws, as we read in ancient sages. See Lawyers and 
the Laws.—Beattie. 

Lawzy! fwr. Lawdylf, don’t I rickollect. See Waitin’ 
fer the Cat to Die.—Riley. 

Lay a garland on my hearse. See Maid’s Tragedy, 
The (Aspatia’s Song).—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Lay away the story. See Evensong.—Riley. 

Lay by the weekly, Betsey, it’s old like you and I. See 
Fast Mail and the Stage, The.—Yates. 

Lay down the axe, fling by the spade. See Our Coun¬ 
try’s Call.-—Bryant, 

Lay him beneath his snows. See Dead Czar Nicholas, 
The.—Craik. 

Lay me down beneaf de willers in de grass. See Death 
Song, A.—Dunbar. 

Lay me low, my work is done. See Valedictory.— 
Gordon. 

Lazy sheep, pray tell me why. See Boy and the Sheep, 
The.—Taylor. 

Lazy-bones, wake up and peep! See Nonsense Verses. 
—Lamb. 

Le chateau de Ploerneuf <5tait la terreur des Bretons. 
See Repentir de Noel.—Bernhardt. 

“Le Petit” call not him who by one act. See Jupiter 
Amans.— (London Leader.) 

Lead, kindly light, amid the encircling gloom. See 
Pillar of the Cloud, The.—Newman. 

Lead us, Heavenly Father, lead us. See same. Ed- 
meston. , . 

Lead us. Heavenly Father, lead us, Shepherd kind. 
See Prayer, A.—Herford. 

Leaf after leaf drops off, flower after flower See Leaf 
after Leaf.—Landor. 

Leafless are the trees; their purple branches. See same. 
—Elliott. 

Lean close and set thine ear against the bark. See 
Heart of Oak.—Luders. 

Lean closer, darling, let thy tender heart. See Before 
Sailing.—( All the Year Round.) 


741 




Leaning 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Leaning against a broken parapet. See Bard’s Sum¬ 
mons to War, The.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Leaning with parted lips, some words she spake. See 
Hyperion (Thea).—Keats. 

Leans lie 'gainst the old Dutch ingle. See Yes or No. 
—Louther. 

Leap to the highest height of spring. See Early Blue¬ 
bird, An.—-Thompson. 

Lear and Cordelia! ’twas an ancient tale. See To Eng¬ 
land.—Boker. 

Learn, boy, from me what dwells in man alone. See 
Two Lessons, The.—Higginson. 

Learn everything you can. It will all come in play. 
See Learn Everything You Can.-—Anon. 

Learn to live, and live to learn. See same. —Anon. 

Learn to wait—-life’s hardest lesson. See Learn to 
Wait.—Anon. 

Learning condemns beyond the reach of hope. See 
Rhymed Lesson, A (Urania).—Holmes. 

Leave God to order all thy ways. See same.- —New¬ 
man. 

Leave me a little while alone. See At His Grave.— 
Austin. 

Leave me, comrades, here I drop. See Road to the 
Trenches, The.—-Lushington. 

Leave me! O, leave me! Unto all below. See Parting 
Words.—Hemans. 

Leave me, O Love, which readiest but to dust. See 
Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet CX).—Sidney. 

Leave now our streets, and in yon plain behold. See 
Borough, The (Founder of the Almshouse, The) 
—Crabbe. 

Leave our schoolroom. See Bad I Can’t.—Anon. 

Leave the young hearts to Nature and to God. See 
same. —(.4/1 the Year Round.) 

Leave wringing of your hands. See Hamlet.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Leaves have their time to fall. See Hour of Death, 
The.—Hemans. 

Leaving the Expedition outside to rest. See Tramp 
Abroad, A (American Specimen, An).—Clemens. 

Led by a star they came. See Guided by a Star.— 
Perry. 

Led by his God on Pisgah’s height. See Death of 
Moses. The.—M’Cartee. 

Leman! famed in song and story. See Sunset on Lake 
Leman.—Washburn. 

Lend me thy fillet, Love. See Lover’s Song, The.— 
Sill. 

‘Lend me your ears!” cried wiped-out Caesar’s chum. 
See Prelude to an Evening’s Recitations, A.— 
—Anon. 

Lenora waked at morning’s red. See Lenora.—Burger. 

Lenten ys come with love to toune. See Spring-tide.— 
Anon. 

Leoffricus the noble earl See Leoffricus.—Anon. 

Leona, the hour draws nigh. See Leona.—Clarke. 

Leonard was not more than eight-and-twenty. See 
Leonard and Margaret.—-Southey. 

Leonard was to some extent a spoiled child. See 
Story of a Short Life, The (Leonard and the V. C.). 
—Ewing. 

Les morts vont vite! Ay, for a little space. See Les 
Morts Vont Vite.—Bunner. 

Lesbia hath a beaming eye. See same. —Moore. 

Lesbia hath a fowl to cook. See Boiled Chicken. 
— (Punch.) 

Less noise in the room, I say! See Hour in School, An. 
—Crosby. 

Less worthy of applause, though more admired. See 
Task, The (Ice Palace, The).—Cowper. 

Lessons sweet of Spring returning. See First Sunday 
after Epiphany.—Keble. 

Lest it may more quarrels breed. See Twelve Articles. 
—Swift. 

Lest men suspect your tale untrue. See Painter Who 
Pleased Nobody and Everybody, The.—Gay. 

Lestenyt, lordynges, both elde and zynge. See Of a 
Rose, a Lovely Rose, of a Rose is al myn Song.— 
Anon. 

Let all good citizens in both England and America, all 
who desire the world’s progress. See Great 
Britain and America.—Hall. 

Let all the earth fear the Lord. See Psalms of David, 
XXXIII. (Nation’s Strength, A).— Bible. 

Let all the fish that swim the sea. See Herring is 
King.—Graves. 

Let all the good thou doest to man. See Boast Not.— 
Stoddard. 

Let boys have all the sport they will. See Washing 
Dishes.—Ellis. 

Let dead names be eternized by dead stone. See same. 
—Thomas. 


Let dogs delight to bark and bite. See Against Quar¬ 
relling and Fighting.—Watts. 

Let down the bars, O Death! See Fold, The.—Dick¬ 
inson. 

Let drum to trumpet speak. See Grant.—Fuller. 

“Let Earth give thanks,” the deacon said. See Give 
Thanks fer What?—Croffut. 

Let England, and Ireland, and Scotland rejoice. See 
Royal Victory over the Dutch, The.—Anon. 

Let Erin remember the days of old. See Erin and the 
Days of Old.—Moore. 

Let every sound be dead. See Baby Sleeps.—Anon. 

Let Fate do her worst; there are relics of joy. See 
Farewell! but Whenever you Welcome the Hour 
(Sweet Remembrances).—Moore. 

Let Granta boast the patrons of her name. See Tri¬ 
umph of Isis, The.—Warton. 

Let hammer on anvil ring. See Armourer’s Song, The. 
—Smith. 

“Let her sing if she will.” See Rival Singer, The.— 
Anon. 

Let him listen, whoso would know. See Golden Bridge, 
The.—Lanigan. 

Let him who will sing Beauty’s praise. See Constant 
Heart, A.—Clay. 

Let Honesty be as the breath of thy soul. See 
Honesty and Economy.—Franklin. 

Let India boast in spicy trees. See British Oak, The.— 
Barton. 

Let it be remembered, that it has ever been the pride. 
See Responsibility of Our Country, The.—Madi¬ 
son. 

Let it be remembered that no power is so sensibly felt 
by society. See Judges Should be Free.—Bay¬ 
ard. 

Let it be remembered that, the Constitution of the 
United States. See Constitution not Unalter¬ 
able, The.—Webster. 

Let it not be forgotten that patriotism is one of the 
positive lessons. See Patriotic Sentiments. 

Let it not grieve thee, dear, to hear me say. See Love 
and Absence.—Noble. 

Let Liberty run onward with the years. See Holy 
Nation, A.—Realf. 

Let little hands bring blossoms sweet. See For Decora¬ 
tion Day.—Kniel. 

Let me at last be laid. See At Last.—Morris. 

Let me be with thee where thou art. See Let Me Be 
with Thee.—Elliott. 

Let me be your servant. See As You Like It (Old Age 
of Temperance).—Shakespeare. 

Let me begin, Men of Athens, by imploring of all the 
Heavenly Powers. See Oration on the Crown, 
The (Reply to HSschines).—Demosthenes. 

Let me call the attention of the court to the magnifi¬ 
cent paragraph. See Impeachment of Warren 
Hastings (Nature of Justice, The).—Sheridan. 

Let me come in where you sit weeping—aye. See 
Bereaved.—Riley. 

Let me go forth, and share. See Ode in May.—Was¬ 
son. 

Let me have men about me that are fat. See Juliu3 
Casar (Suspicion).—Shakespeare. 

Let me here say that I hold judges. See Duties of 
Massachusetts at the Present Crisis (Judicial Tri¬ 
bunals).—Sumner. • 

Let me here speak plain words. See Against the Spoils 
System.—Van Dyke. 

Let me lie down just here in the shade. Nee Wounded. 
—Miller. 

Let me move slowly through the street. See Crowded 
Street, The.—Bryant. 

Let me not die, before I’ve done for thee. See same. — 
Anon. 

Let me not to the marriage of true minds. See Sonnets^ 
CXVI.—Shakespeare. 

Let me now, for a moment show you what the two 
systems. See Voltaire and Wilberforce.—Sprague^ 

Let me play the fool. See Merchant of Venice, 
The.—Shakespeare. 

“Let me put my name down first.” See Drunken 
Engineer, The.— (Occident.) 

Let me say a few words to you on a cause that some 
years ago. See Greatest Curse to Labor, The.— 
Powderly. 

Let me see, six and four are ten. See Beginning 
Right.—Trafton. 

Let me see, Tom,—how long is it since I’ve seen you?' 
See Jack at all Trades.—Crosby. 

Let me sit down a minute. See Tale of a Tramp, The. 
—Anon. 

Let me stand still upon the height of life. See Forward.. 
—Coolidge. 


742 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Let 


Let me tell you, boys, of a run we made. See Peril of 
the Passenger Train, The.—Gillett. 

Let me tell you what to do. See Olive’s Advice.— 
Richards. 

Let me warn you most solemnly against the baneful 
effects. See Maxims of George Washington.— 
Washington. 

Let memories of pure white snow. See Valentine, A.-— 
Hobart. 

Let merry England proudly rear. See Freedom’s 
Flower.—Douglas. 

Let more than the domestic mill. See Charity.— 
Anon. 

Let no cold marble o’er my body rise. See Epitaph on 
a Young Lady who Desired that Tobacco might 
be Planted on her Grave.—Anon. 

Let no man ask thee of anything. See Soothsay.— 
Rossetti. 

Let no man be held responsible for my death. See 
Almost a Tragedy.—“Bob o’Link.” 

Let no man say, he at his lady’s feet. See In Absence. 
—Lanier. 

“Let no man write my epitaph; let my grave.” See 
Emmet’s Epitaph.—Southey. 

Let not woman e’er complain. See same. —-Burns. 

Let Observation, with extensive view. See Vanity of 
Human Wishes, The.—Johnson. 

Let old Santa Claus come in. See Let Santa Claus In. 
—Anon. 

Let one smile more, departing, distant sun. See 
November.—Bryant. 

Let one who sips life’s tears with strange delight. See 
’Neath the Cotton-wood Trees.—Rude. 

Let other men wrangle and strive. See In Medio 
Tutissimus Ibis.—Burdette. 

Let other swains, upon the best cream-laid. See 
First Sensible Valentine, The.— (Punch.) 

Let other tongues in older lands. See This Canada 
of Ours.—Edgar. 

Let others praise the god of wine. See True Leu- 
cothoe, The.—Anon. 

Let others sing of Knights and Paladines. See Son¬ 
nets to Delia (Beauty, Time, and Love, VII.).— 
Daniel. 

Let others sing the praise of wine. See Ad Nicotina.— 
E. H. S. 

Let others write of battles fought. See True Heroism. 
—Anon. 

Let Poets rhyme of what they will. See Tobacco.— 
Jones. 

Let Protestants freely allow. See Protestants’ Joy, 
The.—Anon. 

Let sometimes, in the gay and noisy street. See 
Fall of the Indian, The.—McLellan. 

Let sparkling wine o’erbrim the glass. See Drinking 
Song.—Gould. 

Let Snorus tremble.—What? that thing of silk. See 
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot (Sporus).—Pope. 

Let still the woman take. See Twelfth Night.— 
Shakespeare. 

Let sybarites still dream delights. See My Friendly 
Pipe.—( Detroit Tribune.) 

Let Taylor preach, upon a morning breezy. See 
Morning Meditations.—Hood. 

Let the angels ring the bells. See same.— Ran¬ 
kin. 

Let the bird of loudest lay. See Phoenix and the Tur¬ 
tle, The.—Shakespeare. 

Let the farmer praise his grounds. See Cruiskeen 
Lawn, The.—Anon. 

Let the field be joyful, aTid all that is therein. See 
Scripture Etchings for Arbor Day. 

Let the first witness take the stand. See Trial of 
Fing Wing.—Bunnell. 

Let the learned talk of books. See Pipe of Tobacco, 
A.—Fielding. 

Let the little children come. See Room for Children. 

-—Anon. 

Let the past perish, let darkness shroud it, let it sleep 
for ever. See Rienzi (Appeal to the Romans).— 
Bulwer-Lytton. 

Let the sower scatter seed. See As for Me, I Have a 
F riend.—McGaffey. 

Let the toper regale in his tankard of ale. See Pipe of 
Tobacco, A.—Usher. ' 

Let them come, come never so proudly. See Elizabeth 
at Tilbury.—Palgrave. 

Let them go by—the heats, the doubts, the strife. 
See Oasis.—Dowden. 

“Let there be light!” God spake of old. See Library, 
The.—Whittier. 

Let there be no more accursed races on the earth. See 
same. —Castelar. 


“Let this gypsy tell our fortune.” See Telling For¬ 
tunes.—Jessop. 

Let this meetin’ come to order forthwith. See Bung- 
town Lyceum, The.—Anon. 

Let those complain that feel Love’s cruelty. See To 
the Blest Evanthe.—Fletcher. 

Let those laugh who will about it. See Gaining 
Ground.—Wilcox. 

Let those who are in favor with their stars. See Son¬ 
nets, XXV.—Shakespeare. 

Let thy devotee extol thee. See Ode to Rum, An.— 
Brown. 

Let thy gold be cast into the furnace. See Cleansing 
Fires.—Procter. 

Let time and chance combine, combine. See Adieu.— 
Carlyle. 

Let Tyranny tremble and Cowardice quake. See Song 
for the Hour.—Dunbar. 

Let us be friends; we may not now be more. See 
Friends.—Wood. 

Let us be of good cheer. Humanity has ever advanced. 

See Progress is Constant.—Sumner. 

Let us begin and carry up this corpse. See Grammar¬ 
ian’s Funeral, A.—Browning. 

Let us bring before us the assembly which was about 
to decide. See Adams and Jefferson (Supposed 
Speech against the Declaration of Independence). 
—Webster. 

Let us bury him here. See Between the Battles.— 
Sherman. 

Let us consider the problem of life. See Problem of 
Life, The.—Tilton. 

Let us drink and be merry, dance, joke, and rejoice. 
See Coronemus nos Rosis antequam Marcescant.— 
Jordan. 

Let us drink the health of the newly-wedded pair. 

See Bridal Wine-cup, The.—Herbert. 

Let us go back and place ourselves in the year 1815. 

See Close of the Battle of Waterloo.—Hugo. 

Let us go, lassie, go. See Braes o’ Balquhither, The.— 
Tannahill. 

Let us kneel. See Laus Deo.—Whittier. 

Let us lay hold of common duties. See Common 
Duties.—Brown. 

Let us learn to be content with what we have. See 
same. —Swing. 

Let us live while the heart is lightest. See Life and 
Love.—Tongue. 

Let us look through sacred story. See Trees of the 
Bible, The.—Slade. 

Let us not fall into the vulgar whim and dishonor the 
century in which we live. See same. —Hugo. 

Let us not, gentlemen, undervalue the art of the ora¬ 
tor. See Worth of Eloquence, The.—Anon. 

“Let us pass over!” We were far astray. See same. 
—( Friends’ Review.) 

Let us play school this evening. See Playing School. 
—Anon. 

Let us proclaim it firmlv, proclaim it even in fall and 
in defeat. See Napoleon the Little (Present 
Age, The).—Hugo. 

Let us quarrel, American kinsmen. Let us plunge into 
war. See Burlesque Challenge to America, A.— 
Lemon. 

Let us reflect on the necessary limits of all human 
legislation. See Religion Independent of Govern¬ 
ment.—Grattan. 

Let us royster with the oyster. See Song of the Oy¬ 
ster, A.—Anon. 

Let us seize this occasion to renew to each other our 
vows of allegiance. See Washington Monument, 
The.—Winthrop. 

Let us (since life can little more supply). See Essay 
on Man, An.—-Pope. 

Let us sing a song. See New Rosette, The.—Vickers. 
Let us sing of the Babe that was born to-day. See 
At Bethlehem.—Rand. 

“Let us spread the sail for purple islands.” See “I 
Too. Woolson. 

Let us take to our hearts a lesson—no lesson can 
braver be. See Tapestry Weavers, The.—Ches¬ 
ter. 

Let us thank God that we live in an age. See Bunke 
Hill Monument, The (Age of Improvement, The) 
—Webster. 

Let us then, be of good cheer. See Law of Human 
Progress, The (Progress of Humanity, The).— 
Sumner. 

Let us then labor for an inward stillness. See New 
England Tragedies, The.—Longfellow. 

Let us, therefore, stop, while to stop is in our power. 
See same. —Johnson 

Let us try to be happy. See same. —Anon. 

743 




Let 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Let us try to be polite. See Be Polite.—Anon. 

Let us try to conceive the effects of the fall of the 
material of a comet upon the earth. See Possible 
Consequences of a Comet Striking the Earth in 
the Pre-Glacial Period.—Donnelly. 

Let us turn our eyes and thoughts back to the log- 
cabin days. See Retrospective, A.—Anon. 

Let us twine each thread of the glorious tissue of our 
country’s flag. See Stand by the Flag.—Holt. 

Let us venerate the bones. See Patient Mercy Jones.— 
Fields. 

Let us wreath the mighty cup. See same. —Field. 

Let who list (for me) advance. See Flower of Virtue, 
The.—Wither. 

Let whosoever will, inquire. See New Haven, The.— 
Scudder. 

Let your imagination carry you back to the year 1776. 
See Declaration of Independence, The.—Schurz. 

Let Youth, who never rests, run by. See Approach of 
Age, The.—Landor. 

Let’s fight life’s battle bravely. See Life’s Conflict.— 
Whitehead. 

Let’s have a party, your doll to come to tea with my 
doll. See Party, The.—Anon. 

Let’s oftener talk of noble deeds. See This Life is 
what we Make it.—Anon. 

Let’s play we’re married, Clara? See Little Mimics.— 
Smith. 

Let’s see, where am I? This is coal I’m lying on. See 
Drunken Soliloquy in a Coal Cellar, A.—Bur¬ 
nett. 

Let’s spell awhile. See Playing School.—Anon. 

Let’s talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs. See 
King Richard II.—Shakespeare. 

Let’s tell a story, you and me. See Story, The.— 
Anon. 

Let’s up and be doing. See Morning.—Ruggles. 

Let’s up and be doing. See also Up and Doing.— 
Ruggles. 

Letter from Benton Fosdick, Esq., of New York. See 
Two Letters and Two Telegrams.—Fitch. 

Letting go the unworthy things that meet us. See 
same. —Brown. 

Letting I dare not wait upon I would. See Macbeth.— 
Shakespeare. 

Letty, they will not be here. See Practical Jokes.— 
Meyers. 

Level with the summit of that eastern mount. See 
Orion (Eos).—Horne. 

Levi Cohen went to Rockaway Beach for the salt 
water bathing. See Cohen at the Seashore.— 
Ransome. 

Liberty! Freedom! Tyranny is dead! See Julius 
Caesar.—Shakespeare. 

Liberty, gentlemen, is a solemn thing. See Liberty. 
—Dewey. 

Liberty has been bought with a great price. See Cost 
of Liberty, The.—Giles. 

Liberty has lost by the sword far more than she ever 
gained by it. See Sword, The.—GrimkA 

Liberty is a dear word. And it is behind that good 
word. See Liberty.—Elliott. 

Liberty is a solemn thing; a welcome, a joyous thing. 
See Liberty.—Dewey. 

Liberty is not idleness, but an unconstrained use of 
time. See True Liberty.—Bruyere. 

Lichens and mosses (though these last in their luxu¬ 
riance). See Modern Painters (Humblest of the 
Earth-children, The).—Ruskin. 

Li-Chi was a maiden with nothing to do. See Legend 
of the Willow-pattern Plate.—Anon. 

Lie heavy on him, earth! See On Sir John Vanbrugh 
—Poet and Architect.—Evans. 

Lie lightly on our Willie, earth! See Our Willie.— 
Anon. 

Lie still, old Dane, below thy heap! See Danish Bar- 
row, A.—Palgrave. 

Life and Death are sisters fair. See Life and Death.— 
Anon. 

Life and Death meet. See Only a Beggar Boy.— 
Volk. 

Life and the Universe show spontaneity. See Posi¬ 
tivists, The.—Collins. 

Life and Thought have gone away. See Deserted 
House, The.—Tennyson. 

Life appears to me too short to be spent in nursing 
animosity. See same. —Bronte. 

Life, as a rule, is all work. See Law of Labor, The.— 
Anon. 

Life bears us on like the current of a mighty river. 
See Stream of Life, The.—Heber. 

Life, believe, is not a dream. See Good Cheer.— 
Bronte. 


Life, death, eternity. See Thoughts on Immortality. 
—Schaff. 

Life gives us better than it takes away. See Com¬ 
pleteness.—Morton. 

Life has a burden for every man’s shoulder. See 
Somehow or Other.—Anon. 

Life has two sovereign moments. See Sovereign 
Moments.—Knight. 

Life hath its barren years. See What Life Hath.— 
Doudney. 

Life! I know not what thou art. See Life.—Bar- 
bauld. 

Life is a boat that is drifting. See Last Word, The.— 
Sanderson. 

Life is a burden to every one’s shoulder. See Some¬ 
how or Other.—Anon. 

Life is a count of losses. See Every Year.—Pike 
[or Covert]. 

Life is a great battle field. There are moral victories. 
See Life’s Battle Field.—Brooks. 

Life is a mystic flame. See same. —Van Cleve. 

Life is a sea; like ships we meet. See Such is Life.— 
Brooks. 

Life is an absolute burden, and I am wearied with it. 
See Ladies of Athens.—Lipscomb. 

Life is but a tangled skein. See Tangled Skein, A.— 
Pollard. 

Life is not ours to waste it as we will. See Life’s Pur¬ 
pose.—Lawton. 

Life is not very long at best. See It’s not Worth 
While to Hate.—Kavanaugh. 

Life is one and universal. See Glimpses into Cloud- 
land.—Longfellow. 

Life is unutterably dear. See Satisfied.—Rog6. 

Life is what we make it. See same. —Dewey. 

Life, like a romping school-boy full of glee. See Life. 
—Wilcox. 

Life may be given in many ways. See Ode Recited at 
the Harvard Commemoration, July 21, 1865 
(Martyr Chief, The).—Lowell. 

Life may give for love to death. See Epicede.— 
Swinburne. 

Life of Ages, richly poured. See Inspiration.— 
Johnson. 

Life of Life! Thy lips enkindle. See Prometheus 
Unbound (Hymn to the Spirit of Nature).— 
Shelley. 

Life offers no joy like a friend. See Friend, A.— 
Larcom. 

Life of the king, and safety fix his throne! See Perkin 
W arbeck.—Ford. 

Life! we’ve [or we have] been long together. See 
“Life’s Good-morning.”—Barbauld. 

Life without love is like. See Life without Love.— 
Anon. 

Life’s best prizes are won, not by adroitness nor sharp¬ 
ness. See Manhood.—Morris. 

Life’s fragile bonds united. See Sidney Lanier.— 
Hayne. 

Life’s mystery—deep, restless as the ocean. See 
Peace in God.—Stowe. 

Life’s not our own,—’tis but a loan. See Life.— 
Swain. 

Life’s sunsets should have in them the elements of 
rest and quiet. See Life’s Sunsets.—( Christian 
at Work.) 

Lift it high, our glorious banner. See American Flag, 
The.—Faulds. 

Lift up the light, O soul, arise and shine. See My 
Lighthouse.—Thaxter. 

Lift up the mournful head, and dry thine eyes. See 
Cuba Libre.—( Red and Blue.) 

Lift up the years, lift up the years. See Victory of 
Perry, The.—Cary. 

Lift your glad voices in triumph on high. See Resur¬ 
rection of Christ.—Ware. 

Light and Shadow! Shadow and Light! See Shadow 
of the Cross,The.—Arnold. 

Light as a flake of foam upon the wind. See 
Pelican Island, The (Sea Life).—Montgomery. 

Light flows our war of mocking words, and yet. See 
Buried Life, The.—Arnold. 

Light is presented to us in ever-varying conditions. 
See Light.—Anon. 

Light of dim mornings; shield from heat and cold. See 
To Duty.—Higginson. 

Light of our fathers’ eyes, and in our own. See To 
Louis Kossuth.—Anon. 

Light traverses space at the rate of twelve million miles 
a minute. See Immensity of Creation, The.— 
Mitchell. 

Light words they were, and lightly, falsely said. See 
Protest, A.—Clough. 


744 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


List 


Lighter than dandelion down. See Silkweed.—-Sav¬ 
age. 

Lightly He blows, and at His Breath they fall. See 
Falling Leaves, The.—Roberts. 

Lightly the birds sang in the thorn. See Song of Yes¬ 
teryear, A.—Smith. 

Lights out! And a prow turned toward the South. 
See Race of the “Oregon. ” The.—Meehan. 

Light-winged Smoke! Icarian bird. See Walden 
(Smoke).—Thoreau. 

Lijah, he wuz de blackes’ nigger an’ de hardes’ ter git 
converted on de Marrowbone Plantation. See 
’Lijah’s Call to Preach.—Seawell. 

Like a blind spinner in the sun. See Spinning.— 
Jackson. 

Like a cathedral tower, the stately pine. See Tree 
Assembly, The.—Denton. 

Like a cradle, rocking, rocking. See Love of God, The. 
—Holm. 

Like a [or Like as the] damask rose you see. See Man’s 
Mortality.—W as tell. 

Like a furnace of fire blazed the Midsummer sun. See 
At Gettysburg.—Anon. 

Like a gale that sighs along. See Pleasures of Memory. 
—Moore. 

Like a great burst of singing came the day. See 
Morning in the Bay of Naples —Todhunter. 

Like a huge Python, winding round and round. See 
Our Casuarina Tree.—Dutt. 

Like a jewel golden-rimmed. See Autumn Day, An.— 
Sangster. 

Like a lackey, from the rise to set. See King 
Henry V. (Labor).—Shakespeare. 

Like a light in the skies he has now passed below the 
dews and damps of the horizon. See Edwin 
Booth.—Godwin. 

Like a loose island on the wide expanse. See To a 
Deaf and Dumb Little Girl.—Coleridge. 

Like a meteor, large and bright. See Easter.—Tabb. 

Like a musician that with flying finger. See Master- 
chord, The.—-Roscoe. 

Like a poet hidden. See To a Sky-lark.—Shelley. 

Like a shower, breeze-suspended. See Birch-tree, 
The—E. A. H. 

Like .Etna’s dread volcano, see the ample forge. See 
Anchorsmiths, The.—Dibdin. 

Like an awful alligator. See In Nevada.—Leland. 

Like apple-blossom, white and red. See To Daphne. 
—Besant. 

I.ike as a ship, that through the Ocean wide. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “Like as a 
shiD,” etc.).—Spenser. 

Like as the armed Knighte. See Fight of Faith, The. 
—Askewe. 

Like as the culver, on the bar^d bough. See Amo¬ 
retti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “Like as the 
culver,’’ etc.).—Spenser. 

Like as the [or Take a] damask rose you see. See 
Man’s Mortality.—Wastell. 

Like as the lark that, soaring higher and higher. See 
“Like as the Lark.”—Parsons. 

Like as the rising morning shows a grateful lighten¬ 
ing. See Sixe Idillia (Helen’s Epithalamion).— 
Dyer. 

Like as the waves make toward the pebbled shore. 

^ 9 See Sonnets. LX.—Shakespeare. 

Like birds that wing. See Francesco’s Angel.—Alt. 

Like burnt out torches by a sick man’s bed. See 
Grave of Shelley, The.—Wilder. 

Like crowned athlete that in a race hath run. See 
Landor.—Japp. 

Like Crusoe, walking by the lonely strand. See same. 
—Aldrich. 

Like Crusoe with the bootless gold we stand. See 
Experience.—Wharton. 

Like Dian, her trim ankles seen. See My Lady of the 
Links.—-Anon. 

Like Dian’s kiss, unasked, unsought. See Endymion 
(How Love Comes).—Longfellow. 

Like drifts of tardy snow. See May.—Deland. 

Like drooping, dying stars, our dearly loved ones go 
away from our sight. See Gone out Forever.— 
Anon. . 

I.ike fallen logs the sleeping bandits lay. See Man- 
quita, the Bandit’s Daughter.—Cummins. 

Like fragments of an uncompleted world. See Sierras, 
The.—Miller. 

Like gallant courtiers, the forest trees. See October.— 
Withrow. < 

Like Israel’s seer I come from out the earth. See 
Ghost Flower, The.—Rand. 

Like listless lullabies of sail-swept seas. See With a 
Copy of Keats.—Knowles. 


Like marble, nude, against the purple sky. See Diver, 
The.—Herbin. 

Like merry Momus, while the gods were quaffing. See 
Eulogy on Laughing.—Sewall. 

Like mists that round a mountain gray. See Acadie.— 
Lockhart. 

Like most singers, he kept them waiting a bit. See 
It is Never too Late to Mend (Lark, The).— 
Reade. 

Like Noah’s weary dove. See Soul’s Home, The.— 
Muhlenberg. 

Like other tyrants, death delights to smite. See 
Death.—Anon. 

Like patient saint of olden time. See My Mother’s 
Hymn.—Anon. 

Like pearls that lie hid 'neath the ocean’s broad breast. 
See Our Sweet Unexpressed.—Fox. 

Like raven’s wings her locks of jet. See Her Brother’s 
Cigarette.—Anon. 

Like small curled feathers, white and soft. See 
“While Shepherds Watched their Flocks by 
Night. ”—Deland. 

Like solest swan, that swims in silent deep. See St. 
Peter’s Complaint.—Southwell. 

Like some great pearl from out the Orient. See Night- 
wind.—Lloyd. 

Like some huge bird that sinks to rest. See Sunset.— 
Bashford. 

Like some vision olden. See Shepherd Boy, The.— 
Landon. 

Like souls that balance joy and pain. See Sir Launce- 
lot and Queen Guinevere.—Tennyson. 

Like spectral hounds across the sky. See Minot’s 
Ledge.—O’Brien. 

Like the glad birds of springtime. See Arbor Day 
Invocation.—Thomas. 

Like the Idalian queen. See Madrigal: “Like,” etc.— 
Drummond. 

Like the violet, which alone. See Castara (Descrip¬ 
tion of Castara, The).—Habington. 

Like thee I once have stemm’d the sea of life. See 
Epitaph, An.-—Beattie. 

Like to a coin, passing from hand to hand. See 
Like to a Coin.—Bates. 

Like to Diana in her summer weed. See Menaphon 
(Samela).—G reene. 

Like to hear how I was crippled? I’m loath to bring 
the scene to mind. See Danger Signal, The.— 
M’Beath. 

Like to the clear in highest sphere. See Rosalynde; 
or, Euphues’ Golden Legacy (Rosaiine).—Lodge. 

Like to the falling of a star. See On the Life o’f Man.— 
King. 

Like to the leaf that falls. See Epicedium.—Traubel. 

Like to the thundering tone of unspoken speeches. 
See Like to the Thundering Tone.—Corbet. 

Like trains of cars on tracks of plush. See Bee, The.— 
Dickinson. 

Like twittering birds that flutter to the nest. See 
Twilight.—Blackburn. 

Like unto ships far off at sea. See Building of the 
Ship, The.—Longfellow. 

Like verses? Why, of course, though not in books. 
See To Peggy.—Loring. 

Like white feathers blown about the rocks! See Kitti- 
wakes, The.—Thaxt.er. 

Lila, dearest, as I entered. See Economical Boomer¬ 
ang, An.—Neall. 

Lilac of Persia! tell us some fine tale. See Lilac, The. 
—Sigourney. 

Lily hells; lily bells! swinging and ringing. See Field 
Lilies.—Anon. 

I.ily gave a party. See Lily’s Ball.— (Fun and Earnest.) 

Lily on liquid roses floating. See Champagne RosA— 
Kenyon. 

Limned upon a sauare of satin, tinted with artistic 
care. See St. Valentine’s and St. Patrick’s Day.— 
Banks. 

Lines that ripple, notes that dance. See Tildy in the 
Choir.—Knowles. 

Linger not long. Home is not home without thee. 
See Wife to her Husband, The.—Anon. 

Lingering Latimer lived up a tree. See Lingering 
Latimer. 

Linked to a clod, harassed, and sad. See Circum¬ 
stance.—Aldrich. 

Lips, lips, open. See Sleeping Child, A.—Clough. 

List! the clamor of the bells. See Two Bells.—San- 
born. , . 

List! the piece is about to begin. See Opera Music for 
the Piano.—Anon 

List to a tale well worth the ear. See Why Truth Goes 
Naked.—Anon. 


745 




List 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


List to my tale—as true a tale as any bard can sing. 
See Legend of Kingsale, The.—Anon. 

List to that bird! His song —what poet pens it. See 
Mocking-bird, The.—Hayes. 

Listed into the cause of sin. See True Use of Music, 
The.—Wesley. 

Listen a moment, I pray you; what was that sound that 
I heard? See Bluebird, The.—Rexford. 

Listen, darling, and tell me. See Sea-shell, The.— 
MacDonald. 

Listen! I will tell a legend of a land beyond the sea. 
See Finding of the Cross, The.-—Brown. 

I.isten! in the April rain. See Brother Robin.—Ander¬ 
son. 

Listen, lordings, unto me, a tale I will you tell. See 
Christmas Carol.—Anon. 

Listen, my boy, and you shall know. See How We 
Killed the Rooster.—Anon. 

Listen, my boy; I’ve a word for you. See Bird’s Song, 
The.—Anon. 

Listen, my children, and you shall hear. See Paul 
Revere’s Ride.—Longfellow. 

Listen, now, O listen. See “Lost.”—Denton. 

Listen! the grand old forests. See Arbor Day Poem.— 
Knapp. 

Listen! thou moody, melancholy guest. See His 
Guiding Star.—Moore. 

Listen to me, now, my dear little lad. See Never 

* play truant.—-Anon. 

listen to the tawny thief. See Bacchus.—Sherman. 

Listen to the water-mill. See Water-mill, The.— 
Doudney. 

Listen when I call de figgers! Watch de music as you 
go! See Dancing in the Flat Creek Quarters.— 
Macon. 

Listen, young heroes! your country is calling! See 
Never or Now.—Holmes. 

Listening in the twilight, very long ago. See Lost 
Memory, A.—Peck. 

Listening, yearning. See Waiting.—Anon. 

List’ning uxorious, whilst a woman’s prate. See 
Charles the First.—Churchill. 

Literature has been a most powerful agent in feeding 
the warlike propensity. See Literature Per¬ 
verted.—Anon. 

Lithe and listen, gentlemen. See Heir of Linne, The.— 
Anon. 

Lithe and long as the serpent train. See Grape-vine 
Swing, The.—Simms. 

Lithe and lysten, gentylmen. See Lytell Geste of 
Robyn Hode. A.—Anon. 

Little acts of kindness. See same. —Anon. 

Little Ah Sid was a Christian kid. See Little Ah Sid. 
—Anon. 

Little All-Aloney’s feet. See Little All-Alonev.—Field. 

Little and black, shining and round. See Seed, The.— 
Anon. 

Little ants in leafy wood. See Little Brothers of the 
Ground.—M arkham. 

Little bare feet, sunburned and brown. See Little 
Bare Feet.—Lincoln. 

Little barefooted Anna was trudging along. See God 
Made them for Me.—Hale. 

Little Bess, with laughing eyes. See “What’s the Les¬ 
son for To-day?”—Anon. 

“Little bird! little bird! come to me! See Little 
Maiden and the Little Bird, The.—Child. 

Little bird, little bird, tell me true. See Little Mary 
and her Birdie.—Anon. 

Little bird, with bosom red. See To a Redbreast.—- 
Langhorne. 

Little birds sit on the telegraph wires. See Sparrows. 
—Whitney. 

“Little Blue Ribbons!” We call her that. See Lit¬ 
tle Blue Ribbons.—Dobson. 

Little book, surnamed of white. See In the Album of 
Lucy Barton.—Lamb. 

Little Boy Blue, so [or as] the story goes. See True 
Story of Little Boy Blue, The.—Perry. 

Little boy Love drew his bow at a chance. See Blind 
Archer, The.—Doyle. 

Little brother, darling boy. See Little Brother.— 
Anon. 

Little brother in a cot. See Little Brother, The.— 
Rands. 

Little brown baby wif spa’klin’ eyes. See Little 
Brown Baby.—Dunbar. 

Little brown brother, oh! little brown brother. See 
Baby Seed Song.—Nesbit. 

Little Brown Bushy-tail lived up a tree. See Little 
Brown Bushy-tail.—Baldwin. 

"Little by little,” an acorn said. See Little by Lit¬ 
tle.—Anon. 


Little by little, sure and slow. See Little by Little.— 
Anon. 

“Little by little,” the tempter said. See Little by 
Little.—Anon. 

Little by little the time goes by. See same. —Anon. 

“Little by little,” the torrent said. See Little by 
Little.—Anon. 

Little child, I call thee fair. See Little Child, I call 
Thee.—Hyde. 

Little children can you tell. See Christmas Carol, A.— 
Anon. 

Little children, love each other. See Little Children. 
—Anon. 

Little children, never give. See Kindness to Animals 
—Anon. 

“Little children should be seen and not heard.” See 
Children Should be Seen and not Heard.—Good- 
fellow. 

Little children, you must seek. See Take Care.— 
Cary. 

Litt le Daisy is so lazy. See Lazy Daisy.—Anon. 

Little dimples so sweet and soft. See Daisy’s Dim¬ 
ples.—Sterry. 

Little Dombey had never risen from his little bed. See 
Dombey and Son (Death of Paul Dombey).— 
Dickens. 

Little Dot in gray coat and white mittens. See Run¬ 
away Ride, A.—Millard. 

Little Drop of dew. See Dewdrop, A.—Sherman. 

Little drops of claret. See Little Drops.—Anon. 

Little dun cow to the apple-tree tied. See Milking.— 
Thaxter. 

Little Elbe sits alone. See Romance of the Swan’s 
Nest, The.—Browning. 

Little Evelyn’s cheeks bloomed in delicate pink. See 
Be Lovely Within.—Thaxter. 

Little Fairy snowflakes. See Santa Claus.—Anon. 

Little feet on the street. See Une Robe Angelique.—■ 
Merritt. 

Little flower, fading, dying. See Her Flower.—Soper. 

Little folks, little folks, where are you straying. See 
Going to School.—Anon. 

Little foot, whose lightest pat. See Parson’s Daughter 
The.—Lincoln. 

Little fresh violets. See Country Children.—Anon. 

Little gardens may have room. See Little Gardens. 
—Poulsson. 

Little gifts are precious. See Little Gifts.—Anon. 

Little girl across the way. See Little Boy’s Valentine, 
A.—Anon. 

Little girl 'at lives next door. See Good Name more 
Desirable than Riches, A.—Coley. 

Little girl, did you see a rabbit cross this road just now? 
See Hunter and the Child, The.—Anon. 

“Little girl, where do you go to school?” See School, 
The.—Ludlow. 

Little Golden-hair was watching, in the window broad 
and high. See Little Golden-hair.—Carleton. 

Little Gretchen, little Gretcben, wanders up and down 
the street. See Little Match-girl, The (New Year’s 
Eve) .—Andersen. 

Little Gustava sits in the sun. See Little Gustava.— 
Thaxter. 

“Little Haly! Little Haly! cheeps the robin in the 
tree.” See On the Death of Little Mahala Ash¬ 
craft.—Riley. 

Little hands will soon be strong. See Give the little 
boys a chance.—Anon. 

Little harp, at thy cry. See Brechva’s Harp Song.— 
Rhys. 

Little I ask; my wants are few. See Contentment.— 
Holmes. 

Little, I ween, did Mary guess. See His Mother’s 
Joy.—Chadwick. 

Little ills may vex your heart. See Little Things.— 
Anon. 

Little Indian, Sioux or Crow. See Foreign Children.— 
Stevenson. 

Little inmate, full of mirth. See Cricket, The.—Cow- 
per. 

Little Jack Horner. See same. —Anon. 

Little Jack Horner sat in a corner. See What is fame? 
—Stedman. 

Little Jacqueline sat ’neath an old oaken tree. See 
Jacqueline.—Vickers. 

Little Jennie, fretful, sitting in a tree. See Fretting 
Jennie.—Anon. 

Little Jesus,wast Thou shy. See “Ex Ore Infantium.” 
—Thompson. 

Little John Bottlejohn lived on a hill. See John Bot¬ 
tle john.—Richards. 

Little Julia, since that we. See To the Child Julia.— 
Riley. 


746 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Lo 


“Little lad, slow wandering across the sands so yellow.” 
See Rescued.—Thaxter. 

Little ladies, white and green. See Snowdrops.— 
Alma-T adema. 

Little lamb, who made thee? See Lamb, The.— 
Blake. 

Little Leaf had never seen the world before. See 
Little Leaf’s Sacrifice.—Penney. 

Little Lettice is dead, they say. See Lettice.—Field. 

Little maid Margaret and I. See Sir William Pep- 
perrell’s Well.—Thaxter. 

Little maiden, are you lonely. See Waiting.— 
Anon. 

Little masters, hat in hand. Sec Clover.—Tabb. 

Little Miltiades Peterkin Paul. See Miltiades Peter- 
kin Paul.—Brownjohn. 

Little Miss Blue Eyes opens the door. See Little Miss 
Blue Eyes.—Weir. 

Little Miss Brag has much to say. See Little Miss 
Brag.—Field. 

Little Miss Limberkin. See Miss Limberkin’s Mouse. 
—Dodge. 

Ljttle Miss Ray. See same. —Kavanaugh. 

Little Miss Selfish and Lend-a-hand. See Selfish and 
Lend-a-hand.—Butts. 

Little Mistress Sans-Merci. See same. —Field. 

Little Mollie and Faith, in the arbor at play. See 
Faith and Works.—Montgomery. 

Little moments, how they fly. See Little Moments.— 
Anon. 

Little moments make an hour. See Value of Little 
Things, The.—Anon. 

Little motto bearers, we come before you. See Little 
Motto Bearers, The.—Morton. 

“Little mouse, little mouse, don’t go in, I say.” See 
Wilful Little Mouse, The.—Anon. 

Little Muriel lay, day after day. See Little Muriel.— 
—Craik. 

Little Nell was dead. No sleep so beautiful. See 
Old Curiosity Shop, The.—Dickens. 

Little New Year, little New Year. See New Year, The. 
—Butts. 

Little one, come to my knee. See Night with a Wolf, 
A.—-Taylor. 

Little Orphant Annie’s come to our house to stay. See 
Little Orphant Annie.—Riley. 

Little Patsy and Tom. See Patsy’s and Tom’s Thanks¬ 
giving.—Richards. 

Little peach blossom has awakened at last. See Little 
Peach Blossom.—Anon. 

“Little pearl of crystal clear.” See Dew-drop, The.— 
Amiel. 

Little Penelope Socrates. See Christmas Chimes in 
Boston, Philadelphia, New York and Chicago.— 
Anon. 

Little Penelope took up her needle. See Little Pene¬ 
lope’s Sewing.—Pratt. 

Little Pet, when with dew the grass is wet. See Pro¬ 
posal, A.— (Puck.) 

Little Philip w-ent to bed early. See Palace of the Days, 
The.—Raymond. 

Little Prince Carl he stole away. See What the Lord 
High Chamberlain Said.—Cloud. 

Little rills make wider streamlets. See I.earn a Little 
Every Day.—Anon. 

Little Robbie Rockaway has left his playful fun. See 
Robbie Rockaway.—Collester. 

Little Robert Robin sat on a leafless vine. See St. 
Valentine’s Day among the Birds.—Anon. 

Little robin in the tree, sing a song to me. See Sing a 
Song to Me.—Anon. 

Little Roger up the long slope rushing. See Triumph, 
A.—Thaxter. 

Little Sam Sugartooth said to himself. See Where 
the Mince Pie Grows.—Anon. 

Little sands make up the shore. See Little Things, 
The.—Anon. 

Little Sarah she stood by her grandmother’s bed. See 
Johnny-cake, The.—Anon. 

Little Sigrid, fresh and rosy, was a bonny maid, indeed. 
See Little Sigrid.—Boyesen. 

Little snatch of ancient song. See On an Old Song.— 
Lecky. 

Little streams are light and shadow. See Little 
Streams.—Howitt. 

Little thinks, in the field, yon red-cloaked clown. See 
Each and All.—Emerson. 

Little think’st thou, poor flower. See Blossom, The. 
Donne. 

Little Tommy and Peter and Archy and Bob. See 
Story of an Apple, A.—Dyer. 

Little Tommy and Trotty were playing. See We’d 
All Like to Stop There.—Anon. 


Little was king Laurin, but from many a precious gem. 
See Fairies.—Warton. 

Little white Lily sat by a stone. See Little White Lily. 
—Macdonald. 

Little white snowdrop, I pray you arise. See Blue¬ 
bird. The (Bluebird’s Song, The).—Miller. 

Little white snowdrop, just waking up. See Waiting 
to Grow.—French. 

Little Willie hung his sister. See Little Willie.-—Anon. 

Little Willie, in the best of sashes. See Tender-heart¬ 
edness.—Streamer. 

Little yellow sunbeam. See Little Sunbeam.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

Live and love, doing both nobly. See Drama of Exile, 
A ( ‘Live and love”).—Browning. 

Live for thyself! let each successive morn. See Whom 
Wilt thou Live for?—Anon. 

Live in these conquering leaves; live all the same. See 
Flaming Heart, The.—Crashaw. 

Live, live with me, and thou shalt see. See To Phillis, 
to Love and Live with him.—Herrick. 

“Live while you live!” the epicure would say. See 
Epigram on his Family Arms.—Doddridge. 

Live with me still, and all the measures. See Sun’s 
Darling, The (Invitation, The).—Dekker. 

Live thy life, young and old^ See Oak, The.—Tennyson. 

Lives of great men all remind us. we can make our 
fame eternal. See Life.—L. F. M. 

Lives of great men all remind us, we can make our lives 
sublime. See Psalm of Life, A (Life).—Longfellow. 

Living here comfortably at home, do we ever think of 
the perils of the poor sailor? See Plea for the 
Sailor, A.—Anon. 

Lizzie and I are one, and one we mean to be. See 
Lizzie and I Are One. 

Lizzie! Lizzie!—Did you call me, Madge? See Playing 
School. 

Lo! above the mournful chanting. See Kol Nidra.— 
Leiser. 

Lo! all thy glory gone! See Nekros.—Tabb. 

Lo, as some bard on isles of the .Egean. See Saint 
Paul.—Myers. 

Lo, by Nilus’ languid waters. See Cleopatra’s Dream. 
—Owens. 

Lo! Collin, here the place whose pleasaunt syte. See 
Shepheardes Calender, The (June).—Spenser. 

Lo! Death has reared himself a throne. See City in the 
Sea, The.—Poe. 

Lo gray hawks ride the rising blast. See Sioux Chief’s 
Daughter, The.—Anon. 

Lo! He comes, with clouds descending! See same. — 
Olivers. 

Lo! here a little volume, but great book. See On a 
Prayer-book Sent to Mrs. M. R.—Crashaw. 

Lo, I am weary of all. See Cry, A.—Clarke. 

Lo, mother! it is here—thou hast thy will. See Daugh¬ 
ter of Herodias, The.—Anon. 

Lo, my shepherd’s hand divine! See Psalm Twenty- 
three.—Merrick. 

Lo, now four others act upon the stage. See Four Ages 
of Man, The.—Bradstreet. 

Lo! on his far-resounding path. See Entrance of Co¬ 
lumbus into Barcelona.—Mellen. 

“Lo,” quoth he, “cast up thine eye.” See House of 
Fame, The (Milky Way, The).—Chaucer. 

Lo! the chief builders, masons, engineers. <See Herod. 
—Phillips. 

Lo! the day of rest declineth. See Evening Hymn.— 
Robbins. 

Lo, the fading, dying year. See Story of Thanksgiving, 
The.—Hadley. 

Lo! the king’s son hath taken prisoner. See Hostage, 
The.—-Booth. 

I,o, the lilies of the field. See Providence.—-Heber. 

Lo! the long, slender spears, how they quiver and flash. 
See Song of the Rain, The.—( Spectator. The.) 

Lo! the winter is past, the rain is over and gone. See 
Spring is Coming.— Bible. 

Lo! there he lies, our Patriarch Poet, dead! See Bry¬ 
ant Dead.—Hayne. 

Lo! through a shadowy valley. See Funeral of Time, 
The.—Hirst. 

Lo! ’tis a gala night. See Conqueror Worm, The.— 
Poe. 

Lo, to the cruel hand of fate. See Tender Husband, 
The.—Pindar. 

Lo! Venice, gay with color, lights and song. See 
Canada not Last.—Lighthall. 

Lo, what a golden day it is! See Thorgerda.—Payne. 

Lo what it is to love. See Rondel of Love, A.—Scott. 

Lo, when the Lord made north and south. See Angel 
in the House, The (Rose of the World, The).— 
Patmore. 


747 




Lo 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lo! [or Loe!] where she comes along with portly pace. 
See Epithalamion, The (Bride, The).—Spenser. 

Lo! where the four mimosas blend their shade. See 
For an Epitaph at Fiesole.—Landor. 

Lo! where the rosy-bosom’d hours. See Ode: On the 
Spring.—Gray. 

Loaded with gallant soldiers. See Ready .—Carey. 

“Lobelia, my love, another long and delightful evening 
is before us.” See McSwats Swear Off, The.— 
Anon. 

Lochiel! Lochiel! beware of the day. See Lochiel’s 
W arning.—Campbell. 

“Lock the dairy door!” Oh, hark, the cock is crowing 
proudly! See Lost.—Thaxter. 

Loe where he shineth yonder. See Lines on the Prince 
of Wales.—Frederick. 

Loe! [or Lo f| where she comes along with portly pace. 
See Epithalamion, The (Bride, The).—Spenser. 

Lofty against our Western dawn uprises Achilles. See 
Song, Youth and Sorrow.—Lawton. 

Logan! He hasn’t become accustomed to answering. 
See Pro Tem.—Griffith. 

Logicians have but ill defined. See Logicians Refuted, 
The.—Goldsmith. 

Logicians used to clap a proposition. See Logicians. 
—Butler. 

London, thou art of townes A per se. See In Honour 
of the City of London.—Dunbar. 

Lone lake, half lost amidst encircling hills. See Arts 
Lough.—Greene. 

Lone upon a mountain, the pine trees wailing round 
him. See Awakening of Endymion, The.—Mac- 
lean. 

Lonely and cold and fierce I keep my way. See Gulf 
Stream.—W oolsey. 

Lonely once, my love away. See On a Clock.—Sher¬ 
man. 

Long after Washington’s judicious and intrepid con¬ 
duct in respect to the French and English. See 
Franklin’s Toast.—Anon. 

Long ages ago when the world was young. See Legend 
of the Heather.—Anon. 

Long ago a poet dreaming. See Rain upon the Roof. 
—Gage. 

Long ago and long ago. See Maiden Song.—Rossetti. 

Long ago, in changeful autumn. See Oak Tree, The. 
—Anon. 

Long ago in our childhood’s years. See Childish 
Fancy, A.—Anon. 

Long ago, on a bright spring day. See Old and Young. 
—Bourdillon. 

Long ago, so says my story, dwelt in some fair-distant 
land. See Legend of St. Christopher, The.— 
Fletcher. 

Long ago there dwelt in India two great Rajas whp 
were brothers. See Maha-Bharata, Story of the. 
—Rabb. 

Long ago there was a certain marquis of Saluzzo. See 
Patient Griselda.—Boccaccio. 

Long ago, when first the human heart-strings. See 
Modern Cain, The.—Edwards. 

Long ago, when violets were blooming. See Leaves, 
The.—Anon. 

Long and hard were the lessons studied, many years 
ago. See Arithmetic in Life.—Cooper. 

Long as the fair old City stands the glory of the North. 
See Moray and his Thirty.—Anon. 

Long as thine art shall love true love. See Centennial 
Meditation of Columbia (Dear Land of all my 
Love) .—Lanier. 

Long back in the far off ages, when low lay the might 
of Rome. See St. George and the Dragon.— 
Latimer. 

’Long ’bout June, when everything’s. See “I go 
Fishin’.”—Powell. 

Long, but not loud, the droning wheel went on. See 
Closing Scene, The.—Read. 

Long centuries ago, in a famed city. See Work that 
is Best, The.—Perry. 

Long centuries ago, three Persian boys. See Story 
of Omar, The.—Sherman. 

Long did I toil, and knew no earthly rest. See Long 
Did I Toil.—Lyte. 

Long, Dodington, in debt, I long have sought. See 
To the Right Hon. Mr. Dodington.—Young. 

Long expected one-and-twenty. See One and Twenty. 
—-Johnson. 

Long fed on boundless hopes, O race of man. See 
Better Part, The.—Arnold. 

Long has the summer sunlight shone. See Incognita 
of Raphael.—Butler. 

Long hours we toiled up through the solemn wood. See 
Mount Rainier.—Bashford. 


Long I followed happy guides. See Forerunners.— 
Emerson. 

Long is the way, O Lord! See Long is the Way.— 
Moulton. 

Long lines of cliff breaking have left a chasm. See 
Enoch Arden.—Tennyson. 

“Long live our King, good Harry of Navarre!” See 
Henry IV.—Saltus. 

Long live who knows humanity. See To Whom Honor 
Be Due.—Anon. 

Long, long ago, a beauteous maid. See Chestnut.— 
Sabine. 

Long, long ago, from Amsterdam, a vessel sailed away. 
See Flying Dutchman, The.—O’Reilly. 

“Long, long ago, in a far-away province of the Eastern 
world.” See Story of the Priest Philemon, The. 
—Corelli. 

Long, long ago, it seems, this summer morn. See June. 
—Lampman. 

Long, long ago—millions of years ago—no one lived 
on the earth but the spirits of Fire. See Spirits 
of Fire, The.—Sherman. 

Long long ago, when this world was in its tender in¬ 
fancy. See Pandora.—Hawthorne. 

Long, long before the Babe could speak. See Child, 
The (At Bethlehem).—Tabb. 

Long, long had we heard in India of his name. See 
Emerson.—Mozoomdar. 

Long night succeeds thy little day. See Margaret Love 
Peacock.—Peacock. 

Long on Golconda’s shore a diamond lay. See Value 
of Education, The.—( Boston Transcript.) 

Long pipes and short ones, straight and curved. See 
My Meerschaums.—Lummis. 

Long pored St. Austin o’er the sacred page. See 
Passage in the Life of St. Augustine, A.—Anon. 

Long the tyrant of our coast. See Capture of the 
Guerriere by the Constitution, The.—Freneau. 

Long they pine in weary woe—the nobles of our land. 
See Kathaleen Ny-Houlahan.—Mangan. 

Long time a child, and still a child, when years. See 
Sonnet: “Long time a child,” etc.—Coleridge. 

Long time ago, when this old world was young. See 
Sunbeam’s Mission, The.—Jones. 

Long weeks you have stood in the yielding sand. See 
Border Land, The.—Moffat. 

Long while I sought to what I might compare. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Her Eyes).—Spenser. 

Long years a sculptor wrought. See True Immor¬ 
tality, The.—Miller. 

Long years ago, a little band. See Pacific Shore, The. 
—Anon. 

Long years ago (how youth to-day). See School 
Episode, A.—Shaw. 

Long years ago I wandered here. See Wanderer, The. 
—Anon. 

Long years ago, in distant lands, when kings were 
strong in might. See Legend of the True, A.— 
Cloud. 

Long years ago, in times so remote, See Why no 
Scotchmen go to Heaven.—Anon. 

Long years ago there lived a King. See King Bell.— 
Sherman. 

Long years ago there lived in monkish cell. See Elixir 
of Life, The.—M’Gill. 

Long years agone a southern artisan. See Story of 
Some Bells, The.—Anon. 

Long years had elapsed since 1 gazed on the scene. See 
Childhood’s Scenes.—Anon. 

Long years he dwelt behind the latticed wall. See 
Postmaster, The.—Burdette. 

Long years their cabin stood. See Eviction.—Lin¬ 
ton. 

Long years within its sepulchre. See Last Letter, The. 
Sherman. 

Look above thee—never eye. See same. —Bowring. 

Look abroad over this country. See Teacher the Hope 
of America, The.—Eells. 

Look all around thee! How the spring advances! See 
Spring.—Tieek. 

Look always on the sunny side. See Look on the Sunny 
Side.—Anon. 

Look, a,s two little brothers, who address’d. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals (Country Danger, A).— 
Browne. 

Look at all history—consult her pages, ancient or 
modern. See Sacredness of the Union.—Clay. 

Look at her collar!—Will, I’ve got your tag. See Col¬ 
orado.—Olcott. 

Look at it carefully, Jim, old man! See High-backed 
Chair, The.—Sanborn. 

Look at it, Senators of the South. See Our Country’s 
Greatness.—Hoar. 


748 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Lord 


Look at me with thy large brown eyes. See Philip, 
My King.—Craik. 

“Look at the clock!” quoth Winifred Pryce. See Look 
at the Clock.—Barham. 

Look at these two questions for a moment. See Tradi¬ 
tions of Massachusetts, The.—Lodge. 

Look back on Time with kindly eyes. See Time.— 
Dickinson. 

Look forth, O Land, thy mountain-tops. See My 
Country.—W oodberry. 

Look, girls, here comes aunt Kitty home from her day’s 
shopping. See Aunt Kitty’s Shopping.—Rook. 

“Look, Grandmamma,” the soubrette cried. See 
Soubrette’s Revenge, The.—Hewitt. 

Look here, Johnson! See Bones on Polygamy.—-Anon. 

Look here, Jonsing! See Bones on Adam and Eve.— 
Anon. 

“Look here,” said the teacher of the Possum Ridge 
school. See Educating to a Purpose.—Montfort. 

Look here upon this picture, and on this. See Hamlet. 
■—Shakespeare. 

Look here upon thy brother Geoffrey’s face. Spe King 
J ohn.—Shakespeare. 

Look! here’s a pretty pigeon house! See Pigeon House, 
The.—( Blades and Flowers.) 

Look how it sparkles, see it greet. See Diamond, A.— 
Loveman. 

Look, how the flower which ling’ringly doth fade. See 
No Trust in Time.—Drummond. 

Look how the pale Queen of the silent night. See Son¬ 
net to the Moon, A.—Best. 

Look in his face, look in his eyes. See Why Mother 
is Proud.—Klingle. 

Look in my face: my name is Might-have-been. See 
Superscription, A.—Rossetti. 

Look, love, what envious streaks. See Romeo and 
Juliet (Morning).—Shakespeare. 

Look Nature through, ’tis revolution all. See Night 
Thoughts (Nature).—Young. 

Look not thou on beauty’s charming. See Lucy Ash¬ 
ton’s Song.—Scott. 

Look not upon the wine when it is red within the cup! 
See Look not upon the Wine.—Willis. 

Look now abroad—another race has filled. See 
America.—Bryant. 

Look now, directed by yon candle’s blaze. See Curios¬ 
ity (Fiction).—Sprague. 

Look off, dear love, across the sallow sands. See Even¬ 
ing Song.—Lanier. 

Look on him!—through his dungeon grate. See Pris¬ 
oner for Debt, The.—Whittier. 

Look on this cast, and know the hand. See Hand of 
Lincoln, The.—Stedman. 

Look our ransomed shores around. See New Hail 
Columbia.—Anon. 

Look out, bright eyes, and bless the air! See Look 
Out, Bright Eyes.—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Look, out of line one tall corn-captain stands. See 
Corn.—Lanier. 

Look out upon the stars, my love. See Serenade, A.— 
Pinkney. 

Look right into my face with your honest brown eyes. 
See My Dog and T.—Marsh. 

Look round our world; behold the chain of love. See 
Essay on Man. An (Nature’s Chain).—Pope. 

"Look!” she said ; "I see my father.” See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The.—Longfellow. 

Look through mine eyes with thine, true wife. See 
Miller’s Daughter, The.—Tennyson. 

Look to your history, that part of it which the world 
knows by heart. See American Sailor, The.— 
Stockton. 

Look up. and let thy nature strike on mine. See At 
Life’s Best.—Tennyson. 

Look up, my young American! See American Boy, 
The—Gilman. 

“Look up, not down!” Do you see how the tree-top. 
See Four Mottoes.—Palmer. 

“Look up,” she said, and all the heavens blazed. See 
Starlight.—Chadwick. 

Look you, now. See Eagles.—Ingelow. 

Looking around on all assembled here. See Epilogue. 
—“Bob o’Link.” 

Looking around the globe to-day, we see an unbroken 
line. See Sacred Influences.—Cook. 

Looking back a hundred years. See Then and Now.— 
Fish. 

Looking calmly yet humbly for the close of my mortal 
career. See same. —Greely. 

Looking into the near future, I see the aisles of the 
school-room. See Schools and Teachers.—Anon. 

Looking over the world on a broad scale. See same. — 
Stowe. 


Looking upward every day. See same. —Anon. 

Loose the sail, rest the oar, float away down. See 
Hypatia (Boat-song, A).—Kingsley. 

Loosed from the bands of the frost, the verdant ground. 
See Elegy—Written in Spring (Spring Pointing to 
God).—Bruce. 

Lord Audley, whiles our son is in the chase. See King 
Edward the Third.—Anon. 

Lord Beichan was a noble lord. See Lord Beichan 
and Susie Pye.—Anon. 

Lord Caesar, when you sternly wrote. See After Con¬ 
struing.—Benson. 

Lord! call thy pallid angel. See Corn-law Hymn.— 
Elliott. 

Lord Cardigan’s eye glanced us over. See Graphic 
Story of the Light Brigade, A.—Anon. 

Lord, come away. See Christ’s Coming to Jerusalem 
in Triumph.—Taylor. 

Lord Erskine, at women presuming to rail. See Wife, 
A.—Sheridan. 

Lord, for the erring thought. See Thanksgiving, A.— 
Howells. 

Lord, for tomorrow and its needs . See Just for To¬ 
day.—Wilberforce. 

Lord, how long, how long wilt Thou. See Psalm Thir¬ 
teen.—Davison. 

Lord, I have laid my heart upon Thy altar. See Smoke 
of Sacrifice, The.—MacDonald. 

Lord, in this dust thy sovereign voice. See Thanks¬ 
giving, A.—Newman. 

Lord, in thy name thy servants plead. See Seed Time 
Hymn.—Keble. 

Lord indeed! He is no more a lord than I am a baron, 
Bob. See British Lion and American Hoosier, 
The.—Anon. 

Lord Ingram and Child Vyet. See Child Vyet.— 
Anon. 

Lord, it belongs not to my care. See Resignation.— 
Baxter. 

Lord John stood in his stable-door. See Burd Ellen.— 
Anon. 

Lord, let me know mine end, and of my days. See 
End of King David, The.—Anon. 

Lord, let the angels praise Thy name. See Misery.— 
Herbert. 

Lord Lovel he stood at his castle-gate. See Lord 
Lovel.—Anon. 

Lord, make me quick to see. See same. —Offord. 

Lord Malcolm of Ruthven mounts his steed. See 
Lady Maud’s Oath.—Henry. 

Lord Mortimer, and Cousin Glendower. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I.—Shakespeare. 

Lord, my weak thought in vain would climb to search. 
See Unfaltering Trust.—Palmer. 

Lord of all being! throned afar. See Sunday Hymn 
A.—Holmes. 

Lord of the vale! astounding Flood. See Composed 
at Cora Linn.—Anon. 

Lord of the winds! I feel thee nigh. See Hurricane, 
The.—Bryant. 

Lord, oft I come unto Thy door. See Lord, Oft I 
• Come.—Reese. 

Lord Ronald has come to his halls in Clyde. See 
Lord Ronald’s Bride.—Lytton. 

Lord, send us forth among thy fields to work! See 
Work.—Lowe. 

Lord, teach a little child to pray. See Lord, Teach 
a Little Child.—Anon. 

Lord, teach us the lesson of loving. See Loving and 
Giving.—Anon. 

Lord Thomas and Fair Annet. See same. —Anon. 

Lord Thomas he was a bolde forester. See Lord 
Thomas and Fair Ellinor.—Anon. 

Lord Thomasine was a bold forester, a chaser of our 
king’s deer. See Lord Thomasine and Fair Ellin- 
nor.—Anon. 

Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all genera¬ 
tions. See Psalms of David, XC.— Bible. 

Lord, Thou hast been our dwelling place in genera¬ 
tions past. See Ninetieth Psalm.—Anon. 

Lord, Thou hast been Thy people’s rest. See Time 
Past, Time Passing, Time to Come.—Montgom¬ 
ery. 

Lord, thou hast given me a cell. See Thanksgiving to 
God for His House, A.—Herrick. 

Lord, what a change within us. See same. —Anon. 

Lord, when I quit this earthly stage. See Hymn: 
“Lord, when I,” etc.—Watts. 

Lord! when these [or those] glorious lights I see. See 
same. —Wither. 

Lord! who art merciful as well as just. See Prayer, 
A.—Southey. 


749 




Lord 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Lord, who ordainest for mankind. See Mother’s 
Hymn, The.—Bryant. 

Lord, with glowing heart I’d praise Thee. See same. — 
Key. 

Lord, with what care hast thou begirt us round! See 
Sin.—Herbert. 

Lords, knights, and ’squires, the numerous band. See 
To a Child of Quality Five Years Old.—Prior. 

Lost! lost! lost! See Advertisement of a Lost Day.— 
Sigourney. 

Lot One, the well known village, with bridge, and 
church, and green. See Selling Off at the Opera 
House.— {Punch.) 

Lot Skinner was the meanest man. See Lot Skinner’s 
Elegy.—Fields. 

Lots of folks that would really like to do right. See 
Cowboy’s Sermon, The.—Curtis. 

Lottie Smith lived in the country. See What Lottie 
Saw.—Brown. 

Loud and Clear. See City Bells.—Barham. 

Loud and wild the storm is howling. See Old Letters.— 
—Benners, Jr. 

Loud as a scandal on the ears of town. See Orator, 
The.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Loud chilling winds may hoarsely blow. See Tomor¬ 
row.—Fox. 

Loud he sang the psalm of David! See Slave Singing 
at Midnight, The.—Longfellow. 

Loud is the summer’s busy song. See July.—Clare. 

Loud is the Vale! the voice is up. See Lines Written 
at Grasmere.—Wordsworth. 

Loud mockers in the roaring street. See Second 
Crucifixion, The.—LeGallienne. 

Loud roared the dreadful thunder. See Bay of Biscay, 
The.—Cherry. 

Loud roared the tempest. See Requital, The.— 
Procter. 

Loud the organ tones came swelling all the crowded 
aisles along. See How the Organ was Paid for.— 
Bradley. 

Loud wind! strong wind! sweeping o’er the mountains. 
See North Wind.—Craik. 

Louhi, hostess of the Northland. See Kalevala, The 
(Ilmarinen’s Wedding Feast). 

Louis XIV. created the formula of absolute personal 
power. See Government by Epigrams.—Maupas¬ 
sant. 

‘‘Louisa, my love,” Mrs. Manners began. See How to 
Look when Speaking.—-Turner. 

Love and believe: for works will follow spontaneous. 
See Children of the Lord’s Supper, The (‘‘Love 
and believe.” etc.).—Longfellow. 

Love and death is all of poets’ singing. See Love and 
Death.—King. 

Love bade me welcome; yet my soul drew back. See 
Love.—Herbert. 

Love, banished heaven, in earth was held in scorn 
See Love Banished Heaven.—-Drayton. 

Love! blessed Love! if we could hang our walls. See 
Bridal Hour, The (“Love! blessed,” etc.).—Cary. 

Love built a crimson house. See Crimson House, The 
—Carman. 

Love built a stately house, where Fortune came. See 
World, The.—Herbert. 

Love, by that loosened chair. See Song: “Love by 
that,” etc —Carman. 

Love came a beggar to her gate. See Love and Pity. 
—Anon. 

Love came to me through the gloaming. See Late 
Love.—Martyn. 

Love came to me when I was young. See Love Came 
to Me.—Williams. 

Love comes back to his vacant dwelling. See Wan¬ 
derer, The.—Dobson. 

Love divine, all love excelling. See same. —Toplady. 

Love framed with Mirth a gay fantastic round. See 
Ode to the Passions.—Collins. 

Love from that summer morn. See Alice of Monmouth. 
—Stedman. 

Love gilds thy laurel,—love was found thy blame. See 
Tasso.—Betts. 

Love, give me one of thy dear hands to hold. See 
Rest.—Anon. 

Love guides the roses of thy lips. See Love’s Wanton¬ 
ness.—Lodge. 

Love has a language that mocks at rules. See Love’s 
Language.—Gifford. 

Love held a harp between his hands, and, lo! See 
Love’s Music.-—Marston. 

Love? I will tell thee what it is to love! See Love.— 
Swain. 

Love! if Thy destined sacrifice am I. See Acquies¬ 
cence of Pure Love, The.—Cowper. 


Love in fantastic triumph sate. See Song.—Rehn. 

Love in her sunny eyes does basking play. See Love 
in her Sunny Eyes.—Cowley. 

Love in my bosom, like a bee. See Rosalvnde; or, 
Euphues’ Golden Legacy (Rosalynd’s Madrigal).— 
Lodge. 

Love in my heart: oh, heart of me, heart of me! See 
Song: “Love in my heart,” etc.—Sharp. 

Love in thy youth, fair maid, be wise. See Love in 
Thy Youth.—Porter. 

Love is a hunter boy. See same. —Moore. 

Love is a King and every heart a throne. See Love.— 
Westley. 

Love is a little golden fish. See Golden Fish, The.— 
Arnold. 

Love is a sickness full of woes. See Hymen’s Triumph 
(Love).—Daniel. 

Love is a tree that demands. See Love is a Tree.— 
De Gruchy. 

Love is and was my Lord and King. See In Memoriam. 

-—Tennyson. 

Love is a woman with soulful eyes. See same. —Anon. 

Love is better than house and lands. See Best.— 
Cooke. 

Love is come with a song and a smile. See Harold 
(“Love is come,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

Love is enough. Let us not seek for gold. See same .— 
Wheeler. 

Love is enough- though the World be a-waning. See 
Love is Enough.—Morris. 

Love is eternal, so the strong souls say. See Love 
is Eternal.—Perry. 

Love is eternal. Whatever dies, that lives, I feel and 
know. See Philip van Artevelde (Artevelde’s 
Vision).—Taylor. 

Love is forever—-think no more. See Love is Forever. 
—Bradford. 

Love is like a lamb, and love is like a lion. See What 
Love is Like.—Middleton. 

Love is like arbutus blooming. See Hidden.—Liv¬ 
ingston. 

Love is not a feeling to pass away. See Village 
Coquettes (Lucy’s Song).—Dickens. 

Love is not made of kisses, or of sighs. See Love. 
— {Chambers’ Journal.) 

Love is the blossom where there blows. See Pan¬ 
glory’s Wooing Song.—Fletcher. 

Love is the minstrel; for in God’s own sight. See 
Love the Musician.—Redi. 

Love is the root of creation. See Children of the Lord’s 
Supper, The.—Longfellow. 

Love is too great a happiness. See Love.—Butler. 

Love knock’d one night, at a gentleman’s heart. See 
Love under the Ledger.—Clarke. 

Love knoweth every form of air. See Annoyer, The.— 
Willis. 

“Love laughs at locksmiths,” laughs ho! ho! See 
Love Laughs.— {Trinity Tablet.) 

Love, like religion, has its prayer. See Love’s Prayer. 
—Knowles. 

Love making all things else his foes. See Against 
Love.—Denham. 

Love me and leave me; what love bids retrieve me? 
See John Jones.—Swinburne. 

Love me for what I am, Love. Not for sake. See Of 
Such as I Have.—Woolsey. 

Love me if I live! See same. —Procter. 

Love me little, love me long. See same. —Anon. 

Love me not, love, for that I first loved thee. See 
same. —Gilder. 

Love much. JEarth has enough of bitter in it. See 
Love Much.—Wilcox. 

Love must be a fearsome thing. See Wood-song.— 
Peabody. 

Love not, love not! ye hapless sons of clay! See Love 
Not.-—Norton. 

Love not me for comely grace. See same. —Anon. 

Love, Peace, and Repose! the tenderest trio. See My 
Early Home.—Clark. 

Love, Reason, Hate, did once bespeak. See Dance, 
The.—Suckling. 

Love rises in the morning. See Love’s Day.—For- 
bush. 

Love sayeth: Sing of me! See Love and Song.—Lock¬ 
hart. 

Love scorns degrees; the low he lifteth high. See 
Love Scorns Degrees.—Hayne. 

Love still hath [or has] something of the sea. See 
same. —Sedley. 

Love strong as death—nay, stronger. See same. — 
Anon. 

Love swore by Styx, while all the depths did tremble. 
See Aurora (Sonnets from “Aurora”).—Alexander. 


750 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Maggie 


Love tapped upon my lattice. See same. —Hawes. 

Love that asketh love again. See same. —Craik. 

Love that liveth and reigneth in my thought. See 
Sonnet: Complaint of a Lover Rebuked.—Surrey. 

Love thee, dearest? love thee? See same. —Moore. 

Love thee?—so well, so tenderly.— See Love Thee?— 
Moore. 

Love, thou art absolute, sole Lord. See Hymn to the 
Name and Honour of the Admirable Saint Teresa, 
A.—Crashaw. 

Love, thou art not alone for gentle dells. See Place of 
Love, The.—Brackett. 

Love thou thy land, with love far-brought. See Love 
Thou Thy Land.—Tennyson. 

Love thy country, wish it well. See Shorten Sail.— 
Dodington. 

Love thy mother, little one! See To a Child Embracing 
his Mother.—Hood. 

Love thyself last; cherish thou hearts that hate thee. 
See King Henry VIII. (“Love thyself last,” etc.). 
—Shakespeare. 

Love took me softly by the hand. See same. —Cas- 
sels. 

Love took my life and thrill’d it. See Song.—Morris. 

Love we the warmth and light of tropic lands. See 
Tropics, The.—Sladen. 

Love, when all the years are silent, vanished quite and 
laid to rest. See Hereafter.—Spofford. 

Love, who hast granted many prayers and set. See 
Let me Forget.— (Trinity Archive.) 

Love wing’d my hopes and taught me how to fly. See 
Icarus.—Jones. 

Love, work thy wonted miracle to-day. See Love’s 
Miracle.—Kimball. 

“Love you?” said I, then I sighed, and then I gazed 
upon her sweetly. See Ferdinando and Elvira. 
—Gilbert. 

“Love your neighbor as yourself.” See Thoughts on 
the Commandments.—Baker. 

Lovely kind, and kindly loving. See same. —Breton. 

Lovely, lasting peace of mind! See Hymn to Con¬ 
tentment, A.—Parnell. 

Lovely Mabel, were you dreaming? See As Toll.— 
Barker. 

Lovely maid, with rapture swelling. See Lines by a 
Fond Lover.—Anon. 

Lovely May, lovely May. See Lovely May.—Anon. 

Lover of children! Fellow heir with those. See In 
Memory of Lewis Carroll;— (London Punch.) 

Lover of Man, if not of God, the Sea. See Shelley.— 
Martin. 

Lovers and madmen have such seething brains. See 
Midsummer Night’s Dream.—Shakespeare. 

Lovers by a dim sea strand. See Two Epochs.— 
Hayne. 

Love’s arms were wreathed about the neck of Hope. 
See Lover’s Tale, The ("Love’s arms,” etc.).— 
Tennyson. 

Love’s light illumines the pathway ye trod. See On 
Heights of Power.—Willard. 

Love’s light is strange to you? Ah, me! See same. — 
Cary. 

Love’s priestess, mad with pain and joy of song. See 
Sappho.—Swinburne. 

Love’s sun, like that of day, may set, and set. See 
Love’s Renewal.—Sangster. 

Loving friends, the gift of one. See To Flush, My 
Dog.—Browning. 

Loving in truth, and fain in verse my love to show. 
See Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet I.).—Sidney. 

Loving Jesus, meek and mild. See Hymn of a Child.— 
Wesley. 

Loving words will cost but little. See Kind Words. 

- Anon. 

Low anchored cloud. See Mist.—Thoreau. 

I.ow bums the summer afternoon. See Nightfall; A 
Picture.—Street. 

Low hang the clouds like a threatening pall. See 
Rescued.—Anon. _ 

Low hung the moon, the wind was still. See Return 
of the Dead, The.—Procter. 

Low in the troubled west. See Cradle Song.—Anon. 

Low lie your heads this day. See Sons of Turann, 
The.—Todhunter. 

Low, like another’s, lies the laurelled head. See 
Lachrym® Musarum.—Watson. 

Low on a sick bed she helplessly lay. See Her Vision. 
—Anon. 

Low on the utmost boundary of the sight. See Moon¬ 
light in Summer.—Bloomfield. 

Low spake the knight to the peasant maid [or girl|. 
See Rose and the Gauntlet, The.—Wilson for 
Sterling]. 


Lowell is a remarkable man and poet. See Lowell, 
Extract Concerning —Bartlett. 

Lowliness is young ambition’s ladder. See Julius 
Csesar.—Shakespeare. 

Lucasta, frown, and let me die! See To Lucasta: Her 
Reserved Looks.-—Lovelace. 

Luck, my dear Norton, still makes shifts. See Ode of 
Thanks for Certain Cigars, An.—Lowell. 

Lucretius—nobler than his mood. See Vision of Poets, 
A.—Browning. 

Lucy is a golden girl. See Golden Girl, A.—Procter. 

Luke Major was a soldier bold. See Luke Major.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Lullaby, lullaby, night winds are blowing. See Lulla¬ 
by, Rest.—Manchester. 

Lullaby! O lullaby! Baby, hush that little cry! See 
Cradle Song.—Bennett. 

“Lullaby, oh, lullaby!” Thus I heard a father cry. 
See "Lullaby, oh, lullaby!”—Hood. 

Lute! breathe thy lowest in my lady’s ear. See Sere¬ 
nade.—Arnold. 

Luther rebelled against the Pope in behalf of the minis¬ 
try. See same. —Murray. 

Luther, they say, was unwise; like a half-taught Ger¬ 
man he could not. See Amours de Voyage (Claude 
to Eustace).—Clough. 

Lycius, the Cretan prince, of race divine. See Wine 
Cup, The.—Anon. 

Lydia’s soul is a golden sun. See Night and Day.— 
Gibbs. 

Lying out on the campus. See Last Spring, The.— 
R. D. 

Lying supine on the soft, matted grasses. See Dis¬ 
turbed Reverie, A.—Anon. 

Lyke as a ship, that through the Ocean wyde. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: "Lyke as a 
ship,” etc.).—Spenser. 

Lysander talks extremely well. See Pedant, The.— 
Prior. 


M 


M. Butterwick, of Roxborough, had a fit of sleepless¬ 
ness one night lately. See How to Go to Sleep.— 
Adeler. 

Ma pauvre petite, my little sweet. See My Cigarette. 
—Hall. 

Ma she’s home—an’ I’m way here. See Christmas 
Memory, A.—Riley. 

Ma’amselle Bas Bleu, erudite virgin. See Bas Bleu. 
— (Punch.) 

Mabel, little Mabel, with face against the pane. See 
Face against the Pane, The.—Aldrich. 

Mabel went a-fishing. See Mabel’s Way.—Davis. 

Macgregor, Macgregor, remember our foemen. See 
Queen’s Wake. The (Fate of Macgregor, The).— 
Hogg. 

M’Kinnon’s tall mast salutes the day. See Queen’s 
Wake, The (Abbot M’Kinnon, The).—Hogg. 

“Maclaine! you’ve [or you] scourged me like a hound.” 
See Maclaine’s Child; a Legend of Lochbuy-Mull. 
—Mackay. 

Macphairson Clonglocketty Angus McClan. See Ellen 
McJones Aberdeen.—Gilbert. 

Mad? Oh, no, not mad! See Ere the Sun Went 
Down.—Weatherly. 

“Madam,” said a man on a horse-car to the mother of a 
crying baby. See She Wouldn’t Listen.—Anon. 

Madam, there is a lady in your hall. See De Mon¬ 
fort (Jane de Monfort).—Baillie. 

Madam; When for our sakes your hero you resigned. 
See Verses to Her Royal Highness the Duchess.— 
Dry den. 

Madam, whither walks your majesty so fast? See 
Edward II.—Marlowe. 

“Madam, we miss the train at B.” See In Answer.—- 
Thorpe. 

Madam, will you please inform me of the number of 
inhabitants in this house? See Taking the Census. 


Madame Arachne sat in the sun at her door. See 
Madame Arachne.—Thaxter. 

Mademoiselle, it is the King’s desire that I compliment 
you. See Imaginary Conversations (Bossuet and 
the Duchess of Fontanges).—Landor. 

Magdalen at Michael’s gate. See Blackbird’s Song, 
The.—Kingsley. „ , . 

Magdalena’s robes are trailing. See Magdalena.— 
Anon. , . 

Maggie and Tom came in from the garden with their 
father. See Mill on the Floss, The (Maggie Cuts 
her Hair).—Eliot. 


751 






Maggie 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Maggie, my lass, I’m gaun awa’.” See Tit for Tat.— 
Lyle. 

Maggie Tulliver was kneeling on the floor in the little 
house by the riverside. See Mill on the Floss, 
The (Flood on the Floss, The).—Eliot. 

Magnificent thy fate. See Cumberland, The.—Anon. 

“Mahmud is coming,” the Brahmins cried. See 
Mahmud and the Idol.—Chandler. 

Maid of all work, as a part. See Calf’s Heart.— 
(Punch.) 

Maid of Athens, ere we part. See same. —Byron. 

Maid of my love, sweet Genevieve. See Genevieve.— 
Coleridge. 

"Maiden Agnes,” said the Year in going out. See 
Agnes and the Years.—Burr. 

Maiden, thy cheeks with tears are wet. See April.— 
Loveman. 

“Maiden, why that look of sadness.” See On My 
Finding Angelina Stop Suddenly in a Rapid After- 
Supper Polka.— (Punch.) 

Maiden! with the meek, brown eyes. See Maidenhood. 
—Longfellow. 

Maidens, kilt your skirts and go. See Celia’s Home¬ 
coming.—Darmesteter. 

Maids to bed and cover coal. See Bellman’s Song, 
The.—Anon. 

Maine, from her farthest border, gives the first exulting 
shout. See Fourth of July.—Bethune. 

Majestic flower! How purely beautiful. See Magnolia- 
Grandiflora.—Cranch. 

Majestic Monarch! whom the other gods. See To the 
Lord of Potsdam.—Seaman. 

Major Andre’s story is the one overmastering romance 
of the Revolution. See Captain Hale and Major 
Andre.—Depew. 

Major Schottguhn had been prowling around. See 
Automatic Cradle, The.—Anon. 

Make a joyful noise unto the Lord. See Psalms of 
David, C.— Bible. 

Make a picture, dreamy smoke. See Farmer’s Pipe, 
The.—Cooper. 

Make haste away, and let one be. See To His Book.— 
Herrick. 

“Make me a head-board, mister, smooth and painted, 
you see.” See Little Phil.—Rich. 

“Make me a statue,” said the King. See Statue in 
Clay, The.—Anon. 

Make me no vows of constancy, dear friend. See Until 
Death.—Anon. 

Make me over, mother April. See Spring Song.— 
Carman. 

Make new friends, but keep the old. See Friends Old 
and New.—Anon. 

Make room in heaven! A gifted child of song. See 
Make Room in Heaven.—Durant. 

Make the best of yourself. Watch, and plant, and sow. 
See Self-culture.—Anon. 

Make thyself know, Sibyl, or let despair. See Leon¬ 
ardo’s “Monna Lisa.”—Dowden. 

“Make way for liberty,” he cried. See Patriol’s Pass¬ 
word, The.—Montgomery. 

Make way, my lords; for Death now once again. See 
Charles II. of Spain to Approaching Death.—Lee 
Hamilton. 

Make yourselves nests of pleasant thoughts! See 
Nests.—Ruskin. 

Making dolly’s dresses. See Small Dressmaking. 

_— (Youth’s Companion.) 

Making toast at the fireside. See Misfortunes Never 
Come Singly.—Streamer. 

Malbrouck, the prince of commanders. See Mal- 
brouck.—Mahony. 

Mama, do send for doctor-man. See Dolly’s Broken 
Arm.—Anon. 

“Mamma, dear mamma,” cried, in haste, Mary Anne. 
See Wonders, The.—Turner. 

Mamma, don’t you think I would make a good states¬ 
man? See Young Statesman, The.—Beno. 

Mamma gave us a single peach. See Peach, The.— 
Lamb. 

Mamma had ordered Ann, the maid. See Sash, The.— 
Turner. 

Mamma, I saved a life to-day, such a tiny, tiny life! 
See Boy’s Mercy, A.—Hart. 

Mamma, I will play grocery store. See Little Grocer 
that Failed, The.—Anon. 

Mamma, I’s been washin’. See Ready for a Kiss. 
—(Christian Weekly , The.) 

“Mamma, is there too many of we?” See “Too Many 
of We.”—Anon. 

Mamma makes ’e nices’ cookies. See Little Cookie- 
hookie.—Finer. 


“Mamma, my dear, if a robber should come.” See 
Brave Little Boy, A.—Anon. 

Mamma, please introduce me to your assistant. See 
Lessons in Cookery.—Anon. 

“Mamma,” said little Isabel. See Dew, The.—Anon. 

Mamma said: "Little one, go and see.” See Grand¬ 
ma’s Angel.—Dayre. 

Mamma says we can play in your room this afternoon. 
See Keeping House.—May. 

Mamma she came down all smiles and delight. See 
Baby’s First Tooth.—Anon. 

Mamma, sit down! I want to ask. See Small Boy’s 
Questions, A.—Nason. 

“Mamma, what is Christmas?” “How can I say?” 
See Christ’s Birthday.—Anon. 

“Mamma, what kind of flowers has that lady got in her 
bonnet?” See Tired of Church.—Anon. 

“Mamma, what makes your face so sad?” See Wind’s 
Voices, The.—Warner. 

Mamma, why do men stagger through the street? See 
Why Do They Ever Begin?—Anon. 

Mammals, as regards brain, are divided into four 
classes. See My Sister’s Husband.—Brewster. 

Mamma’s got a headache pain. See International 
Band, The.—Harper. 

Mammon, the least erected spirit that fell. See 
Paradise Lost.—Milton. 

“Mammy” is old and wrinkled and black. See Love 
is Blind.—Anon. 

Mammy’s li’l pickaninny coon. See Li’l Pickaninny 
Coon.—P. H. 

Mamsel Marie she say me no. See Parrots, The.— 
Meyers. 

Man and the pocket have advanced toward the millen¬ 
nium side by side. See Pockets.—Hawthorne. 

Man, Blake was fine; ev’ry word that he spoke. See 
After the Lecture on Spion Kop.—Clarke. 

Man born of woman is of few days and no teeth. See 
Sermon of Life, A.—Burdette. 

Man counts his age by years; the oak, by centuries. 
See Age of Trees.—Anon. 

Man has interests other than those that are material. 
See same. — (Christian Intelligencer.) 

Man hath a weary pilgrimage. See Remembrance.— 
Southey. 

Man is a most frail being, incapable of directing his 
steps. See Mr. The. Cibber.—Goldsmith. 

Man is but a reed, the weakest in nature. See Thoughts 
(“Man is but,” etc.).—Pascal. 

Man is dear to man; the poorest poor. See same. — 
Wordsworth. 

Man is divided into several parts. See Boy’s Composi¬ 
tion on Physiology, A.—Anon. 

Man is his own star, and the soul that can. See 
Upon an Honest Man’s fortune (Our Acts Our 
Angels Are).—Fletcher. 

Man is lazy and selfish. See Dollar, The.—Logan. 

Man is no mushroom growth of yesterday.ti See Social 
Heredity.—Ingram. 

Man is permitted much. See Elements, The.—New¬ 
man. 

Man is the only animal that laughs. See Gamut of 
Merry Momus, The.—Anon. 

Man knows not love—such love as woman feels. See 
Woman’s Love.—Anon. 

“Man may be happy, if he will.” See Man May Be 
Happy.—Wolcott. 

Man puts things out of the way whenever the necessity 
of so doing presents itself. See How Man Puts 
Things Away.—Anon. 

“Man,” says Sir Thomas Browne, “is a noble animal!” 
See Life.—Wallace. 

Man that is born of woman finds a charm. See Ex 
Libris.—Munby. 

Man, thee behoveth oft to have this in mind. See 
Inscription on a Wall in St. Edmund’s Church in 
Lombard Street, London.—Anon. 

“Man wants but little here below.” See Wants of 
Man, The.—Adams. 

Manchester Examiner, Manchester Guardian. See 
Railway Station in the North of England, A.— 
Anderson. 

Mandy, I feel jess terry-bul dis mownin’. See Uncle 
Peter at the “Big House.”—Neall. 

Manhood will come, old age will come, and the dying 
bed will come. See same. —Chalmers. 

Manifest destiny iz the science ov going tew bust, or 
enny other place. See Josh Billings on “Manifest 
Destiny.”—Shaw. 

Mankind a re toiling for a deathless name. See Pyramids 
Not All Egyptian.—Barnes. 


752 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Massachusetts 


Mankind, says a Chinese manuscript. .See Disserta¬ 
tion upon Roast Pig, A.—Lamb. 

Mannix the coiner and Neville the Piper. See Mannix 
the Coiner.—Hogan. 

Man’s home is everywhere. On Ocean’s Flood. See 
Man—-Woman.—Sigourney. 

Man’s life is fleet, his years are few. See Festival of 
the Year, The.—Linn. 

Man’s love is of man’s life a thing apart. See Don 
Juan (Man’s Love).—Byron. 

Man’s use and function—and let him who will not grant 
me this follow me no further. See Modern Painters 
(Utility of the Beautiful, The).—Ruskin. 

Many a beaming brow I’ve known. See L’Inconnue. 
—Praed. 

Many a green isle needs must be. See Lines Written 
among the Euganean Hills.—Shelley. 

Many a hearth upon our dark globe sighs after many a 
vanish’d face. See Vastness.—Tennyson. 

Many a long, long year ago. See Nantucket Skipper. 
The.—Fields. 

Many a morning the trees’ slim fingers. See White 
Morning. A.—Leach. 

Many a time amid the roar of battle has sounded the 
"Marseillaise.” See John Brown’s Body.— 
Sherman. 

Many a year hath [or has] passed away. See Lay of the 
Madman.—Anon. 

Many a year is in its grave. See Passage. The. — 
Uhland. 

Many and urgent are the questions that the working 
men and women. See Legitimate “Strike,” A.— 
Willard. 

Many are the sayings of the wise. See Samson 
Agonistes.—Milton. 

Many believed; but more the truth of God. See 
Perversion of the Bible.—Pollock. 

Many deeds of daring glory figure on the roll of fame. 
See Voiceless Chimes, The.—Fox. 

Many love music but for music’s sake. See On Music. 
—Landor. 

Many loved truth and lavished life’s best oil. See Ode 
Recited at the Harvard Commemoration, July 21, 
1865.—Lowell. 

Many, many years ago. See Long Ago.—Anon. 

Many men think a railroad journey is rendered really 
pleasant. See Interesting Traveling Companion, 
An.—Lewis. 

Many pleasures of youth have been buoyantly sung. 
See Envoy.—Riley. 

Many the lands that the true-hearted honor. See 
Mine Own Countree.—Bates. 

Many things in life there are. See Passing Under¬ 
standing.—Hosmer. 

Many things thou hast given me, dear heart. See 
same. —Rollins. 

Many years ago I contracted an intimacy with a 
Mr. William Legrand. See Gold-bug, The.— 
Poe. 

Many years ago (I think it was in the autumn of 1858). 
See My First Reading.—Irving. 

Many years ago in a rude garret, in the loneliest 
suburbs of London. See Benedict Arnold (Patriot 
and Traitor, The).—-Lippard. 

Many years ago there lived in Georgia an eccentric 
bachelor planter. See Mass’ Crawford, Isam, and 
the Deer.—Edwards. 

Many years long gone, I took my stand by Freedom. 
See Freedom.—Baker. 

Many young persons are growing up with the idea. 
See Doing Nothing.—Anon. 

Maple, from the leafy wild-wood. See Song of the 
Maple.—Streeter. 

March! and all the winds cry, March! See March.— 
Sherman. 

March, if you’ll hush a moment. See Complaining 
March.—Swett. 

March, march, Eskdale and Liddesdale. See Border 
Ballad.—Scott. 

March, march, Ettrick and Teviotdale! See Border 
Ballad.-—Scott. 

Marching down to Armageddon. See Armageddon.— 
Arnold. 

Margaret sat at her work alone. See Margaret’s Guest. 
—Lay. 

Margarita first possess’d [or possest]. See Chronicle, 
The. A Baljad.—Cowley. 

Margery Brown in her arm-chair sits. See Browns, 
The.—English. _ . . 

Maria Ann recently determined to go to a picnic. See 
Jenkins Goes to a Picnic.—Anon. 

Maria come to me one day last week and says, says she. 
See Smith’s Bargain Day.—Meyers. 


Maria had an Aunt at Leeds. See Maria’s Purse.— 
Turner. 

Maria intended a letter to write. See How to Write a 
Letter.—Turner. 

Marian Drury, Marian Drury. See Marian Drury.—• 
Carman. 

Marie Hamilton’s to the kirk gane. See Queen’s Marie, 
The.—Anon. 

Marier! Here’s a letter come. See Orthography.— 
Whipple. 

Marina’s gone and now sit I. See Britannia’s Pastorals 
(Song of Celadyne, The).—Browne. 

Marit at the brookside sitting, rosy, dimpled, merry¬ 
eyed. See Marit and I.—Anon. 

Marjorie hides in the deep, sweet grass. See Marjorie. 
—Thaxter. 

Marjorie, oh, how I loved you once. See ' ‘Ever so 
Long Ago.”—Sanborn. 

Marjorie, with the waiting face. See His Messenger.— 
Anon. 

Marjory May came tripping from town. See Marjory 
May.—Anon. 

Mark me how still I ami—The sound of feet. See 
Statue of Lorenzo De Medici, The.—Nesmith. 

Mark that swift arrow, how it cuts the air. See Time 
not to be Recalled.—Anon. 

Mark where the pressing wind shoots javelin-like. 
See Modern Love (Love’s Grave).—Meredith. 

Marley was dead, to begin with. See Christmas Carol, 
A (Scrooge and Marley).—Dickens. 

Marm, there’s a man cornin' right up to the house. See 
Taking the Census.—Anon. 

Marry, I lent my gossip my mare, to fetch hame coals. 
See Carman’s Account of a Lawsuit, A.—Lyndsay. 

Martha, when will John be home? See Daddy Dumm. 
—Coale. 

Martial, the things that do attain. See Means to 
Attain Happy Life, The.—Surrey. 

Martin said to his man. See Martin to His Man.— 
Anon. 

Marvel of marvels, if I myself shall behold. See 
Marvel of Marvels.—Rossetti. 

Mary Ann was a hired girl. See Sorrowful Tale of a 
Servant Girl.—Quill. 

Mary Ann was alone with her baby in arms. See 
Mary Ann’s Child.—Barnes. 

Mary Ann went to the front door, last evening, to see if 
the paper had come. See On the Ice.—Anon. 

Mary Brown’s mother is a very nice woman. See 
Getting Rid of her Daughter’s Beau.—Anon. 

Mary Ellen, me daughter, is as foine a gerrel as yez 
could foind. See Mary Ellen Attends a School of 
Elocution.—Hopkins. 

Mary entered the room where Burr was seated. See 
Interview between Aaron Burr and Mary Scudder 
—Stowe. 

Mary had a little dog. See Brought Back by the 
Butcher’s Boy.—( Washington News.) 

Mary had a little lamb.— See Mary’s Lamb.—Hale. 

Mary haf got a leetle lambs already. See Dot Lambs 
vot Mary haf Got.—Adams. 

Mary, I know it is nine o’clock. See Hasty Opinions.— 
Denison. 

Mary! I want a lyre with other strings. See To Mrs. 
Unwin.—Cowper. 

Mary, it seems useless for me to make any further 
effort. See Reclaimed; or, Sunshine Comes at 
Last.—McBride. 

Mary, I’ve just got home from the post-office, and I’ve 
got a letter. See Uncle John.—Anon. 

Mary Jane was a farmer’s daughter. See Mary Jane.— 
Anon. 

Mary, let’s kill the fatted calf, and celebrate this day. 
See No Mortgage on the Farm.—Yates. 

Mary possessed a diminutive sheep See Mary’s 
Diminutive Sheep.—Anon. 

Mary Richling, the heroine of the story, was the wife 
of John Richling. See Dr. Sevier (Mary’s Night 
Ride).—Cable. 

Mary, the mother, sits on the hill. See same. — 
Mitchell. 

Mary to her Saviour’s tomb. See Weeping Mary.— 
Newton. 

Mary took her singing-book. See Mary’s Singing- 
lesson .—Anon. 

Mary, what does prosody treat of? See Scandinavia.— 
Anon. 

“Ma’s up-stairs changing her dress,” said the freckled¬ 
faced little girl. See Freckled-faced Little Girl, 
The.—( Boston Globe.) 

Massachusetts welcomes this grand addition to the 
monuments. See Pilgrim Monument, The.— 
Brackett. 


753 







Massy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Massy saiks alive, Eb’s hum again!” says Cousin 
Sally. See Ebenezer on a Bust.—Anon. 

Master I have, and I am his man. See Master and Man. 
—Anon. 

"Master of human destinies am II” See Opportunity. 
—Ingalls. 

Master of the murmuring courts. See Love’s Noctum. 
—Rossetti. 

Master squirrel, blithe and gay. See Master Squirrel.— 
Anon. 

Master! to do great work for thee, my hand. See same. 
—Havergal. 

Master went a-hunting. See Master.—Doyle. 

Master, which is worth more, man or woman? See 
Bones His Own Grandfather.—Anon. 

Matches are made for many reasons. See Picture, 
The.—Anon. 

Matchless, melting eyes of brown. See Yours.—W. 

Mated to the Millennium—Time’s last heir. See 
Columbia.—Knowles. 

Maternal lady with the virgin grace. See Lines on 
Leonardo da Vinci’s The Virgin of the Rocks.— 
Lamb. 

Matilda, now go take thy bed. See Requiem, A.— 
Davenport. 

Matildy, jest you mind them hens. See Minding the 
Hens.—Loring. 

Matron! the children of whose love. See Living Lost, 
The.—Bryant. 

Matted with yellow grass the fields lie bare. See First 
Violet, The.—Williams. 

Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. See White Pater¬ 
noster, The.—Anon. 

Maud Muller on a mild March day. See Maud Muller’s 
Moving.—Anon. 

Maud Muller on a summer day. See Bicycle Girl, The. 
The.—Ellison. 

Maud Muller, on a summer’s day. See Maud Muller.— 
Whittier. * 

Maud Muller on von schummer day. See Maud Muller 
(A New Version).—Anon. 

Maud Muller von summer afternoon. See Maud Muller 
in Dutch.—Anon. 

“Maud, take my heart!” cried Algernon. See Her 
Answer.—C. H. 

Mavoumeen, swate isle. See St. Patrick’s Day.— 
King. 

“Mawnin’,” said Mistah Souf Win’. See Mis’ Rose. 
—R. R. K. 

Maxweltonfs] braes are bonnie. See Annie Laurie.— 
Douglas. 

May! Be thou never graced with birds that sing. 
See In Obitum M. S. X°. Maij, 1614.—Browne. 

May, blighted by keen frosts, passed on to June. See 
Bad Year, The.—Thomson. 

May bought golden shoes for her boy. See Golden 
Shoes.—Anon. 

May comes laughing, crowned with daffodils. See 
May.—Anon. 

May de Lord—He will be glad of me. See Bright 
Sparkles in de Churchyard.—Anon. 

May his pretty Duke-ship grow. See To the Duke of 
York.—Herrick. 

“May I kiss you, dear,” a youth once cried. See She 
Shook her Head.—Sawyer. 

“May I print a kiss on your lips,” I said. See Full 
Edition, A.—Lilienthal. 

Mayl tell your fortune, kind sir? See Vanessa.—A.non 

May in the woods and in my heart. See May and 
Love.—Brooke. 

May is a pious fraud of the almanac. See Under the 
Willows.—Lowell. 

May is here! I know there’s a blossom somewhere 
near. See May.-—Rexford. 

May is here, the world rejoices. See Polish May Song. 
—Anon. 

May it please the Court— Gentlemen of the Jury: See 
Pleading Extraordinary.—Anon. 

May it please your honors, this may be the last time. 
See Tribute to the Supreme Court.—Johnson. 

May it please your Honours: I was desired by one of 
the court to look into the books. See On the Writs 
of Assistance.—Otis. 

May nevermore a selfish wish of mine. See In Unison. 
—McNight. 

May, queen of blossoms. See Song to May,—Thurlow. 

May shall make the world anew. See May.—Sherman. 

May the Babylonish curse. See Farewell to Tobacco, 
A.—I.amb. 

May the glad dawn of Easter mom. See Easter 
Greeting.—Anon. 

May this glass suffocate me, but a fine girl. See Squire 
Thornhill’s Argument.—Anon. 


May time! May time! See Cherry Ripe.—Brown. 

May you never say of a brother dear. See To the 
Children.—Cary. 

May you wander as I wander. See Leah the Forsaken. 
—Daly. 

Maybe a month ago, was it not? news came here. See 
Ivan Ivanovitch.—Browning. 

Maybe [or maype] dot you don’t [or don’d] rememper. 
See Yawcob’s Dribulations.—Adams. 

Maybe this is fun, sitting in the sun. See Fishing.— 
Wilcox. 

Maype [or maybe] dot you don’d rememper. See 
Yawcob’s Tribulations.—Adams. 

May’s a word ’tis sweet to hear. See To June.— 
Hunt. 

Me an’ Bert and Minnie Belle. See Fool Youngens.— 
Riley. 

Me an’ Jones was down the mine. I’d never liked him 
much. See Me an’ Jones.—Meyers. 

Me and Billy’s in the woodshed; Ma said, “Run out 
• doors and play.” See Circle Day.—Lincoln. 

Me darlint, it’s axin’ they are. See Marry Me, Darlint, 
To-night.—Fink. 

Me hither from moonlight. See Written in a Nunnery 
Chapel.—Mangan. 

Me mither mend’t me auld breeks. See Robbie 
Tamson’s Smiddie.—Anon. 

Me so oft my fancy drew. See Choice, The.—Wither. 

Me thoghte thus, that hyt was May. See Boke of the 
Duchesse, The.—Chaucer. 

Me, whom no muse of heavenly birth inspires. See 
Description of his Muse.—Churchill. 

“Meanest boy in town,” they said. See Story of Dick, 
The.—Stanton. 

Meantime, the moist malignity to shun. See Art of 
Preserving Health, The (Building a Home).— 
Armstrong. 

Meantime, the Spanish cavalry had cleft its way 
through the city. See Fall of Antwerp, The.— 
Motley. 

Meantime we shall express our darker purpose. See 
King Lear.—Shakespeare. 

Meanwhile the bubbling stream shall court the shore. 
See Rapture, The.—Carew. 

Meanwhile the Son of God, who yet some days. See 
Paradise Regained.—Milton. 

Meanwhile the Tuscan army, right glorious to behold. 
See Horatius.—Macaulay. 

Measureless liar! Thou hast made my heart. See 
Coriolanus.—Shakespeare. 

Medina, the Admiral, finding his ships scattering fast. 
See Westward, Ho! (Sea Fight, The).—Kingsley. 

Meditate long, meditate humbly, on what it is to have 
a Creator. See same. —Faber. 

Meek creatures! The first mercy of the earth. See 
Modern Painters (Mosses—Earth’s Humblest Chil¬ 
dren).—Ruskin. 

Meek Francis lies here, friend: Without stop or stay. 
See On Bishop Atterbury.—Prior. 

Meerschaum, thing with amber tip. See Dreamer’s 
Pipe, The.—( New Orleans Times-Democrat.) 

Meester Verris: t see dot mosd efferpoty wrides some¬ 
thing. See “Sockery” Setting a Hen.—Anon. 

Meet me at breakfast alone. See Red Herrings. 
— {Punch.) 

“Meet me,” she said, "by the orchard wall.” See 
Left.—Chapman. 

Meeting our friend, Jean Mocquard, a day or two since. 
See Monsieur Mocquard between Two Fires.— 
Anon. 

Mein shveetheardt haf von brudder Hans, von wicked 
leedle poy. See Mein Katrine’s Brudder Hans.— 
Anon. 

Mein vriend! Of you vant id dot you vould heard. 
See Gosling’s Wife Snores.—Gosling. 

Melican man no wantee John Chinaman ally mo’. See 
John Chinaman’s protest.—Anon. 

Melinda Jane, and Kate and Nell. See Little School- 
ma’am, A.—-Anon. 

Melinda Miranda Bottletop was a young lady who had 
neither father nor mother. See Courtship, 
Marriage, Separation and Re-union.—Anon. 

Mellow the moonlight to shine is beginning. See 
Spinning-wheel Song, The.—Waller. 

Melpomene among her livid people. See Two Masks, 
The.—Meredith. 

Members of the graduating class: You have come to 
an important period in your own lives. See 
Address to a Graduating Class by a Teacher.— 
Anon. 

Memorial Day, or, as it is called in some sections, 
Decoration Day. See Memorial, or Decoration 
Day.—Anon. 


754 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Midget 


Memorial Day will hereafter gather around it. See 
Soldier Boy, The.—Long. 

Memorials are always evidences of the highest civiliza¬ 
tion. See Memory’s Message.—Anon. 

Memory cannot linger long. See So Wags the World.— 
Cortissoz. 

Memory, hither come. See Song: “Memory, hither 
come.”—Blake. 

Memory holds a sacred place for songs that mother 
sung. See Mother’s Songs.—Smith. 

Men and systems change; and in no century has change 
been more marked. See Reaction against the 
Classics, The.—Anon. 

Men and Women:—You must not expect me to preface 
the few remarks I have to make with a bow. See 
Professor Gunter on Marriage.—Kyle. 

Men begin to look at the signs of the weather. See 
Summer Rain.—Beecher. 

Men, Brethren, Fathers and Fellow-countrymen: The 
attentive gravity. See Boston Massacre, The.— 
Hancock. 

Men call you fair, and you do credit it. See Amoretti 
and Epithalamion (Sonnet: "Men call you fair,” 
etc.).—Spenser. 

Men don’t believe in a devil now, as their fathers used 
to do. See Devil, The.—Hough. 

Men, dying, make their wills, but wives. See Woman’s 
Will.—Saxe. 

Men give me credit for genius. See same. —Hamilton. 

Men grew sae cauld, maids sae unkind. See Blind 
Boy’s Pranks, The.—Thom. 

Men have done brave deeds. See George Nidiver.— 
E. H. 

Men have entered into a desire of learning and knowl¬ 
edge. See Worth of Knowledge.—Bacon. 

Men lie who tell us what no books can teach. See 
Fox.—Lytton. 

Men—not slaves! See Matumus’ Address to his 
Band.—Spencer. 

Men of action! Men of might! See Battle Song for 
Freedom, A.—Hamilton. 

Men of England, heirs of Glory. See same. —Shelley. 

Men of England! who inherit. See Men of England.— 
Campbell. 

Men of Gaul! what would you give for Freedom? See 
Catiline (Catiline to the Gallic Conspirators).— 
Croly. 

Men of God, come take your stand. See Men of God.— 
Hill. 

Men of Kent; England of England. See Queen 
Mary (Wyatt’s Harangue to the London Crowd). 
—Tennyson. 

Men of purpose, sound the tocsin. See Prohibition 
Bugle Call.—Meriwether. 

Men of the North and West. See same. —Stoddard. 

Men of the North, look up! See Men of the North.— 
Neal. 

Men of thought, be up and stirring Night and Day! 
See Clear the Way.—Mackay. 

Men questioned thus: “Where goes our life?” See 
Three Nazarites, The.—Murray. 

Men say, Columbia, we shall hear thy guns. See 
America.—Dobell. 

Men say the sullen instrument. See In the Twilight. 

. —Lowell. 

Men take the pure ideals of their souls. See Ideal is 
the Real, The.—Preston. 

Men try to drown the floating dead of their own souls 
in the wine-cup. See same. —Prentice. 

Men!—whose boast it is that ye \wr. we]. See 
Stanzas on Freedom (Freedom).-—Lowell. 

Men’s evil manners live in brass. See King Henry 
VIII. (Cardinal Wolsey).—Shakespeare. 

Merciful Heaven! Thou rather, with thy sharp and 
sulphurous bolt. See Measure for Measure (Mer¬ 
ciful Heaven).—Shakespeare. 

Mercy love us. See Comet, The.—Burdette. 

Merrily ring the Christmas Bells. See Christmas 
Acrostic.—Anon. 

Merrily swinging on brier and weed. See Robert of 
Lincoln.—Bryant. 

Merfy Christmas! fair maid, with the lashes brown. 
See Grown-up Land.—Anon. 

Merry it is in the good greenwood. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Alice Brand).—Scott. 

Merry it was in green forest. See Adam Bel, Clym of 
the Clough, and William of Cloudesle.—Anon. 

Merry little sunbeams. See Sunbeams.—-Anon. 

Merry mad-cap on the tree. See Bobolink.—M’Lach- 
lan. 

Merry Margaret, as midsummer flower. See Gar- 
lande of Laurell, The (To Mistress Margaret Hus¬ 
sey) .—Skelton. 


Merry Mike from the door bounded off to his play. 
See Merry Mike.—Anon. 

Merry smiles and entrancing eyes. See Circe.—( Colum¬ 
bia Spectator ) 

Merry spring, will you bring. See Merry Spring.— 
Anon. 

Merry the children, under the castle wall. See “Merry 
Christmas.”—Anon. 

Messages of God’s dear love. See Easter Flowers.— 
Denton. 

Methinks I see his august image, and I hear. See 
Funeral Oration on the Death of General Wash¬ 
ington (Father of his Country, The).—Lee. 

Methinks I see in dreamland fancies. See Dream 
Rambles.—Jones. 

Methinks I see it now, that one solitary, adventurous 
vessel. See First Settlement of New England, 
The (Sufferings and Destiny of the Pilgrims).— 
Everett. 

Methinks it is good to be here. See Lines Written in 
Richmond Church-yard, Yorkshire.—Knowles. 

Methinks it were no pain to die. See To Death.— 
Gluck. 

Methinks the measure of a man is not. See Methinks 
the Measure.—Hutchison. 

Methinks the soul within the body held. See Birth and 
Death.—Wade. 

Methinks the world seems oddly made. See Atheist 
and Acorn, The.—Anon. 

Methought, as I beheld the rookery pass. See Rookery, 
The.—Turner. 

Methought I heard a voice. See Macbeth (Remorse). 
—Shakespeare. 

Methought I saw my late espoused Saint. See On 
his Deceased Wife.—Milton. 

Methought I saw the footsteps of a throne. See Throne 
of Death, The.—Wordsworth. 

Methought I saw the grave where Laura lay. See 
Vision upon this Conceit of the Faerie Queene, 
A.—Raleigh. 

Methought I stood again, at dead of night. See 
Absalom’s Vision.—Hillhouse. 

Methought the stars were blinking bright. See Sailing 
beyond Seas.—Ingelow. 

Methought the stream of Time had backward rolled. 
See Day with Homer, A.—Smith. 

Michael, awful angel of the world’s last session. See 
Victor Hugo.—Swinburne. 

Michael McGaffaty—faith, what a name. See Mike 
McGaffaty’s Dog.—Melville. 

Michael, the leader of the hosts of God. See Michael 
the Archangel.—Craik. 

Mick doing lookout duty on board ship. See Character 
Stories.—Anon. 

Mickey Free was a devout Catholic. See Charles 
O’Malley (Mickey Free and the Priest).—Lever. 

Micky Hickey, £0, 7s, 6d. See Subscription List.— 
Blake. 

Mid April seemed like some November day. See San 
Terenzo.—Lang. 

'Mid Cambrian heights around Dolgelly vale. See 
Literature and Nature.—Waddington. 

Mid clamour and clang. See Song of the Trip-hammer. 
—Collester. 

Mid dewy pastures girdled with blue air. See Saint 
Bri gid.—Gilbert. 

'Mid dim and solemn forests, in the dawning chill and 
gray. See Johnston at Shiloh.—James. 

’Mid fritters and lollipops though we may roam. See 
Beignet de Pomme.— (Punch.) 

’Mid Greenland’s polar ice and snow. See Eskimelo- 
drama; or. The Escapade of an Eskamaid.— (Cornell 
Widow.) 

'Mid many strangely thrilling tales. See Heroes of the 
Mines.—Jones. 

’Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam. See 
Home, Sweet Home.—Payne. 

’Mid the broken grass of a trampled glade. See After 
the Skirmish.—Lyall. 

’Mid the flower-wreathed tombs I stand. See Decora¬ 
tion.—Higginson. 

’Mid the half-lit air, and the lonely place. See In the 
Graveyard.—Clarke. 

'Mid the roses she is standing. See ’Mid the Roses.— 
Gerould. 

Mid the tawdry purple and tinsel bright. See After the 
Play.—Stevenson. 

Mid the white spouses of the Sacred Heart. See To 
St. Mary Magdalen.—Hill. 

“Midas, I want to s’posen a case to you.” See S’posen 
a Case.—Anon. 

Midget and Fidget, and Dumpy and Dun. See Dog 
Kindergarten, The.—Anon. 


755 







Midget 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Midget, gypsy, big-eyed elf, little Kitty Clover.” See 
Kitty Clover.—Thomson. 

Midnight past! Not a sound of aught. See Portrait, 
The.—Lytton. 

Midnight sounded with a thin, jangling voice. See 
Sentry on the Tower, The.—Anon. 

’Midst tangled roots that lined the wild ravine. See 
Dead Drummer-boy, The.-—( Harper's Weekly.) 

Midsummer music in the grass. See Golden-rod. — 
Larcom. 

Mighty, luminous, and calm. See Song of Palms.— 
O’Shaughnessy. 

Mighty man’s will, and sweeps a world-wide arc. See 
Laws and Law.—Weitzel. 

Mighty of heart, mighty of mind—“magnanimous.” 
See True Kings of the Earth, The.—Ruskin. 

Mild is the parting year, and sweet. See Autumn.— 
Landor. 

Mild offspring of a dark and sullen sire! See To An 
Early Primrose. —White. 

Mildly through the mists of night. See Chinook.— 
Stafford. 

Miles after miles of graves. See Catacombs, The. 
—(Golden Hours.) 

Millburg was in want of a school-teacher. See Bridget 
as a School-teacher.—Adeler. 

Millee Maudee Muller. See Chinese Version of “Maud 
Muller,” A.—Smiley. 

Millennium at hand!—I’m delighted to hear it. See 
Millennium.—Moore. 

Millions of massive raindrops. See Rain.—Anon. 

“Milors and gentlemans,” commences the Frenchman. 
See Charity Dinner, The (Frenchman Proposes the 
Ladies, A).—Mosely. 

Milors and gentlemen! You excellent chairman, M. le 
Baron de Mount-Stuart. See Charity Dinner, 
The (Speech of M. Hector de Longuebeau).— 
Mosely. 

Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour. See 
London, 1802.—Wordsworth. 

Mimi, do you remember. See Biftek aux Champig¬ 
nons.—Beers. 

Mind of man, what have you wrought. See Song of the 
Battle-ships.—Harper. 

Mind, you let me out at one. Of course, I know you 
only obey orders. See In Pitti.—La Rame. 

“Mine.” A gingham apron—please don’t stare. See 
One Summer.—J. M. L. 

Mine are the night and morning. See Song of Nature. 
—Emerson. 

Mine be a cot beside the hill. See Wish, A.—Rogers. 

Mine be the breezy hill that skirts the down. See 
Minstrel, The; or. The Progress of Genius.— 
Beattie 

Mine cracious! Mine cracious! Shust look here und 
see. See Dot Baby off Mine.—Adams. 

Mine eyes are dim; what hath she written? Read. 
See Queen Mary.—Tennyson. 

Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the 
Lord. See Battle Hymn of the Republic.— 
Howe. 

Mine eyes be closed, but open left the cell. See 
Paradise Lost (Adam Describing Eve).—Milton. 

Mine eyes to mine eyelids cling thickly. See Brandy 
and Soda.—Howard. 

Mine eyes were stiffened with the last night’s tears. 
See Blessings in Disguise.—Anon. 

Mine friends, ven first you come here, you vas poor. 
See Dutch Sermon, A.—Anon. 

Mine frients, it vas a pooty schmart feller. See Schake 
und Agers.—Brown. 

Mine honesty and I begin to square. See Antony and 
Cleopatra (Oracle).—Shakespeare. 

Mine horse is shloped. See Deitsche Advertisement.— 
Wolfe. 

“Mine host,” lay there at dead of night. See Land¬ 
lord’s Last Moments, The.—Jones. 

Mine is a strange, wild for wild, strange] story—the 
strangest you ever heard. See Old Actor’s Story, 
The.—Sims. 

Mine name ish Hans Krauples. I have so pigger a 
family. See Dutchman’s Experience, The.— 
Anon. 

Mingled ate with fragrant yearnings. See Blue Moon¬ 
shine.—Stokes. 

Minnie and Winnie slept in a she'll. See Minnie and 
Winnie.—Tennyson. 

Minnie, let us act up like the big girls do. See Person¬ 
ating Olders.—Anon. 

Minutely trace man’s life; year after year. See Man’s 
Life.—Crabbe. 

Mira, thine eyes are those twin-heavenly powers. See 
Stella and Mira.—Fletcher. 


Miraculous genius, grasping at the whole! See 
Richard III.—Saltus. 

"Mirandy, I’m going up to see the parson.” See 
Parson’s Conversion, The.;—Murray. 

Mirror your sweet eyes in mine, love. See Lover’s 
Lullaby, A.—Sterry. 

Mirry Margaret, as mydsomer flowre. See Garlande 
of Laurell, The (To Maystress Margaret Hussey). 
—Skelton. 

"Mis’ Jones is late agin to-day.” See Village Sewing 
Society, The.—Anon. 

Misfortune to have lived not knowing thee! See 
Emerson.—Alcott. 

Mislike me not for my complexion. See Merchant of 
Venice, The.—Shakespeare. 

Miss Agnes had two or three dolls, and a box. See 
Hoyden, The.—Turner. 

“Miss Agnes,” we always had called her. See Miss 
Agnes.—Ewing. 

Miss Alpha, though she led her class. See Naughty 
Greek Girl, The.—Anon. 

Miss Annabel McCarty was invited to a party. See 
First Party, The.—Pollard. 

Miss Chrysanth’um gave a party. See Foolish Flowers, 
The.—Ri chards. 

Miss Dora Delaine of West Livingston Place. See 
Similia Similibus Curantur.—Newell. 

“Miss Emersonia Osgoodson will now favor the com¬ 
pany with a recitation.” See “Twinkle, Twinkle, 
Little Star.”—Anon. 

Miss Flora McFlimsey, of Madison Square. See 
Nothing to Wear.—Butler. 

Miss Flora! the cook has given warning. .See Romance 
of the War, A.—Anon. 

Miss Furbelow is all the go. See Coming Woman, The. 
—Kavanaugh. 

Miss Helen was always too giddy to heed. See Giddy 
Girl, The.—Turner. 

Miss Julia was induced to give a taste of her musical 
powers. See Fashionable Singing.—( Baltimore 
Elocutionist.) 

Miss Kindly is aunt to everybody. See Aunt Kindly. 
—Parker. 

Miss Kitty was rude at the table one day. See Lost 
Pudding, The.—Turner. 

Miss Lucy was a charming child. See Richard’s 
Reformation.—Turner. 

Miss Maggie, you’re to come down this minute. See 
Mill on the Floss, The (Maggie Cuts her Hair).— 
Eliot. 

Miss Marshall is late this morning, isn’t she? See 
Keystone.—Rook. 

Miss Medairy Dory-Ann. See Session with Uncle Sid¬ 
ney, A (Imperious Angler, The).—Riley. 

Miss Melinda Parkinson had come down to New York. 
See City Mystery, A.—Randolph. 

Miss Ophelia began with Topsy by taking her into a 
chamber. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Topsy’s First 
Lesson).—Stowe. 

Miss Pallas Eudora von Plurky. See Rhyme of the 
Time, A.—Anon. 

Miss Rosewame, I hope you will believe me when I 
say. See When Angry, Count a Hundred.—• 
Cavazzi. 

Miss Simmons had on her new bonnet to-day. See 
Miss Simmons’ New Bonnet.—Raymond. 

Miss Sophy, one fine summer day. See Ambitious 
Sophy.—Turner. 

Miss, will you accept these flowers? See Conversation 
under Difficulties.—Anon. 

Missal of the Gothic Age. See To a Missal of the 
Thirteenth Century.—Dobson. 

Misshapen, black, unlovely to the sight. See Bulb, A. 
—Munkittrick. 

Mist clogs the sunshine. See Consolation.—Arnold. 

Mr. Adam Baines is a little gray about the temples. 
See Ride by Night, The.—Thomson. 

Mr. and Mrs. Blinks were an argumentative couple. 
See How Mr. Blinks Named the Baby.—How¬ 
ard. 

Mr. and Mrs. Bolivar Pyke had been married about six 
weeks. See Their First Unpleasantness.—Anon. 

Mr. and Mrs. Jones had just finished their breakfast. 
See Baby’s First Tooth, The.—Bailey. 

Mr. Bertram, paralytic, and almost incapable of 
moving. See Guy Mannering (Death of Mr. Ber¬ 
tram, The).—Scott. 

Mr. Blake was a regular out-and-out hardened sinner. 
See Lost Mr. Blake.—Gilbert. 

Mr. Bones, and Mr. Tambo, I am about to open a 
Museum. See Curiosities for a Museum.—Anon. 

Mr. Bones, we are having fine weather. See End Gag. 
—Anon. 


756 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Mr. President 


Mr. Bowser doesn’t intend to let sickness or death get 
ahead of us. See Mr. Bowser Takes Precautions. 
—Lewis. 

Mr. Bresident and Mr. Schendlemans: I haf me much 
feel got dot you meet me on dis grade ewent. See 
German Anniversary Speech of Herr Hans Yager, 
The.—( Kentucky State Journal.) 

Mr. Bret Harte once told so charming a story about a 
bear. See Bear at Appledore, The.—Thaxter. 

Mr. Brooks, my opinion is that that Western Union 
stock. See Stockade.—Anon. 

Mr. Brown is one of our most enterprising merchants. 
See Mr. Brown has his Hair Cut.—Anon. 

“Mr. Brown, you don’t want to buy a first-rate wooden 
leg, do you!” See Wooden Leg, The.—Adeler. 

Mr. Busyman Piper a family had. See That “Fellow” 
who Came on Sundays.—Dodge. 

Mr. Chairman and Fellow-Democrats—I take this to 
be a dress-parade of the boys in the trenches. See 
Star of Democracy, The.—Watterson. 

"Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen:—I plead guilty to 
the soft impeachment.” See Tribute to East 
Tennessee, A.—Haynes. 

Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen, if it be true, that I have 
been so fortunate as to contribute. See After- 
Dinner Speech.—Bulwer. 

Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the ConventionI 
would be presumptuous, indeed. See Free Silver 
Coinage.—Bryan. 

Mr. Chairman: I antagonize the pending treaty. See 
Against Expansion.—Johnson. 

Mr. Chairman, I feel most deeply the rejection of the 
Reform Bill. See Rejection of the Reform Bill.— 
Smith. 

Mr. Chairman, it has been advanced as a principle. 
See Speech on the Compromises of the Constitution 
(General Government and the States, The).— 
Hamilton. 

Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: On an impor¬ 
tant occasion in the life of the Master. See Better 
Part, The.—Washington. 

Mr. Chairman, our confederacy has within its vast 
limits a great diversity of interests. See On 
American Industry.—Clay. 

Mr. Chairman:—The resolution proposed providing 
the means to defray the expenses of a mission. 
See America’s Duty to Greece —Clay. 

Mr. Chairman: When I pass by the collective parties. 
See Dangerous Legislation.—McDowell. 

Mr. Crier, you may open the court. See Scene in Court, 
A.—Anon. 

Mr. Easyman sat in his padded chair. See What is 
it to Me?—-Shillaber. 

Mr. Ferdinand Plum was a grocer by trade. See 
Shadow on the Blind, The.—Anon. 

Mr. Fillisy came home in hot haste. See Burglar 
Alarm, The (Mrs. Fillisy’s Burglar-alarm).—Arnold. 

Mr. Finney had a turnip. See Mr. Finney’s Turnip.— 
Anon. 

Mr. Fogg has a strong tendency to exaggeration in con¬ 
versation. See Mr. Fogg’s Account of a Scien¬ 
tific Experiment.—Anon. 

Mr. Forbes is rather a nervous man, and it is not sur¬ 
prising. See Driving the Cow.—( Burlington 
Hawkeye.) 

Mr. George Adair rents houses to thirteen hundred 
tenants. See Prohibition in Atlanta.—Grady. 

Mr. Hastings, in the magnificent paragraph which con¬ 
cludes this communication. See Impeachment 
of Warren Hastings (Character of Justice).—Sheri¬ 
dan. 

Mr. Hawkins he left the app’intin’. See Our Weddin’- 
day.—Greene. 

Mr. Hawkins, Q. C., engaged in a cause before the late 
Lord Campbell. See Rowland for an Oliver, A. 
— (Jest Book, The.) 

“Mr. Hoffenstein,” said Herman, as he folded up a 
pair of pants. See Hoffenstein’s Bugle.— (N. O. 
Times-Democrat.) 

Mr. John Winfield, proprietor of the Winfield Rajich. 
See Nine Cent Girls, The.—Bunner. 

Mr. Johnson, can you tell me why a baby should neber 
be taken into a painter’s studio. See Tambo on 
Babies.—Anon. 

Mr. Johnson, did you hear about my getting discharged 
from de hotel? See Waiting to see Him off.— 
Anon. 

Mr. Johnson, hab you eber seen my gal? See Musical 
Mary Jane.—Anon. 

Mr. Jonathan Bangs was an honest old man. See Mr. 
Jonathan Bangs.—Cole. 

Mr. Jonsing, did you eber go out on one ob dose little 
nic-pics? See Bones at a Pic-nic.—Anon. 


Mr. Jonsing, do you know de difference between a 
donkey and a postage stamp? See Tambo's 
Postage Stamp Gag.—Anon. 

Mr. Jonsing, whar did you spend your holidays last 
summer? See Bones goes a-Hunting.—Anon. 

Mr. Lowell says somewhere that the art of writing 
See Lowell, Extract Concerning.—Haweis. 

Mr. Middlerib paused with his coffee-cup raised half 
way to his lips. See Mrs. Middlerib’s Letter. 
—-( Burlington Hawkeye .) 

Mr. Mildmay.—-Bravissimo! See Still Waters Run 
Deep.—Taylor. 

Mr. Mills, the minister, was a stranger. See Mrs. 
Brown’s Husbands.—Anon. 

“Mister, no doubt you have all the learnin’. See Slim 
Teacher of Cranberry Gulch, The.—Anon. 

Mr. Orator Puff had two tones in his voice. See 
Orator Puff.—Moore. 

Mr. Percival Satterlee was anxiously considering a 
communication. See Halliday Hunt Breakfast, 
The.—Stoddart. 

Mr. Pickwick, in company with a japanned candle¬ 
stick. See Pickwick Papers, The (Mr. Pickwick’s 
Romantic Adventure with a Middle-aged Lady in 
Yellow Curl-papers).—Dickens. 

Mr. Pickwick’s apartments in Goswell street. See 
Pickwick Papers, The (Mr. Pickwick in a Dilemma). 
—Dickens. 

Mr. Plum was retiring o rest one night. See Shadow 
on the Blind. The.—Anon. 

Mr. President and Fellow-Citizens of New York:—The 
facts with which I shall deal. See Cooper Insti¬ 
tute Address.—Lincoln. 

Mr. President and Gentlemen: It would in some 
measure relieve my embarrassment. See Address 
at the Harvard Alumni Dinner.—Washington. 

Mr. President, and Gentlemens of this here lyceum. 
See Egyptian Debate.—Burnett. 

Mr. President, as the architect selected by your com¬ 
mittee. See Presentation of the Keys of a New 
School Building by the Architect.—Anon. 

Mr. President, Classmates, Ladies and Gentlemen. See 
Dux’s Speech. —( Phoenix , The.) 

Mr. President, do men propose to us seriously. See 
Free Press, A.—Baker. 

Mr. President, eloquent allusions have been made here 
to the ominous condition of Europe. See On Pre¬ 
cedents in Government.—Cass. 

Mr. President,—For the second time in this generation. 
See Memorial Address on the Life and Character 
of James A. Garfield (Eulogy on Garfield).—Blaine. 

Mr. President, Friends: Ninety-seven, about to die, 
salutes you! See Class Will.—Anon. 

Mr. President.—Happiness is like a crow perched upon 
the neighboring top. See Speech on Happiness. 
—Anon. 

Mr. President, I am coming very close. See True 
Americanism.—Lodge. 

Mr. President: I am here by command of silent lips. 
See Affairs in Cuba (Plea for Cuba, A).—Thurs¬ 
ton. 

Mr. President, I am not ashamed to say in any presence. 
See New England Character.—Blaine. 

Mr. President,—-I am oppressed with a sense of the im¬ 
propriety. See Strewing Flowers on the Graves of 
Union Soldiers (Decoration Day Address).—Gar¬ 
field. 

Mr. President, I have designedly dwelt so long on the 
probable effects. See Plea for the Union.— 
Seward. 

Mr. President, I have thus stated the reasons of 
my dissent to the doctrines. See Reply to 
Hayne, The (Liberty and Union).—Webster. 

Mr. President, I regret, speaking for myself. See True 
War Spirit, The.—Hoar. 

Mr. President, I shall enter on no encomium upon Mas¬ 
sachusetts. See Reply to Hayne, The (Tribute to 
Massachusetts).—Webster, 

Mr. President, I shall not acknowledge that the hon¬ 
orable member goes before me. See Rep’y to 
Hayne, The (South Carolina and Massachusetts). 
—Webster. 

Mr. President: I should have much preferred to hear 
[or I should much prefer to have heard] from 
every member on this floor. See Constitution 
and the Union, The (Peaceable Secession).—Web¬ 
ster. 

Mr. President: if the Senate is not responsible. See 
Great Britain and America.—Wolcott. 

Mr. President, in the Committee on Foreign Relations. 
See Cuba.—Frye. 

Mr. President, it is gravely argued. See Monroe Doc¬ 
trine, The.—Thurston. 


757 




Mr. President 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mr. President: It is natural to man to indulge in the 
illusions of hope. See Speech in the Virginia Con¬ 
vention, 1775.—Henry. 

Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen:—The wise man 
Solomon. See Centennial Speech.—McIntyre. 

Mr. President, men must have liberty. See Affairs 
in Cuba (Cuba).—Thurston. 

Mr. President:—No man thinks more highly than I do 
of the patriotism. See Speech in the Virginia 
Convention (Call to Arms, The).—Henry. 

Mr. President: On the great questions which occupy 
us. See Natural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, 
The (Fraudulent Party Outcries).—Webster. 

Mr. President, public men must certainly be allowed to 
change their opinions. See Constitution and the 
Union, The (On Sudden Political Conversions).— 
Webster. 

Mr. President: The eagle is a noble bird. See Ameri¬ 
can Eagle, The.—Anon. 

Mr. President—The great events on which my resigna¬ 
tion depended. See General Washington’s Resig¬ 
nation.-—Washington. 

Mr. President, the State in whose representation I bear 
a part. See Compromise Measures, The (Massa¬ 
chusetts and the Union).—Webster. 

Mr. President, the subject’ afore the meetin’ for debate 
this evenin’ is Newspapers. See Crab Village 
Lyceum.—Anon. 

Mr. President, the uneasy desire to augment our ter¬ 
ritory. See Unjust National Acquisitions.—Cor¬ 
win. 

Mr. President'These are the culminating hours of a 
closing scene. See Eulogy on Representative 
Bums of Missouri.—Ingalls. 

Mr. President, this question of our duty. See America’s 
Mission.—Beveridge. 

Mr. President, we had a short discussion the other day 
upon the subject. See Monroe Doctrine, The.— 
Cass. 

Mr. President, we must distinguish a little. See En¬ 
mity toward Great Britain.—Choate. 

Mr. President:—When the mariner has been tossed. 
See Reply to Hayne, The.—Webster. 

Mr. Secretary, what is our business with these lads? 
See Brave Boston Boys.—-Harrison. 

“Mr. Shaker,”sed I, “you see before you a Babe in the 
Woods, so to speak.” See Artemus Ward Visits 
the Shakers.—Brown. 

Mr. Shbeaker und Shendlemen of der Shoory. See 
Pretzel’s Speech before the Illinois Assembly.— 
Pretzel. 

Mr. Skinner, a respectable middle-aged gentleman. See 
Mr. and Mrs. Skinner.—Hardwick. 

Mr. Smith is a quiet, respectable citizen of Frost Hol¬ 
low. See Night of Horror, A.—Anon. 

Mister Socrates Snooks, a lord of creation. See Soc¬ 
rates Snooks.—Anon. 

Mr. Speaker,—Among all the people of the universe. 
See Against the Succession of Richard Cromwell 
to the Protectorate.—Vane. 

Mr. Speaker: As to those great trunk-lines. See 
Duluth.—Knott. 

Mr. Speaker, I have one word to say, before I sit down, 
to the gentleman from Kentucky. See Cumber¬ 
land Road, The.—Corwin. 

Mr. Speaker: I rise to ask you to place in the new 
House of Representatives. See Historic Codfish, 
The.—Irwin. 

Mr. Speaker, it behooves the piety as well as the wis¬ 
dom of Parliament. See Folly of Religious Per¬ 
secution, The.—Anon. 

Mr. Speaker,—Now, there has been a great deal of 
bombast here to-day. See Buncombe Speech.— 
Anon. 

Mr. Speaker: The Address to the King, upon the dis¬ 
turbances in North America. See Bold Predic¬ 
tions.—Wilkes. 

Mr. Speaker The mingled tones of sorrow, like the 
voice of many waters. See Death of John Q. 
Adams.—Holmes. 

Mr. Speaker: Whether this measure shall prevail. 
See Tribute to the Men of Maine, A.—Cousins. 

Mr. Speaker, why shall we destroy this Government? 
See Why Destroy this Government?—Nelson. 

Mr. Spectator:—-Women are armed with fans as men 
with swords. See Spectator, The (Fan-drill, The). 
—Addison. 

“Mister,” the little fellow said. See My Bread on the 
Waters.—Catlin. 

Mr. Thikhed called on Miss Brightlooks last Monday. 
See Thikhed’s New Year’s Call.—Anon. 

Mr. Timothy Figg got lost in the fog. See Rescue of 
Mr. Figg, The.—Anon. 


Mr. Thorpe had lost his position at Jonathan Black 
and Brothers. See Dorothy’s Auction.—Plympton. 

Mr. Travers had told me momamillion times. See 
Jimmy Brown’s Dog.—Alden. 

Mr. Tulkinghorn, the lawyer, smoke-dried and faded. 
See Bleak House (Tulkinghorn, the Lawyer, and 
Mademoi selle Hortense).—Di ckens. 

Mr. Watkins is a gentle old man, living on Ninth Ave¬ 
nue. See Fourth of July, The.—( Detroit Free 
Press.) 

Mr. Watson! Mr. Watson! I wonder why Mr. Wat¬ 
son doesn’t come. See Striking Oil.—McBride. 

Mr. Weller having obtained leave of absence from Mr. 
Pickwick. See Pickwick Papers. The (Elder Mr. 
Weller Delivers some Critical Sentiments Respect¬ 
ing Literary Composition, The).—Dickens. 

Mrs. B. is my wife; and her alarms are those produced 
by a delusion. See Mrs. B’s Alarms.—Payn. 

Mrs. Catherine Lavina Fairweather; that must mean 
the old lady. See Deaf Uncle Zed.—Anon. 

Mrs. Centre was jealous. Sie Schooling a Husband.— 
Anon. 

Mrs. Chertsy loved to curtsy. See Curtsy, The.— 
Meyers. 

Mrs. Chub was rich and portly. See Jupiter and Ten. 
—Fields. 

Mrs. Corney, the matron of the workhouse, sat herself 
down before a cheerful fire. See Oliver Twist 
(Courtship of Mr. Bumble and Mrs. Corney, The). 
—Dickens. 

“Mrs. Gray has sent home my new bonnet, Bessy.” 
See Mill on the Floss, The (Aunt Pullet’s Bon¬ 
net).—Eliot. 

Mrs. Guptill was a woman who. See Mrs. Guptill Gets 
Ahead of the Grip.—Smith. 

Mrs. June is ready for school. See Mrs. June’s Pros¬ 
pectus.—Coolidge. 

Mrs. Kemble often used to say of people who met her. 
See Frances Anne Kemble.—James. 

“Mrs. Leo Hunter, The Den, Eatanswille.” See Pick¬ 
wick Papers, The (Mrs. Leo Hunter).—Dickens. 

Mrs. Lofty keeps a carriage. See Mrs. Lofty and I.— 
Anon. 

Mrs. Luvoffame was studying elocution. See Trial 
at Elocution, A.—Head. 

“Mrs. M’Gra,—-Tear-an’-ages, sure I need not be treat¬ 
ing her that way.” See Charles O’Malley (Mickey 
Free’s Letter to Mrs. M’Gra).—Lever. 

Mrs. McShane decided one day. See Mrs. McShane’s 
Shopping Expedition.—Smith. 

Mrs. Marigold is a dear old lady. See Mrs. Marigold.— 
Anon. 

Mrs. Mulkittle started on a visit to friends living in the 
suburbs. See Inquisitive Boy, The.—Anon. 

Mrs. Nipkin, West Twenty-fifth Street, has rooms. 
See What Will Become of the Children.—Croly. 

“Mistress of gods and men! I have been thine.” See 
Pygmalion.—Scott. 

Mrs. Opie, in her “Illustrations of Lying.” See Fatal 
Falsehood, The.—Anon. 

Mistress Penelope Penwick, she. See Ballad of Sweet 
P., The.—Cloud. 

Mrs. Perkins, it’s a burning shame—so it is—the cross 
old curmudgeon. See How She Cured Him.— 
Anon. 

Mrs. Piper was a widow. See Mrs. Piper.—Douglas. 

Mrs. Pussy, sleek and fat. Nee Mrs Pussy.—Anon. 

Mrs. Rogers lay in her bed. See Doctor’s Story, The. 
—(Medical World.) 

Mixed with the masque of death’s old comedy. See 
Theophile Gautier.—Swinburne. 

Moan, moan, ye dying gales! See same. —Neele. 

Moans the bay. See Dirge of Cael, The.—Sigerson. 

Moderation is counseled. See Arraignment of Rum, 
The.—Foster. 

Moderation! You, Mr. Renwick, counsel moderation. 
See Covenanters and Charles Stuart, The.—Galt. 

Mohammed, Emir of Granada, kept. Nee Emir’s Game 
of Chess, The.— {LondonSpeaker.) 

Mohammed, the divine, ere yet his name. See Mo¬ 
hammed.—Meredith. 

Mollie had a little ram as black as a rubber shoe. See 
Mollie’s Little Ram.—Anon. 

“Molly, and Maggie, and Alice.” See Hold Fast what 
I Give You.—-Warner. 

Mollie Muldoon was an Irish girl. See Mollie Muldoon. 
—Anon. 

Momentous to himself as I to me. See Insight.— 
Watson. 

Moments there are in life—alas, how few! See same. 
—Southey 

Monarch of floods! How shall I approach thee? See 
Niagara.—Anon 




i 


* 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Mother 


Monday’s bairn is fair in the face. See Birthday Week, 
The.—Anon. 

Monday’s child is fair of face. See Days of Birth.— 
Anon. 

’Mongst all your virtues. See Charity.—Middleton. 

Monkey, little merry fellow. See Monkey, The.— 
Howitt. 

Monseigneur, monseigneur! does your Grandeur know 
where the plate basket is? See Les Miserables 
(Bishop’s Silver Candlesticks, The).—Hugo. 

"Monsieur Adam, he wakes [or vake] up.” See French¬ 
man’s Account of the Fall, A.—Anon. 

Monsieur Adam was all alone in ze garden. See Mme. 
Eef.—Anon. 

Monsieur Chabot. was a Frenchman of high connections. 
See Frenchman’s Revenge, The.—Anon. 

Monsieur McGint^ allait en bas jusqu’au fond du mer. 
See Monsieur McGinte.—Anon. 

Monsieur the Cur) 5 , down the street. See Cure’s Pro¬ 
gress, The.—Dobson. 

Monsieur the Under-prefect is on his rounds. See 
Under-prefect The.—Anon. 

Mont Blanc is the monarch of mountains. See Man¬ 
fred.—Byron. 

Montcalm and his chief officers held a council of war. 
See Battle of the Plains of Abraham, The.—Park- 
ham. 

Monuments and birthday anniversaries should be com¬ 
memorative. See Obligations of Wealth, The.— 
Anon. 

Mony a time and often I had heard of play acting. See 
Mansie Waugh’s First and Last Play.—Moir. 

"Mooly cow, mooly cow, home from the wood.” See 
Cow-boy’s Song, The.—Wells. 

Moon, moon, where are you going? See Child’s Good¬ 
night, The.—Holmes. 

Moon of Harvest, herald mild. See To the Harvest 
Moon.—White. 

Moon so bright, stars alight. See Skating Song.—War- 
burton. 

Moon, so round and yellow. See same. —Anon. 

"Mordaunt,” she called him. In a novel book. See 
Baby’s Name, The.—Anon. 

More can truthfully be said to the praise of the worthies, 
the Pilgrims. See Fidelity to God is Fidelity to 
Man.—Gordon. 

More in the garden grows than what is sown. See 
same. —Bonar. 

More love or more disdain I crave. See Against In¬ 
difference.—Webbe. 

More love to Thee, O Christ! See same. —Prentiss. 

More men are trying to be prosperous than are trying 
to be good. See Pursuit of Character and Service. 
—Brooks. 

More, more! My cry is never stilled. See Grave, The. 
—Davenport. 

More of good than we can tell. See Temperance.— 
Anon. 

More servants wait on man. See Man.—Herbert. 

More she had spoke, but yawn’d—all nature nods. See 
Dunciad, The.—Pope. 

More shy than the shy violet. See Quaker Ladies.— 
Cortissoz. 

More than a century gone to-day. See Elopement in 
Seventy-five.*—Anon. 

More than I have said, loving countrymen. See King 
Richard III. (Earl of Richmond to his Army, 
The).—Shakespeare. 

More than most fair, full of the living fire. See Amo- 
retti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “More than most 
fair,” etc.).—Spenser. 

More than the soul of ancient song is given. See Poet 
of To-day, The.—Lippincott. 

More things are wrought by prayer. See Morte 

d’Arthur (“More things are wrought,” etc.).— 
Tennyson. 

Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel. 
See First Corinthians, XV.— Bible. 

Morn is the time to wake. See Morn.—Gray. 

Mornin’, sir. I see you want a boy. See Brave 
Woman, A.—Anon. 

Morning! all speedeth well: the bright sun. See Ship 
on Fire, The.—Bateman. 

Morning! Baby on the floor. See Mother’s Diary, 
A.—Anon. 

Morning dawns on the heights of Sedan. See Rider¬ 
less Steeds, The.—Anon. 

Morning, evening, noon and night. See Boy and the 
Angel, The.—Browning. 

Morning, sir! Good-morning. See Train to Mauro, 
The.—Frost. 

Mornings frosty grow, and cold. See In September. 
—(Sunday Afternoon.) 


Morpheus, the humble god, that dwells. See Song 
from “The Sophy.”—Denham. 

Morpheus, the lively son of deadly Sleep. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Sonnet XXXII.).—Sidney. 

Mortal mixed of middle clay. See Guy.—Emerson. 

Mortality, behold and fear! See On the Tombs in 
Westminster Abbey.—Beaumont. 

Mortals there are who seem, all over, flame. See On 
the Death of Canon Kingsley.—Hayne. 

Moses led the world’s first emancipation movement, 
liberating three million slaves. See Sketch of 
Moses, A.—Hastings. 

Moses Sparrow was very, very green. See Summer 
Boarder, The.—Anon. 

Moses, who spake with God as with his friend. See 
Death of Moses, The.—Eliot. 

Most glorious Lord of lyfe! that, on this day. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Easter Morning).— 
Spenser. 

Most like it was this kingly lad. See Born to the Pur¬ 
ple.—Riley. 

Most men know love but as a part of life. See Quator- 
zain.—Timrod. 

Most potent grave and reverend signiors. See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice (Othello’s Defense).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

"Most potent, grave and reverend signiors.” See 
Toast to the Lovers and Husbands of the Shake¬ 
speare Club.—Anon. 

Most strange! Most queer—although most excellent a 
change! See Rationalistic Chicken, The.—Anon. 

Most sweet is it with unuplifted eyes. See Inner Vis¬ 
ion, The.—Wordsworth. 

Most welcome. Calumny! come speak! See Power of 
Justice, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Most wives will end their story with. See Model Hus¬ 
band, The.—Denny. » 

Mother birdie stiff and cold. See Poor Little Children. 
—Hugo. 

Mother dear, what is the water saying? See High 
Tide, The.—Anon. 

Mother has gone out for the day, Joe. See Civility 
Never Lost.—Anon. 

Mother, has the dove that nestled. See Ministering 
Angels.—Judson. 

Mother, Home, and Heaven. See same. —Anon. 

Mother, I cannot mind my wheel. See same. —Lan- 
dor. 

Mother, I feel death’s icy chill. See Just Twenty-one. 
—Todd. 

Mother, I see with your nursery light. See Best.—■ 
Jackson 

Mother, I want a piece of cake. See Domestic Scene, 
A.—Anon. 

Mother, if I were a flower. See Harebell, A. Lar- 

Mother! is that the passing bell? See "Dark Girl” 
by the ‘ ‘ Holy Well,” The.—Keegan. 

"Mother, it rains!” and tears like rain fell down. See 
Rain-lesson, The.—Sigourney. 

Mother, may I go down to the skating pond to-night? 
See Evening at Home, An.—Anon. 

Mother, mother, the winds are at play. See Child 3 
Wish in June.—Gilman. 

Mother, mother, up in heaven. See Bertha in the 
Lane.—Browning. . 

Mother, move a little nearer—I’m so lonely in the 
dark. See Willie Clark.—Garrett. 

Mother of Hermes! and still youthful Maia! See Frag¬ 
ment of an Ode to Maia.—Keats. 

Mother of nations, of them eldest we. See America to 
England.—Woodberry. 

Mother of our own dear mother, good old grandam, 
wake and smile! See Grandmother, The. 

Motheroif Swords! while the river runs. See Ad Bello- 
nam.—Pollock. 

Mother of the Fair Delight. See Ave. Rossetti. 

Mother? Oh, you mean my mamma. See Mothers 
and Fathers: Two Pictures.—Dallas. 

"Mother,” quoth Ambrose to his thrifty dame. See 
Young Gray Head, The.— (Blackwood s Maga¬ 
zine.) _ ,. , , T 

Mother, see! the stars are out. See Starlight. .Lar- 


See Love Wins 


com. 

Mother, the birdies all love father. 

Love.—Anon. D , 

Jot her was away, and, in consequences, oess, r>ob, 
Archie, and Tom. See Mice at Play. Forest. 
Jother, watch the little feet. See Mother, Watch!— 

Jother wept, and father sighed. See Mother Wept.^ 
Skipsey. 


759 




Mother 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Mother, what ugly feet Clara Harvey has. See Beau¬ 
tiful Feet.—Anon. 

"Mother, where are the flowers gone?” See God’s 
Work.—Brooke. 

Mother, who in the days of childhood. See Mother’s 
Prayer.—Crawford. 

Mother, who make the stars which .light. See Who 
Made Them.—Anon. 

Mother, will you tell us more about those beautiful 
countries. See Little Travelers, The.—Anon. 

Mother’s quite distracted. See Baby’s Ring.— 
Cary. 

Motionless, in a dark, cold cell in Rome. See Epi- 
charis.—Palmer. 

Motions and means, on land and sea at war.— See 
Steamboats, Viaducts, and Railways.—Words¬ 
worth. 

Mount Flibbertygibbet? Of course, Ben; don’t I 
know horse and tricks full well? See Flibberty¬ 
gibbet and Me.—Mackenzie. 

Mount Vesuvius was fast burying the city. See 
Last Days of Pompeii (Nydia’s Sacrifice).—Bul- 
wer-Lytton. 

Mountains! who was your builder? See Mountains.— 
Morse. 

Mounted on Kyrat strong and fleet. See Leap of 
Roushan Beg, The.—Longfellow. 

Mourn, great McGregor, mourn! Thou youngest. 
See Funeral of the Mountains, The.—Brooks. 

Mourn, hapless Caledonia, mourn. See Tears of Scot¬ 
land, The.—Smollett. 

Mourn, hills and groves of Attica! See Dion.—Words¬ 
worth. 

Mourn, O rejoicing heart! See Time’s Cure.—Anon. 

Mournfully! oh, mournfully. See Midnight Wind, 
The .—Motherwell. 

Mournfully, sing mournfully. See Nightingale’s Death 
Song, The.—Hemans. 

Move along a trifle, stranger, just a little; don’t you 
see. See Ole Bull’s Christmas.—Bruce. 

Move me that jasmine further from the bed. See 
Deaths of Myron and Klydone, The.—Webster. 

"Move my arm-chair, faithful Pompey. ” See On the 
Shores of Tennessee.—Beers. 

Mowers, weary and brown, and blithe. See Scythe 
Song.—Lang. 

Mozzer bought a baby. See Nose out of Joint. — 
Adams. 

Much as we are indebted to our observatories.! See 
Uses of Astronomy, The (Wonders of the Dawn, 
The).—Everett. 

Much has been said by poets wise. See Recitation 
for a Small Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

Much have I spoken of the faded leaf. See November. 
—Stoddard. 

Much have I travelled in the realms of gold. See On 
First Looking into Chapman’s Homer.—Keats. 

Much, however, as we are indebted to our observa¬ 
tories. See Uses of Astronomy, The (Sunrise).-— 
Everett. 

Much lately have I thought, my darling wife. See 
Connubial Eclogue, A.—Saxe. 

Much of Whittier’s work has been in the form of con¬ 
tributions. See Whittier, Extract Concerning.— 
Scudder. 

Much strange is true. And yet so much. Nee Virgin 
with the Bells, The.—Dobson. 

Much victuals serves for gluttony. See In Favor of 
Tobacco.—Rowlands. 

Muffled tones in secret conclave. Nee Dynamiter’s 
Daughter, The.—Jackson. 

M-u-l-a-t-t-o, potato, tomato,—oh, there. See All 
Ending in "O”.—Caldwell. 

"Murphy, what’s the meaning of mystery?” See 
Murphy’s Mystery of the Pork-barrel.—Anon. 

Muse of the many-twinkling feet, whose charms. See 
Waltz, The.—Byron. 

Muses and Graces appear! See Her First Train.— 
Watrous. 

Muses, that sing Love’s sensual empirie. See same. — 
Chapman. 

Music as of the winds when they awake. See Bee¬ 
thoven.—Todhunter. 

Music is the most spiritual of all human enjoyments. 
See Power of Music, The.—Burke. 

Music, music hath its sway. See Saul (Flight of 
Malzah, The).—Heavysege. 

Music of bells when the night is gone. See Children’s 
Voices.—Chatfield. 

Music, when soft voices die. See same. —Shelley. 

Musical! how much lies in that. Nee On Heroes and 
Hero Worship (“Musical! how much,” etc.).— 
Carlyle. 


Must all tradition then be set aside? See Tradition.— 
Dryden. 

Must I budge? Must I observe you? See Julius 
Csesar.—Shakespeare. 

Must I despise thee too, as well as hate thee? See 
Revenge.—Y oung. 

Must I thus leave thee, Paradise! thus leave. See 
Parad'se Lost (Eve’s Lamentation).—Milton. 

Mute, sightless visitant. See Helen Keller.—Sted- 
man. 

Muzzer’s bought a baby. See Charley’s Opinion of the 
Baby.—Anon. 

My absent daughter—gentle, gentle maid. See Liv¬ 
ing Memory, A.—Croffut. 

My aunt! my dear unmarried aunt! See My Aunt.— 
Holmes. 

My auntie has a parlor grand. See Auntie’s Parlor.— 
Richards. 

My baby boy sat on the floor. See Baby’s Visitor. 
— (Allant x Constitution.) 

My bachelor’s den is a queer old pen. See Bachelor’s 
Love Song, A.—Ryan. 

My banks they are furnished with bees. See Pas¬ 
toral Ballad (Shepherd’s Home, The).—Shenstone. 

My beautiful! my beautiful! that standest meekly by. 
See Arab’s Farewell to his Horse, The.—Norton. 

My beautiful new watch had run eighteen months. 
See Mark Twain’s Watch.—Clemens. 

My bed is like a little boat. See My Bed is a Boat.— 
Stevenson. 

Mv beloved brethe-ing, b fore I take my text I must 
tell you. Ne<- Brother Watkins.—Gough. 

My Beloved Brethering: I am a unlarnt hard-shell 
Baptist preacher. See Hard-shell Sermon, A.— 
Anon. 

My better half desired a wheel,-I argued and I thun¬ 
dered. See Price, The.—Masson. 

My birthday! what a different sound. See My Birth¬ 
day.—Moore. 

My birthplace, the home of my childhood and earlier 
and later boyhood. See Poet at the Breakfast- 
table, The (Gambrel-roofed House and its Outlook, 
The).—Holmes. 

My blessing with thee [or you]! See Hamlet (Polonius 
to Laertes).—Shakespeare. 

My blood hath been too cold and temperate. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I.—Shakespeare. 

My blood so red for thee was shed. See Call, The.— 
Anon. 

My boat is on the shore. See To Thomas Moore.— 
Byron. 

My body answers you, my blood. See Music of Hun¬ 
gary.—Aldrich. 

My body, eh? Friend Death, how now? See Habeas 
Corpus.—Jackson. 

My body sleeps; my heart awakes. See Indian Love- 
song.—Lytton. — 

My body was part of the sun and the dew. See In 
Love’s Eternity.—O’Shaughnessy. 

My books I’d fain cast off, I cannot read. See Summer 
Rain, The.—-Thoreau. 

My boy and I rode in the train. See His Profession.— 
Anon. 

My boy, do you know the boy I love? See Boy I 
Love, The.—Anon. 

My boy Kree? See Kree.—Gordon. * 

My boy left me just twelve years ago. See Ballad of 
the Shamrock, The.—O’Brien. 

My boy sat looking straight into the coals. See Their 
Mother.—Anon. 

My brave associates, partners of my toil, my feelings 
and my fame! See Pizarro (Rolla to the Peru¬ 
vians) .—Sheridan. 

My bredren! one time, long, long time ago. See 
Noten like a Patience.—Oughton. 

My Breethering and sistering of Skilletville; I rise this 
momin’ full of indignation. See Burst of Indig¬ 
nation, A.—McBride. 

My breethering I am a plain spoken preacher. See 
Sarmon to the Skillettvillers.—McBride. 

My brethren, be not many masters. See St. James 
(Power of the Tongue, The).— Bible. 

My brier that smelledst sweet. See Brier, The.—Lan- 
dor. 

My brigantine! See same. —Cooper. 

My brother Jack was nine in May. See Baby’s Debut, 
The.—Smith. 

My brother Jim, he’s in the regiment. See Guards¬ 
man, The.—Finnegan. 

My brother Tom is just too mean. See Tom’s Eyes 
and Mine.—( Popular Educator.) 

My brudder sittin’ on de tree of life. See Roll, Jordan, 
Roll.—Anon. 


760 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


My father 


My business on the jury’s done—the quibblin’ all is 
through. See Goin’ Home To-day.—Carleton. 

My Callie is a winsome lass. See My Callie.—P. A. P. 

My child and schollar, take good heed. See same. — 
Anon. 

My child is lying on my knee. See Like a Little Child. 
—Macdonald. 

My child, my child, my son. See Zenobia.—Jones. 

My child, the duck-billed platypus. See Platypus, 
The.—Herford. 

My child woke crying from her sleep. See God Watch- 
eth.—Macdonald. 

My children, come near to me. See Out of the Depths. 
—-McBride. 

My chile? Lord, no, she’s none o’ mine. See Bor¬ 
rowed Child, The.—Weeden. 

My chil’ren, lub one anoder; b’ar wid one anoder. 
See Uncle Pete’s Counsel to the Newly Married.— 
Kirke. 

My Christmas gifts were few: to one. See To a Lady. 
—Parsons. 

My cigarette! The amulet. See My Cigarette.— 
Lummis. 

My coachman, in the moonlight there. See Without 
and Within.—Lowell. 

My country, ’tis of thee. See America.—Smith. 

My countrymen, one and all, think calmly and well 
upon this whole subject. See First Inaugural 
Address (War or Peace?).—Lincoln. 

My Countrymen:—-The century that has gone by has 
changed the face of nature. See Centennial Ad¬ 
dress (Valley Forge).—Brown. 

My countrymen! the moments are quickly passing. 
See Centennial Oration (“My countrymen! the,” 
etc.).—Brown. 

My Countrymen: The tide of battle never ebbed and 
flowed upon these banks. See Centennial Ad¬ 
dress Delivered at Valley Forge, June 19, 1878 
(Valley Forge).—Brown. 

My Countrymen! this anniversary has gone by for¬ 
ever. See Centennial Oration (“My countrymen, 
this,” etc.).—Brown. 

My cousin Vernon! welcome. See King Henry IV., 
Pt. I.—Shakespeare. 

My curse upon thy venom’d stang. See Address to 
the Toothache.—Burns. 

My daily walk was through a garden fair. See Lost 
and Found.—Appleget. 

My dame is old, and I am old. See Good Old Souls. 
—Southesk. 

My Damon was the first to wake. See Tales of the 
Hall (Meeting).—Crabbe. 

My Daphne’s hair is twisted gold. See Midas (Daphne). 
—Lyly. 

My darling doll, so young and tender. See Sad Acci¬ 
dent, A.—Anon. 

My darling dolly is one week old. See Naming Dolly. 
—Anon. 

My darling, I’m close to your bed. See Answer to 
‘ ‘ Leona. ”—Anon. 

My darling kneeled down for her evening prayer. 
See Perfect Faith, A.—M’Manus. 

My darling, my darling, my darling. See At Your 
Gate.—Gray. 

My darling Roy’s a splendid boy. See What Grandma 
Thinks.—Kavanaugh. 

“My darter?” Yes, thet’s Lizy Ann. See Lizy Ann. 
—Davis. 

“My daughter,” and his voice was stern. See Applied 
Mathematics.—( Lehigh Burr.) 

My days among the Dead are pass’d. See same. — 
Southey. 

My days are full of pleasant memories. See Phan¬ 
toms.—Ashe. 

My days pass pleasantly away. See I’m Growing Old. 
—Saxe. 

My dear and only Love, I pray. See same —Gra¬ 
ham. 

“My dear, be sensible! Upon my word.” See Love s 
Logic.—( Chambers’ Journal. ) 

My dear boy, men have fought, bled and died, but not 
for beer. See What Men Have Fought for.— 
Burdette. 

My dear Boys; I wonder whether you miss me as much 
as I miss you. See Eugene Field to his Children. 
—Field. 

My dear, do you know that a long time ago. See 
Babes in the Woods, The.—Anon. 

My dear Fellow-Grumblers:—Poets, philosophers, and 
fools. See Grizzly Grumbler’s Advice.—Anon. 

My dear Friends: When the Emperor Maximus 
Gorillus entered Rome. See Felinaphone, The.— 
Kyle, 


My dear, if only I might write. See If Only I Might 
W rite.—Anon. 

“My dear, I’m delighted to see you.” See Pet and 
Bijou.—Bean. 

My dear Josephine. See Children in the Wood, The.— 
Anon. 

My dear Mary, the darlint of my heart and sowl, I am 
well. See Jimmy McBride’s Letter.—Anon. 

My dear mistress has a heart. See same. —Rochester. 

My dear Mrs. M-: Every time I think of you, 

my heart. See Model Love-letter, A.—Anon. 

My Dear Nephew: I have not heard anything of you 
sens the last time I wrote ye. See Affectionate 
Letter, An.—Anon. 

My dear Nephew: I haven’t sent ye a letther since 
the last time I wrote to ye. See Bridget O’Hoo- 
legoin’s Letter.—Anon. 

My dear niece—I know that you are expecting your 
cousin’s arrival from Europe. See “Let those 
Laugh who Win.”—Sedgwick. 

My dear, precious dolly, I love you, you know. See 
Good-bye to Dolly.—Anon. 

My dear pupils! I desire to say a few words to you. 
See School Affairs in Riverhead District.—Deans. 

My dear Redeemer, and my God. See Example of 
Christ, The.—Watts. 

“My dear Rootle,” says my wife. See Mr. Rootle’s 
Economy.—Anon. 

“My dear,” said Mr. Spoopendyke, rumpling his hair 
around over his head. See Spoopendyke Stops 
Smoking.—( Brooklyn Eagle.) 

“My dear,” said Mrs. Policy. See Parson Policy.— 
Miller. 

“My dear,” said Mrs. Popperman to her husband one 
evening. See Mr. and Mrs. Popperman.—Anon. 

My Dear Sir: Having now a little peace and quietness 
I sit down to inform you of the dreadful bustle. 
See Irish Letter, An.—Anon. 

My dear sir, I thank you heartily for the kindness. 
See Contesting for a Prize.—Avery. 

“My dear sister, I hasten to inform you.” See I Guess 
I’m the Man.—Parsons. 

My dear, there’s rare news from the exchange. See 
Our Daughter.—Anon. 

My dear, you would have forgotten to purchase me a 
muff. See New Muff and Collar, The.—Peet. 

My dear young friend, whose shining wit. See Comic 
Miseries.—Saxe. 

My Dearling!—thus, in days long fled. See “My 
Dearling. ”—Allen. 

My delicate lily. See Lily’s Word, A.—Larcom. 

My delight and thy delight. See same. —Bridges. 

My doll got sick one summer day. See When Dolly 
Was Sick.—Richards. 

My dolly is a dreadful care. See Naughty Doll, The.— 
Field. 

My dolly is a Japanese. See Japanese Doll, The.— 
Anon. 

My dolly is so happy. See Dolly’s Pocket.—Anon. 

My dolly was going to be married. See Dolly’s Wed¬ 
ding.—Anon. 

My dream was lengthened after life. See King Rich¬ 
ard III. (Clarence’s Dream).—Shakespeare. 

My dreams so fair that used to be. See Margins.— 
Burdette. 

My dream-ship’s decks are of beaten gold. See Bal¬ 
lade of the Dreamship, The.—Lincoln. 

My early love! I’ll think on thee. See My Early 
Love.—Anon. 

My ear-rings, my ear-rings! they’ve dropped into the 
well! See Zara’s Ear-rings.—Lockhart. 

My eye, descending from the hill, surveys. See Coop¬ 
er’s Hill (Praise of the Thames).—Denham. 

My eyes are filled with blinding tears. See Baby’s 
Drawer.—Rook. 

My eyes are filmed, my beard is grey. See Time of the 
Barmecides, The.—Mangan. 

My eyes are full my silent heart is stirred. See Septem¬ 
ber Robin, A.—Craik. 

My eyes! how I love you. See same. —Saxe. 

My faint spirit was sitting in the light. See From the 
Arabic. An Imitation.—Shelley. 

My Fair, no beauty of thine will last. See Song.— 
Meynell. 

My fairest child, I have no song to give you. See Fare¬ 
well, A.—Kingsley. 

My faith looks up to Thee. See same. —Palmer. 

My faithful dog—his actions fairly talk. See Dog¬ 
matic Philosophy.—Burdette. 

“My Fanny, I have news to tell.” See Frances Keeps 
her Promise.—Taylor. 

My father bought an undershirt. See Song of the 
All-wool Shirt.—Anon. 


761 





My Father 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


My Father God, lead on! See Father, Lead on.—Anon. 

My father had a fair-haired harvester. See Fatal 
Arrow, The.—Anon. 

My father had a farm hand. See Little Child’s Trials, 
A.—Neal. 

My father is deceas’d! Come Gaveston. See Edward 
the Second (King Edward the Second).—Marlowe. 

My father left a park to me. See Amphion.—Tennyson. 

My father left me three acres of land. See Three Acres 
of Land.—Anon. 

My father loved a tree as men. See Dreamer and 
Reaper, The.—Ecob. 

My father was a farmer upon the Carrick border, O. 
See My Father was a Farmer.—Burns. 

My father was no pessimist; he loved the things of earth. 
See Father’s Way.—Field. 

My father was the finest watermelon grower in the 
country. See Judge Brown’s Watermelon Story. 
—(Arkansaw Traveller.) 

My father’s half-bushel comes oft to my mind. See 
My Father’s Half-bushel.—Anon. 

My feet are wearied and my hands are tired. See Rest. 
—Ryan. 

My feet strike an apex of the apices of the stairs. See 
Song of Myself (Infinity).—Whitman. 

My feet they haul me round the house. See My Feet. 
—-Burgess. 

My fiddle? Well, I kind o’ keep her handy, don’t you 
know? See My Fiddle.—Riley. 

My First, a tale of history. See Teacups.—Sabine. 

My First are seen in feathered bands. See Cocks¬ 
comb.—Sabine. 

My First destroys, consumes and wastes. See Mother 
Hubbard.—Sabine. 

My First goes a bumping and buzzing around. See 
Dormouse.—Sabine. 

My First goes frequently by train. See Postage.— 
Sabine. 

My First hard by the waters cool are seen. See Cow¬ 
slips.—Sabine. 

My First has always, as I have been told. See Dog 
Days.—Sabine. 

My First, if he were saucy to his brother. See Pota¬ 
toes.—Sabine. 

My First in ancient Rome was used. See Ascutney.— 
Sabine. 

My First is a dunce, he has no ideas. See Mullet.— 
Sabine. 

My First is a familiar preposition. See Perverse.— 
Sabine. 

My First is a genial old uncle. See Samson.—Sabine. 

My First is a lake. See Linden.—Sabine. 

My First is a picturesque kind of fence. See Hedge¬ 
row.—Sabine. 

My first is brought from lands across the sea. See 
Charade.—Pratt. 

My First is but a bitter word. See Rubber.—Sabine. 

My First is but a simple decoration. See Bo Peep.— 
Sabine. 

My First is he of whom a jest. See Culdee.—Sabine. 

My First is marked by want of light. See Blackbird.— 
Sabine. 

My First is powerful, to will and do. See Kangaroo.— 
Sabine. 

My First is privilege that may. See Kickshaw.— 
Sabine. 

My First is seen in pageants great. See Alborak.— 
Sabine. 

My First is simply an abbreviation. See Conundrum. 
—Sabine. 

My First is so versatile that it is more. See Ground¬ 
hog.-—Sabine. 

My First is the price of a lawyer’s brief. See Feline.— 
Sabine. 

My First is to enumerate. See Countless.—Sabine. 

My First is what a king must be. See Sonnet.—Sabine. 

My first lesson on the wheel. See Wheel and I, The.— 
Anon. 

My First may be a twist or simple fold. See Plymouth 
Rock.—Sabine. 

My First, my Second, and my Third. See Liberty 
Bell.—Sabine. 

My first, my very first, his name was Will. See Her 
Lovers.— “Bachelor Ben.” 

My First the helmsman guides aright. .See Concord.— 
Sabine. 

My First, though sometimes horned, is a fish. See 
Dog-star.—Sabine. 

My first thought was, he lied in every word. See 
“Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came.— 
Browning. 


My First was a musician’s son. See Tom Tom.—Sabine. 

My First was known in the remotest times. See Dol¬ 
lar.—Sabine. 

My First was once a part of one. See Cotton.—Sabine. 

My First was worshiped like a queen. See Catalogue. 
—-Sabine. 

My First’s a quiet place of rest. .See Bedroom.— 
Sabine. 

My foe was dark, and stern, and grim.' See My Enemy. 
—Brotherton. 

“My Fred, I can’t understand it.” See Soldier’s Re¬ 
prieve, The.—Thorpe. 

My friend, adown Life’s valley, hand in hand. See 
Hand in Hand.—Lowell. 

My friend holds careless in his palm. See Gift, A.— 
Cutter. 

My friend, I see the lines of care. See To the Dis¬ 
couraged.—Crofts. 

My friend, Mr. Tongue, he lives in my mouth. See Mr. 
Tongue.—Anon. 

My friend, my chum, myTrusty crony! See Dolce Far 
Niente.—Halpine. 

My friend. Mynheer Steven Van Brammelendam. .See 
Dutchman in England, A.—Bell. 

My friend, pray don’t hug up your pile. See Tim 
Titus.—Abrahams. 

My friend, thou sorrowest for thy golden prime. See 
Return of Youth, The.—-Bryant. 

My friends and brethren, Templars true. See Who’ll 
be the Drunkards Then.—Thompson. 

My friends, are you growing discouraged. See Living 
Stones.—Anon. 

My friends, hesitate before you vote liquor back into 
Atlanta. See Appeal for Temperance.—Grady. 

My friends, I’m glad to see you all. See Modern Chiv¬ 
alry.—M. D. S. 

My friends, our country must be free! See Alfred the 
Great to his Men.—Knowles. 

My friends. Thanksgiving Day comes. See Thanks¬ 
giving Sermon, A.—Anon. 

My friends, the business for which this meeting was 
called. See Temperance Meeting, A.—McBride. 

My fugitive years are all hasting away. See Poplar 
Field, The —Cowper. 

My garden grows beside a wall. See Two Gardens.— 
Anderson. 

My gentle Puck, come hither, thou remember’st. See 
Midsummer Night’s Dream (Compliment to Queen 
Elizabeth).—Shakespeare. 

My gettin’ the better of my wife’s father is one of the 
richest things on record. See How I Got Invited 
to Dinner.—Anon. 

My girl hath violet eyes and yellow hair. See Little 
Milliner, The.—Buchanan. 

My girl, thou gazest much. See Lover to his Lady 
that Gazed Much up to the Skies, The.—Turber- 
ville. 

My goblet’s golden lips are dry. See Song: “My gob¬ 
let’s golden,” etc.—Beddoes. 

My God and Father, while I stray. See Thy Will be 
Done.—Elliott. 

My God, I heard this day. See Man.—Herbert. 

My God, I love thee! Not because. See My God, I 
Love Thee.—Francis Xavier. 

My God, now I from sleep awake. See Midnight Hymn. 
—Ken. 

My God (oh, let me call thee mine). See Prayer, A.— 
Bronte. 

My God, who makes the sun to know. See Morning 
Hymn.—Watts. 

“My golden spurs now bring to me.” See Vision of 
Sir Launfal, The.—Lowell. 

My good blade carves the casques of men. See Sir 
Galahad.—Tennyson. 

My grandfather he, at the age of ninety-three. See 
Grandfather’s Pants.—Thatcher. 

“My grandfather Squeers,” said that Raggedy Man. 
See Grandfather Squeers.—Riley. 

My Grandma tells lovely stories. See Grandma’s 
story and Mine.—Goodfellow. 

My grandmamma says that the right way to sew. See 
Learning to Sew.—Anon. 

My grandmother’s garden! how well I remember. See 
Old Flower-beds, The.—Butterworth. 

My grandpa is the strangest man! See Grandpa’s Way. 
—Anon. 

My Grandpa promis’d if I’d stand. See Speech for 
a Small Boy.—Anon. 

My grandpa was a soldier. They tell about the day. 
See Best Tribute, The.—Anon. 

Vly grandpa went to war long years ago. See For 
Grandpa’s Sake.—Anon. 


762 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


My little 


My gran’pa is a funny man. See. Her Grandpa.— 
Stewart. 

My grief on the sea, how the waves of it roll! See My 
Grief on the Sea.—Hyde. 

My gun shines in the misty air. See Picket before Bull 
Run, The.—Day. 

My hair is gray, but not with years. See Prisoner of 
Chillon, The.—Byron. 

My half-day’s work is done. See same. —-Anon. 

My harp is on the willow tree. See Jewish Lullaby.— 
Field. 

My Harry and his sister Nan. See Harry’s Logic.— 
Phelps. 

My hawk is tired of perch and hood. See Lady of 
the Lake, The (Lay of the Imprisoned Hunts¬ 
man).—Scott. 

My head feels fairly dizzy over these problems. See 
Ambition.—Anon. 

My head is like a title-deed. See Lines to Bessy. 
— (Punch.) 

My hearers—-male and female, squenchin’ my native 
modesty. See Woman’s Rights, by Miss Tabitha 
Primrose.—Anon. 

My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains. See 
Ode to a Nightingale.—Keats. 

My heart and I but lately were at strife. See Content. 
—Anon. 

My heart, I cannot still it. See Auspex.—Lowell. 

My heart, I will put thee a question. See Question, 
A.—Hahn. 

My heart is at Thy feet—my helpless heart! See 
Prayer in Sorrow, A.—Moulton. 

My heart is awed within me, when I think. See Forest 
Hymn, A.—Bryant. 

My heart is breaking, dear Tittie. See Tam Glen.— 
Bums. 

My heart is chilled and my pulse is slow. See Old 
Story, The.—Allen. 

My heart is far from Liffey’s tide. See Mo Craoibhin 
Cno.—Walsh. 

My heart is high above, my body is full of bliss. See 
My Heart is High Above.—Anon. 

My heart is like a fountain true. See Mother’s Song. 
—Anon. 

My heart is like a singing bird. See Birthday, A.— 
Rossetti. 

My heart is set down ’twixt hope and fears. See 
Hecatompathia (Passion II.).—Watson. 

My heart is wasted with my woe. See Ballad of Ori- 
ana, The.—Tennyson. 

My heart leaps up when I behold. See same. —Words¬ 
worth. 

My heart was heavy, for its trust had been. See same. 
—Whittier. 

My heart will break—I’m sure it will. See False Love 
and True Logic.—Blanchard. 

My heart yearns to-day for a land far away. See To 
the Stars and the Stripes from Abroad. —- 
Welcker. 

My heart’s in the Highlands, my heart is not here. 
See My Heart’s in the Highlands.—Burns. 

My heid is like to rend, Willie. See same. —Mother- 
well. 

My hero is na deck’d wi’ gowd. See Hero, The.— 
Nicoll. 

My highway is unfeatured air. See Hymn of the 
Earth.—Channing. 

My home is on the rolling deep. See My Home.— 
Anon. 

My home was in the wilderness; I dwelt. See Lost 
Child, The.—Robinson. 

My home was on the mountain side. See Sailor’s Story, 
A.—Thomas. 

My home—yes, it’s bright and clean, sir. See Child’s 
Tear, A.—Shore. 

My homeless friend with the chromatic nose. See 
Drinking a Farm.—Hastings. 

My honorable and learned friend (Sir James Mackin¬ 
tosh) began by telling us. See Collision of Vices, 
A.—Canning. 

My “Hope” and “Faith” bought a modish gown. 
See My Poems.—Wheeler. 

My hopes retire; my wishes as before. See Persistence. 
—Landor. 

My house and barn have recently been destroyed by 
fire. See Bereaved Editor’s Speech, The.— 
Anon. 

“My husband cost me a good girl last week by one of 
his whims.” See Hen-hussey, The.—Anon. 

My incorrigible nephew, Billy, aged eleven. See Billy. 
—Ludlow. 

My inmost soul, O Lord, to Thee. See Learning to 
Pray.—Phelps. 


My intimates the best men ever had. See Savonarola 
and Lorenzo.—Austin. 

My Jessie lives beyond the town. See My Jessie.— 
Edwards. 

My jewels are the drops of dew. See My Treasures.— 
Spencer. 

My kingdom is my sweetheart’s face. See My Sweet¬ 
heart’s Face.—Wyeth. 

My lack of noble blood! Then that’s the bar. See 
Pride of Ancestry.—Croly. 

My lad, I should like to tell you a story. See It is 
Never Too Late to Mend (Digging for Hidden 
Treasure).—Reade. 

My lad, who sits at breakfast. See Recipe for an Ap¬ 
petite.—Cary. 

My lady carries love within her eyes. See Vita Nuova 
(His Lady’s Praise).—Dante. 

My lady fair, her golden hair. See Faint Heart.— 
Pearson. 

My lady Gwendolen would ride. See Gwendolen.—■ 
Griswold. 

My lady has a tea-gown. See Tea-gown, The.—Field. 

My lady hath a sable coach. See My Lady’s Coach.— 
Anon. 

My lady is fair as the flowers that grow. See Trouba¬ 
dour’s Song.—Fellows. 

My lan’, how you is growed, honey! See Tom and Roxy. 
—Clemens. 

My last word to you is, be courageous! See same .— 
Richter. 

My late washerwoman was a humorist. See She 
Washed for Him.—Fielding. 

My letters! all dead paper, mute and white. See Son¬ 
nets from the Portuguese, XXVIII.—Browning. 

My liege, I did deny no prisoners. See King Henry 
IV., Pt. I. (Hotspur’s Defence).—Shakespeare. 

“My liege,” said Warwick, “I crave pardon for pre¬ 
senting myself.” See Last of the Barons, The 
(Warwick, the King-maker).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

My liege, your anger can recall your trust. See Riche¬ 
lieu; or. The Conspiracy (Richelieu and France).— 
Bulwer-Lytton. 

My life closed twice before its close. See Parting.— 
Dickinson. 

My life ebbs from me—I must die. See First or Last? 
—Veley. 

My life is a wearisome journey. See End of the Way, 
The.—Anon. 

My life is like a stroll upon the beach. See Fisher’s 
Boy, The.—-Thoreau. 

My life is like the summer rose. See same. —Wilde. 

My life was a long dream; when I awoke. See Duty 
and Fame.—Smith. 

My life, which was so straight and plain. See Web of 
Life, The.—Moore. 

My light thou art, without thy glorious sight. See To 
His Mistress.—Wilmot. 

My lips are not to speak General Grant’s eulogy. See 
Ulysses S. Grant.—Robinson. 

My little bird, how canst thou sit. See Of the Child 
with the Bird at the Bush.—Bunyan. 

My little book, that’s neat and new. See Catullus to 
his Book.—-Catullus. 

My little Bo-Peep is fast asleep. See My Little Bo- 
Peep.—Holliday (or M’Manus]. 

My little boy at Christmas-tide. See Toy Cross, The. 
—Noel. 

My little boy, with pale, round cheeks. See Shadows, 
The.—Macdonald. 

My little boy, with voice and eyes. See On the Coast 
of Man.—Burdette. 

My little dear, so fast asleep. See My Little Dear.— 
Radford. 

My little girl is nested. See My Little Girl.—Peck. 

My little girl ran in and out, uneasy at her play. See 
Why Don’t You Tell Me Yes?—Archibald. 

My little kitty’s been so bad. See Kitty and I.—Anon. 

My little kitty’s gone astray. See Lost Kitten, The.— 
Goodfellow. 

My little love, do you remember. See Chess-board, 
The.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

My little love! my little speechless child. See Born 
Dumb.—Gale. 

My little love sits in the shade. See Priscilla.—Hutch¬ 
inson. 

My little Madchen found one day. See Chrysalis, A. 
—Bradley. 

My little maiden of four years old. See Larvse.— 
Whitney. 

My little neighbor’s table’s set. See My Little Neigh¬ 
bor.—Mason. 

My little niece and I—I read. See Card Houses. 
-—(New York Graphic.) 


763 





My little 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


My little one begins his feet to try. See First Step, 
The.—Saxton. 

My little pet sat in the moonshine. See Moonshine.— 
Larcom. 

My little son, who look’d from thoughtful eyes. See 
Toys, The.—Patmore. 

My little speech, dear friends, to-night. See Books.— 
Goodfellow. 

My little story, Cousin Rufus said. See Cousin Rufus’ 
Story.—Riley. 

My little white kitten’s asleep on my knee. See White 
Kitten, Tfye.—Douglas. 

My lonely heart is brimming o’er to-night. See Mem¬ 
ories of the War.—Riche. 

My lord, do the gods assemble to-day in council? See 
Gods in Council, The.—Radcliffe. 

My Lord—I have been lately informed. See Letter 
to Lord Chesterfield.—Johnson. 

My lord rides through his palace gate. See Farmer 
Feedeth All. The.—Anon. 

My lord, the Duke of Brittany. See Trumpeter’s Be¬ 
trothed, The.—Hooper. 

My Lord, the Irish Catholics never, never broke their 
faith.— See Violation of English Promises.— 
O’Connell. 

My Lord Tomnoddy got up one day. See Execution, 
The.—Barham. 

My Lord Tomnoddy’s the son of an earl. See My Lord 
Tomnoddy.—Brough. 

My lord, you told me you would tell the rest. See 
King Richard II. (Bolingbroke’s Entrance into 
London).—Shakespeare. 

My Lords, at this awful close, in the name of the Com¬ 
mons. See Impeachment of Warren Hastings 
(Peroration).—Burke. 

My Lords, I am amazed; yes, my Lords, I am amazed. 
See Lord Thurlow’s Reply to the Duke of Grafton. 
—Thurlow. 

My Lords! I am charged with being an emissary of 
France. See On being Found Guilty of High 
Treason (Robert Emmet’s Last Speech).—Emmet. 

My Lords: I cannot concur in a blind and servile 
address. See American War, The.—Chatham. 

My lords, I care not, if my actions. See King Henry 
VIII. (Queen Catherine, Henry VIII.).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

My Lords, I contend that we have not. See Concilia¬ 
tion Preferable to War.—Chatham. 

My Lords, I do not disguise the intense solicitude which 
I feel. See Parliamentary Reform.—Brougham. 

My Lords, I do not mean now to go further than just 
to remind your Lordships of this. See Impeach¬ 
ment of Warren Hastings.—Burke. 

My Lords, I have done; the part of the Commons is con¬ 
cluded. See Impeachment of Warren Hastings 
(Close).—Burke. 

My Lords, it is hard to be questioned upon a law which 
cannot be shown. See Earl of Strafford’s Defense, 
The.—Strafford. 

My Lords, many days have been spent in maintenance 
of the impeachment of the Earl of Strafford. See 
End of Government, The.—Pym. 

My Lords, we have endeavored to lay our case before 
you. See Defence of the Irish Party, A.—Rus¬ 
sell. 

My Lords: What have I to say why sentence of death. 
See On Being Found Guilty of High Treason 
(Speech of Vindication).—Emmet. 

My Lords, what is it that we want here to a great act. 
See Impeachment of Warren Hastings.—Burke. 

My Lords, what is my present misfortune may be for¬ 
ever yours. See Strafford’s Defense against the 
Charge of High Treason.—Strafford. 

My Lords—Who is the man that, in addition to the 
disgraces and mischiefs of the war. See American 
War, The (Employment of Indians in the American 
War).-—Chatham. 

My Lords, you have now heard the principles. See 
Impeachment of Warren Hastings.—Burke. 

My Lords, your House yet stands; it stands, a great 
edifice. See Impeachment of Warren Hastings 
(To the House of Lords).—Burke. 

My love and I among the mountains strayed. See 
Pastoral, A.—Nichols. 

My love and I for kisses play’d. See Kisses.—Strode. 

My love and I went maying. See My Love and I.— 
Ficke. 

My love, braid up thy golden locks. See Kilbrannon. 
—Joyce. 

My love (dear man!) turns in his toes. See My Love. 
—Anon. 

My love dwelt in a Northern land. See Romance.— 
Lang. 


My love for thee doth march like armed men. See 
same. —Gilder. 

My love has long brown curls. See To My Big Sweet¬ 
heart.—Cozzens. 

My love has talked with rocks and trees. See In Memo- 
riam (My Love has Talked).—Tennyson. 

My love he built me a bonnie bower. See Lament of 
the Border Widow.—Anon. 

My love he went to Burdon Fair. See Memories.— 
Japp. 

My love, I have no fear that thou shouldst die. See 
Sonnet: “My love, I have,” etc.—Lowell. 

My love in her attire doth shew for show) her wit. See 
Madrigal.—Anon. 

My love is far away from me to-night. See In Ab¬ 
sence.—Lampman. 

My love is like a parlor car. See Brakeman’s Sweet¬ 
heart, The.—Burdette. 

My love is like an even star. See Triolet.—Hersey. 

My love is neither young nor old. See My Love.—- 
Jones. 

My love is strengthen’d, though more weak in seeming. 
See Sonnets, ClI.—Shakespeare. 

My love leads the white bulls to sacrifice. See Pro¬ 
cessional.—James. 

My love—my chosen—but not mine! See Love-letter, 
A.—Meredith. 

“My love, my only love! The time will soon be here.” 
See Innocent Drummer, The.—Adams. 

My love o’er the water bends dreaming. See Sunday 
up the River.—Thomson. 

My love, on a fair May morning. See Marit.—Ashe. 

My love, still I think, that I see her once more. See 
Kathleen O’More.—Reynolds. 

My love to fight the Saxon goes. See Spinning Song, 
A.—O’Donnell. 

My Love too stately is to be but fair. See Electra.— 
Williams. 

My loved, my honoured, much respected friend! See 
Cotter’s Saturday Night, The.—Bums. 

My love’s face is exceeding fair. See Problem, A.— 
Day. 

My love’s worth all the world to me. See My Love.— 
Aide. 

My Loving People-—We have been persuaded by some 
that are careful of our safety. See Speech to the 
Army at Tilbury.—Queen Elizabeth. 

My lute, awake! perform the last. See Lover Com- 
plaineth of the Unkindness of his Love, The.— 
Wyatt. - 

My lute, be as thou wert when thou didst grow. See 
To His Lute.—Drummond. 

My luve is like a red, red rose. See Red, Red Rose, 
A.—Bums. 

My Maggie, my beautiful darling! See Before and 
After.—Anon. 

My maiden Isabel. See Garlande of Laurell, The 
(Mistress Isabel Pennell).—Skelton. 

My Maker! of Thy power the trace. See Hymn, A: 
“My Maker! of Thy power, ” etc.—Coleridge. 

My mama says that I’m too old. See Dolly Days.— 
Richards. 

My Mamma said that Santa. See Cross at Santa.— 
McNabb. 

My mamma to my papa said. See Fate of Charlotte 
Russe, The.—Donnelly. 

My marriage is a failure! All my troubles should have 
ended to-day at noon. See Fly, The.—Anon. 

My married daughter could you see. I’m sure you would 
be struck. See Match-making Mamma, The.— 
Anon. 

My masters twain made me a bed. See Canoe, The.— 
Crawford. 

My mate and I had a cosy nest. See Empty Nest, The. 
—Case. 

My Maudie sat in her cushioned chair. See Adhesive 
Poem, An.—Thatcher. 

My May of life is fall’n into the sear. See Macbeth.— 

Shakespeare. 

My memory is shocking. See Open or Shut?—De 
Musset. 

My men were all my First, brave, stalwart, true. See 
Picture.—Sabine. 

My merry men I now must call. See Scene from the 
Life of Robin Hood, A.—Kavanaugh. 

“My mind, gentle maiden, is more disturbed by anxiety 
than my body with pain.” See Ivanhoe (Besieged 
Castle, The).—Scott. 

My mind lets go a thousand things. See Memory.— 
Aldrich. 

My minde to me a kingdom is. See same. —Dyer. 

My missis! You gwine to marry her, you say! See 
Aunt Phoebe’s Remonstrance.—Williams. 


764 







FIRST LINE INDEX 


My sistern 


My mistress’s eyes^ are nothing like the sun. See 
Sonnets, CXXX.—Shakespeare. 

My mother bore me in the southern wild. See Little 
Black Boy, The.—Blake. 

My mother has but just gone out. See Little Nurse 
The—Tastu. 

My mother, my kind mother. See My Mother.— 
Anon. 

My mother oft said to me, “Jamie, my boy.” See 
Me and My Dog.—( Harper’s Weekly.) 

My mother says—“Empty your pocket, Jo.” See 
Boy’s Pocket, A.—Anon. 

“My mother says I must not pass.” See Witch in the 
Glass, The.—Piatt. 

My mother she’s so good to me. See Boy’s Mother, A. 
—Riley. 

My mother, when I learned that thou wast dead. See 
On the Receipt of My Mother’s Picture.—Cowper. 

My mother’s almost crazy. See Muzzer’s Chil’ren 
(Mother’s Children .—Otis. 

My much-esteemed Pupils —As our school has now 
drawn to a close. See Correct Habits.—Munson. 

My mule refreshed, his bells. See Descent, The.— 
Rogers. 

My muzzer’s almos’ trazy. See Muzzer’s Chil’ren.— 
Otis. 

My name is Hans von Hillon, and. See Over behind 
der Moon.—Kerr. 

My name is Meek. I am, in fact, Mr. Meek. See 
“Births. Mrs. Meek, of a Son.”—Dickens. 

My name is Norval. On the Grampian hills. See 
Douglas (Douglas’s Account of Himself).—Home. 

My name is Spring; I bring warm showers See Four 
Seasons, The.—Anon. 

My name is Tommy, an’ I hates. See So I Was.— 
Smiley. 

My name is winter. My scepter I sway. See Winter’s 
Work.—Anon. 

My name it is Hugh Reynolds, I come of honest par¬ 
ents. See Lamentation of Hugh Reynolds, The.— 
Anon. 

My name, sir, is Bill, but they call me Swipes. See 
Swipes’s Dinner.—Anon. 

My name’s Jack, and I’m eight years old. See Arathu- 
sa’s Torment.—-Anon. 

My name’s John White; I am a warder. See Mouse, 
The.—Cox. 

My native country, thee. See America.—Smith. 

My native land, my native land. See American 
Eagle, The.—Thompson 

My native Land—thy Puritanic stock. See Rejected 
National Hymns, The, II.—Newell. 

My neat and pretty book, when I thy small lines see. 
See Written in the First Leaf of a Child’s Memo¬ 
randum Book.—Lamb. 

My neighbor met me on the street. See My Neighbor. 
—Anon, 

My new pittayatees—my—a—new pittayatees! See 
My New Pittayatees.—Hood. 

My new-cut ashlar takes the light. See Dedication, 
A.—Kipling. 

My noble lord. See Othello, the Moor of Venice (Act 
III., Sc. 3).—Shakespeare. 

My noble, lovely, little Peggy. See Letter to Lady 
Margaret Cavendish, A.—Prior. 

My nose! my nose! Oh! mercy me! my dreadful little 
nose! See Stanzas to My Nose.—Anon. 

My old Uncle Tommy, why, he alius used to say. See 
Uncle Tommy’s Philosophy.—Hynson. 

My old Welch neighbor over the way. See Robin, The. 
—Whittier. 

My ornaments are arms. See Wandering Knight’s 
Song, The.—rLockhart. 

My own acquaintance with Philip Nolan. See Man 
without a Country, The.—Hale. 

My own beloved, who hast lifted me. See Sonnets 
from the Portuguese, XXVII.—Browning. 

My own! Closer, closer yet! See Fool’s Revenge, 
The.—Taylor. 

My own dim life should teach me this. See In Memo- 
riam (“My own dim life,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

My pa and ma will be surprised. See Speech: “My 
pa.” etc.—Kavanaugh. 

My pa, he scolds me jes’ becuz. See My Ma, She Knows. 
—Anon. 

My pa, he’s got the funniest ways. See Pa’s Ways.— 
Richards. 

My papa he’s the bestest man. See Boy’s King, A.— 
Kiser. 

My Pa is a travelling man, so he calls himself. See 
Colorado Hotel Rules.—Anon. 

My papa sometimes scolds and says. See Little Mid¬ 
get.—-Anon. 


My papa’s all dressed up today. See U. S. Spells 
‘ ‘ Us. ”—Bradford. 

My pappy asked me if I’d say. See Speech: “My 
pappy,” etc.—Kavanaugh. 

My passion is as mustard strong. See New Song, of 
New Similes, A.—Gay. 

My patron saint, St. Valentine. See Valentine Verses 
—Page. 


My Peggy is a young thing. See Gentle Shepherd, The 
(My Peggy).—Ramsay. 

My pensive Public, wherefore look you sad? See 
Play-house Musings.—Smith. 

My pensive Sara! thy soft cheek reclined. See Eolian 
Haro, The.—Coleridge. 

My people!—the cause of your present assemblage too 
well is known to you. See Peasant Boy’s Vindica¬ 
tion, The.—Dimond. 

My Phillis hath the morning-sun. See Phillis.—Lodge 
[or Dyer], 

My Phyllis, O my Phyllis. See My Phyllis.—Fitch. 

My pipe is lit, my grog is mixed. See Bachelor’s 
Dream, The.—Hood. 

My pipe is out; the hour is late. See My Pipe is Out.— 
— Hopkins. 

My Poins, I cannot frame my tongue to feign. See 
Second Satire, The.—Wyatt. 

My pony and I! See My Pony.—Denton. 

My pony toss’d his sprightly head. See My Pony.— 
A. ’ 


My poor, dear Grandma is so sick. See Grandma’s 
Tea.—Rook. 

“My poor father! I am thy only son!—if I were to 
fall.” See Last Days of Pompeii (Last Night of 
Pompeii, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

My practice’s out! See Musical Threnody, A.—Anon. 

My pretty budding, breathing flower. See Sketch of a 
Young Lady Five Months Old.—Praed. 

My pretty little Dora is well and happy? See David 
Copperfield (Disastrous Announcement, A).— 
Dickens. 

My prime of youth is but a frost of cares. See Lines 
Written by One in the Tower.—Tychborn. 

My prow is tending toward the west. See My New 
World.—Browne. 

My purest longings spring. See same. —Eaton. 

My queen is tired and craves surcease. See At the 
Dance.—DeGruchy. 

My race is o’er.—But now, before. See Year, The.— 
Kavanaugh. 

My rauist spreit in that desert terribill. See Palice 
of Honour, The (Desert Terrible, The).—Douglas. 

My reason for loving a republican form of government. 
See Free Speech.—Smith. 

My recollectest thoughts are those. See My Recol- 
lectest Thoughts.—Carryl. 

My risen Lord, I feel Thy strong protection. See same. 
Anon. 

My roof is hardly picturesque. See Autumn Flitting, 
An.—Cotterell. 

My rose of crimson peeped over the sweet brier. See 
My Rose and Hers.—Guild. 

My roses blossom the whole year round. See same. — 
Bennett. 

My sandalled feet are firm and fleet. See Song of the 
Thaw, The.—Kernighan. 

My Saviour, dare I come to Thee. See Wanderer, The 
(Palingenesis).—Lytton. 

My sentence is for open war- of wiles. See Paradise 
Lost (Moloch to the Fallen Angels).—Milton. 

My shag-hair Cyclops, come, let’s ply. See Sapho and 
Phao (Arrows for Love).—Lyly. 

My sheep are thoughts, which I both guide and serve. 
See Arcadia (Dorus to Pamela).—Sidney. 

My sheep I neglected, I broke my sheep hook. See 
Amynta.—Elliot. 

My silks and fine array. See Song: “My silks,” etc.— 
Blake. 

My sin-stricken bretherin and sisters, thar Lord only 
knows. See Sermon on Keards, Horses, Fid¬ 
dlers and Foolin’ with the Gals, A.—Anon. 

My sis’er Sue she’s little ’n me. See Us Two.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

My sister! my sweet sister! if a name. See Epistle to 
Augusta.—Byron. 

My sister, you are faint, exhausted! you can bear no 
more. See Execution of Louis XVI., The.— 
Anon. 

“My sister’ll be down in a minute, and says you’re to 
wait, if you please.” See Miss Edith Helps Things 
Along.—Harte. 

My sistern an’ brodrin dear. See Brudder Jones’s 
Heterodoxy.—Anon. 


765 




My sister’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


My sister’s best feller is ’most six-foot-three. See 
“Sister’s Best Feller.”—Lincoln. 

My skiff is of bark from the white birch-tree. See 
Fairy Barcarolle, A.—Eddy. 

My Skillettville breethering, of the masculine and also 
of the feminine gender. See Trumpet Sermon, A. 
—Anon. 

My son, a father’s warning heed. See Papa to his Heir. 
— (Punch.) 

My son, be this thy simple plan. See Advice to the 
Young.—Anon. 

My son Hezekiah’s a painter; yes, that’s the pur- 
fession he’s at. See Hezekiah’s Art.—Lincoln. 

My son, thou wast my heart’s delight. See On the 
Death of my Son Charles.—Webster. 

My son, what does this mean? See Effects of War, 
The.—Ceria. 

My son! What! Drafted! My Harry! Why, man, 
he’s a boy at his books. See Drafted.—Bostwick. 

My song is silenced, yet the echo stays. See Quat¬ 
rain.—Banning. 

My soul, asleep between its body-throes. See Soul 
Stithy, The.—Woods. 

My soul its secret has, my life too has its mystery. 
See Secret, The.—Arvers. 

My soul, sit thou a patient looker-on. See Respice 
Finem.—Quarles. 

My soul, there is a country. See Peace.—Vaughan. 

My soul to-day is far away. See Drifting.—Read. 

My soul, where is the fruit of thy long pain. See Love 
Unreturned.—Beeching. 

My spirit longeth for Thee. See Desponding Soul’s 
Wish, The (My Spirit Longeth for Thee).—Byrom. 

My spirit’s on the mountains, where the birds. See 
Sonnet Written during his Residence in College. 
—Wolfe. 

My spotless love hovers with purest wings. See 
Sonnets to Delia (Beauty, Time, and Love, II.). 
—Daniel. 

My story is a simple one, its moral I don’t know. See 
Stray Sunbeam, A.—Gilbert. 

My story, marm? well, really now, I haven’t much to 
say. See What the Temperance Cause Has 
Done for John and Me.—Coles. 

My story opens in the classic presinks of Bostin. See 
Moses, the Sassy; or. The Disguised Duke.— 
Ward. 

My sunbeam children must work and play. See Sun¬ 
beam Fairies.—Anon. 

My sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love. See To Les- 
bia.—Campion. 

My tea is nearly ready and the sun has left the sky. 
See Lamplighter, The.—Stevenson. 

My teacher told me, yesterday. See Butterflies.— 
Goodfellow. 

My teacher told me the other day. See Large Room, 
A.—Goodfellow. 

My text, dear brethren, may be found. See Early 
Bird, The.—Anon. 

My thoughts are all in yonder town. See Friend’s 
Burial, The.—Whittier. 

My thoughts hold mortal strife. See Lament, A.— 
Drummond. 

My time, O ye Muses, was happily spent. See Pas¬ 
toral, A.—Byrom. 

My times are in thy hand! S°e same. —Hall. 

My Tito, you are tired; it has been a fatiguing day. 
See Romola (Tito’s Armor).—Eliot. 

My train left Dantzic in the morning. See Mad Engin¬ 
eer, The.—Anon. 

My train ran from Dantzic to Bromberg, one hundred 
miles. See Prussian Railway Conductor’s Story, 
The.—Fobes. 

My true love hath my heart, and I have his. See 
Arcadia, The (Bargain. The).—Sidney. 

My Valentine I prithee be. See Rondeau for St. 
Valentine’s Day.—Fitch. 

My very dear friend. See Bit of Shopping for the 
Country, A.—Anon. 

My vife all de time says to me, “Carl Dunder. ” See 
Initiated as a Member of the United Order of Half¬ 
shells.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

My voice is still for war. See Cato (Speech of Sem- 
pronius for War).—Addison. 

My voice shrinks from the task. See Bunker Hill 
Monument, The.—Kossuth. 

My warning to the idlers. See Cyrano de Bergerac 
(Seen'’ from etc.).—Rostand. 

My wawst fearws a^e wealized; the Op’wa is na maw. 
See Last Kick of Fop’s Aliev, The — (Punch.) 

My wife and I live all alone. See Rumpus in a Shoe¬ 
maker Shop, A.—McBride. 


My wife is a woman of mind. See same. —Anon. 

My wife looked o’er a valentine. See Old Valentine, 
An.—Birdseye. 

My wife worked along side o’ me, sewing new seats on 
the boy’s pants. See Broken Home, A.—Anon. 

My wind has turned to bitter north. See No More.— 
Clough. 

My window is the open sky. See Immortality.—Hardy. 

My work is finished; I am strong. See Finished.— 
Longfellow. 

My worthy friend, A. Gordon Knott. See New House, 
The.—Lowell. 

My youngest doll is very sick. See Dr. Johnny’s 
Visit.-—Anon. 

Mynheer, blease helb a boor oldt man. See Fritz and 
I.—Adorns. 

Myriads of daisies have shown forth in flower. See 
Poems Composed in the Summer of 1833.— 
Wordsworth. 

Myriads of motley molecules through space. See 
Soul and Sense.—Kimball. 

Myrtle, and eglantine. See Wishmaker’s Town 
(Flower-seller, The).—Young. 

Mysterious Death! who in a single hour. See Trans¬ 
figuration . —Alcott. 

Mysterious Life, we speak as if we know. See Life.— 
Morgan. 

Mysterious Night, when our first parent knew. See 
Night and Death.—White. 

Mysterious Presence, source of all. See Inspiration 
of the Spirit The.—Beach. 


N 

“N” for Nannie and “B” for Ben. See same. —Dal¬ 
las. 

Naiiy, noii mander o’use to be callin’ ’im Roii, Roii, 
Roii. See Owd Roii.—Tennyson. 

Nae ane’s wae worn and weary. See Far Awa Lan’, 
The—Anon. 

Nae palace hae I wi’ gilded ha’s. See Bonny Wee 
House, The.—Lyle. 

Nae shoon to hide her tiny taes. See Babie, The.— 
Miller. 

Nae star was glintin’ out aboon. See Nae Star Was 
Glintin’.-—Cook. 

Naiad, hid beneath the bank. See Dirge, A.—Cory. 

Naiads and the nymphs extremely overjoy’d, The. 
See Polyolbion.—Drayton. 

Naiads, and ye pastures cold. See Telling the Bees.— 
Lang. 

Naked and shaggy, they herded at eve by the sound of 
the seas. See Dream of the Prehistoric, A.— 
Scott. . • 

Naked on parents’ knees, a newborn child. See Babe, 
The.—Jones. 

Name me the fairest flower of earth. See Challenge. 
A.—Snowden. 

Niinftc the faithful pausing once to pray. See Allah’s 
House.—Sherman. 

Nancy Dawson, Nancy Dawson. See Nancy Dawson. 
—Horne. 

Nancy Matilda Jones was a gal which didn’t have a 
mind of her own. See Nancy Matilda Jones.— 
Anon. 

Napoleon Bonaparte took a great fancy to Talma. See 
Napoleon’s Advice to an Actor.—Anon. 

Napoleon! he hath come again—borne home. See 
Napoleon’s Final Return.—Browning. 

Napoleon sent an army to conquer Tyrol See Hans, 
the Useless.—-Fobes. 

Napoleon was sitting in his tent. See Victor of Ma¬ 
rengo, The.—Anon. 

Napoleon, Wellington, Von Moltke,—it is with such 
names as these the name of General Grant belongs. 
See Our Happy Warrior.—Collier. 

Napoleon’s banners at Boulogne. See Napoleon and 
the Sailor.—Campbell. 

Narrow, wretched, and solitary is the self-life! See 
Self-life.—Pulsford. 

Nat Ricket at cricket was reckoned a don. See Nat 
Ricket at Cricket.—Miles. 

National policies can encourage industry and com¬ 
merce. See Duty of the Hour, The.—McKinley. 

National security depends upon the manhood of its 
voters. See True Manhood, the Nation’s only 
Safety.—Soper.. 

Nations have armies in the plentitude of power. See 
Opinions Stronger than Armies.—Ostrander. 

Nature, a jealous mistress, laid him low. See Epi¬ 
gram on the Death of Edward Forbes.—Dobell. 


766 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Never 


Nature admits no lie. Most men profess to be aware 
of this. See Nature a Hard Creditor.—-Carlyle. 

Nature and he went ever hand in hand. See Priest, A. 
—Gale. 

Nature denied him much. See same. —Rogers. 

Nature, ever fickle jade. See Miller’s Maid, The.— 
Brooks. 

Nature is interesting in all its multifold phases. See 
Nature’s Monotony.—Anon. 

Nature is made better by no mean. See Winter’s 
Tale, The (Art and Nature).—Shakespeare. 

Nature never did betray. See Lines Composed a Few 
Miles above Tintern Abbey, etc. ("Nature never,” 
etc.).—W ordsworth. 

Nature reads not our labels, “great” and “small.” 
See Man with the Shoe, The.—Cheney. 

Nature, that framed us of four elements. .See Ambi¬ 
tion.—Marlowe. 

Nature, they say, doth dote. See Abraham Lincoln.— 
Lowell. 

Nature will be reported—all things are engaged in 
. writing it’s history. See Nature.—Miller. 

Nature’s children, beautiful trees! See Beautiful 
Trees.—A. L. R. 

Naught is the same “as if Love had not been!” See 
With Sa’di in the Garden (“Naught is the same.” 
etc.).—Arnold. 

Nay but you, who do not love her. See Song: “Nay, 
but you,” etc.—Browning. 

Nay! Byron, nay! not under where we tread. See 
Byron’s Grave.—Noel. 

Nay, Death, thou art a shadow! Even as light. See 
Lux Est Umbra Dei.—Symonds. 

Nay, fond one! I will ne’er reveal. See On a Tear An¬ 
gelina Observed Trickling down my Nose. 

-— (Punch.) 

Nay, fond one. shun that mistletoe. See On my Re¬ 
fusing Angelina a Kiss under the Mistletoe. 
— (Punch.) 

“Nay, give me back my blossoms.” See Gain of Loss, 
The.—Bonar. 

Nay, I cannot come into the garden just now. See 
Maud.—Leigh. 

Nay, I have loved thee! See Theseus and Ariadne.— 
Mifflin. 

Nay, I must knit till my task is done. See Fidelity.— 
M. F. B. 

Nay! I will pray for them until I go. See Prayers for 
the Dead.—Proctor. 

Nay! if you will not sit upon my knee. See Pan in 
Love.—Story. 

“Nay, I’ll stay with the lad.” See Heroic Death, A. 
— (Spectator.) 

Nay, it may not be otherwise, darling. See Isle of 
Yew.—Anon. 

Nay, lady, one frown is enough. See To Helen in a 
Huff.—Willis. 

Nay, nay, another fortnight. See His Own Pills.— 
Anon. 

Nay, nay, dear child, I cannot let you slight. See 
Linings.—Smith. 

Nay, only look what I have found! See Sparrow’s 
Nest, The.—Howitt. 

Nay, said I not, and if I said it not, I say it now. See 
Philip van Artevelde (“Nay, said I not,” etc.).— 
Taylor. 

Nay, then, farewell. See King Henry VIII. (Cardinal 
Wolsey, on being Cast off by King Henry VIII.).— 
Shakespeare. 

Nay, this is Hope; a gentle dove. See Answer to “Cui 
Bono?” An.—Carlyle. 

Nay, ye shall hear how it befell! See Count Gaultier’s 
Ride.—Renaud. 

Nay, you wrong her, my friend, she s not fickle. See 
Outgrown.—Dorr. 

Near a shabby village, which was caving. See Gilded 
Age, The (Uncle Dan’l’s Prayer).—Clemens. 

Near a small village in the West. See Quince.—Praed. 

Near Erie there lives a colored person. See Chicken 
on the Brain.—Anon. . 

Near ould Skibbereen, in the gim of the owshun. See 
Widow MacShane.—Newell. 

Near our south-western border, when a child. See 
Tree Burial.—Bryant. 

Near strange, weird temples, where the Ganges tide. 
See Bayadere, The.—Saltus. 

Near the campfire’s flickering light. See Now I Lay 
Me down to Sleep.— (Wichita Eagle.) 

Near the city of Sevilla. See Magdalena; or, the Span¬ 
ish Duel.—Waller. „ 

Near the King’s court was a young child born, see 
Hynd Horn.—Anon. 


Near the lake where drooped the willow. See Near the 
Lake.—Morris. 

Near the stately German palace. See Marble Queen, 
The.—W oolsey. 

Near the town of Reading, in Berks County, Pennsyl¬ 
vania. See Dutchman's Snake, The.—Anon. 

Near the tumultuous brook of Green-head Ghyll. See 
Michael and his Son.—Wordsworth. 

Near to a farm-house, and bordered round. See Gris- 
elda Goose.—Cary. 

Near to Clapham town-gate lived an old Yorkshire tike. 
See Yorkshire Horse-dealer, The.—Anon. 

Near to that part of the Thames. See Death of Bill 
Sikes, The.—Dickens. 

Near to the silver Trent. See Sirena.—Drayton. 

Near where yonder evening star. See Cockayne Coun¬ 
try.—Darmesteter. 

Near yonder copse, where once the garden smiled. See 
Deserted Village, The (Village Preacher, The).— 
Goldsmith. 

Nearer and nearer and nearer and near! See Indian 
Attack, The.—Brownjohn. 

Nearer, my God, to Thee. See same. —Adams. 

“Nearer my God to Thee.” rose on the air. See 
“Nearer to Thee.”—Jones. 

Nearly four thousand years ago history parted into 
two streams. See Two Streams of History, The. 
—-Thompson. 

Nearly one hundred years ago, there was a day of re¬ 
markable gloom and darkness. See same.— Lee. 

’Neath cloister'd bough each floral bell that swingeth. 
See Hymn to the Flowers.—Smith. 

’Neath summer's sun and winter’s blast. See Realiza¬ 
tion.—Burdette. 

Neber hearn tell o’ dat, honey? ’Twas more’n twenty 
year ago. See Carmel ita.—Dunn. 

Necks are very convenient to have. Bull-frogs and 
toads don’t need them. See Essay on Necks.— 
Bronson. 

Necks is a very convenient things to have. See Necks 
—a Boy’s Composition.—Bronson. 

“Needy knife-grinder, whither are you going?” See 
Friend of Humanity and the Knife-grinder, The.— 
Canning. 

“Ne’er have I seen the market and streets so empty!” 
See Hermann and Dorothea.—Goethe. 

Neglect of small things is the rock. See Neglect of 
Little Things.—Smiles. 

Neglected minstrel of the single song. See American 
Partridge, The.— (Southern Collegian.) 

Neighbor Silas sung a song. See Song that Silas 
Sung, The.—Foss. 

Neither realism nor romance furnishes a more striking 
and picturesque figure. See Columbus the Dis¬ 
coverer of America.—Depew. 

Nellie, please don’t sing any more. See Two Faults.— 
Coale. 

Nellie was my eldest doll. See Dolls’ Tea-party, The. 
—Anon. 

Nello and Patrasche were left all alone in the world. 
See Dog of Flanders, A.—La Ramee. 

Nelson, having dispatched his business at Portsmouth. 
See Death of Nelson, The.—Southey. 

Neow, look'ee here, feller citizens, and the wimmin. 
See Lecture by a Yankee.—McBride. 

Neow, Si, I’ll jest tell yeou how it is. See Josiah’s Pro¬ 
posal.—McBride. 

Nestleton Abbey, in the East Riding of Yorkshire. 
See Nestleton Magna (Sister Agatha’s Ghost).— 
W ray. 

Never a beak has my white bird. See Thistle-down.— 
Bates. 

Never a boy had so many names. See One of his 
Names.—Pollard. 

Never a fairer maiden breathed. See Acrostic Plaint, 
An.—R. S. P. 

Never a leaf falls. See Work.—Anon. 

Never any more. See In a Year.—Browning. 

Never be ashamed to say, “I do not know.” See Be 
in Earnest.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Never be it said that fate itself. See King Richard III. 
—Shakespeare. 

Never did a pilgrim approach Niagara with deeper en¬ 
thusiasm. See My Visit to Niagara.—Haw¬ 
thorne. 

Never did the Nine impart. See Shepherd’s Hunting, 
The (Eclogue IV.).—Wither. 

Never did there devolve on any generation of men 
higher trusts than now. See Constitution and the 
Union. The (Constitution, The).—Webster. 

Never from lips of cunning fell. See Problem, The 
(Responses).—Emerson. 


767 




Never 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Never, from the foundation of the earth. See Joan of 
Arc (Execution of Joan of Arc).—DeQuincey. 

Never have I known such a fireside companion as he 
was! See Colloquial Powers of Dr. Franklin.— 
Wirt. 

Never give up!—it is wiser and better. See Never Give 
Up.—Tupper. 

Never, Iago. Like to the Pontic Sea. See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice.—Shakespeare. 

Never let it be said the days of chivalry are fled. See 
Fight of Hell-kettle, The.—Power. 

Never lived a Yankee yet. See In the Catacombs.— 
Ballard. 

Never look behind, boys. See Climbing up the Hill.— 
Anon. 

Never look sad; nothing so bad. See Don’t Look Sad. 
—Anon. 

Never love unless you can. See Advice to a Girl.— 
Campion. 

Never mind how the pedagogue proses. See To Fanny. 
—Moore. 

Never mind me, Uncle Jared; never mind my bleeding 
breast! See Ensign Bearer, The.—Anon. 

Never, my heart, wilt thou grow old! See Growing 
Old.—Hall. 

Never saw anything like it! See Rebellion, The.— 
Denton. 

Never seek to tell thy love. See Love’s Secret —Blake. 

Never sleeping, still awake. See Echo, An.—Swift. 

Never stoops the soaring vulture. See Song of Hia¬ 
watha, The (Ghosts, The).—Longfellow. 

Never tell a man that he is a liar, unless you are certain 
that you can lick him. See Don’t Call a Man a 
Liar.—Anon. 

Never the time and the place. See same. —Browning. 

Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore. 
See O Come Quickly!—Campion. 

Never wedding, ever wooing. See Maid’s Remon¬ 
strance, The.—Campbell. 

Never yet was a springtime. See Awakening.— 
Sangster. 

New doth the sun appear. See Change should Breed 
Change.—Drummond. 

New England has furnished us so many shining lights 
of feminine poetic genius. See Three Women 
Poets of New England.—Faxon. 

New England’s dead! New England’s dead! See New 
England’s Dead.—M’Lellan. 

New England’s poet, rich in love as years. See To 
John Greenleaf Whittier.—Lowell. 

New Year comes,—so let’s be jolly. See Feast of 
Vegetables, and the Flow of Water, The.— (Punch.) 

New Year’s morning softly broke. See New Year’s 
Wishes.—Larcom. 

News from a foreign country came. See News.— 
Traherne. 

News o’ grief had overtea ken. See Broken Heart, 
The.—Barnes. 

News of battle! Hear it ringing. See Silent Army 
of Memorial Day, The.—Jones. 

News of battle! News of battle! hark! ’tis ringing 
down the street. See Edinburgh after Flodden.— 
Aytoun. 

"News to the king, good news to all!” See News to 
the King.—Webster. 

Next comes the dull disciple of thy school. See English 
Bards and Scotch Reviewers (Wordsworth).— 
Byron. 

Next morn the Baron climbed the tower. See Mar- 
mion (March, The).—Scott. 

Next to the notice which the opposition has found itself 
called upon to bestow. See Defence of Jefferson.— 
Clay. 

Next to the worship of the Father of us all. See Agri¬ 
culture and Love of Country.—Holt. 

Next to thee, O fair gazelle. See Arab to the Palm, 
The.—Taylor. 

Next week will be published (as “Lives” are the rage). 
See Lines on Leigh Hunt.—Moore. 

“Next year, next year,” we say. See Next Year.— 
Perry. 

Niagara Falls is one of the finest structures in the 
known world. See Day at Niagara, A.—Clemens. 

Nice distinctions are troublesome. See same. —Eliot. 

Nicolo Paginini strode with downcast eyes. See 
Legend of Paginini, A.—Harrison. 

Nicotia, dearer to the Muse. See Winter Evening 
Hymn to my Fire, A.—Lowell. 

Nigger mighty happy w’en he layin’ by co’n. See 
Plough-hands’ Song, The.—Harris. 

"Nigh on to twenty years.” See Aged Prisoner, The.— 
Anon 


Nigh one year ago. See Festus (Lucifer and Elissa).— 
Bailey. 

Nigh to a grave that was newly made. See Old Sexton, 
The.—-Benjamin. 

Night after night we dauntlessly embark. See Night 
after Night.—Bloede. 

Night saw the crew like pedlers with their packs. See 
Lunar Stanzas.—Knight. 

Night and Morning were at meeting. See Dance of 
Death, The.—Scott. 

Night came at last. The noisy throng had gone. See 
Rizpah.—Vickers. 

Night clos’d around the conqueror’s way. See After 
the Battle.—Moore. 

Night in a great city. What a world of meaning. See 
Fire! Fire!—Eaton. 

Night in Arabia. An hour ago. See Scholar of 
Thebet Ben Khorat, The.—Willis. 

Night in the Baron’s castle. See Christmas Guest, 
The.—Goodwin 

Night is fair virtue’s immemorial friend. See Night 
Thoughts (Socrates).—Young 

Night is the time for rest. See Night.—Montgomery. 

Night kissed the young rose, and it bent softly to sleep. 
See Charity.—Winton. 

Night of the Tomb! He has entered thy portal. See 
Webster.—Sargent. 

Night on the great grass plains of Africa. See Martyrs 
of Uganda, The.—Murray. 

Night rested on the sea—the moon alone See Burning 
of the Lexington.—Bard. 

Night spread its starry mantle! See Drunkard, The. 
—(Real Life.) 

Nightingales warble about it. See Secret, The.— 
Woodberry. 

Night’s diadem around the head. See America.— 
Rankin. 

Nights of music, nights of loving. See Nights of Music. 
—Moore. 

Nihilism is the righteous and honorable resistance of a 
people crushed. See Russian Nihilism.—Phillips. 

Nikolas roused the watchman, the bridge was let down, 
and the steward summoned. See Sin of the 
Bishop of Modenstein, The.—Hope. 

Nilus! Nilus! and before them rolled. See How Bal¬ 
thazar the King Went down into Egypt.—Duvar. 

Nimble boy, in thy warm flight. See Castara (To 
Cupid, upon a Dimple in Castara's Cheek).-—Hab- 
ington. 

“Nine,” by the cathedral clock. See Child Lost.— 
Anon. 

Nine grenadiers with bayonets on their guns. See 
Boy’s Dream, A.—Levee. 

Nine o’clock. ’Tis time for school. Nee Little Teacher, 
The.—Eastman. 

Nineteen! of years a pleasant number. See JEta.te 
XIX.—Merivale. 

Nineteen out of twenty in this country receive all their 
education. See Country Pedagogue, The.— 
Valentine. 

Nine-tenths of all that goes wrong. See Mind Your 
Business.—Dixey. 

Nisus was guardian of the gate. Nee ,-Eneid, The 
(Nisus and Euryalus).—Conington. 

No abbey’s gloom, nor dark cathedral stoops. See 
Sleepy Hollow.—Channing 

No account of John Boyle O’Reilly would be complete. 
See John Boyle O’Reilly.—Capen. 

No baby in the house, I know. See No Baby in the 
House.—Dolliver. 

No beard on thy chin, but a fire in thine eye. See 
Anne Hathaway.—Falconer. 

No bird had ever lifted note so clear. See “Love that 
never Cold Can Be.”—Erskine. 

No bird-song floated down the hill. See River Path, 
The.—Whittier. 

No black-plumed hearse goes slowly sweeping by. See 
Night that Baby Died, The.—Niles. 

No candid observer will deny that whatever of God 
there may be. See same. — (Springfield Repub¬ 
lican.) 

No cause is so bound up with religion as the cause of 
political liberty. See Moral and Physical Science 
Friendly to Freedom.—Chapin. 

No ceaseless vigil with hard toil we keep. See Com¬ 
pensation.—Collier. 

No chance has brought this ill to me. See My Web of 
Life.—Anon. 

No, children, my trips are over. See Engineer’s Story, 
The.—-Thorpe. 

No cloud, no relict of the sunken day. See Nightin¬ 
gale, The.—Coleridge. 


768 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


No 


No clouds are in the morning sky. See Autumn Song. 
—Stedman. 

No common object to your sight displays. See Human¬ 
ity’s Heroes.—Pope. 

No, comrades, I thank you, not any for me. See I 
Have Drank my Last Glass.—Anon. 

No coward soul is mine. See Last Lines.—Bronte. 

No cymbal clashed, no clarion rang. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Battle of Beal’ an Duine).—Scott. 

No factious voice. See Graves of the Patriots.— 
Percival. 

No fairies left? You need not tell me so. See Frost 
Work.—Bradley. 

No, fellow-citizens, we dismiss not Adams and Jeffer¬ 
son. See Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson (Adams 
and Jefferson).—Everett. 

No fish stir in our heaving net. See Fisherman’s Song. 
—Baillie. 

No flame of war was he, no flower of grace. See 
Jacques Cartier.—Knight. 

No free government was ever founded. See same .— 
Quincy. 

No freeman, saith the wise, thinks much on death. See 
End, The.—Rice. 

No god to mortals oftener descends. See Old Poet to 
Sleep, An.—Landor. 

No graceful shape like a Grecian urn. See Churning, 
The.—Taylor. 

No harbor of all harbors 'neath God’s sun. See De 
Long.—W atrous. 

No heavenly maid we here behold. See Madonna of 
Fra Lippo Lippi, A.—Gilder. 

No help in all the stranger-land. See Faith.—Cheney. 

No human being who saw that sight. See Catastrophe, 
A.—Arkwright. 

No human eyes Thy face may see. See Pantheism and 
Theism.—-Higginson. 

No, I am not working on a farm for my health now. 
See Following the Advice of a Physician.—( Dakota 
Bell.) 

No, I tell you! I cannot bear a hand upon my person. 
See Becket (Murder of Thomas A Becket, The).— 
Tennyson. 

No, I thank you, I can’t, possibly. See Kisses all 
Round.—-Anon. 

No, I won’t forgive our parson—not down to my dyin’ 
day. See Christening, The.—Corbett. 

No! I’m no longer an aspirant for histrionic honors. 
See Coaching the Rising Star.—De Lorez. 

No, Impudence, you sha’n’t have one! See Her No.— 
Anon. 

No! is my answer from this cold bleak ridge. See 
Loyal Woman’s No, A.—Larcom. 

No, it’s not because he has the suffrage that I should 
like to be a man. See Mrs. Pickles Wants to be a 
Man.—Dallas. 

No jewell’d beauty is my love. See No Jewell’d 
Beauty.—Massey. 

No less than five of the eight zones. See Trees of the 
Bible.—Groser. 

No! let me alone!—’tis better so. See Her Last 
W ords.—Anon. 

No life in earth, or air, or sky. See Crotalus.—Harte. 

No little step [or steps] do I hear in the hall. See Papa 
Can’t Find Me.—Anon. 

No longer mourn for me when I am dead. See Son¬ 
nets, LXXI.—Shakespeare. 

No longer sleep. See Awake.—Dutt. 

No man can be truly great without money. See 
Office-seeker’s Platform, The.—Anon. 

“No man can come unto me except the Father draw 
him.” See God’s Love to Man.—Beecher. 

No man ever stood for so much to his country and to 
mankind. See Superiority of Washington.— 
Depew. 

No man has ever sunk so low. See Old Violin, The.— 
Stewart. 

No man is the lord of anything. See Troilus and 
Cressida (Foresight).—Shakespeare. 

No man thinks more highly than I do of the patriotism. 
See Call to Arms, The.—Henry. 

No matter how the chances are. See Jerry an’ Me.— 
Rich. 

No matter what horse-car. See Horse-car Incident, A. 
—Shillaber. 

No matter where you meet a dozen earnest men 
pledged to a new idea. See Public Opinion. 
Phillips. , 

No mercy, traitor!—Now at his heart! See Pizarro 
(Pizarro and Rolla).—Sheridan. 

No more happy expedient for raising the revenues of 
the church could have been found. See Mt. Pis- 
gah’s Christmas ’Possum.—Dunbar. 


No more! I’ll hear no more! Begone, and leave me! 
See Venice Preserved (Priuli and Jaffier).—Otway. 

No more, my dear, no more these counsels try. See 
Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet LXIV).—Sidney. 

No more—no more—O, nevermore on me. See 
Don Juan (Nevermore).—Byron. 

No more, no more, shall come the brave. See New 
Beacon’s Set.—Rooney. 

No more shall meads be decked with flowers. See 
Protestation, The.-—Carew. 

No more the battle or the chase. See Indian Summer. 
—Tabb. 

No more the pleasing jest, the genial flow. See Edgar 
W. Nye.—Ham. 

No more these .simple flowers belong. See Burns.— 
Whittier. 

No more words. See same. —Lushington. 

No mortal power shall turn me! I arise. See Death of 
Livingston. The.—Nod!. 

“No; my boys, they don’t amount to no great.” See 
Hoss.—Greene. 

No, my dear neighbor, I don’t reckon as how it’s pos¬ 
sible. See Born Inventor, A.—Edwards. 

No, my own love of other years! See In After Time.— 
Landor. 

No, my son, cheek is not better than wisdom. See 
Advice to a Young Man.—Anon. 

No, never, never will I live at a hotel again; not unless 
I come to my dotage. See Mrs. Slowly at the 
Hotel.—Dallas. 

No night of gloom to drop between our eyes. See 
There Shall be no Night There.—Jay. 

No! No! Bird in the darkness singing. See Tsigane's 
Canzonet, The.—King. 

No, no, fair heretic! it needs must be. See True Love. 
—Suckling. 

No, no! go not to Lethe, neither twist. See Ode on 
Melancholy.—Keats. 

No! no! I don’t defend him. See At the Court-house 
Door.—Anon. 

No, no, I well remember—proofs, you said. See 
Demon Lover, The.—Hillhouse. 

No, not despairingly. See Unto Thee.—Bonar. 

No, not in the halls of the noble and proud. See 
Quakeress Bride, The.—Kinney. 

No, not more welcome the fairy numbers. See No, 
not More Welcome.—Moore. 

“No one can tell,” said little Nell. See Stranger, The. 
—Johnson. 

No one could tell me where my Soul might be. See 
Search, The.—Crosby. 

No one failed him! He is keeping. See Edinburgh 
after Flodden (James IV. at Flodden).—Aytoun. 

No one has a greater admiration than I. See What 
the Flag Means.—Lodge. 

No one is more like an honest man than a thorough 
rogue. See Spurgeon’s Advice.—Charles Spur¬ 
geon. 

No one saw me! This time I shall get off. See Orange 
Tree, The.—Anon. 

No paltry promptings of unglutted hate. See Jeffer¬ 
son Davis.—Peck. 

No party has ever risen into power so rapidly as the 
Prohibition. See National Prohibition.—Tal- 
mage. 

No people can be bound to acknowledge. See Maxims 
of George Washington. 

No power is so sensibly felt by society as that of the 
judiciary. See Judges Should be Free.—Bayard. 

No power so completely sways the hearts and wills of 
mankind. See Plea for Enthusiasm, A.—Anon. 

No precedent, ye say. See For Cuba.—Bell. 

No rain, no rain; the long, hot hours rolled by. See 
Main Hazir Hun.—Winslow. 

No roofs of gold o’er riotous tables shining. See 
Description of a Religious House.—Crashaw. 

“No rose may bloom without a thorn?” See Thorn¬ 
less Roses.—Dorr. 

No royal governor, indeed. See Centennial Celebra¬ 
tion of Concord Fight (Minute Men of ’ 76 ).—Curtis. 

No ruffling wind or howling storm disturbed the placid 
sea. See Foundering of the Dolphin.—Reed. 

"No,” said the lawyer, “I sha’n’t press your claim.” 
See Claim Was Met, The.—Anon. 

No screw, no piercer can. See Confession.—Herbert. 

No sculptured marble greets the pilgrim’s view. See 
Ode to Independence Hall, An.—Mitchell. 

No seas again shall sever. See All Well.—Bonar. 

No shout disturbed the night. See Bunker’s Hill.— 

No, sir, we are above all this. See Enmity toward 
Great Britain (Old Grudge against England, The). 
—Choate. 


769 





No 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


No slave beneath that starry flag. See same. —Taylor. 

No sleep like hers, no rest. See White Roses.— 
Rhys. 

“No smoking allowed,” met the eye of the crowd. 
See No Smoking Allowed.—Bailey. 

No soldier, statesman, hierophant, or king. See To 
the Memory of Fletcher Harper.—Craik. 

No song of a soldier riding down. See Ride of Collins 
Graves, The.—O’Reilly. 

No sooner is mention made of laws affecting the liquor 
traffic. See Cry of Personal Liberty, The.— 
Ireland. 

No soul did hear her lips complain. See Ellen Brine 
of Allenburn.—Barnes. 

No specious splendor of this stone. See Cornelian, 
The.—Byron. 

No splendor ’neath the sky’s proud dome. See Angel 
in the House, The (Tribute, The).—Patmore. 

No stately column marks the hallowed place. See 
Alamance.—Whiting. 

No stir in the air, no stir in the sea. See Inchcape 
Rock, The.—Southey. 

No stream from its source flows seaward. See Lucile 
(“No stream,” etc.).—Lytton. 

No sun—no moon! See November.—Hood. 

No sweeter girl ewe ever gnu. See Zoological Ro¬ 
mance, A.—Adams. 

No, the bugle sounds no more. Nee Robin Hood.— 
Keats. 

No! there ain’t no use of talkin’. See Wife’s Lament, 
A.—Cadmus. 

No! those days are gone away. See Robin Hood.— 
Keats. 

No thyng ys to man so dere. See Praise of Women.— 
Mannyng. 

No, Tom, you may banter as much as you please. See 
Shelling Peas.—Cranch. 

No twenty centuries can be compared with these four 
centuries. Nee Our Expanding Republic (Dedica¬ 
tion of Columbian Exposition).—Watterson. 

No two are alike, and no one is alike more than once. 
See Woman.—Anon. 

No united nation that resolves to be free can be con¬ 
quered. See Greek Revolution.—Clay. 

No use denyin’, Haines; it’s all my fault. See Repa¬ 
ration.—Anon. 

No vesper-breeze is floating now. See Marathon by 
Starlight.—Montgomery. 

No voter can help holding one of the four following 
relationships to the saloons. See On Which Side 
Are You?—Willard. 

No vulture’s eye hath seen the path. See Hidden 
Path; or. The Atlantic Cable, The.—Cleaveland. 

No, we ain’t performin’ to-day, sir, and the boys are 
all on the gape. See Positively the Last Perform¬ 
ance!— (.Punch.) 

No wonder he creaks as the winds go by. See Weather¬ 
cock’s Complaint, The.—Anon. 

“No wonder me darling is cross-eyed.” See “No 
W onder. ’ ’—Easton. 

Noah did the best and worst thing for the world. 
See Curse of Drink, The.—Talmage. 

Noble Republic! happiest of lands. See Viva l’Amer- 
ica.—Anon. 

Nobles and heralds, by your leave. See Epitaph Ex¬ 
tempore.—Prior. 

Noblest Charis, you that are. See Celebration of 
Charis, A (Discourse with Cupid).—Jonson. 

Nobly, nobly Cape Saint Vincent to the North-west 
died away. See Home-thoughts, from the Sea.—- 
Browning. 

Nobody here? I suppose somebody will come pres¬ 
ently. See At Cross Purposes.—Anon. 

Nobody knows how hard I’ve tried. See Trying Hard. 
—Kavanaugh. 

Nobody knows how I want to grow. See Coming 
Woman, The.— (Christian Union.) 

“Nobody knows how much that man thought of me.” 
See Josiah Allen’s Wife as a P. A. and P. I. (Wid- 
der Doodle).—Holley. 

Nobody knows of the work it makes. See Nobody 
Knows but Mother.—Anon. 

Nobody knows the nerve it takes. See “Angels Can 
Do no More.”—Kavanaugh. 

Nobody sees a battle. See Battle, A.—Sumner. 

Nodded his liege assent, and straightway bade. See 
Rab the Ranter’s Bag-pipe Playing.—Tennant. 

Noey Bixler ketched him, and fetched him in to me. 
See Pet Coon The.—Riley. 

None are so wise as they who make pretense. See 
Chinese .Story, A.—Cranch. 

None but a school-boy knows how hard. See Speech 
for a Small Boy.—Kavanaugh. 


None call the flower! ... I will not so malign. See 
To the Milkweed.—Mifflin. 

None ever climbed to mountain height of song. See 
Woman’s Hand, A.—Parker. 

None will dwell in that cottage. See Ruined Cottage, 
The.—Maclean. 

Noon o’er Judea! All the air was beating. See 
Palmer’s Vision, The.—Holland. 

Noon-time an’ June-time, down around the river. See 
Down around the River.—Riley. 

Noozell was alone in his glory. See Noozell and the 
Organ-grinder.—“ Ah-Mie.” 

Nope, I reckon ’tain’t no problem why our Sammy went 
away. See Why Sammy Left the Farm.—Paine. 

Nor Bethlehem nor Nazareth. See Assumption The. 
—Tabb. 

Nor force nor fraud shall sunder us! See America.— 
Dobell. 

Nor lack I friends, long tried and near and dear. See 
Prisoners of Naples, The.—Whittier. 

Nor martial shout, nor minstrel tone. See Marmion 
(Flodden Field).—Scott. 

Nor myrrh, nor cassia, nor the choice perfumes. See 
Sonnet : “Nor myrrh,” etc.—Quarles. 

Nor second he, that rode sublime. See John Milton.— 
Gray. 

Nor shall it hope in vain: the time draws on. See 
Grave, The (Resurrection, The).—Blair. 

Norfolk sprung thee, Lambeth holds thee dead. See 
Epitaph on Clere.—Surrey. 

“Norroway hills are grand to see.” See Sailing of 
King Olaf, The.—Brotherton. 

North of the North Star. See Song of the Mad Poet.— 
M. P. 

North Wales is a land of mountains and rocks. See 
Blind Mary of the Mountain.—Anon. 

North Wind came whistling through the wood. See 
Friends.—Warner. 

Northward he turneth through a little door. See 
Eve of St. Agnes, The (Music).—Keats. 

Nose and chin would shame a knocker. See On 
Samuel Rogers.—Byron. 

“Not a child; I call myself a boy.” See Not a Child.— 
Swinburne. 

Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note. See Burial 
of Sir John Moore at Corunna, The.—Wolfe. 

Not a fine work of art; the keen critic would have pro¬ 
nounced it a daub. See Picture on the Wall, The. 
-—Hawks. 

Not a hand has lifted the latchet. See House of Death, 
The.—Moulton. 

Not a kiss in life, but one kiss at life’s end. See To a 
Dead Woman.—Bunner. 

Not a man of iron, but of live oak. See Golden Grains. 
—Garfield. 

Not a sound disturbs the air. See Midsummer’s Noon 
in the Australian Forest, A.—Harpur. 

Not a sound, not a breath. See Bayonet Charge, The. 
—Urner. 

Not a sound through the forest’s deep silence was 
heard. See Woodland Lesson, The.—Bouton. 

Not a sous had he got — not a guinea or note. See Not 
a Sous Had He Got.—Barham. 

Not all the beauties of this joyous earth. See Cease¬ 
less Aspirations.—Waterston. 

Not all thy flushing suns are set. See Ode to Endym- 
ion Porter.—Herrick. 

Not all who seem to fail have failed indeed. See same. 
—Anon. 

Not alone for the rich and great. See People’s Holi¬ 
days, The.—Farningham. 

Not alone in grand Cathedrals, not alone in Concert 
Hall. See Music of Nature, The.—Ormsby. 

Not alone in pain and gloom. See Temptation.— 
Gilder. 

Not always on the mount may we. See On the Mount. 
—Hosmer. 

Not an Indian had been seen all the afternoon. See 
Cry in the Darkness—the Sentinel’s Alarm.— (De¬ 
troit Free Press.) 

Not another day of the year comes upon the earth. 
See Easter Morning.—Beecher. 

Not any of earth’s happiness she knew. See Charlotte 
Bronte.—Becker. 

Not as all other women are. See My Love.—Lowell. 

Not as when some great Captain falls. See Abraham 
Lincoln.—Stoddard. 

Not as you meant, O learned man, and good! See 
Hopefully Waiting.—Randolph. 

Not at home to any one, excepting Colonel Harrington 
and Mr. Carter. See Testing the Suitors.—Anon. 

Not beauty which men gaze on with a smile. See 
Gougane Barra.—De Vere. 


770 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Not 


Not because of their courage, O soldiers, but because 
an engagement is now inevitable. See History 
of Rome (Scipio to his Army).—Livy. 

Not bed-time yet! The night-winds blow. See Be¬ 
fore the Curfew.—Holmes. 

Not by [the] ball or brand. See Vanquished.— 
Browne. 

Not care to know your future, blue-eyed maiden? See 
Orphan’s Trust, The.—Hunt. 

Not, Celia, that I juster am. See same. —Sedley. 

Not changed but glorified! Oh, beauteous language. 
See Not Changed but Glorified.—-Anon. 

Not charity we ask. See Promise, The.—Holmes. 

Not costly domes, nor marble towers. See Memorial 
Day.—Smith. 

Not drowsihood and dreams and mere idleness. See In 
Sleep.—Burton. 

Not even in the magnificent harbor of Constantinople. 
See Harbor of San Francisco, The.—Anon. 

Not every danger is physical. See Man Behind, The 
(Sword of Damocles, The).—Denison. 

Not every thought can find its words. See Undevel¬ 
oped Lives.—Lecky. 

Not far advanced was morning day. See Marmion 
(Marmion and Douglas).—Scott. 

Not far from old Kinvara, in the merry month of May. 
See Ould Plaid Shawl, The.—Fahy. 

Not far from town there is a country inn. See Matri¬ 
monial Bugs and the Travelers, The.—Anon. 

Not for that neither;—here’s the pang that pinches. 
See King Henry VIII. (Anne Bullen).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Not for the Puritan, in his reserved and haughty con¬ 
sciousness. See Puritan Spirit, The.—Storrs. 

Not for the splendor of the brow that shines. See 
Why I Love Thee.—AidA 

Not forever on thy knees See Deeds, not Words.— 
Anon. 

Not from a vain or shallow thought. See Problem, 
The.—Emerson. 

Not from his throat there came. See Anton Seidl.— 
Ingham. 

Not from the grave our journey home begins. See 
Heavenward.—Dickenga. 

Not from the pestilence and storm. See In Extremis. 
—Brown. 

Not from the whole wide world I chose thee. See 
same. —Gilder. 

Not going abroad? What, to-morrow? See Farewell, 
The.—Anon. 

Not greatly moved with awe am I. See Two Deserts, 
The.—Patmore. 

Not he who displays the latest fashion. See Real Gen¬ 
tleman. The.—Anon. 

Not he who rides through conquered city’s gates. See 
Triumph.—Anon. 

Not here! not here! not where the sparkling waters. 
See I Shall be Satisfied.—Anon. 

Not here! the white North has thy bones. See Sir 
John Franklin.—Tennyson. 

Not I myself know all my love for thee. See Dark 
Glass, The.—Rossetti. 

Not in anger, not in pride. See Ode Recited at the 
Harvard Commemoration, July 21,1865.—Lowell. 

Not in prosperity’s broad light. See Robert Bruce and 
the Spider.—Barton. 

Not in the eyed, expectant gloom. See Night in a 
Down-town Street.—Roberts. 

Not in the haunts of the wicked. See God’s Beverage. 
—Watkins. 

Not in the laughing bowers. See Dreamer, The.—Anon. 

Not in the simmering still, over smoky fires. See 
Glass of Cold Water, A.—Denton. 

Not in the sky where it was seen. See Lost Pleiad, 
The.—Simms. 

Not in the solitude. See Hymn of the City.—BryanL 

Not in the swaying of the summer trees. See WOman’s 
Voice.—Arnold. 

Not in the time of pleasure. See Tears.—Cheney. 

Not in the world of light alone. See Living Temple, 
The.—Holmes. 

Not in this world to see his face. See First Lesson 
The.—Dickinson. _ . , TT ,, 

Not in vain the distance beacons. See Locksley riali. 
—Tennyson. 

Not knowing, or looking, or heeding what happened 
behind. See Under Two Flags (Military Steeple¬ 
chase, The).—La Ramee. 

Not least, ’tis ever my delight. See Morning.—Sav¬ 
age. . „ 

Not less than eighty thousand victims go annually to 
the drunkard’s grave.—See New Declaration of 
Independence, A.—Fisk. 


Not like clouds that cap the mountains. See Song of 
the Smoke-wreaths.—L. T. A. 

Not like the tombs where sleep Egyptian kings. See 
Grant at Rest.—Meehan. 

Not lips of mine have ever said. See In Youth.— 
Stein. 

Not long after we were settled in our new abode. See 
Aristarchus Studies Elocution.—Bisbee. 

Not long ago I wandered near. See Letting the Old 
Cat Die.—Dodge. 

Not long ago I was slowly descending the carriage 
road, after you leave Albano. See Modern Paint¬ 
ers (Sky, The).—Ruskin. 

Not long since a sober middle-aged gentleman was 
quietly dozing. See Frenchman’s Mistake, The. 
—Anon. 

Not long since I was walking with Jimmy Butler. _ See 
Paddy McGrath’s Introduction to Mr. Bruin.— 
Anon. 

Not many friends my life has made. See Tribute, A.— 
Holland. 

Not many generations ago, where you now sit. See 
North American Indians.—Sprague. 

Not many leagues from here, and e’en not many months 
ago. See Orphan’s Prayer, The.—Anon. 

Not many years since, a young married couple. See 
Give me back my Husband.—Anon. 

Not marble, nor the gilded monuments. See Sonnets, 
LV.—Shakespeare. 

Not merely for our pleasure, but to purge. See Ej 
Blot Til Lyst.—Payne. 

Not ’mid [or midst] the lightning of the stormy night. 
See Death of Stonewall Jackson.—Flash. 

Not ’mid the thunder of the battle guns. See Birth 
of Australia, The.—Russell. 

Not ’mid the world’s vain objects that enslave. See 
Sonnet Composed while the Author was Engaged 
in Writing a Tract, occasioned by the Convention 
of Cintra.—Wordsworth. 

Not midst [or ’mid] the lightning of the stormy fight. 
See Death of Stonewall Jackson.—Flash. 

Not mighty deeds make up the sum. See Little Deeds. 
—Anon. 

Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul. See Son¬ 
nets, CVII.—Shakespeare. 

Not mine to draw the cloth-yard shaft. See Satirist, 
The.—Koopman. 

Not more than a dozen persons were in the car. See 
Fleeting Show of Hen, A.—Anon. 

Not much doing to-day—that’s certain! See Silver 
Dollar, The.—McBride. 

Not much to make us happy. See Playthings.—Lar- 
com. 

Not now, my child—a little more rough tossing. See 
Not Now.—Pennefather. 

Not on a prayerless bed, not on a prayerless bed. See 
Exhortation to Prayer.—Mercer. 

Not on some despot drunk with slaughtering. See 
M. Carnot’s Death.—Ingham. 

Not on the neck of prince or hound. See Splendid 
Spur, The.—Quiller-Couch. 

Not one pretty flower would stay. See Holly.— 
Hartley. . 

Not only talked of, but absolutely settled, signed, 
sealed, and delivered. See Will, The.—Picker¬ 
ing. 

Not only that thy puissant arm could bind. See Wel¬ 
lington.—Beaconsfield. 

Not only we, the latest seed of Time. See Godiva.— 


leuuy&un. 

“Not ours,” say some, “the thought of death to 
dread. ” See Great Misgiving, The.—Watson. 

Not ours the vows of such as plight. See Not Ours 
the Vows.—Barton. . 

Not out of books, legal researches, historical inquiry. 
See On the Declaration of Independence.— 


DtUllO. , . 0 

Not she with traitorous kiss her Saviour stung, bee 
Woman.—Barrett. . 

Not since last year! So glad again to find you! bee 
After a Dance.—Moran. 

Not since the death of Moses has a man so gone up 
into a mountain. See Tribute to Grant, A. 
Jenkins. 

Not so in haste, my heart! See Wait.—Taylor. 

Not so the son; he marked this oversight. See Moral 
Essays, Epistle III.—Pope. 

Not that which men do covet most is best. See r ae¬ 
rie Queene, The (Contentment).—Spenser. 

Not the last struggles of the Sun. See On the Death 
of Southey.—Landor. . 

"Not the Mr.-, really?” See Charming Woman, 

A.—Jerome. 


771 







Not 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Not then forget that Chamber of the Dead. See Night 
and Day, The.—Rogers. 

Not to be conquered by these headlong days. See 
Outlook.—Lampman. 

Not to be served, O Lord, but to serve man. iSee 
same.—Smith. 

Not to know vice at all, and keep true state. See 
Epode.—Jonson. 

“Not to myself alone.” See same. —Webb [or Part¬ 
ridge]. 

Not trust you, dear? Nay, ’tis not true. See One 
Way of Trusting.—Kimball. 

Not twice a twelvemonth you appear in print. See 
Epilogue to the Satires.—Pope. 

Not understood. We move along asunder. See Not 
U nderstood.—Bracken. 

Not until after tea. Mamma said that we must not 
go. See Book-peddler, The.—Graham. 

Not unto us, O Lord. See Non Nobis.—Anon. 

Not unto you the gods gave wings. See To Austin 
Dobson.—Ketchum. 

Not violets I gave my love. See Love’s Colors.—Fra- 
zer-Tytler. 

Not what the chemists say they be*. See Pearls.— 
Stoddard. 

Not what we think, but what we do. See Faith and 
Works.—Cary. 

Not where high towers rear. See True Temple, The.— 
Anon. 

Not where the chimes of the Sabbath bell. See Grave 
of Mrs. Judson, The.—Remifk 

Not with a craven spirit he. See Maximilian.—;Saxe. 

Not with more glories, in th’ ethereal plain. See 
Rape of the Lock, The.—Pope. 

Not with slow, funereal sound. See Ode on the Unveil¬ 
ing of the Shaw Memorial, An.—Aldrich. 

Not worlds on worlds, in phalanx deep. See Daisy, 
The.—Good. 

“Not ye who have stoned, not ye who have smitten 
us, ” cry. See Arraignment.—Cone. 

Not yet! Along the purpling sky. See Not Yet.— 
Mason. 

Not yet, dear love, not yet: the sun is high. See Part¬ 
ing Hour, The.—Custance. 

Not yet! No, no,—you would not quote. See Come¬ 
dian’s Last Night, The.—Stedman. 

“Not yet, not yet; steady, steady!” See Bunker Hill. 
—Calvert. 

Not yet, O friend! not yet. See same. —Harte. 

“ Not yet, the flowers are in my path. ” See Death and 
the Youth.—Landon. 

Not yet will Cold, the tyrant, abdicate. See January. 
—Cornwell. 

Not your sweet, red lips, dear. See Soul’s Kiss, The.— 
Thompson. 

Nothin’ to say, my daughter! Nothin’ at all to say! 
See Nothin’ to Say.—Riley. 

Nothing at all in the paper to-day! See same. —Anon. 

Nothing but flags! but simple flags! See Nothing but 
Flags.—Anon. 

Nothing but leaves; the spirit grieves. See Nothing 
but Leaves.—Akerman. 

Nothing could be rougher and more rustic. See Zeph 
Higgins’ Confession.—Stowe. 

Nothing exceeds in ridicule, no doubt. See Pride and 
Vanity.—Young. 

Nothing from the pen of Dickens or Thackeray goes 
nearer to the fount of tears. See Boys—and the 
Bottle.—Cuyler. 

Nothing, in fact, is small, and any one who is affected 
by the profound penetrations of nature. See 
Majesty of Trifles, The.—Hugo. 

Nothing in his life became him like the leaving of it. 
See Macbeth.—Shakespeare. 

Nothing is a mystery. See Misfortune.—Fletcher. 

Nothing is lost; the drop of dew. See Nothing is 
Lost.—Anon. 

Nothing is quite so quiet and clean. See Snow in 
Town.—Mark. 

Nothing of this now; nothing but incessant eulogy. 
See Idols.—Phillips. 

Nothing resting in its own completeness. See Incom¬ 
pleteness.—Procter. 

Nothing so difficult as a beginning. See Don Juan 
(Haidee and Juan).—Byron. 

Nothing to do but work. See Pessimist, The.—King. 

“Nothing to do!” in this world of ours! See Nothing 
to Do.—Anon. 

Nothing to wear! Now, as this is a true ditty. See 
Nothing to Wear.—Butler. 

Nothing under the sun is new. See same. —Cook. 

Nothing was heard in the library of the Ringwood 
household. See Busy.—Burk. 


Notis,—On de occasion of a vedding celebration. See 
Charge of the “Dutch Brigade,” The.—Con¬ 
nolly. 

“Nought loves another as itself.” See Orthodoxy.— 
Blake. 

“Nought to be done,”—eh? See For Life and Death. 
—Anon. 

November chill blaws loud wi’ angry sugh. See Cot¬ 
ter’s Saturday Night, The.—Burns. 

November has one day which is sacred in the family 
calendar. See Thanksgiving Speech, A.—Anon. 

November winds, blow mild. See November Child, A. 
—Gilder. 

November woods are bare and still. See “Down to 
Sleep. ”—Jackson. 

November’s hail-cloud drifts away, November’s sun¬ 
beam wan. See Orphan Maid, The.—Scott. 

Now, a boy is one kind of person. See David’s Solil¬ 
oquy.—Richards. 

Now a strong, fair shoot, from the forest bring. See 
Arbor Day.—Anon. 

Now all the cloudy shapes that float and lie. See 
“Such Stuff as Dreams are Made of.”—Higgin- 
son. 

Now all the flowers that ornament the grass. See 
Unreturning.—Stoddard. 

Now all ye flowers make room. See Memorial Hymn 
—.1. A. Garfield.—Swing. 

Now along the solemn heights. See Recessional.— 
Roberts. 

Now are our brows bound with victorious wreaths. 
See King Richard III. (Peace).—Shakespeare. 

Now are the winds about us in their glee. See Song in 
March.—Simms. 

Now as an angler melancholy standing. See Brit¬ 
annia’s Pastorals ("Riot’s Climbing of a Hill).— 
Browne. 

Now, as fame does report, a young Duke keeps a court. 
See Frolicksome Duke, The.—Anon. 

Now at last I am at home. See Return, The.— 
Tooker. 

Now, believe me, God hides some ideal in every human 
soul. See same. —Collyer. 

Now, Bell has gone, and Charley too. See Left Alone. 

•—Denton. 

Now, Bones, I think I shall be able to puzzle you this 
time. See Bones on Mensuration.—Anon. 

Now, Bones, tell me what you are thinking about? 
See Fresh Set of Teeth, A.—Anon. 

Now, boys, are we all of one mind with regard to Mr. 
Stephen Slipperton? See Going! Going! Gone! 
—Graham. 

Now, boys, are we ready? See Rehearsal, The.—-Anon. 

Now, boys, I promised you a new study for Monday. 
See Noblest Hero, The.—Gray. 

Now, boys, I want you to form into a class. See 
Spelling Class, The.—Brubaker. 

Now, boys, let us teach each other. See Dialogue for 
Five Boys.—Keife. 

Now bring we sweet flowers, bring lilies and roses. 
See Silent Grand Army, The.—E. M. H. C. 

Now, bumble-bee, you just keep still. See Captured 
Bumble-bee, The.—Wood. 

Now, butt an’ ben, the change-house fills. See Holy 
Fair, The.—Burns. 

Now, by heaven, they may be cool who can. See 
Strafford.—Browning. 

Now, by the blessed Paphian queen. See Dilemma, 
The.—Holmes. 

Now, by the rood, as Hamlet says, it grieves me sore 
to say. See Other One was Booth, The.—Cooke. 

Now by your children’s cradles,—now, by your fath¬ 
ers’ graves. See Virginia (Icilius on Virginia’s 
Seizure).—Macaulay. 

Now came still Evening on, and Twilight gray. See 
Paradise Lost (Evening in Paradise).—Milton. 

Now Camilla’s fair fingers are plucking in rapture the 
pulsating strings. See Camilla.—Keeler. 

Now can the world once more the glory see. See Our 
Flag.—-Alsop. 

Now, captain, what is a sloop? See Nautical Conver¬ 
sation, A.—Anon. 

Now, children, all sit down. See Rehearsal, The.— 
Clement. 

“Now, children,” said Puss, as she shook her head. 
See Pussy’s Class.—M. M. D. 

Now, children, there’s somebody coming. See Who 
is It?—Anon. 

Now comes the graybeard of the north. See Winter 
Days.—Abbey. 

Now, comrades, as ye love the hills. See Last Charge, 
The.—Hynson. 


772 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Now Jack 


Now Councilman O’Hoolihan don’t b’lave in annixa- 
tion. See “Fift’ Ward J’int Debate, The.”— 
Lincoln. 

Now dandelions in the short, new grass. See Dande¬ 
lions.—Albee. 

Now, darn if I han’t jist about sick of being boddered 
by dese boys. See Snackin’-turple Man, The.— 
Anon. 

Now, dear Aunt Bethiah, do tell us all about your 
journey. See Aunt Bethiah’s Journey.—Anon. 

Now deeper roll the maddening drums. See Bunker 
Hill.—Mellen. 

“Now, des’ oo wait, my papa dear.” See Little Doro¬ 
thy’s Sayings.—Bible. 

Now, Dolly, listen to me. See Grace and Dolly.—Anon. 

Now, Dolly, really I can’t see. See Nerves.—-Denton. 

Now, don’t look so glum and so sanctified, please. See 
There’s never any Harm in Good Company.— 
Brooks. 

“Now, Dyonysius—tyrant—die!” See Damon and 
Pythias.—Schiller. 

Now each creature joys the other. See Ode: “Now 
each creature,” etc.—Daniel. 

Now England lessens on my sight. See To England.— 
Moore. 

Now fades the last long streak of snow. See In Memo- 
riam (Spring).—Tennyson. 

Now fair Arbor Day is here. See Hail, Arbor Day.— 
Roosa. 

Now, Faith, Hope, and Love. See Easter Wreath, 
The.—Denton. 

Now Fannie, my love, our honey-moon is ended. See 
Mr. Hunter’s Mistake.—Anon. 

Now fill the bowl, now join the dance and see. See 
Death of Cleopatra, The.—Horace. 

“Now for a beautiful night’s rest.” See Night with a 
Ventriloquist, A.—Cockton. 

“Now for a brisk and cheerful fight!” See Fight at 
the San Jacinto, The.—Palmer. 

Now for a parental lecture. Sir, I am delighted to see 
you here. See Rivals, The.—Sheridan. 

Now for the fight! Now for the cannon peal! See 
Battle Cry.—Anon. 

Now from the chamber all are gone. See Lying in 
State.—Landor. 

Now gather all our Saxon bards—let harps and hearts 
be strong. See Triumphs of the English Language. 
—Lyons. 

Now gentle sleep hath closed up those eyes. See 
Upon a Stolen Kiss.—Wither. 

Now, girls, and boys too. See Getting up a Picnic.— 
Anon. 


“Now, girls,” said Aunt Hetty, “put down your em¬ 
broidery and worsted work.” See Aunt Hetty on 
Matrimony.—Anon. 

Now, girls, the teacher has gone after her dinner. See 
Grumbling over Lessons.—Herbert. 

Now glory to the Lord of hosts, from whom all glories 
are! See Ivry.—A Song of the Huguenots.— 
Macaulay. . 

“Now, good wife, bring your precious hoard, the 
Norland farmer cried. See Christmas Sheaf, The. 
—-Cary. 

Now good-bye to play, ’tis the first of September. See 
First Day of School, The.—Denton. 

Now, Grandpa, as I sit and knit. See Playing Old 
Folks.—Goodfellow. 

“ Now, Gudhand, have you sold the cow.’ See Happy 
Little Wife, The.—Cary. 

“ Now half a hundred years had I been born. See 
His Statement of the Case.—Morse. 

Now hands to seed-sheet, boys! See Sower’s Song. 
Carlyle. v „ 

Now hardly here and there a hackney coach. See 
Description of the Morning, A.—Swift. 

Now has the lingering month at last gone by. See 
Earthly Paradise, The (Atalanta’s Defeat).— 
Morris. 

Now hath the summer reached her golden close. See 
September.—Lampman. 

Now' haud your tongue, baith wife and carle. See 
Battle of Harlaw.—Scott. 

Now he who knows old Christmas. See Old Christ¬ 
mas.—Howitt. _ T . 

Now heap the branchy barriers up. See Keepers of the 
Pass, The.—Roberts. 

Now here’s a hand-glass, let me try. See V hat Mother 
Says.—Anon. TT 

Now he’s gittin’ ready to go off to town. See Happy 


Woman, A.—Anon. 

Now hide the flowers beneath the snow. See Hide- 


and-seek.—Sherman. 


Now, how can anybody look upon me and say I ain’t 
to be commiserated. See Missionary Work at 
Home.—Anon. 

Now I am alone. See Hamlet (Soliloquy from Hamlet). 
—Shakespeare. 

“ Now I can wait on baby, ” the smiling merchant said. 
See No Telephone in Heaven.—Anon. 

Now I find thy looks were feigned. See Deceitful Mis¬ 
tress, The.—Lodge. 

“ Now I lay me down to sleep. ” See same. —Pullen. 

Now I lay me down to take my sleep. See Child’s 
Prayer.—( New England Primer.) 

“Now I lay,” repeat it, darling. See Unfinished 
Prayer, The.—Anon. 

Now I must hurry up and get this coat finished. See 
False Notions.-—-Anon. 

Now I saw in my dream, that, by this time, the pil¬ 
grims were got over the Enchanted Ground. See 
Pilgrim’s Progress (Land of Beulah, The).— 
Bunyan. 

Now, I should rather be a robin. See Bird Dialogue, 
The.—Diaz. 

Now T tell you a poem must be kept and used. See 
Poems.—Holmes. 

Now I think I shall have some help in getting the 
work done. See Advertising for a Servant.— 
Anon. 

Now, I want it distinctly understood before I begin. 
See Doctor’s Story, The.—Harte. 

Now, I want to say to all of you that you needn’t 
be partic’lar how you quilt this quilt. See Mrs. 
Bolivar’s Quilting.—Anon. 

Now if I could only make this jelly a success. See 
Jelly for the Minister.-—Anon. 

Now, if the fish will only bite. See Timid Hortense.— 
Newell. 

Now, if to be an April-fool. See First of April, The.— 
Collins. 

Now, if we had another couple, we could have a dance. 
See Restraining Jotham.—Anon. 

Now I’ll tell the truth though it carries my own boy 
to prison. See Sick Boy’s Plan, The.—Anon. 

Now, I’ll unfold a secret to you, Pauline. See Heze- 
kiah’s Arrival.—Anon. 

Now, I’m determined I’ll not be so cheated any longer. 
See Watching for Santa Claus.—Denton. 

Now, I’m goin’ for till become famous and rise up in 
the world. See Tom and Sally.—Anon. 

Now, in dese busy wiikin’ days, dey’s changed de 
Script er fashions. See What Sambo Says.—Anon. 

Now in her green mantle blythe Nature arrays. See 
My Name’s Awa.—Burns. 

Now in his crystal palace. See King Winter.—Anon. 

“Now in the place where he was crucified there was a 
garden.” See Sepulcher in the Garden, The.— 
Beecher. 

Now in the west is spread. See Evening.—Kemble. 

Now is done thy long day’s work. See Dirge, A.— 
Tennyson. 

Now. I’s got a notion in my head dat when you come to 
die. See Theology in the Quarters.—Macon. 

Now, is it contrition? See Lent.—Hyde. 

Now, is not this the most insufferable nuisance. See 
My Next Door Neighbor.—-Anon. 

Now is the cherry in blossom, love. See Now is the 
Cherry in Blossom.—Wilkins. 

Now is the city great! See Of Henry George.—Gilder. 

Now is the gentle season, freshly flowering. See Love 
and May.—Morley. 

Now is the month of maying. See Month pf Maying, 
The.—Anon. 

“Now” is the syllable ever ticking from the clock of 
time. See “Now.”—Anon. 

Now is the time for mirth. See To Live Merrily, and 
to Trust to Good Verses.—Herrick. 

Now is the time when all the lights wax dim. See To 
Anthea.—Herrick. 

Now is the time, while yet the dark-brown water aids 
the guile. See Seasons, The.—Thomson. 

Now is the winter of our discontent. See King 
Richard III. (King Richard’s Soliloquy).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

“Now. is’t for bond or faith you come.” See Heart of 
the Bruce, The.—Aytoun. 

Now. it is trying, very. See Lost Letter, The.— 
Denton. 

Now it’s hail to the commander. See Song of the 
Sailor-men, A.— (Baltimore News.) 

Now I’ve got things fixed. See Swinging on the Gate. 
—Anon. 

Now Jack looked up—it was time to sup. See Here is 
the Tale.—Deane. 


773 





Now. Jennie 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Now, Jennie dear, T think you will agree. See Love 
Making.—Reavis. 

Now, Jerry, sit down and have something before you 
go down street. See Demons of the Glass, The.— 
Adams. 

Now, Jinnie, my dear, to the dwarf be off. See Dwarf, 
The.—Ramal. 

Now Joe’s a splendid fellow, but I do abominate. See 
Expecting to Get Even. (Boston Post.) 

Now, John, bring in the electrical mat. Sec Four 
Photographs, The.—Denton. 

"Now John,” says apothecary Jones, “I’m going home 
to tea.” See Apothecary Man, The.—Anon. 

“Now John,” the district teacher says. See School- 
day, A.—McSparran. 

Now, Johnson, are you awake? See Gather this Up.— 
Anon. 

Now Johnson, I’ve got a question to ask you which 
you must answer “yes” to. See Tambo’s Bet 
with Mr. Johnson.—Anon. 

Now Josie, you may as well understand. See Wrong 
Man. The.—-Anon. 

Now kitten-cat Daisy, just hear me. See Daisy’s 
Thanksgiving.—Anon. 

Now Ladies and gents, who here I see, Shappo! See 
Arkansaw Pete’s Adventure.—Sheppard. 

Now, lads, a short yarn I’ll just spin you. See Stow- 
away, The.—Matthison. 

Now, lads and lassies, cease your mirth. See On a Pet 
Cat.—Persell. 

Now, lady, hear me. See Lady of Lyons, The (Claude 
Melnotte’s Apology).—Buiwer-Lytton. 

Now, lawyer. I’ll tell you my story—you’ll have to be 
patient with me. See I Sue for Damages.—Anon. 

Now let me alone, though I know you w T on’t. See 
Barney O’Hea.—Lover. 

Now, let me say a few words on a cause. See Curse to 
Labor, The.—Powderly. 

Now let the solemn minute gun. See On the Death of 
General Worth.—Cutter. 

“Now let us sing,” the preacher said. See Missionary 
Hymn, The.—Anon. 

“Now, let’s have a game of play.” See Boy’s Play and 
Girl’s Play.—Hawtrey. 

Now Liddesdale has ridden a raid. See Jock o’ the 
Side.—Anon. 

Now look here, Jack; I know this track. See Fauntle- 
roy.—Butler. 

Now, look here, Rain, said the Sun one day. See 
Rainbow, The.—Goodfellow. 

“Now Maitre, this is the Tintamarre.” See Tinta- 
marre, The.—Ryan. 

"Now, mamma, if only you’ll promise me true.” See 
My Sweetheart.—Dayre. 

Now, mamma, take me on your lap and hold me tight- 
just so. See Missionary Doll, The.—Anon. 

Now Mary, I am going to read you a lecture. See 
Arabella’s Poor Relations.—McBride. 

Now Memory, false, spendthrift. Memory. See Lough 
Bray.—O’Grady. 

Now, merry hearts, let games begin. See Genevra.— 
Stilwell. 

Now might I do it pat, now he is praying. See Ham¬ 
let (Soliloquies from Hamlet).—Shakespeare. 

Now mind, Miss Grey, your name to-night. See 
Cousin Floy.—Proudfit. 

“Now mind,” said Mrs. Hilary Musgrave. See Dolly 
Dialogues, The (My Last Chance).—Hope. 

Now mirk December’s dowie face. See Daft Days, 
The.—Fergusson. 

Now, Mr. Caudle; Mr. Caudle, I say: Oh, you can’t be 
asleep. See Mr. Caudle has been Made a Mason.— 
Jerrold. 

"Now, Mr. Malone, whin yer spakin’ like that.” See 
Love in the Kitchen.—Arkwright. 

Now, Mr. Smith, who had taken his leave. See John 
Smith’s Will.—Shillaber. 

Now, Mrs. Caudle, I should like to know what has 
become of my hat? See Mr. Caudle’s Hat.—Anon. 

Now, Mrs. Pringle, once for all, I say. See Matrimony. 
—Anon. 

Now more the bliss of love is felt. See Home at L st.— 
Romanes. 

Now morn, her rosy steps in the Eastern clime. See 
Paradise Lost.—Milton 

Now morning from her orient chambers came. See 
Morning.—-Keats. 

Now, mother, my kitchen work is done. See Double- 
faced.—Anon. 

Now, mother, what’s the matter? See Hamlet 
(Closet Scene).—Shakespeare. 

Now must the storied Potomac. See Grave of Lincoln, 
The.—Proctor. 


Now my blood with long-forgotten fleetness. See 
Tulip Tree, The.—Taylor. 

Now, my co-mates and brothers in exile. See As You 
Like It (Tongues in Trees).—Shakespeare. 

“Now, mv dear,” said Mr. Spoopendyke, hurrying up 
to his wife’s room. See Spoopendykes, The.— 
Anon. 

"Now, my dear,” said Mr.Spoopendyke, opening the 
book. See Spoopendyke’s Private Theatricals.— 
Anon. 

Now, my gay little lad, trolling out your blithe air. See 
Were I You, Little Lad.—Towne. 

Now Nature hangs her mantle green. See Lament of 
Mary Queen of Scots, on the Approach of Spring.— 
Burns. 

Now nerve thy spirit to the proof. See Battle of Life, 
The.—Bryant. 

Now, nursey, won’t you just 'ew this ruffle in my 
dress. See Choose your Words.—Broome. 

Now o’er the one half world Nature seems dead. See 
Macbeth (Macbeth: Selection from the Dagger 
Scene) .—Shakespeare. 

Now, of all the birds that keep to tree. See Cuckoo’s 
Wit, The.—Hawker. 

Now of all the trees by the King’s highway. See Holly, 
The.—Hawker. 

Now, on a sudden, I know it, the secret, the secret of 
life. See Revealed.—Hoopman. 

Now on land and sea descending. See Vesper Hymn.— 
Longfellow. 

Now on the hills I hear the thunder mutter. See 
Summer Storm (Summer Rain).—Lowell. 

Now over intervening waste. See Epic of Women.— 
O’Shaughnessy. 

Now over-head a rainbow, bursting through. See 
Don Juan (Rainbow, The).—Byron. 

Now peace to his ashes who planted yon trees. See 
Bolehill Trees.—Montgomery. 

Now. Petah, go and sot down dah. See Petah.-—Anon. 

Now ponder well, you parents dear. See Children in 
the Wood, The.—Anon. 

Now poor [or that] Tom Dunstan’s cold. See Tom 
Dunstan; or, the Politician.—Buchanan. 

Now praise to God’s oft-granted grace! See Centen¬ 
nial Meditation of Columbia, The (America).— 
Lanier. 

Now, prosp’rous gales the bending canvas swell’d. See 
Lusiad, The (Spirit of the Cape, The).—Mickle. 

Now, pussy, I’ve something to tell you. See Pet and 
her Cat.—( Harper’s Younq People.) 

Now, Rachel, seriously, you are not vexed with me? 
See Golden Pippins.—Anon. 

Now rank and beauty is all agog. See Latest Toast, 
The.—Walker. 

“Now. right about face!” September cries. See “Right 
about Face.”—Brine. 

Now, Rose I shan’t stay a single minute. See Affec¬ 
tion of the Heart, An.—Coggins. 

Now, Rose, school will close to-day. See Last Parting, 
The.—Denton. 

Now, Rover, I am very sure. See Rover.—S. D. 

Now saddle El Canalo—the freshening wind of morn. 
See FJ Canalo.—Taylor. 

"Now,” said Wardle, after a substantial lunch, [or 

“Now,” said Wardle,.“what say you 

to an hour on the ice?”] See Pickwick Papers, 
The (Mr. Winkle on Skates).—Dickens. 

Now saucy Phoebus’ scorching beams. See Humble 
Petition of Bruar Water to the Noble Duke of 
Athole, The (River’s Supplication, The).—Burns. 

Now say, what would Augustus Caesar with us. See 
Cymbeline (Cymbeline, Act III, Scene 1).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Now shall I eat it all myself? See Question, A.— 
Anon. 

“Now show something not so grand.” See Maiden 
Husking Corn, The.—Blow. 

“Now since mine even is come at last.” See Ride to 
the Lady, The.—Cone. 

Now sinks the summer sun into the sea. See Summer. 
—Holley. • 

Now, sir I ave hincurred a great expense in the French 
and Hindian war. See Uncle Sam’s Wars.— 
McBride. 

Now sir, what was the conduct of your own allies to 
Poland? See Partition of Poland, The.—Fox. 

Now, sitting by her side, worn out with weeping. See 
Dream of the World without Death, The.— 
Buchanan. 

Now slain is King Amulius. See Prophesy of Capys. 
The.—Macaulay. 

Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white. See 
Princess, The (Summer Night).—Tennyson. 


774 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Now, who 


Now, Solomon Gundy, how are they going on in the 
village? See Prompt Messenger. A.—Colman. 

Now something’s the matter with Tabby, I see. See 
Sick Kitty, The.—Anon. 

Now, sometimes in my sorrow shut. See In Memoriam. 
—Tennyson. 

Now, soul, be very still and go apart. See same. — 
Barr. 

“Now start me true,” cried Fred. See Start True.— 
Blakeslee. 

Now, stay right still and listen, kitty-cat, and I’ll tell 
you a story. See Story Kathie Told, The.— 
A. C. H. S. 

Now stir the fire, and close the shutters fast. See 
Task, The.—Cowper. 

Now storming fury rose. See Paradise Lost.—Milton. 

Now stretch your eye off shore, o’er waters made. See 
Ocean, The.—Dana. 

Now strike the golden lyre again. See Alexander’s 
Feast.—Dryden. 

Now Summer finds her perfect prime. See Heaven, 
O Lord, I Cannot Lose.—Proctor. 

Now Tab, be a sensible cat, I say. See Fred’s Experi¬ 
ment.—Anon. 

“Now tell me, my merry woodmen.” See Estray, The. 
—Willson. 

Now thank we all our God. See Nun Danket Alle 
Gott.—Rinkart. 

Now that all hearts are glad, all faces bright. See 
George III.—Wordsworth. 

Now that I have a new sled, what shall I do with the 
old one? See Good for Evil.—Anon. 

Now that I, tying thy glass mask tightly. See Labora¬ 
tory, The.—Browning. 

Now that she is gone. See Michael Angelo.—Long¬ 
fellow. 

Now that the green hill-side has quite. See In May.— 
Weeks. 

Now that the pain is gone, I. too, can smile. See 
Then and Now.—Anon. 

Now that the village reverence doth lie hid. See New 
Year’s Gift to Brian Lord Bishop of Sarum, A.— 
Cartwright. 

Now that the winter’s gone, the earth hath lost. See 
Spring.—Carew. 

Now that [or poor] Tom Dunstan’s cold. See Tom 
Dunstan;or, the Politician.—Buchanan. 

Now that we are all here, what shall we do? See 
Parlor Entertainment, A.—Anon. 

Now the bright crocus flames, and now. See Spring.— 
Lang. 

Now the bright morning star. Day’s harbinger. See 
Song on May Morning.—Milton. 

Now the Consul’s brow was sad. See Horatius at the 
Bridge.—Macaulay. 

Now the day is over. See Child’s Evening Hymn.— 
Baring-Gould. 

Now the deacon maintained stoutly, and w T ith energy 
and vim. See Deacon’s Downfall, The.—Lan¬ 
sing. 

Now the Fraser gleamed. See Eos.—Davin. 

Now the frosty stars are gone. See Ariel in the Cloven 
Pine.—Taylor. 

Now the gloom of a mist-laden evening. See Banjo 
Mine.—Anon. 

Now the glories of the year. See Hallelujah (For Sum¬ 
mer Time).—Wither. 

Now the golden morn aloft. See Ode on the Pleasure 
Arising from Vicissitude.—Gray. 

Now the hour has arrived and soon they’ll be here. 
See Coming to an Understanding.—Anon. 

Now the hungry lion roars. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream (Approach of the Fairies, The). 
—Shakespeare. 

Now the joys of the road are chiefly these. See Joys of 
the Road, The.—Carman. . 

Now the last day of many days. See Recollection, 1 he. 
—Shelley. . 

Now the lovely spring has come. See Spring Song. 
Hawthorn. _ 

Now the lusty Spring is seen. See \ alentinian 
(Spring).—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Now the noisy winds are still. See same.— Dodge. 

Now the North wind ceases. See Tardy Spring. 
Meredith. . 

Now the Philistines gathered together their armies to 
battle. See David and Goliath.— Bible. 

Now the rite is duly done. See Newly Wedded, 1 he. 

Now the scarlet tints the tree-tops, and the robin-birds 
repair. See Indian Summer.—Collester 

Now the spring is coming on. See Snowdrop, the. 
—(Songs for the Little Ones at Home.) 


Now the storm begins to lower. See Fatal Sisters. The. 
—Gray. 

Now the student tosses reason to the breeze. See 
Spring on the Heights.—M. H. C. 

Now the summer days are come. See Wreath of 
Flowers, A.—Denton. 

Now the sun is sinking. See same. —Anon. 

Now the third and fatal conflict for the Persian throne 
was done. See Harmosan.—Trench. 

Now the widow McGee. See Larrie O’Dee.—Fink. 

Now then for the opening speech. See Boys’ Meeting, 
A.—Anon. 

“Now then, look alive there!” See Ventriloquist on a 
Stage Coach.—Cockton. 

“Now, then,” said the short and fat and anxious- 
looking man, as he sat down. See It Made a 
Difference.—Anon. 

“Now, then,” says Jone, after he’d been thinkin’a while. 
See Rudder Grange (Pomona Describes her Bridal 
T rip).—Stockton. 

Now then, take your seats! for Glasgow and the North. 
See Night Mail North, The.—Cholmondeley- 
Pennell. 

Now, then, to polish up these boots. See Medical Man, 
A.—Gilbert. 

Now then! You! come out o’ that! Sec Black Zeph’s 
Pard.—Anon. 

Now there was one who came in later days. See Last 
Caesar, The.—Aldrich. 

Now, there was Uncle Elnathan Shaw. See Aunt 
Shaw’s Pet Jug.—Day. 

Now, there’s a nice looking young man for a wedding- 
party. See Not Ashamed of his Occupation.— 
Morton. 

Now there’s peace on the shore, now there’s calm on 
the sea. See Broadswords of Scotland, The.— 
Lockhart. 

Now this is the law of the jungle—as old and as true 
as the sky. See Law of the Jungle, The.— 
Kipling. 

Now Titus Labienus. See Ballad of Titus Labienus, 
The.—Richards. 

Now, trumpeter! for thy close. See Mystic Trumpeter, 
The.—Whitman. 

Now Tudens, you sit on this knee. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A (One of his Animal Stories).— 
Riley. 

“Now unto yonder wood-pile go.” See Saddened 
Tramp, A.—Anon. 

Now, upon Syria’s land of roses. See Lalla Rookh 
(Syria).—Moore. 

"Nowwake me up at six o’clock.” See Sleepy.—Anon. 

Now, we are all here but Mr. Puffy, and your friend. 
See Tailor of Tipperary, The.—Anon. 

Now we can talk. Thank goodness, that old bore. 
See Two Simple Little Ostriches.—Tompkins. 

Now we have all our arrangements complete, I think. 
See Three Smart Girls.—Anon. 

Now welcome, welcome, baby-boy, unto a mother’s 
fears. See Irish Mother in the Penal Days, The.— 
Banim. 

Now went forth the morn. See Paradise Lost (Battle 
of the Angels).—Milton. 

Now westward Sol had spent the richest beams. See 
Nightingale’s Song, The.—Crashaw. 

“Now what I want is facts.” See Hard Times (Grad- 
grind’s Idea of Education).—Dickens. 

“Now what is that noise?” said the glad New Year. 
See New Year’s Vows.—Anon. 

“Now, what shall I send to the Earth to-day?” See 
Sunbeams, The.—Poulsson. 

Now what should a young maid do? See What Should 
a Young Maid Do?—King. 

Now, what was the Venezuela Question? See Vene¬ 
zuela Question, The.—Lodge. 

Now what’s the use of wondering. See Because.— 
Richards. 

Now when the giant in us wakes and broods. See 
Symbolism.—Russell. 

Now when the glorious lady reached the room. See 
Odyssey, The (Bending of the Bow, The).— 
Homer. 

Now when the troops together with their captains. 
See Iliad, The (Combat between Paris and 
Menelaus).—Homer. 

"Now where are you going, little May, little May? 
See Little May’s Answer.—Anon. 

Now wherefore trembles still the string. See Visit of 
the Prince of Wales to Laura Secord.—Curzon. 

Now whilst he dreams, O Muses, wind him round! See 
For Music.—Procter. 

“Now. who shall get my valentine? See Clarabel s 
Valentine.—Richards. 


775 




Now who 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Now who shall tackle the Golfer mad? See Golf Fiend, 
The—R. F. B. 

Now who would ever think that one long yellow hair. 
See Sister Ernestine’s Beau.—Locke. 

Now winter fills the world with snow. See Song for 
Winter.—Sherman. 

Now winter nights enlarge. See Winter Nights.— 
Campion. 

Now wol I turn unto my tale agen. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The (Fox and Cock).—Chaucer. 

“Now, woman, why without your veil?” See King 
of the Crocodiles, The.—Southey. 

Now, work and me could ne’er agree. See When Work 
and Me Fell Out.—Richards. 

Now yield thee, or, by Him who made. See Death 
Struggle, The.—Scott. 

Now you may think it very nice. See Not so Easy.— 
Doolittle. 

Now you must take your things right off. See Tiny 
Quarrel, A.—May. 

Now young gentleman, we have met to learn the won¬ 
derful art of elocution. See Real Elocution.— 
Anon. 

Now, you’ve sung your roundelay. See Fairy Joke, 
A.—Anon. 

Nowhere fairer, sweeter, rarer. See Ranger, The. 
—Whittier. 

“Number 106” must have been a beautiful woman 
once. See Easter in a Hospital Bed.—Crinkle. 

“Number twenty-five!” See same. —Anon. 

Nuns fret not at their convent’s narrow room. See 
Gain® of Restraints,. The.—Wordsworth. 

Nurse of the Pilgrim Sires, who sought, beyond the 
Atlantic foam. See England.—Elliot. 

Nymphs and Shepherds, dance no more. See Arcades 
(Song: “Nymphs and Shepherds,” etc.).—Milton. 


o 

O [Oh—C.J a dainty plant is the ivy green. See Pick¬ 
wick Papers, The (Ivy Green, The).—Dickens. 

O [Oh—C.J a wonderful stream is the river Time. See 
Isle of the Long Ago, The.—Taylor. 

O Adam was a ploughboy. when plowing first began. 
See Painful Plough, The.—Anon. 

O Albuera, glorious field of grief! See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage (Battle of Albuera).—Byron. 

O Alison Gross, that lives in your tower. See Alison 
Gross.—Anon. 

O Arranmore, loved Arranmore. See Arranmore.— 
Moore. 

O Austria, proud Austria, thou wert a bitter foe. See 
Renyi.—Booth. 

O Babe of Bethlehem, I pause to hear. See O Christ, 
Our King.—Anon. 

O Babie, dainty Babie Bell. See Baby Bell.—-Aldrich. 

O babbling brook of Lappington. See Brook of Lap- 
pington, The.—Gillman. 

O babbling spring, than glass more clear. See “O 
Fons Bandusiae.”—Dobson. 

“O bairn, when I am dead.” See “O Mither, Dinna 
Dee!”—Buchanan. 

O bear him where the rain can fall. See Elegy on 
William Cobbett..—Elliott. 

O beauteous God! Uncircumscribed treasure. See 
Of Heaven.—Taylor. 

O beauteous things of earth! See Under the Cloud.— 
Ames. 

O beautiful faith of childhood! How. See Baby 
Faith.—( Christian Observer.) 

O beautiful world of green! See Round the Year.— 
Cooper. 

O. Bella fior del mondo! to-morrow. See Malta. — Ryan. 

O Bertha, aren’t you sorry school begins next Monday? 
See Two Ways of Looking at It.—Waterman. 

O Bessie Bell and Mary Gray. See Bessie Bell and 
Mary Gray.—Anon. 

O better that her shattered hulk. See Old Ironsides. 
—Holme®. 

O big old tree, so tall an’ fine. See Noble Old Elm, 
The.—-Riley. 

O bird, thou dartest to the sun. See Song, "O bird, 
thou dartest,” etc.—Lowell. 

O blackbird! sing me something well. See Blackbird, 
The.—Tennyson. 

O blessed angel of the All-bounteous King. See Invo¬ 
cation to Rain.—Curzon. 

O blessed Dead! beyond all earthly pains. See Thren¬ 
ody in Memory of Albert Darasz, A.—Lin¬ 
ton. 

O blessed pipe. See Ode to My Pipe.—W.vnter. 


O blest of Heaven, whom not the languid songs. See 
Pleasures of the Imagination (Compensations of 
the Imagination).—Akenside. 

O blithe new-comer! I have heard. See To the 
Cuckoo.—Wordsworth. 

O bloom of the apple so bright! See Apple Blossom, 
The.—Anon. 

O blue eyes close in slumber. See Cradle Song.— 
Brooke. 

O blue-jay, up in the maple tree. See Blue-jay, The.— 
Swett. 

O boat of my lover! go softly, go safely. See Boat of 
My Lover, The.—Craik. 

O bonnie Bird, that in the brake, exultant, dost 
prepare thee. See Waking of the Lark, The. — 
Mackay. 

O born in days when wits were fresh and clear. See 
Scholar-Gipsy, The (Flee fro' the Press).—Arnold. 

O bright ideals, how ye shine. See Ideals.—Seas. 

“O brightest of my children dear, earthborn.” See 
Hyperion (Ccelus to Hyperion).—Keats. 

O [Oh—C.]! breathe not. his name, let it sleep in 
the shade. See Oh! Breathe not His Name.— 
Moore. 

O, [ ur. Oh] Brignall banks are wild and fair. See 
Rokeby (Edmund’s Song).—Scott. 

O brother man' fold to thy heart thy brother. See 
W orship.—Whittier. 

O brother Planets, unto whom I cry. See Isolation.— 
Peabody. 

O brotherhood, with bay-crowned brows undaunted. 
See Invocation in a Library, An.—Cone. 

O brothers! thro’ how many lands. See Retrospect 
The.—Lockhart. 

O brothers, who must ache and stoop. See To My 
Brothers.—Gale. 

O brown boughs, lovely boughs. See Apple Blossoms. 
—Coolidge. 

“O, bury me not in the deep, deep sea.” See Ocean 
Burial, The.—Saunders. 

O Caledonia! stern and wild. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel (Scotland).—Scott. 

O [or Oh] call my brother back to me. See Child’s 
First Grief, The.—Hemans. 

O [or Oh], came ye ower by the Yoke-burn Ford. See 
Jock Johnstone the Tinkler.—Hogg. 

O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done. See 
O Captain! my Captain!—Whitman. 

O Castell Gloom! thy strength is gone. See Castell 
Gloom.—Nairne. 

O Charlie was juist a king to see. See Scottish Ballad, 
A.—Lyle. 

O child, had I thy lease of time! Such unimagined 
things. See Child of To-day, A.—Buckham. 

O child! O child! my soul, and not my child! See 
Romeo and Juliet (Resignation).—Shakespeare. 

O Child of Nations, giant-limbed. See Canada.— 
Roberts. 

O children’s eyes unchildlike!—Children’s eyes. See 
Unto the Least of These Little Ones.—Rives. 

O Christ of Godl whose life and death. See Vesta.— 
Whittier. 

O Christian soldier! shouldst thou rue. See Christian 
Exaltation.—Hayne. 

O Christmas Girl, whose dainty feet. See Laudo 
Puellam.—Richmond. 

O Christmas, merry Christmas! See Bells across the 
Snow.—Havergal. 

O Columbia, the gem of the ocean. See Columbia, 
the Land of the Brave.—Shaw. 

“O come and be my mate!” said the Eagle to the Hen. 
See Wedded Bliss.—Gilman. 

O, come let us sing. See Old Time Plays.—-Rook. 

O come, let us sing unto the! Lord. See Psalms of 
David. XCV.— Bible. 

O come, soft rest of cares! Come, Night! See Bridal 
Song.—Chapman. 

O comrades, on each lonely grave we place one flower 
to-day. See Red, the White, the Blue, The.— 
Sherwood. 

O cool in the summer is salad. See Salad.—Collins. 

“O Cosette, you are the dearest kitty!” See Cat’s- 
crddle.—-Thaxter. 

O, could I flow like thee, and make thy stream (See 
Cooper’s Hill —Denham: 

O covering grasses! O unchanging trees! See Pre¬ 
lude, A.—Sherman. 

O cruel Love! on thee I lay. See Sapho and Phao 
(Sappho’s Song).—I.yly. 

O cubic foot of healthful sports See To a Football. 
—Knowles. 

O Cupid! monarch over kings. See Love’s College.— 
Lyly. 


776 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


O fortunate 


O curfew of the setting sun! O bells of Lynn! See 
Bells of Lynn, The.—Longfellow. 

O d’ hear the seas complainin’. See Doom-bar, The. 
—Gillington. 

O dandelion yellow as gold. See Dandelion, The.— 
Anon. 


O dappled throat of white! Shy, hidden bird. See 
Lonely Bird, The.—Morris. 

O dark, dark, dark, amid the blaze of noon. See 
Samson Agonistes.—Milton. 

O darkling River! Through the night I hear. See 
Night Journey of a River, The.—Bryant. 

O dat Gawgy watahmillon, an’ dat gal ob Gawgy wif 
'im! See Dat Gawgy Watahmillon.—Cooke. 

O dawn upon me slowly, Paradise. See Come Slowly, 
Paradise.—Kenyon. 

• O day and night, but this is wondrous strange. See 
Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

O day! he cannot die. See Death-scene, A.—Bronte. 

O day most calm, most bright! See Sunday.—Herbert . 

O days and hours, your work is this. See In Memo- 
riam (O Days and Hours).—Tennyson. 

O de’! O de’! I’se out of bwef. See Repentance.— 
Anon. 

O dear, dear Jeanie Morrison. See Jeanie Morrison. 
—Motherwell. 

O dear! I am so very tired. The wind has been blowing 
so fiercely. See Jean Noel: A Story of Christmas 
in France.—Scanned. 

O dear! I’m afraid I can never make anything present¬ 
able. See Unexpected Company.—Anon. 

"0 dear! I’se so tired and lonesome!” See Licensed 
to Sell; or. Little Blossom.—Bidwell. 

O dear life, when shall it be. See Astrophel and Stella 
(Tenth Song).—Sidney. 

"0 dear me!” cried the April sky. See Caprice.— 
Anon. 

O dear! Oh! dear me! What does ail me? See 
Heartrending Affair, A.—Locke. 

O dear saint! If I have been too daring, pardon me. 
See Guido Ferranti.—Wilde. 

O, dear! this age is far too cross. See Ta! Ta!—Anon. 

O dear! this pain in my side. See Idle Hands.— 
Arthur. 

O dear! to have a lover you never set your eyes on. 
See Long Lost Nephew, The.—Meyers. 

O death! thou tyrant fell and bloody! See Elegy on 
Captain Matthew Henderson.—Burns. 

O death, when thou shalt come to me. See Strong 
as Death.—Bunner. 

O deep of Heaven, tis thou alone art boundless. See 
Night Sky. The.—Roberts. 

O Deirdre, terrible child. See Druid Song of Cathvah. 
The.—Todhunter. 

O destined land, unto thy citadel. See My Country. 
—W oodberry. 

O did you ever hear o’ brave Earl Bran? See Brave 


Earl Brand, The.—Anon. 

O dig a grave, and dig it deep. See Dirge.—Roscoe. 

O [or Oh] dinna ask me gin I lo’e ye. See Dinna Ask 
Me.—Dunlop. 

O distant Christ! the crowded darkening years. See 
Doubt.—Deland. 

O divine star of Heaven. See Mad Lover, The (T enus). 
—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

O [tor. Oh], do not wanton with those eyes! See 
same. —-Jonson. 

O do you hear the merry waters falling. See W aters 
of Carr, The.—Lockhart. . 

O, Dolly, school is out at last. See School is Out. 
Denton. 

O, Dolly, you are getting old. See Grandma Doll, A. 

—Denton. , , . , 

O don’t be sorrowful, darling. -See Don t be Sorrowful, 
Darling.—Peale. . 

O don’t go away until you hear. See Irish Sleigh Ride 
The.—Anon. 

O draw me. Father, after thee. See Moravian Hymn. 
—Wesley. 

O dreadful Memory! why dost thou tread. See 
Memory.—( People’s Magazine.) 

O earth, art thou not weary of thy graves? See O 
Earth. Art Thou not Weary?—Dorr. 

O earth, lie heavily upon her eyes. See Rest. 


Rossetti. , , 0 

O earth! thou hast not any wind that blows. See 
Symbolisms (“O earth! thou.” etc.). Realf. 

O Easter lilies, pure and sweet! See Fair Easter 


O, eine edle Himmelsgabe ist. _ See W llliam Tell 
(Das Licht des Auges).—Schiller. 

O elder sister, though thou didst of yore. See Canada 
to Columbia.—Smith. 


O Ellen, do pray tell me what did Miss Brown say. 
See Composition, The.—Hillyer. 

“O Elsie, ye will drive me mad.” See “It War Crackit 
Afore.”—Brittle. 

O [Oh—C.], England is a pleasant place for them 
that’s rich and high. See Last Buccaneer, The.— 
Kingsley. 

O, ever from the deeps. See Soul's Cry, The.—Palmer. 

O, fain would I, before I die. See O Fain Would I.— 
Anon. 

O faint, delicious, spring-time violet! See Violet, 
The.—Story. 

O fair and stately maid, whose eyes. See To Eva.— 
Emerson. 

O fair! O sweet, when I do look on thee. See Heart 
and Soul.—Sidney. 

O fair, sweet face! O eyes celestial bright! See To 
My Mistress’s Eyes.—Fletcher. 

O fairer than vermilion. See Eleanor of Castile.—Anon. 

O fairest lady ever seen. -See Cruel Brother, The.— 
Anon. 

O fairest of creation, last and best. See Paradise Lost 
(Adam to Eve).—Milton. 

O fairest of the blue Antilles. See Cuba’s Appeal.— 
Rice. 

O fairest of the rural maids! See same. —Bryant. 

O Falmouth is a fine town with ships in the bay. See 
Home.—Henley. 

O fame, thy laurels graced a blighted pall! See 
Byron.—Betts. 

O far-off darling in the South. See Cceur de Lion to 
Berengaria.—Tilton. 

O far-off rose of long ago. See Far-off Rose, A.— 
Peabody. 

O fate, O fault, O curse, child of my bliss. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella (Sonnet XCIII.).—Sidney. 

O Father, let me not die young! See Prayer for Life, 
A.—Burleigh. 

“O father,” shouted Johnny Leach. See Under-tow, 
The.—Anon. 

O Father, Thou art near—so near. See Morning 
Hymn.—Anon. 

O, fear me not. I stay too long. See Shakespeare 
Improved.—Anon. 

O fields in June’s fair verdure drest. See Day in June, 
A.—Washburn. 

O finest essence of delicious rest! See Desultory 
Reading.—F. M. P. 

O first of human blessings, and supreme. See Bri¬ 
tannia (War for the Sake of Peace).—Thomson. 

O fir-tree green! O fir-tree green! See To the Fir- 
tree.—Bellamy and Goodwin. 

O, Flamen! why trembles Jove’s altar? O, Vesta, why 
. quivers thy flame? See Battle of Cannae, The.— 
Wells. 

O fling not this receipt away. See Paid Bill, The. 
— (Punch.) 

O flower of passion, rocked by balmy gales. See 
Gold of Ophir Roses.—Dennen. 

O fly, my Soul! What hangs upon. See Hymn, A: 
“O fly,” etc.—Shirley. 

O fly not Pleasure, pleasant-hearted Pleasure. See 
same. —Blunt. 

O [Oh—C.] for a lodge in some vast wilderness. 
See Task, The (Love of Liberty).—Cowper. 

O for a moon to light me home! See Song: “O for a 
moon,” etc.—Ramal. 

O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend. See King 
Henry V. (Agincourt).—-Shakespeare. 

O for a sculptor’s hand. See Second Sunday after 
Ea=ter.—Keble. 

O [Oh—C.l for a tongue to curse the slave. See Lalla 
Rookh (Curse on the Traitor, A).—Moore. 

O, for my sake do you with Fortune chide. See Son¬ 
nets, CXI.—Shakespeare. „ , ,, 

O [Oh—C.] for one hour of youthful joy! See Old Man 
Dreams, The.-—Holmes. 

O for some honest lover’s ghost. See Doubt of Mar¬ 
tyrdom, A.—Suckling. 

O, for that warning voice, which he, who saw. See 
Paradise Lost.-—Milton. 

O for the look of those pure grey eyes. See Regrets.— 

O for the mighty wakening that aroused. See Half- 
asleep, The.—Wade. 

O, for the times which were. See Tempora Acta.— 

Lytton. , o 

O force of faith! O strength of virtuous will! See 
Curse of Kehama. The.—Southey. 

O, formed by Nature, and refined by Art. See To a 
Lady before Marriage.—Tickell. 

O fortunate. O happv day. See Hanging of the Crane. 
The (New Household, A).—Longfellow. 


777 






0 fountain 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


O fountain of Bandusia! See To the Fountain of Ban- 
dusia.—Field. 

O freedom, thou art not, as poets dream. See Free¬ 
dom.—Bryant. 

O friend! I know not which way I must look. See 
Written in London, September, 1802.—Words¬ 
worth. 

O friend, like some cold wind to-day. See To a Deso¬ 
late Friend.—Dawson. 

O friend, your face I cannot see. See In June.—Chad¬ 
wick. 

O friends! with whom my feet have trod. See Eternal 
Goodness, The.—Whittier. 

O gallant brothers of the generous South. See Ode 
for Decoration Day. An.—Peterson. 

O [Oh—CJ, Galuppi Baldassaro [Baldassare—C.j, this 
is very sad to find. See Toccata of Galuppi’s, A. 
—Browning. 

O gather, gather! stand. See Vestis Angelico.—Hig- 
ginson. 

O gay, yet fearful to behold. See Lord of the Isles, 
The (Bannockburn).—Scott. 

O gentle, gentle summer rain. See Invocation to Rain 
in Summer.—Bennett. 

O gentle Jennie Eaglehart, I know not where you be. 
See Rhyme of Jennie Eaglehart, The.—Anon. 

O gifted son of our dear land and thine. See To Louis 
Frechette.—Reade. 

O, girls, did you ever? There come Florence and Liz¬ 
zie together. See Four Judges, The.—Denton. 

O, girls! did you hear about Mrs. Lawrence’s girl Han¬ 
nah? See Little Gossips.—Smith. 

O, girls, don’t, don’t. See Professor’s Present, The.— 
Denton. 

O girls, ha-ha-ha! I have just written another letter for 
Aunt Hannah. See Aunt Hannah’s Letter.— 
McCollum. 

O, girls, I know the nicest game. See Bunch of Flow¬ 
ers, A.—Anon. 

O girls, my father has bought a beautiful sail-boat. 
See Knowing the Circumstances.—Anon. 

Ogive thanks unto the Lord; for He is good. See 
Thanksgiving.—Rook. 

O glad New Year! O glad New Year! See New 
Year’s Day.—Anon. 

O glorious Easter morning. See same. —Bolton. 

O [ter. Oh], go not yet, my love! See Hero to 
Leander.—Tennyson. 

O God, I thank Thee that the night. See Morning 
Hymn for a Child.—Pierpont. 

O God! methinks, it were a happy life. See King 
Henry VI., Pt. III. (Shepherd’s Life, A).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

O God! my sins are manifold! against my life they cry. 
See Forgive.—Heber. 

O God, my strength and fortitude, of force I must love 
Thee. See Psalm Eighteen.—Sternhold. 

O God of Battles, who art still. See On the Eve of 
W ar.—Dandridge. 

O God of hosts, whose mighty hand. See In Days Like 
These.—Stacy. 

O God, our Father, if we had but truth! See Prayer, 
A.—Sill. 

O God! our help in ages past. See same. —Watts. 

O God! that T might breathe of Freedom’s air. See 
Cuba, 1897.—Bashford. 

O God that madest earth and sky, the darkness and the 
day. See O God that Madest Earth and Sky.— 
Heber. 

O God, that men should put an enemy in their mouths 
to steal away their brains. See Othello.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

O God, the cleanest offering. See Father Damien.— 
Tabb. 

O God! this is a holy hour. See same. —Motherwell. 

O God! though sorrow be my fate. See Prayer.— 
Mary, Queen of Hungary. 

O God, thy moon is on the hills. See Kelpius’s Hymn. 
—Peterson. 

O God, unseen but. not unknown. See Thou, God, 
Seest Me.—Montgomery. 

O God! who wert my childhood’s love. See God of my 
Childhood, The.—Faber. 

O God! whose thunder shakes the sky. See Resigna¬ 
tion.—Chatterton. 

O goddess! hear these tuneless numbers, wrung. See 
Ode to Psyche.—Keats. 

O gold Hyperion, love-lorn Porphyro. See Ode to 
England. An (Keats).—Lord. 

O good gray head which all men knew. See Ode on 
the Death of the Duke of Wellington.—Tennyson. 

O good New Year! we clasp. See Address to the New 
Year.—Craik. 


O [Oh—C.], good painter, tell me true. See Order 
for a Picture, An.—Cary. 

O granite nature! like a mountain height. See Car¬ 
lyle.—Hayne. 

O great Republic, rise and shake. See New Emanci¬ 
pation, The.—Williams. 

O [ter. Oh], greenly and fair in the lands of the sun. 
See Pumpkin, The.—Whittier. 

O Hamlet! speak no more. See Hamlet.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

O [Oh—-C.] happiness! our being’s end and aim! 
See Essay on Man, An (Happiness).—Pope. 

O happy buds of violet! See Violets at Home.—Col¬ 
lins. 

O happy dames! that may embrace. See Complaint 
of the Absence of her Lover being upon the Sea.— 
Howard. 

O happy day returning. See Arbor Day.—Halsey. 

O happy, golden age! See Pastoral, A.—Daniel. 

O happy hours! O compensation ample. See Dipsychus 
(In Venice; Dipsychus Speaks).—Clough^ 

O happy hush of heart to heart! See First Kiss, The. 

•—-Meredith. 

O happy shades! to me unblest. See Shrubbery, The. 
—Cowper. 

O happy sleep! that bear’st upon thy breast. See 
Sleep.—Martin. 

O happy soul, that lives on high. See same. —Watts. 

O happy [or happie] Thames that didst my Stella bear! 
See Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet CIII.).—Sidney. 

O happy Tithon! if thou know’st thy hap. See 
Aurora.—Alexander. 

O hark, O hear, how thin and clear. See Bugle Song. 
—Tennyson. 

O [tor. Oh] have ye na heard o’ the fause Sakelde? 
See Kinmont Willie.—Anon. 

O, have you been in Gudbrand’s dale. See Thoralf 
and Synnbv.—-Boyesen. 

O [or Oh], he was a Bowery bootblack bold. See 
Total Annihilation.—Brine. 

O [wr. Oh], heard ye yon pibroch sound sad in the 
gale? See Glenara.—Campbell. 

O hearken, all ye little weeds. See Candlemas.— 
Brown. 

O hearkener to the loud-clapping shears. See En- 
dymion (Hymn to Pan).—Keats. 

“O heart, my heart!” she said. See Silly Song, A.— 
Craik. 

O [wr. Oh] heart of mine, we shouldn’t. See Kissing 
the Rod.—Riley. 

O heart sore-tried! thou hast the best. See Snow¬ 
bound.—Whittier. 

O hearts that never cease to yearn! See Grief for the 
Dead.—Anon. 

O, heavenly born! in deepest dells. See Ode on 
Science.—Swift. 

O Heavens, if you do love old men. See King Lear.— 
Shakespeare. 

O hemlock tree! O hemlock tree! how faithful are thy 
branches! See Hemlock Tree, The.-—Longfellow. 

O, here comes Auntie Dimple. See Auntie Dimple.— 
Anon. 

O here’s a little rhyme for the Spring or Summer-time. 
See Session with Uncle Sidney, A (Sings a ” Winky- 
tooden” Song).—Riley. 

O Hetty McEwen! Hetty McEwen! See Hetty 
McEwen.—Hooper. 

O [or Oh] hideous leagues of straining woods. See 
Flight for Life, The.—Sawyer. 

O hie honour, sweit heuinlie flour degest. See Palice 
of Honour, The (Ballade in Commendation of 
Honour, A).—Douglas. 

‘‘O, ho! he has drunk one glass too much!” See One 
Glass too Much.—Anon. 

O, ho. you lazy Boy Blue. See Scene from ‘‘Mother 
Goose,” A.—Denton. 

O, hoi-ye-ho, ho-ye-ho, who’s for the ferry? See 
Diamond Cut Diamond.—Banks. 

O hoi-ye-ho, ho-ye-ho, who’s for the ferry! See also 
Twickenham Ferry.—Anon 

O horror! horror! horror! Tongue and heart. See 
Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

O hour of all hours, the most blest upon earth. See 
Lucile (Dinner-hour, The).—Lytton. 

O how canst thou renounce the boundless store! See 
Minstrel, The; or, The Progress of Genius (Nature). 
—Beattie. 

O how comely it is, and how reviving. See Samson 
Agonistes (Out of Adversity).—Milton. 

“O, how feeble is man’s power.” See Song:‘‘Sweet¬ 
est love,” etc.—Donne. 

O [ter. Oh] how much more doth [tor. does] beauty 
beauteous seem. See Sonnets, LIV.—Shakespeare. 


778 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


O Lord 


O how my heart is beating as her name I keep repeat¬ 
ing. See Mine.—Craik. 

O, how the thought of God attracts. See same .— 
Faber. 

O, how tired I am! I cannot walk any further. See 
Good Way to Play a Joke, A.—Anon. 

O hush, my little baby brother! See Nursing.— 
Lamb. 

O, hush thee, my babie, thy sire was a knight. See 
Lullaby of an Infant Chief.—Scott. 

“O, I am so happy!” a little girl said. See Good¬ 
morning.—Anon. 

O, I die, Horatio! See Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

O I forbid ye maidens a’, that wear gowd on your hair. 
See Young Tam Lin.—-Anon. 

O I forbid ye, maidens a’, who are sae sweet and fair. 
See Tamlane.—Anon. ( Another version of the 

foregoing .) 

O I hae come from far away. See Witch’s Ballad, 
The.—-Scott. 

O |wr. Oh], I have passed a miserable night. See King 
Richard III. (Clarence’s Dream).—Shakespeare. 

O if I had a thousand a year. Gaffer Green. See 
Thousand a Year, A.—Anon. 

O! if I wake, shall I not be distraught. See Romeo 
and Juliet (Potion Scene).—Shakespeare. 

O, if thou knew’st how thou thyself dost harm. See 
To Aurora.—Alexander. 

O, if you teach me to believe this sorrow. See King 
John.—Shakespeare. 

O [wr. Oh), inexpressible as sweet. See same. — 
Woodberry. 

O, is it a phantom, a dream of the night. See Lucile 
(Under Canvas).—Lytton. 

O [or Oh], it is great for our country to die, where 
ranks are contending! See Elegiac.—Percival. 

O r or Oh], it is hard to work for God. See Right Must 
Win, The.—Faber. 

O! [tor. Oh] it is pleasant, with a heart at ease. See 
Fancy in Nubibus.—Coleridge. 

O Italy, how beautiful thou art! See Italy.—Rogers. 

O, it’s Christmas eve, and moonlight, and the Christ¬ 
mas air is chill. See “Little Feller’s Stockin’, 
The.”—Lincoln. 

O it’s I that am the captain of a tidy little ship. See 
My Ship and T.—Stevenson. 

O it’s up in the Hielands. See Bonny James Camp¬ 
bell.—Anon. 

O Jesu, Thou art standing. See Behold, I Stand at 
the Door and Knock.—How. 

O, Jesus, dear Jesus, we need Thee each day. See 
Prayer, A. —Anon. 

O Johnny was as brave a knight. See Johnny Scott. 
—Anon. 


O Joy, hast thou a shape? See Joy.—Jackson. 

O joy of creation, to be! See What the Bullet Sang.— 
Harte. 

O joy of life, O joy of love! See Piero da Castiglione. 
—Sterne. 

O, joy! thou welcome stranger, twice three years. 
See Revenge.—Young. 

O joy too high for my low style to show! See Astrophel 
and Stella (Sonnet LXIX.).—Sidney. 

O judge not from the ripple. See Under-current, The. 
—Fiester. 

O judgment, thou art fled to brutish beasts. See 
Julius Caesar.—Shakespeare. 

O June! delicious month of June. See June.—Sher¬ 
man. 

O Jupiter, and thou Minerva fierce in fight. See 
Sixe Idillia (Prayer of Theocritus for Syracuse, 
The).—Dyer. . 

O Karol, Karol! call him back again. See Sad 
Shepherd, The (Karol’s Kiss).—Jonson. 

O keeper of the Sacred Key. See In State.—Willson. 

O ken ye no’ my ain wife. See My Ain Wife.—Ben- 
noch. 

O, Kenmure’s on and awa, Willie! See Kenmure s 
On and Awa.-—Burns, 

O kisse, which doest those ruddie gemmes impart. 
See Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet LXXXI.).—Sid¬ 
ney. 

O lady fair! O lady fair! See Why?—Patterson. 

“O [wr. Oh] lady fair, these silks of mine are beau¬ 
tiful and rare.” See Vaudois Teacher, The. 
Whittier. 

O lady, lay your costly robes aside. See Dialogue 
between a Mother and Child.—Lamb. 

O lady, leave thy silken thread. See Song: “O Lady, 
leave,” etc.—Hood. 

O, Lady Mary Ann. See Lady Mary Ann.—Burns. 

O Lady Moon, your horns point toward the east. See 
O Lady Moon.—Rossetti. 


O lady, rock never your young son. See Young 
Hunting.—Anon. 

“O lady, thy lover is dead,” they cried. See Song: 
“O Lady thy lover,” etc.—Macdonald. 

O [or Oh], lady wake!—the azure moon. See Ballad 
of Bedlam, A.— (Punch.) 

O land, of every land the best. See Peace.—Cary. 

O land of happiness! O land of joy, of light, of youth. 
See Happy Land, The.—Turgenief. 

O large of heart, and grand, and calm. See John A. 
Andrew.—Moulton. 

O lark! sweet lark! See Singer, The.—Stedman. 

O late-remembered, much-forgotten. See Martin 
Chuzzlewit (When Duty Begins).—Dickens. 

O, lay thy hand in mine, dear! See same. —Massey. 

O [ter. Oh], leave this barren spot to me! See 
Beech Tree’s Petition, The.—Campbell. 

O lend to me. sweet nightingale. See Daughter of 
Mendoza, The.—Lamar. 

0 let me die a-singing! See Morning Fancy.—Fenol- 
losa. 

O [wr. Oh] let me dream of happy days gone by. See 
O let me dream.—Aide. 

O let me love my love unto myself alone. See Hidden 
Love, The.—Clough. 

O let the solid ground. See Maud (“O let,” etc.).— 
Tennyson. 

O let the soul her slumbers break. See Coplas de 
Manrique (Relentless Time).—Manrique (Long¬ 
fellow). 

O life! how pleasant is thy morning. See Epistle to 
James Smith.—Burns. 

O life, O death, O world, O time. See same. —Trench. 

O Life, O silent shore. See same.- —Craik. 

O life! that mystery that no man knows. See Life.— 
Little. 

O lifted face of mute appeal! See Come Love or 
Death.—Thompson. 

O li’l’ lamb out in de col’. See Hymn: “O, li’l’ lamb,” 
etc.—Dunbar. 

O lilies fair, O emblems meet. See Consider the 
Lilies.—-Murray. 

O, limSd soul! that, struggling to be free. See Ham¬ 
let.—Shakespeare. 

O lips that mine have grown into. See Felise.— 
Swinburne. 

O [wr. Oh], listen, listen, ladies gay! See Lay of 
the Last Minstrel (Rosabelle).—Scott. 

“O listen, man.” See Husband’s and Wife’s grave, 
The.—Dana. 

O little bird! sing sweet among the leaves. See Nest¬ 
lings.—F. A. C. 

“O little brook,” the children said. See Brook that 
Ran into the Sea, The.—Larcom. 

O little buds, break not so fast. See Budding-time too 
Brief.—Stein. 

O little child, lie still and sleep. See Mother’s Cradle¬ 
song, The.—Anon. 

O little city-gals, don’t never go it. See Biglow 
Papers, The ('Spring).—Lowed. 

O little flowers, you love me so. See Little Girl’s 
Fancies, A.—“A.” 

O little lambs! the month is cold. See Lambs in the 
Meadow.—Alma-Tadema. 

O little town of Bethlehem. See same. —Brooks. 

O lively, O most charming pug. See Sonnet to a 
Monkey.—Fleming. 

O living image of eternal youth. See Trilby.—Brown. 

O Logie o’ Buchan, O Logie the laird. See Logie 
o’ Buchan.—Halket. 

O lonely day! No sounds are heard. See February 
Rain.—Dazey. 

O lonely tomb in Moab’s land. See Burial of Moses, 
The.—Alexander. 

O lonesome sea-gull,floating far. See Sea-birds.—Allen. 

O long ago, when Faery-land. See Riquet of the 
Tuft (Prince Riquet’s Song).—Brooke. 

O Lord, another day is flown. See Hymn for Family 
Worship.—White. 

O Lord, bless de teacher who come so far to ’struct us 
in de way to heaven. See Negro Prayer.—Anon. 

O Lord, in me there lieth nought. See Psalm CXXXIX. 
—Sidney. . 

O Lord my God, do thou thy holy will. See Resig¬ 
nation.—Keble. 

O Lord, my God, Thou art very great. See Psalms of 
David, CIV.— Bible. . 

O Lord of heaven and earth, and sea! See Giving to 
God.—Wordsworth. 

O Lord of life, and truth and grace. See Church, 
The.—Frothingham. 

O Lord! oh, dear! my heart will break; I shall go stick, 
stark, staring wild! See Lost Heir, The.—Anon. 


779 




O Lord 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


O Lord our Lord, how excellent. See Psalms of 
David, VIII.— Bible. 

“O Lord! take thou my heart.” See F^nelon’s 
Prayer.—Harrison. 

O Lord, thy wing outspread. See same. —Blew. 

O Lords! O ruler, of the nation! See People’s 
Petition, The.—Call. 

O loss of sight, of thee I most complain! See Samson 
Agonistes (Samson on His Blindness).—Milton. 

O Lou! see here, my birdie’s dead! See Dead Bird, 
The.—Anon. 

O Love and Death! See same. —Hemans. 

O Love builds on the azure sea. See Master-builder, 
The.—Crawford. 

O love, can the tree lure the summer bird. See Song 
in Autumn, A.—Stringer. 

O Love divine, how sweet Thou art! See Desiring to 
Love.—W esley. 

O Love Divine, that stooped to share. See Hymn of 
Trust.—Holmes. 

O love, if life should be. See same. —Anon. 

O, Love, if you were here. See If You Were Here.— 
Mars ton. 

O love is like the roses. See Love in Winter.— 
Buchanan. 

O Love, so sweet at first. See Disarmed.—Searing. 

O Love, sweet Love, who came with rosy sail. See 
Burnt Ships.-—Jackson. 

O Love! thou makest all things even. See Love.— 
Adams. 

O Love, what hours were thine and mine. See Daisy, 
The.—Tennyson. 

O love, when life was young, I knew. See In the 
Evening.—Aide. 

O Love, whose patient pilgrim feet. See Golden Wed¬ 
ding, The.—Gray. 

O [or Oh] lovely Mary Donnelly, it’s you I love the 
best! [or my joy, my only best!] See Lovely 
Mary Donnelly.—Allingham. 

O [wr. Oh] lovely voices of the sky. See Christmas 
Carol.—Hemans. 

O lovers’ eyes are sharp to see. See Maid of Neidpath, 
The.—Scott. 

O Love’s but a dance, where Time plays the fiddle! 

See Cupid’s Alley.—Dobson. 

O lusty May, with Flora queen! See Lusty May.— 
Anon. 

O lyric love, half angel and half bird. See Ring and 
the Book, The.—Browning. 

O maiden crowned with tresses silken black. See 
Soliloquy at the Oak Grove (8:55 a. m.).— 
Palmer. 

O majestic Night! See Night Thoughts (Night).— 
Young. 

O Maker of sweet poets! dear delight. See ‘‘I stood 
tiptoe upon a little hill” (Nature’s Delights).— 
Keats. 

‘‘O Mammy, have you heard the news?” See South¬ 
ern Scene, A.—Anon. 

O man who art nursed by blind fortune. See Stanzas 
to Eternity.—Wilbor. 

O for Oh], many a day have I made good ale in the 
glen. See Outlaw of Loch Lene. The.—Callanan. 

O many a time it. hath been told. See Centennial Ode 
( Our Fathers).—Sprague. 

O, many are the poets that are sown. See Excursion, 

The (Unknown Poets).—Wordsworth. 

O Marcius! Marcius! Each word thou hast spoke. 

See Coriolanus(Martial Friendship).—Shakespeare. 

O mare aeva si forme. See Tonis ad Resto Mare. 

—Swift. 

O, Marian, I want to ask you a question. See Genius 
and Application.—Kavanaugh. 

“O Maro, doff your cest.us, and drop your garments 
white. See Roman Valentine, A.—Anon. 

O martyr-soul, the infamy they speak. See Dreyfus. 

—Ingham. 

O marvel, fruit of fruits, I pause. See My Strawberry. 

—Jackson. 

O fur. Oh] Mary, at thy window be! See Mary 
Morison.—Burns. 

“O [rer. Oh] Mary, go and call the cattle home.” 

See Sands of Dee, The.—Kingsley. 

“O Mary, will you gang wi’ me.” See A’aboot It.— 
Lyle. 

O Maryanne, you pretty girl. See Venus of the Needle. 

—Allingham. 

O master-builder, blustering as you go. See To Feb¬ 
ruary. —W etheral d. 

O, May, gentle May. See Crowninir the May Queen.— 
Denton. 

O [ter. Oh] may I join the choir invisible. See 
same. —Cross. 

780 


O may she comes, and may she goes. See Bonny 
Hind, The.—Anon. 

O May, thou art a merry time. See Sylvia; or, The 
May Queen (May Day).—Darley. 

O me, what eyes hath Love put in my head. See 
Sonnets, CXLVIII.—Shakespeare. 

O! Meary, when the zun went down. See Woone 
Smile Mwore.—Barnes. 

O melancholy bird, a winter’s day. See To a Bird.— 
Thurlow. 

O memories of green and pleasant places. See Days 
that Are no More, The.—Anon. 

O memory, thou fond deceiver. See Memory.— 
Goldsmith. 

O men with sisters dear. See Song of the Shirt.— 
Hood. 

O Merop^! See Orion (Distraught for Meropd!).—Horne. 

O merry are the hours. See Fairy, A.—Anon. 

O messenger, art thou the king, or I? See Thought.— 
Jackson. 

O mickle yeuks the keckle doup. See Justice to Scot¬ 
land.— (Punch.) 

O mighty Caesar! dost thou lie so low. See Julius Caesar. 
—Shakespeare. 

O mighty mouth’d inventor of harmonies. See Milton. 

-—-Tennyson. 

O mistress mine, where are you roaming? See 
Twelfth Night; or, What you Will (O, Mistress 
Mine).—Shakespeare. 

O, mither, sing a sang to the bairns. See O, Mither, 
Sing a Sang to the Bairns.—Anderson. 

O modern girl, we know you well. See “O Modern 
Girl.”—Adams. 

O Mollie, my love, is it you that I see. See Family 
Quarrel, The.—Anon. 

11 0 monstrous, dead, unprofitable world.” See Writ¬ 
ten in Emerson’s Essays.—Arnold. 

O moon! did you see. See Maiden to the Moon, The. 
—Saxe. 

O Moon, said the children, O Moon, that shineth fair. 
See Moon, The.—Anon. 

O Moon, that shinest on this heathy wild. See To the 
Moon.—-Thurlow. 

O more and more, this was so well. See Pleasure 
Reconciled to Virtue (Song II.).—Jonson. 

O mortal folk, you may behold and see. See His 
Epitaph.—Hawes. 

O mortal man, who livest here by toil. See Castle of 
Indolence, The.—Thomson. 

O mother dear, Jerusalem. See New Jerusalem, The. 
—Dickson. 

O, Mother Earth, thy task is done. See Elisha Kent 
Kane.—Boker. 

O Mother Earth! upon thy lap. See Randolph of 
Roanoke.—Whittier. 

O, Mother Goose! did you sail away. See Mother 
Goose Medley.—Rook. 

O mother, how pretty the moon looks to-night. See 
New Moon, The.—Anon. 

O mother, mother, I swept the hearth. See All Souls’ 
N ight.—Sigerson. 

O |Oh—C.] mother of a mighty race. See same .— 
Bryant. 

”0 [or Oh], mother, what do they mean by blue? See 
Two Colors.—( Springfield Republican.) 

O mother, what will grandpa do? See Grandpa’s 
Spectacles.—Anon. 

O mother-my-love, if you’ll give me your hand. See 
Child and Mother.—Field. 

O mothers whose children are sleeping. See same. 

—(Christian Union.) 

O mount and go. See Captain’s Lady, The.—Burns. 

O much has been told our dear girls and boys. See 
Mrs. Santa Claus.—McNabb. 

O my beloved ones. See In Paradise.—Kimball. 

O, my brother, heardst thou the news the stripling 
Joseph hath brought. See From Captivity to 
Power.—Denton. 

O [or Oh] my dark Rosaleen. See Dark Rosaleen.— 
Mangan. 

O my daughter! lead me forth to the bastion on the 
north. See Siege of Derry, The.—Alexander. 

O my dear sister, my best-beloved Ismene! See 
Antigone.—Sophocles. 

O my deir hert, young Jesus sweit. See Cradle Song. 
—Anon. 

O my earliest love, who, ere I number’d. See First 
Love.—Calve rley. 

O my God, my God. See Aurora Leigh (By Soli¬ 
tary Fires).—Browning. 

O my heart’s heart and you who are to me. See 
Monna Innominata (Sonnet V.).—Rossetti. 

O, my little sea-side girl. See Flower Girls.—Larcom. 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


O shepherds 


O my lord, we were prompt. See Richelieu; or, The 
Conspiracy.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

O [or Oh], my love’s like the steadfast sun. See Poet’s 
Bridal-day Song, The—Cunningham. 

O [or Oh], my luve is [or love’s] like a red. red 
rose. See Red, Red Rose, A.—Burns. 

O, my offense is rank, it smells to heaven. See Ham¬ 
let (Remorse of King Claudius).—Shakespeare. 

O, my poor sorrowing heart! What is earth? See 
Mourner, The.—Anon. 

O my son! The ostentatious virtues which still press. 
See Humble and Unnoticed Virtue.—More. 

O name, all other names above. See Found.— 
Hosmer. 

O Nanny, wilt thou go with me [or gang wi’ me]? See 
same. —Percy. 

O nature! all thy seasons please the eye. See Seasons, 
The.—Grahame. 

O nature! I do not aspire. See Nature.—Thoreau. 

O near ones, dear ones! you, in whose right hands. 
See O Near Ones, Dear Ones.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

O, Nelly Gray! O, Nelly Gray! See Nelly Gray.— 
Hood. 

O, never despair! for our hopes, oftentime. See Never 
Despair.—Lover. 

O, never from thy tempted heart. See Fortitude amid 
Trials.—Anon. 

O never rudely will I blame his faith. See Wallenstein 
(Mythology).—Coleridge. 

O [wr. Oh], never say that I was false of heart. See 
Sonnets, CIX.—Shakespeare. 

O never yet was theme so meet for roundel or romance. 
See Aristocracy of France, The.—Strangford. 

O night, look down through cloud and star. See Under 
the Stars.—Hutchinson. 

O might, the ease of care, the pledge of pleasure. See 
Arcadia, The (Night).—Sidney. 

O nightingale, that on yon bloomy spray. See To the 
Nightingale.—Milton. 

O nightingale, the poet’s bird. See Song about Sing¬ 
ing, A.—Aldrich. 

O nightingale! thou surely art. See Nightingale, 
The.—Wordsworth. 

O no. beloved: I am most. sure. See Love’s Eternity. 
—Herbert. 

“O, no, Mr. Crane, by no manner o’ means.” See 
Widow Bedott Papers (Widow’s Mistake, The).— 
Whitcher. 

O [or Oh], no, no—let me lie. See Not on the Battle¬ 
field.—Pierpont. 

O not by graves should tears be shed. See O, Not by 
Graves.—Wallace. 

O! now for ever farewell the tranquil mind' See 
Othello, the Moor of Venice (Othello’s Farewell). 
—Shakespeare. 

O now, mv true and dearest bride. See Plorata Veris 
Lachrymis.—Barnes. 

O once I had plenty of thyme. See Thyme and Rue. 
—Anon. 

O once I lay in stable, a hunter well and warm. See 
Poor Old Horse.—Anon. 

O only Source of all our light and life. See Qui 
Laborat, Orat.—Clough. 

O pa, dear papa! we’ve had such a fine game. See 
Voyage in the Arm-chair, A.—Anon. 

O painted gauds and mimic scenes. See Ring down 
the Drop—I Cannot Play.—Watson. 

O painter of the fruits and flowers. See Hymn—“O 
Painter of the Fruits and Flowers.”—Whittier. 

O pallid student! leave thy dim alcove. See Midsum¬ 
mer Invitation.—Benton. 

O Paradise, O Paradise. See Paradise.—Faber. 

O pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth. See 
Julius Csesar (Antony’s Lament over Caisar).— 
Shakespeare. 

O! Patent Pen-inventing Perrian Perry! See Ode 
to Perry.—Hood. 

O patient Christ, when long ago. See Hymn.—Deland. 

O patient lives that sunless are. See Pompeian 
Preacher, A.—Smith. 

O Peace! thou source and soul of social life! See 
Britannia (Peace).—Thomson. 

O peerless shore of peerless sea. See Riviera, The.— 
Jackson. 

O pensive, tender maid, downcast and shy. See 
Earthly Paradise, The (Song to Psyche).—Morris. 

O perfect Light, which shaid away. See Story of a 
Summer Day, The.—Hume. 

O piety! O, heavenly piety! See same. —Anon. 

O [or Oh], Pilot! ’tis a fearful night.—there’s danger on 
the deep. See Pilot, The.—Bayly. 

O pious mother! kind, good, brave and truthful. See 
same. —Carlyle. 


“O pitying angel, pause, and say.” See In Paradise 
—Bates. 

O poet rare and old! See Astraea —Whittier. 

1 ‘O pour upon my soul again.” See Rosalie.—Allston. 

O power of love, O wondrous mystery! See Love.— 
Trask. 

O, praise an’ tanks! De Lord he come. See at Port 
Royal (Song of the Negro Boatman).—Whittier. 

O praise the Lord, his wonders tell. See Paraphrase 
upon Luke I.—Sandys. 

O pretty Lady Golden-rod. See Golden-rod.—Bronson. 

O Proserpina, for the flowers now, that frighted, thou 
let’st fall. See Winter’s Tale, The (Flowers).— 
Shakespeare. 

O ragged, ragged Sailors! See Ragged Sailors.— 
Anon. 

O rainy days! O days of sun! See April.—Foster. 

O reader! hast thou ever stood to see. See Holly- 
tree, The.—Southey. 

O red, red clouds in the westering sky. See Evening 
Song, An.—Munger. 

O remnant of that perished host. See Army of the 
Potomac.—Miller. 

O, Reverend sir, I do declare. See Widow Bedott 
Papers (Widow Bedott to Elder Sniffles).— 
Whitcher. 

O Richard, my King, lion-hearted, behold. See 
Troubadour, The.—Breakenridge. 

O Richard, O my King. See Blondel’s Song under the 
Prison Window of Richard Coeur-de-Lion.—Se- 
daine. 

O ivers rolling to the sea. See Canadian Streams.— 
Roberts. 

O robin in the cherry-tree. See In the Orchard.— 
Sherman. 

O iobin, pipe no more of rain. See Robin’s Rain- 
song.—Thaxter. 

O [wr. Oh] Rome! my country! city of the soul! See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Rome).—Byron. 

O Rosamond, thou fair and good. See Dreams and 
Realities.—Cary. 

O rose! who dares to name thee. See Dead Rose, A.— 
Browning. 

O roses for the flush of youth. See Song: ”0 roses 
for,” etc.).—Rossetti. 

O ruddier than the cherry! See Song.—Gay. 

O ruddy Lover. See Clover, The.—Deland. 

O ruthful scene! when from a nook obscure. See 
Schoolmistress, The (Suffering and Sympathy).— 
Shenstone. 

O sacred Head, now wounded. See Dying Saviour, 
The.—Gerhardt. 

O Sacred Providence, who from end to end. See 
Providence.—Herbert. 

O [Oh— C.] sacred Truth, thy triumph ceased awhile. 
See Pleasures of Hope, The (Downfall of Po¬ 
land, The).—Campbell. 

O [Ah— C 1 sad are they who know not love. See 
Two Songs from the Persian, II.—Aldrich. 

O [or Oh], St. Patrick was a gentleman. See St. Pat¬ 
rick Was a Gentleman.—Bennett. 

O, sairly may I rue the day. See Women Fo’k, The.— 
Hogg. 

O Sandy, why leaves thou thy Nelly to mourn? See 
Through the Wood, Laddie.—Ramsay. 

O [t vr. Oh], saw ye bonnie Lesley? See Bonnie Les¬ 
ley.—Burns. 

O [t nr. Oh] saw ye not fair Ines? See Fair Ines.— 
Hood. 

O, saw ye the lass wi’ the bonny blue een? See O, 
Saw Ye the Lass?—Ryan. 

O [or Oh]! say, can you see, by the dawn’s early light. 
See Star-spangled Banner, The.—Key. 

O say, have you heard of the sing-away bird. See 
Sing-away Bird, The.—Larcom. 

O say, my flattering heart. See Loves She like Me?— 
Woodworth. 

O [or Oh] say not that my heart is cold. See Song.— 
Wolfe. 

O say, thou best and brightest. See same. —Moore. 

O [or Oh] say what is that thing call'd Light. See 
Blind Boy, The.—Cibber. 

O say, what sums that generous hand supply. See 
Moral Essays (Epistle III.).—Pope. 

O sextant of the meetin’ house, which sweeps. See 
To the “Sextant.”—Willson. 

O shadow in a sultry land! See Vespers.—Packard. 

O shady vales, O fair enriched meadows. See Solitary 
Shepherd’s Song, The.—Lodge. 

O, shameless thief, a nation trusted thee. See lo 
Louis Napoleon.—Boker. 

O shepherds! take my crook from me. See Adieu.— 
Montgomery. 


781 




O ship 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


O ship incoming from the sea. See Off Riviere du 
Loup.—Scott. 

O [or Oh]! shun the spot, my youthful friends, I urge 
you to beware. See Street of By-and-bye, The.— 
Abdy. 

O sigh of the Sea, O soft lone-wandering sound. See 
Calling, The.—Sigerson. ’ 

O silent land to which we move. See Singer, The. 
—Whittier. 

O [ur. Oh] sing unto my roundelay (O! Synge untoe 
mie Roundelaie). See JElla (Minstrel's Song).— 
Chatterton. 

O sing unto the Lord a new song. See Psalms of 
David (Song of Praise, A).— Bible. 

O singer of the field and fold. See For a Copy of 
Theocritus.—Dobson. 

O sister Sophie! we’ve got a letter, by the evening’s 
mail! See Mendicant.—Anon. 

O sleep, my babe, hear not the rippling wave. See 
O Sleep, my Babe.—Coleridge. 

0 sleep, O gentle sleep. See King Henry IV., Pt. II. 
(Sleep).—Shakespeare. 

O, snatched away in beauty’s bloom. See same. —Byron. 

O soft embalmer of the still midnight! See To Sleep.— 
Keats. 

O Soggarth aroon! sure I know life is fleeting. See 
“Will My Soul Passthrough Ireland?’’—O’Sullivan. 

O solitude! if I must with thee dwell.—See Solitude.— 
Keats. 

O somewhere, somewhere, God unknown. See Last 
Appeal.—Myers. 

O son of Virginia, thy mem’ry divine. See Our Wash¬ 
ington.—Durbin. 

O sons of men, that toil, and love with tears! See 
Fair Maid and the Sun, The.—O’Shaughnessy. 

0 sorrow, sorrow, say where dost thou dwell? See 
Sorrow-song.—Rowley. 

O sorrow! why dost borrow? SeeEndymion (Song of 
the Indian Maid).—Keats. 

O soul! however sweet. See Prayer, A.—Coolbrith. 

O spare my child, my joy, my pride. See McLaine’s 
Child (Supplication).—Mackey. 

O spirit of the Summertime! See Song: “O spirit of 
the Summertime!”.—Allingham. 

O Spirits of the Beautiful. See Queen of Beauty, The. 
—Anon. 

O Spring-time sweet! See Spring Song, A.—Clarke. 

O Star of mine, lone Star of mine! See To the Even¬ 
ing Star.—Perkins. 

“0 star on the breast of the river!” See Water-lily, 
The.—Butts. 

O star-spangled banner! the flag of our pride! See 
Stripes and the Stars, The.—Proctor. 

O, stay, sweet warbling wood-lark, stay. See O, Stay, 
Sweet Warbling Wood-lark.—Burns. 

O steadfast trees that know. See Man and Nature.— 
Weeks. 

O still, white face of perfect peace. See Ripe Grain.— 
Goodale. 

O stoodent A has gone and spent. See Ballad with an 
Ancient Refrain.—Anon. 

O strange sweet loveliness! O tender grace. See 
Love’s Transfiguration.—( Chambers’ Journal .) 

O stream descending to the sea. See Stream of Life, 
The.—Clough. 

O strong soul, by what shore See Rugby Chapel.— 
Arnold. 

O, struck beneath the laurel, where the singing foun¬ 
tains are. See O, Struck beneath the Laurel.— 
Woodberry. 

O suffering, sad humanity! See Goblet of Life, The. 
—Longfellow. 

O sunbeam, O sunbeam! See Sunbeam and Dewdrop. 
—Havergal. 

O sunflower, what is the secret thing? See Secret of 
the Sunflower, The.—Anon. 

O suns and skies and clouds of June. See October’s 
Bright Blue Weather.—Jackson. 

O swallow, swallow, flying, flying South See Princess, 
The (O Swallow, Swallow, Flying South).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

O, sweet as the lapse of water at noon. See Voice of 
the Reader, The.—Whittier. 

O sweet Sabbath bells! See Sabbath Bells—Anon. 

O sweet September rain! See Rain in September.— 
Collins. 

O sweet September! thy first breezes bring. See 
September Days (Sweet September).—Arnold. 

O sweet unto my heart i« the song my mother sings. 
See Song mv Mother Sings, The.-—O’Hagan. 

O l wr. Oh], sweeter than the marriage-feast. See Rime 
of the Ancient Mariner. The (Love and Prayer).— 
Coleridge. 


O swete Lady, the good perfect starre. See Pastime 
of Pleasure, The (Dialogue between Graunde 
Amoure and La Pucel).—Hawes. 

O [Oh—(?.]! talk not to me of a name great in story. 
See Stanzas Written on the Road between Flor¬ 
ence and Pisa.—Byron. 

O tell me, pretty river! See River, The.—Good¬ 
rich. 

“O [Oh—C.]! tell me. sailor, tell me true.” See Gray 
Swan, The.—Cary. 

O tender love of long ago. See Reverie, A.—Scott. 

O tenderly the haughty day. See Ode, Sung in the 
Town Hall, Concord. July 4, 1857.—Emerson. 

O, terribly proud was Miss MacBride. See Proud 
Miss MacBride, The.—Saxe. 

O than the fairest day, thrice fairer night! See Shep¬ 
herds, The.—Drummond. 

O [or Oh], that last day in Lucknow fort! See Relief 
of Lucknow, The.—Lowell. 

O that the chemist’s magic art. See On a Tear.— 
Rogers. 

O that the pines which crown yon steep. See Even¬ 
ing Melody.—De Vere. 

O that this too, too solid flesh would melt. See Ham¬ 
let (Hamlet’s First Soliloquy).—Shakespeare. 

O [ ivr. Oh] that those lips had language! Life has 
pass’d. See On the Receipt of my Mother’s Pic¬ 
ture.—Cowper. 

O [ut. Oh] that ’twere possible after long grief and 
pain. .See Maud (O that ’twere Possible).— 
Tennyson. 

O that we now had here. See King Henry V. (Battle 
of St. Crispian’s Day).—Shakespeare. 

O [wr. Oh] that word Regret ! See Regret,.—Ingelow. 

O, the billows of fire! See His Name.—Preston. 

O, the birds of bonnie Scotland. See Birds of Scot¬ 
land, The.—Macdonald. 

O the Broom, the yellow Broom. See Broom Flower, 
The.—Howitt. 

O the charge at Balaklava! See Balaklava.—Smith 
[or Meek], 

O the dark days are over. See Spring is Coming.—Anon. 

O, the dark days of vanity! See Night Thoughts 
(Pursuit of Frivolous Pleasures.The).—Young. 

O [Oh—C-l! the days are gone, when Beauty bright. 
See Love’s Young Dream.—Moore. 

O [ter. Oh] the days gone by! O the days gone by! 
See Days Gone By, The.—Riley. 

O, the difference between sea and land! See Plea for 
the Sailor, A.—Mountford. 

O, the East is but the West, with the sun a little hotter. 
See Canadians on the Nile, The.—Smith. 

O [or Oh]! the French are on the say [or sea]. See 
Shan van Vocht.—Anon. 

O [or Oh]! the gallant fisher’s life. See Angler, The.— 
Chalkhill. 

O [wr. Oh], the green things growing, the green things 
growing. See Green Things Growing.—Craik. 

O [wrong, Oh] the happy meeting from over the sea. 
See Three Meetings.—Craik. 

O the Little Lady’s dainty. See Little Lady, The.— 
Riley. 

O the long and dreary winter. See Song of Hiawatha, 
The (Famine, The).—Longfellow. 

O [wr. Oh] the Man in the Moon has a crick in his 
back. See Man in the Moon, The.—Riley. 

O, the month of May, the merry month of Slay. See 
Shoemaker’s Holiday, The (Merry Month of May, 
The).—Dekker. 

O the night was dark and the night was late. See 
Treasure of the Wise Man, The.—Riley. 

O [or Oh], the old, old clock of the household stock. 
See Old Clock against the Wall, The.—-Anon. 

O for Oh], the pleasant days of old, which so often peo¬ 
ple praise! See O, the Pleasant Days of Old.— 
Browne. 

O the ploughboy was a ploughing. See Simple 
Ploughboy, The.—Anon. 

O the raggedy man! He works fer Pa. See Raggedy 
Man, The.—Riley. 

O the sad day! when friends shall shake their heads, 
and say. See Sad Day, The.—Flatman. 

O, the sight entrancing. See same. —Moore. 

O [or Oh], the snow, the beautiful snow. See Beau¬ 
tiful Snow.—Watson. 

O the South Wind and the Sun. See South Wind and 
the Sun, The.—Riley. 

O! the Spring! the beautiful Spring! See Seasons, 
The.—W alster. 

O the summer Night has a smile of light. See Night, 
The.—Procter. 

O, the wrath of the Lord is a terrible thing! See Curse 
of Cain, The.—Knox. 


782 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


O where 


O, then, I see, Queen Mab hath been with you. See 
Romeo and Juliet (Queen Mab).—Shakespeare. 

O then -what soul was his, when, on the tops. See 
Morning in the Mountains.—Wordsworth. 

O, there. Sis, do stop lecturing me. See Served Him 
Right.—Denton. 

O thorn-crowned Sorrow, pitiless and stern. See 
Sorrow.—Trask. 

O those days of Elizabeth! See Elizabethan Poets.— 
Browning. 

O [or Oh], those little, those little blue shoes! See 
Baby’s Shoes.—Bennett. 

“O thou bressed Jesus, who has met wid dy c-h-i-l’n.” 
—See Negro Prayer, A.—( Methodist Recorder.) 

O thou, by Nature taught. Nee Ode to Simplicity.— 
Collins. 

O [or Oh]! thou eternal One! whose presence bright. 
See Ode to the Deity.—Derzhaven. 

O thou ever restless sea. See Missing Ships, The.— 
Laighton. 

O Thou, from whom all goodness flows. See same .— 
Haweis. 

O thou goddess. See Cymbeline (Inborn Royalty). 
—Shakespeare. 

O thou great arbiter of life and death. See Night 
Thoughts (Aspiration).—-Young. 

O Thou great Friend to all the sons of men! See same. 
—Parker. 

O thou great Movement of the Universe. See Even¬ 
ing Revery, An.—Bryant. 

O thou great Wrong, that, through the slow-paced 
years. See Death of Slavery, The.—Bryant. 

O Thou, in all Thy might so far. See Mystery of God, 
The.—Hosmer. 

O thou of home the guardian I.ar. See Winter Even¬ 
ing Hymn to my Fire, A.—Lowell. 

O thou that cleavest heaven. See Bird’s Song at 
Morning.—Dawson. 

O thou that rollest above, round as the shield of my 
fathers! See Ossian’s Address to the Sun.— 
McPherson. 

O Thou, that sendest out the man. See England and 
America.—Tennyson. 

O thou that sit’st upon a throne. See Song to David, 
A.—Smart. 

O thou that swing’st upon the waving hair. See 
Grasshopper, The.—Lovelace. 

O thou that, with surpassing glory crowned. See Para¬ 
dise Lost.—Milton. 

O Thou, the contrite sinner’s friend. See same. —Elliott. 

O thou, the wonder of all dayes! See Dirge of Jeph- 
thah’s Daughter.—Herrick. 

O thou to whom, athwart the perished days. See 
Mary Arden.—Mackay. 

O Thou, to whom in ancient time. See Universal 
Worship.—Pierpont. 

O thou undaunted daughter of desires! See Upon the 
Book and Picture of the Seraphical Saint Teresa. 
—Crashaw. 

O thou unknown, Almighty Cause. See Prayer in the 
Prospect of Death, A.—Burns. 

O [or Oh] thou vast Ocean! ever-sounding Sea! See 
Ocean, The.—Procter. 

O Thou, that [or wha] in the Heavens does [or dost] 
dwell. See Holy Willie’s Prayer.—Burns. 

“O thou, whatever title please thine ear.” See To My 
Poland Rooster.—Cozzens. 

O thou! whatever title suit thee. See Address to the 
Deil.—Burns. 

O thou who bearest on thy thoughtful face. See Au¬ 
tumn Leaves.—Higginson. 

O [Oh—C.] Thou who dry’st the mourner’s tear. 
See same. —Moore. 

O Thou who hast beneath Thy hand. See Ascription. 


—Roberts. . „ „ , 

O Thou who mak’st the sun to rise. See Morning 
Prayer.—Anon. i 

O thou whom sacred duty hither calls. See “Cease to 
do Evil—Learn to do Well.”—McCarthy. 

O thou, whose dim and tearful gaze. See To-, on 

Her Sister’s Death.—Keble. 

O thoti whose fancies from afar are brought. See lo 
Hartley Coleridge.—Wordsworth. 

O thou, whose mighty palace roof doth hang. See 
Endymion (Hymn to Pan).—Keats. 

O thou with dewy locks, who lookest down. See To 
Spring.—Blake. , 

O Tim, did you hear of thim Saxons. See Molony s 
Lament.—Thackeray. 

O Time! kind Time, you’ve brought thus far. See 


Lifting the Veil.—Anon. , 

O Time! O Death! I clasp you in my arms. See Poet s 
Hope, A.—Channing. 


O Time, who knowest a lenient hand to lay. See In¬ 
fluence of Time on Grief.—Bowler. 

O! ’Tis wondrous much. See Praise of Homer, The.— 
Chapman. 

O Tityrus, thy plaint is over-long. See Lament for 
Meliboeus, A.—Watson. 

O [Oh—C.] to be in England now that April’s 
there. See Home Thoughts from Abroad.— 
Browning. 

O to lie in long grasses! See In the Grass.—Garland. 

O to part now, and parting now. See After Love.— 
Symons. 

O touch me not unless thy soul. See Unless.— 
Glynes. 

O true and tried, so well and long. See In Memoriam 
(Wedding-da^, The).-—Tennyson. 

O turn away those cruel eyes. See Relapse, The.— 
Stanley. 

O Twenty, running through the wood! See Twenty- 
old and Seven-wild.—Huestis. 

O unexpected stroke, worse than of Death! See Para¬ 
dise Lost (Eve’s Lament).—Milton. 

O unhatch’d Bird, so high preferred. See Paradise of 
Birds, The (Ode—to the Roc).—Courthope. 

O unknown Belov’d One! to the perfect season. See 
Therania.—Allingham. 

O, unlucky me! Little did I think. See Gold Spinner, 
The.—Denton. 

O unseen Spirit! now a calm divine. See On a Beauti¬ 
ful Day.—Sterling. 

O vat is dis has come to pass? See Life, Liberty and 
Lager.—Anon. 

O Venice! Venice! when thy marble walls. See Race 
with Death, The.—Byron. 

O very, very far from our dull earth. See Poet, The.— 
Cotes. 

O Victor Emmanuel the King. See same. —Browning. 

O, wad that my time were owre but. See Rustic Lad’s 
Lament in the Town, The.—Moir. 

O, waly, waly, my gay gos«-hawk. See Gay Goss- 
hawk, The.—Anon. (Scott). 

O [or Oh] waly, waly up the bank. See Waly, Waly, 
but Love be Bonny.—Anon. 

O wanderer in the southern weather. See Indian Song, 
An.—Yeats. 

O, [or oh] water for me! bright water for me! See 
Water-drinker, The.—Johnson. 

O weary feet that on Life’s stony way. See Forbidden. 
—Anon. 

O weel’s me, my gay goss-hawk. See Gay Goss-hawk, 
The.—-Anon. 

“O well is me, my gay gos-hawk.” See Gay Gos- 
Hawk, The.—Anon. 

O well is me, my jolly goshawk. See Jolly Goshawk, 
The.—Anon. 

O, were I a cross on thy snowy breast. See same. 
—(Eton Magazine.) 

O were my Love yon lilac fair. See same. —Burns. 

O [wr. Oh], wert thou in the cauld blast. See same. 
—Burns. 

O western wind, when wilt thou blow. See Lover in 
Winter Plaineth for the Spring, The.—Anon. 

O wha wad wi_h the wind to blaw. See Brown Adam. 
—Anon. 

O [or Oh] wha [or who] will shoe my bonny [or fair] 
foot. See Fair Annie of Lochroyan.—Anon. 

O what a day it was to us. See Tricksey’s Ring.— 
Cary. 

O [or Oh] what a plague is love! See Phillida flouts 
Me.—Anon. 

O, what a sight it was, wistly to view. See Venus and 
Adonis.—Shakespeare. 

“O [or. Oh], what can ail thee, knight-at-arms.” 
See La Belle Dame sans Merci.—Keats. 

O what can little hands do. See same.— Anon. 

O what harper could worthily harp it. See School¬ 
master, The.—Calverley. 

O, what shall I do with them both? See Rivals, The. 
—Chandler. 

O, what wonders the day hath brought. See Snow.— 
Akers. 

O, when I hear at sea. See Wind and Wave.-—Stod¬ 
dard. 

O when the half-light weaves. See Sad Mother, The.— 
Hinkson. 

O [or Oh], when't is summer weather. See Greenwood, 
The.—Bowles. . 

“O where are you going so early,” he said? See Milk¬ 
maid, The.—Allingham. 

“O where are you going with your love-locks flowing. 
See Facilis Descensus.— {Congregntionalist. The.) 

“O where do you come from, berries red?” See Plant 
Song.—Brown. 


783 





0 where 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


O where do you go, and what’s your will. See London 
Feast.—Rhys. 

O where hae ye been a’ day, Lord Donald, my son? 
See Lord Randal [Lord Donald].—Anon. 

O, where hae [or have] ye been,Lord Randal [or Ronald], 
my son? See Lord Randal [or Ronald].—Anon. 

O where hae ye been, my lang-lost lover. See Ship o’ 
the Fiend, The.—Anon. 

O, where have you been my long, long love. See 
Demon Lover, The.—Anon. 

O [or Oh] where is the knight or the squire so bold. See 
Diver. The.—Schiller. 

O where will ye gang to and where will ye sleep. See 
Witch-mother, The.—Swinburne. 

O [Oh—C.], wherefore come ye forth, in triumph 
from the north. See Battle of Naseby, The.— 
Macaulay. 

O which is the last rose? A blossom of no name. See 
Last Rose, The.—Davidson. 

O whistle, and I’ll come to you, my lad. See Whistle 
and I’ll Come to You, My Lad.—Burns. 

O white and midnight sky, O starry bath! See Celes¬ 
tial Passion, The.—Gilder. 

X) white moon sailing down the sky. See Fairy Jewels. 
—Sherman. 

O white, white, light moon, that sailest in the sky. See 
Donald.—Abbey. 

O whither dost thou fly? cannot my vow. See Cas- 
tara (To the Moment Last Past).—Habington. 

O whither goest thou, pale student. See Ye Laye of 
ye Woodpeckore.—Beers. 

O, whither sail you, Sir John Franklin? See Ballad of 
Sir John Franklin, A.—Boker. 

O whither will you lead the fair. See On the Cap¬ 
tivity of the Countess of Anglesey.—Davenant. 

O, who can hold a fire in his hand. See King Richard 
11.—Shakespeare. 

O, who could lie a-snoring. See Wreck off Mizen- 
Head, The. Savage-Armstrong. 

O, who is there within whose heart. See Ode to the 
Trees.—Welsh. 

O who rides by night thro’ the woodland so wild? See 
Erl-king, The.—Goethe. 

O! [or Oh] who shall lightly say that Fame. See Worth 
of Fame, The.—Baillie. 

O why are darkness and thick cloud. See Mystery.— 
Savage. 

O [or Oh], why should the spirit of mortal be proud.— 
See same. —-Knox. 

O Widow Mysie, smiling soft and sweet! See Widow 
Mysie, The.—Buchanan. 

O wild red rose, what spell has stayed. See Wild Rose 
in September, A.—Jackson. 

O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn’s being. 
See Ode to the West Wind.—Shelley. 

O [wr. Oh] will ye choose to hear the news. See Mr. 
Molony’s Account of the Ball.—Thackeray. 

O, Willie brewed a peck o' maut. See Happy Trio, 
The.—Burns. 

O Willie’s gane to Melville Castle. See Willie’s Visit 
to Melville Castle.—Anon. 

O Willie’s [or Willy’s] large o’ limb and lith. See Birth 
of Robin Hood, The.—Anon. 

O willows, why forever weep. See Willow, The.—Allen. 

O wilt thou go wi’ me. See Tibbie Dunber.—Burns. 

O Wind of the Mountain, Wind of the Mountain, hear! 
See O Wind of the Mountain.—Westwood. 

O Wind, thou hast thy kingdom in the trees. See 
Wind of Summer.—Field. 

O winds! ye are too rough, too rough! See same. — 
Cary. 

O Winter, ruler of the inverted year. See Winter.— 
Cowper. 

O! winter twilight, while the moon. See same —Bour- 
dillon. 

O winter! wilt thou never, never go? See O Winter! 
Wilt Thou never Go?—Gray. 

O wise Assembly! and O wiser Senate! See Ode to the 
Legislature.—Saxe. 

O [or Oh] wise little birds, how do ye know. See Flight 
of the Birds, The.—Kimball. 

O, woe to you, ye lofty halls! may no sweet sounds 
resound. See Minstrel’s Curse, The.—Uhland. 

O woman, let thy heart not cleave. See Forepledged. 
—Spalding. 

O woman! lovely woman! nature made thee. See 
Venice Preserved.—Otway. 

O woman of the Piercing Wail. See Lament of the 
Princes of Tir-Owen and Tirconnell.—Mangan. 

O woman of Three Cows, agra! don’t let your tongue 
thus rattle! See Woman of Three Cows, The.— 
Mangan. 


O Word of God incarnate. See same. —How. 

O world, be nobler, for her sake! See O World, be 
Nobler.—Binyon. 

O world, great world, now thou art all my own. See 
We Conquer God.—Egan. 

O world, in very truth thou art too young. See Writ¬ 
ten at Florence.—Blunt. 

O World! O Life! O Time! See Lament, A.— 
Shelley. 

O World, thou choosest not the better part! See Faith. 
—Santayana. 

“O [wr. Oh] World-God, give me wealth!” the Egyptian 
cried. See Gifts.—Lazarus. 

O would God call a halt,—one moment’s halt. See In¬ 
somnia.-—Aldrich. 

O, would you be a sunbeam. See Little Sunbeam.— 
Anon. 

‘‘O, wusha thin, tis the sore thrubble.” See Nora Mul¬ 
ligan’s Thanksgiving Party.—Savage. 

O ye feline brutes erotic. See Quousque Tandem, O 
Catilina?—Frisbie. 

O ye sweet heavens! your silence is to me. See O Ye 
Sweet Heavens!—Parsons. 

O ye tears! O ye tears! that have long refused to flow 
See O Ye Tears!—Mackay. 

O [wr. Oh] ye, wha are sae guid yoursel. See Ad 
dress to the Unco Guid, or the Rigidly Righteous 
—Burns. 

O ye who see with other eyes than ours. See Life and 
Deat h.—-Perry. 

O year that is going, take with you. See To the Old 
and the New Year.—Armitage. 

O years, you have vanished like shadows. See “ O 
Years, You Have Vanished.”—Anon. 

“O, yes! O, yes! O, yes! ding-dong.” See Cicely and 
the Bears.—Rands. 

O yes! O yes! O yes! Madame Bonne Bouche! Direct 
from Paris! See Latest Sensation in Podunk.—- 
Crosby. 

O, yes, you are a handsome Miss! See Birthday Doll 
The.—Denton. 

O [ter. Oh] yet we trust that somehow good. See In 
Memoriam (O yet we Trust).—Tennyson. 

O yonge fresshe folkes, he or she. See Troilus and 
Criseyde (Love Unfeigned, The).-—Chaucer. 

O you boys grown gray and bearded, you that used ter 
chum with me. See Our First Fire-crackers.— 
Lincoln. 

O you plant the pain in my heart with your wistful 
eyes. See Maureen.—Todhunter. 

O [Oh—C.], young Lochinvar’s come out of the west 
See Marmion (Lochinvar).—Scott. 

O youth, beware! that laurel-rose. See Rhododaphne 
(Spell of the Laurel-rose).—Peacock.—Bridges. 

O youth whose hope is high. See same. 

Oak, Caroline! fir yew I pine. See Poet-tree.—Dodge. 

Oak leaves are big as the mouse’s ear. See Every One 
to his Own Way.—Cheney. 

Obedience,—the true school of empire, has two ap¬ 
plications. See Greatness of Obedience, The — 
Farrar. 

Obedient to his summons, there ranged themselves in 
front of the schoolmaster’s desk. See Nicholas 
Nickleby (Squeers’ School).—Dickens. 

Obscurest night involved the sky. See Castaway, The. 
—Cowper. 

Observe good manners. See Twelve Golden Rules for 
Boys.—Anon. 

Obviously a government resting upon the will. See 
Political Duties and Responsibilities of University 
Men (College and the Nation, The).—Cleveland. 

Occasions drew me early to this city. See Samson 
Agonistes (Death of Samson, The).—Milton. 

Och, Barney, go way now, for sure I’ll not hear till yez. 
See Sorra the Day.—Best. 

Och, be aisy now, darlint! Don’t I tell yees the b’y 
don’t be wid me all the day. See Lost Child, The. 
—Cushing. 

Och, Biddy! ’tis bad news I’m bringin’. See Sale of 
the Pig, The.—O’Donnell. 

Och! but it’s an illigant counthry entirely. See Pat’s 
Dilemma.—Anon. 

Och! don’t be talkin’. Is it howld on, ye say? See 
Miss Malony on the Chinese Question.—Dodge. 

Och. girls, did you ever hear, I wrote my love a letter. 
See Kat[e]y’s Letter.—Dufferin. 

Och hone, and it’s Biddy McClooney. See Pat’s Love. 
—Jot. 

Och hone! and what will I do? See Molly Carew.— 
Lover. 

Och! it’s deceivin’ that all men are! See Pat’s Ex¬ 
cuse.—Anon. 


784 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Of 


Och, Katie’s a rogue, it is thrue. See Katie’s Answer. 
—Anon. 

Och, Mollie Moriarity, I’ve been havin’ the quare iks- 
paryincis since yiz hurrud from me. See Bridget 
O’Flannagan on Christian Science and Cock¬ 
roaches.—Bourchier. 

Och, Nora, so swate, an’ so purty, the darlint! See 
Love Song, A.—Anon. 

Och, Oolaghaun! Och, Oolaghaun! See Shaugraun, 
The (“Oolaghaun,” The).—Boucieault. 

Och! Paddy Dunbar is come out of the West. See 
Paddy Dunbar.—-Scott. 

Och, Paddy O’Flynn, are yez at it agin. See Teddy 
McGuire and Paddy O’Flynn.—Jones. 

Och! the Coronation! what celebration. See Mr. Bar¬ 
ney Maquire’s Account of the Coronation.—Bar¬ 
ham. 

October fields are hazy. See October Love Song. 
— (Campus.) 

October gave a party. The leaves by hundreds came. 
See October’s Party.—Cooper. 

October is here, so gay and bright. See October.— 
Richards. 

October is the month that seems. See October.— 
Sherman. 

October turned my maple’s leaves to gold. See Maple 
Leaves.—Aldrich. 

O’Driscoll drove with a song. See Folk of the Air, 
The.—Yeats. 

O’er a low barn, the setting sun. See Baron Grimal¬ 
kin’s Death.—Carleton. 

O’er a low couch the setting sun had thrown its latest 
ray. See Baron’s Last Banquet, The.—Greene. 

O’er a wild heath, as the decline of day. See Fright¬ 
ened Traveller, The.—Anon. 

O’er all the hilltops is quiet now! See Sleep.—Goethe. 

O’er Lucknow’s walls bursts war’s red thunder storm. 
See Jessie Brown at Lucknow.—Vandenhoff. 

O’er many roods of restless blades. See Fields of Corn, 
The.—Hartzell. 

O’er moorlands and mountains, rude, barren, and bare. 
See Content. A Pastoral.—Cunningham. 

O’er Provence breathing, nimble air. See Gay Pro¬ 
vence.—Savage-Armstrong. 

O’er royal London in luxuriant May. See St. James’ 
St reet on a Summer Morning.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

O’er swift Niagara’s echoing shore. See Niagara’s 
Sacrifice.—Anon. 

O’er the cheerless'common. See Ballad of the Way¬ 
farer, The.—Buchanan. . 

O’er “The Devil’s Gulch,” a chasm wide. See Boy 
Here, A.—Anon. 

O’er the forest of Judea. See Legend of the Aspen.— 
Anon. 

O’er the glad waters of the dark blue sea. See Corsair, 
The (Song of the Rover).—Byron. 

O’er the purple hills, O Cuba. See Cuba.—Hope ; 

O’er the rough main with flowing sheet. See Victory 
of the “Bonhomme Richard” over the “Serapis.” 
—Freneau. 

O’ei^he silent meadows. See Carol, A.—Brewer. 

O’erthe smooth [or sweet] enamelled green. See Ar¬ 
cades (2nd song).-—Milton. 

O’er the sunlit hills of Berkshire. See At Last.—Anon. 

O’er the waste of waters cruising. See On Captain 
Barney’s Victory over the Ship General Monk.— 
Freneau. 

O’er the wet sands an insect crept. See Autograph, 
An.—Lowell. 

O’er the white waste of drifted sands unstable. See 
Recollection, A.—Nickerson. 

O’er the yellow crocus on the lawn. See Russian Fan¬ 
tasy, A.—Dole. _ 

O’er western tides the fair Spring Day. See Pilot s 
Daughter, The.—Allingham. 

Of a’ the airts the wind can blaw. See Of a’ the Airts. 
—Burns. 

Of a thousand things that the year snowed under. 
See Snowed Under.—Wilcox. 

Of all beasts he learned the language. See Song of 
Hiawatha, The (Hiawatha’s Brothers).—Long- 
fellow. 

Of all inhabitants on earth. See On a Candle. Swift. 

Of all inorganic substances, acting in their own proper 
nature. See Modern Painters (Water).—Ruskin. 

Of all men. saving Sylla the man-slayer. See Don 
Juan (Daniel Boone).—Byron. 

Of all miracles, far the most wonderful is that ot lite. 
See Mystery of Life.—Tennyson. 

Of all monopolies that disgrace civilization a monopoly 
in sin. See Fallacy of High License, The.—Willard. 

Of all old women hard of hearing. See Tale of a 
Trumpet.—Hood. 


Of all political characters, Demosthenes is the most 
sublime. See Demosthenes.—Creasy. 

“Of all sad words of tongue or pen.” See Twentieth 
Birthday.—M. K. 

Of all speculations the market holds forth. See Specu¬ 
lation, A.—Moore. 

Of all the blessings which can befall a community. See 
Address at the Dedication of a Memorial Tablet, 
An.—Anon. 

Of all the bonny buds that blow. See Heart’s-ease.— 
Bradley. 

Of all the books with which, since the invention of 
writing. See Bible and the Iliad, The.—Wayland. 

Of all the brave captains that ever were seen. See Sir 
Dilberry Diddle.—Anon. 

Of all the busy people. See In Santa Claus Land.— 
Shelton. 

Of all the customs of Eastern countries. See Chinese 
Wedding, A.—Wilson. 

Of all the dancing academies that ever were estab¬ 
lished. See Sketches by Boz (Signor Billsmethi’s 
Dancing Academy).—Dickens. 

“Of all the days of all the year .” See Which is Best? 
—Hannah. 

Of all the days that comes around. See When Ma 
Begins to Clean.—Richards. 

Of all the delicacies in the whole world of eatables. 
See Dissertation upon Roast Pig (Roast Pig).— 
Lamb. 

“Of all the disagreeable people, of all the horrible, 
cross old men.” See Uncle Ben.—Bradley. 

Of ail the dispositions and habits which lead to politi¬ 
cal prosperity. See Maxims of George Washing¬ 
ton. —W ashington. 

Of all the faithful friends we had. See Old Canteen, 
The.—Vickers. 

Of all the floures [or flowers] in the mede. See Le- 
gende of Goode Women (Daisy, The).—Chaucer. 

Of all the flowers rising now. See Maritas Suae.— 
Philpot. 

Of all the girls that are so smart. See Sally in Our 
Alley.—Carey. 

Of all the institutions now existing in the civilized 
world. See Established Church of Ireland. The.— 
Macaulay. 

Of all the joys that summer brings. See Umbrella on 
the Beach, The.—( Harper’s Bazar.) 

Of all the lines that volumes fill. See Evidence.— 
B. O. H. 

Of all the martial virtues, the one which is perhaps 
most characteristic of the truly brave. See Get¬ 
tysburg: A Mecca for the Blue and Gray.— 
Gordon. 

Of all the men one meets about. See same.—Moore. 

Of all the men the world has seen. See Adam never 
was a Boy.—Harbaugh. 

Of all the months, of all the year. See Jolly March.— 
Rook. 

Of all the myriad moods of mind. See Longing.— 
Lowell. 

Of all the nights of most mysterious dread. See Rab- 
boni.—Preston. 

Of all the nuisances abroad. See Riding in the Cars. 
(For a girl.) —Kavanaugh. 

Of all the reproaches which arise against a man in his 
chamber of study. See same. —Vaughan. 

Of all the rides since the birth of time. See Skipper 
Ireson’s Ride.—Whittier. 

Of all the ships upon the blue. See Captain Reece.— 
Gilbert. 

Of all the solemnities of which the mind can conceive, 
death is the greatest. See same.— Swing. 

Of all the souls that stand create. See Choice.— 
Dickinson. 

Of all the thoughts of God that are. See Sleep, The.— 
Browning. 

Of all the tiny race of Skye. See Flossy (with her own 
Portrait) to her Mistress.—Smith. 

Of all the torments, all the cares. See Rivalry in Love. 
—Walsh. 

Of all the vile inventions, misbegotten by mistake. 
See Song of the Bicycle, The.—Anon. 

Of all the ways of travelling. See Canal-boat, The.— 
Stowe. 

Of all the wives as e’er you know. Nee Nancy Lee.— 
Weatherly. ' 

Of all the wonders that I yet have heard. See Julius 
Cffisar.—Shakespeare. 

Of all the words in English tongue. See Balance Due. 
—Kavanaugh. 

Of course I don’t believe in any such person as Santa 
Claus. See Billy’s Santa Claus Experience.— 
Redmond. 


785 





Of 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Of course I love the house o’ God. See When Sam’wel 
Led the Singin’.—( Boston Globe.) 

Of course it was a sin. See Getting at the Point.— 
Anon. 

Of course Johnny wanted to stay in town for the 
Fourth. See Johnny’s Fourth of July.—Anon. 

“Of course,” said Miltiades Peterkin Paul. See Mil- 
tiades Gets the Best of Santa Claus.—Brownjohn. 

Of course, ye read about it in the papers, sir. See 
Story of Hard Times, A.—Phelps. 

Of every ill is love the cure. See Reductio ad Absur- 
dum.—Simonds. 

Of Februar the fiftene nycht. See Dance of the 
Seven Deadly Sins [or Sevin Deidly Synnis, The]. 
—Dunbar. 

Of fine maize flour, yellow as the locks of the lovely 
Lenore. See Making Brown-bread Cakes.—Ham¬ 
ilton. 

Of Florence and of Beatrice. See Dante Alighieri.— 
Rossetti. 

Of happiness terrestrial, and the source. See Wine.— 
Gay. 

Of Heaven or Hell I have no power to sing. See 
Earthly Paradise, The (Singer’s Prelude, The).— 
Morris. 

Of heavenly stature, but most human smile. See 
Written in the Visitor’s Book at the Birthplace of 
Robert Burns.—Cable. 

Of hem, that writen us to-fore. See Confessio Amantis 
(Opening of the Original Prologue).—Gower 

Of him, whom all this erthe dradde. See Confessio 
Amantis (Alexander and the Robber).—Gower. 

Of its own beauty is the mind diseased. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage.—Byron. 

Of jes’ no ’count an’ mebbe wuss. See Why Jim For¬ 
sook the Ministry.—Pierson. 

Of late I sat within the night-fire’s gleam. See Villon. 
—(Cornell Widow.) 

Of law there can be no less acknowledged. See Neces¬ 
sity of Law (Law).—Hooker. 

Of Leinster, famed for maidens fair. See Colin and 
Lucy.—Tickell. 

Of Lentren in the first morning. See All Earthly Joy 
Returns in Pain.—Dunbar. 

Of love that never found his [wr. its] earthly close. 
See Love and Duty.—Tennyson. 

Of manners and tricks, as erratic. See My Owl.— 
Cornwell. 

Of Man’s first disobedience, and the fruit. See Para¬ 
dise Lost (Invocation from Paradise Lost).— 
Milton. 

Of mornings, bright and early. See Googly-Goo.— 
Field. 

Of mortal glory, O soon darkened ray! See Sonnet: 
“Of mortal glory,” etc.—Drummond. 

Of nature broad and free. See Tribute to Nature.— 
—-Heermans. 

Of Nelson and the North. See Battle of the Baltic, 
The.—Campbell. 

Of Neptune’s empire let us sing. See Hymn in Praise 
of Neptune, A.—Campion. 

Of no distemper, of no blast he died. See (Edipus. 
—Dryden. 

Of old, a man who died. See Immortal Flowers.— 
Rice. 

Of old sat Freedom on the heights. See same. — 
Tennyson. 

Of old, when Scarron his companions invited. See 
Retaliation, The.—Goldsmith. 

Of one that is so fayr and bright. See Hymn to the 
Virgin, A.—Anon. 

“Of one blood,” the Father “all nations, made.” See 
Congress of Nations, The.—( Chicago Inter-Ocean.) 

Of Pan we sing, the best of singers, Pan. See Pan’s 
Anniversary; or, The Shepherd’s Holiday (Hymn 
to Pan).—Jonson. 

Of priests we can offer a charmin’ variety. See 
Father O’Flynn.—Graves. 

Of Salisbury, who can report of him. See King Henry 
VI., Pt. II. (Battle of St. Albans).—Shakespeare. 

Of speckled eggs the birdie sings. See Singing.—Ste¬ 
venson. 

Of steak—of steak—of prime Rump Steak. See 
Steak, The.— (Punch.) 

Of the infinite variety of fruits. See Rural Hours.— 
Cooper. . 

Of the many misstatements in regard to the Pilgrim 
Fathers. See Pilgrims as Conquerors, The.— 
Lodge. 

Of the million or two, more or less. See Instans 
Tyrannus.—Browning. 

Of the mission church San Carlos. See Midnight Mass, 
The.—White. 


Of thee, kind boy, I ask no red and white. See Truth 
in Love.—Suckling. 

Of these the false Achitophel was first. See Absalom 
and Achitophel (Achitophel).—Dryden. 

Of this fair volume which we World do name. See 
Lessons of Nature, The.—Drummond. 

Of this man I will say little. See Pickwick Papers, The 
(Peroration of Buzfuz).—Dickens. 

Of thy stream, Amelete, who reaches the shore. See 
Dirge.—Gilbert. 

Of Truth, of Grandeur, Beauty, Love, and Hope. See 
Outline.—Wordsworth. 

Of what am I dreaming?—of Violet’s glance. See 
After the Waltz.—Davis. 

“Of what are you afraid my child?” See Wild 
Flowers.—Newell. 

Of worthy Captain LoveweU, I purpose now to sing. 
See Lovewell’s Fight.—Anon. 

Of yore, in Old England, it was not thought good. See 
To Mr. Alexandre, the Ventriloquist.—Scott. 

Of yore, when books were few and fine. See From the 
Fly-leaf of the Rowfant Montaigne.—Locker. 

Of your trouble, Ben, to ease me. See Proper Man, A. 
—Jonson. 

Off the first of next week! My goodness! What a lot 
of things to be done! See Fashionable Vacation, 
A.—Dallas. 

Off to the woods! Off to the woods! See Arbor Day. 
—Anon. 

“Off with it, old fellow, before you start!” See Last 
String, The.—Hartwig. 

“Off with the saddle and shoot him!” Ten miles from 
the camp he fell lame. See Abandoned Troop 
Horse, The.—Rocke. 

Off with your hat as the flag goes by! See Salute 
the Flag.—Bunner. 

Officer Brady was passing in front of a large tenement 
house. See How Mrs. O’Doolahan Had Mike 
Arrested.—Smith. 

Officer, what is the charge against this man? See 
Italian from Cork, The.—Daly. 

Oft as my lady sang for me. See On a Lady Singing. 
—Parsons. 

Oft, as sitting in my study. See That Little Girl of 
Mine.—-Head. 

Oft has it been my lot to mark. See Chameleon, The. 
—Merrick. 

Oft have I gathered flowers for thee. See To My Dear 
Friend Aimte.-—Westley. 

Oft have I heard of Lucy Gray. See Lucy Gray; or, 
Solitude.—Wordsworth. 

Oft have I seen at some cathedral door. See Divina 
Commedia.—Longfellow. 

Oft have I stood upon the foaming strand. See Dark¬ 
ness.—Rosenberg. 

Oft have I wakened ere the spring of day. See In¬ 
verted Torch, The (Will it Be So).—Thomas. 

Oft have I walked these woodland paths. See Under 
the Leaves.—Laighton. 

Oft have the nymphs. See Fair Virtue, the Mistress 
of Philarete (Love-poems, I.).—Wither. 

Oft I had heard of Lucy Gray. See I.ucy Gray; or, 
Solitude.—Wordsworth. 

Oft I have met her. See Innocence.—Mair. 

Oft I see at twilight. See Old Mirror, The.—Whitman. 

Oft I see her at the opera. See At the Opera.— 
Pierson. 

Oft in the pleasant summer years. See Theology in 
Extremis.—Lyall. 

Oft, in the stilly night. See same. —Moore. 

Oft I’ve heard a gentle mother. See Be a Woman.— 
Brooks. 

Oft may the spirits of the dead descend. See Pleas¬ 
ures of Memory, The.—Rogers. 

Oft o’er my brain does that strange fancy roll. See 
Sonnet Composed on a Journey Homeward.— 
Coleridge. 

Oft since thine earthly eye? have closed on mine. See 
Sonnet: “Oft since thine earthly,” etc.—Whitman. 

Oft through the summer vacation. See Two Seasons. 
—Burleigh. 

Oft when, returning with her loaded bill. See Sea¬ 
sons, The (Nightingale, The;.—Thomson. 

Oft with true sighs, oft with uncalled tears. See Astro- 
phel • nd Stella (Sonnet LXI.).—Sidney. 

Oft you have ask’d me, Granville, why. See Epistle 
from Lord Boringdon to Lord Granville.—Can¬ 
ning. 

Often as it has been repeated, it will bear another repe¬ 
tition. See Men and Deeds of the Revolution, 
The.—Everett. 

Often have I [or I have] heard it said. See Rubies.— 
Landor. 


786 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


Oh, dear 


Often have I heard of Comal. See Comal and Galbina. 
—Ossian. 

Often have I swept backward, in imagination. See 
First View of the Heavens, The.—Mitchel. 

“Often have strange cases?’’ Yes, sir; frequently a 
case lies here. See Told by the Hospital Nurse.— 
McBeath. 

Often I have Lor have I] heard it said. See Rubies.— 
Landor. 

Often I linger where the roses pour. See same. —Dorr. 

Often I sit and spend my hour. See Dreams.—Cary. 

Often I think of the beautiful town. See My Lost 
Youth.—Longfellow. 

Often rebuk’d, yet always back returning. See Stanzas. 
—Bronte. 

Often, trifling with a privilege. See Osmunda Regalis, 
The.—W ordsworth. 

Often, when o’er tree and turret. See “Hie Vir, Hie 
Est. ”—Calverley. 

Ofttimes I have seen a tall ship glide by. See Profes¬ 
sor at the Breakfast-table (Faithful Little Wife, 
A).—Holmes. 

O’Grady lived in Shanty row. See O’Grady’s Goat.— 
Hays. 

Oh, a dainty craft has just put out. See Dream-ship, 
The.—Edmondson. 

Oh [wr. O], a dainty plant is the Ivy green. See 
Pickwick Papers, The (Ivy Green, The).—Dickens. 

Oh, a queer little chap is the honest old toad. See 
Honest Old Toad, The.—Anon. 

Oh! a splendid Soup is the true Pea Green. See Green 
Pea Soup.— (.Punch.) 

Oh, a tempered sword. See Song of the Smithy.— 
L. W. 

Oh, a wonderful horse is the Fly-away Horse. See 
Fly-away Horse, The.—Field. 

Oh [wr. O], a wonderful stream is the river Time. 
See Isle of the Long Ago, The.—Taylor. 

Oh, aged Time! how far, and long. See Roman Le¬ 
gions, The.—Mitford. 

Oh, agony of fear! would that he yet might live! See 
Cenci, The (Fear).—Shelley. 

Oh, ah! You are worse, dear father. See One Good 
Turn Deserves Another.—Trowbridge. 

Oh, Alice! She has actually pushed him over the 
chalk pit and killed him. See Haunted Chamber, 
The.—Anon. 

Oh, Alice, what shall I do? Aunt Dorothy is coming. 
See Threatened Visit, The.—Anon. 

Oh! Amos Cottle!—Phoebus! what a name. See English 
Bards and Scotch Reviewers.—Byron. 

Oh, Anna, see what I have got! See New Quarters, 
The.—Anon. 

Oh! ask me not to take the cup. See Temperance 
Speech.—Anon. 

Oh, ask not thou how shall I bear. See Oh, Ask not 
Thou.—Saxby. 

Oh, Aunt Martha! only hear this! it’s in the Chronicle. 
See Matrimonial Advertisement, The.—“Clara 
Augusta.” 

Oh, band in the pine-wood, cease! See Band in the 
Pines, The.—Cooke. 

Oh, be at least able to say in that day. See same. — 
Kingsley. 

Oh, be not ether-borne, poet of earth. See Poet of 
Earth.—Thayer. 

Oh, be not faithless! with the morn. See Cast Thy 
Bread upon the Waters.—Barton. 

Oh! be the dav accurst that gave me birth! See Poet 
Relates how he Stole a Lock of Delia's Hair, and 
her Anger, The.—Southey. 

Oh! bear me then to vast* embowering shades. See 
Seasons. The (“Oh! bear me then,” etc.).—Thom- 
son. , 

Oh! bells of joy, how sweet they ring. See Old-time 
Bells, The.—Anon. . 

Oh, bells that chime your sweetest! See Merry Christ¬ 
mas and a Glad New Year, A.—-Cooper. 

Oh, bird of the avenue, strong is thy wing. See Hod- 
fellow, The.—Burdette. 

Oh, birds that sing such thankful psalms. See Nature 
Prayer, A.—Jones. . 

Oh, Bisham Banks are fresh and fair. See Marlow 
Madrigal, A.—Ashby-Sterry. 

Oh, bless us, we are young and small. See Oh, Bless 
Us!—Anon. 

Oh, blushing, youthful maiden. See To My Love.— 
Eaton. . , . , 

Oh! Iter. Ol breathe not his name, let it sleep m the 
shade. See Oh! Breathe not His Name.— 
Moore. „ 

Oh [O—C.], Brignall banks are wild and fair. See 
Rokeby [Edmund’s Song].—Scott. 


Oh, brother, schoolmaster, let us remember evermore. 
See Pure and Holy Motive.—Thompson. 

Oh, call it by some better name. See same. —Moore. 

“Oh [or Ol, call my brother back to me.” See Child’s 
First Grief.—Hemans. 

Oh [or O], came ye ower by the Yoke-burn Ford. See 
Jock Johnstone the Tinkler.—Hogg. 

Oh! Carrie, wait a minute, I want to tell you some¬ 
thing. See Christmas Dialogue.—Anon. 

Oh! carry me ’long. See O, Boys, Carry Me ’Long.— 
Foster. 

Oh! carve me yet another slice. See Eating Song. 
— (Punch.) 

Oh cash! Thou potent thing; to thee. See Cold, Hard 
Cash.— (Chicago Herald.) 

Oh, cease thy murmurs, bleedng heart. See Psalm of 
Hope, A.—Fox. 

Oh, Charlie, guess what I have just found. See What 
Tommy Found.—Anon. 

Oh! Christmas is coming again, you say. See Christ¬ 
mas Thought, A.—Larcom. 

Oh, Colonel Marvel! have you read Mr. Ranger’s new 
book of travels? See Drawing a Long Bow.— 
Pickering. 

Oh, Columbia, the gem of the ocean. See Columbia, 
the Gem of the Ocean.—Shaw. 

Oh come away! Make no delay. See Feast, The.— 
Vaughan. 

Oh! come, let us wander alone i’ the gloamin’. See 
Bonnie Sweet Jessie.—Anon. 

Oh! come to the woodlands, ’Tis joy to behold. See 
Thoughts on the Forest.—Anon. 

“Oh! come you from the Indies, and soldier, can you 
tell.” See From India.—Bennett. 

Oh, Constance! What have I done? See Stupid 
Lover, The.—Anon. 

Oh, could there in this world be found. See Mischief 
Makers.—Anon. 

Oh, country, marvel of the earth. See Our Country. 
—Bryant. 

Oh courage! there he comes. See same. —Sylvester. 

Oh! cradle me on your knee, mamma. See Infant’s 
Dream.—Anon. 

Oh (cried the goddess) for some pedant reign! See 
Dunciad, The.—Pope. 

Oh, dainty little pussies. See First Pussy Willows, 
The.—Armitage. 

Oh, darn it all! afeared of her. See Afeared of a Gal. 
—Anon. 

Oh, de good ole chariot swing so low. See Swing Low, 
Sweet Chariot.—Anon. 

Oh, dear! all my lessons to get for to-morrow, and it’s 
eight o’clock already. See Studious Girl, A.— 
Gates. 

Oh, dear, Charles, how sick and tired I am of house¬ 
work! See In Want of a Servant.—“Clara 
Augusta.” 

Oh, dear! How I do hate to rip! See Work or Play. 
—Anon. 

Oh dear, how I hate this cold weather! I am almost 
frozen. See Snow, The.—Anon. 

Oh! dear, how very tired I am. See Lenna’s Dream. 
—Anon. 

Oh! dear, I believe it is going to rain. See Cloudy 
Day, A.—Griffith. 

Oh! dear, I fear I can never get all these things into 
this small valise. See Package.—Rook. 

Oh! dear me! I am tired out for the want of some¬ 
thing to do. See How He Teased Ned.—Smith. 

Oh, dear me! I feel so dull and stupid after last 
night’s dissipation. See Winning a Wager.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Oh, dear! I shall never do these sums. See That 
Echo.—Anon. 

Oh dear! If ever I try to .earn another piece. See 
Studying for the Contest.—Anon. 

Oh dear, if this isn’t tormentin’ a body. See Respect 
the Aged.—Richbrook. 

Oh dear! I’m in such trouble. See Trials.—McClure. 

Oh! dear. Is it any wonder I feel cross? See Elsie’s 
Soliloquy.—Anon. 

Oh dear! it’s so far to next Christmas! See Day After, 
The.—( Harper’s Young People.) 

Oh, dear little daisy, come whisper me softly. See 
“He Loves Me, Loves Me Not.”—Anon. 

Oh, dear me! What shall I do? I really believe I 
shall melt. See Not what He Wanted.—Vinton. 

Oh, dear! My poor baby is very sick! See Sick 
Doll, The.—Anon. 

Oh, dear! Now for another long, tiresome day, I sup¬ 
pose. See Idolize.—Rook. 

Oh, dear! oh, dear! How lonesome I am! See Scan¬ 
dal on the Brain.—Beebe. 


787 






Oh dear 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Oh dear! Oh dear! I declare I don’t know what I 
shall do. See “He Laughed at Five.”—Head. 

Oh dear, oh dear, I feel so queer. See All Upset.— 
Goodfellow. 

“Oh dear! Oh dear! Oh dear me, suz! I feel’s if I 
sh’u’d die! See Medley.—Banks. 

Oh dear! Oh dear! Oh dear! What is it, husband! 
See Illinois.—Anon. 

Oh! dear; oh! dear; what shall we do? See Christmas 
Pastime, A; or, The Crying Family.—Bradbury. 

Oh! dear. What a troublesome set of children the 
“I can’ts” are. See “I Can’t” Army, The. 
—Anon. 

Oh! dear! what can the matter be. See same. — 
Fielding. 

Oh, dear! What is the matter now? See Oh, Dear.— 
Anon. 

Oh, dear, what will become of me? See Man of Nerve, 
A.—Anon. 

Oh, dear!—Why Susie, what is the matter? See 
Writing a Letter.—Anon. 

Oh, deem not that earth’s crowning bliss. See Blessed 
Are They that Mourn.—Burleigh. 

Oh, deem not they are blessed alone. See “Blessed 
Are They that Mourn. ”—Bryant. 

Oh dem that absawd Cwystal Palace! alas. See Peo¬ 
ple and Their Palace, The.— (Punch.) 

Oh, did you see him riding down. See Riding Down.— 
Perry. 

Oh [or O], dinna ask me gin I lo’e ye. See Dinna Ask 
Me.—Dunlop. 

Oh, do go on, miss! you does it beautiful. See Ama¬ 
teur Rehearsals; or. The Detective’s Dilemma.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Oh [O—C.], do not wanton with those eyes. See 
same. —Jonson. 

Oh, do you know, and do you know. See Ginger¬ 
bread Tree, The.—Spofford, 

Oh, dolly dear, your hair’s too long. See Dolly’s 
Toilet.—Anon. 

Oh, don’t go in to-night, John! See Wife’s Appeal, 
The.—Bennett. 

Oh, don’t you remember our grandfather’s barn. See 
Grandfather’s Barn.— -(Arkansaw Traveller.) 

Oh! don’t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? See 
Ben Bolt.—Edwards. 

Oh! don’t you remember Sweet Alice, Ben Bolt. See 
also Ben Bolt.—English. 

Oh, dose shildren, dose shildren, dey bodder mine life! 
See Mine Shildren.—Adams. 

Oh, dot shnow, dot goot lookin’ shnow. See Der Goot 
Lookin’ Shnow.—Anon. 

“Oh! Dottie and Rose, come over and play.” See A- 
Soak in “Wum Barrels.”—Heywood. 

Oh! doubt me not—the season. See Oh! Doubt Me 
Not.—Moore. 

Oh! drimin donn dilis! the landlord has come. See 
Drimin Donn Dilis.—Walsh. 

Oh, earth and heaven are far apart! See We Twain.— 
Jones. 

Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain 
shall meet. See Ballad of East and West, The.— 
Kipling. 

Oh, Echo, tell me, nymph divine. See Echo’s Secret. 
—(Trinity Tablet). 

Oh, Eddie, here you are! See Poor Sick Lucy.— 
Anon. 

Oh, Edith, I’m so glad you’ve come. See Gretchen.— 
Anon. 

Oh, egotism of agony! See In Shadow.—Bates. 

Oh [wr. O]! England is a pleasant place for them 
that’s rich and high. See Last Buccaneer, The.— 
Kingsley. 

Oh, Ernest Montague.—He promised to meet me here 
by eight. See Wife and a Home, A.—Anon. 

Oh, ever skill’d to wear the form we love! See 
To Hope.—Williams. 

Oh, ever thus from childhood’s hour. See Muddled 
Metaphors.—Hood. 

“Oh, ever thus from childhood’s hour.” See Wail of a 
Disappointed Candidate.—Anon. 

Oh, everyone was sorry for Ned! See Changing Color. 
—Canfield. 

Oh! fairer than the lily tall, and sweeter than the rose. 
See Irish Molly O.—Fahy. 

Oh Fanny, dear Fanny. See Doll Babies.—Anon. 

Oh, father’s gone to market-town: he was up before 
the day. See Midsummer Song, A.—Gilder. 

Oh, fear not thou to die. See same. —Anon. 

Oh, fill me flagons full and fair. See Ballad of a 
Bridal.—Bland. 

Oh, fine old times were those, I ween. See Stately 
Minuet, The.—Butterworth. 


Oh, fireflies, fireflies, light all your candles. See 
Fairy’s Love-song, A.—Higginson. 

Oh, first of human blessings! and supreme! See Bri¬ 
tannia (“Oh, first,” etc.)—Thomson. 

Oh, flag of a resolute nation. See Our Flag.—Mont¬ 
gomery. 

Oh, fly to your nest, pretty sparrow. See Recitation 
for a Very Little Girl.—Kavanaugh. 

Oh for a breath o’ the moorlands. See Song for the 
Hot Winds, A.—Davidson. 

Oh for a closer walk with God. See Walking with 
God.—Cowper. 

Oh, for a glance of that gay Muse’s eye. See Search 
after Happiness, The.—Scott. 

Oh for a lodge in a garden of cucumbers! See Ninety- 
nine in the Shade.—Johnson. 

Oh [icr. O] for h lodge in some vast wilderness. 
See Task, The (Love of Liberty).—Cowper. 

“Oh, for a man!” the clear voice sang. See Oh, for 
a Man!—Hungerford. 

Oh [vmr. O] for a tongue to curse the slave. See 
Lalla Rookh (Curse on the Traitor, A).—Moore. 

Oh [u>r. O] for one hour of youthful joy! See Old 
Man Dreams, The.—Holmes. 

Oh, for the glimpse of a natural boy. See Lost Type, 
A.—Rayne. 

Oh, frame some little word for me. See Clue, The.— 
Bates. 

Oh, [wr. 0], Galuppi Baldassare [wr. Baldassaro], 
this is very sad to find! See Toccata of Galuppi’s, 
A.—Browning. 

Oh. Gentle-breath goes singing, goes singing through 
the grass. See Gentle-breath.—Huestis. 

“Oh George!” cried young Mrs. Merry, running to 
meet her husband at the door. See Phenomenal 
Baby, A.—Anon. 

Oh, girls! Have you made your selections yet? See 
Half an Hour with the Poets.—Peck. 

Oh! girls, I am so glad to see you. See Like a Nettle.— 
Denton. 

Oh, give me a home by the warm Southern sea! See 
Home by the Warm Southern Sea, A.—Rude. 

Oh! give me a name that shall live forever. See 
Name, A.—Fox. 

Oh, give me back that royal dream. See Patriot’s 
Bride, The.—Duffy. 

Oh, give me but Virginia’s weed. See Ballad of the 
Pipe, The.—-Rave. 

Oh! give thanks for the summer and winter. See 
Thanksgiving.—Anon. 

Oh [0—C.], go not yet, my love! See Hero to Leander. 
—Tennyson. 

Oh, gold-green wings, and bronze-green wings. See 
Winged Seeds.—Cone. 

Oh [wr. O], good painter, tell me true. See Order 
for a Picture, An.—Cary. 

Oh, Gracie dear! I’m so glad to find you at home. 
See Shy Gallant, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Oh, grandly flowing river. See On the Bluff.—Hay. 

Oh, green was the corn as I rode on my way. See 
Spring Journey, The.—Heber. 

Oh, Greencastle streets were a stream of steel. See 
Greencastle Jenny.—Cone. 

Oh! had you eyes, but eyes that move. See Formosae 
Puellae.—Horne. 

Oh, hadst thou never shared my fate. See To My 
Wife.—Bayly. 

Oh [uyr. O] happiness! our being’s end and aim! 
See Essay on Man, An (Happiness).—Pope. 

Oh, happy birds among the boughs. See Reason 
Why, The.—Cooper. 

Oh, happy day that fixed my choice. See Confirma¬ 
tion Hymn.—Doddridge. 

Oh, happy, happy, maid. See Nuptial Eve, A.— 
Dobell. 

“Oh! happy is he that giveth.” See Lady of the Cas¬ 
tle, The.—Anon. 

Oh, happy is the man who hears. See Heavenly Wis¬ 
dom.—Logan. 

Oh, happy land, with castles fair. See Visions.— 
Maulsby. 

Oh, happy trees which we plant to-day. See same. — 
Anon. 

Oh, hark to the brown thrush! See Joy-month.— 
Wasson. 

Oh, haunting dreams of a sweet summer dead! See 
October.—J ordan. 

Oh [O—C.] have ye na heard o’ the fause Sakelde? 
See Kinmont Willie.—Anon. 

Oh, he (so he said) was a millionaire. See Summer 
Deceit, A.—Anon. 

Oh [or O], he was a bowery boot-black bold. See 
Total Annihilation.—Brine. 


788 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Oh let 


Oh! he was a student of mystic lore. See Language of 
Love, The.—Baker. 

Oh, hear a pensive prisoner’s prayer. See Mouse’s 
Petition, The.—Barbauld. 

Oh [O—C.], heard ye yon pibroch sound sad in 
the gale? See Glenara.—Campbell. 

Oh, hearing sleep, and sleeping hear. See Serenade.— 
Allingham. 

Oh heart of God that pities all! See same. —Tennyson. 

Oh [0—C.l heart of mine, we shouldn’t. See 
Kissing the Rod.—Riley. 

Oh! Here you are again! See Trying to be Literary. 
—Dickens. 

Oh, here you are. We were afraid you were not com¬ 
ing. See True Charity.—Anon. 

Oh! Hezekiah’s a pious soul. See Deacon Hezekiah.— 
Anon. 

Oh [or O], hideous leagues of straining woods. See 
Flight for Life, The.—Sawyer. 

Oh, ho! little chicks, I’m on time, now, you see. See 
Santa Claus’ Speech.—Butts. 

Oh ho! oh ho! Pray, who can I be? See Guessing 
Song.—Johnstone. 

Oh horror! horror! horror! Tongue nor heart. See 
Macbeth.—Shakespeare. 

Oh how comely it is and how reviving. See Samson 
Agonistes.—Milton. 

Oh, how hard it is to be sick and have to lie here all 
day. See Ralph Coleman’s Reformation.— 
McBride. 

Oh, how I wish I was a man, to do just as I please! 
See Harry’s Wish.—Anon. 

Oh, how it rains! I cannot go out, and I have no one 
to play with. See Guess!—Anon. 

Oh how kindly hast Thou led me. See same. —Grin- 
field. 

Oh [O—C.], how much more doth [tw. does] beauty 
beauteous seem. See Sonnets, LIV.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Oh, how she plough’d the ocean, the good ship Castle 
Down. See Good Ship Castle Down, The.— 
McBurnev. 

Oh! how the wind blows; how cold it is! See Good 
for Evil.—Howard. 

Oh, how the world remembers! See Washington.— 
Anon. 

Oh, how tired I am.—Are you? See Little by Little. 
—Anon. 

Oh, hum! this is insufferably dull. See Precarious Pre¬ 
dicament. A.—Trafton. 

“Oh, husband, what one boarder eats. See Hungry 
Boarder, The.—Anon. 

Oh, hush thee [listen—C.], little Dear-my-Soul. See 
Fairy and Child.—Field. 

Oh, hush thee my baby, the ’night is behind us. See 
Seal Lullaby.—Kipling. 

Oh, I am a woman’s watch, am I. See Woman’s 
Watch, A.—Anon. 

Oh, I am weary of a heart that brings. See Helios.— 
Spingarn. 

Oh, I got me so much droubles, I can’t toled you how 
much droubles I have got. See Mrs. Britzen- 
hoeffer’s Troubles.—Kyle. 

Oh! I had de vorst dime lasd veek dot you effer saw. 
See Sockery Kadahcut’s Kat.—Anon. 

Oh! I have loved thee fondly ever. See Stanzas to 
Pale Ale.— [Punch.) 

Oh [O— C.l, I have passed a miserable night. See King 
Richard III. (Clarence’s Dream).—Shakespeare. 

Oh, I have such a hard time! Father drinks, and 
mother is sick. See Silver Lining, The.—Anon. 

Oh, I know a certain woman, who is reckoned with the 
good. See Pin, A.—Wilcox. , 

Oh, I know a little queen. See Good Queen Bess.— 
Montgomery. 

Oh, I love the merry gurgle of my pipe. See Pipe, 
The.— (Philadelphia Times.) 

Oh, I see with sight prophetic thro’ the mists of coming 
years. See Hymn for America, A.—Best. 

Oh, I shall die,' I know I shall. I can’t hold out until 
to-morrow. See Pain in the.Side, A.—McBride. 

Oh, I so love to wander near to Jeduthan’s house. See 
Pantaloon Fight, A.—McBride. 

Oh, I wad like to ken—to the beggar-wife says I. 
See Spaewife, The.—Stevenson. 

Oh! I will give you a paper of pins. See Old Ballad, 
An.—Anon. 

Oh, I wish I was a grown-up. See I Wish I Was a 
Grown-up.—Butts. 

Oh! I wish that the strange kith and kin of my 
father. See Poor Irish Boy, The.—Cook. 

Oh, I wish the winter would go. See Winter and Sum¬ 
mer.—Anon. 


Oh, if every one could put his arms round one other 
one. See same. —Gough. 

Oh, if I were a humming bird. See Oh, Dear Me.— 
Douglas. 

Oh, if I were a little bird. See Happy Bird, The.— 
Anon. 

Oh, if it wasna lawful. See Scotch Philosophy of Kiss¬ 
ing.—( Harper’s Magazine.) 

Oh, if my love offended me. See Love’s Punishments. 
—Ashby-Sterry. 

Oh, if thou be’st true lover. See same. —Arnold. 

Oh, if thou lovest and art a woman. See same. — 
Landon. 

Oh! ignorant boy, it is the secret hour. See Joseph 
and His Brethren (Phraxanor to Joseph).—Wells. 

Oh, I’m a ferry wretched man; I’ve got an aching head. 
See About Katarine.—Anon. 

Oh! in the quiet haven, safe for aye. See Inscription 
on the Statue Erected to Captain Boyd.—Alex¬ 
ander. 

Oh [O—C.], inexpressible as sweet. See O, Inex¬ 
pressible as Sweet.—Woodberry. 

Oh, is it a phantom? a dream of the night? See Lucile 
(Under Canvas).—Lytton. 

Oh, is not this a holy spot! See Bunker Hill.—Pier- 
pont. 

Oh! Is that you, Annie? See Seeing Santa Claus.— 
Bradbury. 

Oh Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself. See Elijah 
and the Rain.—Murray. 

Oh! it is excellent to have a giant’s strength. See 
Measure for Measure (Abuse of Authority).— 
Shakespeare. 

Oh [or O]! it is great for our country to die, where ranks 
are contending. See Elegiac.—Percival. 

Oh [or O], it is hard to work for God. See Right Must 
Win, The.—Faber. 

Oh [O— C.]\ it is pleasant, with a heart at ease. 
See Fancy in Nubibus.—Coleridge. 

Oh, it is so pleasant this afternoon. See Old Maid, 
The.—Garrett. 

Oh, it is veriest vanity to love! See Isabel’s Grave.— 
Landon. 

Oh, it was a dainty maid that went a-maying in the 
morn. See Ballad of the Brook, The.—Roberts. 

Oh, it was a musical old Beetle! See Concert Rehear¬ 
sal, The.—Dixey. 

Oh! it was a sight right fearsome. See Lass Dorothy. 
—Anon. 

Oh, it’s Fannie Day! See Annie’s Party.—L. A. B. C. 

Oh, it’s Hynde Horn fair, and it’s Hynde Horn free. 
See Hynde Horn. Anon. 

Oh, it’s nice to grow big. See Mamma’s Dear Lap.— 
Richards. 

Oh, it’s the boys who did that! See Us Boys.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

Oh, it’s twenty gallant gentlemen. See Last Hunt, 
The.-—Thayer. 

“Oh, I’ve got a plum-cake, and a feast let us make.” 
See Another Plum-cake.—Taylor. 

“Oh! I’ve got a plum-cake, and a fine feast I’ll 
make.” See Plum-cake, The.—Taylor. 

Oh, I’ve such a lot of dollies. See Helen’s Babies.— 
Anon. 

Oh, Johnny Bull! you know, John. See Red and the 
Blue, The.—Roby. 

“Oh, jolly crow!” See Kept In.—Beers. 

Oh, just burning up some old papers. See Auto-da- 
fe.—Baker. 

Oh, keep their memory green who led. See same. — 
Venable. 

Oh, Kenmure’s on and awa, Willie! See Kenmure’s 
On and Awa.—Burns. 

Oh [O— C .] lady fair, these silks of mine are beautiful 
and rare. See Vaudois Teacher, The.—Whittier. 

Oh [or O], lady wake! the azure moon. See Ballad 
of Bedlam, A.— [Punch.) 

Oh, Larry M’Hale, he had little to fear. See Larry 
M ’Hale.—Lever. 

Oh! lay the burden care aside. See New Year’s 
Guest, A.—Moriarty. 

Oh! leave the past to bury its own dead. See To One 
Who would Make a Confession.—Blunt. 

Oh [O—C.] leave this barren spot to me! See Beech 
Tree’s Petition, The.—Campbell. 

Oh! [O—C.] let me dream of happy days gone by. See 
Oh, Let Me Dream.—Aide. 

Oh! let me from the festive board. See Secret Sor¬ 
row, The.— [Punch.) 

Oh, let me know. See same. —Havergal. 

Oh! let the soul its slumber[s] break. See Coplas 
de Manrique (Footprints of Decay).—Manrique 
(Longfellow). 


789 






Oh, let 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Oh, let us carry hence, each one. See same. —Anon. 

Oh, let us go home in the gloaming. See Told in the 
Twilight.—Nicholson. 

Oh Liberty, thou goddess heav’nly bright. See 
Blessings of Liberty, The.—Addison. 

Oh, life in the Lab. is a frolic. See Life in the Chem. 
Lab.—Eliot. 

Oh, life is fair when the eyes are bright. See Boating- 
song.—Freeman. 

Oh, life to me is a thing of pleasure! See Life; a 
School Scene.—Trafton. 

Oh, Lily sw'eet, I saw a pleasant sight. See What the 
Rose Saw.—Marston. 

Oh, limpid stream of Tyrus, now I hear. See Classic 
Ode, A.—Loomis. 

Oh, list the boat-horn’s wild refrain. See Boat-horn, 
The.—Anon. 

Oh list to the song of an old dollar bill. See Song of an 
Old Dollar Bill.—Curtis. 

Oh, listen, friends, and hear me tell. See Echo Dell.— 
Miller. 

Oh [O—C.], listen, listen, ladies gay! See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel (Rosabelle).—Scott. 

Oh, listen Iwr. hush thee], little Dear-my-Soul. 
See Fairy and Child.—Field. 

Oh! listen man! See Husband’s and Wife’s Grave, 
The (Immortality,).—Dana. 

Oh, listen to me, darkies. See Cabin Love-song.— 
Macon. 

Oh! listen to the tale of little Annie Protheroe. See 
Annie Protheroe.—Gilbert. 

Oh, listen to the tale of Mister William, if you please. 
See Mister William.—Gilbert. 

Oh! listen to the water-mill, through all the livelong 
day. See Water-mill, The.—Doudney. 

“Oh, listen to the water-wheel through all the live¬ 
long day.” See Sic Transit.—Burdette. 

Oh, little girl, whose twenty years. See Partial Critic, 
A.—Anon. 

Oh! little loveliest lady mine. See Valentine, A.— 
Richards. 

Oh, look at my hat, how nicely it suits! See Charlie 
Boy.—Anon. 

Oh, look at the moon! See same. —Follen. 

Oh! look at the snow, the pretty white snow. See 
Winter.—Anon. 

Oh, look, where the lilac-bush, stout and tall. See 
In the Lilac-bush.—Thaxter. 

Oh, loosen that snood that you wear, Janette. See 
Janette’s Hair.—Halpine. 

Oh, love is not a summer mood. See same. —Gilder. 

Oh, Love is weak. See Love’s Fulfilling.—Jackson. 

Oh [or O], lovely Mary Donnelly, it’s you I love the 
best [or my joy, my only best]! See Lovely Mary 
Donnelly.—Allingham. 

Oh [O—C.] lovely voices of the sky. See Christmas 
Carol.—Hemans. 

Oh, Lowbury pastor is fair and young. See Christ¬ 
mas Greens.—Baker. 

Oh, Lucy, I’m so glad my education at last is finished. 
See Finished Education, A.—( Journal of Educa¬ 
tion.) 

Oh, Lulu, here is the frame for papa’s new picture! 
See Lulu’s Picture.—Anon. 

Oh, make me not as other men. See Prayer of the 
Satirist.—O. L. 

Oh, man, boast not thy “lion heart!” See same. — 
Streeter. 

Oh! man may bear with suffering. See same. —Willis. 

Oh [or O], many a day have I made good ale in the 
glen. See Outlaw of Loch Lene, The.—Callanan. 

Oh, many a leaf will fall tonight. See Dear Old Toil¬ 
ing One, The.—Gray. 

Oh [O—C.] Mary, at thy window be! See Mary Mori- 
son.—Burns. 

Oh, Mary, I have searched for you. See Novel Christ¬ 
mas tree, A.—Kavanaugh. 

“Oh [O—C.], go and call the cattle home.” See Sands 
of Dee. The.—Kingsley. 

Oh, Mary McGallagher, see phat you’ve done now. See 
Paddy’s Lament.-—Anon. 

Oh, Mary, wait a minute, won’t you? See Secret, 
The.—Cousin Fannie. 

Oh [O— C .] may I join the choir invisible. See same. 
—Eliot. 

Oh! may T live exempted (while I live). See Task, 
The (Relish of Fair Prospect).—Cow r per. 

Oh! merrv is the Madrepore that sits beside the sea. 
See Zoology.— (Punch.) 

Oh, minstrel of these borean hills. See Golden Crown 
Sparrow of Alaska.—Burroughs. 

Oh, mis’rv in de mornin’ come wid de turnout horn. 
See Plantation Pictures.—Wilkinson. 


Oh, mistress mine, where are you roaming? See 
Twelfth Night; or. What you Will (Oh, Mistress 
Mine).—Shakespeare. 

Oh, Mrs. Chatter—dear, dear—do sit down. See W’hat 
Old Mrs. Ember Said.—Dallas, 

Oh! Mona’s waters are blue and bright. See Mona’s 
Waters.—Anon. 

“Oh! mother, mother, steik the door.” See Adam 
O’Fintry.—Black. 

Oh [wr. O] mother of a mighty race. See same. 
—Bryant. 

“Oh [or O], mother, what do they mean by blue? 
See Two Colors.— (Springfield Republican.) 

“Oh, mother, what good neighbors.” See Falling in 
and Falling Out.—Coates. 

Oh, murddr! but it fales quare. See “Dark Noight’s 
Business, A.”—McDermott and Trumble. 

Oh, muse! grant me the power. See Virginia’s Kingly 
Plant.—Anon. 

Oh! my aged Uncle Arly. See Incidents in the Life of 
My Uncle Arly.—Lear. 

Oh, my baby, my child, my darling! See Lost on the 
Prairie.—Cooke. 

Oh [or O]! my dark Rosaleen. See Dark Rosaleen.— 
Mangan. 

Oh, my dear Gold, I am so delighted to see you. See 
Scandal Monger, The.—Pickering. 

Oh, my dear, only think! Selina Audrey is going 
to marry. See Report, The.—Pickering. 

Oh, my Geraldine. See same. —Burnand. 

Oh [or O], my love’s like the steadfast sun. See Poet’s 
Bridal-day Song, The.—Cunningham. 

Oh [or O], my love is [or luve’s] like a red, red rose. 
See Red, Red Rose, A.—Burns. 

“Oh, my, my!” says a leetle feller. See Dem Ole 
Dimes Habbiness and dem New.—Slaeter. 

Oh! my people—thou heart of my heart, thou life of 
my life. See Duties of Christianity, The.—Kos¬ 
suth. 

Oh, Nell, do stop awhile and rest under these bushes. 
See Be Prompt in what You Do.—Kavanaugh. 

Oh, never mind, Jimmie, don’t w r hine. See Better 
Whistle than Whine.—Anon. 

“Oh! never mind, they’re only boys.” See Boy’s 
Complaint, The.—Anon. 

Oh [O—C.] never say that I was false of heart. 
See same. —Shakespeare. 

Oh, never sit we down, and say. See Looking into the 
F uture.—Massey. 

Oh, never talk again to me. See Girl of Cadiz, The.— 
Byron. 

Oh! never wear a brow of care. See same. —Anon. 

Oh, no, I never mention her. See Love of his Life, 
The.—Anon. 

Oh, no! I’ll never see him more. See Irresolute Reso¬ 
lution.—Anon. 

Oh, no! it is no flattering lure, no fancy weak or fond. 
See Immortality.—Smith. 

Oh no more, no more, too late. See Broken Heart, 
The (Penthea’s Dying Song).—Ford. 

Oh [or O] no, no,—let me lie. See Not on the Battle¬ 
field.—-Pierpont. 

Oh, no,—not e’en when first w r e loved. See same. — 
Moore. 

Oh! no, ’tisn’t so! See Papa’s Watch.—Anon. 

“Oh, not for long, ah, not for long shall I be lingering.” 
See In the King’s Garden.—Brown. 

Oh, not in distant Palestine. See God with Us.— 
Anon. 

Oh not in ladies’ gardens. See Succory, The.—Deland. 

Oh, nothing in all life worse is. See Unwilling Muse, 
The.;—Carryl. 

Oh! nothing now can please me. See Grief.—Dryden. 

Oh, oh, how the wild winds blow! See Wild W'inds.— 
Butts. 

Oh, Paddy dear! an’ did ye hear the news that’s goin’ 
round? See Wearin’ o’ the Green, The.—Anon. 

“0 patient Christ ! when long ago.” See Hymn: "O 
Patient Christ,” etc.—Deland. 

Oh! Phaidrig Crohoore was the broth of a boy, and he 
stood six feet eight. See Phaidrig Crohoore.— 
Anon. 

“Oh [or O]! pilot, ’tis a fearful night—there’s danger 
on the deep.” See Pilot, The.—Bayly. 

“Oh, please let me go! my mother is sick in bed.” See 
Child and the Flowers, The.—Anon. 

“Oh, please sir, do buy a paper! Please do!” See My 
Little Newsboy.—Melville. 

Oh, pleasant land of childhood. See Childhood’s 
Country.—Moulton. 

“Oh, pray, do you know of those wonderful styles.” 
See Fashions at the Court of Queen Flora.—Far¬ 
mer. 


790 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Oh, the 


Oh, precious drop of crystal dew. See Lines on a 
Ring.—Luke. 

Oh! promise me that some day you and I. See “Oh! 
Promise Me” (after De Koven).—Wood. 

“Oh proud am I, exceeding proud, I’ve mustered the 
Elite! See Poppy, The.—Bayly. 

Oh, rare as the splendor of lilies. See Easter-tide.— 
Sangster. 

Oh rich man! from your happy door. See Passing By. 
—Mulock. 

Oh, rise up in your glorious might. See War Hymn.— 
Stevens. 

Oh! rise up, Willie Reilly, and come along with me. 
See Willy Reilly.—Anon. 

Oh [O— C.], Rome! my country! city of the soul! 
See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Rome). — 
Byron. 

Oh [wr. O]! sacred Truth! thy triumph ceased 
awhile. See Pleasures of Hope, The (Downfall of 
Poland) The).—Campbell. 

Oh [Ah— C.J, sad are they who know not love. See 
Two Songs from the Persian, II.—Aldrich. 

“Oh,” said Daisy to her mama, “I was in the parlor 
last night behind the sofa.” See Daisy’s Story. 
—Anon. 

Oh [or O], St. Patrick was a gentleman. See St. Pat¬ 
rick was a Gentleman.—Bennett. 

Oh [or O], saw ye bonnie Lesley. See Bonnie Lesley. 
—Burns. 

Oh [O—C.], saw ye not fair Ines? See Fair Ines.— 
Hood. 

Oh [or O], say can you see, by the dawn’s early light. 
See Star-spangled Banner, The.—Key. 

Oh! say can you see, by the moon’s soft light. See 
Cuba’s Banner.—De Long. 

Oh [or O], say not that my heart is cold. See Song.— 
Wolfe. 

Oh! say not woman’s heart is bought. See Song: 
“Oh ! say not,” etc.—Peacock. 

Oh [or O], say what is that thing call’d Light. See 
Blind Boy, The.—Cibber. 

Oh, say, what is this fearful, wild. See Hippopotamus, 
The.—Herford. 

Oh, see how glorious show. See Ode on a Fair Spring 
Morning.—Morris. 

Oh, see the lovely grasses. See Gathering Grasses.— 
Anon. 

Oh seek not destin’d evils to divine. See Gebir (Tamar 
and the Nymph).—Landor. 

Oh! send Lewie Gordon hame. See Lewie Gordon.— 
Geddes. 

Oh, she was so utterly utter! See Girl of the Period, A. 
—Anon. 

Oh [or O]! shun the spot, my youthful friends, I urge 
you to beware. See Street of By-and-bye, The.— 
Abdy. 

Oh [O—C.] sing unto my roundelay. See ASellad Min¬ 
strel’s Song.—Chatterton. 

Oh! sir, have you seen her? See Frances Edwena.— 
Dunn. 

Oh! sir; there are times in the history of men and 
nations. See Memory of Abraham Lincoln, The 
(On the Assassination of President Lincoln).— 
Garfield. 

Oh, sixty years ago to a day. See Sixty Years Ago. 
—( Harper’s Young People.) 

Oh, slow to smite and swift to spare. See Abraham 
Lincoln.—Bryant. 

Oh [wr. O]! snatch’d away in beauty’s bloom. See 
same. —Byron. 

Oh, so pure the white syringas! See God’s Acre.— 
Field. 

Oh solemn harmonies that sound. See Parsifal—at 
Baireuth.—-Browne. 

Oh, solitude! thou wonder-working fay. See Imagina¬ 
tive Crisis, The.— [Punch.) 

Oh, Spirit of Love and of Light. See Winter Hymn, 
A.—Rives. 

Oh, Spirit! Spirit of Literature. See Dilly and the 
D’s, The.— {Punch.) 

Oh, starlit-skies, what generations have. See Trip to 
the Stars, A.—Durant. 

Oh, stay not thine hand, when the winter’s wind rude. 
See Christian Charity.—Coates. 

Oh, such a commotion under the ground. See Laugh¬ 
ing Chorus, A.—Anon. 

Oh, such a dismal night to be out. See Out All 
Around.—Anon. 

Oh, Sue, I’m so glad to see you. See America in Pina¬ 
fore.—Walcott. 

Oh, Summer has the roses. See Winter Song, A.— 
Hartley. 

Oh, surely who will guide. See same. —Wolcott. 


Oh, swate Kitty Galore was but jist twinty-one. See 
Squeeze in the Dark, A.—Banks. 

Oh, swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon. See 
Romeo and Juliet (Balcony Scene).-—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Oh, sweet but short experience. See Kindness.—Bar¬ 
rett. 

Oh, sweet is the sound of the shuttle and the loom. See 
same. —Read. 

Oh [O;—C.], sweeter than the marriage feast. See 
Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The (He Prayeth 
Well who Loveth Well).—Coleridge. 

Oh! sweetest words that Jesus could have sought. See 
Weep Not.—Hofei. 

Oh, sweetly the robin warbled, wooing his little mate. 
See Unbidden Guest, The.—Thaxter. 

Oh! take away my wig and gown. See Monody on the 
Death of an Only Client.—( London Punch.) 

Oh, take me back to Massa an’ ma ole Virginy home. 
See Longing for the Old Plantation.—Hinman. 

Oh! take the maddening bowl away. See Maddening 
Bowl, The.—Anon. 

Oh! talk as we may of beauty as a thing to be chiseled. 
See Beautiful, The (True Beauty).—Whittier. 

Oh [wr. O], talk not to me of a name great in story. 
See Stanzas Written on the Road between Flor¬ 
ence and Pisa.—Byron. 

Oh! tell me have you ever seen a red, longleg’d Fla¬ 
mingo? See Flamingo, The.—Clark. 

Oh, tell me, little children, have you seen her. See 
Nikolina.—Thaxter. 

Oh, tell me not that they are dead. See Honored 
Dead, The.—Beecher. 

“ Oh [wr. O]! tell me, sailor, tell me true.” See Gray 
Swan, The.—Cary. 

Oh, that I could only live my life again! See David 
Copperfield (Rosa Dartle’s Revenge).—Dickens. 

Oh that joy so soon should waste! See Cynthia’s 
Revels (Kiss, The).—Jonson. 

Oh [or O]! that last day in Lucknow fort. See Relief of 
Lucknow, The.—Lowell. 

Oh that my Lungs could bleat like butter’d Pease. See 
N onsense.—Anon. 

Oh that my soul a marrow-bone might seize! *See Son¬ 
net Found in a Deserted Mad House.—Anon. 

Oh, that the Desert were my dwelling-place. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Apostrophe to the 
Ocean).—Byron. 

Oh, that the golden lyre divine. See To Carmen Syl- 
va.—Lazarus. 

Oh [O—C.] that those lips had language! Life 

has passed. See On the Receipt of my Mother’s 
Picture.—Cowper. 

Oh [O— C.] that 'twere possible after long grief 
and pain. See Maud (O that ’twere Possible). 
—Tennyson. 

Oh, that we two were Maying. See Saint’s Tragedy, 
The (“Oh, that we two,” etc.).—Kingsley. 

Oh [O—C.] that word Regret! See Regret.—Ingelow. 

Oh! the beautiful home of the sunset. See Finding the 
Sunset.—Anon. 

Oh, the beautiful old story! See Beautiful Old Story, 
The.—Alcott. 

Oh, the beauty of the Christ Child. See Offertory, An.— 
Dodge. - 

Oh, the bitter pain and sorrow. See None of Self and 
All of Thee.—Monod. 

Oh, the Circus-day parade! How the bugles played 
and played! See Circus-day Parade, The.— 
Riley. 

Oh, the cool September mornin’s! now they’re with us 
once again. See “September Mornin’s.”—Lin¬ 
coln. 

Oh, the dancing leaves are merry. See Rain.—Deland. 

Oh [wr. O]! the days are gone, when Beauty bright. 
See Love’s Young Dream.—Moore. 

0h[0— C.] the days gone by! Oh the days gone by! See 
Days Gone by. The.—Riley. 

Oh, the dear, delightful sound. See Crocus.—Thaxter. 

Oh, the faces we meet, the faces we meet. See Faces 
We Meet, The.—Wellington. 

Oh [or O]! the French are on the say [ or sea]. See Shan 
van Vocht.—Anon. 

Oh, the Friday evening meetings in the vestry, long 
ago. See Friday Evening Meetings.—Lincoln. 

Oh [or O], the gallant fisher’s life! See Angler, The.— 
Chalkhill. 

Oh, the gay and festive Freshman has appeared upon 
the scene. See As Usual.— ( Harvard Lampoon.) 

Oh! the gigglety girl—gee whiz! See Gigglety Girl, 
The.— {Judge.) 

Oh, the glorious Thanksgivings. See Thanksgivings 
of Old.—Smuller. 


791 




Oh, the 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Oh! the goin’ was delightful—never saw sich slidey 
snow! See Out Sleighing with Sophia.—Hobart. 

Oh! the golden, glowing morning. See same .—( New 
York Herald .) 

Oh, the gorgeous city. See Golden City, The.—Mackay. 

Oh, the grave! the grave! It buries every error. See 
Rural Funerals (Grave, The).—Irving. 

Oh [O—C.], the green things growing, the green things 
growing. See Green Things Growing.—Craik. 

Oh [O—C.] the happy meeting from over the sea. See 
Three Meetings.—Craik. 

Oh the heights of Killiecrankie. See Burial March of 
Dundee, The.—Aytoun. 

Oh! the home we loved by the bounding deep. See Old 
Mountain Tree, The.—Anon. 

Oh, the hopper grass is clattering and flying all the day. 
See Song, A.—S. P. 

Oh! the horns are all a-tootin’ as we rattle through the 
town. See Sunday-school Picnic, The.—Lincoln. 

Oh, the houses are all alike, you know. See House 
that was just like its Neighbors, The.—Anon. 

Oh, the joy of a woolless pate. See Phantasy, A. 
—(Campus.) 

Oh, the little flax flower! See Flax Flower, The.— 
Howitt. 

Oh [wr. O], the long and dreary winter! See Song of 
Hiawatha, The (Famine, The).—Longfellow. 

Oh, the long, long years are flown. See same. —Anon. 

Oh [O—C.], the man in the moon has a crick in his 
back. See Man in the Moon, The.—Riley. 

Oh the merry Christ-church bells. See Merry Bells 
of Oxford, The.—Anon. 

Oh [or O], the old, old clock of the household stock. 
See Old Clock against the wall, The.—Anon. 

Oh, the old school exhibitions! will they never come 
again? See Old School Exhibitions, The.—Stanton. 

Oh [or O]! the pleasant days of old, which so often peo¬ 
ple praise! See Oh! the Pleasant Days of Old.— 
Browne. 

Oh! the pride of Portsmouth water. See Lost War- 
sloop, The.—Proctor. 

Oh, the queen in her carriage is passing by. See Queen 
in Her Carriage Riding by, The.—Anon. 

Oh, the queen of all the roses it cannot be denied. See 
Roses. : —Fawcett. 

Oh, the queerest land is the Wee-waw Land. See W T ee- 
waw Land, The.—Hollands. 

Oh! the quietest home on earth had I. See Bald- 
headed Tyrant, The. —Vandyne. 

Oh! the regular round is a kind of a grind! See Whirl¬ 
ing Wheel, The.—Jenks. 

Oh! the Roman was a rogue. See Lay of Ancient 
Rome, A.—Tbarra. 

Oh, the roses we plucked for the blue. See New Memo¬ 
rial Day, The.—Paine. 

Oh, the shambling sea is a sexton old. See Grave¬ 
digger, The.—Carman. 

Oh [or O], the snow, the beautiful snow! See Beautiful 
Snow.—Watson. 

Oh, the song of the Sea. See Song of the Sea, The.— 
Lincoln. 

Oh, the sports of childhood! See Swinging ’neath the 
Old Apple-tree.—Barrows. 

Oh! the stars one and all. See Stars’ Ball, The. 
—( Ladies’ Home Journal.) 

Oh, the story-book boy! he’s a wonderful youth. See 
Story-book Boy, The.—Lincoln. 

Oh, the sun is bright and the day is fair. See Long 
Sermon, The.—Anon. 

Oh, the sweet contentment. See Coridon’s Song.— 
Chalkhill. 

Oh, the weary, solemn silence. See Without the Chil¬ 
dren.—Anon. 

Oh, the wild November wind. See Wind’s Song, The. 
—Lincoln. 

Oh, the wind from the desert blew in! See Khamsin.— 
Scollard. 

Oh! the woe that woman brings! See Differences of 
Opinion.—Anon. 

Oh, the wonder of our life. See Query, A.—( Good 
Words.) 

Oh! then nothing pleases ’em. See How the Gen¬ 
tlemen Do after Marriage.—Anon. 

Oh, then tell me, Shawn O’Ferral. See Rising of the 
Moon, The.—-Casey. 

Oh! then they come flattering. See How the Gentle¬ 
men Do before Marriage.—Anon. 

Oh, there is a little artist. See Little Artist, The.—Anon. 

Oh! there you are, doctor. How is she to-day? See 
Merely Players.—Clarke. 

Oh, there’s a heart for every one. See Heart for Every 
One, A.—Swain. 


Oh, there’s many a lovely picture. See My Mother 
at the Gate.—Edwards. 

Oh, there’s mony a gate eawt ov eawr teawn-end. See 
Sweetheart Gate, The.—Waugh. 

Oh, they sang a song of Wind and Sail. See Song of 
Then and Now, The.—Barnes. 

Oh! they’ve swept the parlor carpet, and they’ve dusted 
every chair. See When the Minister Comes to 
Tea.—Lincoln. 

Oh, this beautiful island of Ceylon. See Beautiful Is¬ 
land of Ceylon, The.—Brooks. 

Oh! this is a happy, beautiful world! See Edna’s 
Birthday.—Anon. 

Oh, those blessed times of old. See Oh, the Pleasant 
Days of Old ("Oh, those blessed,” etc.).—Brown. 

Oh [or O], those little, those little blue shoes! See 
Baby’s Shoes.—Bennett. 

Oh, those sweet old-fashioned posies, that were moth¬ 
er’s pride and joy. See Old-fashioned Garden, The. 
—Lincoln. 

Oh [ or O]! Thou Eternal One! whose presence bright. 
See Ode to the Deity.—Derzhavin. 

Oh, Thou, Grand Builder of the Universe! See Thanks¬ 
giving Prayer, A.—Anon. 

Oh, thou northland bobolink. See To the Lapland 
Longspur.—Burroughs. 

Oh, thou that swing’st upon the waving eare [or haire]. 
See Grasshopper, The.—Lovelace. 

Oh, thou to-morrow! Mystery! See same. —Miller. 

Oh [cr O] thou vast ocean! ever-sounding sea! See 
Ocean, The.—Procter. 

Oh [ur. O], Thou who dry’st the mourner’s tear. See 
same. —Moore. 

Oh, thoughts that go in with the stitches. See Little 
Stitches.—Anon. 

Oh! thtay one moment, love implorth. See Lisping 
Lover, The.—Anon. 

Oh, time keeps steadily on and on. See Thanksgiving 
Exercise.—Hadley. 

Oh, ’tis bland, and oh, ’tis blooming, for it’s May! See 
May Day.—Opper. 

‘‘Oh, ’tis time I should talk to your mother.” See 
How to Ask and Have.—Lover. 

Oh, ’tis well and enough a whiff or a puff. See Good 
Cigar. A.—Bull. 

Oh to be home again, home again, home again! See 
In a Strange Land.—Fields. 

Oh [mt. O], to be in England now that April’s there. 
See Home Thoughts from Abroad.—Browning. 

Oh to be ready when death shall come. See same. —Anon. 

Oh! to be wafted away. See Quatrain.—Anon. 

Oh, to have dwelt in Bethehem. See Desire, A.— 
Procter. 

Oh, touch that rosebud! it will bloom. See Conceit, 
A.—Collins. 

‘‘Oh, Uncle Sam,” they said, ‘‘has grown fat and loves 
his ease.” See Awakening of Uncle Sam, The.— 
Foss. 

Oh, up the brae, and up and up, beyont the fairy 
thorn. See Out in the Dark.—Gwynn. 

Oh, wad some pow’r the giftie gie us. See To a 
Louse (We All Have Faults).—Burns. 

Oh, waken up, my darlin’, my Dermot, it is day. See 
Dermot’s Parting.—Anon. 

Oh [or O] waly, waly up the bank. See Waly, Waly, 
but Love be Bonny.—Anon. 

Oh [or O], water for me! bright water for me! See 
Water-drinker, The.—Johnson. 

Oh, we met the Spanish squadron. See Soarin’ o’ the 
Eagle, The.—Ham. 

Oh! we were fain for sorrow and for shame. See 
Light of the World, The (Mary’s Story of the Cru¬ 
cifixion).—Arnold. 

Oh wearisome condition of Humanity. See Mustapha 
(Chorus of Priests;.—Brooke. 

Oh, weel may the boatie row. See Boatie Rows, The. 
—Ewen. 

Oh! weep for Moncontour! Oh! weep for the hour. See 
Battle of Moncontour, The.—Macaulay. 

Oh welcome, bat and owlet gray. See Song Written 
fora Welsh Air, etc.—Baillie. 

‘‘Oh! were you at war in the red Eastern land?” See 
Ballad of War, A.—Smedley. 

Oh [O—C.], wert thou in the cauld blast. See O, 
Wert thou, etc.—Burns. 

‘‘Oh, wha hae ye brought us harne now. my brave lord.” 
See Muckle-mou'd Meg.—Ballantine. 

“Oh [or O], wha will shoe my fair [or bonny] foot?” See 
Fair Annie of Lochroyan.—Anon. 

Oh! whar shall we go w’en de great day comes. See 
Uncle Remus. His Songs and his Sayings (Re¬ 
vival Hymn).—Harris. 


792 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Old 


Oh, what a dull book! Nothing interesting in it. See 
Advertising for a Companion.—Anon. 

Oh, what a face! What is the matter, Harry? See 
It never Rains but it Pours.—Anon. 

Oh! what a lot of folks to-night. See Prologue.— 
“ Bob o’Link.” 

Oh [or O], what a plague is love! See Phillida Flouts 
me.—Anon. 

Oh, what a set of Vagabundos. See Morgan.—Sted- 
man. 

Oh, what a thing is love. What is it the poet says. 
See Completely Sold.—Anon. 

Oh, what are all life’s treasures worth. See Grand¬ 
mother to her Grandson.—Thaxter. 

Oh [O—C.], what can ail thee, knight-at-arms? See 
La Belle Dame sans Merci.—Keats. 

Oh! what is home? That sweet companionship. See 
What Is Home?—Anon. 

‘‘Oh, what is love?” the fair maid sighed. See What 
is Love?—A. J. T. 

Oh! what is man, great Maker of mankind! See same. 
—Davies. 

Oh, what is so rare as a day in June? See Vision 
of Sir Launfal, The (June).—Lowell. 

Oh! what is that comes gliding in. See Sally Simp- 
kin’s Lament.—Hood. 

Oh what is that country. See Mother Country.— 
Rossetti. 

Oh, what is the matter with Robin. See Poor Robin. 
—Anon. 

Oh, what is the song that the winter winds sing. See 
Song of the Winter Winds.—Clark. 

Oh, what is the use of such pretty wings. See Sweet 
Peas.—Anon. 

Oh, what is this splendor that beams on me now. See 
Heaven.—Faber. 

Oh, what shall I do, dear. See Words for Parting.— 
Clemmer. 

Oh, what will a’ the lads do. See When Maggy Gangs 
Away.—Hogg. 

Oh, what will be our future work? See Our Future 
Work.—Anon. 

Oh, what would people do. See Oh!—Anon. 

Oh! what’s the matter? what’s the matter? See 
Goody Blake and Harry Gill.—Wordsworth. 

Oh, what’s the news, Beatrice. See Piece of News; or, 
Aunt Ray’s Cat, A.—Sydney. 

Oh, what’s the use of this Junior Mess. See Tirade 
Explained, A.—( Cornell Widow.) 

Oh, what’s the way to Arcady. See Way to Arcady, 
The.—Bunner. 

Oh! when a Mother meets on high. See Curse of 
Kehama, The.—Southey. 

Oh, when I’m a man. See When I’m a Man.—Anon. 

Oh, when shall the boatman ferry me o’er. See 
Angel Ferry. The.—Cornwell. 

Oh, [or O], when ’tis summer weather. See Green¬ 
wood, The.—Bowles. 

Oh! where do fairies hide their heads. See same. — 
Bayly. 

Oh, where do you come from. See Little Rain-drops. 
—Anon. 

“Oh, where do you come from, little Tomtit?” See 
Little Tomtit, The.—Anon. 

“Oh! [or O] where hae [or have] ye been. Lord Ran¬ 
dal [or Ronald], my son?” See Lord Randal [or 
Ronald].—Anon. 

“Oh, where is my bell,” sighed the brownie. See 
Lost Bell, The.—Thaxter. 

Oh, where is the boy, dressed in jacket of gray. See 
Lost: Three Little Robins.—Anon. 

“Oh [or O], where is the knight or the squire so bold.” 
See Diver. The.—Schiller. 

Oh, where shall a wandering pilgrim through life. See 
Rest for the Weary.—Swingle. 

Oh, where will be the birds that sing? See Hundred 
Years to Come, A.—Brown. 

Oh, wherefore cam ye here, Ailie? See Lost on Schi- 
hallion.—Shairp. 

Oh [wr. O]! wherefore come ye forth, in triumph from 
the North. See Battle of Naseby, The.—Macaulay. 

Oh! who is that poor foreigner that lately came to 
town? See Irish Molly O.—Anon. 

Oh [or O], who shall lightly say that Fame. See Worth 
of Fame, The.—Baillie. 

“Oh, who [or O wha] will shoe my bonny foot?” See 
Lass of Lochroyan, The.—Anon. 

Oh, who would stay indoor, indoor. See Hunting 
Song.—Hovey. 

“Oh! why did you marry him, Biddy?” See Why 
Biddy and Pat Married.—Stoddard. 

Oh! why do critics insist. See Crushed Tragedian, 
The.—McDowell. 


Oh, why do the waves so ceaselessly roll. See Question, 
A—Head. 

Oh! why left I my hame? See Exile’s Song, The.— 
Gilfillan. 

Oh! Why must I always be washed so clean. See 
Little Boy’s Lament, The.—Anon. 

“Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?” See 
Different Tastes.—Anon. 

Oh [or O]! why should the spirit of mortal be proud? 
See same. —Knox. 

Oh [O—C.] will ye choose to hear the news. See 
Mr. Molony’s Account of the Ball.—Thackeray. 

Oh, will ye walk the wood, lady? See Liddel Bower, 
The.—Hogg. 

“Oh! William, ” James was heard to say. See Colloquy 
on a Cab-stand.— (Punch.) 

“Oh! wilt thou sew my buttons on?” See same .— 
(Punch.) 

Oh, Wing Tee Wee. See Wing Tee Wee.—Denison. 

Oh [or O] wise little birds, how do ye know. See 
Flight of the Birds, The.—Kimball. 

Oh, with what pride I used. See William Tell (Tell 
on his Native Hills).-—Knowles. 

Oh, woman born first to believe us. See Woman.— 
Miller. 

Oh! woodland paths she ne’er again may see. See 
Lady of La Garaye, The.—Norton. 

“Oh [O—C.] World-God, give me wealth!” the 
Egyptian cried. See Gifts.—Lazarus. 

Oh, would I were a boy again. See same. —Lemon. 

Oh would that thou wert with me, my own. See 
Longing.—Westley. 

Oh ye powers! what a roar. See Uncle Sam’s a Hun¬ 
dred.—( New York Evening Post.) 

Oh [O—C.] ye, who are sae guid yoursel. See Ad¬ 
dress to the Unco Guid, or the Rigidly Right¬ 
eous.—Burns. 

Oh ye who love to overhang the springs. See Among 
the Trees.—Bryant. 

Oh, ye wild waves, shoreward dashing. See Song of 
the Wild Storm-waves, The.—Sinnett. 

Oh! yes, I do—I know a lot about ’em. See On Ba¬ 
bies.—Jerome. 

Oh yes, I’m fixed as solid, sir, as most of folks you see. 
See Ancient Miner’s Story, The.—Carleton. 

Oh, yes! Oh yes! if any maid. See Cupid Arraigned. 
—Lyly. 

Oh, yes, we mean all kind words that we say. See We 
Love but Few.—Anon. 

Oh, yes, we’ve be’n fixin’ up some sence we sold that 
piece o’ groun’. See Sary “Fixes up” Things.— 
Paine. 

Oh [0—C.] yet we trust that somehow good. See 
In Memoriam (“Oh, yet we Trust,” etc.;.—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Oh, you dear, darling, sweet girl, have you brought 
me the third volume? See Novel Readers, The. 
—Anon. 

Oh, you foolish child; to spend all the money you have 
saved to buy your wedding outfit. See Susette.— 
Fobes. 

Oh, you pussy-willow! Pretty little thing. See 
Pussy-willow.—Anon. 

Oh! young Lochinvar has come out of the West. See 
True Story of Young Lochinvar in Blank Verse.— 
Fay. 

Oh [wr. O], young Lochinvar is come out of the 
west. See Marmion (Lochinvar).—Scott. 

Oh, you’re a good brother. Now I will see if my poem 
is published. See Who is the Poet?—Woodland. 

“Oh, you’re so sleepy, dollie dear.” See Doll’s Lulla¬ 
by, The.—Anon. 

Oh youth beware! that laurel-rose. See Rhododaphne 
(Spell of the Laurel-rose, The).—Peacock. 

Oho! this is the tree I am to fill. See Christmas Tree, 
The.—Anon. 

Oi’ll be afther wagerin' a considherable poile av money. 
See Making Soap.—Anon. 

01’ marster is a cur’us man, as sho as yo’ is born. 
See Uncle Mellick Dines with his Master.— 
Eggleston. 

Old Adam, the carrion crow. See Death’s Jest Book 
(Wolfram’s Song).—Beddoes. 

Old [or Oldt] dEsop wrote a fable vonce. See Gets 
Dhere.—Adams. 

Old Ajax was a faithful dog. See Ajax.—Cary. 

Old, and abandoned by each venal friend. See Im¬ 
promptu on Holland’s Seat at Kingsgate.—Gray. 

Old as history is, and manifold as are its tragedies, I 
doubt if any death. See Death of Lincoln.— 
Emerson. 

Old Bergetta lay asleep on the doorstep in the sun. 
See Bergetta’s Misfortunes.—Thaxter. 


793 





Old 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Old Biddy Brown, a nice old hen. See Nellie’s Easter 
Eggs.-—Richards. 

Old Birch [or Nick], who taught the village school. 
See Retort, The.—Morris. 

Old Bob White’s a funny bird! See “Old Bob 
White. ”—Riley. 

Old books are best! With what delight. See Old 
Books are Best.—Chew. 

Old! call you me? See Time’s Soliloquy.—Anon. 

Old Chaucer, like the morning-star. See Elegy on 
Cowley, The.—Denham. 

Old Church, thou still art Catholic—e’en dream they 
as they may. See Old Church at Lismore, The.— 
Downing. 

Old coat, for some three or four seasons. See “Le 
Dernier Jour d’un Condamne. ”—Baker. 

Old Daddy Mugwump. See Recitation for a Little 
Child.—Kavanaugh. 

Old Dan’l Hanks he says this town. See Village Ora¬ 
cle, The.—Lincoln. 

Old Deakin Brown lives out f’um town. See Deakin 
Brown’s Way.—Horton. 

Old Death proclaims a holocaust. See Mines of Avon¬ 
dale, The.—Cary. 

Old England’s sons are English yet. See Ready, Ay, 
Ready.—Merivale. 

Old Farmer B. is a stingy man. See Best Cow in 
Peril, The.—Anon. 

Old Farmer Ray came home one day. See Lesson in 
Weighing, A.—Talbot. 

Old Farmer Rough was grim and gruff. See Rough 
and Smooth.—Pollard. 

Old Farmer Smith came home in a miff. See That 
Line Fence.—Anon. 

Old Farmer Winrow raised his head. See Rural 
Remonstrance, A.—( Boston Courier.) 

Old Fezziwig laid down his pen, and looked up at the 
clock. See Christmas Carol, A (Old Fezziwig’s 
Ball).—Dickens. 

Old Giles, the undertaker, sat. See Giles and Abra¬ 
ham.—Coates. 

Old girl that has borne me far and fast. See Trooper 
to his Mare, The.—Halpine. 

Old Glory! say, who, by the ships and the crew. See 
Name of Old Glory, The.—Riley. 

Old Grandma Robbins bent down low and smoothed 
the curling hair. See Grandma Robbins’ Tem¬ 
perance Mission.—Banks. 

Old Grimes is dead; the good old man. See Old Grimes. 
—Greene. 

Old Hodge was sick; so very sick, in sooth. See Pro¬ 
visional Forgiveness.—Anon. 

Old Horace on a summer afternoon. See Classical 
Criticism.—Richardson. 

Old Ironsides at anchor lay. See Main-truck, The.— 
Morris. 

Old Isaac was, or rather believed himself to be, a very 
devout Christian. See He Wasn’t Ready. — 
Anon. 

Old ivory and yellow lace. See Fan Painted by W T at- 
teau, A.—B. B. W. 

Old Joe is gone, who saw hot Percy goad. See Big¬ 
low Papers, The (Revolutionary Hero, A;.— 
Lowell. 

Old Judge Grepson, a justice of the peace, was never 
known to smile. See His Last Court.—Anon. 

“Old King Cole was a jolly old soul.” See Old King 
Cole.—Hungerford. 

Old King Cole was a merry old soul. See Mother 
Goose, Tab. fr. —Anon. 

Old lady, put your glasses on. See Old Photographs.— 
Baker. 

Old letters! wipe away the tear. See Old Letters.— 
Locker. 

Old lion the Hermitage, again. See To Andrew Jack- 
son.—Boker. 

“Old man, God bless you! does your pipe taste sweetly?” 
See Nobleman and the Pensioner. The.—Pfeffel. 

Old man never had much to say. See Old Man and 
Jim, The.—Riley. 

'“Old man, the charge is assaulting an officer of the 
court.” See Old Darky’s Defense, The.—Anon. 

Old Man Whiskery-Whee-Kum-Wheeze. See same. — 
Riley. 

Old Margery Miller sat alone. See Margery Miller.— 
Anon. 

Old Master Brown brought his ferule down. See 
Old-school Punishment.—Anon. 

Old meerschaum pipe, I’ll fondly wipe. See My 
Meerschaum Pipe.—Mundy. 

Old Meg she was a gipsy. See Meg Merrilies.—Keats. 

Old memories rush o’er mv mind just now. See Old 
School Clock, The.—O’Reilly. 


Old Menalcas, on a day. See Never too Late (Palm¬ 
er’s Ode, The).—Greene. 

Old Mistress Chestnut once lived in a burr. See Little 
Nut People.—Nicholson. 

Old Mose[s] who sells eggs and chickens on the streets. 
—See Counting Eggs.— (Texas Siftings.) 

Old Mother Duck has hatched a brood. See Dame 
Duck’s First Lecture on Education.—“Aunt 
Effie.” 

Old Mother Earth woke up from her sleep. See Spring 
Song, A.— -(Children’s Friend and Kindergarten.) 

Old Mother Goose rode in her caboose. See Mother 
Goose’s Dinner Party.—Richards. 

Old mother-wit and nature gave. See Elegy on Cow¬ 
ley (Abraham Cowley).—Denham. 

Old mountains! dim and gray ye rise. See Mountains, 
The.—Bartol. 

Old Nathan was out in the garden. See Puzzle, A.— 
Eytinge; 

Old Nature teems with many things. See Tree-tise 
on Nature, A.—Levin. 

Old Nick [or Birch], who taught the village school. 
See Retort, The.—Morris. 

“Old pard, come near and raise my head.” See Jo, 
the Tramp.—Chipman. 

Old Parson Kelly’s fair young wife. See Parson 
Kelly.—Douglas. 

Old Peter led a wretched life. See Perils of Invisi¬ 
bility, The.—Gilbert. 

Old Quizzle was a man of great discerning. See Old 
Quizzle.-—Anon. 

Old Reuben Fisher, who lived in the lane. See True 
Faith. Shillaber. 

Old Ripton is a Yankee town, amid the fair green 
mountains. See Fourth of July at Ripton.— 
Hall. 

Old Rodillard, a certain cat. See Council of the Rats, 
The.—F ontaine. 

Old Satan lubs to come out to de meetin’s now-a-days. 
See Uncle Gabe on Church Matters.—Macon. 

Old Seth Peters once heard Daniel Webster. See Seth 
Peters’s Report of Daniel Webster’s Speech.— 
Foss. 

Old soldiers true, ah, them all men can trust. See 
Prophecy, A.—Thompson. 

Old Sorrow I shall meet again. See Childhood.—Tabb. 

“Old Speckle” rose from off her nest. See “Old 
Speckle. ”—Anon. 

Old stories tell how Hercules. See Dragon of Wantley, 
The.—Patmore. 

Old things need not be therefore true. See Ah! Yet 
Consider it Again.—Clough. 

Old Thomas stood surveying the beautifully laid dinner- 
table. See Thanksgiving Guest, The.—Grosve- 
nor. 

Old Time and I the other night. See Old Time and I. 
—Lemon. 

Old Time has turned another page. See Song for the 
New Year.—Cook. 

Old tree, how low you seem to stoop. See Old Tree, 
The.—Anon. 

Old Tubal Cain was a man of might. See Tubal Cain. 
—Mackay. 

Old,—we are growing old. See Growing Old.—Lar- 
com. 

Old Widow Clare, in a low-backed chair. See Land¬ 
lord’s Visit, The.—Lockwood. 

Old Winchester and “Little Phil,” our Sheridan’s 
glorious ride. See How Congress Fought for 
Sheridan.—Banks. 

Old wine to drink! See Give Me the Old.—Messinger. 

Old Winter, Esquire, is now on his way. See Old 
Winter, Esquire.—Lynes. 

Old winter is a sturdy one. See Winter.—Anon. 

Old Winter sad, in snow yclad. See Old Winter.— 
Noel. 

Oldt [or old] iEsop wrote a fable, vonce. See Gets 
Dhere.—Adams. 

Ole “Cross-roads Brown,” he give a bee. See 
Huskin’, The.—McSparran. 

Ole man, what day de monf am dis? See Ginger and 
the Preacher.-—Anon. 

Oliver Twist who had some very Hard Times in the 
Battle of Life. See Catalogue of Dickens’ Works. 
—Anon. 

Olympian sunlight is the Poet’s sphere. See Crystal, 
The.—Coan. 

Omnibus nunc rite et feliciter peractis. See Perduret 
atque Valeat.—Anon. 

On a bank with roses shaded. See Queen Oriana’s 
Dream.—Lamb. 

On a bleak ridge, from whose granite edges. See 
Mother Margery.—Burleigh. 


794 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


On 


On a board of bright mosiac wrought in many a quaint 
design. See College “Oil Cans.”—McGuire. 

On a brick by the curb-stone a little peal lay. See 
Banana.—Thatcher. 

On a bright June morning, 1759, Wolfe, sailing proudly 
up the St. Lawrence. See Wolfe at Quebec.— 
Budlong. 

On a bright November afternoon, when the autumn 
leaves were tinged. See Lincoln at Gettysburg.— 
Carr. 

On a certain mild March evening, A.D., 1864, the 
Ducklow kitchen. See Coupon Bonds.—Trow¬ 
bridge. 

On a Christmas morning, many years ago, I stood upon 
the deck of a merchantman. See Piece of Bunt¬ 
ing, A.—Palmer. 

On a dark November morning. See Praying for Shoes. 
—Hayne. 

On a day, alack the day! See Love’s Labour’s Lost 
(Love’s Perjuries).—Shakespeare. 

On a desolate, storm-beaten island. See Parable of 
the Wrecks, The.—Stoddard. 

On a far shore my land swam far from my sight. See 
same. —Anon. 

On a green slope, most fragrant with the spring. See 
My Rose.—Hawthorne. 

On a hill that graced the plain. See Thirsis’ Praise of 
his Mistress.—Browne. 

On a hill there grows a flower. See Pastoral, A.— 
—Breton. 

On a log behind the pigsty of a modest little farm. See 
Crushed Hero, A.— Lincoln. 

On a lone barren isle, where the wild roaring billow. 
See Grave of Bonaparte, The.—Heath. 

On a pine woodshed, in an alley dark. See Catastrophe. 
A.—Anon. 

On a poet’s lips I slept. See Prometheus Unbound 
(Poet’s World, The).—Shelley. 

On a starr’d night Prince Lucifer uprose. See Luci¬ 
fer in Starlight.—Meredith. 

On a stone by the wayside, half-naked and cold. See 
Tramp, The.—M’Caig. 

On a sultry April evening, more than twenty years 
ago. See Anne Pickens.—Hall. 

On a summer evening, Mr. Ellis Henderson. See 
Twilight Idyl, A.—Burdette. 

On a time the amorous Silvy. See Wakening, The.— 
Anon. 

On a weary slope of Apennine. See Brushwood.— 
Read. 

On a window-sill one morning still. See Four Flies, 
The.—Pierson. 

On a winter’s night.— See Greedy Fox, The.—Anon. 

On account of Conn’s fondness for the “juice of sod.” 
See Shaugraun, The (Tailor’s Thimble, The).— 
Boucicault. 

On Afric’s coast at morning dawn. See African Moth¬ 
er, The.—Anon. 

On afternoons, when baby boy has had a splendid nap. 
See “Booh!”—Field. 

On Alpine heights the love of God is shed. See Alpine 
Heights.-—Krummacher. 

On an important occasion in the life of the Master. 
See Better Part, The.—Washington. 

On an olive-crested steep. See Virgil’s Tomb.— 
Rogers. 

On Bellosguardo, when the year was young. See To 
Vernon Lee.—Levy. 

On Calais Sands the gray began. See On Calais Sands. 
—Lang. 

On California’s verdant slopes. See Portiere.— 
Sabine. 

On came the whirlwind—like the last. See Field of 
Waterloo, The (Charge at Waterloo, The).—Scott. 

On Carrigdhoun the heath is brown. See Lament of 
the Irish Maiden, The.—Lane. 

On Christmas day in seventy six. See Battle of Tren¬ 
ton.—Anon. 

On Christmas day, when fires were lit. See December. 
—Anon. 

On Christmas eve the bells were rung. See Marmion 
(Christmas in the Olden Time).—Scott. 

On de night befo’ Thanks-gib-bin, oh, I tells yo’ things 
looked blue. See Thanksgiving Turkey.—Havez. 

On deck beneath the awning. See White Squall, The. 
—Thackeray. 

On dun Cithseron’s ridge appears. See Siege of Cor¬ 
inth, The.—Byron. 

On dusty shelves in seried rows they stand. See 
Books I Ought to Read, The.—Brown. 

“On earth be peace, be peace,” the angels sang. See 
Coronation, The.—Mainwaring. 


On either side a window. See Two.—Field. 

On either side the river lie. See Lady of Shalott, The. 
—Tennyson. 

On entering the room we find more than two hundred 
noblemen and gentlemen. See Charity Dinner, 
The.—Mosely. 

On Euripides’ plays we debated. See Blind Student, 
The.—Armstrong. 

On every side of me I see causes at work. See False 
Coloring Lent to War.—Chalmers. 

On foot they came, chieftain and men alike. See 
Roderick.—Southey. 

On Friday morning as we set sail. See Mermaid, The. 
—Anon. 

On going forth last night, a friend to see. See Poetry 
on an Improved Principle.— (.Punch.) 

“On good and bad an equal value sets.” See Ass and 
his Master, The.—Yriarte. 

On gossamer nights when the moon is low. See Fairy 
Thrall, The.—Byron. 

On Hallow-Mass eve, ere you boune ye to rest. See 
St. Swithin’s Chair.—Scott. 

On Haverhill’s pleasant hills there played. See Story 
of the Barefoot Boy, The.—Trowbridge. 

On Helen’s heart the day were night! See First Kiss, 
The.—Gale. 

On Hellespont, guilty of true love’s blood. See Hero 
and Leander.—Marlowe. 

On her lap gran’ma did hoi’ me. See Long Ago.— 
Baer. 

On her white breast a sparkling cross she wore. See 
Rape of the Lock, The (Belinda).—Pope. 

On his bold visage middle age. See Lady of the Lake, 
The.—Scott. 

On his morning rounds the master. See Incident 
(Characteristic of a Favourite Dog).—Words¬ 
worth. 

On history’s crimson pages, high up on the roll of fame. 
See Flag that has never Known Defeat, The.— 
Benjamin and Sutton. 

On hoary Conway’s battlemented height. See With 
a Rose from Conway Castle.—Dorr. 

On in the snow—on in the snow. See Faithful unto 
Death.—Harrison. 

On its straight iron pathway the long train was rush¬ 
ing. See Beside the Railway Track.—Anon. 

On Kingston Bridge the starlight shone. See On 
Kingston Bridge.—Cortissoz. 

On leaving Fagin’s, without one pause or moment’s 
consideration. See Oliver Twist (Murder of 
Nancy, The).—Dickens. 

On Leven’s banks, while free to rove. See Ode to 
Leven Water.—Smollett. 

‘ ‘On Linden when the sun was low.” See Critics, The 
-—Graham. 

On Linden, when the sun was low. See Hohenlinden. 
—Campbell. 

“On Linden, when the sun was low.” See Medley, A. 
—Irving. 

On long, serene midsummer days. See Wild Roses.— 
Fawcett. 

On man, on nature, and on human life. See Excur¬ 
sion. The (Mind’s Eye, The).—Wordsworth. 

On March 7th, June, July. See Nones and Ides.— 
Anon. 

On me and on my children! See Cromwell and Hen¬ 
rietta Maria.—Wills. 

On me he shall ne’er put a ring. See Feminine Arith¬ 
metic.—Halpine. 

On Monday I wash my dollie’s clothes. See My Week. 
—Anon. 

On Monday, the Fourteenth of October, 1793, a cause 
is pending in the Palais de Justice. See French 
Revolution, The (Marie Antoinette).—Carlyle. 

On Monday we will wash our clothes. See Week of 
Work, A.—Anon. 

On mountains cold and bold and high. See Whistling 
Marmot, The.— Garland. 

On my cornice linger the ripe, black grapes ungath¬ 
ered. See Third of November, The.—Bryant. 

On my first like a feather the proud ship is tossed. 
See Charade.—Anon. 

On my study shelves they stand. See My Books.— 
Johnson. 

On my word, Mr. Caudle, I think it a waste of time. 
See Mr. Caudle Wants a Latch-key.—.Jerrold. 

On New Yeah’s day resolbe straightway to minimize 
yo’ ills. See Sambo's New Year Sermon.—Jones. 

On, on, my brown Arab, away, away! See Arab, The. 
—Calverley. 

On other fields and other scenes the morn. See Burnt 
Lands.—Roberts. 


795 




On 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


On our border, looking westward. See Canada.— 
Anon. 

On our lone pathway bloomed no earthly hopes. See 
Sonnet: “On our lone,” etc.—Whitman. 

On parents’ knees, a naked, new-born child. See 
Baby, The.—Jones. 

On Paris, when the sun was low. See Battle of the 
Boulevard, The.—Aytoun. 

On pottery my love was pleased to paint. See Fiery 
Ordeal, The.—Anon. 

On pride of wit, when high desire of fame. See To His 
Fair Idea.—Drayton. 

On Richmond Hill there lives a lass. See Lass of 
Richmond Hill, The.—Upton. 

On Saturdays she walks abroad. See High School 
Girl, The.—( Merchant and Manufacturer.) 

On scent of game from town to town he flew. See On 
a Traveling Speculator.—Freneau. 

On shores of Sicily a shape of Greece! See Shepherd 
Maiden, A.—Lefroy. 

On softest pillows my dim eyes unclose. See Vita 
Benefica.—Rollins. 

On some of the Western roads they attach a passenger 
car to a freight train. See Consolation Even on a 
Mixed Train.— {Traveler’s Magazine.) 

On, sons of mighty stature. See Gracie of Alabama. 
—Ticknor. 

On spinet old, Clarissa plays. See Picture, A.—Reed. 

On sunny Capri’s mountain heights. See Ballad of 
Capri, A.— {Harper’s Weekly.) 

On sunny slope and beechen swell. See Burial of the 
Minnisink.—Longfellow. 

On sure foundations let your fabric rise. See Essay 
on Translated Verse, The.—Roscommon. 

On that ancient seat. See Sasso di Dante, The.— 
Rogers. 

On that most eventful morning of the world’s history. 
See Presentation Address to a Foreman by a 
Workman, A.—Anon. 

On the jEgean shore a city stands. See Athens.— 
Milton. 

On the Bank of the Rhine, on the site of the ancient 
Roman camp. See Book and the Building, The. 
—Storrs. 

On the banks of the Xenil a dark Spanish maiden. 
See Pumpkin, The.—Whittier. 

On the beach near a summer hotel, up in Maine. See 
Sisterly Scheme, A.—Bunner. 

On the bloody field of Monmouth flashed the guns of 
Greene and Wayne. See Captain Molly at Mon¬ 
mouth.—Collins. 

On the bluff of the Little Big-Horn. See Miles 
Keogh’s Horse.—Hay. 

On the bosom of a river. See In Memoriam.—Prentice. 

On the braes around Glenfinnan. See Return to Na¬ 
ture.—Shairp. 

On the broad Manila Bay. See In Manila Bay.— 
Wadsworth. 

On the Coast of Coromandel. See Yonghy-Bonghy - 
Bo, The.—Lear. 

On the crimson cloth. See Only an Insect.—Allen. 

On the crimson edge of the eve. See Song of the 
Nightingale, The.—Scollard. 

On the cross-beam under the Old South bell. See 
Belfry Pigeon, The.—Willis. 

On the deck of a home-bound steamer. See Saved by 
a Hymn.—Anon. 

On the deck of a steamer that came up the Bay. See 
Foreign Views of the Statue.—Brooks. 

On the deck of Patrick Lynch’s boat I sat in woful 
plight. See County of Mayo, The.—Fox. 

On the deck stood Columbus; the ocean’s expanse. 
See Three Days in the Life of Columbus.—Dela- 
vjgne. 

On the eighth day of March it was, some people say. • 
See Birth of St. Patrick, The.—Lover. 

On the eve of St. Laurence, at the cross of Glenfad. 
See Battle of Ardnocher, The.—Geoghegan. 

On the field of Balaklava. See Little Grenadier, The. 
— {Harper’s Young People.) 

On the fifth day of the moon, which, according to the 
custom of my forefathers. See Spectator, The 
(Vision of Mirza, The;.—Addison. 

On the first day of March it was, that Tommy Taft had 
been unquietly sleeping. See Norwood (Tommy 
Taft).—Beecher. 

On the flowery bank of a.purling stream. See Ships 
at Sea.—Wellington. 

On the fourth day of July, 1776. See Eulogium on 
Henry Clay.—Lincoln. 

On the Fourth of July, 1776, the representatives of the 
United States of America. See Addition to the 
Capitol, The (Fourth of July, The).—Webster. 


On the girdling circuit. See Hobson and his Men.— 
Burns. 

On the grave of Parson Williams. See How the Par¬ 
son Broke the Sabbath.—Anon. 

On the great day of my life. See Spectre of the Past. 
—O ’Shaughnessy. 

On the green banks of Shannon when Sheelah was 
nigh. See Poor Dog Tray.—Campbell. 

On the green hill top. See Grandame, The.—Lamb. 

On the ground lived a hen. See Envious Wren, The. 
—Cary. 

On the heights of Killiecrankie. See Burial March of 
Dundee, The.—Aytoun. 

On the helpless Flemish village. See How the Ransom 
Was Paid.—Anon. 

On the hills of Porto Rico. See Flag, The. {"Life.") 

On the isle of Penikese. See Player of Agassiz, The.— 
Whittier. 

On the limb of an oak sat a cunning old crow. See 
Cunning Old Crow, The.—Anon. 

On the limb of an oak sat a jolly old crow. See Jolly 
Old Crow, The.—Anon. 

On the liquor vender stern Death had called. See 
Closing Scene, The.—Anon. 

On the lofty brow of Monticello, under a green old oak. 
See Daniel O’Connell’s Epitaph.—Seward. 

On the lofty mountain, elevate the banner. See 
Isaiah (Despoiler Doomed, The).— Bible. 

On the lone deserted cross-road. See Robber, The.— 
Anon. 

On the lowest round of the ladder I firmly planted my 
feet. See Helping Hand, A.—Higginson. 

On the morning of October 7, at ten o’clock. See 
Burgoyne’s Surrender.—Curtis. 

On the morning of Saturday, July 2, President Garfield. 
See Memorial Address on the Life and Character 
of James A. Garfield (Death of Garfield, The).— 
Blaine. 

On the morning of the 31st of May, the families of the 
London citizens. See History of England (Corona¬ 
tion of Anne Boleyn, The).—Froude. 

On the morning of the trial of the great action for 
breach of promise. See Pickwick Papers, The 
(Bardell and Pickwick).—Dickens. 

On the morning of Waterloo, then, Napoleon was 
cheerful. See Les Misthables (Battle of Waterloo, 
The).—Hugo. 

On the mountain’s side th’ battle raged, there was no 
stop nor stay. See Battle of Dundee, The.—Anon. 

On the night of the earthquake shock I was sitting with 
Millie. See Earthquake in Egypt, The.—Anon. 

On the ninth of January I received by the evening 
delivery. See Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. 
Hyde, The (Dr. Lanyon’s Story).—Stevenson. 

On the noon of the 14th of November. See Barbara S. 
—Lamb. 

On the plains of Kalevala. See Ivalevala, The (Legend 
of Aino, The). 

On the plains of New Jersey, one hot summer day. 
See How the Yankee Answered the Englishmen.— 
Anon. 

On the Potomac’s peaceful breast. See True Incident 
of the War, A.—Irwin. 

On the ramparts bare stood the lady fair. See same. 
—Anon. 

“On the right by file into line! Forward! Charge 
bayonets!” See Quaker Boy, The.—-Jones. 

On the right of the battalion a grenadier of France. 
See Dead Grenadier, The.—Taylor. 

On the road from Springfield to Boston. See Railroad 
Car Scene, A.—Anon. 

On the road once more, with Lebanon fading a\vay in 
the distance. See Brakeman at Church, The.— 
Burdette. 

On the road, the lonely road. See Stab, The.— 
Harney. 

On the Sabbath-day, through the church-yard old and 
gray. See Barbara.—Smith. 

On the sea and at the Hogue, sixteen hundred ninety- 
two. See Herve Riel.—Browning. 

On the snowy branch of the holly-bush. See Robin’s 
New Year.—Anon. 

On the Sunday in question Father Phil intended de¬ 
livering an address. See Father Phil’s Collection. 
—Lover. 

On the sunny hillside sleeping. See Beneath the Flag. 
—{Cleveland Plain Dealer.) 

On the sward at the cliff-top. See Empedocles on 
Etna (Callicles’ Song of Apollo).—Arnold. 

On the 30th of April, 1864, President Lincoln wrote to 
Lieutenant-General Grant. See Major-General 
John Sedgwick (General Grant, the Silent Captain). 
—Curtis. 


796 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Once 


On the tossing sea, the heaving sea. See Men of 
Gloucester, The.—Richards. 

On the warm and perfumed dark. See Fireflies.— 
Powers. 

On the wealthy Larica’s worn features I wrote. See 
Equivocal.—Johnson. 

On the Wednesday after Trinity Sunday in 1431. See 
Joan of Arc (Martyrdom of Joan of Arc, The).— 
De Quincey. 

On the white head of the old man divine. See St. 
Simeon Stylites.—Nencione. 

On the whole, there are much sadder ages than the 
early ones. See Modem Painters (“On the whole,” 
etc.).—Ruskin. 

On the whole, with few exceptions which have turned 
out disastrously. See Ancestral Ideals.—Van 
Dyke. 

On the wide lawn the snow lay deep. See Red 
Riding Hood.—Whittier. 

On the wide level of a mountain’s head. See Time, 
Real and Imaginary.—Coleridge. 

On the wide veranda white. See Corn-song, A.— 
Dunbar. 

On the wind of January. See Year’s Windfalls, A.— 
Rossetti. 

On this day Browning died. See Twelfth of Decem¬ 
ber, The.—Gilder. 

On this fair valley's grassy breast. See Battle of 
Bennington, The.-—Bryant. 

On this grefet memorial day of the American nation. 
See Washington’s Birthday Address.—Anon. 

On this night we made our camp. See Panther’s 
Choice, The.—( Chicago Times.) 

On this side and on that men see their friends. See 
Grave, The (Omnes Eodem Cogimur).—Blair. 

On this solemn and joyful day, we again lift to the 
breeze our father’s flag! See Raising the Flag at 
Sumter.—Beecher. 

On this wondrous sea. See Eternity.—Dickinson. 

On those great waters now I am. See Hallelujah 
(When We Are upon the Seas).— Wither. 

On three notable occasions and by three remarkable 
speeches. See Henry W. Grady as an Orator.—Lee. 

On through the Libyan sand. See Gordon.—Myers. 

On thy fair bosom, silver lake. See To Seneca Lake. 
—Percival. 

On tidings of the wreck of Vrishni’s race. See Maha- 
Bharata, The (Great Journey, The).—Arnold. 

On to Freedom! On to Freedom! See On to Free¬ 
dom.—Duganne. 

‘‘On to Richmond!” came the unthinking cry. See 
Army of the Potomac, The.—-Depew. 

On to the goal the impatient legions come! See 
Austerlitz.—Saltus. 

On to the sacred hill. See Paradise Lost (“On to the,” 
etc.).—Milton. 

On Trinitye Mondaye in the morne. See King Ar¬ 
thur’s Death.—Anon. 

On Tuesday, April 18, 1775, Gage, the royal governor. 
See Centennial Celebration of Concord Fight (Paul 
Revere’s Ride).—Curtis. 

On Vorska’s glittering waves. See Battle of Pultowa, 
The.—Southey. 

On wan dark night on Lac St. Pierre. See Wreck of 
the “Julie Plante,” The.—Drummond. 

On what foundation stands the warrior’s pride. See 
Vanity of Human Wishes, The (Charles XII. of 
Sweden).—Johnson. 

On what ground is it asserted that Ctesar secured the 
greatness of his country? See Passing of the 
Rubicon, The.—Knowles. 

On what side soever I turn my eyes. See History of 
Rome Hannibal to the Carthaginian Army).— 
Livy. 

On wings of glory, swift as light. See Our Navy. 


Anon. 

On wings of lightning the message came. See Bells of 
Brookline, The.—Downing. 

On with the dance! let joy be unconfined. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Battle of Waterloo).— 
Byron. 

On woodlands ruddy with autumn. See My Autumn 
Walk.—Bryant. . 

On yonder hill a castle standes. See Child of Elle, The. 


On your bare rocks, O barren moors. See Barren 
Moors, The.—Channing. 

Once a child is born, one of his inalienable rights. See 
Children’s Rights.—Riggs. 

Once a funny old man down in Wheeling. See runny 
Old Man, A.—Denton. , 

Once a funny old woman in Waring. See there 
Yet.”—Denton. 


Once a learned Boston maiden was besought for one 
sweet kiss. See Her Reason.—Sawyer. 

Once a little baby lay. See First Christmas, The.— 
Anon. 

Once a little boy, Jack, was, oh! ever so good. See 
Sad Story of a Little Boy that Cried, The.— (St. 
Nicholas.) 

Once a little lady dressed in black and red. See Poor 
Little Mother, A.—Branch. 

Once a little Pine-tree. See Little Pine-tree, The.— 
Bumstead. 

Once, a little while ago, ’twas so warm and still. See 
Mystery, A.—-Hoyt. 

Once, a long time ago, so good stories begin. See 
Landlord of “The Blue Hen.”—Cary. 

Once, a maid with golden tresses. See Mp-ta-ta.— 
Anon. 

Once a mighty potentate. See “As it is in Heaven.” 
—Jones. 

Once a poet wrote a sonnet. See Which?—Anon. 

Once a shining penny. See Bennie’s Penny.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

Once a trap was baited. See They Didn’t Think.— 
Cary. 

Once again the flowers we gather on these sacred 
mounds to lay. See Flowers for the Brave.— 
Chapman. 

Once again we are gathered here. See Vacation Hymn, 
A.-—Anon. 

“Once as our Saviour walked with men below.” See 
same. —Anon. 

Once at eve a soldier brave. See La Tour d’Auvergne. 
—Buon. 

“Once at midnight, just as Arktos.” See same .— 
Anacreon. * 

Once at the Angelus. See “Good Night, Babette” 
(Angelus Song).—Dobson. 

Once before, this self-same air. See Once Before.— 
Dodge. 

Once—but no matter when. See Chronicle, A.— 
Anon. 

Once, by the edge of a pleasant pool. See Croaker, 
The.—Lincoln. 

Once came to our fields a pair of birds that had never 
built a nest nor seen a winter. See Norwood 
(Coming and Going).—Beecher. 

Once did she hold the gorgeous East in fee. See On 
the Extinction of the Venetian Republic.— 
Wordsworth. 

Once Fate, with an ironic jest. See Jest of Fate, The. 
—Foss. 

Once, from the parapet of gems and glow. See Flight 
from Glory, A.—Lee-Hamilton. 

Once from the town a starling flew. See same. — 
(St. Nicholas.) 

Once git a smell o’ musk into a draw. See Biglow 
Papers, The (Sunthin’ in a Pastoral Line).— 
Lowell. 

Once he sang of summer. See Snow Flake, A.—Al¬ 
drich. 

Once hoary Winter chanced—alas. See Why ye 
Blossome Cometh before ye Leafe.—Herford. 

Once I knew a fine song. See ’Scaped.—Crane. 

Once I knew a little girl. See Loveliness.—Lacey. 

Onc 3 —I remember well the day. See Enthusiast, The 
An Ode.—Whitehead. 

Once I sat on a crimson throne. See Waif.—Mac¬ 
Donald. 

Onc 3 I saw mountains angry. See Ancestry.—Crane. 

Once I was quite a singer. See Horse Business, The.— 
Thatcher. 

Once in a barn theatric, deep in Kent. See Theatrical 
Curiosity, A.—( Cruikshank’s Omnibus.) 

Once, in a good old college town. See Cow and the 
Bishop, The.—Townsend. 

Once in a golden hour. See Flower, The.—Tennyson. 

Once in a merry tavern in Brabrant. See Gasper 
Schnapp’s Exploit.—Anon. 

Once in a race I stood well front. See Charity.— 
Lanigan. . 

Once, in a rough, wild country. See Wise Fairy, The. 
—Cary. 

Once in an eastern palace wide. See First Tangle, 
The.—Burnham. 

Once in his shop a workman wrought. See Camel’s 
Nose, The.—Sigourney. . 

Once in old Rome, long centuries ago. See Saint 
Cecilia.—Morris. 

Once in Persia ruled [or reigned] a king. See All 
Things Shall Pass Away.—Tilton. 

Once in Royal David’s city. See Christmas.—Anon. 

Once in the chase, this monarch drooping. See Apple- 
dumplings and George the Third, The. Wolcott. 


797 




Once 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Once in the days of old. See Sea’s Love, The.— 
Weatherly. 

Once, in the flight of ages past. See Common Lot, The. 
—Montgomery. 

Once in the icy winter weather. See Boy and Girl.— 
Bradley. 

Once in the leafy prime of Spring. See Agassiz.— 
Fields. 

Once in the morning when the breeze. See Fairies’ 
Dance, The.—Sherman. 

Once into a quiet village. .See Pegasus in Pound.— 
Longfellow. 

Once it smiled a silent dell. See Valley of Unrest, The. 
—Poe. 

Once more at Church is seized with sudden fear. See 
Wicliffe.—Wordsworth. 

Once more, Cesario. See Twelfth Night; or, What 
You Will (Viola Disguised and the Duke).— 
Shakespeare. 

Once more, once more, my Mary dear. See Memories. 
—Prentice. 

Once more the Heavenly Power. See Early Spring. 
—Tennyson. 

Once more the liberal year laughs out. See Thanks¬ 
giving Ode.—Whittier. 

Once more the robin flutes in glee. See Once More.— 
Hodgins. 

Once more through God’s high will, and grace. See 
Year of Sorrow Ireland, 1849, The.—De Vere. 

Once more to distant ages of the world. See Excur¬ 
sion. The (Among the Mountains). — Words¬ 
worth. 

Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more. 
See King Henry V. (Henry V. at Harfleur).— 
Shakespeare. 

Once more we gather under skies of May. See O Mar¬ 
tyrs Numberless.—-Anon. 

Once more we stand with half-reluctant feet. See 
Upon the Theshold.—G. E. 

Once my love and I together. See Lemonade.— 
Chandler. 

Once on a charger there was laid. See Salome.— 
Lamb. 

Once, on a golden afternoon. See Bobolink, The. 
—(The Aldine.) ■ 

Once on a time, a certain man was found. See Pond, 
The.—-Byrom. 

Once on a time a little leaf was heard to sigh and cry. 
See Norwood (Little Leaf, The).—Beecher. 

Once on a time, a monarch tired with whooping, whip¬ 
ping and spurring. See Apple-dumplings and a 
King, The.—Wolcott. 

Once on a time a rustic dame. See Milkmaid, The.— 
Lloyd. 

Once on a time, a son and sire, we’re told. See Gre¬ 
cian Fable, A.—Anon. 

Once on a time an artful Ant. See Artful Ant, The.— 
Herford. 

* ‘Once on a time.” as fairy tales begin. See Relentless 
Tyrant, A.—Anon. 

Once on a time Bo-Peep and Boy Blue. See Bo-Peep’s 
Party.—Anon. 

Once on a time, in a queer little town. See Christmas 
Eve Adventure, A.—M. M. 

Once on a time, in sunshine weather. See Truth and 
Falsehood.—Prior. 

Once on a time. Love, Death, and Reputation. See 
Love, Death, and Reputation.—Lamb. 

Once, on a time, some little hands. See Garden on the 
Sands, The.—Anon. 

Once on a time, some years ago. See Wax Work.— 
Anon. 

Once on a time, the nightingale, whose singing. See 
Critic, The.—Sargent. 

Once on a time there lived a king. See True Happiness. 
—Anon. 

Once on a time there was a knight. See Ye Olde Tyme 
Tayle of ye Knighte, ye Yeomanne and ye Faire 
Damosel.—Bennett. 

Once on a time three Pilgrims true. See Cock and 
Hen Story, A.—Southey. 

Once on a time, ’tis said. See Remedy as Bad as the 
Disease, The.—Anon. 

Once on a time two little boys. See What Echo Said.— 
Anon. 

Once on a time, when jewels flashed. See Anne 
H athaway.—An on. 

Once on a winter’s night—these things were written. 
See Adolphus, Duke of Guelders.—Meredith. 

Once on my mother’s breast, a child, I crept. See 
Mysteries, The.—Howells. 

Once, on New England’s bloody heights. See Rhode 
Island to the South.—Lander. 


Once or twice in a life-time, we are permitted to enjoy. 
See Manners.—Emerson. 

Once, Paumonok. See Out of the Cradle Endlessly 
Rocking (Mocking-bird, The).—Whitman. 

Once Santa Claus sobered, and said with a sigh. See 
Marriage of Santa Claus, The.—Anon. 

Once, seeking truth, I wholly lost my way. See Deeds 
versus Creeds.—Muzzey. 

Once she was fair as thou. See Old Apple Woman, 
The.—Anon. 

Once Switzerland was free! With what a pride. See Wil¬ 
liam Tell (William Tell on Switzerland).—Knowles. 

Once the Emperor Charles of Spain. See Emperor’s 
Bird’s Nest, The.—Longfellow. 

Once the head is gray. See Catch, A.—Stoddard. 

Once there lived a wise philosopher. See Philosopher’s 
Escape, The.—Lovett. 

Once there was a bad little boy. See Story of the Bad 
Little Boy Who Didn’t Come to Grief, The.— 
Clemens. 

Once there was a good little boy. See Mark Twain’s 
Story of “The Good Little Boy.”—Clemens. 

Once there was a little boy. See Tale of a Cigarette, 
The.—Denton. 

Once there was a little kitty. See Little Kitty.— 
Prentiss. 

Once there was a little maid. See Foolish Maid, A.— 
Denton. 

Once there was a robin lived outside the door. See 
Foolish Little Robin.—Anon. 

Once they was a man without no hairs. See Unawares. 
—Kerr. 

Once this soft turf, this rivulet’s sands. See Battle¬ 
field, The.—Bryant. 

Once to every man and nation comes the moment to 
decide. See Present Crisis, The (Once to Every 
Man and Nation).—Lowell. 

Once upon a midnight dreary. See Attitudes Illus¬ 
trated in Verse.—Barbour. 

Once upon a midnight dreary. See Medley, A.— 
McHenry. 

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak 
and weary. See Raven, The.—Poe. 

Once upon a time a little leaf was heard to sigh and cry. 
See Norwood (Anxious Leaf, The).—Beecher. 

Once upon a time a little princess, whose name was 
Theodosia. See Christmas Angel, The.—Ray¬ 
mond. 

Once upon a time, a thousand years ago, there dwelt 
by the sea a little maid. See Spray Sprite, The.— 
Thaxter. 

Once upon a time, after a long and honorable reign. 
See King’s Bell, The.—Anon. 

Once upon a time, fatigued and out of breath. See 
Battle of the Frogs and Mice.—Anon. 

Once upon a time, in beautiful Dreamland, Queen 
Fancy. See Song Revels.—Allen. 

Once upon a time in Sky-land. See Legend, A.— 
Badlam. 

Once upon a time, it does not matter when or where. 
See Parrot in a Deacon’s Meeting, A.—Anon. 

Once upon a time life lay before me. See Once upon 
a Time.—Bushnell. 

Once upon a time the Supreme Being gave a large 
festival in his azure palace. See Festival of the 
Supreme Being, The.—Tourgenieff. 

Once upon a time there lived an old gentleman in a 
large house. See Oil Yourself a Little.—Anon. 

Once upon a time, there lived at Simla, India, a very 
pretty girl. See Cupid’s Arrows.—Kipling. 

Once upon a time there was a very small child. See 
Fairy Tale, A.—Turner. 

Once upon a time there was in Japan a poor stone¬ 
cutter. See Stone-cutter, The.-—Taylor. 

Once upon a time there were four brothers. See Four 
Brothers, The.—Macrae. 

Once upon a time two little candles lay side by side 
in a big box. See Reward of the Cheerful Candle, 
The.—Worstell. 

Once upon an evening bleary. See "Ager,” The. 
— (Boston Gazette.) 

Once Venus, deeming Love too fat. See Such a Duck. 
—Anon 

Once we built our fortress where you see. See Moun¬ 
tain, The.—Channing. 

Once, when I was a little boy. Nee Reminiscence, A.— 
Anon. 

Once when morn was flowing in. See Spider and Fly.— 
Cary. 

Once, when old winter was shaking the snow down. 
See Euterpe’s Visit.—Cook. 

Once, when the days were ages. See Brahma’s 
Answer.—Stoddard. 


798 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


One 


Once, when the King was traveling through. See 
Sheriff of Saumur, The.—Saxe. 

Once when the wind was on the roof. See Beyond.— 
Kimball. 

Once when the world was younger than now. See 
Union, A.—Junkermann. 

Once, when this grand old earth was young. See 
Legend of the Lily, The.—Wall. 

Once, when to the busy city. See “Pitty Fower.”— 
Moore. 

Once where our city farmers sat. See Vegetable Con¬ 
vention, A.—Bungay. 

Once with an honest Dutchman walking. See Perverse 
Hen, The.—Anon. 

Once ye were happy, once by many a shore. See 
Loons, The.—Lampman. 

Once your smoothly polished face. See To an Old 
Pipe.—Sterry. 

Onct ’pon a time dere wus a woman, an’ she wus a 
widder. See Story of Guggle.—Speed. 

Onct there was a little boy that hadn’t any pa! See 
That Littul Orfun Brat.—Kerr. 

Onc’t there was a spellin’ school. See Spellin’ School, 
A.—Buchanan. 

One afternoon, as Joseph West. See Lesson, The.— 
Turner. 

One afternoon in April, 1689, Sir Edmund Andros. 
See Gray Champion, The.—Hawthorne. 

One afternoon in the month of June. See Angel in a 
Saloon, An.—Anon. 

One afternoon, last summer, while walking along 
Washington street. See Howe’s Masquerade.— 
Hawthorne. 

One afternoon of a cold winter’s day. See Snow- 
Image, The.—Hawthorne. 

One afternoon, when the sun was going down, a mother 
and her little boy. See Great Stone Face, The.— 
Hawthorne. 

One April day, our little May. See May’s Apple-tree.— 
Richards. 

One asked of Regret. See Regret.—Le Gallienne. 

One autumn eve, when clouds unfurled. See Hunter’s 
Last Ride, The.—Anon. 

One Balaam Vermicelli Lepidoptera Fitz-Ape. See 
Chimpanzor and the Chimpanzee, The.—Hamil¬ 
ton. 

One ballade more before we say good-night. See 
Ballade to Banville.—Gosse. 

One Biddy Brown, a country dame. See How to Cure 
a Cough.—Anon. 

One bleak and blustering winter day. See One Easter 
Day.—Richards. 

One bright day in June, I strolled out into the woods. 
See Night Shade.—Anon. 

One by one the kind and gentle, loving spirits glide 
away. See Vacant Places.—( Friends’ Intelli¬ 
gencer.) 

One by one the old-time fancies. See One by One.— 
Anon. 

One by one the sands are flowing. See One by One.— 
Procter. 

One by one they pass away. See At Edgewater.— 
Merrill. 

One by one we are turning. See Historical Trees.— 
Hadley. 

One calm and cloudless winter night. See Medusa.— 


Weeks. 

One Christmas Eve a strange tragedy was enacted in 
the far Northwest. See How the Gospel Came to 
Jim Oaks.—Anon. 

One Christmas Eve, when Santa Claus came to a certain 
house. See Santa Claus and the Mouse.—Anon. 

One Christmas time some roots and bulbs. See Said 
Tulip, “That is So.”—Elliot. 

One circumstance troubled Mr. Swiveller’s mind. See 
Old Curiosity Shop, The (Dick Swiveller and the 
Marchioness).—Dickens. 

One cold December morning, about eighty years ago. 
See Drummer-boy, The.—Anon. 

One day a bookseller, who had grown rich. See My 
Fountain Pen.—Burdette. 

One day a harsh word, rashly said. See Words. Anon. 

One day, a lazy farmer’s boy. See Hoe out \ our 
Row.—Anon. 

One day a politician said. See Hopeful Youth,- A. 
Kavanaugh. 

One day, a poor peddler. See Grateful Swan, I he. 

One day, a rich man, flushed with pride and wine. 
See Retort, The.—Anon. 

One day atter Brer Rabbit fool Brer Fox wit dat 
calamus root. See Uncle Remus. His Songs and 
his Sayings (Wonderful Tar-baby, The). Harris. 


One day, as a very susceptible young man. See Sad 
Mistake, A.—Scribner. 

One day as I wandered, I heard a complaining. See 
Housekeeper’s Tragedy, A.—Anon. 

One day, as I was going by. See Lost Heir, The.— 
Hood. 

One day between the Lip and the Heart. See Lip and 
the Heart, The.—Adams. 

One day Bill and me both got a cent. See Bill an 
Me.—Richards. 

One day I saw a ship upon the sands. See Sea Irony.— 
Heaton. 

One day I wandered where the salt, sea-tide. See 
Seaside Well, The.—Anon. 

One day I wrote her name upon the strand. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Our Love Shall Live). 
—Spenser. 

One day, in a crowded Gates Avenue car. See Pat’s 
Reason.—( Brooklyn Eagle.) 

One day in der summer times, dhere was two peobles. 
See Reckermemper der Poor.—Anon. 

One day, in his garden, he observed an apple falling. 
See Christopher Columbus.—Anon. 

One day in June Peter discovered a young couple. 
See Two Gentlemen of Kentucky.—Allen. 

One day, in one of the West India Islands, the sons 
and daughters of the planters. See Death or 
Liberty.—Weld. 

One day, it matters not to know. See St. Romauld.— 
Southey. 

One day, it was before a civic dinner. See Turtles, 
The.—Hood. 

One day Josiah came in, an’ sez he, “The Everlastin’ 
Spring is the one for me, Samantha!” See Saman¬ 
tha at Saratoga (Josiah at the Various Springs).— 
Holley. 

One day little Mary most loudly did call. See False 
Alarms.—Taylor. 

One day, mamma said: “Conrad dear.” See Story 
of Little Suek-a-Thumb, The.—Hoffmann. 

One day my grandma said to me. See Grandmother’s 
Beau.—Kavanaugh. 

One day, nigh wearie [or weary] of the yrkesome [or 
irksome] way. See Faerie Queene, The (Una and 
the Lion).—Spenser. 

One day, not a great while ago, Mr. Middlerib. See 
Movement Cure for Rheumatism, The. — Bur¬ 
dette. 

One day Sail fooled me; she heated the poker awful 
hot. See Peter Sorghum in Love.—Burnett. 

One day the bad spirits met together. See Original 
Liquor League, The.—Talmage. 

One day the dreary old King of Death. See Death’s 
Ramble.—Hood. 

One day the Queen of Sheba gave Solomon a ring. See 
Solomon and his Sages.—Anon. 

One day there entered at my chamber door. See 
My Uninvited Guest.—Smith. 

One day thou didst desert me—then I learned. See 
To Imagination.—Thomas. 

One day, through a narrow and noisome street. See 
Street Musicians, The.—Catlin. 

One day through the primeval wood. See Calf Path, 
The.—Anon. 

One day when the birds had sung themselves quite 
weary. See Parable of Nature, A.—Anon. 

One day when the ocean was at rest, and its waters 
sheened and sparkled. See By the Shore.— 
Anon. 

One day when the studies were over. See Brightest 
Gift, The.—( Presbyterian Journal.) 

One day, while Jupiter, the great Olympian. See 
Sorrow.—Volk. 

One day, while yet the gods of Greece were young. See 
How it Happens.—Anon. 

One December night there fell a heavy snow. See 
Battle with the Tramp, The.—Anon. 

One early spring mom, w’ile de sun shine bright. See 
Ter’ble Sperience, A.—Johnson. 

One effort more, my altar this bleak sand. See Prayer 
of Columbus, The.—Whitman. 

One elf, I trow, is diving now. See Song of the Elfin 
Steersman.—Hill. .. , , 

One eve I knelt in a Franciscan Church. See Monk s 
Prayer, The.—Hahn. 

One eve, I musing, paced the sands. See Stranded 
Bugle, The.—Mosher. 

One eve of beauty, when the sun. See Constancy.— 

One evening a red-headed Connaught swell. See Pat 
and the Oysters.—Anon. 

One evening as they sat beneath the moon s soft rays 
so pale. See Taking the Veil.—Masson. 






One 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


One evening, in times long ago, old Philemon and his old 
wife, Baucis. See Miraculous Pitcher, The.— 
Hawthorne. 

One evening two pussies, a tabby and white. See 
Tabby’s Tea-fight.—Anon. 

One evening under the poplar’s shade. See Hundred 
Louis d’Or, The.—Dow. 

One evening when a gale blew so roughly that January 
seemed to have returned. See Les Mis^rables (Little 
Gavroche).—Hugo. 

One evening when Luther saw a little bird perched on a 
tree to roost. See Little Bird, The.—Luther. 

One evening while reclining. See Accepted and Will 
Appear.—Mix. 

One eye screwed up, cheek out of joint. See Biologic 
Face, The.—L. B. 

One face alone, one face alone. See Phantasmion (One 
Face Alone).—Coleridge. 

One face looks up from every page. See One Face.— 
Bolton. 

One famous day in great July. See Day We Do not 
Celebrate, The.—Burdette. 

One feast, of holy days the crest. See All-Saints.— 
Lowell. 

One finds nowhere in Holmes’s volumes crude and 
unformed thoughts. See Holmes, Extract con¬ 
cerning.—Palmer. 

One Fourth of July, when Abraham Lincoln was a 
boy, he heard an oration. See Young Patriot, 
Abraham Lincoln, The.—Anon. 

One fully enjoys being wracked with diseases. See Lay 
of the Grateful Patient.—F. D. 

One Garrick said, as in this tale you’ll find. See 
Pussy’s Better Nature.—Hughes. 

One glance at the platform is sufficient to convince the 
audience. See Charles Dickens the Reader.— 
Field. 

One heart’s enough for me. See same. —Cheyney. 

One holy church of God appears. See Church Univer¬ 
sal, The.—Longfellow. 

One honest John Tomkins, a hedger and ditcher. See 
Contented John.—Taylor. 

One hour before the Spaniards appeared. See Battle 
of Santiago.—Schley. 

One hue of our flag is taken. See Rejected National 
Hymns, The, VI.—Newell. 

One hundred years ago, and something more. See 
Lady Wentworth.—Longfellow. 

One hundred years ago in the goodly city of New 
York. See Our Army and Navy.—Sherman. 

One hundred years ago the United States began their 
existence. See Problem of Self-government, The. 
—Depew. 

"One I love;” a pretty face. See Counting the Seeds.— 
Anon. 

One idiotic habit of the people is to attribute to the 
King. See King and People.—Hugo. 

One in herself, not rent by schism, but sound. See 
Hind and the Panther, The (Unity of the Catholic 
Church, The).—Dryden. 

One is bad enough, two are worse. See Looking for 
Bargains.— (St. Louis Chronicle.) 

One is the engine, large and grand. See Railroad 
Train, The.—Smith. 

One kiss from all others prevents me. See Agro-dolce. 
—Lowell. 

One little black duck. See Ducks, The.—Anon. 

One little grain in the sandy bars. See One at a Time. 
—Whitney. 

One little head of yellow hair. See Our Baby.— 
Anon. 

One little kitten with a jingling bell. See Counting.— 
Brewer. 

One little row of ten little toes. See That’s Baby.— 
Anon. 

One little star in the starry night. See One Little 
Star.—Coolidge. 

One little sunbeam. See All Together.—Eddy. 

One long summer afternoon there came to Mr. David¬ 
son’s. See Courtship Fair and Square.—Anon. 

One loved her for her beauteous face. See A la Mode. 
—Greene. 

One lovely name adorns my song. See One Lovely 
N ame.—Landor. 

One man looka at da labor quest’ one way. See 
Italian’s Views on the Labor Question, An.—Kerr. 

One merry summer day. See Two Little Roses.— 
Ballard. 

One mild October afternoon Wendell Phillips sitting in 
his law-office. See Wendell Phillips (Wendell Phil¬ 
lips at Faneuil Hall).—Curtis. 

One moment, oh, stay one moment, and give me a coin 
for bread. See Pauper’s Revenge, A.—Nicholls. 


One moment, poised above the flashing blue. See 
Dive, The.—Gould. 

One moment the boy, as he wander’d by night. See 
“Sea-maids’ Music, The.”—Myers. 

One more great Voice gone silent! See Cardinal 
Manning.— (London Punch.) 

One more polygamous. See To the Memory of the 
Late Brigham Young.—Anon. 

One more unfortunate. See Bridge of Sighs, The.— 
Hood. 

One morn a Peri at the gate. See Lalla Rookh (Tear 
of Repentance, The).—Moore. 

One morn an angel stopped beside my door. See 
Angel of Dawn, The.—Cutler. 

One morn as Flora chanced to stray. See Strike 
among the Flowers, A.—Kavanaugh. 

One morn, hard by a slumberous streamlet’s wave. 
See Cambyses and the Macrobian Bow.—Hayne. 

One morn, two friends before the Newgate drop. See 
On Seeing an Execution.— (Punch.) 

One morning, all alone, out of his convent of gray 
stone. See Christus: a Mystery (Story of the 
Monk Felix, The).—Longfellow. 

One morning among the high alps. See Moral Courage. 
—Farrar. 

One morning fair. See Wolf and the Bear, The.— 
Kavanaugh. 

One morning, fifty years ago. See Wedding Fee, The. 
—Streeter. 

One morning in January, when the ice in the Hudson 
river. See Captain Joe.—Smith. 

One morning in the garden. See Robin’s Apology.— 
Sherman. 

One morning just ten years ago. See For a Wedding 
Anniversary.—Denton. 

One morning, Mr. Simpson, a worthy man, and a happy 
husband. See Inconsolable Husband, The.—Anon. 

One morning my heart can remember. See Unofficial. 
—Nesbit. 

One morning (raw it was and wet). See Sailor’s 
Mother, The.—Wordsworth. 

One morning, the 24th of December, a little ragged 
urchin. See Boy Wanted.—Anon. 

One morning when I was about eight years old. See 
Evils of Tight Lacing, The.—“Charlotte Elizabeth.” 

One morning, when I went to school. See Smooth 
Path, A.—Pomeroy. 

One morning when Spring was in her teens. See Two 
Fishers.—Anon. 

One morning, when the hands were mustered for the 
field. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Cassy).—Stowe. 

One morning when the rain was done. See Fairy 
Shipwreck.—Sherman. 

One morning, while Miss Ophelia was busy in some 
of her domestic cares. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin 
(Topsy).—Stowe. _ 

One name from Illinois comes up in all minds. See 
Abraham Lincoln.—Fowler. 

One night came on a hurricane. See Sailor’s Consola¬ 
tion, The.—Dibdin. 

One night came Winter noiselessly and leaned. See 
Frosted Pane, The.—Roberts. 

One night during the recent troubles in the Pennsyl¬ 
vania coal regions. See Airs. Potts’ Dissipated 
Husband.—Anon. 

One night I lay asleep in Africa. See Bookra.— 
Warner. 

One night little Diamond woke up suddenly. See 
Little Diamond and the Drunken Cabman.— 
Macdonald. 

One night mid swarthy forms I lay. See Wrecker's 
Oath on Barnegat, The.—Morford. 

One night, returning from my twilight walk. See 
Past Meridian.—Meredith. 

One night when I climbed into bed. See Harley’s Trip 
to Dreamland.—Richards. 

One night when the wind it blew cold. See Alary of the 
Wild Aloor.—Anon. 

One of the ablest writers that England ever produced. 
See Alacaulay’s Prophecy.—Garfield. 

One of the best of those paintings which have made 
the name of Edouard DcHaille famous. See 
American Courage.—Hoar 

One of the best things in the world to be is a boy. See 
Being a Boy.—Warner. 

One of the carronades of the battery, a twenty-four 
pounder, had got loose. See Ninety-three (Car- 
ronade, The).—Hugo. 

One of the exhibitors at the recent Texas State Fair. 
See Number Ninety-one.—Anon. 

One of the greatest delights in boarding in the country 
for the summer. See Out of the Hurly Burly 
(Reaching the Early Train).—Adeler. 


800 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Only 


One of the kings of Scanderoon. See Jester Con¬ 
demned to Death, The.—Smith. 

One of the many popular delusions wespecting the 
Bwitish. See Lord Dundreary at Brighton and 
the Riddle he Made there.—Anon. 

One of the most delightful books in my father’s 
library. See My Garden Acquaintance.—Lowell. 

One of the most important questions pressing for your 
investigation. See Judge’s Charge to the Grand 
Jury, The.—C. E. B. 

One of the most melancholy productions of a morbid 
condition of life is the sniveler. See Sniveler, 
The.—Whipple. 

One of the parish sent one morn. See Dressed Turkey, 
The.—Anon. 

One of the strongest muniments to save us from all 
harm. See Example of Washington, The.— 
Adams. 

One of us, dear—but one. See Which One?—Brown. 

One of your old world stories. Uncle John. See Little 
People of the Snow, The.—Bryant. 

One only rose our village maiden wore. See Flos 
Florum.—Munby. 

One pale November day. See Affaire d’Amour.— 
Deland. 

One part, one little part, we dimly scan. See Minstrel, 
The; or, The Progress of Genius (Reasons for 
Humility).—Beattie. 

One phantom was a girl, who here. See Queen’s Ball, 
The.—Clive. 

One pleasant day in October, an acorn and a chestnut. 
See Acorn and Chestnut.—Anon. 

One quiet eve, some years ago, whilst lingering by a 
stile. See Water and the Flower, The.—Anon. 

One rainy morning, just for a lark. See Among the 
Animals.—Anon. 

One raw morning in spring—it will be eighty years 
the 19th day of this month. See Reminiscence of 
Lexington, A.—Parker. 

One righteous word for Law—the common will. See 
Pilgrim Fathers, The.—O’Reilly. 

One rule to guide us in our life. See Follow the 
Golden Rule.—Anon. 

One Sabbath morn in lovely June. See What the 
Bells Said.—Richards. 

One said: “To one great end.” See Advice.—Anon. 

One sat within a hung and lighted room. See Love 
and Poverty.—Pullen. 

One sees in Viteall Yard. See Jacob Omnium’s Hoss. 
—Thackeray. 

One shadow glides from the dumb shore. See Glou¬ 
cester Harbor.—Ward. 

One silent night of late. See Cheat of Cupid, The.— 
Anacreon. 

One star is trembling into sight. See Evening. 
—( Chambers’ Journal.) 

One steed I have of common clay. See Comrades.— 
Blood. 

One step and then another, and the longest walk is 
ended. See Little by Little.—Anon. 

One stormy morn I chanced to meet. See Kiss in the 
Rain, A.—Anon. 

One summer afternoon Mr. Malcolm Anderson. See 
Unexpected Son, The.—Anon. 

One summer afternoon, within his palace. See Beggar 
and the King, The.—Goodwin. 

One summer day, a country youth, arrayed in kilt and 
plaid. See Sandy’s Romance.—Davenport. 

One summer day, to a young child I said. See Knowing. 
—Dorr. 

One summer eve, with [or in] pensive thought. See 
Shells of Ocean.—Merry. 

One summer evening, a maiden fair. See Broken 
Token, The.—Anon. 

One summer morning a daring band. See Ballad of 
Ishmael Day, The.—Anon. 

One summer night, in twilight dim. See Cruel Maid, 
The.—Bradley. 

One summer’s evening ere the sun went down. See 
Little Pilgrim, A.—Anon. 

One Sunday morn good parson Jones. See Wet and 
Dry.—Jillson. 

One Sunday mornin’ years ago, along in May or June. 

’ See Matildy Goes to Meetin’.—Eisenbeis. 

One sunshiny morning, in the good old times of the 
town-of Boston. See Drowne’s Wooden Image.— 
Hawthorne. 

One sweet spring morn, when skies were bright. See 
Voyage of Life.—Janvier. 

One sweetly solemn thought. See Nearer Home.— 
Cary. 

One tear-drop from a mother’s eye. See Woman’s 
Day.—Anon. 


One there is who has silently advanced through time 
from the beginning. See same. —Bremer. 

"One thing is certain,” said Mr. Hathaway. See 
Saying the Cider.—Anon. 

One thing is sure, the day of the Lord is hastening on. 
See same. —Ninde. 

One, three, nine, seven days to Christmas. See Till 
Christmas.—Anon. 

“One time after Brer Rabbit done bin trompin’ ’roun’ 
huntin’ up some sallid.” See Brer Rabbit and the 
Little Girl.—Harris. 

One time there was a seed that wished to be a tree. 
See Tree that Tried to Grow, The.—Lee. 

One time, when we’z at Aunty’s house. See At 
Aunty’s House.—Riley. 

One touch there is of magic white. See Very Far 
Away.—Alexander. 

One touch to her hand and one word in her ear. See 
Marmion (Lochinvar).—Scott. 

One, two, three, a bonny boat I see. See One, Two, 
Three.—J ohnson. 

One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine. See 
Truth Speaker, The.—Anon. 

One ugly trick has often spoiled. See Meddlesome 
Matty.—Taylor. 

One unto his Beloved came. See Me and Thee.— 
Hopkins. 

One very hot day, a great lion. See Lion and the 
Mouse, The.—Anon. 

One was a king, and wide domain. See Two Men.— 
Gregory. 

One was the loveliest thing! a pink sachet. See Two 
Valentines.—Smith. 

One wet day the rain gathered in blobs on the road 
that passed our garden. See How Gavin Birse 
Put it to Mag Lownie.—Barrie. 

One who does not believe in immersion for baptism. 
See I Vash so Glad I Vash Here.—Anon. 

One, who is not, we see; but one, whom we see not, is. 
See Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The.— 
Swinburne. 

One who took manhood for his art. See To George 
Edward Woodberry.—Erskine. 

One winter evening, a country storekeeper. See 
Melting Moments.—Anon. 

One winter’s day long, long ago. See Caoch, the Piper. 
—Keegan. 

One winter’s evening toward the close of the year 1800. 
See Black Veil, The.—Dickens. 

One word and only one. See Burnt Out.—Anon. 

One word is too often profaned. See To-: “One 

word,” etc.—Shelley. 

One word only is a sufficient characterization of Wash¬ 
ington—disinterestedness. See Washington’s Char¬ 
acterization.—Eliot. 

One writes, that, “Other friends remain.” See In Me- 
moriam (“One writes,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

One year ago—a ringing voice. See “Only a Year.”— 
Stowe. 

One year ago, in lonely state. See His Neighbor’s 
Wife.—Anon. 

One yellow rushlight glimmered dim among the 
shadows deep. See Wrecker of Priest’s Cove, 
The.—Tomson. 

One young life lost, two happy young lives blighted. 
See Death of a First-born.—Rossetti. 

Only a baby, fair and small. See George Washington. 
—Anon. 

Only a baby, kissed and caressed. See Seven Stages, 
The.—Anon. 

Only a baby small, dropped from the skies. See Only 
a Baby Small.—Barr. 

Only a baby ’thout any hair. See Only a Baby.— 
Anon. 

Only a baby’s rattle. See Baby’s Rattle, A.—Anon. 

Only a boy, with his noise and fun. See Only a Boy.— 
Anon. 

Only a bunch of roses fair. See Prom-roses.—Sawyer. 

Only a cup of water. See Cup of Water, A.—Ben¬ 
nett. 

Only a dirty white and black dog! See Nobody’s Dog. 
—Anon. 

Only a drop in the bucket. See Mite Song, A. Anon. 

Only a drunkard, reeling around. See Only a Drunk¬ 
ard.—Anon. 

“Only a drunken man,” they said. See Only a 
Drunkard.—Clingan. 

Only a fallen horse, stretched out there on the road. 
See Dying in Harness.—O’Reilly. 

Only a flower! but, dear, it grew. See On a Cyclamen. 
—Arnold. 

Only a frown! yet it pressed a sting. See Smile and a 
Frown, A.—Dowd. 


801 






Only 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Only a hut, as mean, to Thee. See Transformation.— 
Dennison. 

Only a little bird am I. See Thankfulness.— Cooper. 

Only a little child! See same. —Anon. 

Only a little dust. See Fallen Asleep.—Stanton. 

Only a little pink rosebud. See Recitation.—Chase. 

Only a little tomato-can. See Only.—Thatcher. 

Only a man dead in his bed—that is all! See Dead 
in his Bed.—Ballou. 

“Only a pauper,” the neighbors said. See Pauper 
Girl, The.—Traver. 

“Only a penny a box,” he said. See Keeping hia 
Word.—Anon. 

“Only a penny. Sir!” See Glory-roses.—Rand. 

Only a pin, yet it calmly lay. See Only a Pin.— 
Brown. 

“Only a player dead!” See Dead Player, The.— 
Meehan. 

Only a rose in a glass. See Message of the Rose, The.— 
Anon. 

Only a seed—but it chanced to fall. See Only.— 
Gordon. 

Only a shelter for my head I sought. See Wer wenig 
Sucht, der Findet Viel.—Riickert. 

Only a tender little thing. See Snowdrop, A.— 
Spofford. 

Only a touch and nothing more! See Kate Temple’s 
Song.—Collins. 

Only a touch of your hand, ma belle. See Girl in Gray, 
The.—Merritt. 

“Only a tramp!” The farmer sneered. See Only a 
Tramp.—La Moille. 

Only a week more, and Christmas will be here. See 
Self-denial.—Anon. 

Only a woman, shrivelled and old! See Only a Woman. 
—Benedict. 

“Only a woman’s hair!” we may not guess. See Only 
a Woman’s Hair.—Noble. 

Only a word for the Master. See Only.—Murray. 

Only an hour more, and I shall have finished my work. 
See Novel Reading.—Anon. 

Only by giving gifts can the true meaning of the great 
gift. See Christmas Tree, The.—Wheelock. 

Only eighteen! And yet I’m to have company to-night, 
sure enough company. See Debutante.—Anon. 

Only five dollars in my pocket. See Marrying for 
Money.—McBride. 

Only in dreams she appears to me. See Beauty.— 
Haultain. 

Only last year, at Christmas-time. See Newsboy’s 
Debt, The.—Hudson. 

Only one moment unfettered by care. See Give Me 
Rest.—Anon. 

Only sixteen, so the papers say. See Only Sixteen.— 
Anon. 

Only tell her that I love. See Song.—Cutts. 

Only that, dear, neither wise nor fair. See Only 
Faithful.—Williams. 

“Only the brakeman killed”—say, was that what they 
said? See Only the Brakeman.—Woolson. 

Only the grasses. See Little Field Preachers.—Ives. 

Only the leaf of a rosebud, that fell to the ballroom 
floor. See Things not always what they Seem.— 
Anon. 

Only to find Forever, blest. See Heaven.—Dickinson. 

Only two years after the birth of John Quincy Adams. 
See Corsican hot Content, The.—Seward. 

Only waiting till the shadows. See Only Waiting.— 
Mace. 

“Oo s’an’t have my bwed and butter!” See Watching 
for Crumbs.—Anon. 

Ope your doors and take me in. See House of the 
Trees, The.—Wetherald. 

Open afresh your round of starry folds. See Marigolds. 
—Keats. 

Open his books and bid them forth. See Thackeray’s 
Birthday.—Rogers. 

Open, my heart, thy ruddy valves. See Magnanimous 
and Mean.—Heavysege. 

“Open the door, some pity to show!” See Palmer, 
The.—Scott. 

Open the door, will yer. Bill? Hush! take the gentle¬ 
man’s dicer. See Frank, the Fireman.—Frost. 

Open the old cigar box, get me a Cuba stout. See 
Betrothed, The.—Kipling. 

Open thy lattice, O lady bright! See Soft Guitar, The. 
—Bowne. 

Open your doors, open your heart. See Beautiful 
Spring, Haste, oh Haste!—Muller. 

Open your eyes, mamma. See Baby’s Day.—I.arcom. 

Open your eyes, my pansies sweet. See Pansy Song. 
—Anon. 


Opening one day a book of mine. See Pregnant 
Comment, The.—Lowell. 

Opinion governs all mankind. See Opinion.—Butler. 

Opinion is that high and mighty dame. See Opinion.— 
Howell. 

Opinions become dangerous to a State 6nly when 
persecution makes it necessary. See Liberty is 
Strength.—F ox. 

Or else I sat on in my chamber green. See Aurora 
Leigh (Books).—Browning. 

Or ere those shoes were old. See Hamlet.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Or if the soul of proper kind. See House of Fame, The 
(Forecast).—Chaucer. 

Or rushing thence, in one diffusive band. See Seasons, 
The (Sheep Washing, The).—Thomson. 

Or, suppose on the other hand, he had told you the 
plea was granted. See same. —Jack. 

Or view the lord of the unerring bow. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage,—Byron. 

Oratory has this test and mark of divine providence. 
See Oratory.—Beecher. 

Oratory is the cornerstone in the Temple of Arts. See 
Oratory among the Arts.—Shafer. 

Oratory is the corona of speech. See Nature of 
Oratory, The.—Quayle. 

Orb from a chaos of good things evolved. See To a 
Christmas Pudding.—Anon. 

Orphan Hours, the Year is dead! See Dirge for the 
Year.—Shelley. 

Orpheus with his lute made trees. See King Henry 
VIII. (Influence of Music).—Shakespeare. 

O’Ryan was a man of might. See Irish Astronomy.— 
Halpine. 

Ostera! spirit of spring-time. See Easter Morning.— 
Mace. 

“Othellum’s occupation’s gone!” See Bones at a 
Raffle.—Clipper. 

Other ages have had their designations, local or personal 
or mythical. See Centennial Oration (American 
Age, The).—Winthrop. 

Other nations with abilities far less eminent. See 
Examples for Ireland.—Meagher. 

Other people have their faults. See Speak nae Ill.— 
Anon. 

Othere, the old sea-captain. See Discoverer of the 
North Cape, The.—Longfellow. 

Others abide our question. Thou art free. See 
Shakespeare.—Arnold. 

Others may need new life in Heaven. See Speculative. 
—Browning. 

Ought we to exclude the Chinese? See Chinese Immi¬ 
gration.—Blaine. 

Ouphe and goblin! imp and sprite! See Culprit Fay, 
The (Elfin Song).—Drake. 

Our aims are all too high; we try. See Aspirations.— 
Anon. 

Our Aunt Lucy, she lives ’ith us. See Our Aunt Lucy. 
—Richards. 

Our Aunt ’Mandy thinks that boys. See “Aunt 
’Mandy.”—Lincoln. 

Our author by experience finds it true. See Aureng- 
Zebe;or, The Great Mogul (Prologue).—Dryden. 

Our baby lay in its mother’s arms. See Malaria.— 
Reid. 

Our band is few, but true and tried. See Song of 
Marion’s Men.—Bryant. 

Our bark is on the waters; wide around. See "Pater 
Vester Pascit Ilia.”—Hawker. 

Our beloved country is more than a hundred years old. 
See Day of Our Country, A.—Long. 

Our beloved Old State House is now restored. See Old 
State House, Boston (Restored 1882), The.— 
Whitmore. 

Our best beloved of all the brave. See Nelson.— 
Massey. 

Our better part remains. See Paradise Lost.—Milton. 

Our boat to the waves go free. See Our Boat to the 
Waves.—Channing. 

Our brethren of New England use. See Hudibras 
(Puritans).—Butler. 

Our brows are wreathed with spindrift. See Coast¬ 
wise Lights, The.—Kipling. 

Our bugles sang truce, for the night-cloud had lower’d. 
See Soldier’s Dream, The.—Campbell. 

Our bugles sound gayly. To horse and away! See 
Cavalry Song.—Raymond. 

Our camp-fires shone bright on the mountain. See 
Sherman’s March to the Sea.—Byers. 

Our cause is a progressive one. See Cause of Temper¬ 
ance, The.—Gough. 

“Our church has got a bran’ new man.” See Law 
agin it, A.—Archibald. 


802 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Our 


Our constitution since its adoption has been amended. 
See Our Constitution.—Depew. 

Our country has produced at least three great men. 
See Abraham Lincoln.—Langston. 

Our country is a whole, my Publius. See Duty to 
One’s Country.—More. 

Our country!—’tis a glorious land! See Our Country. 
—Pabodie. 

Our country! whose eagle exults as he flies. See Our 
Country.—Proctor. 

Our cousin king is dead. See Lady Jane Grey.— 
Webster. 

Our Daisy lay down. See Hint, A.—Anon. 

Our darling little Florence, our blessing and our pride. 
See Christmas Tree, The.—Sangster. 

Our dim eyes seek a beacon. See same. —Anon. 

Our disposition is much of our own making. See 
Women’s Dispositions.—Talmage. 

Our doctor had called in another, I never had seen him 
before. See In the Children’s Hospital.—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Our dog Fred. See Session with Uncle Sidney, A 
(Diners in the Kitchen).—Riley. 

Our doll-baby show it was something quite grand. See 
Doll-baby Show, The.—Cooper. 

Our dying friends come o’er us like a cloud. See 
Night Thoughts (Death of Friends, The).—Young. 

Our England’s heart is sound as oak. See Heart and 
Will.—Linton. 

Our enterprise is in advance of the public sentiment. 
See Cause of Temperance, The.—Gough. 

Our entertainment now is through. See Closing 
Address.—-Cornell 

Our exercises for the day. See Valedictory for a Small 
Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

Our exhibition has begun. See Salutatory for a Small 
Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

Our eyeless bark sails free. See Earth, The.— 
Emerson. 

Our Father, by right of creation. See Lord’s Prayer 
Illustrated, The.—Anon. 

Our Father-land! And wouldst thou know. See 
Father-land and Mother-tongue.—Lover. 

Our Fatherland is in danger! Citizens! to arms! to 
arms. See Appeal to the Hungarians.—Kossuth. 

Our Father’s God! from out whose hand. See Centen¬ 
nial Hymn'.—Whittier. 

Our fathers rejected the holidays of the church. See 
Family as an American Institution, The (Thanks¬ 
giving Day).—Beecher. 

Our fellow-countrymen in chains! See Our Country¬ 
men in Chains.—Whittier. 

“Our First Commander. General U. S. Grant.” See 
Our First Commander.—Vilas. 

Our first young love resembles. See Our First Young 
Love.—Anon. 

Our flag is there! See same. —Anon. 

Our flag means, then, all that our fathers meant in the 
Revolutionary War. See National Flag, The 
(Meaning of the Flag, The).—Beecher. 

Our flag on the land, and our flag on the ocean. See 
Our Defenders.—Read. 

Our floods’ queen, Thames, for ships and swans is 
crowned. See Rivers of England, The.—Drayton. 

Our folks have been cleaning house. See Hattie’s 
Views on House-cleaning.—Anon. 

Our forests are fast disappearing. See Forest Flowers. 
—Frankenstein. 

Our girl’s name was Pomona. See Rudder Grange 
(Our Hired Girl).—Stockton. 

Our God, our help in ages past. See Psalm XC.— 
Watts. 

Our good steeds snuff the evening [wr. winter] air. 
See Alice of Monmouth (Cavalry Song).—Stedman. 

Our gracious queen—long may she fill her throne. 
See Wonders of the Victorian Age.— (Punch.) 

Our grandmothers tell us that when they were little 
girls. See Epilogue for a Boy and a Girl.— 
Anon. 

Our happiness went on till she was sixteen years old. 
See Dr. Marigold (Dr. Marigold and his Dumb 
Girl).—Dickens. 

Our hearts are full of joy to-night. See Address on the 
Occasion of a New Pastor.—Anon. 

Our hearts grow cold, we lightly hold. See Eve of 
Election, The.—Whittier. _ 

Our heroes and martyrs! they are identified with the 
names that live. See Our Heroes and Martyrs.— 
Chapin. , 

Our hired girl, she’s Lizabuth Ann. See Our Hired 
Girl.—Riley. 

Our historian Bancroft says of the Federal Constitu- 
tion. See Our Federal Constitution.—Fuller. 


Our honored dead! how calm they sleep. See Our 
Honored Dead.—Anon. 

Our hopes, like towering falcons, aim. See To the 
Hon. Charles Montague.—Prior. 

Our horsis pasturit in ane plesand plane. See Palice 
of Honour, The (Fete Champetre, The).—Douglas. 

Our house is topsy-turvy. See Moving.—Rook. 

Our kind hostess has asked me to recite something. 
See By Special Request.—Castles. 

Our King has wrote a long letter. See Lord Derwent- 
water.—Anon. 

Our king he has a secret to tell. See Bonny Lass of 
Anglesey, The.—Anon. 

Our life is comely as a whole; nay, more. See Woman’s 
Four Reasons.—Bailey. 

Our life is twofold; Sleep hath its own world. See 
Dream, The.—Byron. 

“Our little babe.” each said, “shall be.” See Wonder- 
child, The.—Le Gallienne. 

Our little bark seem’d a mere speck. See Touching 
Incident, A.—Anon. 

Our little bird in his full day of health. See Vacant 
Cage, The.—Turner. 

Our little boy who went away. See Little Boy Who 
Went Away, The.—Foss 

Our little Daisy is rosy and sweet. See Our Daisy.— 
Anon. 

Our little Jim was such a limb. See Little Jim.— 
Sims. 

Our lives are songs; God writes the words. See Our 
Lives.—Anon. 

Our long dispute must close. See Catiline (Expulsion 
of Catiline from the Senate).—Croly, 

Our lords are to the mountains gane. See Hughie 
Graham.—Anon. 

Our love is not a fading, earthly flower. See Sonnet: 
“Our love is not,” etc.—Lowell. 

Our love was most like other loves. See End of the 
Romance, The.—Praed. 

Our ma, why she kin do most anything. See What 
Ma Kin Do.—Richards. 

Our many years are made of clay and cloud. See 
Destiny.—Morris. 

Our martyred dead. See same.-— Trafton. 

Our men fought well at Morat! They fought like lions, 
boy. See Battle of Morat, The.—Story. 

Our minister, good Dr. Kane, a highly “proper man.” 
See Shouting Jane.—Ford. 

Our modern institution—Arbor Day. See Arbor Day. 
—( Vick’s Maqazine.) 

Our Mother Earth is in her loom. See Spring Har¬ 
bingers.—Anon. 

Our mother is the good green earth. See Voyageur 
Song.—Weir. 

Our Mother, loved of all thy sons. See Sea and Shore. 
—Koopman. 

Our mother, while she turned her wheel. See Snow¬ 
bound (Mother).—Whittier. 

Our name is Perkins. I alius thought that was a nice 
name. See About our Folks.—Wood. 

Our nationality has its charter and seal, not in a writ¬ 
ten constitution so much as in the trend of a coast. 
See Our Nationality.—King. 

“Our nation’s foes lament on Fox’s death.” See On 
the Death of Mr. Fox.—Byron. 

Our new flag-bearer, pale and slim. See Incident of 
War, An.—Thompson. 

Our night repast was ended; quietness. See Youth and 
Age.—Scott. 

Our object will not have been accomplished. See Ob¬ 
ject of Missions. The.—Wayland. 

Our old brown homestead reared its walls. See Our 
Homestead.—Cary. 

Our old mother country has had indeed a peculiar 
destiny. See Centennial Oration (Glorious Des¬ 
tiny of England, The).—Winthrop. 

Our opponents have charged us with being the pro¬ 
moters. See Appeal to the People, An.—Bright. 

Our own dear land, our native land. See Our Own 
Dear Land.—Thomas. 

Our pains are real things, and all. See Upon the Weak¬ 
ness and Misery of Man.—Butler. 

Our parts are performed and our speeches are ended. 
See Epilogue for a School Performance.—Anon. 

Our party has been called in half derision a conscience 
party. See Conscience in Politics.—Funk. 

Our past is bright and grand. See Nation’s Hymn, 
The.—Anon. 

Our people, in a day, assumed a place among the na¬ 
tions of the earth. See People of the United 
States.—Cleveland. 

Our play is short, requiring little casting. See T’ward 
Arcadie.—New 


803 





Our 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Our popular institutions demand a talent for speaking. 
See Eloquence and Logic.—Preston. 

Our President is dead. We can hardly believe it. See 
McKinley’s Funeral Address.—Manchester. 

Our program we have put in print. See Salutatory. 
—Anon. 

Our revels now are ended. These our actors. See 
Tempest, The (Airy Nothings).—Shakespeare. 

Our Rob has mittens new and red. See Rob’s Mittens. 
— (Youth’s Companion .) 

Our Sary Emma is possessed ter be at somethin’ queer. 
See “Sary Emma’s Photographs.”—Lincoln. 

Our Senator was a man who by mere force of char¬ 
acter. See Senator Entangled, A.—De Mille. 

Our share of night to bear. See Life.—Dickinson. 

Our sheriff is a man of rather high intelligence. See 
Joe Striker and the Sheriff.—Anon. 

Our sires were rocked in Faneuil Hall. See Temper¬ 
ance.— Bungay. 

Our six little stockings we hung in a row. See Old 
Christmas Forty Years Ago!—Candy. 

Our souls are sick for permanence; this world. See 
Refuge of the Ideal, The.—Kimball. 

Our sweet, autumnal western-scented wind. See 
Sweetbrier, The.—Brainard. 

Our Tabby, she is very wise. See Praise of the Cat.— 
Anon. 

Our three cats is Maltese cats. See Find the Favorite. 
—Riley. 

Our two souls, therefor, which are one. See Valedic¬ 
tion Forbidding Mourning.—Donne. 

Our warrior was conquer’d at last. See Abdication of 
Napoleon,—Thackeray. 

Our wean’s the most wonderfu’ wean e’er I saw. See 
Wonderfu’ Wean, The.—Miller. 

Our Will had earned a dollar bill. See Will’s Dollar 
Bill.—Richards. 

Our window’s not much—though it fronts on the street. 
See What Miss Edith Saw from her Window.—Harte. 

Our world has battle-fields where truth and right. See 
Heroes.—Shaw. 

Ours all are marble halls. See Song of the Kings of 
Gold.—Jones. 

Ours is a wise and earnest age, an age of thought and 
science. See New Guides to Faith and Belief, 
The.—Anon 

Ours is and always has been a government controlled 
by lawyers. See Lawyer and Free Institutions, 
The.—Depew. 

Out again! What a mania that boy has for agricul¬ 
ture. See Martyr to Science, A; or, Wanted—a 
Confederate.—Weston. 

Out and in the river is winding. See Red River Voy- 
ageur, The.—Whittier. 

Out from behind this bending, rough-cut mask. See 
My Patriot.—Whitman. 

Out from the city’s dust and roar. See Forgotten 
Grave, The.—Dobson. 

Out from the corners and over the floor. See Bed¬ 
time Fancies.—Anon. 

Out from the hearthstone the children go. See Will 
it Pay?—Lathrap. 

Out from the home of the Christmas tree. See Christ¬ 
mas Exercise, A.—Hadley. 

Out from the mine and the darkness. See In the 
Crucible.—Anon. 

Out from tower and from steeple rang the sudden New 
Year bells. See Masque of the New Year, The.— 
Wilbor. 

Out I went in the morning, to look at my garden gay. 
See Perseverance.—Thaxter. 

Out in a fog-bank we went down. See Jim.—Perry. 

Out in the beautiful country. See Thanksgiving 
Elopement, A.—-Emerson. 

Out in the cornfield, grouped together. See Farmer 
Nick’s Scarecrow.—Crosby. 

Out in the dark it throbs and glows. See On the Verge. 
—Winter. 

Out in the garden wee Elsie. See Butterfly, The.— 
Anon. 

Out in the hilly patch. See Dear Lads and Lasses.— 
Anon. 

Out in the meadows the young grass springs. See Re¬ 
turn of the Swallows, The.—Gosse. 

Out in the midnight’s white and starry splendor. See 
Christmas Carol.—Carpenter. 

Out in the misty moonlight. See Ghosts.—Munkit- 
trick. 

Out in the pleasant sunshine of a bright October day. 
See Nutting.—Blinn. 

Out into the mud and the wet he goes. See Hero, A.— 
Field. 


Out it spake Lizzie Lindsay. See Lizzie Lindsay.— 
Anon. 

Out, John! out, John! what are you about, John? See 
Out.—Bayly. 

Out of a cavern on Parnassus’ side. See New Castalia, 
The.—Ward. 

Out of a Northern city’s bay. See Cruise of the 
“Monitor,” The.—Baker. 

Out of a pellucid brook. See Pebbles.—Sherman. 

Out of blackened clouds of powder. See Sergeant of 
the Fiftieth, The.—Anon. 

Out of Flanders did we ride. See Four Knights, 
The.—Meyers. 

Out of my dooryard maple. See Memory.—Luders. 

Out of my window I could see. See Blossoms.—Sher¬ 
man. 

Out of shadow into sunlight. See Out of Shadow.— 
Chellis. 

Out of the bosom of the Air. See Snow-flakes.— 
Longfellow. 

Out of the church she follow’d them. See Maude 
Clare.—Rossetti. 

Out of the cloud-world sweeps thy awful form. See 
To an Alaskan Glacier.-—Keeler. 

Out of the clover and blue-eyed grass. See Driving 
Home the Cows.—Osgood. 

Out of the cottage looked Meg May. See Meg May’s 
Valentine.—-Anon. 

Out of the cradle endlessly rocking. See same .— 
Whitman. 

Out of the deep. O Lord, Thy Spirit moves, and passes 
and none knows. See Battle of Manila, The.— 
Burr. 

Out of the deeps of heaven. See same. —Stoddard. 

Out of the distance and darkness so deep. See Out and 
Into.—Anon. 

Out of the dreams that heap. See Origins.-—Roberts. 

Out of the dusk a shadow. See Evolution.—Tabb. 

Out of the East a hurricane. See Captain Lean.— 
Ramal. 

Out of the east comes up the morning sun. See Out 
of the East.—Bates. 

Out of the far sea, vaporous, ghost-like arms. See 
South Fork.—Bates. 

Out of the focal and foremost fire. See Little Giffen 
of Tennessee.—Ticknor. 

Out of the frozen earth below. See Crocus, The.— 
King. 

Out of the golden remote wild west where the sea 
without shore is. See Hesperia.—Swinburne. 

Out of the heart it came, the impulse strong. See Out 
of the Heart.—Chadwick. 

Out of the heart there flew a little singing bird. See 
Youth.—Cloud. 

Out of the hills of Habersham. See Song of the Chat¬ 
tahoochee.—Lanier. 

Out of the Latin Quarter. See Sphinx of the Tuileries, 
The.—Hay. 

Out of the mighty Yule log came. See Yule Log, The. 
—Hayne. 

Out of the mist came the voice of Gavin, clear and 
strong. See Little Minister, The (Rescue of Gavin, 
The).-—Barrie. 

Out of the mists of childhood. See Fairy Faces.— 
Anon. 

Out of the night that covers me. See Invictus.— 
Henley. 

Out of the North the wild news came. See^Revolu- 
tionary Rising, The.—Read. 

Out of the old house, Nancy—moved up into the'new. 
See Out of the Old House, Nancy.—Carleton. 

Out of the past remembered eyes. See Rondel.— 
Gray. 

Out of the sky they come. See Snowflakes.—Sher¬ 
man. 

Out of the tavern I’ve just stepped to-night. See As¬ 
tonished Tippler, The.—Anon. 

Out of the uttermost ridge of dusk. See Tryst of the 
Night, The.—Byron. 

Out of the way in a comer. See “Elizabeth, Aged 
Nine.”—Sangster. 

Out of the window, as I lie. See Sick Little Girl, The. 
—Anon. 

Out of this town there riseth a high hill. See Manor 
a Poetical History (Of a Vision of Hell, which a 
Monk Had).—Dixon. 

Out of water, clear and white. See Rainbow, The.— 
Anon. 

Out on the field in red o’ rain. See How She Was 
Consoled.—Anon. 

Out on the lawn in the evening gray. See Croquet.— 
Anon. 


804 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


Paddy 


Out on the lawn, one summer’s day. See Grandpa 
and Baby.—Anon. 

Out on the margin of moonshine land. See Lugu¬ 
brious Whing-whang, The.—Riley. 

Out on the mountain over the town. See Gold and 
Love for Dearie.—Field. 

Out, out at sea, the light. See Dead Light-house 
Keeper, The.—Ware. 

Out, out in the night, in the chill wintry air. See 
Turned out for Rent.—Burke. 

“Out, out, Old Age! aroint ye!” See Crabbed Age and 
Youth.—Anon. 

Out she swung from her moorings. See Sealed Orders. 
—Anon. 

Out upon it, I have loved. See Constancy.—Suckling. 

Out upon the Bay of Filey. See Wreck of the “Mary 
Wiley,” The.—Jackson. 

Out upon Time, who will leave no more. See Siege of 
Corinth, Tne (Hurts of Time).—Byron. 

Out where the sky and the sky-blue sea. See Flying- 
fish.—Fenollosa. 

Out yonder in the moonlight, wherein God’s Acre lies. 
See Singing in God’s Acre. The.—Field. 

Outdoors the white rain coming down. See April.— 
Sherman. 

Outillon saidi! Corlanafaci! SeeOutillon Saidi.—Anon. 

Outlanders, whence come ye last? See Earthly Para¬ 
dise, The (Minstrels and Maids).—Morris. 

Outside my garret window there’s a roof. See Spar¬ 
rows, The.—Anon. 

Outside the fort, the creoles were beginning a noise of 
jubilation. See Alice’s Flag.—Thompson. 

Outside the village, by the public road. See Dried-up 
Fountain, The.—Leighton. 

Outstretched beneath the leafy shade. See Green¬ 
wood Shrift, The.—Southey. 

Outstretching flameward his upbraided hand. See 
Cranmer.—Wordsworth. 

Over all the hill-tops. See Wanderer’s Night-song, 
The.—Goethe. 

Over all the raindrops fall. See Preparation.—Butts. 

Over and over again. See same. —Pollard. 

Over and under, and in and out. See Mother’s Mend¬ 
ing Basket.—-Kidder. 

Over here in England I’m helpin’ wi’ the hay. See 
Corrymeela.—O’Neill. 

Over hill, over dale. See Midsummer Night’s Dream 
(Fairy Land, I.).—Shakespeare. 

Over hills and over woodlands. See Where Shall We 
Find God.—Linn. 

Over hills and uplands high. See Nepenthe.—Darley. 

Over his keys the musing organist. See Vision of Sir 
Launfal, The.—Lowell. 

Over his millions death has lawful power. See On the 
Death of M. d’Ossoli and his Wife, Margaret Ful¬ 
ler —Landor. 

Over in the meadow. See same. —Wadsworth. 

Over meadows purple-flower’d. See Riding to the 
Tournament, The.—Thornbury. 

Over mossy stone and mound. See To-morrow is An¬ 
other Day.—Choate. 

Overmy shaded door way. See Bird’s Nest, A.—Percy. 

Over my soul the great thoughts roll. See Music in the 
Soul.—Anon. 

Over my window the ivy climbs. See My Window 
Ivy.—Dodge. 

Over our head f or heads] the branches made. See 
Passing Show, The.—Luders. 

Over the Alban mountains the light of morning broke. 

See Virginia.—Macaulay. 

Over the bare hills, far away. See Over the Bare 
Hills.—Anon. __ 

Over the borders, a sin without pardon. See Keep¬ 
sake Mill.—Stevenson. 

Over the chimney the night wind sang. See Chimney s 
Melody, The.—Harte. 

Over the cradle the mother hung. See Where Shall 
the Baby’s Dimple Be?—Holland. 

Over the crumbs of Southern camp shaded with palm 
and pine. See Bird’s Convention.—Hageman. 

Over the dim blue hills. See Maire My Girl. Casey. 

Over the dim confessional cried. See Priest’s Prayer, 
A.—Dickinson. 

Over the dumb campagna-sea. See View across the 
Roman Campagna, A.—Browning. 

Over the dusky verge. See In the Twilight. Anon. 

Over the field the bright air clings and tingles. See 
Flock of Sheep, A.—Scott. 

Over the field the grass is red. See Star-spangled 
Banner, The.—O’Donnell. , 

Over the fields the daisies lie. See Summer Day, A.— 
Anon. 


Over the fields where the soft wind blows. See Ro¬ 
salie.—Tompkins. 

Over the fence is a garden fair. See Over the Fence.— 
Anon. 

Over the green downs when I do wander. See Over 
the Green Downs.—Ingelow 

Over the happy inother's bed. See Little Dead Prince, 
A.—Craik. 

Over the hill the farm-boy goes. See Evening at the 
Farm.—Trowbridge. 

Over the hill to the poor-house I’m trudgin’ my weary 
way. See Over the Hill to the Poor-house.— 
Carleton. 

Over the hills and far away. See same. —Field. 

Over the hills, at the close of day. See Cloudland. 
—(Columbia Literary Monthly.) 

Over the hills through the valley away. See Mill 
River Ride.—Donovan. 

Over the hills to the poor-house sad paths had been 
made to-day. See Over the Hills from the Poor- 
house.—Mignonette. 

Over the hills where March winds sweep. See Sleeping 
May.—Willis. 

Over the lattice there clambered a vine. See same .— 
Anon. 

Over the lofty Ben-Lomond. See Mother’s Answer, 
A.—Barr. 

Over the meadow and over the hill. See My Quest.— 
W. T. O. 

Over the monstrous, swashing sea. See March Song.— 
Sunrise.—Field. 

Over the mountains and over the waves. See Truth’s 
Integrity.—Anon. 

Over the mountains we trample, the troop of us. See 
Vagabonds, The.—Macy. 

Over the plains where Persian hosts. See Cyclamen, 
The.—Bates. 

Over the ribs of the salt sea sand. See Widow’s Light, 
The.—Moore. 

Over the river and through the wood. See Thanks¬ 
giving Day.— Child. 

Over the River of Drooping Eyes. See same. —Anon. 

Over the river on the hill. See Two Villages, The.— 
Terry. 

Over the river they beckon to me. See Over the River. 
—Wakefield. 

Over the rope and under the rope. See Skipping.— 
Anon. 

Over the sea our galleys went. See Paracelsus (Song 
from “Paracelsus”).—Browning. 

Over the Snows. See Snows, The.—Sangster. 

Over the telegraph wires. See Humming of the Wires, 
The..—Rand. 

Over the threshold a gallant new-comer. See New 
Year, A.—Anon. 

Over the turret, shut in his ironclad tower. See 
Craven.—Newbolt. 

Over the undulated prairie. See Prairie Fire, The.—Hall. 

Over the village on the hill. See Two Villages, The.— 
Cooke. 

Over the west the glory dies away. See Yearning. 
—(All the Year Round.) 

Over their graves rang once the bugle’s call. See Over 
Their Graves.—Stockard. 

Over valley, over hill. See Snow Song.—Sherman. 

Overburden not thy memory to make so faithful a 
servant a slave. See Memory.—Fuller. 

Overloaded , undermanned. See Coasters, The.—Day. 

Overtopping all others in character, LaFayette was 
conspicuous in debate. See Lafayette, the Faith¬ 
ful One (Marquis de LaFayette).—Sumner. 

Owd Pindar were a reckless foo. See Owd Pinder.— 
Waugh. 

Owen Moore went away. See Owen Moore.—Anon. 

Oxcoose me if I shed some tears. See Shacob’s La¬ 
ment.—Anon. 

Oxen that rattle the yoke and chain. See Song of 
Myself (‘‘Oxen that rattle,” etc.).—Whitman. 

Oxford County to me, sir, is a volume of poems. See 
Oxford County.—Long. 


P 

Pa he bringed me here to stay. See Christmas Mem¬ 
ory, A.—Riley. 

Pack clouds away and welcome day. See Rape of 
Lucrece, The (Pack Clouds Away).—Heywood. 

Paddy, in want of a dinner one day. See Paddy 
O’Rafther.—Lover. 

Paddy McCabe was dying one day. See Father Mol- 
loy; or, The Confession.—Lover. 


805 




Paddy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Paddy Moore was all Irish, and no doubting it. See 
Paddy Moore.—Brooks. 

“Paddy,” said the squire, “perhaps you would favor 
the gentlemen with that story. See Pat and the 
Fox.—Lover. 

Pain’s furnace heat within me quivers. See God’s 
Anvil.—Sturm. 

Paint me your perfect lady. I have seen. See Por¬ 
trait of a Lady.—Anon 

Paint you a perfect man? I cannot tell. See Per¬ 
fect Man, The.—Anon. 

Pale and weary, strangely old. See Beggar Baby, The 
—Anon. 

Pale beryl sky, with clouds. See Winter Twilight, A. 
—Bates. 

Pale Brussels! then what thoughts were thine. See 
Field of Waterloo, The.—Scott. 

Pale, climbing disk, who dost lone vigil keep. See To 
the Moonflower.—Betts. 

Pale, faded and withered flowers. See Faded Flowers. 
—Buxton. 

Pale in the pallid moonlight, white as the rose on her 
breast. See In a Garden.—Moulton. 

Pale is the February sky. See Twenty-second of 
February, The.—Bryant. 

Pale melancholy, faithfully thou lov’st. See Corydon 
and Amaryllis.—Stewart. 

Pallid saffron glows the broken stubble. See Fifteenth 
of April, The.—Scott. 

Pallid white the moonlight gloweth. See Accursed. 
—(Sacramento Union.) 

Pallid with too much longing. See Laus Veneris.— 
Moulton. 

Palmerston traced his lineage to the time of the Con¬ 
queror. See Palmerston and Lincoln.—Ban¬ 
croft. 

Pan’s Syrinx was a girl indeed. See Midas (Pan’s 
Song).—Lyly. 

Pansies, lilies, kingcups, daisies. See To the Small 
Celandine.—Wordsworth. 

Pansies? You praise the ones that grow to-day. See 
Hugh Sutherland’s Pansies.—Buchanan. 

Panting and pensive now she ranged alone. See 
Hind and the Panther, The (Sects, The. Private 
Judgment ). —Dryden. 

Papa, don’t you know it is my birthday? See Birth¬ 
day Gifts.—Anon. 

Papa, I’d like to have some change. See How He Had 
Him.—Kavanaugh. 

“Papa,” said a little West End girl the other evening. 
See Papa Was Stumped.—Anon. 

Papa, what is the reason that some days are so lucky 
and other days so unlucky. See Katy Didn’t.— 
Anon. 

Papa will soon be here. See Afraid of the Dark.— 
Anon. 

Papa’s coming! Does he see. See Papa’s Coming.— 
Carlos. 

Papers, boss? Times, Press, Herald, Record. All 
the latest news. See Have a Shine, Sah?—Ober- 
holtzer. 

Papers! Papers! wanter paper, mister? Yes? See 
Heart of Old Hickory, The.—Dromgoole. 

Pap’s got his patent right and rich as all creation. See 
Back Where they Used to be.—Riley. 

Parading near Saint Peter’s flood. See Battle of Lake 
Champlain, The.—Freneau. 

Paradoxical as it may appear, war, the demon scourge 
of humanity. See same. —Anon. 

Pardon a friend who ventures to give. See Good 
Maxims.—Anon. 

“Pardon me for disturbing you, sir, but there is a little 
fellow here. ” See How the LaRue Stakes were 
Lost.—Hood. 

“Pardon me for troubling you, sir, but did you drop 
a twenty dollar gold piece? ” See Loser of Money. 
—Anon. 

Pardon me, my fellow-citizens, I know you want not 
zeal or fortitude. See American Rights.—Warren. 

Pardon the faults in me. See Wife to Husband.— 
Rossetti. 

Parent of golden dreams, Romance. See Romance.— 
Byron. 

Parents and friends. Our performances are ended and 
we are glad. See Valedictory.—Anon. 

Parents and friends, you have come in here to-night. 
See Salutatory, A.—Anon. 

Parents, friends, we bid you welcome. See Welcome. 
—Anon. 

Paris, from throats of iron, silver, brass. See Destiny. 
-—Lazarus. 

Paris has a child; the forest has a bird. See Les 
Mis(?rabies (Gamin, The).—Hugo. 


Parrhasius stood, gazing forgetfully. See Parrhasius. 
—Willis. 

Parties are the molds into which God pours. See 
Parties.—Willard. 

Partly work and partly play. See St. Distaff’s Day.— 
Herrick. 

Parunts knows lots more than us. See Intellectual 
Limitations.—Riley. 

Pass the word to the boys to-night! lying about midst 
dying and dead! See Midnight Charge, The.— 
Scott. 

Passage, immediately passage! the blood burns in my 
veins. See Sea of Faith, The.—Whitman. 

Passing away, saith the World, passing away. See 
Passing Away.—Rossetti. 

Passing feet pause, as they pass. See Marian.—Thomas 
Ashe. 

Passing from Italy to Greece, the tales. See Lover’s 
Melancholy. The (Lutist and the Nightingale, 
The).—Ford. 

Passion and pain, the outcry [ wr. outcome] of des¬ 
pair. See Beethoven’s Third Symphony.— 
Hovey. 

“Passion o’ me!” cried Sir Richard Tyrone. SeeSally 
from Coventry, The.—Thornbury. 

Passion the fathomless spring, and words the pre¬ 
cipitate waters. See Lyrical Poem, The.—Gar¬ 
nett. 

Passions are liken’d best to floods and streams. See 
Silent Lover, The.—Raleigh. 

Past ruin’d Ilion Helen lives. See Verse.—Landor. 

Past two o’clock, and not yet returned. See Road 
to Ruin, The.—Holcroft. 

Pat Flynn had sixty-seven hats. See What’s the 
Difference?—Pearre. 

Pat Murphy had been on a fishing excursion. See 
Pat’s Perplexity.—Anon. 

Patience, my lord! why ’tis the soul of peace. See 
Honest Whore, The.—Dekker. 

Patient creature, sitting here. See To a Spider.— 
Whytehead. 

Patrick Flanigan, stand up and plead guilty or not 
guilty. See Pat Flanigan’s Logic.—Anon. 

Patrick O’Flanigan, from Erin’s isle. See Pat O’Flani¬ 
gan’s Colt.—Anon. 

Patrick O’Mars, a private in the Ninth Regulars went 
to the colonel of his regiment. See Two of a 
Kind.—Anon. 

Patriotism is love of country. See Patriotism.—Ire¬ 
land. 

Patriots have toiled, and in their country’s cause. 
See same. —Cowper. 

Patter, patter all day long. See Mothers, watch the 
Little Feet.—Anon. 

Patter, patter, let it pour. See April Shower.— 
Anon. 

Patter! patter! running feet! See Friend or Foe?— 
Weatherly. 

Pattie, have you put the pies to bake? See Grateful.— 
Anon. 

Paul Denton, a Methodist preacher in Texas. See 
Apostrophe to Water (Apostrophe to Cold Water). 
—Gough. 

Paul had never risen from his little bed. See Dom- 
bey and Son (Last Hours of Little Paul Dombey, 
The).—Dickens. 

Paul Louis Courier thus writes to a cousin. See 
Night of Terror, A.—Courier. 

Paul Revere was a rider bold. See Ride of Jennie 
McNeal, The.—Carleton. 

Paul—that’s me! Peter is my father-in-law. See 
Pity the Poor Blind.—Anon. 

Paul Venarez heard them say, in the frontier town 
that [or one] day. See Ride of Paul Venarez, 
The.— Rexf ord. 

Pauline, by pride angels have fallen ere thy time. 
See Lady of Lyons, The (Claude Melnotte to Pau¬ 
line).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Pause for awhile, ye travelers upon the earth. See 
Beauties of Nature.—Moodie. 

Pause not to dream of the future before us. See 
Labor is Worship.—Osgood. 

Pavements a-frying in street and in square. See 
Ninety-eight in the Shade.-—Lincoln. 

“Pax Vobiscum!” Peace be with ye! Hark the In¬ 
dependence bells! See Pax Vobiscum!—Taylor. 

Peace! Be still! See same. —Anon. 

Peace! for my brain is on the rack! See Fisherman’s 
Wife, The.—Cary. 

Peace hath its victories more renowned than war. See 
Father’s Choice, The.—Parsons. 

Peace in the clover scented air. Heart of the War, 
The.—Holland. 


806 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


Piping 


Peace! Let the long procession come. See Abraham 
Lincoln: A Horatian Ode (Burial of Lincoln).— 
Stoddard. 

"Peace on earth and mercy mild.” See Winning and 
Losing.—Craik. 

Peace, peace, peace, do you say? See First News from 
Villafranca.—Browning. 

Peace, Shepherd, peace! What boots it singing on? 
See Genius Loci.—Woods. 

Peace! there is nothing more for men to speak. See 
Misrepresentation.—DeTabley. 

Peace through the mountain and the vale, the night. 
See Avalanche, The.—Anon. 

Peace to all such! but were there one whose fires. See 
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot (Portrait of Addison). 
—Pope. 

Peace to the brave who nobly fell. See Peace.—Adams. 

Peace to the slumberers! See same. —Moore. 

Peace to the virgin heart, the crystal brain! See 
John Henry Newman.—Gosse. 

Peace to Torquato’s injured shade! SeeChilde Harold’s 
Pilgrimage (Tasso).—Byron. 

Peace, troubled heart! the way’s not long before thee. 
See Peace.—Ames. 

Peace! what do tears avail? See same. —Procter. 

Pearls and patches, powder and paint. See Portrait, 
The.—( Southern Collegian:) 

Peeping, peeping, here and there. See Song of the 
Grass Blades.-—Anon. 

Peers to me that clock ticks louder’n common. See 
Slight Misunderstanding, A.—Hall. 

Peggy, Peggy, Come here. See Rose and a Thorn, A.— 
Boyd. 

"Peggy! Peggy!” Who was calling Peggy? See 
Peggy’s Garden, and what Grew Therein.— 
Thaxter. 

,,Penalties!” quarrel not with the old phraseology.— 
See same. —Carlyle. 

Pendent from my chandelier. See German Favors.— 
Clarke. 

Pensive and faltering. See same. —Whitman. 

Pentecost, day of rejoicing, had come. The church of 
the village. See Children of the Lord’s Supper, 
The.—Longfellow. 

People talk of Liberty as if it meant. See True Lib¬ 
erty.—Robertson. 

People’s Attorney, servant of the Right. See Wen¬ 
dell Phillips.—Alcott. 

Perceiv’st thou not the change of day. See Ober- 
mann Once More.—Arnold. 

Perchance you cannot see his face. See Father Christ¬ 
mas.—Gale. 

Perched upon a maple bough. See Bird’s Song in 
April.—Scollard. 

Perfect little body, without fault or stain on thee. 
See On a Dead Child.—Bridges. 

Perhaps it may have been little thought of. See 


See His 


See same. —Stedman. 
how much of God. See 


See Guest, 


same. —Chalmers. 

Perhaps never before in its eventful history. 
Sweetheart’s Song.—Dayton. 

Perhaps one of the prettiest themes for declamation 
ever presented. See On the Greek Question. 
Randolph. 

Perhaps the best collection of blunders. See Letter 
of Blunders, A.—Anon. 

Perhaps there are tenderer, sweeter things. See Lit¬ 
tle Hand, A.—Stanton. 

Perhaps ’twas boyish love. 

Perhaps we do not know 

Phillips Brooks.—Spofford. 

Perhaps you have heard of Jack Frost 
The.—Anon. 

Perhaps you’ll hardly believe it all. See What Grand¬ 
mother Says.—Anon. 

Perish policy and cunning. See same. —Macleod. 

Perkins sat in the chair. When I say that he sat in 
the chair. See Our Debating Club.—Turner. 

Perplexed with deciding. Nee Omen, The.—( n rinkle.) 

Perry’s famous battle on Lake Erie raised the spirits 
of the Americans. See Perry’s Celebrated Vic¬ 
tory on Lake Erie.—Anon. 

Perseverance! Can you spell it? See Hard Word, 
A.—Anon. 

Persimmon was a colored lad. See "Take Good Care 
of Baby.”— (St. Nicholas.) 

Personal glory will be always spoken of as character¬ 
izing. See Character of Napoleon.—Lamar- 

Personal influence is inseparable from the mental and 
moral faculties. See Personal Influence. 
Branch. , 

Persons who patronize papers should pay promptly. 
See Mind Your P’s.—Anon. 


Persuasion, friend, comes not by wit or art. See Elo¬ 
quence that Persuades.—Goethe. 

Perugia holds a picture wrought by one. See Per 
gl’ Oceh’ Almeno non v’e Claiisura.—Pember. 

Pest of the Muses, devourer of pages, in crannies that 
lurkest. See Epigram.—Evenus. 

Pete, you know Mr. Simpson, de head waiter up to 
Slamatoga Springs? See Saratoga Waiter, The. 
—White. 

Peter Adair was a native of Slushington-in-the-Mud. 
See Peter Adair.—Overton. 

Peter Klaus was a goatherd of Sittendorf. See Peter 
Klaus.—Anon. 

Peter was a tip up baggage-man, he ran on Number 
4. See Ye Baggage Smasher.—Anon. 

Peter would ride to the wedding, he would. See 
Peter’s Ride to the Wedding.—Anon. 

Petite moskeetare, your time it have come! See 
Frenchman and the Mosquitoes, The.—Anon. 

Phil Fawcett had written a drama. See Fawcett’s 
Fame.—Rae-Brown. 

Philarete on Willy calls. See Shepherd’s Hunting, 
The.—Wither. 

Philemon Hayes and Fanny Ray had been just three 
weeks married. See Family Jar, A.—Anon. 

Philip and Mary, Philip and Mary! See Queen Mary. 
—Tennyson. 

Philip Ray and Enoch Arden. See Improved "Enoch 
Arden.”—Anon. 

Philippa of Hainault, the Good, Philippa, England’s 
Queen. See Burghers of Calais, The.—Brad- 
dock. 

Phillida was a fair maid. See Harpalus’ Complaint of 
Phillida’s Love Bestowed on Corin.—Howard. 

Phillis, a herd-maid dainty. See Phillis.—Anon. 

Phillis, for shame, let us improve. See Song: ‘‘Phillis, 
for shame,” etc.—Dorset. 

Phillis is my only joy. See Song: “Phillis is my,” etc. 
—Sedley. 

Philonicus, the Thessalian, brought to Philip’s court a 
steed. See Alexander Breaking Bucephalus.— 
Taylor. 

Philosophy consists not in airy schemes, or idle specu- 
tions. See Philosophy.—Thomson. 

Philosophy has sometimes forgotten God, as a great 
people never did. See same. —Bancroft. 

"Phoebe! Phoebe! Phoebe!” the trees were bare and 
the sky was gray. See St. Valentine’s Day.— 
Clark.' 

Phoebe sat, sweet she sat. See Rosalynde; or, Euphues’ 
Golden Legacy (Montanus’ Sonnet, I).—Lodge. 

Phcebus arise, and paint the sable skies. See Phoebus, 
Arise.—Drummond. 

Phyllis and Damon met one day. See Phyllis and 
Damon.—Hopper. 

Phyllis took a red rose from the tangles of her hair. 
See Phyllis and Corydon.— Cotton. 

Piano put away in de garret for to stay. See Ethio- 
piomania.—Tyrrell. 

Pibroch of Donuil Dhu. See same. —Scott. 

Picnics is fun ’at’s purty hard to beat. See In Fer¬ 
vent Praise of Pienics.—Riley. 

Picture to yourselves the joy and expectation of that 
day. See Lessons from the Washington Centen¬ 
nial.—Gordon. 

Pictures on the window. See Frost Pictures.—Anon. 

Piero Luca, known of all the town. See Brother of 
Mercy, The.—Whittier. 

"Pile in the diamonds, Tom, for the run is long.” See 


Engineer’s Last Run, The.—Anon. 

Pilgrim, burdened with thy sin. See Hymn.— 
Crabbe. 

Pillowed on crimson clouds, the golden sun. See 
Corregio.—“Kruna.” 

Pinch him, pinch him black and blue. See Fairy 
Revels.—Lyly. 

Pins are very useful. They have saved the lives of 
many men. See My Composition about Pins.— 
Anon. 

Pip! Pop! flipperty flop! See Song of the Corn Popper, 
The.—Richards. . 

Pipe, little minstrels of the waning year. See Crickets, 
The.—Kimball. 

Pipe, merry Annot. See same. —Udall. 

Piped a tiny voice hard by. See Titmouse, The.— 
Emerson. 

Piped the blackbird on the beechwood spray. See 
Little Bell.—Westwood. 

Piper with the rusty quill. See To a Cricket.—Shep- 
herd. T , 

Pipes of the misty moorlands. See Pipes at Lucknow, 
The.—Whittier. 

Piping down the valleys wild. See Piper, The.—Blake. 


807 





Pitch 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Pitch here the tent, while the old horse grazes. See 
Juggling Jerry.—Meredith. 

Pity now poor Mary Ames. See Mary Ames.—Anon. 

Pity the sorrows of a poor old man. See Beggar’s 
Petition, The.—Moss. 

Place for the queen of song. See Armgart. —Eliot. 

“Place there the boy,” the tyrant said. See William 
Tell.—Baine. 

Placing the little hats all in a row. See Saturday 
Night.—Anon. 

Plague on her ladyship’s ugly cur! See Irishman’s 
Lesson, The.—Oulton. 

Plague take Mr. Paul Pry! See Disagreeable Meddler, 
The.—Poole. 

Plain red-brick walls. See Bell-ringer of ’76, The.— 
Anon. 

Plan not, nor scheme, but calmly wait. See same. — 
Macduff. 

Plant in the springtime the beautiful trees. See Ar¬ 
bor Day.—Anon. 

Plant trees and care for them. See same. —Larra- 
bee. 

Planting the corn and potatoes. See Little Helpers. 
—Anon. 

Play it slowly, sing it lowly. See Old Love Song, The. 
—Gannett. 

Play me a march low-toned and slow, a march for a 
silent tread. See Dead March, A.—Monkhouse. 

Play on! play on! as softly glid s. See At the Piano 
—Anon. 

Play that my knee was a calico mare. See Ride to 
Bumpville, The.—-Field. 

Play that you are mother dear. See At Play.—Field. 

“Play us a tune,” cried the children. See Song with¬ 
out Words, A.—M. E. B. 

Pleasant are Thy courts above. See Psalm LXXXIV. 
—Lyte. 

Pleasant it was, when woods were green. See Voices 
of the Night.—Longfellow. 

Pleasant little Ruth! Cheerful, tidy, bustling, quiet, 
little Ruth. See Martin Chuzzlewit (Ruth Pinch’s 
Housekeeping—and what Came of it).—Dickens. 

Pleasant words never come amiss. See Pleasant 
Words.—A non - 

“P-l-e-a-s-e h-e-l-p a p-o-o-r b-l-i-n-d m-a-n.” See 
Blind Beggar, The.—Davis. 

Please, sir, I have brought you the ticket. See Annie’s 
Ticket.—Anon. 

“Please wear my rosebud, for love, papa.” See Sweet 
Pease.'—Payson. 

Pleased we remember our august abodes. See Gebir 
(Inscription on a Sea Shell).—Landor. 

Pleasing't is, O modest Moon! See To the Harvest 
Moon.—White. 

Pleasures lie thickest where no pleasures seem. See 
Hidden Joys.—Blanchard. 

Pledge of a feather’d pair’s affection. See Stanzas to 
an Egg.—( Punch .) 

“Pledge with wine—pledge with wine.” See Bridal 
Feast, The (Brdal Win’-cup, The).—Long. 

Pluck the fruit and taste the pleasure. See Whilst 
Youthful S 'orts are Lasting.—-Lodge. 

Plunge thy right hand in St. Madron’s spring. See 
Doom-well of St. Madron, The.—Hawker. 

Plunged in night, I sit alone. See Samson.—Scott. 

Po’ little Jude! See Po’ Little Jude.—Hackley. 

Poet and Saint! to thee alone are given. See On the 
Death of Mr. Crashaw.—Cowley. 

Poet beloved, again I come. See Hour with Whittier, 
An.—Holder. 

Poet! I come to touch thy lance with mine. Se= Wa¬ 
pentake.—Longfellow. 

Poet of Nature, thou didst teach to see. See To Words¬ 
worth.—Emerson. 

Poet of the Pulpit, whose full-chorded lyre. See Bar- 
tol.—Alcott. 

“Poet, sit and sing to me.” See Poetic Mystery, The. 
—Anon. 

Poet who sleepest by this wandering wave! See Words¬ 
worth’s Grave.—Watson. 

Poetry, and its twin-sister, Music, are the most sub¬ 
lime and spiritual of arts. See same. —Schaff. 

Poetrv is not imagination, but imagination shaped. 
See Poetry the Language of Symbolism.—Robert¬ 
son. 

Poets are singing the whole world over. See Rus in 
Urbe.—Scott. 

Poets-have well described and artists have vividly 
painted. See Beauties of Nature, The.—Anon. 

Poets, like painters, thus unskilled to trace. See 
Essay on Critic’sm. An.—Pope. 

Poets may be born, but success is made. See Success 
in Life.—Garfield. 


Poets may sing their plaintive wails. See Experience. 
—Anon. 

Poets of old have sung of tea and scandal. See Gossip. 
—Anon. 

Pointer rushes indo mine house de oder day. Pointer’s 
Dyspeptic Goat.-—Von Boyle. 

Poisons, be their drink. See King Henry VI., Pt. 
111.—Shakespeare. 

Politeness is to do and say. See Politeness.—Anon. 

Politeness was born in him, and he couldn’t help it. 
See He Guessed he’d Fight.—Anon. 

Polly! Polly!—Well, ma’am! See Old Heads on 
Young Shoulders.—Boyd. 

Polydamas to dauntless Hector spake. See Iliad, 
The (Hector’s Rebuke to Polydamas).—Home. 

Pompey, I hab jined a ’eiety lately. See Darkey De¬ 
bating Society, The.—White. 

Pomposo, insolent and loud. See Description of John¬ 
son.—Churchill. 

Poor Blanche! no more by Devon-side. See Lady of 
the Lake, The (Combat between Fitz James and 
Roderick Dhu).—Scott. 

Poor creature! nay, I’ll not say poor. See To a Moth. 
—Thomas. 

Poor Cupid froze his wings one day. See Cupid’s 
Blunder.—Jones. 

Poor Deacon Brown, in the prime of life. See Wife¬ 
hunting Deacon, The.—Stuttle. 

Poor Dick, the happiest silly fellow I ever knew. See 
Miser and his Three Sons, The.—Goldsmith. 

Poor Edmund sees poor Britain’s setting sun. See 
Edmund Burke’s Attack on Warren Hastings.— 
Wolcott. 

“Poor fool!” the base and soulless worldling cries. See 
Student, The.—Anon. 

Poor Friar Philip lost his wife. See Friar Philip.—Anon. 

Poor Grandma, I do hate to tell her. See Grandma’s 
Mistake.—Anon. 

Poor little Bessie! She tossed back her curls. See 
Stranger in the Pew, A.—Dodge. 

Poor little boy—only nine years old. See Cartwheels. 
—Elliot. 

Poor little daffy-down-dilly. See Daffy-down-Dilly. 
—-Anon. 

Poor little Johnnie longed to go. See Took Johnnie 
to the Show.—Carleton. 

Poor lone Hannah. See Hannah Binding Shoes.— 
Larcom. 

Poor Matthias! found him lying. See Poor Matthias.— 
Arnold. 

Poor Matthias! Wouldst thou have. See Poor 
Matthias (On the Death of a Favorite Canary).— 
Arnold. 

Poor Mistress Levi had a luckless son. See Jewess 
and her Son, The.—Wolcott. 

Poor naked wretches, whosoe’er you are. See King 
Lear.—Shakespeare. 

Poor Nell, she is in trouble again. See Country or 
City.—-Anon. 

Poor old pilgrim Misery. See Bride’s Tragedy, The 
(Hesperus Sings).—Beddoes. 

Poor papa has a toothache this morning, Edith. See 
Two Dutiful Daughters.—Litchfield. 

Poor Peter Staggs now rests beneath this rail. See 
Epitaph on Peter Staggs.—Pindar. 

Poor prisoned bird, that sings and sings. See Caged. 
—Mason. 

Poor Puss is gone!—’Tis Fate’s decree. See On a Cat 
Killed while Attempting to Rob a Dove-cote.— 
Alwaharwan y. 

Poor rose! I lift you from the street. See Romaunt 
of the Rose, The.—Dobson. 

Poor, sad Humanity. SeeChristus: a Mystery (“Poor, 
sad Humanity”).—Longfellow. 

Poor soul, the center of my sinful earth. See Sonnets, 
CXL V1.—Shakespeare. 

Poor, sweet Piccola! did you hear. See Piccola.— 
Thaxter. 

Poor wither’d rose and dry. See Poor Withered Rose. 
—Bridges. 

“Pop,” said young Philip Gratebar to his father. See 
Dream of a Smart Boy, The.—Anon. 

Pop! went the gray cork flying. See Toast, The.— 
Dallas. 

Poppies red, and nink, and white. See Pussy and the 
Poppies.—( Youth’s Companion.) 

Possibly the reader may have undergone. See Writ¬ 
ten under D fficulties.—Thatcher. 

’Possum mighty nice fer fryin’. See Husking Song.— 
Bellaw 

Posterity admires, and will long admire, the awful re¬ 
mains. See Description of the Amphitheatre of 
Titus.—Gibbon. 


808 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Proud 


Pour out thy love like the rush of a river. See same. I 
Cooke. 

Pour, varlet, pour the water. See Poets at Tea, The 
—Pain. 

Power of thine elbow, thou newest of sciences. See 
Darwinity.—Merivale. 

“Poy Pilly” was the adopted son of Father Zende. 
See His First and Last Drink.—Anon. 

“Praise God from whom all blessings flow.” See Lan¬ 
cashire Doxology, A.—Craik. 

Praise him, Al-Barr, whose goodness is so great. See 
Clemency of Salah-ud-deen, The.—Arnold. 

Praise is devotion fit for mighty minds. SeeGondibert 
(Praise and Prayer).—Davenant. 

Praise me no Csesars, Alexanders, all. See Royal Saint 
The—Blackie. ' 

Praise the Lord, my Christian friends. See Old Method¬ 
ist’s Testimony, The.—Anon. 

Praise they that will times past, I joy to see. See 
This Age Best.—Herrick. 

Praise to God, immortal praise. See Praise to God.— 
Barbauld. 

Praise ye the Lord. Praise the Lord. See Psalms of 
David, CXLVI.— Bible. 

Praise ye the Lord. Praise ye the Lord from the 
Heavens. See Psalms of David, CXLVIII.— 
Bible. 

“Praise ye the Lord!” The psalm to-day. See 
Thanksgiving in Boston Harbor, The.—Butter- 
worth. 

Praised be Diana’s fair and harmless light. See Shep¬ 
herd’s Praise of his Sacred Diana, The.—Anon. 

Pray but one prayer for me ’twixt thy closed lips. 
See Summer Dawn.—Morris. 

Pray for my soul. More things are wrought by prayer. 
See Pray for My Soul.—Tennyson. 

Pray for the dead—who bids thee not? See Pray for 
the Dead.—Eaton. 

Pray, have you seen our Tommy? See Lost Tommy. 
—Dana. 

Pray, how comes Love? See Love.—Anon. 

Pray, how should I, a little lad. See Little Orator, 
The.—Harris. 

Pray listen to my song—I’ll endeavor, if you please. 
See All Mankind are Trees.—Anon. 

“Pray, Mr. Dram-drinker, how do you do?” See 
Drunkard, The.—-Rockwell. 

Pray tell me aright, through the darkness of night. 
See St. Nicholas.—M. J. H. 

Pray tell me, my own dainty darling. See Way they 
Pop in Boston, The.—Anon. 

“Pray tell me where ye’ve been sae lang, guid Nan.” 
See Shall Bess Come Hame?—Brooks. 

“Pray what do they do at the Springs?” See Song of 
Saratoga.—Saxe. 

Pray, where are the little bluebells gone? See About 
the Fairies.—Anon. 

Pray, why do maidens ever stand beneath. See Vin¬ 
dication.—Smith. 

Pray you, wherefore are the village bells. See Wed¬ 
ding, The.—Southey. 

Prayer is the application of want to Him who only can 
relieve it. See same. —More. 

Prayer is the soul’s sincere desire. See same. —Mont¬ 
gomery. 

Preaching may be compared to lightning. See same. 
—Pond. 

Precisely. I see it, You all want to say. See Smiling 
Listener, The.—Anon. 

Prejudged by foes determined not to spare. See Laud. 
—Wordsworth. 

Prejudice is prejudgment. It is forming an opinion 
without examining. See same. —Anon. 

Preparations for war are manifest on our frontiers. 
See To the French People.—-Vergniaud. 

Presentiment is that long shadow on the lawn. See 
Poems. XVI.—Dickinson. 

Presently the pilot said- “By George, yonder comes 
the Amaranth!” See Gilded Age, The (Steam¬ 
boat Race, The).—Clemens. 

Preserve thy sighs, unthrifty girl. See Soldiers Going 
to the Field, The.—-Davenant. 

Press me closer, all mine own. See Pulmonic Passion. 
—Burdette. 

Press on! surmount the rocky steeps. See Press On.— 
—Benjamin. 

Press on! there’s no such word as fail! See Press On. 
—Benjamin. 

Press the grape, and let it pour. See Anacreontique. 
—Moore. 

Presumption, her pavilion spread. See Lady of Vain 
Delight, The.—Fletcher. 

Pretty and sweet, ever so neat. See Inviting.—Brewer. 


‘Pretty birds, pretty birds, what do you play.” See 
Summer Games.—Cooper. 

Pretty little blue-bird, singing in the trees. See Pretty 
Little Blue Bird.—Anon. 

Pretty little maiden. See Discouraging.—Brewer. 
Pretty little violets, waking from your sleep. See 
May.—Anon. 

Pretty maiden passing by. See Sport.—Southwick. 
Pretty? Rather! Her teeth were like pearls, sir. 

•See College Widow, A.—Anon. 

Pretty Robin Redbreast. See Robin Redbreast.— 
Mathers. 

‘‘Pretty warm,” the man with the thin clothes said. 

See All about the Weather.—Anon. 

Pride by presumption bred, when at a height. See 
Pride.—Sterlene. 

“Pride goeth before destruction.” See Decisive Bat¬ 
tle of the Rebellion, The.—Anon. 

Priest of God, unto thee I come. See Absolution.— 
Watson. 

Prime cantante! See My Cat Bird.—Venable. 

Prince, and Bishop, and Knight, and Dame. See 
Wishmaker’s Town (Pawns, The).—Young. 

Prince BaiR of Ulster rode out in the morn. See 
Noble Lay of Aillinn, The.—Brooke. 

Prince Eugene, our noble leader. See Prince Eugene. 
—Hughes. 

Prince Hal is a widow's baby. See Prince Hal.— 
Larcom. 

Prince of the dark abodes! I ween. See Ode to the 
Devil.—Pindar. 

Prince William, of the Brunswick race. See Royal 
Adventurer, The.—Freneau. 

Princes! Potentates! Warriors! See Paradise Lost 
(Satan’s Speech to his Legions).—Milton. 

Princess of pretty pets. See Little Rebel, The.— 
Ashby-Sterry. 

Princesses are they, of a royal line. See Daughters 
of the King, The.—Anon. 

Priscilla hath come back to town. See Priscilla.— 
Peck. 

Priscilla in the garret loft. See Priscilla.—( Yale 
Record.) 

Priscilla is a maid devout. See Lent.—Clarke. 

Prithee, honey-sweet husband, let me bring thee to 
Staines. See King Henry V. (Act II., Scene III.). 
—Shakespeare. 

Prithee, tell me, Dimple-chin. See Toujours Amour.— 
Stedman. 

Prize thou the nightingale. See Nightingale, The.— 
Visscher. 

Probably no man since the days of Washington. See 
Religious Character of President Lincoln, The.— 
Gurley. 

Probably there is not the remotest corner. See Bene¬ 
fits of Laughter.—Anon. 

Prodiggus reptile! long and skaly kuss. See Some 
Verses to Snaix.—Anon. 

Profaneness is a low grovelling vice. See same. — 
Chapin. 

Professor Artichoke Huggins recently delivered his 
celebrated lecture. See “Am Life Wuf de Lib- 
in. ”—<Detroit Free Press.) 

Profe-sor coming, John? See Elocution Class, The.— 
Graham. 

Professor, hab you got a cousin? See Our Cousins.— 
White. 

Professors, in your plan there seems. See On the 
Windows of King’s College Remaining Boarded.— 
Barham. 

Progress has its deepest root in history. See Hebraism 
and Culture.—Anon. 

Progress! progress! all things cry. See Progress.— 
Michell. 

Prohibition is a grand and glorious fact. See Prohi¬ 
bition the True Anti-poverty Party.—Demorest. 
Prop yer eyes wide open, Joey. See Poor Little Joe.— 
Proudfit. 

Prope ripani fluvii solus. See Malum Opus.—Morgan. 
Prophet, whose straining eyes. See Sixty-second 
Birthday of Swinburne, The.—Russell. 

Propt on the marsh, a dwelling now I see. See Biglow 
Paoers, The (Schoolhouse, The).—Lowell. 
Proserpine may pull her flowers. See Song of the 
Stygian Naiades.—Beddoes. 

Protect us through the coming night. See Protect Us 
through the Coming Night.—Anon. 

Proud and lowly, beggar and lord. See London Bridge. 
•—Weatherly. 

Proud, languid lily of the sacred Nile. See Egyptian 
Lotus. The.—Eaton. 

Proud Mairie is in the wood. See Heart of Midlothian, 
The (Proud Maisie).-—Scott. 

809 





Proud 


AX INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Proud of you, fond of you, clinging so near to you. 
See My Owen.—Downing. 

Proud Winter cometh like a warrior bold! See Proud 
Winter Cometh.—Shurtleff. 

Proud word you never spoke, but you will speak. See 
Proud Word you never Spoke.—Landor. 

Prune thou thy words; the thoughts control. See 
Flowers without Fruit.—Newman. 

Prythee, Willy! tell me this. See Shepherd’s Hunting, 
The.—Wither. 

Pshaw! away with leaf and berry. See To Charles 
Dickens.—Hood. 

Public life has been in all free states the highest and 
noblest of ambitions. See Scholar in Public life. 
The.—Depew. 

Public Notice.—This is to state. See Lilliput Notice. 
—Rands. 

Public opinion employs no officers, yet it follows and 
captures men. See same. —Murray. 

Public opinion is the collective judgment of men. See 
same. —Murray. 

Puer ex Jersey. See same. —Anon. 

“Pufessor, I’s bout come to de conclusion dat you’s 
triflin’ wid me. ” See He Had Changed his Mind. 
—Anon. 

Puffed up with luring to her knees. See Flute, The.— 
Taylor. 

Pulling the weeds from the garden. See Farm Boys’ 
Song, The.—Rook. 

Punctuality! punctuality! this must be inquired into. 
See Little Gradgrinds, The.—Broome. 

Pupil and master together. See Gold Locks and Silver 
Locks.—Thaxter. 

Pure and true and tender. See same. —H. 

Pure stream, in whose transparent wave. See To 
Leven Water.—Smollett. 

Purple waves of evening play upon the western shores 
of day. See Off for Slumber-land.—Anon. 

Purty big place—this country—to ever be laid on the 
shelf. See This Old Country.—Stanton. 

“Purty night, ain’t it. Tillie?” See At a Rural Gate. 
—Anon. 

Pushing the clods of earth a. ide. See Ivy, The.— 
Burton. 

Pussy-cat lives in the servants’ hall. See Pussy-cat. 
—“Aunt Effie.” 

Pussy Clover’s running wild. See Pussy Clover.— 
Larcom. 

Pussy-willow had a secret that the snowdrops whispered 
her. See Open Secret, An.—Anon. 

Put a ’velop on it, and write his name. See Letter to 
Santa Claus, A.—Stoddard. 

Put away the little coal-hod that our darling wants to 
paint. See Decorative Mania, The.—( Chicago 
Rambler.) 

Put every tiny robe away! See In Vain.—Cooke. 

Put flowers in your window, friend. See Put Flowers 
in your Window.—Anon. 

Put forth thy leaf, thou lofty plane. See In a London 
Square.—Clough. 

Put off, put off, your mail, O kings. See Dawn of 
Peace, The.—Ruskin. 

Put out the light, and then—put out the light. See 
Othello, the Moor of Venice.—Shakespeare. 

Put the broidery-frame away. See Bertha in the 
Lane.—Browning. 

Put them in print? See Posthumous.—Beers. 

“Put to the door—the school’s begun.”—See Country 
School. The.—Anon. 

Put your head, darling, darling, darling. See Cean 
Dubb Deelish.—Ferguson. 

Putting up a stove is not so difficult in itself. See 
Struggle with a Stove-pipe, A.—Gailey. 

Pwist! here, Rover; we must be going. See Empty 
Pocket, The.—Lummis. 

Py shiminy! dot vos de kind of dings for me. See 
“Dot Quied Lotgings.”—McDermott andTrumble. 

Pygmalion!—Who called? See Pygmalion and Gal¬ 
atea.—Gilbert. 

Pygmies are pygmies still, though perched on Alps. 
See Night Thoughts.—Young. 


Q 

Quack, quack, quack! See Dumpy Ducky.—Larcom 
“Quack!” said the duck, “quack! quack!” See 
Quarrel. A .—(Little Folks.) 

"Quarter to [or of] nine! Boys and girls, do you hear?” 

See Before and After School.—Anon. 

Quebec, the grey old city on the hill. See At Quebec. 
—Blewett. 


Queen and huntress, chaste and fair. See Cynthia’s 
Revels (Hymn to Diana).—Jonson. 

Queen Bonduca, I do not grieve your fortune. See 
Bonduca.—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Queen Elizabeth is dead. See Queen Elizabeth.—Anon. 

Queen Guinevere had fled the court, and sat. See 
Idylls of the King (Guinevere).—Tennyson. 

Queen Jane, O! Queen Jane, O. See Death of Queen 
Jane, The.—Anon. 

Queen of fragrance, lovely Rose. See Rosebud, The. 
—Broome. 

Queen of my tub, I merrily sing. See Little Women 
(Song from the Suds, A).—Alcott. 

Queen of the lute and lay! whose song of yore. See 
Mrs. Hemans.—Hallock. 

Queen of the silver bow, by thy pale beam. See same. 
—Smith. 

Queen of wondrous beauty! it’s no marvel that kings 
and princes. See Beauty of Face and Beauty of 
Soul.—Thornton. 

Queen rose of the rosebud garden of girls. See Maud. 
—Tennyson. 

Queer cattle is women to deal udth ? Lord bless ye, yer 
honor, they are! See Moll Jarvis O’Morley.— 
Sims. 

Questioned in trust and honor, I could speak. See 
Scipio to the Senate.—Wasson. 

Quhen Flora had o’erfret the firth. . See When Flora 
had O’erfret the Firth.—Anon. 

Quhen Merche wes with variand windis past. See 
Thistle and the Rose, The (Thrissill and the Rois, 
The).—Dunbar. 

Quhy dois zour brand sae drop wi’ bluid. See Edward, 
Edward.—Anon. 

Qui nunc dancere vult modo. See Polka Lyric, A.— 
Philips [or Becket]. 

Quick gleam that ridest on the gossamer! See To the 
Gossamer-light.—T urner. 

Quick! man the life-boat! See yon bark. See Life¬ 
boat, The.—Anon. 

Quiet as are the quiet skies. See Smiling Demon of 
Notre Dame, A.—Jewett. 

Quietly, like a child. See Sheridan.—Gilder. 

Quite^ by themselves, a knot of violets blue. See 
Nellie’s Decorations.—Davis. 

Quite spent and out of breath he reached the tree. 
See Rhoecus.—Lowell. 

Quivering fears, heart-tearing cares. See Verses in 
Praise of Angling.—Wotton. 

Quompegan is a town some ten miles south from 
Jethro. See Uncle Reuben’s Tale.— (Atlantic 
Monthly.) 

Quoth he; “Sweetheart, thou art young and fair.” 
See “For Better, for Worse.”—Fowler. 

Quoth the boy, “I’ll climb that tree.” See Bird’s-eye 
View, A.—Anon. 

Quoth tongue of neither maid nor wife. See Philip 
van Artevelde (Elena’s Song).—Taylor. 


R 

Rabbi Ben Levi, on the Sabbath, read. See Legend 
of Rabbi Ben Levi, The.—Longfellow. 

Rabia, sick upon her bed. See Rabia.—Clarke. 

Rachel, the beautiful (as she was called). See Joseph 
and his Brethren (Rachel).—Wells. 

Radiant month of beauty. See Month of Apple Blos¬ 
som.—Anon. 

Ragged? So ragged a dog would sniff. See Outcast, 
The.—Anon. 

“Rain, rain, go away.” See Rain.—Deland. 

Rain! rain, rain! I wish it would stop and not rain 
for a year. See Rain Fairy, The.—-Anon. 

Rainbow-hued, ragged, wild, and terrible. See Point 
Sublime, Colorado Canon.—Nesmith. 

Raise a song of gladness on this festal day. See Arbor 
Day Ode.—Harlow. 

Raise me up gently—there! See Death of an Inebriate. 
—Anon. 

Raise my pillow, husband dearest. See I am Dying.— 
Anon. 

Raise the Cromlech high! See Lament of Maev 
Leith-Dherg, The.—Rolleston. 

Raise thy majestic voice, thou grand old singer, Atlan¬ 
tic! See Columbus.—Davis. 

Raise thy tender eyes to mine. See Dancing the Min¬ 
uet.—Hamilton. 

Raised on a little carven corner-shelf. See Bristol 
Figure, A.—Monkhouse. 

Rake the embers, blow the coals. See King is Cold, 
The.—Browning. 


810 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Righd 


Rally round the flag, boys. See Stars and Stripes, 
The.—Fields. 

Rambling along the marshes. See Flight of the Wild 
Geese.—Channing. 

“Randy,” said Uncle Mose. See Little Efrum’s Ride. 
—Oriel. 

“Rap! rap! rap! how the shingles clap. See Playing 
Carpenter.—Anon. 

Rare voice, the last from vernal Hellas sent. See 
Keats.—Brodie. 

Rarely, rarely, comest thou. See same. —Shelley. 

Raschi, of Troyes, the Moon of Israel. See Raschi in 
* Prague.—Lazarus. 

Rashly, and praised be rashness for it. See Hamlet 
(Guidance).—Shakespeare. 

Ravish my beauty, O mind, O breeze. See Jealous 
Rose, The.—Anon. 

Read boldly, and unprejudiced peruse. See Taste, 
an Epistle to a Young Critic.—Armstrong. 

Read in these roses the sad story. See Red and White 
Roses.—Carew. 

Read me no moral, priest, upon my life. See Con¬ 
demned, The.—Howland. 

Read me no more—leave me, for pity’s sake. See 
Avenged!—Berlyn. 

“Read out the names!” and Burke sat back. See 
Fighting Race, The.—Clarke. 

Read this declaration at the head of the army. See 
Independence.—Webster. 

“Read us a psalm, my little one.” See Morning 
Psalm, The.—-Famingham. 

Reader, stay; and if I had no more to say. See Epi¬ 
taph on Master Philip Gray, An.—Jonson. 

Rear high thy bleak majestic hills. See On the Death 
of Burns.—Roscoe. 

Reason off duty, nerves all unstrung. See Reason off 
Duty.—Loomis. 

Reason thus with life. See Life and Death.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Rebecca Jane Fermosie Lee. See McSwinger’s Fate.— 
Anon. 

Rebellion! foul, dishonoring word. See Lalla Rookh 
(Rebellion).—Moore. 

Recall the quaint and homely city of Philadelphia. 
See Declaration of Independence, The.—Long. 

Recall to your recollection the free nations which have 
gone before us. See Military Supremacy Danger¬ 
ous to Liberty.—Clay. 

Recently a couple of miners were seated on a boulder. 
See Gentle Mule, The.—Anon. 

Recently our church has had a new minister. See 
Big Mistake, A.—Anon. 

“Reck’n dey ain’t no hope.” See Loyal to a Trust.— 
Whitney. 

Red on the morn’s rim rose the sun. See De Quincey’s 
Deed.—Green. 

Red Riding-Hood! Red Riding-Hood, I say! See 
Little Red Riding-Hood; or. The Wicked Wolf and 
the Virtuous Woodcutter.—Hood. 

Red-top and Timothy. See same. —Larcom. 

Reflected in the lake, I love. See same. —Townshend. 

Reflecting on the origin of this war. See Galgacus to 
the Caledonians.—Tacitus. 

Regent of song! who bringest to our shore. See To 
Rosina Pico.—Lord. 

Reign on, majestic Ville Marie! See Montreal.— 
Lighthall. 

Rejoice, ye men of Angiers, ring your bells. See Her¬ 
ald’s Call, The.—Anon. 

Released from her fetters, all nature rejoices. See 
Song of Consecration.—Holbrook. 

Relentless misfortune pursued the exiles wherever they 
fled. See History of the United States (Acadian 
Exiles, The).—Bancroft. 

Religious, punctual, frugal, and so forth. See Moral 
Essays (Epistle III.).—Pope. 

Reluctantly I laid aside my smiles. See Journey, The. 
—Hansbrough. 

Remain, ah not in youth alone! See Remain!—Landor. 

Remember, Dennis, all I bade you say. See Irish 
Widow to her Son, The.—Forrester. 

“Remember me,” the Savior said. See Communion 
Hymn.—Frothingham. 

Remember me when I am gone away. See Remem¬ 
ber.—Rossetti. 

Remember, my son, you have to work. See Advice to 
a Young Man.—Burdette. 

Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth. 
See Remember now Thy Creator.— Bible. 

Remember, remember. See Oxfordshire Guy Fawkes 
Song.—Anon. 

Remember, though box in the plural makes boxes. See 
Remember.—Anon. 


Remember three things come not back. See They 
Come not Back.—Anon. 

Remember us poor Mayers all 1 See Hitchen May-day 
Song, The.—Anon. 

Remembering his taste for blood. See Of Baiting the 
Lion.—Seaman. 

Remote, unfriended, melancholy, slow. See Travel¬ 
ler, The.—Goldsmith. 

Remote, upon the sunset shrine. See Lonely Pine, 
The.—Lockhart. 

Remove yon skull from out the scatter’d heaps. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Skull, The).-—Byron. 

Repent, O ye, predestinate to woe! See Wishmak- 
ers| Town (Conscience-keeper, The).—Young. 

Republican institutions have been vindicated. See 
Abraham Lincoln (Death of Lincoln, The).— 
Beecher. 

Respected Wife: From these few lines my where¬ 
abouts thee’ll learn. See Words and Their Uses. 
—Olive. 

Rest here, at last. See At Last.—Marston. 

Rest! how sweet the sound! See Vision of Future 
Bliss, A.—Baxter. 

Rest in the grave! but rest is for the weary. See Rest 
in the Grave.—( Temple Bar.) 

Rest is not quitting the busy career. See Rest.— 
Goethe. 

Rest shall come to all. See Man after All.—Anon. 

Rest there awhile, my bearded lance. See Tale of 
Drury Lane, A.—Smith. 

Rest! This little Fountain runs. See Inscription for a 
F ountain.—Procter. 

Rest ye—set down the bier. See Funeral Custom in 
Egypt.—Anon. 

Restless forms of living light. See Address to Certain 
Goldfishes.—Coleridge. 

Restless, to-night, and ill at ease. See In the Dark.— 
Bushnell. 

Return, return! all night my lamp is burning. See 
Return!—Dobell. 

Revered, beloved—O you that hold. See To the Queen. 
—Tennyson. 

Reverend sir: I received your obliging favor. See 
Letter to the Rev. Dr. Lathrop, Boston.—Frank¬ 
lin. 

Revolving deeply as he went. See Ape and the Think¬ 
er, The.—Wister. 

Rhaicos was born amid the hills wherefrom. See 
Hamadryad, The.—Landor. 

Rhinoceros, your hide looks all undone. See Ode to a 
Rhinoceros.—Belloc. 

Rhodora! if the sages ask thee why. See Rhodora, 
The.—Emerson. 

Rhyme the rudder is of verses. See Distichs and Saws. 
—Butler. 

Rhymers and writers of our day. See Sir Walter Scott. 
—Gilder. 

Rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief. See Magic 
Buttons.—Dowd. 

Rich Mr. Dombey sat in the corner. See Dombey and 
Son (Birth of Little Paul, The).—Dickens. 

Richard is a cruel boy. See Cruel Boy, The.—Turner. 

Richard jumped into his boat, and pulled down the 
tide. See Ferdinand and Miranda.—Meredith. 

Richard surveyed the Nubian in silence as he stood 
before him. See Talisman, The (Nubian, The).— 
Scott. 

Richard Swiveller being often left alone, began to 
find the time hang heavy. See Old Curiosity 
Shop (Dick Swiveller and the Marchioness). 
—Dickens. 

Richard, the lion-hearted. See Matins at St. Mary’s. 
—Proctor. 

Riches I hold in light esteem. See Old Stoic, The.— 
Bronte. 

Rid of the world’s injustice and his pain. See Grave 
of Keats. The.—Wilde. 

Ride on, ride on in majesty! See Christ Crucified.— 
Milman. 

Ridiculous to some may seem. See South Carolina 
Bourbon, A.—Snowden. 

Riding out of town a few days since. See “Woodman, 
Spare that Tree. ” History of the Poem.—Anon. 

“Rien,” he wrote, because it chanced that day. See 
King’s Diary, The.—Chadwick. 

Rienzi,- the Roman Senator. See Rienzi (Last of the 
Roman Tribunes, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

“Rifleman, shoot me a fancy shot.” See Civil War.— 
Shanly. 

Righ Shemus he has gone to France, and left his crown 
behind. See Irish Rapparees, The.—Duffy. 

Righd from der front one putiful day. See Schlosser’s 
Ride.—Anon. 


811 




Right 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Right and wrong, justice and crime. See Patriotism 
(True Patriotism is Unselfish).—Curtis. 

Right into our house one day. See Little Angel, The. 
—Prentiss. 

Right on our flank the crimson sun went down. See 
Loss of the ‘ Birkenhead,’ The.—-Doyle. 

Right stout and strong the worthy burghers stood. 
See How it once Was. —(New York Sun.) 

Rightwisenes chastised al robbours. See Description 
of the Golden Age.—Lydgate. 

Ring, bells, from every lofty height! See New Year, 
The.—Fuller. 

Ring, bells of Freedom, from your brazen throats! 
See Soldiers’ Re-union.—Bennett. 

Ring, Christmas bells, ring, merrily, ring. See Christ¬ 
mas Bells.—Rook. 

Ring from the rim of the glass, boys. See same. — 
Anthony. 

Ring, happy bells of Easter time! See Ring, Happy 
Bells.—Larcom. 

Ring, joyous chords!—ring out again! See Revellers, 
The.—Hemans. 

Ring, New-Year bells, ring loud and clear. See Ring 
out the Old.—Anon. 

Ring out, glad bells, your merry chime. See Indepen¬ 
dence Day, 1776.—Anon. 

Ring out merrily . See Old Church Bells.-—Anon. 

Ring out, O bells! ring silver-sweet o’er hill and 
moor and fell! See On the Threshold.—Bald¬ 
win. 

Ring out, oh gladsome Easter bells. See Easter Bells. 
—;Lo water. 

Ring out, ring out, ye Christmas bells! See Christmas 
Bells.—Brine. 

Ring out the joy bells! Once again. See Nation’s 
Birthday, The.—-Vandyne. 

“ Ring out, wild bells, ” the radiant moon. Nee Ring 
out. Wild Bells.—Hughes. 

Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky. See In Memo- 
iam (Ring out, Wild Bells).—Tennyson. 

Ring out, ye crystal spheres. See On the Morning of 
Christ’s Nativity (Hymn, The).—-Milton. 

Ring out your bells, let mourning shows [or shews] be 
spread. See Sidera (Dirge, A).—Sidney. 

Ring, silver bells of memory, ring. See Memorial 
Day Poem.—Bennett. 

Ring, sing! ring, sing! pleasant Sabbath bells! See 
Green Gnome, The.—Buchanan. 

Ring soft across the dying day. See Angelus, The.— 
Mace. 

Ring the bells, nor ring them slowly. See Cedar Moun¬ 
tain.—Fields. 

Ringed about with the flame and smoke of rebel bat¬ 
teries. See Our Flag.—Stone. 

Ringleted youth of my love. See same. —Hyde. 

Ring-ting! I wish I were a Primrose. See Wishing. 
—Allingham. 

Ripple, ripple, ripple. See Brook, The.—Lee. 

Rippling through thy branches goes the sunshine. See 
Birch Tree, The.—Lowell. 

Rise after rise bow the phantoms behind me. See 
Song of Myself. The.—Whitman. 

Rise!—-for the day is passing. See same. —Procter. 

Rise, heart! thy Lord is risen. Sing His praise. See 
Easter.—Herbert. 

Rise, honest Muse! and sing the Man of Ross. See 
Moral Essays (Man of Ross, The).—Pope. 

Rise! man the wall! Our clarion blast. See Hymn of 
the Alamo.—Potter. 

Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings. See same. — 
Seagrave. 

“Rise,” said the Master, “come unto the feast.” See 
same. —Alford. 

Rise! Sleep no more! ’Tis a noble morn. See Hun¬ 
ter’s Song, The.—Procter. 

Rise up, my song! stretch forth thy wings and fly. 
See Greeting, A.—Marston. 

“Rise up, rise up, now, Lord Douglas,” she says. See 
Douglas Tragedy, The.—Anon. 

“Rise up, rise up, Xarifa! lav the golden cushion down. 
See Bridal of Andalla, The.—Lockhart. 

Rising in the pine forests of the North. See Opening 
of the Mississippi in 1862, The.—Lewis. 

River of billows, to whose mighty heart. See Shannon, 
The.—De Vere. 

River! river! little river! See River, The.—Southey. 

River! that in silence windest. See To the Silent 
River.—Longfellow. 

Rivermouth Rocks are fair to see. See Wreck 
of Rivermouth, The (Rivermouth Rocks).— 
Whittier. 

Rob is the nicest baby. See Taking Care of him 
Nights.—Anon. 


Robene sat on gud greene hill. See Robin and 
Makyne.—Henryson. 

Robert Browning can hardly remember a time. See 
Browning’s First Manuscript.—Gosse. 

Robert of Lincoln is going away. See Birds’ Depart¬ 
ure, The.—Anon. 

Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane. See King 
Robert of Sicily.—Longfellow. 

Robert, the Bruce, in his dungeon stood. See Per¬ 
severe.—-Brougham. 

Robin and Joe, and Ruth and Ann. See Four Musi¬ 
cians, The.—Kavanaugh. _ . 

Robin comes with early spring. See Robin or I?— 
Sprague. 

Robin, have you seen the cat? See Little Boy’s Argu¬ 
ment, A.—Anon. 

Robin, holding his mother’s hand. See How an Angel 
Looks.—Anon. 

Robin rashly kissed my hand. See He Understood.— 
Culbertson. 

Robin sat on gude green hill. See Robin and Makyne. 
—Henryson. 

Robin the Miller, he kept a mill. See Happy Miller, 
The.—Hood. 

Robins in the tree-top. See Marjorie’s Almanac.— 
Aldrich. 

Robinson Crusoe went to sea. See Robinson Crusoe in 
Verse.—Brown. 

Rock of Ages, cleft for me. See Bible Reading on “Rock 
of Ages,” A.—Jones. 

“Rock of Ages, cleft for me.” See How a Song Saved 
a Soul.—Stanton. 

Rock of Ages, cleft for me. See Rock of Ages.—Top- 
lady. 

“Rock of ages, cleft for me.” Thoughtlessly the 
maiden sung. See “Rock of Ages.”—Moore. 

Rock-a-by, baby, on the tree-top. See Little Mothers, 
The.—Floyd. 

Rock-a-bye, baby, on the tree top. See same .— 
Anon. 

Rockaby, baby, the days will grow long. See Rockaby. 
—Anon. 

Rockaby, baby, thy cradle is green. See Lullaby: 
“ Rockabv, baby,” etc.—Anon. 

“Rock-a-by, baby, up in the tree-top!” See In the 
Tree Top.—Larcom. 

Rockaby, lullaby, bees on ft nr. in] the clover! See 
Mistress of the Manse, The (Lullaby).—Holland. 

Rocked in the cradle of the deep. See same. —Wil¬ 
lard. 

Rocks of my country, let the cloud. See Rocks of My 
Country.—Hemans. 

Roget, droop not, see, the spring. See Shepherd’s 
Pipe, The (Invitation, An).—Browne. 

Roguish, laughing, saucy eyes. See Twin Jewels.— 
Anon. 

Roland feeleth his death is near. See Song of Roland, 
The (Death of Roland, The).—O’Hagan. 

Roll a river wide and strong. See Flag, The.—M. W. 
S. 

Roll back the tide of eighteen hundred years. See 
Pompeii.—Anon. 

Roll forth, my song, like the rushing river. See 
Nameless One, The.—Mangan. 

Roll on, and with thy rolling crust. See One in the 
Infinite.—Savage-Armstrong. 

Roll on, thou ball, roll on! See To the Terrestrial 
Globe.—Gilbert. 

Roll on, thou deep and dark blue Ocean, roll! See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Apostrophe to the 
Ocean).—Byron. 

Roll on, thou Sun, forever roll. See Roll On.—Anon. 

Roll out, O song to God. See Roll out, O Song.— 
Sewell. 

Roll, roll, roll on, O dark blue sea! See Love and the 
Sea.—Gregg. 

Rolland now feels his death is drawing nigh. See 
Song of Roland,The (Roland’s Death).—Rabillon. 

Rollicking Robin is here again. See Sir Robin.—Lar¬ 
com. 

Rolling and pitching. Not hungry as usual. See 
Diary of a Sea Voyage.—Anon. 

Rolling up to the hillside. See Pickett’s Charge at Get¬ 
tysburg. —(Chicago Ledger.) 

Roman and Jew upon one level lie. See In Galilee.— 
Butts. 

Roman Virgil, thou that singest. See To Virgil.— 
Tennyson. 

Romancer, far more coy than that coy sex! See 
Hawthorne.—Alcott. 

Romans, countrymen and lovers! Hear me for my 
cause. See Julius Caesar (Brutus on the Death of 
Caesar).—Shakespeare. 


812 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Safe 


Romans! look round you—on this sacred place. See 
Rienzi to the Roman Conspirators in 1347.— 
Moore. 

Romans, the blood which hath been shed this day. 
See Brutus; or. The Fall of Tarquin (Roman 
Father, The).—Payne. 

Rome and Carthage!—Behold them drawing near 
for the struggle. See Rome and Carthage.— 
Hugo. 

Rome, Florence, Venice—noble, fair and quaint. See 
My Native Land.—Lighthall. 

Rome had its Caesar, great and brave; but stain was on 
his wreath. See Washington.—Cook. 

Rome shook with tyrannies. A bloated face. See 
Tears of Tullia, The.—Fawcett. 

“Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?’’ See 
Shakespearean Perversion, A.—Anon. 

Romola was waked by a tap at the door. See Romola 
(Romola’s Flight).—Eliot. 

Room after room. See Love in a Life.—Browning. 

Room for a soldier! lay him in the clover. See Dirge 
for One Who Fell in Battle.—Parsons. 

“Room for the leper! Room! And as he came. See 
Leper, The.—Willis. 

Room, my lords, room. See Richelieu; or, The Con- 
spi acy (Scene from “Richelieu”).—Bulwer- 
Lytton. 

"Room there! stand back!—give way. See Last 
Days of Pompeii (Destruction of Pompeii, The).— 
Bulwer-Lytton. 

Rorate coeli desuper! See On the Nativity of Christ.— 
Dunbar. 

Rosanna Brent an’ me got to be good friends. See 
Surly Tim’s Trouble.—Burnett. 

Rose dreamed she was a lily. See What they Dreamed 
and Said.—M. E. 

Rose kissed me to-day. See Rose at it Again.—Fol- 
lansbee. 

Rose kissed me to-day. See Rose-leaves (‘‘Rose 
kissed.” etc.).—Dobson. 

Rose o’ the World, she came to my bed. See Dark 
Man, The.—Hopper 

Rose! thou art the sweetest flower. See Rose, The.— 
Anacreon. 

Rose! what dost thou here. See Song of the Rose, A.— 
Hemans. 

Rose who do you think will call first? See New Year 
Calls.—Denison. 

Rose-cheeked Laura, come. See Rose-cheeked Laura. 
—Campion. 

Roses and butterflies snared on the fan. See Painted 
Fan, A.—Moulton. 

Roses at first were white. See How Roses Came Red. 
—Herrick. 

Roses fill the air with fragrance, in the month of balmy 
June. See Jacqueminot Rose Sunday, A.— 
Banks. 

Roses in breathing forth their scent. See Celia Sing¬ 
ing.—Stanley. 

Roses, their sharp spines being gone. See Two Noble 
Kinsmen, The (Bridal Song, A).—Shakespeare 
and Fletcher. 

Rosina of Liliengarten it was, indeed—such a full 
blown Rosina I have seldom seen. See Princess’s 
Tragedy, A.—Thackeray. 

Rough and ready the troopers ride. See Baby’s Kiss, 
The.—Emerson. 

Rough pasture where the blackberries grow! See 
Pasture, A.—Knowles. 

Rough wind, that moanest loud. See Dirge, A.— 
Shelley. 

Round about in a fairy ring-a. See Elves’ Dance, 
The.—Anon. 

Round among the quiet graves. See Love’s Resurrec¬ 
tion Day.—Moulton. 

Round de meadows am a-ringing. See Massa’s in de 
Cold Ground.—Foster. 

Round my own pretty rose I have hovered all day. 
See Nightingale’s Song, The.—Bayly. 

Round Quebec’s embattled walls. See Montgomery 
at Quebec.—Scollard. 

Round the cape of a sudden came the sea. See Parting 
at Morning.—Browning. 

Round the green play-ground the dear children stand. 
Nee “Plant the Trees, Children.”—-Anon. 

Round their flag, on the bank of a railway, the regi¬ 
ment stood.—See French Ensign, The. Daudet. 

Round-a, round-a, keep your ring. See Satyrs’ Dance, 
The.—Anon. 

Rout and defeat on every hand. See Contrast. Kim- 
balh „ _ , 

Row me o’er the strait, Douglas Gordon. See Douglas 
Gordon.—Weatherly. 


“Row me out to the sunset—row me, fisher-boy Ben.” 
See Into the Sunset.—Anon. 

Row us out from Desenzano, to your Sirmione row! 
See Frater Ave atque Vale.—Tennyson. 

Row-diddy, dow de, my little sis. See Grampy Sings 
a Song.—Day. 

Royal and Saintly Cashel! I would gaze. See Rock 
of Cashel, The.—De Vere. 

Royal Egypt! Empress. Nee Antony and Cleopatra 
(Cleopatra’s Resolution).—Shakespeare. 

Rudolph, professor of the headsman’s trade. See 
Autocrat of the Breakfast-table. The (Rudolph the 
Headsman).—Holmes. 

Rudolph Swackhamer gave a ball. See Swackhamer’s 
Ball.—Anon. 

Rugged wanderers out in the cold. See Chrysanthe¬ 
mums.—Elliot. 

Ruggles & Co., 29 Bond Street; Messrs. Nicholas Rug- 
gles & Co. See Ruggles & Co.—Wayne. 

Ruin and death held sway. See In Apia Bay.—Rob¬ 
erts. 

“Ruin seize thee, ruthless King!” See Bard, The.— 
Gray. 

Rum, we yield not to thy unhallowed influence. See 
Water and Rum.—Gough. 

Rumble thy belly-full! Spit, fire! Spout, rain! See 
King Lear.—Shakespeare. 

Rumbling and rolling, and rocking, the battle swept 
up from the valley. Sec Chickamauga.—Anon. 

Run. little rivulet, run! See Rivulet, The.—Larcom. 

Run? Now you bet you; I rather guess so. See Kit 
Carson’s Ride.—Miller. 

Run, shepherds, run where Bethlehem blest appears. 
See Angels, The.—Drummond. 

Run up our flag in the breeze. See Flag Day.—Banks. 

Runs the wind along the waste. See Were-wolf.— 
Hawthorne. 

Rustic mirth goes round. See Seasons, The.—Thomson. 

Rustily creak the crickets; Jack Frost'came down last 
night. See Jack Frost.—Thaxter. 

Rustling billows of silk ’neath the foam of old lace. 
See Society Martyr, A.—Anthony. 

Rusty and dusty, long out of date. See Old Fire-dog, 
The.—Frost. 

Ruth’s mamma sang out: “Ruthie! Ruthie! Ru—th—i 
—e!” Called her thrice. See Ruthie’s Faith in 
Prayer.—Anon. 


S stands for Sabbath—day of rest. See Sunday-school 
Acrostic—Rook. 

Sabrina fair, listen where thou art sitting. See 
Comus (Sabrina Fair).—Milton. 

Sachems, chiefs, and warriors! Metamora has told 
his brothers of the many aggressions. See Meta¬ 
mora to his Warriors.—Anon. 

Sad are they who know not love. See Two Songs from 
the Persian, II.—Aldrich. 

Sad are the words that men have spoken. See Un¬ 
spoken.—Anon. 

Sad happy race! Soon raised and soon depressed. See 
Borough, The (Strolling Players).—Crabbe. 

Sad is my lot; among the shining spheres. See Earth. 
—Roscoe. 

Sad is our youth, for it is ever going. See Human 
Life.—De Vere. 

Sad is yonder blackbird’s song. See Ruined Nest, 
The.—Sigerson. 

Sad Mayflower! watched by winter stars. See May¬ 
flowers, The.—Whittier. 

Sad souls, that harbor fears and woes. See Exchange, 
The.—Palfrey. 

“Saddle and mount and away!”—loud the bugles in 
Durban are pealing. See In Matabele Land.— 
Baylis. 

Sad-hearted, be at peace! the snow-drop lies. See O 
Thou of Little Faith.—MacDonald. 

Sadly as some old mediaeval knight. See My Books.— 
Longfellow. 

Sadly the dead leaves rustle in the whistling wind. See 
Church of a Dream, The.—Johnson. 

Safe at anchor in Drontheim Bay. See Crew of the 
Long Serpent, The.—Longfellow. 

Safe ’neath the violets. See Beneath the Violets.— 
Higginson. 

Safe stands our simple shed, despised our little store. 
Nee Jerusalem Delivered (Shepherd’s Song, The). 

Safe to the fold the shepherd leads. See At Mother’s 
Knee.—Anon. 


813 




Safe 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Safe where I cannot die yet. See Is it Well with the 
Child?—Rossetti. 

Said a little wandering maiden. See Bee’s Wisdom, 
The.—Anon. 

Said an ancient hermit, bending. See Olive Tree, The. 
—Baring-Gould. 

Said Brier-Rose’s mother to the naughty Brier-Rose. 
See Brier-Rose.—Boyesen. 

Said Burgoyne to his men, as they passed in review. 
See Progress of Sir Jack Brag, The.—Anon. 

Said Farmer Jones, in a whining tone. See Hoeing and 
Praying.—Anon. 

Said Folly to Wisdom. See On the Road.—Jenks. 

Said he “Did you recollect, my dear.” See June 21st. 
—Birdseye. 

Said I not so,—that I would sin no more? See Said I 
not So?—Herbert. 

Said I to myself, here’s a chance for me. See Speci¬ 
mens.—Rands. 

Said Jake Metzenmaker to his sweetheart. See Dutch 
Security.—Anon. 

Said Life to Death: “Methinks, if T were you.” See 
Recrimination.—Wilcox. 

Said little Miss Nancy, I’ve taken a fancy. See Spring 
Maiden, A.—Liddell. 

Said Mrs. A. to Mrs. J. See Origin of Scandal, The. 
—( Argonaut , The.) 

Said O’Flaherty to Muggins, “Do you call yourself a 
man?” See Coward, The.—Meyers. 

Said one little raindrop. See Race, The.—X. Y. Z. 

Said our bright-eyed boy, with curls of gold. See 
Y esterday.—Percy. 

Said Stiggins to his wife, one day. See Domestic 
Economy.—( Punch .) 

Said the archangels, moving in their glory. See Voice. 
—Spofford. 

Said the burghers of Cologne, “We have voted a new 
bell.” See Great Bell of Cologne, The.—-Anon. 

Said the child to the youthful year. See Child and the 
Year, The.—Thaxter. 

Said the corn to the lilies. See Corn and the Lilies, 
The.—-Anon. 

Said the Englishman “W'at’s all this bloomin’ wow?” 
See Foreigners at the Fair.—Brooks. 

Said the first little chicken. See Chickens, The.—Anon. 

Said the Grocer’s Scale to the Orange-peel. See In 
.Esop’s Vein.—Mitchell. 

Said the little shepherdess. See What the Lambs say. 
—Thomas. 

Said the needle, “I’ve swallowed a thread.” See 
Mistake, A.—Greenleaf. 

Said the Raggedy Man on a hot afternoon. See Man 
in the Moon, The.—Riley. 

Said the rose to the pansies. See Some One Loves Us 
Best.—Vandyne. 

Said the school teacher, who lives at a hotel. See Her 
Excuse.—Anon. 

Said the Shagbark to the Chestnut. See Gossip of the 
Nuts, The.—Anon. 

Said the Wind to the Moon, “I will blow you out.” 
See Wind and the Moon, The.—Macdonald. 

Said Wind to the bright little weather vane.. See 
Points of the Compass, The.—Anon. 

Sailing away! Losing the breath of the shores in May. 
See Skipper Ben.—Anon. 

Sailing like a stately ship. See Samson Agonists. 
—Milton. 

“Sailorman, I’ll give to you.” See Silver Penny, The. 
—Ramal. 

St. Agnes’ Eve—Ah, bitter chill it was! See Eve of 
St. Agnes. The.—Keats. 

St. Anthony at church. See St. Anthony’s Sermon to 
the Fishes.—Anon. 

St. Anthony sat on a lowly stool. See Temptations 
of St. Anthony.—( Bentley's Miscellany.) 

Saint Augustine! well hast thou said. See Ladder of 
St. Augustine. The.—Longfellow. 

Saint Brandan sails the northern main. See Saint 
Brandan.—Arnold. 

St. Mark’s hushed abbey heard. See Sir Pavon and 
St. Pavon.—Palfrey. 

Saint Patrick did a vast deal of good in his day. See 
Patrick O’Rouke and the Frogs.—Bungay. 

Saint Patrick, slave to Milcho of the herds. See Proc¬ 
lamation, The.—Whittier. 

Saint Peter sat by the celestial gate. See Vision of 
Judgment, Tlie.—Byron. 

St. Peter stood guard at the golden gate. See Thirty 
Years with a Shrew.—( Brooklyn Eagle.) 

St. Peter’s spacious plaza with a mighty throng was 
filled. See Bresca.—Ewing. 

Saint Philip Neri, as old readings say. See Saint 
Philip Neri and the Youth.—Byron. 


St. Stephen’s cloistered hall was proud. See Colum¬ 
bus.—Sigourney. 

St. Swithin’s Day, if thou dost rain. See St. Swithin. 
—Anon. 

“St. Valentine!” What tender thoughts come 
wreathed around the honored name. See First 
Valentine, The.—Anon. 

St. Wilfrid once, aware of love grown cold. See Lost 
Legend. A.—Bourdillon. 

Sally Saltre [or Salter] she was a [young] teacher and 
r or who] taught. See Tragedy on past Participles, 
A —C. A. S. 

Salome, waken! waken! Dost thou sleep? See Res¬ 
urrection Morn.—Murray. 

Sam Brown was a fellow from way down East. See 
In the Catacombs.—Ballard. 

Sam, did you eber go huntin’ in the winter time way 
out West? See Wonderful Dream.—Christy. 

Sam had spirits naught could check. See Impetuous 
Samuel.—Streamer. 

Sam, I tell you what it is, hoeing potatoes is a swindle. 
See Runaways, The.—Anon. 

Sam, I went an answered an advertisement a week 
ago. See De Necessary Consequences.—Anon. 

Sam, you’ve got along pretty well in the world. See 
First Thing that Turn’d up. The.—Anon. 

Samanthy Price and Rebecca Jane Judd was real close 
and pertickeler friends. See Rebecca’s Revenge. 
—Dallas. 

Sambre and Maese their waves may join. See On the 
Taking of Namur by the King of Great Britain. 
—Prior. 

Sammy Smith would drink and eat. See Greedy Boy, 
The.—Turner. 

Sammy, stop your whittlin’. See Happy Family, A. 
—McBride. 

Samples of wine, and samples of beer. See Sample 
Rooms.—Anon. 

Sanctioned by custom, licensed by the State. See 
Touch it Not.—Eaton. 

Sandy and Ned were brothers. See Problem, A.— 
Chandler. 

Sang one of England in his island home. See Canada 
to England.—Stringer. 

Sang the lily and sang the rose. See Summer Changes. 
—Marston. 

Sans peur sans reproche!—our lion-heart. See Will¬ 
iam Ewart Gladstone.—Machar. 

Santa Ana came storming, as a storm might come. 
See Defence of the Alamo, The.—Miller. 

Santa Claus, I hang for you. See Real Santa Claus, A. 
—Sherman. 

Santa Claus! Santa Claus! Where have you been? 
See Short Christmas Performance, A. —Anon. 

Sarah, thine act hath made me what I am. See 
Hagar’s Farewell.—Moore. 

Sarcastic people are wont to say that poets dwell in 
garrets. See In the Garret.— (Knickerbocker.) 

Sarsarty was the fiddler’s name. See Dad’s Little 
Fiddle—Sibley. 

Sarsfield rode out the Dutch to rout See Ballad of 
Sarsfield, A; or, The Bursting of the Guns.—De- 
Vere. 

Sarvent, Marster! Yes, sah, dat's me. See Uncle 
Gabe’s White Folks.—Page. 

Saturnian mother! why dost thou devour. See Rus¬ 
sia.—Dole. 

Saunders McGlashan was a hand-loom-weaver in a 
rural part of Scotland. See Saunders McGlashan’s 
Courtshi p.—Kenn edy. 

Sauntering hither on listless wings. See To a. Sea¬ 
bird.—Harte. 

Savage I was sitting in my house, late, lone. See 
Fifine at the Fair (Householder, The).—Browning. 

Save through the flesh Thou wouldst not come to me. 
See Incarnation. The.—Tabb. 

Saved! And the alibi! See Deacon Brodie.—Henley 
and Stevenson. 

Saviour, again to thy dear name we raise. See Grant 
us Thy Peace.—Anon. 

Saviour! T follow on. See same. —Hastings. 

Saviour! like a shepherd lead us. See “I Am the 
Good Shepherd.”—Thrupp. 

Saviour, sprinkle many nations. See Desire of All 
Nations, The.—Coxe. 

Saviour, when in dust to Thee. See Litany.—Grant. 

Saviour, who Thy flock art feeding. See same. — 
Muhlenberg. 

“Saw ye my wee thing? saw ye my ain thing?” See 
Mary of Castle Cary.—Macneil. 

Saw ye ne’er a lonely lassie. See Be Content.—Anon. 

Saw you never in the twilight. See Adoration of the 
Wise Men, The.—Alexander. 


814 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Scotland 


Saws’t thou ever Siquis pateht on Paul's Church door. 
See On Simony.—Hall. 

“Say, are you a Mason, or a Nodfellow, or anything?” 
See Royal Bumper Degree, The.— (Peck’s Sun.) 

Say, Bill, I’ve been a thinkin’! you know how a feller 
feels. See Don’t you Think so. Bill?—Brooks 

Say, crimson Rose and dainty Daffodil. See Nose¬ 
gay, A.—Reynolds. 

Say, darkeys, hab you seen de massa. See Year of 
Jubilee, The.—Anon. 

Say, darling, do you love me true? See To an Im¬ 
aginary One.—Eddy. 

Say, did his sisters wonder what could Joseph see. 
See Regina Coeli.—Patmore. 

Say! did you ever get right angry? See Did You— 
Will You?—Anon. 

Say, doctor, may I not have rum. See Rum Maniac. 
The.—Allison. 

Say, does Fact or Reason err. See Logic.— (Harvard 
Lampoon.) 

Say, fair maids maying. See Of Life.—Lang. 

Say, fellers! there’s a man down in the other part of the 
school-yard. See Reading a Letter.—Smith. 

Say, from what golden quivers of the sky. See Hymn 
to Light, The.—Cowley. 

“Say, General, say!” the courier said. See Caliber 
Fifty-four.—Carleton. 

Say, girls, ’tisn’t time for the bell to ring yet. See 
Playing School.—Smith. 

Say, girls, you know Mr. Smith, don’t you? See 
Fanny’s Secret.—Anon. 

Say, guiltless pair. See Winged Worshippers, The. 
—Sprague. 

Say! hullo, dere. du Yacob Stein! See Rip Van Win¬ 
kle.—Irving and Jefferson. 

Say, I was going down Broadway de oder day. See 
Examining de Bumps.—White. 

Say, in a hut of mean estate. See Soul of Man, The.— 
Goodale. 

Say, I’ve got a little brother. See His New Brother. 
—Lincoln. 

“Say, Jim,” I said, “I’d like to get.” See My Neigh¬ 
bor Jim.—Anon. 

Say, Johnnie, who was that tall man that was to your 
house the other night. See Susie’s Lesson.— 
Smith. 

Say, Johnson, I want to ask you something. See 
That’s what I Thought.—Anon. 

Say, Johnson, what has become ob your brother? See 
Shakes.—Anon. 

Say! little Pup, what’s up? See Lost Puppy, The.— 
Wood. 

Say, Louie. See Nell’s Christmas Stocking.—Har¬ 
bour. 

Say, ma, need I go to bed now? See Troublesome In¬ 
vestment, The.—Bradley. 

Say, Miss Judith has company in the parlor. See Ex¬ 
amination Day.—Smith. 

Say, Mr. Grajq Sis is our housekeeper, nowadays. See 
Sue Waters’s Housekeeping.—Whiting. 

Say, Mr. Johnson, you don’t come to see us now like 
you used to one time. See Awful Responsibility, 
An.—Anon. 

Say, mother earth. See Liquor-seller’s Dream, The.— 
Murray. 

f ‘Say, my dear,” ejaculated Mr. Spoopendyke. See 
Mr. Spoopendyke Hears Burglars.—Huntley. 

Say never, ye loved once. See same. —Browning. 

Say not adieu, but au revoir. See Parting Song.— 
Swinburne. 

Say not good-by! dear friend, from thee. See Good¬ 
night, Good-by.—Greenwell. 

Say not the struggle nought availeth. See same. — 
Clough. 

Say on! What was the dream that waked thy soul? 
See Seer and the Dreamers, The.—Murray. 

Say over again, and yet once over again. See Sonnets 
from the Portuguese, XXL—Browning. 

Say Paddy! D’ you mind the ould grog-shop. See 
Slaughter House, The.—Young. 

Say, pipe, let’s talk of love. See Pipe Critic, The.— 
Littlefield. 

Say, sire of insects, mighty Sol. See Flies, The.— 
Prior. 

Say, sis, where’s ma? See Census Taker, The.— 
Olcott. 

Say, Sunday’s lonesome fur a little feller. See Little 
Feller, A.—( Michigan Christian Advocate.) 

Say, Swain, who, that is now in this school. See 
Choosing a Trade or Profession.—Hunt. 

Say there! P’r’aps. See “Jim.”—Harte. 

Say, this lodgin’-house fur newsboys. See Demmy 
Jake.—Arkwright. 


Say to me whose fortunes shall rise higher. See 
Antony and Cleopatra (Antony and the Sooth¬ 
sayer) .—Shakespeare. 

Say, tother day Kip Elbert, that’s my beau, was going 
to go out fishin’. See Naughty Zell.—Anon. 

Say, what is Honor? Nee Honor.—Wordsworth 

Say, what is it. Eyes, ye see? See Senses, The.— 
Anon. 

Say, what is life? ’Tis to be born. See Life’s Story.— 
Saxe. 

Say, what is the spell, when her fledglings are cheeping. 
See Song of Love, A.—Carroll. 

Say which enjoys the greater blisses. See Nice Point, 
A.—Lessing. 

Say, why was man so eminently raised. See Pleasures 
of Imagination, The (Mind of Man, The).—Aken- 
side. 

Say, will you love me when I’m bald? See Will You 
Love Me when I’m Bald?—Wood. 

Say, wilt thou think of me when I’m away. See 
Filiolae Dulcissimae.—Alford. 

Say, ye that know, ye who have felt and seen. See 
Lambs at Play.—Bloomfield. 

Say ye, that years roll on and ne’er return? See same. 
—Landor. 

Says bould Barney Milligan. See Not Willin’.—Anon. 

Says John to his mother, “Look here! look here! See 
Nut Hard to Crack, A.—Cary. 

Says Patrick to Biddy, "Good-morning, me dear!” 
See Irish Coquetry.—Anon. 

Says Sammy to Dick. See Two Little Rogues.—Diaz. 

Says Stonewall Jackson to “Little Phil.” See Joined 
the Blues.—Rooney. 

Says the Colonel to the sergeant, “I was kept awake 
all night.” See Raggles.—Meyers. 

Says the pipe to the snuff-box, “I can’t understand.” 
See To the Rev. Mr. Newton.—Cowper. 

Says Tweed to Till, “What gars ye rin sae still?” See 
Two Rivers.—Anon. 

Scamper, little leaves, about. See Leaves at Play.— 
Sherman. 

Scant along the ridgy land. See First of April, The. 
—Warton. 

Scarce grown to womanhood, to die a Queen! See 
Mercedes.—Parsons. 

Scarce Rama to the wilderness had with his younger 
brother gone. See Ramayana (Death of Yajna- 
datta).—Milman. 

Scarce were the splintered lances dropped. See Count 
Candespina’s Standard.—Boker. 

Scarcely Hope had shaped for me. See Andrew 
Rykman’s Prayer (“Scarcely Hope,” etc.).— 
Whittier. 

Scarcely were the archbishop’s feet upon the steps of 
the altar. See Murder of Thomas ii Becket in 
Canterbury Cathedral, The.—Thierry. 

Scatter in spring-time a handful of seeds. See same. — 
Anon. 

Scatter the germs of the beautiful. See Scatter the 
Germs of the Beautiful.—Anon. 

Scattered here and there over this beautiful land of 
ours. See Grove of Historic Trees, A.—Anon. 

Scattered over glade and dingle. See Wild Flowers.— 
Doudney. 

Scene, a drug store. Enter a tall and rather mild- 
looking young man. See Drug Clerk’s Trials, A.— 
Anon. 

Scenes that are brightest. See With no One to Love 
Us.—Ball. 

Schelynlaw Tower is fair on the brae. See Laird of 
Schelynlaw.—Veitch. 

Schir! though your Grace has put gret order. See 
Satire on Syde Taillis—Ane Supplicatioun Directit 
to the Kingis Grace.—Lyndsay. 

Schneider is very fond of tomatoes. See Schneider’s 
Tomatoes.—Adams. 

Science, if true to itself, must come back to a personal 
God. See same. —Porter. 

Science is necessary not only for the most successful 
production. See Poetry of Science, The.— 
Spencer. 

Science long watched the realms of space. See World 
Beyond, A.—Bowditch. 

Scion of a mighty stock, hands of iron, hearts of oak. 
See Young American, The.—Everett. 

Scores of women, old and young. See Skipper Ireson’s 
Ride.—Whittier. 

"Scorn not the sonnet,” though its strength be sapped. 
See On a Magazine Sonnet.—Loines. 

Scorn not the sonnet; Critic, you have frown’d. See 
Scorn not the Sonnet.—Wordsworth. 

Scotland! There is a magic in the sound. See Scot¬ 
land.—Flagg. 


815 






Scots 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Scots, wha hae wi’ Wallace bled. See Scots, Wha 
Hae.—Burns. 

Scrooge is finally haunted in his dreams by three 
spirits. See Christmas Carol, A (Scrooge’s Re¬ 
formation).—Dickens. 

Sea-birds are asleep. See Sea Slumber-song.—Noel. 

Sea-king’s daughter from over the sea. See Welcome 
to Alexandra, A.—Tennyson. 

Seal thou the window! Yea, shut out the light. See 
Cloistered.—Brown. 

Seamen three! What men be ye? See Nightmare 
Abbey (Men of Gotham, The).—Peacock. 

Search creation around, where can you find a country. 
See Destiny of America.—Phillips. 

Search there; nay, probe me; search my wounded 
veins. See Alexander.—Lee. 

Search thou the ruling passion; there, alone. See 
Moral Essays (Ruling Passion, The).—Pope. 

Searching for strawberries ready to eat. See On the 
Hillside—A. 1. M. 

Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness! See To 
Autumn.—Keats. 

Seated by the glowing embers, in the pleasant firelit 
hall. See Two Thanksgiving Dances.—Banks. 

Seated I see the two again. See Hanging of the 
Crane, The (Household Sovereign, The).—Long¬ 
fellow. 

Seated one day at the organ. See Lost Chord, A.— 
Procter. 

Secession! Peaceable Secession! See Constitution and 
the Union, The (Peaceable Secession).-—Webster. 

Sech an experience as I hev hed this mornin’, Tirzah 
Ann’. See Sweet Cicely (Buymg a Feller).— 
Holley. 

Secure in his prophetic strength. See St. Paul at 
Melita.—Newman. 

Securely cabined in the ship below. See Faith.— 
Botta. 

See Antonina playing her guitar. See Antonina.— 
Boyne. 

See, around you gathered. See Floral Birthday Greet¬ 
ing, A.—Jackson. 

See, Chloris, how the clouds. See To Chloris.— 
Drummond. 

See, from this counterfeit of him. See On a Bust of 
Dante.—Parsons. 

See how a king can slumber on his throne. See 
Winter-song for Pan.—Erskine. 

See! how he strives to rescue from the flood. See 
Faithful Dog, The.—Sigourney. 

See now she leans her cheek upon her hand. See 
Romeo and Juliet. The Way it should be Read 
in 1880.—( Burlington Hawkeye.) 

See how the flowers, as at parade. See Garden. A.— 
Marvell. 

See how the Mom awakes. Along the sky. See 
Coming of the Morn, The.—Heavysege. 

See how the orient dew. See Drop of Dew, A.— 
Marvell. 

See how yon flaming herald treads. See Steamboat, 
The.—Holmes. 

See! I’m making patchwork. See Little Seamstress, 
The.—Anon. 

See! I se a nigger baby! See Nigger Baby.—Wilson. 

See living vales by living waters blessed. See Ocean.— 
Sprague. 

See Lucifer like lightning fall. See Third Sunday in 
Lent.—Keble. 

“See mamma, the crumbs are flying.’’ See Snow- 
shower, The.—Duncan. 

See my new drum, Fred! See Drum, The.—Anon. 

See my slate! I dot it new. See New Slate, The.— 
Anon. 

See, O see! How every tree. See Elvira.—Digby. 

See, on yon shoal amid the blast. See Grace Vernon 
Bussell.—Drayton. 

See some queer things, we traveling folk? Well, yes, 
that’s perfectly true. See Not in the Programme. 
—Coller. 

See, see, King Richard doth himself appear. See King 
Richard II.—Shakespeare. 

See that thou have no gods but me. See Ten Com¬ 
mandments, The.—Anon. 

See, the birds together. See Worship in the Wild¬ 
wood.—You!. 

See the chariot at hand here of Love! See Celebration 
of Charis, A ('Chari-’ Triumph).—Jonson. 

See the course throng’d with gazers, the sports are 
begun. See High-mettled Racer, The.—-Dibdin. 

See the day begins to break. See Faithful Shepherdess, 
The (Daybreak).—Fletcher. 

See the frog, the slimy, green frog. See Boy and the 
Frog, The.—Anon. 


See! the hour for school is near. See Late at Break¬ 
fast.—Anon. 

See the kind Shepherd, Jesus, stands. See Christ’s 
Love.—Doddri dge. 

See the Kitten on the Wall. See Kitten and Falling 
Leaves, The.—Wordsworth. 

See the morning sunbeams lighting up the wood. See 
God is Good.—Anon. 

See, the pretty Planet! See Blowing Bubbles.— 
Allingham. 

See the pretty snow-flakes falling from the sky. See 
Falling Snow, The.—Anon. 

See the smoke-wreaths how they curl so lightly sky¬ 
ward. See Bush Study, a la Watteau, A.—Martin. 

See, the stars are coming. <See Stars are Coming, The. 
—Anon. 

See the swift and busy bee. Nee Wily Bee, The.— 
Cahill. 

See them go forth like the floods to the ocean. See 
Dawn of Redemption, The.—Clark. 

See, this is my Christmas dolly. See Christening 
Dolly.—Rook. 

See those five talking earnestly, in the center of a ring. 
See Westward Ho! (Waiting for the Armada).— 
Kingsley. 

‘See, valient war friends, yonder be the first, the last, 
and all.’ See Before the Battle of Hastings.— 
Warner. 

See, what a beauty! Half Shut eyes. See Hebe.— 
Anon. 

See, what a grace was seated on his brow. See Hamlet 
(Gentleman, A).—Shakespeare. 

See what a heap of flowers I have. See May’s Flowers. 
—Anon. 

See what a lovely shell. See Maud (Shell, The).—Ten¬ 
nyson. 

See, what a wonderful garden is here. See Little Oh- 
Dear.—Field. 

See where my love a-maying goes. See A-Maying.— 
Anon. 

See where she comes adown the lane. See School 
Ma’am, The.—Burdette. 

See where she issues in her beauty’s pomp. See Her 
Coming.—Chapman. 

See where she sits upon the grassie greene. See 
Shepheardes Calender, The (In Praise of Eliza, 
Queen of the Shepherds).—Spenser. 

See with what simplicity. See Picture of Little T. C. 
in a Prospect of Flowers, The.—Marvell. 

See yon blithe child that dances in our sight! See 
Child, The.—Coleridge. 

See yon Robin on the spray. See English Robin, The. 
—Weir. 

See yonder hill, so green, so round. See Much Taste 
and Small Estate.—Shenstone. 

See yonder poor, o’er-labored wight. See Man was 
Made to Mourn (Melancholy).—Burns. 

See! yonder stately, lordly spire. See Known unto 
God.—Runcie. 

See, yonder, the belfry tower. See At Midnight.— 
Sherman. 

Seeds with wings, between earth and sky. See ’Tween 
Earth and Sky.—Webster. 

Seedy Cab-driver, whither art thou going? See 
Sapphics of the Cabstand.— (Punch.) 

Seeing our lives by Nature now are led. See Euthan-* 
asia.—McKnight. 

Seeing so many warriors fall’n around. See Song 
of Roland, The (Horn, The).—Rabillon. 

Seeing that little Johnny Tompkins was safely out of 
the country. See Dolly Dialogues, The (That 
Little Wretch).—Hope. 

Seeing the two men together and knowing that one 
of them was a murderer. See Sunshine Johnson.— 
Anon. 

Seek music in the wolf’s fierce howl. See Irish Wolf. 
The.—McCarroll. 

Seek not, Leuconoe, to know how long. See To 
Leuconoe.—Field. 

Seek not the tree of silkiest bark. See Song: “(Seek 
not the tree,” etc.—De Vere. 

Seek out “acceptable words.” See Potency of English 
Words.—Macintosh. 

Seems not our breathing light? See Remmciants.— 
Dowden. 

Seen you down at chu’ch las’ night. See Discovered.— 
Dunbar. 

Sees not my love, how Time resumes. See To a Lady- 
in Retirement.—Waller. 

See’st thou how gaily my young master goes. See 
Impecunious Fop, The.—Hall. 

See’st thou, my daughters, yon blue outline against the 
sky. See Farewell, The.—Anon. 


816 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Shame 


See’st thou my home?—’tis where yon woods are 
waving. See Two Homes, The.—Hemans. 

Selestial apoley which didest inspire. See Odd to a 
Krokis.—Anon. 

Self, Soul & Co., Architects. See Letter, A.—C. S. 

Self-denial and discipline are the foundation of all good 
character. See Law of Success, The.—Sargeant. 

Self-ease is pain, thy only rest. See same. —Whittier. 

Self-murder! name it not; our island’s shame. See 
Grave, The (Self-murder).—Blair. 

Sell old Robin, do you say? Well, I reckon not to-day! 
See Old Robin.—Trowbridge. 

Sempronius Prigg and Miltiades Piso. See Presto 
Change.—Smiley. 

Sen throw vertew incressis dignitie. See Gude and 
Godlie Ballates, The.—James the First. 

Senators of Rome,—Whither, oh whither shall I fly? 
See Jugurthine War, The (Prince Adherbal before 
the Roman Senate).—Sallust. 

Sence little Wesley went, the place seems all so strange 
and still. See Absence of Little Wesley, The.— 
Riley. 

Sence the first time I heered you preach. See Widow 
Bedott Papers (Widow Bedott's Letter to Elder 
Sniffles, The).—Whitcher. 

Send danger from the east unto the west. See King 
Henry IV., Part I.—-Shakespeare. 

Send it up to the garret? Well, no. See Old Canteen, 
The.—White. 

Send us your prisoners. See King Henry IV., Pt. I. 
(Hotspur).—Shakespeare. 

Sense with keenest edge unused. See Pater Filio.— 
Bridges. 

September has come, a month so fair. See September. 
—Richards. 

September strews the woodland o’er. See Song for 
September, A.—Parsons. 

September sunshine, warm and low. See School-time. 
—Anon. 

Seraglio of the Sultan Bee. See Hollyhock, A.— 
Sherman. 

Seraphina, young and lovely, with a fortune at com¬ 
mand. See Ideal with a Roman Nose, An.— 
Anon. 

Serene, I fold my hands and wait. See Waiting.— 
Burroughs. 

Serene, vast head, with silver cloud of hair. See 
Tribute of Grasses, A.—Garland. 

• Sergeant of Police Reynolds, Forty-eighth district. See 
Every-day Case, An.—Bloomingdale. 

Set as a challenge at the mountain’s side. See 
Escurial, The.—Gautier. 

Set in this stormy northern sea. See Ave Imperatrix. 
—Wilde. 

Set me where Phoebus’ heat the flowers slayeth. See 
Test, The.—Anon. 

Set the bells a-ringing, ringing. See While the Joy 
Goes on.—Denton. 

Set where the upper streams of Simois flow. See 
Palladium.—Arnold. 

Settin’ round the stove last night. See Taste.— 
Riley. . 

Setting aside the palpable injustice. See Death 
Penalty for New Offences, The.—Byron. 

Seven colors in heaven combined. See Rainbow, The. 


Seven daughters had Lord Archibald. See Seven 
Sisters, The; or, The Solitude of Binnorie.— 
Wordsworth. 

Seven little girls are we. See Seven Days in a Week.— 
Foster. _ 

Seven maidens ’neath the midnight. See Romance of 
the Ganges, A.—Browning. 

Seven patriot soldiers, the father and six stalwart sons. 
See Seven Invincibles, The .—(New England 
Magazine.) 

Seven sheep were standing. See Kitty Knew. Anon. 
Seven wee birds on the limb of a tree. See Ten Little 
Songsters, The.—Anon. 

Seven weeks of sea, and twice seven days of storm. 

See Gibraltar.—Blunt. . 

Seven years had we been married. See Naming the 
Baby.—Anon. . 

Seventeen hundred and thirty-nine. See Ballad of 
“Beau Brocade,” The.;—Dobson. _ . 

Several passengers were sitting in the waiting room. 

See Two Absent-minded Men.—Anon. 

Several years ago the steamboat Buckeye blew up. 
See Dutchman’s Testimony in a Steamboat Case, 


Several years ago there dwelt—and for aught I know 
there still dwells. See Dutchman and the Yankee, 
The.—Anon. 


Sez 

Sez 


See 


See Ballad of 


or, The Wicked Revenge.- 
See Love’s Request. 


"Sexton," Bessie’s white lips faltered, pointing to the 
prison old. See Curfew must not Ring To-night. 
—Thorpe. 

Sexton, we go to-morrow. It is foolish. See Good¬ 
bye, Old Church.—Pomeroy. 

Alderman Grady. See Officer Brady.—Cham¬ 
bers. 

Corporal Madden to Private McFadden. See 
Recruit, The.—Chambers. 

Sh, Arthur! Not so loud! Is everything ready? See 
Love Stronger than Locks.—Anon. 

Sh—I’ve got out of bed, just a minute. See Santa’s 
Secret.—Anon. 

Shade of Herrick, Muse of Locker. See Knickerbocker. 
—Dobson. 

Shade of our greatest. O look dowm to-day 1 See To 
the Spirit of Abraham Lincoln.—Gilder. 

Shades of evening, close not o’er us. See Isle of Beauty. 
—Bayly. 

Shadows up the hillside creeping. See Memory, A.— 
Le Compte. 

Shady tree—babbling brook. See Romance of a 
Hammock.—Anon. 

“Shake off your heavy trance.” See Song: ‘‘Shake 
off,” etc.—Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Shakespeare and Milton—what third blazoned name. 
See Tennyson.—Aldrich. 

Shakespeare says something about worms. See His 
Wedded Wife.—Kipling. 

Shakespeare tells us seven years constitute of life a 
span. See Minstrel’s Seven Ages, The.—Thatcher. 

Shakespeare, thy legacy of peerless song. See At 
Stratford-on-Avon.—Bell. 

Shakey, take a fader’s plessing. See Polonius to 
Laertes—* ‘ Renewed. ’ ’—Anon. 

Shall atoms be eternally active, and intellect. See 
Intimations of Immortality.—Simmons. 

“Shall I, a priest of God.liveon in sin?” SeeAnselmo, 
the Priest.—Runcie. 

Shall I be like grandmamma when I am old? 
Secret, A.—Anon. 

Shall I breathe it? Hush! ’twas dark. 

“Bonny Portmore’ 

De Vere. 

Shall I come, sweet Love, to thee. 

—Campion. 

Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? See Sonnets, 
XVIII.—Shakespeare. 

Shall I ever be a drunkard. See Wise Resolution, A.— 
Allen. 

“Shall I go and call them up ” See Calling Them up. 
—Cooper. 

Shall I grieve because a maid swore to love me. See 
Philosophy.—Crannell. 

Shall I meet you again. See Triolets; To her whom I 
Call Rose.—Gray. 

“Shall I sing?” says the Lark. See Lark, Flower, Sun, 
and Shower.—Greenaway. 

Shall I strew on thee rose or rue or laurel. See Ave 
atque Vale.—Swinburne. 

“Shall I take, and take, and never give?” See Receiv¬ 
ing and Giving.—Anon. 

Shall I tell you whom I love? See "Britannia’s Pastorals 
(My Choice).—Browne. 

Shall T thus ever long, and be no whit the nearer? See 
To Her Sea-faring Lover.—Anon. 

Shall I, wasting in despaire. See Shepherd’s Resolu¬ 
tion, The.—Wither. 

Shall mine eyes behold thy glory, O my country. See 
Post Mortem.—Parnell. 

Shall pride a heap of sculptured marble raise. See On 
Laurence Sterne.—Anon. 

Shall we await the orders of the War Office to overturn 
thrones? See Against War.—Robespierre. 

Shall we carry now your bundle. See Pilgrim, The.— 
Ramal. ... _ _ 

Shall we keep the Philippine Archipelago. See For 
Expansion.—Sibley. 

Shall we know in the hereafter. See Wings.—Dan- 
dridge 

Shall we meet again, love. See Concord Love Song, A. 
—Roche. .... _ , 

Shall we meet no more, my love, at the binding of the 
sheaves. See Adonais.—Harney. 

Shall we not weary in the windless days. See Here- 
aftsr ~“Wstson, 

Shall we send back the Johnnies their bunting. See 
Those Rebel Flags.—Jewett. 

Shall we then surrender to turbulence. See Shall We 
Give ud the Union?—Dickinson. 

Shame on thee, savage monarch-man, proud monopo¬ 
list of reason. See Of Cruelty to Animals. 
Tupper. 


817 





Shame 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Shame upon you, Robin. See Queen Mary (Song of the 
Milkmaid).—Tennyson. 

Shameful imposture, truly! I wonder who the kind 
friend is. See Reception, The.—Pickering. 

Sha’n’t and Won’t were two little brothers. See Won’t 
and Will.—Anon. 

Shapcot! to thee the Fairy State. See Oberon’s Feast. 
—Herrick. 

Shaper of breathing lives, and Lord of all above. See 
Last Orison, The.—Stafford. • 

Shawondasee, fat and lazy. See Song of Hiawatha, 
The (South Wind, The).—Longfellow. 

She always stood upon the steps. See Watching for 
Papa.—Anon. 

She beat the happy pavement. See Gratiana Dancing. 
—Lovelace. 

She began ripping the binding from the bottom of the 
skirt. See“Jefful, The.”—Habberton. 

She bids you on the wanton rushes lay you down. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I. (Night and Sleep).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

She blossomed in the country. See Country Lassie, 
The.—Anon. 

She bought them in the town one day. See Her S Shoes. 
—Anon. 

She bounded o’er the graves. See Annie in the Grave¬ 
yard.—Gilman. 

She brought it over to our house, Mrs. Bascomb did. 
See Bascomb’s Baby.—Anon. 

She calls him cruel—he has crushed a rose. See Nice 
Distinction, A.—Vannah. 

She came among the glittering [gathering—C.] crowd. 
See Common Sense.—Fields. 

She came and stood in the Old South Church. See 
In the “Old South.”—Whittier. 

She came and went as comes and goes. See Under the 
Red Cross.—Hickox. 

She came from Detroit and her great pride was in 
being an invalid. See Remarkable Case, A.— 
Anon. 

She came here from the middle west. See Combine, 
A.—Anon. 

She came in from the country. See She Wanted an 
Epitaph.—Anon. 

She came tripping from the church-door. Set 
“Course of Love” too “Smooth,” The.—Anon. 

She casts a spell—oh! castls a spell. See My Love— 
Oh! She is My Love.—Hyde. 

She clung to him, the game was o’er. See Football 
Tragedy, A.—( University of Chicago Weekly.) 

She comes like the hush and beauty of the night. 
See Poetry.—Markham. 

She comes, she comes—the Burden of the Deeps. See 
Invincible Armada, The.—Schiller. 

She comes—the spirit of the dance! See Dancing 
Girl, A.—Osgood. 

She comes to the Quad when her Ladyship pleases. 
See Prof.’s Little Girl, The.—Field. 

She comes with fairy footsteps. See Little Rose. 
— {Blackwood's Magazine.) 

She dances, and I seem to be. See Perdita.—Coates. 

She dared not wait my coming, and shall look. See 
Canute the Great.—Field. 

She decided that the only way to run a house econom¬ 
ically. See When not to Keep Books.—Anon. 

She died—as die the roses. See Child of Promise, The. 
—MacColl. 

She died in June, while yet the woodbine sprays. See 
Mary—A Reminiscence.—Turner. 

She died—this was the way she died. See Vanished. 
—Dickinson. 

She does not “languish in her bower.” See “New 
Woman,” The.—Matherson. 

She does not live at my house, O dear no! See Cross 
Betsy.—Chatfield. 

She dreams of Love upon the temple stair. See 
Sleeping Priestess of Aphrodite, A.—Rogers. 

She dressed herself, she made her will, she bade them 
all good-by. See Her First Railroad Ride.— 
Anon. 

She dwelt among the untrodden ways. See same. — 
Wordsworth. 

She entered a crowded car and was followed by five 
blooming children. See Mrs. O’Toole and the 
Conductor.—Smith. 

She fell away in her first ages spring. See Daphnaida. 
—Spenser. 

She felt, I think, but as a wild-flower can. See Irish 
Wild Flower, An.—Piatt. 

She filled her shoes with fern-seed. See Fern-seed.— 
Thaxter. 

She flushed and paled, and, bridling, raised her head. 
See Whispering Gallery, The.—McKay. 


She fluttered gaily down the hill. See Polly.—Shope. 

She folded up the worn and mended frock. See Com¬ 
pensation.—Anon. 

She gamboll’d on the greens. See Olivia.—Tennyson. 

She gathered at her slender waist. See Girdle of 
Friendship, The.—Holmes. 

She gave her life to love. She never knew. See Old 
Maid, The.—Barlow. 

She gave him her book to write in. See Autograph 
Book of Blue, The.—Jakeway. 

She gazed upon the burnished brace. See Tender 
Heart, The.—Cone. ' 

She glided on her peaceful quest. See Nemesis.— 
Crandall. 

She grasped the bar, arranged her skirts. See Fulfill¬ 
ment.—Anon. 

She had a parcel, small and round. See Woman’s 
“No,” A.—Graham. 

She had lingered long by the window-pane. See 
Weather Bureau, The.—Anon. 

She had looked for his coming as warriors come. See 
Love’s Coming.—Wilcox. 

She had never mailed a letter before. See Ruling 
Passion, The.—Switer. 

“She hailed from round Boston somewheres, and she 
came out here.” See Kindergarten Christmas, A. 
—Carruth. 

She has a beauty of her own. See Australian Girl, An. 
—Castilla. 

She has a primrose at her breast. See Primrose Dame, 
A.—White. 

She has gone.—she has left us in passion and pride. 
See Brother Jonathan’s Lament for Sister Caroline. 
—Holmes. 

“She has gone to be with the angels.” See Vision of the 
Snow, The.—Preston. 

She has gone to the bottom! the wrath of the tide. 
See Alabama, The.—Bell. 

She has- laughed as softly as if she sighed! See 
Woman’s Shortcomings, A.—Browning. 

She hath no gems of lustre bright. See Little Knot of 
Blue, A.—Peck. 

She hed no maw ner paw, ner any blood er kin. See 
Jinny.—McGlasson. 

She held a Cup and Ball of ivory white. See Delia at 
Play.—Southey. 

She hid herself in the soiree kettle. See Ballade of the 
Nurserie, A.—Twig. 

She hung the cage at the window. See Caprice.— * 
Howells. 

She is a maid of artless grace. See same —Vicente. 

She is a winsome wee thing. See My Wife’s a Win¬ 
some Wee Thing.—Burns. 

She is always in trouble—and don’t she let you know 
it, too! See Stage Land (Stage Heroine, The). 
—Jerome. 

“She is dead!” they said to him. “Come away.” See 
She and He.—Arnold. 

“She is dead!” they say! she is robed for the grave. 
See Dead Singer, The.—O’Reilly. 

She is far from the land where her young hero sleeps. 
See She is Far from the Land.—Moore. 

She is fighting for her freedom, striving hard to rend in 
vain. See Cuba.— Gardner. 

She is like Nature, and I love. See All on One Side.— 
Romaine. 

She is mine own! See Two Gentlemen of Verona, 
The.—Shakespeare. 

She is my only girl. See Dumb Child, The.—Anon. 

She is not fair to outward view. See same. —Cole¬ 
ridge. 

She is not yet, but he whose ear. See Dominion of 
Australia, The.—Stephens. 

She is not young and fair. See Miss Milly O’Naire.— 
Bleyer. 

She is old, and bent, and wrinkled. See Marching 
Still.—-Irving. 

She is so pretty, the girl I love. See She is so Pretty.— 
Beranger. 

She is so tall, so slender, and her bones. See Lines on 
an X-Ray Portrait of a Lady.—Russell. 

She is so winsome and so wise. See She Just Keeps 
House for Mo.—Blewett. 

She is talking aesthetics, the dear clever creature. See 
Mi dges.—Lytton. 

She isn’t half so handsome as when twenty years agone. 
See Hannah Jane.—Locke. 

She just had left the Latin school. See Love and 
Latin.—Anon. 

She kept her secret well, oh yes. See My Angeline.— 
Smith. 

She knelt upon her brother’s grave. See Dora.— 
Brown. 


818 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


She 


She knew that she was growing blind. See Blind 
Louise.—Dewey. 

She laid it where the sunbeams fall. See Motherhood 
—Calverley. 

She lay unconscious, in dreamy sleep. See Beautiful 
Dreams.—Anon. 

She lay upon the couch—the prisoner queen. See 
Death of Cleopatra, The.—Anon. 

She leads me on through storm and calm. See My 
Guide.—Savage-Armstrong. 

She leaned her cheek upon her hand. See Ballad of 
Oriskany, The.—Auringer. • 

She let her hand be taken and with confidence 
unshaken. See At Last.—Masson. 

She listened like a cushat dove. See Listening.— 
Rossetti. 

She lived beside the Anner. See Irish Peasant Girl, 
The.—Kickham. 

She lived where the mountains go down to the sea. See 
Golden Rowan.—Carman. 

She lives in light, not shadow. See Of One who 
neither Sees nor Hears.—Gilder. 

She looked just like that kind of a woman. See 
Emancipation of Man, The.—Burdette. 

She looks “up to it,” quite. See Three Triolets.— 
Hamilton. 

She makes no moan above her faded flowers. See 
Going Softly.—Anon. 

She might have known it in the earlier spring. See 
F eminine.—Bunner. 

She moved through the garden in glory, because. See 
Marigold.—Garnett. 

She must be courteous, she must be holy. See My 
Queen.—Anon. 

She never sighs. See Girl Who is always Good, The.— 
Anon. 

She, of whose soul, if we may say, ’twas gold. See 
Elegy on Mistress Elizabeth Drury.—Donne. 

She once was a lady of honor and wealth. See Sister 
of Charity, The —Griffin. 

She pass’d away like morning dew. See Early Death. 
—Coleridge. 

She pass’d up the aisle on the arm of her sire. See St. 
George’s, Hanover Square.—Locker 

She passes in her beauty bright. See Secret, The.— 
Monkhouse. 

She picked up the fencing foils and ran up the stairs. 
See New Woman Considered, The.—Graham. 

She played upon her music-box a fancy air by chance. 
See Her Polka Dots.—Newell. 

She plucked a rosebud by the wall. See Rosebuds. 
—(Bowdoin Orient.) 

She prayed, her withered hand uprearing. See Goody 
Blake and Harry Gill.—Wordsworth. 

She promised me a kiss the other day. See Extending 
Credit.—Anon. 

She rose from her untroubled sleep. See same. —Willis. 

She roves through shadowy solitudes. See Tacita.— 
Kenyon. 

She rushed to the telephone and rung it madly. See 
Expensive Chicken, An.—Anon. 

She sat alone by the gray stone wall. See Song, A. 


—Locke. . 

She sat and wept beside His feet; the weight. See 
“Multum Dilexit.”—Coleridge. 

She sat beside me in the train, pain flitted o’er her 
face. See Difference, A.—Anon. 

She sat beside the mountain springs. See Forsaken, 
The.—Aide. _ . , 

She sat down below a thorn. See Fine Flowers in the 
Valley.—Anon. 

She sat in Philip’s vacant chair. See Mildred in the 


Library.—Holland. 

She sat on the porch in the sunshine. See Kissed his 
Mother!—R exford. 

She sat on the sliding cushion. See I.augh in Church, 


A.—Anon. n n ,, 

She sauntered by the swinging seas. See By the 
Swinging Seas.—Henley. 

She sayeth “No,”—my lady fair. See She Sayeth 
“No.”—Smalley. 

She says, “The cock crows—hark!’ See Parting 
Lovers, The.—Alger 

She screamed in terror when her purse, See Shopping. 


She seemed an angel to our infant eyes. See Mother s 
Picture, A.—Stedman. 

She sees her image in the glass. See Shadow Dance, 


The.—Moulton. 

She should never have looked at me if she meant I 
should not love her. See Cristina.- Browrung. 
She shrank from all, and her silent mood. See Female 
Convict, The.—Landon. 


She sits all day plaiting a wild-rose wreath. See June. 
—Anon. 

She sits beneath the elder-tree See Death-child, The. 
—Sharp. 

She sits in a fashionable parlor. See Modern Belle, 
The.—Anon. 

She sits on a table and smokes a cigarette. See Stage 
Land (Stage Adventuress, The).—Jerome. 

She sits within the white oak hall. See Helen.—Val¬ 
entine. 

She sleeps amongst her pillows soft. See Repose, A.— 
Procter. 

She smiled! she did—she smiled at me! See All in the 
Wind.—Gibbs. 

She smiles, but her heart is in sable. See Rose and the 
Ring, The.—Locker-Lampson. 

She smiles; the cruel world seems bright. See My 
Fiancee.—Reilly. 

She sowed at mom with eager hand. See Sower, The. 
—Wakeman. 

She spake so kindly unto all. See Metamorphosis.— 
Mifflin. 

She spoke of the Rights of Woman. See Lecture, The. 
—Corbett. 

She spoke to me, her voice was low. See Idyl of the 
Strap, An.— (Red and Blue.) 

She sports a witching gown. See Dollie.—Peck. 

She stands, a thousand-wintered tree. See England 
and her Colonies.—Watson. 

She stands on the corner. See Woman Who Ungers, 
The.—Anon. 

She stands upon the border land. See My Mother.— 
Pollard. 

She stepped upon Sicilian grass. See Persephone.— 
Ingelow. 

She stood alone amidst the April fields. See Late 
Spring, The.—Moulton. 

She stood at the bar of justice. See Guilty or not 
Guilty.—Anon. 

She stood at the clumsy loom. See At the Loom. 
—(Public Opinion.) 

She stood at the glass with a glowing cheek. See 
Domestic Episode, A.—Anon. 

She stood before a chosen few. See Her Creed.—Bol¬ 
ton. 

She stood before her father’s gorgeous tent. See 
Jephtha’s Daughter.—Willis. 

She stood before the dying man. See Dying Brigand, 
The.—-Anon. 

She stood breast-high amid the com. See Ruth.— 
Hood. 

She stood on the tender twilight. See Homeless.— 
Anon. 

She studies Henrik Ibsen “to cultivate her mind.” 
See Fin de SEcle Girl, A.— (Concordiensis ) 

She takes but to give again. See National Ode, The 
( ‘She takes,” etc.).—Taylor. 

She thanked me, and bade me. See Othello, the 
Moor of Venice (“She thanked me,” etc.).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

She thanked them all for everything. See Her Thanks. 
—Follansbee. 

She told him surely ’twas not right. See Conversion, 
The.—Bergengren. 

She told him that men were false. See Old Story, The. 
—Anon. 

She told the story, and the whole world wept. See 
Harriet Beecher Stowe.—Dunbar. 

She tole me sumfin defful. See What She Said.— 
Gamwell. 

She took her song to beauty’s side. See Woman’s 
Song, A.—Scott. 

She took the veil—how light a thing. See Taking the 
Veil.— (Punch Bowl.) 

She turn’d the fair page with her fairer hand. See 
Home in War-time.—Dobell. 

She turned, smiled, and passed up the twilight. See 
Lucile (Character of Lucile).—Lytton. 

She turns her great grave eyes toward mine. See 
Other Side of the Moon, The.—Fawcett. 

She twirled the string of golden beads. See Illustra¬ 
tion of a Picture.—Holmes. 

She walks in beauty, like the night. See She Walks 
in Beauty.—Byron. 

She walks—the lady of my delight. See Shepherdess, 
The.—Meynell. ., „ , 

She wandered alone at midnight, through alley ana 
court and street. See Brought Back. Nicholls. 

She wanders in the April woods. See Agatha.—-Austin. 

She wanders through St. Peter’s. See Critic* A.— 
Romaine. . _. 

She wanders up and down the main. See Derelict.— 
Pullen. 


819 




She 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


She wanted to reach an ideal. See Her Tdeal.—Mas- 
terson. 

She warbled the soprano with dramatic sensibility. See 
We all Know Her.—Masson. 

She was a beauty in the days. See She was a Beauty. 
—Bunner. 

She was a Boston [or cultured] lady or maiden], and 
she’d scarcely passed eighteen. See What He 
Called it.—( Somerville Journal.) 

She was a bright and beautiful child. See Drunkard’s 
Daughter, The.—Hall. 

She was a creature framed by love divine. See Philip 
van Artevelde (Wife, A).—Taylor. 

She was a fair girl graduate, enrobed in spotless white. 
See Woman’s Career.— {Life.) 

She was a girl as neat and trim. See Asking Mother.— 
Davenport. 

She was a handsome and wealthy young widow. See 
How a Widow Mourned.—Anon. 

She was a little Irish maid. See Daisies.—Anon. 

She was a little old woman. See There’ll be Room in 
Heaven.—Anon. 

She was a maid with rosy cheeks. See She was Trav¬ 
eling all Alone.—Marion. 

She was a meek little woman, and she carried a fretting 
baby in her arms. See How Mr. Simonson Took 
Care of the Baby.—Phelps. 

She was a phantom of delight. See same. —Words¬ 
worth. 

She was a queen of noble Nature’s crowning. See 
Stanzas: “She was a queen,” etc.—Coleridge. 

She was a theosophic miss. See Theosophic Marriage, 
A.—Dam. 

She was a Vassar graduate, and didn’t know a little bit 
about housekeeping. See Aired Her Knowledge. 
—(Detroit Free Press.) 

She was a very pretty girl—although that counted for 
little with either of us. See Platonic Friendship, 
A.—Barrie. 

She was a widow stern and spry. See Widow’s Mite, 
The.—( Columbia Spectator.) 

She was a winsome country lass. See Billet-doux, A. 
—Anon. * 

She was about forty-five years old. See Jiners, The.— 
Anon. 

She was an actress, famous, rich, and fair. See Sac¬ 
rifice of Genius, The.—Hichens. 

She was bashful, self-conscious, but rosy. See Un¬ 
sophisticated.—Pickhardt. 

She was but an average American girl. See Unpaid 
Seamstress, The.—Anon. 

She was dead. Dear, gentle, patient, noble Nell, was 
dead. See Old Curiosity Shop, The (Death of Little 
Nell, The).—Dickens. 

She was dead. No sleep so beautiful and calm. 
See Old Curiosity Shop. The (Death of Little 
Nell, The).—Dickens. 

She was dead. There upon her little bed, she lay at 
rest. See Old Curiosity Shop, The (Death of Little 
Nell The).—Dickens. 

She was ironing her dolly’s new gown. See Baby 
Logic.—Bellamy. 

She was just a little curly-headed school-girl. See 
School Episode, A.—Anon. 

She was just the prettiest little maiden that you ever 
knew. See Soldier’s Joys, The.—Anon. 

She was milking an Alderney cow. See Amaryllis.— 
Anon, 

She was my dream’s fulfillment and my joy. See 
Mother-in-law, The.—Wilcox. 

She was no armoured cruiser of twice six thousand 
tons. See War-ship of 1S12, The.—( Philadelphia 
Record.) 

She was not as pretty as women I know. See My 
Kate.—Browning. 

She was not fair, nor full of grace. See same. —Proc¬ 
ter. 

She was one of those pretty and charming girls. See 
Necklace, The.—Maupassant. 

She was pretty and happy and young! See Pardon 
Complete.—Dolliver. 

She was rich and of high degree. See Sea, The.— 
Ogden. 

She was sent forth. See same. —Landon. 

She was sitting up straight in a straight-backed chair. 
See Little Girl that Grew Up, The.— {Zion's 
Herald.) 

She was so little—little in her grave. See Mother who 
Died too, The.—Thomas. 

She was the daughter of John Artley. See Phoebe’s 
Exploit.—Lynde. 

She was the premiere danseuse of the ballet. See Out¬ 
ward Shows, The.—( Harvard Lampoon.) 


She was the prettiest girl, I ween. See History of a 
Pretty Girl.—Anon. 

She was walking in the springtime, in the morning- 
tide of life. See Curtain, The.—Anon. 

She wasn’t on the playground, she wasn’t on the lawn. 
See Message, A.—Dayre. 

She wears a rose in her hair. See Under the Rose.— 
Stoddard. 

She wears no crown. See At Queen Maud’s Banquet. 
—Larcom. 

She wears no jewel upon hand or brow. See King’s 
Daughter, The.—Utter. 

She went round and asked subscriptions. See Cosmo¬ 
politan Woman, A.—Foss. 

She who to Heaven more Heaven doth annex. See 
To a Virtuous Young Gentlewoman that Died 
Suddenly. —Cartwright. 

She wore a little knot of blue. See At the Race. 
—(Yale Record.) 

She wore a wreath of roses. See same. —Bayly. 

She wrote to her daddy in Portland, Maine, from out 
in Denver, Col. See Cure for Homesickness.— 
Day. 

She wuz a old maid, Aunt Suewuz. See Boy’s Conclu¬ 
sion, A.—Anon. 

Shed no -tear! oh shed no tear! See Faery Song.— 
Keats. 

Sheddad, the son of Ad, of Hadramant. See King 
Sheddad’s Paradise.—Arnold. 

Shemuel, the Bethlehemite. See Shemuel.—Bowen. 

Shepherd Jesus, in Thy arms. See Child’s Evening 
Hymn, A.—Clarke. 

Shepherd, what’s love, I pray thee tell? See Shep¬ 
herd’s Description of Love, The.—Raleigh. 

Shepherd, wilt thou take counsel of the bird. See 
Philomel to Corydon.—Young. 

Shepherds all, and maidens fair. See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The (Priest’s Evening Song, The).— 
Fletcher. 

Shepherds rise, and shake off sleep. See Faithful 
Shepherdess, The (Priest’s Morning Song, The).— 
Fletcher. 

She’s a floating boiler, crammed with fire and steam. 
See Torpedo-boat, The.—Barnes. 

She’s all my fancy painted him. See same. —Carroll. 

She’s consinted at last! See How Pat went Courting. 
—(Leeds Mercury.) 

‘She’s cursed,’ said the skipper, ‘speak her fair.’ See 
Wreck of Rivermouth, The.—Whittier. 

She’s gane to dwall [or dwell] in heaven, my lassie. 
See She’s Gane to Dwall in Heaven.—Cunningham. 

She’s had a Vassar education. See American Girl, 
An.—Matthews. 

She’s little and modest and purty. See Ministers 
Wife, The.—Lincoln. 

She’s loveliest of the festal throng. See Rose and 
Thorn, The.—Hayne. 

She’s lovely! Her eyes are as blue. See They Don’t 
Agree.—Anon. 

She’s not what fancy painted her. See Song of the Hum¬ 
bugged Husband, The.— {Punch.) 

She’s only a singin’ a tune that he taught ’er. See 
Si, Do, Re.—Rude. 

She’s somewhere in the sunlight strong. See Song.— 
Le Gallienne. 

She’s still asleep—worn out for want of rest. See 
Death of Poe’s Wife, The.—Bleyer. 

She’s up and gone, the graceless girl! See Ballad: 
“She’s up and gone ” etc.—Hood. 

She’s up there,—Old Glory,—where lightnings are sped. 
See Old Flag Forever.—Stanton. 

Shine!—All right; here y’ are, boss! See Jack and Me. 
—Baker. 

Shine brighter than the sun in heaven, O eyes, beloved 
so long! See Winter Sunshine.—Anon. 

Shine kindly forth, September sun. See Ode Written 
for the Consecration of Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. 
—Sanborn. 

“Shine? shine, sor? Ye see, I’m just a dien’.” See 
Over the Crossin’.— {Springfield Republican.) 

Shine, sir? Have a shine? make them look like pat¬ 
ent leather. See Young Bootblack, The.—Bur¬ 
roughs. 

Shining patent leather. See Making New Year’s Calls. 
—Baker. 

Ship, to the roadstead rolled. See “O Navis.”—Dob¬ 
son. 

Sho’, dere, ma honey, don’t ye neber hab a fear. See 
Ephraim’s Storm Lullaby.—Collester. 

Shock’s fate I mourn; poor Shock is now no more. 
See On a Lapdog.—Gay. 

Shonny, my poy, come here by me. See Shonny, 
Don’d You Hear Me?—“Gooft.” 


820 








FIRST LINE INDEX 


Since 


Shoot, false Love! I care not. See Defiance to Love. 
—Drayton. 

Shorter and shorter now the twilight clips. See 
Autumn.—Cary. 

Shortly before the conclusion of the war with Napo¬ 
leon. See I Vant to Fly.—Anon. 

Should auld acquaintance be forgot. See Auld Lang 
Syne.—Burns. 

Should I long that dark were fair? See Spanish Gypsy, 
The (Dark, The).—Eliot. 

Should there be schools of elocution? See Study of 
Elocution, The.—Simpson. 

Should you ask me whence these stories? See Song 
of Hiawatha, The (Story of “Hiawatha,” The).— 
Longfellow. 

Shout for the banner bright. See Our Flag.—Anon. 

Shout for the mighty men [or dead]. See Leonidas.— 
Croly. 

Shout the glad tidings, exultingly sing! See Shout the 
Glad Tidings.—Muhlenberg. 

Shove off there!—ship the rudder, Bill—cast off! she’s 
under way. See Pain in a Pleasure Boat.—Hood. 

Show me a sight bates for delight . See Irish Spinning- 
wheel, The.—Graves. 

Shrewd Simon Short sewed shoes. See Simon Short’s 
Son Samuel.—Anon. 

Shrill and clear from coppice near. See Bob White. 
—Ham. 

Shrouded by the evening shadows. See Trysting.— 
Hart. 

Shrubs there are. See Lilacs.—Thomson. 

Shuffle-Shoon and Amber-Locks sit together, building 
blocks. See Shuffle-Shoon and Amber-Locks.— 
Fields. 

Shun delays, they breed remorse. See Loss in Delay.— 
Southwell. 

Shure, an’ I think Barney is sthayin’ away an awful 
long spill. See Barney’s Resolution.—McBride. 

Shure, is this the road to Da -throitf See Bound for 
Detroit.—Anon. 

Shut fast the door! let not one vulgar din. See Thomas 
Carlyle.—( London Punch.) 

Shut in a close and dreary sleep. See Dream’s Awak¬ 
ening, A.—Piatt. 

Shut in from all the world without. See Snow-bound 
(Firelight).—Whittier. 

Shut not so soon; the dull-eyed night. See To Daisies, 
Not to Shut so Soon.—Herrick. 

Shut these odious books up, brother. See Sister’s 
Expostulation on the Brother’s Learning Latin, 
The.—Lamb. 

Shuttle of the sunburnt grass. See Grasshopper, The. 
—Thomas. 

Shy bird of the silver arrows of song. See White- 
throat, The.—Rand. 

Shy little pansies. See April Fools.—Miller. 

Shy violets among the tangled grass. See By the 
Roadside.—Loomis. 

Si bene commemini causae sunt quinque bibere. Sefi 
Why Drink Wine?—Aldrich. 

Si com la nief, quant le fort vent tempeste. See 
Cinkante Balades.—Gower. 

Si Todd, our Freshman from Podunk, last Sunday— 
shame to tell! See “When the Sleeper Wakes.” 
_—(Yale Record.) 

Siccine separ t amara mors? See Knowledge after 
Death.—Beeching. 

Sick of myself and all that keeps the light. See Mira¬ 
cles.—Aldrich. 

Sickles sound; on the ground. See Harvest Song.— 
Goethe. 

Side by side with Lady Mabel. See Lady Mabel.— 
Austin. 

Sigh and grieve that you are yet so canial and worldly. 
See Imitation of Christ, The (“Sigh and grieve,” 
etc.).—Kempis. 

Sigh, heart, and break not; rest, lark, and wake not! 
See Nuptial Song.—De Tabley. 

Sigh his name into the night. See Love’s Secret Name. 
—Blaikie. 

Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more. See Much Ado 
about Nothing ("Sigh no more,” etc.).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Sigh not for love,—the ways of love are dark! See 
Sigh not for Love.—Hay. 

Sigh on, sad heart, for love’s eclipse. See Ballad: 
“Sigh on, sad heart,” etc.—Hood. 

Sighing like a furnace. See Three Stages.—Anon. 

“Sign the petition!” “Write my name!” See Eight 
Hours.—Baker. 

Signior Antonio, many a time and oft. See Merchant 
of Venice, The (Shylock to Antonio).—Shake¬ 
speare. 


Silence. A while ago. See Sea Story, A.—Hickey. 

Silence, all! ye winged choir. See To Song-birds on a 
Sunday.— (Punch.) 

Silence and Solitude may hint. See Uninscribed 
Monument on One of the Battle-fields of the 
Wilderness, An.—Melville. 

Silence augmenteth grief, writing increaseth rage. 
See Elegy on Sir Philip Sidney, An.—Greville. 

Silence, in truth, would speak my sorrow best. See 
Tears Wept at the Grave of Sir Albertus Morton.— 
Wotton. 

Silence instead of thy sweet song, my bird. See 
Lament of a Mocking-bird.—Kemble. 

Silence! Nobody is making a noise but you. See 
Schoolmaster Abroad, The.—Anon. 

Silence sleeping on a waste of ocean. See Rest.— 
Payne. 

Silence was envious of the only voice. See Voice of 
Webster, The.—Johnson. 

Silent amidst unbroken silence deep. See India.— 
Coates. 

Silent and lone, silent and lone! See Mother’s Thought, 
A.—Gage. 

Silent as thou, whose inner life is gone. See To a 
Skull.—Irwin. 

Silent companions of the lonely hour. See To My 
Books.—Norton. 

Silent it stands, the shrine within whose halls. See 
Vigil, The.—( London Punch.) 

Silent nymph, with curious eye! See Grongar Hill.— 
Dyer. 

Silent, O Moyle, be the roar of thy water. See Song of 
Fionnuala, The.—Moore. 

Silently musing a maiden sat. See Out of the Window. 
—Brock. 

Silently, tenderly, mournfully home. See Dead 
Volunteer, The.—Barker. 

Silly Swain, sit down and weep. See Clorus’ Song.— 
Basse. 

Silver stars shining. See Stars, The.—Murray. 

Silvery noted, lily-throated. See Jealousy in the Choir. 
—(Lowell New Moon.) 

Simon bent to his hissing saw. See Simon.-—Herbin. . 

Simon Danz has come home again. See Dutch Pic¬ 
ture. A.—Longfellow. 

Simon Wadso, returning home with his arms full of 
groceries. See Spring House-cleaning.—Anon. 

Simple, erect, austere, sublime. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage (Pantheon, The).—Byron. 

Simpson Green I hate like smoke. See Mitten, The.— 
Bellaw. 

Sin runs to passion: passion to tumult in character. 
See same. —Phelps. 

Since all that I can ever do for thee. See Last Wish, 
The.—Bulwer. 

Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea. 
See Sonnets, LXV.—Shakespeare. 

“Since Cleopatra died!” Long years are past. See 
“Since Cleopatra Died.”—Higginson. 

Since Eden, it keeps the secret! See Hidden Life.— 
Ames. 

Since ever the world was fashioned. See God’s Music. 
—Weatherly. 

Since fate has so ordained it that T, who began the war. 
See History of Rome (Hannibal Pleads for Peace). 
—Livy. 

Since first I saw your face I resolved to honour and 
renown ye. See Since First I Saw Your Face.— 
Anon. 

Since for kissing thee, Mingiullo, my mother scolds me 
all the day. See Ancient Spanish Lyric.—Anon. 

Since gratitude, ’tis said, is not o’er common. See 
Tinker and the Glazier, The.—Harrison. 

Since honour from the honourer proceeds. See Con¬ 
cerning the Honour of Books.—Daniel. 

Since I am coming to that holy room. See Hymn to 
God, my God, in my Sickness.—Donne. 

Since I had the honor—I should say the dishonor. See 
Infamous Legislation.—Burke. 

Since I have heard so much about the dismemberment 
of Mexico. See Spirit of Conquest, The.—Cor- 
win. 

Since I noo mwore do zee your fence. See Wife a- 
Lost, The.—Barnes. 

Since I’m somewhat known to fame. See Puzzle, A.— 
Denton. 

Since I rose out of child-oblivion. See Their Waving 
Hands.—Parker. 

Since I’ve got used to city ways and don’t scare at the 
cars. See Budd Wilkins at the Show.—Kiser. 

Since my father’s death our family have resided in 
London. See Rosamund Gray (Recollections of 
Childhood).—Lamb. 


821 





Since 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Since Nature’s works be good, and death doth serve. 
See Arcadia, The (Song from. etc.).—Sidney. 

Since o’er thy foot-stool here below. See Heaven’s 
Magnificence.—Muhlenberg. 

Since our country, our God—Oh! my sire! See 
Jephthah’s Daughter.—Byron. 

Since Phyllis vouchsafed me a look. See Pastoral 
Ballad.—Shenstone. 

Since she went home, the evening shadows linger longer 
here. See Since She Went Home.—Burdette. 

Since the avowal [Mr. Chairman] of that [or the] un¬ 
principled and barbarian motto. See Defalcation 
and Retrenchment.—Prentiss. 

Since the commencement of the term. See Wash¬ 
ington’s Inaugurals, Dec. 3, 1793.—Washington. 

Since the excavations of Pompeii commenced, many 
strange things have been brought to light. See 
Touching Relic of Pompeii, A.—Anon. 

Since the final end of life is the development of charac¬ 
ter. See Tendencies of Self-government, The.— 
Abbott. 

Since the first dominion of men was asserted over the 
ocean. See Stones of Venice, The (Tyre, Venice, 
and England).—Ruskin. 

Since the night when Ike went to the opera. See Ike 
after the Opera.—Anon. 

Since the ominous declaration of Lord Beaconsfield on 
the status quo. See Bulgarian Horrors.—Glad¬ 
stone. 

Since the Sun, the absolute, the world-absorbing one. 
See Evening Star, The.—Wordsworth. 

Since the sweet knowledge I possess. See Happy Love. 
—Mackay. 

Since the unfortunate accident to Mr. Coville. See 
Mr. Coville’s Easy Chair.—Bailey. 

Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part. See 
Parting, The.—Drayton. 

Since thou art dead, Clifton, the world may see. See 
Lady Penelope Clifton.—Beaumont. 

Since through the open window of the eye. See On a 
Photograph.—Wilton. 

Since we parted yester eve. See Since We Parted.— 
Meredith. 

Since what I am to say must be but that. See Win¬ 
ter’s Tale, The (Court Scene).—Shakespeare. 

Since you desire of me to know. See Reply, The.— 
Norris. 

Sing a song of Christmas pocket full of fun. See Sing 
a Song of Christmas.—Kavanaugh. 

Sing a song of Christmas! Pockets full of gold. See 
Ye Ballad of Christmas.—Anon. 

Sing a song of old days. See Old Days.—( Harvard 
Advocate.) 

Sing a song of rapture. See Song We Sing, The.— 
Turner. 

Sing a song of sixpence. See Golden Rule, The.— 
“Bob o’Link.” 

Sing a song of springtime! See Song of Seasons, A.—- 
MacDonald. 

Sing a song of summer-time. See Little Song, A. 
—( Youth’s Companion.) 

Sing again the song you sung. See Egyptian Serenade. 
—Curtis. 

Sing aloud! His praise rehearse. See Philosopher’ 
Devotion, The.—More. 

Sing, and let your song be new. See Sing unto the 
Lord.—Sidney. 

Sing, bird, on green Missouri’s plain. See Lyon.— 
Peterson. 

Sing, children, sing! And the lily censers swing. See 
Song of Easter, A.—Thaxter. 

Sing Erlington and Cowdenknowes where Homes had 
ance commanding. See Leader Haughs.—Min¬ 
strel Burn. 

Sing for the garish eye. See Sing for the Garish Eye.— 
Gilbert. 

Sing for the oak tree, the monarch of the world! See 
Oak Tree, The.—Howitt. 

Sing! gangling lad, along the brink. See Song of 
Singing, A.—Riley. 

Sing his praises that doth keep. See Faithful Shep¬ 
herdess, The (Hymn to Pan).—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. 

Sing, I pray, a little song. See Golden-tressed Ade¬ 
laide.—Procter. 

Sing little bird, when skies are blue. See Sing.—Car¬ 
ter. 

Sing lullaby, as women do. See Lullaby of a Lover, 
The.—Gascoigne. 

Sing me a hero! quench me thirst. See Tray.—Brown- 
. ing. 

Sing me a song of the great Dominion. See Song of 
Canada, A.—Reid. 


Sing me a sweet, low song of night. See Song.—Haw¬ 
thorne. 

Sing, O goddess, the wrath, the ontamable dander of 
Keitt. See Fight over the Body of Keitt, The. 
— (Punch.) 

Sing of the one now whose birthday we’re keeping. 
See Laurel Wreath, The.—Hadley. 

Sing, oh sing for the cotton plant! See Cotton Plant, 
The.—Anon. 

Sing out, O heart of mine! sing out. See Thanksgiving 
Song.—Anon. 

Sing out, and with rejoicing bring. See Eve of Mary, 
The.—Hopper. 

Sing, pretty birds and build your nests. See Sing, 
Pretty Birds.—Anon. 

Sing, sweet thrushes, forth and sing! See Angler’s 
Trysting-tree, The.—Stoddart. 

Sing the bridal of nations! with chorals of love. See 
Christmas Carmen.—Whittier. 

Sing the old song, amid the sounds dispersing. See 
Song: "Sing the old song,” etc.—De Vere. 

Sing the song of the singer, merrily ring the rhymes. 
See Between the Lines.—Phillips. 

Sing the song of wave-worn Coogee. See Coogee.— 
Kendall. 

Sing to Apollo, god of day. See Midas (Hymn to 
Apollo).—Lyly. 

Sing to me. nightingale, that sweet tune. See Once.— 

(Child World.) 

Sing we and chant it. See Hence Care!—Morley. 

Sing we of the summer. See Sotto Voce.—Bowman. 

Sing!—Who sings. See Bacchanalian Song, A.— 
Procter. 

Singing in the rain, robin? See Spring Twilight.—Sill. 

Singing through the forests. See Rhyme of the Rail.— 
Saxe. 

“Sink or swim, live or die, survive or perish.” See 
Adams and Jefferson (Supposed Speech of John 
Adams, etc.).—Webster. 

Sink,—slide—confound the first inventors of cotillions, 
say I. See Rivals, The (Challenge, The).— 
Sheridan. 

Sin-satiate, and haggard with despair. See Tann- 
hiiuser.—Payne. 

Sion lies waste, and Thy Jerusalem. See Caelica 
(Sonnet).—Greville. 

Sir, a charge is brought against gentlemen sitting in 
this house. See In Reply to Mr. Grenville.— 
Chatham. 

Sir Arthur’s foot is on the sand. See Sir Arthur and 
Lady Ann.—Ainslie. 

Sir, at the period of the birth of Washington, there 
existed in Europe. See Character of Washington, 
The (Spirit of Human Liberty).—Webster. 

Sir, before God, I believe the hour is come. See 
Adams and Jefferson (Independence).—Webster. 

Sir Cupid once, as I have heard. See Sir Cupid.— 
Weatherly. 

Sir, did you hear of that celebrated dwarf that has ar- 

' rived in the city? See Conjugating German, The. 
—Chester. 

Sir Easy Lovewell chanced to fall in love. See Pea¬ 
cock on the Wall, The.—Anon. 

Sir Edward Templerow, with whom Steven von 
Brammelendam was staying for a couple of days. 
See Dutchman’s Speech at an Institute, A.— 
Anon. 

Sir Eldric rode by field and fen. See Sir Eldric.— 
Robinson. 

Sir G. Staunton related a curious anecdote of old Kien 
Long, Emperor of China. See Emperor of China. 
—Anon. 

Sir—gentlemen appear to me to forget that they stand 
on American soil. See Speech on the War of 
1812.—Clay. 

Sir, good motives may always be assumed, as bad 
motives may always be imputed. See Philan¬ 
thropic Love of Power.—Webster. 

Sir, he who sees these States now revolving in har¬ 
mony. See Constitution and the Union, The 
(Peaceable Secession).—Webster. 

Sir Hudson Lowe, Sir Hudson Low. See To Sir Hud¬ 
son Lowe.—Moore. 

Sir—I agree with the honorable gentleman who spoke 
last. See American Taxation.-—Burke. 

Sir, I am delighted to see you See Rivals, The. 
—Sheridan. 

Sir, I am growing old. I have had some little measure 
of experience. See Reply to John Randolph.— 
Clay. 

Sir, I dare not trust myself to speak of my country. 
See Emotions on Returning to the United States. 
—Legare. 


822 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Six 


Sir, I desire you do me right and justice. See King 
Henry VIII. (Queen Katharine’s Appeal to 
Henry VIII.).—Shakespeare. 

Sir, I have entreated an attendance on this day. See 
Declaration of Irish Rights.—Grattan. 

Sir, I have from the beginning of these discussions, 
supported reform. See Reform Irresistible.— 
Macaulay. 

Sir, I have to say a few words about the accusation 
which has been brought. See General Amnesty.— 
Schurz. 

Sir —I, in the most express terms, deny. See Irish 
Parliament, The.—Plunket. 

Sir, I make no secret of the trade I follow. See Mr. 
Puff’s Account of Himself.—Sheridan. 

Sir. I must detain you no longer. See National En¬ 
sign, The.—Anon. 

Sir, I see, in those vehicles, which carry to the People. 
See Natural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, The 
(Hatred of the Poor, etc.).—Webster. 

Sir, I see no wisdom in making this provision for 
future changes. See On Altering the Virginia 
Constitution.—Randolph. 

Sir,—I was unwilling to interrupt the course of this 
debate. See Against Mr. Pitt.—Walpole. 

Sir, I wish for peace; I wish the negotiation may succeed. 
See Free Navigation of the Mississippi.—Morris. 

Sir, if the people have a right to discuss the official 
conduct. See Presidential Protest, The (Repre¬ 
sentatives, The).—Webster. 

Sir, if there be within this hall. See Temperance 
Pledge, The.—Marshall. 

Sir, if there is any spectacle from the contemplation of 
which I would shrink. See Popular Elections.— 
M’Duffie. 

Sir, in the efforts of the People. See People always 
Conquer, The.—Everett. 

Sir, it ill becomes the duty and dignity of Parliament. 
See Conquest of the Americans Impracticable.— 
Wilkes. 

Sir, it is amusing to compare the manner in w'hich the 
question of Catholic emancipation. See Jewish 
Disabilities.— Macaulay. 

Sir, it is an insult to our laboring classes. See Labor¬ 
ing Classes, The.—Legare. 

Sir, it matters very little what immediate spot. See 
Washington (Character of Washington).—Phillips. 

Sir John got him an ambling nag. See Sir John Suck¬ 
ling’s Campaign.—Mennis. 

Sir John was old, and grim, and gray. See Old 
Knight’s Treasure, The.—Morford. 

Sir Marmaduke was a hearty knight. See Sir Mar- 
maduke.—Colman. 

Sir Orpheus, whom the poets have sung. See Orpheus 
and Eurydice.—Saxe. 

Sir, our country stands, at the present time, on com¬ 
manding ground. See Public Dinner at New 
York (Liberty and Knowledge).—Webster. 

Sir, our institutions are telling their own story by the 
blessings they impart to us. See Influence of Ameri¬ 
can Freedom.—Johnson. 

Sir Plume (of amber snuff-box justly vain). See Rape 
of the Lock (Pride and Vanity).—Pope. 

Sir, revering as I do, the great abilities of the honorable 
gentleman. See On a Motion to Censure the 
Ministry.—Pitt. 

Sir Reynard once, as I’ve heard tell. See Fox in the 
Well, The.—Trowbridge. 

Sir Roland’s sword was brave and keen. See Love’s 
Roses.—Gregory. 

Sir Rupert the Fearless, a gallant young knight. See 
Sir Rupert the Fearless.—Barham. 

Sir Rupert, unstained by dishonor, unsullied by fear. 
See Si r Rupert the Fearless (Lurline; or, The 
Knight’s Visit to the Mermaids).—Barham. 

Sir,—The atrocious crime of being a young man. See 
Reply of Pitt to Walpole.—Chatham. 

Sir, the gentleman inquires why he was made the ob¬ 
ject of a reply. See Renly to Hayne, The (Matches 
and Overmatches).—Webster. 

Sir, the People of the United States, if I do not wholly 
mistake their character. See Predictions of Dis¬ 
union.—Pinkney. 

Sir —The two honorable and learned gentlemen who 
spoke in favor of this clause. See Against Search- 
warrants for Seamen.—Chatham. 

Sir, there is a gentleman below desires to see you. See 
Rivals, The (Cool Reason).—Sheridan. 

Sir, this proposition is so glaring. See Reply to Lord 
North.—Barre. 

Sir, under the cover of the roofs of the capital. See 
Natural Hatred of the Poor to the Rich, The. 
Webster. 


Sir Walter Raleigh has built a ship. See Golden 
Vanitee.—Anon. 

Sir, we are at the point of a century from the birth of 
Washington. See Cnaracter o* Washington, The 
(Century from Washington, A).— Webster. 

Sir, we have heard a great deal about Parliamentary 
armies. See On Reducing the Army.—Pulteney. 

Sir, we shall not fight our battles alone. See War 
Inevitable.—Henry. 

Sir, welcome: It is my father’s will I should take on 
me. See Winter’s Tale, The (Sheep-shearing, A). 
—Shakespeare. 

Sir, what is to be gained by this change in the Repre¬ 
sentation? See Perils of Parliamentary Reform. 
—Croker. 

Sir, when I flew to seize the bird. See Beau’s Reply.— 
Cowper. 

Sir William Napier, one bright day. See Sir William 
Napier and Little Joan.—Thaxter. 

Sirs, ye have heard these knights discourse to you. 
See Philip van Artevelde (Van Artevelde to the 
Men of Ghent).—Taylor. 

Sirs, you have been told. See Texas Centennial Ora¬ 
tion.—Hubbard. 

Sister, awake! close not your eyes. See Sister, Awake. 
—Anon. 

Sister, fie, for shame, no more! See Brother’s Reply, 
The.—Lamb. 

Sister Mary, our teacher told us yesterday. See Motto; 
or, Example, The.—Peat. 

Sister says I mustn’t tell yer. See Telling Tales.— 
Barnard. 

Sister Simplicitie. See Fragment of a Sleep-song.— 
Dobell. 

Sit down, Carmela; here are cobs for kings. See 
Menaphon (Doron’s Eclogue Joined with Car- 
mela’s).—Greene. 

Sit down. It may be you can be made to listen to 
reason. See Ruby’s Stratagem.—Kavanaugh. 

Sit down, sad soul, and count. See Sit Down, Sad 
Soul.—Procter. 

Sit here and muse!—it is an antique room. See Souls 
'of Books, The.—Lytton. 

Sit stern in your saddles! grip tighter each blade! See 
Death-ride, The.—Massey. 

Sittin’ around the stove last night. See Taste.— 
Riley. 

Sitting all day in a silver mist. See In the Mist.— 
Woolsey. 

Sitting by a river’s side. See Philomela’s Ode.— 
Greene. 

Sitting here by my desk all day. See Telegraph Clerk, 
The.—Anon. 

Sitting in a station the other day. See Sermon, The.— 
Alcott. 

Sitting in my humble doorway. See Footsteps on the 
Other Side.—Anon. 

Sitting in my window. See Love at First Sight.— 
Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Sitting ’mid the gathering shadows, weary with the 
Sabbath’s care.—See Teacher’s Diadem, The.— 
Anon. 

Sitting silent by the window while the evening’s fading 
beam. See Old Thanksgiving Days, The.—Shurt- 
leff. 

Sitting there by the side of this prone Monarch. See 
Fallen Monarch, The.—Bromley. 

Sitting upon our cottage stoop. See ’Tis Five and 
Twenty Years.—Anon. 

Sitting-room, bedroom, lumber-room, all as they should 
be. See Christmas Carol, A.—Dickens. 

Six and nine had a falling out. See Tit for Tat.— 
Hudson. 

Six fools, the story runs. See Wisest Fool, The.— 
Lovett. 

Six frogs went out one pleasant night. See Froggie’s 
Fate.—Anon 

Six hundred souls one summer’s day. See “Nay, I’ll 
Stay with the Lad. ”—Barr. 

Six hundred years ago in Dante’s time. See How 
Lisa Loved the King.—Cross. 

Six little maids from school are we. See Six Little 
Maids from School.—Anon. 

Six little words arrest me every day. See Six Little 
Words.—Anon. 

Six months had elpsed since the first chest of the 
Useful Knowledge. See Popanilla on Man.— 
Disraeli. 

Six or eight congenial spirits sat around a stove. See 
Mr. Hopwell’s Theory of Suppressing a Fire in 
a Theatre.— {Detroit Free Press.) 

Six skeins and three, six skeins and three! See Spin¬ 
ster’s Stint, A.—Cary. 


823 







Six 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Six years had passed, and forty ere the six. See 
Tales of the Hall (Approach of Age, The).—Crabbe. 

Six young men of Caesar’s household. See Seven 
Sleepers of Ephesus, The.—Goethe. 

Sixty seconds make a minute, how much good can 
I do in it? See My Time Table.—Anon. 

“Sixty seconds make a minute, sixty minutes make 
an hour. ” See Time.—Anon. 

Sixty years through shine and shadow. See Last Mile¬ 
stones, The.—Rivers. 

’Skeeters am a hummin’ on de honeysuckle vine. See 
Kentucky Babe.—Buck. 

Skim, skim, skim; with the skimmer bright. See 
Making Butter.—Anon. 

Skimpsey was a jockey, and made his living on the race¬ 
track. See Skimpsey.—Stoddart. 

Skin creamy as the furled magnolia bud. See Dancer, 
The.—Hayes. 

Skirting the river road (my forenoon walk, my rest). 
See Dalliance of the Eagles, The.—Whitman. 

Sky in its lucent splendor lifted. See Tropical Morn¬ 
ing at Sea, A.—Sill. 

Sky, mountains, river, winds, lake, lightnings! ye. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Poet’s Impulse, The). 
—Byron. 

Slave of the dark and dirty mine! See Ode to an 
Indian Gold Coin.—Leyden. 

Slave to no sect, who takes no private road. See 
Moral Essays (Epistle IV.).—Pope 

Slavery is dead,—buried in a grave that never gives up 
its dead! See Nineteenth Century Ends Slavery, 
The.—Lamar. 

Slayer of Winter, art thou here again? See Earthly 
Pa adise, The (March).—Morris. 

Sleep, angry beauty, and fear not me! See same .— 
Campion. 

Sleep, baby, sleep! Fondly I keep. See Sleep, Baby, 
Sleep.—Jones. 

Sleep, baby, sleep. Gone the sun to other skies. See 
In Santa-Claus Land.—Denton. 

Sleep, baby, sleep; The Mother sings. See Christmas 
Lullaby, A.—-Symonds. 

Sleep, baby, sleep! thy father watches his [or the] 
sheep. See Lullaby Song.—Prentiss. 

Sleep breathes at last from out thee. See To T. L. H., 
Six Years Old, during a Sickness.—Hunt. 

Sleep, comrades, sleep and rest.— See Decoration Day. 
—^Longfellow. 

Sleep is like death, and after sleep. See Morning.— 
Allingham. 

Sleep, little baby of mine. See Cradle Song.—Anon. 

Sleep, little pigeon, and fold your wings. See Japanese 
Lullaby.—Field. 

Sleep, love, sleep! See Watching.—Judson. 

Sleep, Mr. Speaker, tis surely fair. See Verses on 
Seeing the Speaker Asleep in his Chair.—Praed. 

Sleep, Motley, with the great of ancient days. See In 
Memory of John Lothrop Motley.—Bryant. 

Sleep, my child; no care can cumber. See Greek 
Mother’s Lullaby.—Cocke. 

Sleep, my darling, sleep! See Lullaby, A.—Thaxter. 

Sleep, my little Jesus. See Mary’s Manger-song.— 
Gannett. 

Sleep on, and dream of Heaven awhile. See Sleeping 
Beauty, The.—Rogers. 

Sleep on, baby on the floor. See Child and the Watcher, 
The.—Browning. 

Sleep on, my Love, in thy cold bed. See Requiem, A. 
—King. 

Sleep, silence’ child, sweet father of soft rest. Nee 
Sleep, Silence’ Child.—Drummond. 

Sleep, sleep, beauty bright. See Cradle Song, A.— 
Blake. 

Sleep, Sleep, come to me, Sleep. See Charm to Call 
Sleep, A.—Johnstone. 

Sleep, sleep, imperious heart! Sleep, fair and unde¬ 
filed! See Nocturne of Spiritual Love, A.—Rob¬ 
erts. 

Sleep, sleep, lovely white soul! See Lullaby.—Ramal. 

Sleep, sleep, my Ueasure.—Nee Sleep, My Treasure.— 
Nesbit. 

Sleep, sleep, sleep in thy folded waves, O Sea! See 
Sea-sleep.—Harris. 

Sleep, sleep today, tormenting cares. See Sabbath of 
the Soul, The.—Barbauld. 

Sleep, soldier, sleep. See same. —Anon. 

Sleep sweet, beloved one, sleep sweet! See Serenade.— 
Buchanan. 

Sleep sweetly in your humble graves. See Ode Sung on 
the Occasion of Decorating the Graves of the Con¬ 
federate Dead.—Timrod. 

Sleep that like the couched dove. See Nocturne.— 
Griffin. 


Sleep! the bird is in its nest. See Cradle Song.—Ben¬ 
nett. 

Sleep!—The ghostly winds are blowing! See Mother’s 
Last Song, The.—Procter. 

Sleep time, mah honey! evenin’ shadows failin’. See 
Darktown Lullaby, A.—Anon. 

Sleep’ry Sim of the Lamb-hill. See Fray o’ Suport, 
The.—Anon. 

Sleeves to the dimpled elbow. See Mother’s Girl.— 
Anon. 

Slow, groping giant, whose unsteady limbs. See 
Doubt.—Rogers. 

Slow paced, with listless steps he moved along. See 
Tramp, The.—Burdette. 

Slow, slow, fresh fount, keep time with my salt tears. 
See Cynthia’s Revels (Echo’s Lament of Narcissus). 
—Jonson. 

Slowly and sadly we laid him down. See Burial of Sir 
John Moore, The (“Slowly and sadly,” etc.).— 
Wolfe. 

Slowly, by Thy [or God’s] hand unfurled. See Night¬ 
fall.—Furness. 

Slowly England’s sun was setting o’er the hilltops far 
away. See Curfew Must not Ring Tonight.— 
Thorpe. 

Slowly forth from the village church. See Little 
Christel.—Rands. 

Slowly rose the daedal Earth. See Illumined Goal, 
The.—Sangster. 

Slowly, steadily, under the moon. See By the Sea.— 
Anon. 

Slowly the dawn a magic paleness drew. See Trafalgar 
Square.—Binyon. 

Slowly the invaders emerged from the groves. See 
Fall of Jericho, The.—Osborne. 

Slowly the mist o’er the meadow was creeping. See 
Lexington.—Holmes. 

Slowly the twilight was gathering in. See Resur¬ 
rected Hearts, The.—Cappleman. 

Slowly the weary, dispirited creatures wound their way 
into the room. See Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Cruelty 
of Legree, The).—Stowe. 

Slowly, with measured tread. See Last Journey, The. 
—Southey. 

Slumber, Sleep,—they were two brothers. See Broth¬ 
ers, The.—Goethe. 

Slumber, slumber, little one, now. See Lullaby.— 
Sherman. 

Sly Beelzebub took all occasions. See Epigram on 
Job and the Devil.—Coleridge. 

Sly Cupid late with Maia’s son. See Cupid and Mer¬ 
cury; or, The Bargain.—Lessing. 

Sly Eros once knocked at the door. See Love’s Dis¬ 
guise.—Hamilton. 

Sly Merry Andrew, the last Southwark fair. See 
Merry Andrew.—Prior. 

Small boy Bertie. See Bertie’s Philosophy.—Tap- 
pan. 

Small current of the wilds afar from men. See Brook 
Rhine, The.—Webster. 

Small fellowship of daily commonplace. See Friend¬ 
ship, A.—Jewett. 

Small have continual plodders ever won. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost.—Shakespeare. 

Small oaks from mighty acorns grow. See Salutatory. 
(I ).—Denton. 

Small service is true service while it lasts. See To a 
Child.—Written in her Album.—Wordsworth. 

Smile, lady, smile! (Bless me! what’s thatt) See 
Serenade, A.— [Punch.) 

Smiling river, smiling river. See To a River in Which 
a Child was Drowned.—Lamb. 

Smith had just asked Mr. Thompson’s daughter. See 
Asking the Gov’ner.—Anon. 

Smith—Smith—Smith. See Letters for Mr. Smith.— 
Meyers. 

“Smith was asking me to-day,” said Mr. Bowser. See 
Quiet Evening at Cards, A.—Lewis. 

Smooth and lean,—they have stripped her clean. See 
Battle-ship and Torpedo-boat.—J. W. M. 

Smooth it slides upon its travel. See Looking-glass 
River.—Stevenson. 

Smoothing soft the nestling head. See Two Lovers, 
The.—Whittier. 

Snare me the soul of a dragon-fly. See Miyoko San.— 
Fenollosa. 

Snatch the departing mood. See To a Town Poet.— 
Reese. 

Snow so fair. See Snow.—A. E. C. 

Snow-bound for earth, but summer-souled for thee. 
See Friend’s Greeting, A.—Taylor. 

Snyder kept a beer-saloon some years ago “over the 
Rhine.” See Snyder’s Nose.—Griswold. 


824 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


So 


So, after all, ’tis better that we err. See Though Oft 
Deceived.—Anon. 

So all day long I followed through the fields. See 
Gentian.—Crane. 

So all day long the noise of battle roll’d. See Morte 
d’Arthur.—Tennyson. 

So all night long the storm roared on. See Snow-bound 
(Snowstorm, The).—Whittier. 

So am I as the rich, whose blessed key. See Sonnets, 
LI I.—Shakespeare. 

So are the stars and the arching skies. See It is Com¬ 
mon.—Anon. 

So are you to my thoughts, as food to life. See Sonnets, 
LXXV.—Shakespeare. 

So, as I sat upon Appledore. See Wreck of River- 
mouth, The.—Whittier. 

So, boys, you want a story, well, mine’s not one of 
mirth. See On the Sunset Line.—Claxton. 

So busy is the dear old earth. See Nature’s Thought¬ 
fulness.—Butts. 

So careful of the type. See In Memoriam.—Ten¬ 
nyson. 

So cold was the night. See Skating Hath Charms.— 
H. H. 

So cruel prison how could betide, alas! See Prisoned 
in Windsor He Recounteth His Pleasure There 
Passed.—Howard. 

So dainty in plumage and hue. See English Sparrow, 
The.—Forsyth. 

So doth one sound the sleeping spirit wake. See 
Woman’s Voice.—Arnold. 

So ended Saturn; and the God of the Sea. See Hyperion 
(Oceanus).—Keats. 

So equal, then, the war and battle hung. See Iliad, The 
(Triumph of Hector, The).—-Homer. 

So every spirit, as it is most pure. See Hymn in Honor 
of Beauty (Beauty).—Spenser. 

So fair and yet so wild of face. See “Beauty of St. 
Giles, A. ”—Bradley. 

“So, Fairy Bell, you’ve come at last.” See Fairy 
Bell.—Short. 

So fallen! so lost! the light withdrawn. See Ichabod.— 
Whittier. 

So fell our stateman—for he stood sublime. See 
Everett.—Parsons. 

So forth issued [or issew’dl the seasons of the year 
[or yeare]. See Faerie Queene, The (Seasons, The). 
—Spenser. 

So, Freedom, thy. great quarrel may we serve. See 
Our Cause.—Linton. 

So go forth to the world, to the good report and the evil. 
See Amours de Voyage (Epilogue).—Clough. 

So goes the world; if wealthy, you may call. See Rich 
Man and the Poor, The.—Khemnitzer. 

So good of you to come in an early train. See Day 
before the Wedding, The.—Meyers. 

So, good Old Year, we part to-day. See Old and New 
Year, The.—Goodfellow. 

So grew Ossdo, as a lonely pine. See Mon-da-min.— 
Taylor. 

So happy were Columbia’s eight. See Crew Poem, A. 
—Blount. 

So he trassed away dreamin’ of Nora na Mo. See Gill 
with the Cows, The.—Graves. 

So help me gracious, efery day. See Der Baby.— 
Anon. 

So, Henry, your father has given his consent to your 
leaving school. See School or Work.—Anon. 

So here hath been dawning another blue day. See 
Today.—Carlyle. 

So hung the wa r in balance. See Iliad, The (Hector s 
Exploit at the Barriers of the Grecian Fleet).— 
Homer. 

So I am watching quietly. See Coming.—Anon. 

So I arm thee for the final night. See Page of Lance¬ 
lot, The.—Kendall. 

So I saw in my dream that he made haste, and went 
forward. See Pilgrim’s Progress (Palace Beautiful, 
The).—Bunyan. 

So, I shall see here in three days. See In Three Days 
—Browning. 

So, T think that looks very neat. See Lady of Lyons, 
The.—Bulwer-Lytton. 

So is it not with me as with that Muse. See Sonnets. 
XXI.—Shakespeare. 

So it all ends. I came here with the hope. See Elec¬ 
tric Episode, An.—Booth. 

So it all ends like a Chr'stmas tale. See For ( hrist- 
mas’ Sake.—Meyers. 

So it is come. The doctor’s glossy smile. See Gin- 
eVra.—Coolidge. . , 

So it’s just a year since I severed my matrimonial bonus. 
See Uncomfortable Call, An.—Anon. 


“So, John, I hear you did not pass.” See Did not 
Pass.—Burnett. 

So “Keats took snuff”? A few more years. See 
“Keats Took Snuff.”— {Globe, The.) 

So Kings and Chiefs and Bards, in Eman of the Kings. 
See Fate of the Sons of Usna, The.—Todhunter. 

So, Lady Flora, take my lay. See Day-dream, The 
(Moral).—Tennyson. 

So let him lie here in our midst to-day. See Lincoln, 
the Shepherd of the People.—Brooks. 

So lightly still the mother sleeps. See Rustle of a 
Wing, The.—Carter. 

So little, and yet mamma says. See So Little.—Anon. 

So live, that wheD thy summons comes to join. See 
Thanatopsis (How to Live).—Bryant. 

So long ago, a part we were of all that glorious show. 
See Great Remembrance, The.—Gilder. 

So long ago, so long ago, a fair-haired shepherd-boy. 
See Shepherd Boy’s Carol, The.—Anon. 

So long as fortune would permit the same. Nee Com¬ 
plaint of the Duke of Buckingham. — Buck- 
hurst. 

So long he rode he drew anigh. See Earthly Paradise, 
The (King’s Visit, The).—Morris. 

So Love is dead that has been quick so long. See Hie 
Jacet.—Moulton. 

So many are more beautiful? Nee No One Else is 
You.—Anon. 

So many days the birds have been calling. See Begun 
at Last.—Denton. 

So many folks dese lattah days am gwine an gittin’ 
married. See Smoked-American Theology.— 
Jones. 

So many friends are gathered here. See For a Birthday 
Celebrati on.—Denton. 

So many hill-sides, crowned with rugged rocks! See 
At Bethlehem.—Arnold. 

So many stars as shine in the sky. See Greeting from 
Far Away.—Buckert. 

So many talents are wasted, so many enthusiasms 
turned to smoke. See Heroism in Housekeeping. 
—Carlyle. 

So many worlds, so much to do. See Death in Life's 
Prime.—Tennyson. 

So Mary said, and Dora hid her face. See Dora 
(Sobbing).—Tennyson. 

So may Abraham, Jacob, and all the fathers of our 
people assist me. See Ivanhoe (Baron and the 
Jew, The).—Scott. 

So Mistress Liberty, w'e are met together again. See 
Brother Jonathan’s Birthday.—Denton. 

So much to do; so little done! See Three Days.— 
Gilmore. 

So, my Kathleen, you’re going to leave me. See Ter¬ 
ence’s Farewell.—Dufferin. 

So, my lord, the Lady Giovanna, who hath been away 
so long. See Falcon, The.—Tennyson. 

So my pretty flower-folk, you. See Dance of the 
Daisies, The.—Piatt. 

So my uncle is not at home. See Rose-colored Note, 
The.—Anon. 

So, Nell, at last we are alone. See Masquerading.— 
Rook. 

So nigh is grandeur to our dust. See same. —Emer- 


son. . . 

So now is come our joyful’st feast. See Christmas 
Carol, A.—Wither. 

So! one stage of our journey is accomplished! See 
Stage Struck.—Anon. 

“So, Pat, you’ve bought a house I’m told.” See Pat’s 
Purchase.—Kavanaugh. 

“So please your grace! once more upon your clemency 
I call.” See Cid, The (My Cid’s Triumph).— 
Ormsby. . 

So poor Mrs. Mulligan’s gone, nst her sown See 
Mother’s Tinder Falin’s, A.—Smith. 

So pride has had a fall at last! See Unfortunate 
Scholar, The.—Anon. 

So rest, forever, O princely Pair! See Church of 
Brou, The (Tomb in the Church of Brou, The).— 


See Sallie’s Visit to the 


Arnold. 

So Sallie has been to the city? 

City.—Anon. 

So sat I yesterday, with weary eyes. See Sparrows, 
The.—Kirby. IT 

So Saturn, as he walked into the midst. See Hype¬ 
rion (Saturn).—Keats. 

So saying, her rash hand in evil hour. See Paradise 
Lost.—Milton. 

Sp shaken as we are, so wan with care. 

Henry IV., Pt. I.—Shakespeare. 

So shall it be; your grace shall stay behind. 

John.—Shakespeare. 


See King 
See King 


825 





So 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“So she’s here, your unknown Dulcinea—the lady 
you met on the train.” See Half an Hour before 
Supper.—Harte. 

So should we live that every hour. See same. —Milnes. 

So shuts the marigold her leaves. See Memory.— 
Browne. 

So sinks the day star. See Lycidas.—Milton. 

So, so! all safe! Come forth, my pretty sparklers. 
See Miser Fitly Punished, The.—Osborne. 

So, so; I feel the signal. See Saul (Malzah and the 
Angel Zelehtha).—Heavysege. 

So, so, rock-a-by so! See same. —Field. 

So, s ime tempestuous morn in early June. See Thyr- 
sis (Departure of the Cuckoo, The).—Arnold. 

So spake the Son of God; and Satan stood. Sec Para¬ 
dise Regained.—Milton. 

So stately and so dignified. See That Sweet Girl 
Graduate.— (Harvard Lampoon.) 

So sweet a kiss the golden sun gives not. See Love's 
Labour’s Lost (Lover’s Tears, The).—Shakespeare. 

So sweet love seem’d that April morn. See So Sweet 
Love Seemed.—Bridges. 

So sweet, so sweet, the roses in their blowing. See 
In June.—Perry. 

So that soldierly legend is still on its journey. See 
Kearny at Seven Pines.—Stedman. 

So that’s Cleopathera’s Naadle for Needle], bedad. See 
Paddy’s Reflections on Cleopatra’s Needle.— 
O’Leary. 

So the boys have told you, have they, to ask me for 
that tale. See Horse-thief Jim.—Meyers. 

So the foemen have fired the gate, men of mine. See 
Knight’s Leap, The.—Kingsley. 

So the Freshmen aped and bored him. See Sopho¬ 
more, The.—Anon. 

So, the powder’s low, and the larder’s clean. See Last 
Cup of Canary, The.—Cone. 

So the record flashed over the telegraph wires. See 
Fall of Pemberton Mill, The.—Phelps. 

So, the truth’s out. I’ll grasp it like a snake. See 
Only a Woman.—Craik. 

So then, at last, let me awake this sleep. See To a 
Writer of the Day (Purpose).—Mitchell. 

So these lives that had run thus far in separate channels. 
See Courtship of Miles Standish, The (“So these 
lives.” etc.).—Longfellow. 

So, this is my erratic son’s studio. See Painter’s 
Studio. The.—Anon. 

“So this is our new cabin-boy.” See Brave Boy, A.— 
Anon. 

So this is the grand-duke’s workshop where. See 
Masque, The.—Meyers. 

“So this is the uproar? Well, isn’t this a monster big 
building?” See Aunt Sophronia Tabor at the opera. 
—Anon. 

So tired; I fain would rest. See So Tired.—Townsend. 

So tired looking out of the window. See Little 
Watcher, The.—Preston. 

So ’tis seven years since you went away, and I have 
been married five. See Blind Poet’s Wife, The.— 
Coller. 

So, to-morrow is Washington’s birthday. See Break¬ 
ing the Colt.—Denton. 

So tremulous the flame of thinking burns. See Moon¬ 
light.—M’Kenzie. 

So was he lifted gently from the ground. See Ex¬ 
cursion, The (Mist Opening in the Hills).—Words¬ 
worth. 

So, we’ll go no more a roving. See same. —Byron. 

So we’ve got to wait an hour and better before the 
stage starts? See Waiting for the Stage.—Crosby. 

So when the ghostly man had come and gone. See 
Idylls of the King (Elaine).—Tennyson. 

So when the old delight is born anew. See Immor¬ 
tality.—Myers. 

So, when their feet were planted on the plain. See 
Idylls of the King (Gate of Camelot, The).— 
Tennyson. 

So work the honey bees. See King Henry V. (Bees, 
The).—Shakespeare. 

“So you are going out to your little missionary 
society.” See Little' Mission Band, The.—(Ar¬ 
thur’s Home Maqazine.) 

So, you are ready for school, are you? See Discon¬ 
tented Girls, The.—McConaughy. 

So you beg for a story, my darling, my brown-eyed 
Leopold. See How He Saved St. Michael’s.— 
Stansbury. 

So you bid me to Thanksgivin’! Thank you, neighbor, 
it is kind. See Thanksgivin’ Pumpkin Pies.— 
Sangster. 

So you have changed your mind again, Simon and will 
not be a sailor? See Model Farmer, The.—Anon. 


So you knew Lizzie well, ma’am, and being down this 
way. See Lizzie.—Meyers. 

So you think our language very difficult, Mons. Bon- 
jean? See Fix.—Anon. 

So you were sitting and singing. See At the Window. 
—Foster. 

So, you will fly out. See Rivals, The.—Sheridan. 

So you’re a writer, and you think I could. See Old 
Roundsman’s Story, An.—Eytinge. 

So! you’re all the way from Kansas. See That Baby 
in Tuscaloo.—Campbell. 

So you’re going to give up flirtation, my dear. See 
Piece of Advice, A.—Baker. 

So you’re going to Scotland to-morrow. See On the 
Terrace.—Nesbit. 

So you’re takin’ the census, mister? There’s three of 
us livin’ still. See Whisperin’ Bill.—Bacheller. 

So you’re the latest victim—no. See Old Doll to the 
New One, The.—Leigh. 

So you’re the senior of the firm, the head. See Bank¬ 
rupt’s Visitor, The.—English. 

So you’ve brought me this costly Bible. See Grand¬ 
mother’s Bible.—Cooley. 

So you’ve come here to ask me for Susie—don’t stand 
there ahangin’ your head. See Going Away.— 
Frost. 

So you’ve gotten an offer of marriage? See Tale of 
Sweethearts, A.—-Sims. 

So you’ve lost your race, lad. See Take it Like a Man. 
—Lester. 

Society can no more exist without government. See 
Liberty the Meed of Intelligence.—Calhoun. 

Socrates was the reverse of a sceptic. See Last Hours 
of Socrates, The.—Anon. 

Soe, Mistress Anne, faire neighbour myne. See Salem. 
—Stedman. 

Soft and sweet the zephyrs sigh. See Soft and Sweet 
the Zephyrs Sigh.—-Anon. 

Soft and white the dew' was falling on the wild rose and 
the daisies See Whip-poor-Will.—Bennett. 

Soft fell the tender shades of eve, the coming night 
foretelling. See Unseen Angel, An.—McLean. 

Soft heath this elevated spot supplied. See Excur¬ 
sion, The (Sunset, The).—Wordsworth. 

Soft is the strain when zephyr gently blows. See 
Essay on Criticism, An.—Pope. 

Soft is thy rest, O silent sea. See “Soft is Thy Rest.” 
—Baker. 

Soft on the sunset sky. See Ashes of Roses.—East¬ 
man. 

Soft—soft—soft. See Snow-flakes.—Benjamin. 

Soft, sweet, and sad in its pathetic glory. See In 
November.—Phillips. 

Soft the angelus at even. See Rhapsody, A.—Gould. 

Soft were my numbers, who could take offence. See 
Satire on the Whig Poets.—Pope. 

Soft you; a word or two before you go. See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice (Othello’s Last Words).— 
Shakespeare. 

Soft-breathing Spring’ how many pleasant thoughts. 
See Outre-Mer (Journey into Spain, The).— 
Longfellow. 

Softer than silence, stiller than still air. See Snow'ing 
of the Pines, The.—Higginson. 

Softly fell the touch of twilight on Judea’s silent hills. 
See Beautiful Legend, A.—Anon. 

Softly now the light of day. See same. —Doane. 

Softly, O midnight Hours! See Serenade.—De Vere. 

Softly, oh softly, the years have swept by thee. See 
Growing Old.—Anon. 

Softly! she is lying. See Dirge.—Eastman. 

Softly the evening breezes. See Two of a Kind.— 
Banks. 

Softly the evening shadows. See same. —Brewer. 

Soft ly through my soul to-night. See Dreaming.—Anon. 

Softly woo aw'ay her breath. See same. —Procter. 

Soft-sandalled twilight, handmaid of the night. See 
Winter Twilight.—Elliot. 

Soft-throated South, breathing of summer’s ease. See 
South Wind.—Lathrop. 

Soldier and statesman, rarest unison. See Under the 
Old Elm (Washington).—Lowell. 

Soldier, rest! thy warfare o’er. See Lady of the Lake, 
The (Soldier, Rest!).—Scott. 

Soldier, soldier, come from the wars. See Soldier, 
Soldier.—Kipling. 

Soldiers and countrymen:—We have met this evening. 
See Revolutionary Sermon, A.—Breckenridge. 

Soldiers and Fellow-Citizens,—The unjust reproaches 
of our enemies we could easily disprove. See 
Caesar’s Death Justified.—Cassius. 

Soldiers and friends! we soon shall reach the ground. 
See Arminius to his Soldiers.—Murphy. 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Some 


Soldiers from the army and navy. See Address to the 
Soldiers.—Manning. 

Soldiers of the Armies of the United States! See Gen¬ 
eral Grant to the Army, 1865.—Grant. 

Soldiers of the - Regiment: The occasion which 

has brought together. See Presentation of a Flag 
to a Regiment Departing for War.—Anon. 

Soldiers! receive my adieu. See Farewell to the Army 
at Fontainebleau, 1814.—Bonaparte. 

Soldiers, the chief, Malinski, has betrayed his post and 
fled. See Alasco to his Countrymen.—Shee. 

Soldiers! who freely for our country’s glory. See 
Decoration Hymn.—Randall. 

Soldiers: You have in a fortnight gained six victories. 
See Bonaparte to his Army in Italy.—Napoleon 

Soldiers, you have, in fifteen days, gained six victo¬ 
ries. See Bonaparte to his Army in Italy (Procla¬ 
mation to the Army of Italy).—Napoleon. 

Soldiers! You have precipitated yourselves like a tor¬ 
rent from the Apennines. See Bonaparte to his 
Army in Italy (To the Army of Italy, May 15, 
1796).—N apoleon. 

Sole Lord of Lords and very King of Kings. See 
Sesostris.—Mifflin. 

Solemn days of Lent are closing, and in soft ethereal 
light. See Easter Altar-cloth, The.—Thayer. 

Solemn he paced upon that schooner’s deck. See Cap¬ 
tain, The.—Brainard. 

Solemnly, mournfully, dealing its dole. See Curfew.— 
Longfellow. 

Solid bronze never looked more ethereal. See Bar¬ 
tholdi Statue, The.—Hawthorne. 

Solomon Grub is a peculiar old man. See Solomon 
Grub.—Cook. 

Solomon never said a truer word than what he says. 
See Warning against Wine, A.—Moody. 

Solomon says, in words so mild. See Solomon and 
Mamma.—Anon. 

Solomon! where is thy throne? It is gone in the wind. 
See Gone in the Wind.—Mangan. 

Some ask’d me where the Rubies grow. See Rock of 
Rubies, The.—Herrick. 

Some bad little girls hate the boys. See Use for Boys, 
A.—Denton. 


Some boys were once engaged in play. See Little Gen¬ 
tleman, The.—Kavanaugh. 

“Some charity for Christ’s sake!” At the door. See 
“Dead! Name Unknown.”—Durant. 

Some clerks aver that as the tree doth fall. See Ut¬ 
most, The.—Lytton. 

Some, Cupid kills with arrows. See Strategy.—Field. 

Some day I think you will be glad to know. See Con¬ 
stancy in Absence.—Anon. 

Some day or other I shall surely come. See Some Day 
or Other.—Moulton. 

Some day, some day of days, threading the street. See 
Some Day of Days.—Perry. 

Some day soon this rhyming volume, if you learn with 
proper speed. See To My Name-child.—Steven¬ 
son. 

Some day the daisies will all be dead. See Mamma s 
Flower.—Cass. 

Some doubt the courage of the negro. See Toussamt 
L’Ouverture.—Phillips. 

Some dreams we have are nothing else but dreams. 
See Haunted House, The.—Hood. 

Some eight and twenty years ago, I knew. See Lost. 
—Cunard. . . 

Some evil god. or an avenging spirit. See Battle of 
Salamis, The.—jEschylus. 

Some find Love late, some find him soon. See VV hen 
Will Love Come?—Beatty. . 

Some find work where some find rest. See >V hy Is it 


Some folks ’re allers findin’ fault ’nd frettin’ round, 
y’ know. See “There Was a Crooked Man. — 
Penney. , . „ ... 

Some folks tell dis story one way, an some tell hit er- 
nuther. See Uncle Dick’s Version.—Anon. 

Some folks the Old World find so fair. See Patriotic 
Tourist, The.—Munkittrick. 

Some folks thought Hepsy had talent. See Hepsy s 
Ambition.—Thomson. _ _ _ 

Some future day when what is now is not. See songs 
in Absence (Some Future Day). Clough 
Some glad thing comes to me. See In June.—Morton. 
Some hae meat and canna eat. See Child s Grace, A. 


Some have denied a soul! They never loved. See 
Poet Proves the Existence of a Soul from his Love 
for Delia, The.—Southey. 

Some hearts go hungering through the world. See 
same. —Anon. 


Some high or humble enterprise of good. See same. — 
Anon. 

Some horses have high-toned names, but it didn’t 
matter with him. See Jim.—Bellaw. 

Some hundreds of years ago in the quaint old city of 
Nuremberg. See Folded Hands, The.—Anon. 

Some in the promise of an early prime. See William 
E. Gladstone. —(London Punch.) 

Some innocent girlish kisses by a charm. See Wild 
Rose.—Allingham. 

Some ladies love the jewels in Love’s zone. See Love’s 
Lovers.—Rossetti. 

Some laws there are too sacred for the hand. See 
Liberty of the Press.—DeVere. 

Some like drink in a pint pot. See Not I.—Stevenson. 

Some little boys are very shy. See Speech for a Very 
Little Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

Some little drops of water. See Raindrops' Ride, The 
—Anon. 

Some little folks are apt to say. See I’ll Put it Off.— 
Anon. 

Some little girls are lazy. See Helping Mamma.— 
Anon. 

Some love is light and fleets away. See True Love’s 
Dirge.—Motherwell. 

Some love the glow of outward show. See What House 
to Like.—Anon. 

Some men have “greatness thrust on them.” See 
What has been Done may be Done again.—Kav- 
anaifgh. 

Some men look upon this temperance cause as whining 
bigotry. See Temperance Question, The.— 
Phillips. 

Some men strut proudly, all purple and gold. See 
Good of it. The.— Craik. 

Some men were born for great things. See Uncle 
Sammy.—Carleton. * 

Some miners were sinking a shaft in Wales. See Lost 
and Found.—Aide. 

Some months ago—I need not mention where. See 
Little Shoes Did it. The.—Anon. 

Some months ago one of the janitors of a certain school. 
See His Limitation.—Anon. 

So much true resolution wrought in those. See Death 
of Talbot, The.—Daniel. 

Some murmur when their sky is clear. See Different 
Minds.—Trench. 

Some of my friends (for friends I must suppose). See 
Journey, The.—Churchill. 

Some of the best friends I have are Hebrews. See 
Hebrew Children, The.—Thatcher. 

Some of the boys in our school. See Fellow Who Is 
Game, A.—Anon. 

Some of the down-town merchants put in a stock of 
books. See At the Book Counter.—-Anon. 

Some of the figures presented to the Forestry Congress. 
See Destruction of the Forests.—Anon. 

Some of the most renowned American orators were 
still in their prime. See Wendell Phillips (Wen¬ 
dell Phillips as an Orator).—Curtis. 

Some of their chiefs were princes of the land. See 
Absalom ^nd Achitophel (Zimri).—Dryden. 

Some of these views, Bella, are lovely! See Bella’s 
Visit to Camp.—Anon. 

Some opulent force of genius, soul and race. See 
Abraham Lincoln.—Benton. 

Some parts of Holland keep out the ocean only by 
dykes. See To the Dykes.—Talmage. 

Some people say that dogs can’t talk. See My Carlo 
Talks.—Goodfellow. 

Some people think it’s nothing much. See Confidence 
versus Merit.—Kavanaugh. 

Some peoples thinks they ain’t no Fairies now. See 
Bud’s Fairy-tale.—Riley. 

Some person accidentally upset a bucket of water. 
See Mumford’s Pavement.—Anon. 

Some poets sing of sweethearts dead. See Ballade of 
Forgotten Loves.—Grissom. 

Some praise taking snuff. See Pot, and a Pipe of To¬ 
bacco, A.—Anon. 

Some quick and bitter words we said. See Wedded.— 
Anon. 

Some reckon their age by years. See Rosary of My 
Years, The.—Ryan. 

Some say Love, foolish Love, doth rule and govern all 
the gods. See Menaphon (Menaphon’s Song).— 
Greene. 

Some say that ever ’gainst that season comes. See 
Hamlet (Gracious Time, The).—Shakespeare. 

Some say that kissing’s a sin. See Kissing’s no Sin.^— 
Anon. . . , 

Some say the soul’s secure. See Hudibras (Spiritual 
Trimmers).—Butler. 


827 






Some 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Some say thy fault is youth, some wantonness. See 
Sonnets, XCVI.—Shakespeare. 

Some sigh for this and that. See Cigar, The.—Hood. 

Some sings of the lily, and daisy, and rose. See Clover, 
The.—Riley. 

Some sombre evening, when I sit. See My After- 
dinner Cloud.—Leigh. 

Some space beyond the garden close. See Hollyhocks, 
The.—Betts. 

Some take their gold. See Gold.—Herford. 

Some talk of Alexander, and some of Hercules. See 
British Grenadiers, The.—Anon. 

Some tangled hair, with ribbons there. See Some 
Tangled Hair.—Anon. 

Some tell us ’tis a burnin’ shame. See Sambo’s Right 
to be Kilt.—Halpine. 

Some ten or fifteen years ago. See Lost Watch, The. 
—“Juvenal.” 

Some there are who urge that “the liquor traffic is an 
old institution.” See Liquor Traffic Antagon¬ 
istic to American Liberty.—Finch. 

Some things look mighty easy until you try them. See 
Elusive Dollar Bill, The.—Wilson. 

Some think that all the great liars go to perdition. See 
Legend of the Knot-hole, The.—Nye. 

Some think themselves exalted to the sky. See Do¬ 
mestic Chaplain, The.—Oldham,. 

Some tiny elves, one evening, grew mischievous, it 
seems. See Dreams for Sale.—Morris. 

Some to Conceit alone their taste confine. See Essay 
on Criticism, An.—Dope. 

Some undone widow sits upon mine arm. See New 
Way to Pay Old Debts, A.—Massinger. 

Some vast amount of years ago. See Tommy’s First 
Love.—Calverley. 

Some vex their souls with jealous pain. See On One 
who Died Discovering her Kindness.—Sheffield. 

Some water and oil. See How Soap Was First Made. 
—Anon. 

Some will talk of bold Robin Hood. See Robin Hood 
and the Bishop of Hereford.—Anon. 

Some wit of old—such wits of old there were. See 
Paper.—Franklin. 

Some words on language may be well applied. See 
Rhymed Lesson, A: Urania (Wordson Language). 
—Holmes. 

Some years ago, a droll sort of a Dutchman. See 
Dutchman who Gave Mrs. Scudder the Small-pox, 
The.—Anon. 

Some years ago, ere civil war’s alarms. See Judging 
by Appearances.—Anon. 

Some years ago, ere time and taste. See Vicar, The.— 
Praed. 

Some years ago, in an Eastern town. See Poetical 
Courtship.—Hills. 

Some years ago, in Georgia. See Untimely Trumpet, 
The.—( Harper’s Monthly.) 

Some years ago, when civil faction. See Vat You 
Please.—Planche. 

Some years agone, one summer’s morn. See Ho, Boat 
Ahoy!—Stilwell. 

Some years since I attended the National Peace Jubilee. 
See Power of Music, The.—Talmage. 

Somebody asked me to take a drink. See No!—Anon. 

Somebody has said that in order to know a commu¬ 
nity. See Roughing It (Buck Fanshaw’s Funeral). 
—Clemens. 

“Somebody is coming.” See Stranger, A.—J. M. L. 

Somebody loves her little bed. See Somebody.— 
Anon. 

Somebody tells of the good old days. See New Girl’s 
Logic, The.—Curtis. 

Somebody told me, one bright summer day. See 
‘ 4 Somebody.”—Anon. 

Somebody turn to us las’ night. See New Baby, The. 
—Snyder. 

Somebody’s baby, with laughing eyes. See “Some¬ 
body’s.”—McRay. 

Somebody’s courting somebody. See Somebody.— 
Anon. 

Somebody’s dead; there’s crape on the door. See 
Crape on the Door.—Anon. 

Somebody’s dying tonight! Alas! See Agony Bells. 
—Wellington. 

Somebody’s heart is gay. See Two Pictures.—Anon. 

Somedimes ven I’m a-feeling bad. See Katrina Likes 
Me Poody Veil.—Gooft. 

Someone, a figure arrayed in white. See Load on his 
Mind, The.—( Burlington Hawkeye.) 

Someone asked the Duke of Wellington. See Battle 
of Life, The.—Olin. 

“Someone has been in the garden.” See Jack Frost.— 
Anon. 


Someone has gone from this strange world of ours. See 
Ring the Bell Softly.—Smith. 

Some one has said, and I think it was Mr. Moody. See 
Account of a Negro Sermon.—Gough. 

Someone has taken the trouble. See Beatitudes in 
Broad Scotch, The.—Anon. 

Some’ow I don’t mind talkin’ about myself. See Lit¬ 
tle Charlie.—Overton. 

Some’ow I don’t mind talking about myself. See Jail¬ 
bird’s Story, A.—Anon. 

Somethin’ cur’ous in his air. See His Sunday Clothes. 
—Anon. 

Something beyond! Though now, with joy unfound. 
See Something Beyond.—Clemmer. 

Something each day,—a smile. See Something Each 
Day.—Anon. 

Something is on your mind this evening, Brother 
Bones. See Brudder Bones as a Log-roller.—Anon. 

Something more than the lilt of the strain. See Poetry. 
—Foote. 

Something put Bateman in mind of old Bill Stevens. 
See Old Bill Stevens.—Anon. 

Something round which it may twine. See God 
Careth.—Anon. 

Something startles me where I thought I was safest. 
See This Compost.—Whitman. 

“Something to do, mamma, something to do!” See 
Something to Do.—Havergal. 

Something’s wrong in this house; can’t tell what it is. 
See New Christmas, The.—Denton. 

Sometime ago I jvas staying with Sir George Flasher. 
See Love in a Balloon.—Moseley. 

Sometime before young Paris’ birth. See Birth of 
Paris, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Sometime, dear heart, yes, sometime. See Sometime. 
—F. A. F. W. W. 

Sometime, it may be, you and I. See To Faustine.— 
Colton. 

Sometime there ben a lyttel boy. See Lyttel Boy, The. 
—Field. 

Sometime, when all life’s lessons have been learned. 
See Sometime.—Smith. 

Sometimes a light surprises. See Joy and Peace in 
Believing.—Cowper. 

Sometimes at lonely dead of night. See In Solitude.— 
Scollard. 

Sometimes goldfinches one by one will drop. See “I 
stood tiptoe upon a little hill” (Goldfinches).— 
Keats. 

Sometimes I have seen a tall ship glide by. See Pro¬ 
fessor at the Breakfast-table, The (Faithful Little 
Wife, A).—Holmes. 

Sometimes I keep from going to sleep. See Katydids, 
The.—Riley. 

Sometimes I smile, sometimes I sigh. See Shadows.— 
Anon. 

Sometimes I think ’at parunts does. See Parent Rep¬ 
rimanded. A.—Riley. 

Sometimes I think I will be cold with her. See When 
She Comes.—Westley. 

Sometimes I think I’ll thrash him good. See 'Nough 
for Me.—Foley. 

Sometimes I think that those we’ve lost. See Our 
Dead.—Argyll. 

Sometimes I wonder what a mean man thinks about 
when he goes to bed. See Don’t be Mean, Boys. 
—Burdette. 

Sometimes in passing along the street. See Man Who 
Wears the Button, The.—Thurston. 

Sometimes mamma calls me “general.” See Which 
General?—Hamilton. 

Sometimes my darling, I have suffered doubt. See 
Doubt.—Chapman. 

Sometimes my First will hide its smiling face. See 
Skylight.—Sabine. 

Sometimes—not often—when the days are long. See 
Sometimes.—Story. 

Sometimes she spake with those who had seen her be¬ 
loved and known him. See Evangeline.—Long¬ 
fellow. 

Sometimes when after spirited debate. See Change.— 
Howells. 

Sometimes when I get to feelin’. See Elam Chase’s 
Fiddle.—Tongue. 

Sometimes when I’ve been ’spesh’ly good. See "Ma’i 
Attic.”—Crissey. 

Sometimes, when Nature falls asleep. See Night 
Mists.—Hayne. 

Sometimes, when rude, cold shadows run. See Last 
and Best.—Cary. 

Sometimes when we’re in school, and it’s the afternoon 
and late. See School Committee Man, The.— 
Lincoln. 


828 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Speed 


Somewhat apart from the village, and nearer the Basin 
of Minas. See Evangeline (Evangeline in Acadie). 
—Longfellow. 

Somewhat back from the village street. See Desola¬ 
tion.—Masson. 

Somewhat back from the village street! See also Old 
Clock on the Stairs, The.—Longfellow. 

Somewhere beneath the sun. See Amaturus.—-Cory. 

Somewhere in cloudland, but I won’t say where. See 
Perfect Wife, The.—Anon. 

Somewhere, in deeps. See Sport.—Garland. 

Somewhere—in desolate wind-swept space. See 
Identity.—Aldrich. 

Somewhere in Leather Lane. See Sausage Maker’s 
Ghost, The.—Hood. 

Somewhere in the world there hide. See In Twos.— 
Gannett. 

Somewhere on this earthly planet. See Common 
Thought, A.—Timrod. 

Somewhere or other there must surely be. See Some¬ 
where or Other.—Rossetti. 

Somewhere, out on the blue seas sailing. See When 
My Ship Comes in.—Burdette. 

‘Somewhere the wind is blowing,” I said, and toiled 
along. See Somewhere.—Shaw. 

Somewhere there waiteth in this world of ours. See 
Dest iny.—A mold. 

Son of Erebus and night. See Inner Temple Masque, 
The (Charm, The).—Browne. 

“Son of Light,” I murmured lowly. See Behind the 
Veil.—DeMille. 

Son of the Brittannia’s isle. See Gordon.—Tennyson. 

Sons of New England in the fray. See Treason’s Last 
Device.—Stedman. 

Sons of the nation, to glory restored. See Sons of the 
Nation.—Anon. 

Soon after I came to live in this house, as I was paint¬ 
ing the palisades. See Man in the Fustian Jacket, 
The.—Moggridge. 

Soon after the French war. See Grandfather’s Chair 
(Affray in King Street, Boston, 1770, The).— 
Hawthorne. 

Soon after two o’clock yesterday. See He Wanted it 
Let Alone.—Anon. 

Soon as her lover to the war had gone. See Night- 
watch, The.—Coppee. 

Soon as the sun begins to rise. See Strawberry 
Woman, The.—Denton. 

Soon the steeples called good people all to church and 
chapel. See Christmas Carol, A (Bob Cratchit's 
Dinner).—Dickens. 

Soon they the palace reached of Astragon. See 
Gondibert.—Davenant. 

Sooner or later, in some future date. See Last Day 
Book, The.—Young. 

Sophia Saunders searching scrutinized Sarah. See 
Short Sensational Story.—Anon. 

Sorrow, my friend. See Song before Grief, A.—Lath- 
rop. 

Sorrows humanize our race. See same. —Ingelow. 

Soul of a tree ungrown, new life out of God’s life pro¬ 
ceeding. See Yosemite.—Shinn. 

Soul, wherefore fret thee? Striving still to throw. 
See Soul, wherefore Fret Thee?—Bloede. 

Soulless, colorless strain, thy words are the words of 
wisdom, See Didactic Poem, The.—Garnett. 

Souls are built as temples are. See Building.—Coolidge. 

Soul’s joy, bend not those morning stars from me. See 
Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet XLVIII.).—Sidney. 

Souls of men! why will ye scatter. See same. —Faber. 

Souls of poets dead and gone. See Lines on the Mer¬ 
maid Tavern.—Keats. . 

Souls of the patriot dead. See Kidnapping of Sims, 
The.—Pierpont. _ 

Sound all to arms! See Catiline (Catiline to the Roman 
Army).—Croly. 

Sound fife, and cry the slogan. See Burial March of 
Dundee, The.—Aytoun. „ 

Sound over all waters, reach out from all lands. See 
Christmas Carmen, A.—Whittier. 

Sound seeks for sympathetic things. See Organ C rea- 


tions.—Warren. 

Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife! See Sound, 
Sound the Clarion.—Scott. 

Sound the deep waters. See Sleep at Sea.—Rossetti. 

Sound the loud timbrel o’er Egypt’s dark sea! See 
Sound the Loud Timbrel.—Moore. . 

Source immaterial of material naught. See Rejected 
National Hymns, The, IV.—Newell. 

Source of my life’s refreshing springs. See Source of 
My Life.—Waring. , „ 

South Florida, where the sunlight dances. See lam pa 
Romance, A.—Rogers. 


South Mountain towered upon our right, far off the 
river lay. See Pride of Battery B, The.—Gassa- 
way. 

South Pokus is religious,—that’s the honest, livin 
truth. See Wasted Energy.—Lincoln. 

Southrons, hear your country call you! See Dixie.— 
Pike. 

Southward the swallow flies, south to the sun- 
lands. See Autumn Wedding-song, An.—Tas- 
sin. 

Southward with feet of ice. See Sir Humphrey Gil¬ 
bert.—Longfellow. 

Sow, and look onward, upward. See same .—( House¬ 
hold Words.) 

Sow in the morn thy seed. See Sower, The.—Mont¬ 
gomery. 

Sow with a generous hand. See Sowing and Reaping. 
—Procter. 

Spain’s hour has struck. No more her flag. See 
Spain’s Hour of Doom.—Haven. 

Spake full well, in language quaint and olden. See 
Flowers.—Longfellow. 

Spare all who yield; alas, that we must pierce. See 
Death of Hampden, The.—Beatty. 

Spare, generous Victor, spare the slaves. See To a 
Lady: She Refusing to Continue a Dispute.— 
Prior. 

Spare her at least; look, you have taken from me. See 
Old and the New Year, The.—Procter. 

"Spare man nor steed, use utmost speed; before the 
sun goes down.” See Cavalry Scout, The.— 
Scotus. 

Spare, O spare! the noble youth of our country. See 
Spare the Youth.—Brosius. 

Sparkling and bright in liquid light. See Sparkling 
and Bright.—Hoffman. 

Speak and tell us, our Ximena, looking northward far 
away. See Angels of Buena Vista, The.—Whit¬ 
tier. 

Speak gently; in this world of ours. See Speak Gently. 
—Anon. 

Speak gently; it is better far. Nee Speak Gently.— 
Bates. 

Speak gently to the erring-ye know not all the power 

Nee Speak Gently to the Erring.—Lee. 

Speak gently to the herring, and kindly to the calf. 
See some. —Ashby-Sterry. 

Speak kindly to that poor old man. See Way to Be 
Brave, The.—Anon. 

Speak low to me, my Saviour, low and sweet. See 
Comfort.—Browning. 

Speak low! tread softly through these halls. See 
Thoughts in a Library.—Botta. 

“Speak, O man, leas recent! Fragmentary fossil!” 
See To the Pliocene Skull.—Harte. 

Speak, quiet lips, and utter forth my fate. See Eng¬ 
lish Girl, An.—Home. 

Speak, Roman! wherefore does thy master send. See 
Spartacus and Jovius.—Bird. 

“Speak!” said the high priest of Tanit. “What do you 
wish?” See Salammbo’s Appeal.—Flaubert. 

Speak, satire; for there’s none can tell like thee. See 
True-born Englishman, The.—DeFoe. 

“Speak! speak! thou fearful guest!” See Skeleton in 
Armor, The.—Longfellow. 

Speak the speech. I pray you, as I pronounced it to you. 
See Hamlet (Hamlet’s Instruction to the Players). 
—Shakespeare. 

Speak the truth! See some. —Anon. 

Speak thou the truth! Let others feneo. See Be Just, 
and Fear not.—Alford. 

Speak to the children, Little Book. See same. — 
Lovejoy. 

Speak ye unto all the congregation of Israel. See 
Easter Service, An.—Denton. 

Speaker, hark here! How can you hope to reach. 
See How Two Men Spoke the Same Words.— 
Sarge >nt. 

Speakin’ of dorgs, my bench-legged fyce. See Bench¬ 
legged Fyce, The.—Field. 

“Speaking ob ’lectricity ” fsaid the Rev. Plato John¬ 
son], “it ’pears to me.” See Brudder Johnson on 
’Lectricity.—Anon. 

Speaking of Anthems says a writer in the Nautical 
Gazette. See H’Anthem, The.—Anon. 

Specklety flew from the haymow dim. See * ‘ Planting” 
Wheat.—Anderson. 

Speech is a Divine gift bestowed upon man. See 
Ancient and Modern Oratory.—Wyman. 

Speechless Sorrow sat with me. See Guest, The.— 
Kimball. 

Speed away! speed away! on thine errand of light. 
See Speed Away.—Woodberry. 


829 




Speed 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Speed on, speed on, good master! See Walker of the 
Snow, The.—Shanly. 

Speed our Republic, O Father on high. See American 
Hymn.—Keller. 

Speed, Ringbolt, to your leader speed! See same. — 
Read. 

“Speed, speed thee forth,” said Washington. See 
Nathan Hale.—Geary. 

Speed the news; speed the news! See One of the Six 
Hundred.—Anon. 

Speeding before the gale. See With Gleaming Sail.— 
Gardiner. 

Sphinx was a monster that would eat. See Two 
Riddles.—Prior. 

Spices for love’s service bringing. See When the Stone 
was Rolled Away.-—Denton. 

Spinning, spinning by the sea. See Hilda, Spinning.— 
Anon. 

Spirit, I know thee not, I look on thee. See White 
Pilgrim, The.—Merivale. 

Spirit of “fire and dew.” See To O. S. C.—Trumbull. 

Spirit of song, whose shining wings have borne. See 
Song and Science.—Shinn. 

Spirit of Spring, thy coverlet of snow. See Waking 
of Spring, The.—Custance. 

Spirit of Twilight, through your folded wings. See 
Twi li ght.—Custance. 

Spirit that breathest through my lattice: thou. See 
Evening Wind, The.—Bryant. 

Spirit that moves the sap in spring. See Fertility.— 
Thompson. 

Spirits of fire, that brood not long. See Lalla Rookh. 
—Moore. 

Spite of storm and stress of weather, in a gale that 
lashed the land. See Story of a Stowaway, The. 
—Scott. 

Splendors of morning the billow-crests brighten. See 
Surf.—Stedman. 

Spontaneous Us! See Presto Furioso.—Seaman. 

Sporting through the forest wide. See Little Children. 
—Howitt. 

Spose man lun slam—bang flont of gal. See John 
Chinaman’s “Cornin’ through the Rye.”—( Har¬ 
per’s Magazine .) 

S’pose ye’ve noticed that there cunnin’ little rascal 
taggin’ Dan about, heven’t ye? See Lumber 
Camp Romance, A.—Crocker. 

Spouse! sister! angel! pilot of the fate. See Epipsy- 
chidion.—Shelley. 

Sprawling down one hill and half-way up another. See 
Dave Flint’s Temptation.—Anon. 

Spread a feast with choicest viands. See Cleopatra to 
Antony.—Doudney. 

Spread straw and tan-bark on the street. See After 
the Battle.—Burdette. 

Sprig, sweet sprig, is cobig. See Beautiful Sprig.— 
Welsh. 

“Spring all the graces of the age.” See Song before 
the Entry of the Masquers.—Jonson. 

Spring came with tiny lances thrusting. See Blossom 
Time.—Larremore. 

Spring comes hither. See Spanish Gypsy, The (Spring 
Song).—Eliot. 

Spring gives the order, “Forward, March!” See For¬ 
ward, March!—Anon. 

Spring is coming! Everywhere there is a fragrance in 
the air. See Spring Comes.—Anon. 

Spring is coming, spring is coming. See Oxfordshire 
Children’s May Song.—Anon. 

Spring is coming! Spring is coming. See also Spring 
is Coming.—Anon. 

Spring is growing up. See Spring and Summer.— 
Anon. 

Spring is on the mountain. See Spring Time.—Anon. 

Spring is the morning of the year. See Golden-rod. 
—Sherman. 

Spring it is cheery. See Ballad: “Spring,” etc.—Hood. 

Spring, summer, autumn, winter. See Builders, The.— 
Elliott. 

Spring! The beautiful spring is coming. See April.— 
Howitt. 

Spring, the sweet Spring, is the year’s pleasant king. 
See Spring, the Sweet Spring.—Nashe. 

Spring, with that nameless pathos in the air. See 
Spring in Carolina.—Timrod. 

Spring-time is coming again, my dear. See Song, A: 
“Spring-time is coming,” etc.—Baker. 

Sprinkle, sprinkle, comes the rain. See Merry Rain.— 
Anon. 

Sprinkle, sprinkle, water-cart. See Aquarius.—Bur¬ 
dette. 

Spruce Macaronis, and pretty to see. See Maryland 
Battalion, The.—Palmer. 


Sprung from a race of soldiers. See Career of Gordon, 
The.—-Swift. 

Sprung from a sword-sheath fit for Mars. See Villa- 
nelle.—Harrison. 

Sprung from the blood of Israel’s scattered race. See 
Rachel.—-Arnold. 

Squeak the fife and beat the drum. See Independence 
Day—1798.—Tyler. 

Squire Peleg Sanford and all his family. See Gucom 
and the Backlog.—Haliburton. 

“Stack Arms!” I’ve gladly heard the cry. See 
“Stack Arms.”—Alston. 

“Stand, Bayard, stand!” The steed obeyed. See 
Lady of the Lake, The.—Scott. 

Stand by the flag! Its stars, like meteors gleaming. 
See Stand by the Flag!—Wilder. 

Stand by the flag! on land and ocean billow. See 
Stand by the Flag.—Wilder. 

Stand close around, ye Stygian set. See Dirce.— 
Landor. 

Stand here by my side and turn, I pray. See Snow- 
shower, The.— Bryant. 

Stand, in imagination, of a summer’s morning. See 
Triumph of Peace, The.—Chapin. 

Stand still, and I will read to thee. See Lecture upon 
the Shadow, A.—Donne. 

Stand still, my soul, in the silent dark. See My Soul 
and I.—Whittier. 

Stand! the ground’s your own, my braves! See War¬ 
ren’s Address.—Pierpont. 

“Stand to your guns, men!” Morris cried; small need 
to pass the word. See On Board the Cumberland, 
March 7, 1862.—Boker. 

Stand up—erect! Thou hast the form. See Laborer, 
The.—Gallagher. 

Stand up, ye spellers now and spell. See Spelling 
Class, The.—Dyer. 

Standing at the portal. See New Year’s Hymn.— 
Havergal. 

Standing forth on life’s rough way. See Our Children. 
—Bryant. 

Standing here on the threshold of Happy New Year. 
See Which Path?—Goodfellow. 

Standing on Saxon foundations and inspired. See 
Scholar in a Republic, The (Educate the Masses). 
—Phillips. 

Standing on tiptoe ever since my youth. See Stand* 
ing on Tip-toe.—Cameron. 

Standing with her palms together. See Fireflies.— 
A. C. S. 

Star of the flowers, and flower of the stars. See Dia¬ 
mond, The.—Wilkinson. 

Star of the mead! Sweet daughter of the day. See 
Daisy, The.—Leyden. 

Star of the North! though night winds drift. See 
Fugitive Slave’s Apostrophe to the North Star, 
The.—Pierpont. 

Star that bringest home the bee. See Song to the 
Evening Star.—Campbell. 

Star-dust and vaporous light. See Noel.—Gilder. 

Stars of the summer night! See Spanish Student, The 
(Serenade) .—Longfellow. 

Stars trembling o’er us, and sunset before us. See 
In Our Boat.—Craik. 

“Star-spangled battle-flag, tattered and torn.” See 
Song of the Battle-flag.—Anon. 

Starting, starting, from the earth. See May.— 
Curtis. 

Stately yon vessel sails down the tide. See Ship, The 
—Southey. 

States are not great. See John Brown.—Ironquill. 

Statesman, I thank thee! and, if yet dissent. See To 
William H. Seward.—Whittier. 

“Stay at home,” said Inclination. See Duty and 
Inclination.—Anon. 

Stay, I fell asleep. Jaikes, you don’t know what a 
murderer’s sleep is? See Wilfred Denver’s 
Dream.—Anon. 

Stay, jailer, stay, and hear my woe. See Maniac, The. 
—Lewis. 

Stay, lady, stay, for mercy’s sake. See Orphan Boy’s 
Tale, The.—Opie. 

Stay, mortal stay; nor heedless thus. See One Glass 
More.—Anon. 

Stay. O sweet, and do not rise! See Daybreak.— 
Donne. 

Stay one moment, ere you leave me. See Noon of 
Life, The.—Scott. 

Stay, Phoebus, stay! See same. —Waller. 

Stay, Roman, in pity!—if not for thy life. See Resolve' 
of Regulus, The.—Sargent. 

Stay, stay at home, my heart, and rest. See Song. 
—Longfellow. 


830 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Strive 


Stay with me. Poesy! playmate of my childhood! See 
Invocation to Poesy, An.—Mackay. 

Stay you, that bear the course, and set it down. See 
King Richard III.—Shakespeare. 

Steadfast as sorrow, fiery, sad and sweet. See For a 
Portrait of Felice Orsini.—Anon. 

Steady, boys, Steady! Keep your arms ready. See 
Wounded Soldier, The.— Watson. 

Steer hither, steer your winged pines. See Inner 
Temple Masque, The (Siren’s Song, The).—Browne. 

Stella, since thou so right a princess art. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Sonnet CVII ).—Sidney. 

Stella, the only planet of my light. See Astrophel 
and Stella (Sonnet XLV1II).—Sidney. 

Stella, think not that I by verse seek fame. See Astro¬ 
phel and Stella (Sonnet XC.).—Sidney. 

Step by step onward. See Keep to the Line.—Mur¬ 
ray. 

“Step gently, sir, step gently.” See Wee, Wee 
Bairnie, The.—Anon. 

Stern be the pilot in the dreadful hour. See To Abra¬ 
ham Lincoln.*—Piatt. 

Stern Daughter of the Voice of God! See Ode to Duty. 
—Wordsworth. 

Stern granite Gate of Wicklow, with what awe. See 
Scalp, The.—Savage-Armstrong. 

Stern land! We love thy woods and rocks. See New 
England.—Anon. 

Stick to your aim; the mongrel’s hold will slip. See 
Perseverance.—-Holmes. 

Stiff are the warrior’s muscles. See Lines Written after 
a Battle.— {Punch.) 

Still and dark along the sea. See Twilight on Sumter. 
—Stoddard. 

Still and gentle all around. See Little Snowflakes.— 
Anon. 

Still and sweet was the home that stood. See Bride 
of the Greek Isle, The.—Hemans. 

Still are the ships that in haven ride. See Outwards or 
Homewards.—Bourdil.on. 

Still as I move thou movest. See Her Shadow.—Pul¬ 
len. 

Still, as we saunter down the crowded street. See 
Old and New Rome.—Merivale. 

Still do the stars impart their light. See Falsehood.— 
Cartwright. 

Still dumb thou sittest, with a downcast look. See 
Love and Books.—Gosse. 

Still farther would I fly, my child. See Aboriginal 
Mother’s Lament, An.—Harpur. 

Still first, as long and long ago. See Massachusetts 
Line, The.—Lowell. 

Still I am patient, tho’ you’re merciless. See Joseph 
and his Brethren (Patriarchal Home, The).— 
Wells. 

Still, in the light of morning gray. See Sunset on the 
Tusket.—Huntington. 

Still in thy love I trust. See same. —Fields. 

Still let my tyrants know, I am not doom’d to wear. 
See Prisoner, The.—Bronte. 

Still may the Muses foster thee, O friend. See To 
Lord De Tabley.—Dobson. 

Still more, still more: I feel the demon move. See 
Saul (David Exorcising Malzah).—Heavysege. 

Still on the lips of all we question. See To Lydia 
Maria Child.—Whittier. 

Still on the tower stood the vane. See Letters, The.—- 
Tennyson. 

Still onward swept the hurricane of strife. See Battle 
of Fredericksburg, The.—Cornwallis. 

Still she stood in the shunning crowd. See Shriving of 
Guinevere, The.—Mitchell. 

Still sits th£ school-house by the road. See In School¬ 
days.—Whittier. 

Still, still, with thee, when purple morning breaketh. 
See When I Awake I am Still with Thee.—Stowe. 

Still Sundays, rising o’er the world. See Days of Rest. 
—Spofford. 

Still thirteen years; ’tis autumn now. See Palinode.— 
Lowell. 

Still though the one I sing. See same. —Whitman. 

Still, though the sun is setting. See Blue Flower, The. 
—-Merrill. 

Still to be neat, still to be drest. See Simplex Mundi- 
tiis.—Jonson. 

Still will we trust, though earth seem dark and dreary. 
See Trust.—Burleigh. 

Stillness reigned in the vast amphitheatre. See 
Gladiator, The.—Anon. 

Stir in a fool to make us laugh. See Receipt for a 
Modern Novel.—Anon. 

Stirring drums in a sunny street. See Two Views of 
War.—Palmer. 


“Stitch, stitch, stitch, in poverty, hunger, and dirt.” 
See Second Prize, The.—McBride. 

Stone by stone the marble palace reared its snowy 
front on high. See Palace, The.—Denison. 

Stood the afflicted mother weeping. See Stabat Mater 
Dolorosa.—Jacopone. 

Stop a moment, boy. I’ve a word to say. See Axe to 
Grind, An.—Anon. 

Stop and tell us all the story. See New Story, The.— 
Murray. 

Stop. Christian passer-by—stop, child of God. See 
Epitaph on Himself.—Coleridge. 

Stop!—for thy tread is on an Empire’s dust. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Field of Waterloo, The).— 
Byron. 

Stop, Mortal! Here thy brother lies. See Poet’s 
Epitaph, A.—Elliott. 

Stop on the Appian Way. See On the Campagna.— 
Stoddard. 

Stop, stop, pretty water! See same. —Follen. 

Stop! stranger, may I speak with you? ah! yes, you 
needn’t fear. See Where’s Annette?—Aden. 

Stop that, or I’ll open the door and make you. See 
Little Women (Reconciliation, The).—Alcott. 

Stop up th’ access and passage to remorse. See Mac¬ 
beth. -Shakespeare. 

Stop yer kickin’ ’bout the times. See Stop yer Kickin’! 
—Anon. 

Stork, I am justly wroth. See Cobbler and Stork.—Field. 

Storm-wearied Argo slept upon the water. See Hylas. 
—Taylor. 

Stout Sir Walter was old but hearty. See Old Sir 
Walter.—Thornbury. 

Straight to his heart the bullet crushed. See Apoca¬ 
lypse.—Realf. 

Straightway Virginius led the maid a little space aside. 
See Virginia.—Macaulay. 

Strain, strain thine eyes, this parting is for aye! See 
Lohengrin.—Payne. 

Strange fits of passion have I known. See Lucy.— 
Wordsworth. 

Strange I can’t find it. See Pink Perfumed note, A.— 
Meyers. 

Strange that an innocent, girlish way See Derby 
Day.—Clark. 

Strange that the city thoroughfare. See Hi-Spy.— 
Field. 

Strange here? Yes, come from Varmount. See When 
Greek Meets Greek.—Anon. 

Stranger, if thou hast learned a truth which needs. 
See Inscription for the Entrance to a Wood.— 
Bryant. 

“Stranger, it is in vain,” she cried. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Blanche of Devan’s Last Words).— 
Scott. 

Stranger! whose steps have reached this solitude. See 
In a Forest.—Southey. 

Strangers visiting the beautiful city of Burlington. 
See Settling under Difficulties.—Burdette. 

Strangers yet! See same. —Houghton. 

Stream! meandering through the plain. See Lines to 
the Des Moines River.—Parsons. 

Streaming down the ages, blighting the rose buds. 
See Harvest of Rum, The.—Denton. 

Strength for the day! At early dawn I stand. See 
same .— ( Scribner’s Magazine.) 

Strew not earth with empty star. See Second Brother, 
The.—Beddoes. 

Strew on her roses, roses. See Requiescat.—Arnold. 

Strew the fair garlands where slumber the dead. See 
Decoration Day.—Smith. 

Stricken in the midst of public service. See American 
and the Corsician, The.—Seward. 

Strictly speaking, I never had a brother Henry. See 
My Brother Henry.—Barrie. 

Strictly speaking, there were only six Poor Travellers. 
See Seven Poor Travellers, The.—Dickens. 

Strike for prohibition. See same. —Anon. 

Strike for the Anglo-Saxon! See War Poem.— 
LeGallienne. 

Strike for your altars. See Lone Star of Cuba, The.— 
Adee. 

Strike the concertina’s melancholy string! See Story 
of Prince Agib, The.—Gilbert. 

Strike up, you lusty gallants. See Captain Ward and 
the Rainbow.—Anon. 

Strikes are quite proper, only strike right. See Strikes. 
—Anon. 

String your arrow to my lips, Harry Lincoln. See 
Riding to the Hunt.—Leahy. 

Strive to live well. See same. —Anon. 

Strive: yet I do not promise. See Strive, Wait, and 
Pray.—Procter. 


831 





Strong 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Strong are the mountains, Lord, but stronger Thou! 
See same. —Anon. 

Strong in the steadfast purpose, be. See Purpose.— 
Piatt. 

Strong men have strong convictions. See same. — 
Garfield. 

Strong Son of God, immortal Love. See In Me- 
moriam (“Strong son,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

Students and reviewers of American history. See 
Foreign Influence upon American University 
Life.—Anon. 

Studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability. 
See Of Studies.—Bacon. 

Stumpy Wicks was dead. See Over the Range.— 
Anon. 

Sturdy saint militant, stout genial soul. See Charles 
H. Spurgeon. —(London Punch.) 

Sturdy Sammie Simpson sought sweet Sallie Stevens’ 
society. See Sammie—Sallie. 

Sturdy Steenie, rose-cheeked, bright-eyed. See Little 
Steenie.—Ruth. 

Sublime—invention ever young. See Song to David.— 
Smart. 

Sublime is patriotism that faces death for the right! 
See Soldier, The.—Anon. 

Sublime tobacco! which from east to west. See Island, 
The.—Byron. 

Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a 
goose the rarest of all birds. See Christmas 
Carol, A (Christmas Goose, The).—Dickens. 

Such a funny little roly-poly Polly as she was. See 
Polly’s Thanksgiving.—Stoddard. 

Such a horrid jogafry lesson! See Indignant Scholar, 
An.—Anon. 

Such a muff! Too cross and disagreeable for any¬ 
thing! See Rule Golden, The.-—Anon. 

‘‘Such a quantity of them,” said the Widow Winton. 
See Wild Grapes.—Anon. 

Such a scene as the division of last Tuesday. See 
Passage of the Reform Bill.—Macaulay. 

Such a starved bank of moss. See Two Poets of 
Croisic (“Such a starved,” etc.).—Browning. 

Such a wee, mischievous lassie. See Her Name.— 
Anon. 

Such age how beautiful! O Lady bright. See To 
Lady Fitzgerald, in her Seventieth Year.— 
Wordsworth. 

Such as are thy habitual thoughts, such also will be 
the character of thy mind. See Thoughts of Mar¬ 
cus Aurelius (Even in a Palace).—Antoninus. 

Such beautiful, beautiful hands! See Beautiful Hands. 
—Anon. 

Such doleful faces! what’s the matter, girls? See 
Better than a Doctor.—Leach. 

Such, fellow-citizens, as I contemplate them. See 
Great Issue, The.—Everett. 

Such hints as untaught Nature yields. See Nature: 
the Artist.—Knowles. 

Such is my name, and such my tale. See Giaour, The 
(“Such is my name,” etc.).—Byron. 

Such is the death the soldier dies. See same. —Wilson. 

Such is the destiny of all on earth. See Minstrel, 
The; or. The Progress of Genius (Life beyond the 
T omb).—Beattie. 

Such is the intrinsic excellence of Christianity. See 
Inspiration of the Bible, The.—Winthrop. 

Such is the mould that the blest tenant feeds. See 
Battle of the Summer’s Islands, The.—Waller. 

Such let me seem till such I be. See Wilhelm Meister’s 
Apprenticeship (Mignon Aspiring to Heaven).— 
Goethe. 

Such natural debts of love our Oxford knows. See 
Martyr’s Memorial.—Guiney. 

Such often, like the tube they so admire. See Conver¬ 
sation.—Cowper. 

Such souls, whose sudden visitations daze the world. 
See Philip van Artevelde.—Taylor. 

Such special sweetness was about. See That Day You 
Came.—Reese. 

Such times as windy moods do stir. See Spirit of the 
Wheat, The.—Valentine. 

Such was he, our Martyr-chief. See Ode Recited at 
the Harvard Commemoration, July 21,1865 (Abra¬ 
ham Lincoln!.—Lowell. 

Such was old Chaucer: such the placid mien. See 
Inscription for a Statue of Chaucer at Woodstock. 
—Akenside. 

Such was that happy garden-state. See Solitude.— 
Marvell. 

Such was the Child-world of the long ago. See Old 
Home Folks, The.—Riley. 

Such was the poise in which the battle hung. See 
Iliad, The (Exploit of Hector, The).—Homer. 


Such was the rise of this prodigious fire. See Fire of 
London, The.—Dryden. 

Such was Zuleika! such around her shone. See Bride 
of Abydos, The.—Byron. 

Such were the shepherds of Judea! See Angel and the 
Shepherds, The.—Wallace. 

“Suck, baby, suck! mother’s love grows by giving.” 
See Gipsy’s Malison, The.—Lamb. 

Suddenly —all the sky is hid. See Summer Storm.— 
Lowell. 

Suddenly an enormous mass of snow and ice. See 
Avalanches of the Jungfrau.—Cheever. 

Suddenly, shrill and clear, the bugle sounded the 
garde a vous. See Fine Battle Picture.—Anon. 

Suddenly the notes of the deep-laboring organ burst 
upon the ear. See Westminster Abbey (Organ, 
The).-—Irving. 

Sue and Sally lor Sallie] went a-fishing. See Queer 
Fish They Caught, The.—Brine. 

Sue ought to have been married a long while ago. 
See Adventures of Jimmy Brown, The (Jimmy 
Brown's Sister’s Wedding).—Alden. 

“Sue,” said Tom, “did you hear this?” See Highly 
Evangelical Osculation.—Anon. 

Sugar-toothed Dick for dainties was sick. See Stolen 
Custard, The.—Anon. 

Sullen and dull, in the September day. See Last 
Reservation, The.—Learned. 

Sumer [or summer] is icumen [or i-cumin or i-cummen] 
in. See Coming of Spring, The.—Anon. 

Summer at the seaside. See Love at the Seaside.— 
Anon. 

Summer dieth:—o’er his bier. See Dirge for Summer, 
A.—Evans. 

Summer fading, winter comes. See Picture-books in 
Winter.—Stevenson. 

Summer has gone. See Life in the Autumn Woods.— 
Cooke. 

Summer is coming, summer is coming. See Throstle, 
The.—Tennyson. 

“Summer is dead!—it was the wind that spake.” 
See Passing of Summer, The.—Hunt. 

Summer is fading, the broad leaves that grew. See 
Farewell to Summer.—Arnold. 

Summer [or sumer] is i-cummen [or i-cumin or icumen] 
in. See Coming of Spring, The.—Anon. 

Summer is over, and the leaves are falling. See Noc¬ 
turne.—Baker. 

Summer is the time for swings. See Jumping the 
Rope.—Denton. 

Summer joys are o’er. See Winter Song.—Holty. 

Summer moon, summer moon! across the west you fly. 
See Summer Moon.—Buchanan. 

Summer nights at Grandpa’s—ain’t they soft and 
still! See Summer Nights at Grandpa’s.—Lin¬ 
coln. 

Summer of ’sixty-three, sir, and Conrad was gone 
away. See Kentucky Belle.—Woolson. 

Summer or Winter or Spring or Fall. See Masque of 
the Seasons, A.—Riley. 

Summer set lip to earth’s bosom bare. See Poppy, 
The.—Thompson. 

Sumter and Appomattox! See Citizen’s Responsi¬ 
bility.—McKinley. 

Sun am des a golden ball. See Sleep Time in Dark- 
town.—( Baltimore American.) 

Sun and skies and clouds of June. See October’s 
Bright Blue Weather.—Jackson. 

Sun, bright sun, what dost thou here. See Song of 
the Waters.—Anon. 

Sun comes, moon comes. See When?—Tennyson. 

Sun like a furnace hung up over head. See Mid¬ 
summer.—Lincoln. * 

Sun of my soul, thou Saviour dear. See Sun of My 
Soul.—Keble. 

Sun of the stately Day. See National Ode: Read at 
the Celebration in Independence Hall, Philadel¬ 
phia, July 4, 1876.—Taylor. 

Sunday morning in Plymouth Church. See Slave’s 
Auction, A.—Eaton. 

Sundays the pillars are. See Sunday.—Herbert. 

Sunny breath of roses. See Rose Song.—Sawyer. 

Sunset! a hush is on the air. See Dream of Home, A. 
—Can'. 

Sunset and evening star. See Crossing the Bar.— 
Tennyson. 

Sunset at last, and the evening came. See Bivouac by 
the Rappahannock.—Roe. 

Sunset glories are smiling down. See At Sunset.— 
Clark. 

Sunset with its rosy feet. See same. —Anon. 

Superb and sole, upon a plumed spray. See Mocking¬ 
bird, The.—Lanier. 


as2 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Sweet 


Superintindint wuz Flannigan. See Finnigan to 
Flannigan.—Gillilan. 

Suppose a bright green leaf that grows. See Every 
Little Helps.—Anon. 

Suppose, Fadette, that I, instead of keeping tryst. 
See Suppose.—Robertson. 

Suppose it were perfectly certain that the life and for¬ 
tune. See Liberal Education and where to Find 
it, A (Education).—Huxley. 

Suppose, my little lady. See Suppose!—Cary. 

Suppose the Jack who went with Jill. See Jack and 
Jill.—Denton. 

Suppose the little breezes. See Breezes, The.—Larcom. 

Suppose the little cowslip. See Deeds of Kindness.— 
Sargent. 

Suppose we think little about “Number One.” See 
Suggestion for a Happy New Year, A.—Dodge. 

Suppose, when now the house is dumb. See Ghosts in 
the Library.—Lang. 

Suppose you lived in a little green house. See Sup¬ 
pose.— (Our Little Men and Women.) 

Suppose you screeve? or go cheap-jack? See Villon’s 
Straight Tip to all Cross Coves.—Henley. 

Suppose your task, my little man. See Suppose (“Sup¬ 
pose your task,” etc.).—Cary. 

Supposin’, ez I’m settin’ upon this corn-field fence. 
See Supposin’.—M’Glasson. 

Supposing all the teachers. See Some Suppositions.— 
Denton. 

Supposing the grass should forget to grow. See Sup¬ 
posing.—Prescott. 

Sure, an' did I tell yez how I wint to the dintist yister- 
day? See Miss Maloney Goes to the Dentist.— 
Anon. 

Sure and exact,—the master’s quiet touch. See Dead 
Player, The.—Wilson. 

Sure enough! That Miss Abigail Fisher. See Abigail 
Fisher.—Haywood. 

Sure, Felix McCarty he lived all alone. See Ballad of 
McCarty’s Trombone, The.—Lincoln. 

Sure, he’s five months an’ he’s two foot long. See 
Johneen.—O’Neill. 

Sure now, ladies and gintlemen, if ye plaze. I’ll relate 
the great mistake I made. See Paudeen O’Raf- 
ferty’s Say-voyage.—Anon. 

Sure the Shak-a-spear class is cornin’ here to-day. 
See Hiartville Shakespeare Club, The.—Locke. 

Sure there’s a dale o’ dustin’ to-day. See Love in High 
Life.—Denison. 

Sure, thou didst flourish once! and many springs. 
See Timber, The.—Vaughan. 

Sure, ’tis a serious thing to die! See Grave, The. 
—Blair. 

Surely a Voice hath called her to the deep. See Lines. 
—-Greene. 

Surely, if happiness can ever come from the honors" or 
triumphs of this world. See Memorial Address on 
the Life and Character of James A. Garfield (Death 
of Garfield).—Blaine. 

Surely there is a vein for the silver, and a place for 
gold where they find it. See Job (Knowledge 
and Wisdom).— Bible. 

Surely yon heaven, where angels see God’s face. See 
Not Verv Far.—Bonar. 

Surging in the heart of man is an indefinable unrest. 
See Philosophy of Progress, The.—Dunlavy. 

Surly Tim is represented to have been an operative. 
See Surly Tim’s Trouble.—Burnett. 

Surprised by joy—-impatient as the Wind. See De- 
sideri a.—W ordsworth. 

Surrounded by unnumber’d foes. See His Banner 
over Me.—Massey. 

Sursum corda. We have in our own time seen the 
Republic survive an irrepressible conflict. See 
Lift up Your Hearts.—Anon. 

Survey this shield, all bossy bright.- See Tale of Drury 
Lane, A.—Smith. 

Susan Ellsworth lived just out from Boston and was a 
schoolmistress. See Susan’s Escort.—Hale. 

Susan poisoned her grandmother’s tea. See Susan.— 
Anon. 

Susie, my baby’s very sick! See Sick Doll, The.— 
Anon. 

“Suspense is worse than bitter grief.” See “I Canna’ 
Turn the Key and My Bairn Outside.”—Anon. 

Suspicions amongst thoughts are like bats. See Of 
Suspicion.—Bacon. 

Suthin’ to put in a story. See Romance of the Saw¬ 
dust, A.—Baker. 

Svend Vonved binds his sword to his side. See Svend 
Vonved.—Borrow. 

Swallow, my sister, O sister swallow. See Itylus.— 
Swinburne. 


Swans sing before they die—’twere no bad thing. 
See Epigram on a Bad Singer.—Coleridge. 

Sway to and fro in the twilight gray. See Shadow- 
town Ferry.—Rice. 

Swedes! countrymen! behold at last. See Gustavus, 
King of Sweden, to his Soldiers.—Lefevre. 

“Sweep ho! Sweep ho!” See Chimney-sweep, The. 
—Hooper. 

Sweep the floor and then sweep the floor. See Sweep¬ 
ing the Floor.—Anon. 

Sweet Adon, dar’st thou not glance thine eye. See 
Never too Late (Infida’s Song).—Greene. 

Sweet after showers, ambrosial air. See Evening.— 
Tennyson. 

Sweet and low, sweet and low. See Princess, The 
(Lullaby).—Tennyson. 

Sweet are the charms of her I love. See Sweet Are the 
Charms.—Booth. 

Sweet are the rosy memories of the lips. See Wanderer, 
The (Night in Italy, A).—Lytton. 

Sweet are the thoughts that savour of content. See 
Content.—Greene. 

Sweet are the uses of adversity. See As You Like It 
(Adversity).—Shakespeare. 

Sweet are the ways of peace, and sweet. See Chorus 
of Islanders.—Austin. 

Sweet Auburn! loveliest village of the plain. See 
Deserted Village, The.—Goldsmith. 

Sweet Autumn is no longer bright. See Winter.— 
Goodale. 

Sweet babe! true portrait of thy father’s face. See 
Child Asleep, The.—Surville. 

Sweet baby, sleep! What ails my dear? See Rock¬ 
ing Hymn, A.—Wither. 

Sweet, be not proud of those two eyes. See To Dia- 
neme.—Herrick. 

Sweet, beautiful water! See Water.—Anon. 

Sweet bell of Stratford, tolling low. See Passing Bell 
at Stratford, The.—Winter. 

Sweet Betty Lee, the village lass. See Betty Lee.— 
Gunnison. 

Sweet bird, in life thy tuneful voice. See To a Dead 
Bird.—Kellogg. 

Sweet bird, that shunn’st the noise of folly. See II 
Penseroso.—M ilton. 

Sweet bird, that sing’st away the early hours. See 
Sonnet: Sweet Bird.—Drummond. 

Sweet bird! up earliest in the morn. See To a Thrush 
Singing in January.—Keble. 

Sweet child of an April shower. See Mayflower, The. 
—M’Pherson. 

Sweet child of April, I have found thy place. See 
Pyxidanthera, The.—Bristol. 

Sweet country life, to such unknown. See Country 
Life, The.—Herrick. 

Sweet daughter of a rough and stormy sire. See Ode 
to Spring.—Barbauld. 

Sweet Day, so cool, so calm, so bright! See Virtue,—- 
Herbert. 

Sweet, do you ask me if you love Or no? See Love 
Test, A.—Herloszsohn. 

Sweet Echo, sweetest Nymph, that livest unseen. 
See Comus (Echo).—Milton. 

Sweet Emma Moreland of yonder town. See Edward 
Gray.—Tennyson. 

Sweet eyes by sorrow still unwet. See Wonderland.— 
Peck. 

Sweet flower of the golden horn. See Columbine.—- 
Rusby. 

Sweet friends, I could not speak before I went. See 
From One Who Went away in Haste.—Weitzel. 

Sweet, good-night! See Romeo and Juliet.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Sweet guitar, so old thou art. See To Maude’s Guitar. 
—Stone. 

Sweet hand that, held in mine. See same. — (Fra¬ 
zier’s Magazine.) 

Sweet heart, that no taint of the throne or the stage. 
See Nell Gwynn.—Swinburne. 

Sweet Highland Girl, a very shower. See To a High¬ 
land Girl.—Wordsworth. 

Sweet in her green dell the flower of beauty slumbers. 
See Song.—Darley. 

Sweet in the innocence of youth. See Eve of Deco¬ 
ration Day, The.—Smith. 

Sweet Innisfallen, fare thee well. See Sweet Innis- 
fallen.—Moore. 

Sweet is a voice in the land of gold. See Things 
Delightful.—Sigerson. 

Sweet is childhood—childhood’s over. See Sweet is 
Childhood.—Ingelow. 

Sweet is our youth. See Sonnet: “Sweet is our youth.” 
—De Vere. 


833 




Sweet 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Sweet is the breath of Morn, her rising sweet. See 
Paradise Lost (Morning).—Milton. 

“Sweet is the holiness of Youth.” See Edward VI.— 
Wordsworth. 

Sweet is the lore which nature brings. See Tables 
Turned, The (“Sweet is the lore,” etc.).—Words¬ 
worth. 

Sweet is the pleasure. See same. —Dwight. 

Sweet is the rose, but grows upon a brere. See Amoretti 
and Epithalamion (Sweet and Bitter).—Spen¬ 
ser. 

Sweet is the scene when virtue dies! See Death of the 
Virtuous, The.—Barbauld. 

Sweet is the sound of infant voice. See “Children 
must be Paid for.”— (Punch.) 

Sweet is the time of joyous folk. See Hora Christi.— 
Brown. 

Sweet is the voice that calls. See September.— 
Arnold. 

Sweet is true love, tho’ given in vain, in vain. See 
Idylls of the King (Song of Elaine).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Sweet lady, let your lids unclose. See Phantom of 
the Rose, The.-—Hart. 

Sweet letters of the angel tongue. See same. — 
Ballou 

Sweet little Bennie, with thoughtful face. See Com¬ 
passion.—Riche. 

Sweet little Dot on the doorstep sits, with Dolly 
wrapped in a shawl. See Dot and Dolly.— 
Patterson. 

Sweet little face, so full of slumber now. See Mabel.— 
Riley. 

Sweet little maid with winsome eyes. See Other One, 
The.—Peck. 

Sweet little Major, he mounts my knee. See Private’s 
Glory, The.—-Burdette. 

Sweet love, if thou wilt gain a monarch’s glory. See 
Picture, A.—Anon. 

Sweet maiden of Passamaquoddy.* See Lines to Miss 
. Florence Huntingdon.—Anon. 

Sweet Malvern Hill is wreathed in flame. See Un¬ 
known Hero, An.—McCabe. 

Sweet Mary, pledged to Tom, was fair. See Tom’s 
Little Star.—Foster. 

Sweet mouth! O let me take. See Kiss. A.— 
Domett. 

Sweet names, the rosary of my evening prayer. See 
Love’s Rosary.—Woodberry. 

Sweet Nea!—for your lovely sake. See Because.— 
Fitzgerald. 

Sweet nurselings of the vernal skies. See Fifteenth 
Sunday after Trinity.—Keble. 

Sweet order hath its draught of bliss. See Angel 
in the House, The (Joy).—Patmore. 

Sweet Peace, where dost thou dwell? I humbly crave. 
See Peace.—Herbert. 

Sweet poet of the woods—a long adieu! See On the 
Departure of the Nightingale.—Smith. 

Sweet Robin, I have heard them say. See Robin Red¬ 
breast.—Doane. 

Sweet rois of vertew and of gentilness. See To a Lady. 
—Dunbar. 

Sweet rose! whence is this hue. See Madrigal: Sweet 
Rose! Whence is this Hue.—Drummond. 

Sweet saint! whose rising dawned upon the fight. See 
Ariana.—Sanborn. 

Sweet Saviour! bless us ere we go. See Evening Hymn. 
—Faber. 

Sweet scented flower! Who art wont to bloom. See 
To the Herb Rosemary.—White. 

Sweet scented flowers on beauty’s grave. See On the 
Death of Decatur.—Crafts. 

Sweet, serene, sky-like flower. See Rose, The.—Love¬ 
lace. 

Sweet singer of the Spring, when the new world. See 
On a Thrush Singing in Autumn.—Morris. 

Sweet Smile! the daughter of the Queene of Love. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion, Sonnet XXXIX.— 
Spenser. 

Sweet smoking pipe; bright glowing stowe. See Sweet 
Smoking Pipe.—Anon. 

Sweet Spring, thou tum’st with all thy goodly train. 
See Spring Bereaved, II.—Drummond. 

Sweet stream, that winds through yonder glade. See 
Comparison, A. Addressed to a Young Lady.— 
Cowper. 

Sweet Suffolk owl, so trimly dight. See Sweet Suffolk 
Owl.—Vautor. 

Sweet summer girl with curling tresses. See Summer 
Girl, The.—Anon. 

Sweet, sweet, sweet is the wind’s song. See Harvest.— 
Cortissoz. 


Sweet, sweet, sweet! Oh, happy that I am! See 
Meadow Larks.—Coolbrith. 

Sweet the chime of vesper bell. See Vesper Bell, The. 
—Davis. 

Sweet, thou hast trod on a heart. See False Step, A.— 
Browning. 

Sweet thrall, first step to Love’s felicity! See Pas¬ 
toral Catch, A.—Dickenson. 

Sweet to the morning traveller. See Traveller’s Re¬ 
turn, The.—Southey. 

Sweet violets, Love’s paradise, that spread. See 
Shepherd to the Flowers, The.—Anon. 

Sweet was the sound, when oft, at evening’s close. 
See Deserted Village, The (Village Preacher, The). 
—Goldsmith. 

Sweet welcome to thee, dainty winsome flower! See 
Arbutus.—Hall. 

Sweet western wind, whose luck it is. See To the 
Western Wind.—Herrick. 

Sweet wild roses by the roadside. See Wild Roses.— 
Crocker. 

Sweet Willy’s ta’en him o’er the faem. See Willy’s 
Lady.—Anon. 

“Sweet wind, fair wind, where have you been?” See 
Work.—Prescott. 

Sweet wooded way in life, forgetful Sleep! See To 
Sleep.—Fleming. 

Sweet world, if you will hear me now. See Envoy.— 
Piatt. 

Sweet-breathed and young. See Woman’s Execution, 
A.—King. 

Sweeter and sweeter. See Thread and Song.—Palmer. 

Sweetest love, I do not go. Nee Song: “Sweetest 
love,” etc.—Donne. 

Sweetest of all childlike dreams. Nee Vanishers, 
The.—Whittier. 

Sweetest of all the traditions. See Legend of the Fleur- 
de-lis, The.—Cronise. 

Sweetest Savior, if my soul. See Dialogue, A.—Her¬ 
bert. 

Sweetest sweets that time hath rifled. See Song in 
Imitation of the Elizabethans.—Watson. 

Sweetheart, good-by! The [or That] fluttering sail. See 
Sailor’s Farewell, The.—Jenkyns. 

Sweetheart, I have no hero’s face.— See Sweetheart.— 
Aide. 

Sweetheart, in thee my hopes behold. See Villon to 
his Mistress.—F. B. W. 

Sweetheart, name the day for me. See Wedding-day, 
The.—Stedman. 

Sweetheart, the year is young. See Madrigal, A.— 
Sherman. 

Sweetly breathing, vernal air.— See Airs of Spring, 
The.—Carew. 

Sweetness, truth, and every grace. See My Charmer.— 
Waller. 

Sweets to the sweet: farewell. See Hamlet.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Sweet-voiced Hope, thy fine discourse. See All’s 
Well.—Wasson. 

Swept by the hot wind, stark, untrackable. See 
Mohammed and Seid.—Morris. 

Swift across the palace floor. See Little Guinever.— 
Fields. 

Swift o’er the sunny grass. See Shadow-evidence.— 
Dodge. 

Swift, though some trap mine eyes have never found. 
See Harlequin of Dreams, The.—Lanier. 

Swift to the dust descends each honored name. See 
Lines on the Death of Gen. Joseph Reed.— 
Freneau. 

Swift troopers twain ride side by side. See Little 
Trooper, The.—Weir. 

Swifter far than summer’s flight. See Remembrance. 
—Shelley. 

Swifter the flight ! -Far, far and high. See Skater and 
W olves.—Clarke. 

Swiftly walk over the western wave. See To Night. 
—Shelley. 

Swing away, from the great cross-beam. See Swing 
Away.—Larcom. 

Swing dat gate wide, ’Postle Peter. See De ’Sperience 
of de Reb’rend Quacko Strong.—Anon. 

Swing high and swing low. See same. —Field. 

Swing inward, O gates of the future. See Voice of the 
People, The.—Clarke. 

Swing! Swing! Swing! See Swing Song and Drill. 
—Morton. 

Swinging across the belfry tower. See Christmas 
Peal, The.—Spofford. 

Swinging on a birch-tree. See same. —Larcom. 

Sword, on my left side gleaming. See Sword Song, 
The.—Korner. . t. 


834 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Tears 


Swords crossed,—but not in strife. See Crossed 
Swords, The.—Frothingham. 

Swung in the hollows of the deep. See Cradle Song of 
the Fisherman’s Wife.—Higginson. 

Symphorien! Symphorien See Symphorien.—Cooke. 
Symple is my goste, and scars my letterure. See 
De Regimine Principum.—Occleve. 


T 

Tabitha, sweet Tabitha, I never can forget. See Con¬ 
cerning Tabitha’s Dancing the Minuet.—Colton. 

Taddeo Gaddi built me. I am old. See Old Bridge at 
Florence, The.—Longfellow. 

Tagus farewell! that westward with thy streams. See 
On his Return from Spain.—Wyatt. 

Tahawus had conquered the tempest. See Tahawus. 
—Mendum. 

’Taint no use o’ argying de pint wid me. See I’s 
Gwine to Jine de Masons.—Anon. 

Take a cigar,—draw up your chair. See Government 
Spy, The.—Story. 

Take a robin’s leg (mind, the drumstick merely). 
See Homoeopathic Soup.—Anon. 

Take a seat in the shade, here, lady. See Station- 
agent’s Story, The.—Thorpe. 

Take all of me,—I am thine own, heart, soul. See 
Sonnet, A.—Troubetzkoy. 

Take along with thee. See Epistle to a Friend, to 
Persuade him to the Wars.—Jonson. 

Take as gold this old tradition. See Schone Rothraut. 
—Goodchild. 

Take away that star and garter. See Charles Edwards 
at Versailles.—Aytoun. 

Take back all the words thou hast breathed in my ear. 
See Awakened, The.—Haxard. 

Take back into thy bosom. Earth. See Stanzas to the 
Memory of Thomas Hood.—Simmons. 

Take back your suit. See Song of Faith Forsworn, A. 
—De Tabley. 

Take back your words and dry your tears. See Take 
Back Your Words.-—Mifflin. 

Take care of the minutes, they are priceless, you know. 
See Take Care of the Minutes.—Anon. 

Take down your map, sir, and you will find. See 
Crime against Kansas, The (Kansas).—Sumner. 

Take for your hero some thoroughbred scamp. See 
Recipe for a Poem .—(New York Evening Post.) 

Take from dead Rome the home. See Bacchic Lyric, 
A.—Doggett. 

Take heed, O Youth, both brave and bright. See 
Warning.—Thaxter. 

Take, Lord, the little I can do. See Simplicity.— 
Stryker. 

Take me. Mother Earth, to thy cold breast. See Take 
Me, Mother Earth.—Jameson. 

Take my life, and let it be. See Consecration Hymn. 
—Havergal. 

Take not from me my lute! See John Avar’s Last 
Lay.—Duvar. 

Take, O, take those lips away. See Measure for Meas¬ 
ure (“Take, O take,” etc.).—Shakespeare; also, 
Bloody Brother, The (“Take, oh take,” etc.).— 
Beaumont and Fletcher. 

Take one example—to our purpose quite. See Course 
of Time. The (Lord Byron).—Pollok. 

Take, proud ambition, take thy fill. See Sigh for 
Knoekmany, A.—Carleton. 

Take rather a coarse view of things in general. See 
How to Make an Imitation of Browning.—Anon. 

Take some quiet, sober moment of life. See Folly of 
Pride, The.—Smith. 

Take, take, lobsters and lettuces. See Lobster Salad. 
(Pxmch.) 

Take Temperance to thy breast. See Talisman, A.— 
Guiney. _ 

Take the banner down! ’tis weary. See Trailed Ban¬ 
ner, The.—Ryan. 

Take the dead Christ to my chamber. See Dead Christ, 
The.—Howe. 

Take the mouldering dust. See In Apprehension, so 
Like a God.—Morgan. 

Take the New England climate in summer.— See New 
England Climate in Summer, The.—Choate. 

Take the open air. See Sensible.—Anon. 

Take the world as it is—there are good and bad in it. 
See Take the World as it Is.—Swain. 

Take them into the church. See Tact and Talent. 
Anon. 

Take these missives white. See St. Valentine s Re¬ 
venge.-—-Denton. 


Take this for granted, once for all. See To the Despond¬ 
ing.—Cary. 

Take this slave of music. See With a Guitar, to Jane. 
—Shelley. 

Take thy lute, wench, my soul grows sad. See King 
Henry VIII. (Scene from King Hen y VIII.).— 
Shakespeare. 

Take up the white man’s burden. See White Man’s 
Burden, The.—Kipling. 

“Take up the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the 
vines.” See Little Foxes and Little Hunters.— 
Anon. 

“Take your places. Goodness gracious.” See Coun¬ 
try Dance, The.—-Jot. 

Talbot, Elizabeth will soon be here. See Mary Stuart. 
—Schiller. 

Talent is something, but tact is everything. See 
Tact and Talent.—( London Atlas.) 

Talk about boys! I’ve got one. See My Son John.— 
Thatcher. 

Talk about the anxious mothers. See Twenty-six of 
Them.—Denton. 

Talk about weather! I never did in all my born days. 
See Mrs. Brown on the State of the Streets.— 
Sketchley. 

Talk not of temples—there is one, built without hands, 
to mankind given. See Nature’s Temple.—Ved- 
der. 

Talk of sleighing! Talk of dancing! See At the 
Skating Rink.—Anon. 

Talk of study! Talk of learning! See Closing Song 
for School Exhibition.—Kavanaugh. 

Talk to the point, and stop when you reach it. See 
Be Comprehensive.—Anon. 

Talking about flies, Bones, what was the largest trout 
you ever caught with a fly? See Early Fly, The.— 
Anon. 

“Talking of preachers,” said Caleb Parker.— See 
Uncle Cephas’ Yarn.—( Century Magazine.) 

Talking of river-locks reminds me of an accident. See 
Three Men in a Boat (Unexpected Denouement, 
An).—Jerome. 

Talking of sects till [or quite] late one eve. See No 
Sects in Heaven.-—Cleveland. 

Tall grew a weed outside a garden gate. See Weed’s 
Mission, The.—Eytinge. 

Tall, sombre, grim, against the morning sky. See 
Aspects of the Pines.—Hayne. 

Tambo, do you know much of natural history? See 
Tambo on Natural History.—Anon. 

Tambo, I hear you are trying to learn the French 
language See Advantage of Knowing French, 
The.—Anon. 

Tambo, I know a man who am de mos’ absent-minded 
nigger I ebber saw. See Absent-mindedness.— 
Anon. 

Tambo, my boy! See How Tambo Got Shot.—Anon. 

Tambo, what would you call a handy thing. See 
Questions Easily Answered.—Anon. 

Tambo, you seem to be in a brown study, what is the 
matter? See Tambo on Kisses.—Anon. 

Tameless in his stately pride, along the lake of islands. 
See Loon. The.—Street. 

Tanagra! think not I forget. See Pericles and Aspasia 
(Corinna, from Athens to Tanagra).—Landor. 

Tang! tang! went the gong’s wild roar. See Night 
Quarters.—Brownell. 

Ta-ratta, ta-ratta, tum-tum, tum-tum. See Drummer 
Boy, A.-—Goodfellow. 

Tary no longer; toward thyn heritage. See Vox 
Ultima Crucis.—Lydgate. 

Taste and genius are two words frequently joined. 
See Taste and Genius.—Blair. 

Tasteful illumination of the night. See To the 
Glowworm.—Clare. 

Tauler, the preacher, walked, one autumn day. See 
Tauler.—Whittier. 

Tax not the royal Saint with vain expense. See 
Inside of King's College Chapel, Cambridge.— 
Wordsworth. 

Tchassan Ouglou is on! See same. —Motherwell. 

Te Eagle vot is American! I speaks mit it bo prout as 
nefer vas! See Glory mit ter Stars und Shtripes. 
—Spluttermann. 

Teach me, my God and King. See Elixir, The.—Her¬ 
bert. 

Teach me the secret of thy loveliness.—Cawein. 

Teach me to live! 'Tis easier far to die. See same. — 
• (Hymnal.) 

Teach you French? I will, my dear! See French 
with a Master.—Tilton. 

Tears for my lady dead. See Heliodore Dead.— 
Lang. 


835 




Tears 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Tears, idle tears I I know not what they mean. See 
Princess, The (Tears, Idle Tears).—Tennyson. 

Tears in your eyes, and why? Because you find. See 
Heads, not Hearts, are Trumps.—Field. 

Tears of gold the heavens wept. See Meteors.—Eieh- 
• berg. 

Tears stood in the eyes of the cid as he looked at his 
pillaged castle. See Poem of the Cid, Story of 
the.—Rabb. 

Tears wash away the atoms in the eye. See Compen¬ 
sation.—Cranch. 

Teddy O’Rourke’s my chum you see. See Teddy 
O’Rourke.—Douglas. 

Telemachus, it will do you ever so much good. See 
Get Acquainted with Yourself.—Burdette. 

Telemachus, the monk, sat in his cell. See Tele¬ 
machus.—Sheldon. 

Tell all I know about the case, about the dead man 
there? See Stranger on the Stand, The.—Blount. 

Tell me again you love me. See Cup of Youth, The. 
—Mitchell. 

Tell me, Effie, while you are sitting. See Effie’s Rea¬ 
sons.—Cary. 

“Tell me, gray-headed [or gniy-haired] sexton,” I 
said. See Where are Wicked Folks Buried? 
—(Truth Seeker.) 

Tell me, is there sovereign cure. See Inverted Torch, 
The (Tell Me).—Thomas. 

Tell me, my secret soul. See Inquiry, The.—Mackay. 

Tell me not in idle jingle. See Psalm of Marriage.— 
Cary. 

Tell me not, in mournful numbers. See Psalm of 
Life, A.—Longfellow. 

Tell me not of a face that’s fair. See Resolve, The.— 
Brome. 

Tell me not of morrows, sweet. See same. —Webster. 

Tell me not of the honor of belonging to a free country. 
See Spiritual Freedom (Liberty).—Channing. 

Tell me not, Sweet, I am unkind. See Song: To Lu- 
casta on Going to the Warres.—Lovelace. 

Tell me not Time hath played the thief. See To One 
Saying She Was Old.—Shirley. 

Tell me not what too well I know. See On Catullus.— 
I.andor. _ 

Tell me now in what hidden way is. See Ballad of Dead 
Ladies, The.—Villon. 

Tell me, O paradox inscrutable! See Dude, The.— 
Anon. 

Tell me, O tell, what kind of thing is wit. See Ode to 
Wit.—Cowley. 

Tell me, shade of Walter Raleigh. See Patriotic 
Smoker’s Lament, The.— [St. James Gazette, The.) 

Tell me, sunny goldenrod. See Goldenrod.—Lovejoy. 

Tell me, thou skilful shepherd swain! See Song of 
Motto and Perkin.—Drayton. 

Tell me, thou soul of her I love. See To Her I Love.— 
Thomson. 

Tell me, thou star, whose wings of light. See World’s 
Wanderers, The.—Shelley. 

Tell me what brings you, gentle youth, to Rome? 
See St. Philip Neri and the Youth.—Anon. 

Tell me, what is a poet’s thought? See Poet’s Thought, 
A.—Procter. 

Tell me what is sorrow? Is it a garden-bed. See 
Sorrow and Joy.—Stoddard. 

Tell me what is this innumerable throng. See Christ¬ 
mas Hymn, A.—Gilder. 

Tell me what sail the seas. See Under the Stars.— 
Rice. 

“Tell me where is fancy bred.” See Merchant of 
Venice, The (“Tell me,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

Tell me, who can, about our flag. See Our Flag.— 
Anon. 

Tell me who is this pompous signor. See Humbug¬ 
ging a Tourist.—Paulding. 

Tell me, wide wandering soul, in all thy quest. See 
But Once.—Winthrop. 

Tell me, ye bloody butchers! ye villains, high and low! 
See Boston Massacre, The.—Hancock. 

Tell me, ye winds, if e’er ye rest. See Carolina and 
Mecklenburg.—Delke. 

Tell me, ye winged winds, that round my pathway 
roar. See Inquiry, The.—Mackay. 

Tell me your joy, that I may tune my life. See To 
-.—Anon. 

“Tell me your story,” the lady said. See Flossie.— 
Hamberlin. 

Tell my maidens, sirrah, that the queen would rest. 
See Pardon, The.—Joy. 

Tell the story to your sons. See Fight of the “Arm¬ 
strong” Privateer, The.—-Roche. 

“Tell us a story, grandpa.” See Grandfather’s Story. 
—Field. 


Tell us, thou clear and heavenly tongue. See Star 
Song, The.—Herrick. 

Tell ye the story far and wide. See Men of Monomoy, 
The.—Cone. 

Tell you a story, children? Well, gather around my 
knee. See Wreck of the Steamship “Puffin,” 
The.—Anstey. 

Tell you a story, darling. See Heart’s-ease, The.— 
Williams. 

‘Tell you a story,” my beautiful dear. See PoppV 
Seed, A.—Thaxter. 

Tell you about it? Of course, I will! See Bishop’s 
Visit, The.—Nason. 

“Tell you how grandpa proposed? Dear me!” See 
How Grandpa Proposed.—Anon. 

Tell you what I like the best. See Knee-deep in June. 
—Riley. 

Tell Youth to play with Wine and Love. See House 
of a Hundred Lights, The (Compensation).— 
Torrence. 

“Tempus fugit,” said the Romans. See Flight of 
Time, The.—Blake. 

Ten dollars. Quite a sum to pay. See After the 
Theatre.—Anon. 

Ten little fingers, dimpled and fat. See Ten Little 
Fingers.—Anon. 

Ten little schoolboys sitting in a line. See Tragedy of 
the Ten Little Boys, The.—Anon. 

Ten o’clock, and neither Victim nor Tactic come. See 
Stage-struck Clerk.—Anon. 

Ten o’clock! Well, I’m sure I can’t help it! See 
Matinal Musings.—Baker. 

Ten rag babies standing in a row. See Rag Babies.— 
Anon. 

Ten small hands upon the spread. See Intra, Mintra, 
Cutra, Corn.—Anon. 

Ten thousand sowers through the land. See Sowers. 
The.—Anon. 

Ten true friends you have. See Ten True Friends.— 
Anon. 

Ten years ago, when she was ten. See Then and Now. 
—Valentine. 

Tender mercies on my way. See Tender Mercies.— 
Waring. 

Tender-handed stroke a nettle. See How to Deal with 
Common Natures.—Hill. 

Terrace and lawn are white with frost. See Game of 
Chess, A.—Collins. 

Te-whit! te-whit! te-whee! W’ill you listen to me? 
See Who stole the Bird’s Nest?—Child. 

Th’ Anam tho’ Diah! but there it is. See Dawn on 
the Irish Coast.—Locke. 

“Thackeray had no heart,” says popular criticism. 
See Pathos of Thackeray and Dickens, The.— 
Elliott. 

Thaisa fair, under the cold sea lying. See Thaisa’s 
Dirge.—Merivale. 

Thank’ee, sir, kindly for calling my cough’s mending 
slowly but sure. See Wreck of the Scotch Ex¬ 
press, The.—Mott. 

Thank God for pleasant weather! See Pleasant 
Weather.—Anon. 

Thank God! some of us have an old-fashioned mother. 
See Old-fashioned Mother, The.—Anon. 

Thank God that God shall judge my soul, not man! 
See Eternal Justice, The.—Aldrich. 

Thank God, there’s still a vanguard. See same. —Arey. 

Thank God! ’Tis the war cry! They call us! We 
come! See For Freedom.—Proctor. 

Thank Heaven, lanthe, once again. See Ianthe.— 
Landor. 

Thank heaven, that is over! It must be very late! 
See When I Am Married.—Anon. 

Thank Heaven! the crisis, the danger is past. See 
For Annie.—Poe. 

Thank the lady, Johnny, and give the money to dad. 
See Street Tumblers, The.—Sims. 

“Thank you—much obliged, old boy.” See Mar¬ 
riage h la Mode.—Baker. 

Thank you, pretty cow, that made. See Thank You, 
Pretty Cow.—Taylor. 

Thanks be to God! to whom earth owes. See Thanks¬ 
giving.—H avergal. 

Thanks be to God, who overrules everything for good. 
See Centennial Oration (Admonition to Coming 
Generations).—Winthrop. 

Thanks for the lessons of this spot, fit school. See 
Cave of Staffa.—Wordsworth. 

Thanks! thanks! With the Muse is always love and 
light.. See Festus (Poet, The).—Bailey. 

Thanks to the Gods! my boy has done his duty. See 
Cato (Cato over the Dead Body of his Son).— 
Addison. 


836 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


That 


Thanks to the human heart by which we live. See 
Ode: Intimations of Immortality (“Thanks to 
the human,” etc.).—Wordsworth. 

Thanks, under God, to him whose singular greatness. 
See Abraham Lincoln.—Stryker. 

Thanks untraeed to lips unknown. See Snow-bound. 
—Whittier. 

Thanksgiving Day is the one national festival. See 
Family as an American Institution, The (Day of 
Thanksgiving, The).—Beecher. 

“Thanksgiving Day I Thanksgiving Day!” See Na¬ 
tion’s Day of Praise, The.—Denton. 

"Thanksgiving!—for what?”—and he muttered a 
curse. See John White’s Thanksgiving.—Anon. 

Thanksgiving to the Gods! See Seeker in the Marshes, 
The.—Dawson. 

Thar wuz Si, thar wuz Hi, thar wuz Alec an’ Dan. See 
’Ceptin’ Ike.—Devere. 

Thar’s be’n some trubble in the choir. See Leading 
the Choir.—Norris. 

Thar’s folks eroun this mounting side. See Content¬ 
ment.—McGlasson. 

Tha’rt welcome, little bonny brid. See Welcome, 
Bonny Brid.—Laycock. 

That a man stand and speak of spiritual things to men! 
See same. —Carlyle. 

That Adam was a lonely man. See Fun that Adam 
Missed, The.—Anon. 

That afternoon I devoted to making a bouquet for 
Miss Mayton. See Helen’s Babies (Budge’s Ver¬ 
sion of the Flood).—Habberton. 

That brief phrase—the schools and colleges of the 
United States. See Washington and our Schools 
and Colleges (Schools and Colleges of Our 
Country, The).—Eliot. 

That Charles himself might chase. See Horatian Ode 
upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland (Execution 
of Charles I.).—Marvell. 

That day I oft remember, when from sleep. See Para¬ 
dise Lost (Eve’s Mirror).—Milton. 

That day of wrath, that dreadful day. See Dies Irae.— 
Celano (Scott). 

That doll’s necklace is mine, Annie. See Forbearance. 
—Kavanaugh. 

That each, who seems a separate whole. See In Memo- 
riam (Personal Resurrection).—Tennyson. 

That face which no man ever saw. Nee Sargent’s Por¬ 
trait of Edwin Booth at “The Players.”—Aldrich. 

“That fellow Bixby is th’ derndest chap I ever see. 
See Only a Little Chinese Talk.—Anon. 

“That gal of old Fecho’s wur about the pootyest 
creatur.” See Courting in French Hollow.— 
Robb. 

That General Garfield was the man for the crisis. See 
Man for the Crisis, The.—Anon. 

That God rules in the affairs of men is as certain as any 
truth of physical science. Nee God in History.— 
Bancroft. 

That high-gifted man. See Lines on the Death of 
Sheridan.—Moore. 

That I am a dude you see at a glance. See Open the 
Gates as High as the Sky.—Kavanaugh. 

That I did love thee, Cresar, O, ’tis true. See Julius 
Csesar.—Shakespeare. 

That I love thee, charming maid, I a thousand times 
have said. See Waiting for the Grapes.—Ma- 
ginn. 

That I should be sheriff and keep the jail. See Sheriff 
Thorne.—Trowbridge. 

That I went to warm myself into Lady Betty’s cham¬ 
ber, because I was cold. See Mrs. Frances Harris’ 
Petition.—Swi ft. 

That instrument ne’er heard. See Harp, The.— 
Drayton. 

“That is the school house, is it?” See How Jim Tur¬ 
ner Broke up the School.—Anon. 

That is, undoubtedly, the wisest and best system. 
See Physical Education.—Anon. 

That it was May me thoughts tho. See Romaunt of 
the Rose, The.—Chaucer. 

That Kittyboy was lost was an evident fact. See Kit- 
tyboy’s Christmas.—Blanchard. 

That last drear mood of envious sloth. See Hypatia 
(Hypatia, Sel. fr.,). —-Kingsley. 

That law and system, self caused and self directed. 

. See same. —Anon. 

That leg and arm? ’Twas at Bull Run. See Street 
Incident, A.—Anon. 

That Life is a Comedy oft hath been shown. See Book 
of Life, The.—Thomson. 

That light fringing the far hills. See That Light, 
Craik. 

That littlf hand! See Won the Pot.—J. R. 


That longed-for door stood open, and he passed. See 
Open Door, An.—Moulton. 

That love of liberty which led our fathers to declare 
their independence. See Political Equality the 
Soul of the Republic.—MoCall. 

That man has had a liberal education. See Liberal 
Education and where to Find it, A (Liberal Edu¬ 
cation, A).—Huxley. 

That man is not perfect who is so in and for himself 
alone. See Each and All.—Savage. 

That man’s actions here are of infinite moment to him. 
See On Heroes and Hero Worship (Mohammed).— 
Carlyle. 

That mist which lies in the morning so softly in the 
valley. See Modern Painters (Cloud Beauty).— 
Ruskin. 

That motionless shaft will be the most powerful of 
speakers. See Completion of the Bunker Hill 
Monument (Duties of American Citizens).—Web¬ 
ster. 

That mystic word of Thine, O sovereign Lord. See 
Soul’s Answer, The.—Stowe. 

That night I think that no one slept. See Last Night, 
The.—Tooker. 

That nightee teem he come chop-chop [or That njghtey- 
time begin chop-chop]. See Chinese Excelsior, 
The.—Anon. 

That ocean you of late surveyed. See To the Rev. Mr. 
Newton, on His Return from Ramsgate.—Cow- 
per. 

“That puts me in mind,” said Veny Raynor, “about 
what I’ve heered tell.” See Veny Raynor’s Bear 
Story.—Hawes. 

That rake up near the rafters. See Rory of the Hills. 
—Kickham. 

That regal soul I reverence, in whose eyes. See Roy¬ 
alty.—W asson. 

That seat of Science, Athens. See Free America.—• 
Warren. 

That so Thy blessed birth, O Christ. See Twelfth Day; 
or, The Epiphany.—Wither. 

That soft autumnal time. See Indian Summer, The. 
—Bryant. 

That son of Italy who tried to blow. See Austerity of 
Poetry.—Arnold. 

That sovereign thought obscured? That vision clear. 
See On a Great Man Whose Mind is Clouding.— 
Stedman. 

That stubborn crew. See Hudibras (Presbyterians, 
The).—Butler. 

That such have died enables us. See That Such Have 
Died.—Dickinson. 

That the First Charles does here in triumph ride. See 
On the Statue of King Charles I. at Charing Cross 
in the Year 1674.—Waller. 

That the truths of the Bible have the power of awak¬ 
ening. See Truths of the Bible.—Anon. 

That there exists in this country an intense sentiment 
of nationality. See Barbarity of National Ha¬ 
treds.—Choate. 

"That there missionary box,” said Mrs. Pickett. See 
Mrs. Pickett's Missionary Box.—Eddy. 

That thou art blamed shall not be thy defect. See 
Sonnets, LXX.—Shakespeare. 

That time of year thou mayst in me behold. See Son¬ 
nets, LXXIII.—Shakespeare. 

That was a bitter winter. See Good Little Sister, The. 
—Cary. 

That was a brave old epoch. See Battle of La Prairie, 
The.—Lighthall. 

That was a day of delight and wonder. See Maple.— 
English. 

That was a strangely shaped hat I saw you wearing the 
other day, Tambo. See Tambo’s Hat.—Anon. 

That was Nottman waving at me. See How Little 
Tom was Saved.—-Anderson. 

That was sage advice from the mouth ot a sage. See 
Need of Heroism To-day.—Wylie. 

That way look, my infant, lo! See Kitten and Falling 
Leaves, The.—Wordsworth. 

That weary time which comes between. See Between 
Winter and Spring.—Larcom. 

That which has been done once is easier done the sec¬ 
ond time. See Law of Habit, The.—Willard. 

That which hath made them drunk hath made me 
bold. See Macbeth (Murder, The). — Shake¬ 
speare. 

That which her slender waist confined. See On a Gir¬ 
dle.—Waller. 

That which shall last for aye can have no birth. See 
Or Ever the Earth Was.—Moore. 

That which we dare invoke to bless. See In 
Memoriam (“That which we,” etc.).—Tennyson. 


837 




That 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


That year the apple-blooms came late, late in the 
month of May. See Memorial Day at the Farm. 
—Anon. 

That year? Yes, doubtless I remember still. See 
World Well Lost, The.—Stedman. 

That you have wronged me doth appear in this. See 
Julius Csesar (Quarrel between Brutus and 
Cassius, The).—Shakespeare. 

That you may not be unapprised. See History of 
Rome (Publius Scipio to the Roman Army before 
the Battle of Ticin).—Livy. 

That zephyr every year. See Spring Bereaved, I.— 
Drummond. 

That’s all right. Good-bye boys. See Billy K. 
Simes.—Coates. 

That’s Jerry now calling me over the river. See Hess. 
—Piner.. 

That’s just my luck!. See John Hasty and Peter 
Quiet.—Anon. 

That’s my last Duchess painted on the wall. See My 
Last Duchess.—Browning. 

“That’s not the way, at sea, my boys.’’ See That’s 
Not the Way at Sea.—Havergal. 

That’s our choir singing; Dr. Dodd is the basso. See 
In,Amity of Soul.—Dallas. 

“That’s something like a bill,” said Jobson. See 
Badger’s Dfibut as Hamlet.—Moseley. 

“That’s the third umbrella gone since Christmas.” 

• See Mrs. Caudle’s Umbrella Lecture.—Jerrold. 

The Abbot arose, and closed his book. See Red Fish¬ 
erman, The; or, The Devil’s Decoy.—Praed. 

The Abbot of Inisfalen. See Abbot of Tnisfalen, The. 
—Allingham. 

The Abbot of Innisfallen. See Legend of Innisfallen, 
The.—Bateham. 

The Abbot on the threshold stood. See Lord of the 
Isles, The (Bruce and the Abbot).—Scott. 

The above numerals do not represent the inscription 
on my front door. See No. 999.—Turner. 

The actor’s dead and memory alone. See J. B.— 
Bunner. 

The actress was occupied in the study of her role. 
See Disillusionizing of Alexander Oldworthy, The. 
—Reade. 

The admiration which every one has for the hero 
springs. See Hero, The.—Cardwill. 

The admired mirror, glory of our isle. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals (Sir Philip Sidney).—Browne. 

The advance of the British army was like a solemn 
pageant. See Battle of Bunker Hill, The.— 
Anon. 

The advantages arising from a system of copyright are 
obvious. See Copyright.—Macaulay. 

The advent of Col. Bob. Ingersoll in Louisville was not 
unnoticed by Uncle Jim Johnson. See Rev. 
Uncle Jim’s Sermon, The.—Anon. 

The advocates of Charles, like the advocates of other 
male factors. See Milton (Charles the First).— 
Macaulay. 

The African day was at its noon. See Under Two 
Flags (Battle of Zaraila).—Ouida. 

The age is tempestuous with speculation. See “Age 
is tempestuous with speculation, The.”—Anon. 

The age of chivalry has gone. An age of humanity 
has come. See Scholar, the Jurist, the Artist, the 
Philanthropist, The (Age of Progress).—Sumner. 

The aged and venerable maternal representative. See 
New “Old Mother Hubbard.”—Anon. 

The air bites shrewdly; it is very cold. See Hamlet. 
—Shakespeare. 

The air is keen, the sky is clear. See Winter Starlight. 
—Sherman. 

The air is soft and balmy. See In April.—Arnold. 

The air is still, the night is dark. See Fisherman’s 
Light, The.—Moodie. 

The air is sweet with promising. See Oh, Lady Mine. 
—Kelley. 

The air was still o’er Bethlehem’s plain. See Nativity, 
The.—Read. 

The alder by the river. See Spring.—Thaxter. 

The Almighty has his own purposes. See Second In¬ 
augural Address (Retribution).—Lincoln. 

The aloes grow upon the sand. See He that Believeth 
Shall not Make Haste.—Woolsey. 

The American liner, Pennland. See Case of Go Hang. 

-—Anon. 

The American nation stands pre-eminent as a typi¬ 
cally magnanimous people. See Memorial Day 
Exercise, A.—Anon. 

The American Revolution was not the struggle of a 
class, but of a people. See Power of Free Ideas. 
The.—Curtis. 


The American saloon sits supreme in American poli¬ 
tics. See Saloon in Politics, The.—Fisk. 

The amount of suffering and mortality inseparable. 
See Traffic in Ardent Spirits.—Beecher. 

The analytic method applied to Puritan and Dutch¬ 
man. See Puritan and the Dutchman, The.-— 
Anon. 

The anatomist, gazing upon the conformation of the 
human body, exclaims. See Hand, The.—Tal- 
mage. 

The ancient memories buried lie. See Cadences.— 
Payne. 

The ancient river glimmer’d in its bed. See Going 
Home.—Turner. 

The angel came by night. See Adsum.—Stoddard. 

The Angel of Renunciation came. See Angel, The.— 
Gillespy. 

The angel of the flowers, one day. See Moss Rose, 
The.—Krummacher. 

The angel of the nation’s peace. See Our Fallen He¬ 
roes.—Griffith. 

The angel with great joy received his guests. See 
King Robert of Sicily (“ Angel with great joy,” 
etc.).—Longfellow. 

The angel wrote and vanished. See Abou ben Adhem 
(“Angel wrote,” etc.).—Hunt. 

The annual ceremony of taking up and whipping and 
putting down carpets. See Taking Up Carpets.— 
Anon. 

The anti-slavery contest had closed many a door. 
See Charles Sumner.—Curtis. 

The appellation “gentleman,” too frequently is 
bought. Set Gentleman, A.—Vickers. 

The apple blooms come falling down. See Bird 
among the Blooms, The.—Short. 

The apple boughs half hid the house. See Wonderful 
Sack, The.—Trowbridge. 

The apples are ripe in the orchard. See After All.— 
Winter. 

The approach to the Abbey through gloomy monastic 
remains. See Westminster Abbey.—Irving. 

The April sun smiles bright above. See “April sun 
smiles bright above. The.”—Eaton. 

The Archey Road Literary»Club was holding a meet¬ 
ing. See Mr. Dooley Defines a Poet.—Dunne. 

The ark of God is in the field. See Watch by Night, 
The.—Keble. 

The armaments which thunderstrike the walls. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Apostrophe to the 
Ocean. The).—-Byron. 

The armor hung high in the tapestried hall. See Court 
of the King, The.—Alt. 

The army is gathering from near and from far. See 
Marching Along.—Bradbury. 

The arrangement of God which makes man’s con¬ 
science his guide to action. See Supremacy of 
Conscience. The.—Storrs. 

The art of making daily bread. See Lost Arts, The.— 
Anon. 

The art of reading well is an accomplishment that all 
desire to possess. SeeArtof Reading,The.—Rush. 

The ascent to Paradise was accomplished by a fixed 
gaze. See Story of the Divine Comedy. The (Par¬ 
adise. The).—Rabb. 

The ash-berry clusters are darkly red. See Fall Song. 
—Anon. 

The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold. See 
Destruction of Sennacherib, The.—Byron. 

The asvlum in France so dark and cold. See May Bug, 
The.-—Brandis. 

The Athenians never were known to live contented. 
See Oration on ths Crown, The (Public Spirit of 
Athenians).—Demosthenes. 

The atmosphere forms a snhencal shell, surrounding 
the earth. See Air and Sea, The.—Maury. 

The atrocious crime of being a young man, which the 
honorable gentleman. See Reply of Pitt to 
Walpole.—Chatham. 

The attempt to fight the liquor traffic successfully out¬ 
side. See Prohibition Party a Necessity, A.— 
Leonard. 

The Attorney-General has talked of his impartiality. 
See Press the Protection of the People, The.— 
O’Connell. 

The auctioneer leaped on a chair, and bold and loud 
and clear. See Auctioneer’s Gift, The.—Foss. 

The audience entire seemed pleased, indeed. See 
Limitations of Genius.—Riley. 

The auld wife sat at her ivied door. See Auld Wife, 
The.—CaWerley. 

The Autumn has filled me with wonder to-day. See 
Autumn Song of a Little Girl.—H. C. B. 


838 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The bird’s 


The Autumn is old. See Autumn.—Hood. 

The Autumn leaves are falling. See Autumn I.eaves, 
The.—Anon. 

The autumn seems to cry for thee. See Helen.—Wool- 
sey. 

The autumn time is with us. Its approach. See 
Autumn in the West.— Gallagher. 

The average man is perfectly inconsolable when he 
loses his hat. See Where is My Hat?—Owens. 

The average person notices the arrangement of a room 
surprisingly little. See After a Match.—Anon. 

The awful shadow of His too great light. See God and 
the Soul (Sursum Corda).—Spalding. 

The awful shadow of some unseen power. See Hymn 
to Intellectual Beauty.—Shelley. 

The awfulest times that ever could be. See Little 
Girl Who Wouldn’t Eat Crusts, The.—Dodge. 

The Babies—As they comfort us in our sorrows. See 
Babies, The.—Clemens. 

The baby knelt down to whisper her prayer. See 
Baby Logic.—Winslow. 

The baby sits in her cradle. See Silent Baby.— 
Currier. 

The baby sits on his mammy’s knee. See Baby’s 
Thoughts, The.—Anon. 

The baby wept. See Sleeping Babe, The.—Hinds. 

The baobab-trees of the Cape Verde Islands. See 
Some Famous Trees.—Anon. 

The bairnies cuddle doon at nicht. See Cuddle Doon. 
—Anderson. 

The ballot-box is a symbol of political equality in our 
Republic. See Ballot-box, The.—Chapin. 

The “Ballyshannon” foundered off the coast of Cariboo. 
See Etiquette.—Gilbert. 

The band of Pilgrim exiles in tearful silence stood. See 
Embarkation, The.—Doten. 

The band was playing a waltz-quadrille. See Waltz- 
quadrille, A.—-Wilcox. 

The band was playing “Dixie” when he marched, 
marched away. See Volunteer, The.—Stan¬ 
ton. 

The banks are all a bustin’, Nance. See Contentment. 
—Hayes. 

The banner of Freedom high floated unfurled. See 
“United States” and “Macedonian,” The (II.).— 
Anon. 

The banners of the world are met upon that wild blue 
wave. See Cleopatra at Actium.—Hervey. 

The banquet-cups, of many a hue and shape. See 
Zophiel; or, The Bride of Seven (Respite, The).— 
Brooks. 

The bar is crossed; but Death—the pilot—stands. See 
Becalmed.—Tabb. 

The bard has sung, God never formed a soul. See 
Zophiel; or, The Bride of Seven (Disappointment). 
—Brooks. 

The bare text of this ludicrous, desultory speech. See 
Oration on the “Labor” Question.—Anon. 

The barge she sat in, like a burnished throne. See 
Antony and Cleopatra (Cleopatra).—Shakespeare. 

The bark that held a prince, went down. See He 
Never Smiled Again.—Hemans. 

The barn was low and dim and old. See Cradle, The.— 
Thaxter. 

The baron hath the landward park, the fisher hath the 
sea. See Sea-fowler, The.—Howitt. 

The Baron of Smaylho’me rose with day. See Eve of 
St. John, The.—Scott. 

The Barons bold on Runnymede. See Barons Bold, 
The.—Fox. 

The Baron’s daughter would ride abroad. See 
Wanderer’s Bell, The.—Preston. 

The Bastille—the terror is in the word. See Bastille 
and the Starling, The.—Sterne. 

The battle blood of Antrim had not dried on freedom’s 
shroud. See Kathleen Ban Adair.—Davis. 

The battle had ceased and the victory was won. See 
Jephthah’s Rash Vow.—Howard. 

The battle of Lexington infused into the life of this 
people the first sentiment of American nationality. 
See Merchants of the Revolution.—Cowdin. 

The battle of our life is won. See "Battle of our life 
is won. The.”—Larcom. 

The battle of Sedgemoor had been fought and lost. 
See Rivals, The.—Smith. 

The battle of Waterloo is an enigma. See Les Mis£r- 
ables (Waterloo).—Hugo. 

The battle was over and the sun had gone down. See 
Enemies Meet at Death’s Door.—Jackson. 

The battleships Brooklyn, Oregon and Texas pushed 
ahead. See Race for Dear Life, A.—Anon. , 

The bay is set with ashy sails. See At Les Eboule- 
ments.—Scott. 


The beams of the rising sun had gilded the lofty domes 
of Carthage. See Regulus to the Carthaginians.— 
Kellogg. 

The bearded grass waves in the summer breeze. See 
Death and Night.—Kenyon. 

The beauteous Ethel’s father has. See Piazza Tragedy, 
A.—Field. 

I he Beautiful City! forever. See Beautiful City, The.— 
Riley. 

The Beautiful, which mocked his fond pursuing. See 
Beautiful, The.—Dorgan. 

The beauty and the life. See Her Passing.—Drum¬ 
mond. 

The beauty of the northern dawns. See Christine.— 
Hay. 

The beauty of the sky and the delights of night in 
Venice. See Nights of Venice, The.—Sand. 

The beaver cut his timber. See Cobbler Keezar’s 
Vision.—Whittier. 

The bees about the linden-tree. See November’s 
Cadence.—Southesk. 

The bees in the clover are making honey. See Mower 
in Ohio, The.—Piatt. 

The bell strikes one; we take no note of time. See 
Night Thoughts (Time).—Young. 

The bell struck one, and shook the silent tower. See 
Fair Eleanor.—Blake. 

The bell that rang at Lexington. See Ethan Allen.— 
Raymond. 

The bells chime clear. See Christening, The.—Ramal. 

The bells of Mount Vernon are ringing to-day. See 
Washington’s Birthday.—Anon. 

The benefits of college training are five-fold. See 
“Benefits of college training are five-fold. The.” 
—Vincent. 

The benefits of the Constitution are not exclusive. See 
Public Dinner at New York (Benefits of the Con¬ 
stitution ).—W ebster. 

The best of all the pill-box crew. See Three Good 
Doctors.—Duffield. 

The best of things, as well as the worst. See Epilogue. 
—Anon. 

The best thoughts of the day ought to be in the daily 
papers. See “Best thoughts of the day ought to 
be in the daily papers. The.”—Babb. 

The betrothal and marriage of the Princess Charlotte. 
See How Kaiser Wilhelm’s Sister Was Won.— 
Anon. 

The Bible is a handbook for right living. See Bible, 
The.—Hillis. 

The Bible is fragrant with the breath of new-mown 
grass. See Bible, The.Ta—Image. 

The Bible is not only the revealer. See Sublimity of 
the Bible, The.-—Halsey. 

The bilder oke, and eke the hard asshe. See Parle- 
ment of Foules, The (Trees, Flowers and Birds;. 
—Chaucer. 

The bill under consideration is intended to authorize 
the Treasury Department. See On Government 
E> travagance.—Crittenden. 

The bill which has been read. Mr. Speaker, claims the 
serious attention of this House. See In Favor 
of a State Law against Duelling.—Randolph. 

The billowy headlands swiftly fly. See Battle Song of 
the Oregon.—Rice. 

The birch tree swang her fragrant hair. See Amphion. 
—Tennyson. 

The bird, let loose in eastern skies. See Bird, Let 
Loose, The.—Moore. 

The bird that soars on highest wing. See Humility.— 
Montgomery. 

The bird to the nest and the bee to the comb. See 
Love Lights of Home, The.—Stanton. 

The birds, against the April wind. See What the 
Birds Said.—Whittier. 

The birds all held a party. See Birds’ Party, The.— 
Richards. 

The birds are coming home soon. See Coming of 
Spring, The.—Anon. 

The birds can fly, an’ why can’t I? See Darius Green 
and his Flying Machine.—Trowbridge. 

The birds have been singing to-day. See In February. 
—Symonds. 

The birds have hid, the winds are low. See Evening 
Songs.—Cheney. 

The birds must know. Who wisely sings will sing as 
they. See Way to Sing, The.—Anon. 

The birds no more in dooryard trees are singing. See 
In Bay Chaleur.—Butterworth. 

The birds of the woodland, in soft summer weather. 
See Birds’ Lawn Party, The.—( Child Garden .) 

The bird’s song, the sun and the wind. See Bird’s 
Song, the Sun and the Wind, The.—Roberts. 


839 




The birds 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The birds their love-notes warble. See Alice Ray.— 
Hale. 

The birds their quire apply; airs, vernal airs. See 
Paradise Lost (Eternal Spring, The).—Milton. 

The birds, when winter shades the sky. See Love 
and Friendship.—Legett. 

The birthday of the “Father of his Country!” See 
Birthday of Washington.—Choate. 

The bison is vain, and (I write it with pain). See 
Bison, The.—Belloc. 

The black-bird early leaves its nest. See There’s 
Work Enough to do.—Anon. 

The blackcaps pipe among the reeds. See Before the 
Rain.—Troubetzkoy. 

The black-eyed children of the desert drove. See 
Kubleh.—-Taylor. 

The black-haired, gaunt Paulinus. See Edwin and 
Paulinus.—-Anon. 

The blast has swept the clouds away. See Perfect 
Day, The.—Proctor. 

The blessed Damozel lean’d out. See Blessed Dam- 
ozel. The.—Rossetti. 

The blessed hush of eventide. See Sister Madeline.— 
Everest. 

The blessed morn has come again. See Snow. A 
Winter Sketch.—Hoyt. 

The blessed old fireplace! how bright it appears! See 
Old Fireplace, The.—Anon. 

The blessed Poster-girl leaned out. See Poster-girl, 
The—Wells. 

The blessings which the weak and poor can scatter. 
See Charity.—Talfourd. 

The blinded Parisians presume to call themselves free. 
See Against the Terrorism of the Jacobins.— 
Vergniaud. 

The bliss of man (could pride that blessing find). See 
Essay on Man, An (Content).—Pope. 

The bloated Boggaboon. See Bloated Boggaboon, 
The.—Cholmondeley-Pennell. 

The bloom hath fled thy cheek, Mary. See Bloom 
Hath Fled Thy Cheek, Mary, The.—Motherwell. 

The bloom of the elm is falling. See Elm Blossom. 
—(Hours at Home.) 

The bloom of the roses, the youth of the fair. See 
Sense and Spirit.—G. F. W. 

The bloom that lies on Hilda’s cheek. See Elective 
Course, An.—Aldrich. 

The blooming flowers, the galaxies of space. See 
Love.—Rand. 

The Blue is marching South once more. See Union of 
Blue and Gray.—Hayne. 

The bluebirds and the violets. See Awakening Year, 
The.—Read. 

The bluebirds, the bluebirds. See Sister and Blue¬ 
birds.—Larcom. 

The bluest gray—the grayest blue. See Moon and 
Dawn.—( Sunday Magazine.) 

The Board of State Prison Directors was sitting in 
session. See Inmate of the Dungeon, The.— 
Morrow. 

The boarding nettings are triced for fight. See Jack 
Creamer.—-Roche. 

The boat is chafing at our long delay. See Song. 
—Davidson. 

The boatman sate with brawny arms embrowned. 
See Ferryman, The.—Moore. 

The body, moulded by the clime, endures. See Art of 
Preserving Health, The.—Armstrong. 

The bogs show green in the meadow. See Redwing’s 
Song.—Douglass. 

The bolt on the back door had needed replacing for a 
long time. See Gimlet versus Corkscrew. Anon. 

The bond that links our souls together. See Chain, A. 
—Procter. 

“The boneless tongue, so small and weak.” See 
Tongue, The.—Strong. 

The bonnie, bonnie bairn [who] sits poking [nr pokin’] 
in the ase. See Castles in the Air.—-Ballantyne. 

The bonniest bairn in a’ the warl’. See Bonniest 
Bairn in a’ the Warl, The.—Ford. 

The booby! he must fall in love, indeed! See Love 
Chase, The (Scene from “The Love Chase”).— 
Knowles. 

The bood is beabig brighdly, love. See Lides to Bary 
Jade.— (Scribner’s Monthly.) 

The Book of the New Year is opened. See Book of the 
New Year, The.—Anon. 

The books I cannot hope to buy. See Ballad of the 
Unattainable.—I.ang. 

The Books say well, my Brothers! each man’s life. 
See Light of Asia, The (Nirvana).—Arnold. 

The bootblack at the corner-stand. See Darkey Boot- 
black, The.—Anon. 


The bootblacks and the newsboys had missed Cripple 
Tim. See Cripple Tim.—Hastings. 

The boy from his bedroom window. See Boy, The.— 
Allingham. 

The boy lives on our farm. See Boy Lives on Our 
Farm, The.—Riley. 

The boy so late; pray God, he be not lost. See Becket 
(Bower Scene, The).—Tennyson. 

The boy stood in the burning block. See At the North 
Avenue Fire.—White. 

The boy stood on the back-yard fence, whence all but 
him had fled. See Parody on Casabianca, A.— 
Anon. 

The boy stood on the burning deck. See Casabianca.— 
Hemans. 

“The boy stood on the burning deck.” See Medley, A. 
—Denton. 

The boy who does a stroke and stops. See Rome 
Wasn’t Built in a Day.—Cary. 

The boy who sells fruit and confectionery on the train. 
See Difficult Love-making.—Anon. 

The boy who’s always wishing. See Luck.—Anon. 

“The boys are coming home tomorrow.” See Boys, 
The.—Lynn. 

The boys have come back to school. See School 
“Takes Up.”-—Burdette. 

The boys insisted that I needed relaxation. See 
Mule Ride in Florida, A. —Anon. 

The boys were coasting down the hill last evening. 
See Mr. Sanscript’s Slide Down Hill.—Anon. 

The braggart March stood in the season’s door. See 
Passing of March, The.—Wilson. 

The Brahmin’s son was dead; the Brahmin’s heart. 
See Brahmin’s Son, The.—Stoddart. 

The branches creaked on the garret roof. See Grand¬ 
mother’s Valentine.—Irving. 

The brave man is not he who feels no fear. See Brave 
Man, The.—Baillie. 

The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here. 
See Address at the Dedication of the Cemetery at 
Gettysburg.—Lincoln. 

The brave young city by the Balboa Seas. See 
Twilight at the Heights.—Miller. 

The bravest battle that ever was fought. See Bravest 
Battle that ever was Fought, The.—Miller. 

The bravest names for fire and flames. See General 
John.—Gilbert. 

The break o’ the dawn, and the plain is a-smoke with 
the breath of the frost. See Race of the Boomers, 
The.—Burton. 

The breaking waves dashed high. See Landing of the 
Pilgrim Fathers in New England, The.—Hemans. 

The breast that nursed thee, shrunk with age. See 
Hail, America.—Knowles. 

The breath of June, with faint perfume. See Master 
Sleeps, The.—Burdette. 

The breaths of kissing night and day. See Dream 
Tryst.—Thompson. 

The breeze blew fair, the waving sea. See Charnel 
Ship, The.—Davidson. 

The breeze of the evening that cools the hot air. See 
“Quien Sabe.”—Waller. 

The breezes went steadily through the tall pines. See 
Ballad of Nathan Hale, The.—Moore. 

The brethering in Lucre Hollow were disturbed a heep 
in mind. See Church in Lucre Hollow.—Eisen- 
beis. 

The Brewers should to Malt-a go. See Grand Scheme 
of Emigration.—Anon. 

The bridal is over, the joy-bells have ceased. See 
Wedding-day, The.—Anon. 

The bride, she bound her golden hair. See Sir Tur- 
lough; or. The Churchyard Bride.—Carleton. 

The bride she is winsome and bonny. See Song, 
Woo’d and Married and A’.—Baillie. 

The bridges mingle with the river. See Tom’s Phi¬ 
losophy.— (Harvard Lampoon.) 

The brief phrase, the schools and colleges of the United 
States. See Washington and Our Schools and 
Colleges.—Eliot. 

The bright sea washed beneath her feet. See Return. 
The.—Fields. 

The brilliant black eye. See Black and Blue Eyes.— 
Moore. 

The brine is in your blood from days of yore. See 
Sea’s Influence. The.—Hunt. 

The British Parliament, in a former session. See 
Speech at Bristol, Previous to the Election, 1780 
(Wisdom Dearly Purchased).—Burke. 

The British Parliament in 1774 had voted a law. See 
Nineteenth of April, 1775, The.—Hoar. 

The broad moon lingers on the summit of Mount 
Olivet. See Jerusalem by Moonlight.—Disraeli. 


840 




The chime 


FIRST LINE INDEX 


The broad, round-shouldered giant Earth. See By the 
St. John.—Currie. 

The broken moon lay in the autumn sky. See To 
-.—Smith. 

The brook and road were fellow travelers. See Pre¬ 
lude, The (Defile of Gondo).—-Wordsworth. 

The brook is brimmed with melting snow. See Pussy 
Willow.—Anon. 

The brooks are full, and busy. See Good-by, Winter! 
—Stone. 

The brooks are running swift and clear. See Spring.— 
Anon. 

The brown leaves rustle under our tread. See Death 
and Life.—Anon. 

The bubbling brook doth leap when I come by. See 
Nature.—Very. 

The bud will soon become a flower. See Now is the 
Time.—Very. 

The budding floweret blushes at the light. See /Ella 
(Minstrel’s Marriage Song).—Chatterton. 

The buds awake at touch of spring. See Spring’s 
Immortality.—Bell. 

The buds in the tree's heart safely were folded away. 
See When the Apple Blossoms Stir.—Anon. 

The buds that bloom on Easter Day. See Easter Buds. 
—Wilson. 

The bulbul mummeth like a book. See Bulbul, The.— 
Seaman. 

The bulbul wail’d, “Oh, Rose! all night I sing.” See 
With Sa’di in the Garden; or. The Book of Love 
(Song without a Sound).—Arnold. 

The bumble-bee, the bumble-bee. See Bumble Bee, 
The.—Anon. 

The Bunker Hill Monument is finished. Here it stands! 
See Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, 
The (Dedication of Bunker Hill Monument).— 
Webster. 

The burglar entered. He carefully reconnoitered, 
then rose. See Apparition, An.—Anon. 

“The burn runs swiftly, my dainty lass.” See Faint 
Heart ne’er Won Fair Lady.—Hine. 

The bush that has most briers and bitter fruit. See 
Barberry-bush, The.—Very. 

The business of the day now went forward. See 
Bride of Lammermoor, The (Ravenswood and 
Lucy Ashton).—Scott. 

The busy larke, messager of daye. See Canterbury 
Tales, The (Morning in May).—Chaucer. 

The butterfly from flower to flower. See Butterfly, 
The.—Skipsey. 

The cactus towers, straight and tall. See In Mexico.— 
Stein. 

The caller presented a "little work.” See Baby’s 
Offeri ng.—Burnham. 

The calm dispassionate muse of history has pronounced 
her unequivocal award. See Inauguration of the 
Statue of Franklin, The (Inauguration of Franklin 
Statue, Boston).—Winthrop. 

The calm Rappahannock flowed on to the sea. See 
On the Rappahannock.—Tiffany. 

The camp has had its day of song. See Workshop 
and the Camp, The.—Anon. 

The cane is growin’ juicy for the grindin’ at the mill. 
See When Summer Says Good-bye.—Stanton. 

The Cap’n was such a little fellow. See How the 
Captain Saved the Day.—Williams. 

The Captain galloped to the front. See Hero of the 
Gun, The.—Preston. 

The captain of the Shannon came sailing up the bay. 
See “Shannon” and the “Chesapeake,” • The.— 
BouvA 

The captain stood on the carronade—“First Lieu¬ 
tenant,” says he. See Captain stood on the 
Carronade, The.—Marryat. 

The car he waited for came down. See Trolley La La! 
—Burdette. 

The careful hen calls all her chirping family around. 
See Seasons, The (Domestic Birds).-—Thomson. 

The careful winter was hardly gone. See Busy and 
Happy.—Whitney. 

The carrier cannot sing to-day the ballads. See Old 
Sergeant, The.—Willson. 

The carved doors “were open. See Death’s Blunder.— 
Goodwin. 

The castle clock had tolled midnight. See On the 
Funeral of Charles First, at Night, in St. George’s 
Chapel, Windsor.—Bowles. . 

The castled crag of Drachenfels. See Childe Harold’s 
Pilgrimage (Longing).—Byron. 

The catastrophe of this stupendous drama is at hand. 
See Rome and Carthage.—Hugo. 

See cause of education be hanged,” he muttered— 

See Going to School.—Anon. 


The Cavalier as well as the Puritan was on this conti¬ 
nent in early days. See New South, The.— 
Grady. 

The cedars of Mount Lebanon are, perhaps, the most 
renowned. See Famous and Curious Trees.— 
Anon. 

The celebration was held in Josiah’s sugar bush. See 
My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s (Fourth of July 
in Jonesville).—Holley. 

The Central American Treaty was fully ratified on the 
4th of July, 1850. See Central American Treaty, 
The.—Seward. 

The central figure was a bareheaded woman. See 
Young America.-—Anon. 

The century that has gone by has changed the face of 
Nature. See Centennial Address delivered at Val¬ 
ley Forge, June 19, 1878 (Valley Forge).—Brown. 
The champions had come from their fields of war. 

See Sicilian Captive, The.—Hemans. 

The Chancellor mused as he nibbled his pen. See 
• Love and War.—Martin. 

The changing guests, each in a different mood. See 
I nclusiveness.—Rossetti. 

The chapel-bell began to ring at a quarter to eleven. 
See Tom Brown’s School Days (Morning and After¬ 
noon Chapel).—Hughes. 

The character of a nation is often known by its festivals. 

See Decoration Day.—Cochran. 

The character of Catherine de Medicis is a study. See 
Catherine de Medicis.—Punshon. 

The character of Jesus is perfectly original. See 
Character of Our Saviour, The.—Anon. 

The character of Washington! Who can delineate it 
worthily? See Completion of the National Mon¬ 
ument to Washington, The (Character of Wash¬ 
ington, The).—Winthrop. 

The characters of great and small. See Skeleton in 
the Cupboard, The.—Locker-Lampson. 

The charge of the gallant Three Hundred, the Heavy 
Brigade! See Charge of the Heavy Brigade at 
Balaklava, The.—Tennyson. 

The charitable ladies from the hospital stood beside a 
little newly-made grave. See Souarest Un among 
’Em, The. ( Detroit Free Press.) 

The chateau of Ploerneuf was the terror of the Breton 
people. See Christmas Repentance, A.—Bern¬ 
hardt. 

The chestnuts shine through the cloven rind. See 
Song.—Aldrich. 

The chief agency in the progress and development of 
the law. See “Chief agency in the progress and 
development of the law, The.”—Bonney. 

The chief in silence strode before. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Fitz-James and Roderick Dhu).— 
Scott. 

The Chief Magistrate derives all his authority from the 
people. See First Inaugural Address.—Lincoln. 
The Chief of Police yesterday had a visit from an old 
farmer. See Tickled all Oafer.—Anon. 

The chiefest action for a man of spirit. See Action.— 
Webster. 

The chiefs were seated in a ring beneath the starry sky. 

See Legend of Crystal Spring.—Austin. 

The chieftain gazed with moistened eyes upon the 
veteran band. See Washington’s Farewell to his 
Army.—Anon. 

“The child is father to the man.” See Wonders of 
Genealogy, The.—( Yale Record.) 

The child leans on its parent’s breast. See Trust in 
God.—Williams. 

The child looked out upon the field. See Trees of 
Corn.— (Good Cheer.) 

The child was so sensitive, so like that little shrinking 
plant. See Kiss Me, Mamma, I Can’t Sleep.— 
Anon. 

The children crowned themselves with roses. See 
Crowns for Children.—Anon. 

The children kept coming, one by one. See Children 
We Keep, The.—Anon. 

The children of a neighbor of mine had a leveret given 
them. See Tame Hares.—Cowper. 

The children tucked away. See At the Hearthside.— 
Cheney. 

The children wandered up and down. See Phantom 
Ship, The.—Thaxter. 

The children’s world is full of sweet surprises. See 
“Children’s world is full of sweet surprises, 
The.”—Doudney. 

The chill November day was done. See Little Goose, 
A.—Turner 

The chill snows lingered, the spring was late. See 
Back Again.—Thaxter. 

The chime of a bell of gold. See Songs’ End.—Payne. 

841 







The chime 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The chime of bells across the waking year. See 
Easter Memory, An.—Roberts. 

The chimes, the chimes of Motherland. See Chimes 
of Old England, The.—Coxe. 

The chimney soot was falling fast. See Char-co-o-al. 
—Anon. 

The choicest and the costliest goods. See Choicest 
Goods, The.—Kavanaugh. 

The choir was singing the new arrangement of the 
beautiful anthem. See Considering the Lilies.— 
Anon. 

The chough and crow to roost have gone. See Chough 
and Crow, The.—Baillie. 

The Christmas chimes are pealing high. See Christ¬ 
mas Chimes. The.—Coolidge; < l 

The Christmas Day was coming, the Christmas Eve 
drew near. See Little Christmas Tree, The.— 
Coolidge. 

The Christmas is coming, the fairies are humming. 
See Little Barefoot.—Anon. 

The church bells were ringing, the devil sat singing. 
See Parable from Liebig, A.—Kingsley. 

The church in debt feels that prudence demands. See 
“Church in debt feels that prudence demands. 
The.”—Stall. 

The church of Christ, if called again to pass through the 
age of martyrdom. See “Church of Christ, if 
called again to pass through the age of martyrdom, 
The.”—Hurst. 

The church was still, as the parson read. See Proto¬ 
type, A.—Anon. 

The church was vast and dim. The air was fragrant 
with pine boughs. See How Dot Heard “The 
Messiah.”—Butterworth. 

The churchyard leans to the sea with its dead. See 
Old Churchyard of Bonchurch, The.—Marston. 

The circle formed, we sit in silent state. See Conversa¬ 
tion (Afternoon Call, An).—Cowper. 

The circling century has brought. See Battle of 
Lexington, The.—^Bungay. 

The circling year again brings round. See Memorial 
Day.—Riley. 

The citizen who can claim America for his home. See 
American Patriotism.—Porter. 

The City is of Night: perchance of Death. See City of 
Dreadful Night, The.—Thomson. 

The city of Sidon having surrendered to Alexander. 
See Virtue Uncorrupted by Fortune.—Curtius. 

The city slumbers. O’er its mighty walls. See Fire¬ 
man, The.—Conrad. 

The city’s shining towers we may not see. See 
Heaven.—W akefield. 

The clear smiling lake woo’d to bathe in its deep. See 
William Tell (Alpine Minstrelsy).—Schiller. 

The clock is on the stroke of six. See Father is 
Coming.—Howitt. 

The clock says, “Tick! Tick!” See Lazy Boy's 
Lesson, A.—Tirrell. 

The clock strikes seven in the hall. See Children’s 
Bedtime, The.—-Anon. 

The clock struck nine, when I did send the nurse. See 
Romeo and Juliet.—Shakespeare. 

The closing scene of French dominion in Canada was 
marked. See Capture of Quebec, The.—War- 
burton. 

The cloud, which had scattered so deep a murkiness 
over the day. See Last Days of Pompeii (De¬ 
struction of Pompeii).—Bulwer-Lytton. 

The clouds are flying, the woods are sighing. See 
Wallenstein (Thekla’s Song).—Schiller. 

The clouds are scudding across the moon. See Storm 
Song.—Taylor. 

The clouds grew dark as the people paused. See Our 
Country’s Call.—-Barry. 

The clouds hang dark, the surging waves. See How 
Cushing Destroyed the Albemarle.—Anon. 

The clouds hang heavy round my way. See Shadows. 
—( Richmond. Christian Advocate.) 

The clouds that rest on the mountain’s breast. See 
Kissing Inducements.—Anon 

The c'ouds that wrapt the setting sun. See Second 
Sunday after Trinity.—Keble. 

The clover blossoms kiss her feet. See Clover Blos¬ 
soms, The.—Laighton. 

The Club will please come to order. See Little 
Women (Little Women’s Pickwick Club, The).— 
Alcott. 

The coach is at the door at last. See Farewell to the 
F arm.—-Stevenson. 

The coals have lower, fainter burned. See Auf Wied- 
ersehen.—Abbott. 

The cock ; s crowing. See Written in March.—Words¬ 
worth. 


The codfish is a child ov the oshun. See Codfish, The.— 
Shaw. 

The coffin was a plain one—a poor, miserable pine 
coffin. See Noble Revenge, The.—Anon. 

The cold blast at the casement beats. See Heart’s 
Summer, The.—Sargent. 

The cold, feeble dawn of a January morning was 
stealing in at the windows. See Nicholas Nickleby 
(Schoolmaster Beaten. The).—Dickens. 

The cold, gray light of the dawning. See Ticonderoga. 
—Wilson. 

The cold gray moon of a winter’s sky. See Dead 
Soldier-boy, The.—Turner. 

The cold hands call upon abysmal Gloom. See Death 
• of Livingston, The.—Noel. 

The cold, red sun is going down. See Valentine, A.— 
Green. 

The cold that winter had been more persistent and 
severe in the mountains. See Fire, The.— 
Deland. 

The cold wind [or winds] swept the mountain height. 
See Mother’s Sacrifice, The.—Smith. 

The cold winter-wind rushed noisily forth. See New 
Theory of Frost, A.—Brackett. 

The Colonel had been detained at his office. See One- 
legged Goose. The.—Smith. 

The Colonel loved sweet Cicely—alas! she loved not 
him. See Colonel’s Orders, The.—Meyers. 

The colonel rode by his picket-line. See Two Wives, 
The.—Howells. 

The “Colored Debating Society,” of Mount Vernon, O. 
See “De Pen and de Swoard.”—( Harper’s 
Magazine .) 

The colour gladdens all your heart. See Sympathy.— 
Gyles. 

The comb between whose ivory teeth she strains. See 
Poet Expatiates on the Beauty of Delia’s Hair, 
The.—Southey. 

The combat raged not long, but ours the day. See 
Burial of Latane, The.—Thompson. 

The combatants are women, the weapons treachery 
and intrigue. See Two Queens.—Addington. 

The commandant stands shouting. “Dress!” See 
Quite Possible.—Anon. 

The commissioner bet me a pony—I won. See Song 
of the Squatter.—Sherbrooke. 

The communion service of January was just over. See 
Deacon’s Week, The.—-Cooke. 

The compliment, especially the mark of confidence 
you have now bestowed upon me. See Address 
on Receiving the Degree of Doctor of Laws, An.— 
Anon. 

The compliment of this graceful self-respect. See 
Manners.—Emerson. 

The composition of man is threefold. See Character 
of Washington. The.—Vance. 

“The concept, the being, the essence, the part.” See 
Promenading Ontology.—E. T. D. 

The concluding paragraphs of a historical work. See 
Province of History, The.—Ridpath. 

The conditions of life are always changing. See 
Centennial Oration.—Brown. 

The conduct of England toward us resembles that of 
Ebenezer Bullock. See Imaginary Conversations 
(Washington and Franklin).—Landor. 

The conference-meeting through at last. See Doorstep, 
The.—Stedman. 

The conflict is over! Day by day the material evi¬ 
dences of war. See No Conflict Now.—Devens. 

The conflict is over, the struggle is past. See Farewell, 
The.—Hoffman. 

The conflict which tried Washington and gave birth 
to the Republic. See Washington as a Soldier.— 
Carrington. 

The Connaught Castle had arrived in New York. See 
Annie O’Brien.—Dallas. 

The Connecticut editor who wrote the following. See 
Calling a Boy in the Morning.—Bailey. 

The conqueror moves in a march. See School-teacher, 
The.—Brougham. 

The conquest of the “Promised Land” did not prevent 
long and painful contests. See David, the Patri¬ 
otic King.—Geikie. 

The consul’s brow was sad, and the consul’s speech was 
low. See Horatius at the Bridge.—Macaulay. 

The convent-bells are ringing. See Parisina. — 
Byron. 

The conversation, which was at a high pitch of anima¬ 
tion. See Silas Marner (Discussion at “The 
Rainbow,” A).—Eliot. 

The cordiality of your greeting, your unbounded 
hospitality. See Address to Northern and 
Southern Veterans, An.—Anon. 


842 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The day 


The corn crop’s ruther light this year ag’in. See 
Adalina’s Arrival.—McBride. 

The corn, oh, the corn, ’tis the ripening of the corn! 
See Lorna Doone (Harvest Song, A;.—Blackmore. 

The Cornish king had heard a minstrel say. See 
Idy'ls of the King (Vivien).—-Tennyson. 

The cosiest place and the snuggest spot. See On 
Grandpapa’s Knee.—Handford. 

The cottage was a thatched one, the outside old and 
mean. See Little Jim.—Anon. 

The Countess Amy with her hair and her garments 
dishevelled. See Kenilworth (Interview between 
Amy and Lord Leicester at Kenilworth).—Scott. 

The Countess di Nottinero was not exactly a Recamier. 
See Senator Entangled, A.—De Mille. 

“The Countess Vera von Liningen.” See Fleurange. 
—Craven. 

The countless stars, which to our human eye. See 
God and the Soul (Starry Host, The).—Spalding. 

The country is now emerging from trying conditions. 
See Future of the Nation, The.—Anon. 

The country lanes are bright with bloom. See Early 
Auturtin.—Fairthorne. 

The country residence of John Hickman was a delight¬ 
ful place to me. See Transferred Ghost, The.— 
Stockton. 

The country ways are full of mire. See Night before 
the Wedding.—Smith. 

The course of the boat-race was to be two miles. See 
Boat-race, The.—Grant. 

The course of the weariest river. See We shall be 
Satisfied.—Phillips. 

The course of things below. See Life’s Battle.—Anon. 

The courteous citizen bade me to his feast. See 
Hollow Hospitality.—Hall. 

The court-house where the trial was held was as bare 
of ornaments as the cell. See Prisoner’s Plea, 
The.—Anon. 

The courting of T’nowhead’s Bell reached its crisis 
one Sabbath. See Race for a Wife, A.—Barrie. 

The Court’s assembled—no grave court of law. See 
Prologue to an Evening’s Entertainment.—Anon. 

The cow is a good animal. She has two horns and two 
eyes. See Cow, The.—Anon. 

The cow is too well known, I fear. See Cow, The.— 
Herford. 

The cows in the farm-yard know me. See Bessie’s 
Dilemma.—Dallas. 

The coyote of the farther deserts is a long, slim, sick 
and sorry-looking skeleton. See Roughing It 
(Coyote, The).—Clemens. 

The crab, the bullace, and the sloe. See Prince 
Lucifer (Gravedigger’s Song).—Austin. 

The crackling embers on the hearth are dead. See 
N ight.—Coleridge. 

The crafty Nix, more false than fair. See Nix, The.— 
Garnett. 

The Crankadox leaned o’er the edge of the moon. See 
Spirk Troll—Derisive.—Riley. 

The crew had just finished their early dinner. See 
Tom Brown at Oxford (Boat Race, The).— 
Hughes. 

The cricket chirps all day. See September.—Arnold. 

The crickets in the corner sing. See Cradle Song.— 
Stephens. 

The crimson leafage fires the lawn. See Letter from 
Newport, A.—Myers. 

The crimson moon uprising from the sea. See 
Sonnet: “The crimson moon,” etc.—Thurlow. 

The crimson sun was sinking down to rest. See 
Columbus.—Devere. 

The crimson tide was ebbing, and the pulse grew weak 
and faint. See Very Dark.—Anon. 

The crisis has come. By the people of this generation. 
See National Morality.—Beecher. 

The crocuses in the square. See “Extras.”—Burton. 

The crow doth sing as sweetly as the lark. See 
Merchant of Venice. The.—Shakespeare. 

The crowd was famished by degrees. See Darkness 
(Dream of Darkness).—Byron. 

The crowning glory of Franklin’s career. See Inaugu¬ 
ration of the Statue of Franklin, The (Franklin as 
a Philanthropist).—Winthrop. 

The crowns of earth are jewelled dust. See Crown, 
The.—Palmer. 

The crows were wheeling behind the plow in scattering 
clusters. See Stickit Minister, The.—Crockett. 

The cruelest lies are often told in silence. See Truth.— 
Anon. 

The crumbling tombstone, and the gorgeous mauso¬ 
leum. See Glory.—Wayland. 

The cuckoo’s a fine bird. See Cuckoo’s Character, 
The.—Anon. 


The cunning hand that carved this face. See On an 
Intaglio Head of Minerva.—Aldrich. 

The Cup day broke calm and beautiful, no cloud on the 
horizon. See Bob, Son of Battle (Shepherd’s 
Trophy, The).—Ollivant. 

The cup I sing is a cup of gold. See Cup, The.— 
Trowbridge. 

The curfew tolls the knell of parting day. See Elegy 
Written in a Country Churchyard.—Gray. 

“The curfew tolls the knell of parting day.” See Mosaics. 
—Winrow. 

The curious wits, seeing dull pensiveness. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Sonnet XXIII.).—Sidney. 

The current, that with gentle murmur glides. See 
Two Gentlemen of Verona, The.—Shakespeare. 

"The curse of St. Withold upon these infernal porkers.” 
Seelvanhoe (Anglo-Norman Days).—Scott. 

The curtain had fallen, the lights were dim. See At 
the Stage-door.—Harvey. 

The curtain on the grouping dancers falls. See Music- 
hall, The.—Wratislaw. 

The curtain rises on a hundred years. See Old Thir¬ 
teen, The.—Brooks. 

The curtains were half-drawn, the floor was swept. 
See After Death.—Rossetti. 

The Cynic is one who never sees a good quality in a 
man. See Portrait Gallery (Cynic, The).— 
Beecher. 

The cypress swamp around me wraps its spell. See 
Down the Bayou.—Townsend. 

The cypresses of Scutari. See Greek at Constanti¬ 
nople, The.—Houghton. 

The Daffodil sang “Darling of the sun.” See Field- 
lily, The.—Anon. 

The daily work of the pulpit is not to convince the 
judgment. See Pulpit Oratory.—Dougherty. 

The dainty Lady Daffodil. See Dainty Lady Daffodil. 
—Sharpe. 

The daisies peep from every field. See May-day.— 
Anon. 

The daisies white are nursery-maids. See Daisy 
Nurses.—Anon. 

The daisy follows soft the sun. See Daisy Follows 
Soft the Sun, The.—Dickinson. 

The daisy is the meekest flower. See Daisy, The.—Anon. 

The daisy scatter’d on each mead and down. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals (Shepherdesses’ Garlands, 
The).—Browne. 

The “Dame with the Camelias—.” See Tragedy, The. 
—Aldrich. 

The dandelions and buttercups. See A1 Fresco.— 
Lowell. 

The danger, my countrymen, is that we shall become 
intoxicated. See Dangers of Our Prosperity.— 
Walker. 

The Danube to the Severn gave. See Arthur Henry 
H allam.—T ennyson. 

The darkness brings no quiet here. See Railway 
Station, The.-—Lampman. 

The daughter of a king, how should I know. See 
Ariadne’s Farewell.—H. H. 

The daughter of a Saxon king See Ride of Death, 
The—Hall. 

The daughter sits in the parlor. See Modern Belle, 
The.—Anon. 

The dawn came in through the bars of the blind. See 
Triumph.—Bunner. 

The dawn of new ages is breaking. See Banner that 
Welcomes the World, The.—Butterworth. 

The dawn of peace is breaking! breaking! See Dawn 
of the Centennial, The.—Oberholtzer. 

The day appointed for the death of Probus had 
arrived. See Christian Martyr, The.—Ware. 

The day before Christmas dawned frosty and bright. 
See Santa Claus’ Agent.—Kohaus. 

The day begins to droop. See Winter Nightfall.— 
Bridges. 

The day dies slowly in the western sky. See Home¬ 
ward.—Anon. 

The day for the contest that was to decide. See 
Harvard-Yale Football Game, A.—-Anon. 

The day grows brief; the afternoon is slanting. See 
Life’s Forest Tree.—Wilcox. 

The day had been a calm and sunny day. See Winter. 
—Bryant. 

The day has lengthened into eve. See Twilight of 
Thanksgiving, The.—Kelly. 

The day is cold, and dark, and dreary. See Rainy 
Day, The.—Longfellow. 

The day is done, and the darkness. See Day is Done, 
The.—Longfellow. 

The day is done; the weary day of thought and toil is 
past. See Vesper Hymn.—Scudder. 


843 




The day 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The day is down into his bower. See Sea Side 
Songs (Serenade).—Meredith. 

The day is ended. Ere I sink to sleep. See All’s 
Well.—Kimball. 

The day is ending. See Afternoon in February.— 
Longfellow. 

The day is fixed that there shall come to me. See 
My Guest.—Granniss. 

The day is gone, its hours have run. See Evening 
Hymn.—Faber. 

The day is long, and the day is hard. See Close at 
Hand.—Coolidge. 

The day is quenched, and the sun is fled. See Song 
of Doubt, A.—Holland. 

The day is set, the ladies met. See Quilting, The.— 
Bache. 

The day of Gettysburg had set. See Brotherhood.— 
Holland. 

The Day of the Lord is at hand, at hand. See Day of 
the Lord, The.—Kingsley. 

The day of the race was all that could be desired. See 
Son of Abdallah, A.—Tourgee. 

The day of tumult, strife, defeat, was o’er. See Lines 
Written in August, 1847.—Macaulay. 

The day on which the battle of Lexington occurred. 
See People always Conquer, The.—Everett. 

The day retires as o’er the plain. See Ben Hafed.— 
Whitehead. 

The day returns, my bosom burns. See Day Returns, 
The.—Burns. 

The day set for Arbor Day, and the weather on that 
day. See How to Plant Trees—What to Plant. 
—(Department of Agriculture.) 

The day so mild is Heaven’s own child. See Drifting. 
—Read. 

The day unfolds like a lotus bloom. See Sunrise in 
the Hills of Satsuma.—Fenollosa. 

The day was becoming warm, and the girls plunged 
more deeply into the forest. See Encounter with 
a Panther, An.—-Cooper. 

The day was breaking over Persia’s realm. See 
Golden Scepter, The.—Merrill. 

The day was dawning clear, mild, entering the narrow 
room. See Boum-Boum.—Clar^tie. 

The day was gloomy and chill. See Little Allie.—Parton. 

The day was lingering in the pale northwest. See 
T wi 1 i ght.—H ea vy sege. 

The day, with cold gray feet, clung shivering to the 
hills. See Claribel’s Prayer.—Parmelee. 

The day, with its sandals dipped in dew. See Memory’s 
Wildwood.—Anon. 

The days are cold, the nights are long. See Cottager 
to her Infant, The.—Wordsworth. 

The days are sad, it is the Holy tide. See Holy Tide, 
The.—T ennyson. 

The days begin to wane, and evening lifts. See 
“There Sat the Women Weeping for Thammuz.” 
—Allison. 

“The days keep coming. Mamma,” said little Serious 
Eyes. See “Days Keep Coming, The.”-—Anon. 

The days of infancy are all a dream. See Seasons of 
Life, The.—Southey. 

The days of June were nearly done. See Battle of 
Gettysburg, The.—Glyndon. 

The days of our youth are numbered. See Address to 
a College Graduating Class, An.—Anon. 

The days of the week once talking together. See 
Days of the Week.—Page. 

The day’s oration is in flowers. See Day’s Oration 
is in Flowers, The.—Hall. 

The days passed on, gloomy days they were. See 
How Randa Went over the River.—Coflin. 

The day’s work is ended, all cares are forgot. See 
When the Hammock Swings.—Oldham. 

The dead abide with us! Though stark and cold. 
See Dead, The.—Blind. 

The dead leaves their rich mosaics. See November 
and April (November).—Longfellow. 

The deadly cup, while [or which] others drink. See 
Deadly Cup, The.—Anon. 

The dear little pansies are lifting their heads. See 
Pansies. The.—Wilson. 

The dear old Bell is silent now that rang the anthem 
grand. See Immortal Washington.—Dillmore. 

The dearest spot of earth to me. See Dearest Spot, 
The.—W righton. 

The dearest things in this fair world must change. 
See Change.—Pert ridge. 

The death of Moses himself is more easily to be con¬ 
ceived. See Modern Painters (Death of Moses, 
The).—Ruskin. 

The debutantes are in force to-night. See Mothers 
of the Sirens, The.—Baker. 


The Declaration of American Independence has become 
the Declaration of the Rights of Men. See Tribute 
to Washington.—Price. 

The Declaration of Independence! The interest 
which in that paper has survived. See Nation 
Born in a Day, A.—Adams. 

The Declaration of Independence was, when it occurred, 
a capital transaction. See Dignity of our Nation’s 
Founders, The.—Evarts. 

The deed was executed with a degree of self-possession. 
See Murder of Captain Joseph White, The (Crime 
Revealed by Conscience).—Webster. 

The deep affections of the breast. See Parrot, The.— 
Campbell. 

The defender of his country—the founder of liberty. 
See Epitaph on Washington, An.—-Anon. 

The deference showed by youth to old age. See 
Reverence Due from the Old to the Young, The.— 
Lowell. 

The deliberations of great councils have vitally affected. 
See Constitutional Convention of 1787, The.— 
Depew. 

The demand for cheapness has compacted capital. 
See Critical Conditions of Labor. The.—Harrison. 

The departure of the Pilgrims for Holland is deeply 
interesting. See First Settlement of New England, 
The (Departure of the Pilgrims for Holland).— 
Webster. 

The desert was my dwelling—and I stood. See Ruins 
of Babylon, The.—Husenbeth. 

The despot treads thy sacred sands. See Carolina.— 
Timrod. 

The despot’s heel is on thy shore. See My Maryland.— 
Randall. 

The Destiny, Minister General. See Canterbury 
Tales, The (Destiny).—Chaucer.' 

The destiny of man is f he concern of the world. See 
National Prohibition Party our only Deliverer, A. 
—Ray. 

The details (of the fight off Santiago). See Fight off 
Santiago, The.—Lodge. 

The Detroit brigade of boot-blacks was increased by 
one yesterday. See "Come and be Shone.” 
—(Detroit Free Press). 

The development of society is directly dependent. 
See Individualism in Society.—Lyon. 

The devil came up to the earth one day. See Devil 
and the I.awyers, The.—Anon. 

The Devil can cite Scripture for his purpose. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The.—Shakespeare. 

The Devil sits in his easy chair. See Devil at Home, 
The.—Heryey. 

The devil was piqued such saintship to behold. See 
Moral Essays (Epistle III.).—Pope. 

The dew is gleaming in the grass. See Among the 
Millet.—Lampman. 

The dew is on the heather. See Captain’s Feather, 
The.—Peck. 

The dew was falling fast, the stars began to blink. 
See Pet Lamb, The.—Wordsworth. 

The dewdrops on the summer morn. See Dewdrops.— 
Anon. 

The dews of [the] summer night did fall. See Cumnor 
Hall.—Mickle. 

The dignity of labor! Consider its achievements! See 
Dignity of Labor, The.—Hall. 

The dining-room of a house on Fifth Avenue. See 
When Angry, Count a Hundred.—Cavazza. 

The dirge is sung, the ritual said. See I. H. B.—Win¬ 
ter. 

The discipline of the wilderness had done its work. See 
New Country Occupied, The.—Geikie. 

The dismal yeV and cypress tall. See Wake of the 
Absent, The.—Griffin. 

The distinction of our volunteer army over all other 
armies. _ See Our Fallen Heroes.—Depew. 

The distinguishing trait of Grubbins was his unex¬ 
pectedness. See Dikkon’s Dog.—Lundt. 

The district school-master was sitting behind his great 
book-laden desk. See School-master’s Guests, 
The.—Carleton. 

The doctor said it was no unusual thing in delirium. 
See Child Once More, A.—Anon. 

The doctor said we needed exercise. See Base Ball.— 
Anon. 

The doctors say ’tis good for health. See Philosophy 
of Laughter.—Peat. 

The dog will come when he is called. See Birds, 
Beasts, and Fishes.—Taylor. 

The domestic establishment of Montezuma was on the 
same scale of barbaric splendor. See History of 
the Conquest of Mexico (How Montezuma Lived). 
—Prescott. 


844 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


The evening 


The door is shut—I think the fine old face. See Last 
of the New Year’s Callers, The.—Bunner. 

The door of many a maiden’s heart. See Safe Attach¬ 
ment, A.—Lawrence. 

The door of Scrooge’s counting-house was open. See 
Christmas Carol (Christmas Invitation, A).— 
Charles Dickens. 

The door was shut, as doors should be. See Jack 
Frost.—Setoun. 

The door was thrown open wide. See Les Mis& ables 
(Jean Valjean and the Bishop).—Hugo. 

The doors are shut, the wi»dows fast. See Canadian 
Folk-song, A.—Campbell. 

The doubt which ye misdeem, fair love, is vain. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “Thedoubt,” 
etc.).—Spenser. 

The dragon-fly and I together. See Two of a Trade.— 
Duffield. 

The dram-seller’s wife wears fine silken robes. See 
Two Pictures from Life.—Anon. 

The dread of death is but an animal instinct. See 
Dread of Death, The.—Belford. 

The dreamy crags with raucous voices croon. See 
Hymn to the Sunrise.—Anon. 

The dreamy rhymer’s measured snore. See To Ma¬ 
caulay.—Landor. 

The dreary days of November. See November.— 
Richards. 

The drops of water slung across the camel’s back. See 
World’s Verdict, The.—Mines. 

The drums are all muffled, the bugles are still. See 
After the Battle.—Anon. 

The drums are beat, the trumpets blow. See Stars and 
Stripes. The.—Noble. 

The drum’s wild roar [or roll! wakes [or awakes] the 
land; the fife is calling shrill. See Drum-call in 
1861, The.—Cutler. 

The drunkard dreamed of his old retreat. See Drunk¬ 
ard’s Dream, The.—Denison. 

The drunkard lay*m his bed of straw. See Drunkard’s 
Dream, The.—Smith. 

"The ducats take! I’ll sign the bond to-day.” See 
Two Argosies.—Bruce. 

The Duke of Argyle made a signal for Jeanie to ad¬ 
vance. See Heart of Midlothian, The (Jeanie 
Deans and Queen Caroline).—Scott. 

The Duke of Gordon’s three daughters. See Duke of 
Gordon's Daughter, The.—Anon. 

The dule’s i’ this bonnet o’ mine. See Dule’s i’ This 
Bonnet o’ Mine, The.—Waugh. 

The dusky night rides down the sky. See A-Hunting 
We Will Go.—Fielding. 

The dusky warriors stood in groups around the funeral 
pyre. See Huron Chief’s Daughter, The.—I.e- 
prohon. 

The dying man now told how cruelly he had burned 
and plundered the land. See William the Con¬ 
queror.—F reeman. 

The dykes half bare are lying in the bath. See Across 
the Dykes.—Herbin. 

The eagle, did ye see him fall? See Eagle’s Fall, The. 
—Whiting. 

The eagle nestles near the sun. See Song of Content, 
A.—-Piatt. 

The eagle of the armies of the West. See Flight of the 
War-eagle, The.—Auringer. 

The Earl of Wigton had three daughters. See Richie 
Story.—Anon. 

The Earlsburn Glen is gay and green. See Rose and 
the Fair Lily, The.—Motherwell. 

The early morning air, refreshing, cool and sweet. 
See September.—Finch. 

The early settlers of Concord, we must believe, could 
not have fully anticipated. See Town of Concord, 
Mass., The.—Robinson. 

The earth goes on, the earth glittering in gold. See 
Inscription on Melrose Abbey.—Anon. 

The earth has treasures deep. See Where Are Your 
Treasures?—Durant. 

The earth is so bleak and deserted. See Christmas 
Flowers.—Procter. 

The earth is the cup of the sun. See Sun Cup, The.— 
Lampman. 

The earth is the Lord’s, and the fullness thereof. See 
Psalms of David, XXIV.— (Bible.) 

The earth, late choked with showers. See Spring and 
Melancholy.—Lodge. 

The earth seems a desolate mother. See March.—Webb. 

The earth was made from nothing, and man was made 
from the earth. See Wilkins Family, The.—Quill. 

The earth, with its bright and glorious things. See 
“Earth, with its bright and glorious things, The.” 
—Oxenham. 


The East was crowned with snow-cold bloom. See 
Krishna.—Russell. 

The East Wind is coming, all moist with the spray. 
See East Wind, The.—Washburn. 

The Easter praise may falter. See “ Easter praise may 
falter. The.”—Dickinson. 

The Eastern day was well-nigh o’er. See Corporal 
Dick’s Promotion.—Doyle. 

The easy-chair, all patched with care. See Old Farm¬ 
house, The.—-Anon. 

The echoes of Sumter had thrilled through the land. 
See O’Branigan’s Drill.—Fink. 

The edge of thought was blunted by the stress. See 
Resuscitation of Fancy.-—Turner. 

The editor ate too much; the editor ate too long. See 
Vision, A.—Craig. 

The editor of St. Twel’mo, noted for his love of a prac¬ 
tical joke. See Man Who Hadn’t Any Objection, 
The.— Anon. 

The editor sat with his head in his hands. See He 
Came to Pay.—Kelley. 

The education, moral and intellectual, of every indi¬ 
vidual. See Culture the Result of Labor.—Wirt. 

The effects of alcohol are a crowning curse. See Pro¬ 
hibition the Ultimatum.—Phelps. 

“The ego, non-ego, the body, the soul.” See Prom¬ 
enading Psychology.—Curtis. 

The elder folk shook hands at last. See Meeting, The. 
—Whittier. 

The electric nerve, whose instantaneous thrill. See 
Agassiz.—Lowell. 

The elephant said, “If my trunk I could check.” See 
Too Much of a Good Thing.—Anon. 

The elm belongs to the order of ulmacese or elmworts. 
See Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Elm.—Stewart. 

The elm, in all the landscape green. See Elm versus 
Apple.—Smith. 

The elms are clad in brown and gold. See October 
Here Again.— Anon. 

The eloquence of Mr. [ wr. John] Adams resembled 
his general character. See Adams and Jefferson 
(Eloquence of John Adams, The).—Webster. 

The Emperor Charlemagne was at war with the Moors. 
See Orlando Furioso, Story of the.—Rabb. 

The Emperor Nap he would set off. See March to 
Moscow, The.—Southey. 

The Emperor of China had something on his mind. 
See Leveling.—Anon. 

The end draws near. By Fates unseen directed. See 
Finis.—-Anon. 

The enemies of popular might and power. See Strength 
of the American Government, The.—Bright. 

The enemies of the Republic call me tyrant! See 
Robespierre’s Last Speech.—Robespierre. 

The English colonists in America, generally speaking. 
See Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument , The 
(Elements of the American Government).—Web¬ 
ster. 

The English language abounds in words and phrases. 
See Double Meaning.—Anon. 

The Englishman’s waked by the lark. See Street 
Cries.—Eggleston. 

The envoy that come from Patsy Burns’ yesterday. 
See Justice in a Quandary.—Anon. 

The epic poem on which I shall ground my present 
critique. See Reformation of the Knave of Hearts. 
—Canning. 

The essence of patriotism lies in a willingness to sac¬ 
rifice foi one’s country. See Memorial Day Ad¬ 
dress.—Bryan. 

The Eternal Father looked down from His lofty throne. 
See Jerusalem Delivered. Story of the.—Rabb. 

The eulogium pronounced [by the honorable gentle¬ 
man] on the character of the State of South Caro¬ 
lina. See Reply to Hayne, The (South Carolina 
and Massachusetts).—Webster. 

The evening and the morning have joined in fight at 
last. See 1898 and 1562.—Foss. 

The evening comes, the fields are still. See Baccha¬ 
nalia; or. The New Age.—Arnold. 

The evening heavens were calm and bright. See 
Visions of Liberty, The.—Ware, Jr. 

The evening shadows lengthen on the lawn. See Sun¬ 
set.—Taylor. 

The evening star its vesper lamp. See Evening Idyl, 
An.—Anon. 

The evening star rose beauteous above the fading day. 
See Virgin Mary’s Bank, The.—Callahan. 

The evening was glorious, and light through the trees. 
See Rainbow, The.—Anon. 

The evening weather was so bright and clear. See 
“I stood tiptoe upon a little hill” (Cynthia’s 
Bridal Evening).—Keats. 


845 





The evenings 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The evenings are damper and colder. See “Stay-at- 
Home’s” Psan, The.—Baker. 

The examination and trial of Madame Roland. See 
Execution of Madame Roland, The.—Lamartine. 

The expense of spirit in a waste of shame. See Son¬ 
nets, CXXIX.—-Shakespeare. 

The experience of years proves that the legislature. See 
Constitutional Prohibition.—Finch. 

The face of the world is changing. See Truth and 
Victory.—Sco\ ille. 

The face, which duly as the sun See De Profundis.— 
Browning. 

The factory was situated on the outskirts of a thriving 
country town. See Surly Tim’s Trouble.—Bur¬ 
nett. 

The facts in the following case came to me by letter. 
See Aurelia’s Unfortunate Young Man.—Clem¬ 
ens. 

The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew. See Rime 
of the Ancient Mariner, The (Dead Calm at Sea;.— 
Coleridge. 

The fair maid who, the first of May. See First of May, 
The.—Anon. 

The fair Pamela came to town. See Pamela in Town. 
—Cortissoz. 

The fair varieties of earth. See Life is Love.—Fox. 

The fairest action of our human life. See Revenge of 
Injuries.—Carew. 

The fairest flower upon the vine. See Ah! Me.—Anon. 

The fairest thing in all the world. See Moonshine.— 
Moody. 

The fairies who attend the birth. See Fairy’s Revenge, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

The Fairy and the Sou! proceeded. See Queen Mab 
(Magic Car Moved on. The).—Shelley. 

The fairy beam upon you. See Gipsies Metamor¬ 
phosed (Wish, A).—Jonson. 

The faithful helm commands the keel. See At Best. 
—O’Reilly. 

The fall of her did make the god below. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals (Marina and the River-god).— 
Browne. 

The fallen cause still waits. See Sentinel Songs (Cause 
of the South, The).—Ryan. 

The fame of Franz Schubert is now an established fact. 
See Erl-konig, The.—Biggart. 

The fam’ly of the Sniggles has just come to town. See 
Sniggles Family, The.—Minster. 

The fan no longer flutters. See In Memoriam—J. O.— 
Watrous. 

The fancy I had to-day. See Fifine at the Fair 
(Amphibian).—Browning. 

The farmer and the farmer’s wife. See Notes from a 
Battle-field.—Stone. 

The farmer came in from the field one day. See Farmer’s 
Wife, The.—Anon. 

The farmer had five buxom girls. See Blind-man’s- 
buff—Hall. 

The farmer is a happy man. See Happy Farmer, The. 
—Anon. 

The farmer looked at his cherry-tree. See Scarecrow, 
The.—Thaxter. 

The farmer planted a seed. See Seed, The.—Anon. 

The fanner sat in his easy chair, between the fire and 
the lamp-light’s glare. See Saving Mother.— 
Anon. 

The farmer sat in his easy chair, smoking his pipe of 
clay. See Picture, A.—Eastman. 

The farmer stood by his open door. See Lightning 
Story, A.—Lampton. 

The farmer’s goose, who in the stubble. See Pro¬ 
gress of Poetry, The.—Swift. 

The farmer’s wife sat at the door. See “They’re Dear 
Fish to Me.”—Anon. 

The fastidious reader will doubtless smile when he is 
informed. See Jack and Gill. (A Criticism.)— 
Dennie. 

The fate of the man-child. See Fate of the Man-child, 
The.—Emerson. 

The father asked: “How have you done.” See 
Reward of Merit, A.—( Trinity Tablet.) 

The fault is not mine, if I love you too much. See 
Fault is not Mine, The.—Landon. 

The fault with the mass of civic virtue. See Piety and 
Civic Virtue.—Parkhurst. 

The Faun is the marble image of a young man, leaning 
his right arm. See Marble Faun, The (Faun of 
Praxiteles, The).—Hawthorne. 

The favor that I ask is one, my liege. See Colonna 
to the King.—Shiel. 

The favorite books of Tennyson were the Bible and 
Shakespeare. See Good Memory Work.—Mc- 
Caskey. 


The feast is o’er!—Now brimming wine. See Knight’s 
Toast, The.—Anon. 

The feast prepared, the splendor round. See Chinese 
Dinner, The.—Anon. 

The feast was over in Branksome tower. See Lay of 
the Last Minstrel, The (Branksome Hall).—Scott. 

The feast was spread, the solemn words were spoken. 
See “As I Have Loved You. ”—Holliday. 

The feathered songster chanticleer. See Bristowe 
Tragedy.—Chatterton. 

The festive Ah Goo. See Story of Chinese Love, A.— 
(Los Angeles Express.) 

The fettered Spirits linger. See Story of the Faithful 
Soul, The.—Procter. 

The fiat of death is inexorable. See Shall We Meet 
Again.—Prentice. 

The fields of Gettysburg are green. See Gettysburg. 
—Anon. 

The fields were silent, and the woodland drear. See 
In the Dark.—Higginson. 

The fierce exulting worlds, the motes in rays. See 
Love.—Smith. 

The fierce March winds were blowing. See Nothing to 
AVear.—Crocker. 

The fiery mid-March sun a moment hung. See Easter 
Eve at Kerak-Moab.—Seollard. 

The fifteenth of July. See Brave Lord Willoughby.— 
Anon. 

The fifth from the north wall. See Cross of Gold, The. 
—Gray. 

The fight is o’er, the day is done. See Hans A^ogel.— 
Buchanan. 

The figure is by no means novel. See Snow of Age, 
The.—Anon. 

The fire beneath his crucible was low. See Dying 
Alchemist, The.—-Willis. 

The fire in the kitchen was out. See Two Visits.— 
Hatheway. 

The fire in the west burns low. See Twilight Reverie, 
A.—Anon. • 

The fire of love in youthful blood. See Fire of Love, 
The.—Dorset. 

The fire on the hearth has almost gone out in New 
England. See Backlog Studies.—Warner. 

The fire upon the hearth is low. See In the Firelight.— 
Field. 

The first astronomer announces to a startled world. 
See First Predicted Eclipse, The.—Mitchel. 

The first baby was a great institution. See Mr. Blif- 
kin’s First Baby.—Anon. 

The first creature of God in the works of the days. See 
Truth.—Bacon. 

The first forty years of the seventeenth century. See 
Small Beginnings of Great Historical Movements. 

-—Hillard. 

The first great fight of the war is fought! See Manila 
Bay.—H. E. W„ Jr. 

The first great lesson a young man should learn. See 
Getting the Right Start.—Holland. 

The first imposing armed movement, against the colo¬ 
nics. See Centennial Celebration of Concord Fight 
(Paul Revere’s Ride).—Curtis. 

“The first, in the hearts of his countrymen!” Yes, 
first! See Washington’s Birthday, February 
22, 1732.—Choate. 

The first law of success. See Employ Your Own Intel¬ 
lect.—Anon. 

The first letter our Captain wrote. See Captain Gold 
and French Janet.—Robinson. 

The first mom of April, so balmy and fair. See April’s 
Fools.—Park. 

The first Nowell the Angel did say. See First Nowell, 
The.—Anon. 

The first of our society is a gentleman of Worcester¬ 
shire. See Spectator, The (Club, The).—Addi¬ 
son. 

The first public man I ever saw .... was 
Charles Sumner. See Traditions of Massachu¬ 
setts, The.—Lodge. 

The first sparrow of Spring! The year beginning with 
younger hope. See AValden (Spring).—Thoreau. 

The first step a person takes [toward putting up a 
stove - ]. See Putting up Stoves.—Anon. 

The first thing in order will be to choose some one. See 
Women’s Rights.—Zeliff. 

The first thing that I remember was Carlo tugging 
away. See Asleep at the Switch.—Hoey. 

The first time I saw him I was hurrying up the stair¬ 
way. See Little Bill.—Anon. 

The first time that I began to sneeze. See Curing a 
Cold.—Anon. 

The first time that the sun rose on thine oath. See 
Sonnets from the Portuguese, XXXII.—Browning. 


846 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The gaudy 


The first train leaves at six P. M. See Poppyland 
Limited Express, The.—Abbott. 

The first wild rose in wayside hedge. See Wild Rose, 
A.—Austin. 

The first world-sound that fell upon my ear. See Sea 
Longings.—Aldrich. 

The fisher is out on the sunny sea. See Voice of 
Spring, The.—Hemans. 

The fisher who draws in his net too soon. See Per¬ 
severe.—Anon. 

The fisherman stood all day by the beach. See Women 
of Marblehead, The.—Gunnison. 

The fisherman’s wife went down to watch. See Father 
Paul.—Dallas. 

The fitful April sunshine. See Sunshine.—Anon. 

The five years following the final separation of the 
colonies. See Washington.—Spence. 

The fiver’s spread upon the plate, its right side up with 
care. See About Contributions.—Anon. 

The flag of the Union—what precious associations 
cluster around it! See American Flag, The.— 
Putnam. 

The flags of war like storm-birds fly. See Battle 
Autumn of 1862, The.—Whitfier. 

The flame of love assauges. See Love’s a Riddle.— 
Carey. 

The flame-wing’d seraph spake a word. See Poeta 
Nascitur.—Ashe. 

The flighty purpose never is o’ertook. S e Macbeth 
(O rac 1 e). —S h akesp eare. 

The floor had been swept and the furniture dusted. 
See Thanksgiving Day.—Thorpe. 

“The flower fadeth, ” but the seed and the fruit come. 
See “ ‘Flower fadeth,’ but the seed and the fruit 
come. The.”—Wadsworth. 

The flower that smiles to-day. See Mutability.— 
Shelley. 

The flower that’s bright with the sun’s own light. 
See “Flower that’s bright with the sun’s own 
light. The.”—Anon. 

The flowers have no tongues. See Silence is Golden. 

—(C hautauouan.) 

The flowers were never more lovely and bright. See 
Jubilee of the Flowers, The.—Howard. 

The flowers were nodding and tossing, one day. See 
Violet’s V'ctory, The.—Wolcott. 

The flying sea-bird mocked the floating dulse. See 
Sea-weed, The.—Pullen. 

The foes of Rohab thrust the tongue in cheek. See 
Sorrow of Rohab. The.—Bates. 

The fog had been so thick. See Tragedy of the North 
Sea, A.—Powell. 

The fog was so thick yer could cut it. See Through 
the Fog.—Lincoln. 

The folk who lived in Shakespeare’s day. See Guil- 


ielmus Rex.—Aldrich. 

The following communication. See Effective Narra¬ 
tion, An.—Anon. 

The following is a vivid description of the terrible 
disaster. See Fall of the Pemberton Mill, The.— 
Phelps. 

The following is the Chinese version. See Medley— 
Mary’s Little Lamb.—Anon. 

The following tale was found among the papers of the 
late Diedrich Knickerbocker. See Rip Van Winkle. 
—Irving. . 

The fool hath said “There is no God.” See Atheist. 


The forest leaves lay scattered cold and dead. See 
Field of the Grounded Arms, The.—Halleek. 

The forest trees are transient things and frail. See 
Changeless World, The.—Jacobs. 

The forty little ducklings who lived up at the farm. 
See Forty Little Ducklings, The.—Anon. 

The forward violet thus did I chide. See Sonnets, 
T£CIX _Sh^kGspc^r©. 

The forward youth that would appear. See Horatian 
Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland, An.— 
Marvell. 

The foundation of the Bunker Hill Monument we have 
now laid. See Bunker Hill Monument, The 
(Foundation of Bunker Hill Monument).—Web- 


The fountains mingle with the river. See Love’s 
Philosophy.—Shelley. 

The fountains smoke, and yet no flames they show. 

See When Love Most Secret Is.—Jones. 

The fourteenth of July had come. See La Tricoteuse. 
—Thombury. 

‘The Fourth of July. 1776, will be the most remark¬ 
able epoch.” See Independence Day.—Parmele. 
The four-wav winds of the world have blown. See 
Strike the Blow.—McK. 


The fox and the cat, as they travell’d one day. See 
Fox and the Cat, The.—Cunningham. 

The framers of our national Constitution carefully 
stated the objects. See National Constitution 
and Rum, The.—Willey. 

The fray began at the middle-gate. See Ballad of 
Orleans, A.—Darmesteter. 

The freckle-faced girl went over to a neighbor’s house. 
See That Freckle-faced Girl.—Anon. 

The free man cannot long be an ignorant man. See 
Abstract of an Address at the Dedication of a 
Hall of Science and Art.—Anon. 

The freed dove flew to the Rajah’s tower. See Dove 
of Dacca. The.—Kipling. 

The French Revolution began with great and fatal 
errors. See Revolutionary Desperadoes.—Mack¬ 
intosh. 

The fresh, bright bloom of the daffodils. See April 
Fantasie.—Cortissoz. 

The Freshman hies him to the shop. See Decora- 
menta.—Ely. 

The friend who holds a mirror to my face. See 
“Friend who holds a mirror to my face, The.”— 
(Scribner’s Monthly.) 

The friendly cow all red and white. See Cow, The.— 
Stevenson. 

The friends of little Mary Green. See Playing with 
Fire.—Turner. 

The friends of my childhood with pleasure I greet. 
See I’m Getting too Big to Kiss.—Vickers. 

The friendship of Holland! The independence of 
Spain! See On Mr. Tierney’s Motion.—Canning. 

The frost and snow of mistletoe. See Love’s Token.— 
Taggart. 

The frost is here. See Winter.—Tennyson. 

The frost is out, and in the open fields. See October.— 
Very. 

The frost looked forth one [or on a] still, clear night. 
See Frost, The.—Gould. 

The frost performs its secret ministry. See Frost at 
Midnight, The.—Coleridge. 

The frost will bite us soon. See Harvest Home Song. 
—Davidson. 

The frosty regioun ringis of the zeir. See Pro¬ 
logues to the Aeneid (Scottish Winter Landscape, 
A).—Douglas. 

The frosty wind was wailing wild across the wintry 
wold. See Willy’s Grave.—Waugh. 

The frugal crone, whom praying priests attend. See 
Moral Essays (Ruling Passion, The).—Pope. 

The frugal snail, with forecast of repose. See House¬ 
keeper, The.—Lamb. 

The fruit full well the schoolboy knows. See Bramble. 
—Elliot. 

The fundamental service which the church has to 
render. See Christian Citizenship. — Park- 
hurst. 

The funeral of the late Mr. Bertram was performed. 
See Guy Mannering (Lucy Bertram and Dominie 
Sampson).—Scott. 

The funeral services were ended. See Old Wife’s 
Kiss, The.—Anon. 

The funniest story [or thing] I ever heard. See She 
Would be a Mason.—Naughton. 

The furrows of life Time is plowing. See Love’s Har¬ 
vest.—Straton. 

The future hides in it. See “Future hides in it, The.” 
—Goethe. 

The gallant Youth who may have gain’d. See Yar¬ 
row Revisited.—Wordsworth. 

The game is mine, Julius. See Fourth of July Ora¬ 
tion, The.—Anon. 

The game was over and Yale had won. See Under 
False Colours.—R. A. L. 

The garden beds I wandered by. See Conservative, 
A.—Stetson. 

The garden is a royal court. See Jester Bee.—Sher¬ 
man. 

The garden path runs north. See Garden Path, The.— 
Smiley. 

The garden within was shaded. See Thisbe.—Cone. 

The gardener does not love to talk. See Gardener, 
The .—Stevenson. 

The gardener stands in his bower door. See Gardener, 
The.—Anon. 

The garland I send thee was cull’d from those bowers. 
See Garland I Send Thee, The.—Moore. 

The garlands wither on your brow. See Death’s Final 
Conquest.—Shirley. 

The gate was thrown open, I rode out alone. See 
How Salvator Won.—Wilcox. 

The gaudy peacock’s origin. See Origin of the Pea¬ 
cock, The.—Kavanaugh. 


847 





The gay 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The gay belles of fashion may boast of excelling. See 
Needle, The.—Woodworth. 

The gayest hours trip lightly by. See Joy and Sor¬ 
row.—Hedderwick. 

The general dashed along the road. See General’s 
Death, The.—O’Connor. 

The gentian was the year’s last child. See Last Flower 
of the Year, The.—Larcom. 

The gentle child, who lives to please. See Gentle Child, 
The.—Anon. 

The gentle Elise sat drearily in the gloaming in the 
front room. See Unexpected Greeting, An.— 
Anon. 

The gentle shepheard satte beside a springe. See 
Shepheardes Calender, The (December).—Spenser. 

The gentleman from South Carolina taunts us. See 
New England in the War of 1812.—Cushing. 

The gentleman [sir! has misconceived the spirit and 
tendency of northern institutions. See Northern 
Laborers.—Naylor. 

The gentleman, who has so copiously declaimed 
against all declamation. See Aristocracy.— 
Livingston. 

The gentleman, with his usual skill. See Tariff Re¬ 
form.—-Wilson. 

The German may sing of his rosy-cheeked lass. See 
American Girl, The.—S. F. P. 

The Ghost of Christmas Present rose. See Christmas 
Carol, A (Christmas at Bob Cratchit’s, A).— 
Charles Dickens. 

The ghostly wind of Weber’s northern pines. See 
Rossini.—Todhunter. 

The ghosts of flowers went sailing. See Changelings.— 
Higginson. 

The gingham dog and the calico cat. See Duel, The.— 
Field. 

The gipsies came to our good lord’s gate. See Gipsy 
Laddie, The.—Anon. 

The girl from Chicago arose sharp at eight. See Christ¬ 
mas in Chicago.—White. 

The girls may have their dollies. See Boy’s Opinion, 
A.—Anon. 

The girls that are wanted are home-girls. See Girls 
who afe in Demand (Girls that are Wanted, The). 
—Anon. 

The girls who are wanted are good girls. See Girls 
who are in Demand.—Anon. 

The girt woak tree that’s in the dell. See Girt Woak 
Tree that’s in the Dell, The.—Barnes. 

The glad Dawn sets his fires upon the hills. See For 
Easter Morning.—Moulton. 

The glad harvest greets us; brave toiler for bread. 
See Song of the Harvest.—-Washburn. 

The glamour of the after-light. See Aftermath, The. 
—Hendry. 

The gloom of the sea-fronting cliffs. See Aboard the 
‘ ‘ Sea-swallow. ”—Dowden. 

The gloomiest day hath gleams of light. See Lights 
and Shades.—Hemans. 

The glories of our blood and state. See Dirge, A.— 
Shirley. 

The glorious days of September. See Chronicle of the 
Drum. The (Execution of the Princess de Lam- 
balle).—Thackeray. 

The glow and the glory are plighted. See Nice Cor¬ 
respondent, A.—Locker. 

The goblin marked his monarch well. See Culprit 
Fay, The (First Quest, The).—Drake. 

The God of Abraham praise. See God of Abraham 
Praise, The.—Olivers. 

The God of Love,— ah, benedicite! See Cuckoo and the 
Nightingale, The.—Chaucer. 

The gods be praised! The morn is here at last! See 
Within the Gates.—Clement. 

The gold I gave to Dromio is laid up. See Comedy 
of Errors.—Shakespeare. 

The gold that with the sunlight lies. See Dead 
Millionaire, The.—Miller. 

The golden dreams of youth. See Hope’s Song.— 
Winslow. 

“The golden gates are open now.” See Final Day 
Dialogue, A.—Lampton. 

The golden gates of day in quiet close. See Sunset.— 
Williams. 

The golden glow is paling. See Stars.—Havergal. 

The golden glow of a summer’s day. See Valedictory. 
—Shoals. 

The golden robin came to build his nest. See Golden 
Robin’s Nest, The.—Chadwick. 

The golden sea its mirror spreads. See Golden Sunset, 
The.—Longfellow. 

The golden rod is tossing. See Katydid.—Sangster. 

The goldenrod is yellow. See September.—Jackson. 


The gondolier, in music clear. See Barcarolle.— 
Davis. 

The good a man does from time to time. See Woman’s 
Face, A.—Stephen. 

The good dame looked from her cottage. See Leak in 
the Dike, The.—Cary. 

The good people of the United States. See Protection 
of Americans in Armenia, The.—Frye. 

The good ship “Albatross” sailed out. See Bos’n 
Jack of the “Albatross.”—Jackson. 

The good ship lies fast at her mooring. See Pound, 
Sir, A.—Anon. 

The gorse is yellow in the heath. See First Swallow, 
The.—Smith. 

The government of the republic by a congress of 
States. See Convention of 1787, The.-—Depew. 

The grace and gayety, the pathos and melody. See 
Holmes, Extract Concerning.—Curtis. 

The graduates are going forth. See At Graduating 
Time.—Anon. 

The grain is gathered in. See Indian Summer.— 
Bumstead. 

The grammars and the spellers. See Vacation Time. 
—-Anon. 

The Grand Army of the Republic, organized to foster 
the friendships. See Tribute to Logan.—Sherman. 

The grand days of oratory are gone forever. See 
Oratory and the Press.—Dougherty. 

The grand idea of humanity. See Present Age, The.— 
Channing. 

The grandest dream the human heart has ever cher¬ 
ished. See Immortality.—Anon. 

The grandeur of this earthly round. See Plato to 
Theon.—Freneau. 

The grass has so little [so little has—C.] to do. See 
Grass, The.—Dickinson. 

The grass hung wet on Rydal Banks. See With 
Wordsworth at Rydal.—Fields. 

The grass is green on Bunker Hill. See People’s Song 
of Peace, The.—-Miller. 

The grass of fifty Aprils hath waved green. See On 
the Proposal to Erect a Monument in England to 
Lord Byron.—Lazarus. 

The grass so little has [w. has so little] to do. See 
Grass, The.—Dickinson. 

The grass that is under me now. See Dying Lover, 
The.—Stoddard. 

The grave buries every error, covers every defect. 
See “Grave buries every error,” etc.—Irving. 

The gray sea and the long black land. See Meeting at 
Night.—Browning. 

The gray waves rock against the gray skyline. See 
When Nature Hath Betrayed the Heart that 
Loved Her.—Jewett. 

The great bell swung as ne’er before. See Indepen¬ 
dence.—Read. 

The great [or gret] big church wuz crowded full uv 
broadcloth an’ of [or uv] silk. See Volunteer 
Organist, The.—Foss. 

The great blue heron stood all alone. See Great Blue 
Heron, The.—Thaxter. 

The great captain of our cause—Abraham Lincoln. 
See Death of Lincoln, The.—Godwin. 

The great charm, however, of English scenery. See 
Rural Life in England (English Scenery).—Irving. 

The great distinction of a nation—the only one worth 
possessing. See Spiritual Freedom (Great Distinc¬ 
tion of a Nation, The).—Channing. 

The great element of reform is not born of human 
wisdom. See True Source of Reform, The.— 
Chapin. 

The great end of education is not information. See 
“Great end of education is not information,” etc. 
—(Philadelphia Press.) 

The great face was so sad, so earnest, so longing, so 
patient. See Innocents Abroad, The (On the 
Sphinx).—Clemens. 

The great man down, you mark his favorite flies. See 
Hamlet (“Great man down,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

The great old-fashioned clock struck twelve. See 
Swan Song, The.—Brooks. 

The great Pacific journey I have done. See Cockney 
Wail, A.—Anon. 

The great procession came up the street. See How 
we Kept the Day.—Carleton. 

The great question is settled. Upon this field conse¬ 
crated by American valor. See Great Question 
Settled, The.—Curtis. 

The great Republic goes to war. See War.—Stetson. 

The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign 
nations. See Farewell Address (Our Relations with 
Europe).—Washington. 


848 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The history 


The great soft downy snow storm like a cloak. See 
Snow Storm, The.—Wetherald. 

The great struggle for victory on the heights of Inker- 
man. See Spike that Gun.—Anon. 

The great sun, scattering the clouds with a resistless 
smile. See Effects of Spring.—Wilson. 

The Great Sword Bearer only knows. See House of a 
Hundred Lights, The (Conclusion of the Whole 
Matter, The).—Torrence. 

The great trees of California must be classed among the 
wonders. See California’s Giant Trees.—Anon. 

The greatest liberty of the Kingdom is religion. See 
Three Liberties, The.—Pym. 

The greatest of all the fruits of the Charter of Inde¬ 
pendence. See Greatest Fruit of the Declaration. 
—Adams. 


The greatness of some men only makes us feel. See 
Martin Luther.—Krauth. 

The greatness of Stonewall Jackson was an uncon¬ 
scious greatness. See Unconscious Greatness of 
Stonewall Jackson, The.—Hoge. 

The Grecian Muse, to earth who bore. See California. 
—Harris. 

The Greek rhetorician, Longinus, quoted from the 
Mosaic account. See Let there be Light.— 

Mann. 

The Greeks held the grandest feast of all the year. 
See Thanksgiving among the Greeks.—Anon. 

The green boughs rustle by my window. See Nest- 
builders, The.—Anon. 

The greenhouse is my summer seat. See Faithful 
Bird, The.—Cowper. 

The greeting of the company throughout. See Pathos 
of Applause, The.—Riley. 

The gret [or great] big church wuz crowded full uv 
broadcloth an’ uv [or of] silk. See Volunteer 
Organist, The.—Foss. 

The grog-seller sat by his bar-room fire. See Satan 
and the Grog-seller.—Burleigh. 

The ground I walk’d on felt like air. See Secret of 
the Nightingale, The.—Noel. 

The ground was all covered with snow one day. See 
Snow-bird’s Song, The.—Woodworth. 

The ground was still covered with snow. See Robin¬ 
son Crusoe (Crusoe’s Fight with Wolves).—Defoe. 

The grove was gloomy all around. See Dream, The.— 
Behn. 

The groves of Blarney they look so charming. See 
Groves of Blarney, The.—Milliken. 

The groves were God’s first temples. Ere man 
learned. See Forest Hymn, A.—Bryant. 

The guardian pines upon the hill. See Threnody of 
the Pines.—Hayne. 

The gudewife sits i’ the chimney-neuk. See Ballad of 
the Werewolf, A.—Tomson. 

The gunny time, the funny time. See July.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

The guns are hushed. On every field once flowing. 
See Rear Guard, The.—Brown. 

The haddock’s feet are on thy shore. See Owed to 
Halifax.—Burdette. 

The hag is astride. See Hag. The.—Herrick. 

The half-seen memories of childish days. See Early 
Friendship.—De Vere. 

The half-world’s width divides us; where she sits. See 
Divided.—Gray 

The Hall of Sleep is a welcome hall. See Hall of 
Sleep, The.—Bates. 

The hand I love has dropped a spray. See Haw¬ 


thorne.—Anon. 

The hand of God never tires, nor are its movements 
aimless. See God in History.—Lanahan. 

The hand of time was heavy on the brow. See Story 
of Rebekah, The.—Armstrong. 

The hand that swept the sounding lyre. See On a 
Dead Poet.—Osgood. 

The handful here, that once was Mary’s earth. See 
Her Epitaph.—Parsons. 

The hands are such dear hands. See While We May. 
—Coolidge. 

Tbe hands that do God’s work are patient hands. See 
Master’s Work, The.—Partridge. 

The happiness and the progress of mankind have as 
often been advanced. See Capture of Major 
Andre, The.—Depew. . 

The happy Christmas-time draws near. See Christ¬ 
mas Time.—Festellis. 

The harp at Nature’s advent strung. See Worship of 
Nature, The.—Whittier. _ 

The harp of Zion’s psalmist now is still. See Silent 
Harp, The.—Anon. , , „ TT 

The harp that once through Tara’s halls. See Harp 
that once through Tara’s Halls, The.—Moore. 


The hawthorn whitens, and the juicy groves. See 
Seasons, The (Early Spring).—Thomson. 

The Hawthorne children—seven in all. See Haw¬ 
thorne Children, The.—Field. 

The hawse is a noble animal. See Horse,—A Boy’s 
Composition, The.—Anon. 

The head is stately, calm, and wise. See Head and 
the Heart, The.—Saxe. 

The heart is a garden, and never a seed. See Thoughts. 
—Thorpe. 

The heart leaps with the pride of their story. See 
Fleet at Santiago, The.—Russell. 

The heart may often be cheered by observing. See 
“Heart may often be cheered by observing, 
The.”—Livingstone. 

The heart never grows old. See Heart never Grows 
Old, The.—Adams. 

The heart of man, walk it which way it will. See 
Philip van Artevelde (Heart-rest).—Taylor. 

The heart of Merrie England sang in thee. See Chau¬ 
cer.—Betts. 

The heart soars up, like a bird. See Flight of the 
Heart, The.—Goodale. 

The heart swells with unwonted emotion when we 
remember our sons and brothers. See Our He¬ 
roes.—Andrew. 

The heart when broken, is like sweet gums and spices 
w T hen beaten. See “Heart when broken, is like 
sweet gums and spices when beaten, The.”— 
Bunyan. 

The heart!—Yes, T wore it. See Hearts.—Procter. 

The heath this night must be my bed. See Lady of 
the Lake, The (Song of the Young Highlander).— 
Scott. 

The heave, the wave, and bend. See Thoughts on the 
Forest.—Neal. 

The heaven doth not contain so many stars. See 
Sextain.—Drummond. 

The heavens and the earth, and the great as well as 
numberless events. See Glory of Nature, The.— 
Dwight. 

The heavens are our riddle; and the sea. See Heavens 
are Our Riddle, The.—Bates. 

The heavens declare the glory of God. See Psalms 
of David, XIX.— Bible. 

The heavens declare Thy glory, Lord! See Psalm 
XIX.—Watts. 

The heavens on high perpetually do move. See Swift¬ 
ness of Time, The.—Gascoigne. 

The heavy mists have crept away. See “Mark.”— 
McGaffey. 

The hedges on both sides of the road from Inverness. 
See Fie'd of Culloden, The.—Winter. 

The hen that cackles loudest. See “Hen that cackles 
loudest, The.”—Anon. 

The herald ends; the vaulted firmament. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The (Palamon and Arcite).—Chaucer 
(Drvden). 

The herald note of summer days. See Hear it and 
Wish!—Whittier. 

The herald of the flowers. See Snowdrop, The.— 
Anon. 

The heroism and perfection of John Brown’s life and 
character. See John Brown of Osawatomie.— 
Anon. 

The herring loves the merry moon-light. See An¬ 
tiquary, The (Elspeth’s Ballad).—Scott. 

The hill opposite one end of Bathsheba’s dwelling. 
See Sword Exercise, The.—Hardy. 

The hills are bright with maples yet. See Faded 
Leaves.—Cary. 

The hills, rock-ribbed and ancient as the sun. See 
Thanatopsis.—Bryant. 

The Hired Man’s supper, which he sat before. See 
Hired Man and Floretty, The.—Riley. 

The history of humanity is a history of progress. See 
Our Future.—Ireland. 

The history of mankind as well shows forth the uni¬ 
formity of law. See “History of mankind as 
* well shows forth tbe uniformity of law, The.” 
—Minton. 

The history of New England to this hour. See Puri¬ 
tanism.—Hoar. 

The history of our glorious old flag is of exceeding 
interest. See History of Our Flag.—Putnam. 

The history of persecution. See Compensation.— 
Emerson. 

The history of strong drink is the history of ruin. See 
Strong Drink.—Seiss. 

The history of that plain and simple sect. See Twenty- 
second of December, The.—Bulwer. 

The history of the world does not furnish an instance. 
See War Deprecated.—Douglas. 


849 




The history 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


i 

The history of the world is full of testimony to prove 
how much depends upon industry. See Industry 
Necessary to the Attainment of Eloquence.— 
Ware. 

The history of this city has reached a point of moral 
crisis. See Moral Crisis, A.—Parkhurst. 

The holiest of all holidays are those. See Holidays.— 
Longfellow. 

The hollow sea-shell, which for years hath stood. See 
Sea-shell Murmurs.—-Lee-Hamilton. 

The hollow winds begin to blow. See Signs of Rain.— 
•Tenner. 

The holly' the holly! oh, twine it with bay. See 
Christmas Holly, The.—Cook. 

The homely words, how often read! See What Man is 
there of You?—Macdonald. 

The honest man could contain himself no longer. See 
Rip Van Winkle.—Irving. 

The honey-bee that wanders all day long. See Hidden 
Sweets.—Botta. 

The honey-bees on Mount Hymettus, long and long 
ago. See How the Bees Came by Their Sting.— 
Perry. 

The honor has. been conferred upon me of addressing 
you. See For a Dental College.—Anon. 

The Hon. Demshire Hornet had a very unpleasant 
experience lately. See Wrong Man, The. — 
Anon. 

The honorable gentleman from Massachusetts, after 
deliberating a whole night. See On Mr. Foot’s 
Resolution in the U. S. Senate, Jan. 21, 1830 (Re¬ 
ply to Mr. Webster, .Tan., 1830).—Hayne. 

The honorable gentleman has asked. See America's 
Obligations to England.—Barre. 

The honorable member complained that I had slept on 
his speech. See Reply to Hayne.—Webster. 

The honored daughter of Connecticut, the author of 
“Uncle Tom.” See New Englander in History, 
The —Wayland. 

The honors we grant mark how high we stand. See 
I dols.—Phillips. 

The hornet is an inflammibel buzzer. See Hornet, 
The.—Billings. 

The horsemen and the footmen. See Horatius (Mus¬ 
ter, The).—Macaulay. 

The host is riding from Knocknarea. See Hosting of 
the Sidhe, The.—Yeats. 

The hosts of Don Rodrigo were scatter’d in dismay. 
See Lamentation of Don Roderick, The.—Lock¬ 
hart. 

The hottest time in any clime. See August.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

The hound was cuffed, the hound was kicked. See 
Hound. The.—Lanier. 

The hour for conciliation is passed. See Speech at 
Union Square, N. Y (To Young Men of New York 
in 1861).—Baker. 

The hour had struck, but still the air was fill’d. See 
Aftemote of the Hour, The.—Turner. 

The hour has come. I expect to see Mr. Hopkins 
soon. See Unsuccessful Advance, An.—Anon. 

The hour has come to part us. See Hour Has Come, 
The.—Anon. 

The hour is come! What mean these words full of 
gloom’ See Blind Flower Girl of Pompeii, The.— 
Matchett. 

The hour of meeting having arrived, the Association 
will please come to order. See City and the 
Country, The.—Anon. 

The hour of noon had been appointed for Major 
Andre’s execution. See Execution of Andre, The. 
—Peterson. 

The hours I spent with thee, dear heart. See Rosary, 
The.—Rogers. 

The hours of this day are rapidly flying See First 
Settlement of New England (Future of America, 
The).—Webster. 

The hours went on as Damay walked to and fro. See 
Tale of.Two Cities, A (Execution of Sydney Car¬ 
ton, The).—Dickens. 

The house had been “genteel.” Nee On the Stairs.— 
Morrison. 

The house in question faced a street and the back 
looked over a turfed garden. See Waiting Juliet, 
The.—Quiller-Couch. 

The house is dark and dreary. See House is Dark and 
Dreary, The.—Stoddard. 

The house lay snug a3 a robin’s nest. See Fairy of the 
Dell, The.—Cary. 

The house of Chivalry decayed. See Chivalry.— 
Jonson. 

The housewife woke with sudden fright. See Con¬ 
sternation.—Anon. 


The hue of her hide was dusky brown See Highway 
Cow, The.-—Hall. 

The human will, that force unseen. See Will.— 
Wilcox. 

The hunt for the runaway slaves was long, animated, 
and thorough, but unsuccessful. See Uncle Tom’s 
Cabin (Death of Uncle Tom, The).—Stowe. 

The hunt is up, the hunt is up. See. Hunt is up, The. 
—Anon 

The hunt is up, the hunt is up. See Master Sky-lark 
(Song of the Hunt, The;.—Bennett. 

The hunter mist creeps slowly o’er the sea. See 
Approach of the Storm, The.—(Fassar Miscel¬ 
lany.) 

The Hylodes! The Hylodes! See Hylodes, The.— 
Wilson. 

The idea of a Supreme Being and of the immortality of 
the soul. See Mortality the Basis of Civilized 
Society—Belief in God the Basis of Morality.— 
Robespierre. 

The idea of writing a National hymn to order. See 
National Hymn, The.—Richards. 

The idea that alcohol is necessary to enable men. See 

S uestion of Nations. The.—-Richardson. 

eal citizen is the man who believes that all men 
are brothers. See Ideal Citizen, The.—Habber- 
ton. 

The ideal co-ed is a thing of books. See Ideal Co-ed, 
The.—Field. 

The ideals of the past for men. See Soldier’s Faith, 
The.—Holmes. 

The idle groups upon the streets, hearing the well- 
known sounds of Bud’s war-whoops. See Stirring 
up of Billy Williams, The.—Edwards. 

The imagination follows the lines of Nature. See 
Imagination and Fancy.—Everett. 

The “Imitation of Christ” was written by a hand that 
waited for the heart’s promptings. See Nlill on the 
Floss, The (“‘Imitation of Christ’was written,” 
etc.).—Eliot. 

The immediate occasion of the first thanksgiving. See 
First National Thanksgiving, The.—Anon. 

The immortal spirit hath no bars. See Dawn.— 
Scott. 

The imperial boy had fallen in his pride. See My 
Fatherland.—Lawton. 

The imperial stature, the colossal stride. See King 
Henry the Eighth.—Wordsworth. 

The impulse came upon me, one Saturday afternoon. 

See How Norman Won the Race.—Whitson. 

The increasing exactions of the church and the world 
upon ministers. See “Increasing exactions of 
the church, The.”—Colfelt. 

The increasing moonlight drifts across my bed. See 
F redericksburg.—Aldrich. 

The Indian weed withered quite. See Pipe and Can. 
—Anon. 

The infidels, a motley band. See “We’re Building 
Two a Day!”—Hough. 

The influence of Christianity upon the political con¬ 
dition of mankind. See Christianity as a Political 
Force.—Dix. 

The influence of well-selected books in a school. See 
School Libraries.—Anon. 

The injury of unrestricted immigration to American 
wages. See Great Peril of Unrestricted Immigra¬ 
tion, The.—Lodge. 

The innocent, sweet Day is dead. See Night and Day. 
Lanier. 

The inquiry is whether presence at the overt act be 
necessary. See Instigators of Treason, The.— 
Wirt. 

The instinct of animals, in many cases. See Instinct 
of Locality in Animals and Birds.—Anon. 

The Lis was yellow, the moon was pale. See Iris.— 
Field. 

The irresponsive silence of the land. See Thread of 
Life, The.—Rossetti. 

The island lies nine leagues away. See Island, The.— 
Dana. 

The isles of Greece! the isles of Greece! See Isles of 
Greece, The.—Byron. 

The .1. Nigra of the Juglans genus is a native of America. 
See Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Black Walnut. 
—Ripley. 

The Jackdaw sat on the Cardinal’s chair! See Jack¬ 
daw of Rheims, The.—Barham. 

The Jaybird he’s my favorite. See Jaybird, The.— 
Riley. 

The jester shook his hood and bells, and leaped upon 
a chair. See Jester’s Sermon, The.—Thornbury. 
The jingling of a harp and piano. See Book of Snobs, 
The (Music at Mrs. Ponto’s).—Thackeray. 


850 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The lawns 


The jolly month of winter time. See February.— 
Richards. 

The journals this morning are full of a tale. See 
Johnny Bartholomew.—English. 

The joy-bells are ringing in gay Malahide. See Bridal 
of Malahide, The.—Griffin. 

The joyous Prom, is past and gone. See Aftermath.— 
Walker. 

The jury having found you guilty of selling intoxica¬ 
ting liquors. See Judge’s Temperance Lecture, A. 
Reading. 

The Kaiser’s hand from all his foes. See Kaiser, The 
—Howitt. 

The keener tempests come: and fuming dun. See 
Seasons, The (Snow Scene, A).—Thomson. 

The keenest pangs the wretched find. See Giaour, The. 
-—Byron. 

The key of some charm’d music in your voice. See 
Sea Captain’s Story, The.—Lytton. 

The keynote to the oratory of Wendell Phillips lay in 
this. See Oratory of Wendell Phillips, The.— 
Higginson. 

The kindly words that rise within the heart. See Un¬ 
spoken Words.—Anon. 

The King and the Pope together. See King and the 
Pope, The.—Webb. 

The king but an his nobles a’. See Brown Robin.— 
Anon. 

The king called his best archers. See William of 
Cloudesle.—Anon. 

The king can drink the best of wine. See Differences. 
—Mackay. 

The king from the council chamber. See King’s Pic¬ 
ture, The.—Bostwick. 

The king is full of grace and fair regard. See King 
Henry V.—Shakespeare. 

The king is kind, and well we know. See King Henry 
IV., Pt. I. (Hotspur’s Quarrel with Henry IV.).— 
Shakespeare. 

The king looked on him kindly, as on a vassal 
true. See Cid, The (Cid and Bavieca, The).— 
Anon. 

The King of Love my Shepherd is. See Lord is My 
Shepherd, The.—Baker. 

The king of the day is exerting his power. See Songs 
of the Seasons.—Thorne. 

The King said, “Come.” See Light of Asia, The (Sor¬ 
row of Buddha, The).—Arnold. 

The king sent forth an edict through the land. See 
King’s Joy Bells, The.—Bradley. 

The king sits in Dunfermline town. See Sir Patrick 
Spens.—Anon. 

The king stood still till the last echo died. See Absalom 
(David’s Lament over Absalom).—Willis. 

The King was drinking in Malwood Hall. See Red 
King, The.—Kingsley. 

The king was on his throne. See Vision of Belshazzar. 
—Byron. 

The king was sick. His cheek was red. See En¬ 
chanted Shirt, The.—Hay. 

The king was walking through the street. See King’s 
Kisses, The.—Tubbs. 

The king was weary of his part. See Search for Hap¬ 
piness.—Gaddess. 

The king with all his kingly train See Louis XV.— 
Sterling. 

The Kingdom of Ireland, with her imperial crown, 
stands at your Bar. See Heaven Fights on the 
Side of a Great Principle.—Grattan. 

The kingdoms of this world shall pass away. See 
Realm of Love, The.—Bispham. 

The King’s men, when he had slain the boar. See How 
the King Lost his Crown.—Trowbridge. 

The Kings were moved; conviction hung. See Death 
of Ajax, The.—Praed. 

The kings who ruled mankind with haughty sway. See 
Whiskers, The.—-Woodworth. 

The kiss, dear maid! thy lip has left. See Kiss, Dear 
Maid, The.—Byron. 

The knell that dooms the voiceless and obscure. See 
Survival.—Coates. 

The Knight had ridden down from Wensley Moor. See 
Hart-leap Well.—Wordsworth. 

The knightliest of the knightly race. See Virginians 
of the Valley, The.—Ticknor. 

The lad Kullervo laid his luncheon in his basket. See 
Kalevala, The (Kullervo and the Cheat-cake). 

The lad Philisides. See Arcadia (Country Song, A).— 
Sidney. 

The lad who wrote that little note. See Other Side, 
The.—( Cornell Widow.) 

The ladies of St. James’s. See Ladies of St. James’s, 
The.—Dobson. 


The ladies rose. I held the door. See Angel in the 
House, The (Dean’s Consent, The).—Patmore. 

The Lady Blanche, regardless of all her lovers’ fears. 
See Lines Suggested by a Picture of Two Females. 
—Lamb. 

The lady from the West was fair. See Lady from the 
West, The.—Meyers. 

The Lady Jane was tall and slim. See Knight and the 
Lady, The.—Barham. 

The lady lay in her bed. See Lady’s Dream, The.— 
Hood. 

The Lady Mary Villiers [wr. Villers] lies. See Epitaph 
on the Lady Mary Villiers.—Carew. 

The Lady May went forth at morn: See Legend of 
Ogre Castle, The.—English. 

The lady of Antrim rose with the morn. See Randall 
M’Donald.—M’Gee. 

The Lady Rohesia lay on her death-bed! See Lady 
Rohesia, The.—Barham. 

The lady stands in her bower door. See Two Magi¬ 
cians, The.—Anon. 

The lady-bug sat in the rose’s heart. See Lady-bug 
and the Ant, The.—Anon. 

The laird o’ Cockpen, he’s proud an’ he’s great. See 
Laird o’ Cockpen, The.—Nairne. 

The Laird o’Drum is a wooing [or a hunting] gane. 
See Laird o ’Drum, The.—Anon. 

The lake comes throbbing in with voice of pain. See 
Lake Memory, A.—Campbell. 

The lake one lucent pearl, its depths aglow. See Sun¬ 
set.—L. F. B. 

The lamps now glitter down the street. See Armies 
in the Fire.—Stevenson. 

The Land beyond the Sea! See Land beyond the Sea, 
The.—Faber. 

The Land, it boasts its titled hosts—they could not vie 
with these. See Merchants of Old England, The. 
—Strangford. 

The land which freemen till. See You Ask me why, 
tho’ ill at Ease (“Land which freemen till, The”). 
—Tennyson. 

The large purple beech at Waltham. See Purple 
Beech, The.—( Garden and Forest.) 

The lark above our heads doth know. See Violinist, 
A.—Bourdillon. 

The lark is singing in the blinding sky. See Life- 
drama, A (Sea-marge).—Smith. 

The lark now leaves his watery [or wat’ry] nest. See 
Song.—Davenant. 

The lark sings for joy in her own loved land. See 
Lines to the Stormy Petrel.—Anon. 

The last and greatest Herald of Heaven’s King. See 
Saint John Baptist.—Drummond. 

The last beams of day were faintly streaming 
through the painted windows. See Westmin¬ 
ster Abbey (Reflections on Westminster Abbey).— 
Irving. 

The last gleam o’ sunset in ocean was sinkin’. See 
Mary MacNeil.—Conolly. 

The last light lingers in the west. See Influence.— 
Schauffier. 

“The last of England! O’er the sea, my dear. See 
For the Picture “The Last of England.”—Brown. 

The last of Winter’s melancholy train. See February. 
—Cornwell. 

The last sunbeam See Two Veterans.—Whitman. 

The last tall son of Lot and Bellicent. See Idylls of 
the King (Gareth).—Tennyson. 

The last time I ran home over the Chicago, Burlington 
and Quincy. See Railway Matinee, A.—Bur¬ 
dette. 

The last time I visited the tomb of Washington. See 
Centennial Address.—Mason. 

The late Charles F. Browne was a great quiz. See Lit¬ 
erary Question Discussed, A. 

The late Henry W. Grady, of Atlanta, Ga. See Ap¬ 
peal for Temperance.—Grady. 

The latter rain,—it falls in anxious haste. See Latter 
Rain. The.—Very. 

The laurel wreath of glory. See Soldier’s Offering, A. 
—Vickers. 

The law, as quoted, lays down a fair conduct of life. 
See Man who would be King, The.—Kipling. 

The law is more than a great river, rising in the far off 
mountains. See “Law is more than a great 
river, rising in the far off mountains, The.”— 
Bonney. 

The law of “the survival of the fittest.” See Survival 
of the Fittest in Literature, The.—Anon. 

The law of virtue is the same in God and man. See 
Law of Virtue, The.—Cicero. 

The lawns were dry in Euston park. See Fakenham 
Ghost, The.—Bloomfield. 


851 






The laws 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The laws of England, founded on principles of liberty. 
See England's Relations to America.—Macintosh. 

The lazy, languid breezes sweep. See In the Hammock. 
—(London Society.) 

The leaders of our Revolution were men of whom the 
simple truth is the highest praise. See Element 
of Justice, The —Curtis. 

The leaders of the Greeks, worn with war and baffled 
by fate. See iEneid, The (Destruction of Troy, 
The).—Virgil. 

The leafless trees are brown and bare. See Old Clock 
in the Corner, The.—Hall. 

The leaf-tongues of the forest, the flower-lips of the 
sod. See Sweet Song of Songs, A.—Massey. 

The leafy city of the birds. See By Summer Woods. 
—(Hours at Home.) 

The leaves are dead, you say? See Winter Leaves.— 
Anon. 

The leaves are fading and falling. See November.— 
Cary. 

The leaves are falling; so am I. See Late Leaves.— 
Landor. 

The legend says: In Paradise. See Gift of Tears, The. 
—Piatt. 

The legislation of Moses! Let me ask, what other 
legislation of ancient times. See Moses in Sight 
of the Promised Land.—Peabody. 

The lessening cloud. See Seasons, The: Summer.— 
Thomson. 

The letter ran thus: My Dear Neph.,— See Nothing 
for Use.—Coates. 

The letter which you wrote me. See Translation from 
Heine.—Wright. 

The liberally educated young men in our country. See 
Scholar in Public Life, The.—Depew. 

The liberty of the press is the highest safeguard to all 
free government. See Liberty of the Press.— 

The life of man. See Flight of the Arrow, The.—Stod¬ 
dard. 

The life-boat is a gallant bark, that bears no pennon 
gay. See Life-boat is a Gallant Bark, The.— 
Cook. 

The lifeless son—-the mother’s agony. See Three 
Marys at Castle Howard, The.—Elliott. 

The light burned low in the drawing-room of the Gar- 
side mansion. See He Gave him a Start.—Ter- 
williger. 

The light is shining through the window-pane. See 
Out in the Streets.—English. 

The light of dawn rose on my dreams. See Child in 
the Story Awakes, The.—Ramal. 

The light of nature, the works of creation, the general 
consent of nations. See Goodness of God.—Anon. 

The light of spring. See Light of Spring, The.— 
Miller. 

The light shone dim on the headland. See Little Light, 
The.—( Good Cheer.) 

The light that fills thy house at mom. See Gifts of 
God, The.—Very. 

The light-house flashed from the rocky isle. See Light¬ 
house May.—-Faxton. 

The lighthouse keeper’s daughter looked out across 
the bay. See Light on Deadman’s Bar, The.— 
Rexford. 

The lightning flashed across the heaven, the distant 
thunder rolled. See Stonewall Jackson’s Death.— 
Russell. 

The lightning rends the goodly tree. See In Memo- 
riam Prince Leopold.—Halloran. 

The lights blaze high in our brilliant rooms. See Pro 
Patria et Gloria.—Baker. 

The lights bum dim. A sea fog drifts in dank. See 
Cobbler of Lynn, The.—Vickers. 

The lights extinguished, by the hearth I leant See 
Legend of Provence, A.—Procter. 

The lights from the parlour and kitchen shone out. 
See Escape at Bedtime.—Stevenson. 

The lights were gleaming and the feast was spread. 
See Death of the Reveller, The.—Eaton. 

The lilac stood close to Elizabeth’s window. See Lilac, 
The.— (St. Nicholas.) 

The lilac, various in array—now white. See Lilac, 
The.—Anon. 

The lilacs are in blossom, the cherry flowers are white. 
See Mary and the Swallow.—Douglas. 

The lilied fields behold. See Song of Faith.—Croswell. 

The lilies lie in my lady’s bower. See Oh! Weary 
Mother.—Pain. 

The lilies of the field, whose bloom is brief. See Con¬ 
sider.—Rossetti. 

The lilies were swinging their fair, white bells. See 
Butterfly’s Lesson, The.—Anon. 


The lily drinks ihe sunlight. See What to Drink.— 
Burleigh. 

The lily has an air. See There’s Nothing Like the 
Rose.—Rossetti. 

The lineal descendants of the Pilgrims are as numerous 
as the army of Xerxes. See Age of Miles Standish, 
The.—Greenhalge. 

The linnet in the rocky dells. See Song.—Bronte. 

The lion is the beast to fight. See Sage Counsel.— 
Quiller-Couch. 

The lion is the desert’s king; through his domain so 
wide. See Lion’s Ride, The.—Freiligrath. 

The lion, the lion, he dwells in the waste. See Lion, 
The.—Belloc. 

The lioness whelped, and the sturdy cub. See Eagle’s 
Song, The.—Mansfield. 

The listening Dryads hushed the woods. See Pewee, 
The.—Tro wb ridge. 

The literature of the world is, in a very deep sense. 
See Value of Literature, The.—Mabie. 

The little bird stood on the roof of the cowshed. See 
Latest Form of Literary Hysterics. (Chicago 
Tribune.) 

The little birds are wide awake. See Wakeful Birds, 
The. 

The little birds fly over. See Spring Holiday, A.— 
Anon. 

The Little Black Rose shall be red at last. See Little 
Black Rose, The.—De Vere. 

The little boy who says “I’ll try.” See I’ll Try and I 
Can’t.—Anon, 

The little boys in Labrador. See North and South. 
(Youth’s Companion.) 

The little brown squirrel hops in the com. See Re¬ 
jected National Hymns, The, VII.—Newell. 

The little cares that fretted me. See Out in the Fields. 
—Anon. 

The little children on the stairway. See On the Stair¬ 
way.—Larcom. 

The little cup-bearer entered the room. See Little 
Cup-bearer, The.—Anon. 

The little dimpled baby girl. See As She Says.— 
Smiley. 

The little fragment of time that is left for me, may it 
please your honors. See In Defence of Aaron 
Burr.—-Randolph. 

The little French doll was a dear little doll. See Doll’s 
Wooing, The.—Field. 

The little frog sits on the bank of the pool. See Marsh 
Symphony, A.—M’Cardell. 

The little gate was reached at last. See Auf Wieder- 
sehen.—Lowell. 

The little lame tailor sat stitching and snarling. See 
Starling, The.—Buchanan. 

The little leaves upon the trees. See Birds’ Music.— 
Sherman. 

The little Sister of Mercy sighed! See Little Sister of 
Mercy, The.—Booth. 

The little stars sang sweetly to the birds up in the sky. 
See Poetic Inspiration.—Thatcher. 

The little things of to-day may grow into great things 
of to-morrow. See Little Things.—Anon. 

The little things which you may do for those about you. 
See Small Things.—Anon. 

The little toy dog is covered with dust. See Little Boy 
Blue.—Field. 

The lone proud man! for him no graces smiled. See 
Pitt.—Lytton. 

“The loneliest night of all the [lonely] year!” See 
Christmas Guests.—Duncan. 

The lonely valley of Thingvellir, in southern Iceland. 
See Bondman, The (Mount of Laws, The).— 
Caine. 

The long, bright day of the harvest toil is past. See 
Rizpah.—Blinn. 

The long grass burned brown. See Prarie on Fire, 
The.—Cary. 

The long, gray moss that softly swings. See In Louis¬ 
iana.—-Paine. 

The long lines stretched from west to east. See Bird 
on the Telegraph Wire, The.—Anon. 

The long, long wished-for hour has come. See Cushla 
Gal mo Chree, A.—Doheny. 

The long-expected discovery of the Mississippi was 
accomplished by James Marquette and Louis 
Joliet. See History of the United States (Dis¬ 
covery of the Mississippi, The).—Bancroft. 

The look of sympathy, the gentle word. See Not Lost. 
—Doudney. 

The looks of yer, ma’am, rather suits me. See Cook 
of the Period, A.—Anon. 

The lopped tree in time may grow again. See Times 
Go by Turns.—Southwell. 


852 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The means 


The Lord descended from above. See Psalm XVIII.— 
Sternhold. 

The Lord is good unto all, and His tender mercies are 
over all His works. See Seed-time.—Bradbury. 

The Lord is in His Holy Place. See Secret Place of the 
Most High, The.—Gannett. 

The Lord is merciful and gracious. See Psalms of 
David, CIII.— Bible. 

The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. See Psalms 
of David, XXIII.— Bible. 

The Lord is my shepherd, no want shall I know. See 
Lord the Good Shepherd, The.—Montgomery. 

The Lord my pasture shall prepare. See Spectator, 
The (Psalm XXIII.).—Addison. 

The Lord of Glen Allen came home from far. See 
Glen Allen’s Daughter.—-Anon. 

The Lord of Life walked in the forest one morn. See 
Legend of the Aspen-tree, A.—Darby. 

The Lord who fashioned my hands for working. See 
Failure.—Anon. 

The lordly manor, Cordelie, stood by the river Tweed. 
See Cordelie.—Brother Paul. 

The Lords of Thule did not please. See Lords of 
Thule, The.—Anon. 

The loss of a firm national character, or the degrada¬ 
tion of a nation’s honor. See Loss of National 
Character.—Maxcy. 

The lost days of my life until to-day. See Lost Days. 
—-Rossetti. 

The lounger must oft, as he walks through the streets. 
See Numbers Altered.— (Punch.) 

The love Alexis did to Damon bear. See Sonnet to 
Sir W. Alexander.—Drummond. 

The love for fatherland was deep. See Sleep, Weary 
Child.—Plough. 

The love in my heart is as strong as the hills. See 
All for You.—Peck. 

The love of man and woman is as fire. See My Com¬ 
rade.—Roche. 

The love that I hae [or have] chosen. See Lawlands o’ 
[or of] Holland, The.—Anon. 

The love the people of the South feel for the negro race. 
See At the Boston Banquet (Love and Loyalty of 
the Negro).—Grady. 

The love wherewith my heart is big for thee. See 
Mystery, A.—Symonds. 

“The loved and lost!” Why do we call them lost? 
See Loved and Lost, The.—Anon. 

The lovely lass o’ Inverness. See Lovely Lass of 
Inverness, The.—Bums. 

The “Lovely Mary,” on her way. See Altruism.— 
Trowbridge. 

The lovely moss! on the lowly cot. See Mosses, The.— 
Browne. 

The lovely purple of the noon’s bestowing. See Night 
at Sea.-—Landon. 

The lover of child Marjory. See Sea Child, A.—Car¬ 
man. 

The loves that doubted, the loves that dissembled. 
See Lines by a Person of Quality.—Nichols. 

The low desire, the base design. See Ladder of St. 
Augustine. The.—Longfellow. 

The low plains stretch to the west with a glimmer of 
rustling weeds. See At Tiber Mouth.—Rodd. 

The lowest of politicians is that man who seeks to 
gratify an invariable selfishness. See Portrait 
Gallery (Demagogue, The).-—Beecher. 

The lowest trees have tops; the ant her gall. See 
Natural Comparisons with Perfect Love.—Anon. 

The luxury derived in doing good. See Grain of 
Truth, A.—Vickers. 

The Lyceum will come to order at once. See Debating 
Society, The.—Denison. 

The I.yceum will please come to order. See Reading 
Works of Fiction.—Crosby. 

The magic voice of spring is gone. See Glad Autumn 
Days.—Anon. 

The magnetism of Longfellow’s touch. See Long¬ 
fellow, Extract Concerning.-—Curtis. 

The maid, and thereby hangs a tale. See Bride, The.— 
Suckling. 

The maid, as by the papers doth appear. See Too 
Great a Sacrifice.—Anon. 

The maid I loved, and still shall love. See Maid I 
Loved, The.—Anon. 

The maid who binds her warrior’s sash. See Wagoner 
of the Alleghanies, The (Brave at Home, The).— 
Read. 

The maiden aunt, in her straight backed chair. See 
Culprit, A.—Vandegrift. 

The mail has just brought me my letters—a baker’s 
dozen or more. See Saving Mission of Infancy, 
The.—Hodson. 


The Maister sat in a wee cot house. See Maister an’ 
the Bairns, The.—Thomson. 

The man in conscious virtue bold. See “Man in con¬ 
scious virtue bold, The. ”—Horace. 

The man in righteousness arrayed. See To Sally.— 
Adams. 

The man in the wilderness asked of me. See Riddle, A. 
—Anon. 

The man is thought a knave or fool. See Eternal 
Justice.—Mackay. 

The man of expedients is he who. See Man of Expe¬ 
dients, The.—Gilman. 

The man of life upright. See Man of Life Upright, 
The.—Campion. 

The man sank back in the barber’s chair with a sigh 
of relief. See Modern Seer, A.—( Philadelphia 
Press.) 

The man tnat hails you Tom or Jack. See On Friend¬ 
ship.—Cowper. 

The man that has a thousand friends. See Friends 
and Enemies.—Anon. 

The man that joins in life’s career. See Parting Glass, 
The.—F reneau. 

The man who fiercest charged in fight. See Stonewall 
Jackson.—Melville. 

The man who frets at worldly strife. See Man Who 
Frets at Worldly Strife, The.—Drake. 

The man who hath no music in himself. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The.—Shakespeare. 

The man who is so conscious of the rectitude of his 
intentions. See Decisive Integrity.—Wirt. 

The man who kindles the fire on the hearthstone of an 
honest and righteous home. See Against Cen¬ 
tralization (Love of Home, The).—Grady. 

The man who wears the shoulder straps. See Soldier 
Boy for Me, The.—Kiser. 

The “man without a country” was in such a sorry 
plight. See Man without a Country, The.— 
H. F. H. 

The manliest man of all the race. See Manliest Man, 
The.—Bungay. 

The man’s actions here are of infinite moment to him. 
See On Heroes and Hero Worship (Mohammed). 
—Carlyle. 

The maple buds are red, are red. See Song of Waking, 
A.—Bates. 

The maple does not shed its leaves. See Daily Dying. 
—Anon. 

The Maple owned that she was tired of always wearing 
green. See Fall Fashions.—Thomas. 

The maple trees are tinged with red. See When Mary 
was a Lassie.—Anon. 

The March wind whistles through the somber pines. 
See March.—(.4 II the Year Round.) 

The marvellous devotion of the Hebrew people to their 
new country. See Hebrew Codes Developed, The. 
—(New Testament Records.) 

The mask of peace was thrown aside; the war-cry 
thundered forth. See Tale of the Crimean War, 
A.—Webb. 

The massive structure which crowns this hill. See 
Garfield Memorial at Cleveland, Ohio, The.— 
Cox. 

The master came to his garden. See My Garden Plot. 
—Anon. 

“The Master has come over Jordan,” See Christ and 
the Little Ones.—Qill. 

The Master walked in Galilee. See In Galilee.—Sang- 
ster. 

The master’s face is wrinkled now. See Old School¬ 
master, The.—Bungay. 

The match of Love is of so quick a sort. See Match of 
Love, The.—Anon. 

The matron watched Tom for a moment. See Tom 
Brown’s School Days (New Boy, The).— 
Hughes. 

The May sun sheds an amber light. See May Sun 
Sheds an Amber Light, The.—Bryant. 

The Mayor of Scuttledon burned his nose. See Mayor 
of Scuttledon, The.—Dodge. 

The meadow is a battle-field. See In the Meadow.— 
Sherman. 

The meanest creature somewhat may contain. See 
Tinker and Miller’s Daughter, The.—Wolcott. 

The meanest floweret of the vale. See Ode on the 
Pleasure Arising from Vicissitude.—Gray. 

The meanest way a man can ride. See Sheriff of 
Cerro-Gordo, The.—Brooks. 

The means of extending knowledge and influencing 
the human mind. See Modern Facilities for Evan¬ 
gelizing the World.—Beecher. 

The means, therefore, which unto us is lent. See 
Hymn of Heavenly Beauty.—Spenser. 


853 






The meeting 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The meeting having been called to order, the chairman 
said. See Pine Town Debating Society, The. 
—( Harper’s Magazine.) 

The melancholy days are [ivr. have] come, the sad¬ 
dest of the year. See Death of the Flowers, The.— 
Bryant. 

The melancholy days have come that no householder 
loves. See Putting up o’ the Stove.—Anon. 

The mellow year is hasting to its close. See Novem¬ 
ber.—Coleridge. 

The members of a republic, above all other men. See 
American and England.—Irving. 

The members of the Boys’ Debating Club. See Boys’ 
Debate, A.—Anon. 

The men of culture are those who have had a passion 
for diffusing. See Duties of the Scholar.—Arnold. 

The men of learning say she must. See Given Over.— 
Woolner. 

The men to make a state must be intelligent men. 
See Men to Make a State, The.—Doane. 

The mention of America has never failed to fill me 
with the most lively emotions. See Panegyric on 
America.—Phillips. 

The merchant to secure his treasure. See Love’s Dis¬ 
guises.—Prior. 

The mercury lay in her bulb at morn. See Personal. 
—(.Chicago Tribune.) 

The merriment that followed was subdued. See Be¬ 
wildering Emotions.—-Riley. 

The merry boats of Brixham. See Wives of Brixham, 
The.—Anon. 

The merry brown hares came leaping. See Rough 
Rhyme on a Rough Matter, A.—Kingsley. 

The merry heart, the merry heart. See Merry Heart, 
A.—Anon. 

The merry, merry lark was up and singing. See Merry 
Lark, The.—-Kingsley. 

The merry mice stay in their holes. See Mice, The.— 
Anon. 

The merry world did on a day. See Quip, The.—Her¬ 
bert. 

The merry-go-round, the merry-go-round, the merry- 
go-round at Fowey! See Merry-go-round, The.— 
Noel. 

The mess-tent is full, and the glasses are set. See 
Battle-eve of the Brigade, The.—Davis. 

The mice had been in council. See Catching the Cat.— 
Vandegrift. 

The midges dance aboon the burn. See Midges Dance 
aboon the Burn, The.—Tannahill. 

The midnight hour was drawing on. See Belshazzar’s 
Downfall.—Heine. 

The might of one fair face sublimes my love. See 
Might of One Fair Fac \ The.—Michael Angelo. 

The mighty Minstrel breathes no longer. See Extem¬ 
pore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg 
(Passing of the Elder Bards, The).—Wordsworth. 

The mighty mother, and her son, who brings. See 
Dunciad, The (Description of Dulness, The).— 
Alexander Pope. 

The mighty ocean rolls and raves. See Songs in Ab¬ 
sence (“Mighty ocean rolls and raves, The.”)— 
Clough. 

The mighty soul that is ambition’s mate. See Dis¬ 
enchantment . —Moore. 

The mighty sun had just gone down. See Napoleon.— 
Lockhart. 

The mill goes toiling slowly around. See Nightfall in 
Dordrecht.—Field. 

The mind a highway is. A constant throng. See 
Highway, The.—Husted. 

The mind is the glory of man. See Mind, the Glory of 
Man.—Wise. 

The minister misrepresents the sentiments of the Peo- 
ble. See Anti-union Speeches (Union with Great 
Britain).—Grattan. - 

The minister of finance has presented a most alarming 
picture. See Necker’s Financial Plan.—Mira- 
beau. 

The minister said [or sed] last night, said [or sed] he. See 
John Jankin’s Sermon.—( Harper’s Bazar.) 

The minstrel boy to the war is gone. See Minstrel Boy, 
The.—Moore. 

The Minstrel came once more to view. See Lady of 
the Lake, The (Battle of Beal’ an Duine).—Scott. 

The minstrel touched his silver strings. See Old Song. 
—Anon. 

The minstrels played their Christmas tune. See 
Christmas‘Carol, The.—Word.^words. 

The minute-hand points to the quarter. See Late.— 
Anon. 

The mistakes of my life are many. See Humility.— 
Locke. 


‘ ‘ The misthress is dyin’, the doctors have said so. ” See 
Kitty’s Prayer.—Anon. 

The mistletoe hung in the castle hall. See Mistletoe 
Bough, The.—Bayly. 

The mists of Easter morning. See Easter Song, An.-— 
Hanford. 

The mob was fierce and furious. They cried. See 
Relenting Mob, A.—Hugo. 

The modern newspaper is not merely a private enter¬ 
prise. See “Modern newspaper is not merely a 
private enterprise. The. ”—Bonney. 

The modern process of varnishing over wicked char¬ 
acters. See Marc Antony.—Anon. 

The monarch oak, the patriarch of the trees. See Oak, 
The.—Dryden. 

The monarch sat on his judgment-seat. See Culprit 
Fay, The (Fay’s Sentence, The).—Drake. 

The monarch of glory! There are a class of monarchists 
in France. See Two Napoleons, The.—Hugo. 

The Monk Servetus sits alone. See Friar Servetus.— 
Lanier. 

The monkev married the Baboon’s sister. See Mon¬ 
key’s Wedding, The.—Anon. 

The monks had endless power, and with power 
the usual greed. See Strange Harvest, The.— 
Meyers. 

The monopoly of fame by the few in this world comes 
from an instinct. See Permanence of Grant’s 
Fame. The.—Blaine. 

The month of June brings roses sweet. See June.— 
Richards. 

The month of March has come again. See March.— 
Richards. 

The month was August and the morning cool. See 
Truant Boys, The.—Taylor. 

The monument outlasting bronze. See Ancient and 
Modern Muses, The.—Palgrave. 

The monument, tipped with electric fire. See Soldiers’ 
Home, Washington, The.—Miller. 

The moon a light-hung world of gold. See Shadows.— 
Kennedy. 

The moon and the stars were shining down. See 
Old City Church, The.—Weatherly. 

The moon had climbed the highest hill. See Mary’s 
Dream.—Lowe. 

The moon had just gone down, sir. See Bill and I.— 
Miles. 

The moon has a face like the clock in the hall. See 
Moon, The.—Stevenson. 

The moon has left the sky. See Night in Lesbos, A.— 
Horton. 

The moon is at her full, and, riding high. See Tides, 
The.—Bryant. 

The moon is tired and old. See Waning Moon, The.— 
Thaxter. 

The moon is up, and yet it is not night. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Sunset).—Byron. 

The moon is up in splendor. See Night Song.— 
Claudius. 

The moon is up! the moon is up. See Moon is Up, 
The.—Anon. 

The moon rose up and laughed to see. See Night 
before Christmas, The.—Agave. 

The moon shines dim in the open air. See Chris- 
tabel (Lady’s Chamber, A).—-Coleridge. 

The moon shines white and silent. See Midnight.— 
Lowell. 

The moon was afloat. See Miller of Dee, The.— 
Ogden. 

The moon was a-waning. See Moon was a-Waning, 
The.—Hogg. 

The moonbeams over Arno’s vale in silver flood were 
pouring. See Veery, The.—Van Dyke. 

The moon’s gray tent is up: another hour. See Bridal 
Hour,*The.—Cary. 

The moon-white waters wash and leap. See Coves of 
Crail, The.—Sharp. 

The Moorish king rides up and down. See Very 
Mournful Ballad on the Siege and Conquest of 
Alhama, A.—Byron. 

The Moorland waste lay hushed in the dusk of the 
second day. See Le Mauvais Larron.—Watson. 

The moral and intellectual education of every individ¬ 
ual. See No Excellence without Labor.—Wirt. 

The more a man accomplishes the more he may. See 
Industry.—Anon. 

The more intimately I enter into communion with 
myself. See Death is Compensation.—Rous¬ 
seau. 

The more we live, more brief appear. See River of 
Life, The.—Campbell. 

The morn is clear; with frosty light. See Song of 
Winter Days.—Macdonald. 


854 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The new 


The mom was fair. See Crowning of the King, The.— 
Southey. 

The morning broke. Light stole upon the clouds. 
See Hagar in the Wilderness.—Willis. 

The morning is cheery, my boys, arouse! See Reveille. 
—O’Connor. 

The morning light falls gently on the eyes. See Daily 
Task, The.—-Famingham. 

The morning light is breaking. See Missionary Hymn. 
—Smith. 

The morning mist is clear’d away. See Twenty-first 
Sunday after Trinity.—Keble. 

The morning of the launch was fair and bright. See 
Launching of Cortez’ Ships, The.—Cornwallis. 

The morning of the year flushes again these northern 
glades. See Greenwood Greetings.—Benedict. 

The morning on which Reginald Gloverson was to 
leave. See Gloverson the Mormon.—-Ward. 

The morning papers contained among their casualties 
the following paragraph. See Casualty, A.— 
Anon. 

The morning pearls. See Chastity.—Chamberlayne. 

The morning sun rose from his crimson couch. See 
Roman Sentinel, The.—Florence. 

The morning was gray and cloudy. See Bluebirds 
in Autumn.—Thaxter. 

The morning was sunshiny, lovely, and clear. See 
How Two Birdies Kept House in a Shoe.—Anon. 

The morns are meeker than they were. See Autumn.— 
Dickinson. 

The Moslem spears were gleaming. See Marguerite of 
France.—Hemans. 

The most characteristic and most essential. See 
Lowell, Extract Concerning.—Wilkinson. 

The most difficult thing to reach is a woman’s pocket. 
See Woman’s Pocket, A.—Bailey. 

The most effective working-force in the world. See 
Old Woman’s Railway Signal.—Burritt. 

The most exquisite article of domestic torture is the 
modern window-curtain fixture. See Curtain 
Fixture, The.—Bailey. 

The most fearful and impressive exhibitions of power. 
See Grandeur of the Ocean.—Colton. 

The most important thing that a community can do is 
to accumulate wealth. See Wealth and Progress. 
—Anon. 

The most marvelous mortal that ever was born. See 
Timothy Horn.—Fink. 

The most remarkable boy in the village of Samoset. 
See What Came from a Ride.—Anon. 

The most tiresome insect in existence is probably the 
ant. See Tiresome Insects.—( New York Times.) 

The most tremendous word in the English language. 
See Mighty Word, “No,” The.—Cuyler. 

The motes up and down in the sun. See Motes and 
Mountains.—-Anon. 

The mother and child took the train for Long Branch. 
See “We All Wishes You Was up Here.”—Anon. 

The Mother of God at Kevlar her best dress wears to¬ 
day. See Pilgrimage to Kevlar, The.—Heine. 

The Mother of the Muses, we are taught. See Mem¬ 
ory.—Landor. 

The mother who conceals her grief. See Wagoner 
of the Alleghanies, The (“Mother who conceals,” 
etc.).—Read. 

The mother will not turn, who thinks she hears. See 
Broken Music.—Rossetti. 

The mother-heart doth yearn at even-tide. See When 
Even Cometh on.—Tilley. 

The moth’s kiss, first! See In a Gondola (Song).— 
Browning. 

The mountain and the squirrel. See Fable.—Emer¬ 
son. 

The mountain ash, deck’d with autumnal berries that 
outshine. See Excursion, The (Mountain Ash, 
The).—Wordsworth. 

The mountain peaks put on their hoods. See De 
Roberval (Twilight Song).—Hunter-Duvar. 

The mountain sheep are sweeter. See War-song of 
Dinas Vawr, The.—Peacock. 

The mountain shepherd-boy am I! See Song of the 
Mountain-boy.—Uhland. 

The mountain that the morn doth kiss. See Celestial 
Passion, The (Morning and Night).—Gilder. 

The mountain wooded to the peak. See Enoch 
Arden (Tropical Scene, A).—Tennyson. 

The mountains of this glorious land. See Alps, The.— 
Montgomery. 

The mournful funeral slow proceeds behind. See 
“Mournful funeral slow proceeds behind, The.” 
—Wilson. 

The muffled drum’s sad roll has beat. See Bivouac of 
the Dead, The.—O’Hara. 


The mule is half hoss, and half jackass, and then kums 
t-u a full stop. See Josh Billings on the Mule.— 
Billings. 

The mule seemed pensive, even sad. See Nobody’s 
Mule.—Anon. 

The multitude of Angels, with a shout. See Paradise 
Lost (Concord).—Milton. 

The murmur of the morning ghost. See Ballad of 
Keith of Ravelston, The.—Dobell. 

The Muse, disgusted at an age and clime. See On the 
Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in Amerb 
ca.—Berkeley. 

The Muse doth tell me where to borrow. See Muse, 
The.—Wither. 

The Muse, nae poet ever fand her. See Inspiration. 
—Burns. 

The Muse's fairest light in no dark time. See To the 
Memory of Ben Jonson.—Cleveland. 

The Muses wrapped in mysteries of light. See Whirl¬ 
wind Road, The.—Markham. 

The music had the heat of blood. See During Music.— 
Symons. 

The music of art is but the imitation of the music of 
nature. See “Music of art is but the imitation of 
the music of nature, The.”—Robertson. 

The Musical Tree has a peculiar shaped leaf. See 
Grove of Curious Trees, A.—Benedict. 

The Musmee has brown velvet eyes. See Musmee, The. 
—Arnold. 

The muster-place is Lanrick mead. See Message, The. 
—Scott. 

The mystery of our being, and the mystery of our ceas¬ 
ing to be. See Poetry of Science.—Hunt. 

The name of Bryant cannot be mentioned. See Bryant, 
Extract Concerning.—Whipple. 

The name of Republic is inscribed upon the most im¬ 
perishable monuments. See liberty and Great¬ 
ness.—Legare. 

The name thou wearest does thee grievous wrong. 
See Mocking-bird, The.—Stockard. 

The narration would interest you were it repeated in the 
most simple manner. See Gypsy Flower Girl, The. 
—McDowell. 

The narrator, knocking the ashes out of his pipe. See 
Little Stowaway, The.—Anon. 

“The nation has been at war, not within its own 
shores.” See Reunited Country, A.—-McKinley. 

The nation rises up at every stage of his coming. See 
Abraham Lincoln (Funeral Oration on Abraham 
Lincoln).—Beecher. 

The national triumph in our civil war led to social and 
political changes. See View from Lookout Moun¬ 
tain, The.—Pierce. 

The Nation’s sire, four-score of years had toiled. See 
Patriotic Prince, The.—Carrington. 

The naturalists say that these singular creatures. See 
Bachelors, The.—Anon. 

The naughty girl never minds mamma. See Naughty 
Girl. The.—Anon. 

The nearest woodlands wore a misty veil. See Au¬ 
tumn.—Mifflin. 

The neatest housewife in the land. See Charade (Soap¬ 
stone) .—Holmes. 

The necessity of amusement is admitted on all hands. 
See Nature Designed for Our Enjoyment.— 
Beecher. 

The need of the hour is a grand tidal-wave of total 
abstinence. See Temperance.—Ireland. 

The needles have dropped from her nerveless hands. 
See Christmas Shadows.—Anon. 

The negro church which stood in Pine Valley near the 
little village of Oxford. See Uncle Peter’s Mas¬ 
terly Argument.—Stockton. 

The neighyinge of the war-horse prowde. See Cav¬ 
alier’s Song.—Motherwell. 

The nervous, dapper, “peart” young man took the 
chair I offered him. See Mark Twain and the 
Interviewer.—Clemens. 

The new era began; the King was tried, doomed and 
beheaded. See Tale of Two Cities, A (Guillotine, 
The) .—Dickens. 

The new mistress of that brand new house on Park 
avenue. See Practical Regeneration, A.—Anon. 

The new moon hung in the sky. See Prescience.— 
Aldrich. 

The new South is enamored of her new work. See New 
South, The.—Grady. 

The New World’s sweetest singer! See Longfellow.— 
Betts. 

The New Year comes in with shout and laughter. See 
Dance of the Months.—Anon. 

The New Year gave a dinner to twelve little brothers. 
See Twelve Little Brothers, The.—Cone. 


855 





The news 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The news frae Moidart cam’ yestreen. See Wha’ll be 
King but Charlie?—Naim. 

The news! our morning, noon, and evening cry. See 
Curiosity (News, The).— Sprague. 

The news ran fast—the man of mirth was dead. See 
Happy Man, The.—Hawes. 

The next morning at first lesson Tom was turned back 
in his lines. See Tom Brown’s School Days (Egg 
Hunting).—Hughes. 

The next morning at sunrise Monseigneur Welcome 
was walking about the garden. See Le- Miserables 
(Jean Valjean and the Bishop;.—Hugo. 

The next Saturday evening there was much excited dis¬ 
cussion at the Donnithorne Arms. See Mrs Poy- 
•ser “Has Her Say Out.”—Eliot. 

The next train for New York starts in half an hour. 
Sec Budget of Blunders, A.—Anon. 

The night and the storm fell together upon the old 
town of Dundee. See Death-bridge of the Tay, 
The.— -('arleton. 

The night before Larry was stretched. See Night be¬ 
fore Larry was Stretched, The.—Anon. 

The night came down in terror. See Tempest, The.— 
Sargent. 

The night comes stealing o’er me. See Water Fay, 
The.—Heine. 

The night has a thousand eyes. See Light.—Bour- 
dillon. 

The night hours wane, the bleak winds of December. 
See Dreams.—Anon. 

“The night is cold,” said Willie Ware. See Little 
Willie Ware.—Anon. 

The night is come, but not too soon. See Light of 
Stars, The.—Longfellow. 

The night is come, like to the day. See Evening Hymn. 
—Browne. 

The night is dark. All can be repaired. See Cyrano 
de Bergerac (Balcony Scene).—Rostand. 

The night is dark, and the winter winds. See Without 
and Within.—Stoddard. 

“The night is dreary and cold.” See Magdalena — 
Anon. 

The night is late, the house is still. See For Charlie’s 
Sake.—Palmer. 

The night is [or was] made for cooling shade. See At 
Sea.—Trowbridge. 

The night is mother of the day. See Dream of Sum¬ 
mer. A (Hope On).—Whittier. 

The night is past and shines the sun. See Siege of 
Corinth, The.—Byron. 

The night is silent, the wind is still. See Christus: 
a Mystery (Abbess’s Story, The).—Longfellow. 

The night is still, the moon looks kind. See Night is 
Still, The.—Thomas. 

The night it is so cold, so cold! For weeks the snow 
has lain. See Sentinel of Metz, The.—Meyers. 

The night it was still, and the moon it shone. See 
Gondoline.—White. 

The night that has no star lit up by God. See New 
World, The.—Very. 

The night was clear, with a touch of frost in the air. 
See Ride for I.ife, The.—Gordon. 

The night was dark and fearful. See Watcher, The.— 
Hale. 

The night was dark, though sometimes a faint star. 
See Dawn.—Gilder. 

The night was dark when Sam set out. See Rustic 
Courtship.—Anon. 

The night was dark with murky clouds. See Watch¬ 
ing.—Kavanaugh. 

The night was falling dreary, in merry Bandon town. 
See Orange and Green.—-Anon. 

The night was growing old. See In the Night.—Anon. 

The night was [or is] made for cooling shade. See At 
Sea.—Trowbridge. 

The night was stormy and dark. See Speculators, The. 
—Thackeray. 

The night was thick and hazy. See Robinson Crusoe. 
—Garryl. 

The night was winter in his roughest mood. See Task, 
The (Winter Noon).—Cowper. 

The night wind with a desolate moan swept byT See 
Soliloquy of the Dying Alchemist.—Willis. 

The nightingale, as soon as April bringeth. See Sidera 
(Philomela).—Sidney. 

The nightingale has a lyre of gold. See Love Notes.— 
Henley. 

The nightingale is mute—and so art thou. See Sonnet: 
"The nightingale,” etc.—Thurlow. 

The night-mist dim and darkling. See Carey, of Car- 
son.—Leland. 

The night’s dark curtain trails the East. See Lights 
of Lawrence, The.—Shurtleff. 


The noble Duke is extremely angry with me, that I did 
not consult him. See Lord North's Ministry De¬ 
nounced.—Chatham. 

The noble king of Brentford. See King of Brent¬ 
ford’s Testament, The.—Thackeray. 

The noble Lord’s purpose is to prove that France began 
the war. See Atheistical Government Impossi¬ 
ble, An.—-Sheridan. 

The noble Mumbo Jumbo sat. See Cannibal and the 
Skeleton, The.—Fezandi?. 

The noble river widens as we drift. See Nearing Port. 
—C. P. R. 

The noblest men that live for I know] on earth See 
Noblest Men, The.—Bungay. 

The noon was shady, and soft airs. See Dog and the 
Water-lily, The.—Cowper. 

The north wind doth blow, and we shall have snow. 
See First Snow, The.—Anon. 

The Northern Lights are flashing. See Canadian 
Hunter’s Song.—Moodie. 

The northern part of the United States and Canada. 
See Choosing a “State Tree”—The Hemlock.— 
Bachelder. 

The Northern Star sail’d over the bar. See Northern 
Star. The.—Anon. 

The noted divine, Richard Hooker, once said. See 
Law and Humanity.—Kellogg. 

The notes of the deep-laboring organ. See Westmin¬ 
ster Abbey'.—Irving. 

The nurse-life wheat within his green husk growing. 
See Cselica (Seedtime and Harvest).—-Greville. 

The ny'cht followis, and euery wery wicht. See .Eneid 
(Sleep).—Virgil. 

The Ny'um-N.vum chortled by the sea. See Nyum- 
Nyum, The.—Anon. 

The oak, for grandeur, strength, and noble size. See 
Oak, The.—Anon. 

The oak is a strong and stalwart tree. See Christmas 
Song, A.—Russell. 

The oak is a very common tree. See Choosing a “State 
Tree.”—The Oak.—Brobeck. 

The oak-tree \or oak tree's] boughs once touched the 
grass. See Bits of Things.—Anon. 

The objects of the restoration of the forests. See Man 
and Nature.—Marsh. 

The observance of Arbor Day has already led to the 
planting. See Arbor Day.—Northrop. 

The ob-ervance of Arbor Day' in New York State. See 
Arbor Day.— (The Student.) 

The ocean at the bidding of the moon. See Ocean, 
The.—Turner. 

The ocean bursts in very' wrath. See Resentment.— 
Clarke. 

The ocean old. centuries old. See Building of the Ship, 
The.—Longfellow. 

The ocean stood like cry'stal. See “Ocean stood like 
cry'stal, The.”—R. C. W. 

The odor of a rose: light of a star. See Shelley.—Japp. 

The officer at last. See Night Watch, The.—Copp^e. 

The old barn window, John. See Barn Window, The. 
—Larcom. 

The old clock croons on the sun-kissed wall. See Old 
Clock, The.—Carleton. 

The old familiar sights of ours. See Snow-bound.— 
Whittier. 

The old flag is a doin’ of her very level best. See Regi¬ 
ment Song.—Stanton. 

The old gentleman who sits opposite. See Autocrat- 
of the Breakfast-table. The (Hats).—Holmes. 

The old hay'-mow's the place to play'. See Old Hay¬ 
mow, The.—Riley. 

The old house by the lindens. Sec Open Window, The. 
—Longfellow. 

The old man had “billy'-goat ” whiskers. See Emer¬ 
gency, An.—Marsh. 

The old man said, “Take thou this shield, my son.” 
See Shield. The—S. G. W. 

The old man sat by the chimney side. See Old Folks’^ 
Room, The.—Anon. 

The old man sits in his easy-chair. See Sabbath Bells, 
The.—Anon. 

The old man, sitting by the way. See Picture, A.— 
Anon. 

The old mayor climbed the belfry tower. See High 
Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, The.—Ingelow. 

The old men sat with hats pulled down. See White 
Rose over the Water, The.—Thornbury. 

The old priest Peter Gilligan. See Father JJilligan.— 
Yeats. 

The old professor taught no more. See Old Professor, 
The.—Anon. 

The old publishing house of T. Copernicus & Son. 
See Mr. Copernicus and the Proletariat.—Bunner. 


856 




FIRST LIXE INDEX The pastor’s 


The old South rested everyth! lie; on slavery and agricul¬ 
ture. See New South, The (Old and the New 
South, The).—Grady. 

The Old State House is to-day rededicated. See Old 
State House, Boston ( Rededicated, 1882), The.— 
Green. 

The old wine filled him, and he saw with eyes. See 
Maurice de Guerin.—Egan. 

The old witch-wife beside her door. See Lowland 
Witch Ballad, A.—Scott. 

The old wives sit on the heaving brine. See Burgo¬ 
master Gull, The.—Thaxter. 

The old woman was standing at the door of a mudhouse. 
See Little Minister. The (Nanny Saved from the 
Poorhouse).—Barrie. 

The Old World has already revealed to us, in its un¬ 
sealed books. See Our Duties to the Republic.— 
Story. 

The old year and the new! With faltering feet. See 
Old and the New, The.—McGuire. 

The Old Year being dead, and the New Year coming 
of age. See Rejoicings upon the New Year's 
Coming of Age.—Lamb. 

The old year, hoary with the snows of age, exhausted 
with the labors of its life. See New Year's Ad¬ 
dress, A.—Brooks. 

The old year is passing away, Maud. See Old and the 
New Year, The.—Anon. 

The Old Year knocks at the farm-house door. See As 
Dies the Year.—Austin. 

The Old Year sat beside the hearth. See Old Year and 
the New, The.—Pollard. 

The one is a city of life. See Two Cities.—Anon. 

The One remains, the many change and pass. See 
Eternal, The.—Shelley. 

The only amaranthine flower on earth. See Task, The 
(Truth).—Cowper. 

The only incident worth recording here, however, was 
his first run. See Tom Brown’s School Days (Hare 
and Hounds).—Hughes. 

The only way of conducting the war against Hannibal. 
See History of Rome (Fabius to .Emilius).— 
Levy. 

The only way to clear the track of life is to leave no 
enemy behind. .See“Only way to clear the track 
of life is to leave no enemy behind, The.”— 
Twitched. 

‘‘The ony objection ever made to me in this arr 
county.” See Old Sugar’s Courtship.—Robb. 

The Opera Hall was crowded. See Old Minstrel, The. 
—Anon. 

The opera is an experiment, bold even to the verge of 
absurdity. See “Opera is an experiment, bold 
even to the verge of absurdity. The.”—Edwards. 

The Opera Season cannot fail. See At the Opera.— 
Anon. 

The orang-outang in the big iron cage lashed to the 
sheep-pen began the discussion. See Bimi.— 
Kipling. 

The orb I like is not the one. See Quiet Eye, The.— 
Cook. 

The orchard is a rosy cloud. See May Song, A.— 
Pratt. 

The orchard trees are white. See Apple Blossoms.— 
Anon. 

The orchard-lands of Long Ago! See Orchard-lands 
of Long Ago, The.—Riley. 

The orchards that climb the hillsides. See Flower 
from the Catskills, A.—E. W. 

The “Orchids” were as tough a crowd. See Bohe¬ 
mians of Boston, The.—Burgess. 

The ordeal’s fata! trumpet sounded. See Adelgitha.— 
Campbell. 

The origin of this distressful thing was this. See Facts 
in the Case of the Great Beef Contract, The (Mark 
Twain’s “Great Beef Contract”).—-Clemens. 

The originality of the Pucelle, the secret of her success. 
See Joan of Arc.—Michelet. 

The osprey sails above the sound. See Fisherman’s 
Hymn, The.—Wilson. 

The other day a lady, accompanied by her son, a very 
small boy. See Bald-headed Man, The.—( Little 
Rock Gazette.) 

The other day a stout woman, armed with an umbrella. 
See Banging a Sensational Novelist.—-Anon. 

The other day as I rambled down. See Scenes at the 
Police Court.—Anon. 

The other day going back to Cleveland. See What 
Three Women Said.—Anon. 

The other day I paid a call on Miss Dolly Foster. See 
Dolly Dialogues, The (Cordial Relations).—Hope. 

The other day I was at Tom McGinnis’ house, and he | 
had some company. See Santa Claus.—Anon. 


The other day, while waiting at a desolate way station 
in Illinois. See Boy Kept Step, The.—Read. 

The other evening, old Mr. and Mrs. Coffin, who live 
on Brush Street. See How Mr. Coffin Spelled it. 
—(Detroit Free Press.) 

The other evening there was a little company up on 
Joralemon Street. See Society Boy, The.—Anon. 

The other girls and boys in school. See Speech for a 
Small Girl.—Anon. 

The other morning at breakfast. See Mr. Stiver’s 
Horse.—Bailey. 

The other morning two gentlemen, looking out of a 
window. See Street Crowd, A.—Anon. 

The other morning while Mr.-. See Facts 

Concerning “Jay Gou’.d.”—Anon. 

The outmost crowd have heard a sound. See Rokeby 
(Death of Bertram, The).—Scott. 

The overworked scribe of the Mudville Gazette. See 
Constant Reader, A.—Mix. 

The Owl and the Pussy-cat went to sea. See Owl and 
the Pussy-cat, The.—Lear. 

The owl is abroad, the bat, the toad. See Gipsies 
Metamorphoses, The (Song).—Jonson. 

The owl, they say, is a very nice bird. See Owl’s 
Court, The.—Agave. 

The oxen are such clever beasts. See Oxen, The.— 
Anon. 

The packs are on, the cinches tight. See Line Up, 
Brave Boys.—Garland. 

The pains I have taken none ever could guess. See 
Gay Christmas Ball, A.—Denton. 

The painter employed by the King’s command. See 
Our Expanding Republic (Retrospect, A.)—Wat- 
terson. 

The palace gardens shone with flowers. See Angel 
Court.—W eatherly. 

The palace of the Duke was decorated for a banquet. 
See Silver Cup, The.—Anon. 

The palaces and domes of Carthage were burning with 
the splendors of noon. See Regulus to the Car¬ 
thaginians (Curse of Regulus, The).—Kellogg. 

The pale moon hid her face; the glittering stars. See 
Lightkeeper’s Daughter, The.—Goodwin. 

The pale primrose her petals fain would hide. See 
Oh, Golden-rod.—Jaquith. 

The pale, transparent Autumn mists. See Yard in 
December, The.—Ficke. 

The pall of the past with its woes and joys. See Long 
Ago.—Denison. 

The pall was settled. He who slept beneath. See 
Absalom (David’s Lament for Absalom).—Willis. 

The palm—the vine—the cedar—each hath power. 
See Olive Tree. The.—Hemans. 

The panting city cried to the Sea. See City and the 
Sea. The.—Longfellow. 

The papers blew a perfect gale. See That Autograph 
Sale.—Coates. 

The Paradis? of Dante consists of nine heavens. See 
Divine Comedy, Story of the (Paradise, The).— 
Rabb. 

The Parliament of Ireland!—of that assembly I have 
a parental recollection. See Catholic Question, 
The.—Grattan. 

The parson goes about his daily ways. See Parson’s 
Comforter, The.—Langbridge. 

The partial power that to the female race. See "Book 
in a Bustle, A.”— (Punch.) 

The particular political stripe of municipal administra¬ 
tion. See Pulpit and Politics, The.—Park- 
hurst. 

The pa’son’s been preachin’ ’bout heaven. See Maria 
in Heaven.—Kimball. 

The pass is barred! "Fall back,” cries the guard; 
“cross not the French frontier.” See Obsequies 
of David the Painter.—Mahony. 

The passion of despair is quelled at last. See Patience. 
—Lazarus. 

The passionate chapter in our history known as the 
Abolition Agitation. See Rub-a-dub Agitation, 
A.—Curtis. 

The past, as it were, rises before me like a dream. See 
Col. Ingersoll’s Remarkable Vision.—Ingersoll. 

The past century has not, the century to come will not 
have, a figure so grand. See Abraham Lincoln.— 
Castelar. 

The past rises before me like a dream. See Vision of 
War, The.—Ingersoll. 

The Past walks here, noiseless, unasked, alone. See 
Old Street, An.—Cloud. 

The pastor sits in his easy-chair. See Pastor’s Reverie, 
The.—Gladden. 

The pastor’s little daughter. See Old, Old Story, The. 
—Dallas. 


857 








The pastry 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The pastry was delicious, and I wanted it myself. See 
Ant an Engineer, The.—Anon. 

The path by which we twain did go. See Dead Friend, 
The.—Tennyson. 

The path of duty is the way of glory. See Ode on 
the Death of the Duke of Wellington (Path of 
Duty, The).—Tennyson. 

The path of sorrow, and that path alone. See Path of 
Sorrow, The.—Cowper. 

The path through which that lovely twain. See 
Prometheus Unbound.—Shelley. 

The path we planned beneath October’s Sky. See 
Path, The.—Bryant. 

The pathway of the sinking moon. See On the Sea.— 
Taylor. 

The pathways of thy land are little changed. See 
Pathways in Palestine.—Anon. 

The patter of feet was on the stair. See One of God’s 
Little Heroes.—Preston. 

The peaceful western wind. See “Peaceful western 
wind. The.”—Campion. 

The pent sea throbbed as if racked with pain. See 
Storm in Venice, A.—Miller. 

The people always conquer. They always must 
conquer. See People Always Conquer, The.— 
Everett. 

The people of a certain locality in Japan. See Monu¬ 
ment of Trees, A.—McCaskey. 

The people who have been abroad. See Just Tribute, 
A.—Eliot. 

The peple of vdyr realmis, son, sayd he. See .Eneid, 
The (Destiny of Rome, The).—Virgil. 

The perceptive faculties are those by which. See 
Mental Faculties, The.—Wayland. 

The Percy [or Perse] out of Northumberland. See 
Hunting of the Cheviot, The.—Anon. 

The perfect world by Adam trod. See Dedication 
Hymn.—Willis. 

The period for a new election. See Farewell Address. 
—Washington. 

The Perse [or Percy] out of Northumberland. See 
Hunting of the Cheviot, The.—Anon. 

The Phantom isles are fading from the sea. See 
Phantom Isles, The.—Monsell. 

The phantom sea serenely blue. See Phantoms, The. 
—(Baltimore News.) 

The pickaninny was alone in bed. See Pickaninny, 
The.—Anon. 

The picnic at Selina—it covered lots o’ ground. See 
Picnic at Selina, The.—Stanton. 

The picture being unfinished, gentlemen. See Portrait 
and the Critics, The.—Anon. 

The pig and the hen, they both got in one pen. See 
Pig and the Hen, The.—Cary. 

The pilgrim and stranger who through the day. See 
Charity.—Whittier. 

The Pilgrim Fathers, after ten months of sickness. 
See How the Pilgrims Gave Thanks.—Anon. 

The Pilgrim Fathers—where are they? See Pilgrim 
Fathers, The.—Pierpont. 

The Pilgrim of Plymouth has a character in history 
distinct from any other. See Puritan and the 
Pilgrim, The.—Hoar. 

The pine tree grew in the wood. See Three Trees.— 
Crandall. 

The pines were dark on Ramoth Hill. See My Play¬ 
mate.—Whittier. 

The pines, which are distinguished from all other trees. 
See Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Pine Tree.— 
Youngs. 

The pipe came safe, and welcome, too. See To C. F. 
Bradford.—Lowell. 

The pipe of the quail in the Stubblefield. See In Time 
of Peace.—Burdette. 

The pipe, with solemn interposing puff. See Con¬ 
versation (Pernicious W’eed!).—Cowper. 

The pipers are not made of pipes. See Funny, Isn’t 
it?—Anon. 

The place of crucifixion was a space upon the top. See 
Ben-Hur (Crucifixion, The).—Wallace. 

The place was worthy of such a trial. See Warren 
Hastings (Trial of Warren Hastings, The).— 
Macaulay. 

The plague has come among us. See Letter and an 
Answer, A.— (Punch.) 

The plain people have reason to be proud of their 
appellation. See Plain People, The.—Anon. 

The plan is fixed; I fluctuate no more. See Soliloquy 
of Arnold.—Jones. 

The plant worship which holds so prominent a place. 
See Plant Worship.— (Gentleman’s Magazine.) 

The play is done—the curtain drops. See End of the 
Play, The.—Thackeray. 


The play was done; the mimic lovers of the stage. See 
Epilogue at Wallack’s, An.—Wayland. 

The plea of emotional insanity or transitory mania. 
See “Plea of emotional insanity or transitory 
mania. The.”—Hoffman. 

The pleasant town of Hinckley. See Modem Hero, A. 
—Verey. 

The pleasure I receive from the warbling of the birds 
in the spring. See Humming Bird, The.—St. 
John. 

The plowman homeward plods his weary way. See 
Transpositions.—Fox. 

The pobble who has no toes. See Pobble Who Has no 
Toes, The.—Lear. 

The poem of the Universe. See Poem of the Universe, 
The.—Weldon. 

The poet Dante, in the thirty-fifth year of his life. See 
Divine Comedy, Story of the (Hell, The).—Rabb. 

The poet dreamt of Heaven! See Poet Dreamt of 
Heaven, The.—Anon. 

The poet is forever young. See Lyric Seer, The.— 
Markham. 

The poet leads us,—as I think. See With Sa’di in the 
Garden (Book of Love, The).—Arnold. 

The poet or priest who told us this. See There’s a 
Silver Lining to Every Cloud.—Cook. 

The poet plowman wrote, long years ago See Ode to 
Burns.—Anon. 

The poet stood in the sombre town See Poet in the 
City, The.—Liddell. 

The poet tells us, in pathetic cadence. See True 
Greatness.—King. 

The poet thus shut out from the busy world. See 
Shakespeare.—Bryan. 

The poet, to whose mighty heart. See Resignation. 
—Arnold. 

The poetry of earth is never dead. See On the Grass¬ 
hopper and Cricket.—Keats. 

The poet’s secret I must know. See Poet’s Secret, 
The.—Stoddard. 

The poets sing that love is blind. See Song.— 
(Wellexley Magazine.) 

The point is turned; the twilight shadow fills. See 
Between the Rapids.—Lampman. 

The point of honor has been deemed of use. See 
Conversation (Duelling).—Cowper 

The point of one white star is quivering still. See 
Prometheus Unbound (Sunrise).—Shelley. 

The point of view from which I shall speak is that of 
total abstinence. See Public Opinion.—Farrar. 

The polis was in my cabin to-day. See Shaugraun, The 
(Conn’s Description of the Fox Hunt).—Bouci- 
cault. 

The political prosperity which this country has 
attained. See Character of Washington, The 
(Evil of Disunion).—Webster. 

The poplar drops beside the way. See Spring at the 
Capital.—Allen. 

The poplars and the ancient elms. See Theocritus.— 
Gosse. 

The poplars are felled; farewell to the shade. See 
Poplar Field, The.—Cowper. 

The populace was stirred, and here and there. See 
Herod.—Brooks. 

The population of Ireland has doubled since the union. 
See Repeal of the Union, 18 4, The.—Sheil. 

The port of peace and Perfect Day. See Bark of True 
Love, The.—Taylor. 

The ports of death are sins; of life, good deeds. See 
Life and Death.—Jonson. 

The post-boy drove with fierce career. See Alice Fell; 
or. Poverty.—Wordsworth. 

The potter stood at his daily work. See Bit of Pottery, 
A.—Anon. 

The pouring music, soft and strong. See Song.—Myers. 

The Power that led his chosen, by pillared cloud and 
flame. See Oliver’s Advice.—Blacker. 

The power to converse well is a very great charm. See 
“Power to converse well is a very great charm. 
The.”—Ruskin. 

The practical way for Christians to reform the theatre. 
See Practical Way for Christians to Reform the 
Theatre, The.— (Baltimore American.) 

The prairie stretched as smooth as a floor. See 
Burning Prairie, The.—Cary. 

The prayers I make will then be sweet indeed. See 
Sonnet: “The prayers I make.” etc.—Michelangelo. 

The preacher’s evening task was done. See Mr. 
Beecher and the Waifs.—Anon. 

The preparations were now complete. See Ben-Hur 
(Chariot Race, The).—Wallace. 

The presences of woods informed his soul. See Words¬ 
worth.—Betts. 


858 





FIRST LINE IXDEX 


The Republicans 


The present age, exultant over the many recent 
wonderful triumphs. See “Present age, exultant 
over the many recent wonderful triumphs. 
The.”—Minton. 

The Present Age. In those brief words. See Present 
Age, The.—Channing. 

The present attitude of the temperance cause is a 
bewilderment in many minds. See Our Regi¬ 
ments of Reform.—Talmage. 

The pretty black eyes of a little field-mouse. See Cat¬ 
tails.—Anon. 

The pretty black squirrel lives up in a tree. See 
Squirrel, The.—Howitt. 

The primwrose in the she.ide do blow. See Rlack- 
mwure Maidens.—Barnes. 

The princess was queenly and fair in the face. See 
Jester, The.—Anon. 

The princess with her women-train without the fort 
he found. See Congal.—Ferguson. 

The principal earthly work of John Wycliffe. See 
John Wycliffe and the Bible.—Storrs. 

The prison for felons awaiting trial in th? civil courts 
was in Castle Rushen. See Deemster, The 
(Father and Son).—Caine. 

The prisoner being arraigned, and the formalities. See 
Trapping a Witness.—Anon. 

The problem before the convention. See Constitution, 
The —Henry. 

The products of the whole world are, or soon may be 
found. See Future of Our Language, The.— 
Bethune. 

The project of connecting the planting of trees. See 
“Project of connecting.” etc.—Mann. 

The promise of these fragrant flowers See With a 
Spray of Apple Blossoms.—Learned 

“The proper way for a man to pray/’ See Prayer of 
Cyrus Brown, The.—Foss. 

The proposed religious amendment to the Constitution. 
See “Proposed religious amendment to the 
constitution. The.”—Noble. 

The prosecuting attorney sat down. See Foraging or 
Stealing?—Anon. 

The proudest motto for the young! See There’s no 
Such Word as Fail.—Neal. 

The proudest now is but my peer. See Poor Voter on 
Election Day, The.—Whittier. 

The Prussian eagle in its eyrie screamed. See Jena.— 
Saltus. 

The pulpit plagiarist ruins his style. See “Pulpit 
plagiarist ruins his style. The.”—Buckley. 

The pump, straight as a soldier stands. See Town 
Pump, The.—Bungay. 

The pupil of the eye is the portal through which light. 
See “Pupil of the eve is the portal through which 
light. The.”—March. 

The “pure dairy milk” which the Texas milkman 
ladled out to his customers. See Texas Cow, The. 
—(Texas Si'tings.) 

The pure, the bright, the beautiful. See Things that 
never Die.—Dickens. 

The pure white snow is falling fast. See Christmas 
Eve.—Fuller. 

The Purgatory of Dante is situated on a mountain top. 
See Purgatory, The.—Rabb. 

The Puritan came to America seeking freedom to 
worship God See Puritan, The.—Curtis. 

The Puritan fenced in his Sabbath. See Puritan 
Sabbath, The.—Van Dyke. 

The Puritan Spring Beauties stood freshly clad for 
church. See Spring Beauties. The.—Cone. 

The Puritans are the patriarchs of liberty. See 
Tribute to Lincoln.—Castelar. 

The Puritans were men who [or whose minds had] 
derived a peculiar character. See Milton (Puri¬ 
tans, The).—Macaulay. 

The Puritans were the most remarkable body of men. 
See Milton (Puritans, The).—Macaulay. 

The purple shadows dreamingly. See Summer Night, 
A.—-Chapman. 

The quality of bribery is deep stained. See Parody 
for a Reformed Parliament.— (Punch.) 

The quality of mercy is not strained. See Merchant 
of Venice, The (Quality of Mercy, The).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

The quarry whence thy form majestic sprung. See 
Washington’s Statue.—Tuckerman. 

The Queen arrived in the hall of death. See Execution 
of Queen Mary.—Lamartine. 

The Queen becoming conscious of the fact. See Idylls 
of the King (King Arthur and Queen Guinevere). 
—Tennyson. 

The queen is proud on her throne See My Little 
Lady.—Westwood. 


The Queen is taking a drive to-day. See Queen's 
Last Ride, The.—Wilcox. 

The Queen looked up, and said. See Idylls of the 
King (Foolish Virgins, The).—Tennyson. 

The Queen sat in her balcony. See Gil, the Toreador 
—Webb. 

The Queen’s in the hall where the torches are bright. 
See Page and the Maid of Honor, The.—Goethe. 

The question arises in my mind, what are we going to 
do this evening? See Boy's Meeting, A.—Mc¬ 
Bride. 

The question is, shall we confide the public education 
of youth to a clerical party. See Practical 
Religious Instruction.—Hugo. 

The question of the desolation of the American home 
and its protection. See American Home, The.— 
Bain. 

The question, the comprehensive question, is. .See 
Contentment of Europe, The.—Kossuth. 

The quiet graves of our country’s braves. See Decora¬ 
tion Day.—Wilcox. 

The Rabbi Nathan, two score years and ten. See Two 
Rabbis, The.—Whittier. 

The race had been fixed for ten o’clock. See Boat 
Race, The.—Grant. 

The race of yore. See I.ady of the Lake, The.—Scott. 

The race problem was launched in the South. See 
Negro and the South, The.—Anon. 

The radiant ruler of the year. See On the Winter 
Solstice.—Akenside. 

The rain had fallen; the poet arose. See Poet’s Song 
The.—Tennyson. 

The rain has ceased, and in my room. See After 
the Rain.—Aldrich. 

The rain is o’er. How dense and bright. See After a 
Summer Shower.—Norton. 

The rain is pouring down. See "It’s an Ill Wind.”— 
K’tchel. 

The rain is raining all around. See Rain.—Stevenson. 

The rain set early in to-night. See Porphyria's Lover. 
—Browning. 

The rainbow on the ocean. See So Slow to Die.— 
Woodberry. 

The rain-drops plash, and the dead leaves fall. See 
Departure of the Swallows.—Gautier. 

The Ram. the Bull, the Heavenly Tvrins. See Signs of 
the Zodiac.—Anon. 

The rays of warning sunlight steal. See Enter den 
Linden.—Peck. 

The reader must picture a stout, big-bellied, short- 
haired recruiting officer. See Dutch Recruiting 
Officer, A.—Anon. 

The reason why I'm single now. «o many people want 
to know. See Old Maid’s Warning. An.—Caslin 

The recent remarkable experience of Professor Von 
Schweinhund. See Remarkable Experience, A.— 
Anon. 

The reception is in full blast. See Nellie Walsh.— 
Barnard. 

The reception, manner of attendance. See Spectator, 
The iCoverley Household, The).—Addison. 

The recluse hermit ofttimes more doth know. See 
Eclogue. December 26, 1613 (“Recluse hermit, 
etc.).—Donne. 

The red room with the giant bed. See To Minnie.— 
Stevenson. 

The red rose petals droop and fall. See Quatrain. 
—(M omingside .) 

The red rose whispers of passion. See White Ro«e, 4 
—O'Reilly. 

The red tiled towers of the old Chateau. See Chateau 
Papineau.—Harrison. 

The red-clad fishers row and creep. See Como — 
Miller. 

The reek it rose, and the flame it flew. See Fire of 
Frendraught. The.—Anon. 

The regular auctioneer was ill, and in the emergency 
the auctioneer from the horse stables. See Horse 
Auctioneer, The.—Anon. 

The reign of Napoleon may be defined as the old world 
reconstructed. See Reign of Napoleon, The.— 
I.amartine. 

The reivers they stole Fair Annie. See Fair Annie.— 
Anon. 

The religion of Mr. Rudyard Kipling and his men. 
See Kipling’s Religion.—Anon. 

The renowned Wouter (or Walter) Van Twiller was 
descended. See Knickerbocker History of New 
York (Dutch Governor, The).—Irving 

The representative* of the people assembled in solemn 
conclave. See Bel! of Liberty. The.—Headley. 

The Repubhcans of the Cnited States. See Plumed 
Knight, The —Ingersoll. 


859 





The resolute 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The resolute, clear-headed, broad-minded men of the 
South. See At the Boston Banquet (Regard for 
the Negro Race).—Grady. 

The resolution proposed providing the means to defray 
the expense of a mission. See On the Greek 
Revolution (America’s Duty to Greece).—Clay. 

The restless clock is ticking out. See Christmas 
Lullaby, A.—Weir. 

The Rev. Abijah Blackmore had received a letter. See 
Early Start, An.—Chaffee. 

The Reverend Eliab Eliezer. See Eliab Ehezer.— 
Reed 

The Rev. Mr. Mulkittle. having successfully organized 
a church fair. See “Calls.”—Anon. 

The Rhine is running deep and red. See Island of the 
Scots, The.—Aytoun. 

The rhyme o’ The Raggedy Man’s at’s best. See 
Lugubrious Whing-Whang, The.—Riley. 

The rich man sat in his father’s seat. See This Side 
and That.—MacDonald. 

The rich man’s son inherits lands. See Heritage, The. 
—Lowell. 

The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature. 
See Dedication of a Public Library.—Anon. 

The richest garments round her careless thrown. See 
Last Tudor, The.—Hawes. 

The ring, so worn as you behold. See Marriage Ring, 
A.—Crabbe. 

The ringing laugh of a joyous heart, and the glance of a 
smiling eye. See Afterwards.—Stevenson. 

The ripe red berries of the wintergreen. See Wood 
of Chancellorsville, The.—German. 

The rising moon has hid the stars. See Endymion.— 
Longfellow. 

The river Avon at Rugby is a slow and not very clear 
stream. See Tom Brown’s School Days (Keeper, 
The).—Hughes. 

The river lifts its morning mist. See Morning Miracle, 
A.—Dickinson. 

The river widens to a path'ess sea. See On a Ferry 
Boat.—Burton. 

The rivers that sweep to the sea. See Song of the 
Pagan Princess.—Morton. 

The road is left that once was trod. See Old Road, 
The.—Very. 

The road was straight, the afternoon was gray. See 
Beyond the Haze.— -(Cornhill Magazine.) 

The roar of Niagara dies away. See H. W L.—Nichol. 

The roar of waters! From the headlong height. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Fall of Terni, The).— 
Byron. 

The robin and the red-breast. See Rule for Birds’ 
Nesters, A.—Anon. 

The robin chants when the thrush is dumb. See 
To-morrow.—Coates. 

The robin repeats his two beautiful words. See Words. 
—Holland 

The robins sang in the orchard, the buds into blossoms 
grew. »See Marguerite.—Whittier. 

The Rock-a-by Lady from Hushaby Street. See 
Rock-a-by Lady, The.—Field. 

The rocky ledge runs far into the sea. See Lighthouse, 
The.—Longfellow. 

The rocky nook with hill-tops three. See Boston.— 
Emerson. 

The Roman knight who rode. See Bell, The.— 
Taylor. 

The Roman sentinel stood helmed and tall. See 
Widow of Nain, The.—Willis. 

The roof it has a lazy time. See Lazy Roof, The.— 
Burgess. 

The rook’s nest do rock on the tree-top. See Lullaby. 
—Barnes. 

The room is ablaze with countless lights, the faces 
catch the glow. See Reproach, A.—Mines. 

The room occupied by the prisoner was nothing like 
one of our modern penetentiary system. See 
Joam Dacosta.—Verne. 

The room was cold and cheerless and bare. See Drink¬ 
ing-house over the Way, The.—Nutting. 

The room was large, but with a low ceiling. See 
“Gentlemen, the King!”—Barr. 

The rose aloft in sunny air. See Rose and Root.— 
Piatt. 

The rose had been washed, just washed in a shower. 
See Rose, The.—Cowper. 

The rose in the garden slipped her bud. See Fancy 
from Fontenelle, A.—Dobson. 

The rose is fairest when ’tis budding new. See Lady 
of the Lake, The (“Rose is fairest,” etc.).—Scott. 

The rose is praised for its beaming face. See Grass.— 
Fawcett. 


The rose is weeping for her love. See Festus (Helen’s 
Song).—Bailey. 

The rose looks out in the valley. See Nightingale, The. 
—Vicente. 

The rose o’er crag or vale. See Rose, The.—Anon. 

The rose that all are praising. See “Rose that all are 
praising, The.”—Bayly. 

The rose that blushes like the mom. See Sentimental. 
—Coleridge. 

The rose thou gav’st at parting. See Rose Thou 
Gav’st, The.—Swain. 

The rose upon my balcony, the morning air perfuming. 
See Vanity Fair (Rose upon My Balcony, The). 
—Thackeray. 

The rose was rich in bloom on Sharon’s plain. See 
Hebrew Mother, The.—Hemans. 

The rose was sick and smiling died. See Funeral 
Rites of the Rose.—Herrick. 

The roses are a regal troop. See Bluebells of New 
England, The.—Aldrich. 

The roses are gone, little one. See Next Year.— 
Anon. 

The roses of yesteryear. See At Twilight.—Rens¬ 
selaer. 

The rosy clouds float overhead. See Sandman, The.— 
Vandegrift. 

The rosy mouth and rosy toe. See Bunch of Roses, 
A.—Tabb. 

The rosy musk-mallow blooms where the south wind 
blows. See Rosy Musk-mallow, The.—Gillington. 

The rowan tree grows by the tower foot. See Ballad 
of the Mad Ladye.—MacLean. 

The Rowfant books, how fair they show. See Row- 
fant Books, The.—Lang. 

The royal banners forward go. See Passion Sunday.— 
Fortunatus. 

The royal feast was done; the King. See Fool’s 
Prayer, The.—Sill. 

The ruddy poppies bend and bow. See To Diane.—■ 
Hay. 

The ruddy sun was setting behind the Murchian hills. 
See Bell of Zanora, The.—Rose. 

The ruling passion, be it what it will. See Moral 
Essays 'Ruling Passion, The).—Pope. 

The rumseller sat in his den alone. See Rumseller’s 
Song, The.—Denison. 

The Sabbath day was ending in a village by the sea. 
See Drowning Singer, The.—Farningham. 

The Sabbath was made for man—not to be contemned 
and forgotten. See Sabbath, The.—Freling- 
huysen. 

The Sabbath's sun was setting low. See Child and the 
Angels, The.—Swain. 

The sad and solemn night. See Hymn to the North 
Star.—Bryant. 

The saddest days of all the year. See Year in Paradise, 
A.—-Cross. 

The saddest thing in the Union meetings of 1859. See 
Is This All?—Phillips. 

The saddest thing that can befall a soul See “Saddest 
thing that can befall a soul, The.”—Smith. 

The sage Ceridwen was the wife. See Cauldron of 
Ceridwen, The.—Peacock. 

The sage, who said he should be proud. See On Seeing 
Verses Written upon Windows at Inns.—Swift. 

The sailing Pine; the Cedar, proud and tall. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Kinds of Trees to Plant).— 
Spenser. 

The sailor says, “I like your rig.” See How They Pop 
the Question.—Anon. 

The sainted Isle of old. See Shan Van Vocht.—Anon. 

The sale and use of intoxicating beverages is a most 
potent force. See Churches and Saloons.—Hurst. 

The saleswoman’s form was like this. See Justice.— 
Wood. 

The saloon is an agent for the corruption of the morals 
of the home. See Saloon in Relation to Morals, 
The.—Pentecost. 

The salt wind blows upon my cheek. See In the Sea.— 
Rich. 

The same majestic pine is lifted high. See Under the 
Pine.—Hayne. 

The same old baffling questions! O my friend. See 
“Same old baffling,” etc.—Whittier. 

The same year calls, and one goes hence with another. 
See Farewell.—Swinburne. 

The sanguine sunrise, with his meteor eyes. See 
Cloud, The.—Shelley. 

The sapphire walls of Paradise. See Bridal in Eden, 
The.—Otterson. 

The savior, and not the slayer, he is the braver man. 
See David Shaw, Hero.—Buckham. 


860 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The silent 


The Saviour, bowed beneath his cross. See Why the 
Robin’s Breast is Red.—Randall. 

The Saviour’s feast was spread. Group after group. 

See Blind Communicant, The.—Lee. 

The Saxon Edniund reigned o’er Albion’s isle. See 
Death of King Edmund, The.—Sigourney. 

The Saxons had met, and the banquet was spread. 

See O’Kavanaugh, The.—Shea. 

The saying of an ancient sage. See Life’s Lessons.— 
Anon. 

The scaffold had been awkwardly erected. See His¬ 
tory of England (Execution of Sir Thomas More, 
The).—F roude. 

The scarlet tide of summer’s life. See To An Autumn 
Leaf.—Mathews. 

The scene is a turret chamber of Torquilstone Castle. 

See Ivanhoe (Scene from "Ivanhoe”).—Scott. 

The scene is laid in the mountainous regions of Georgia. 
See How a Blacksmith Was Converted.— 
Anon. 

The scene is that fair island, which its discoverer, 
Columbus, described. See Sinking of the Merri- 
mac. The.—Hall. 

The scene of the following anecdote is laid in a drawing¬ 
room in Paris. See Circumstantial Evidence.— 


Anon. 

The scene opens on a clear, crisp morning. See Cut 
Behind.—Talmage. 

The scene opens with a view of the great natural bridge 
in Virginia. See One Niche the Highest.-—Bur- 
ritt. 

The scene was in a drawing-room in West Brompton. 
See And She Was His.—Anon. 

The scene was more beautiful far to the eye. See 
Light-house, The.—Moore. 

The scent of a blossom from Eden! See In the Air.— 
Larcom. 

The scent of bramble sweets the air. See Sleeping 
Beauty, The.—Ramal. 

The scepter that rules mankind—who holds it? See 
Mission of the Press, The.—Shuman. 

The schades of night vas falling down. See Ein 
Deutsches Lied.—Anon. 

The school was out, and down the street. See Boy’s 
Promise, A.—Cooper. 

The school-house of Glendalough. See Scene in an 
Irish School.—Griffin. 

The schoolmaster was weary. See Schoolmaster’s 
Sleep, The.—Davis. 

The scimetar was sharp, through air it flew. See 
Edgeworth.—Sabine. 

The sea at the crag’s base brightens. See Exiles, The. 
—( Chambers’ Journal.) 

The sea crashed over the grim gray rocks. See Flotsam 
and Jetsam.— {All the Year Round.) 

The sea hath many thousand sands. See Advice to a 
Lover.—Anon. 

The sea is a jovial comrade. See Wind and the Sea, 
The.—Taylor. 

The sea is calling, calling! See Fisherman’s Summons, 
The.—Anon. 

The sea is calm to-night. See Dover Beach.— 
Arnold. 

“The sea is His, and He made it.” See Beauty of the 
Sea, The.—Anon. 

The sea it is deep, the sea it is wide. See Sea, The.— 
Howitt. 

The sea rolls vaguely, and the stars are dumb. See 
-EolianvHarp.—Allingham. 

The sea swings owre the slants of sand. See Ballad of 
Dead Men’s Bay, The.—Swinburne. 

The sea tells something, but it tells not all. See 
Reserve.—Townsend. 

The sea! the sea! the open sea! See Sea, The.— 
Procter. 

The sea was bright, and the bark rode well. See 
White Squall, The.—Procter. 

The sea-bound landsman, looking back to shore. See 


John Brown.—Koopman. 

The sea-gull is so sorry! See Sorrowful Sea-gull, The. 
—( Child-World.) 

The seal is set. Now welcome, thou dread power! 
See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Dying Gladiator, 


The).—Byron. 

The seas are quiet when the winds give o er. See Old 
Age and Death.—Waller. _ 

The season of music was closing. See White Lily, A. 
—Wright. 

The Second Charles of England. See Knighting of the 
Sirloin of Beef by Charles the Second, The.— 


Anon. 

The secret then is mine. I have sworn the oath. 
Carpenter and his Apprentice, The.—Anon. 


See 


The secretary stood alone. Modern degeneracy had 
not reached him. See Character of Mr. Pitt.— 
Grattan. 

The Senator from Massachusetts has thought proper 
to cast the first stone. See On Mr. Foot’s Reso¬ 
lution in the U. S. Senate, Jan. 21, 1830 (South 
Carolina and the Union).—Hayne. 

The sensation novel has had its day. See “Sensa¬ 
tion novel has had its day, The.”—McCarthy. 

The sensation of being at work again. See Mark Twain 
Edits an Agricultural Paper.—Clemens. 

The sense of national honor beats high in the American 
heart. See Aspirations of the American People.— 
Hunter. 

The sense of the world is short. See Eros.—Emerson. 

The seraph Andiel, faithful found. See Paradise 
Lost (Faithful Angel, The).—Milton. 

The setting of a great hope is like the setting of the 
sun. See Hyperion (“Setting of a great hope, 
The”).—Longjellow. 

The setting sun, with dying beams. See To-morrow.— 
Anon. 

The “seven days” fight was ended. See Tobe’s Monu¬ 
ment.—Kilham. 

The shabby street-cars jingling go. See On a Forgotten 
By-way.—Watrous. 

The shades of eve come slowly down. See Highland 
Stranger, The.-—Scott. 

The shades of eve had crossed the glen. See Pretty 
Girl of Loch Dan, The.—Ferguson. 

The shades of night ’ad closed round Seving Dials. 
See Jail-bird’s Story, A.—Overton. 

The shades of night were falling fast. See Excelsior. 
—Longfellow. 

The shades of night were falling fast. See Proclivior. 
— {Punch.) 

The shadow of the mountain falls athwart the lowly 
plain. See “Follow Me.”—Ryan. 

The Shadow of the Rock! See Shadow of the Rock, 
The.—Faber. 

The shadow on the dial’s face. See Sun-dial.—Mont¬ 
gomery. 

The shadows and the firelight gleams. See Poet and 
Painter.—Hudson. 

The shadows deepen down the woodland road. See 
N ightf all .—Carver. 

The shadows gather round me, while you are in the 
sun. See Next of Kin.—Rossetti. 

The shadows lay along Broadway. See Unseen 
Spirits.—Willis. 

The shadows lengthen, night draws on. See Shadows 
Lengthen, The.—Anon. 

The shadows of night were a cornin’ down swift. See 
Higher.—Anon. 

The shadows of the evening hours. See Evening 
Hymn.—Procter. 

The Shakers is the strangest religious sex I ever met. 
See Artemus Ward Visits the Shakers.—Brown. 

The shape. alone let others prize. See “Shape alone 
let others prize, The.”—Akenside. 

The shapes that frowned before the eyes. See Eclipse 
of Faith, The.—Woolsey. 

The sheep-bell tolleth curfew-time. See Evening 
Scene, The.—Patmore. 

The shepherds went their hasty way. See Christmas 
Carol, A.—Coleridge. 

The ship is sinking, slowly sinking, and no help is near! 
See Stewart Holland.—Fobes. 

The ship may sink. See Athanasia.—Ames. 

The ship’s bell tolled, and slowly o’er the deck. See 
Sailor’s Funeral, The.—Sigourney. 

The ships glide in at the harbor’s mouth. See Song 
of Summer, A.—Sangster. 

The shore is lined with anchored ships. See “Shore is 
lined with anchored ships, The.”—Jackson. 

The showers fall as softly. See High and Low.— 
Goodale. 

The shroud is yet unspread. See Young Queen, The.— 
Browning. 

The sight of a faded flower pressed in a book brings 
back. See Remembrance.—Haweis. 

The signs of the times are full of promise. See Words 
of Cheer.—Barker. 

The silent and deserted street. See "Bring out Your 
Dead.”—Lawless. 

The silent bird is hid in the boughs. See Song.— 
Gilbert. 

The silent city steeped and bathed itself in rose- 
tints. See Fall of the Pemberton Mill, The.— 
Phelps. 

The silent heart, which grief assails. See Hymn to 
Contentment, A.—Parnell. 


861 




The silver 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The silver birch is a dainty lady. See Child’s Song in 
Spring.—Nesbit. 

The silver rain, the golden rain. See Rain-drops, The. 
—-Colton. 

The similarity of man is very perplexing. See 
Thoughts at a Party.—Dallas. 

The singer stood in a blaze of light. See Encore.— 
Anon. 

The single eye, the daughter of the light. See To the 
Authoress of “Our Village.”—Kingsley. 

The sinking of the ship Merrimac at the mouth of San¬ 
tiago harbor. See Sinking of the Merrimac, The.— 
Hobson. 

The sinking sun is taking leave. See Summer Evening, 
The.—Clare. 

The situation at the R— Western Agency was des¬ 
perate. See Gordon’s Reprieve.—Anon. 

The sixth was August, being rich arrayed. See Faerie 
Queene. Th * (August}.—Spenser. 

The skies are low, the winds are slow. See Under the 
Blue.—Browne. 

The skies have sunk, and hid the upper snow. See 
Ite Domum Saturie, Venit Hesperus.—Clough. 

The skies they were ashen and sober. See Ulalume.— 
Poe. 

The skilful listener, he, methinks, may hear. See 
Skilful Listener, The.—Cheney. 

The skipper stood on the windy pier. See Skipper’s 
Love; or. The Tide Will Turn, The.—Barr. 

The sky had a gray, gray face. See Little White Sun, 
The.—Huestis. 

The sky is a drinking-cup. See Sky, The.—Stoddard. 

The sky is blue, the sea is bright , the sunny day is long. 
See Boston Grasshopper, The.—Gregg. 

The sky is changed; and such a change! See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Storm, The;.-—Byron. 

“The sky is clouded, the rocks are bare.” See Fate.— 
Harte. 

The sky is dark and the hills are white. See Norse 
Lullaby.—Field. 

The sky is full of clouds to-day. See Clouds.— 
Sherman. 

The sky is low, the clouds are mean. See Beclouded.— 
Dickinson. 

The sky is overcast. See Night Piece, A.—Words¬ 
worth. 

The sky is ruddy in the east. See Ship-builders, The. 
—Whittier. 

The sky was clear, the stars were bright. See Running 
Away.—Anon. 

The sky was dark and gloomy. See Close of a Rainy 
Day, The.—Dole. 

The skylark’s nest among the grass. See Birds’ 
Nests.—Anon. 

The slant sun falls at shut of day. See Our Comrades. 
—Anon. 

The slave system is one of constant danger. See 
Irrepressible Conflict, The.—Seward. 

The slave who is bound down to th ■ earth by the weight 
of his chains. See Eulogy on Emmet.—Jones. 

The sleep of the fugitives lasted for several hours. See 
Prairie on Fire, The.—Cooper. 

The sleeping earth, with thick white veil. See Flower 
Dreams.—Anon. 

The small boy is a terror. See Small Boy, The.— 
Anon. 

The small life coiled within the seed. See Patriot Sons 
of Patriot Sires.—Smith. 

The small poet is one who would fain make himself 
that which nature never meant him. See Char¬ 
acter of a Small Poet, The.—Butler. 

The small waves came frolicking in from the sea. See 
Little White Beggars, The.—Ludlow. 

The smile of her I love is like the dawn. See Smile 
of Her I Love, The.—Gilder. 

The smile of spring is blessing all the hills. See Lines 
to a Mule.—Burdette. 

The smoke of the Indian Summer. See Chopper’s 
Child, The.—Carv. 

The smoke rose straight from the chimney. See Tom’s 
Thanksgiving.—Vickers. 

The smooth-worn coin and threadbare classic phrase. 
See Andromeda.—Aldrich. 

The snow had begun in the gloaming. See First Snow 
Fall, The.—Lowell. 

“The snow is deep,” the Justice said. See Green 
Mountain Justice, The.—Reeves. 

The snow is white, the wind is cold. See Night.— 
Butts. 

The snow lies still and white. See New Year, The.— 
Thaxter. 

The snow, th» snow, downy and bright. See Snow, 
The.—Whitehead. 


The snow-capped summits of the Alps were darkened 
with the legions of Carthage. See Hannibal on the 
Alps.—Swan. 

The snowfall had ceased, the wind had sunk. See 
Passing of Olaf, The.—Corelli. 

The snowflakes are falling swiftly. See Beautiful 
Snow, The.—Griswold. 

The snowflakes fall so gently. See Little Snowflakes.— 
M. M. 

The snows are gone at last, lad. See Song of the Road, 
A.—Walker. 

The snows arise, and, foul and fierce. See Seasons, 
The (Lost in the Snow).—Thomson. 

The society will please come to order. See Society for 
the Suppression of Gossip, The.—Anon. 

The soft light of the setting sun. See Rocks of Mt. 
Desert, The.—E. M. T. 

The softest whisperings of the scented South. See 
Old Battlefield, An.—Stanton. 

The soldier said, as he was called to die. See Con¬ 
tented.—Sylva. 

The soldiers of 1776 did not march away with music 
and banners. See Liberty or Death.—Ingersoll. 

The soldiers stepped from the trenches. See New 
South, The.—Grady. 

The solemn hush of midnight is brooding over the 
earth. See Old Sermon, The.—Anon. 

The solemn old bells of the steeple are ringin’. See 
Deacon’s Story, The.—Emerson. 

The solemn wood had spread. See Sure Witness, The. 
—Cary. 

The sombre pall of night had spread. See King 
William Thanks His God.—Anon. 

The Son of God goes forth to war. a kingly crown to 
gain. See Church Militant, The.—Anon. 

The Son of him with whom we strove for power. See 
Welcome to the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, 
A.—Tennyson. 

The Son of Man must. die. See Resurrection.—Train. 

“The song is ended and the singer fled.” See After.— 
Bates. 

The song of Kilvani [ter. KilvanyJ. Fairest she. See 
Law of Death, The.—Hay. 

The song of Nature is forever. See Music of Nature, 
The.—Cheney. 

The song that once I dream'd about. See After Many 
Years.—Kendall. 

The song unsung more sweet shall ring. See Ideal.— 
Cochrane. 

The song-birds? Are they flown away? See Flight.— 
Cawein. 

The sonnet is a diamond flashing round. See Sonnet, 
The.—Brownlow. 

The sonnet is a fruit which long hath slept. See 
Sonnet, The.—Symonds. 

The sonnet is an opal. See White Opal, The.— 
R. K. K. 

The soote [or sweet] season, that bud and bloom forth 
brings. See Description of Spring.—Howard. 

The sorrow for the dead is the only sorrow from which 
we refuse to be divorced. See R ral Funerals 
(Sorrow for the Dead).—Irving. 

The sorry world is sighing now. See Fin de Siecle.— 
Mackintosh. 

The soul of man, evolving more and more. See 
Thought, A.—Ingham. 

The soul of man is larger than the sky. See Shake¬ 
speare.—Coleridge. 

The soul of music slumbers in the shell. See Sensi¬ 
bility.—Rogers. 

The soul of the world is abroad to-night. See Soul of 
the World, The.—Crosby. 

The soul, secured [ter. secure] in her existence, smiles. 
See Cato (Immortal Part, The).—Addison. 

The soul which animates Nature is not less significantly 
published. See Behavior.—Emerson. 

The soul’s dark cottage, battered and decayed. See 
“Soul’s dark cottage, battered and decayed. The.” 
—Waller. 

The souls of women are so small. See Women.— 

> Butler. 

The’sounding cataract. See Lines Composed a Few 
Miles above Tintern Abbey (Love of Nature. The). 
—Wordsworth. 

The c outh wind brings life, sunshine, and desire. See 
Threnody.—-Emerson. 

The South wind brings wet weather. See Four Winds, 
The.—Anon. 

The south-land boasts its teeming cane. See Our 
State.—Wh-ttier. 

The sovereignty of the people is the basis of our sys¬ 
tem. See Government of the People, The.— 
Bancroft. 


862 










FIRST LINE INDEX 


The subject 


The spacious firmament on high. See Spectator, The 
(Spacious Firmanent on High, The).—Addison. 

The spacious hippodrome is packed. See Serapis 
(Hippodrome Race, The).—Ebers. 

The spacious hippodrome was filled. See Serapis 
(Chariot Race in Alexandria).—Ebers. 

The spark of life is like a spark of fire. See Life.— 
Anon. 

The sparrow told it to the robin. See Earlv News.— 
Pratt. 

The spearmen [or spearman] heard the bugle sound. 
See Beth-Gelert; or. The Grave of the Greyhound. 
—Spencer. 

The speckled sky is dim with snow. See Midwinter.— 
Trowbridge. 

The spectacle America presents this day is without 
precedent in history. See Meaning of the Four 
Centuries, The.—Anon. 

The spice-tree lives in the garden green. See Spice- 
tree, The.—Sterling. 

The spider wears a plain brown dress. See Pretty is 
that Pretty Does.—Cary. 

The spinner twisted her slender thread. See Spinner, 
The.—De Vere. 

The spirit in our hearts. See “Spirit in our hearts, 
The.”—Onderdonk. 

The Spirit of Earth with still, restoring hands. See 
Last Furrow, The.—Markham. 

The spirit of free thought may be seen in every depart¬ 
ment of active life. See “Spirit of free thought 
may be seen in every department of active life. 
The.”—Minton. 

The spirit of self-sacrifice. See Christ’s Giving.— 
Hamilton. 

The spirit of the nation is at the highest. See Cen¬ 
tennial of 1876, The.—Evarts. 

The spirits I have raised abandon me. See Manfred 
(Soliloquy of Manfred).—Byron. 

The spirits of the North were out last night. See Snow 
Sorcery.-—Hildreth. 

The spiritual body will be the soul set free. See 
Spiritual Body, The.—Ayres. 

The splendor falls on castle walls. See Princess, The 
(Bugle Song).—Tennyson. 

The splendor of the kindling day. See Fluttered 
Wings.—Rossetti. 

The sprightly youth. See Seasons, The (Bathing).— 
Thomson. 

The spring came earlier on. See Song for Lexington, 
A.—Weeks. 

The spring had brought out the green leaf on the trees. 
See She Liked Him Rale Weel.—Wauless. 

The spring has gone, the summer’s come. See Com¬ 
plication, A.—( Cornell Widow.) > 

The Spring has grown to Summer. See St ay-at-Home’s 
Plaint, The.—Baker. 

The spring has less of brightness. See Every Year — 
Pike. 

The spring is come; warm breezes blow. See Spring 
Lament, A.—Magee. 

The Spring,—she is a blessed thing! See Spring.— 
Howitt. 

The spring sun flashes a rapier thrust. See Birds’- 
nesting Time.—Lincoln. 

The spring was in our valley now. See Lorna Doone. 
—Blackmore. 

The Spring will come again, dear friends. See Song 
of Farewell, A.—Greenwell. 

The spring-scented buds all around me are swelling. 
See Spring.—Clark. 

The spring-time is coming, the winter is past. See 
Spring-time is Coming.—Anon. 

The squadrons of the sun still hold. See De Lunatico. 
—Baker. 

The Squire sat propped in a pillowed chair. See 
“Fidele’s” Grassy Tomb.—Newbolt. 

The stag at eve had drunk his fill. See Stag Hunt, 
The.—Scott. 

The stag too, singled from the herd where long. See 
Seasons, The (Stag Hunt, The).—Thomson. 

The stage from the depot. See Sarah’s Proposal.— 
Barnard. 

The star I worship shines alone. See Egeria.—Win- 
ter. 

The star is not extinguished when it sets. See Life 
from Death.—Bonar. 

The star must cease to burn with its own light. See 
God and the Soul (Et Mori Lucrum).—Spalding. 

The star of love now shines above. See “Star of love 
now shines above. The.”—Morris. 

The Star that bids the Shepherd fold. See Comus.— 
Milton. 


The stars above will make thee known. See Epigram 
on Sir Francis Drake.—Cowley. 

The stars are forth, the moon above the tops. See 
Manfred (Coliseum by Moonlight, The).—Byron. 

The stars are on the moving stream. See Evening.— 
Drake. 

The stars are with the voyager. See Song: “The stars,” 
etc.—Hood. 

The stars know a secret. See Force.—Sill. 

The stars of Night contain the glittering Day. See 
Dying Words of Stonewall Jackson.—Lanier. 

The stars of our morn on our banner borne. See Flag 
of the Constellation, The.—Reid. 

The stars were out and the moon was bright. See At 
the Junior Promenade.—Culbertson. 

The State of Maine stands here to-day. See Maine at 
Gettysburg.—Chamberlain. 

The State of New York is not alone a vast area. See 
Empire State, The.—Cleveland. 

The stateliness of houses, the goodliness of trees. See 
Necessity of Law.— Hooker. 

The stately homes of England! See Homes of Eng¬ 
land, The.—Hemans. 

The statesman at the council. See Grounds of the 
Terrible.—Begbie. 

The Station clock proclaims the close of day. See 
Elegy Written in a Railway Station. {Punch.) 

The stern old judge, in relentless mood. See Smiting 
the Rock.—-Anon. 

The still small voice that speaks within. See Voice 
Within, The.—Fagan. 

The still white coast at Midsummer. See Ballad of the 
Midnight Sun, The.—Hamilton-King. 

The stings of Falsehood those shall try. See On a 
Distant Prospect of Eton College.—Gray. 

The stoic’s plan is futile, which requires. See Occa¬ 
sional Prologue, An.—Anon. 

The storm had spent its rage, the sea. See Save the 
Other Man.—Preston. 

The storm in the forest is rending and sweeping. See 
Storm in the Forest, The.—Gould. 

The storm is out; the land is roused. See Men and 
Boys.—Korner. 

The storm o’er the ocean flew furious and fast. See 
Burning Ship, The.—Anon. 

The stormy March is come at last. See March.— 
Bryant. 

The story from the first book of Samuel is one of the 
most beautiful. See To be Kings among Men.— 
Anon. 

The story is told of a mason’s wife. See Secrets of 
Masonry, The.—Anon. 

The story that I am about to tell is of a tradition of past 
times. See German Fire-eater, A.—Fay. 

The story-books have told you. See Fairy-folk.— 
Cary. 

The stoutest heart in this assembly would recoil. See 
Miseries of War, The.—Chalmers. 

The stranger wandering in the Switzer’s land. See 
Beyond.—Cooke. 

The stream is calmest when it nears the tide. See At 
the Last.—Winton. 

The stream through the valley ran smoothly and still 
See Periton’s Ride.—Hageman. 

The stream was smooth as glass. We said: “Arise 
and let’s away.” See Ballad of the Boat, The.— 
Garnett. 

The streams that wind amid the hills. See Sylvia; 
or, The May Queen (Sylvia’s Song).—Darley. 

The streets were filled with passers-by. See Panto¬ 
mime, A.—Anon. 

The streets were rife with joyous life. See Temper¬ 
ance Star, The.—Anon. 

The strong hot breath of the land is lashing. See 
Night in the Red Sea, A.—Lyall. 

The strong sob of the chafing stream. See Orara.— 
Kendall. 

The strong winds burst on Judah’s sea. See Tempest 
Stilled, The.—Lyons. 

The strongest influence in the world is recollection. 
See Recollection, the Strongest Influence.—Anon. 

The struggle over, we, yet in the grime. See Dying 
Chief, The.—Sawyer. 

The students of District No. 6 had never given an ex¬ 
hibition. See Last Day in District No. 6.—Har- 
riman. 

The study of the history of most other nations. See 
American History.—Verplanck. 

The sturdy rock, for all his strength. See Stability of 
Virtue, The.—Marshall. 

The subject of forestry is, of course, an appropriate one. 
See Use of Arbor Day, The.—( Garden and Forest.) 


863 







The subject AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The subject of my speech is one. See “They Say.”— 
Anon. 

The subjeck app’inted fur debate last Sadday. See 
Debatin’ S’ciety, The.—Andrews. 

The success or failure of the united colonies. See Cap¬ 
ture of Andre, The.—Depew. 

The sudden glow of a summer’s day. See Valedic¬ 
tory, A.—Shoals. 

The sudden thrust of speech is no mean test. See Fire 
i’ the Flint, The.—Robinson. 

The sufferings of animal nature, occasioned by intem¬ 
perance. See Moral Effects of Intemperance.— 
Beecher. 

The Sultan awoke with a stifled scream. See Way It 
is Said, The.—Anon. 

The sultan of Damascus found asleep. See Sultan and 
the Potter, The.—Arnold. 

The sultry day has closed at night on Syria’s glowing 
plain [or plains]. See Zarafi.—Lamartine. 

The sultry stillness of a summer’s day. See On the 
W eather.—Greenslet. 

The summer and autumn had been so wet. See God’s 
Judgment on a Wicked Bishop.—Southey. 

The Summer comes and the Summer goes. See Love’s 
Calendar.—Aldrich. 

The Summer dawn’s reflected hue. See Lady of 
the Lake, The (Summer).—Scott. 

The Summer, has come! oh, the Summer has come! 
See Welcome to Summer, A.—Anon. 

The summer sun is beating down on a blue Norwegian 
fiord. See Voyage of the “Fram,” The.—Hunt. 

The summer sun is falling soft on Carbery’s hundred 
isles. See Sack of Baltimore, The.—Davis. 

The summer sun was sinking. See Fairy Child, The. 
—Anster. 

The Summer, the divinest Summer burns. See Sum¬ 
mer.—Thurlow. 

The Sun, a shining orb, descends. See Good-night, 
Good-morning.—Bowen. 

The Sun appeared so smug and bright. See Silver 
Question, The.—Herford. 

The sun came through the frosty mist. See From 
Love and Nature.—Houghton. 

The sun comes up and the sun goes down, and the day 
and the night are the same as one. See Vanity. 
—Cary. 

The sun comes up and the sun goes down, the night 
mist shrouds the sleeping town. See Fallow 
Field, The.—Dorr. 

The Sun, departing, kissed the summer Sky. See 
Sunset, A.—Loveman. 

The sun descending in the west. See Night.—Blake. 

The sun deserts his flaming car. See When Nelly 
Hangs her Stocking Up.—Eaton. 

The sun does arise. See Echoing Green, The.— 
Blake. 

The sun does not shine for a few trees and flowers. 
See God the Father.—Beecher. 

The sun gives ever; so the earth. See Giving.—-Anon. 

The sun goes down, and over all. See Low Tide on 
Grand Prd—Carman. 

The sun grew low and left the skies. See Hudibras 
(Night).—Butler. 

The sun had closed the winter day. See Vision, The. 
—Burns. 

The sun had dropped into the distant west. See Home, 
Sweet Home.— Somerville. 

The sun had dropped low down the Western sky. See 
How the Refugees were Saved.—Bradford. 

The sun had long since in the lap. See Hudibras 
(Morning).—But! er. 

The sun had set behind Robinson Robb’s corn crib. 
See Sad Story, A.—Anon. 

The sun had set behind the mountains, and darkness 
palled the vale. See Prayer in Battle, The.— 
Hewitt. 

The sun had [wr. was] set; the leaves with dew were 
wet. See Keenan’s Charge.—Lathrop. 

The sun has gane down o’er the lofty Benlomond. See 
Jessie, the Flower o’ Dumblane.—Tannahill. 

The sun has gone down in liquid gold. See On the 
Ottawa.—Dewart. 

The sun has gone from the shining skies. See Summer 
Lullaby, A.—Bumstead. 

The sun has kissed the violet sea. See Betrayal.— 
Lanier. 

The sun has stricken the armor splendid. See Lohen¬ 
grin.—Watrous. 

The sun has sunk behind the hills. See Good-night.— 
Hill. 

The sun in gorgeous and transcendent splendor. See 
Approach of Night, The.—Powell. 


The sun in martial splendor rose. See Poet’s Morn, 
The.—Bigelow. 

The sun is bright, the sky is clear. See Doncaster St. 
Leger, The.—Doyle. 

The sun is clear of bird and cloud. See Alulvan.— 
Ramal. 

The sun is in the sky, mother, the flowers are springing 
fair. See Biter Bit, The.—Aytoun. 

The sun is low, the ocean’s flow. See On the Beach.— 
Whitehead. 

The sun is nearly set; the city gates. See Ingomar, the 
Barbarian.—Halm. 

The sun is not a-bed, when I. See Sun’s Travels, The. 
—Stevenson. 

The sun is not yet risen. See Alice Du Clos.—Coleridge. 

The sun is set; the swallows are asleep. See Evening. 
—Shelley. 

The sun is setting, and the toiler halts. See Dignity of 
Labor, The.—Anon. 

The sun is sinking in the west. See Wife’s Prayer, The. 
—Van Sickle. 

The sun is sinking over hill and sea. See At Night.— 
—Montgomery. 

The sun is warm, the sky is clear. See Stanzas Writ¬ 
ten in Dejection near Naples.—Shelley. 

The Sun looked from his everlasting skies. See My 
Old Counselor.—Hall. 

The sun looks down. See Day after the Fourth, The. 
—Ricker. 

The sun now rose upon the right. See Rime of the 
Ancient Mariner, The.—Coleridge. 

The sun of life has crossed the line. See Equinoctial. 
—Whitney. 

The sun of May was bright in middle heaven. See Old 
Man’s Counsel, The.—Bryant. 

The sun on Ivera. See Dirge of O’Sullivan Bear.— 
Callanan. 

The sun rises bright in France. See My Ain Countrie. 
—Cunningham. 

The sun set, but set not his hope. See Character.— 
Emerson. 

The sun sets in the night, and the stars shun the day. 
See Indian Death-song.—Hunter. 

The sun shines bright in the [or our] old Kentucky 
home. See My Old Kentucky Home, Good¬ 
night.—Foster. 

The sun shines not upon, has never shone upon a land. 
See Our Land.—King. 

The sun shines on the chamber wall. See Death of 
Marlborough, The.—Thornbury. 

The sun shone bright from a clear, blue sky. See Mis¬ 
takes Will Occur.—Anon. 

The sun shone in at the window. See Silent Warriors, 
The.—Anon. 

The sun shone in through waving boughs. See Smack 
“Out” of School, The.—Anon. 

The sun shone warm, and the lilac said. See Lilac, 
The.—Bates. 

The sun sinks down the distant west. See Evening.— 
Burdette. 

The sun sinks softly to his evening post. See Reject¬ 
ed National Hymns. The, V.—Newell. 

The sun strikes, through the windows, up the floor. 
See Casa Guidi Windows (Sursum Corda).—Brown¬ 
ing. 

The sun that brief December day. See Snow-bound.— 
Whittier. 

The sun, the moon, the stars, the seas, the hills, and 
the plains. See Higher Pantheism, The.—Ten¬ 
nyson. 

The sun upon the lake is low. See Doom of Devorgoil, 
The (Evening).—Scott. 

The sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill. See Sun upon the 
Weirdlaw Hill, The.—Scott. 

The sun was drowned in the western tide, See Easter¬ 
tide Deliverance, An.—Bulfineh. 

The sun was going down. See Miner’s Death, The.— 
Hanover. 

The sun was setting o’er Mount Zion’s top. See Be- 
ruria.—Wilbor. 

The sun was shining on the sea. See Walrus and the 
Carpenter, The.—Carroll. 

The sun was shining softly. See Queer Scholars, The. 
—Anon. 

The sun was sinking on the shore. See Revenge.— 
Blount. 

The sun was slumbering in the west, my daily labors 
past. See Good-night.—Hood. 

The sun went down beyond yon hills. See Farmer’s 
Boy.—Anon. 

The sun, with his great eye. See Daisy’s Song, The.— 
Keats. 


864 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The time 


The sun, yon glorious orb of day. See Sun, The.— 
Davis. 

The sunbeams, lost for a half a year. See Spring Has 
Come, The.—Holmes. 

The sunburnt mowers are in the swath. See Mowers, 
The.—Benton. 

The sunflowers hung their banners out in the sweet 
September weather. See Double Sunflower, The. 
—Thaxter. 

The sunlight fills the trembling air. See Betrothed 
Anew.—Stedman. 

The sunlight glitters keen and bright. See Hampton 
Beach.—Whittier. 

The sunlight on a waveless sea. See Twilight’s Hour. 
—W. F. E. I. 

The sunlight shone on walls of stone. See King and 
the Child, The—Hall. 

The sunlight slants through the tremulous trees. See 
Turkish Refrain.—Newcomer. 

The sunny wisdom of the Greeks. See Therapia.— 
Faber. 

“The sun’s heat will give out in ten million years more.” 
See He Worried about it.—Foss. 

The sun’s text is: “ Begin the day.” See Sunny-day 
Sermons.—Anon. 

The sunset in the rosy west. See Little Song A.— 
Scott. 

The sunset light is on the sail. See Wings.—Ritter. 

The sunshine of thine eyes. See Sunshine of Thine 
Eyes, The.—Lathrop. 

The supernatural in this Jesus is the best hope of the 
world. See “Supernatural in this Jesus is the 
best hope of the world, The.”—Swing. 

The supper is o’er [or over], the hearth is swept. See 
Grandmother’s Sermon.—Jewett. 

The supreme want, as well as the supreme blessing of 
man is truth. See Truth the Object of All Studies. 
—Frayssinous. 

The surging sea of human life forever onward rolls. 
See Hundred Years from Now, A.—Ford. 

The swallow, bonny birdie, comes sharp twittering o’er 
the sea. See Swallow, The.—Aird. 

The swallow is a mason. See Bird Trades.—Anon. 

The swallow is flying over. See Tears in Spring.— 
Channing. 

The swarthy bee is a buccaneer. See More Ancient 
Mariner, A.—Carman. 

The sweet [or soote] season, that bud and bloom 
forth brings. See Description of Spring.— 
Howard. 

The sweet star of the Bethlehem night. See Sweet 
Star, The.—Lighthall. 

The sweet-brier rose has not a form more fair. See 
Sabbatia, The.—Very. 

The sweetest flower that blows. See Sweetest Flower 
that Blows, The.—Peterson. 

“The sweetest lass in all the land.” See Jennie.— 
Brooks. 

The sweetest sound our whole year round. See Seek¬ 
ing the May-flower.—Stedman. 

The sweetest time of all the year. See May.—Rich¬ 
ards. 

The swevens came up round Harold the Earl. See 
Weird Lady, The.—Kingsley. 

The sword!—a name of dread; but when. See ‘‘Sword! 
a name of dread. The.”—Pierpont. 

The sword of Washington! The staff of Franklin! 
See Washington’s Sword and Franklin’s Staff.— 
Adams. 

The sword was sheathed: in April’s sun. See Vow of 
Washington, The.—Whittier. 

The tale was this. See Edwin the Fair (Wind in 
the Pines, The).—Taylor. 

The tall clock in the great hallway. See Joseph Clay¬ 
ton.—Parry. 

The tall green tree its shadow cast. See Tale of Provi¬ 
dence, A.—Pennypacker. 

The tall oak, towering to the skies. See Oak, The.— 
Montgomery. 

The task had fallen to my share. See Valedictory.— 
Kavanaugh. 

The tattoo beats—the lights are gone. See My Wife 
and Child.—Jackson. 

The teacher had a class of one. See Grammar Lesson, 
A.—Grove. 

The teacher stood upon the floor. See Elocution Les 
son, The.—Nash. 

The tear down Childhood’s cheek that flows. See 
Rokeby (Youth).—Scott. 

The tempest over and gone, the calm begun. See 
Easter Even.—Rossetti. 

The tempest rages wild and high. See Storm, The.— 
Procter. 


The temple made of wood and stone will crumble and 
decay. See Temple of Living Masons, The.— 
Greenleaf. 

The tendency, of everything is to go to ruin. See 
Keeping in Repair.—Anon. 

The tender and beautiful floral service of this Memo¬ 
rial Day is completed. See Decoration Day.—• 
Thwing. 

The tender smile of parting day. See My First Kiss.— 
Peck. 

The tented field wore a wrinkled frown. See Battle 
Flag at Shenandoah, The.—Miller. 

The 10th of June was a delightful summer day. See 
Boat Race, The.—Anon. 

The tent-lights glimmer on the land. See At Port 
Royal.—Whittier. 

The terms lady and gentlewoman are often in our 
mouths. See True Politeness.—Anon. 

The territory which we occupy is at least three million 
square miles. See Elements of National Wealth, 
The.—Blaine. 

The terror of the boys and girls am I. See Obedient 
Servants, The.—Denton. 

The text was this - “Inasmuch as ye.” See Simon 
Grub’s Dream.—Anon. 

The theater is neither moral nor immoral. See 
“Theater is neither moral nor immoral, The.”— 
Sweetzer. 

The themes you write as you ought to write. See 
Literary Lottery.— Macy. 

“The thing is but a statue after all!” See Pygmalion 
and Galatea.—Gilbert. 

The things to be desired for man in a healthy state. 
See Modern Painters (True Contentment).— 
Ruskin. 

The third quarter of the eighteenth century is 
commonly called. See Thomas Chatterton.— 
Anon. 

The thirsty earth soaks up the rain. See Drinking.— 
Anacreon. 

The thirsty flowerlets droop; the parching grass. See 
Cold Water.—Sigourney. 

“The thistle,” the thistle, the bonnie brown thistle. 
See Old Home and the New, The.—Bleakie. 

The thoughts are strange that crowd into my brain. 
See Niagara.—Brainard. 

The throne of France is maintained by the cap and 
bells of the jester. See Government by Epi¬ 
grams.—Maupassant. 

The throng was great. Back from the Gaderenes. 
See Woman Healed, The.—Houser. 

The thrush that carols at the dawn of day. See 
Birds of Killingworth, The.—Longfellow. 

The tide flows in and out and leaves. See Meadow 
Lands, The.—Eaton. 

The tide is high, and stormy beams. See Lost Love, 
A.—Symonds. 

The tide of war first penetrated Kentucky, in the sum¬ 
mer of 1862. See Fortunes of War, The.— 
Younge. 

The tide rises, the tide falls. See Tide Rises, the Tide 
Falls, The.—Longfellow. 

“The tide runs strong, and the sea grows dark.” See 
Nix’s Mate.—Butterworth. 

The tide slips up the silver sand. See Sea-way.— 
Cortissoz. 

The tide was well out, the moon shining brightly. See 
Scaling of Perce Rock, The.—Parker. 

The time draws near the birth of Christ. See In 
Memoriam (Bells of Yule).—Tennyson. 

The time for toil has passed, and night has come. See 
Bringing Our Sheaves with Us.—Allen. 

The time had come when he who should unite the Gor¬ 
dian knot of slavery. See Change of Base, A.— 
Tourg(5e. 

The time has been, Sir, indeed, when fleets and armies. 
See Revolution in Greece, The (Moral Force 
against Physical).—Webster. 

The Time hath laid his mantle by. See Spring.— 
Orleans. 

The time is come, fathers. See Verres Denounced 
(Against Caius Verres).—Cicero. 

The time is come to speak, I think. See Mrs. Go- 
light ly.—Hall. 

The time is coming when the stars cannot take refuge. 
See Problem of the Universe, The.—Mitchel. 

The time is now near at hand which must probably 
determine. See To the American Troops Before 
the Battle of Long Island, 1774.—Washington. 

The time I’ve lost in wooing. See Time I’ve Lost in 
Wooing, The.—Moore. 

The time of the singing of birds is come. See Time of 
the Singing of Birds, The.—Anon. 


865 




The time 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The time shall come when wrong shall end. See 
Chartist Song.—Cooper. 

The time will certainly come when the fated separation. 
See For Independence.—Lee. 

The time you won your town the race. See To an 
Athlete Dying Young.—Housman. 

The times that tried men’s souls are over. See Birth¬ 
day of the Republic, The.—Paine. 

The tiny cradle is empty now. See Babies All Are 
Grown, The.—Colson. 

The tired breezes are tucked to rest. See At Even¬ 
tide.—Lincoln. 

The toil is very long and I am tired. See Golden 
Street, The.—Stoddard. 

The toil worn cotter frae his labor goes. See Cotter’s 
Saturday Night, The.—Burns. 

The tomb of God before us. See Saint’s Tragedy, The. 
—Kingsley. 

The tongue of England, that which myriads. See 
Shakespeare and Milton.—Landor. 

The tongues of dying men. See King Richard II.— 
Shakespeare. 

“The top av the morning to ye, Father Ray.” See 
Pat’s Bondsman.—Moulton. 

The top it hummeth a sweet, sweet song. See Hum¬ 
ming Top, The.—Field. 

The top o’ the momin’ to ye, Mrs. McAllister. See 
Judy O’Shea Sees Hamlet.—Porter. 

The top o’ the momin’ to you, Mick. See Seed-time. 
—Coleman. 

The topsy-turvy doctors have. See Delightful Cus¬ 
tom, A.—Goodfellow. 

The torment of hell is bred of these two things. See 
‘‘Torment of hell is bred,” etc.—Murray. 

The tossing, frothing, raging sea. See Fair Enthu¬ 
siast, A.—Anon. 

The town of Hay is far away. See Town of Hay, The. 
—Foss. 

The town of Haverhill, even as late as the close of the 
seventeenth century. See Boy Captives, The.— 
Whittier. 

The train from out the castle drew. See Marmion 
(Marmion and Douglas).—Scott. 

The train from the north had halted and then rushed 
on. See Depot Incident, A.—Garrison. 

The train leaves at 6 P. M. See Rapid Transit.— 
Abbot. 

The train of cars in which I was to trust my walerable 
life. See Mr. Artemus Ward Crossing Dixie’s 
Line.—Browne. 

The training-ship Eurydice. See Last of the Eury- 
dice. The.—Paton. 

The traveler from his native land. See Love of Home. 
—Anon. 

The traveler o’er the desert wild. See Encore.— 
Anon. 

The travelers’ room at the White Horse Cellar is very 
uncomfortable. See Pickwick Papers, The (Mr. 
Winkle’s Adventure).—Dickens. 

The treaty of peace with Spain. See Philippine 
Islands, The.—Long. 

The tree of deepest root is found. See Three Warn¬ 
ings, The.—Piozzi. 

The tree of which I am about to tell. See Twig that 
Became a Tree. The.—Anon. 

The tree we are planting this May day. See Song of 
Dedication.—Beauchamp. 

The trees and the flowers seem running a race See. 
Race of the Flowers, The.—Rands. 

The trees are yet bare. See Bluebird’s Message, The. 
—Armitage. 

The tree’s early leaf-buds were bursting their brown. 
See Tree, The.—Bjornson. 

The trees which the children plant. See Arbor Day.— 
Peaslee. 

The trembling dew-drops fall. See At My Mother’s 
Grave.—Prentice. 

The trembling train clings to the leaning wall. See 
Moonrise in the Rockies.—Higginson. 

The tremendous unity of the pine. See Modern 
Painters (Pine Tree, The).—Ruskin. 

The trial was ended, the vigil [was] past. See Some¬ 
thing Great.—Tyler. 

The triumph of Montjoy, successor to the young Earl 
of Essex. See Death of Elizabeth, The.—Green. 

The triumphs of the warrior are bounded by the nar¬ 
row theatre of his own age. See “Triumphs of 
the warrior,” etc.—Prescott. 

The troops exulting sat in order round. See Iliad, 
The.—Homer. 

The troops, refreshed by a night’s rest. See History 
of the Conquest of Mexico (Venice of the Aztecs, 
The).—Prescott. 


The true gentleman carefully avoids whatever may 
cause a jar or jolt. See True Gentleman, The.— 
Newman. 

The true grandeur of passing historic events is not 
seen. See Again Brethren and Equals.—Patterson. 

The true greatness of a nation cannot be in triumphs 
of the intellect alone. See True Grandeur of 
Nations, The (Victories of Peace, The).—Sumner. 

The true honor of a nation is to be found only in 
deeds of justice. See True Grandeur of Nations, 
The (“True honor of a nation,” etc.).—Sumner. 

The true power of the court has resided, and must ever 
dwell. See Supreme Court and the Constitution, 
The.—Hitchcock. 

The true teacher must have the faith of martyrs. See 
Educational Power.—Anon. 

The trump hath blown. See Lonely Bugle Grieves, 
The.—Mellen. 

The trumpets blew, the cross-bolts flew. See Heart of 
the Bruce, The.—Aytoun. 

The trumpet sounded short and sharp. See Ben-Hur 
(Chariot Race, The).—Wallace. 

The trumpet’s loud clangor. See Song for St Cecilia’s 
Day, A (Fife and Drum).—Dryden. 

The trumpet’s voice hath roused the land. See Trum¬ 
pet, The.—Hemans. 

The trustees of a school on Staten Island. See Modern 
Education.—Anon. 

The Turkman lay beside the river. See Greek and 
Turkman, The.—Croly. 

The turtle on yon withered bough. See Song of 
Thyrsis.—F reneau. 

The twentieth year is well-nigh past. See To Mary.— 
Cowper. 

The twenty-third psalm is the nightingale of the 
psalms. See Twenty-third Psalm, The.— 
Beecher. 

The twilight gray is fading. See Childhood Fancies. 
—Anon. 

The twilight hours like birds flew by. See Twilight at 
Sea.—Welby. 

The twilight is sad and cloudy. See Twilight.— 
Longfellow. 

The twilight land toyed with the night. See Unfin¬ 
ished Prophecy, An.—Jakeway. 

The twilight twiles in the vernal vale. See In the 
Gloaming.—Bayles. 

The two, alas! were very poor. See Sudden Revul¬ 
sion, A.—Anon. 

The two honorable and learned gentlemen. See 
Against Search-warrants for Seamen.—Chatham. 

The two words “character” and “service” describe 
the higher regions. See Character and Service.— 
Brooks. 

The tyrannous and bloody deed is done. See King 
Richard III. (Murder of the Princes in the Tower). 
—Shakespeare. 

The undersigned desires, in a modest sort of way. See 
Weather in Verse, The.—Brown. 

The unearthly voices ceased. See Lay of the Last 
Minstrel (Defiance).—Scott. 

The unfathomable sea, and time, and tears. See To 
N. V. D&G. S.—Stevenson. 

The unfortunate Rebecca was conducted to the black 
chair placed near the pile. See Ivanhoe (Trial of 
Rebecca. The).—Scott. 

The Union cannot expire as the snow melts from the 
rock. See Our Responsibility as a Nation.— 
Boardman. 

The union of lakes, the union of lands. See Flag of 
Our Union.—Morris. 

The Union! The Union! The hope of the free! See 
Union, The.—Janvier. 

The United Sisterhood of Colchester were holding its 
weekly session. See Strike at Colchester, The.— 
Exeter. 

The United States frigate Constitution has come back 
to Boston. See “Old Ironsides.”—Lodge. 

The United States is the only country with a known 
birthday. See Independence Day.—Blaine. 

The unmistakable danger that threatens free govern¬ 
ment in America. See Against Centralization.— 
Grady. 

The usual collection will now be taken up. See 
Alphabetical Sermon.—Kyle. 

The vale of Tempe had in vain been fair. See Ideality. 
—Coleridge. 

The valley rings with mirth and joy. See Idle Shep¬ 
herd Boys, The.—Wordsworth. 

The value of your teaching is not the information you 
have put into the mind. See Enthusiasm.— 
Anon. 


866 







FIRST LINE INDEX 


The white 


The varying year with blade and sheaf. See Day* 
dream, The.—Tennyson. 

The venerable Bede, with age grown blind. See 
Amen of the Rocks, The.—Gellert. 

The venerable Past—is past. See Now.—Mackay. 

The vesper hymn had died away. See Idiot Lad, The. 
—Overton. 

The vice of intemperance is the arch-abomination of 
our natures. See Vice of Intemperance, The.— 
Everett. 

The vicomte is wearing a brow of gloom. See Chez 
Brabant.—Durivage. 

The victor stood beside the spoil, and by the grinning 
dead. See Omiir and the Persian.—Williams. 

The Victory had been out ten days. See On Board 
the Victory. —Robinson. 

The view from this spot bears some resemblance. See 
Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union Soldiers 
(Graves of Union Soldiers at Arlington, The).— 
Garfield. 

The village sleeps, a name unknown, all men. See 
Distinction.—Howe. 

The villeins clustered round the bowl. See Brawn of 
England’s Lay.—Hunter-Duvar. 

The violet in her greenwood bower. See Violet, The. 
—Scott. 

The violet invited my kiss. See Violet and the Rose, 
The.—Skipsey. 

The violet loves a sunny bank. See Proposal.— 
Taylor. 

The violets are coming. See Spring Violets.—Anon. 

The violets blossom, the grass is green. See Content¬ 
ment.—M. B. 

The violets that you gave are dead. See Relics.— 
Winter. 

The virgin Member takes his honored place. See 
Orator’s First Speech in Parliament, An.—Bell. 

The virtues and traditions of both happily still live. 
See New South, The . (Lincoln as Cavalier and 
Puritan).—Grady. 

The vital bond between literature and elocution is 
that of thought. See Literature and Elocution.— 
Johnson. 

The voice of England is a trumpet tone. See England. 
—Montgomery. 

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness. See 
Isaiah (Voice in the Wilderness, The).— Bible. 

The voice of your father’s blood calls [or cries to you] 
from the ground. See Constitutional Liberty and 
Arbitrary Power (Scorn to be Slaves).—Warren. 

The voice that breath’d o’er Eden. See Holy Matri¬ 
mony.—Keble. 

The wail of Irish winds. See Parnell.—Johnson. 

The waiting women wait at her feet. See Old Story, 
The.—Cary. 

The wakening bugles cut the night. See Good-by, A. 
—Hayes. 

The wall is high, and yet will I leap down. See King 
John (Death of Prince Arthur).—Shakespeare. 

The wanton troopers, riding by. See Nymph Com¬ 
plaining for the Death of her Fawn, The.— 
Marvell. 

The wants of our time and country, the-constitution 
of our modem society. See Scholar’s Mission, 
The.—Putnam. 

The war in the east had ended. See Mission Tea 
Party, The.—Nason. 

The war is over, and it is well over. See “Let Us 
Have Peace.”—Watterson. 

The war is over. It is for us to bury. See Gray 
Honors the Blue, The.—Watterson. 

The war [then] must go on. We must fight it through. 
See Adams and Jefferson (Supposed Speech of 
John Adams, etc.).—Webster. . 

The war of centuries is at a close. See Condition of 
Ireland, The.—Meagher. 

The war was not without its benefits to us. See Bene¬ 
fits of the Civil War.—Busbee. 

The warm sun is failing, the bleak wind is wailing. 
See Autumn: A Dirge.—Shelley. 

The warmth of thy glow. See To My Cigar.—Marc. 

The war-path is true and straight. See Just One Sig¬ 
nal.— {Chicago Record.) 

The warrior bowed his crested head, and tamed his 
heart of fire. See Brenardo del Carpio.—Hemans. 

The warrior suddenly paused and bent his face aside. 
See Prairie, The (Stampede, The).—Cooper. 

The wars we wage are noble. See Ode in Time of Hes¬ 
itation, An (Robert Gould Shaw).—Moody. 

The water sings along our keel. See Armistice. 
Jewett. , , 

The water! the water! See Water! the Water, The. 
—Motherwell. 


The waterpots were filled at God’s behest. See Miracle 
of Cana, The.—Brooks. 

The waters are flashing. See Fugitives, The.—Shelley. 

The waters have gone over me. See Warning, A.— 
Lamb. 

The waters—O the waters!—wild and glooming. See 
Spanish Point.—De Vere. 

The waters purled, the waters swelled. See Fisher, 
The.—Goethe. 

The waters skirt me right and left. See Sea, The.— 
Marvell. 

The waters slept. Night’s silvery veil hung low. 
See Absalom David’s Lament for Absalom).— 
Willis. 

The wattles were sweet with September’s rain. See 
Beneath the Wattle Boughs.—Gill. 

The waves are still, and touched with crimson light. 
See Sea-bird’s Cry, The.—Parsons. 

The waves forever move. See Sisters, The.—Tabb. 

The waves rolled over the pebbled beach. See Dag- 
mar.—Harwood. 

The waves were white, and red the mom. See Sea, 
The.—Procter. 

The way at times may dark and dreary seem. See 
“Way at times may dark and dreary seem. The.” 
—Carleton. 

The way is dark, my child! but leads to light. See 
Gracious Answer, The.—Cobb. 

The way is dark, my Father! Cloud on Cloud. See 
“Father, Take My Hand.”—Cobb. 

The way is long and dreary. See Pilgrims, The.— 
Procter. 

The way is steep and hard to tread, and drear. See 
Love and Life.—Woolsey. 

The way to destruction is pointed and clear. See 
Down Grade, The.—Thompson. 

The way was long and weary. See Lights o’ London, 
The.—Sims. 

The way was long, the wind was cold. See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel (Last Minstrel, The).—Scott. 

The wayfarer, perceiving the path to truth. See Way¬ 
farer, The.—Crane. 

The ways of life, mysterious. See At Last.—Clothier. 

The weary day runs down and dies. See Jacobite in 
Exile, A.—Swinburne. 

The weary night is o’er at last! See Trooper’s Death, 
The.—Raymond. 

The weary teacher sat alone. See Teacher’s Dream, 
The.—Venable. 

The weather-brown* windmill swings to rest. See 
Dutch Lullaby.—Plummer. 

The weather-leech of the topsail shivers. See Tack¬ 
ing Ship Off Shore.—Mitchell. 

The weaver at his loom is sitting. See Mystic Weaver, 
The.—Anon. 

The weaver sat one day at his loom. See Neglected 
Pattern, The.—Cary. 

The wedding, last night, was a royal affair. See Post¬ 
nuptial Reverie, A.—Greene. 

The wee flowers are nodding; so sleepy they grow. See 
Flowers’ Sleep, The.—More. 

The welcome month of April. See April.—Richards. 

The welcome spring, with days of calm. See Welcome 
Spring, The.—Latta. 

The Wellesley girls say. See Waban Ripple, A.—Anon. 

The well-recognized fact that nursing is not only art. 
See Address to a Graduate Class of Nurses.—Anon. 

The western skies were all aglow. See Going for the 
Cows.—Hall. 

The western sky blazed through the trees. See Whip¬ 
poorwill.—Dodge. 

The western waves of ebbing day. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Trosachs, The).—Scott. 

The western wind is blowing fair. See Serenade: 
“The western wind,” etc.—Wilde. 

The west-wind laden with fragrance, blows. See 
Farewell, A.—Arnold. 

The wet wind sobs o’er the sodden leas. See Ash Pool, 
The.—Anon. 

The Weverwend Awthur Murway Gween. See Mod¬ 
em Martyrdom, A.—Foss. 

The wheat has stood like a golden sea. See Gleaners, 
The.—Weatherly. 

The wheels of the world go round and round. See One 
Who Stays at Home, The.—Lane. 

The whelp that nipped its mother’s dug in turning from 
her breast. See Lion’s Cub, The.—Thompson. 

The whistle, shrill. See Little Martyr, The.—Anon. 

The white ash is one of the most interesting. See 
Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Ash.—Pierson. 

The white blossom’s off the bog and the leaves are off 
the trees. See White Blossom’s off the Bog, The. 
—Graves. 


867 





The white 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The white dove sat on the sunny eaves. See Constant 
Dove, The.—Thaxter. 

The white snow veils the earth’s brown face. See Two 
Christmas Eves.—Nesbit. 

The white turkey was dead! The white turkey was 
dead! See Motherless Turkeys, The.—Robinson. 

The white-rose garland at her feet. See E. B. B.— 
Thomson. 

The whole continental struggle exhibited [wr. ex¬ 
hibits] no sublimer spectacle. See Napoleon and 
his Marshals (Marshal Ney's Last Charge at Water¬ 
loo) .—Headley. 

“The whole earth,” said Pericles, as he stood over the 
remains of his fellow-citizens. See Gettysburg.— 
Everett. 

The whole family came in with Darling Petkin in the 
centre. See Spoiled Child, A.—Home. 

The whole of history shows that all great revolutions. 
See Reform Bill a Second Bill of Rights, The.— 
Macaulay. 

The wiokedness and the blindness of the subjects are 
the judgments of Heaven for the neglect of the 
sovereign. See Evils of Ignorance, The.—Mann. 

The wide gates swung open. See Little Nan.—Anon. 

The widow Cummiskey was standing at the door of her 
little millinery store. See Widow Cummiskey, 
The.—Anon. 

The widower was seated at a small round table. See 
Pickwick Papers, The (Mr. Weller in Affliction). 
—Dickens. 

The wife in the cot is lonely. See Loyal Fisher, The.— 
Anon. 

The wife sat thoughtfully turning over. See Wife, A. 
—Allingham. 

The wild azaleas sweeten all the woods. See Briar- 
bloom. —Allen. 

The wild birds strangely call. See Grave in Samoa, A. 
MacFarlane. 

The wild geese, flying in the night, behold. See Wild 
Geese, The.—Morse. 

The wild wind blows, the sun shines, the birds sing 
loud. See Wild Geese.—Thaxter. 

The wild winds raved, the tempest roared, the waves 
rolled mountains high. See Wreck of the Solent, 
The.—Lyster. 

The wild winds weep. See Mad Song.—Blake. 

The wilderness a secret keeps. See Ecce in Deserto.— 
Beers. 

The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for 
them. See Isaiah (Isaiah XXXV).— Bible. 

The Wildgrave winds his bugle-horn. See Wild Hunts¬ 
man, The.—Biirger. 

The Willis are out to-night. See Willis, The.—Proud- 
fit. 

The wind ahead, the billows high. See Seen and Un¬ 
seen.—Wasson. 

The wind blew wide the casement, and within. See 
Mother and Child.—Simms. 

The wind bloweth wildly; she stands on the shore. See 
Fisherman’s Wife, The.—Anon. 

The wind blows, the sun shines, the birds sing loud. 
See Wild Geese.—Thaxter. 

The wind blows wild on Bos’n Hill. See Bos’n Hill.— 
Albee. 

The wind came blowing out of the west. See Jimmy’s 
W ooing.—Hamey. 

The wind came over the southland pines. See Matthew 
the Miner.—Stanton. 

The wind doth blow to-day, my love. See Unquiet 
Grave, The.—Anon. 

The wind exultant swept. See Mood, A.—Howells. 

The wind flapp’d loose, the wind was still. See Wood- 
spurge, The.—Rossetti. 

The wind from out the west is blowing. See “Woods 
that Bring the Sunset Near, The.”—Gilder. 

The wind from the hills of Finnmark, came o’er the 
icy fjord. See Brita’s Wedding.—Marsh. 

The wind has a language, I would I could learn. See 
Wind, The.—Landon. 

The wind is awake, pretty leaves, pretty leaves. See 
Way of It, The.—Cheney. 

The wind it blew, and the ship it flew. See Yerl o’ 
Waterydeck, The.—Macdonald. 

The wind it wailed, the wind it moaned. See Alec 
Yeaton’s Son.—Aldrich. 

The wind of death that softly blows. See Wind of 
Death, The.—Wetherald. 

The wind of Hampstead Heath still bums my cheek. 
See Breath of Hampstead Heath.—Thomas. 

The Wind of the East and the Wind of the North. See 
Voice of the West Wind, The.—Utter. 

The wind of the morning was in the sky. See Lesson 
of Trust, The.—Perry. 


The wind one morning sprang up from sleep. See 
Wind in a Frolic, The.—Howitt. 

The wind sits in the shoulder of your sail. See Ham¬ 
let (Polonius to Laertes).—Shakespeare. 

The wind, the wandering wind. See Wandering 
Wind, The.—Hemans. 

The wind, the wind where Erie plunged. See Abigail 
Becker.—Jones. 

The wind was [wr. is] high, the window shakes. See 
Miser and Plutus, The.—Gay. 

The wind was soft and heavy. See Heroes.—Anon. 

The wind was waked by the morning light. See Wed¬ 
ding of Pale Bronwen, The.—Rhys. 

The wind wears roun’, the day wears doun. See 
Bride’s Tragedy, The.—Swinburne. 

The wind went forth o’er land and sea. See Wind, The. 
—Procter. 

The wind, when first he rose and went abroad. See 
Voice of the Wind.—Taylor. 

The wind, wife, the wind, how it blows, how it blows! 
See January Wind.—Buchanan. 

The winding road, the air like wine. See Shadow of 
the End, The.—Hawkins. 

The windmill’s fans, around they go. See Windmill, 
The.—Anon. 

The window over the veranda was opened with a sud¬ 
den dash. See From the Valley o’ the Shadder.— 
Morgan. 

The windows of Heaven were open wide. See Ballad 
of the Connemaugh Flood, A.—Rawnsley. 

The winds are hushed; the peaceful moon. See Hymn 
of the Last Supper.—Pierpont. 

The winds are sweet with mignonette. See Nation’s 
Dead, The.—Anon. 

The winds are whispering over the sea. See Cradle 
Song.—Wright. 

The winds, as at their hour of birth. See We are Free. 
—Tennyson. 

The winds blow up through the blooming vale. <See 
Trysting-place, The.—Everette. 

The winds have talked with him confidingly. See 
Longfellow.—Riley. 

The winds of the winter have breathed their dirges. 
See Winds of the Winter, The.—Hayne. 

The winds stir idly by this knoll of bloom. See Little 
Graves.—Curry. 

The winds that once the Argo bore. See Heroes.— 
Proctor. 

The winds transferred into the friendly sky. See Iliad, 
The (Camp at Night, The).—Homer. 

The winds were yelling, the waves were swelling. See 
Last Buccaneer, The.—Macaulay. 

The windy forest, rousing from its sleep. See Silence 
of the Hills, The.—Foster. 

The wine of life tastes stale and sour. See Passion and 
Patience.—Fowler. 

The wine of Love is music. See Vine, The.—Thomson. 

The wine-month shone in its golden prime. See Song 
of the Battle of Morgarten.—Hemans. 

The winter being over. See Winter Being Over, The. 
—Collins. 

The winter is gone, and at first Jack and I were sad. 
See Our Garden.—Ewing. 

The winter is pathless in the distant valleys. See Skee- 
race. The.—Boyesen. 

The winter night shuts swiftly down. Within his lit¬ 
tle humble room. See Heavenly Guest, The.— 
Tolstoi. 

The winter season is now begun. See Ballad of the 
Afternoon Tea.—Huntress. 

The winter storms have passed away. See Hymn in 
Praise of the Natural World, A.—Beauchamp. 

The winter weather it waxeth cold. See Take Thy 
Old Cloak about Thee.—Anon. 

The winter wind is wailing, sad and low. See You and 
I.—Alford. 

The Winter’s gone, come hail the Spring. See Spring 
Song, A.—Anon. 

The wintry blast goes wailing by. See Christmas 
Night of ’62.—McCabe. 

The wintry sky may be chill and drear. See Friends. 
—Carry 1. 

The wintry west extends his blast. See Winter.—A 
Dirge.—Burns. 

The wintry winds are never drear. See In Jamaica.— 
Denison. 

The wise forget, dear heart. See Valentine, A.—Gil¬ 
lespy. 

The wise man always shows himself on the side of his 
assailants. See Compensation (“Wise man,” etc.). 
—Emerson. 

The wise men of Gotham, who sailed away. See Wise 
Men of Gotham, The.—Denton. 


868 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


The years 


The wisest of the wise. See One Gray Hair, The.— 
Landor. 

The wish that of the living whole. See In Memoriam 
(Strife, The).—Tennyson. 

The wistful hound creeps, listening, to the door. See 
After the Battle.—Braddon. 

The wittiest thoughts in aptest words expressed. See 
Epilogue.—Anon. 

The woggly bird sat on the whango tree. See Whango 
Tree, The.—-Anon. 

The woman still was young and should be fair. See 
Streets of London, The.—Meredith. 

The woman was old, and ragged, and gray. See Some¬ 
body’s Mother.—Macmillan. 

The woman’s cause is man’s: they rise or sink. See 
Princess, The (Woman).—Tennyson. 

The woman’s-rights movement. See Fair Play for 
Women (Woman’s Rights).—Curtis. 

The wonder of all-ruling Providence. .See “Wonder 
of all-ruling Providence, The.”—Keats. 

The wondering sage pursues his airy flight. See Dis¬ 
pensary, The.—Garth. 

The wood is dyed with varied hue. See Indian War¬ 
rior’s Last Song, The.—Wert. 

The woodland, and the golden wedge. See Violet’s 
Grave, The.—Vicortari. 

The woodland brooks that murmur as they go. See 
Spring’s Coming.—Sherman. 

The woods are full of fairies! See Child and the 
Fairies, The.—“A.” 

The woods decay, the woods decay and fall. See 
Tithonus.—Tennyson. 

The woods grew dark, as though they knew no noon. 
See Life and Death of Jason (Summer Storm).— 
Morris. 

The woosel-cock, so black of hue. See Midsummer 
Night’s Dream (Birds).—Shakespeare. 

The word of God to Leyden came. See Word of God 
to Leyden Came, The.—Ranken. 

The word of the Lord by night. See Boston Hymn.— 
Emerson. 

The words of a blue-eyed child as she kissed her chubby 
hand. See “Good-night, Papa.”—( American 
Messenger.) 

The words of a rebel old and battered. See Bond of 
Blood. The.—Thompson. 

The words that trembled on your lips. See Half Truth. 
—Houghton. 

The work of the sun is slow. See Green Grass under 
the Snow, The.—Preston. 

The work proceeds without intermission. See Soul¬ 
building (“Work proceeds,” etc.).—Beecher. 

The work that should to-day be wrought. See Our¬ 
selves Alone.—O’Hagan. 

The workshops open wide their doors. See Six o’Clock 
P. M.—Anon. 


The world ascribed to Napoleon great and noble quali¬ 
ties. See True and False Glory.—Eddy. 

The w'orld, dear John, as the old folks told us. See 
Home to Rest in, A.—Morford. 

The world for sale!—hang out the sign. See World for 
Sale, The.—Hoyt. ' 

The world goes up and the world goes down. See 
Dolcino to Margaret.—Kingsley. 

The world has seen empires and dynasties without 
number. See Sovereignty of the People, The.— 
Phelps. 

The world hath its night. See Songs of the Night.— 
Spurgeon. 

The world is a battle-field. See South and her Prob¬ 
lems, The (Future of the South, The).—-Grady. 

The world is a queer old fellow. See World, The — 
Wilcox. 

The world is always full of pestilential bores. See 
Climax, The .—(Boston Courier.) 

“The world is ever as we take it.” See Cheerful 


Heart, The.—Anon. . 

The world is filled with folly and sin. See Aux Ital- 
iens <One isn’t Loved Every Day).—Lytton. 

The world is filled with the voices of the dead. See 
Voices of the Dead, The.—Dewey. 

The world is full of care. See Captain Kempthorn.— 
Longfellow. . _ 

The world is full of poetry—the air. See Poetry.— 


See Criti- 


Percival. 

The world is full of proofs; on every side. 

cal Moment, The.—Brown. 

The world is glad when I appear. See Months, Ihe. 

Kavanaugh. _ , „ 

The world is great; the birds all fly from me. See 
Spanish Gypsy, The (I am Lonely). -Eliot. 

The world is growing better every year. See benex 
Jubilans.—Reed. 


The world is naught till one is come. See One.—Bates. 

The world is not so bad a world. See World, The.— 
Anon. 

The world is now entering upon the Mechanical Epoch. 
See Mechanical Epoch, The.—Kennedy. 

The world is quite as good a world. See How We Take 
it.—Miller. 

The world is so full of a number of things. See Happy 
Thought.—Stevenson. 

The world is sympathetic; the statement none can 
doubt. See Men who Do not Lift, The.—Anon. 

The [wr. This] world is too much with us; late and 
soon. See World is too Much with Us, The.— 
Wordsworth. 

“The world is very beautiful;” I said. See Poetry and 
the Poor.—Stowe. 

The world is very evil. See Celestial Country, The.— 
St. Bernard. 

The world keeps festival to-day. See Christmas 
Thoughts.—Talmage. 

The world must be amused. See Value of Amuse¬ 
ments.—Anon. 

The world, not hush’d, lay as in a trance. See Old 
Souls.—Hake. 

The world of fiction hardly contains a more thrilling 
chapter. See Thrilling Incident, A.—Anon. 

“The world owes you a living Does it, Mr. Do- 
nothing? See “World Owes Me a Living, The.”— 
Anon. 

The world puts on its robes of glory now. See Autumn. 
—Laighton. 

The world recedes! it disappears! See Dying Chris¬ 
tian to his Soul, The.—Pope. 

The world, so full of talent. See Balance Wheel, The. 
Coates. 

The world wants men—light-hearted, manly men. 
See Wanted.—Chester. 

The world was like a wilderness. See Flock of Doves, 
The.—Thaxter. 

The world was void. See Darkness.—Byron. 

The worldly hope men set their hearts upon. See 
Rubaiy&t of Omar Khayyam, The (Life and 
Death).—Fitzgerald. 

The world’s a bubble, and the life of a man. See 
World, The.—Bacon. 

The world’s a sea; my flesh a ship that’s manned. See 
Voyage of Life, The.—Quarles. 

The world’s a very happy place. See World’s Music, 
The.—Setoun. 

The world’s great age begins anew. See Hellas (Last 
Chorus of “Hellas”).—Shelley. 

The world’s history is a divine poem. See “World’s 
history is a divine poem, The.”—Garfield. 

The worm of conscience still be-gnaw the soul! See 
King Richard III. (Hatred).—Shakespeare. 

The worst thing that can come. See Just 'Sposin’.— 
Denton. 

The wreath that star-crowned Shelley gave. See After 
a Lecture on Keats.—Holmes. 

The w r ren had built within the porch, she found. See 
Haunted House, The.—Hood. 

The wretch, condemned with life to part. See Captiv¬ 
ity, The (Wretch Condemned, etc.).—Goldsmith. 

The Yankee boy, before he’s sent to school. See 
Whittling.—Pierpont. 

The year begins. I turn the leaf. See Turning over 
the New Leaf.—Anon. 

The year decays, November’s blast. See Thanksgiv¬ 
ing Day.—Anon. 

The year had all the days in chariro. See Why it was 
Cold in May.—Eliot. 

The year has past and gone at last. See Old and the 
New, The.—-Richards. 

The year of my birth is unknown. See Nuts to Crack, 
No. 1.—Denton. 

The year 1784 was remarkable in the life of our friend 
the First Gentleman of Europe. See Comparison 
of George Washington with George the Fourth, 
called the First Gentleman of Europe.—Thackeray. 

The year stood at its equinox. See Milking Maid, The. 
—Rossetti. 

The yearly miracle of spring. See Yearly Miracle 
of Spring, The.—Boker. 

The years are flowers and bloom within. See God’s 
Garden.—Burton. 

The year’s at the spring. See Little Tommy Smith. 
—Riley. 

The year’s at the Spring. See Pippa Passes (Pippa’s 
Song).—Browning. 

The years back of us are full of voices. See “Years 
back of us are full of voices. The.”—Murray. 

The years come in and the years go out. See Months 
and Holidays, The.—Hadley. 


869 





The yellow 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


The yellow death came stealing. See New Magdalen, 
The.—Cary. 

The yellow goldenrod is dressed. See August.—Win¬ 
slow. ' . 

The yellow snow-fog curdled thick. See Retreat from 
Moscow, The.—Thombury. 

The yellow-hammer came to build his nest. See Yel¬ 
low-hammer’s Nest, The.—Chadwick. 

The young child Jesus had a garden. See Legend, A.— 
Stoddard. 

The young May moon is beaming, love. See Young 
May Moon, The.—Moore. 

The young oak grew, and proudly grew. See Oak, The. 
—Smith. 

Thee finds me in the garden, Hannah—come in! ’Tis 
kind of thee. See Quaker Widow, The.—Taylor. 

Thee I would think one of the many wise. See To 
Charles Lamb.—Houghton. 

“Thee, Mary, with this ring I wed.” See To Mary.— 
Bishop. 

Thee need not close the shutters yet; and, David, if 
thee will. See Vacant Chair, The.—Anon. 

Thee, too, modest tressed maid. See Moon.—Rowe. 

Thees man come into my shop already and he don’t 
say a word. See One Cent and Costs.—( Boston 
Globe.) 

Their advent is as silent as their going. See Lost 
Hours.—Duke. 

Their lips are still as the lips of the dead. See Sher¬ 
man’s March.-—By a Soldier. 

Their little language the children. See Love’s Lan¬ 
guage.—Palgrave. 

Their manners had a formal cast. See When Wither¬ 
spoon was President.—Potter. 

Their noonday never knows. See Fame.—Tabb. 

Their only labor was to kill the time. See Castle of 
Indolence, The.—Thomson. 

Their very gods, it seems, we have forgot. See Beside 
the Martyr’s Memorial.—Stringer. 

Then a chief of the great ones around him. See 
Shah-Nameh (Zal and Rudabeh).—Robinson. 

Then agayne I went to the tower melodious. See 
Pastime of Pleasure, The (Amoure Laments the 
Absence of La Belle Pucel).—Hawes. 

Then Agrippa said unto Paul, “Thou art permitted 
to speak for thyself.” See Acts of the Apostles 
(Paul before King Agrippa).— Bible. 

Then as a nimble squirrel from the wood. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals (Hunted Squirrel, The).— 
Browne. 

Then awake!—-the heavens look bright, my dear! See 
Young May Moon.—Moore. 

Then before all they stand—the holy vow. See Human 
Life (Marriage).—Rogers. 

Then came a bloody battle in the clouds. See Battle 
of Lookout Mountain, The.—Cornwallis. 

Then came fair May, the fairest maid on ground. See 
Faerie Queene, The (May).—Spenser. 

Then came jolly summer, being dight. See Faerie 
Queene, The (Summer).—Spenser. 

Then came the Autumn all in yellow clad. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Autumn).—Spenser. 

Then came the fair Queen Kriemhild; she too had seen 
full well. See Nibelungen Lied (How Margrave 
Riideger was Slain).—Lettsom. 

Then came the mad retreat; the whirlwind snows. 
See Retreat from Moscow, The.—Anon. 

Then come we to the last remedy,—civil war. See 
Civil War the Greatest National Evil.—Palmer¬ 
ston. 

Then, fare thee well, my own dear love. See Then, 
Fare Thee Well.—Moore. 

Then felt I like some watcher of the skies. See On 
First. Looking into Chapman’s Homer.—Keats. 

Then forth he called that his daughter fayre. See 
Faerie Qu°ene, The (Una’s Marriage).—Spenser. 

Then from those dark and dreadful precincts passing, 
ghostly fields. See Epic of Hades. The (Marsyas). 
—Morris. 

Then, gazing, I beheld the long-drawn street. See 
Casa Guidi Windows.—Browning. 

Then gently scan your brother man. See Address 
to the Unco Guid (“Then gently,” etc.).—Burns. 

Then give me back that time of pleasures. See Give 
Me back My Youth again.—-Goethe. 

Then haste ye, Prescott and Revere! See Battle of 
Lexington, The.—Lanier. 

Then hate me when thou wilt; if ever, now. See Son¬ 
nets, XC.—Shakespeare. 

Then hear me, bounteous Heaven. See Venice 
Preserved (Jaffier Parting with Belvidera).— 
Otway. 


Then his hand he placed, as ever. See When Greek 
Meets Greek.—Anon. 

Then hush! oh, hush! for the Father knows what thou 
knowest not. See same. —Havergal. 

Then I tuned my harp,—took off the lilies we twine 
round its chords. See Saul (David Playing before 
Saul).—Browning. 

Then in a free and lofty strain. See Banquet of Sense, 
The.—Jonson. 

Then, in that time and place, I spoke to her. See 
Gardener’s Daughter, The.—Tennyson. 

Then is she gone? O fool and coward I! See Sonnets 
from the Poems.—Drummond. 

Then it came to pass that a pestilence fell on the city. 
See Evangeline (Finding of Gabriel).—Longfellow. 

Then let the holly red be hung. See same. —Sher¬ 
man. 

Then looking upward to the heaven’s leams. See In¬ 
duction, The.—Buckhurst. 

Then, methouht, the air grew denser, perfumed from 
an unseen censer. See Raven, The.—Poe. 

Then Oberon spake the word of might. See Flitting 
of the Fairies, The.—Barlow. 

Then out spake brave Horatius. See Horatius.—Ma¬ 
caulay. 

Then sang Moses and children of Israel this song unto 
the Lo r d. See Exodus (Song of Moses).— Bible. 

Then saw I, with gray eyes fulfilled of rest. See In 
Hades.—Brackett. 

Then saw they how there hove a dusky barge. See 
Idylls of the King (Passing of Arthur, The).— 
Tennyson. 

Then shall He answer how He lifted up. See “When 
Saw We Thee?”—Piatt. 

Then shall the kingdom of heaven be likened unto the 
ten virgins. See St. Matthew, XXV.— Bible. 

Then shall we see and know the group divine. See 
Then shall We See.—Moore. 

Then sighed the Wandering Angel sore. See Water 
Lily, The.—Waters. 

Then sing, ye birds, sing, sing a joyous song! See 
Ode: Intimations of Immortality.—Wordsworth. 

Then spake Jehovah to Job out of the whirlwind and 
said. See Job (Omnipotence of Jehovah).— 
Bible. 

Then spake King Arthur to Sir Bedivere. See Idylls 
of the King (Passing of Arthur, The).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Then step by step walks Autumn. See October 
(Autumn’s Processional).—Craik. 

Then that dread angel near the awful throne. See 
Fiat Lux.—Mifflin. 

Then the little Hiawatha. See Song of Hiawat ha, The 
(Hiawatha’s Chickens).—Longfellow. 

Then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind, and 
said. See Job.— Bible. 

Then the master with a gesture of command. See 
Building of the Ship, The.—Longfellow. 

Then the night wore on, and we knew the worst. See 
Maiden’s Last Farewell, The.—John Paul. 

Then to my room I went. See Angel in the House, 
The.—Patmore. 

Then, too, I love thee. See same. —Lomin. 

Then took the generous host. See Rose, The.—Tay¬ 
lor. 

Then walked they to a grove but near at hand. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals (Scented Grove, The).— 
Browne. 

Then, while the first day of the week was dark. See 
Light of the World, The (Mary at the Sepulchre). 
—Arnold. 

Then you acknowledge that it is yours? See Mouse 
Trao, The.—Howells. 

Then you have not h°ard his adventures? See Mun¬ 
chausen Outdone.—Anon. 

Then you think everybody ought to stop and weigh 
their words. See I Didn’t Mean Anything.— 
Anon. 

Then you think you hain’t got nothin’ to give to the 
Persians? See Subscribing to Missionary Fund.— 
Anon. 

Thence passing forth, they shortly doe arryve. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Bower of Bliss, The). 
—Spenser. 

Thence to the famous orators repair. See Paradise 
Regained.—Milton. 

Theocritus! Theocritus! ah, thou hadst pleasant dreams. 
See Theocritus.—Langhorne. 

Theophilus Thistle, that sifter of thistles. See Theo- 
philus Thistle’s Thrusted Thumb.—Pond. 

Ther is right at the West side of Itaille. See Canter¬ 
bury Taler The (Griselda).—Chaucer. 


870 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


There are 


There ain’t no pleasure in being a boy these days, 
there ain’t! See Fauntleroy’s Wail.—Riordan. 

There all the happy souls that ever were. See Pleas¬ 
ures of Heaven, The.—Jonson. 

There ance was a may, and she lo’ed na men. See 
Werena my Heart’s Licht I wad Dee.—Baillie. 

There are a great many kinds of animals. See Com¬ 
position on Animals.—Rook. 

There are a number of us creep. See Insignificant Ex¬ 
istence.—Watts. 

There are a sort of men whose visages. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The (Pomposity). — Shake¬ 
speare. 

There are a thousand foxes to one lion. See Little 
Foxes.—Burdette. 

There are a thousand pretty, engaging little ways. 
See Engaging Manners.—Anon. 

There are about fifty species of maple. See Choosing 
a “State Tree.”—The Maple.—Tindall. 

There are beautiful songs that we never sing. See Way 
of the World, The.—Anon. 

There are blossoms that hae budded. See Scotch 
Hymn.—Anon. 

There are bonds of all sorts in this world of ours. See 
Canteen, The.—O’Reilly. 

There are books which take rank in our life with 
parents and lovers. See Books (“There are books,” 
etc.).—Emerson. 

There are but three individuals. See Character of 
Washington[, The].—Everett. 

There are certain things—as a spider, a ghost. See 
Englishman’s Sea-dirge, An.—Anon. 

There are circumstances of peculiar and beautiful cor¬ 
respondence in the careers of Virginia and New 
England. See Pilgrim Fathers, The (New England 
and Virginia).—Winthrop. 

There are days of silent sorrow. See Hardest Time of 
All, The.—Doudney. 

There are days when the sun shines warm and bright. 
See Song.—Hartridge. 

There are faces just as perfect. See My Love of Long 
Ago.—Browne. 

There are few faithful portraits. See Daniel Webster. 
—Hoar. 

There are four things—four indubitable things that 
make high license. See Some Delusions of High 
License.—Johnson. 

There are gains for all our losses. See Flight of 
Youth, The.—Stoddard. 

There are generally about six of them in a bunch. See 
How Girls Fish.—Anon. 

There are harps that complain to the presence of night. 
See Music of the Night.—Neal. 

There are in this loud stunning tide. See St. Matthew 
(Happiness).—Keble. 

There are lessons to learn through the school-time of 
life. See Lessons.—Roach. 

There are living organisms so transparent. See Emer¬ 
son, Extract concerning.—Holmes. 

There are lots of things a girl doesn’t know. See 
Things a Girl doesn’t Know.—Denton. 

There are many flags in many lands. See Hurrah for 
the Flag.—Anon. 

There are many friends of summer. See Cling to Those 
Who Cling to You.—Anon. 

There are many phases through which the soul must 
pass. See same. —Anon. 

There are many things that boys may know. See No 
Boy Knows.—Riley. 

There are men who dispute what they do not under¬ 
stand. See How Mr. Coville Counted the Shingles 
on his House.—Bailey. 

There are moments in life that are never forgot. See 
Remembrance.—Percival. 

There are new developments of human character. See 
Drunkard’s Wife, The.—Burritt. 

There are no bargains driven. See Hudibras (Marriage). 
—Butler. 

There are no colors in God’s heaven-bent bow. See 
My Mother.—Currie. 

There are no colors in the fairest sky. See Walton s 
Book of Lives.—Wordsworth. 

There are no ghosts. Could they return to earth. See 
Ghosts.—Anon. 

There are no infidels. All unbelief. See There are 
None.—Jones. t . 

There are occasions in life, in which a great mind lives 
years. See Uses of Astronomy, The (Discoveries 
of Galileo).— Everett. 

There are one or two things I should just like to hint. 
See Fable for Critics, A (To his Countrymen).— 
Lowell. 


There are other fellows nearer. See Lines to Her.— 
McClure. 

There are parts of our life we do not like to think about. 
See same. —Parker. 

There are people who say they can never succeed. See 
Where there’s a Will there’s a Way.—Kavanaugh. 

There are persons among you, O Athenians, who think 
to confound a speaker. See Philippics (Democ¬ 
racy Hateful to Philip, A).—Demostnenes. 

There are poems unwritten and songs unsung. See 
Unwritten Poems.—Anon. 

There are points from which we can command our life. 
See Festus (Forecast).—Bailey. 

There are recollections as pleasant as they are sacred 
and eternal. See same. —Walker. 

There are several sovereignties in this country. See 
same.— Garfield. 

“There are silver pines on the window-pane.” See 
Gift that None could See, The.—-Wilkins. 

There are so many birds and bugs. See Time Flies.— 
Goodfellow. 

There are so many things, I think, we do not under¬ 
stand. See Brother Ben.—Meyers. 

There are soft words murmured by dear, dear lips. See 
Mother.—Anon. 

There are some great troubles that only time can heal. 
See same. —Anon. 

There are some hearts like wells, green-mossed and 
deep. See Living Waters.—Spencer. 

There are some hearts, that, like the roving vine. See 
Trodden Flowers.—Anon. 

There are some ills which affect all society and all 
government. See Sense of Public Duty, The.— 
Pillsbury. 

There are some qualities—some incorporate things. 
See Silence.—Poe. 

There are some quiet ways. -See Wayside, The.—Morse. 

There are some things hard to understand. See Last 
Time I Met Lady Ruth, The.-—Lytton. 

There are some things that puzzle me. See Recitation 
for a Small Boy.—Kavanaugh. 

There are some wishes that may start. See Retro¬ 
spect, A.—Landor. 

There are sounds in the sky when the year grows old. 
See Christmas Bells.—Anon. 

There are stages of the progress. See Graduation.— 
Brooks. 

There are stepping-stones in the deepest waters. See 
As Thy Day Thy Strength shall Be.—H. B. C. 

There are strong powers of love that early years. See 
Love’s Final Flowers.—Barlow. 

There are sweeter words than were ever said. See 
Life’s Unexpressed.—Elders. 

There are those, though, whom monuments can never 
honor. See Bombast.—Anon. 

There are three green eggs in a small brown pocket. 
See At Virgil’s Window.—Markham. 

There are three lessons I would write. See Words of 
Strength.—Schiller. 

There are three preachers, ever preaching. See Three 
Preachers, The.—Mackay. 

There are three tests by which races love to be tried. 
See Toussaint L’Ouverture (Toussaint L’Ouver- 
ture’s Place among Great Men).—Phillips. 

There are three ways in which men take. See Music 
Grinders, The.—Holmes. 

There are times when arms alone will suffice. See 
Sword and a Nation’s Rights, The.—Meagher. 

There are twelve months in all the year. See Robin 
Hood Rescuing the Widow’s Three Sons.—Anon. 

There are two angels that attend unseen. -See Christ- 
us: A Mystery (“There are two,’’etc.).—Longfellow. 

There are two births; the one when light. See To 
Chloe.—Cartwright. 

There are two little songsters well known in the land. 
See I Have and Oh! Had I.—Langheim. 

There are two smithies in our little town. See Haunted 
Smithy, The.—Eaton. 

There are two very funny fellows in Harlem. See 
Ever so Far Away.—Von Boyle. 

There are two ways of regarding a sermon. See 
Stones of Venice (Sermons).—Ruskin. 

There are veils that lift, there are bars that fall. See 
Song of Maelduin.—Rolleston. 

There are who blame sensations of delight. See 
Bamberg.—F aber. 

There are who say the lover’s heart. See Love.— 
Hervey. 

There are who say we are but dust. See same. — 
Landor. 

There are wild theories abroad. See Against Lord 
John Russell’s Motion.—Canning. 


871 




There as 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


There, as she sewed, came floating through her head. 
See Past.—Howells. 

There be in plants influences yet unthought. See 
Hidden Uses of Plants.—Tupper. 

There be many kinds of parting—yes, I know. See 
Separation.—Dickinson. 

There be none of Beauty’s daughters. See Stanzas 
for Music.—Byron. 

There be the greyhounds! lo’k! an’ there’s the heiirel 
See Heiire, The.—Barnes. 

There be those who sow beside. See There be Those.— 
Barton. 

There bloom three young flowers so sweet and fair. See 
Three Flowers, The.—Smith. 

There breathes no being but has some pretence. See 
Poetry (Poesy).—Holmes. 

There came a day of showers. See Silver Thaw, The.— 
Roberts. 

There came a ghost to Marjorie’s [or Margaret’s] door. 
See Sweet William’ Ghost.—Anon. 

There came a man, making his hasty moan. See 
Mahmoud.—Hunt. 

There came a message to the vine. See God’s Miracle 
of May.—Sherman. 

There came a pedlar to an evening house. See Pedlar, 
The.—Ramal. 

There came a soul to the gate of Heaven. See Self- 
exiled, The.—Smith. 

There came a sound of drums. Twice on such a day. 
See Dr. Sevier (Fall In!—1S60).—Cable. 

There came a stirring of wind from the east. See 
MacLeod of Dare.—-Black. 

There came a time when roses bloomed again. See 
May.—Saunders. 

There came a youth upon the earth. See Shepherd of 
King Admetus.—Lowell. 

There came at night a clarion call from Heaven. See 
Off Havana.—Ingham. 

There came from the Rhineland three travelers gay. 
See Landlady’s Daughter, The.—Parsons. 

There came to Cameliard. See Idylls of the King 
(Crowning of Arthur, The).—Tennyson. 

There came to port last Sunday night. See New 
Arrival, The.—-Cable. 

There came to the beach a poor exile of Erin. See 
Exile of Erin, The.—Campbell. 

There can be no prosperity nor virtue nor glory in the 
aggregate. See same. —-Chapin. 

There can be nothing sadder than the solemn hush of 
nature. See Autumn Thoughts.—Nye. 

There clung three roses to a stem. See Envoy.— 
Ramal. 

There come the boys! Oh, dear, the noise! See 
There Come the Boys.—Anon. 

There comes a month in the weary year. See October. 
—Anon. 

There dawn dear memories of the past. See Memories. 
—Anon. 

There died upon the Miraj height. See Good Deeds.— 
Arnold. 

There, don’t cry any more, Arty, and you shall have 
Sissy’s new wax doll. See Brave Little Sister, 
The.—Anon. 

There! don’t that look nice? I know mamma thought 
I couldn’t do this. See Pious.—Rook. 

There dwelt a miller hale and bold. See Miller of [the] 
Dee, The.—Mackay. 

There dwelt in Bethlehem a Jewish maid. See Miracle 
of the Roses, The.—Southey. 

There dwelt in far Japan. See Stone-cutter, The.— 
Allen. 

There dwelt the Man, the flower of human kind. See 
Mount Vernon, the Home of Washington.—Day. 

There falls with every wedding chime. See same. — 
Landor. 

There fell a King. Not King alone in blood. See 
Frederick III.—Coolbreth. 

There fell an April shower, one night. See April 
Showers.—Wilkins. 

There go those men again, from morning till night. 
See Removal, The.—Hamilton. 

There goes in the world a notion that the scholar 
should be a recluse. See American Scholar, The.— 
Emerson. 

There goes Johnnie on a run. See Johnnie’s Gun.— 
Denton. 

There goes the old bell again, swinging out from the 
old stone arch. See Cherokee Roses.—Anon. 

There grew a little flower once. See Die Herz Blume. 
—Hood. 

There grewe an aged tree on the greene. See Shep- 
heardes Calender, The (Oak and the Briere, The). 
—Spenser. 


There grows a fail palmetto in the sunny southern lands. 
See Palmetto and the Pine, The.—Pike. 

There had been a gloomy silence in the room. See 
Oliver Twist (Death of Bill Sykes, The).—Dickens. 

There hangs a saber, and there a rein. See All.— 
Durivage. 

There happened to be only four bedrooms. See Night 
with a Ventriloquist, A.—Cockton. 

“There has been a heap of rubbish dumped about the 
patient seas.” See Uncle Sam’s Spring Cleaning. 
—Foss. 

There has been considerable excitement in Harlem. 
See Schlausenheimer’s Alarming Glock.—Von 
Boyle. 

There has come to my mind a legend,—a thing I had 
half forgot. See Legend, A.—Osborne. 

There has something gone wrong. See “Keep a Stiff 
Upper Lip.”—Cary. 

There have been a number of trees suggested. See 
Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Hickory.— 
Painter. 

There have been many painful crises since the impa¬ 
tient vanity of South Carolina. > See Abraham 
Lincoln.—Lowell. 

There have been those who have denied to Lafayette 
the name of a great man. See Eulogy on Lafay¬ 
ette.—Everett. 

There he lay upon his back. See Aurora Leigh 
(Marian’s Child).—Browning. 

There he repeated with a look. See Apostrophe to 
Water (Apostrophe to Cold Water).—Arrington. 

There he stands, in his pitiful parti-hues. See Circus 
Clown, The.—Urner. 

There! I have finished my algebra lesson at last. See 
Behind the Scenes.—Rayne. 

There, I knew they’d begin before we could get there. 
See Ways of Some Girls at the Play, The.—Anon. 

There, I know my lesson! See Cow in the Garden, 
The.—Anon. 

There! I knowed it would be so, spite of all my word 
and prayer. See Church Fair, The.—Eisenbeis. 

There, I think that will do. Pink suits my com¬ 
plexion. See Golden Rule, The.—Kavanaugh. 

There in her high-backed chair she sits. See Mother’s 
Blessing, The.—Anon. 

There in his room, whene’er the moon looks in. See 
Ode for a Master Mariner Ashore.—Guiney. 

There in its old historic splendour stands. See Sonnet 
to the Hudson.—Heilman. 

There in seclusion and remote from men. See Nathaniel 
Hawthorne.—Longfellow. 

There in stupendous horror grew. See For the Picture. 
—Turner. 

There in the fane a beauteous creature stands. See 
W Oman .—Calidasa. 

There is a beauty at the goal of life. See Goal of Life, 
The.—Lampman. 

There is a bird, a plain, brown bird. See Nightingale, 
The.—Thaxter. 

There is a bird I know so well. See Song-sparrow, The. 
—Van Dyke. 

There is a bird that comes and sings. See Song the 
Oriole Sings, The.—Howells. 

There is a bird who by his coat. See Jackdaw, The.— 
Cowper. 

There is a boat upon a sea. See Silver Boat, The.— 
Anon. 

There is a book, who runs may read. See Elder 
Scripture, The.—Keble. 

There is a child—a boy or girl. See Is it You?— 
Goodwin. 

There is a city, builded by no hand. See Paradisi 
Gloria.—Parsons. 

There is a class of men rebellious to all law. See Shall 
America be Ruled Forever by the Liquor Power? 
—Ireland. 

There is a clouded city, gone to rest. See Aztec City, 
The.—Ware. 

There is a creed whose pure and gentle teaching. See 

• Creeds.—Anon. 

There is a dance of leaves in that aspen bower. See 
Gladness of Nature, The.-—Bryant. 

There is a danger from suppressed repudiation. See 
Suppressed Repudiation.—Beecher. 

There is a day which never comes. See To-morrow.— 
Spencer. 

There is a difference worth while to note. See Heroism 
of Horatio Nelson, The.—Mills. 

There is a dungeon in whose dim drear light. See 
Cliilde Harold’s Pilgrimage (FilialLove).—Byron. 

There is a family out on the west-side who had a visit 
one day from a strange dog. See That West-side 
Dog; or, William Nye in Chicago.—Wilkie. 


872 





There is 


FIRST LINE INDEX 


Thereds a fellow across the way. See Banjo Fiend, 
The.—Bleyer. 

There is a fever of the spirit. See Nightmare Abbey 
(Mr. Cypress’s Song in Ridicule of Lord Byron).— 
Peacock. 

There is a flower, a little flower. See Daisy, The.— 
Montgomery. 

There is a flower I wish to wear. See Heartsease.— 
Landor. 

There is a flower, the lesser Celandine. See Lesson, A. 
—Wordsworth. 

There is a flower which dares the storms and winds. 
See Flower of Love, The.—Kahn. 

“There is a fountain filled with blood.” See Outside. 
—Anon. 

There is a fountain fill’d with blood. See Praise for 
the Fountain Opened.—Cowper. 

There is a funny fellow. See Funny Fellow, A.— 
Sherman. 

There is a funny little man. See Mr. Nobody.—Anon. 

There is a Garden in her face. See Cherry Ripe.— 
Champion 

There is a gentle nymph not far from hence. See 
Comus (Nymph of the Severn, The).—Milton. 

There is a glorious city in the Sea. See Venice.— 
Rogers. 

There is a glory in tree and blossom. See same .— 
Parker. 

There is a God! The herbs of the valley, the cedars of 
the mountains, bless Him. See Genius of Chris¬ 
tianity,The (Nature Proclaims a Deity).—Chateau¬ 
briand. 

“There is a good time coming, boys.” See Now.— 
Anon. 

There is a grandeur in the soul that dares. See same .— 
Clarke. 

There is a great hope for the Prohibition Party. See 
Go Forward to Victory.—-Funk. 

There is a green hill far away. See There is a Green 
Hill.—Alexander. 

There is a green island in lone Gougaune Barra. See 
Gougaune Barra.—Callanan. 

There is a happy land. See same. —-Young. 

There is a Heaven, or here, or there. See Ballade of 
the Bookman’s Paradise.—Lang. 

There is a history in all men’s lives See King Henry 
IV., Pt. II. (Oracle).—Shakespeare. 

There is a knack in doing many a thing. See Pilgrims 
and the Peas, The.—Pindar. 

There is a lady sweet and kind. See There is a Lady. 
-—Anon. 

There is a lady with a baby, and it looks like a new 
one. See New Baby, The.—Burnett. 

There is a land, of every land the pride. See West 
Indies, The (My Country).—-Montgomery. 

There is a land of pure delight. See same. —Watts. 

There is a little bird that sings. See Sweetheart.— 
Greville. 

There is a little maiden, who has an awful time. See 
Awful Story, An.—Anon. 

There is a little maiden. Who is she? Do you know? 
See Who is She?—Douglass. 

There is a little moral thing in France. See Bien- 
seance.—Wolcott. 

There is a little mystic clock. See Life Clock, The.— 
Anon. 

There is a love of country which comes uncalled. See 
American Nationality (Love of Country).— 
Choate. 

There is a madness of the heart, not head. See Mad¬ 
ness.— {Punch.) 

There is a man of great abilities. See Irish Aliens.— 
Shiel. 

There is a mansion vast and fair. See World, The.— 
Schiller. 

There is a mate for every heart. See Dream-love.— 
Peck. 

There is a mountain and a wood between us. See 
Separation.—Landor. 

There is a mystery in the soul of state. See Troilus 
and Cressida (Oracle).—Shakespeare. 

There is a National Flag! See American Flag, The.— 
Sumner. 

“There is a niland on a river lying.” See Collusion 
between a Alegaiter and a Water Snaik.—Morris. 

There is a perennial nobleness, and even sacredness in 
work. Nee Past and Present (Work).—Carlyle. 

There is a plant you often see. See Corn.—Anon. 

There is a pleasure in the pathless woods. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Apostrophe to the Ocean).— 
Byron. 

There is a question that comes down to all of us. See 
Momentous Question, A.—-Colfax. 


There is a quiet garden. See Love's Garden.—Field. 

There is a quiet spirit in these woods. See Spirit of 
Poetry, The.—Longfellow. 

There is a race from eld descent. See Hey Nonny No. 
—;Merington. 

There is a rainbow in the sky. See Promise.—Anon. 

There is a Reaper, whose name is Death. See Reaper 
and the Flowers, The.—Longfellow. 

There is a river clear and fair. See Imitation of Words¬ 
worth, An.—Fanshawe. 

There is a river in the ocean. See same. —Maury. 

There is a safe and secret place. See Secret Place, 
The.—Lyte. 

There is a sect of ancient philosophers. See Common¬ 
wealth of Lunatics, The.—Steele. 

There is a shadow on the wall. See Shadow on the 
Wall, The.—Anon. 

There is a silence where hath been no sound. See 
Silence.—Hood. 

There is a singing in the summer air. See Summer 
Pool, The.—Buchanan. 

There is a soft green darkness ’round. See Forest 
Silence. ( Harper's Magazine.) 

There is a sort of courage, which, I frankly confess it. 
See Noblest Public Virtue, The.—Clay. 

There is a soul above the soul of each. See Humanity. 
—Dixon. 

There is a sound I would not hear. See' Fear.— 
Mitchell. 

There is a stir of expectation, a burst of trumpets from 
the Capitol. See Festival of Mars, The.—Brooks. 

There is a story, I have heard. See Bluebell, The.— 
Eastman. 

There is a story that I have been told. See Ten Robber 
Toes.—Barr. 

There is a stream (I name not its name, lest inquisitive 
tourist). See Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, The 
(Bathers, The).—Clough. 

There is a temple in ruin stands. See Siege of Corinth, 
The (Alp’s Decision).—Byron. 

There is a tide in the affairs of men. See Julius 
Caesar (“There is a tide.” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

There is a time, we know not when. See same. — 
Alexander. 

There is a tomb in Arqua, rear’d in air. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Petrarch’s Tomb).— 
Byron. 

There is a vignette representing a heavy sword. See 
Opinions Stronger than Armies.—Ostrander. 

There is a virtuous, glorious courage. See True 
Courage in Life.—Channing. 

There is a white hatchment over the portal. See Baby 
is Dead, The.—Browne. 

There is a woman down town who delights to find a 
case. See Uncle Tom and the Hornets. ( Detroit 
Free Press.) 

There is a yew-tree, pride of Lorton Vale. See Yew- 
trees.—-Wordsworth. 

There is abundant evidence in America. See Cutting 
off the Forests.—Higley. 

There is an affinity between all natures, animate and 
inanimate. See True Nobleman, A.—Irving. 

There is an apostolical succession. See same. — 
Boardman. 

There is an earthly glimmer in the Tomb. See Love 
after Death.—O’Shaughnessy. 

There is an editor on Harvard Street who never gets 
home till long after midnight. See Ruining the 
Minister’s Parrot.—Anon. 

There is an element of poetry in us all. See Poetry in 
Battle.—Robertson. 

There is an end to kisses and to sighs. See To Love 
there is no End.—Anon. 

There is an evening twilight of the heart. See Twilight. 
—Halleck. 

There is an hour of peaceful rest. See Hour of Peaceful 
Rest, The.—Tappan. 

There is an isle beyond our ken. See Isle of Lost 
Dreams, The.—Sharp. 

There is an old tradition sacred held in Wexford town. 
See Fishermen of Wexford, The.—O’Reilly. 

There is an old woman down town. See Uncle Tom 
and the Hornets.—Anon. 

There is an old yew tree. See Old Church-yard Tree, 
The.—Anon. 

There is an opinion that littleness must necessarily 
be mean. See Napoleon’s Ambition and Shelley’s 
Doubt.—De Shon. 

There is an unseen battle-field. See Unseen Battle¬ 
field, The.—Anon. 

There is another fact which strikes one in looking at 
these nests. See Birds Choose the Maple, The.— 
Cooper. 


873 





I 


There is AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


There is beauty in the forest. See Beauty Everywhere. 
—Smith. 

There is, between the whole animal kingdom on the 
one side. See same. —Muller. 

There is but one great sorrow. See Shadow, The.— 
St 9 ddard. 

There is delight in singing, though none hear. See 
Robert Browning.—Landor. 

There is dignity in toil. See Dignity of Labor, The.— 
Hall. 

There is enjoyment in the pathless woods. See Quiet 
Street, The.—Anon. 

There is ever a song somewhere, my dear. See Song, 
A.—Riley. 

There is going on to-day an organized conspiracy. See 
In Defence of the Christian Sunday.—Doyle. 

There is hope in the world for you and me. See Look 
Up.-—Bolton. 

There is in life no blessing like affection. See Bonds 
of Affection.—Landon. 

There is in the fate of these unfortunate beings much 
to awaken our sympathy. See Indians, The.— 
Story. 

There is Lowell, who’s striving Parnassus to climb. See 
Fable for Critics, A (On Himself).—Lowell. 

There is many a rest in the road of life. See Bright 
Side, The.—Kidder. 

There is much declamation about the sacredness of the 
compact. See Keynote of Abolition, The.— 
Garrison. 

There is much in every way in the city of Florence to 
excite the curiosity. See Uses of Astronomy, 
The (Galileo).—Everett. 

There is much that is awe-inspiring about the death 
of soldiers on the battlefield. See After the Charge 
at La Quasina.—Marshall. 

There is much that may be done. See So Much May 
be Done.—( Hebrew Journal.) 

There is much to be said in favor of keeping a regular 
account. See Boy’s Journal, A.—Anon. 

There is music in the ocean. See Music Everywhere.— 
Mulchinock. 

There is naught that is new, saith the preacher. See 
To Robert Louis Stevenson.—Viele. 

There is no architect. See House, The.—Emerson. 

There is no birdling in the nest the breeze rocks in the 
tree. See God’s Father Care.—Harris. 

There is no breeze upon the fern. See Lady of the 
Lake, The (Beal’ an Dhuine).—Scott. 

There is no charm in time, as time, nor good. .See 
Time and its Changes.—Bailey. 

There is no dearer love of lost hours. See Idleness.— 
Mitchell. 

There is no death, the stars go down. See There is No 
Death.—-M cCreery. 

There is no doubt of the sovereignty of the United 
States. See Sovereignty of the United States, 
The.—Anon. 

There is no excuse for neglect of duty more common. 
See I Forgot.—Anon. 

There is no flock, however watched and tended. See 
Resignation.—Longfellow. 

There is no friend like a sister. See Good Sister, The.— 
Rossetti. 

There is no God! If one should stand at noon. See 
There is no God.—Almon-IIensley. 

'There is no God,” the wicked saith. See Dipsychus 
(Atheism).—Clough. 

There is no historic figure more noble than that of the 
Jewish lawgiver. See Abraham Lincoln {Martyr 
President, The).—Beecher. 

There is no joy in the world like you. See Baby Mine. 
—Burdette. 

There is no land like England. See Foresters, The 
(King Richard in Sherwood Forest).—Tennyson. 

There is no laughter in the natural world. See 
Laughter and Death.—Blunt. 

There is no life in which there is. See Sweet Peace is 
Born.—Hahn. 

There is no life on earth, but being in love 1 See Love. 
—Jonson. 

There is no more worthy mission for the poet. See 
Mission of Thomas Hood, The.—Anon. 

There is no morrow. See same. —Preston. 

There is no name so sweet on earth. See Blessed 
Name, The.—Bethune. 

There is no one that dies whose death is not momentous. 
See Horace Greeley.-—Beecher. 

There is no [other] one quality that so much attaches 
man to his fellow-man as cheerfulness. See 
Cheerfulness.—Anon. 

There is no other place under the heavens. See Daddy 
Benson and the Fairies.—( Detroit F*-ee Press.) 


Siere is no other word in the vocabulary of our 

* language. See Cones for the Camp Fire (Camp¬ 
ing and Campers).—Murray. 

There is no permanent greatness to a nation. See 
Moral Law for Nation.—Bright. 

There is no pleasure like the pleasure of doing good. 
See Multitude of Littles, The.—Hall. 

There is no reason why the inventor of a remedy. See 
She Meant Business.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

There is no rest. ’Tis but an empty sound. See Rest. 
—Anon. 

There is no rhyme that is half so sweet. See Proem.— 
Cawein. 

There is no roof in all the world, of palace or of cot. 
See same. —Anon. 

There is no sadness so unutterable. See same. — 
Brooke. 

There is no social disease so widespread. See Piano 
Mania, The.—Croly. 

There is no summer ere the swallows come. See Love’s 
Meinie.—Bourdillon. 

There is no sunshine that hath not its shade. See 
Compensation.—Anon. 

There is no time like the old time, when you and I 
were young. See No Time Like the Old Time.— 
Anon. 

There is no use in talking. Say what you will. See 
Love in a Cottage.—Anon. 

There is no virtue wfithout a characteristic beauty. 
See Good Son, The.—Dana. 

There is no worldly pleasure here below. See On Love. 
—Ayton. 

There is none, O, none but you. See same. —Cam¬ 
pion. 

There is not, and there never was on this earth. See 
Antiquity of the Roman Catholic Church, The.— 
Macaulay. 

There is not in all the north countrie. See Burial of 
the Old Flag, The.—Barr. 

There is not in the [ter. this] wide world a valley so 
sweet. See Meeting of the Waters, The.—Moore. 

There is nothing beautiful, sweet, or grand in life, but 
in its mysteries. See Mysteries of Life, The.— 
Chateaubriand. 

There is nothing more beautiful and interesting than 
to watch the gradual development. See Juvenile 
Inquisitor, A.—Dane. 

There is nothing new under the sun. See same. — 
Gilder. 

There is nothing nicer for an Exhibition, or other like 
occasion. See Floral Guide, The.-—Olcott. 

There is nothing so scarce as good nonsense. See 
Uncle Esek’s Wisdom.—( Century Magazine.) 

“There is nothing that adds so much to the enjoyment 
of home.” See Mrs. Brindle’s Music Lesson.— 
Anon. 

There is nothing which the adversaries of improvement 
are more wont to make themselves merry with. 
See Teachers of Mankind, The.—Brougham. 

There is now no nation which is not familiar with the 
Stars and Stripes. See Stars and Stripes, The.— 
Anon. 

There is one accomplishment, in particular, which I 
would earnestly recommend to you. See Good 
Reading.—Hart. 

There is one broad proposition [.senators,] on which I 
stand. See Against Flogging in the Navy (Against 
Whipping in the Navy).—Stockton. 

There is one grand and sublime ceremony, the Miserere 
of St. Peter. See Miserere of St. Peter’s Church 
at Rome, The.—Castelar. 

There is one great historic fact which in my sober 
judgment. See Abolition of African Slavery.— 
Haygood. 

There is one lady in Indianapolis. See Mrs. McDuffy 
on Baseball.—( Detroit Free P%ess.) 

There is one man, of great abilities. See Irish Aliens 
and English Victories.—Sheil. 

There is one part of our mental nature which, it has 
occurred to me. See Culture of the Imagination, 
The.—Anon. 

There is one respect in which men differ. See Strong 
Heart, The.—Chapin. 

There is one spot for which my soul will yearn. See 
same. —Benton. 

There is one spot on all the earth. See Our Childhood’s 
Home.—R. S. 

There is one thing in the wide universe which is really 
valuable. See same. —Todd. 

There is only one cure for the evils which newly 
acquired freedom produces. See Milton (Men al¬ 
ways Fit for Freedom).—Macaulay. 


874 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


There sat 


There is perhaps no pursuit which leads the mind more 
directly. See Study of Trees and Flowers, The.— 
Chambers. 

There is rain upon the window. See Home Song.— 
Scott. 

There is right at the west side of Itaille. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The (Griselda).—Chaucer. 

There is room in this our country but for one flag. See 
But One Flag for Our Country.—Holstein. 

There is sad news from Genoa. See Eulogy on 
O 'Connell.—Seward. 

There is something bright and precious. See Great 
Treasure, A.—Denton. 

There is something cordial in a fat man. See Falstaff. 
—Giles. 

There is something in the Autumn that is native to my 
blood. See Vagabond Song, A.—Carman. 

There is something in the word home. See Home.— 
Anon. 

There is something most refreshing. See Visit to the 
Sea, A.—Troland. 

There is something on earth for the children to do. See 
Something to Do.—Anon. 

There is something pathetic in the life of every man. 
(See True Heart, A. (Youth’s Companion.) 

There is something, sir, peculiarly unjust in bounding 
the term of an author’s property. See Extension 
of the Term of Copyright.—Talfourd. 

There is something sustaining in the very agitation. 
See Mill on the Floss, The (“There is something,” 
etc.).—Eliot. 

There is something that fills me with wonder. See 
Difficult Problem, A.—Thurston. 

There is strange music in the stirring wind. See 
November, 1793.—Bowles. 

There is strength for a school as there is for a state. 
See Inaugural Address.—Anon. 

There is such power even in smallest things. See 
Sonnets in Shadow.—Bates. 

There is sweet music here that softer falls. See Lotos- 
eaters. The (Choric Song).—Tennyson. 

There is the hat. See Only the Clothes She Wore.— 
Shepherd. 

There is the national flag. He must be cold indeed. 
See Flag of the Union, The (Flag of our Country, 
The). —Wi nt hrop. 

"There is work, good man, for you to-day!” See 
Might of Love, The.—Cary. 

There! It is all ready. See Cats.—Anon. 

There it lies, a little shoe. See Little Shoe, A.—Anon. 

There it lies before you, that moving panorama. See 
Midnight in London.—Jones-Foster. 

There! I’ve got my morning work all done. See 
After a Fashion.—Duffey. 

There! I’ve lost my hat getting in. See Cassius’ 
Whistle.—Meyers. 

There iz one man in this basement world. See Billings 
on “The District Schoolmaster.”—Shaw. 

There! John, hitch Dobbin to the post; come near me 
and sit down. See There’s Danger in the Town.— 
Yates. 

There lay upon the ocean’s shore. See Finding of the 
Lyre, The.—Lowell. 

There lies a little city [ter. little omitted] in the hills. 
See Home.—Sill. 

There lies a little city leagues away. See Deserted 
City, The.—-Roberts. 

There lies a lone isle in the tropic seas. See Easter 
Island.—Scott. 

There, like a rich and golden pyramid. See To the 
Countess of Rutland.—Jonson. 

There, like ebon statues in the starlight, stood the 
Black Brigade. See Reason Why, The.—Prickett. 

There! little girl; don’t cry! See Life Lesson, A.— 
Riley. 

There lived a little laddie once. See It wasn’t Me!— 
Richards. 

There lived a man named Ferguson. See Suicidal Cat, 
The.—Anon. 

There lived a parson, as we’re told. See Loud Call, 
The.—Anon. 

There lived a shining bumble-bee. See Boy and Bee. 
—Richards. 

There lived a wife at Usher’s Well. See Wife of 
Usher’s Well, The.—Anon. 

There lived a young man called Mackay. See Fate of 
Mackay, The.—Little. 

There lived and flourished long ago, in famous Athens- 
town. See Icarus; or, The Peril of Borrowed 
Plumes.—Saxe. 

There lived, as Fame reports, in days of yore. See 
Monsieur Tonson.—Taylor. 


There lived in Florence, many years ago. See Gonello. 
—Anon. 

There lived in France, in days not long now dead. See 
Galley-slave, The.—Abbey. 

There lives within our land to-day a greater slaver. 
See New Slavery, The.—Anon. 

There may be comrades in this world. See My Pipe 
and I.—Buckley. 

There, Mr. Caudle, I hope you’re in a little better 
temper. See Mrs. Caudle’s Lecture on Shirt 
Buttons.—Jerrold. 

There must be something after all this woe. See At 
the Last.—Bensee. 

There, my composition is finished at last. See Slang.— 
Anon. 

There, my dear, I think that will do. See All that 
Glitters is not Gold.—Frost. 

There! My tragedy is complete. The last line is the 
best. See Writing a Tragedy.—Anon. 

There needs no other charm, nor conjurer. See Fear.— 
Butler. 

“There never was a grandma half so good!” See 
Bamboozling Grandma.—Anon. 

There never was a specimen of manhood so rich. See 
David, King of Israel.—Irving. 

There never was, in any age or nation, a body of men. 
See First American Congress, The.—Maxcy. 

There never were such radiant noons. See Then and 
Now.—Rodd. 

There! now Betsey, don’t be long! See Martin Chuzzle- 
wit (Quarrel of Sairey Gamp and Betsey Prig).— 
Dickens. 

There now, my missus is gone out, the cook is busy. See 
Stage Struck Darkey, The.—Anon. 

There now, she’s asleep! Dear me! dear me! See 
Almost a Mormon.—Wayne. 

There often wanders one, whom better days. See 
Task, The (Crazy Kate. The Gypsies).—Cowper. 

“There, on the left!” said the colonel; the battle had 
shuddered and faded away. See Marthy Vir¬ 
ginia’s Hand.—Lathrop. 

There once lived a creature-—if I’ve not been deceived. 
See Gossip.—Cooper. 

There once lived in the famed town of Hull. See 
Quart of Milk, A.—Anon. 

There once lived one Asa Stokes. See Deacon Stokes. 
—Quilp. 

There once was a bird that lived up in a tree. See 
“Fiddle-dee-dee.”—Field. 

There once was a blundering, ignorant King. See 
King and the Spelling Book, The.—Denton. 

There once was a boy, but his name I forget. See 
Peevish Boy, A.—Kavanaugh. 

There once was a founder who trafficked in bells. See 
Lesson from a Bell, A.—Smith. 

There once was a kitten who wished that he. See 
Kitten that Never Grew Old, The.—Anon. 

There once was a maiden. See Bessie’s Troubles.— 
Anon. 

There once was a man who always would go. See 
Word of Warning, A.—Denton. 

There once was a period, when, why, or where. See 
Scientific Genesis, The.—Anon. 

There once was a time when, as old songs prove it. See 
Wonderful Country, The.—O’Reilly. 

There once was a toper—I’ll not tell his name. See 
There Once was a Toper.—Anon. 

There once was a woman, and what do you think. See 
Victuals and Drink.—Whitney. 

There once was an old man of Lyme. See same. — 
Monkhouse. 

There once were two knights full of mettle and merit. 
See Invincibles, The.—Goodale. 

There our murdered brother lies. See Wake of William 
Orr, The.—Drennan. 

There, out by the sand-heap, his barrow fast filling. 
See Mother’s Hired Man.—Baker. 

There passed a weary time. See Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The (Phantom Ship, The).—Coleridge. 

There reigned a king in Yvetot. See King of Yvetot, 
The.—Beranger. 

There resteth to Servia a glory. See Battle of Kossovo, 
The.—Meredith. 

There rolls the deep where grew the tree. See In Me- 
moriam (“There rolls,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

There sat a little weary bird. See Sympathy.—Bates. 

There sat an old man on a rock. See Too Late.— 
Ludlow. 

There sat one day in quiet. See Happiest Land, The.— 
Longfellow. 

There sat two glasses, filled to the brim. See Two 
Glasses, The.—Wilcox. 


875 




There sat 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


There sat two kings upon Orkadal. See Zwei Konige 
auf Orkadal.—Baker. 

There shall be no more sea; no wild winds bringing. 
See No More Sea.—Anon. 

There she goes up the street with her book in her hand. 
See Martin’s Puzzle.—Meredith. 

There she goes, with schemes prolific for the heathen- 
isled Pacific. See Maiden Missionary, The.— 
Pastnor. 

There she lies at her moorings. See Alec. Dunham’s 
Boat.—Webb. 

There she sees a damsel bright. See Christabel.— 
Coleridge. 

There shines the morning star! See Sonnet.—Stevens. 

"There, Simmons, you blockhead! Why didn’t you 
trot that old woman aboard her train?’’ See On 
the Other Train.—Anon. 

There, Sir Anthony, there stands the deliberate 
simpleton. See Rivals, The.—Sheridan. 

There sits he with the wits around his chair. See 
Dryden.—Betts. 

There sitteth a dove, so white and fair. See Swedish 
Mother’s Hymn.—Bremer. 

There smiled the smooth Divine, unused to wound. 
See Smooth Divine, The.—Dwight. 

There, speak in whispers; fold me to thy heart. See 
same. —Anon. 

There sprang a tree of deadly name. See Upas-tree, 
The.—Sigourney. 

There stands a city,—neither large nor small. See 
Ghost, The.—Barham. 

There stands a tree. See Three Trees, The.—Murray. 

There stood a church that men would praise. See 
Virgin with the Bells, The.—Dobson. 

There stood a young form in the mild. See Nola 
Kozmo.—Baine. 

There stood an unsold captive in the mart. See 
Parrhasius.—Willis. 

There studious let me sit. See Seasons, The: Winter. 
—Thomson. 

There sunk the greatest, nor the worst of men. See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Napoleon).—Byron. 

There surely is a gold mine somewhere underneath the 
grass. See Dandelions.—Anon. 

There swells a cry, as thunders crash. See Guard 
on the Rhine, The.—Schnechenburger. 

There, the buttons are all on. See Private Rehearsal, 
A,—Monologue, A.—Locke. 

There the moon leans out and blesses. See In a 
September Night.—Home. 

There the most daintie paradise on ground. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Bower of Bliss, The).— 
Spenser. 

There the voluntuous nightingales. See Prometheus 
Unbound (Semichorus II.).—Shelley. 

There the wrinkled old Nokomis. See Song of Hiawa¬ 
tha, The (Hiawatha’s Childhood).—Longfellow. 

“There, there, there.” See Magruder’s Lullaby—Anon. 

There—there they are! There are the horses! See 
Ladybird’s Race.—Rae-Brown. 

There! There’s the morning mail of an obscure minor 
poet. See Morning’s Mail, A.—Cooke. 

There they are, my fifty men and women. See One 
Word More.—Browning. 

There, through the long, long summer hours. See 
June.—Bryant. 

There used to be a family living uptown [or on the 
north side]. See Facial Family, The.—Anon. 

There was a beautiful bakeshop smell in the kitchen. 
See Pete Ivory’s Ordeal.—Anon. 

There was a boy once who had been brought up under 
the “sheltered life.” See Thrown Away.— 
Kipling. 

There was a Boy; ye knew him well, ye cliffs. See 
There was a Boy.—Wordsworth. 

There was a captain-general who ruled in Vera Cruz. 
See El Capitan-General.—Leland. 

There was a certain king. See King and the Locusts, 
The.—Anon. 

There was a child went forth every day. See There 
was a Child Went Forth.—Whitman. 

There was a cunning spider once. See Spider’s Parlor, 
The.—Richards. 

There was a curious quiet for a space. See Heat 
Lightning.—Riley. 

There was a dove with wings of green. See Green 
Dove and the Raven, The.—Joyce. 

There was a famous washing day, its action near the 
Hub. See George Birthington’s Washday.— 
Homer. 

There was a feast that night. See Banquet, The.— 
Landon. 


There was a feller here once by the name of Jim Smiley. 
See Celebrated Jumping Frog, The.—Mark Twain. 

There was a female millinery establishment on the 
third floor. See Calmest of her Sex, The.—Kerr. 

There was a fern on the mountain, and moss on the 
moor. See Fern and the Moss, The.—Cook. 

There was a frog swum in the lake. See There was a 
Frog.—Anon. 

There was a gather’d stillness in the room. See My 
Mother.—Scott. 

There was a gathering a short time ago at a neat house 
in an Ohio village. See Last of the Choir, The.— 
Kimball. 

There was a gay damsel of Lynn. See same. —Anon. 

There was a gay maiden lived down by the mill. See 
Ferry, The.—Boker. 

There was a general air of festive preparation. See 
Friend at Court, A.—Morton. 

There was a girl once in our class. See Smart Girl, A.— 
Kavanaugh. 

There was a good deal of pleasant gossip about old 
Captain “Hurricane” Jones. See Captain Hurri¬ 
cane Jones on the Miracles.—'Clemens. 

There was a grand time over Buck Fanshaw when he 
died. See Roughing It (Buck Fanshaw’s Funeral). 
—Clemens.' 

There was a holy hermit. See Spanish Gypsy, The 
(Hermit, The).—Eliot. 

There was a jolly miller once lived on the river Dee. 
See There was a Jolly Miller.—Bickerstaffe. 

There was a jovial beggar. See Jovial Beggar, The.— 
Anon. 

There was a jovial blade. See Dumb Wife, The.— 
Kavanaugh. 

There was a king in Thule. See Faust (King of Thule, 
The).—Goethe. 

There was a king that much might. See Confessio 
Amantis (Nebuchadnezzar).—Gower. 

There was a kingdom known as the Mind. See 
Barbarous Chief, The.—Wilcox. 

There was a knight and a lady bright. See Broomfield 
Hill, The.—Anon. 

There was a Knight of Bethlehem. See Song of Saint 
Francis, A.—Maugham. 

There was a knight was drunk with wine. See Baffled 
Knight, The; or, Lady’s Policy.—Anon. 

There was a lady all skin and bone. See Gay Lady 
that Went to Church, The.—Anon. 

There was a lady liv’d at Leigh. See Irishman and 
the Lady, The.—Maginn. 

There was a land where lived no violets. See Violets, 
The.—Crane. 

There was a laughing devil in his sneer. See Corsair, 
The.—Byron. 

There was a little boy and a little girl. See Nursery 
Rhymes, V.—Anon. 

There was a little boy whom his mother did employ. 
See Johnny-jump-up.—Anon. 

There was a little boy, with two little eyes. See There 
was a Little Boy.—Anon. 

There was a little busy bee. See Drops of Honey.— 
Richards. 

There was a little comet who lived near the Milky Way. 
See Naughty Little Comet, A.—Wilcox. 

There was a little fellow once. See Little Fisherman, 
The.—Taylor. 

There was a little frogie. See Frogie on the Log.— 
Richards. 

There was a little girl and she had a little curl. See 
There was a Little Girl.—Longfellow. 

There was a little girl, she wore a little hood. See 
Jemima..—Anon. 

There was a little grasshopper. See Conceited Grass¬ 
hopper, The.—Anon. 

There was a little laddie once. See Awful Boy, An.— 
Richards. 

There was a little Guinea-pig. See Guinea-pig, The.— 
Anon. 

There was a little Prince of Spain. See Prince’s Bow 
and Arrow, The.—Foss. 

There was a little tree-toad once. See Tree-toad on 
the Limb, The.—Richards. 

There was a maid, richly array’d. See Blancheflour 
and Jellyflorice.—Anon. 

There was a maid came out of Kent. See same. — 
Anon. 

There was a maiden simple. See Good for Evil.—Anon. 

There was a man. a Roman soldier, for some daring 
deed. See Roman Soldier at the Destruction 
of Herculaneum, The.—Atherstone. 

There was a man in Arkansaw. See Great Fit, A.— 
Kerr. 


876 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


There was 


There was a man. it was said one time. See Two 
Sinners.—Wilcox. 

There was a man named Ferguson. See Suicidal Cat, 
The.—Anon. 

There was a man named Tom O’Connor. See Tom 
O’Connor’s Cat.—Anon. 

There was a man, so legend says. See History, A.— 
Anon. 

There was a man who watched the river flow. See 
Cranes of Ibycus, The.—Lazarus. 

There was a may, and a weel-fared may. See Kath¬ 
arine Janfarie.—Anon. 

There was a monkey climbed up a tree. See There 
was a monkey.—Anon. 

There was a negro preacher, I have heard. See 
Learned Negro, The.—( Congreaationalist.) 

There was a parlor in the house, a room. See “Best 
Room,” The.—Holmes. 

There was a poor old man. See Brothers and a 
Sermon (Old Fisherman’s Prayer. The).—Ingelow. 

There was a pretty dandelion. See Dandelion’s Hair. 
—Anon. 

There was a rich lord, and he lived in Forfar. See 
Bonny Annie.-—Anon. 

There was a roaring in the wind all night. See Resolu¬ 
tion and Independence.—Wordsworth. 

There was a rose-bush in a garden growing. See Rose¬ 
bush, The.—Anon. 

There was a rose-tree grew so high. See White Roses. 
—Fabbri. 

There was a rover from a western shore. See Mother 
England.—Thomas. 

There was a run on the Sandhill and District Bank. 
See How they Stopped the Run.—Hope. 

There was a Russian came over the sea. See Russian 
and Turk.—Anon. 

There was a slight blaze on the roof of a house on Rus¬ 
sell Street. See “Two Tollar?”—( Detroit Free 
Press.) 

There was a social gathering at the residence of Mr. 
Wigglesworth. See Party at Mr. Wigglesworth’s, 
A.— (Rockland Courier.) 

There was a social gathering in Rockland the other 
evening. See Music Hath Charms.— (Rockland 
Courier Gazette.) 

There was a sound of revelry by night. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Waterloo).—Byron. 

There was a South of secession and slavery [wr. 
slavery and secession]—that South is dead. See 
New South, The.—Grady. 

There was a time, betwixt the days. See When Girls 
Wore Calico.—Whitney. 

There was a time, in the better days of the Republic. 
See Purse and the Sword, The.—Calhoun. 

There was a time on this fair continent. See Un¬ 
tamed.—Mair. 

There was a time, Sir, which it may be fit sometimes to 
revive. See Barbarism of our British Ancestors. 
—Pitt. 

There was a time, so ancient records tell. See Philip 
van Artevelde (Revolutions).—Taylor. 

There was a time when death and I. See Beyond 
Recall.—Bradley. 

There was a time, when meadow, grove and stream. 
See Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recol¬ 
lections of Early Childhood.—Wordsworth. 

There was [a] tumult in the city. See Independence 
Bell—July 4, 1776.—Anon. 

There was [or were] a watermillion. See Watermillion, 
The.—Anon. 

There was a well-to-do Irishman up on O’Fallon Street. 
See Maloney’s Will.—Anon. 

There was a young lady of Niger. See same. —Anon. 

There was a young maid who said, “Why.” See same. 
—Anon. 

There was a young man of Cohoes. See same. —Bur¬ 
dette. 

There was a young man who was bitten. See same. — 
Parke. 

There was a youth who kept a store. See Alexander.— 
Geddes. 

There was a youthe, and a well-beloved youthe. See 
Bailiff’s Daughter of Islington, The.—Anon. 

There was an air of desolation about the grim old State 
House. See Heart of Old Hickory, The.—Drom- 
goole. 

There was an ape in the days that were earlier. See 
Darwin.—Collins. 

There was an honest fisherman. See Cold-water Man, 
The.—Saxe. 

There was an old chap in the west country. See King 
and the Countryman, The.—Anon. 


There was an old decanter, and its mouth was gaping 
wide. See Song of the Decanter.—Anon. 

There was an old lady all dressed in silk. See Differ¬ 
ence, The.—Anon. 

There was an old man lived out in the wood. See 
Green Broom.—Anon. 

There was an old man who lived in the [or a] wood [or 
woods]. See Old Man in the Wood, The.—Anon. 

There was an old man who lived on a common. See 
Wonderful Old Man, The—Anon. 

There was an old person of Ware. See Limericks.— 
Lear. 

There was an old shoemaker, sturdy as steel. See 
Pegging Away.—Anon. 

There was an old woman, as I’ve heard tell. See 
Nursery Rhymes, III.—Anon. 

There was an old woman in Fife. See Funny Old 
Woman, A.—Denton. 

There was an old woman named Barbara Blue. See 
Barbara Blue.—Cary. 

There was an old woman who always was tired. See 
Tired Old Woman, The.—Anon. 

There was an old woman who lived in a shoe. See Big 
Shoe, The.—Anon. 

There was anguish in the faces of those who bent over 
the little white bed. See ‘ ‘Help Me Across, Papa.” 
—Anon. 

There was Bijah, Ben an’ Bart. See He Didn’t 
Amount to Shucks.—Foss. 

There was but a sparse congregation. See Story of 
Little Moses, The.—Hall. 

There was certainly something going on out under the 
locusts. See Uncle Isrul’s Call.—Stanley. 

There was ease in Casey’s manner as he stepped into 
his place. See Casey at the Bat.—Thayer [or 
Murphy], 

There was feasting in the hall. See King Edwin’s 
Feast.—Chadwick. 

There was growling and grumbling all over the world. 
See “Confusion Worse Confounded.”—Anon. 

There was heard the sound of a coming foe. See 
Bended Bow, The.—Hemans. 

There was in Charles Sumner as a public man, a pecu¬ 
liar power of fascination. See Eulogy on Charles 
Sumner.—Schurz. 

There was in the breast of Washington one sentiment 
so deeply felt. See Character of Washington, 
The (Washington and the Union).—Webster. 

There was joy in the ship as she furrowed the foam. 
See Ship on Fire, The.—Mackay. 

There was just room on the teacher’s little platform. 
See Spelling-match at Grande Pointe, The.— 
Cable. 

There was monie a braw noble. See Glenlogie.— 
Anon. 

There was music on the midnight. See Coronation of 
Inez De Castro, The.—Hemans. 

There was never a leaf on bush or tree. See Vision of 
Sir Launfal, The (January).—Lowell. 

There was no day in all the year that Mr. Barnard 
loved so well as Christmas. See Christmas Rose, 
The.—Morton. 

There was no fierceness in the eyes of those men now. 
See Foes United in Death.—Anon. 

There was no sound save, faintly heard. See Solitude. 
—E. R. G. 

There was no west, there was no east. See Demon of 
the Gibbet, The.—-O’Brien. 

There was (not certaine when) a certaine preacher. 
See Of a Certaine Man.—Harrington. 

There was not very much on the table—in fact. See 
Swipesy’s Christmas Dinner.—Anon. 

There was once a boat on a billow. See Songs of 
Seven (Seven Times Seven).—Tngelow. 

There was once a boy, an aggrieved, unappreciated 
boy. See Runaway Boy, The.—Riley. 

There was once a child, and he strolled about a good 
deal. See Child’s Dream of a Star, A.—Dickens. 

There was once a just and most Christian king of 
Britain See Saint Ursula.—Ruskin. 

There was once a little animal. See Similar Cases.— 
Stetson. 

There was once a little child. See Self Conceit — 
Pomeroy. 

There was once a little flower growing where weeds 
were tall. See Flower Mission, The.—Anon. 

There was once a little man, and his rod and line he 
took. See Usual Way, The.—Weatherly. 

There was once a perfectly modern girl. See Per¬ 
fectly Awfully, Lovely Story, A.—Anon. 

There was once a pretty chicken. See Advice.— 
Anon. 


877 




There was 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


There was once a school. See Misses at School, The. 
—Anon. 

There was once an ancient city. See Legend of St. 
Freda, The.—Hobart. 

There was once’t upon a time. See Story of the Little 
Rid Hin, The—( Riverside Magazine.) 

There was one thing Piggy Pennington could not do. 
See King of Boyville, The.—White. 

There was only one vacant chair in a down-town bar¬ 
ber-shop. See Dimple and Dumpling.—Davies. 

There was plenty of gold in his coffer last week. See 
Man in the Moon and T, The.—Esprit. 

There was something so unusual in the singing of the 
choir. See Trouble in the Choir.—Worden. 

There was something very beautiful in that picture. 
See Hero Woman, The.—Lippard. 

There was strife ’twixt Rome and Alba. See Hora- 
tii and the Curiatii, The.—Sulpee. 

There was [wr. were or went] three kings into the 
East. See John Barleycorn.—Burns. 

There was three ladies play’d at the ba’. See Cruel 
Brother, The.—Anon. 

There was tumult [or a tumult] in the city. See In¬ 
dependence Bell—July 4, 1776.—Anon. 

There was twa sisters in a bow’r. See Twa Sisters, 
The.—Anon. 

There wasn’t a better doctor. See Our Old Doctor.— 
Anon. 

There we are! Some nice cold ham. See Best Policy, 
The.—Wayne. 

There went a rider on a roan. See Riddler, The.— 
Leland. 

There went a stranger child. See Strange Child’s 
Christmas, The.—Anon. 

There went an incense through the land one night. See 
Monk’s Song.—Dobell. 

There were for wasl a watermillion. See Watermillion, 
The.—Anon. 

There were eight hundred men at Kehoe’s Bar. See 
How the Church was Built at Kehoe’s Bar.—Ben¬ 
nett. 

There were ferns on the mountain, and moss on the 
moor. See Fern and the Moss, The.—Cook. 

There were four lads of us an’ a lattle lass. See 
Charlie.—Clark. 

There were four little boys . See Taking Aim.—Anon. 

There were four of us about that bed. See Shameful 
Death.—Morris. 

There were many women during the French Revolu¬ 
tion. See Tale of Two Cities, A (Death of Mme. 
Defarge, The).—Dickens. 

There were never two people exactly alike. See Bash¬ 
ful Boys’ Piece, The.—Anon. 

There were ninety and nine that safely lay. See 
Ninety and Nine, The.—Clephane. 

There were only sixty of us cavalry to guard a train of 
thirty wagons. See Face of a Demon, The.— 
Quad. 

There were seven fishers, with nets in their hands. See 
Fire by the Sea, The.—Cary. 

There were six little crows so terribly thin. See Piggy 
and the Crows.—Anon. 

There were six little girls in the Sunday-school class. 
See Bridget’s Mission Jug.—Anon. 

There were sounds of mirth and joyousness. See 
Revellers, The.—Anon. 

There were thirty million English who talked of Eng¬ 
land’s might. See Last of the Light Brigade, The. 
—Kipling. 

There were three demons came out of the deep. See 
Three Fiends, The.—Burdette. 

There were three jovial huntsmen. See Three Jovial 
Huntsmen. —Anon. 

There were three jovial Welshmen. See Nursery 
Rhymes, II. 

There were three maidens who loved a king. See 
Three Loves.—Hooper. 

There were three ravens sat on a tree. See Three 
Ravens, The.—Anon. 

There were three sailors of [wr. in] Bristol City. 
See Little Billee.—Thackeray. 

There were three young maids of Lee. See Maids of 
Lee, The.—Weatherly. 

There were three young men of Ware. See Men of 
Ware, The.—Weatherly. 

There were twa brethren in the north. See Twa 
Brothers, The.—Anon. 

There were twa brothers at the scule. See Twa 
Brothers, The.—Anon. 

There were twa [or two] sisters sat in a bower for bour, 
or bouir]. See Twa Sisters O’Binnorie, The.— 
Anon. 


There were two brethren fell on strife. See Brothers. 
The.—Swinburne. 

There were two friends, a very charming pair! See 
Wooden Doll and the Wax Doll, The.—Taylor. 

There were two for two little] kittens, a black and a 
gray. See Kittens and Babies.—Hadley. 

There were two little chickens hatched out by one 
hen. See Naming the Chickens.—Bacon. 

There were two [little] kittens, a black and a gray. 
See Kittens and Babies.—Hadley. 

There were two [or twa] sisters sat in a bour [or bouir 
or bower]. See Twa Sisters, o’ Binnorie, The.— 
Anon. 

There were two squirrels. See Two Squirrels, The.— 
Anon. 

There, where death’s brief pang was quickest. See 
Murat.—Byron. 

There will be news to-morrow. See To-morrow’s 
News.—Klingle. 

There will come a maiden soon, I ween. See Four 
Sisters, The.—Anon. 

There will I ask of Christ the Lord. See same. —Ros¬ 
setti. 

There wor once a mason at Guiseley gat intor his heead. 
See Text without a Sermon, A.—( Harper’s Maga¬ 
zine.) 

There yet lingered sufficient light in the heavens. See 
Last of the Mohicans, The (Running the Gauntlet). 
—Cooper. 

There you are! I’ve conquered you at last. See Trusty 
and True.—Sylvester. 

Thereat, within the house in Magdala. See Light 
of the World, The (Great Consummation, The).— 
Arnold. 

Therefore it is with confidence. See Impeachment of 
Warren Hastings (Oration, etc.).—Burke. 

Therefore, to whom turn I but to Thee, the ineffable 
Name? See Abt Vogler.—Browning. 

Thereon that noble lady, hastening near. See 
Maha-Bharata (Savitri, or Love and Death).— 
Arnold. 

There's a baby moon rocking far up in the sky. See 
Cradle Song.—Camp. 

There’s a battle to be fought. See Something to be 
Done.—Chellis. 

There’s a beautiful artist abroad in the world. See 
Beautiful Artist, The.—Yule. 

There’s a beautiful cloud-fleet passing by. See Sail 
on the Clouds, A.—Wyatt. 

There’s a beautiful face in the silent air. See Gone 
Before.—Taylor. 

There’s a beauty, forever unchangingly bright. See 
Lalla Rookh (Nourmahal).—Moore. 

There’s a blare of bugles blowing. See Battle of New 
Orleans, The.—Rice. 

There’s a bliss beyond all that the minstrel has told. 
See Lalla Rookh (Power of Love and Beauty). 
—Moore. 

There’s a bower of roses by Bendemeer's stream. See 
Lalla Rookh.—Moore. 

There’s a burden of grief on the breezes of spring. See 
In Memoriam—A. Lincoln.—Bugbee. 

There’s a busy little fellow. See Little Visitor, A.— 
Perkins. 

There’s a charm in deliv’ry, a magical art. See Elo¬ 
quence.—Welby. 

There’s a charm in the sun-crested hills. See To My 
Meerschaum.—P. D. R. 

There’s a church-tower gray. See Just over the Way. 
—Anon. 

There’s a city that lies in the kingdom of clouds. See 
Sunset City, The.—Cornwell. 

There’s a club in this place that is growing apace. See 
Back-work Club, The.—Chamberlain. 

There’s a dance of leaves in that aspen bower. See 
Gladness of Nature, The (Summer).—Bryant. 

There’s a dandy little fellow. See Dandelion.—Gara- 
brant. 

There’s a dear little home in Good-children street. 
See Good-children Street.—Field. 

There’s a dolorous cheat in the words so sweet. See 
It might have Been.—Hopkins. 

There’s a face that haunts me ever. See Picture, A.— 
Anon. 

There’s a flag hangs over my threshold. See Flag, 
The.—Howe. 

There’s a flower that grows by the greenwmod tree. 
See Trailing Arbutus, The.—Whitman. 

There’s a funny little army. See Little Army, The. 
—(Good Times.) 

There’s a funny tale of a stingy man. See “Penny 
Ye Meant to Gi’e, The.”—Anon. 


878 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


There’s 


There’s a game much in fashion, I think it’s called 
Euchre. See Game of Life, The.—Saxe. 

There’s a gilded vane on the tall church spire. See 
Song of the Vane, The.—Learned. 

There’s a glade in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe. See 
Aghadoe.—Todhunter. 

There’s a good time coming, boys. See Good Time 
Coming, The.—Mackay. 

There’s a grim one-horse hearse in a jolly round trot. 

See Pauper’s Drive, The.—Noel. 

There’s a jolly Saxon proverb that is pretty much like 
this. See Concerning Kisses.—Anon. 

There’s a joy without canker or cark. See Ballade of 
Blue China.—Lang. 

There’s a junior partner wanted. See Junior Partner 
Wanted, A.—Sanford. 

There’s a land far away, ’mid the stars, we are told. 

See Mountains of Life, The.—Clark. 

There’s a legend that’s told of a gypsy who dwelt. 

See Flight into Egypt, The.—Mahony. 

There’s a letter from home 1 was dreading. See Old 
Letters.—Kitchel. 

There’s a little brown wren that has built in our tree. 

See Little Brown Wren, The.—Anon. 

There’s a little crib bed that is unused now. See Lit¬ 
tle Crib Bed, The.—Richards. 

There’s a little gray friar in yonder green bush. See 
Gray Linnet, The.—M’Carroll. 

There’s a little low hut by the river’s Tor river] side. 

See My Childhood Home.—Shillaber. 

There’s a little mischief-maker that is stealing half our 
bliss. See By-and-by.—Anon. 

There’s a little mischief-making elfin, who is ever nigh. 
See By-and-by.—Anon. 

There’s a little old man with silvery hair. See Christ- 
mastide.—Anon. 

There’s a lonely grave in Virginia. See Mustered Out. 
—Anon. 

There’s a lot of solid comfort.’ See Old Clay Pipe, The. 
—Van Fleet. 

There’s a lurid light in the clouds to-night. See 
Wrecker’s Bell, The.—Winter. 

There’s a magic isle in the River of Time. See Magi¬ 
cal Isle, The.—Anon. 

There’s a magical tie to .the land of our home. See 
Land of My Birth, The.—Cook. 

There’s a man in the dark, so the big folks say. See 
Man in the Dark, The.—Richards. 

There’s a maxim that all should be willing to mind. 
See One Story’s Good till Another is Told.— 
Swain. 

There’s a merry brown thrush sitting up in the [vrr. a] 
tree. See Brown Thrush, The.—Larcom. 

There’s a mine of comfort for you and me. See One 
Step at a Time.—Anon. 

There’s a neat little clock. See Little Clock, The.— 
Anon. 

There’s a never-dying chorus. See Toil.—Anon. 
There’s a new hired girl at our house. See Nursery 
Stove, The.—Denton. 

There’s a New Year coming, coming. See New Year 
Song.—Larcom. 

There’s a noisy way and a quiet way. See Aunty’s 
Lesson.—Anon. 

There’s a perennial nobleness. See Past and Present. 
—Carlyle. 

There’s a place in Florence, the world knows well. 

See Statue and the Bust, The.—Browning. 
There’s a purple cloud with a fringe of pink. See Song 
in Color, A.—Anon. 

There’s a quee* - little house, and it stands in the sun. 

See Queer Little House, The.—Anon. 

There’s a song in my heart, Dear Love. See My Song. 
—Wilson. 

There’s a song in the air! See Christmas Carol, A.— 
Holland. 

There’s a song in the maple, thrilling and new. See 
April Time.—Anon. 

There’s a song that rings in my ears to-night. See 
Voice of an Alumnus, The.—Whitney. 

There’s a song that’s very popular that’s sung in every 
clime, See Home, Sweet Home.—-Thatcher. 
There’s a spider crab that lives in the sea. See Three 
Cunning Crabs, The.—Woods. 

There’s a star in the west that shall never go down. 

See Star in the West, A.—Cook. 

There’s a staunch old Southern mansion near the broad 
Potomac river. See Phantom Ball, J he.— 
Jeffrey. . 

There’s a stir among the trees. See Christmas Trees, 
The.—Butts. . , 

There’s a story, once current, and sometimes still told. 
See Plato and Diogenes.—Gore. 


There’s a story that’s old. See Pat’s Criticism.— 
Adams. 

There’s a story told through ages, which shall yet live 
ages more. Nee Old, Old Story, The.—Anon. 

There’s a strangely solemn moment. See Doorway of 
Sleep, The.—Beers. 

There’s a tender Eastern legend. See Eastern Legend, 
An.—Goodwin. 

There’s a thing that grows by the fainting flower. See 
Toadstool, The.—Holmes. 

There’s a time in happy boyhood. See Too Old for 
Father’s Kisses.—Bingham. 

There’s a tree that blossoms in winter time. See 
There’s a Tree that Blossoms.—Anon. 

There’s a vast amount of murderin’ and robberin’ goin’ 
on. See Robber under the Bed, A.—Anon. 

There’s a verse in the Psalms, or a bit of a verse. See 
In the Hospital Ward.—Anon. 

There’s a wail in the mansion. «See There’s Tan in the 
Street,—Thaxter. 

There’s a way and you will find it. See Helping Hand, 
A.—Richards. 

There’s a wedding in the orchard, dear. See There’s 
a Wedding in the Orchard.—Dodge. 

There’s a wedding in the orchard, dear, I know it by 
the flowers. See Marriage of the Flowers, The.— 
Byers. 

There’s a whisper down the field where the year has 
shot her yield. See L’Envoi.—Kipling. 

There’s a whisper of leaves in the woods to-day. See 
In the Woods.—Anon. 

There’s a whisper of life in the dull dead trees. See 
White Canoe, The.—Sullivan. 

There’s a wideness in God’s mercy. See same .— 
Faber. 

There’s a willow near my casement. See Alice Maude. 
—Anon. 

There’s a woman and two boys cornin’. See Visitors 
from the city.—Anon. 

There’s a woman like a dew-drop, she’s so purer than 
the purest. ' See Blot in the ’Scutcheon, A (Earl 
Mertoun’s Song).—Browning. 

“There’s a wonderful tree, a wonderful tree.” See 
Wonderful Tree, The.—Anon. 

There’s a wonderful weaver high up in the air. See 
Wonderful Weaver, The.—Cooper. 

There’s a young man on the corner. See Eggs that 
never Hatch, The.—Anon. 

There’s a youth of great renown. See His Name.— 
Coleman. 

There’s always a river to cross. See same. —Anon. 

There’s an adage trite and golden. See Learn to Labor 
and to Wait.—Denison. 

There’s an arrow aloft with a feathered shaft. See 
Vane on the Spire, The.—Taylor. 

There’s an illigant place for you. See Disgusted 
Dutchman, The.—Lover. 

There’s an oriole’s nest in the elm-tree boughs. See 
Our Oriole Neighbors.—Moore. 

There’s another boy what I know. See Different Kind 
er Boy, The.—Richards. 

There’s beauty in the deep. See Deep, The.—-Brainard. 

There’s been a wedding to Hopeville—they say it 
can’t be beat. See Jerry an’ Me.—Anon. 

There’s Bob Bunker cornin’ up to the door with a box. 
See Infernal Machine, The.—McBride. 

There’s business for all in this world, my boy. See 
There’s Business for All.—Pennell. 

There’s clay pipes an’ brier pipes an’ meerschaum 
pipes as well. See Pipe You Make Yourself, The. 
—Brown. 

There’s doubtless something in domestic doings. See 
Don Juan (Matrons and Maids).—Byron. 

There’s freedom in the farmer’s life. See Farmer’s 
Life, The.—Beard. 

There’s Jane Sophia, and Ann Maria. See Our Choir. 
—Anon. 

There’s just one thing a man can have. See Easy 
Wife, The.—Anon. 

There’s lots an’ lots of people (if you’l just believe my 
song). See Shoutin’?—Stanton. 

There’s lots of folks that has good times. See “You 
Git Up!”—Kerr. 

There’s many a life chained down by circumstance. 
See same. —Anon. 

There’s many a rest on the road of life. See Golden 
Side, The.—Anon. 

There’s many a trouble. See Trouble Borrowers.— 
Anon. 

There’s many an excellent Saint. See Saint Jonathan. 
—Saxe. 

There’s mony a wee sweet lily sair nipped wi’ the cold. 
See Shelter.—Lee. 


879 




There’s 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


There’s naught but ceaseless moaning. See Presen¬ 
timents.—Denison. 

There’s no dew left on the daisies and clover. See 
Songs of Seven (Seven Times One).—Ingelow. 

There’s no faith in earth. See Catiline (Bitter Disap¬ 
pointment).—Croly. 

There’s no one on the long white road. See Irish 
Mother’s Lament, The.—-Alexander. 

There’s no use of your talking, for mamma told me so. 
See Nelly Tells how Baby Came.—Collier. 

There’s no use trying to keep anything in order. See 
Changed Housewife, A.—Oberholtzer. 

“There’s none can tell about my birth.” See Archae¬ 
ological Congress.—Burdette. 

There’s not a breath the dewy leaves to stir. See 
Moonlight in Italy.—Kinney. 

There’s not a cheaper thing on earth. See Something 
Cheap.—Swain. 

There’s not a flower that decks the vale. See God’s 
Love.—Griffin. 

There’s not a hearth, however rude. See Hidden 
Brightness.—Anon. 

There’s not a joy the world can give like that it takes 
away. See Stanzas for Music.—Byron. 

There’s not a leaf within the bower. See Hymn.— 
Opie. 

There’s not a nook within this solemn pass. See 
Trosachs, The.—Wordsworth. 

There’s not a plant that springeth. See Teachings of 
Nature.—Hale. 

There’s not a spider in the sky. See Love Song by a 
Lunatic, A.—Anon. 

There’s not a tint that paints the rose. See God’s Wis¬ 
dom and Power.—Anon. 

There’s not a wild flower blossoming. See Love Uni¬ 
versal.—Anon. 

There’s not in the wide world so tempting a sweet. 
See Trifle.— {Punch.) 

There’s nothing bright, above, below. See Turf shall 
be my Fragrant Shrine, The.—Moore. 

There’s nothing here on earth deserves. See Laugh 
and Grow Fat.—Praed. 

There’s one B. A. more dead! stiff is poor Hone. See 
On the Death of Mr. Hone.—Pindar. 

There’s one thing I can’t understand. See Uncle Mor¬ 
ton’s Gift.—Wells. 

There’s one thing that’s important in these hustling, 
bustling days. See Keep up with the Times.— 
Burdick. 

There’s one thing to the ladies I plainly wish to say. 
See One Bachelor of Many.— {Harper’s Magazine.) 

There’s sadness in the Union camp. See Garfield at 
the Wheel.—Anon. 

There’s Sandy, the miller, wi’ siller in kist. See Las¬ 
sie’s Decision. The.—-McAthol. 

There’s some is born with their straight legs by 
natur’. See Sailor’s Apology for Bow-legs, A.— 
Hood. 

“There’s some think Injins pison. ...” (It was Par¬ 
son Pete who [or that] spoke.) See Phil Blood’s 
Leap.—Buchanan. 

There’s somebody coming up the lane. See Aunt Vir¬ 
ginia’s Ear Trumpet.—Anon. 

There’s somebody knocking. Hark! who can it be? 
See Somebody’s Knocking.—Anon. 

There’s something in a noble boy. See Boy, The.— 
Willis. 

There’s something in the air. See Coming of Spring, 
The.—-Perry. 

There’s something in the name of Kate. See Lines to 
Kate.—Anon. 

There’s something in “the parting hour.” See Parting 
Hour, The.—Pollock. 

There’s something that I’ve thought. See Polly’s 
Dilemma.—-Anon. 

There’s somewhat on my breast, father. See Con¬ 
fession, The.—Barham. 

There’s sumpen in a woman’s tears that makes you 
wanter, sorter. See Tears.—Ousley. 

There’s that old hag Moll Brown, look, see, just past! 
See Witch, A.—Barnes. 

There’s the birds as has just come, and there’s the 
breakfast. See Student’s Frolic, The.—Robinson. 

There’s the man who lets you shake his limpy hand. 
See Bores, The.—Anon. 

There’s time for work and time for play. See Time 
Only for Love.—M. A. L. 

There’s trouble in Hungary, now, alas. See Tartar, 
The.—Saxe. 

These abominable principles, and this more abomin¬ 
able avowal of them. See American War, The.— 
Chatham. 


These are fragments again without date addressed to 
Adam. See Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, The 
(Philip to Adam).—Clough. 

These are little lambkins. See Little Lambkins, The. 
—Anon. 

These are my scales to weigh reality. See Reality.— 
Dickinson. 

These are some of the things that a boy can do. See 
What a Boy can Do.—Anon. 

These are the days that try us. See November.— 
Harrison. 

These are the days when the birds come back. See 
Indian Summer.—Dickinson. 

These are the Janissaries of the cause. See Jesuits, 
The.—Oldham. 

These are the letters she sent me. See Last Straw, 
The.—Anon. 

These are the merry hours they say. See Christmas 
Pictures.—Williamson. 

These are the tawny dryads, who love nooks. See 
Dryads, The.—Hunt. 

These are they who, with the Bible in their hands. Nee 
same. —Anon. 

These are thy glorious works, Parent of Good. See 
Paradise Lost (Adam’s Morning Hymn in Para¬ 
dise).—Milton. 

These are unquestionably the two most remarkable 
epistles I ever received. See Adventures in the 
Wrong House.—Brown. 

These, as they change, Almighty Father, these. See 
Seasons, The (Hymn of the Seasons).—Thomson. 

These brilliant October days, when there is one glory 
of luminous blue. See Autumn.—Anon. 

These dreary hours of hopeless gloom. See Face, The. 
—Jones. 

These emmets; how little they are in our eyes! See 
Ant, The.—Watts. 

These eyes, though clear. See To Cyriack Skinner, 
1655 (“These eyes,” etc.).—Milton. 

These four gray walls are but the bodily shell. See 
Spirit of the House, The.—Lampman. 

These had been together from the first. See Aylmer’s 
Field (Leolin and Edith).—Tennyson. 

These hallowed precincts, long to memory dear. See 
School-boy, The.—Holmes. 

These lands are clothed in burning weather. See Arid 
Lands, The.—Bashford. 

These little firs to-day are things. See Young Fir- 
wood, A.—Rossetti. 

These little songs. See Day and Night Songs.—Ailing- 
ham. 

These loving eyes may never more behold thee. See 
same .—( Blackwood’s.) 

These nuts, that I keep in the back of the nest. See 
My Treasures.—Stevenson. 

These pearls of thought in Persian gulfs were bred. 
See In a Copy of Omar Khayydm.—Lowell. 

These sheets primaeval doctrines yield. See On Bar¬ 
clay’s Apology for the Quakers.—Green. 

These things are but toys. See Of Masques and 
Triumphs.—Bacon. 

These things premised, you have my full consent. See 
Honeymoon, The (Confession of Love, A).—Tobin. 

These to His memory—since he held them dear. See 
Idylls of the King (To the Memory of Prince 
Albert).—Tennyson. 

These two girls were the only witnesses of the deed. 
See Shaugraun, The (O’Kelley Cabin, The).—Bou- 
cicault. 

These United States are, as a whole, and always have 
been. See Importance of the Agricultural Interest. 
—Cushing. 

These winter nights, against my window pane. See 
Frost-work.—-Aldrich. 

“They ain’t much ‘tale’ about it!” Noey said. See 
Noey’s Night-piece.—Riley. 

’’They ain’t no jury thatfll hang him,” said Bill Towne 
doggedly. See Sheriff’s Honor, The.—Anon. 

They ain’t no style about ’em. Nee Old-fashioned 
Roses.—Riley. 

“They ain’t no use o’ talkin’,” said Uncle Jerry Green¬ 
ing. See Squire Billings’ Pickerel.—Anon. 

They ain’t performin’ to-day, sir, and the boys are all 
on the gape. See Positively the Last Perform¬ 
ance.— {Pun ch.) 

They all climbed up on a high board-fence. See Nine 
Little Goblins, The.—Riley. 

They all were looking for a king. See That Holy Thing. 

—MacDonald. 

They are a beauteous family. See My Children.— 
Larcom. 

They are all gone away. See House on the Hill, The. 

—Robinson. 


880 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


They 


They are all gone into the world of light. See They are 
All Gone.—Vaughan. 

They are all in the lily-bed, cuddled close together. 
See Vagrant Pansies.—Hutchinson. 

They are always at the gate. See They are Always 
at the Gate.—Anon. 

They are at rest. See Rest.—Newman. 

They are building as Babel was built, to the sky. See 
Man with the Musket, The.—Taylor. 

They are camped on Chickamauga! See Chicka- 
mauga—1898.—( Baltimore News.) 

They are dying 1 they are dying! where the golden corn 
is growing. See Ireland.—MacCarthy. 

They are free at last! They can face the sun. See 
Released.—O ’ Reilly. 

Theyare funny! They have. See Stage Land (Comic 
Lovers, The).—Jerome. 

They are gone from their own green shore! See Fleet 
under Sail, The.—Lushington. 

They are gone into the world of light. See They are 
All Gone.—Vaughan. 

They are idols of hearts and of households. See Chil¬ 
dren, The.—-Dickenson. 

They are marching from the Southland, from the North, 
and from the West. See Recompense, The.— 
Dorrie. 

They are my laddie’s hounds. See My Laddie’s 
Hounds.—Easter. 

They are not dead whose names we breathe. See 
Heroic Dead, The.—Emery. 

They are slaves who fear to speak. See Stanzas on Free¬ 
dom (“They are slaves,” etc.).—Lowell. 

They are so clean, We have seen. See Stage Land 
(Peasants, The).;—Jerome. 

They are sowing their seed in the daylight fair. See 
Sowing and Harvesting.—Oakey. 

They are such tiny feet. See Patience with Love.— 
K1 ingle. 

They are waiting on the shore. See Old, The.—Noel. 

They ask me to vote for a national flower. See Na¬ 
tional Flower, The.—I.arcom. 

They ask me why I am so bad. See same. —Kav- 
anaugh. 

They bade me cast the thing away. See Doubt.— 
Jackson. 

They bore three corpses through the crowded city. 
See Deed of Grace, A.—Childe-Pemberton. 

“They both came aboard there at Cairo.” See Pilot’s 
Story, The.—Howells. 

They both were artists, gathering hair and hay. See 
Golden Orioles, The.—Hartzell. 

They break the kitchen windows. See Mice.—Anon. 

They brought one Pinch, a hungry, lean-faced villain. 
See Comedy of Errors.—Shakespeare. 

They brought their flowers to the altar. See Easter 
Flowers.—Ingelow. *■ 

They brushed the clothes all clean. See Lulu Takes 
Care.—Anon. 

They built a church at his very door. See “He wasn’t 
in it.”—( Detroit Free Press.) 

They call her fair. I do not know. See Love’s Blind¬ 
ness.—-Linton. 

They call me a tyrant! See Defence from the Charge of 
Tyranny.—Robespierre. 

They call me “Little Chatterbox.” See Chatterbox. 
—Anon. 

They call me the forester, I am the man. See Fra¬ 
grant Timber of her Fan, The.—Hay. 

They call me the queen of the garden. See Message 
of the Flowers. The.—Anon. 

They call thee Nightingale, who know thee not! See 
To Jenny Lind.—Gosse. 

They called him. Bill, the hired man. See William 
Brown of Oregon.—Miller. . 

They called the place Crappy Shute. See How Christ¬ 
mas came to Crappy Shute.—( Leslie's Weekly.). 

They came in sight of a lovely shore. See Sunshine 
Land.—Thomas. 

They can talk about the country, ’n’ how it s good for 
boys. See Average Boy, The.—Phelps. 

They cannot wholly pass away. See Departed, The.— 
Tabb. , , „ „ 

They carried the pie to the parson’s house. See Par¬ 
son’s Sociable, The.—Anon. 

''They certainly are nice people, and I’ll bet that their 
three children.” See Nice People, The.—Bunner. 

They chained her fair young body to the cold and cruel 
stone. See Andromeda.—Roche. 

They come in the quiet twilight hour. See Twilight 
Dreams.—( Chambers’ Journal .1 

They come! the merry summer months of beauty, song, 
and flowers. See They Come! the Merry Summer 
Months.—Motherwell. 


“They come! they come! the paleface come!” See 
Fall of the Indian Heroes.—Miller. 

They considered the pastor a trifle too young. See Sus¬ 
ceptible Parson, The.—Anon. 

They course the glass, and let it take no rest. See 
Vanity of the Beautiful, The.—Gascoigne. 

They die — the dead return not. See Death. — 
Shelley. 

They do me wrong, and I will not endure it. See 
King Richard III.—Shakespeare. 

They do neither plight nor wed. See City, The.—Bur¬ 
ton. 

They drew him to my very feet, insensible, dead. See 
David Copperfield.—Dickens. 

They drive home the cows from the pasture. See Lit¬ 
tle Brown Hands.—Krout. 

They dropped like flakes, they dropped like stars. See 
Battlefield, The.—Dickinson. 

They dwell in the odour of camphor. See My Books. 
—Dobson. 

They err, who count it glorious to subdue. See Para¬ 
dise Regained (True Glory).—Milton. 

They fed me with fire and heaped me with coal. See 
Song of the Locomotive, The.—Anon. 

They fell devoted, but undying. Sec Siege of Corinth, 
The (Dead Heroes).—Byron. 

They fired the shot o’ef Sumter’s walls. See Memorial 
Day.—Little. 

They flee from me, that sometime did me seek. See 
"Lover Sheweth how He is Forsaken of such as 
He Sometime Enjoyed, The.”—Wyatt. 

They fling their flags upon the morn. See Spain’s Last 
Armada.—Rice. 

They fought still like the rage of fire. And now An- 
tilochus. See Iliad, The (Grief of Achilles for 
the Slaying of Patroclus, The).—Homer. 

They found him by the roadside, dead. See Tiny Shoe, 
A.—Anon. 

They found it in her hollow marble bed. See Roman 
Mirror, A.—Rodd. 

They gather round him, one and all. See Story-teller, 
The.—Sherman. 

They gave me advice and plenty of praise. See Ex¬ 
cellent Man, The.—Heine. 

They gave the whole long day to idle laughter. See 
Before the Gate.—Howells. 

They glare—those stony eyes! See Sphinx, The.— 
Brownell. 

They glide upon their endless way. • See Stars.—Proc¬ 
ter. 

They grew in beauty side by side. See Graves of a 
Household, The.—Hemans. 

They had a quarrel, and she sent. See Reciprocity.— 
Anon. 

They had been keeping company a year. See Ker 
Chew Duet, A.—^Anon. 

They had been married three weeks, and had just gone 
to housekeeping. See Their First Spat.—( London 
T id-bits.) 

They had been married two months and gone to house¬ 
keeping. See She didn’t Want to Meddle.— 
Anon. 

They had brought in such sheafs of hair. See Last 
Bowstrings, The.—White. 

They had pressed us sore, and we fled from them. See 
Quicksand, The.—Meyers. 

They had whirled around in the steps of the waltz. 
See Repartee.—York. 

They hasten, still they hasten. See Were-wolves, The. 
—Campbell. 

They have a saying in the East. Mercy of God, The.— 
Knight. 

They have asked me to vote for a national flower. 
See National Flower, The.—Larcom. 

They have chained me in the central hall. See Drop of 
Water, The.—Stackpole. 

They have fetched the steed with care, in the harness 
he did wear. See Rhyme of the Duchess May 
(End of the Siege, The).—Browning. 

They have had more trouble at our Methodist meeting¬ 
house. See Disturbance in Church, A.—Anon. 

They have met at last—as storm-clouds. See Man¬ 
assas.—Warfield. 

They have no care. See Consider the Lilies.—Far- 
ningham. 

They have not come! And ten is past. See In the 
Royal Academy.—Dobson. 

They heard a noise unlike anything usually heard. See 
Ninety-three (Monster Cannon, The).—Hugo. 

They heaved the stone; they heaped the cairn. See 
Aideen’s Grave.—Ferguson. 

They hide within the hollows, they creep into the dell. 
See Vale of Estabelle, The.—Thomson. 


881 




They 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


They journeyed sadly, slowly on. See Two Marys, 
The.—Blewett. 

They knelt around the cross divine. See Wexford 
Massacre, The.—Barry. 

They know not my heart, who believe there can be. 
See They Know not My Heart.—Moore. 

They know the time to go. See Flowers Know Their 
Time to Go, The.—Coolidge. 

They led a lion from his den. See Gladiator, The.— 
Jones. 

They lifted her up tearfully, they shuddered as they 
said. See Little Gretchen.—Anon. 

They lingered at the garden gate. See At the Garden 
Gate.—Anon. 

They lived in-, and the farmer was well-to-do. See 

Mrs. Jones’ Pudding.—Anon. 

They looked on each other and spake not. See Story 
of Sigurd the Volsung, The (Of the Passing Away 
of Brynhild).—Morris. 

They looked so alike as they sat at their work. See 
Concerning Sisters-in-law.—( Punch.) 

They made her a grave too cold and damp. See Lake 
of the Dismal Swamp, The.—Moore. 

They made the chamber sweet with flowers and leaves. 
See Meeting.—Rossetti. 

They made them ready and we saw them go. See 
Travellers, The.—Howe. • 

They marched away from Scranton in a company one 
hundred strong. See Just Commonplace.— 
Phelps. 

They may rail at this life. See same. —Moore. 

They may talk of love in a cottage. See Love in a 
Cottage.—Willis. 

They meet but with unwholesome springs. See Castara 
(Against Them Who Lay Unchastity to the Sex of 
Women).—Habington. 

They met but once, in youth’s sweet hour. See They 
Met but Once.—Moore. 

They met me in the day of success. See Macbeth 
(Letter Scene, The).—Shakespeare. 

They met, ’t was in a storm. See Love on the Ocean. 
— (.Punch.) 

They met, when they were girl and boy. See All the 
Same.—W eatherley. 

They mock’d the Sovereign of Ghaznin; one saith. See 
With Sa’di in the Garden (Mahmud and Ayaz). 
—Arnold. 

They nearly strike me dumb. See My Mistress’s Boots. 
—Locker-Lampson. 

They never come back, tho’ I loved them well. See 
Ballad of the Bird-bride.—-Tomson. 

They never fail who die. See Marino Faliero (“They 
never,” etc.).—Byron. 

They never quite leave us, our friends who have passed. 
See Our Lost.—Sangster. 

They parted—if it be to part. See They Parted.— 
Planche. 

They parted with clasp of hand. See Comedy.—Aldrich. 

They passed it along from pew to pew. See Silver 
Plate, The.—Preston. 

They, passing by, were guvded by degree. See Faerie 
Queene, The (Gloriana).—Spenser. 

They planted them together—our gallant sires of old. 
See Palmetto and the Pine, The.—French. 

They played at cards on the yellow sand. See After 
the Game.— (Columbia Spectator.) 

They played at tennis that summer day. See Lesson 
in Tennis, A.—-Coburn. 

They put me in the great spare bed, and there they 
bade me sleep. See Christmas.—Dodge. 

They ran through the streets of the seaport town. See 
Greyport Legend, A.—Harte. 

They reach’d the Scsean towers. See Iliad, The (Helen 
on the Rampart).—Homer. 

They rise, by stream and yellow shore. See Fields of 
War, The.—M’Lellan. 

They rise to mastery of wind and snow. See Pioneers. 
—Garland. 

They rode from the camp at morn. See Sidney God&l- 
phin.—Scollard. 

They roused him with muffins. See Hunting of the 
Snark, The (Baker’s Tale, The).—Carroll. 

They said, “Don’t plant them, mother.” See Morning 
Glories.—Anon. 

They said the bulls were wondrous breed, in horn and 
hoof and brawn. See Uncle Sam’s Great Bull 
Fight.—White. 

They said to me at the friendly board. See What I 
Said.—Murray. 

They sat alone by the bright wood fire. See Three 
Little Chairs, The.—Anon. 

They sat and comb’d their beautiful hair. See After 
the Ball.—Perry. 


They sat in silent watchfulness. See Sacred Cypress 
Tree, The.—Whittier. 

They sat on the trunk of a fallen pine. See Marion’s 
Dinner.—Jones. 

They sat together, hand in hand. See First and Last. 
—Anon. 

They sat together side by side, absorbed in Cupid’s 
mission. See Woman’s Way.—Anon. 

They sat together, side by side, in the shade of an 
orange tree. See Blue and the Gray, The.—Anon. 

They sat upon the rocks beside the sea. See Woman’s 
Praise, A.—Anon. 

They say I missed my callin’; I might have been a sage. 
See “Good Enough fer Me.”—Anon. 

They say if our beloved dead. See Our Beloved Dead. 
—(Troy Times.) 

They say, sometimes, that walls have ears. See Ad¬ 
dress of Welcome. An.—Kennedy. 

They say that, afar in the land of the west. See Green 
Isle of Lovers, The.—Sands. 

They say that God lives very high. See Child’s Thought 
of God, A.—Browning. 

They say that Hope is happiness. See Stanzas for 
Music.—Byron. 

They say that I’ve “passed off the stage.” Ah, well! 
it may be true. See Passed off the Stage.—Buck- 
ham. 

They say that Michael Angelo once entered a palace 
at Rome. See What We Owe the Pilgrims.— 
Phillips. 

They say that Pity in Love’s service dwells. See Mod¬ 
ern Love (Com of Pity, The).—Meredith. 

They say that speech is silver. See Speech is Silver; 
Silence Golden.—Goodfellow. 

They say that thou wert lovely on thy bier. See Thou 
wert Lovely on Thy Bier.—Walker. 

They say that you’re a flirt at best. See Confession 
and Avoidance.—Hamilton. 

They say the boy-god Love was born. See What 
They Say about Cupid.—Anon. 

They say the lion and the lizard keep. See Rub&iydt 
of Omar Khayy&m.—Fitzgerald. 

They say ’tis a sin to sorrow. See Wail of the Cornish 
Mother, The.—Hawker. 

They say to-night is Christmas Eve, and, high as I 
could reach. See Christmas Eve.—Bellaw. 

They seem’d to those who saw them meet. See 
Nessun Maggior Dolore.—Houghton. 

They shot him dead on the Nine-stone Rig. See 
Barthram’s Dirge.—Surtees. 

They shot young Windebank just here. See Young 
Windebank.—W oods. 

They sin who tell us Love can die. See Curse of 
Kehama, The (Love’s Immortality).—Southey. 

They sit in the winter gloaming. See Fifty Years 
Apart.— (Parlor Magazine.) 

They sit with gods in slumber-breathing bowers. See 
Helen in Argos.—Clapp. 

They sleep in shelter’d rest. See Tristam and Iseult 
(Iseult’s Children).—Arnold. 

They soon grow old who grope for gold. See Who 
Gather Gold.—Saxton. 

They speak in riddles north beyond the Tweed. See 
Scotch Words.—Leighton. 

They stand on his dressing-table, with the things that 
are next his heart. See Story of Two Little 
Shoes, The.—Ewing. 

They stood above the world. See “Yes.”—Black- 
more. 

They stood at the altar one short year ago. See First 
Cloud, The.—Anon. 

They stood in the moonlight, under a large spreading 
elm. See “Well, then, I’m Yourn.”—Smiley. 

They stood on the beach by the billowy sea. See Her 
Preference.—Anon. 

They strike! hurrah! the foe has surrendered! See 
Victory.—Anon. 

They talked of their concerts, and Cramers and Spohrs. 
See Fancy Concert, The.—Hunt. 

They tell a lovely story, in lands beyond the sea. See 
Christmas in Sweden.—Anon. 

They tell about the happy days. See “I Don’t See It.” 
—Anon. 

They tell how fast the arrow sped. See Speed. 

—(Trinity Tablet.) 

They tell me I am beautiful; they praise my silken hair. 
See Sad Memories.—Calverley. 

They tell me I am shrewd with other men. See Royal 
Guest, The.—Howe. 

They tell me, liberty! that in thy name. See Liberty 
for All.—Garrison. 

They tell me of the Egyptian asp. See Serpent of the 
Still, The.—Lofland. 


882 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


Think 


They tell me, Tambo, you’re a man of taste. See Mr. 
Johnson on the Beautiful.—Anon. 

They tell me that I must not love. See Love Unsought. 
—Embury. 

They tell me ’tis decided you depart. See Don Juan 
(Donna Julia’s Letter).—Byron. 

“They tell me you work for a dollar a day.” See 
Family Financiering.—Anon. 

They tell me you’re a great ladies’ man, Tambo, is that 
true? See Tambo a Ladies’ Man.—Anon. 

They tell me you’re goin’, Robbie, away from home 
and all. See Life’s Game of Ball.—Anon. 

They tell this story of Queen Arj&mand. See With 
Sa’di in the Garden (Queen Arjamand’s Dagger).— 
Arnold. 

They tell us, love, that you and T. See Happiest Days. 
—Anon. 

They tell us, sir, that we are weak. See Speech in the 
Virginia Convention, 1775 (War Inevitable, The). 
—Henry. 

They tell you that Death’s at the turn of the road. See 
“Unillumined Verge, The.”—Bridges. 

They tell us that Woman was made of a rib. See 
Rabbinical Origin of Woman, The.—Moore. 

They that die for a good cause are redeemed from death. 
See Honored Dead, The.—Beecher. 

They that do write in authors’ praises. See Puffing.— 
Butler. 

They that have power to hurt and will do none. See 
Sonnets, XCIV.—Shakespeare. 

They that never had the use. See Apology for having 
Loved Before.—Waller. 

They that were never happy hours. See To King 
Charles and Queen Henrietta.—Shirley. 

They thought I couldn’t make a speech. See Declama¬ 
tion by a Little Tot.—Miller. 

They thought they had come to their port that day. 
See First Christmas in New England, The.—Butter- 
worth. 

They threw my dearest doll away. See Stupid Grown 
Ups, The.—Grant. 

They toiled together side by side. See Pitcher or Jug. 
—Chick. 

They told me, Heraclitus [or Heracleitus], they told 
me you were dead. See Callimachus (Heracleitus). 
—Cory. 

They told me I was heir; I turned in haste. See My 
Legacy.—J ackson. 

They told me in their shadowy phrase. See To Alfred 
Tennyson.—Hawker. 

They took the little London girl from out the city 
street. See Strange Experience, A.—-Pollard. 

They took their stand where the appointed judges. 
See Chariot Race, The.—Sophocles. 

They tossed him and they squeezed him and they 
kissed him, one and all. See Little Paul’s Thanks- 
gi\ ing.—Anon. 

They turned to the earth, but she frowns on her child. 
See same. —Taylor. 

They wait all day unseen by us, unfelt. See Stars, The. 
—Dodge. 

They waked me from my happy sleep. See Broken 
Dreams.—Dallas. 

They walked together, in the dusk. See What Else?— 
Osgood. 

They went to sea in a sieve, they did. See Jumblies, 
The.—Lear. 

They were born in the mountains, in the desert, among 
the caresses of Nature. See Gladiators, The.— 
Castelar. 

They were dining—he and she. See Wish-bone, The.— 
Mead. 

They were friends, not a bit sentimental. See Oh, No; 
of Course not.—Smiley. 

They were from the country and had probably never 
eaten in a restaurant in their lives. See Waiter’s 
Trials, A.—Anon. 

They were gazing through the window. See Teaching 
a Lesson.—Richards. 

They were in the shadowy gray. See On the Stair.— 
Lester. 

They were islanders, our fathers were. See Knowledge. 
—Scott. 

They were living to themselves, self, with its hopes and 
promises. See same. —Anon. 

They were lunching one day. See Repartee.—Davis. 

They were Methodists twain, of the ancient school. 
See Artie’s “Amen.”—Hayne. 

They were not married by a muttering priest. See 
Fragments (by a Free-lover)/— (Blackwood’s 
Magazine.) 

They were practical statesmen, these Pilgrims. See 
Pilgrims, The.—Depew. 


They were rowing over a summer lake. See Autumn 
Tourists.—-Anon. 

They were sitting by the fireside. See Caught.— 
Barry. 

They were sitting five seats back, but I plainly heard 
the smack. See Kiss' in the Tunnel, The.—Anon. 

They were sitting side by side. See Love Scene, A.— 
Anon. 

They were the last Italians of the year. See Uncle 
Billy’s Disaster.—Anon. 

They were three bonny mowers. See Mowers, The.— 
Robinson. 

They were three jolly sailors bold. See Discovery of 
Tobacco, The.— (Cigar and Tobacco World.) 

They were together—her eyes were wet. See Too 
Late.—Becquer. 

They were walking silently and gravely home. See 
Norwood (’Biah Cathcart’s Proposal).-—Beecher. 

They were young and glad together. See Together.— 
Barlow. 

They who create rob death of half of its stings. See 
Sovereigns, The.—Mifflin. 

They who may blame my tenderness. See same .— 
D’Anduze. 

They who may tell love’s wistful tale. See Song: 
“They who may tell,” etc.—Baillie. 

They who sought Truth since dawn. See Truth- 
seekers, The.—McDonald. 

They who the sweetest rest. See same. —Townsend. 

They whose hearts are whole and strong. See Hints.— 
Larcom. 

They will ask thee of Dhoulkarnain [the two-horned]. 
See Koran, The (Dhoulkarnain).—Anon. 

They will send you off to college. See He Has Been 
There Himself.—Walker. 

They win who never near the goal. See William Blake. 
—Gosse. 

They’ll talk of him for years to come. See Popular 
Recollections of Bonaparte.—Mahony. 

They’re always abusing the women. See Chorus of 
W omen.—Aristophanes. 

They’re hastening up across the fields. See Gowns 
of Gossamer.—Larcom. 

They’re making a fuss about George’s birthday. See 
Boy’s Poem on Washington, A.—Davenport. 

They’re serenading me tonight. Their voices clear 
and strong. See Minstrels of the Marshes, The.— 
Anon. 

“They’re swarming, Mirandy. There they are—see 
them? See Mr. Skiff and his Bees.—Anon. 

They’s fellers a-writing about the wa’. See Bravest 
of the Brave.—Burdette. 

They’ve cut the wood away. See same. —Anon. 

They’ve got a brand-new \[wr. bran new] organ. Sue. 
See New Church Organ, The.—Carleton. 

They’ve left the school-house, Charlie lor Charley], 
where years ago we sat. See Old Forsaken 
School-house, The.—Yates. 

They’ve named a cruiser “Dixie”—that’s what the 
papers say. See War-ship “Dixie,” The.— 
Stanton, .n 

They’ve taken away the ball. See In the Closet.— 
Richards. 

Thick green leaves from the soft brown earth. See 
Under the Leaves.—Anon. 

Thick lay the dust, uncomfortably white. See 
Summer Rain.—Coleridge. 

Thick rise the spear-shafts o’er the land. See Burghers’ 
Battle, The.—-Morris. 

Thin and graceful like a clipper Thora was from top 
to toe. See Thora.—Boyesen. 

Thine is a strain to read among the hiUs. See To 
Wordsworth.—Hemans. 

Thine is the mystic melody. See Coleridge.—Heilman. 

Thine old-world eyes—each one a violet. See On a 
Miniature.—Beers. 

Things has come to a pretty pass. See My Josiar.— 
Anon. 

Things have certainly come to a pretty pass. See 
Raising the Wind.—Neall. 

Things of high import sound I in thine ears. See To a 
Child.—"Yankee.” 

Think every morning when the sun peeps through. 
See Birds of Killingworth, The.—Longfellow. 

Think, in this batter’d caravanserei. See RuMiykt 
of Omar Khayyam.—Fitzgerald. 

Think no more of the matter, for I assure you. See 
Wizard of Valley Forge, The.—Kent. 

Think not I love him, though I ask for him. See As 
You Like It (Love Dissembled).—Shakespeare. 

“Think not that I have come to urge thy crimes.” See 
Idylls of the King (King Arthur and Queen 
Guinevere).—Tennyson. 


883 





Think 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


‘‘Think of Death,” the grave-stones say. See Two 
Epitaphs.—Anon. 

Think of me, dearest, when round thee smiling. See 
Think of Me, Dearest.—Hoffman. 

Think of me!—when? See Think of Me Then.—Anon. 

Think of the changes wrought by the enormous influx 
into the United States. See Centennial Celebra¬ 
tion of Concord Fight (Changes of a Hundred 
Years).—Curtis. 

Think of the country for which the Indians fought! 
See Indian Chief to the White Settler, The.— 
Everett. 

Think on thy wants, on thy faults. See same .— 
Bremer. 

Think truly, and thy thought. See Think, Speak, and 
Live Truly.—Anon. 

Think we King Harry strong. See King Henry Y. 
(Black Prince, The).—Shakespeare. 

Think well, I beg of you, of the Fourth of July. See 
Independence Day Address.—Anon. 

Think you to escape. »See Imitation of Christ (“Think 
you,” etc.).—Kempis. 

Think’st thou there are no serpents in the world. See 
Deceit.—Baillie. 

"Third, an’ lass, de cirkelatin’ libery muss be kep’ 
open on Sundays. See De Rev. Plato Johnson on 
Free Cirkelatin’ Liberies.— (Independent.) 

Thirsty, I walked beside a brook. See Verdict, The.— 
Ballard. 

Thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, seventeen—seventeen more 
manuscripts. See Aspirant for Fame, An.— 
Graham. 

Thirteen years ago, mother. See Lost and Found.— 
Procter. 

Thirty days hath September. See Calendar, The.— 
Anon. 

Thirty-two years have passed. See Grant at Appo¬ 
mattox.—Levy. 

This ae nighte, this ae nighte. See Lyke-wake Dirge, 
A.—-Anon. 

This, after all, we believe, is the tone of true wisdom 
and true virtue. See same. —Jeffrey. 

This ain’t Joe Brown. Is it? Why, Joe! See Settin’ 
the Flags.;—Purdy. 

'Phis ancient silver bowl of mine, it tells of good old 
times. See On Lending a Punch-bowl.—Holmes. 

This argufyin’ useless pints. See Farmer’s Cohclu- 
sion, The.— (Omaha World.) 

This army led by a delicate and tender prince. See 
Hamlet (“This army,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

This battle fares like to the morning’s war. See King 
Henry VI.. Pt. III. (King Henry’s Ambition).— 
Shakespeare. 

This bears the seal of immortality. See Living Book, 
The.—Bates. 

This book is all that’s left me now! See My Mother’s 
Bible.—Morris. 

This bright wood fire. See Wood-fire, The.—E. S. H. 

This bronze doth keep the very form and mould. See 
On the Life-mask of Abraham Lincoln.—Gilder. 

Phis, by the way, is a casual remark. See Knicker¬ 
bocker History of New York (Wouter Van Twiller). 
—Irving. 

This can be no trick; the conference was sadly borne. 
See Much Ado about Nothing (Benedick’s Solil¬ 
oquy).—Shakespeare. 

This can’t last much longer. It’ll kill him sure. See 
Forget-me-nots.—Griffith. 

This case befell at four of the clock. See Six Car¬ 
penters’ Case, The.—Pollock. 

This castle hath a pleasant seat. See Macbeth 
(Morning).—Shakespeare. 

This century is the grandest of centuries. See Na¬ 
poleon the Little (“This century is,” etc.).— 
Hugo. 

This century proclaims the sovereignty of the citizen. 
See Napoleon the Little (“This century pro¬ 
claims,” etc.).—-Hugo. 

This, children, is the famed Mon-goos. See Mon-goos, 
The.-—Herford. 

This compliment, great sir, O take. See To the Lead¬ 
ing Periodical.— (Punch.) 

This country, with its institutions, belongs to the 
people who inhabit it. See First Inaugural Ad¬ 
dress (Constitution and the People, The).—Lincoln. 

This day belongs not to America, but to the World. 
See Columbian Oration.—Depew. 

This day, beyond all contradiction. See April Fools.— 
Praed. 

This day. Conscript Fathers, has brought with it. See 
Panegyric on Julius Cresar.—Cicero. 

This day, Dame Nature seemed in love! See Spring 
Idyll, A.—Wotton. 


This day I heard such music that I thought. See 
Music and Words.—Gilder. 

This day I wish to begin life anew. See Conflict, The. 
—Topping. 

This day is sacred to our heroes, dead. See Decora¬ 
tion Day.—Anon. 

This day, my Julia, thou must make. See Bride 
Cake, The.—Herrick. 

This day, O friends and Englishmen, sons of our 
common land. See Harold (King Harold’s 
Speech to his Army before the Battle of Hastings). 
—Bulwer-Lytton. 

This day, O soldiers, will terminate or establish the 
largest empire. See Darius to His Army.— 
Curtius. 

This day, this very day, gave birth. See Birth-day 
Ode.—Pindar. 

This day, two hundred years ago. See same. — 
Whittier. 

This dear English land! See Balder (England).— 
Dobell. 

This dear resemblance of thy lovely face. See Portrait, 
The.—Marot. 

This diploma which I present to you, young gentlemen. 
See Military Training in the Schools.—Carring¬ 
ton. 

This doll, Kris Kringle brought last year. See Christ¬ 
mas Gift, A.—Powers. 

This drop of ink chance leaves upon my pen. See 
Drop of Ink, A.—Whitney. 

This fell in my factor days. See Clive.—Browning. 

This fell when Christmas lights were done. See Sea 
Swallows, The.—Swinburne. 

This fell when dinner-time was done. See Fall of Jack 
Gillespie, The.—Kipling. 

This figure, that thou here seest put. See Lines on the 
Portrait of Shakespeare.—Jonson. 

This flower that Jesus bids us consider was the Chalce- 
donian Lily. See Lessons from Scripture Flowers. 
—Slade. 

This foul thing gives one swing. See Rum Fiend’s 
Portrait, The.—Talmage.. 

This garden does not take my eyes. See Garden, 
The.—Shirley. 

This gentle and half melancholy breeze. See Autumn 
Breeze, An.—Hayne. 

This goodly masque but lacked a fool! See Emperor’s 
Return, The.—Hugo. 

This grave were ye meanin’, stranger? Oh, there’s 
nobody much lies here. See Only Joe.—Reed. 

This happy day two lights are seen. See On the 
Birthday of Catherine of Braganza.—Knight. 

This hinder yeir I hard be tald. See Bludy Serk, The. 
—Henryson. 

This hotel has been built and arranged for the special 
comfort and convenience of summer boarders. 
See Model Summer Hotel, A.— (Traveler’s Record.) 

This House and the world have been told that Robert 
Fulton was not the inventor. See Merits of 
Fulton’s Invention.—Hoffman. 

This house might have come to order. See Plunket- 
ville Literary Society, The.—Anon. 

This I beheld, or dreamed it in a dream. See Oppor¬ 
tunity.—Sill 

This I got on the day that Goring. See Three Scars, 
The.—Thornbury. 

This I learned from the birds. See Song, A: “This 
I learned,” etc.—McDonald. 

“This I say, then; walk in the Spirit.” See Lesson 
from “Fruit of the Spirit.”—Garrett. 

This illustrious man, at once the world’s admiration 
and enigma. See Character of Washington, The. 
—Whipple. 

This immortal state paper, which for its composer. 
See History of the United States f Character of the 
Declaration of Independence).—-Bancroft. 

This in defense of poesie to say. See Weakness.— 
Wither. 

This Indian weed, now withered quite. See Smoking 
Spiritualized.—Anon. 

This infant world has taken long to make! See World 
and Soul.—Macdonald. 

This is a beautiful world! See Destiny of the Empress 
Josephine, The.-—Barritt. 

This is a breath of summer wind. See On Reading a 
Poet’s First Book.—Bunner. 

This is a glorious country! It has larger rivers and 
more of them. See America.—Cox. 

This is a little drama—a regular little drama. See 
Little Drama, A.—Anon. 

This is a mighty matter, Van den Bosch. See Philip 
van Artevelde (Van den Bosch and Van Artevelde). 
—Taylor. 


884 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


This 


This is a pleasant palace, your majesty. See Chosen 
Princess, The.—Douglas. 

This is a predicament! Nobody in the drawing-room. 
See “You Must be Dreaming.”—Meyers. 

This is a spray the bird clung to. See Misconceptions. 
—Browning. 

This is a story of strange old times. See Karl the 
Fiddler.—Raymond. 

This is a very valuable book on the application of the 
leech. See Ghost of Crooked Lane, The.— 
Vickers. 1 

This is a wise old world of ours, See This Old World 
of Ours.—Bungay. 

This is a world of inflexible compensations. See 
Danger of Exclusive Devotion to Business, The.— 
Hillard. 

"This is an educational war.” See Righteous War, A. 
—Witham. 

This is Bridget’s room. See Little Prudy (Inkstand, 
The).—May. 

This is delightful! In the country quiet. See Country 
Quiet.—Anon. 

This is East, and this is West. See same.— Anon. 

This is our Flag, and may it wave. See American 
Flag, The.—Anon. 

This is fortunate indeed to find you at home, and 
alone. See Cure for Obstinacy; or, How Charlie 
Won a Wife, A.—Kavanaugh. 

This is God’s House; the blue sky is the ceiling. See 
God’s House.—Scott. 

This is grandma’s birthday. See Cherry Cheeks.— 
Anon. 

This is her picture as she was. See Portrait, The.— 
Rossetti. 

This is her picture — Dolladine. See Doll Poems 
(Dolladine).—Rands. 

This is her story as once told to me. See Patient 
Mercy Jones.—Fields. 

This is how the pupil put it. See Cows—a Composi¬ 
tion.—Anon. 

This is, indeed, a new move. Sell out! See Oh, What 
a Sell.—Denton. 

This is indeed unexpected news! See Caught in Their 
Own Trap.—“Bob o’Link.” 

This is King Charles his day. Speak it, thou Tower. 
See To the King on his Birthday.—Jonson. 

This is Mr. Harrison, I believe? .See Examination of a 
Candidate for a Position as Teacher.—Anon. 

This is mv birthday and I am going to have a party. 
See Ethel’s Birthday Party.—Rook. 

This is my birthday, baby. Did you know. See 
Grown-up Birthday, A.—Coolidge. 

This is my country’s flag. See My Country’s Flag.— 
Stafford. 

This is my dolly Mary. See Mary and Dinah.—Rook. 

Thisismy grandson, Billy, Mr. Bernacle. See Mrs. 
Winkle’s Grandson.—Dallas. 

This is my Mamma’s calendar. See Mamma’s Helper. 
—Goodfellow. 

This is no my ain lassie. See same. —Burns. 

This is not the first time, O Romans, that Patrician 
arrogance has denied to us. See History of Rome 
(Canuleius against Patrician Arrogance). — 
Livy. 

This is one of those subjects, Mr. Chairman. See 
Speech on the Compromises of the Constitution 
(On the Federal Constitution).—-Hamilton. 

This is Palm Sunday; mindful of the day. See To a 
Young Girl Dying.—Parsons. 

This is some fellow, who, having been praised. See 
King Lear (Bluntness).—Shakespeare.. 

This is terrible, terrible! Thermometer ninety-eight. 
See Manly Boy, A. —Anon. 

This is that day of the year which announced to man¬ 
kind the great fact of American Independence! 
See Addition to the Capitol, The (Fourth of July, 
The).—Webster. 

This is the Arsenal. From floor to ceiling. See 
Arsenal at Springfield, The.—Longfellow. 

This is the bait the fishermen take. See Bait of the 
Average Fisherman.—Dodge. 

This is the bird that sweeps o’er the sea. See Stormy 
Petrel, The.—Benjamin. 

This is the Burden of the Heart. See No More.— 
Willson. 

This is the convent where they tend the sick. See 
Sister Mary of the Love of God.—Mulholland. 

This is the day, the glorious day. See Vacation.— 
Riley. 

This is the earth He walked on not alone. See Holy 
Land.—Gilder. 

This is the end of the book. See Written at the End 
of a Book.—Mitchell. 


This is the feast-time of the year. See Feast-time of 
the Year, The.—Kimball. 

This is the first and great command. See Two Com¬ 
mands, The.—Anon. 

This is the first day of a new year. See Thoughts for 
a New Year.—Parker. 

This is the forest primeval. The murmuring pines and 
the hemlocks. See Evangeline.-—Longfellow. 

This is the glamour of the world antique. See Sibyl. 
—Payne. 

This is the grave prepared; set down the bier. See 
Gardener’s Burial, The.—Johnstone. 

This is the great danger. See What is Worth While.— 
Lindsay. 

This is the house she was born in, full four-score years 
ago. See At Four-score.—Gilder. 

This is the loggia Browning loved. See Browning at 
Asolo.—Johnson. 

This is the month, and this the happy morn. See On 
the Morning of Christ’s Nativity.—Milton. 

This is the old gold-stoled October. See October.— 
Munkittrick. 

This is the pathway where she walked. See Amy.— 
LegarA 

This is the purple sea of ancient song. See Greek 
Reverie, A.—Hodgins. 

This is the recreation ground, or a part of it. See Pet 
of the School, The.—Kavanaugh. 

This is the room to which she came that day. See Her 
Pity.—Martin. 

This is the rugged face. See Michael Angelo Buona- 
rotti.—Cranch. 

This is the season of the year. See Pleasures of 
Picnicing.—Anon. 

This is the seed, so yellow and round. See Johnny- 
cake, The.— (The Nursery.). 

This is the ship of pearl, which, poets feign. See 
Chambered Nautilus, The.—Holmes. 

This is the song of a nameless man. See Nameless 
Hero, A.—Traquair. 

This is the song of the birds in the bowers. See Spring¬ 
time.—Anon. 

This is the song of the wave! The mighty one! See 
Song of the Wave, A.—Lodge. 

This is the state of man. See King Henry VIII. 
(“This is the state,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

This is the story my grandmother told. See Story of a 
Little Red Hen, The.—Eastman. 

This is the story of Renyi, and when you have heard it 
through. See Ballad of Splendid Silence, The.— 
Nesbit. 

This is the sunset of the passing year. See Indian 
Summer.—Kirk. 

This is the tale of the man. See Ticonderoga.— 
Stevenson. 

This is the tale that was told to me. See Sailor’s Yarn, 
A.—Roche. 

This is the top of my little head. See Exercise Recita¬ 
tion, An.—Anon. 

This is the very coinage of your brain. See Hamlet.— 
Shakespeare. 

This is the way the baby slept. See Way the Baby 
Slept, The.—Riley. 

This is the way the happy farmer. See Farmer, The.— 
Anon. 

This is the way the morning dawns. See Summer 
Day, A.—Anon. 

This is the way we dress the doll. See Doll Poems 
(Dressing the Doll).—Rands. 

This is the white winter day of his burial. See Phillips 
Brooks.—Carman. 

This is the Wild Huntsman that shoots the hares. See 
Story of the Wild Huntsman, The.—Hoffman. 

This is the worst thing I ever heard of. See “That 
Other Fourth.”—Denton. 

This is Vimeiro; yonder stream, which flows. See 
Inscription for a Monument at Vimeiro.—Southey. 

This is what a fairy heard. See Fairy Story, A.— 
Sherman. 

This is what the robin sings. See Bird Songs.— 
Moore. 

This is your month, the month of perfect days. See 
James Russell Lowell.—Holmes. 

This journal of folly’s an emblem of me. See Written 
in a Young Lady’s Commonplace Book.—Moore. 

This kind o’ sogerin’ ain’t a mite like our October 
trainin’. See Biglow Papers, The (Letter from 
Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Hon. .1. T. Buckingham). 
—Lowell. 

This kitten, sir, of the Colonel’s? I’ll tell the story. 
See Kitten of the Regiment, The.—Buckham. 

This knight a doughter hadde by his wif. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The (Virginia).—Chaucer. 


885 




This 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


This, ladies and gentlemen, is the distinguished 
hanimal. See Showman on the Woodchuck, A.— 
Anon. 

This life, and all that it contains, to him. See Edwin 
the Fair (Scholar, The).—Taylor. 

This life is a school. There are many lessons to 
learn. See Pluck.—Pomeroy. 

This life is given us for work. See Persevere.— 
Gormley. 

This life, which seems so fair. See Madrigal.— 
Drummond. 

This lighthouse, known to mariners as the Cape Co6 
or Highland Light. See Highland Light, The.— 
Thoreau. 

This little blue card I found on the floor. See Her 
Programme of Dance.—Spencer. 

This little seed of life and love. See Epitaph on a 
Child.—Parsons. 

This little vault, this narrow room. See Epitaph on 
the Lady Mary Villiers.-—Carew. 

This lovely land, this glorious liberty, these benign 
institutions. See Adams and Jefferson (Our 
Duties to Our Country).—Webster. 

This man loved Lincoln, him did Lincoln love. See 
John George Nicolay.—Gilder. 

This man was very ostentatious of his affected know l¬ 
edge of the History of England. See Highgate 
Butcher, The.—Anon. 

This man whose homely face you look upon. See 
Abraham Lincoln.—Stoddard. 

This meetin’ has met for the purpose of doin’ business. 
See Gumtown Woman’s Association, The.— 
McBride. 

This meetin’ has now come till order. See Anti- 
Railroad Meeting, An.—Anon. 

This meetin’ will now come to order. See Frog Hollow 
Lyceum, The.—McBride. 

This meeting will now come to order. See Jimtown 
Lyceum.—McBride. 

This monument, faultless as a work of art. See 
Soldier’s Monument, The.—Swift. 

"This mom I will weave my web,” she said. See 
Weaving the Web.—Dorr. 

This morning I was late in going to school. See Last 
Lesson, The.—Daudet. 

This morning, timely rapt with holy fire. See On Lucy, 
Countess of Bedford.—Jonson. 

This morning, when all of the rest had gone down. See 
What Bessie Saw.—Bronson. 

This morning when I first awoke. See Young Mother’s 
Perplexity, A.—Denton. 

This mortal body that I wear. See “?”—F. A. Le H. 

This mossy bank they press’d. That aged oak. See 
Pastoral Dialogue, A.—Carew. 

This must be the place. Let me see again what the 
note says. See Unjust Suspicion.—Rook. 

This, my Lords, is a perilous and tremendous moment. 
See American War, The (America Unconquerable). 
—Chatham. 

This new Diana makes weak men her prey. See 
Diana.—Rhys. 

This night about our cheerful hearth we gather once 
again. See Christmas.—Sawyer. 

This night is my departing night. See Armstrong’s 
Good Night.—Anon. 

This night presents a play which public rage. See 
Word to the Wise, A.—Johnson. 

This night, while sleep begins with heavy wings. See 
Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet XXXVIII.).— 
Sidney. 

This old watchword so often heard by travellers. See 
“Step to the Captain’s Office and Settle.”— 
Cheever. 

This one fought with Jackson, and faced the fight 
with Lee. See Answering to Roll Call.—Stanton. 

This only grant me, that my means may lie. See Of 
Myself.—Cowley. 

This passeth yeer by yeer, and day by day. See 
Canterbury Tales, The (Knightes Tale, The).— 
Chaucer. 

This peach is pink, with such a pink. See same. — 
Gale. 

This place—the center of the grove. See Douglas 
(Soliloquy of Douglas—Solemnity).—Home. 

This polyglot of wealth, this museum of curiosities, 
the Pension List. See Satire on the Pension 
Syst em. —Curran. 

This realm is sacred to the silent past. See In a 
Garret.—Allen. 

This region is as lavish of its flowers. See Tecumseh 
(Lefroy in the Forest).—Mair. 

This region, surely, is not of the earth. See Naples.— 
Rogers. 


This relative of mine. See To My Grandmother.— 
Locker-Lampson. 

This remarkable beast of prey dwells in mill ponds. 
See Bull-head, The.—Billings. 

This river of azure with many a weed in. See Atkin¬ 
son’s Mill.—Ramsay. 

This rose-tree is not made to bear. See Envy.— 
Anon. 

This royal throne of kings, this sceptered isle. See 
King Richard II.—Shakespeare. 

This scene opens at the time when Ivan Ogareff. See 
Michael Strogoff.—Verne. 

This single stick, which you now behold ingloriously 
lying in that neglected comer. See Meditation 
upon a Broom-stick, A.—Swift. 

This, sir, is my case. It is the case not merely of that 
humble institution. See Close of Defence of Dart¬ 
mouth College.—Webster. 

This song of mine is a song of the vine. See Catawba 
Wine.—Longfellow. 

This song’s of a beggar who long lost his sight. See 
Blind Beggar’s Daughter of Bednall Green, The.— 
Anon. 

This sounds very wise in a galloping reading. See 
True Contentment.—Kent. 

This story I’m going to sing. See Saddle to Rags.— 
Anon. 

This story’s very fine indeed. See George Washing¬ 
ton’s Little Hatchet.—Anon. 

This summer night is neither cool nor warm. See 
Thunder Storm, A.—Miller. 

This sweet child which hath climbed upon my knee. 
See My Slain.—Realf. 

This system and order everywhere forms the basis of 
all science. See same. —Minton. 

This tale is true, for so the records show. See Miser’s 
Will, The.—Birdseye. 

This tantalizing sudden shower! See Under an 
Umbrella.—Meyers. 

This the house of Circe, queen of charms. See Circe.— 
De Tabley. 

This the true sign of ruin to a race. See Decay of a 
People, The.—Simms. 

This, then, is the theatre on which the intellect of 
America is to appear. See Prospects of the 
Republic, The.—Everett. 

This, this is he: softly a while. See Samson Agonistes 
(Eyeless at Gaza).—Milton. 

This thrilling story is furnished by a Prussian railroad 
conductor. See Mad Engineer, The.—Anon. 

This time, four years ago, I lodged in Bath Street. See 
Leap-year Wooing, A.—Macrae. 

This town is decidedly the best place I ever struck. 
See Quack, The.—-Anon. 

This tragical tale, which, they say, is a true one. See 
Pyramus and Thisbe.—Saxe. 

This tree, which surpasses all others of North America. 
See Choosing a “State Tree.”—The Tulip Tree. 
—Vail. 

This uncounted multitude before me, and around me. 
See Bunker Hill Monument, The (Oration at the 
Laying of the Comer Stone, etc.).—-Webster. 

This was our poet—one who strode. See Fitz-James 
O’Brien.—Watrous. 

This was the cause of all the trouble. See Difficulty 
about that Dog, The.—Anon. 

This was the man God gave us when the hour. See 
George Washington.—Tngham. 

This was the picture in front of "Old Daddy Turner’s” 
cabin in the “Kaintuck” quarter. See Old Daddy 
Turner.—( Detroit Free Press.) 

This was the ruler of the land. See Pericles and 
Aspasia.—Croly. 

This was your butterfly, you see. See After Wings.— 
Piatt. • 

This way is long, my darling. See Sojourners.—Anon. 

This way. No, this way. This way, then. See 
Secrets of the Heart, The.—Dobson. 

This way the noise was, if my ear be true. See. Comus 
(Lady Lost in the Wood. The).—Milton. 

This way, this way come, and hear. See Little French 
Lawyer, The (Charm, The).-—Beaumont and 
Fletcher. 

This winter [or winter’s] weather it waxeth cold. See 
Take thy Old Cloak about Thee.—Anon. 

This wintry month of storm and cold. See Some 
Years in Washington’s Life.—Stanley. 

This wolf for many a day. See St. Francis and the 
Wolf.—Tyman-Hinkson. 

"This woman walketh in the smile of God!” See 
Judith.—Aldrich. 

This world a hunting is. See Madrigal: “This world,” 
etc.—Drummond. 


886 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Thou 


This world I deem but a beautiful dream. See Second 
Day of Creation, The.—Whytehead. 

This world is all a fleeting show. See same. —Moore. 

This world is but the sun’s kaleidoscope. See Medita¬ 
tions on Immortality.—Welcker. 

This world is like a looking-glass. See In the Looking- 
glass.—Leonard. 

This world is made a hell. See Damon’s Lament.— 
Drummond. 

This [The—C 1 .] world is too much with us, late and 
soon. See World is too Much with Us, The.— 
Wordsworth. 

This world may be considered as a great mart of 
commerce. See Inconsistent Expectations.— 
Barbauld. 

This world was not as it now is seen. See Golden Age, 
The.—Fenollosa. 

This world’s a scene as dark as Styx. See Lines 
Written in an Album.—Gaylord. 

This wot ye all whom it concerns. See Dinner at the 
House of Dugal Stewart, A.—Burns. 

This yaller dog I have in mind. See Yaller Dog, The.— 
Anon. 

This year—next year—sometime—never. See This 
Year—Next Year.—Anon. 

This year, till late in April, the snow fell thick and 
light. See Nineteenth of April, 1861, The.— 
Larcom. 

Thistledown, motionless over the hill. See Autumn 
Cry, The.—( Cornell Widow.) 

Tho’ a crumpled glove it be. See Di’s Mitten.—Fitch. 

Tho’ death met love upon thy dying smile. See 
Anastasis.—Turner. 

Tho’ I met her in the summer. See Cassandra Brown. 
—Anon. 

Tho’ yer lamp o’ life is bumin’ with a clear and steady 
light. See When the Light Goes Out.—Chester. 

Thomas Jefferson of Virginia and John Adams of Massa¬ 
chusetts. See Centennial Oration (Thomas Jeffer¬ 
son and John Adams).—Winthrop. 

Thomas Ruffin had been found guilty of treason. See 
Governor’s Last Levee. The.—Kennedy. 

“Thomas Watson, Jeweler.” That’s a mighty big 
house. See Only Another Footprint.—Anon. 

Thorowe the halle the bell han sounde. See Accounte 
of W. Canynge's Feast, The.—Chatterton. 

Those Christmas bells as sweetly chime. See Old 
Christmas.—Anon. 

Those days we spent on Lebanon. See On Lebanon.— 
Gray. 

Those delicate wanderers. See Sacrifice.—Russell. 

Those earlier men that owned our earth. See After- 
comers, The.—Lowell. 

. Those evening bells! Those evening bells. See Those 
Evening Bells.—Moore. 

Those far-off fields, how fair they seem. See Those 
Far-off Fields.—Fairbanks. 

Those few pale Autumn flowers. See Autumn Flowers. 
—Southey. 

Those get the least that take the greatest pains. See 
Laborious Writers.—Butler. 

Those gilded flies. See Queen Mab (Drones of the 
Community, The).—Shelley. 

Those glorious wars are long since sped. See Wash- 
i ngton.—Bocock. 

Those guests from many climes had often heard. See 
New Liberty Bell, The.—H. B. C. 

Those ob you who hea’d de o’ator a-week ago. See 
“Sound Money.”—Washburn. 

Those same noble Scots that are your prisoners. See 
King Henry IV., Pt. I. (Hotspur to Worcester).— 
Shakespeare. 

Those slumbering lids unclose, where pure dreams 
hover so light! See Spectre of the Rose, The.— 
Gautier. 

Those spirits God ordained. See To the Memory of 
Channing.—Lynch. 

Those violets blue on my lady’s breast. See Those 
Violets Blue.—Banks. 

Those we love truly never die. See Forever.—-Anon. 

Those were good times, in olden days. See Written 
on a Fly-leaf of Theocritus.—Thompson. 

Those were wonderful days of long ago. See What 
Grandma Says.—Cooper. 

Those who carry latch-keys. See Locked Out.— 
Anon. 

Those who do not control their passions. See Wisdom 
of Krishna.—(Notes and Queries.) 

Those who have stood amid the sublime scenery. See 
Eagle’s Flight, An.—Bedinger. 

Those who love truly never die. See Forever.— 
O’Reilly. 


Those who much read advertisements and bills. Nee 
Cockle vs. Cackle.—Hood. 

Thothmes, who loved a pyramid. See Story of 
Pyramid Thothmes, The.—Anon. 

Thou ancient oak! whose myriad leaves are loud. Nee 
Eliot’s Oak.—Longfellow. 

Thou art a ferryman, Phaon, yet a freeman. See 
Sapho and Phao (Phaon, the Ferryman).—Lyly. 

“Thou art a fool,” said my head to my heart. See 
Retort.—Dunbar. 

Thou art alive, O grave. See In God’s Acre.—Tilton. 

Thou art as a lone watcher on a rock. See England.— 
Day. 

Thou art as welcome as the summer rain. See Love’s 
Return.—Savage. 

Thou art gone from us, and with thee departed. See 
Felicia Hemans.—Maclean. 

Thou art gone to the grave; but we will not deplore 
thee. See Stanzas on the Death of a Friend.— 
Heber. 

Thou art lost to me forever!—I have lost thee. Isadore! 
See Widowed Heart, The.—Pike. 

Thou art mine, thou hast given thy word. See Song 
from a Drama.—Stedman. 

Thou art my very own. See Unborn, The.—Finch. 

Thou art no lingerer in monarch’s hall. See Sunbeam, 
The.—Hemans. 

Thou art not, and thou never canst be mine. See To 
Imperia.—Burbidge. 

Thou art not fair, for all thy red and white. See 
Renunciation, A.—Campion. 

Thou art not gone, being gone. See Eclogue, Decem¬ 
ber 26, 1613 (Love).—Donne. 

Thou art, O God, my East! In thee I dawned. See 
Compass, The.—Robbins. 

Thou art, O God, the life and light. See Thou Art, O 
God.—Moore. 

Thou art sleeping, brother, sleeping. See Brother’s 
Tribute, A.—Anon. 

Thou art so very sweet and fair. See To a Girl.—Anon. 

Thou art the flower of grief to me. See Woodruffe, 
The.—Knox. 

Thou art the joy of age. See Light.—George Mac¬ 
donald. 

Thou art the rock of empire, set mid-seas. See At 
Gibraltar, II.—Woodberry. 

Thou art to all lost love the best. See To the Willow- 
t ree.—Herrick. 

Thou art to me as is the sea. See Alter Ego.—Tabb. 

Thou art to me like all the days. See Yesterday.— 
Knowles. 

Thou art too hard for me in Love. See Love.—■ 
Herbert. 

Thou askest not to know the creed. See Charity.— 
Morgan. 

Thou bay-crowned living One that o’er the bay- 
crowned Dead art bowing. See To L. E. L., on 
the Death of Felicia Hemans.—Browning. 

“Thou bearest flowers within Thy hand.” See “Should 
I not Love My Flowers?”—Greenwell. 

Thou beauteous flower, with heart of gold. See To a 
Chrysanthemum.—Thompson. 

Thou bidst me come away. See To Death.—Herrick. 

Thou blossom, bright with autumn dew. See To the 
Fringed Gentian.—Bryant. 

Thou, bom to sip the lake or spring. See To a Honey 
Bee.—F reneau. 

Thou canst not be the child of solitude. See Genius 
to Her Poet.—Dutton. 

Thou canst not forget me, for memory will fling. See 
Thou canst not Forget.—Anon. 

Thou canst not frown, O Death. See same. —Thayer. 

Thou canst not hope acquittal from the Volscians. 
See Coriolanus (Coriolanus and Aufidius).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Thou canst not say I did it. See Macbeth.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Thou damn’d antipodes to common-sense. See Satire 
on a Conceited Playwright.—Dorset. 

Thou dancer of two thousand years. See Dancing 
Faun, The.—Rogers. 

Thoij dark-robed man with solemn pace. See Winter. 
— (Chambers’ Journal.) 

Thou didst delight my eyes. See same. —Bridges. 

Thou divinest, fairest, brightest. See Faithful Shep¬ 
herdess, The (Satyr’s Service, The).—Fletcher. 

Thou dost not sing of sorrow, being too vast. See 
Beethoven.—Ingham. 

Thou ever young! Persephone but gazes. See To 
Demeter.—Fleming. 

Thou fair haired Angel of the Evening. See To the 
Evening Star.—Crabbe. 


887 






Thou 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Thou foolish blossom, all untimely blown! See To a 
Wild Rose Found in October.—Hayes. 

Thou for whose birth the whole creation yearned. See 
Rise of Man, The.—Chadwick. 

Thou from primeval nothingness didst call. See God. 
—Dezhavin. 

Thou glorious mirror, where the Almighty’s form. 
See Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Apostrophe to the 
Ocean).—Byron. 

Thou glorious mocker of the world! See To the 
Mock>ng-bird.—Pike. 

Thou God of glorious majesty. See Hymn for Serious¬ 
ness, An.—Wesley. 

Thou God unsearchable, unknown. See Thou God 
U n searchable.—W esley. 

Thou God, who high, eternal love. See Wedding 
Hymn.—Lanier. 

Thou golden sunshine in the peaceful day! See Lament 
for King Ivor.—Stokes. 

Thou Grace Divine, encircling all. See Love of God, 
The.—Scudder. 

Thou grim and haggard wanderer, who dost look. See 
On a Portrait of Servetus.—Gilder. 

Thou half-unfolded flower. See Blossom of the Soul, 
The.—Johnson. 

Thou happiest thing alive. See To the Boy.— 
Kinney. 

Thou happy, happy elf! See Parental Ode to My Son, 
Aged Three Years and Five Months, A.—Hood. 

Thou hast beauty bright and fair. See Hermione.— 
Cornwall. 

Thou hast been where the rocks of coral grow. See 
Diver, The.—Hemans. 

Thou hast diamonds and pearls of rare beauty. See 
Thine Eyes.—Heine. 

Thou hast done evil. See Judgment, The.—Goodale. 

Thou hast fill’d me a golden cup. See To Christina 
Rossetti.—Green wel 1. 

Thou hast learned the woes of all the world. See Poet, 
The.—C. S. T. 

Thou hast lost thy love, poor fool. See Simple Maid, 
A.—De Tabley. 

Thou hast not been with the festal throng. See Siege 
of Valencia, The (Ballad of Roncesvalles, A).— 
Hemans, 

Thou hast not drooped thy stately head. See Savan¬ 
nah.—Burroughs. 

Thou hast not gold? Why, this is gold. See Undow¬ 
ered.—Kimball. 

Thou hast on earth a Trinity. See To the Christ.— 
Tabb. 

Thou hast sworn by thy God, my Jeanie. See same. — 
Cunningham. 

Thou hast thy calling to some palace floor. See Son¬ 
nets from the Portuguese, IV.—Browning. 

Thou hast two ears and but one mouth. See Two and 
One.—Ruckert. 

Thou hast vowed by thy faith, my Jeanie. See Thou 
Hast Sworn by thy God, my Jeanie.—Cunning¬ 
ham. 

Thou heart! why dost thou lift thy voice? See Singing 
Heart, The.—Dandridge. 

Thou hidden love of God! whose height. See Divine 
Love.—Tersteegen. 

Thou hidden source of calm repose. See For Believers. 
—Wesley. 

Thou in the moon’s bright chariot proud and gay. See 
Hymn to Light, The—Cowley. 

Thou knowest best, my Father. See Thou Knowest 
Best.—Famingham. 

Thou large-brained woman and large-hearted man. 
See Desire, A.—Browning. 

Thou lavest thy hand on the fluttering heart. See 
“Be Quiet: Fear Not.”—Havergal. 

Thou, leaf-bound, hill-built Nazareth. See Twilight at 
Nazareth.—Miller. 

Thou ling’ring star, with less’ning ray. See To Mary 
in Heaven.—Bums. 

Thou little bird, thou dweller by the sea. See Little 
Beach Bird, The.—Dana. 

Thou little child, with tender clinging arms. See 
Slumber Song.—Thaxter. 

Thou livest, O soul' be sure, though earth be flames. 
See Thou Livest, O Soul!—Moore. 

Thou long disowned, reviled, opprest. See Truth.— 
Scudder. 

Thou lovest me not, thou loveth me not! See same. — 
Browning. 

Thou may’st have read, my little boy Ned. See 
Witches’ Frolic, The.—Barham. 

Thou mayst, thou shalt, I will not go with thee. See 
King John ("Thou mayst,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 


Thou mighty gulf, insatiate cormorant! See To Ever¬ 
lasting Oblivion.—Marston. 

Thou more than most sweet glove. See Cynthia’s 
Revels (To a Glove).—Jonson. 

Thou must be true thyself. See Be True.—Bouar. 

Thou need’st not rest; the shining spheres are Thine. 
See Labor and Rest.—Very. 

Thou neither dost persuade me to seek wealth. See 
Paradise Regained (Saviour’s Reply to the 
Tempter, The).—Milton. 

Thou only bird that singest as thou flyest. See Mano: 
a Poetical History (Skylark, The).—Dixon. 

Thou priest that art behind the screen. See Ipsissi- 
mus.—Hamilton. 

Thou record of the votive throng. See Album Verses. 
—Irving. 

Thou robb’st my days of business and delights. See 
Thief, The.—Cowley. 

Thou shalt have no other gods before me . See Exo¬ 
dus (Ten Commandments, The).— Bible. 

Thou shalt have one God only. See Latest Decalogue, 
The.—Clough. 

Thou shalt not all die; for, while love’s fire shines.— 
See Lines upon Himself.—Herrick. 

Thou should’st have had more faith! SeePio Nono.— 
Howe. 

Thou, Sibyl rapt! whose sympathetic soul. See 
Margaret Fuller.—Alcott. 

Thou spark of life that wavest wings of gold. See 
Ode to a Butterfly.—Higginson. 

Thou sparkling bow!! Thou sparkling bowl! See 
Sparkling Bowl, The.—Pierpont. 

Thou st.andest there, O image green. See To the 
College Idol.—Hmman. 

Thou still unravish’d bride of quietness! See Ode on 
a Grecian Urn.—Keats. 

Thou sweet-souled comrade of a time gone by. See 
To E. N. L.—Livingston. 

Thou sword at my left side. See Sword Song, The.— 
Korner. 

Thou tall, majestic monarch of the wood. See Moun¬ 
tain to the Pine, The.—Hawkes. 

Thou that art our Queen again. See Song to Ceres.— 
Hunt. 

Thou that hast a daughter. See Sailor, The.— 
Allingham. 

Thou that hast given so much to me. See Gratefulness. 
—Herbert. 

Thou that mak’st gain thy end, and wisely well. See 
To My Bookseller.—Jonson. 

Thou that on every field of earth and sky. See 
Colonel Burnaby.—Lang. 

Thou that once, on mother's knee. See Little Child’s 
Hymn, A.—Palgrave. 

Thou that with ale or viler liquors. See Hudibras 
(Muse of Doggerel, The).—Butler. 

Thou thrice denied, yet thrice beloved. See St. 
Peter’s Day.—Keble. 

Thou tiny solace of these prison days. See Sir Walter 
Raleigh to a Caged Linnet.—Lee-Hamilton. 

Thou, too, art worthy of all praise, whose pen. See 
Addison.—Eames. 

Thou, too, hast traveled, little fluttering thing. See 
To a Swallow Building under the Eaves at Craig- 
enputtock.—Carlyle. 

Thou too, hoar Mount! with thy skv-pointing peaks. 
See Hymn before sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni. 
—Coleridge. 

Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State. See Building of the 
Ship, The (Ship of State, The).—Longfellow. 

Thou unrelenting Past! See To the Past.—Bryant. 

Thou vague dumb crawler with the groping head. See 
To my Tortoise Chronos.—Lee-Hamilton. 

Thou wast all that to me, love. See To One in Para¬ 
dise.—Poe. 

Thou wast not born for death, immortal bird! See 
Nightingale, The.—Keats. 

Thou wert fair, Lady Mary. See Lady Mary.—Al¬ 
ford. 

Thou, who didst lay all other bosoms bare. See To 
Shakespeare.—Day. 

Thou, who didst stoop below. See Looking unto Jesus. 
—Miles. 

Thou who dost all things give. See Remembrance of 
God.—Furness. 

Thou who dost build the blind bird’s nest. See Blind 
Bird’s Nest, The.-—Dorr. 

Thou who dost dwell alone. See Desire.—Arnold. 

Thou who dost feel life’s vessel strand. See Ordeal 
by Fire, The.—Stedman. 

Thou who hast slept all night upon a storm. See To 
the Man-of-war Bird.—Whitman. 


888 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Three 


Thou who ordainest, for the land's salvation. See 
God Save the Nation.—Tilton. 

Thou who sendest sun and rain. See Poet’s Journal. 
The (Praise).—Taylor. 

Thou who, when fears attack. See Ode to Tobacco.— 
Calverley. 

Thou, who wouldst wear the name. See Poet, The.— 
Bryant. 

Thou whom these eyes saw never, say friends true. 
See Epitaph for Levi Lincoln Thaxter.—Brown¬ 
ing. 

Thou,—whose endearing hand once laid in sooth. See 
Invocation.—Stedman. 

Thou whose sweet youth and early hopes enhance. See 
Church Porch, The.—Herbert. 

“Thou wilt forget me.” “Love has no such word.” 
See Spring and Autumn.—Linton. 

Thou wilt never grow old. See same. —Howarth. 

Thou window, once which served for a sphere. See 
Sonnets from the Poems.—Drummond. 

Thou wouldst beloved? then thy heart. See To F. S. O 
—Poe. 

Thou youngest virgin-daughter of the skies. See Ode 
to the Pious Memory - of the Accomplished Young 
Lady, Mrs. Anne Ivilligrew.—Dryden. 

Though all the winds of doctrine were let loose. See 
Truth.—Milton. 

Though all things breathe or sound of fight. See 
Adieux a Mary Stuart.—Swinburne. 

Though beauty be the mark of praise. See Elegy. 
—Jonson. 

Though blind with age, forth Beda went with zeal. 
See Amen of the Rocks, The.—Rosegarten. 

Though clock to tell how night draws hence. See His 
Grange: or, Private Wealth.—Herrick. 

Though cruel fate should bid us part. See My Jean.— 
Burns. 

Though dusty wits dare scorn Astrology. See Astro- 
phel and Stella (Sonnet XXVI.).—Sidney. 

Though Emerson had reached a great age. See Emer¬ 
son, Extract concerning.—Bartol. 

Though eminent and able in many ways. See Lowell, 
Extract concerning.—Underwood. 

Though facts will swell as stories fly. See Cat-eater, 
The.—-Anon. 

Though gifts like thine the fates gave not to me. See 
To Hafiz. 

Though high license should reduce the number of 
saloons slightly. See High License.—Hoffman. 

Though his limbs were very tottering, and ’twas hard 
to travel there. See Parson’s Vacation, The.— 
Eisenbeis. 

Though I, alas! a prisoner be. See On a Corkscrew. 
—Swift. 

Though I am conscious of no fault, O Romans, it is yet 
with the utmost shame. See History of Rome 
(Titus Quintius against Quarrels between the Sen¬ 
ate and the People).—Livy. 

Though I am humble, slight me not. See Moss Suppli- 
cateth for the Poet, The.—Dana. 

Though I am native to this frozen zone. See Remin¬ 
iscence.—Aldrich. 

Though I am only six years old. See Very Little Boy, 
A.—Anon. 

Though I have twice been at the doors of death. See 
Sonnet to Sir W. Alexander.—Drummond. 

Though I look old. See As You Like It (“Though I 
look,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

Though I met her in the summer, when one’s heart lies 
round [or off] at ease. See Ballad of Cassandra 
Brown, The.—Green. 

Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels. 
See First Corinthians (Charity).— Bible. 

Though its coming be slow, we can all feel we know. 
See Typewriter Time, The.—Anon. 

Though largely developed’s my organ of order. See 
Phrenologist to his Mistress, The.— [Punch.) 

Though love repine, and reason chafe. See Sacrifice. 
—Emerson. 

Though many and bright are the stars that appear. 
See E Pluribus Unum.—Cutter. 

Though many ills may hamper life. See Little Wor¬ 
ries.—Sims. 

Though oak, and elm, and maple tree. See Birch Tree, 
The.—McMullen. 

Though others at thine outline scoff. See Still True. 
— [St. James Gazette.) 

Though others may her brow adore. See Love’s In¬ 
sight.—Anon. 

Though our great love a little wrong his fame. See 
Charles Lamb.—Beatty. 

Though rude winds usher thee, sweet day. See 
Christmas Day.—Richards. 


Though rudely blows the wintry blast. See Charcoal 
Man, The.—Trowbridge. 

Though scoffers ask, where is your gain? See same .— 
Knox. 

Though singing but the shy and sweet. See Content. 
—Gale. 

Though the day of my destiny’s over. See Stanzas to 
Augusta.—Byron. 

Though the earth were to be burned up, though the 
trumpet of its dissolution were sounded. See In¬ 
significance of Earth.—Chalmers. 

Though the hills are cold and snowy. See Day in the 
Pamfili Doria, A.—Stowe. 

Though the life of the Reformer may seem rugged and 
arduous. See Reformer, The.—Greeley. 

Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind 
exceeding small. See Retribution.—Logau. 

Though the people were sated already with blood 
spilling. See Quo Vadis (Ursus and the Aurochs). 
—Sicnkiewicz. 

Though the [Roman] people were sated already. See 
Quo Vadis (Rescue of Lygia, The).—Sienkie- 
wicz. 

Though the roving bee, as lightly. See Wishmaker’s 
Town (Bridal Pair, The).—Young. 

Though they whisper, he and May. See Rose’s Plant, 
The.—F. B. H. 

Though thy constant love I share. See To M. T.— 
Taylor. 

Though till now ungraced in story, scant although my 
waters be. See Alma.—Trench. 

Thougn tuneless, stringless, it lies there in dust. See 
Old Violin, The.—Egan. 

Though we climb fame’s proudest height. See Uses 
of Life, The.—Anon. 

Though, when other maids stand by. See Smile and 
Never Heed Me.—Swain. 

Though Winter come with dripping skies. See Song 
with a Discord, A.—Colton. 

Though you are young, and I am old. See same .— 
Campion. 

Though you be absent here, I needs must say. See 
Mistress, The (Spring, The).—Cowley. 

Though you see no banded army. See Right Makes 
Might.—Anon. 

Thought is deeper than all speech. See Thought.— 
Cranch. 

Thought never knew material bound or place. See 
Cloister, The.—Child. 

Thousand minstrels woke within me. See Monadnoc. 
—Emerson. 

Thousands of men breathe, move, and live. See Good 
Deeds.—Chalmers. 

Thrash away, you’ll her to rattle. See Biglow Papers, 
The (Letter from Mr. Ezekiel Biglow, A).—Lowell. 

Three barefoot children were threading the slopes of 
Howth toward Raheny. See Provider, The.— 
Guiney. 

Three bright stars! Three bright stars! See Three 
Bright Stars.—Anon. 

Three cats went out on a cat-amaran. See Several Cats. 
—[Golden Days.) 

Three cheers, three cheers, for the olden time. See 
Three Cheers for the Olden Time.—Crosby. 

Three children crouched in an archway, for shelter 
from the rain. See Golden Rain.—Anon. 

Three children sliding on the ice. See Warning, A.— 
Gay. 

Three days longer Penn lay there on his rude bed in 
the cave. See Pomp’s Story.—Trowbridge. 

Three days through sapphire seas we sailed. See Bay 
Fight, The.—Brownell. 

Three dwarfs there were which lived on an isle. See 
Isle of Lone, The.—Ramal. 

Three fair-haired youths sailed out to sea. See Three 
Sailor-boys.—Anon. 

Three fishers went sailing away to [ivr. out into] the 
West. See Three Fishers, The.—Kingsley. 

Three happy beings are there here. See Curse of Ke- 
hama, The (Immortality of Love).—Southey. 

Three horsemen galloped the dusty way. See On the 
Road to Cborrera.—Bates. 

Three horsemen halted the inn before. See Three 
Horsemen, The.—Anon. 

Three hundred and ten years ago our forefathers passed 
through the same experience. See Cross of War, 
The.—Anon. 

Three hundred years ago or so. See On a Tobacco 
Jar.;—Barker. 

Three Kings came riding from far away. See Three 
Kings, The.—Longfellow. 

Three little beggars are standing at the gate. See Lit¬ 
tle Beggars, The.—Anon. 


889 





Three 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Three little boys in a rollicking mood, out in the snow 
at play. See I Can’t, I Won’t, and I Will.—Anon. 

Three little bugs in a basket. See Three Bugs.— 
Cary. 

Three little children sliding on the ice. See Three 
Children.—Anon. 

Three little faces, so round and fair. See Trundle-bed 
Treasures.—Bell. 

Three little kittens, all sleek as a mouse. See Three 
Little Kittens.—Richards. 

Three little kittens in a row. See Kittens, The.— 
Rook. 

Three little kittens, so downy and soft. See Three 
Little Kittens.—Anon. 

Three little leaflets on the treetop high. See Leaflets 
and Lady-bugs.—Denton. 

Three little noses are flattened against the pane. See 
Ballad of St. Swithin’s Day, A.—Hickey. 

Three little stockings—two blue, and one red. See 
Christmas Dream, A.—Foster. 

Three little toad-stools, don’t you see? See Three 
Little Mushrooms.—Anon. 

Three little Tom-cats went out for a spree. See Cats 
Serenade, The.—Anon. 

Three little words you often see. See Grammar in 
Rhyme.—Anon. 

Three locks of hair in my hand I hold. See Bachelor’s 
Reverie, A.—Anon. 

Three maids together sat one eve. See Her Wish.— 
Dewey. 

Three months had passed since she had knelt before. 
See Absolution.—Nesbit. 

Three of us afloat in the meadow by the swing. See 
Pirate’s Story.—Stevenson. 

Three, only three, my darling. See Three Kisses of 
F arewell.—Glase. 

Three or four days ago a colored man, living in Detroit. 
See His Sign.—Anon. 

Three pairs of dimpled arms, as white as snow. See 
Angels in the House, The.—Anon. 

Three poets, in three distant ages born. See Under 
the Portrait of Milton.—Dryden. 

Three pounds of veal my darling girl prepares. See 
Curry.— (Punch.) 

Three rats, a trio sleek and keen. See Sly Old Rat, A. 
—Mix. 

Three roses, wan as moonlight, and weighed down. 
See Destiny.—Aldrich. 

Three shining, silken rings of hair. See Relics.—Ware. 

Three ships of war had Preble when he left the Naples 
shore. See Reuben James.—Roche. 

Three spectres armed and in a rage. See Three Spectres, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

Three steps and I reach the door. See Fate.—Block. 

Three students were travelling over the Rhine. See 
Landlady’s Daughter, The.—Uhland. 

Three thousand ducats, — well. See Merchant of 
Venice, The (Shylock Lends the Ducats).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Three thousand years ago witnessed the Jewish Feast 
of Tabernacles. See Thanksgiving among the 
Jews.—Anon. 

Three times, all in the dead of night. See Colin and 
Lucy.—Tickell. 

“Three times one are three.” See New Multiplica¬ 
tion Table, A.—Denton. 

Three times shall a young foot page. See Romance 
of the Swan’s Nest.—Browning. 

‘Three to one on scarlet!” See Chariot-race in the 
Time of Christ, A.—Saltus. 

Three topers went strolling out into the East. See 
Three Topers.—Parker. 

Three travelers wandered along the strand. See I.azy- 
land.—Vandegrift,. 

Three twangs of the horn, and they’re all out of cover! 
See Glory of Motion, The.—Tyrwhitt. 

Three ways (whom some fastidious carpers'). See 
Blindman’s Buff.—Smith. 

Three women in the waning of a drear November day. 
See Three Women.—Anon. 

Three words fall sweetly on my soul. See Mother, 
Home, Heaven.—Brown. 

Three years she grew in sun and shower. See Lucy.— 
Wordsworth. 

Three young gentlemen who had finished the most 
substantial part. See Three Cherry-stones, The. 
—Anon. 

Three young girls in friendship met. See Three Friends, 
The.—Lamb. 

Three young maids in friendship met. See Three 
Friends, The.—Lamb. 

Threescore and ten! See Maestro’s Confession, The.— 
Preston. 


Threescore o’ nobles rade up [or to] the king’s ha’. 
See Glenlogie.—Anon. 

Thrice, at the huts of Fontenoy, the English column 
fail’d. See Fontenoy.—Davis. 

Thrice happy he who by some shady grove. See On 
Solitude.—Drummond. 

Thrice happy isles that stole the world’s delight. See 
Encomium on Tobacco, An.—Anon. 

Thrice, O thrice happy shepherd’s life and state! See 
Shepherd’s Life, The.—Fletcher. 

Thrice round the earth in graceful measures gliding. 
See Columbus.—Adams. 

Thrice the brinded cat hath mew’d. See Macbeth 
(Macbeth and the Witches).—Shakespeare. 

Thrice toss these oaken ashes in the air. See Charm, 
The.—Campion. 

Thrice welcome, little English flower! See Daisy in 
India, The.—Montgomery. 

Thrise happie she that is so well assured. See Amo- 
retti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: “Thrise happie,” 
etc.).—Spenser. 

Thro’ the forest deep comes a maiden fair. See Vil- 
lanelle.—Allen. 

Thronged were the streets of Andover town. See 
Washington’s Kiss.—Downs. 

Through a Gethsemane of city streets. See Photo¬ 
graph in a Shop Window, A.—M’Evoy. 

Through a window in the attic brawny Burglar Bill has 
crept. See Burglar Bill.—Anstey. 

Through a window, old and broken. See Little 
Gretchen.—Anon. 

Through all disguise, form, place or name. See De¬ 
mocracy.—Whittier. 

Through all estates he found that he had past. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Quelling of the Blatant Beast, 
The).—Spenser. 

Through all history, from the beginning. See Patriot¬ 
ism (“Through all history,” etc.).—Curtis. 

Through all my little daily cares there is. See God 
Knows.—Anon. 

Through all the days of his gallant youth. See King’s 
Tragedy, The.—Rossetti. 

Through all the history of the contest for liberty. See 
Presidential Protest, The (Executive Power to be 
Dreaded).—W ebst er. 

Through all the long midsummer day. See Midsum¬ 
mer.—Trowbridge. 

Through all the pleasant meadow-side. See Hayloft, 
The.—Stevenson. 

Through Alpine meadows soft-suffused. See Stanzas 
from the Grande Chartreuse.—Arnold. 

Through and through the inspired leaves. See Book¬ 
worms, The.—Bums. 

Through Baca’s vale my way is cast. See Baca.— 
Robbins. 

Through court, and through mart, and through college. 
See same. —McNulty. 

Through Goshen Hollow, where hemlocks grow. See 
Ghost of Goshen, The.—Anon. 

Through great Earl Norman’s acres wide. See Earl 
Norman and John Truman.—Mackay. 

Through grief and through danger thy smile hath 
cheer’d my way. See Irish Peasant to his Mis¬ 
tress, The.—Moore. 

Through her forced, abnormal quiet. See Quakerdom. 
—Halpine. 

Through his million veins are poured. See Brook, The. 
—Wright. 

Through its feathery bars twinkled little twin stars. 
See Lucinda's Fan.—Stanton. 

Through laughing leaves the sunlight comes. See In 
the Wood.—Clarke. 

Through love to light! Oh, wonderful the way. See 
After-song.—Gilder. 

Through memory’s haze. See Homeward Road, The. 
—Marsh. 

Through my north window in the wintry weather. 
See My Aviary.—Holmes. 

Through my open window comes the sweet perfuming. 
See Attainment.—Tassin. 

Through my open window, summer breezes straying. 
See Playing for Keeps.—Pelham. 

Through night to light. And though to mortal eyeo. 
See Through Trials.—Rosengarten. 

Through Sleepy-land doth a river flow. See Lullaby. 
—Cavazza. 

Through some strange sense of sight or touch. See 
Death.—Cawein. 

Through storm and fire and gloom, I see it stand. See 
Celtic Cross, The.—McGee. 

Through storms you reach them and from storms are 
free. See Enviable Isles, The.—Melville. 


890 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Thy 


Through sun and shower the pumpkin grew. See 
Pumpkin-pie.—-Anon. 

Through the black, rushing smoke-bursts. See Em¬ 
pedocles on Etna (Song of Callicles, The).— 
Arnold. 

Through the blue and frosty heavens. See Angel’s 
Story, The.—Procter. 

Through the Christian centuries. See Puritans, The. 
—Wayland. 

Through the crowded ranks of the hospital. See Last 
Roll-call, The.—Anon. 

Through the crowded streets returning, at the ending 
of the day. See Victor and Vanquished.—Peck. 

Through the door-way flowed the sunshine. See Child 
and the Sunshine, The.—Tennyson. 

Through the fierce fever T nursed him, and then he said. 
See Little Wild Baby.—Janvier. 

Through the gray willows the bleak winds are raving. 
See By the Shore of the River.—Cranch. 

Through the great sinful streets of Naples as I passed. 
See Easter Day.—Clough. 

Through the green twilight of a hedge. See Mother 
Bird, The.—Ramal. 

Through the house give glimmering light. See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream (Oberon and Titania to 
the Fairy Train).—Shakespeare. 

Through the house what busy joy. See First Tooth, 
The.—Lamb. 

Through the long bending grass. See Heroes’ Dav, 
The.—Anon. 

Through the long night the surges roared. See Equi¬ 
noctial, The.—Blake. 

Through the mist of the years in the long, long ago. 
See Two Temples. The.—Corlis. 

Through the mould and through the clay. See Song 
of the Railroad.—Wolfe. 

Through the night, through the night. See Sea, The. 
—Stoddard. 

Through the packed horror of the night. See Man’s 
Name, A.—Realf. 

Through the “Philadelohy ” college he went in a week. 
See New Doctor, The.—Mix. 

Through the physical horrors of warfare, poetry dis¬ 
cerns the redeeming nobleness. See War and 
Peace.—Robertson. 

Through that pure virgin shrine. See Night, The.— 
Vaughan. 

Through the ranks of the gathered people. See Little 
Child Shall Lead Them, A.—Anon. 

Through the seeding grass. See Sospiri di Roma (Red 
Poppies).—Sharp. 

Through the shrubs as I ’gan crack. See Menaphon 
(Doron’s Jig).—Greene. 

Through the silver mist. See Spring Lilt, A.—Anon. 

Through the somber arch of that gateway tower. See 
Woman of the War, A.—-Johnson. 

Through the straight pass of suffering. See Martyrs, 
The.—Dickinson. 

Through the tense, clear sky above us. See Un 
Bacio Dato non 6 Mai Perduto (“Through the 
tense,” etc.).—Story. 

Through the weary day on his couch he lay. See When 
the Tide Goes Out.—Anon. 


Through the whirl of wind and water. See Brave Kate 
Shelley.—Rayne. 

Through the whole afternoon there had been a tre¬ 
mendous cannonading. See Fort Wagner.—Dick¬ 
inson. 

Through the windows on the park. See Chinese Lan¬ 
terns.—Baker. 

Through thick Arcadian woods a hunter went. See 
Earthly Paradise, The (Atalanta’s Victory).— 
Morris. 

Through untraced ways and airy paths I fly. See 
Cooper’s Hill (View of London from Cooper’s Hill). 
—Denham. 

Through Vanity Fair, in days of old. See In Vanity 
Fair.—Tyler. 

Through yonder windows stained and old. See In 
Chartres Cathedral.—Rodd. 

Throughout Russia in December glitter icicles and 
snow. See Russian Christmas, A.—Anon. 


Throughout the entire word of God, we are taught the 
sacred duty of being happy. See same. — 
Stanley. 

Throughout the soft and sunlight day. See Pines, The. 
—Lippmann. 

Thoughout the wild contention that preceded the war. 

See Abraham Lincoln.—Watterson. 

Throw away Thy rod. See Discipline.—Herbert. 
Thunder and lightning! I do hate to be engaged in such 
a mean business as washing clothes. See When 
Women have their Rights.—Anon. 


Thunder of Funeral Guns! See Berlin—the Sixteenth 
of March.—Arnold. 

Thunder our thanks to her—guns, hearts, and lips! 
See Mayflower.—O’Reilly. 

Thunder peal and roar and rattle of the ships in line of 
battle. See Hobson’s Daring Deed.—Anon. 

Thus Adam to himself lamented loud. See Paradise 
Lost.—Milton. 

Thus all day long the full distended cloud . See 
Seasons, The (Rainbow, The).—Thomson. 

Thus came the welcome favor. See Children’s Praise 
Song.—Downer. 

Thus charged he; nor Argicides denied. See Odyssey, 
The (Hermes in Calypso’s Island).—Homer. 

Thus every good his native wilds impart. See Trav¬ 
eller, The; or, A Prospect of Society.—Goldsmith. 

Thus far our fortune keeps an upward course. See 
King Henry VI., Pt. III. (Battle of Barnet).— 
Shakespeare. 

Thus far we have run before the wind. See Dick, the 
Apothecary’s Apprentice.—Anon. 

Thus have I seen a cnild, with smiling face. See On 
George the Third’s Patronage of Benjamin West. 
—Pindar. 

Thus having past all perill, I was come. See Faerie 
Queene, The (Gardens of Venus).—Spenser. 

Thus I sat one night by a blue-eyed girl. See Categor¬ 
ical Courtship.—Anon. 

Thus, in the march of time, and long procession. See 
Dawning Future, The.—Johnson. 

Thus Lays of Minstrels—may they be the last! See 
English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (Sir Walter 
Scott).—Byron. 

Thus lieth the dead, that whilome lived here. See 
Sir Thomas Wyatt.—Sentleger. 

Thus rank on rank the thick battalions throng. See 
Iliad, The (Defiance of Hector and Ajax, The).— 
Homer. 

Thus said the Lord in the Vault above the Cherubim. 
See Last Chantey, The.—Kipling. 

Thus saith my soul. “The path is long to tread.” See 
Seeking Rest.—Anon. 

Thus sang the sages of the Gael. See Man Octipartite. 
—Stokes. 

Thus saying, from her side the fatal key. See Paradise 
Lost (Discord).—Milton. 

Thus says the prophet of the Turk. See Love of the 
World Reproved; or, Hypocrisy Detected, The.— 
Cowper. 

Thus, some tall tree that long hath stood. See On the 
Death of Benjamin Franklin.—Freneau. 

Thus, still, whene’er the good and just. See No Man 
Knoweth His Sepulchre.—Bryant. 

Thus the Mayne glideth. See Paracelsus (“Thus the 
Mavne,” etc.).—Browning. 

Thus, tnen, I steer my bark, and sail. See Spleen, 
The (Voyage of Life, The).—Green. 

Thus then, one beautiful day, in the sweet, cool air of 
October. See Dorothy (Beauty at the Plough).— 
Munby. 

Thus, thus begin the yearly rites. See Pan’s Anni¬ 
versary (Shepherd’s Holyday, The).—Jonson. 

Thus, thus, my friends! fast as our breaking hearts. 
See Brutus; or, The Fall of Tarquin (Brutus on 
the Death of Lucretia).—Payne. 

Thus to be lost, and thus to sink and die. See To Con¬ 
stants—Singing.—Shelley. 

Thus when the silent grave becomes. See Belinda’s 
Recovery from Sickness.—Broome. 

Thus while on earth iniquities abound. See Triumph 
of Truth, The.—De Mille. 

Thus y-robed in russet romed I about. See Vision of 
Piers the Plowman (Pilgrimage in Search of Do- 
Well).—Langland. 

Thy bosom is endeared with all hearts. See Sonnets, 
XXXI.—Shakespeare. 

Thy braes were bonny, Yarrow stream. See Braes of 
Yarrow, The.—Logan. 

Thy breath was fire! And fire was on thy brow! See 
Napoleon.—Saltus. 

Thy cheek is o’ the roses’ hue. See My Only Jo and 
Dearie, O.—Gall. 

Thy cruise is over now. See Mr. Merry’s Lament for 
‘ ‘ Long Tom.”—Brainard. 

Thy dark eyes open’d not. See Eleanore.—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Thy error, Fremont, simply was to act. See John 
Charles Fremont.—Whittier. 

Thy face I have seen as one seeth. See Song.—Jewett. 

Thy face is whitened with remembered woe. See Pas¬ 
chal Moon, The.—Tabb. 

Thy fruit full well the school-boy knows. See Bram¬ 
ble Flower, The.—Elliott. 


891 




Thy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Thy glory alone, O God, he the end of all that I say. 
See Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam.—Scott. 

Thy glory, O Israel, is slain upon thy high places! See 
Second Samuel (Saul and Jonathan).— Bible. 

Thy glory thou didst manifest, O Christ, by miracle 
divine. See Water into Wine, The.—Anon. 

"Thy grandmother,” said Uncle Toby, addressing him¬ 
self to young Laura. See Musical Instrument, 
The.—Anon. 

Thy greatest knew thee. Mother Earth; unsour’d. 
See Spirit of Shakespeare, The.—Meredith. 

Thy heart is like some icy lake. See Thy Heart.— 
Anon. 

Thy laugh’s a song an oriole trilled. See Kitty’s 
Laugh.—Bates. 

Thy marvelous genius, perfect as the sun. See Caesar. 
—Salt us. 

Thy name of old was great. See To my Totem.— 
Beeching. 

Tby neighbor? It is he whom thou. See Who is My 
Neighbor?—Anon. 

Thy one white leaf is open to the sky. See To a Chero¬ 
kee Rose.—Hayne. 

Thy pencil, too,—with what a force. See Ode in Mem¬ 
ory of Dr. Hoffmann.—( Spectator .) 

Thy praise or dispraise is to me alike. See To Fool or 
Knave.—Jonson. 

Thy prayer is granted; thou hast joined the Choir. 
See George Eliot.—Noble. 

Thy restless feet now cannot go. See Christ Crucified. 

-—Crashaw. 

Thy rosary the flowers shall be. See Rosary, A.— 
Chapin. 

Thy sacred leaves, fair Freedom’s flower. See Flower 
of Liberty, The (“Thy sacred,” etc.).—Holmes. 

Thy soul within such silent pomp did keep. See Quiet 
Soul, A.—-Oldham. 

Thy span of life was all too short. See To a Withered 
Rose.—Bangs. 

Thy spirit. Independence, let me share. See Inde¬ 
pendence.—Smollett. 

Thy tears o’erprize thy loss! See Angel in the House, 
The (She was Mine).—Patmore. 

Thy trivial harp will never please. See Merlin.—Em¬ 
erson. 

Thy tuwhits are lull’d, I wot. See Song: The Owl 
(Second Song).—Tennyson. 

Thy verse is "sad” enough, no doubt. See To the 
Author of a Sonnet Beginning " ‘Sad is my Verse,’ 
you say, ‘and yet no tear.’ ”—Byron. 

Thy voice is heard thro’ rolling drums. See Princess, 
The (Thy Voice is Heard).—Tennyson. 

Thy way, not mine, O Lord See Thy Way, not Mine. 
—Bonar. 

Thy will ’tis I renew. See Divine Comedy, The (Count 
Ugolino).—Dante. 

Thy witching look is like a two-edged sword. See Thy 
Witching Look.—\non. 

Thy works, O Lord, interpret Thee. See Known by 
His Works.—Cary. 

Thy younglings, Cuddy, are but just awake. See Shep¬ 
herd’s Week, The (Monday; or, the Squabble).— 
Gay. 

"Tick,” the clock says, "tick, tick, tick;’ See What the 
Clock Says.—Anon. 

Tick, tick, tock, don’t you hear the clock. See Child’s 
Time-table.—Elton. 

Tick, tock, tick, tock, goes the clock. See Grand¬ 
father’s Clock.—Meyers. 

Tied with bonds, and over his lips. See Song-bird of 
the Princess, The.—Meyers. 

Tiger, tiger, burning bright. See Tiger, The.—Blake. 

"Till Death us part.” So speaks the heart. See Till 
Death us Join.—Stanley. 

Till each man finds his own in all men's good. See 
Ode Sung at the Opening of the International Ex¬ 
hibition.—Tennyson. 

Till he has fairly tried it, I suspect a reader does not 
know how much. See On Learning by Heart.— 
Lushington. 

Till the cricket came, nature had remained voiceless. 
See Nature.—Flammprion. 

Tim Dolan and his wife, wan night. See Pat’s Wis¬ 
dom.— 4non. 

Tim Twinkleton was, I would have you to know. See 
Tim Twinkleton’s Twins.—Bell. 

Tim Turpin he was gravel blind. See Tim Turpin.— 
Hood. 

Tim Weeks, who was a man precise. See Cat-eater, 
The.—Anon. 

Time and education beget experience; experience begets 
memory. See Memory and the Muses.— 
Hobbes. 


Time cannot age thy sinews, nor the gale. See Alba¬ 
tross.—Stoddard. 

Time fled. The world moved faster than ever before. 
See What Waked the World.—Tourgee. 

Time flows from instants; and, of these, each one. See 
Time.—Beaumont. 

Time goes, you say? Ah, no! See Paradox of Time. 
—Dobson. 

Time: half-past six o’clock. Place: The London 
Tavern. See Charity Dinner, The.—Mosely. 

Time has a magic wand! See On an Old Muff.— 
Locker-Lampson. 

Time has no flight—’tis we who speed along. See Time. 
—Collier. 

Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back. See Troilus 
and Cressida (Ruthless Time).—-Shakespeare. 

Time is the feather’d thing. See Time.-—Mayne. 

Time may steal the dewy bloom. See same. —Blandon. 

Time of crisp and tawny leaves. See Time of Clearer 
Twitterings.—Riley. 

Time, through Jove’s judgment just. See Tragedy 
of Darius, The.—Alexander. 

Time to me this truth hath taught. See "Time to 
Me.”—Anon. 

Time was, and that was termed the time of gold. See 
Golden Age, The—Hall. 

Time was, ere the bright presence bathed the "Place.” 
See Column of July, The.—McCrae. 

Time wasteth years, and months, and hours. See 
same. —W atson. 

Timely blossom, infant fair. See To Miss Charlotte 
Pulteney, in Her Mother's Arms.—Philips. 

Times is mighty dull at Squawville, an’ we’ve nothin’ 
else to do. See Patriotism at Squawville.—( Den¬ 
ver Post.) 

Timothy Grey, at school or at play. See Timothy 
Grey.—Miles. 

Tin o’clock an’ the masther not cum yit. See Army 
of Applicants.—Anon. 

Tinged with the blood of Aztec lands. See El Vaquero. 
—Tilton. 

Tinker, may I learn the trick. See Clock-tinker, The. 
—Larcom. 

.Tinkle, tinkle! Listen well! See Waterfall, The.— 
Sherman. 

Tintagel bells ring o’er the tide. See Silent Tower of 
Bottreau, The.—Hawker. 

Tiny little snowflakes. See same. —Anon. 

Tiny rags of golden light. See Memories.—Anon. 

Tiny seeds, tiny seeds, under the ground. See Little 
Seeds, The.—Cooper. 

Tiny slippers of gold and green. See Egyptian Slippers. 
—Arnold. 

Tired Nature’s sweet restorer, balmy Sleep! See Night 
Thoughts (Sleep).—Young. 

Tired of play! tired of play! See Tired of Play.—Wil¬ 
lis. 

Tired! Well [and] what of that? See What of That? 
—Anon. 

Tired with all these, for restful death I cry. See Son¬ 
nets, LXVI.—Shakespeare. 

Tired with the toils that know no end. See Loss of 
the Eurydice, The.—Gosse. 

’T is a beautiful time when Christmas comes. See 
Christmas.—Sangster. 

’Tis a bicycle man, o’er his broken wheel. See Bicycle 
and the Pup, The.—Anon. 

’Tis a cold, bleak night! with angry roar. See Red 
Jacket, The.—Baker. 

’Tis a curious fact, but a fact very old. See Paradox, 
A.—Day. 

’Tis a dark lantern of the spirit. See Hudibras ("New 
Light”).—Butler. 

’T is a dozen or so of years ago. See Deborah Lee.— 
Burleigh. 

’Tis a dull sight to see the year dying. See Old Song.— 
Fitzgerald. 

“ ’Tis a fair country, Marian.” See On the Devon 
Coast. —Chamberlai n. 

'Tis a fearful night in the winter time. See Snow¬ 
storm, The.—Eastman. 

’Tis a fine fable for the advantage of character. See 
Works and Days.—Emerson. 

’Tis a little roadside flower. See Red Sandwort.— 
Larcom. 

’T is a little thing. See Ion (Sympathy).—Talfourd. 

’Tis a political maxim that all government tends to 
despotism. See Letter—-Signed Hyperion.— 

Quincy. 

“ ‘Tis a poor Thanksgiving,” said Farmer Jack. See 
His Riches.—Grey. 

’Tis a simple little story. See Nothing More.—Deni¬ 
son. 


892 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


’Tis 


’Tis a song of a snow-flake cold and white. See Val¬ 
entine, A.—Anon. 

'Tis a stern and startling thing to think. See Miss 
Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg (Her Death). 
—Hood. 

jTis a story told by Kalidasa. See Urvasi.—Bostwick. 

’Tis a time for memory and for tears. See same. — 
Prentice. 

’Tis a world of silences. I gave a cry. See Sileuces.— 
O’Shaughnessy. 

’Tis about twenty years since Abel La.v. See Ghost, 
The.—Anon. 

’Tis all a great show* See World, The.—Very. 

’Tis all a myth that Autumn grieves. See Autumn’s 

( Mirth.—Peck. 

’Tis all men’s office to speak patience. See Much Ado 
about Nothing.—Shakespeare. 

’Tis all right, as I knew it would be by and by. See 
Coming Round.—Cary. 

’Tis an everlasting pity that the youngsters in the 
city.” See Glorious Fourth, The.—Anon. 

’T is an old dial, dark with many a stain. See Sun¬ 
dial, The.—Dobson. 

“ 'Tis baking day, and I must make,” See Troubles of 
a Wife.—Lincoln. 

’Tis beauteous night; the stars look brightly down. See 
Memory.—Garfield. 

’Tis beautiful to see a forest stand. See Trees in the 
City.—Neal. 

’T io beauty truly blent, whose red and white. See 
Twelfth Night; or. What You Will (Olivia).— 
Shakespeare. 

’Tis bedtime; sav your hymn, and bid “Good-night.” 
See Bedtime.—Rosslyn. 

’Tis believed that this harp, which I wake now for thee. 
See Origin of the Harp, The.—Moore. 

’Tis but a little faded flower. See same.- -Howarth. 

’Tis by Thy strength the mountains stand. See 
Psalm Sixty-five.—-Watts. 

’Tis close upon the midnight chimes. See “If It was 
not for the Drink.”—Westcombe. 

’Tis Christmas, and the North wind blows. See 
Christmas Letter from Australia, A.—Sladen. 

’Tis Christmas morn. In other lands they sing. See 
Ode on Christmas.—Clinton. 

’Tis dawn; but not such morning-tide. See Heroine 
of St. John, The.—Hamilton. 

’Tis death! and peace indeed is here. See Youth and 
Calm.—Arnold. 

’Tis dolly’s turn to speak a piece. See Who Made the 
Speech?—Anon. 

’Tis done—dread winter spreads his latest gloom. See 
Seasons, The (Death Typified by Winter).— 
Thomson. 

’Tis early dawn—and all around. See Flowers.— 
Moses. 

’Tis early morn. The clash of arms. See Gloria Bell. 
—Benners. 

'Tis early spring; the distant hills. See Bluebird, The. 
—Gerry. 

’Tis evening, and the round red sun sinks slowly in the 
west. See Millionaire and the Barefoot Boy, The. 
—G. T. L. 

’Tis evening now! See Abide with Us.—Bonar. 

’Tis gone at last, and I am glad; it stayed a fearful 
while. See Mortgage on the Farm, The.— {Farm, 
Field arul Fireside .) 

’Tis gone, that bright and orbed blaze. See Evening. 
—Keble. 

’Tis good to be abroad in the sun. See Out of Doors.— 
Lowell. 

’Tis hard to share her smiles with many! See Thy 
Smiles.—Hoffman. 

’Tis he whose every thought and deed. See Gentle¬ 
man, A.—Anon. 

’Tis here, the Book you begged for so. See Traitor, A. 
—Fertiault. 

’Tis home where’er the heart is. See Home is where 
the Heart Is.—Anon. 

’Tis I go fiddling, fiddling. See Fairy Fiddler, The.— 
Hopper. . 

’Tis just as Fag told me, indeed 1 See Rivals, The. 
—Sheridan. 

’Tis like stirring living embers when, at eighty, one re¬ 
members.—See Grandmother’s Story of Bunker 
Hill Battle.—Holmes. 

’Tis long ago—we have toiled and traded. See If That 
were True!—Brown. . 

’Tis madness to resist or blame. See Horatian Ode upon 
Cromwell’s Return from Ireland, A (Cromwell and 
King Charles).—Marvell. 

’Tis merry in greenwood, thus runs the old lay. See 
Harold the Dauntless.—Scott. 


’Tis midnight, and the setting sun. See ’Tis Midnight. 
—Anon. 

’Tis midnight; falls the lamp-light dull and sickly. See 
Brothers; Henry and John Shears, The.—Wilde 

’Tis midnight’s holy hour,-—and silence now. See 
Closing Year, The.—Prentice. 

’Tis mine! what accents can my joy declare? See Poet 
Relates how he Obtained Delia’s Pocket-hand¬ 
kerchief, The.—Southey. 

’Tis moonlight on Trebarwith Vale. See Ogre, The.— 

j Ramal. 

’Tis morn; and on the mountain top the outlaw rested 
now. See Outlaw, The.—Henderson. 

’Tis morn;—the sea-breeze seems to'bring. See To 
an Absent Wife.—Prentice. 

’Tis morning; and the sun, with ruddy orb. See Task, 
The (Winter Morning).—Cowper. 

’Tis much immortal beauty to admire. See Sonnet: 
“ ’Tis much immortal beauty,” etc.—Thurlow. 

’Tis night, and storms continually roar. See Before 
the Convent of Yuste, 1556.—Platen. 

’Tis night, and the landscape is lovely no more. See 
Hermit, The (Night).—Beattie. 

’Tis night in the forest, the long day is over. See 
Nightingale, The.—Normar. 

’Tis night upon the lake. Our bed of boughs. See 
Voice of the Pine, The.—Gilder. 

’Tis night, when Meditation bids us feel. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Night).—Byron. 

’Tis night—within the close-shut cabin door. See 
How Good are the Poor.—Hugo. 

’Tis no time for vain surmising. See Fall In!— 
Scott. 

’Tis noonday by the buttonwood, with slender-shad¬ 
owed bud. See Minute Men of Northboro, The.— 
Rice. 

’Tis not enough the voice be sound and clear. See 
Modulation.—Lloyd. 

’Tis not enough to say. See Sorrow for Sin.—Taylor. 

’Tis not every day that I. See Not Every Day Fit for 
Verse.—Herrick. 

’Tis not for man to trifle; life is brief. See Only One 
Life.—Anon. 

’Tis not in battles that from youth we train. See 
Home.—Wordsworth. 

’Tis not the richest plant that folds. See Appearances 
Deceptive.—Anon. 

’Tis not to cry God mercy, or to sit. See True Re¬ 
pentance.—Quarles. 

’Tis not wealth that makes a King. See True King, 
The.—Seneca. 

’Tis not your beauty can engage. See To Flavia.— 
Waller. 

’Tis of a gallant Yankee ship that flew the stripes and 
stars. See Yankee Man-of-war, The.—Anon. 

’Tis of a little drummer. See Little Drummer, The.— 
Stoddard. 

’Tis only a pair of woman’s eyes. See Bit of Human 
Nature, —Coleman. 

'Tis only an old man's story,—a tale we have oft heard 
told. See Old Man’s Story, An.—Thompson. 

’Tis over a hundred years ago. See Romance of the 
Revolution, A.—Anon. 

’Tis past; the iron North has -spent his rage. See 
Elegy—Written in Spring.—-Bruce. 

’Tis past,—the sultry tyrant of the South. See Sum¬ 
mer Evening’s Meditation, A.—Barbauld. 

“ ’Tis plain [enough] to see [or me],” said a farmer’s 
wife. See Mother’s Fool.—Anon. 

’Tis pretty to see the girl of DunbWy. See Girl of 
Dunbwy, The.—Davis. 

“ 'Tis really time you were out, I think.” See Rose¬ 
bud’s First Ball.— {New York Star.) 

’Tis right for her to sleep between. See In Memoriam. 
—Houghton. 

’Tis said fantastic ocean doth enfold. See Fish-women 
at Calais.—Anon. 

’Tis said “Fine feathers make fine birds.” See Prin¬ 
cess Fuzz.—Anon. 

’Tis said that absence conquers love! See Song.— 
Thomas. 

'Tis said that in the sun-embroidered East. See Lost 
Lotus, The.—Anon. 

’Tis said that old philosopher. See Star Exercise.— 
Hadley. 

'Tis said that the gods on Olympus of old. See Mint 
Julep, The.—Hoffman. 

'Tis said the rose is Love’s own flower. See Flower of 
Love, The.—Peacock. 

’Tis said the Turk, when passing down. See Turkish 
Tradition, A.—Anon. 

’Tis said there is a fount in Flower Land. See Per¬ 
petual Youth.—Egan. 


893 





’Tis 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


’Tis said when Schiller’s death drew nigh. Sec Death 
of Schiller, The.—Bryant. 

’Tis sair to dream o’ them we like. See ’Tis Sair to 
Dream.—Gilfillan. 

“ ’Tis Saturday night, and our watch below.” See 
Yarn, A.—Hewitt. 

’Tis Saturday night, and the chill rain and sleet. See 
Pawnbroker’s Shop, The.—Anon. 

’Tis she, no doubt. Brunette—and .tall. See “Au 
llevoir.”—Dobson. 

’Tis silence on the enchanted lake. See Night-swans, 
The:—Ramal. 

’Tis slander whose edge is sharper than the sword. See 
Cymbeline (Slander).—Shakespeare. 

’Tis solemn darkness; the sublime of shade. See 
Night.—H eavy sege. 

’Tis some two hundred years ago. See Dr. Jotham 
Tinsdale’s Cue a Cure.—Turnbull. 

’Tis something from that tangle to have won. See 
Icarus.—Koopman. 

’Tis sorrow builds the shining ladder up. See same .— 
Lowell. 

’Tis splendid to live so grandly. See Washington’s 
B irthday. —San gster. 

’Tis spring-time, bright spring-time! All nature is 
gay. See ’Tis Spring-time.—Graham. 

’Tis springtime on the eastern hills! See Mogg Me- 
gone (Spring).—-Whittier. 

'Tis summer eve, when heaven’s ethereal bow. See 
Pleasures of Hope, The.—Campbell. 

’Tis Summer still, yet now and then a leaf. ’Tis Sum¬ 
mer Still.—Sangstcr. 

’Tis sung in ancient minstrelsy. See Laurel, The.— 
Wordsworth. 

’Tis sweet in the green spring. See same. —Bryant. 

'Tis sweet to hear at midnight. See Don Juan (First 
Love).—Byron. 

’Tis sweet to hear the merry lark. See Song: “’Tis 
sweet,” etc.—Coleridge. 

’Tis sweet to linger in the mellow grass. See In Mid¬ 
summer.—Munkittrick. 

’Tis sweet to roam when morning’s light. See Mesopo¬ 
tamia.—Anon. 

’Tis sweet to view, from half past five to six. See 
Theatre, The.—-Smith. 

’Tis sweeter than all else below. See Angel in the 
House, The (Night Thoughts).—Patmore. 

’Tis the blithest, bonniest weather for a bird to flirt a 
feather. See Robin’s Secret.—Bates. 

’Tis the day before Chiistmas, and all through the 
house. See Day before Christmas, The.—Carter. 

'Tis the djinns’ wild-streaming swarm. See Djinns, 
The.—Hugo. 

’Tis the fortress of St. Louis. See Star in the West, 
The.—Butterworth. 

’Tis the golden gleam of an autumn day. See Autumn. 
— (Blackwood’s.) 

’Tis the hour of fairy ban and spell. See Culprit Fay, 
The.—Drake. 

’Tis the last rose of summer, left blooming alone. See 
Last Rose of Summer, The.—Moore. 

“ ’Tis the last time, darling,” he gently said. See In 
the Mining Town.—Thorpe. 

’Tis the laughter of pines that swing and sway. See 
Phantom Light of the Baie des Chaleurs, The.— 
—Eaton. 

’Tis the middle of night by the castle clock. See 
Christabel.—Coleridge. 

’Tis the middle watch of a summer’s night. See Cul¬ 
prit Fay, Thfe.—Drake. 

’Tis the noon [wr. moon] of the spring-time, yet never 
a bird. See April.—Whittier. 

’Tis the “old, old story” of youth and maid, through 
memory’s chasms, re-echoing low. See Yellow 
Roses.—Hamersley. 

’Tis the part of a coward to brood. See Lyric of Ac¬ 
tion.—Hayne. 

’Tis the part of truest wisdom. See Truest Wisdom. 
—Anon. 

’Tis the soft t wilight. Round the shining fender. See 
Vision of the Monk Gabriel, The.—Donnelly. 

’Tis the sound of silver-toned bell. See Gabrielle.— 
M’Kenzie. 

’Tis the time to be cheerful, when nature is gay. See 
Life in its Spring-time.—Holbrook. 

’Tis the tree of the state, and most wisely selected. See 
Song to the Maple Tree.—Holbrook. 

’Tis the white anemone, fashioned so. See ’Tis the 
White Anemone.—Lytton. 

'Tis the wind that’s groaning. See Eve of Saint Bar¬ 
tholomew, The.—Thornbury. 

’Tis the year’s midnight, and ’tis the day’s. See Noc¬ 
turnal upon St. Lucie’s Day, A.—Donne. 


’Tis they of averitie. See Deid Folks’Ferry.—Watson. 

Tis time Doll Rosy had a bath. See Doll Rosy’s Bath. 
—Anon. 

’Tis time this heart should be unmoved. See On This 
Day I Complete My Thirty-sixth Year.—Byron. 

’Tis to yourself I speak; you cannot know. See Your¬ 
self.—Very. 

’Tis true, one half of woman’s life is hope. See Her 
Horoscope.—Townsend. 

’Tis true that when the dust of death has choked. See 
Casa Guidi Windows (Death of Savonarola).— 
Browning. 

’Tis truth, although this truth’s a star. See Angel in 
the House, The (Sentences).—Patmore. 

’Tis twelve o’clock within my prison dreary! See New 
Year’s Eve.—Bartleson. 

’Tis twenty years, and something more. See Reflect¬ 
ive Retrospect, A.—Saxe. 

’Tis very sad to see a tear bedim a loved one’s eye. See 
Signals of Distress!—Crompton. 

’Tis weary watching wave by wave. See same— Mas¬ 
sey. 

’Tis well to woo, 'tis well to wed. See Building upon 
the Sand.—Cook. 

’Tis when the dark goes soaring. See Kissing Time.— 
Field. 

’Tis while reviewing o’er my life that’s past. See Mat 
and Hal and I.—Snow. 

’Tis winter. Now no longer can Mabel, rarest maid. 
See Mabel.—Anon. 

’Tis winter now; the fallen snow. See Hymn of 
Wi nter.—Longfellow. 

’Tis with our judgments as our watches—none. See 
Essay on Criticism, An (Diversities of Judgment). 
—Pope. 

Tis woman’s smile that greets us all. See Old Canteen, 
The.—Edwards. 

’Tis written in the chapter “of the Cave.” See Moses 
and the Angel.—Arnold. 

'Tisn't so much that the Sunday harness never seems to 
fit. See Sunday Talk in the Horse Sheds.— 
Burdette. 

Titan! to whose immortal eyes. See Prometheus.— 
Byron. 

Tittlebat Titmouse was an ignorant vain fop. See 
Tittlebat Titmouse’s Experiment.—Warren. 

To a dairy a crow. See Fox and the Crow, The.— 
Taylor. 

To a drowsy country village. See Parson Lee.—Anon. 

To a high hill where never yet stood tree. See Poet’s 
Complaint of his Muse, The.—Otway. 

To all, “Good-night!” the touch of hands. See Good- 
n ight.—Everette. 

To all who dwell within the confines of Massachusetts 
[or her confines]. See Tribute to Massachusetts, 
A.—Lodge. 

To all you ladies now at land. See Song Written at 
Sea in the First Dutch War.—Sackville. 

To Americans the name of Washington will be forever 
dear. See Washington a Model for Youth.— 
Dwight. 

To arms! From your homes on the seashore and hill¬ 
side come forth. See Long Ago.—Bradbury. 

To arms, to arms! my jolly grenadiers! See Song of 
Braddock’s Men, The.—Anon. 

To ask for all thy love, and thy whole heart. See Two 
in One.—Dowland. 

To battle! to battle! See Covenanter’s Battle Chant, 
The.—Motherwell. 

To be a King, and wear a crown. See “Golden Speech, 
The.”—Queen Elizabeth. 

To be as great as Washington. See Our Very Best.— 
Anon. 

To be cold and breathless, to feel not and speak not. 
See Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson (Fathers of 
the Republic, The).—Everett. 

To be furious is to be frighted out of fear. See Antony 
and Cleopatra (Courage).—Shakespeare. 

To be in love where scorn is bought with groans. See 
Two Gentlemen of Verona, The.—Shakespeare. 

To be in love’s a stern condition. See Lover’s Com¬ 
plaint.—( Punch Bowl.) 

To be let, at a very desirable rate. See Heart to Let, 
A.—Anon. 

To be no more—sad cure; for who would lose. See 
Paradise Lost (To be no More).—Milton. 

To be, or not to be, that is the question. See Hamlet 
(Hamlet’s Soliloquy).—Shakespeare. 

“To be, or not to be, that is the question!” See Med¬ 
ley.—Soper. 

“To be. or not to be?” was Hamlet’s question. See 
Sophomore’s Soliloquy, The.—( Michigan Univer¬ 
sity Magazine.) 


894 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


To 


To be sure. It is a sad world, Prudy. See Changing 

t the Hundred Dollar Note.—Bradley. 

“To be sure,” said I to myself, one year ago the last 
week in December. See Story of Fifty-two 
Prayer-meetings.—Anon. 

To bear false witness against a neighbor. See Inter¬ 
national Good Will.— (New York Tribune.) 

To bear the burden of an Empire’s care. See Dedica¬ 
tion to Dante’s Divine Comedy.—Plumptre. 

To bear, to nurse, to rear. See Songs of Seven (Seven 
Times Six).—Ingelow. 

To begin in things quite simple. See Dan and Dimple, 
and How they Quarreled.—Cary. 

To bright Arbor Day a welcome we sing. See Arbor 
Day.—Stearns. 

To calumniate innovation, and to decry it, is prepos¬ 
terous. See On Parliamentary Innovations.— 
Beaufoy. 

To claim the Arctic came the sun. See Northern 
Lights, The.—Taylor. 

To come back from the sweet South to the North. See 
“Italia, Io Ti Saluto’”—Rossetti. 

“To court I shall go!” wee Marguerite cried. See 
Ambitious Marguerite, The.—Sage. 

To cure the mind’s wrong bias, Spleen. See Spleen, 
The.—Green. 

To die is not the work of one brief hour. See What 
it Is to Die.—Anon. 

To do to all men as I would. See Golden Rule, The.— 
Anon. 

To do to others as I would. See Golden Rule, The.— 
Anon. 

To draw no envy (Shakespeare) on thy name. See 
To the Memory of my Beloved, Mr. William Shake¬ 
speare, and what he hath Left Us.—Jonson. 

To draw, or not to draw, that is the question. See 
Poker.—Anon. 

To drum-beat and heart-beat. See Nathan Hale.— 
Finch. 

To each weary, toil-worn wight 1 See Good Night.— 
Korner. 

To eastward ringing, to westward winging. See When 
the Great Gray Ships Come in.—Carry). 

To enable you to guess my name I must give you some 
insight. See Three Enigmas.—Anon. 

To every question ever sprung. See Riding in the 
Cars ( for a boy). —-Kavanaugh. 

To fair FideR’s grassy tomb. See Dirge in Cymbeline. 
—Collins. 

To fence with Phyllis is a joy. See En Garde.— 
McIntyre. 

To further this, Achitophel unites. See Absalom and 
Achitophel (Malcontents, The—Zimri).—Dryden. 

To General Thomas a battle was neither an earthquake. 
See General George H. Thomas: His Life and 
Character (General Thomas at Chickamauga).— 
Garfield. 

To gild refined gold, to paint the lily. See King John. 
—Shakespeare. 

To give a cup of water; yet its draught. See 'Tis a 
Little Thing.—Talfourd. 

To go or stay, I scarcely knew. See Doubt Resolved, 
The.—Anon. 

To God my soul I do bequeathe, because it is His 
own. See Rhymed Will of Hunnis, The.— 
Hunnis. 

To grass, or leaf, or fruit, or wall. See Snail, The.— 
Bourne. 

To hear the lark begin his flight. See L’Allegro. 
—Milton. 

To heaven approached a Sufi Saint. See same. — 
Rumi. 

To heroism and holiness. Angel in the House, The 
(Queen, The).—Patmore. 

To him that overcometh. See Overeometh.—-Sangster. 

To him who in the love of Nature holds. See Thana- 
topsis.—Bryant. 

To horse, to horse. Sir Nicholas! the clarion’s note is 
high. See Sir Nicholas at Marston Moor.— 

To horse, to horse! the bugles call. See Trooper’s 
Dirge, The.—Anon. 

To horse! To horse! with the stirrup’s clink. See 
Cavalry Song.—Hayne. 

To Houston at Gonzales town, ride. Ranger, for your 
life. Nee Men of the Alamo, The.—Roche. 

To Jennie at plav in the garden. See Farewell of the 
Birds—H. K. P. 

To keep the lamp alive. See Dependence.—Cowper. 

To kiss my Celia’s fairer breast. See On Snow Flakes 
Melting on his Lady’s Breast.—Johnson. 

To Lake Aghmoogenegamook. See American Trav¬ 
eller, The.—Newell. 


To leave unseen so many a glorious sight. See Return¬ 
ing Home.—Trench. 

To lie with half-closed eyes, as in a dream. See What 
I Like.—H. L. 

To live a hero, then to stand. See At the Farragut 
Statue.—Bridges. 

To live in hell, and heaven to behold. See same. — 
Constable. 

To live the sorrow down, and try to be. See Without 
Him.—Rutter. 

To live within a cave—it is most good. See Salve!— 
Brown. 

To London once my step[p]s I bent. See London 
Liekpenny.—Lydgate. 

To look for thee—sigh for thee—cry for thee. See 
Love Song.—Anon. 

To love and seek return. See Love.—Longfellow. 

To love satisfies one-half of our nature. See same .— 
Hodge. 

To make my lady’s obsequies. See Fairest Thing in 
Mortal Eyes, The.—Orleans. 

To make this condiment, your poet begs. See Recipe 
for a Salad, A.—Smith. 

To marry,—or not to marry,—that is the question! 
See Bachelor’s Soliloquy, The.—Anon. 

To me. fair friend, you never can be old. See Sonnets, 
CIV.—Shakespeare. 

“To me, I swear, you’re a volume rare.” See Lawyer’s 
Daughter, A.—Thacher. 

To me men are for what they are. See Humility.— 
Milnes. 

To me, no dull insensate growth. See Old Wood, The. 
—Kelso. 

To me the earth once seemed to be. See Then and 
Now. —Johnson. 

To me, whom in their lays the shepherds call. See 
For a Grotto.—Akenside. 

To men of other minds my fancy flies. See Travel¬ 
ler, The; or, A Prospect of Society.—Gold¬ 
smith 

To most people a grove is a grove, and all groves are 
alike. See Grove of Pines, A.—Anon. 

To murder one so young! See Christmas Hymn, A. 
—Domett. 

To mute and to material things. SeeMarmion (Nelson, 
Pitt, Fox).—Scott. 

To my lot has fallen the pleasant duty of welcoming 
you. See Opening Address.—Rook. 

To my office window, gray. See May Memories.— 
Lincoln. 

To my son, Lisle Clinton. See Dedication.—Richards. 

To my sweet cigarette I am singing. See My Cigarette. 
—Barnard. 

To my true king I offered free from stain. See Epitaph 
on a Jacobite.—Macaulay. 

To Nebraska belongs the distinction of inaugurating 
the observance of Arbor Day. See Institution of 
Arbor Day, The.—Anon. 

To Oggier spake King Didier. See Coming of Charle¬ 
magne .—Macaulay. 

To one he brought the rarest flowers. See Two.— 
Townsend. 

To one who has been long in city pent. See same. —Keats. 

To parents and friends Mrs. June. See Mrs. June’s 
Prospectus.—Coolidge. 

To plant, to build, whatever you intend. See Moral 
Essays (Nature).—Pope. 

To praise the little women Love besought me in 
my musing. See Praise of Little Women.— 
Hita. 

To praise thy life, or waile thy worthie death. See 
Epitaph upon the Right Honourable Sir Philip 
Sidney, An.—Raleigh. 

To predict an eclipse of the sun, the astronomer must 
sweep forward. See First Predicted Eclipse, The. 
—Mitchel. 

To Priamus palice eftir socht I than. See /Eneid, 
The (Ghost of Creusa, The).—Virgil. 

To prove that Washington never attached to his 
doctrine of neutrality. See In a Just Cause.— 
Kossuth. 

To put new shingles on old roofs. See Little Brother 
of the Rich, A.—Martin. 

To Rathlin’s Isle I chanced to sail. See Enchanted 
Island, The.—Conolly. 

To rear a boy under what parents call the “sheltered 
life system.” See Thrown Away.—Kipling. 

To Rome a scout came flying, all wild with haste and 
fear. See Horatius at the Bridge.—Macaulay. 

To say my prayers is not to pray. See True Prayers. 
—Anon. 

To sea! to sea! the calm is o’er. See Death’s Jest 
Book (Sea, The).—Beddoes. 


895 





To 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


To search for truth and wisdom. See What is My 
Work To-day.—Anon. 

To shoot, to shoot, would be my delight. See Shooting 
Song, A.—Rands. 

To shore the sea-nymphs buoyed their captive dead. 
See Shelley.—Betts. 

To sigh, yet feel no pain. See same. —Moore. 

To sit in front of the open grate. See In Bachelor’s 
Hall.—Peabody. 

To sleep I give myself away. See Voyage of Sleep, 
The.—Eaton. 

To some field of labor, mental or manual. See Labor.— 
Dewey. 

To soothe a mad King’s fevered brain. See Ballade 
of Playing Cards, A.—White. 

To spend the long warm days. See Rest.—Woods. 

To spend uncounted years of pain. See Perche Pensa? 
Pensando s’lnvecchia.—Clough. 

To spread, or not to spread, that is the question.—See 
Class-day Hamlet, A.—Huntress. 

To spring belongs the violet, and the blown. See 
Petition, A.—Aldrich. 

To stand within a gently gliding boat. See Haunts 
of the Halcyon, The.—Luders. 

To the Army of the Potomac belongs the unique dis¬ 
tinction of being its own hero. See Army of the 
Potomac, The.—Depew. 

To the belfry one by one, went the ringers from the 
sun. See Rhyme of the Duchess May.—Brown¬ 
ing. 

To the best archer a prize was to be awarded. See 
Ivanhoe (Archery Contest, The).—Scott. 

To the Board of Education. See Sarah Ann Miranda. 
—Anon. 

To the brave all homage render. See Ashby.—Thomp¬ 
son. 

"To the church Pasquale.” See Threads from the Woof 
(Lie for a Life, A).—Galpin. 

To the Cowpens riding proudly, boasting loudly, rebels 
scorning. See Battle of the Cowpens, The.— 
English. 

To the forgotten dead. See same. —Woods. 

To the friends gathered here, to the professors who 
have been our guides. See Good Day.—Anon. 

To the Giver of all blessings. See Thanksgiving 
Hymn.—Anon. 

To the great brown house where the flowers live. See 
Rain, The.—Anon. 

To the great tree-loving fraternity we belong. See 
Walk among Trees, A (Love of Trees, The).— 
Beecher. 

To the historian few characters appear so little. See 
Panegyrics on Washington.—Anon. 

To the instincts of God and conscience let us hasten 
to add the instincts of immortality. See Instinct 
of Immortality, The.—Hillis. 

To the Lake of Coolfin the companions soon came. See 
Lake of Coolfin, The.—Joyce. 

To the little blown cradles. See Sunshine’s Caress, 
The.—Anon. 

To the Lords of Convention ’twas Claver’se [w. 
Claverhouse] who spoke. See Doom of Devor- 
goil. The (Bonny Dundee).—Scott. 

“To the manly will there’s ever a way.” See Arabian 
Tale, An.—Anon. 

"To the memory of Patrick Connor.” See Connor.— 
Anon. 

To the men at work in the field Ruth came running and 
crying. See Ride.'—Bate. 

To the men who fought with Decatur. See Message, A. 
—P. B. 

To the minstrel said the king. See Minstrel, The.— 
Proctor. 

To the ocean now I fly. See Comus (Land of Eternal 
Summer, The).—Milton. 

To the pen of the historian. See Unselfishness of 
Washington, The.—Paine. 

To the President:—I esteem it among the rarest of my 
present privileges. See Service.—Anon. 

To the pure mind alone hath solitude its charms. See 
same. —Anon. 

To the question “what have the People ever gained.” 
See Sword, The.—GrimkA 

To the quick brow Fame grudges her best wreath. See 
Guerdon, The.—Piatt. 

“To the red, white and blue.” See Little Flag-bearer, 
The.— 4non. 

To the scaffold’s foot she came. See Two Loves and a 
Life.—Sawyer. 

To the school and the college attaches vast responsi¬ 
bility. See Patriotic Sentiments.—Gates. 

To the sea-shell’s spiral round. See Appreciation.— 
Aldrich. 


To the sound of timbrels sweet. See Bridal Song.— 
Milman. 

To the wake of O’Hara. See Wake of Tim O’Hara 
The.—Buchanan. 

To the wall of the old green garden. See Yellow 
Pansy, A.—Cone. 

To the yard, by the barn, came the farmer one morn. 
See That Calf.—Cary. 

To the youthful aspirant of to-day, who is willing to 
take so humble a sentiment. See Fruits of Labor, 
The.-—Bates. 

To thee, beneath whose eye. See Washington as a 
Leader.—Pierpont. 

To thee, blest weed, whose sovereign wiles. See 
Acrostic. — J. H. 

To thee, fair Freedom, I retire. See Written at an 
Inn at Henley.—Shenstone. 

To thee, my way in epigrams seems new. See To My 
Mere English Censurer.—Jonson. 

To thee, O country, great and free. See To Thee, 
O Country!—Eichberg. 

To thee, O father of the stately peaks. See To a 
Mountain.—Kendall. 

To them his heart, his love, his griefs were given. See 
' Deserted Village, The.—Goldsmith. 

To these [trr. those] whom death again did wed. See 
Epitaph upon Husband and Wife, An.— 
Crashaw. 

To Thine eternal arms, O God. See I Will Arise and 
Go unto My Father.—Higginson. 

To think that over twenty years have gone by. See 
After Twenty Years.—Booth. 

To this audience what name shall I give? See German- 
icus to his Mutinous Troops.—Tacitus. 

To thy lover, dear, discover. See Out of Italian: A 
Song.—Crashaw. 

To Thy temple I repair. See same. —Montgomery. 

To touch a broken lute. See Saddest Fate, The.— 
Anon. 

To tremble, when I touch her hands. See Divine 
Awe.—Woodberry. 

To turn my volume o’er nor find. See How to Read 
Me.—Landor. 

To understand all that she did. See Put Yourself in 
her Place.—Barnard. 

To us, citizens of America, it belongs above all others 
to show respect to the memory of Washington. 
See Character of Washington, The (Memory of 
Washington, The).—Everett. 

“To wait!” Epitome of life. See Wait On.—Hahn. 

To wake the soul by tender strokes of art. See 
Prologue to Mr. Addison’s Tragedy of "Cato.”— 
Pope. 

To waltz with thee, my pretty belle. See To Waltz 
with Thee.—7.ug. 

To Waterloo, with sad ado, and many a sigh and groan. 
See Waterloo Ballad, A.—Hood. 

To wear the blue I think it best. See Gallant Grahams, 
The.—Anon. 

To weary hearts, to mourning homes. See Angel of 
Patience, The.—Whittier. 

To wed, or not to wed,—that is the question. See 
Bachelor’s Soliloquy, The.—Anon. 

To what causes, Athenians, is the prosperity or the 
calamity of a State to be ascribed? See Invective 
against Demosthenes.—Dinarchus. 

To what new fates, my country, far. See Manifest 
Destiny.—Hovey. 

To what punishment shall we condemn Louis the 
Sixteenth? See On the Punishment of Louis 
XVI.—Robespierre. 

To whit! To whit! To wheel Will you listen to 
me? See Who Stole the Bird’s Nest?—Child. 

To whom shalt Thou be dedicate? See His Book’s 
Patron.—Martial. 

To William Penn belongs the distinction. See True 
Grandeur of Nations, The (Sumner’s Tribute to 
William Penn).—Sumner. 

To write a verse or two is all the praise. See Praise.— 
Herbert. 

To write as your sweet mother does. See Advice.— 
Landor. 

To yon fause stream that, near the sea. See Mermaid, 
The.—Anon. 

To you, Charlotte, my first, my only love. See 
Household Fairy, A.—Talfourd. 

To you, my purse, and to noon [er nonel other wight. 
See Compleynte of Chaucer to His Purse, The.— 
Chaucer. 

To you.sir, the President of this College. See For a 
College Commencement.—Anon. 

To you, whose temperate pulses flow. See On the 
Fly-leaf of Manon Lescaut.—Learned. 


896 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Touch 


Tobacco’s but an Indian weed. See Tobacco is an 
Indian Weed.—Anon. 

To-day a cripple passed me on the way. See Solution, 
The.—Ryan. 

To-day, all day, I rode upon the down. See St. Valen¬ 
tine’s Day.—Blunt. 

To-day, as I went down the street. See “Try” Boys, 
The.—Anon. 

To-day as the pulses powerful. See Memorial Day.— 
Fawcett. 

To-day, dear heart, but just to-day. See Her Answer. 
—Bennett. 

To-day Death seems to me an infant child. See New¬ 
born Death.—Rossetti. 

To-day I saw the dragon-fly. See Dragon-fly, The.— 
Tennyson. 

To-day I was let sit up, tucked up in a quilt in a 
arm-chare. See Photographs, The.—Anon. 

To-day is the fourth anniversary of the revolution in 
Hungary. See Mourning Hero’s Vision, The.— 
Kossuth. 

To-day is theirs—the unforgotten dead. See All Soul’s 
Day.—Watson. 

“To-day, my dear child,” said mamma just now, 
“to-day you are sixteen years old. See Before 
the Mirror.—-Anon. 

To-day the birth of Christ, the Lord. See Royal 
Birthday, A.—Train. 

To-dav the birthright of her hopes the marching nation 
sings. See Festal Day Has Come, The.—Butter- 
worth. 

To-day the great question that is stirring men’s hearts. 
See same. —Parker. 

To-day the United States and Great Britain are 
striving to crown the glories. See Nation’s Honor, 
The.—Coudert. 

To-day the woods are trembling through and through. 
See Corn.—Lanier. 

To-day, unsullied, comes to thee. See “To-day.”— 
Ruskin. 

To-day we are poor; but 1 buy Linette. See Linette.— 
Folsom. 

To-day we have been inaugurating the world-renowned 
Statue of Liberty Enlightening the World. See 
Temperance Enlightening the World. — Tay¬ 
lor. 

To-day! We stand on the threshold! We stand there, 
waiting! See Modern High School Valedictory.— 
Burdette. 

To-day what is there in the air. See Carpe Diem.— 
Marzials. 

To-day with reverent hand we draw. See Cities of the 
Bible.—Hadley. 

Toddlekins and Tidkins were two naughty kittens. 
See Two Kittens.—Goodfellow. 

Together to the church they went. See Pharisee and 
Sadducee.—Anon. 

Toil on, faint not, keep watch and pray. Set Perse¬ 
verance.—Bonar. 

Toil on, poor muser, to attain that goal. See Idea], 
The.—Saltus. 

Toil on! toil on! ye ephemeral train. See Coral Insect, 
The.—Sigourney. 

Toil swings the axe, and forests bow. See Labor.— 
Bungay. 

Toiling in the naked fields. See Laborer, The.— 
Clare. 

Tolerably successful, I guess. Made a sensation, ’pon 
honor. See Fortune Hunter, The.—Pickering. 

Toll for the brave. See On the Loss of the Royal 
George.—f'owper. 

Toll! Roland, toll! See Great Bell Roland, The.— 
Tilton. 

Toll the lilies’ silver bells! See Death of Oberon.— 
Thornbury. 

Toll the slow bell. See Fallen, The.—Cheney. 

Toll! toll! toll! for the old year slowly dying. See 
New Year’s Chime, A.—Anon. 

Toll, toll, toll, thou bell by billows swung. See Bell of 
the “Atlantic,” The.—Sigourney. 

Tom and Charles once took a walk. See Superior Boys, 
The.—Turner. _ 

Tom and Joe quarrelled. Sec Dispute, A.—Mitchell. 

Tom appeared on the sidewalk with a bucket of white¬ 
wash. See Tom Sawyer (How Tom Sawyer Got 
his Fence Whitewashed).—Clemens. 

“Tom, I invite you to a walk.” See It is never too 
Late to mend (Lark in the Gold Fields, The). 
Rcadc 

Tom Pearse, Tom Pearse, lend me your old gray mare. 
See Widdicombe Fair.—Anon. 

Tom Poplin was a London modem spark. See Guess, 
The.—Anon. 


Tom Sawyer, a lad of twelve years, lived with his 
guardian. Aunt Polly. See Tom Sawyer (Tom 
Sawyer Treated for Lovesickness).—Clemens. 

Tom Sawyer, having offended his sole guardian. See 
Tom Sawyer (How Tom Sawyer Got his Fence 
Whitewashed).—Clemens. 

Tom, soon as e’er thou strik’st thy golden lyre. See 
Progress of Curiosity, The.—Pindar. 

Tom Twist was a wonderful fellow. See Tom Twist.— 
Anon. 

Tommy didn’t see the use. See Warning, A.— 
Anon. 

Tommy Jones, across the street. See What He Has.— 
Denton. 

Tommy Linn is a Scotchman born. See Tommy 
Linn.—Anon. 

Tommy thought there was nobody looking. See 
Truant.—Hudson. 

Tommy’s alluz playin’ jokes. See Thomas the Pre¬ 
tender.—Riley. 

To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow. See 
Macbeth (“Tomorrow and tomorrow,” etc.).— 
Shakespeare. 

To-morrow, brightest-eyed of Avon’s train. See To 
Tacsea.—Landor. 

To-morrow, didst thou say? See To-morrow.— 
Cotton. 

To-morrow is the day for Valentines. See Four Valen¬ 
tines.—Field. 

To-morrow, ma, I’m sweet sixteen. See Billy Grimes, 
the Drover.—Anon. 

To-morrow our troubles will all be ended. See 
To-morrow.—Anon. 

To-morrow’s action! can that hoary wisdom. See 
To-morrow.—Johnson. 

To-night I watch the fireflies rise. See Fireflies.— 
Robinson. 

To-night retired, the queen of heaven. See Nightin¬ 
gale, The.— Akenside. 

To-night she will dance at the palace. See Retro¬ 
spections.— Lytton. 

To-night the scenes of boyhood years come thronging 
to my gaze. See Old House on the Hillside, The.— 
McBride. 

To-night the winds begin to rise. See In Memoriam. 
—Tennyson. 

To-night this sunset spreads two golden wings. See 
Sunset Wings.—Rossetti. 

To-night’s the time for Santa Claus. See Watching 
for Santa Claus.—Denton. 

Tony Marvin, the keeper of the Key port Light, was in 
his little room. See Equinoctial Storm, The.— 
Smith. 

Too avid of earth’s bliss, he was of those. See Byron 
the Voluptuary.—Watson. 

Too early, of course! How provoking' See Reverie 
in Church.—Baker. 

Too fair, I may not call thee mine. See Parting.— 
Massey. 

Too frail to keep the lofty vow. See Thoughts Sug¬ 
gested the Day Following, on the Banks of Nith, 
near the Poet’s Residence.—Wordsworth. 

Too hard to bear! why did they take me thence? See 
Enoch Arden.—Tennyson. 

Too late, alas! I must confess. See same. —Wilmot. 

Too late for love, too late for joy. See Bride Song.— 
Rossetti. 

Too late I stay’d—forgive the crime! See To Lady 
Anne Hamilton.—Spencer. 

Too late we met, love, you and I. See Too Late We 
Met.—Westley. 

Too long, too long we keep the level plain. See 
Revival of Romance.—Thomas. 

Too poor for a bribe, and too proud to importune. See 
Sketch of his Own Character.—Gray. 

Too rare a flower is love its bloom to keep. See Fare¬ 
well, A.—Anon. 

Too solemn for day, too sweet for night. See same. — 
Walker. 

Too wearily had we and song. See To a Poet Breaking 
Silence.—Thompson. 

Torches were blazing clear. See Cceur de Lion at the 
Bier of his Father.—Ilemans. 

Tossed through the dark and stormy night. See 
Temperance Ship, The.—(Banner, The.) 

Tossed with rough winds and faint with fear. See 
’Tis I, be not Afraid.—Charles. 

Tossing his mane of snows in wildest eddies and 
tangles. See In Earliest Spring.—Howells. 

T’other day, as I was twining. See Cupid Swallowed. 
—Hunt. 

Touch not that maid. See Salopia Inhospitalis.— 
Sladen. 


897 




Touch 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Touch us gently, Time! See Petition to Time, A.— 
Procter. 

Toussaint, the most unhappy man of men. See To 
Toussaint L’Ouverture.—Wordsworth. 

Toys and treats and pleasures pass. See Happy Child, 
The.—Rand. 

Trace, for a moment, the history of commerce, from 
the earliest period. See Commerce.—Everett. 

Traditions say that when of old. See Man for the 
Hour, The.—Robinson. 

Tramp, tramp, tramp, in the drunkard’s way. See 
Dead March, The.—Lathrop. 

Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching. How 
many of them? See Tramp, Tramp, Tramp.— 
Holland. 

Tramp, tramp, tramp! With the morning clocks at 
ten. See Countermarch, The.—Burdette. 

Trample! trample! went the roan. See Cavalier’s 
Escape, The.—Thornbury. 

Tranquillity! Thou better name. See Ode to Tran¬ 
quillity.—Coleridge. 

Travel, in the younger sort, is a part of education. See 
Of Travel.—Bacon. 

Traveler, what lies over the hill? See Over the Hill.— 
Macdonald. 

Tread lightly here; for here, ’tis said. See Epitaph 
on a Robin Redbreast, An.—Rogers. 

Tread lightly, she is near. See Requiescat.—Wilde. 

Tread softly—bow the head. See Pauper’s Death¬ 
bed, The.—-Southey. 

Treason doth never prosper; what’s the reason? See 
Epigram: Treason.—Harrington. 

Treat not with such wanton disdain. See To an 
“Instructor.”—Furbur. 

Tree of the gloom, o’erhanging the tomb. See Willow 
Tree, The.—Cook. 

Tree of the olden time! A thousand storms. See 
Charter Oak, The.—Prentice. 

Tree planting on Arbor Day, for economic pur¬ 
poses. See What Arbor Day has Already Done. 
—Higley. 

Tree, what makes you frow so high? See Tottie’s 
Tree-talk.—Butler. 

Trees are indeed the glory, the beauty, and the delight 
of nature. See Trees.—Wilson. 

Trembling before thine awful throne. See Forgive¬ 
ness of Sins a Joy Unknown to Angels.—Hill- 
house. 

Tried to fin’ you las’ night. See Where are You 
Sleeping, Eady Fair?—Kirk. 

Trinity bells, with their hollow lungs. See Legend of 
Easter Eggs, The.—O’Brien. 

Tripping down the field-path. See same. —Swain. 

Tritemius of Herbipolis one day. See Gift of Trite- 
mius. The.—Whittier. 

Triumph now with joy and mirth! See Triumph Now. 
—Campion. 

Triumphal arch that fill’st the sky. See To the Rain¬ 
bow.—Campbell. 

Triumphing chariots, statues, crowns of bays. See 
Sonnet: “Triumphing,” etc.—Drummond. 

Trochee trips from long to short. See Metrical Feet.— 
Coleridge. 

True, all we know must die. See Answer to “The Hour 
of Death.”—Wilson. 

True as the needle to the pole. See Song.—Booth. 

True bard and simple,—as the race. See To Campbell. 
—Moore. 

True Comrade, we have tasted life together. See My 
Comrade Canoe.—Roberts. 

True ease in writing comes from art, not chance. See 
Essay on Criticism, An (Criticism and Satire).— 
Pope. 

True education means the drawing out and develop¬ 
ment. See Education as Related to Civic Pros¬ 
perity.—Anon. 

True eloquence [indeed] does not consist in speech. 
See Adams and Jefferson (Nature of True Elo¬ 
quence, The).—Webster. 

True genius, but true woman! dost deny. See Recog¬ 
nition, A.—Browning. 

True happiness had no localities. See Course of 
Time, The (Happiness).—Pollok. 

True, I am old, but ’tis not years alone. See Mendicant, 
The.—Bard. 

True in substance, though I tell it from a memory not 
very retentive. See Reconsidered Verdict, The.— 
Venables. 

True it is that clouds and mist. See Sunrise Comes 
To-morrow.—Anon. 

True love can ne’er forget. See Carolan and Bridget 
Cruise.—Lover. 


True love is but a humble, low-born thing. See Love. 
—Lowell. 

True love’s own talisman. See Footnote to a Famous 
Lyric, A.—Guiney. 

True!—nervous—very, very dreadfully nervous I had 
been and am. See Tell Tale Heart, The.—Poe. 

True—there are books and books. There’s Gray. See 
De Libris.—Monkhouse. 

True Thomas lay on [or o’er yon] Huntlie [or Huntley, 
or grassy] bank. See Thomas the Rhymer.— 
Anon. 

True to the promise of thy far-off youth. See same. 
—[All the Year Round.) 

True worth is in being, not seeming. See Nobility.— 
Cary. 

Trust me, I have not earned your dear rebuke. See 
Monna Innominata (Sonnet: “Trust me,” etc.). 
—Rossetti. 

Trust not, Sweet Soul! those curled waves of gold. See 
same. —Drummond. 

Trust thou thy Love; if she be proud, is she not sweet? 
See Trust Thou Thy Love.—Ruskin. 

Truth and integrity have all the advantages of appear¬ 
ance, and many more. See Truth and Integrity.— 
Tillotson. 

Truth, as humanity knows it, is not what the school¬ 
men call it. See same. —Bulwer. 

Truth crushed to earth shall rise again. See Be Truth¬ 
ful.—Bryant. 

Truth is to be discovered, and Pardon to be won. See 
Truth of Truths, The.—Ruskin. 

Truths half-drawn from Nature’s breast. See same .— 
Anon. 

Tsar Oleg was riding through holy Kieff. See Tsar 
Oleg.—Kenealy. 

T-t-there’s no use talking, landlord, I m-must have 
just one more drink. See Saved.-—Anon. 

Tube, I love thee as my life. See Choosing a W T ife by 
a Pipe of Tobacco.— {Gentleman’s Magazine.) 

Tugged and patient, panting horses, as the colter, 
keen and thorough. See Fight, The.—English. 

Tullia, wife of Tarquin, was the incarnation of iniquity. 
See Drive On! Drive On!—Thayer. 

Tullymueclescrag. Parish of Ballyraggett. See Irish 
Witticism.—Anon. 

Turn back, you wanton flyer. See Basia.—Campion. 

Turn, Fortune, turn thy wheel and lower the proud. 
See Idylls of the King (Enid’s Songh—Tennyson. 

Turn, gentle hermit of the dale. See Vicar of Wake¬ 
field, The (Hermit, The).—Goldsmith. 

Turn, hell-hound, turn! See Macbeth (Killing of Mac¬ 
beth) .—Shakespeare. 

Turn I my looks unto the skies. See Rosalynde; 
or, Euphues’ Golden Legacy (Rosader’s Sonetto). 
—Lodge. 

“Turn out, boys”—“What’s up with our super to¬ 
night?” See From the Wreck.—Gordon. 

Turn out more ale, turn up the light. See Dum 
Vivimus Vigilamus.—Webb. 

Turn, turn, for my cheeks they burn. See Milkmaid’s 
Song, The.—Dobell. 

Turn where we may—within, around—the voice of 
great events in proclaiming to us. See Speech 
Delivered in the House'of Commons on the 2nd 
of March, 1831, A (Reform, that You may Pre¬ 
serve) .—M acaulay. 

Turn with me from the city’s clamorous street. See 
Thomas it Kempis; De Imitatione Christi.— 
Bowker. 

Turning from Shelley’s sculptured face aside. See On 
a Grave in Christchurch, Hants.—Adams. 

Tuscan, that wanderest through the realms of gloom. 
See Dante.—T ongfellow. 

’Tvas der nighd pehind Grisdmas, und all ofer der haus. 
See Der Nighd pehind Gristmas.—Wetmore. 

’Twas a balmy summer evening, and a eoodlv crowd 
was there. See Face on the Floor, The.— 
D’Arcy. 

’Twas a balmy summer morning. See Dawning of the 
Day, The.—Mangan. 

’Twas a beautiful Christmas morning. See Bessie’s 
Christmas Dream.—Anon. 

’Twas a cold autumn morning when Jenny Wren died. 
See Death of Cock Robin and Jenny Wren, The. 
—Fay. 

'Twas a curious bundle of sticks, strings, and cotton. 
See Outrageous Fortune.—Anon. 

’Twas a day full of sorrow for Ulster. See Death of 
King Conor Macnessa.—Sullivan. 

’Twas a debating club for women. See At a Woman’s 
Club.—Russell. 

’Twas a dream of olden days. See Shadow of a Flower 
The.—Heman s. 


898 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


’Twas 


’Twas a drear November evening, shadowy and damp 
and chill. See Old Folks’ Thanksgiving.—Anon. 

’Twas a drowsy night on Tompkins Hill. See How We 
Fought the Fire.—Carleton. 

’Twas a Duke’s fair orphan girl, and her uncle’s ward, 
the Earl. See Rhyme of the Duchess May.— 
Browning. 

’Twas a ferocious baggage-man, with Atlantean back. 
See Baggage Fiend, The.—Anon. 

’Twas a fierce night when old Mawgan died. See 
Mawgan of Melhuach.—Hawker. 

’Twas a funny little fellow. See Funny Little Fellow, 
The.—Riley. 

'Twas a golden summer’s afternoon. See Not so 
Well Acquainted.—Traver. 

’Twas a hard case, that which happened in Lynn! See 
Tale of a Nose, A.—Adams. 

’Twas a hazy, mazy, lazy day. See Big Oyster, The.— 
Arnold. 

’Twas a hovel all wretched, forlorn and poor. See 
Little Mag’s Victory.—Catlin. 

’Twas a jolly old pedagogue, long ago. See Jolly Old 
Pedagogue, The.—Arnold. 

’Twas a little sermon preached to me. See Little 
Messenger of Love, The.—Anon. 

’Twas a little thing, only one kind word, in the hurry 
and bustle of every day. See Only One Kind 
Word.—Dare. 

’Twas a long time ago, so histories tell. See George’s 
Example.—Richards. 

’Twas a lovely night at Grimsby Camp. See Temper¬ 
ance Echo, The.—-Carswell. 

’Twas a merry, glad Thanksgiving, and relations from 
. the west. See One Thanksgiving Day out West. 
—Anon. 


’Twas a moonlight night, the trapper began. See 
Trapper’s Story, The.—Adams. 

’Twas a mother’s good bye at the old cabin door. See 
After so Long.—Anon. 

’Twas a night of dread in Charleston, and the air was 
' thick with fear. See Prayer, The.—Carleton. 

’Twas a poor old church in our village; its days were 
almost done. See How Larry Sang the “Agnus.” 
—Ewing. 

’Twas a Saturday night, midwinter. See Lady 
Yeardlev’s Guest.—Anon. 

’Twas a scene of brilliant splendor, gents and ladies 
richly dressed. See Saved.—Sloper. 

’Twas a sight to be long remembered. See Blue and 
Gray.— (New York Sun .1 

’Twas a ’sperience meetin’. Brother Brown, the 
leader of the class. See No Royal Road to 
Victory.—Glen. 

’Twas a strange picture upon which the sun looked. 
See Noll’s Journey.—Henry. 

’Twas a stylish congregation, that of Theophrastus 
Brown. See Trouble in the “Amen Comer.”— 
Harbaugh. 

’Twas a summer ago, when he left me here. See Lost. 
—Riley. 

'Twas a summery day in the last of May. See Pity 
of the Park Fountain, The.—Willis. 

’Twas a Sunday morning in early May. See Rover in 
Church.—Bickham. 

’Twas a sunny day, and the morning psalm. See 
Breeze in Church, The.—Hinxham. 

’Twas a terrible day, and we spent it fighting the 
third division of Hill’s command. See Little Jack 
Two-sticks.—Manville. 

’Twas a testimony meeting, in the old church on the 
hill. See What the Lord had Done for Him.— 
Braden. 

’Twas a widow’s home and a winter night. See 
Surrender, The.—Henry. 

’Twas a wild, dreary night, in cheerless December. See 
Sign of Distress, The.-;—Anon. 

’Twas a wild mad kind of night, as black as the bottom¬ 
less pit. See Death of the Old Squire, The.—Anon. 

’Twas a wild September evening. See Grace Darling.— 
Anon. 

’Twas a youthful would-be poet. See El Dorado.— 
Showerman. _ 

’Twas after a game of tennis. See Love Game, A.— 
Anderson. 

’Twas after a supper of Norfolk brawn. See lurvy 
Top.—Anon. 

’T was all in the leafy month o’ June. See Knight s 
False Vow, The.—Anon. 

’Twas All-soul’s eve, and Surrey’s heart beat high. See 
Lay of the Last Minstrel (Fitz Traver’s Song). 
—Scott. , „ _ _ 

'Twas an ancient legend they used to tell. See Demon 
on the Roof, The.—Pollard. 


’Twas an early summer morning. See Nature of Man, 
The.—Beecher. 

'Twas an old-time Southern darky. See Uncle Pete’s 
Plea.—Allgood. 

’Twas April; ’twas Sunday, the day was fair. See Re¬ 
miniscence, A.—Clarke. 

’Twas April when she came to town. See Bessie Brown, 
M. D.—Peck. 

’Twas at a ball. In vain I tried. See To-.—El- 

dridge. 

’Twas at a ball they met one night. See And the Band 
Played.—McLaughlin. 

’Twas at the oratorio. See At the Oratorio.—Anon. 

’T was at the royal feast for Persia won. See Alex¬ 
ander’s Feast; or, The Power of Music.—Dryden. 

’Twas at the silent, solemn hour. See William and 
M argaret.—Mallet. 

’Twas at this season, year by year. See In Laleham 
Churchyard.—Watson. 

’Twas at Tuxedo—let me see. See Tuxedo Romance, 
A.—Hardy. 

’Twas autumn, and the leaves were dry. See Three 
Little Graves.—Anon. 

’Twas autumn daybreak gold and wild. See Three 
Beggars, The.—Ramal. 

’Twas autumn when first they stood on the bridge. 
See Year’s Wooing, A.—Anon. 

’Twas beyond at Macreddin, at Owen Doyle’s weddin’. 
See Herself and Myself.—McCall. 

’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves. See Jabberwocky. 
—Dodgson. 

’Twas built for some great-grandmamma. See Her 
Sofa.—M. E. W. 

’T was business call’d a father to travel by the rail. 
See Railway Traveler’s Farewell to his Family, 
The.— (Punch.) 

’Twas but a breath. See Slander.—Anon. 

’Twas but a poor little room; a farm-servant’s loft in a 
garret. See Dorothy: A Country Story (Dorothy’s 
Room).—Munby. 

’Twas but last night I traversed the Atlantic’s fur¬ 
row’d face. See To Duffy in Prison.—McGee. 

’Twas calm at eve as childhood’s sleep. See Lexing¬ 
ton.—Wetmore. 

’Twas Christmas Eve, I fell asleep, despite a Christ¬ 
mas drum. See Christmas a Hundred Years to 
Come.—Eisenbeis. 

’Twas Christmas Eve, the feast so dear. See Bell of 
Innisfare, The.—Anon. 

’Twas Christmas Eve. The frost lay on the road. See 
Christmas-eve Redemption, A.—Aid<5. 

’Twas Christmas Eve; the snow fell down. See Story 
of Santa Claus, A.—Glazebrook. 

’Twas Christmas eve; the snowflakes fell. See Christ¬ 
mas Story, A.—Kavanaugh. 

’Twas Commencement eve, and the ballroom belle. 
See West Point.—Strong. 

’Twas “composition day” in school. See Composi¬ 
tion Day.—Bruce. 

’Twas dusky eve. The cooling shadows. See Salve!— 
Butterworth. 

’Twas Easter night in Milan, and before. See First 
Te Deum, The.—Preston. 

’Twas eighteen hundred years ago. See Day of Days, 
The.—Anon. 

’Twas eve—a glorious eve! See Chief Mourner, The.— 
Smith. 

’Twas eve, and Time, his vigorous course pursuing. 
See Orion (Akinetos).—Home. 

’Twas eve, and twilight’s Canopy, by autumn zephyrs 
swayed. See My Ships.—Bunn. 

’Twas even—the dewy fields were green. See Lass o’ 
Ballochmyle, The.—Bums. 

’Twas evening and the rain was falling. See Annihila¬ 
tion.—Chinn. 

“ ’Twas evening, though not sunset, and the tide.” 
See Gebir (Tamar and the Nymph).—Landor. 

’Twas ever thus! each hour that came. See same. — 
Simms. 

’T was ever thus from childhood’s hour. See Disaster. 
—Calverley. 

" ’Twas five and forty years ago.” See In Swanage 
Bay.—Craik. 

’Twas Friday mom; the train drew near. See Through 
Baltimore.—Taylor. 

’Twas Fultah Fisher’s boarding-house. See Ballad of 
Fisher’s Boarding-house, The.—Kipling. 

’Twas Gastibelza, ranger bold, an^thus it was he sung. 
See Guitare.—Hugo. 

’Twas good St. John’s, and the mountain woods. See 
Little Willie.—Grant. 

’Twas growing dark so terrible fasht. See Paddy’a 
Excelsior.— (Harper's Magazine ). 


899 








’Twas 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


'Twas Harry who the silence broke. See Like a Tree. 
—Anon. 

'Twas hurry and scurry at Monmouth town. See Mol- 
lie Pitcher.—Sherwood. 

’Twas in a little country town. See Race for Life, A. 
—Anon. 

’Twas in a southern hospital, a month ago or more. 
See Old Surgeon’s Story, The.—Donnelly. 

’Twas in green-leafy springtime. See Rose Adair.— 
Ryan. 

’Twas in heaven pronounced, and [’twas! muttered in 
hell. See Letter H, The.—Fanshawe. 

’Twas in June when I first met her and I never will 
forget her. See Modern Athenian, A.—Anon. 

’Twas in midautumn, and the woods were still. See 
Death as the Teacher of Love-lore.—Marzials. 

’Twas in my easy chair at home. See Old Times and 
New.—Spooner. 

’Twas in Persia (the legends say so). See Prince’s 
Hunting, The.—Austin. 

’Twas in Queen Bess’s golden days. See Song without 
a Name, A.—Lloyd. 

’Twas in the days when Claverhouse was scouring 
moor and glen. See Jamie Douglas.—Anon. 

’Twas in the flow’ry month of June. See I’ll Take 
What Father Takes.—Hoyle. 

’Twas in the olden time, long, long ago. See Little 
People of the Snow, The.—Bryant. 

’Twas in the prime of summer time. See Dream of 
Eugene Aram, The.—Hood. 

’Twas in the sultry-summer time, as war’s red records 
show. See Sleeping Sentinel, The.—Janvier. 

’Twas in the summer of ’46 that I landed at Hamilton. 
See Jimmy Butler and the Owl.—Anon. 

’Twas in the summer time so sweet. See Love and 
Reason.—Moore. 

’Twas in the year of battles, the red year ninety-three. 
See Duelist s Victory, The.—Lanergan. 

’Twas in the year that gave the nation birth. See 
Nathan Hale, the Martyr Spy.—Brown. 

’Twas in Trafalgar’s bay. See Death of Nelson, The. 
Arnold. 

’Twas in ye pleasant olden time. See Tarrytown 
Romance, A.—( Good Cheer.) 

’Twas just a waltz the musicians played. See Between 
the Galop and the Lanciers.—Curtis. 

’Twas just before the hay was mown. See same. — 
Swain. 

’Twas just behind the woodshed. See My First Cigar. 
—Burdette. 

'Twas late, and the gay company was gone. See Decla¬ 
ration, The.—Willis. 

'Twas late in the autumn of ’53. See Indian Chieftain, 
The.—Anon. 

’Twas long ago—ere the signal gun. See How He 
Saved St. Michael’s.—Stansbury. 

’Twas long ago, the legends say. See How Came the 
Holly Berries Red?—Chapin. 

'Twas many years since I had left my home. See Mad. 
—Littlejohn. 

’Twas May upon the mountains, and on the airy 
wing. See Surprise at Ticonderoga, The.—Stans¬ 
bury. 

’Twas midnight! Darkness, like the gloom of some 
funereal nail. See Thistle, The.—Murray. 

’Twas midnight; not a sound was heard. See Little 
Conqueror, The.—Adam. 

’Twas midsummer; cooling breezes all the languid 
forests fanned. See Death of Jefferson, The.— 
Anon. 

’Twas moonlight in Eden! Such moonlight, I ween. 
See Night in Eden.—Evans. 

’Twas morn, and beautiful the mountains’ brow. See 
On the Rhine.—Bowles. 

’Twas morn—but not the ray which falls the summer 
boughs among. See Dryburgh Abbey.—Swain. 

’Twas morn—-the rising splendor rolled. See Seventh 
Plague of Egypt, The.—Croly. 

’Twas mom upon the Grecian hills, where peasants 
dressed the vines. See Spartans’ March, The.— 
Hemans. 

’Twas morning in Seville; and brightly beamed. See 
Painter of Seville, The.—Wilson. 

’Twas morning over Galilee. See Christ Calming the 
Tempest.—Durant. 

’Twas near the break of day. See Countersign Was 
Mary, The.—Eytinge. 

’Twas night. A lurid light. See Review of the Dead 
The.—Stockard. 

’Twas night in the beautiful city. See Burning of 
Chicago, The.—Carleton. 

’Twas night in Venice. Then down to the tide. See 
In a Gondola.—Miller. 


’Twas night—mirk night—the sleet beat on. See 
Murder of Riccio, The.—Aytoun. 

’Twas night—the clock had just struck ten. See Mys¬ 
terious Guest, The.—Brannock. 

’Twas night! the stars were shrouded in a veil of mist. 
See Bombastic Description of a Midnight Murder. 
—Anon. 

’Twas nightfall on the tropic sea. See Battle of Manila. 
—Kennedy. 

’Twas nothing—a mere idle word. See Seed Word.— 
—Anon. 

’Twas off the blue Canary isles. See ’Twas off the Blue 
Canaries.—F abens. 

’Twas off the Wash—the sun went down—the sea 
looked black and grim. See Demon Ship, The.— 
Hood. 

’Twas on a bleak, chill, cold and stormy day. See 
Borrowed Baby, The.—Tatlow. 

’Twas on a cold and frosty night when snow and hail 
fast fell. See Old Friends.—M’Dermott. 

’Twas on a dark December evening. See Surgeon’s 
Tale, The.—Procter. 

’Twas on a day, and in high, radiant heaven. See Mys¬ 
tery of Doom, The.—Heavysege. 

’Twas on a Holy Thursday, their innocent faces clean. 
See Holy Thursday.—Blake. 

’Twas on a lofty vase’s side. See On a Favourite Cat, 
Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes.—Gray. 

’Twas on a Monday morning. See Charlie He’s My 
Darling.—Burns. 

’Twas on a Sabbath morning in the sunny month of 
June. See Battle of Bothwell Bridge, The.—Curr. 

’Twas on a street, two strangers met, in a city far away. 
See Triple Tie, The.—Perry. 

’Twas on a summer evening. See Battle of Blenheim. 
—Southey. 

’Twas on a winter morning. See Factory Girl’s Last 
Day, The.—Anon. 

’Twas on board the sloop-of-war Wasp, boys. See 
Wasp’s Frolic, The.—Anon. 

’T was on Lake Erie’s broad expanse. See John May¬ 
nard.—Alger. 

’Twas on the Crimea’s dreary plain. See Lost Colors, 
The.—Barr. 

’Twas on the day that city dames repair. See Journey 
to Exeter, A.—Gay. 

’Twas on the eve of good St. Valentine. See Aurelia’s 
Valentine.—Dallas. 

’Twas on the famous trotting-ground. See How the 
Old Horse Won the Bet.—Holmes. 

’Twas on the Rhine the armies lay. See Blucheron the 
Rhine.—Ivonisch. 

’Twas on the shores that round our coast. See Yam 
of the “Nancy Bell,” The.—Gilbert. 

’Twas one of the charmed days. See Woodnotes 
(Heart of All the Scene, The).—Emerson. 

’Twas only a missing sheep. See Lost Found, The.— 
Anon. 

’Twas only a smile that was given. See Only a Smile. 
—McCurdy. 

’Twas only a tiny, withered rose. See Perdita.—( Har¬ 
vard Advocate.) 

’Twas only coffee, yet we both drank deep. See Cup 
and Saucer Episode, A.—Ross. 

’Twas St. Patrick—good luck to the day he was born 
in. See Banish the Snakes.—H. E. P. 

’Twas Saturday night, and a teacher sat. See Nine¬ 
teenth Century Teacher, The.—Anon. 

’Twas spring when I first found it out. See I.ove’s 
Seasons.—Sherman. 

’Twas springtime of the day and year. See Love’s 
Life, A.—( Chambers’ Jovrnal.) 

’Twas summer and softly the ocean. See Blind Lamb, 
The.—Thaxter. 

’T was summer, and the spot a cool retreat. See Dream, 
A.—Kinney. 

’Twas Sunday after conference, and word had got 
around. See New Preacher, The.—Bull. 

’Twas Sunday morning in summer. See Story the 
Doctor Told, The.—Hallmark. 

’Twas Thanksgiving on the farm. See Thanksgiving 
at Grandma’s.—Richards. 

’Twas the battle-field and the cold pale moon. See 
Grasp of the Dead, The.—Landon. 

’Twas the body of Judas Iscariot. See Ballad of Judas 
Iscariot, The.—Buchanan. 

’Twas the breaking of the tempest when rebellion broke 
the law. See Gettysburg.—Shurtleff. 

’Twas the day beside the Pyramids, it seems but an 
hour ago. See Old Grenadier’s Story, The.— 
Thornbury. 

’Twas the dead of the night. By the pine-knot’s red 
light. See New England’s Chevy-Chase.—Hale. 


900 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Two 


!£ was tEe dream of a God. See Ireland—Sigerson. 
lwas the eve before Christmas: “Good night” had 
yrp keen S & 1C }_. & ee Annie and Willie’s Prayer.—Snow. 
I was the fisher s wife at her neighbor’s door. See 
Nora s Charm.—Cary. 

’Twas the golden eagle’s rock, craggy and wild and 
on ?- * ee Ea S le ’s Rock, The.—Anon, 
i was the hour of prayer, and the farmer stood See 
Child s Wisdom, A.—Anon. 

’Twas the last fight at Fredericksburg. See Bay Billy. 
—Gassaway. 

’Twas the love that lightened service! See As Jacob 
Served for Rachel.—Anon. 

Twas the night after Christmas, when all through the 
douse. See Night after Christmas, The.—Anon. 
1 was the night before Christmas, when all through 
the house. See Visit from St. Nicholas, A.—Moore 
Twas the ominous month of October. See Kin dom 
j The.—Doten. 

’Twas the time of the workingmen’s great strike, when 
all the land stood still. See Dandy Fifth, The.— 
Gassaway. 

'Twas the very verge of May. See Dewey at Manila.— 
Johnson. 

“ ’Twas thirty years ago, and now.” See Old Time.— 
Anon. 

’Twas to be a grand Thanksgiving. See Thanksgiving 
Story. A.—Anon. 

’Twas twelve o’clock, along the line. See “39.”—La 
Moille. 

’Twas twelve o’clock, not twelve at night. See Pom- 
pey’s Ghost.—Hood. 

Twas twilight, for the sunless day went down. See 
t Don Juan (Shipwreck, The).—Byron. 

’Twas when the seas were roaring. See Ballad from 
the “What d’ye Call It,” A.—Gay. 

’Twas when the spousal time of May. See Angel in the 
House, The (Nunc Amet Qui Nunquam Amavit). 
—Patmore. 

’Twas when the wan leaf frae the birk tree was fa’in’. 

See Lucy’s Flittin’.—Laidlaw. 

’Twas whispered in Heaven, ’twas muttered in hell. 

See Letter H, The.—Fanshawe. 

’Twas whispered one morning in heaven. See How 
_ the Gates Came Ajar.—Bostwick. 

’Twas years ago. The scene comes back like life. See 
Soldier and the Pard, The.—Taylor. 

Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee. See same. —Anon. 
Twelve friends, much about the same age. See First 
and Last Dinner, The.—-Anon. 

Twelve o’clock—a misty night. Set Highwayman’s 
Ghost, The.—Garnett. 

Twelve parsons once went to a squire's to dine. See 
Parsons and the Corkscrew, The.—Moncrieff. 
Twelve years ago I made a mock. See School and 
School-fellows.—Praed. 

Twelve years ago. when I could face. See Voice in the 
Wild Oak, The.—Kendall. 

Twenty froggies went to school. See Frogs at School. 
—Anon. 

“Twenty years ago last May.” See Peril of the Mines, 
The.—Anon. 

Twenty years editorial experience. See Sunday Ques¬ 
tion of To-day, The.—Hart. 

Twenty years hence my eyes may grow. See same .— 
Landor. 

Twice had the changing seasons run their round. See 
Love’s Victory.—Wasson. 

Twice one are two. See May Morning Lesson, A.— 
Anon. 

Twice up and down the garden-walks. See Lost Doll, 
The.—Anon. 

Twilight and trees. See From the Depths.—Anon. 
Twilight is here and the baby is weary. See Sand¬ 
man, The.—Coates. 

Twilight was deepening with a tinge of eve. See 
Hebrew Tale, A.—Sigourney. 

“ ’Twill be all the same in a hundred years!” See In 
a Hundred Years.—Anon. 

’Twill not be long—this wearying commotion. See 
’Twill not be Long.—Anon. 

Twin stars, aloft in ether clear. See Twin Stars Aloft. 
—Kingsley. 

Twine then the rays. See Psycholophon.—Burgess. 
Twinkle, twinkle, little star. See same. —Taylor. 

Twist me a crown of wind-flowers. See Twist Me a 
Crown.—Rossetti. 

Twist thou and twine! in light and gloom! See Feather- 
stone’s Doom.—Hawker. 

Twist ye, twine ye! even so. See Guy Mannering (Twist 
Ye, Twine Ye).—Scott. 

Twitched strings, the clang of metal, beaten drums. 
See Javanese Dancers.—Symons. 


’Twixt clouded heights Spain hurls to doom. See 
Brooklyn at Santiago, The.—Rice. 

Two aged men, that had been foes for life. See Golden 
City, The.—Tennyson. 

Two angels came through the gate of Heaven. See 
Song of Two Angels, A.—Richards. 

Two angels, one of Life and one of Death. See Two 
Angels, The.—Longfellow. 

Two Arkansas lawyers were domesticated in the rude 
hotel. See Lawyers and the Cat, The.—Anon. 

Two armies covered hill and plain. See Music in Camp. 
—-Thompson. 

Two artist lovers sought the hand of a noted painter’s 
daughter. See Veiled Picture, The.—Anon. 

Two babes were born in the self-same town. See Two 
Lives, The.—Anon. 

Two barks met on the deep mid-sea. See Meeting of 
the Ships, The.—Hemans. 

Two bills were waiting in the bank for their turn to go 
out into the world. See Two Bills, The.—Anon. 

Two birds within one nest. See Home.—Greenwell. 

Two boxers long enrolled by fame. See Pugilists, The. 
—-Anon. 

Two boys were given a lesson to master. See Why 
One Excelled the Other.—Anon. 

Two bright heads in the corner. See Grandpa and 
Bess.—Miller. 

Two bright little eyes. See Senses, The.—Anon. 

Two brown heads with tossing curls. See Katie Lee 
and Willie Gray.—Hunt. 

Two centuries of steps and then. See Church Steps, 
The.—Foster. 

Two chambers have the heart. See Heart, The.— 
Anon. 

Two children down by the shining strand. See Round 
of Life, The.—Lamont. 

Two children in two neighbour villages. See Circum¬ 
stance.—Tennyson. 

Two children on their way from school. See Gather¬ 
ing Flowers.—Anon. 

Two children sat in the twilight. See Wooden Legs.— 
Anon. 

Two crabs who were on the beach to walk. See Escap¬ 
ing the Shower.—Anon. 

Two cross-eyed lovers in a horse-car sat. See Cross¬ 
eyed Lovers, The.—Johnston. 

Two dark-eyed maids, at shut of day. See Burial of 
Love, The.—Bryant. 

'Two dimpled hands the bars of iron grasped. See Be¬ 
yond the Gate.—Anon. 

Two doves upon the selfsame branch. See Song: 
“Two doves,” etc.—Rossetti. 

Two ears and only one mouth have you. See Two and 
One.—Anon. 

Two families in Slawson had a somewhat singular ex¬ 
perience. See Penning a Pig.—Bailey. 

Two fishermen stood on the beach, the types of youth 
and age. See Young Doland.—Roy. 

Two fleets have sailed from Spain. The one would 
seek. See Sailing of the Fleet, The.— (New York 
Tribune.) 

Two foot-companions once in deep discourse. See 
Nimmers, The.—Byrom. 

Two Frenchmen [who] had just come over. See Vat 
You Please.—Fowle. 

Two frogs, upon a summer day. See Two Frogs, The. 
—Kavanaugh. 

Two gay young frogs, from inland J}ogs. See Tale of 
Hard Times, A.—Anon. 

Two gaz’d into a pool, he gaz’d and she. See Echo 
from Willowwood, An.—Rossetti. 

Two gentlemen their appetite had fed. See Saying 
not Meaning.—Wake. 

Two gods with Saturn’s rings one day. See Eureka.— 
Bates’. 

Two goslings fair, a venturous pair. See Two Goslings. 
—Richards. 

Two gray hawks ride the rising blast. See Sioux 
Chief’s Daughter, The.-—Miller. 

“Two hands upon the breast.” See Now and After¬ 
wards.—Craik. 

Two honest tradesmen meeting in the Strand. See 
Three Black Crows, The.—Byrom. 

Two hours, or more, beyond the prime of a blithe April 
day. See Battle of Charleston Harbor.—Hayne. 

Two human lives, two kindred hearts. See Forever.— 
Berry. 

Two hundred and more years ago. See Story of a 
Great Artist, The.—-Allen. 

Two hundred years ago, Mary Shepherd, a girl of fifteen 
was watching the savages. See Centennial Cele¬ 
bration of Concord Fight (Who Was the Minute- 
man?).—Curtis. 


901 



















Two 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Two hundred years!—two hundred years! See Two 
Hundred Years.—Pierpont. 

Two ideas there are which, above all others, elevate 
and dignify a race. See Love of Country.—Booth. 

Two idle eyes, ’neath lashes fine. See At Church.— 
Livingston. 

Two Irishmen meet in depot. See Character Stories.— 
Anon. 

Two kings ruled in an eastern land. See Two Kings.— 
Piatt. 

Two kittens there were, a black and a gray, and grand¬ 
mamma said with a frown. See Kittens and 
Babies.—Hadley. 

Two ladies chanc’d one day to meet. See Reason 
Why, The.—Anon. 

Two letters will spell me, or five if you choose. See 
Excel.—Sabine. 

Two little boys went out to play. See Two Little Boys. 
—Richards. 

Two little boys were once at play. See Quarrelsome 
Boy, The—W. T. 

Two little brothers, the livelong day. See Conundrum, 
A.—Allen. 

Two little busy hands patting on the window. See 
Looking out for Me.—Anon. 

Two little cousins once there were. See Kiss Deferred, 
The.—Anon. 

Two little cub-bears, frisky and strong. See Two Lit¬ 
tle Bears.— (Our Little Ones.) 

Two little eyes, blue, blue. See Little Servants.— 
Nutting. 

Two little eyes to look to God. See Two Little Eyes. 
—Anon. 

Two little feet running up and down. See I’d Be, 
Wouldn’t You?—Anon. 

Two little feet, so small that both may nestle. See 
Little Feet.—Allen. 

Two little feet went pattering by. See Two Little 
Feet.—Anon. 

Two little friends went off to school. See Two 
Friends, The.—Richards. 

Two little girls are better than one. See One and 
One.—Anon. 

Two little hands, so soft and white. See Hands and 
Fingers.—Anon. 

Two little kittens, one stormy night. See Little 
Kittens, The.—Anon. 

Two little old dames I know. See Two Little Old 
Dames.—Anon. 

Two little ones, grown tired of play. See Drifted Out 
to Sea.—Thorpe. 

Two little squirrels, out in the sun. See Squirrel’s 
Lesson, The.—Anon. 

Two little stockings hung side by side. See Two 
Little Stockings. The.—Hunt. 

Two little tots on the carpet at play. See Playing 
School.—Caskin. 

Two little urchins started out. See Unequal Partner¬ 
ship, An.—Upham. 

Two lovers by a moss-grown spring. See Two Iitners 
—Eliot. 

Two lovers lean on the garden gate. See Midnight 
Tragedy, A.—Anon. 

Two lovers ’mong the weedy brake. See From June to 
June.—Dike. 

Two lovers were strolling in May. See In May.— 
Stern. 

Two loves had I.* Now both are dead. See Dead 
Love.—Adams. 

Two loves took lodgings in a heart. See Terrible 
Example, A.—Brewer. 

Two low whistles, quaint and clear. See Guild’s 
Signal.—Harte. 

Two magpies sat on a garden rail. See Two Little 
Magpies Sat on a Wall.-—Anon. 

Two maiden dames of sixty-two. See Virginia Tobacco. 
—Gregson. 

Two men fighting in mid-air. See Duel on a High 
Tower, A.—Anon. 

Two men I honor, and no third. See Past and Present 
(Honor of Labor, The).—Carlyle. 

Two monks were in a cell at close of day. See Master¬ 
piece of Brother Felix, The.—White. 

“Two months,” the questioned hearer said. See 
Death of Cardinal Mazarin, The.—Sigourney. 

Two more fences came, laced high and stiff with the 
Shire thorn. See Under Two Flags ( Forest King’s 
Race).—La Ram(e. 

Two nights thus pass’d; the lily-handed morn. See 
Britannia’s Pastorals (Description of a Musical 
Consort of Birds, A).—Browne. 

Two of far nobler shape, erect and tall. See Paradise 
Lost (Adam and Eve).—Milton. 


Two old crows confabulous sat perched upon a tree. 
See Two Old Crows.—Anon. 

Two peasants homeward from the fields of toil. See 
Angelus, The.—Miller. 

Two people, young and fresh and fair. See Old Story, 
An.—Kavanaugh. 

Two pilgrims came to a castle gate. See Two Pilgrims. 
—Anon. 

Two pilgrims from the distant plain. See Love and 
Time.—MacCarthy. 

Two qualities, Athenians, an upright statesman 
should possess. See Oration on the Crown.— 
Demosthenes. 

Two robin redbreasts built their nests. See Robin 
Redbreasts, The.—“Aunt Effie.” 

Two robin redbreasts in their nest. See Two Robin 
Redbreasts.—-Anon. 

Two roses growing on a single tree. See Wedding 
Song, A.—Savary. 

Two ruby lips are hers; a pair. See To Ruby Lips.— 
Richmond. 

Two scraps of foundation, some fragments of lace. 
See Recipe for a Modern Bonnet.—Anon. 

Two seas, amid the night. See Two Oceans, The.— 
Sterling. 

Two shall be born the whole wide world apart. See 
Fate.—Spalding. 

Two slender hands upon Time’s dial-plate. See Dial 
of Time, The.-—Hawkes. 

Two small boys were looking at the large black and red 
posters. See Street Gamin’s Story of the Play, 
A.—Anon. 

Two snowy arms around his neck. See Woman’s 
Wiles.—Chapman. 

Two soldiers lay on the battlefield. See As the Sun 
Went Down.—Anderson. 

Two soldiers, lying as \or where] they fell. See Death, 
the Peace-maker.—Flagg. 

Two souls diverse out of our human sight. See On 
the Deaths of Thomas Carlyle and George Eliot.— 
Swinburne. 

Two spiders, so the story goes. See Church Spider, 
The.—Anon. 

Two stars once on their lonely way. See Orbits.— 
Le Gallienne. 

Two steps, your Highness,—let me go before. See On 
the Picture of the Last Supper, at Milan.—Story. 

Two Sundays in the year are now dedicated to the spirit 
of happiness. See Easter.—Swing. 

Two things love can do. See Letter, A.—Phelps. 

Two things there are with Memory will abide. See 
Memories.—Aldrich. 

Two times eleven are twenty-two. See Arithmetic 
Lesson, The.—Anon. 

Two travelers started on a tour. See Faith and 
Reason.—Case. 

Two travelers through the gateway went. See Seeing 
and not Seeing.—Brooks. 

Two voices are there; one is of the deep. See Sonnet, A. 
—Stephen. 

Two Voices are there; one is of the sea. See Thought 
of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland.— 
Wordsworth. 

Two webfoot brothers loved a fair. See That Gentle 
Man from Boston Town.—Miller. 

Two went to pray? O rather say. See Two Went 
up into the Temple to Pray.—Crashaw. 

Two winged genii in the air. See Love and Youth.— 
Linton. 

Two women met in Paradise, where they had recently 
arrived. See Unrest in Paradise.—Anon. 

Two worlds hast thou to dwell in, Sweet. See First 
Skylark of Spring, The.—Watson. 

Two worlds there are. To one our eyes we strain. 
See Two Worlds.—Collins. 

Two worthy farmers once fell out. See “I See the 
Point.”—McCord. 

Two yachtsmen, after storm—out of whose clutch 
their yacht had been wrenched. See Two 
Drowned Lovers.—Murray. 

Two Yankee wags, one summer day. See Here She 
Goes and there She Goes.—-Nack. 

Two young fair lovers. See Conso'ation (Lovers).— 
Arnold. 

Two young men, when I was poor. See Unwise 
Choice, The.—Cary. 

Two young, short-sighted fellows, Chang and Ching. 
See Test of Sight, The.—Cranch. 

’Twuz jest this way: I saw one day a chipper, cross¬ 
eyed girl. See He Loved a Cross-eyed Girl.— 
Waldron. 

Tying her bonnet under her chin. See Love-knot, 
The.—Perry. 


902 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Unfurl 


Tying her shoe, I knelt at Daphne’s feet. See On 
Tying Daphne’s Shoe.—Bryan. 

Tyre of the farther West! be thou, too, warned. See 
United States.—Keble. 

Tyre of the West, and glorying in the name. See 
England.—Newman. 


u 

Ueber alien Gipfeln. See Wanderer’s Night-song. 
The.—Goethe. 

Ugh, how cold the night grows! See While Shepherds 
W atched.—Denton. 

“Ugh, ugh! I’m awful sick, mister, I am.” See Sue 
an’ Me.—Belasco. 

Ugh, ugh, ugh! Well, they tell me I’m growing old. 
See Gay Old Man am I, A.—Sedgwick. 

Ugh! when the wolf strays in the snare. See Poca¬ 
hontas.—Hartwell. 

Ulysses S. Grant was a man of destiny. See Great and 
Noble Man, A.—Vilas. 

Unanswered yet! the prayers your lips have pleaded. 
See Sometime—Somewhere.—Browning. 

Unarmed and unattended, walks the czar. See 
Incident, An.—Macdonell. 

Unborn ages and visions of glory crowd upon my soul. 
See Address before the New York Historical 
Society.—W ebster. 

Unbounded courage and compassion joined. See 
Campaign, The.—Addison. 

Uncle Abe an’ Aunt Maria. See Character Sketch, A 
—Anon. 

Uncle Ben Williamson was as well known in the town 
as the mayor or the governor. See How Jinny 
Eased Her Mind.—Page. 

Uncle Benjamin thinks he is growing worse. See 
Brought to his Senses.—Anon. 

Uncle Caleb, why don’t you buy some cheese and 
some good butter. See Heavy Shower, A.—Anon. 

Uncle Ethan had a theory that a man’s character 
could be told. See Uncle Ethan Ripley’s. Specu¬ 
lation.—Garland. 

Uncle Finn is a typical backwoodsman. See How 
Uncle Finn had the Laugh on the Boys.—Anon. 

Uncle he says ’at ’way down in the sea. See Session 
with Uncle Sidney, A (Uncle Brightens up).— 
Riley. 

Uncle Jack came to our house the other day. See 
Lost Opportunity, The.—Goodfellow. 

Uncle Nathan, you promised us boys that if we 
wouldn’t pester you. See Uncle Nathan’s Indian. 
—Widney. 

Uncle Noah Clayton, with promise of bettering his 
business condition. See Uncle Noah’s Ghost.— 
Cobb. 

“Uncle Peter, I find that after you finished white¬ 
washing my cellar.” See Squire’s Rooster, The.— 
Neall. 

Uncle Peter Tascus Runnels has been feeble some of late. 
See Uncle Tascus and the Deed.—Day. 

Uncle Sam has omitted from his census questions a 
great many queries. See New Series of Census 
Questions, A.—Anon. 

Uncle Sam is growing old. See Uncle Sam’s Birthday. 
—Denton. 

Uncle Sidney, when he wuz here. See Squirtgun 
Uncle Maked Me, The.—-Riley. 

Uncle Simon he clum up a tree. See Uncle Simon and 
Uncle Jim.—Ward. 

Unconquerably, men venture on the quest. See Polar 
Quest, The.—Burton. 

Uncover to the flag; bare head. See Uncover to the 
Flag.—Cheverton. 

Under a spreading chestnut tree. See Village Black¬ 
smith, The.—Longfellow. 

Under a sultry, yellow sky. See Mercedes.—Stoddard. 

Under a throne I saw a virgin sit. See Cselica (Eliza- 
betha Regina).—Brooke. 

Under a toadstool crept a wee elf. See Elf and the 
Dormouse, The.—Herford. 

Under an aged oak was Willy laid. See Shepherd’s 
Pipe, The (Death of Philarete, The).—Browne. 

Under her gentle seeing. See On a Young Poetess’s 
Grave.—Buchanan. 

Under hostile fire, on a foreign soil, fighting in a 
common cause. See Republic’s Duty, The.— 
McKinley. 

Under my keel another boat. See Shadow Boat, A.— 
Bates. 


Under my window, under my window. See Under 
My Window.—Westwood. 

Under the alders, along the brooks. See Partridges.— 
Worden. 

Under the apple bough. See Remembrance.— 
Lathrop. 

Under the apple trees, spreading and thick. See 
Fanny’s Mud Pies.—Sill. 

Under the arch of Life, where love and death. See 
Soul’s Beauty.—Rossetti. 

Under the cooling shadow of a stately elm. See Con¬ 
templation.—Bradstreet. 

Under the coverlet’s snowy fold. See Oldest Story, 
The.—Chadwick. 

Under the drifted snows, with weeping and holy rite. 
See Under the Snows.—Bates. 

Under the drifting winter snow. See New Year’s 
Exercise, A.—Hadley. 

Under the grass, in the bright summer weather. See 
Song of the Cricket , The.—Miller. 

Under the great hill sloping bare. See "King’s 
Missive, 1661, The.”—Whittier. 

Under the green hedges after the snow. See Violets.— 
Moultrie. 

Under the greenwood tree. See As You Like It 
(Greenwood Tree, The).—Shakespeare. 

Under the hay-stack little Boy Blue. See Little Boy 
Blue.—Richardson. 

Under the lamp-light, dead in the street. See Dead 
in the Street.—Anon. 

Under the lamplight, watch them come. See Under 
the Lamplight.—Blount. 

Under the lindens lately sat. See Under the Lindens.— 
Landor. 

Under the maple boughs we sat. See Chivalrie.— 
Baker. 

Under the maples the mourners met to bury the beau¬ 
tiful Violet. See Skylark, The.—Hageman. 

Under the open sky, in the odorous air of the orchard. 
See Evangeline.—Longfellow. 

Under the reign of the Moorish caliphs. See same. 
—Anon. 

"Under the roots of the roses.” See Mors et Vita.— 
Stoddard. 

Under the shadow of a cliff. See “Rise,” A.—Mc- 
Gaffey. 

Under the slanting light of the yellow sun of October. 
See Modern Romans, The.-—Johnson. 

Under the snow our baby lies. See Under the Snow.— 
Anon. 

Under the tree the farmer said. See Cherries.— 
Weatherley. 

Under the violets, blue and sweet. See Under the 
Violets.—Young. 

Under the ward of the Polar star. See Trail of Gold, 
The.—Pollock. 

Under the wide and starry sky. See Requiem, A.— 
Stevenson. 

Under this stone doth lie. See Epitaph on Sir Thomas 
Fairfax.—Buckingham. 

Under what circumstances, O Athenians, ought the 
strenuous and patriotic orator to appear? See 
Oration on the Crown, The (Reply to yEschines). 
—Demosthenes. 

Under yonder beech-tree single on the green-sward. 
See Love in the Valley.-—Meredith. 

Under your rounded chin. See Violoniste.—Quint. 

Underneath an old oak tree. See Raven and the Oak, 
The.—Coleridge. 

Underneath the growing grass. See Bourne, The.— 
Rossetti. 

Underneath the sod low-lying. See Dirge for a Young 
Girl.—Fields. 

Underneath this myrtle shade. See Epicure, The.— 
Cowley. 

Underneath this sable hearse. See Epitaph on the 
Countess of Pembroke.—Jonson. 

Underneath this stone doth lye. See Epitaph on Eliz¬ 
abeth L. H.—Jonson. 

Undeveloped man is the embodiment of possibilities. 
See Master Character of Victor Hugo, The.— 
Sellers. 

Une petite pi'che dans un orchard fleurit. See Little 
Peach, The.—Anon. 

“Unearthing old treasures, Miss Olive?” See As Seen 
in Later Years.—Heywood. 

Unfading Hope! when life’s last embers burn. See 
Pleasures of Hope, The (Hope).—Campbell. 

Unflinching Dante of a later day. See To an Imperilled 
Traveler.—Dole. 

Unfurl the starry banner. See That Starry Flag of 
Ours.—Anon. 


903 




Unhappy 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Unhappy dreamer, who outwinged in flight. See On 
the Death of a Metaphysician.—Santayana. 

Unheard in Summer’s flaring ray. See To the Red¬ 
breast.—Cornish. 

“Union for the sake of the Union.” See Flag of the 
Union, The (Cause of the Union, The).—Winthrop. 

Universal education, without distinction of race, must 
be encouraged. See Hundredth Anniversary of 
the Surrender of Lord Cornwallis, The (Universal 
Education).—Winthrop. 

Universal Suffrage!—what is it but the overthrow of 
violence and brute force. See Universal Suffrage. 
—Hugo. 

Unless coupled with greatness, individual littleness 
seldom becomes notorious. See Human Little¬ 
ness.—De Shon. 

Unless my senses are more dull. See Where are Sighs? 
—Landor. 

Unless you can think when the song is done. See 
Woman’s Shortcomings, A (Unless).—Browning. 

Unlike are we, unlike, O princely Heart! See Sonnets 
from the Portuguese, III.—Browning. 

Unlock the door; let no foot-fall from the present 
disturb this shadowy scene. See Dream Power, 
The.—-Anon. 

Unmannered March hath many a prank. See Madcap 
April.—Jenks. 

Unmoored, unmanned, unheeded on the deep. See 
Derelict, The.—Foote. 

Unnoted as the setting of a star. See Mulford.— 
Whittier. 

Unravel all your tangled cheats. See To the American 
Poet.—Knowles. 

Unroll Erin’s flag! fling its folds to the breeze. See 
Erin’s Flag.—Ryan. 

Unsere Geschichte spielt in einer Weinhandlung. See 
Der Letzte Gast.—Drobisch. 

Unstable dream, according to the place. See Lover 
Having Dreamed Enjoying of his Love, The.— 
Wyatt. 

Until my system collapsed. See Invalid in Lodgings, 
An.—Barrie. 

Until 1768 Samuel Adams did not despair of a peaceful 
issue. See Centennial Celebration of Concord 
Fight (Samuel Adams and the New England Town 
Meeting).—Curtis. 

Until the 7th of March, 1850. See Daniel Webster.— 
Hoar. 

Until we know why the rose is sweet. See Greatness 
of the Poet, The.—Curtis. 

Untrammelled Giant of the West. See Parting of the 
Ways, The.—Gilder. 

Untremulous in the river clear. See Summer Storm.— 
Lowell. 

Untwine those ringlets. Ev’ry dainty clasp. See 
Frangipanni.—Anon. 

Unveil the statue vast and tall. See Statue of Liberty 
Unveiled, The.—Bungay. 

Unwarmed by any sunset light. See Snow-bound. 
—Whittier. 

Unwatched, the garden bough shall sway. See In 
Memoriam.—Tennyson. 

Up and away! For the east wind is blowing. See 
Sea-song.—Baker. 

Up and away, like the dew of the morning. See Ever¬ 
lasting Memorial, The.—Bonar. 

Up and down the village streets. See Prophecy of 
Samuel Sewall, The.—Whittier. 

Up before the bar of justice. See His Sentence.— 
Eliot. 

Up, Fairy! quit thy chick-weed bower. See Culprit 
Fay, The (Second Quest, The).—Drake. 

Up for the conflict! let your battle peal. See To the 
Rescue.—Anon. 

Up from earth’s centre through the Seventh Gate. 
See RuMiy&t of Omar Khayyfim (Master-knot, 
The).—Fitzgerald. 

Up from the bench the other day. See “Charge of the 
Lightning Judge, The.”—Porter. 

Up from the meadows rich with corn. See Barbara 
Freitchie.—Whittier. 

Up from the South at break of day. See Sheridan’s 
Ride.—Read. 

Up, Gregory! the cloudy east. See Christmas Story, 
A.—Cary. 

Up in a wild where no one comes to look. See Up in a 
Wild.—Whitney. 

Up in early morning light. See Dan’s Wife.—Woods. 

Up in the attic I found them, locked in the cedar chest. 
See Old Daguerreotypes, The.—Lincoln. 

Up in the attic stowed away. See Song of the Spinning 
Wheel, The.—Anon. 


Up in the attic where I slept. See When I Was a Boy 
—Field. 

Up in the east a lark was springing. See Singer, The.— 
Robinson. 

Up in the loft, ’mid scented clover. See Up in the 
Loft.—Carleton. 

Up in the morning’s no’ for me. See Up in the Morning 
Early.—Burns. 

Up in the north if thou sail with me. See Beaver, The. 
—Howitt. 

Up in the tree top, down in the ground. See Summer 
is Coming.—Anon. 

Up in your cage of gold. See Canary, The.—Sherman. 

Up into the cherry tree. See Foreign Lands.— 
Stevenson. 

Up many flights of crazy stairs. See Our Sister. 
—(Household Words.) 

Up, my dogs, merrily. See Nor’-west Courier, The.— 
Logan. 

Up! quit thy bower! late wears the hour. See Beacon, 
The (Morning Song).—Baillie. 

Up rose the sun o’er Egypt’s tents. See Petit Jean.— 
Barr. 

Up spoke a little lady. See At the Party.—Phelps. 

Up sprang the sturdy miner, whose locks were streaked 
with gray. See Judge Lynch.—Jones. 

Up springs the lark. See Seasons, The (Songster, 
The).—Thomson. 

Up the airy mountain. See Fairies, The.—Allingham. 

Up the dale and down the bourne. See Song of the 
Summer Winds.—Darley. 

Up the hill, whip me not, down the hill, hurry me not. 
See Horse’s Petition to his Driver. A.—Anon. 

Up the idling reef-set bell. See White Gull, The.— 
Carman. 

Up the sea-saddened valley, at evening’s decline. See 
Dirge of Rory O’More.—De Vere. 

Up the streets of Aberdeen. See Barclay of Ury.— 
Whittier. 

Up the street[s]of Slumber town. See Dream Peddler, 
The.—Blinn. 

Up thro’ the woodpath with bird songs. See Beautiful 
May.—Anon. 

Up through the great Black Forest. See In the Black 
Forest.—Thaxter. 

Up through the rocky pastures. See “Queen Anne’s 
Lace.”—Benedict. 

Up, Timothy, up with your staff and away! See 
Childless Father, The.—Wordsworth. 

Up to her chamber window. See Nocturne.— 
Aldrich. 

Up to me sweet childhood looketh. See Mother's 
Morning Prayer, A.—Anon. 

Up to the frescoed ceiling. See Those Ashes.—Mun- 
kittnck 

Up to the hills I lift mine eyes. See Psalm CXXT.— 
Watts. 

Up to the throne of God is borne. See Laborer’s 
Noonday Hymn, The.—Wordsworth. 

Up! up! let us a voyage take. See Northern Seas, The. 
—Howitt. 

Up, up, my friend! and quit your books. See Tables 
Turned, The.—Wordsworth. 

Up! up! ye dames, ye [or and] lasses gay! See Zapolya 
(Choral Song of Illyrian Peasants).—Coleridge. 

Up with me! up with me into the clouds! See To a 
Skylark.—Wordsworth. 

Up with the banner of the free! See Flag, The.— 
Flash. 

Up with the lark in the first flush of morning. See 
Morning Ride, A.—Anon. 

Up with windows, up with hearts! See Coming of 
Spring, The.—Muller. 

Up with your heads, ye sylvan lords! See Forest 
Trees, The.—Cook. 

Up yonder in Buena Park. See Delectable Ballad 
of the Waller Lot, The.—Field. 

Upo’ this tree there grows sic fruit. See Heard Ye 
o’ the Tree o’ Liberty.—Bums. 

Upon a barricade thrown ’cross the street. See At the 
Barricade.—Hugo. 

Upon a cliff that frowned above the sea. See Time’s 
Silent Lesson.—Smith. 

Upon a cloud among the stars we stood. See Flight. 
The.—Mifflin. 

Upon a day, as Love lay sweetly slumbering. See 
Cupid and the Bee.—Spenser. 

Upon a day in Ramadan. See Caliph’s Draught, The. 
—Arnold. 

Upon a hundred thousand plains. See Maize for the 
Nation’s Emblem.—Thaxter. 

Upon a mountain height, far from the sea. See 
Wanderer, The.—Field. 


904 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Yell 


Upon a rock that, high and sheer. See Hunter’s 
Vision, The.—Bryant. 

Upon a rock yet uncreate. See Cosmic Egg, The.— 
Anon. 

Upon a showery [or shadowy] night and still. See 
Dandelions, The.—Cone. 

Upon a snowy Christmas eve. See Note to Santa 
Claus, A.—Anon. 

Upon a time a neighing steed. See Council of Horses, 
The.—Gay. 

Upon ane [or one] stormy Sunday. See Plaidie, The.— 
Sibley. 

Upon every teacher in the public schools of the United 
States. See Public School Teacher in the Re¬ 
public, The.—Balch. 

Upon her head she wears a crown of stars. See Truth. 
—Jonson. 

Upon her head the snow-hills. See Our Delight.— 
Murray. 

Upon her lips I pressed a kiss. See Upon' Her Lips. 
—( Y ale Record .) 

Upon her snowy couch she drooping lies. See Mother. 
—Goodale. 

Upon her throne of hills in fear and trembling. See 
Coriolanus.—McGuire. 

Upon his royal throne reclined the King. See King’s 
Wooing, The.—Renaud. 

Upon his wooden hobby-horse. See Prophecy.—Alt. 

Upon life’s highway I was hastening. See Last and 
W orst.—Allison. 

Upon my bier no garlands lay. See Now.—Dodge. 

Upon my head they placed a fruitless crown. See 
Macbeth.—Shakespeare. 

Upon my heart thy accents sweet. See On His 
Marriage to Mary Godwin.—Shelley. 

Upon my lap my sovereign sits. See Lullaby.—Row¬ 
lands. 

Upon my lips she laid her touch divine. See Sorrow.— 
Thaxter. 

Upon my mantel-piece they stand. See Moral in 
Sevres, A.—Howells. 

Upon Niagara’s glorious fall. See Average Modem 
Traveler, The.—Anon. 

Upon Nirwana’s brink the riihat stood. See Rahat, 
The.—Rooney. 

Upon our return to London this morning we found 
your letter awaiting us. Eugene Field to his 
Children.—Field. 

Upon St. Michael’s Isle. See Burial of Robert Brown¬ 
ing, The.—Field. 

Upon that night when fairies light. See Halloween.— 
Burns. 

Upon the brown and frozen sod. See Prairie Path, 
The.—Anno. 

Upon the cars—in spirit gay. See Pretty Maid of 
Kissimmee, The.—Benton. 

Upon the day I meet thee face to face. See Love- 
message, A.—Barnes. 

Upon the field of battle the dying trumpeter lay. See 
Dying Trumpeter, The.—Moser. 

Upon the heights of Sillery one day. See At Spencer 
Grange.—Kirby. 

Upon the hills the wind is sharp and cold. See Evening 
Brings Us Home.—Anon. 

Upon the hurricane deck of one of our gunboats. See 
De Pint wid Ole Pete.—Anon. 

Upon the king! let us our lives, our souls. See King 
Henry V.—Shakespeare. 

Upon the kitchen table with her work unfinished yet. 
See Lost Page, The.—Anon. 

Upon the lilac-bush I heard. See Kings and Queens. 
—Douglas. 

Upon the lonely shore I lie. See By the Sea.— 
Clemmer. 

Upon the poop the captain stands. See Shipwreck, 
The.—Palmer. 

Upon the sadness of the sea. See Sunrise never Failed 
Us yet. The.—Thaxter. 

Upon tlie shore of Zuyder Zee, where lands are broad 
and low. See Stavoren.—Conant. 

Upon the stairs his loud tip-toes. See Conjugal 
Lament.—Pond. 

Upon the triangle would he play. See Triangular 
Tragedy.—Anon. 

Upon the white sea-sand. See Losses.—Brown. 

Upon their arms they lay and slept. See Reawakening. 
—Spencer. 

Upon their tree-crowned hills the gods reclined. See 
Flight of the Gods, The.—Biddles. 

Upon thy pictured lineaments I looked. See To the 
Portrait of One “Gone Before.’’—Butterfield. 

Upon two neighboring village houses. See Two 
Chimneys. The.—Strong. 


•Upon Wahsatch’s peaks of snow. See Binley and 
“46.”—Anon. 

Uprising see the fitful lark. See same. —Anon. 

Upstairs in the large closet, child. See Phantom, The. 
—Ramal. 

Uranian Aphrodite, far. See Hymn to Aphrodite, A.— 
De Tabley. 

Urge me no more—your prayers are vain. See 
Regulus.—Dale. 

Urns and odours bring away! See Two Noble Kins¬ 
men, The (Dirge of the Three Queens).—Shake¬ 
speare and Fletcher. 

Us two wuz boys when we fell out. See Our Two 
Opinions.—Field. 

Use sin as it will use you; spare it not, for it will not 
spare you. See Sin.—Baxter. 

Us-folks is purty poor. See Dubious “Old Kriss,” A.— 
Riley. 

Utter the song, O my soul! See The Flight and Return 
of Mahomet.—Coleridge. 

Uvedale, thou piece of the first times. See Epigram: 
“Uvedale, thou,” etc.—Jonson. 


V 

Vacation is coming and we are all glad. See For 
Vacation.—Anon. 

Vacation is coming, oh, oh! oh, oh! See Daisy Drill.— 
Halifax. 

Vacation is coming; the good time is near. See Vaca¬ 
tion.—Hadley. 

Vagation dime vas coom again. See Strauss’ Boedry. 
-—Adams. 

Vain Britons, boast no longer with proud indignity. 
See War and Washington.—Seward. 

Vain human kind! fantastic race! See Verses on the 
Death of Dr. Swift.—Swift. 

Vain is the dream! However hope may rave. See 
White Pacha, The.—Lang. 

Vain the concern which you express. See To the Duke 
de Noalles.—Prior. 

Vain—vain—give o’er! His eye. See Parrhasius. 
—Willis. 

Vainly for us the sunbeams shine. See Casa’s Dirge.— 
Moir. 

Vake up, my schveet! Vake up, my lofe! See Dutch¬ 
man’s Serenade, The.—Anon. 

Valdemar Svenson was conscious of staggering. See 
Crimson Shroud of Olaf Guldmar, The.—Corelli. 

Valiant, defiant and free. See Luther.—Miller. 

Vane, young in years, but in sage counsel old. See 
Sonnet: To Sir Henry Vane.—Milton. 

Vanity Fair, Vanity Fair. See Vanity Fair.—Anon. 

“Vanity of Vanities,” the world is full of sin. See 
“Vanity of Vanities.”—Jones. 

Vanity, saith the preacher, vanity! See Bishop Orders 
His Tomb at Saint Praxed’s Church, The.— 
Browning. 

Various are the appellations given to life. See Ocean 
of Life, The.—Rose. 

Various his subjects, yet they jointly warm. See 
Epigram on Waller.—Middleton. 

Various occurrences had led to the broadest excite¬ 
ment. See Lorna Doone (Death of Carver Doone). 
—Blackmore. 

Various the trees, and passing foliage here. See 
Ravenna Pine Forest.—Hunt. 

Vas marriage a failure? Veil, now, dot depends. 
See “Vas Marriage a Failure?”—Adams. 

Vasari tells that Luca Signorelli. See Episode, An.— 
Symonds. 

Vast and starless, the pall of heaven. See Sailing the 
Mississippi at Midnight.—Whitman. 

Vast as our firmament may be, has it boundaries. See 
Day Conceals what Night Reveals.—Nichol. 

Vast bodies of philosophy. See To Mr. Hobbs.— 
Cowley. 

Vast hollow voids, beyond the utmost reach. See He 
Made the Stars also.—Mifflin. 

Vast superstition! Glorious style of weakness! See 
Mustapha (Chorus of Tartars).—Brooke. 

Vast, unrevealed, in silence and the night. See Train 
among the Hills, The.—Roberts. 

Vastness which grows, but grows to harmonize. See 
St. Peter’s at Rome.—Byron. 

Veil, now, O Liberty, thy blushing face. See Ode on 
the Assassination of President Garfield.—Anon. 

Veil den, I dells you mit te dime I goed a huntin’. See 
How the Dutchman Killed the Woodchuck.— 
Anon. 


905 




Veil 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Veil, der sircus am out; der shpangled-bandyloon 
ladies. See “Uncle Schneider” visits the Side. 
Shows.—Anon. 

Veil, I baed you she vas handsome, mid ackomblish- 
mendts rare and fine. See Dot Young Viddow 
Clara.—Pretzel. 

Veil, I tinks I has done pooty veil. See Who Wears 
the Breeches?—M’Bride. 

Veil, mine freund, you know dat I hav on my het dat 
leedle bump. See Dutchman’s Dolly Varden, The. 
—Anon. 

Veil, now, I haf got started in dis courtin’ peesness. 
See Narrow Escape, A.—Anon. 

Veil, now, vat you s’pose I haf corned up here for? 
See How to Make Hasty Pudding.—-Anon. 

Veil, of you’ll only lisden, I will told you aboud dot 
barty. See Mygel Snyder’s Barty.—Williams. 

‘Veil, Sammy.”—“Veil, my Prooshan Blue.”— See 
Pickwick Papers, The (Sam Weller’s Valentine).— 
Dickens. 

Veil, ven I vas a leedle young. See Dot New Song.— 
Head. 

Veil, von morning I says to Hans. See Katrina’s Visit 
to New York.—Anon. 

Vellow mit der Zitizens:—Vat for ve meets here to-day, 
hey? See Hans von Speigel’s Fourth of July 
Oration.—Gris. 

Ven a prig has come to grief. See Ticket of Leave, 
The.— (Punch.) 

Ven der shbring dot is coming. See "Dis den I’ll Dink 
of Dou.”—Gooft. 

Ven I come home py nighd dimes, yet. See I Vunder 
Vy?—Anon. 

Ven I lays myself down in mine lonely pedroom. See 
Hans in a Fix.—Anon. 

Venerable, ancient, solitary mound. See Bear Butte 
Mountain.—Wilson. 

Venerable Men: You have come down to us from a 
former generation. See Bunker Hill Monument, 
The (Address at Bunker Hill).—Webster. 

Vengeful across the cold November moors. See Pity 
of the Leaves, The.—Robinson. 

Veni, Creator Spiritus. See same. —St. Gregory. 

Veni Sancte Spiritus. See same. —Robert II. 

Venice, thou siren of sea-cities, wrought. See Venice. 
—Symonds. 

Venus fair did ride. See Shepherd’s Song of Venus and 
Adonis, The.—Constable. 

Venus has lit her silver lamp. See Lamp in the West, 
The.—Higginson. 

Venus one day, as story goes. See Reverse; or, Mrs. 
Cludd, The.—Swift. 

Venus, take my votive glass. See Lady who Offers 
her Looking-glass to Venus, The.—Prior. 

Vera Victoria! What is it? ’Tis a query that has 
ever vexed the ages. See Vera Victoria.— 
Soper. 

Versailles!—-Up the chestnut alley. See Pompadour, 
The.—Thombury. 

Verse, a breeze ’mid blossoms straying. See Youth 
and Age.—Coleridge. 

Very dark the autumn sky. See Belated Violet, A.— 
Herford. 

Very high in the pine tree. See Turtle Dove’s Nest, 
The.—"Aunt Effie ” 

“Very interesting conversation in here?” asked papa. 
See Lisping Child, The.—Anon. 

Very little ones are we. , See same. —Anon. 

Very right—but hold! What wonder meets my sight? 
See Yankee’s Stratagem, The.—Dale. 

Very well, ma’am, very well. See School for Scandal, 
The.—Sheridan. 

Very well, Martha, show the gentleman in. See In¬ 
compatibility.—Clement. 

Very wet weather lately, Johnson! See Bones on Bad 
Weather.—Anon. 

Vesper bells were softly chiming. See Grave by the 
Sorrowful Sea, The.—Bayley. 

Vespers were ended. The last clouds of incense. See 
Angelo.—Sterne. 

Vex not the grave with tears; its shadows deep. See 
Translation from Propertius.—Head. 

Vex not thou the poet’s mind. See To the Critic.— 
Tennyson. 

Vexing little trials. See Little Crosses.—Wyman. 

Vhen in der nighd der sun goed oud. See Der Moon.— 
Whipple. 

Vhen Shicago vas a leedle villages. See Dyin’ Vords 
of Isaac.—Anon. 

Vhen shnow und ice vas on der ground. See “Cut, 
Cut Behind.”-—Adams. 

Victor in poesy! Victor in Romance! See To Victor 
Hugo.—Tennyson. 


Victorious men of earth, no more. See Last Con¬ 
queror, The.—Shirley. 

“Victory!” This was the first that she read. See 
Unter den Linden.—Nason. 

View now the winter storm! above, one cloud. See 
Borough, The (Storm on the East Coast, A).— 
Crabbe. 

Viewed from the standpoint of a foreigner, our Gov¬ 
ernment. See Public Opinion the Reliance of Our 
Government.—Garfield. 

Vigil strange I kept on the field one night. See Vigil 
Strange I Kept on the Field.—Whitman. 

Vil ze professeur be arrive present! See Professor, The. 
—Urosby. 

Vill you nefer git de tinner ready? See Wash Day at 
Zofflecoffers.—Anon. 

Vill’st dou learn de Deutsche Sprache? See To a 
Friend Studying German.—Leland. 

Vine leaves rustled, moonbeams shone. See After¬ 
thought, An.—Baker. 

Violet! sweet violet! See Violet, The.—Lowell. 

Violet, violet, sparkling with dew. See Wild Violet, 
The.—Gould. 

Violets! deep-blue violets! See same. —Landon. 

Violets, violets, sweet March [ wr. spring] violets. 
See Violets.—Craik. 

Virginia Cleveland, I declare! See Careless Doll, A.— 
Anon. 

Virtue concealed within our breast. See Horace, 
Book 4, Ode 9. Addressed to Archbishop King.— 
Swift. 

Virtue, liberty and law are the acknowledged and essen¬ 
tial elements of our civilization. See Voter’s 
Responsibility, The.—Demorest. 

Virtuous and faithful Heberden, whose skill. See 
Retirement (Dejection and Retirement).—Cowper. 

Vital spark of heavenly flame! See Dying Christian 
to His Soul, The.—Pope. 

Vocalize in silver strains, and with pennies six. See 
Sing a Song a Sixpence.—Anon. 

Voice of Summer, keen and shrill. See To a Cricket.— 
Bennett. 

Voice of the deeps thou art! But not the wild. See 
Emerson.—Betts. 

Voice of the summer wind. See Grasshopper, The.— 
Tennyson. 

Voiceless lies the broken banjo. <See Broken Banjo, 
The.—Gregory. 

Volumes have been written telling. See Power of 
i Temper, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Von day I shpeak mit a friend von me. See Fritz 
Valdher is Made a Mason.—Hoofnagle. 

Vonce I dook a trib to Coney. See Coney Island down 
der Pay.—Wood. 

Vonce upon a midnite dreary, as I pondered, veak and 
veary. See Dutchman and the Raven, The.— 
Anon. 

Vonst ubon ur dime, Yoppy und me—dot ish Yoppy’s 
varder—und mine vrow. See Yoppy’s Varder 
unt hees Drubbles.—Sidell. 

Vot a coundry dot is anyways! unt vat a peebles! See 
Jew’s Troubles, A.—Hurwood. 

Vot vas id mine baby was trying to say. See Ah-Goo. 
—Adams. 

“Vote for Edmunds!” exclaimed a politician. See 
Country Meeting Talk.—Anon. 

Voyager on golden air. See To a Humming-bird.— 
Cheney. 

Voyager upon life’s sea. See Paddle Your Own Canoe. 
—Bolton. 


w 

Waait till our Sally cooms in, fur thou mun a’ sights to 
tell. See Northern Cobbler, The.—Tennyson. 
Waal, girls—if you must know. See Aunt Jemima’s 
Courtship.—Anon. 

Waes-hael for knight and dame! See King Arthur’s 
Waes-hael.—Hawker. 

Wail for Daedalus, all that is fairest! See Daedalus.— 
Sterling. 

Wail, winter Winds, o’er moor and fell. See Old Year, 
. The—Fuller. 

Wailing, wailing, wailing, the wind over land and sea. 
See Rizpah.—Tennyson. 

Wainamoinen, ancient minstrel. See Kalevala, The 
_ (Birth of the Harp, The). 

Wainamoinen was born upon the ocean after his mother. 

See Kalevala, Story of the.—Rabb. 

“Wait a little,” you say; right; an’ I work an’ I wait to 
the end. See First Quarrel, The.—Tennyson. 


906 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Was 


Wait but a little while. See Song: “Wait but a little,” 
etc.—Gale. 

Wait for me, Mary, since you don’t seem to be in a 
hurry. See Last Day of School, The.—Denton. 

Wait not the morrow, but forgive me now. See For¬ 
give Me Now.—Anon. 

Wait not till the little hands are at rest. See Make 
Childhood Sweet.—Anon. 

Waiting on Him who knows us and our need. See 
Summum Bonum.—Guiney. 

Waiting to-night for the moon to rise. See Yosemite. 
The.—Bruce. 

Wake! For the sun who scattered into flight. See 
Rubaiyilt of Omar Khayyam (Overture).—Fitz¬ 
gerald. 

Wake her with the voice of cannon—give her colors to 
the morn! See Freedom’s Natal Day.—Griswold. 

Wake, Israel, wake! Recall to-day. See Banner of 
the Jew, The.—Lazarus. 

Wake me to-night, my mother dear. See Christmas 
Bells.—Keble. 

Wake not, but hear me, love! See-Ben-Hur (Song).— 
Wallace. 

Wake now, my Love, awake! for it is time. See 
Epithalamion (Wake now, my Love).—Spenser. 

Wake, soldier! wake! thy war-horse waits. See Dead 
Trumpeter, The.—Hervey. 

Wake the world to new conditions. See Sound the 
Reveille.—Jones. 

Wake up, little daisy, the summer is nigh. See Daisy, 
The.—Anon. 

Wake up, wake up, you pretty buds, and shake your 
green capes out. See What the April Breeze Said 
to the Trees.—St. John. 

Wake! wave aloft, thou Banner! let every snowy fold. 
See Banner of the Covenanters, The.—Norton. 

Wake your harp’s music! louder! higher! See In 
Memory of the Pilgrims.—Mellen. 

Waken, lords and ladies gay. See Hunting Song.— 
Scott. 

Waken, voice of the land’s devotion! See Song of 
1876, The.—Taylor. 

Wal, I feel like an eel. See Mister. Yer Gittin’ Old.— 
Cake. 

Wal, Kem’l, this ’ere’s th’ shanty, an’ this all’round’s 
th’ camp. See Over the Divide.—Manville. 

Wal, Mr. Brown, how’s things goin’ on with >’ there 
daown below? See Old Yankee Farmer, The.— 
Anon. 

Wal, yes, we quarrelled eout and eout, old Deacon 
Jones and me. See Aunt Rhody’s Dream.— 
Banks. 

Wal, you see, when Parson Carryl’s wife died. See 
Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories {Minister’s House¬ 
keeper, The).—Stowe. 

Wald my gud Lady lufe me best. See Garmond of 
Fair Ladies, The.—Henryson. 

Wales England wed; so I was bred. See Autobiog¬ 
raphy, An.—Rhys. 

Walk in, sir; your servant, sir, your servant. See 
Genius for the Stage, A.—Carey. 

Walk in, walk in to the great show. See Menagerie, 
The.—Anon. 

“Walk right in! How are you, Fred?” See Idyl of 
the Period, An.—Baker. 

Walk right in the settin’-room, Deacon; it’s all in a 
muddle, you see. See Foreclosure of the Mort¬ 
gage, The.—Corbett. 

Walk with the Beautiful and with the Grand. See 
Beautiful, The.—Borrington. 

Walkin’ wid Pat Magee. See Pat Magee.—Anon. 

Walking thus towards a pleasant grove. See Celinda. 
—Herbert. 

Wall, at last I’ve got our house kind of decent like. 
See Surprise Party, A.—Anon. 

Wall, I can’t make eout what upon airth old Obadiah 
Oakwood’s a cornin’ here for to-day. See Looking 
around for a Wife.—Anon. 

Wall, I feel purty outrageous mean goin’ along the road 
this way. See Poisoned Darkys, The.—McBride. 

Wall, I kalkilat.e I’m purty well fixed. See Married by 
the New Justice of the Peace.—Anon. 

Wall, I ’spose I’ll hev tew stop here and stay over 
night. See Frightened Lodger, A.—McBride. 

Wall, I’m home again. I’ve had consid’able of a 
tramp. See Village Meddler, The.—Anon. 

Wall, I’m tired, and I’m gettin’ tireder every day of 
my life. See “Pardnership.”—Kirk. 

Wall, it never entered my head that any of Jonathan 
Slyker’s children. See Jonathan’s Daughters.— 
McBride. 

Wall, I’ve got here at last, and I’m awful tired. See 
Trouble in a Mormon Family.—McBride. 


Wall, I’ve got here at last. I’ve come over a courtin’. 
See Assisting Hezekiah.—McBride. 

Wall, naow that we’ve got here. See One of the Dew- 
senburys.—Anon. 

Wall [tor. Well), no! I can’t tell whar he lives. See 
Jim Bludso, of the Prairie Belle.—Hay. 

Wall, now. Miss Pettengill, I s’pose you’ve come over 
to hear about my seein’ the Prince! See Mrs. 
Ward’s Visit to the Prince.—Janvirn. 

Wall, wife, it’s fifty years ago. See Prosperous 
Couple, A.—Anon. 

Walls of granite, upward towering. See Midnight Ex¬ 
press, The.—Richardson. 

Walt Whitman is no more. See Eulogy of Walt Whit¬ 
man.—Ingersoll. 

Waltz in, waltz in, ye little kids, and gather round my 
knee. See Spelling Bee at Angel’s, The.— 
Harte. 

Wan brightener of the fading year. See To the Chrys¬ 
anthemum.—Bennett. 

Wan day Roily was walking along the sthreets of Lon¬ 
don. See Sir Walter Raleigh and Queen Elizabeth. 
-—Allen. 

Wandering away on tired feet. See Wedding Bells.— 
Griffiths. 

Wandering through the city. See Rest.—Jennings. 

Wandering up and down one day. See Cobbler, The. 
—Anon. 

Wansfell! this household has a favoured lot. See 
Past Years of Home.—Wordsworth. 

Want any papers, Mister? See Newsboys, The.— 
Corbett. 

Want to see me, hey old chap? See “Jim.”—Lincoln. 

“Wanted—a boy.” How often we. See Boys Wanted. 
—(Chicago Post.) 

Wanted, a perfect lady. See Wanted, a Minister’s 
Wife.—Anon. 

Wanted, a stalwart man! See Wanted.—Ratcliffe. 

Wanted, no drunkards, or dead-beats or bummers. 
See “Not Wanted.”—Anon. 

Wanting is—what? See same. —Browning. 

Wanton droll, whose harmless play. See Kitten, The. 
—Baillie. 

War came! It was not the result of men’s ambition, 
North or South. See Immortal Memories.— 
Sheridan. 

“War is coming! Blood must flow!” See Peace at- 
any-price Man, A.— (.Baltimore Life.) 

War is dread when battle shock and fierce affray. See 
same. —Birch. 

War is emphatically, and more especially a war be¬ 
tween brethren. See Evils of War, The.—Dick¬ 
inson. 

War! war! no peace! peace is to me a war. See King 
John (“War! War!” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

War was in the old dominions, and proud Austria’s 
pride and boast. See Death Makes All Men 
Brothers.—Upham. 

War will yet cease from the whole earth. See Spirit of 
the Age Adverse to War, The.—Beckwith. 

Warble me now for joy of lilac-time. See Warble for 
Lilac-time.—Whitman. 

Warlike fife! See Fife, The.—Eberhart. 

Warm summer dwells upon thy cheeks. See To- 

—Heine. 

Warm Sunshine came down. See Crocus.—Anon. 

“Warm weather, Walter! Welcome warm weather!” 
See Winnifred, Walter, and the W’s.—Anon. 

Warm, wild, rainy wind, blowing fitfully. See May 
Morning.—Thaxter. 

Warmed by her hand and shadowed by her hair. See 
Love-letter, The.—Rossetti. 

Warrior of God, man’s friend, and tyrant’s foe. See 
Epitaph on General Gordon.—Tennyson. 

Warriors and chiefs! should the shaft or \wr. or the] 
sword. See Song of Saul before his Last Battle. 
—Byron. 

Warriors! who from the cannon’s mouth blow fire. 
See Effusion by a Cigar Smoker.—Smith. 

Wars, God forfend! may God defend from war. See 
Advice to Marry Betimes.—Hall. 

Warsaw’s last champion from her height surveyed. 
See Pleasures of Hope, The (Poland).—Campbell. 

Warwick! Gloucester! Clarence! See King Henry IV., 
Pt. II.—Shakespeare. 

War-worn, sun-scorched, stained with the dust of toil. 
See Welcome Home.—Christie. 

Was ever a soul so pestered? dear me! what shall I do? 
See Little Maid with Lovers Twain.—Dowe. 

Was ever a man so tormented? See Spanish Valet and 
the Waiting Maid, The.—Anon. 

Was ever sorrow like to our sorrow. See Voice of the 
Poor, The.—Wilde. 


907 





Was 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Was ever woman in this humor wooed? See Soliloquy 
of Richard III.—Shakespeare. 

Was gal name Moll had lamb. See Medley—Mary’s 
Little Lamb.—Anon. 

Was I to blame? I’ll tell you how. See Was I *o 
Blame?—Boride. 

Was it a dream or not.? See Dream, A.—Dallas. 

Was it a lie that they told me. See Night and Morn¬ 
ing.—( Good Words.) 

Was it for this, dear heart, we met? See Only for This. 
—Jackson. 

Was it not delightful that your brother and mine. See 
Army and Navy, The.—Anon. 

Was it the chime of a tiny bell. See Passing Away.— 
Pierpont. 

Was James A. Garfield great? Ask those early years. 
See same. —Swing. 

Was not Aunt May kind, to bring us these nice gifts? 
See Which is the Best.—Anon. 

Was not Count John here at supper? See Much Ado 
about Nothing.—Shakespeare. 

Was sorrow ever like unto our sorrow? See Voice of 
the Poor, The.—Wilde. 

Was the paiting very bitter? See By and By.— 
Anon. 

“Was the play good, my dear?’’ asked Mr. Greylock 
the other night. See Mrs. Greylock Tells about 
the Play.—Anon. 

Was there another Spring than this? See Was there 
Another Spring.—Hay. 

Was there ever a more signal distinction vouchsafed 
to mortal maji. See Centennial Oration (John 
Hancock).—Winthrop. 

Was there ever such a stone? a stockfish? See Wedding 
Day, The.—Pickering. 

Was this his face, and these the finding eyes. See On 
a Portrait of Columbus.—Woodberry. 

Wash! Whar’s yo’ daddy? See Never Mine de Why 
en Wharfo’.—Anon. 

Wash your hands, and wash your face. See Cleanli¬ 
ness.—Anon. 

Washed in the blood of the brave and the blooming. 
See God Save the Flag.—Holmes. 

Washing and wiping the dishes. <See Little Helpers.— 
Anon. 

Washington, as President of the United States. .See 
Washington’s Proclamation.—Anon. 

Washington has said. “There can be no greater error.” 
See Intervention in the Wars of Europe.—Clemens. 

Washington, Idaho and Arizona, the States of Oregon. 
See Argonauts. The.—Anon. 

Washington Johnson Leland Fine. See Darktown 
Nine, The.—Mason. 

Washington' Methinks I see his venerable form now 
before me. See Addition to the Capitol, The 
(W ashi ngt on).—Webster. 

Washington was greatly pleased with the Sellers Man¬ 
sion. See Gilded Age, The (Washington Hawkins 
Dines with Colonel Sellers).—Clemens. 

Washington was not, like Bonaparte, of a race which 
surpasses the stature of humanity. See Com¬ 
parison of Washington and Napoleon.—Chateau¬ 
briand. 

Washington, who at this time, was a subordinate officer. 
See Defeat of General Braddock, The.—McCabe. 

Washington, why' did you come so early this evening? 
See Rosabella’s Lovers.—Anon. 

Wasn’t intended, sah! Don’t menshin it. See Zip 
Johnson’s Return.—Anon. 

Wasn’t it a funny dream!—perfectly bewild’ring! See 
Dream-march.—Riley. 

Wasn’t it a good time. See When We First Tlayed 
“Show.”—Riley. 

Wasn’t it pleasant, O brother mine? See Old Aunt 
Mary’s.—Riley. 

“Wasn’t that a lovely sermon?” See Coming out of 
Church.—Anon. 

Waste not your precious hours in play. See Always 
Learning.—A non. 

Wasted! Precious pearls of time. See Wasted.— 
Norton. 

Watch and pray! fast fades the day. See Watch and 
Pray.—Anon. 

Watch! boys, watch! The signal lights are flashing. 
See Three W’s,—Work, Watch, Wait, The.—Car¬ 
rington. 

Watch, brethren, watch! See Watch Night.—Bonar. 

Watch over me while I’m asleep. See To the Guardian 
Angel.—Tastu. 

Watchman, tell us of the night. See Watchman’s 
Report, The.—Bowring. 

Water, for anguish of the solstice—nay. See Venetian 
Pastoral, A.—Rossetti. 


"Water is beautiful, variantly beautiful. See Cold 
Water.—Holloway. 

Water! look at it ye thirsty ones! See Apostrophe to 
Water (“Water! look,” etc.).—Arrington. 

Water! There is no poison in that cup. See Water 
and Rum.—Gough. 

Water-lilies in myriads rocked on the slightest undula¬ 
tions. See Evangeline (On the Atchafalaya).— 
Longfellow. 

Wathers o’ Moyle an’ the white gulls flying. See 
Lookin’ Back.—O’Neill. 

Wave after wave of greenness rolling down. See 
Perished.—Ritter. 

Wave after wave successively rolls on. See Newport 
Beach.—Tuckerman. 

Wave by wave o’er the sandy bar. See With the Tide. 
—Anon. 

Wave high our flag. See Little Patriot, The.—Anon. 

Wave, wave your glorious battle flags, brave soldiers 
of the North. See Gettysburg.—Stedman. 

’Way back from the echoing ages. See What Might 
Have Been?—Anon. 

’Way down a narrow alley lived a little girl named 
Dot. See Dot’s Christmas; or, the Sober Hat.— 
Anon. . , 

’Way down in the buttercup meadow. See Katie s 
Questions.—Anon. 

Way down in the meadow, and close by the brook. 
See Golden Rod.—Anon. 

Way down upon the Swanee Ribber. See Old Folks 
at Home.—Foster. 

Way over the seas, in a far, far land. See Where Cupid 
Dwells.—Munger. 

We all complain of the shortness of time. See same .— 
Seneca. 

“We all do fade as a leaf.” See Fading Leaf, The.— 
Dodge. 

We all feel certainly a disposition of the best. See 
Present and Future P'aiths, The.—Brooks. 

“We all like sheep,” the tenors shrill. See “We All 
Like Sheep.”—Anon. 

We all look on with anxious eyes. See When Father 
Carves the Duck.—-Wright. 

We all look with pride and joy at the United States. 
See Democracy.—Dana. 

We all ride something. It is a folly to expect us always 
to be walking. See Hobbies.—Talmage. 

We Americans have many grave problems. See 
Americanism.—Roosevelt. 

We Americans make a God of our common-school 
system. See same. — (Scribner’s Monthly.) 

We are a band of Temperance boys. See Cold Water 
Boys.—Anon. 

We are a class of little tots. See Our Work.—Rook. 

We are a goodly colony—we like our quarters here. 
See Menagerie Song, The.—( Harper’s Young Peo¬ 
ple.) 

We are a jolly set of boys. See Snow Brigade, The.— 
Rook. 

We are all at school in this world of ours. See At 
School.—Chandler. 

We are all here. See Family Meeting, The.—Sprague. 

We are all waiting, wait, wait, waiting. See Santa 
Claus Frolic.—Baker. 

We are always striving for the things just out of reach. 
See Unattainable, The.—Anon. 

We are apt to treat the idea of our own corruptibility. 
See Political Corruption.—McDuffie. 

We are as mendicants who wait. See Mendicants, The. 
—Carman. 

We are asked, “What have we gained by the war?” 
See National Glory.—Clay. 

We are assembled here to-day in pursuance of an an¬ 
nual custom. See Decoration Day Oration.— 
Chevertou. 

We are at a point in reformatory movements in this 
country. See High License.—Talmage. 

We are blushing Roses. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers (Roses).—Hunt. 

We are born; we laugh; we weep. See Life.—Procter. 

We are builders, and each one. See same.— Anon. 

We are building every day. See Building.—Die- 
kenga. 

We are building little homes on the sands. See Chil¬ 
dren on the Shore.—Anon. 

We are busy little bees. See Concert Recitation.— 
Manning. 

We are but little children yet. See Recitation in Con¬ 
cert.—Anon. 

We are but minutes, little things. See Take Care of 
the Minutes.—Anon. 

We are but two—the others sleep. See Brothers, The. 
—Sprague. 


908 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


We call 


We are called upon to act. See Speech at Union 
Square, N. Y., April 20, 1861.—Dickenson. 

We are charged with expressing joy at the triumphs 
of America. See Results of the American War.— 
Fox. 

We are coming, children, coming, with the springtime 
and the rose. See What the Robin Can Tell.— 
Anon. 

We are coming, Cuba—coming; our starry banner 
shines. See Gathering, The.—Swett. 

We are coming. Father Abraham, three hundred thou¬ 
sand more. See Three Hundred Thousand More. 
—Anon. 

We are coming from the wild woods. See May Celebra¬ 
tion.—Kavanaugh. 

We are either to execute this treaty, or break our faith. 
See Sanctity of Treaties.—Ames. 

We are ever taking leave of something that will not 
come back again. See same. —Robertson. 

We are fighting a great moral battle. See Military 
Insubordination.—Clay. 

We are firmly persuaded that the separation of the 
people into two distinct armies. See Individuality 
of Conscience in the Voter.—Willard. 

We are followers of Jesus. See Jesus Loves Me.—Cor¬ 
nell. 

We are fortunate that we behold this day. See Cen¬ 
tennial Celebration of Concord Fight (Heroes of 
'76, The).—Curtis. 

We are four little girls and two little boys. See Little 
Helpers. 

We are four little girls. We play we are flowers. See 
Bunch of Flowers, A.—Rook. 

We are four little rose-buds. See Four Little Rose¬ 
buds.—Anon. 

We are free! we are free! the snowflakes cried. See 
Snow-storm, The.—Anon. 

We are gathered here to-day in honor of the founder. 
See Faith of Washington, The.—Coudert. 

We are ghost-ridden. See Dead Moon, The.—Dan- 
dridge. 

We are glad, dear friends, to greet you with a merry 
tuneful strain. See Welcome.—Anon. 

We are going homeward, homeward, soon must fall 
the parting tear. See Parting Words.—Kent. 

We are here to-day to fling a new banner to the breeze. 
See Old Glory.—Anon. 

We are in love’s land to-day. See Love at Sea.— 
Swinburne. 

We are in Russia. The Neva is frozen. See Sun of 
Liberty, The.—Hugo. 

We are joyous flowers, found in field and dell. See 
Bouquet of Flowers, A.—Anon. 

We are Knights of Labor because we believe that law 
and order should prevail. See Knights of Labor. 
—Powderly. 

We are leaflets, growing, growing. See Little Things. 
—Anon. 

We are lilies fair. See Songs and Chorus of the 
Flowers (Lilies).—Hunt. 

We are little airy creatures. See On the Vowels.— 
Swift. 

We are little brethren twain. See On a Pair of Dice.— 
Swift. 

We are living in a time in the history of the United 
States. See How to Succeed.—Richmond. 

We are marching for the arbor. See Children’s Arbor 
Day March.—Holbrook. 

We are merry maidens sitting in a ring. See Wash 
Day.—Amon. 

We are met, not to lay our garlands on the graves of the 
Pilgrims. See Pilgrims’ Idea of Home, The.—Hall. 

We are met to testify our regard for him. See Char¬ 
acter of Washington, The.—Webster. 

We are not a warlike nation; here of old our fathers 
settled. See Spaniard Answered, The.—Rogers. 

We are not yet far enough from General Grant’s per¬ 
sonality. See General Grant.—Depew. 

We are now in the gloaming, but the morning is break¬ 
ing. See Reinforcement.—Anon. 

We are now ready to take up the case of Slack versus 
Evans. See Lawsuit, A.—Denison. 

We are often told that we must keep the temperance 
question out of politics. See God’s Clock Strikes. 
—Pentecost. 

We are only common people. See Henry George.— 
Carman. 

We are only little boys, but couldn’t we do something 
in the temperance cause? See Commencing to 
Work.—McBride. 

We are our fathers’ sons; let those who lead us know! 
See Ode in Time of Hesitation, An (“No Hint of 
Stain”).—Moody. 


We are poor and lowly born. See Child’s Hymn, The. 
—Howitt. 

We are ready for work. See Song of the Steamer En¬ 
gine.—Le Row. 

We are reproached with having refused to decree that 
the Catholic religion. See Union of Church and 
State, The.—Mirabeau. 

We are sitting to-night by the fire. See Tale of the 
Atlantic Coast, A.—Zeagles. 

We are slumberous poppies. See Songs and Chorus of 
the Flowers (Poppies).—Hunt. 

We are sowing, daily sowing. See Seeds.—Anon. 

We are standing in the daybreak of the second cen¬ 
tury of this Republic. See Against Centralization 
(University the Training Camp of the Future, 
The).—Grady. 

We are standing on the threshold, we are in the opened 
door. See Threshold of the New Year.-—Anon. 

We ar estanding upon Tara of the Kings. See Repeal 
of the Union.—O’Connell. 

We are summoned to new energy and zeal by the high 
nature of the experiment. See American Experi¬ 
ment of Self-government, The.—Everett. 

We are the Ancient People. See Song of the Ancient 
People, The.—Proctor. 

We are the hours, the fair young hours. See Record 
of the Hours, The.—Denton. 

We are the little flowers. See Chorus of the Flowers.— 
Wheelock. 

We are the music makers. See Ode.—O’Shaugh- 
nessy. 

We are the sweet flowers. See Songs and Chorus of 
the Flowers (Chorus of Flowers).—Hunt. 

We are the voices of the wandering wind. See Light of 
Asia, The (Song of the Devas to Prince Siddartha, 
The).—Arnold. 

We are three true-hearted, loving sisters. See Tri¬ 
colors, The.—Fields. 

We are told of the danger of war. See On the Pros¬ 
pect of War with Great Britain 1811.—Calhoun. 

We are told that our constitution.is a mere ex¬ 

periment. See American Constitution no Experi¬ 
ment.—Legare. 

We are told that the country is deluded and deceived 
by cabalistic words. See Sympathy with South 
American Republicanism.—Webster. 

We are told that the inevitable result of democracy. 
See Democracy.—Lowell. 

We are told to look to the example of France. See 
Popular and Kingly Examples.—Sheridan. 

We are two dusky owls, and we live in a tree. See Two 
Wise Owls.—Anon. 

We are two travellers, Roger and I. See Vagabonds, 
The.—Trowbridge. 

We are violets blue. See Songs and Cho us of the 
Flowers (Violets).—Hunt. 

We are what suns and winds and waters make us. See 
Invocation, An.—Landor. 

We are what the past has made us. See same.—Robert¬ 
son. 

We are wiser than we were; our intellects ought to be 
all aflame. See Woman in Temperance.—Wil¬ 
lard. 

We asked where the magic came from. See Children’s 
Music, The.—Owen. 

We base our plea for prohibition on the principles set 
forth. See Home Protection.—Willard. 

We behold at present only the rising of our sun of 
empire. See Home and School the Bulwark of 
Our Country.—Seward. 

We believe that poetry, far from injuring society. See 
Defense of Poetry.—Canning. 

We birdies once loved little Kitty. See Kitty’s Birds. 
—Chase. 

We bore to see the summer go. See Easter Song, An. 
—Coolidge. 

We boys ’u’d run and romp an’ play. See “ ’Ceptin 
.1 im. —Clement. 

We break the glass, whose sacred wine. See Song.— 
Pinkney. 

We breath with our lungs, our lights, our kidneys, and 
our livers. See Boy’s Composition on Breathing, 
A.—Anon. 

We bring the flowers of the May-time. See Spring¬ 
time Flowers.—Dutcher. 

We bring the holly, the ivy, the pine. See Carol: 
‘‘We bring,” etc.—Anon. 

We built a ship upon the stairs. See Good Play, A.— 
Stevenson. 

We but teach bloody instructions. See Macbeth.— 
Shakespeare. 

We call it hallowed ground. See Dedication of a 
School House.—Simes. 


909 





We came 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


We came to fair Lucerne at even. See Organ-tempest 
of Lucerne, The.—Butterworth. 

We camped at Delhi,—by the Kashmir gate. See 
Dancing Girl, The.—Arnold. 

We can best judge of the present by comparing it with 
the past. See Age We Live in. The.—Kavanaugh. 

We can endure that he should waste our lands. See 
Indignation of a High-minded Spaniard.—Words¬ 
worth. 

We can no longer stay on shore. See Greenland 
Whale Fishery.—Anon. 

We can only live once; and death’s terrors. See Living. 
—(London Fun.) 

We can undoubtedly provide some additional legal 
safeguards. See Free Speech and Constitutional 
Liberty.—Hoar. 

We cannot despair of success. See same. —Dale. 

We cannot do with less than the whole union. See 
Value of the Union, The, 1847.—Prentiss. 

We cannot honor our country with too deep a rever¬ 
ence. See Duty of Literary Men to their Country. 
—Grimke. 

We cannot kindle when we will. See Morality.— 
Arnold. 

We cannot say to any young man: “Do not play 
billiards.” See same. —Tulloch. 

We catch the fleeting perfume of roses. See L’Amour, 
1’Amour.—Carryl. 

We celebrate to-day no idle tradition. See Our Na¬ 
tional Anniversary.—-Rice. 

We celebrate to-day the Centenary of our Nationality. 
See Washington’s Inauguration.—Depew. 

We, children of the free, come here to plant this tree. 
See Invocation.—Harlow. 

We choose our blossoms, sitting on the grass. See 
Umpires.—Dodge. 

We climbed to the top of Goat Point Hill. See Forty 
Years after.—Porter. 

We come, fair flowers, two and two. See Bouquet, A. 
—Kavanaugh. 

We come in arms, we stand ten score. See School 
F encibles.—Cory. 

We come, not to mourn our dead soldiers, but to praise 
them. See Our Dead Soldiers.—Walker. 

We come now before you. See Buy a Broom.—Kav¬ 
anaugh. 

We come to-day rejoicing. See Song of the Leaves, 
The.—Kimball. 

We come! we come! and ye feel our might. See Winds. 
The.—Gould. 

We could not pause, while yet the noontide air. See 
Obsequies of Stuart.—Thompson. 

We count the broken lyres that rest. See Voiceless, 
The.—Holmes. 

We crossed Champlain to Keeseville with our friends. 
See Adirondacs, The.—Emerson. 

We crown’d the hard-won heights at length. See 
After the Battle.—Trench. 

We dance on hills above the wind. See Fairies’ Song, 
The.—Anon. 

We deck to-day each soldier’s grave. See Decoration 
Day.—Bruce. 

We didn’t care in the long-ago. See Ole Pine Box, The. 
—Stanton. 

We didn’t have much of a Christmas. See Our Christ¬ 
mas.—Wolcott. 

We die, but we leave an influence behind us that sur¬ 
vives. See Voices of the Dead.—Gumming. 

We die not at all, for our deeds remain. See Love and 
Labor.—Anon. 

We dined. A fish from the river beneath. See Mem¬ 
orable Dessert, A.—Anon. 

We dismiss them not to the chambers of forgetfulness 
and death. See Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson 
(Immortals, The).—Everett. 

We do lie beneath the grass. See Death’s Jest Book 
(Second Dirge).—Beddoes. 

We do not get our best vision of heaven. See same. — 
Storrs. 

We do not make our thoughts; they grow in us. See 
Thoughts.—Bailey. 

We do not stand to receive lectures about peace. See 
Peace Men, The.—King. 

We don’t take vagrants in, sir. See Joe.—Robb'ns. 

We establish the Republic. The Republic! Tt is the 
Government. See Establishment of the Republic, 
The.—Lamartine. 

We fear not the thunder, we fear not the rain. See 
Voice of the Pines, The.—Mair. 

We figure to ourselves. See Philip van Artevelde.— 
Taylor. 

We flirted together a week at the shore. See Appro¬ 
priate Keepsake, An.—Stone. 


We follow where the Swamp Fox guides. See Swamp 
Fox, The.—Simms. 

We found it under the apple tree. See Empty Nest, 
The.—Miller. 

We gather to the sacred board. See Communion of 
Saints, The.—Bulfinch. 

We gaze with patriotic pride upon the grand rivers. 
See States, The.—Lee. 

We gazed on Corryvrekin’s whirl. See Iona.—Gore. 

We get no good by being ungenerous, even to a book. 
See Aurora Leigh (Reading).-—Browning. 

We give thy natal day to hope. See Our Country.— 
Whittier. 

We go on our walk together. See Three Companions. 
—Craik. 

We grasp a hand, we think it true and strong. See 
False and True.—Anon. 

We greet thee, merry spring-time. See same. —Anon. 

We greet you, brethren of the mystic tie. See Knightly 
Welcome, A.—Cox. 

We grow wrong. We allow ourselves to crystallize in 
habits. See same. —Cook. 

We had a tiff: “John Jones,” said I. See John Jones 
and I.—Ames. 

We had been long in mountain snow. See Greeting of 
the Roses, The.—Garland. 

We had been married three years, and no couple were 
ever happier. See Rudder Grange (That Other 
Baby at Rudder Grange).—Stockton. 

We had been to town-meeting, had once voyaged a 
hundred miles on a steamboat. See Wrong Train 
The.—Lewis. 

We had crossed the river to hunt for Lee. See Drum¬ 
head Court-marshal, A.—Anon. 

We had not been long in the camp when a party set out. 
See Bee-hunt in the Far West, A.—Irving. 

We had sailed out a Letter of Marque. See Letter of 
Marque, The.—Orne. 

We had stopped at a farm-house to get a drink oi 
water and rest the horses. See Champion Liar 
The —Lewis. 

We had such fun on Valentine’s Day. See “Prettiest 
Girl, The.’’—Brine. 

We had taken the head of King Capet. See Execution 
of Marie Antoinette.—Thackeray. 

We had to wait for half an hour between Charleston 
and Savannah. See Rosy North, The.—Anon. 

We had very hot work once in the van of the army. 
See Travels of Baron Munchausen (Adventure of 
Baron Munchausen in a Fight with the Turks).— 
Raspe. 

We hail our coming holiday. See Holiday Speech.— 
Kavanaugh. 

We hail with joy the smiling May, See Arbor Day 
Greeting.-—Harlow. 

We hate the Saxon and the Dane. See Celts and 
Saxons.—Davis. 

We have a place for everything. See Order.—Anon. 

We have a secret, just we three. See Secret, The.— 
Anon. 

We have assembled, not to respond to shouts of 
triumph. See Relief for Starving Ireland (Sending 
Relief to Ireland).—Prentiss. 

We have bathed, where none have seen us. See 
Death’s Jest Book (Amala’s Bridal Song).—Bed- 
does. 

We have been accustomed to regard a free-school sys¬ 
tem. See Free Schools and Free Governments 
(American Education).—Winthrop. 

We have been fighting at the edge of the woods. See 
Supporting the Guns.—( Detroit Free Press ) 

We have been frequently told that the farmer should 
attend to his plough. See Popular Interest in 
Elections.—McDuffie. 

We have been friends together. See same. —Norton. 

We have been told, gentlemen, that the magistrate is 
not bound to execute a law. See Disobedience of 
Magistrates, The.—Mirabcau. 

We have been told that it is a war into which we have 
been hurried. See Fruits of the War with France 
—Canning. 

We have been told this night, in express words, that 
the man who dares to do his duty. See Reply to 
Threats of Violence.—Curran. 

We have been under the necessity of telling. See 
Lowell, Extract Concerning.—( North British Re¬ 
view.) 

We have been without a pastor. See Pastor Wanted, 
A.—Anon. 

We have before maintained that the tramps. See In¬ 
itiated Tramp, The.—Anon. 

We have but one more word to say. See Good-bye.— 
Anon. 


910 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


We meet 


We have come to Plymouth Rock to record here our 
homage. See First Settlement of New England 
(Plymouth Rock).—Webster. 

We have come with joyful greeting. See Song of Ar¬ 
bor Day.—Pettinos. 

We have companions, comrade mine. See Com¬ 
panions .—Stoddard. 

We have congregated here to-night to make some 
arrangements for our school exhibition. See Pine 
Valley Boys, The.—McBride. 

We have determined to mass the voters around the 
principle of prohibition. See New Party Needed, 
A.—Finch. 

We have evidence before us. See Home Rule for Ire¬ 
land . —Gladstone. 

We have faith in old proverbs full surely. See Where 
there’s a Will there’s a Way.—Cook. 

We have heard l or read] of a Pat so financially flat. 
See Pat. and the Pig.—Anon. 

We have heard of the city so shining and fair. See 
Nearing Home.—Anon. 

We have indulged in gratifying recollections of the past. 
See Completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, 
The (Duties of American Citizens).—Webster. 

We have loitered and laugh’d in the flowery croft. See 
Garden Lyric, A.—Locker-Lampson. 

We have met for the freest discussion of these resolu¬ 
tions. See Murder of I.ovejov, at Alton, Illinois, 
1837, The.—Phillips. 

We have met here to-night for the purpose of trying to 
debate. See Little Boys’ Debate, A.—Anon. 

We have never known so quick and general a transi¬ 
tion. See Repeal of the Stamp Act, The.—May- 
hew. 

We have nicknamed it “Old Glory.” See Banner 
Betsey Made, The.—Harbaugh 

We have paused to watch the quiver. See Cross-pur¬ 
poses.—Cooper. 

We have put a dumb-waiter in our house. See Dumb¬ 
waiter, The.—Cozzens. 

We have reached the end of the Roman republic. See 
Monarchy of Caesar, The.—Mommsen. 

We have read, as you know for ages and ages. See 
Commonplace Woman, The.—Anon. 

We have read [or heard] of a Pat so financially flat. 
See Pat and the Pig.—Anon. 

We have sailed many months, we have sailed many 
weeks. See Hunting of the Snark, The.—Car- 
roll. 

We have seen that when the earth had to be 
prepared. See Modern Painters (Clouds, The). 
—Ruskin. 

We have seen thee, O Love, thou art fair; thou art 
goodly, 0 Love. See Atalantain Calydon (Chorus). 
—Swinburne. 

We have sent him seeds of the melon's core. See Ku 
Klux.—Cawein. 

We have shaken hands with the world’s business. 
See That we should Rise with the Lark (We Cherish 
Dreams).—Lamb. 

We have short time to stay as you. See Daffodils.— 
Herrick. 

We have the good fortune, under the blessing of a 
benign Providence. See Sanctity of State Obliga¬ 
tions.—Webster. 

We have the subjoined discourse, delivered by a 
Southern divine. See Brother Watkins.—Gough. 

We have to glance over sixty years. See George the 
Third.—Thackeray. 

We hear it maintained by people of more gravity than 
understanding. See Genius and Common Sense.— 
Hazlitt. 

We heard it calling, clear and low. See Cuckoo, The. 
Locker-Lampson. 

We heard the music ringing from the camps of long ago. 
See Our Boys are Marching on.—-Jewett. 

We heard thy name, O Mina! See Song of Mina’s Sol¬ 
diers, The.—Hemans. 

We, Hermia, have with our needles created both one 
flower. See Midsummer Night’s Dream (Helena 
and Hermia).—Shakespeare. _ 

We hev riz up in the world and gone forward with great 
swiftness and revolvability. See Riches nave 
Wings.—McBride. 

We hold each other by the hand. See Evening Rest, 
The.— (University of Virginia Magazine .) 

We hold still among us some of those who were active 
agents. See Bunker Hill Monument, The (To the 
Revolutionary Veterans).—Webster. 

We hold that all drinking of intoxicants is perilous and 
wrong. See Our Warfare and Our Duty.—Cuyler. 

We honor Liberty in name and in form. See Liberty. 
—George. 


We journeyed with a company to play. See Bazaar 
Girl, The.—Arnold. 

We just shake hands at meeting. See Old Friends.— 
Anon. 

We knew it would rain for all the mom. See Before 
the Rain.—Aldrich. 

We know him now, all narrow jealousies. See Prince 
Consort, The.—Tennyson. 

We know not what it is, dear, this sleep so deep and 
still. See Two Mysteries, The.—Dodge. 

We know our fathers and our mothers. See Opening 
Speech for a Boy.—Anon. 

We know what would be the effect of abating faith. 
See same. —Anon. 

We lack yet cannot fix upon the lack. See Later Life. 
—Rossetti. 

We laid [or lay] in a cell. Mister Judge, all night long. 
See Little Outcast’s Plea, The.—Anon. 

We last night received a piece of ill news. See Specta¬ 
tor, The (Death of Sir Roger de Coverley).—Addi¬ 
son. 

We lay [or laid] in a cell, Mr. Judge, all night long. See 
Little Outcast’s Plea, The.—-Anon. 

We lay us down to sleep. See same. —Moulton. 

We lead two lives, the outward seeming fair. See 
same. — Anon. 

We learn to climb, not by the hills. See Never Look 
Back.—Ka vanaugh. 

We leave the well-beloved place. See In Memoriam 
(Old Home, The).—Tennyson. 

We left the silent forest, and, day after day. See 
Tecumseh (Buffalo Herds, The).—Mair. 

We lift our tuneful voices now. See We Lift Our Tune¬ 
ful Voices.—Anon. 

We lingered on the farmhouse steps. See Summer 
Idyl. A.—Morse. 

We listened, as all boys in their better moods will listen. 
See Tom Brown’s School Days (“ We listened,” 
etc.).—Hughes. 

We little children gather the brightest flowers of May. 
See Children’s Offering, The.—-Gerome. 

We live in an age of boasted enlightenment. See Two 
Pictures.—Hoss. 

We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breaths 
See Festus (Aim of Life, The).—Bailey. 

We live in the world’s crisis. Never were such changes. 
See same. —Anon. 

We live not in our moments or our years. See Enjoy¬ 
ment of the Present.—Trench. 

We look before and after, and we see, through the half- 
drawn folds. See Our Expanding Republic 
(Columbian Oration).—Watterson. 

We love our pleasant school. See School Cantata.— 
Hopkins. 

We love the flowers, the little flowers. See For Dec¬ 
oration Day.—Phillips. 

We love the venerable house. See House of God, The. 
—Emerson. 

We love thee, Ann Maria Smith. See Editor’s Wooing, 
The.—Newell. 

We loved the birds and babbling brooks. See My 
John.—Ballou. 

We may grow rich and build. See House not Made 
with Hands, The.—Gordon. 

We may hope that the growing influence of enlight¬ 
ened sentiments. See same. —Webster. 

We may live without poetry, music and art. See 
Lucile.—Lytton. 

We may not know. See In the Time of Strife.—Stanton. 

We may not stand content; it is our part. See same. — 
Piatt. '"SI 

We may scatter our couch with roses. See Way of the 
Cross, The.—Howarth. 

We may see the cunning and curious work of nature. 
See Tongue, The.—Lyly. 

We may shred the moss veil from the rose. See 
Memories of the Heart.—Anon. 

We mean to do it. Some day, some day. See Calling 
the Angels in.—Anon. 

We meandered in der bier-garten. See Dot Sunflower 
—Gooft. 

We meant to be very kind. See Three Little Nest 
Birds.—Anon. 

We measured the riotous baby. See Measuring the 
Baby.—Brown. 

We meet again, the children of the Pilgrims, to remem¬ 
ber our fathers. See Age of the Pilgrims the He¬ 
roic Period of our History, The (Pilgrims of 
New England, The).—Choate. 

We meet and we part; the world is wide. See Life.— 
Anon. 

We meet in thought, or, better still, in person. See 
Thanksgiving.—La Moille. ^ 


911 





We meet 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


We meet ’neath the sounding rafter. See Indian 
Revelry.—Dowling. 

We meet upon the level, and we part upon the square. 
See same. —Morris. 

We men are not fragments—we are wholes. See 
Narrowness of Specialties, The.—Lytton. 

We met at Narragansett Pier. See Engaged.— 
Curtiss. 

We met—'twas in a crowd—and I thought he would 
shun me. See We Met.—Bayly. 

We mind not how the sun in the mid-sky. See Pericles 
and Aspasia (Cleone to Aspasia).—Landor. 

We mourn, as philanthropists and Christians. See 
Prohibition the Only Safeguard for Youth.— 
Taylor. 

We must be free or die, who speak the tongue. See 
Sonnet: “It is not to be thought of,” etc. (Faith 
and Freedom).—Wordsworth. 

We must be nobler for our dead, be sure. See Watchers, 
The.—Bates. 

We must enter the town of St. Ogg’s—that venerable 
town. See Mill on the Floss, The (Ogg, the Son of 
Beorl).—Eliot. 

We must fight this temperance battle out. See same .— 
Gough. 

“We must go,” sighed little Ruby. See Little Leaves, 
The.—Cooper. 

We must have an end of all prosecution of ideas. See 
Freedom of Thought.—Castelar. 

We must love, and unlove, and, it may be. See Wan¬ 
derer, The (“We must love,” etc.).—Lytton. 

We must not hope to be mowers. See Perseverance.— 
Anon. 

We must not part, as others do. See Parting.—Anon. 

We must not stint our necessary actions in the fear.— 
See King Henry VIII. (Oracle).—Shakespeare. 

We must note carefully what distinction there is. See 
Stones of Venice, The (Love of Change).—Ruskin. 

We must pass like smoke or live within the spirit’s 
fire. See Immortality.—Russell. 

We must trust the conductor, most surely. See Don’t 
Stop at the Station Despair.—Miller. 

We mustered at midnight, in darkness we formed. See 
Bethel.—Duganne. 

“We mustn’t go near the pond, sissy.” See Stagnant, 
The.— (St. Nicholas.) 

We need a loftier ideal to nerve us to [or for] heroic 
lives. See Ambition.—Greeley. 

We need never hesitate to bring old faiths into new 
light. See Old Faiths in New Light.—Smyth. 

We need that Charmer, for our hearts are sore. See 
Charmer, The.—Stowe. 

We need the Puritan spirit in certain elements of our 
society. See Independent Spirit of the Puritans, 
The.—Lodge. 

We need the spirit of ’75 to guide us safely. See Battle 
of Bunker Hill (Dizzy Activities of the Times, 
The).—Everett. 

We never fight, my wife and I. See My Wife and I.— 
Anon. 

We never speak our deepest feelings. See Books.— 
Hale. 

We now are but boys. See Looking Ahead.—Rook. 

We now mid hope vor better cheer. See Jeiine.— 
Barnes. 

We often hear of men being “moved by the spirit.” 
See Moved by a Crank.—Allen. 

We often see, as on we jog. See Less than Cost.— 
Kidder. 

We ought persistently to present and emphasize the 
idea. See Resistance of Mal-administration.— 
Cleveland. 

We ought to find the fundamental principles of repre¬ 
sentation exemplified. See House of Representa¬ 
tives.—Lodge. 

We parted at last, the Death Angel had come. See 
Parting, The.—Head. 

We parted by the gate in June. See Difficulty of 
Rhyming, The.—Anon. 

We parted in sadness, but spoke not of parting. See 
We Parted in Sadness.—Hoffman. 

We parted in silence, we parted by night. See We 
Parted in Silence.—Crawford. 

We passed the bridge with tramping steeds. See 
Bridge of Glen Aray, The.—Mackay. 

We passed upon the oaken stair. See Why They 
Didn’t Bow.—Anon. 

We played at chess one wintry night. See Game of 
Chess, A.—St. John. 

We pledged our hearts, my love and I. See Exchange, 
The.-—Coleridge. 

We plough and sow, we’re so very, very low. See Song 
of the “Lower Classes.”—Jones. 


We plough the fields and scatter the good seed on the 
land. See We Plough the Fields.—Claudius. 

We put him to bed in his little night gown. See After 
the Fourth of July.—Dawson. 

We read of kings and gods that kindly took. See 
Cruel Mistress, The.—Carew. 

We represent the cardinal points. See We are Four.—• 
Rook. 

We said good-by! My lips to hers were pressed. See 
Blasted Hopes.—Anon. 

We sail toward evening’s lonely star. See Song.— 
Thaxter. 

We sailed and sailed upon the desert sea. See Hope.— 
Howells. 

We sailed to and fro in Erie’s broad lake. See Perry’s 
Victory.-—Anon. 

We sat by the fisher’s cottage. See Fisher’s Cottage, 
The.—Heine. 

We sat by the open window. See Are These God’s 
Children?—Chatfield. 

We sat in the country parsonage, on a cold winter day. 
See Carlo and the Freezer.—Talmage. 

We sat in the lamplight’s gentle glow. See Memory, 
A.—-Carryl. 

We sat in the light of the dying day. See Four Lives. 
—Freeman. 

We sat mute on our chargers, a handful of men. See 
Death-ride, The.—Marston. 

We sat on the old gray bridge. See Vacation Frag¬ 
ment, A.—Hall. 

We sat on the stair. See On the Stair.—Burton. 

We sat within the farm-house old. See Fire of Drift¬ 
wood, The.—Longfellow. 

We saw and wooed each other’s eyes. See Castara (To 
Castara: The Reward of Innocent Love).—Hab- 
ington. 

We saw the swallows gathering in the sky. See Mod¬ 
ern Love (One Twilight Hour).—Meredith. 

We saw Thee in Thy balmy nest. See Hymn of 
the Nativity. A (Verses from the Shepherd’s 
Hymn).—Crashaw. 

We say it for an hour or for years. See "Good-by.”— 
Litchfield. 

We scatter seeds with careless hand. See Example.— 
Keble. 

We searched the list from first to last. See Naming 
the Baby.— (Harper’s Bazar.) 

We see here to-day a free and independent mingling of 
men. See Our Banner Unrent; its Stars Unob¬ 
scured.—Ross. 

We see not in this life the end of human actions. See 
Enduring Influence.—Anon. 

We see not, know not; all our way. See Thy Will be 
Done.—Whittier. 

We see them not—we cannot hear. See Are They 
not All Ministering Spirits?—Hawker. 

We seek not strife, but when our outraged laws. See 
Old Ironsides (Tattered Ensign, The).—Holmes. 

We seek remembered wood-paths, fragrant with 
breath of pines. See Woodland Hymn, A.— 
Holder. 

We seek to know, and knowing seek. See In Memor- 
iam.—Bede. 

We seem to see his form and hear his deep, grave 
speech everywhere. See Eulogy on Webster.— 
Choate. 

We shall all meet again See To a Lake Party.— 
Faber. 

We shall have success. See War for the Union, The.— 
Holmes. 

We shall have the nicest kind of a party. See Tempta¬ 
tion Resisted.—Denison. 

We shall lodge at the sign of the Grave. See Travellers. 
—Addleshaw. 

We shall meet and rest. See Meeting Place. The (“We 
shall meet,” etc.).—Bonar. 

We shall now consider the law. See Daniel versus 
Dishclout.—Stevens. 

We shall now return to the law, for our laws are full 
of returns. See Bullum versus Boatum.— 
Stevens. 

We shall walk no more through the sodden plain. See 
When Sparrows Build.—Ingelow. 

We shape ourselves the joy or fear. See Raphael 
(“We shaoe,” etc.).—Whittier. 

We sighing said, “Our Pan is dead.” See Thoreau’s 
Flute.—Alcott. 

We sit before the row of evening lamps. See Hamlet 
at the Boston.—Howe. 

We sit here in the Promised Land. See Ode Recited 
at the Harvard Commemoration. July 21, 1865 
(Unreturning Brave, The).—Lowell. 


912 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


We will 


We sit in the light of the dancing fire. See His Reverie. 
—Long. 

We sleep upon fir-tree boughs at night,. See Dreams 
on the Hunting-ground.—Brewer. 

We slight the gifts that every season bears. See 
Through Life.—( Chambers’ Journal.) 

We speak, we speak of the loved and lost. See Beau¬ 
tiful Gate, The.—Anon. 

We stand amid the palaces of Shushan. See Queen 
Vashti.—Talmage. 

We stand among mysteries, are full of enquiries. See 
Truth of the Gospel, The.—McKenzie. 

We stand now on the river’s brink. See Concord 
River.—Hawthorne. 

We stand the latest, and, if we fail, probably the last, 
experiment. See Responsibility of American 
Citizens.—Story. 

We stand to-day in the presence of a stately column. 
See Two Voices.—Brewer. 

We stand to-day the most thoroughly secularized 
government. See God in Government.—Lathrap. 

We stand upon the Moorish mountain side. See 
Pine Woods, The.—Hanmer. 

We started away from the parson’s house, my fair 
young wife and I. See Frontier Bridal— 
almost a Tragedy, A.—Lynch. 

We stood alone in the choir loft. See Lost Chord 
Found, A.—Holcomb. 

We stood at the bars as the sun went down. See 
Lovely Scene, A.—Anon. 

We stood in the moonlight’s tender glow. See It’s 
Hard to be Good.—Anon. 

We stood one night on Beacon Street. See After the 
Opera.—Davis. 

We stood so steady. See Crossing the Blackwater.— 
Joyce. 

We stood upon the ragged rocks. See Cape-cottage 
at Sunset.—Glazier. 

We stood upon the sea-girt sand. See Her Heart was 
False and Mine was Broken.—Dallas. 

We stood where the snake-like ivy. See Shadows.— 
Anon. 

We summoned not the silent guest. See Skeleton at 
the Feast, The.—Roche. 

We talk’d with open heart, and tongue. See Fountain, 
The.—Wordsworth. 

We talked of books, we talked of songs. See Bachelor’s 
Hope, The.—Luzader. 

We telephoned to the intelligence office for a cook. 
See What’s in a Name?—Anon. 

“We tell the truth! we tell! we tell!” shouted the 
Methodistic bell. See Sounds of the Sabbath 
Bells, The.—Anon. 

We, that did nothing study but the way. See Renun¬ 
ciation, A.—King. 

We, the Class of Ninety-seven, being about to leave 
this sphere. See Will, The.—Anon. 

We the fairies, blithe and antic. See Song of Fairies. 
—Randolph. 

We, the people of the United States. See Constitution 
of the United States, The.—Anon. 

We tiny tots must make our speech. See When We 
Grow Big.—Rook. 

We too may hear the voice of Wisdom as it comes 
down to us. See Better Way, The.—McCaskey. 

We took it to the woods, we two. See Emerson.— 
Dodge. 

We trust and fear, we question and believe. See Our 
Limitations.—Holmes. 

We two stood near the chandelier. See Sub-mistletoe. 
—(Lehigh Burr.) 

We two went maying up the hill. See Farther On.— 
Larcom. ___ 

We two will stand in the shadow here. See Iwo.— 
Anon. 

We used to keep a cow when we lived in the country. 
See Experience with a Refractory Cow.—Anon. 

We used to think the negro didn’t count for very 
much. See Negro Soldier, The.—Channing. 

We useter chune to de minor keys. See ’Way down in 
Georgy.—Anon. . „ 

We wait for the bugle, the night dews are cold. See 
Waiting for the Bugle.—Anon. 

We walk alone through all life’s various ways. See 
same. —Gray. 0 , 

We walked along that slippery street. See Smooth 

We walked 4 along! while bright and red. See Two 
April Mornings, The.—Wordsworth. 

We—walking so slowly adown the green lane. 

Bull Run.—Haven. . 

We wander along thro’ the shade of the vale. 
Through the Lovely Vale.—Perkins. 


See 

See 


We wandered down the quaint old lane. See Summer 
Idyl, A.—Waithman. 

We wandered to the pine-forest. See To Jane—the 
Recollection.—Shelley. 

We want a teacher that talks English. See Interview 
between the School Directors and the Janitor, An. 
—Denison. 

We want to sing a little. See Rainy Day, The.— 
Rook. 

We was all boys, then, an’ didn’t care for nothin’. 
See Jim Wolfe and the Cats.—Clemens. 

We was more like brothers than anything else. See 
Me and Bill.—Overton. 

We was out there on the prairie—wife, an’ Jimmie an’ 
me. See On the Prairie.—Meyers. 

We was workin’ at the tunnel’s mouth. See At the 
Tunnel’s Mouth.—Lyster. 

We watch’d her breathing thro’ the night. See 
Death-bed, The.—Hood. 

We watched, as she lingered all the day. See Martyr¬ 
dom of St. Lucy, The.—Neale. 

We watched the eclipse. See Eclipse, The.—Cutler. 

We were a fashionable and highly cultured party. See 
Three Men in a Boat (Herr Slossenn Boschen’s 
Song).—Jerome. 

“We were all preparing,” said Mrs. Jones. See Mary 
Ann’s Wedding.—Anon. 

We were at a railroad junction one night. See One 
Touch of Nature.—Burdette. 

We were at school together, the little Jew and I. See 
Little Jew, The.—Craik. 

We were at the foot of the American fall. See Impres¬ 
sions of Niagara.—Dickens. 

We were both brought up in a country town. See Me 
and Jim. ( Chicago Times.) 

We were boys together. See same. —Morris. 

We were crowded in the cabin. See Ballad of the 
Tempest.—Fields. 

We were driving home from the "Patriarchs.” See 
F rost-bitten.—Baker. 

We were driving the down express. See Engine 
Driver’s Stoiy, The.—Wilkins. 

We were eight, including the driver. Suddenly the 
stage stopped. See Miggles.—Harte. 

We were friends and comrades loyal, tho’ I was of alien 
race. See In a Theatre.—Werner. 

We were going on Saturday ever so far. See Trouble¬ 
some Caller, A.—Anon. 

We were hunting for wintergreen berries. See Sister 
and I.—Anon. 

We were in disgrace, we boys, and the reason of it was 
this. See Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories (Laugh¬ 
ing in Meeting [or Laughin’ in Meetin’]).—Stowe. 

We were lumbering along in the twilight. See Engi¬ 
neer’s Story, The.—Anon. 

We were not many, we who stood. See Monterey.— 
Hoffman. 

We were on picket, sir, he and I. See Guard’s Story, 
The.—Anon. 

We were ordered to Samoa from the coast of Panama. 
See International Episode, An.—Duer. 

We were playing on the green together. See Is It 
Nothing to You?—Probyn. 

We were ready for the movin’. See Them Dear Old 
Garret Things.—Carpenter. 

We were seated after dancing. See On the Stairs.— 
Anon. 

We were seated around a big log fire. See Wonderful 
Dog Story, A.—Wheeler. 

We were sitting at chess as the sun went down. See 
Smoke and Chess.—Duffield. 

We were sitting idly gazing on the varied scene before 
us. See September Violet, A.—Anon. 

We were sitting round the fire, staring at the logs 
ablaze. See Joe, my Pard, the Parson.—M’Beath. 

We were standing in the doorway. See Kiss at the 
Door, A.—Anon. 

We were ten maidens in the green com. See King’s 
Daughter, The.—Swinburne. 

We were twin brothers, tall and hale. See Flight 
Shot, A.—Tennyson. 

We will be satisfied; let us be satisfied. See Julius 
Csesar (Mark Antony Scene).—Shakespeare. 

We will close the first part of our evening’s entertain¬ 
ment with exercises in natural history. See 
Examination in Natural History.—Anon. 

We will grieve not, rather find. See Ode: Intima¬ 
tions of Immortality (“We will grieve not”).— 
Wordsworth. 

We will listen to some facts about a seed. See Lessons 
from Nature about Trees.—Benedict. 

We will not speak of years to-night. See James 
Russell Lowell’s Birthday Festival.—Holmes. 


913 




We will 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


We will not strike for private wrongs alone. See 
Marino Faliero (Procreative Virtue of Great Ex¬ 
amples) .—Byron. 

We will obey. Forward we go, although our feet must 
tread. See Go Forward.—Murray. 

We wondered why he always turned aside. See Inheri¬ 
tance.—Higginson. 

We would speak first of the Puritans. See Milton 
(Puritans, The).—Macaulay. 

We wreathe with flowers the peaceful graves. See 
Cherished Names.—-Smith. 

We wreathed about our darling’s head. See Morning- 
glory, The.—Lowell. 

We yield to none in reverence for the past. See 
Slavery.—Lowell. 

Weak and irresolute is man. See Human Frailty.— 
Cowper. 

Weak and sinful as I am. See Outside the Fold.— 
Willett. 

Weak-winged is song. See Ode Recited at the Harvard 
Commemoration, July 21, 1865.—Lowell. 

Wealth is power, talent is power. See Real Power.— 
Anon. 

Wearied and worn with earthly cares, I yielded to 
repose. See Starless Crown, The.—Anon. 

Wearied arm and broken sword. See Pocahontas.— 
Thackeray. 

Weary at heart with winter yesterday. See April.— 
Auringer. 

Weary human nature lays its head on the bosom of the 
divine Word. See Reply to Essays and Reviews. 
—Anon. 

Weary? I am as limp as that white glove. See 
Debutante’s Bouquets, A.—Hatch. 

Weary men, what reap ye?—“Golden corn for the 
stranger.” See Famine Year, The.—Wilde. 

Weary of all this wordy strife. See Catholic Love.— 
Wesley. 

Weary of myself, and sick of asking. See Self-depend¬ 
ence.—-Arnold. 

Weary one, tired of life and its restlessness. See Rest. 
—Blanchard. 

Weary, weary, desolate. See Yuma.—Phelps. 

Weary, weary loves! See Bird’s Cradle-song, A.— 
Worthley. 

Weary with toil, I haste me to my bed. See Sonnets, 
XXVII.—Shakespeare. 

Weave no more silks, ye Lyons looms. See Our Orders. 
—Howe. 

Weave no more the marriage chain! See Bridal Dirge, 
A.—Procter. 

Weave the warp, and weave the woof. See Bard, 
The (Curse upon Edward, The'.—Gray. 

Webster could awe a senate, Everett could charm a 
college. See Daniel O’Connell’s Power over the 
Irish People.—Phillips. 

We’d never thought of takin’ 'em—’twas Mary Ann’s 
idee. See Takin’ Boarders.—Lincoln. 

Wedding is great Juno’s Crown. See As You Like It 
(Wedlock Hymn, A).—Shakespeare. 

Wee, modest, crimson-tipped flower. See To a Moun¬ 
tain Daisy.—Burns. 

Wee Sandy in the corner. See Still Small Voice, The.— 
Smart. 

Wee, sleekit, cowrin’, tim’rous beastie. See To a Mouse 
on Turning up her Nest with the Plow.—Burns. 

Wee Willie Winkie rins through the town. See Willie 
Winkie.—Miller. 

Weed of the strange flower, weed of the earth. See 
Invocation to Tobacco.—-Mellen. 

Weehawken! In thy mountain scenery yet. See 
Fanny (Weehawken and the New York Bay).— 
Halleck. 

Weel, having thus wooed Miss M’Flimsey and gained 
her. See Cast-off Garments.—Butler. 

Weel [or well], Sandy, man, and how did ye like the 
sermon the day? See Sandy Macdonald’s Signal. 
—Ross. 

Weel, ye maun understan’, said Bob, that naething 
in the worl’ wid. See Bob Johnston’s Visit to the 
Circus.—Stewart. 

Weep no more, nor sigh, nor groan. See Queen of 
Corinth, The (Weep no More).—Fletcher. 

Weep not for him! The Thracians wisely gave. See 
On the Death of General Taylor.—Conrad. 

Weep not for me. See Knowledge.—Newman. 

Weep not for Scio’s children slain. See Massacre at 
Scio, The.—Bryant. 

Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee. See 
Menaphon (Sephestia’s Song to her Child).— 
Greene. 

Weep not! tears must vainly fall. See Weep not! 
Sigh not!—Linton. 


Weep not that we must part. See Love Cannot Die.— 
Anon. 

Weep with me, all you that read. See Epitaph on 
Salathiel Pavy, a Child of Queen Elizabeth’s 
Chapel, An.—Jonson. 

Weep you no more, sad fountains. See Lullaby.— 
Anon. 

Weeping Philosophers there were of old. See Intro¬ 
duction to Barton’s Comic Recitations.—J. B. 

Weird wife of Bein-y-Vreich! horo! horo! See Cailleach 
Bein-y-Vreich.—Shairp. 

Welcome! a right royal welcome! See Lady-killer, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

Welcome, bright flag! welcome to-day! See Red, 
White and Blue, The.—Anon. 

Welcome, dear Rosencrantz, and Guildenstern! See 
Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

Welcome, friend of our fathers, to our shores. See 
Welcome to General La Fayette.—Everett. 

Welcome from Egypt, sir. See Antony and Cleopatra 
(Cleopatra’s Barge).—Shakespeare. 

Welcome her, thunders of fort and of fleet. See 
Welcome to Alexandra, A (Alexandra).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Welcome, Jack! Where hast thou been? See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. (Prince Henry and Falstaff).— 
Shakespeare. 

Welcome, maids of honour. See To Violets.—Herrick. 

Welcome, old friend! These many years. See To Age. 
—Landor. 

Welcome, pale primrose! starting up between. See 
Primrose.—Clare. 

“Welcome, pretty sunshine!” See April Fool, An.— 
Anon. 

Welcome, pure thoughts and peaceful hours. See 
Chosen Path, The.—Vaughan. 

Welcome, pure thoughts! welcome, ye silent groves! 
See Thoughts on the Forest.—Wotton. 

Welcome, sweet prince, to London, to your chamber. 
See King Richard III. (Little Princes, The).— 
Shakespeare. 

Welcome them, cheer them, crown them with flowers! 
See Hail to the Veterans.—Richardson. 

Welcome, thrice welcome is thy silvery gleam. See 
Stratford Fountain.—Holmes. 

Welcome, thou festal morn! never be passed in scorn. 
See Birthday of Washington ever Honored, The.— 
Howland. 

Welcome thou peaceful dawn! See Sabbath, The.— 
Anon. 

“Welcome to Rome!” The cry rang through the city. 
See Regulus.—Braddock. 

Welcome to the day returning. See Ode for Washing¬ 
ton’s Birthday.—Holmes. 

Welcome, Uncle, to our Centennial party. See 
Columbia’s Centennial Party.—Slade. 

Welcome, welcome do I sing. See Welcome, A.—Browne. 

“Welcome, welcome, little stranger, fear no harm, and 
fear no danger. See Address to a Robin.—Alcott. 

Welcome! welcome, little stranger! Welcome to my 
lone retreat! See Prisoner to a Robin who Came 
to his Window.—Montgomery. 

Welcome, wild harbinger of spring! See Crocus.— 
Longfellow. 

Welcome, wild Northeaster! See Ode to the Northeast 
Wind.—Kingsley. 

Welcome, ye pleasant dales and hills. See Old Home¬ 
stead, The.—Bruce. 

Welcome ye shades, ye bowery thickets, hail. See 
Seasons. Tho.—Thomson. 

We’ll a’ go pu’ the heather. See same. —Nicholl. 

We’ll agitate the question against license, high or low. 
See Against License.—Annable. 

Well, Alfred, you’re welcome, old fellow! See Teeto¬ 
taler's Story, A.—Haywood. 

Well, Anna, what are we going to do? See Singing 
Temperance Songs.—Vinton. 

Well, as I have got to live all alone. See Sober Second 
Thought, A.—Anon. 

We’ll begin with a box, and the plural is boxes. See 
English Language, The.—Anon. 

“Well, Bessie, the right of suffrage is finally given to 
women.” See Election of the Future, The. 
—(Detroit Free Press.) 

Well, Betsey, this beats everything our eyes have ever 
seen! See Old Man in the Palace Car, The.— 
Yates. 

Well bethought; send Walter to me. See Iron Chest, 
The.—Colman. 

Well, Bill, shake han’s ’n’ say good-by afore ye go away. 
See Breaking Home Ties.—Frazier. 

Well, Bones, how do you find yourself this evening? 
See How Bones Caught a Duck.—Anon. 


914 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Well 


Well, Bones, how do you find yourself this evening? 
See Who am de Mudder.—Anon. 

Well, Bridget, we’ve been talking. See Bridget and 
the Matinee.—Coates. 

Well, Brother Jonathan. See Keep the Holidays.— 
Denton. 

Well, Captain, whereabouts in the wide world are we? 
See Gridiron, The.—Lover. 

Well, dear, here we are. See Sewing Circle, The.— 
Anon. 

Well, Dick, are you ready to leave? See Wanted—a 
Valet.—Griffith. 

Well, Dinah might dispel the night. See “Well, Dinah 
Might.”—Tenney. 

Well, dolly, it’s almost Christmas again. See Old Santa 
Has Struck.—Denton. 

Well, Dolly, what are you saying. See Talking to 
Dolly.—Anon. 

Well; even then! Besides, what would you do? See 
Discussion, The.—Anon. 

“Well,” exclaimed a young lady just returned from 
school. See Contrasted Soliloquies.—Taylor. 

Well for him that he has such a heart to meet his own. 
See Message of an JEolian Harp, The.—Havergal. 

Well, friends, I think I can not sing to-night. See 
“Where the Lilies Bloom.”—Anon. 

Well, having thus wooed Miss McFlimsey and gained 
hei. See Nothing to Wear (Cast-off Garments).— 
Butler. 

Well, here I am, all ready for my second ball. See 
Nettie Dudd before her Second Ball.—Dallas. 

Well, here I am, almost as ignorant as ever. See 
Student and His Neighbors, The.—Woodward. 

Well, here I am at last. Tired nearly to death. See 
Hungry Traveler, The.—Anon. 

Well, here I am, ensconced in my new boarding-place. 
See Thanksgiving.—McBride. 

Well, here I am! Expected, too, I see! See Visit of 
Santa Claus.—-Anon. 

Well, here I am home at last—a finished young lady. 
See Friend at Court, A.—Anon. 

Well, here I am left all alone, and just as sick as I can 
be. See Curing an Invalid.—Anon. 

Well, here I am, my girls and boys. See Mr. and Mrs. 
Santa Claus.—Anon. 

Well, here I am! No more college studies for three 
months. See Schoolmaster, The.—Adams. 

Well, here I am once again; once more amid the balmy 
atmosphere. See Virginia Mummy, The.— 
White. 

Well, here we are so far, at last. See Opera Mad.— 
Anon. 

Well, here we have him—pray give him a glance. See 
How It Is.—Anon. _ 

Well, honor is the subject of my story. See Julius 
Csesar (Speech of Cassius, Instigating Brutus to 
Join the Conspiracy against Csesar).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Well, how is the young lady. Bones? See Bones on 
Money.—Anon. 

Well, how provoking; no one here but me. See Lost 
Opportunity, The.—Denton. 

Well, I am in a fix—a decided fix. See Opening 
Address, The.—Rook. 

Well, I am of the opinion that we are in straightened 
circumstances. See Love’s Labor not Lost.—Mc¬ 
Bride. 

Well, I am resolved I’ll eollect my bill of Col. Blarney 
this time. See Debtor and the Dun, The.— 
Moliere. 

Well, I am very glad, Thomas. See May Day—a 
Moving Drama.—Hall. 

Well, I confess, 1 did not guess. See I’m not a Single 
Man.—Hood. 

Well. I declare, here is Tim, with his nose in a book as 
usual. See What is a Gentleman?—Denton. 

Well, I do be kept busy, to be sure, now. Miss Eliza. 
See Astonishing the Natives.—Graham. 

Well, I don’t see where Ma put those stockings. See 
Christmas Night.—Johnson. 

Well, I golly! Dat’s a nice lookin’ head to go to a ball 
wid. See Box and Cox.—Morton. 

Well, I guess it’s all up wid me, as de immoral Shakes- 
poke said. See Come and Hug Me!—McDonough. 

Well, I have a hard life of it. And if I continue on in 
this way. See Turning Around.—Anon. 

Well, I have just come into town to meet an old friend 
of mine. See Humorous Irish Sketch.—Sertrew. 

Well, I havn’t got much longer to live. See Uncle 
Zeke’s Opinion.—Sabean. 

Well I know she is not handsome. See Love’s Secret. 
—Bates. 

Well, I know thy trouble. See same. —Neale. 


Well; I may now receive and die. See Character of 
the Bore, The.—Donne. 

Well I never, that tiresome man han’t gone out yet. 
See Stray Parrot, A.—Paul. 

Well I suppose I may give up in despair. See Reunion 
of Peter and Jane.—McBride. 

Well, I think I’ll finish that story for the editor of the 
“Dutchman.” See Romance at Home.—Parton. 

Well! I wonder how much longer we shall have to 
wait? See Cinderella; or, The Glass Slipper.— 
McDonald. 

Well, if ever I saw such another man since my mother 
bound my head! See Mary the Cook-maid’s 
Letter to Doctor Sheridan.—Swift. 

Well! if the Bard was weather-wise, who made. See 
Dejection; An Ode.—Coleridge. 

Well, I’ll be off. See Doctor by Proxy, A.—Graham. 

“Well, I’m determined! That’s enough!” See Abner 
and the Widow Jones.—Bloomfield. 

Well, I'm getting considerably in debt. See Mrs. 
Smith’s Boarder.—McBride. 

Well, I’m off, like a shot from a gun! See Bad Habit 
Cured, A.—Anon. 

Well, I’m sure I don’t know what brought that old 
country woman here. See Uncle Jacob’s Money. 
—McBride. 

Well, I’m sure I don’t know what’s keeping Reuben 
out so late. See Those Thompsons.—Anon. 

Well, I’m sure we have all on us a great deal to be 
thankful for. See Oliver Twist (Mr. Bumble and 
Mrs. Corney).—Dickens. 

Well, is the rack prepared,—the pincers heated? See 
Wail of Jugurtha, The.—Wolfe. 

Well, it is almost time I was off on my route. See 
Turning the Tables.—Smith. 

Well, it is decided, and to-day I start for the poor 
house. See Going to a New Home.—McBride. 

Well, it isn’t the King, after all, my dear creature! See 
Fudge Family in Paris, The (Letters from Miss 
Biddy Fudge).—Moore. 

Well it’s queer, it is, and I’ve been thinking about it. 
See Bridget’s Soliloquy.—Dallas. 

Well; I’ve walked the jail, and the Courts I’ve seen. 
See Retrospection.—Lyall. 

Well, Jack! Here you’ve gone and done it. See 
Similar Case, A.—Anon. 

Well, Jack, where have you been this long, hot day? 
See Two Kinds of Fun.—Denton. 

Well, Jane, I stayed in town last night. See Spelling 
Down.—Gifford. 

“Well, Jo, what is the matter? Don’t be frightened.” 
See Bleak House (Death of Little Jo).—Dickens. 

Well, John, how many boots did you shine to-day. 
See Old Apple-Woman, The.—McBride. 

Well, Katie, and is this yersilf? And where was you 
this while? See Larry’s on the Force.—Russell. 

Well, ladies, what’ll [or what will] it be? See ’Twas 
at Manhattan Beach.—-Anon. 

Well, little girl, you wish to come to school, do you? 
See Little Teacher, The.—Anon. 

Well, Mary me darlint, I’m landed at last. See Pat’s 
Letter.—Queerquill. 

Well, mate, you’ve asked me about a fellow. See 
Dukite Snake, The.—O’Reilly. 

Well, Maud, I’m twenty-four to-day. See Change of 
Heart, A.—Anon. 

Well met, gentlemen, well met! See Excitement at 
Kettleville, The.—Sargent. 

Well might the king wear sackcloth; his were a nation’s 
woes. See Under the Purple and Motley.— 
Burdette. 

Well, Mr. Edward, how are you getting on? See 
Shoemaker’s Cabinet.—Anon. 

Well, Mrs. Columbia, if you do really think so. See 
Columbia and Mr. “They Say.”—Denton. 

Well, mother, how about your temperance work. See 
Signing the Pledge.—Anon. 

Well mother, I mustn’t be skulking about here in 
Leipzig any longer. See Emperor and the De¬ 
serter. The.—Anon. 

Well, my dear Princess, I hope you have chosen wisely. 
See King Roughbeard and the Princess.—Denton. 

Well, my dear sister, you look almost tired to death. 
See Father Time’s Granddaughters.—-Hawthorne. 

Well, neighbor Wink, I obsarved you kept one eye on 
the preacher. See New Preacher, The.—Silonius. 

Well [Wall—C.], no! I can’t tell whar he lives. See 
Jim Bludso, of the Prairie Belle.—Hay. 

Well, no! my wife ain’t dead, sir, but I’ve lost her all the 
same. See Blacksmith’s Story, The.—Olive. 

“Well, no,” the boy said, “the thing didn’t go off ex¬ 
actly as I expected.” See Reminiscence of Ex¬ 
hibition Day, A.—Burdette. 


915 




We’ll 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


We’ll not weep for summer over. See After Summer. 
—Marston. 

Well, now; I can’t see how it is why the boss makes me 
work. See Coopers, The.—White. 

Well, old fellow, how does it seem. See What is the 
Use of Latin?—Anon. 

Well, on condition that we’re very private. See 
Honeymoon, The (Zamora).—Tobin. 

Well, really, since listening to that wonderful Miss Big- 
witz. See Mrs. Tubbs and Political Economy.— 
Dallas. 

"Well,” said a straight-backed, straight-legged chair. 
See How to Gain Friends.—Anon. 

"Well,” said the duckling, "well.” See Ambition.— 
Anon. 

Well, Sally, we are getting along swimmingly now, 
aint we? See John Jones’ Fortune.—McBride. 

Well [or Weel], Sandy, man, and how did ye like the 
sermon the day? See Foxes’ Tails; or, Sandy Mac¬ 
donald’s Signal, The.—Anon. 

"Well,” Saturday to Sunday said. See Sunday Morn¬ 
ing.—Hebei. 

Well, Shamus, what brought ye? See Winnie’s Wel¬ 
come.—Emmett. 

"Well, Sir”—continued Mr. McWilliams. See Mrs. 
McWilliams and the Lightning.—Clemens. 

Well, sir, he had the blamedest, biggest, cattycorned- 
est pianner. See How ‘‘Ruby’’ Played.—Bagby. 

Well, sir, you discover the temper of the man that 
oppresses me. See Vicar of Wakefield, The (Inno¬ 
cence Rewarded).—Goldsmith. 

"Well, sir, you must know that there was wanst a king 
called King O’Toole. See King O’Toole and Saint 
Kevin.—Lover. 

Well, spoiled child, will you never be reasonable? See 
Pursuit, The.—Anon. 

We’ll stop here and rest awhile. See Not Quite a Bar¬ 
gain.—Denton. 

Well, stranger, you’re from Texas? And you want. 
See Soul that Passed in the Night, A.—Anon. 

Well! that’s a woman I pity! See Midshipmite, The. 
—Scott. 

Well, the ways and trials I had wid that Chineser I 
couldn’t be tellin’. See Miss Maloney on the 
Chinese Question.—( Scribner’s Monthly.) 

Well then! I now do plainly see. See Mistress, The 
(Wish, The).—Cowley. 

Well, then, take my life. See Princess, The—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Well then, the promised hour is come at last. See To 
My Friend, Mr. Congreve.—Dryden. 

Well, there is but one thing to be done. See Running 
for Congress.—Crosby. 

Well, they don’t give you much room hin ’ere. See 
Obstructive Hat in the Pit, The.—Anstey. 

Well, they say I’ll be elected. See Victory Deferred.— 
Scott. 

Well, thin, there was once’t upon a time. See Story 
of the Little Rid Hin.—Whitney. 

Well, this has been a red letter day in my calendar. 
See Pussy Wants a Corner.—Stout. 

Well, this is a mighty pleasant room—so cool and nice. 
See Stage-struck Blacksmith, The.—McBride. 

Well, this yer Smiley had rat-tarriers. See Jumping 
Frog, The (Jim Smiley’s Frog).—Clemens. 

Well; ’tis as Bickerstaff has guessed. See Elegy on 
Partridge.—Swift. 

Well, Titus, speak; how is it with thee now? See 
Brutus and Titus.—Lee. 

Well, to go back to where I was before I digressed. 
See Membranous Croup and the McWilliamses.— 
Clemens. 

Well, Tom, my boy, I must say good-bye. See Home 
Concert, The.—Brine. 

“Well, Uncle Sam,” says Jefferson D. See Overtures 
from Richmond.—Child. 

Well, uncle, well. See Uncle, The; or, Comparisons 
are Odious.—Pickering. 

Well, well! it is my birthday once agaip. See Mother 
Goose’s Party.—Anon. 

Well, well, sir! so you’ve come at last. See Fanny 
Gray.—Kavanaugh. 

Well, well, who’d a t’ought ob seein’ you, all drest in dat 
way. See Rival Darkies, The.—Anon. 

Well, when I first infested this retreat. See First 
Settler’s Story, The.—Carleton. 

Well, who’d ha’ thought it! Miss Mehitable has 
walked off the stage. See Miss Higginson’s Will.— 
Bellows. 

Well, whose girl am I, anyway? See Whose Girl?— 
Anon. 

Well, why don’t you say it, husband? I know what 
you want to say. See Selling the Farm.—Day. 


Well, wife, I’ve been to church to-day—been to a 
stylish one. See Old Man in the Stylish Church, 
The.—Yates. 

Well, wife, I've been to ’Frisco, an’ I called to see the 
boys. See Old Man Goes to Town, The.—Swiner- 
ton. 

Well, wife, I’ve found the model church! I worshiped 
there to-day! See Old Man in the Model Church, 
The.—Yates. 

Well, Willie, I suppose you liked the circus? See 
After the Circus.—Denton. 

Well worthy to be magnified are they. See Pilgrim 
Fathers, The.—Wordsworth. 

Well, ye see, I’d sold my papers. See Newsboy in 
Church, A.—Kelly. 

Well, yes, I calkerlate it is a little quiet here. See 
When the Train Comes in.—Waterman. 

Well, yes, it’s sometimes pretty lonesome here. See 
Sod House in Heaven, The.—Mills. 

Well, yes, I’ve lived in Texas since the spring of ’61. 
See Spool of Thread, A.—Eastman. 

Well, yes! On Tuesday last the knot was tied. See 
Hat, The.—Anon. 

Well, yes, sir, dat am a comical name. See Ashcake.— 
Page. 

Well? yes, sir, yes, sir, thankee! so-so, for my time o’ 
life. See What the Old Man Said.—Robbins. 

“Well, you know,” she says after the matinee. See 
Woman’s Description of a Play, A.—Dane. 

Well, you may let him stand in out of the wet. See 
Shaugraun, The (Tailor’s Thimble, The).—Bouci- 
cault. 

Well, young ’un, you’re mighty smooth spoken. See 
Fisherman Job.—Reed. 

“Well! you’ve got back, hev you? See Aunt Patience’s 
Doughnuts.—( Springfield Republican.) 

Well-nerved and stout be the arm that smiteth wrong. 
See same.— Murray. 

W’en Bill Smith gits his ’cordeen out. See W’en Bill 
Smith Gits His ’Cordeen out.—Anon. 

W’en de jewdrops ’gins to glisten. See W’en de Darky 
am a-Whis’lin in de Co’n.—Lapius. 

W’en I was a young boy on de farm, dat’s twenty 
year ago. See How Bateese Came Home.— 
Drummond. 

W’en you come to see ’em close. See Little Johnnie’s 
“Piece” on Owls.—Anon. 

W’en you see a man in woe. See Hullo.—Foss. 

Wer reitet so spilt durch Nacht und Wind? See Erlkonig. 
—Goethe. 

We’re a band of little children. See Little Sunbeams. 
—Richards. 

Were a being of an understanding mind and a benevo¬ 
lent heart. See Education.—Mann. 

We’re all in the dumps. See In the Dumps.—Anon. 

We’re all of us glad at the Easter-time. See At 
Easter Time.—Hewitt. 

Were all the interesting diversities of color and form to 
disappear. See Beautiful in Creation, The.— 
Dwight. 

Were any of you born in New England. See Uncle 
Abel and Little Edward.—Stowe. 

We’re a-studying of Literature. Nee Senior Schedule, 
A.—McLean. 

Were but my spirit loosed upon the air. See same. — 
Moulton. 

We’re faring with the fleet. Nee Song of the Fleet, A.— 
Stanton. 

We’re gathered here with one accord. See Like Wash¬ 
ington.—Denton. 

We’re going to have a dolly show. See Doll Show, 
The.—Anon. 

We’re going to play at keeping shop. See Playing 
Store.—Rook. 

Were half the power that fills the world with terror. 
Nee Arsenal at Springfield, The (Armory, The).— 
Longfellow. 

Were I a happy bird. See Faith Trembling.—De 
Vere. 

“Were I a man,” quoth Mistress Jane. See In Maiden 
Meditation.—Nichols. 

Were I as base as is the lowly plain. See Sonnet.— 
Sylvester. 

Were I but his own wife, to guard and to guide him. 
See Were I but His Own Wife.—Downing. 

Were I despised and desolate and poor. See From the 
Persian.—Nichols. 

Were I so tall to reach the pole. See same. —Anon. 

Were I thy bride. See same. —Anon. 

Were I to name, out of the times gone by. See Sonnet. 
—Hunt. 

Were I transported to some distant star. See Plain 
Man’s Dream, A.—Keppel. 


916 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


What are 


‘‘Were it not for me,” said a chickadee. See Chickadee, 
The.—Day re. 

We’re make-believe maids of Japan. See Maids of 
Japan.—Goodfellow. 

Were men so dull they could not see. See On a Painted 
Lady with Ill Teeth.—Waller. 

We’re only little children. See same. —Richards. 

We’re plain old fashioned folks, my husband and me. 
See Ezra and Me and the Boards.—Field. 

We’re playing we are peddlers. See Little Peddlers, 
The.—Moor. 

We’re soldiers of an army. See Our Temperance 
Banner.—Anon. 

We’re the twins from Aunt Marinn’s. See Twins, The. 
—Riley. 

Were there no night we could not read the stars. See 
same. —Burton. 

We’re three little chaps. See Three Little Lads.— 
Sullivan. 

Were Tully now alive, he’d be to seek. See Language 
of the Learned.—Butler. 

Were you ever at school, Johnson? See Bones on 
Education.—Anon. 

Were you ever in sweet Tipperary, where the fields 
are so sunny and green. See Tipperary.—Kelly. 

Were you ever left alone for an hour with a child? See 
Daniel in the Lion’s Den.—Ten Eyck. 

Were you ever sick, Johnson? See Bones and the 
Doctor.—Anon. 

Were you serious, Professor, in tbat hurried chat we 
had the other day. See Suffrage Question, The.— 
Anon. 

Werther had a love for Charlotte. See Sorrows of 
Wertber, The.—Thackeray. 

West tells the world that Peter cannot rhyme. See 
Lex Talionis upon Benjamin West, The.—Pindar. 

West wind, blow from your prairie nest! See Song 
My Paddle Sings, The.—Johnson. 

Westminster is gray at midnight. See Christmas 
Thought about Dickens, A.—Scranton. 

Westward the course of Empire takes its way. See 
On the Prospect of planting Arts and Learning in 
America (Verse).—Berkeley. 

We’ve a little speech to make. See Echo, The.—Anon. 

We’ve come to ask you children. See Way to Spend 
Christmas, The.—Chase. 

We’ve come to speak a verse! Fred, you must bow. 
See Our Verse.—Anon. 

We’ve come with beating hearts to-night. See Saluta¬ 
tory.—Kavanaugh. 

We’ve fought with many men acrost the seas. See 
“Fuzzy-Wuzzy.”—Kipling. 

We’ve got a baby! I should like you to come. See 
Baby, The.—Townsend. 

We’ve lived for forty years, dear wife. See Ideal 
Husband to his Wife, The.—Foss. 

We’ve trod the maze of error round. See Reflections 
(Late Wisdom).—Crabbe. 

“Wha’ you doin’ out dar, Sammy?” See Picaninny’s 
Cyclone, The.—Anon. 

Wha’ll buy caller herrin’? See Caller Herrin’.— 
Naim. 

Whan father Adie first pat spade in. See Caller Water. 
—Fergusson. 

Whan n 6 that April with his shour^s soote. See Can¬ 
terbury Tales, The (Prologue).—Chaucer. 

“Whar ye gawin’, Andy?” siz mother. See Settin’ up 
with Elder McK’ag’s Peggy.—McCook. 

Wharefore sou’d ye talk o’ love. See Willy and Helen. 
—Ainslie. 

What a beautiful day! Had the weather been wet. 
See My Dejeuner 4 La Fourchette.—Bayly. 

What a beautiful thing is etiquette! See Lesson in 
Etiquette, A.—Thatcher. 

What a confusion there is in the school! See May 
Queen, The.—Anon. 

What a dainty life the milkmaid leads. See Mdkmaid, 
The.—Nabbes. , 

What a difficult thing it would be to sit down and try 
to enumerate. See Influence of Life, The. 
Thackeray. 

“What a fool you are, Paley,” said a young man in a 
British university. See same. —Barnes. 

What a frail thing is beauty! says Baron Le Cras. See 
Forma Bonum Fragile.—Prior. . 

“What a friend we have in Jesus. See Blessing of 
Song, The.—Anon. _ 

What a fuss Delia makes about this visit. See ii«x- 
pected Visitors, The.—Graham. 

What a fwagwant cweachaw she ith! See Bora Dun- 
dreary on Mental Photographs. Anon. 

What a marvelous history is ours! See Decoration 
Day Address, A.—Richardson. 


What a moment, what a doubt! See Sneezing.— 
Hunt. 

What a nice rose-bush, Charles. Where did you get it? 
See Rose Bush, The.—Anon. 

What a noble gift to man are the forests! See same. 
—Cooper. 

What a pretty tale you told me. See Two Poets 
of Croisic, The (Tale, A).—Browning. 

What a profound study is the law! and how difficult to 
fathom! See Goody Grim versus Lapstone.— 
Matthews. 

What a profound study is the law! How shall I define 
it? See Beauties of the Law.—Anon. 

What a queer title! a handful of wool! See Handful 
of Wool, A.—Anon. 

“What a quiet man your husband is, Mrs. Smith.” 
See Quiet Mr. Smith, The.—Fern. 

What a rarg treat it is to meet with three persons so 
distinguished. See Some “Arabian Nights” Peo¬ 
ple.—Denton. 

What a rude, blustering fellow is March! See Who 
Shall be Queen of May?—Wayland. 

What a time since I wrote!—I’m a sad naughty 
girl. See Fudge Family in Paris, The (Letters 
from Miss Biddy Fudge).—Moore. 

What a trying life we lawyers lead, to be sure. See 
Pair of Lions, A.—Cushing. 

What a wonder seems the fear of death. See On the 
Death of Chatterton.—Coleridge. 

What a work was that to make a weak man falter and 
a brave man think! See Storming of Mission 
Ridge, The (Battle of Mission Ridge, The).— 
Taylor. 

What aggregated wisdom must that fellow be pos¬ 
sessed of. See Curious Want, A.—Cook. 

What agony was visible on my mother’s face. See 
Resisting a Mother’s Love.—Anon. 

What ails the black rooster? He seems very sick. 
See Sick Rooster, The.—Goodwin. 

What ails this heart of mine? See same. —Blamire. 

What ails you that you look so pale. See Ballad of 
Marjorie, A.—Sigerson. 

What! alive and so bold, O Earth? See Lines on the 
Death of Napoleon.—Shelley. 

What am I afther radin’ do you be askin’! See Tim’s 
Downfall.—Smith. 

What am I offered for Baby? See Auctioning Off the 
Baby.—Anon. 

What am I to do? Last week Augustus Lofty pro¬ 
posed to me. See Awful Boots.—McBride. 

What an awful long day! I wish it was time to go to 
bed. See Idleness is the Mother of All Evil.— 
Anon. 

What an enormous interest the drink-traffic has built 
up. See Put out that Fire!—Taylor. 

What an idiot I am to wait here for a fellow. See Mrs. 
Hardcastle’s Journey.—Goldsmith. 

What an image of peace and rest. See Old St. David’s 
at Radnor.—Longfellow. 

What are another’s faults to me? See Faults.— 
Anon. 

“What are little girls good for?” See Little Helpers.— 
Brown. 

What! are my deeds forgot? See Troilus and Cressida. 
—Shakespeare. 

What are sufficient causes of war, let no man say, let no 
legislator say. See Responsibilities of a Recom¬ 
mendation of War.—Binney. 

“What are the bugles blowin’ for?” said Files-on- 
Parade. See Danny Deever.—Kipling. 

What are the flowers of Scotland. See same. —Hogg. 

What are the long waves singing so mournfully ever¬ 
more? See Olivia.—Pollock. 

What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast? 
See Under the Shade of the Trees.—Preston. 

What are the Vision and the Cry. See Confused Dawn, 
The.—Lighthall. 

What are these in bright array. See same. —Mont¬ 
gomery. 

What are these, so withered? See Macbeth.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

What are we going to do, dear friends. See Year That 
is to Come, The.—Gage. 

What are we looking at, guv’nor? See Fireman’s 
Wedding, The.—Eaton. 

What are we to do? How are we to bring this emer¬ 
gent and pressing question. See Compromise 
Measures, The (Compromise Bill of 1850, The).— 
Webster. 

What are ye askin’, stranger, about that lock o’ har. 
See Curly-head.—Brooks. 

What are you able to build with your blocks? See 
Block City.—Stevenson. 


917 




What are 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


What are you doin’ now, Bones? See Bones working 
on a Farm.—Anon. 

What are you doing?—-Copying! Got to do something! 
See Photograph Gallery, The.—Graham. 

What are you doing, little white cloud? See Cloud, 
The.—Anon. 

What are you doing, Mary? See Force of Imagination, 
The.—Anon. 

What are you good for, my brave little man? See My 
Good-for-Nothing.—Miller. 

What, are [wr. be] you hurt, lieutenant? See Othello, 
the Moor of Venice (Cassio’s Lost Reputation).— 
Shakespeare. 

What, are you hurt, Sweet? So am I. See To a Hurt 
Child.—-Litchfield. 

What are you making, Lizzie? See Church Raffles.— 
Anon. 

What are you playing, Miss Glen,—a dirge. See Holi¬ 
day.—Case. 

What are you reading, Daniel? See Bumps.—Anon. 

What are you singing for? See Mary Maloney’s 
Phi losophy.—Anon. 

"What, are you stepping westward?”—"Yea.” See 
Stepping Westward.—Wordsworth. 

What are you waiting for, George, I pray? See Tardy 
George.—Anon. 

What art thou? What dost thou look like? See Kiss, 
A.—Anon. 

What avails a confession, O father, when the doom of 
the morning is near. See Francesca.—Clark. 

What awful debts are these, my son? See "As Ye 
Sow.”—Mack. 

What! be you hurt, Lieutenant? See Othello, the 
Moor of Venice (Regrets of Drunkenness).— 
Shakespeare. 

What became of the kitten you had when I was here 
before? See What Became of the Kitten.—-Anon. 

What beck’ning ghost, along the moonlight shade. See 
Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady.— 
Pope. 

What bird is that, with voice so sweet. See Creole 
Slave-song, A.—Thompson. 

What bird so sings, yet does so wail? See Alexan¬ 
der and Campaspe (Spring’s Welcome).—Lyly. 

What boot is it though I am said to be. See Britan¬ 
nia’s Pastorals (Complaint of Pan, The).—Browne. 

What boots it that thine eye is bright. See To-. 

—Dalling. 

What bring ye me, O camels, across the southern desert. 
See Caravans.—Peabody. 

What, brother, not gone yet? I thought you were to 
meet. See Now or Never.—Pickering. 

What can a helpless female do? See Women and Their 
Ways.—Anon. 

What can ail the Bergen burghers. See Black Death 
of Bergen, The.—Dufferin. 

What can be better calculated to fill the mind. See 
Behind the Scenes.—Anon. 

What can better please. See Fields in May, The.— 
Allingham. 

What can console for a dead world? See God and the 
Soul (Believe and Take Heart).—Spalding. 

What constitutes a state? See Ode in Imitation of 
Alcaeus, An.—-Jones. 

What constitutes a state? See also Our Country’s 
Needs.—Finch. 

What can I give him. See Birthday Gift, A.—Ros¬ 
setti. _ 

What can it mean? is it aught to Him. See God Cares. 
—Anon. 

What can lambkins do. See Chill, A.—Rossetti. 

What, can those dead bones live, whose sap is dried. 
See New Ezekiel, The.—Lazarus. 

What can we do to help mamma. See Helping Mamma. 
—Anon. 

What can we play? See Keeping Store.—Anon. 

"What canst thou do?” said the oak to the flower. 
See That Little.—Jay. 

What care I for the tempest? See Cleopatra’s So¬ 
liloquy.—Clark. 

"What care I, what cares he.” See Cowboy, The.— 
Antrobus. 

What change has made the pastures sweet. See 
Maiden with a Milking-pail, A.—Ingelow. 

What charlatans in this later day. See Deathless, The. 
Hayes. 

What charms are thine, oh incense breathing morn. 
See Morning.—Burdette. 

What cheer is there that is half so good. See Winter 
Apples.—Whitney. 

What chivalry did for the few, the Olympic contests 
effected for the many. See Athens: Its Rise and 
Fall (Olympic Crown, The).—Bulwer-Lytton. 


What cometh here from west to east a-wending? See 
Death-song, A.—Morris. 

What, comrade of a night. See Life.—Brown. 

What conscience, say, is it in thee. See To (Enone.— 
Herrick. 

What cordial welcomes greet the guests. See Oh, 
Mother of a Mighty Race (“What cordial,” etc.). 
Bryant. 

What could I do when I was shown my task. See Re¬ 
venge, A.—Meyers. 

What country ever offered a nobler theater for the 
display of eloquence than our own? See Elo¬ 
quence.—Cass. 

What, cringe to Europe! Band it all in one. See 
To America.—Boker. 

What curled and scented sun-girls, almond-eyed. See 
On a Lute Found in a Sarcophagus.—Gosse. 

What days await this woman. See Forecast, A.— 
Lampman. 

What delight to back the flying steed. See Love Chase, 
The (Hunt, The).—Knowles. 

What did the baby come for? See Why?—Moore. 

What did the baby go for? See "Only a Bit of Child¬ 
hood Thrown Away.”—Moore. 

What did the sparrows do yesterday? See In April.— 
Jackson. 

What did you have for breakfast, Johnson? See 
Tambo on Entomology.—Anon. 

What did you mean yesterday, dear mother. See 
Winning the Prize.—Anon. 

What did you say, dear—breakfast? See Left Alone 
at Eighty.—Robbins. 

What did you say? Does the ole place look kind o’ 
nat’ral like? See Old Homestead, The.—Daven¬ 
port. 

What did you say, Mrs. Smith? See Musical Bore, 
The.—Anon. 

What dire offence from amorous causes springs. See 
Rape of the Lock, The.—Pope. 

What distant thunders rend the skies. See On the 
Death of Captain Nicholas Biddle.—Freneau. 

What do grown folks do, mamma. See Bed-time.— 
Anon. 

What do I see in the burning coals. See Unseen 
Depths, The.—Langdon. 

What do the birds say, I wonder, I wonder. See Little 
Girl’s Wonder, A.—Anon. 

What do the dear girls learn nowadays. See Ballade 
of College Girls, A.—Batchelder. 

What do the robins whisper about. See Three 
o’Clock in the Morning.—Palfrey. 

What do we plant when we plant the tree? See Have 
you Planted a Tree?—Abbey. 

What do you bring, O children. See Our Country.— 
Bayley. 

What do you mean by saying. See Little Pitcher, A. 
—Denton. 

What do you say? What? See Use Plain Language. 
Anon. 

What do you think I saw to-day. See Out in the 
Meadow.—Anon. 

What do you think o’ my youngster,—he’s a likely lad, 
sir, eh? See Little Fireman, The.-—Nichols. 

What do you want here? See Rival Speakers, The.— 
Anon. 

What do you want, Mattie? See Voice, The.—Anon. 

What does it mean when the blue-bird flies [or comes]. 
See Signs of the Seasons, The.—Hathaway. 

What does it take to make a racket. See Receipt for a 
Racket. A.—M. E. B. 

What does little birdie say? See same. —Tennyson. 

What does the daisy see. See Day’s Eye, The.—Anon. 

What does youth with silvered crown? See Gray Hair 
in Youth.—Thomas. 

What domes and pinnacles of mist and fire. See Even¬ 
ing in Tyringham Valley.—Gilder. 

What dost thou here, thou dusky courtier? See Moth- 
song.—Cortissoz. 

What dost thou here, young wife, by the water side? 
See Shadow of Doom, The.—Thaxter. 

What, dost thou pray that the outgone tide ba rolled 
back on the strand. See Far Cry to Heaven, A.— 
Thomas. 

What doth the poor man’s son inherit? See Heritage, 
The (Our Heritage).—Lowell. 

What d’ye buy? See Historical Butcher, The.—Anon, 

What end the gods may have ordained for me. See 
To Leuconoe.—Field. 

What fairings will ye that I bring? See Singing. Leaves 
The.—Lowell. 

What flower is this that greets the morn. See Flower 
of Liberty, The.—Holmes. 


918 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


What is 


“ What for the Giver, giant tree?’ ’ See For the Giver. 
—Cooper. 

What fragrant-footed comer. See Little Knight in 
Green, The.—Bates. 

What! Fred, you here? I didn’t see. See On the 
Channel Boat.—Anon. 

What fury has provoked thy wit to dare. See To One 
who Wrote against a Fair Lady.—Waller. 

What gift for passionate lovers shall we find? See 
Perfume.—Gosse. 

What gnarled stretch, what depth of shade, is his! See 
Oak, The.—Lowell. 

What good is a brother? See same. —Richards. 

What great yoked brutes with briskets low. See 
Crossing the Plains.—Miller. 

What guyle is this, that those her golden tresses. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Sonnet: "W'hat 
guyle,” etc.).—Spenser 

What had happened to Emily Foote? See Grand¬ 
mother’s Stitches.—Caldwell. 

What has become of the children all? See Les En- 
fants Perdus.—Baker. 

What has become of the good ship Kite? See Of the 
Lost Ship.—White. 

What has become of your fun and frivolity? See 
Clown’s Lament, The.—Scott. 

What has come over you, my dear? See Small Pitch¬ 
ers Hare Large Ears.—Kavanaugh. 

What has given the liquor traffic the power to get into 
the heart. See Arrest Alcohol and Liberate Man. 
—Anon. 

What has our country done to repay the world for the 
benefits we have received from others? See Our 
History.—Verplanck. 

What has this bugbear death that’s worth our care? 
See Sonnet: Death.-—Walsh. 

What hast thou done to-day? See same. —Wichmann. 

What have I done for you. See England, My Eng¬ 
land.—Henley. 

What have I done that was so criminal? See Address 
to the Assembly of Noblesse.—Mirabeau. 

What have I found in the fields of June. See June 
Fields.—Cooper. 

What have I gained by the toil of the trail? See Toil 
of the Trail, The.—Garland. 

What have I in my hand? Jonas, you may tell me. 
See Model Lesson, The.—Anon. 

What have I to say, why sentence of death should not 
be pronounced on me. See On Being Found 
Guilty of High Treason.—Emmet. 

“What have you done, dear children?” See Katie’s 
Part.—Perry. 

What, have you let the false enchanter 'scape? See 
Comus (Sabrina).—Milton. 

What have you there? See Generous Little Ones.— 
Anon. 

What, he on whom our voices unanimously ran. See 
Pope and the Net, The.—Browning. 

“What he wants us to do I can define in no other words 
than these.” See Path of Duty. The.—Hoar. 

What! here again, indomitable pest! See To a Trouble¬ 
some Fly.—MacKellar. 

What heroes from the woodland sprung. See Seventy- 
six.—Bryant. 

What hidden strength. See Comus.—Milton. 

What hidst thou in thy treasure-caves and cells. See 
Treasures of the Deep. The.—Hemans. 

“What, ho! Andromeda!” See Modern Shakespeare, 
The.—Anon. 

What, ho, sir poet! Dost thou pace. See Shake¬ 
speare’s Dream.—Anon. 

What ho! Virginius! Virginius! See Virginius.—Knowles. 

What, ho! Who hears? A stranger claims a refuge! 
See His Enemy’s Honor.—Anon. 

What holds her fixed far eyes nor lets them range? See 
On Diirer’s “Melencolia.”—Watson. 

What hope is there for modern rhyme. See In Me- 
moriam (Poet’s Tribute. The).—Tennyson. 

What Horace says is. See Eheu Fugaces.—Barham. 

What house do you say?—the Ship at Stock? See 
Tramp and a Vagabond, A.—Anon. 

What! I go on, and thank the gentlefolks! See Char¬ 
acteristic Address.—Moncrieff. 

What I shall leave thee, none can tell. See To Vincent 
Corbet, My Son.—Corbet. 

What I want is my husband, sir. See After the Acci¬ 
dent.—Harte. 

“What I was gwine to remark,” said Bro. Gardener. 
See De Goneness ob de Past.—Anon. 

What if God should place in your hand a diamond. 
See same.— Payson. 

What if I saved from trampling feet. See Which is 
Best.—Redden. 


What if little birds would sing soft to you. See What 
would you Think?—Anon. 

What if some morning, when the stars were paling. 
See Morning Thought, A.—Sill. 

What if the little rain should say. See I Have no In¬ 
fluence?—Anon. 

What if the Soul her real life elsewhere holds. See 
Soul in the Body, The.—Thomas. 

What in me is dark. See Paradise Lost.—Milton. 

What is a gentleman? Is it a thing. See What is a 
Gentleman.—Anon. 

What is a minority? The chosen heroes of this earth. 
See What is a Minority?—Gough. 

What is a school-master? Why, can’t you tell? See 
Doctor and His Apples, The. 

What is a sonnet? ’Tis the pearly shell. See Sonnet, 
The.—Gilder. 

“What is a Tunkuntel?” he asked. See Tunkuntel, 
The.—Anon. 

What is ambition? ’Tis a glorious cheat! See What 
is Ambition?—Willis. 

What, is Antonio here? See Merchant of Venice, 
The (Fourth Act of “Merchant of Venice”).— 
Shakespeare. 

What is commonly called musical criticism is a mis¬ 
nomer. See same.- —Edwards. 

What is death? ’Tis to be free. See Genius of Death, 
The.—Croly. 

What is eternity? Can aught. See Eternity.—Gib¬ 
bons. 

What is fame? ’Tis the sun-gleam on the mountain. 
See Fame, Wealth, Life, Death.—Skeat. 

What is flirtation? Really. See What is Flirtation? 
—Anon. 

What is glory but the blaze of fame. See Paradise 
Regained.—Milton. 

What is gold worth, say. See Child’s Song.—Swin¬ 
burne. 

“What is good for a bootless bene?” See Force of 
Prayer, The.—Wordsworth. 

What is he buzzing in my ears? See Confessions.— 
Browning. 

“What is heaven?” I asked a little child. See What 
is Heaven?—Anon. 

What is hell but an expression of God’s infinite ab¬ 
horrence of sin. See same. —Beecher. 

What is Hope? A smiling rainbow. See "Cui Bono?” 
—Carlyle. 

What is it ails my dollie dear? See Very Bad Case, A. 
—Stauffer. 

What is it comes through the deepening dusk. See 
Scent of a Good Cigar, The.—Carrington. 

What is it fades and flickers in the fire. See By the 
Fireside.—Larcom. 

What is it, my Renzo? What is thy desire? See 
Florentine Juliet, A.—Coolidge. 

What is it that, as taxpayers, as parents. See Mission 
of the Public Schools, The.—Hyde. 

What is that gives to the plainest face. See Open 
Secret, An.—Thaxter. 

What is it that is gone we fancied ours? See ADolian 
Harp.—Allingham, 

What is it that we children feel. See At Nightfall.— 
Larcom. 

“What is it to be dead?” O Life. See Child’s Ques¬ 
tion, A.—Nason. 

What is it to grow old? See Growing Old.—Arnold. 

What is it we are going to do, Bertha? See Parlia¬ 
mentary Law.—Denton. 

What is ministerial success? See same. —Robertson. 

What is needed to elevate the soul is, not that a man 
should know all. See Great Ideas.—Channing. 

What is noble? To inherit. See True Nobility.— 
Swain. 

What is our duty here? To tend. See Our Duty 
Here.—Bowring. 

What is Patriotism? Is it a narrow affection. See 
.What is Patriotism?—Ames. 

What is so rare as a day in June. See Vision of Sir 
Launfal, The (June).—Lowell. 

“What is that great bird, sister, tell me.” See Shag, 
The.—Thaxter. 

What is that long procession approaching Jerusalem? 
See “Half was not Told Me, The.”—Talmage. 

What is that? Look closer and you will see that it is 
a gaunt, grim wolf. See Wiped Out.—( Detroit 
Free Press.) 

What is that, mother?—The eagle, boy. See What 
is That, Mother ? (Eagle, The).—Doane. 

What is that, mother?—The lark, my child. See 
What is That, Mother?—Doane. 

What is the age in which you are called to act? See 
Twentieth Century, The.—Gates. 


919 




What is 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


What is the bigot’s torch, the tyrant’s chain? See 
Pleasures of Hope, The (Hope of an Hereafter, 
The).—Campbell. 

What is the existence of man’s life. See Life.—King. 

“What is the fog, mamma?” See Fog, The.—Anon. 

What is the heritage that has come down to us from 
Lincoln’s administration. See Our Rich Heritage. 
—Thurston. 

What is the Iron Rule? See Iron—Silver—Gold.— 
Anon. 

What is the joy of living. See Gipsy Song.—( Williams 
Literary Monthly.) 

What is the kitty good for? See Benny’s Questions.— 
Anon. 

What is the life of man? See Life and Death.— 
Anon. 

What is the little one thinking about? See Bitter¬ 
sweet (Babyhood).—Holland. 

What is the matter with Grandpapa? See Poor Dear 
Grandpapa.—Thompson. 

What is the meaning of the song. See I Love My Love. 
—Mackay. 

What is the price of human life. See Price of High 
License, The.—Waterhouse. 

“What is the real good?” See What is Good?— 
O’Reilly. 

What is the song the swallows sing. See What is the 
Song the Swallows Sing.—Smith. 

What is the Sunday newspaper? Let us be honest. 
See Sunday Newspaper, The.—Johnson. 

“What is the use of thee, thou gnarled sapling?” See 
Larch and the Oak, The.—Carlyle 

What is the use of these tiny hands? See Little Girl’s 
Questions, A.—Anon. 

What is the voice I hear. See Britannia to Columbia. 
—Austin. 

“What is the wind, mamma?” See Wind, The. 
—Anon. 

What is the world, my little one? See Days and the 
Year, The.—Blodgett. 

What is there down so deep. See Mother’s Love.— 
Anon. 

What is there wanting in the Spring? See Wistful 
Days, The.-—Johnson. 

What is this? A letter from my wife? See Reason¬ 
able Man, A.—Macqueen. 

What is this army that’s marching to-day? See Tem¬ 
perance Song Recital.—Brown. 

What is this? This, darling, is the opera. See Popu¬ 
lar Science Cathechism.—Anon. 

What is this thunder music from the other side of the 
world. See Song of Dewey’s Guns, The.—Foss. 

What is time, O glorious Giver. See Time.—Cary. 

What is to be the destiny of this Republic? See Future 
of the United States, The.—Story. 

What is to be thought of her? See Joan of Arc.— 
De Quincey. 

“What is your bugle blowin’ for?” said Rudyard to 
the maid. See “Danny Deever” up to Date.— 
Anon. 

“What is your name?” asked the teacher. See 
Tommy Brown.—( Common School Education.) 

What is your • opinion of matrimony, Bones? See 
Bones’ Opinion of Matrimony.—Anon. 

“What is your substance, whereof are you made.” 
See Sonnets, LIII.—Shakespeare. 

What is’t, Fine Grand, makes thee my friendship fly. 
See To Fine Grand.—Jonson. 

What, it is asked, has this nation done to repay the 
world. See America’s Contributions to the World. 
—Verplanck. 

What! keep a week away? Seven days and nights. 
See Othello, the Moor of Venice.—Shakespeare. 

What lack the valleys and the mountains. See Shadow, 
A.—Procter. 

What lesson shall those lips teach us? See Burial of 
John Brown, The.—Phillips. 

What lightning shall light be? What thunder shall tell 
it? See Martin Luther at Potsdam.—Pain. 

What love do I bring you? See Measure for Measure. 
—Spofford. 

What make you from Wittenburg, Horatio? See 
Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

What makes a hero?—not success, not fame. See 
What Makes a Hero?—Taylor. 

What makes all doctrines plain and clear. See Hudi- 
bras.—Butler. 

What makes it night? T want to go. See Child’s Won¬ 
der, The.—Johnson. 

What makes one refuse a social glass? See Social 
Glass, A.—Anon. 

“What makes the rain, mamma?” See Rain, The. 
—Anon. 


What makes you come here fer, mister? See Prior to 
Miss Belle’s Appearance.—Riley. 

What makes your eyes so blue, laddy? See Laddy 
Blue Eyes.—Smith. 

What man can live denying his own soul? See Im¬ 
perial Soul, The.—Mitchell. 

What man is there so bold that he should say. See 
Liberty.—Hay. 

What, married! Evangeline married? Great Heavens, 
it cannot be so! See Cruel Deception, A.—Anon. 

What may we take into the vast Forever? See Future, 
The—Sill. 

What means this firing, mother? Have we succeeded? 
Is my father safe? See Hugo Grotius.—Kotzebue. 

“What means this glory round our feet?” See Christ¬ 
mas Carol, A.—Lowell. 

What means yon trampling? what that light. See 
Death of the Duke d’Enghien, The.—White. 

What mechanical inventions already crowd upon us! 
See Age of Work, The.—Kennedy. 

What might be done if men were wise. See What 
might be Done.—Mackay. 

What mighty ills have not been done by woman? See 
Orphan, The.—Otway. 

What Mr.Bowser didn’t know about dressmaking up 
to a week ago wasn’t worth knowing. See Mr. 
Bowser among the Dressmakers.—-Anon. 

“What mockery or malice have we here?” cries Herv£ 
Riel. See Hervt* Riel.—Browning. 

What more felicitie can fall to creature. See Fate of 
the Butterfly, The.—Spenser. 

What mortal, when he saw. See Human Life.—Ar¬ 
nold. 

What motley cares Gorilla’s mind perplex. See Lit¬ 
erary Lady, The.—Sheridan. 

What must be must be, little one. See Verses.— 
—Wickes. 

What, my young master? O my gentle master! See 
As you Like It (Adam’s Warning and Persuasion 
of his Young Master Orlando).—Shakespeare. 

What name can I sign? I, who have no right to any 
name. See Gerald and his Mother.—Wilde. 

What name shall I say, please, sir? See Decidedly 
Cool.—Jerrold. 

What needs complaints. See Comfort to a Youth that 
had Lost his Love.—Herrick. 

What needs my Shakespeare for his honored bones. 
See Epitaph on the Admirable Dramatic Poet, W. 
Shakespeare, An.—Milton. 

What news (sweet Pool) look’st thou my lines should 
tell. See Queen Margaret to William de la Pool.— 
Drayton. 

What note of sorrow wounds the joyous May? See 
same. —Hobart. ' 

What now, jailor? did I not beg to be free from thy 
babbling instrusion? See False Accusation, The. 
—Swander. 

What now, Wiley; inspecting.stock? See Fighting the 
Rum-flend.—Thayer. 

What nymph should I admire or trust. See Question 
to Lisetta, The.-—Prior. 

What of her glass without her? The blank gray. See 
Without Her.—Rossetti. 

■What on earth does that fellow want. See Double 
Play.—Wayne. 

What one does easily is apt to be his forte. See Holmes, 
Extract Concerning.—Underwood. 

What patriotic purpose is to be accomplished. See 
Expunging Resolution, The.—Clay. 

What peaceful hours I once enjoyed. See Elder 
Sniffle’s Courtship.—Witcher. 

What pleasure have great princes. See Quiet Life, 
The.—Byrd. 

What potions have I drunk of Siren tears. See Son¬ 
nets, CXIX.—Shakespeare. 

What precious associations cluster around our flag. 
See Our Flag.—Putnam. 

What reck we of the creeds of men? See What Matters 
it?—Cameron. 

What reflecting American does not acknowledge the 
incalculable advantages. See First Settlement of 
New England, The (Our Relations with England). 
—Everett. 

What reputation, what honor, what profit can accrue 
to you. See Weathercock, The.—Allingham. 

What rights the brave? See Sword, The.—Barry. 

What! Robbed the mail at midnight! See On the 
Frontier.—Jones. 

What! Roses on thy tomb! and was there then. See 
Ave! Nero Imperator.—Osborne. 

What ruined me and got me into an idiot asylum was 
this. See What Drove Me into a Lunatic Asy¬ 
lum .—Perkins. 


920 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


What wak’st 


What sacred memories entwine. See Washington.— 
Caldwell. 

What saw you in your flight to-day. See Vagabonds, 
I he.—Johnson. 

What sawest thou, Orion, thou hunter of the star-lands 
See Singing Stars.—Hinkson. 

What say? A song or a story? Draw up a box ’r a 
chair. See Along the Line.—Russell 

What say the Bells of San Bias. See Bells of San Bias, 
The.—Longfellow. 

What says the little brook? See Little Voices — 
Anon. 

What seat is that, my lord? See Mary Stuart.— 
Schiller. 

What seek I here? I know not; yet I feel I have a 
mission to fulfill. See Leah, the Forsaken.— 
Daly. 

What seek’st thou at this madman’s pace? See His 
Quest.—Tooker. 

What seemed the great primeval curse. See Opportu¬ 
nity to Labor.—Reed. 

What seems to be the most needed patriotism. See 
New Patriotism, The.—Gilder. 

What shall be said of this embattled day. See Parted 
Love.—Rossetti. 

What shall be written of the man. See On a Birthday. 
—Morris. 

What shall become of the ancient race. See Ancient 
Race, The.—Tormey. 

What shall her silence keep. See Dirge.—Cawein. 

What shall I do for my love. See same, —Morris. 

What shall I do? Here is a letter. See Between the 
Acts.—Griffith. 

What shall I do lest life in silence pass? See Fame.— 
Schiller. 

“What shall I do?” My boy, don’t stand asking. 
•See same. —Gage. 

What shall I do to be forever known? See Duty.— 
Schiller. 

What shall I do with all the days and hours'. See Ab¬ 
sence.—Kemble. 

What shall I give you, sweet, to-day? <See Birthday 
Greeting, A.—Edlin. 

What! shall I ne’er more see those halcyon days! See 
To Zepheria.—Anon. 

What shall I say to thee, heart of my heart. See Love’s 
Proving.—Weatherly. 

“What shall I wear to the ball, ma belle?” See 
Norine.—Anon. 

What shall I wish thee for the coming year? See 
Birthday Greeting, A. — M. E. F. 

What shall little children bring. See Children’s Offer¬ 
ing, The.—Alcott. 

What shall my gift be to the dead one lying. See 
Lilian Adelaide Neilson.—Scott. 

What shall we do now, Mary being dead. See Mary 
Booth.—Parsons. 

What shall we do this evening? See Amusement 
Circle, The.-—Anon. 

“What shall we have for dinner to-day?” See What 
Ailed the Pudding.—Pollard. 

What shall we mourn? For the prostrate tree that 
sheltered the young green wood? See Wendell 
Phillips—O’Reilly. 

What shall we, wrap the baby in? See same. —Lar- 
com. 

What shall withstand her? Who shall gainsay her? 
See Parliament of Man, The.—Brown. 

What? Sho’! You don’t! Do you mean it, though? 
See Wabash Violets.—Marble. 

What should a man desire to leave? See Pro Mortuis. 
—Palgrave. 

What should I say ? Since Faith is dead. See Re¬ 
vocation, A.—Wyatt. 

What should I say to you? See Merchant of Venice, 
The.—Shakespeare. 

What! shut the Gardens! lock the latticed gate! See 
Sunday Question, The.—Hood. 

What sight so lured him thro’ the fields he knew. See 
F ar—far—away.—Tennyson. 

What sing the sweet birds in each grove? See Inner 
Temple Masque, The (Song in the Wood, The). 
—Browne. 

What, sir, is the Supreme Court of the United States? 
See Supreme Court of the United States, The.— 
Binney. 

What! soared the old eagle to die at the sun! See 
Death of Harrison.—Willis. 

What solace would those books afford. See Our 
Book-shelves.—Hake. 

What song is well sung not of sorrow. See Hope.— 
Miller. 


What song sang the twelve with the Saviour. See 
Last Supper, The.—Miller. 

What songs found voice upon those lips. See Helen 
Hunt Jackson.—Coolbrith. 

What sound, the world round. See Bobolink’s Song, 
The.—Waterloo. 

What stands upon the highlands? See Moonrise.— 
Jones. 

What strength! what strife! what rude unrest! See 
Westward Ho!—Miller. 

What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted. 

. „ r ,*See. King Henry VI.. Pt. II.—Shakespeare. 

“What struck?” “Half-past ten o’clock.” See Water¬ 
loo.—Sladen. 

What sudden blaze of song. See Christmas Day.— 
Keble. 

What sweet relief the showers to thirsty plants we see. 
See True Love, A.—Grimald. 

What! tear the old church down, you say, and build a 
modern one. See Old Church, The.-—Johnson. 

What telegraphed word. See Return of the Hillside 
Legion.—Lynn. 

What tents gleam on the green hill-side, like snow in 
the sunny beam? See Bernardo’s Revenge.— 
Anon. 

What the Greek wrought, the vaunting Frank may 
gain. See Antique at Paris, The.—Schiller. 

What then is love but mourning? See Come Away!— 
Champion. 

What, then, remains? The liberty of the press, only. 
See Liberty of the Press, The.—Curran. 

“What then, what if my lips do burn.” See Ulf in 
Ireland.—De Kay. 

What! then you won’t accept it, won’t you? Oh! 
See On a Rejected Nosegay.— (Punch.) 

What thing is beauty? “Nature’s dearest minion!" 
See Beauty and Time.—J. C. 

What things have we seen. See Ben Jonson.—Beau¬ 
mont. 

What tho’ short thy date? See Night Thoughts. 
—Young. 

What though I leave this dull and earthly mould. See 
Bard Speaks, The.—Keats. 

What though I sing no other song? See Golden 
Silence, The.—Winter. 

What though the field be lost? See Paradise Lost. 
—Milton. 

What though the green leaf grow? See same. —Flem¬ 
ing. 

What though the radiant thoroughfare. See Bells of 
Notre Dame, The.—Anon. 

What though the storm-king growls in rage. See 
Toast, A.—Lane. 

What though thy Muse the singer’s art essay. See To 
America.—Garnett. 

What though your feet are often overweary. See Min¬ 
istering.—Anon. 

What time is it? Heavens! we’ll have half an hour to 
wait. See Just as she Told It.—Witheridge. 

What time is it?—Seven o’clock you say? See Dying 
Actor, The.—Fawcett. 

What time is it? Time to do well. See What Time 
is it?—Anon. 

What time the earth takes on the garb of spring. See 
Incipit Vita Nova.—Payne. 

What time the glittering rays of morn. See Abor¬ 
iginal Chant.—Anon. 

What time the mighty moon was gathering light. See 
Love and Death.—Tennyson. 

What time the rose of dawn is laid across the lips of 
night. See Angler’s Reveille, The.—Van Dyke. 

What time the winter sun is low. See Finis.—Bur¬ 
dette. 

What time this world’s great Workmaster did cast. 
See Hymn in Honour of Beauty.—Spenser. 

What time Ulysses, in the frosty morn. See Odd I 
See, The.—-Burdette. 

What tongue the melodies of morn can tell? See 
Morning.—Beattie. 

What two men were hidden in a well by a woman. See 
Questions about Women.—Anon. 

What? up for de Senate! See Old Vote for “Young 
Marster,” An.—De Jarnette. 

What voice did on my spirit fall. See Peschiera.— 
Clough. 

What voice is that? my young lord? speak again. See 
Comus (Spirit-shepherd, The).—Milton. 

“What voice, what harp, are those we hear.” See 
Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship (Minstrel, The). 
—Goethe. 

What wak’st thou, Spring?—sweet voices in the woods. 
See Breathings of Spring.—Hemans. 


921 




What was 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


What was David doing when he was called to be king? 
See Search Questions.—Anon. 

What was he doing, the great god Pan. .See Musical 
Instrument, A.—Browning. 

What, was it a dream? Am I all alone. See Left on 
the Battle Field.—Bolton. 

What was it that Charlie saw, to-day? See What?— 
Osgood. 

What was it you were saying, dear? See Laughing 
Family, The.—Denton. 

What was Lincoln’s mysterious power, and whence? 
See Secret of Lincoln’s Power, The.—Watterson. 

What was my dream? though consciousness be clear. 
See What Was My Dream?—O’Connor. 

What was that story about George Washington. See 
Short Conversation, A.—Anon. 

What was that you were saying, Mr. Bones, about a 
banquet. See Bones at a Free-and-easy.—Anon. 

"What was the health officer doing over to your house 
this morning?” See Bad Boy and the Limburger 
Cheese, The.— (Peck's Sun.) 

What was’t awakened first the untried ear. See First 
Man, The.—Coleridge. 

What went ye to the wilderness to see? See Marquis 
of Lome’s Visit to the North-west, The.— 
Kirby. 

What went ye out to see? See Third Sunday in Ad¬ 
vent.—Keble. 

What were the whole void world, if thou wert dead. 
See Foreboding, A.—Lowell. 

“What were they?” you ask. You shall presently see. 
See Philosopher’s Scales, The.—Taylor. 

What? What is all this you tell me? Columbus re¬ 
turned? See Return of Columbus, The.—Sar¬ 
gent. 

What, what, what, what’s the news from Swat? See 
Threnody, A.—Lanigan. 

‘‘What! while our arms can wield these blades.” See 
Lalla Rookh (Gheber to his Followers, The).— 
Moore. 

What whispers so strange at the hour of midnight. 
Legend of the Aspen, A.—Ingemann. 

What wild desires, what restless torments sieze. See 
Bibliomania, The.—Ferriar. 

What wildfire runs about the stooping sheaves. See 
Autumn Sunset, An.—Anon. 

What will be the situation of these States, organized 
as they are now? See On the Judiciary Act, 
1802.—Morris. 

What will become of the West if her prosperity rushes 
up. See East and the West One, The.—Beecher. 

What will it matter ia a little while. See Trifles.— 
Smith. 

What will we do at the May party? See May Queen, 
The.—Denison. 

What will we do this evening, boys? See Secretary, 
The.—Denison. 

What will we do when the good days come? See 
Utopia.—Burdette. 

‘‘What will you be when you are grown?” See Little 
Grace.—Chandler. 

What will you do, love, when I am going. See W r hat 
Will You Do, Love?—Lover. 

What will you give to a barefoot lass. See Song of 
Riches, A.—Bates. 

What will you have, my countryman, liquor or liberty? 
See Liquor or Liberty.—Crafts. 

What will you sow, little children, what will you sow? 
See Spring Planting-time.—Thaxter. 

What woful stuff this madrigal would be. See Essay 
on Criticism. An —Pope. 

What wondrous life is this I lead? See Garden, The 
(‘‘What wondrous,” etc.).—Marvell. 

What wondrous sermons these seas preach to men! 
See Along Shore.—Bashford. 

What would I do if I were you? See If I were You? 
—Anon. 

What would I have you do? I’ll tell you, kinsman. 
See Advice to a Reckless Youth.—Jonson. 

What would they thought in our day, John. See 
Views of Farmer Brown.—Terry. 

What! would ye swing your brother’s form. See Capi¬ 
tal Punishment.—Townsend. 

What would you, George? See Gambler’s Son, The.— 
Anon. 

What would you see if I took you up. See What 
Would You See.—Macdonald. 

What you dot, Tarlie? See Change of Toys.—Smith. 

Whate’er of woe the Dark may hide in womb. See 
Breath of Avon. The.—Watts. 

Whatever any one does or says, I must be good. See 
Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius (Goodness.)—An¬ 
toninus. 


Whatever I do and whatever I say. See Aunt Tabitha. 
—Holmes. 

Whatever I have tried to do in my life, I have tried 
with all my heart to do well. See David Copper- 
field (“Whatever I have tried,” etc.).—Dickens. 

Whatever in the world is the matter with you, Laura. 
See Too Clever by Half.—-Anon. 

Whatever place the sense of one’s own insignificance 
may hold. See Ruskin’s “Ethics of the Dust.”— 
Anon. 

Whatever the heights to which woman is destined to 
rise. See Woman as Friend.—Lord. 

Whatever the lagging, dragging journey * * * * 

may have been to the rest of the emigrants. See 
Gilded Age, Tne (Uncle Daniel’s Introduction to 
a Mississippi Steamer).—Clemens and Warner. 

Whatever you are, be brave, boys! See Brave and 
True.—Downton. 

Whatever you have to say, my friend. See Boil it 
Down.—Anon. 

W T hatever your career, a knowledge of history will 
always be to you a source of profit and delight. 
See Utility of History.—S6gur. 

"What’ll you have, John?” See At the Tavern.— 
Cary. 

“What’s a’ the steer, Kimmer.” See same. —Anon. 

What’s all yo folks er doin’? See How Buck was 
Brought to Time.—Read. 

What’s de use ob keepin’ de place so nice-lookin’. See 
Darkey Photographer, The.—Anon. 

What’s fame?—a fancied life in others’ breath. See 
Essay on Man, An (Fame).—Pope. 

What’s got the matter in the church, have Christians 
quit a speakin’? See Our Church Sociable.— 
Eisenbeis. 

What’s hallow’d ground? Has earth a clod. See 
Hallowed Ground.—Campbell. 

What’s he that wishes [for more men from England]? 
See King Henry V. (Henry V. to his Soldiers).— 
Shakespeare. 

What’s he that wishes so? [for one man more]. See 
King Henry V. (Henry V. to his Soldiers).— 
Shakespeare. 

What’s here? another change! Law books and a bust 
of Cicero. See Lawyer, Doctor, Soldier and Actor, 
The.—Anon. 

What’s in the brain that ink may character. See Son¬ 
nets, CVIII.—Shakespeare. 

What’s love, when the most is said. See When the 
Most is Said.—De Vere. 

What’s my love’s name? Guess her name. See 
Valentine, A.—Anon. 

What’s the best thing in the world? See Best Thing 
in the World, The.—Browning. 

What's the brightness of a brow? See Evanescence.— 
Spo fiord. 

"What’s the fun?” said a rather tall thin young man. 
See Pickwick Papers, The (Pickwickians Taken 
for Informers, but Rescued by the Stranger, The). 

-—Dickens. 

What’s the good o’ shinglin’. See WTiat’s the Good.— 
Webber. 

What’s the matter, little boy? See Hard to Please.— 
Anon. 

What’s the song the crickets sing. See Cricket Songs. 
—Whitney. 

What’s the way to Bylo-town? See Baby’s Lullaby.— 
Anon. 

What’s them things in yer pockets, Jake, a-bulging out 
so? Hey? See Deacon Adams to his Son.— 
Anon. 

What’s there beneath, where the flowers in a heap. See 
Alice Ayers.—Blake. 

What’s this? “Alone with a madman!” See Wanted 
—a Nurse.—Kobbe. 

What’s this dull town to me? See Robin Adair.— 
Koppel. 

What’s this! the red blood stops! he’s growing cold! 
See Cain, Ancient and Modern.—Murray. 

What’s this vain world to me? See Rest is not Here.— 
Navin. 

Whatsoe’er you find to do. See Vicar’s Sermon, The.— 
Mackay. 

Wheel me into the sunshine. See Home, Wounded.— 
Dobell. 

Wheer ’asta beiin saw long and meii liggin’ ere aloiin. 
See Northern Farmer (Old Style).—Tennyson. 

When a boy I used to be, like most other kids you see. 
See Down on the Farm.—Thatcher. 

When a boy’s born a boy. See When a Feller’s a 
.Boy.—Richards. 

When a certain great King, whose initial is G. See 
Ancient Prophecy, An.—Freneau. 


922 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


When daylight 


When a child breathes a pure and earnest prayer. See 
Lilies and Roses.—Anon. 

When a daffodil I see. See Divination by a Daffodil.— 
Herrick. 

When a deed is done for freedom, through the broad 
earth’s aching breast. See Present Crisis, The.— 
Lowell. 

When a’ ither baimies are hush’d to their hame. See 
Mitherless Bairn, The.—Thom. 

When a lady is seen at a party or ball. See “I Wouldn’t 
—Would You?”—Anon. 

When a little girl is good. See Rosebud or Thom?— 
Anon. 

When a man has been railroadin’ twenty long years. 
See Conductor’s Story, The.—M'Loughlin. 

When a pair of red lips are upturned to your own. See 
I Doubt it.—Anon. 

When a pretty maiden passes. See At the Club.— 
Hovey. 

What a pretty tale you told me. once upon a time. See 
Two Poets of Croisic, The (Bard and the Cricket, 
The).—Browning. 

When a thought comes to your brain. See Wait!— 
Steele. 

When a warm and scented steam. See Cuckoo, The.— 
Thombury. 

When a woman has a hen to drive into the coop. See 
Driving a Hen.—-( Mobile Register.) 

When a young seed begins to grow. See How an Apple 
Tree Grows.—Anon. 

When Advent dawns with lessening days. See Golden 
Flowers, The.—Holmes. 

When age hath made me what I am not now. See To 
My Picture.—Randolph. 

When Alcuin taught the sons of Charlemagne. See 
Emma and Eginhard.—Longfellow. 

When all is done and said. See On a Contented Mind. 
—Vaux. 

When all my plans have come to grief. See Bachelor’s 
Invocation, A.—( Pall Mall Gazette.) 

When all the fiercer passions cease. See Reflections.— 
Crabbe. 

When all the ground with snow is white. See Snow¬ 
bird, The.—Sherman. 

When all the panes are hung with frost. See Latakia. 
—Aldrich. 

When all the world is young, lad. See Water 
Babies (“Old, Old Song, The”).—Kingsley. 

When all Thy mercies, O my God. See Hymn, 
A: “When all thy.” etc.—Addison. 

When all were dreaming but Pastheen Power. See 
Song of the Ghost, The.—Graves. 

When almond buds unclose. See When Almonds 
Bloom.—Shinn. 

When along the light ripple the far serenade. See 
Venetian Serenade, The.—Houghton. 

When angel hosts sing glory to God on high. See 
December.—Doane. 

When anger burns within the breast. See Proverbs; or, 
Rhymes and Reasons.—Rook. 

When another life is added. See It is Well We Cannot 
See the End.—Anon. 

When another’s voice thou hearest. See Song.— 
Duflferin. 

When apple-trees in blossom are. See May.—Clarke. 

When April, one day, was asked whether. See April.— 
McDermott. 

When April rains make flowers bloom. See Shamrock, 
The.—Egan. 

When April steps aside for May. See Sister Months, 
The.—Larcom. 

When April’s sky is blue above. See Vernal Solace.— 
Hayne. 

When Arthur first in court began. See Sir Lancelot 
du Lake.—Anon. 

When as in faire Jerusalem. See Wandering Jew, 
The.—Anon. 

When as King Henry ruled [or rulde] this land. See 
Fair Rosamund.—Delone. 

When at close of winter’s night. See Paradise of 
Birds, The (Birdcatcher’s Song).—Courthope. 

When at home alone I sit. See Little Land, The.— 
Stevenson. 

When autumn shakes the rambo-tree. See Rambo- 
tree, The.—Riley. 

When baby wakes of mornings. See Cunnin’ Little 
Thing, The.—Field. 

When banners are waving. See same. —Anon. 

When Barry dares the President to fly on. See Barry’s 
Attack upon Sir Joshua Reynolds.—Pindar. 

When bashful single men are “well to do.” See Help¬ 
mate, A.—Bell. 


When beasts could speak (the learned say). See 
Beasts’ Confession, The.—Swift. 

When beechen buds begin to swell. See Yellow 
Violet, The.—Bryant. 

When Bess gave her dollies a tea, said she. See 
“Company Manners.”—Riley. 

When Bess goes out-doors. See When Bess Goes Out. 
—McIntyre. 

When Bibo thought fit from the world to retreat. See 
Bibo and Charon.—Prior. 

When biting Boreas, fell and doure. See Winter 
Night, A.—Bums. 

When breezes are soft and skies are fair. See Green 
River.—Bryant. 

When brighter suns and milder skies. See Spring.— 
Peabody. 

When Britain first at Heaven’s command. See Rule, 
Britannia.—Thomson. 

When Britain’s king, in days long past. See Sirloin.— 
Sabine. 

When brother Bill and I were boys. See Bell-flower 
Tree, The.—Field. 

When brother was a little girl. See When Brother was 
a Sister.—Richards. 

When brothers leave the old hearthstone. See Home¬ 
coming.—Anon. 

When builders start a house to build. See same .— 
Anon. 

When by a good man’s grave I muse alone. See 
Human Life.—Rogers. 

When by Zeus relenting the mandate was revoked. 
See Phoebus with Admetus.—Meredith. 

When calm is the night, and the stars shine bright. 
See Sleighing Song.—Shaw. 

When cannons peal their booming sounds. See One 
Hundred Years from Now.—Rowland. 

When captaines couragious, whom death cold not 
daunte. See Mary Ambree.—Anon. 

When cats run home and light is come. See Song: The 
Owl.—Tennyson. 

When chapman billies leave the street. See Tam 
O’Shanter.—Burns. 

When cherries grow on apple trees. See When.— 
Bingham. 

When cherry flowers begin to blow. See Yuki.— 
Fenollosa. 

When Chicago wished to impress her greatness and her 
determination. See Why Woman Wants the 
Ballot.—Brehm. 

When children are playing alone on the green. See 
Unseen Playmate, The.—Stevenson. 

When chill November’s surly blast. See Man was 
Made to Mourn.—Bums. 

When chivalry was all the taste. See Knights; or. 
Both Right and Both Wrong, The.—Anon. 

When Christ was born in Bethlehem. See Christmas 
Carol.—Anon. 

When Christ was bom of Mary free. See "In Excelsis 
Gloria.”—Anon. 

When Christmas dawned one plenteous year. See 
Clifford’s Way.—Richards. 

When civil dudgeon first grew high. See Hudibras 
(Character of Hudibras, The) .—Butler. 

When civil war, with horrors dire. See Brothers Once 
More.—Train. 

When clouds are seen, wise men put on their cloaks. 
Sec King Richard III. (Caution).—Shakespeare. 

When, Coelia, must my old day set. See To Ccelia.— 
Cotton. 

When coldness wraps this suffering clay. See same. — 
Byron. 

When Cooper died, the restless city paused. See 
Bryant, Extract concerning.—Curtis. 

WTien Count d’Albr^t had passed away, he left no son 
as heir. See Rescue of Albrct, The.—English. 

When, cruel fair one, I am slain. See Tomb, The.— 
Stanley. 

When Cupid did his grandsire Jove entreat. See To 
Mrs. Biddy Floyd; or, The Receipt to Form a 
Beauty.—Swift. 

When Cupid open’d shop, the trade he chose. See 
Smoke is the Food of Lovers.—Cats. 

When daffodils began to blow. See Love.—Story. 

When daffodils begin to peer. See Winter’s Tale, The 
(Song of Autolycus).—Shakespeare. 

When daisies pied and violets blue. See Love’s 
Labour’s Lost (“When daisies pied,” etc.).— 
Shakespeare. 

When Darby saw the setting sun. See Darby and 
Joan.—Honeywood. 

When daylight dies the world is hushed and still. See 
WTien Daylight Dies.—Lovell. 


923 





When de 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


When de fiddle gits to singing out a ole Vahginny reel. 
See Angelina.—Anon. 

When de worl’ don’ go to suit you. See Colored 
Phi losophy.—Cochran. 

When, dearest, I but think of thee. See same .— 
Suckling. 

When Death from some fair face. See Two Robbers.— 
Bourdillon. 

When death shall snatch us from these kids. See 
Dialogue between Thyrsis and Dorinda, A.— 
Marvell. 

When Death to either shall come. See same. —Bridges. 

When Debt is dressed up in his best. See Debt in Two 
Costumes.—Wilson. 

When deeply in love with Miss Emily Cline [i or. 
Prynej. See Stammering Wife, The.—Saxe. 

When Delia on the plain appears. See Composite 
Maiden, A.—Anon. 

When Delia on the plain appears. See also Tell Me, 
My Heart, if This be Love.—Lyttelton. 

When Demosthenes boasts to you, O Athenians, of 
his Democratic zeal. See Demosthenes Denounced. 
—rEschines. 

When Dermot O’Dowd coorted Molly McCann. See 
Dermot O’Dowd.—Lover. 

When descends on the Atlantic. See Seaweed.— 
Longfellow. 

When dew is glittering in the early morn. See Happy 
Farmer, The.—Haughwout. 

When Dicky was sick. See Little Dick and the Clock. 
—Riley. 

When do I love you most, sweet books of mine? See 
Confessio Amantis.— Le Gallienne. 

When do I mean to marry?—Well. See When I Mean 
to Marry.—Saxe. 

When do I see thee most, beloved, one? See Love- 
sight.—Rossetti. 

When doomed to feel that youth is o’er. See same .— 
Anon. 

When Dorothy and I took tea, we sat upon the floor. 
See Small and Early.—Jenks. 

When dreaming kings, at odds with swift-paced time. 
See Commem oration Ode (Washington).—Mon¬ 
roe. 

When Duncan is asleep. See Macbeth.—Shakespeare. 

When, during our session yesterday, those words which 
you have taught. See On the Refusal of the 
Chamber of Vacations of Rennes to Obey the 
Decrees of the National Assembly.—Mirabeau. 

When early shades of evening’s close. See Whip-poor- 
will, The.—Brownlow. 

When England, reeking from her deadly wound. See 
Eclogue the First.—Chatterton. 

When Erin first rose from the dark swelling flood. See 
Erin.—Drennan. 

When Europeans first visited the southern parts of 
North America. See King Cotton.—Mackenzie. 

When Eve brought woe to all mankind. See Woman.— 
Anon. 

When Eve had led her lord away [wr. astray]. See 
Album Verses.—-Holmes. 

When eve is purpling cliff and cave. See Evening.— 
Croly. 

When Eve went out from Paradise. See May.— 
Dandridge. 

When Ezry, that’s my sister’s son, come home 
from furrinj parts. See Cuckoo Clock, The.— 
Lincoln. 

When fades the last faint ray. See Now I Lay Me 
Down to Sleep.—Anon. 

When falls the soldier brave. See Sentinel Songs.— 
Ryan. 

When first, descending from the moorlands. See 
Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James 
Hogg.—Wordsworth. 

When first I chanced the Eagle to explore. See 
Yankee Landlord, The.—( Atlantic Monthly.) 

When first I looked into thy glorious eyes. See Sonnets 
on Edgar Allan Poe.—Whitman. 

When first I mark upon my child’s clear brow. See 
Two Voyagers.—Higginson. 

When first I met Louisa Ann. See Romance in 
Verse, A.—Anon. 

When first I saw fair-featured Grace. See Grace’s 
Choice.—Loomis. 

When first I saw her, at the stroke. See When First 
I Saw Her.—Woodberry. 

When first I saw sweet Peggy [wr. saw Peggy], 
See Low-backed Car, The.—Lover. 

When first my brave Johnnie lad. See Cock up Your 
Beaver.—Burns. 

When first my true love crown’d me with her smile. 
See Epigram.—Massey. 


When first the bride and bridegroom wed. See At Last. 
—Stoddard. 

When first the crocus thrusts its point of gold. See 
Touch of Nature, A.—Aldrich. 

When first the fiery-mantled Sun. See Ode to Winter. 
—Campbell. 

When first the unflowering Fern-forest. See Darwin¬ 
ism.—Darmesteter. 

When first thou earnest, gentle, shy, and fond. See 
Mother’s Heart, The.—Norton. 

When first Thou didst entice to Thee my heart. See 
Affliction.—Herbert. 

When first thy eyes unveil, give thy soul leave. See 
Rules and Lessons.—Vaughan. 

When first we met she was three feet high. See Then 
and Now.—Carryl. ' 

When Flora with her fragrant flowers. See Sir Andrew 
Barton.—Anon. 

When folks grow old I wonder why. See Molly.— 
Kellogg. 

When folks with headstrong passion blind. See Dame 
Fredegonde.—Aytoun. 

When for me the end has come and I am dead. See 
Written on the Night of his Suicide (“When for 
me,” etc.).—Realf. 

When for me the silent oar. See Across the River.— 
Larcom. 

When for some little insult given. See Forgiveness. 
—Taylor. 

When forty winters shall besiege thy brow. See Son¬ 
nets, II.—-Shakespeare. 

When France was but a province of the English. See 
Joan of Arc.—Anon. 

When Freedom, fair Freedom, her banner display’d. 
See Truxton’s Victory.—Anon. 

When Freedom from her home was driven. See Hills 
were Made for Freedom, The.—Brown. 

When Freedom, from her mountain height. See 
American Flag, The.—Drake. 

When Freedom on her natal day. See Moral Welfare, 
The.—Whittier. 

When Freedom, years ago, was born. See Two Armies, 
The.—Hughes. 

When friends are gone and the last flowers are spread. 
See Last Wish, The.—Kirkham. 

When from my couch I rise at morn, I kneel me 
down and pray. See Reporter’s Prayer, A.— 
Fraser. 

When from my lips the last faint sigh is blown. See 
Epicurean’s Epitaph, An.—De Vere. 

When from the ever-blooming bowers were driven. 
See Woman.—Osborne. 

When from the gloom of earth we see the sky. See 
God and the Soul (Void Between, The).— 
Spalding. 

When from the sacred garden driven. See Ode on Art. 
—Sprague. 

When from the vaulted wonder of the sky. See Faith’s 
Vista.—Abbey. 

When from these shores the British army first. See 
At Coruna.—Southey. 

When frost’s all on our window, an’ the snow’s. See 
Climatic Sorcery.—Riley. 

When gathering clouds around I view. See same.— 
Grant. 

When gathering night. See Orpheus and Eurydice.— 

Baskett. 

When gentle Twilight- sits. See Know Thyself.— 
Sigourney. 

When George the King would punish folk. See How 
We Became a Nation.—Spofford. 

When George the Third was reigning a hundred years 
ago. See Two Captains, The.—Cory. 

When George was thinking one dark night. See 
George’s Letter.—Richards. 

When girls are only babies. See Our Wrongs.— 
C. F. H. 

When Gladys plays in gladsome glee. See When 
Gladys Plays.—Greenslet. 

When God at first made man. See Pulley, The.— 
Herbert. 

When God had created all the flowers. See Forget- 
me-not, The.—-Anon. 

When God sends out His company to travel through 
the stars. See Wrestler, The.-—Roberts. 

When God the Father fashioned with His breath. See 
Legend of the Earth, The.—Rameau. 

When Goethe’s death was told, we said. See Memo¬ 
rial Verses (Death of Goethe).—Arnold. 

When good King Arthur ruled the [or this] land. See 
King Arthur.—Anon. 

When gooseberries grow on the stem of a daisy. See 
To Mollidusta.—Planch^. 


924 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


When I 


When grandma puts her glasses on. See Grandma.— 
Anon. 

“When Grandpa was a little boy about your age,’’ said 
he. See When Grandpa Was a Little Boy.— 
Douglas. 

When griping grief the heart doth wound. See Romeo 
and Juliet (Music’s Silver Sound).—Shakespeare. 

When Harry and Dick had been striving to please. See 
Two Gardens, The.—Taylor. 

When Harry Prettyman saw the very superb funeral 
of Mrs. Caudle. See Mr. Caudle and his Second 
Wife.—Jerrold. 

When Harvard’s crimson cohorts came. See “When?” 
—Blount. 

When haughty Edward with his sword and lance. See 
Siege of Calais, The.—McGuire. 

When he first spoke at Faneuil Hall. See Wendell 
Phillips (Eulogy on Wendell Phillips).—Curtis. 

When he heard the battle-cry. See And Joe Went. 
—(Denver Post.) 

When he hied him home from chase. See Rose of 
Avondale, The.—Booth. 

When he is old and past all singing. See For an Old 
Poet.—Bunner. 

When he shall die. See Romeo and Juliet.—Shake¬ 
speare. 

When he shall hear she died upon his word. See Much 
Ado about Nothing ("When he shall hear,” etc.). 
—Shakespeare. 

When he who adores thee has left but the name. See 
When He Who Adores Thee.— Moore. 

When head is sick and brain doth swim. See Last 
Pipe, The .—(London Spectator.) 

When hearts are trumps and Dolly leads. See Full 
Suite, The.—Metcalfe. 

When Helen dwelt in windy Troy. See Iliad, The.— 
Newton. 

When, high above the busy street. See Day-dream, A. 
—Thomson. 

When His salvation bringing. See Hosanna!—King. 

When home in the evening, from work I am going. See 
My Boy.—Gilbert. 

When hope lies dead within the heart. See Lot of 
Thousands, The.—Hunter. 

When I a verse shall make. See His Prayer to Ben 
Jonson.—Herrick. 

When I am a man—and I’m going to be one some 
time. See When I am a Man.—Miller. 

When I am a man, I mean to be a soldier. See I Want 
to be a Soldier.—Anon. 

When I am a woman tall and grown. See When I 
am a Woman.—Denton. 

When I am big I mean to buy. See “When I am Big.” 
—Anon. 

When I am big, what do you think. See When I am a 
Man.—Anon. . „ l _ 

When I am called to die. See What is that to Thee? 
—James. „ 

When I am dead, and buried. See same.—(Scribner s.) 

When I am dead and I am quite forgot. See "Tuscan 
Cypress.”—Darmesteter. 

When I am dead, my dearest. See Song: “When lam 
dead.” etc.—Rossetti. . _ , „ 

When I am dead, my spirit. See “When I am Dead. 
—Rodd. . . 

When I am dead, no pageant train. See Dirge of Alaric 
the Visigoth.—Everett. . 

When I am grown to man’s estate. See Looking 
Forward.—Stevenson. 

When I am in a serious humour, I very often walk by 
myself in Westminster Abbey. See Spectator, 
The (Reflections in Wes t minster Abbey) .—Addison. 

When I am in New York, I like to drop around at night. 
See Stoddards, The.—Field. 

When I am old—(and O, how soon). See When I am 
Old.—Briggs. „ 

When I am sad it comes to me. See My Mother s Song. 
—Johnston. 

When I am sleeping in my bed. See Dreamer, the. 
Anon. 

When I am standing on a mountain crest. See Love 
in the Winds.—Hovey. . . . 

When I am very big and old. See New Book, A. Anon. 

When I arose to speak one day. See That Giggle. 
Richards. 

When I beheld the poet blind yet bold. See On 
Milton’s Paradise Lost.—Marvell. 

When I behold a forest spread. See Art above Nature. 
—Herrick. . 

When I beneath the cold, red earth am sleeping. See 
same. —Motherwell. , , , „ 

When I bethink me on that speech whyleare. See 
Faerie Queene, The (Mutability). Spenser. 


When I came into Witches’ Town. See Witches, 
Town.— (Bowdoin Quill.) 

When I came to York I hadn’t ever been to a play. See 
Slowlys at the Theatre, The.—Dallas. 

When I come home the other night. See She never 
Was a Boy.—Kiser. 

When I compare. See Loss and Gain.—Longfellow. 

When I consider how my light is spent. See On His 
Blindness.—Milton. 

When I consider Life and its few years. See Tears.— 
Reese. 

When I consider life, ’tis all a cheat. See Aureng- 
Zebe; or. The Great Mogul.—Dryden. 

When I did hear the motley fool. See As You Like It 
(Jester, The).—Shakespeare. 

When I do count the clock that tells the time. See 
Sonnets, XII.—Shakespeare. 

When I forth fare beyond this narrow earth. See 
After Death.—Richardson. 

When I gave to old Dobbin his song and his due. See 
Old Pincher.—Cook. 

When I go musing all alone. See On Melancholy.— 
Burton. 

When I grow gray and men shall say to me. See Life’s 
Gifts.—Barlow. 

When I have borne in memory what has tamed. See 
same. —Wordsworth. 

When I have fears that I may cease to be. * See Sonnet 
W T ritten in January, 1818.—Keats. 

When I have seen by Time’s fell hand defaced. See 
Sonnets, LXIV.—Shakespeare. 

When I have time, so many things I’ll do. See When 
I Have Time.—Anon. 

When I knowed him at first there was suthin’. See 
Bar-tender’s Story, The.—Proudfit. 

When I led by zummer streams. See Zummer an’ 
Winter.—Barnes. 

When I listed, folks all said. See On Crutches.—Rose. 

When I lived in St. Petersburg—many years have 
passed since then. See Mascha.—Tourgenieff. 

When I look around me and see how few of the com¬ 
panions of earlier years. See same. —Goethe. 

When I love, as some have told. See Hymn to the 
Graces.—Herrick. 

When I married a drunkard, I reached the acme of 
misery. See Girls, Don’t Marry a Drunkard.— 
Anon. 

When I opened my eyes to the sun to-day. See 
Flowers’ Convention, The.—Jack. 

When I picked up her glove. See Fate.-—W. 

When I puff my cigarette. See Smoke Traveller, The. 
—Browne. 

When I questioned young Smithson, a short time ago. 
See Apparent.—Thomas. 

When I remember all. See Oft, in the Stilly Night 
(“When I remember”).—Moore. 

When I remember something which I had. See 
Regret.—Ingelow. 

When I remember’d again how my Philip was slain. 
See Nun’s Lament for Philip Sparrow, The.— 
Skelton. 

When I run about all day. See Night and Day.— 
Dodge. 

“When I sailed with Lieutenant-Commander M’Calla 
several years ago.” See M’Calla and the Middy.— 
Anon. ✓ 

When I see a man holding faster his uprightness in 
proportion as it is assailed. See Unnoticed and 
Unhonored Heroes.—C’hanning. 

When I see about me this gathering of business men 
and merchants. See Ballot Reform.—Cleveland. 

When I see the dirtiest little towhead. See Imitation. 
•—Anon. 

When I spin round without a stop. See Spinning Top. 
—Sherman. 

When I survey the bright Celestial sphere. See Cas- 
tara (Nox Nocti Indicat Scientiam).—Habington. 

When I survey the wondrous cross. See Glorying in 
the Cross.—Watts. 

When I the memory repeat. See Spartan Boy, The.— 
Mary Lamb. 

When I think of William Lloyd Garrison. See William 
Lloyd Garrison.—Phillips. 

When I think on the happy days. See Absence.— 
Anon. 

When I took my aunt and sister to the Pequot Hotel. 
See Trick vs. Trick.—Wood. 

When I upon thy bosom lean. See Matrimonial 
Happiness.—Lapraik. 

When I was a baby. See same. —Richards. 

When I was a bachelor brave. See Week’s Work, The. 
—Anon. 

When I was a beggarly boy. See Aladdin.—Lowell. 


925 







When I 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


When I was a boy, a little after seventeen. See My 
Experience in the Dry Goods Business.—Thatcher. 

When I was a boy I read a book which was called, I 
think, “ Asmodeus.” See Homes of the People.— 
Godwin. 

When I was a boy in a printing office in Missouri. See 
Nicodemus Dodge.—Clemens. 

When I was a boy on the old plantation. See Grape¬ 
vine Swing, The.—Peck. 

When I was a child, beside our door. See My Robin.— 
Bolton. 

When I was a child [of seven years old], [says Dr. 
Franklin], my friends on a holiday. See Whistle, 
The.—F ranklin. 

When I was a girl I used to wear. See When I Was a 
Girl.—Richards. 

When I was a lad between two and three. See First 
Trousers, The.—Rose. 

When I was a laddie lang syne at the schule. See 
“ Imph-m. ’ ’—Anon. 

When I was a little boy, I remember, one cold winter’s 
morning. See Turning the Grindstone.—Franklin. 

When I was a maid nor of lovers afraid. See Old 
Story over Again, The.—-Henry. 

When I was a maiden eighteen years old. See Old 
Maid, The.—Kavanaugh. 

When I was a school-boy, aged ten. See Old Bachelor, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

When I was at Grand Cairo. See Spectator, The (Vision 
of Mirza, The).—Addison. 

‘‘When I was at the party,” said Betty. See Reason 
Why, The.—Bradley. 

When I was bound apprentice, in famous Lincoln¬ 
shire. See Lincolnshire Poacher, The.—Anon. 

When I was but a tiny boy. See Stick to Your Bush.— 
Watson. 

When I was camping on the Volga’s banks. See Unit, 
A.—Stoddard. 

When I was commissioned by you, young men. See 
Address to the Young Men of Italy.—Mazzini. 

When I was dead, my spirit turn’d. See At Home.— 
Rossetti. 

When I was down beside the sea. See At the Sea-side. 
—Stevenson. 

When I was first called to the office of historiographer 
to John Bull. See John Bull and his Law-suit. 
—Arbuthnot. 

When I was forced from Stella ever dear. See Astrophel 
and Stella (Sonnet LXXXVIL).—Sidney. 

‘‘When I was in Londres, I go von day into wat ze 
Anglais call ze caffi.” See Generous Frenchman, 
The.—Anon. 

When I was in the wood to-day. See Autumn Voices. 
—F. W. B. 

When I was just a little boy. See How I Saw Santa 
Claus.—Denton. 

When I was one and twenty. See same. —Housman. 

When I was one I wore long dresses just for fun. See 
From One to Six.—Fleming. 

When I was onlv a little tot. See For a Girl Ten Years 
Old.—W. T. 

When I was quite a little chap. See Blood Will Tell.— 
Kavanaugh. 

When I was quite a young man, said the dominie. See 
Singing Joseph.—Preston. 

When I was seventeen I heard. See To Critics.— 
Learned. 

When I was sick and lay a-bed. See Land of Counter¬ 
pane, The.—Stevenson. 

When I was still a boy and mother’s pride. See 
False Friends-like.—Barnes. 

When I was ten and she fifteen. See Time’s Revenge. 
—(The Century.) 

When I was the dirtiest little towhead—and I am sure 
that dirt is no disgrace. See Imitation.—Anon. 

When I was very small indeed. See Chief Bread- 
baker to the King, The.—Adams. 

When I was very young, indeed. See Little Cavalier, 
A.—Larcom. 

When I was young, and long before. See To the Little 
Readers.—Sherman. 

When I was young and went to school. See Latches.— 
Sinnett. 

When I was young, I said to Sorrow. See Song: 
‘‘When I was young,” etc.—De Vere. 

When I went a-courtin’ Marthy. See That Kiss of 
Marthy’s.—Rexford. 

When I went up the minster tower. See At Lincoln.— 
Adams. 

When I would know thee, Goodyere, my thought looks. 
See To Sir Henry Goodyere.—Jonson. 

When I wuz somewhat younger. See Gettin’ On.— 
Anon. 


When icicles hang by the wall. See Love’s Labour’s 
Lost (Winter).—Shakespeare. 

When icicles shine so bright. See Our Sir Robin.— 
Anon. 

When I’m a big man as high as the steeple. See When 
I am a Man.—Cramer. 

When I’m a little city girl. See City or Country.— 
Anon. 

When I’m a man, a man. See Choice of Trades.— 
Slade. 

When I’m growed up big. See same. —Richards. 

When I’m in health and ask to choose between this and 
that, alas! See House of a Hundred Lights, The 
(Carpe Diem).—Torrence. 

When I’m softly sleeping. See Sunshine Song.— 
Anon. 

When in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes. See 
Sonnets, XXIX.—Shakespeare. 

When in my walks I meet some ruddy lad. See Proem, 
A.—Ward. 

When in the chronicle of wasted time. See Sonnets, 
C VI.—Shakespeare. 

When, in the course of human events, it becomes neces¬ 
sary for a half-hungry. See Parody on the Declara¬ 
tion of Independence.—Anon. 

When, in the course of human events, it becomes 
necessary for one people. See Declaration of 
Independence.—Jefferson. 

When in the first great hour of sleep supreme. See 
Inverted Torch, The (When in the First Great 
Hour).—Thomas. 

When in the halcyon days of eld, I was a little tyke. 
See Our Biggest Fish.—Field. 

When in the night we wake and hear the rain. See 
same. —Wilson. 

When in the storm on Albion’s coast. See Minute 
gun, The.—Sharpe. 

When in thy glass thou studiest thy face. See Post¬ 
meridian.—Garrison. 

When Irish hills were fair and green. See Wanted— 
Saint Patrick.—O’Brien. 

When is the time for prayer? See Time for Prayer, 
The.—Anon. 

When I’se a little feller. See Take er Tatah en Wait.— 
Anon. 

When Israel, of the Lord beloved. See Ivanhoe 
(Rebecca’s Hymn).—Scott. 

When it drizzles and drizzles. See Weather Receipt, 
A.—Anon. 

When Jabez Chow came courtin’ Corianna Dowly, 
Granther Peeks was jest as mad as hops. See 
Corianna’s Wedding.—Dallas. 

When Jack Connor was promoted to the position of 
engineer. See Engineer Connor’s Son.—Drom- 
goole. 

When Jack the king’s commander. See Fate of John 
Burgoyne, The.—-Anon. 

When Jacky drown’d our poor cat Tib. See Falsehood 
“Corrected. ’ ’—Turner. 

When Jacob courted Mary Jane. See To Those about 
to Marry.—Anon. 

When Jacob went out from Beersheba. See Building 
the Ladder.—Lloyd. 

When James came up one Sunday night. See Conse¬ 
quences.—Burdette. 

When January’s cold appears. See Smoker’s Calendar, 
The.—Anon. 

When Jefferson said he would rather have newspapers 
without a government. See Politics and Jour¬ 
nalism.—Smith. 

When Jessie comes with her soft breast. See Jessie.— 
Brown. 

When Jesus Christ was here below. See Love of Jesus. 
—Taylor. 

When Jesus trod by thy blue sea. See Lord’s Prayer, 
The.—Hall. 

When Jimmy comes home from school at four. See 
When Jimmy Comes from School.—Matthews. 

When Joe, and Kate, and Dick, and Bell[e], See 
Six-year-old, A.—Anon. 

When John Thorp died. See Epitaph, The.—Meyers. 

When Johnny is all snugly curled in bed. See Young 
Desperado, A.—Aldrich. 

When Josiah and me wuz at Saratoga. See Samantha 
at Saratoga (Josiah and the Mermaid).—Holley. 

When Jupiter, looking down from Olympus, saw the 
Lusitanian fleet sailing. See Lusiad, Story of 
the.—Rabb. 

When klingle, klangle, klingle. See When the Cows 
Come Home.—Mitchell. 

When last before her people’s face her own fair 
face she bent. See Crowned and Wedded.— 
Browning. 


926 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


When on 


When late I heard the trembling cello play. See Cello, 
The.—Gilder. 

When late in summer the streams run yellow See 
Song of Early Autumn, A.—Gilder. 

When leaves grow sear all things take sombre hue. See 
Indian Summer.—Anon. 

When leaves turn outward to the light. See Poet and 
Lark.—De Vere. 

When Lesbia first I saw, so heavenly fair. See Lesbia. 
—Congreve. 

When Letty had scarce pass’d her third glad year. 
See Letty’s Globe.—Turner. 

When Life and Death clasp hands to part no more. See 
Time and Eternity.—Luders. 

When life hath run its largest round. See Daniel 
Webster.—Holmes. 

When Life his lusty course began. See Goblet, The.— 
Taylor. 

When life proves disappointing. See Panacea.— 
Scribner. 

When Life was all a summer day. See My Three Loves. 
—Leigh. 

When life’s troubles gather darkly. See Near the 
Dawn.—Anon. 

When like a bud my Julia blows. See To Julia under 
Lock and Key.—-Seaman. 

When like the early rose. See Eileen Aroon.— 
Griffin. 

When little Claude was naughty wunst. See Naughty 
Claude.—Riley. 

When little Dickie Swope’s a man. See Impetuous 
Resolve, An.—Riley. 

When little people go abroad, wherever they may 
roam. See To Henrietta, on her Departure for 
Calais.—-Hood. 

When little ’Pollus Morton he’s. See Penalty of 
Genius, The.—Riley. 

When loss of property and loss of repute are come. 
See same. —Storrs. 

When, lov’d by poet and painter. See Ivory Gate, 
The.—Collins. 

When Love arose in heart and deed. See Flowers, 
The.—Rands. 

When Love came in, one stormy night. See Love’s 
Entrance.—Knowles. 

When Love comes knocking at thy gate. See When 
Love Comes Knocking.—-Gardner. 

When love grows cool, thy fire still warms me. See 
My Pipe.—Anon. 

When love in the faint heart trembles. See Song of 
Eros. —Woodberry. 

When love on time and measure makes his ground. 
See Love's Realities.—Anon. 

When Love, our great Immortal. See Rose of Stars, 
The.—Woodberry. 

When Love shall come. See same. —Anon. 

When love with unconfined wings. See To Althea 
from Prison.—Lovelace. 

When lovely woman stoops to folly. See Vicar of 
Wakefield. The (Woman).—Goldsmith. 

When lovers talk, they talk a foreign tongue. See 
Foreign Tongue, A.—Branch. 

When Lucien de Hem had seen his last 100 franc note 
raked in by the banker. See Gold Louis, The.— 
Anon. 

When Mabel smiles my heart beats high. See When 
Mabel Smiles.—Peck. 

When maidens such as Hester die. See Hester.— 
Lamb. 

When mamma first proposed the idea. See Killed 
with Kindness.—May. 

When mamma said, “Now children dear.” See What 
He would Give Up.—Anon. 

When mamma was a little girl. See same. —Coolidge. 

When man and maiden meet, T like to see a drooping 
eye. See Modest Couple, The.—Gilbert. 

When man once pure, from childish innocence fell. 
See Conqueror Conquered, The.—Burleigh. 

When March has gone with his cruel wind. See Hives 
and Homes.—-Cary. 

When Margaret laughs the world is gay. See When 
Margaret Laughs.—Kilboume. 

When marshall’d on the nightly plain. See Star of 
Bethlehem, The.—White. 

When Mary Ann Dollinger got the skule daown thar 
on Injun Bay. See Courting in Kentucky.— 
Pratt. 

When May is in his prime, and youthful Spring. See 
May.—Watson. 

When May, with cowslip braided locks. See Lost May, 
The.—Taylor. 

When meeting-bells began to toll. See Her Bonnet. 
Wilkins. 


When men shall find thy flow’r, thy glory, pass. See 
Sonnets to Delia (Beauty, Time, and Love, IV.). 
—Daniels. 

When merry Christmas-day is done. See Christmas- 
night in the Quarters.—Russell. 

When mid the budding elms the bluebird flits. See 
Blood-root.—E. S. F. 

When midnight o’er the moonless skies. See same. — 
Spencer. 

When mid’st the gay 1 meet. See same. —Moore. 

When Mid-years come our joys to rout. See Widow, 
The.—Wheelwright. 

When mighty roast beef was the Englishman’s food. 
See Roast Beef of Old England, The.—Fielding 
and Leveridge. 

When mirth is full and free. See Reverses.—Newman. 

When Mr. Bangs, the elder, returned from Europe. 
See Case of Young Bangs, The.—Clark. 

When Mr. Jenkins went to his bedroom at half-past 
one. See One Thing He Forgot.—Hodge. 

When Mr. Johnson told his wife, that, owing to business 
difficulties. See Just Like Them.—Phelps. 

When Mrs. Mulkittle announced her intention of going 
downtown. See What is a Hedgehog?—Anon. 

When Molly came home from the party tonight. See 
Consolation.—Learned. 

When moonlike are the hazure seas. See same .— 
Thackeray. 

When moonlight’s soft and tender charm. See Music 
of the Waves, The.—Anon. 

When morning breaks in radiance, overstreaming. 
See Beloved Syracuse.— (Syracuse University 
Herald.) 

When morning breaks, what fortune waits for me? 
See When Morning Breaks.—Raleigh. 

When morning came, and they could speak more 
calmly on the subject. See Old Curiosity Shop, 
The (Burial of Little Nell).—Dickens. 

When mother held the little chap. See Then and 
Now.—Anon. 

When mother just had set the coffee on the table 
steaming hot. See Fighting Fire.—Lawless. 

When mother-love makes all things bright. See 
Christmas Song, A.—Jenks. 

When Music, heavenly maid, was young. See Passions, 
The: An Ode for Music.—Collins. 

When my arms wrap you round. See Michael Robartes 
Remembers Forgotten Beauty.—Yeats. 

When my big dolly gave a ball. See Don’t Tell.— 
Best. 

When my Clorinda walks in white. See Her Confirma¬ 
tion.—Image. 

When my dollie went to school. See same. —Richards. 

When my feet have wander’d. See Litany.—Monsell. 

When my grandpa was little. See When Grandpa was 
Little.—Richards. 

When my kitty was a kitten. See same. —Richards. 

When my lady plays golf, there’s commotion galore. 
See My Lady on the Links.—Gilbert. 

When my last sunset is under a cloud. See When I am 
Dead.—Browne. 

When my love was away. See Absence.—Bridges. 

When my mother died I was very young. See Chimney 
Sweeper, The.—Blake. 

When my pipe burns bright and clear. See Pipe and 
Tobacco.—Anon. 

When my room-mate gets cross and her brown eyes 
look black. See My Room-mate.—-S. L. B. 

When Nature from her lavish urn. See Our Heroes’ 
Graves.—Anon. 

When Nature had made all her birds. See Bobolinks, 
The.—Cranch. 

When Nature made the blue-bird. See Blue-bird, 
The.—Burroughs. 

When Nell her evening prayer had said. See Dream 
of Easter, A.—Richards. 

When nettles in winter bring forth roses red. See 
Trust in Women.—Anon. 

When night comes on, when morning breaks, they rise. 
See My Soldier Boy.—Anon. 

When o’er earth is breaking. See God is There.—Anon. 

When o’er proud Venice’ regal crest. See Singing 
across the Water.—Stretch. 

When o’er the mountain steeps. See Reve du Midi.— 
Cooke. 

When of an evening all the joy of the day was done. 
See Little Mistress Merciless.—Field. 

When Old Folks they wuz young like us. See Best 
Times, The.—Riley. 

When Old Jack died we stayed from school. See 
When Old Jack Died.—Riley. 

When on a [or the] fragrant sandal tree. See Forgive¬ 
ness.—Edmondston. 


927 






When on 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


When on my country walks I go. See Amico Suo.— 
Home. 

When on my day of life the night is falling. See At 
Last.—Whittier. 

When on my ear your loss was knell’d. See Alpine 
Sheep, The.—Lowell. 

When on my soul in nakedness. See Quiet Pilgrim, 
The.—Thomas. 

When on the altar of my hand. See Lady to her 
Inconstant Servant, The.—Carew. 

When on the breath of Autumn’s [or Autumn] breeze. 
See Corn-fields.—Howitt. 

When on the [or a] fragrant sandal-tree. See Forgive¬ 
ness.—Edmundston. 

When on the height and by the river. See Bread.— 
Wilbor. 

When on the world’s first harvest day. See Blushing 
Maple Tree, The.—Anon. 

When on those lovely looks I gaze. See Song: 
“When on those,” etc.—Rochester. 

When on thy bed of pain thou layest low. See Emma 
Lazarus.—Gilder. 

When other friends are round thee. See same .— 
Morris. 

When our babe he goeth walking in his garden. See 
Garden and Cradle.—Field. 

When our eyes are weary—weary. See same. —Anon. 

When our heads are bow’d with woe. See Hymn for 
the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity.—Milman. 

When our mother’s ast some cumpny. See Some 
Stylish “Cumpny.”—Richards. 

When our Saviour, bending beneath the weight of his 
cross. See Wandering Jew, The.—Anon. 

When our two souls stand up erect and strong. See 
Sonnets from the Portuguese, XXII.—Browning. 

When out of the West long shadows creep. See Bylo 
Land.— (New York Dispatch.) 

When out-of-doors is full of rain. See Rain-harp, The. 
—Sherman. 

When over the hill the farm-boy goes. See Calling the 
Cows.—Trowbridge. 

When Pa takes care of me. See same. —-Williams. 

When papa puts his great coat on. See same. —Mc- 
Nabb. 

When Papa’s sick, my goodness sakes! See When 
Papa’s Sick.—Lincoln. 

When Parepa was here she was everywhere the peo¬ 
ple’s idol. See Easter with Parepa, An.— 
Delano. 

When, passing southward, I may cross the line. See 
Unnoticed Bound, The.—Anon. 

When Patrick Henry, who gave the first impulse to 
the ball of the American Revolution. See Trea¬ 
son.—( Jest Book , The.) 

When people call this beast to mind. See Elephant, 
The.—Belloc. 

When Peter led the first Crusade. See Palm and the 
Pine, The.—Taylor. 

When Philip Grey, whose wild, adventurous soul. See 
Eunice.—Meyers. 

When Phyllis trips out in the rain. See Cupid’s Met¬ 
amorphosis.—M. S. W. 

When plowmen ridge the steamy brown. See Song- 
sparrow, The.—Thomson. 

When Psyche’s friend becomes her lover. See Friend 
and Lover.—De Vere. 

When public bodies are to be addressed on momen¬ 
tous occasions. See Adams and Jefferson (True 
Eloquence).—Webster. 

When Rnodora Boyd—Rhodora Pennington that was. 
See Round-up, A.—Bunner. 

When Richelieu learned that Wallenstein was dead. 
See Wallenstein’s Death.—Lytton. 

When rising from the bed of death. See Spectator, 
The (Hymn: “When rising,” etc.).—Addison. 

When Rob was left all by himself. See Rob’s Tempta¬ 
tion.—Richards. 

When Robin Hood and Little John. See Robin Hood’s 
Death and Burial.—Anon. 

When round the earth the Father’s hand. See Rest.— 
MacDonald. 

When Royalty was young and bold. See Church and 
State.—Moore. 

When Ruby sings the songs of praise. See In the 
Choir.—Greene. 

When russet beech-leaves drift in air. See Autumn 
Memories.—Savage-Armstrong. 

When rustling leaves in whispers tell. See Music.— 
Vickers. 

When Ruth was left half desolate. See Ruth; or, The 
Influences of Nature.—Wordsworth. 

When Santa came one wintry night. See Santa’s 
Queer Joke.—Richards. 


When self-esteem, or others’ adulation. See Grave, 
The (Pride).—Blair. 

When shall we all meet again? See same. —Anon. 

When shall we meet again, dearest and best. See same. 
—Clarke. 

When shall we meet again, meet ne’er to sever? See 
Parting Hymn.—Anon. 

When shall we three meet again? See same .— 
Anon. 

When shall we three meet again. See Macbeth (Witch¬ 
es’ Meeting, The) .—Shakespeare. 

When shaws beene sheene, and shradds full fayre. See 
Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne.—Anon. 

When she came to work for the family on Congress 
street. See That Hired Girl.— (Detroit Free 
Press.) 

When she comes home again! A thousand ways. See 
When She Comes Home.—Riley. 

When she looks sad, somehow I jes’. See Mirandy.— 
McClasson. 

When she undid her hair at night. See Mother.— 
Anon. 

When she’s young she’s tall and slender. See Who Is 
She?—Lippmann. 

When should a girl marry? See same. —Parke. 

When silent time, wi’ lightly foot. See Nabob, The.— 
Blamire. 

When Silvia sings I seem to hear. See “When Silvia 
Sings.”—Duffield. 

When slim Sophia mounts her horse. See Reverie.— 
Ramal. 

When Sol did cast no light, being darkened over. See 
Seaman’s Happy Return, The.—Anon. 

W’hen Solomon was reigning in his glory. See Solo¬ 
mon and the Bees.—Saxe. 

When some beloved voice that was to you. See Sub¬ 
stitution.—Browning. 

When sometimes our feet grow weary. See Beginning 
Again.—Anon. 

When souls that have put off their mortal gear. See 
Recognition.—Chadwick. 

When sparrows build and the leaves break forth. See 
When Sparrows Build.—Ingelow. 

When sporgles spanned the floreate mead. See Uffia. 
—White. 

When Spring came into the garden. See Spring 
Flowers.—Anon. 

When Spring casts all her swallows forth. See Day- 
rise and Sunset.—Thornbury. 

When spring, to woods and wastes around. See Mur¬ 
dered Traveller, The.—Bryant. 

When stars are in the quiet skies. See same. —Bulwer- 
Lytton. 

When stars pursue their solemn flight. See Music in 
the Night.—Spofford. 

When steps are hurrying homeward. See My Darlings. 
—Cary. 

When stern New England’s tardy spring. See May 
Flower, The.—Goodwin. 

When stem occasion calls for war. See Tempered.— 
Woolsey. 

When streets are swaying to and fro. See Hindrances 
to Happiness.— (Merchant Traveler.) 

When, stricken by the freezing blast. See Daniel 
Webster.—Holmes. 

When study and school are over. See Vacation Song. 
—Sherman. 

When sudden cry shall rend the air. See Be Brave.— 
Cooper. 

When sudden temptation doth strongly assail thee. 
See Waiting.—Anon. 

When summer o’er her native hills. See On a Picture. 
—Lynch. 

When summer sun oppresses. See Welcome to the 
Forest.—Anon. 

When summer’s birds are bringing. See Peter-bird, 
The.—Stanton. 

When Sunday mornin’ comes around. See When Pa 
Begins to Shave.—Robins. 

When sunset throws a golden shaft. See Hopes and 
Fears.—T. H. G. 

When sunshine met the wave. See In the Beginning. 
—Monroe. 

When Sylvia sings I seem to hear. See “When Sylvia 
Sings.”—Duffield. 

When tender ewes, brought home with evening sun. 
See Menaphon (Menaphon’s Roundelay).—Greene. 

When that bright spirit, afterwards known as Satan. 
See Paradise Lost, The Story of.—Rabb. 

When that great Kings return to clay. See Cecil 
Rhodes.—Kipling. 

When that I was a little tiny boy. See Twelfth Night; 
or, What You Will.—Shakespeare. 


923 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


When the 


When that last pipe is smoked at last. See Happy 
Smoking-ground, The.—Le Gallienne. 

When that my mood is sad, and in the noise. See 
Shaded Water, The.—Simms. 

When that Seint George hadde sleyne ye draggon. See 
same. —Anon. 

When that the fields put out their gay attire. See Son¬ 
net: To the Redbreast.—Bampfylde. 

When the administration was striving, by the opera¬ 
tion of peaceful measures. See Mr. Clay and the 
War of 1812 (For the W T ar of 1813).—Clay. 

When the angels all are singing. See Hymn.—- 
Breton. 

When the Arts in their infancy were. See Magpie’s 
Nest, The.—Lamb. 

When the aster wakes in the morning. See Spirit of 
the Sunset, The.—Anon. 

When the Autumn winds nip all the hill-grasses brown. 
See Holiday Home.—Bunner. 

When the baby died, on every side. See When the 
Baby Died.—Jackson. 

When the baby died, we said. See Loss and Gain.— 
Perry. 

When the black-lettered list to the gods was presented. 
See Wife, Children and Friends.—Spencer. 

When the bleak winds in winter’s hoary reign. See 
New Occasional Address, A.—Anon. 

When the blue-black waves are tipped with white. See 
In Action.—Anon. 

When the breath of twilight blows to flame the misty 
skies. See By the Margin of the Great Deep.—A. E. 

When the breeze from the blue-bottle’s blustering blim. 
See To Marie.—Anon. 

When the bright lamp is carried in. See North-west 
Passage (Good-night).—Stevenson. 

When the bright sun doth smiling rise. See Sunshine. 
—Delavigne. 

WTien the bright sun, returning. See Kneel and Pray. 
—Anon. 

When the British warrior queen. See Boadicea.— 
Cowper. 

When the busy day is done. See Lady Button-eyes. 
—Field. 

When the cares of day are ended. See Child’s Wisdom, 
A.—Cary. 

When the clouds of war were rolling o’er the heavens 
like a pall. See Our Heroes.—Pearre. 

When the complaints of a brave and powerful people 
are observed. See To the King.—Junius. 

When the corn begins to sprout. See This Way.— 
Anon. 

When the corn-fields and meadows. See Little Boy 
Blue.—Anon. 

When the cows come home the milk is coming. See 
Milking Time.—Rossetti. 

When the crimson flush of morning. See Day too Late, 
A.—Rock. 

When the darkness drew away, at the dawning of the 
day. See Portent.—Thaxter. 

When the dash for position began. See Ben-Hur 
(Chariot Race, The).—Wallace. 

When the day and the night do meete. See Cobbe’s 
Prophecies.—Cobbe. 

When the day that must come shall have come sud¬ 
denly. See Koran, The (In the Name of God, the 
Compassionate, the Merciful). 

When the day with all its splendor. See Tired.—Anon. 

When the diplomates cease from their capers. See 
Song of the Cannon, The.—Foss. 

When the dishes all is washed an’ wiped, an’ the path 
swep’ to the stoop. See Playing Entertainment.— 
Hopper. 

When the dumb Hour, cloth’d in black. See Silent 
Voices, The.—Tennyson. 

When the dying flame of day. See Pulaski’s Banner.— 
Longfellow. 

When the Easter chimes are ringing. See Does Jesus 
Know?—Richards. _ . . 

When the eccentric Rabelais was physician. See 
Doctor and the Lampreys, The.—Smith. 

When the end comes, and we must say good-by. See 
Love and Death.—Anon. ... 

When the eve is growing gray, and the tide is rolling 
in.—See Bells of Lynn, The.—Weatherly. 

When the fairies used to live here. See When the 
Fairies Lived Here.—Anon. 

When the farm work’s done, at the set of sun. See My 
Old Gray Nag.—Lincoln. „ _ 

When the feud of hot and cold. See December. Ben- 

When the fields were white with harvest, and the 
laborers were few. See Neglected Call, The. 
Neale. 


When the fierce North-wind with his airy forces. See 
Day of Judgment, The.—Watts. 

When the first faint stars come peeping out. See My 
Bess.—Walker. 

When the first violet oped its mild, blue eye. See 
“Blackbird Snow,” A.—Bates. 

When the Floridas were erected into a territory. See 
Origin of the White, the Red, and the Black Men.— 
Irving. 

When the flush of a new-born sun fell first on Eden’s 
green and gold. See Conundrum of the Work¬ 
shops, The.—Kipling. 

When the four quarters of the world shall rise. See 
Our Mary and the Child Mummy.—Turner. 

When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder’s in 
the shock. See When the Frost is on the Punkin. 
—Riley. 

When the full moon lays a radiant haze. See Song of 
the Headlight, The.—Jackson. 

When the Giver made the wings. See Song of Joy, 
The.—Spencer. 

When the golden day is done. See Night and Day.— 
Stevenson. 

When the golden sun was sinking low behind the west¬ 
ern hill. See Love’s Caramels Lost.—Layne. 

When the golden sunlight dances on the bosom of the 
stream.— See How His Garments got Turned.— 
Anon. 

When the grass shall cover me. See same. —Cool- 
brith. 

When the grass was closely mown. See Dumb Soldier, 
The.—Stevenson. 

When the gray Emperor at the Gates of Death. See 
Wilhelm I., Emperor of Germany.—Bunner. 

When the Great Architect conceived the plans. See 
Resurgam.—Short. 

When the great, gray fog comes in, and the damp 
clouds cloak the shore. See Watchers, The.— 
Lincoln. 

When the great wind sets things whirling. See Popu¬ 
lar Poplar Tree, The.—Howard. 

When the green woods laugh with the voice of joy. 
See Laughing Song.—Blake. 

When the head of Bran. See Head of Bran, The.— 
Meredith. 

When the hot summer daylight is dyin’. See “Even¬ 
in’ Hymn, The.”—Lincoln. 

When the hounds of spring are on winter’s traces. See 
Atalanta in Calydon (Chorus from “Atalanta”). 
—Swinburne. 

When the hours of day are numbered. See Footsteps 
of Angels (“When the hours,” etc.).—Longfellow. 

When the house is alone by itself. See When the 
House is Alone by Itself.—Dallas. 

When the humid shadows [or showers] gather [or hover] 
over all the starry sphere. See Rain on the Roof. 
—Kenney. 

When the icy snow is deep. See Wait.—Goodale. 

When the lamp is shatter’d. See same. —Shelley. 

When the lamps were lit in the evening. See Bedtime. 
—Anon. 

When the last bitterness was past. See Actea.— 
Rodd. 

When the last sunshine of expiring day. See Monody 
on the Death of the Right Hon. R. B. Sheridan.— 
Byron. 

When the last word is said. See Valedictory, A.— 
Denton. 

When the laughing, merry June maid shakes her clouds 
of golden hair. See Legend of Rose Sunday, A.— 
Anon. 

When the leaves are off the bushes an’ the quails begin 
to pipe. See After Frost.—Anon. 

When the lessons and tasks are all ended. See Chil¬ 
dren, The.—Dickinson. 

When the light of day declineth. See Lamplighter, 
The.—Ramal. 

When the little boy ran away from home. See When 
the Little Boy Ran Away.—Anon. 

When the little stars are shining. See Her Eyes.— 
“Viola.” 

When the long sounding curfew from afar. See Min¬ 
strel, The.—Beattie. 

When the Lord breathes his wrath above the bosom 
of the waters. See Life-saver, The.—Lincoln. 

When the low breath of the midnight. See Vision, A. 
—Anon. 

When the mariner has been tossed for many days, in 
thick weather. See Reply to Hayne.—Webster. 

When the merry lark doth gild. See Song for the Sea¬ 
sons, A.—Procter. 

When the merry springtime weaves. See Christmas 
Tide.—Cook. 


929 








When the 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


When the midnight hour is come. See Napoleon’s 
Midnight Review.—Zedlitz. 

When the mists grow bright with the morning light. 
See Morning and Evening.—Frost. 

When the mists have rolled in splendor from the beauty 
of the hills. See When the Mists have Rolled 
Away.—Herbert. 

When the monkey in his madness. See Monkey’s 
Glue, The.—Goldsmith. 

When the moon is on the wave. See Manfred (In¬ 
cantation).—Byron. 

When the morning fair and sweet. See Gone.—Anon. 

When the name of the Presidential nominee. See 
Opening the Campaign.—Anon. 

When the night is still and far. See Highway, The.— 
Gannett. 

When the Norn-mother saw the Whirlwind Hour. See 
Lincoln, the Great Commoner.—Markham. 

When the North and South had parted, and the boom 
of the signal gun. See Whistling Regiment, The. 
—Harvey. 

When the old flaming Prophet climb’d the sky. See 
On a Virtuous Young Gentlewoman that Died 
Suddenly.—Cartwright. > 

When the open fire is lit. See Ghost Fairies.—Sher¬ 
man. 

When the opulence of summer unto wood and meadow 
comes. See Smallest of the Drums, The.—Buck- 
ham. 

When the pale wreath is laid upon the tomb. See 
same. —Anon. 

When the poet in the springtime. See Plea for Spring 
Poetry, A.—R. K. K. 

When the radiant morn of creation broke. See Song 
of the Stars, The.—Bryant. 

When the reaper’s task was ended, and the summer 
wearing late. See Swan Song of Parson Avery, 
The.—Whittier. 

When the regiment of the Halberdiers is proudly march¬ 
ing by. See Hireling Swiss Regiment, The.— 
Scott. 

When the rose is brightest. See To Giulia Grisi.— 
Willis. 

When the rough battle of the day is done. See same .— 
Garfield. 

When the rustling leaves lie deep and brown. See 
Winds, The.—( Cornell Widow.) 

When the sad soul, by care and grief oppressed. See 
Library, The.-—Crabbe. 

When the sap begins to flow. See In Sugar Time.— 
Burke. 

When the savagery of the lash, the barbarism of the 
chain. See Volunteer Soldiers of the Union, The. 
—Anon. 

When the scarlet cardinal tells. See July.—Swett. 

When the shadows veil [wr. vail] the meadows. See 
Ranger, The.—Whittier. 

When the sheep are in the fauld, and the kye at hame 
[or kye’s a’ at hame, or kye’s come hame]. See 
Auld Robin Gray.—Barnard. 

When the silence of the midnight. See My Lost Love. 
—(All the Year Round.) 

When the Sleepy Man comes with dust in his eyes. See 
Sleepy Man.—-Roberts. 

When the snow begins to feather. See Winter Sketch, 
A.—De Tabley. 

When the soul sought refuge in the place of rest. See 
Self-discipline.—Russell. 

When the spinning-room was here. See Maids of 
Elfin-mere, The.—-Allingham. 

When the spring comes on, when the snow is*gone. See 
Blest Spring Time.—-E. R. L. 

When the stage “went light” they ran out the small 
buckboard. See Bill.—Anon. 

When the Sultan Shah-Zaman. See When the Sultan 
Goes to Ispahan.—Aldrich. 

When the summer day makes the greenwood gay. See 
Little Fay, The.—Buchanan. 

When the summer harvest was gathered in. See In¬ 
dian Hunter.—Longfellow. 

When the summer-time is passed, and the harvest 
housed at last. See Christmas Welcome, The.— 
Anon. 

When the sun has left the hill-top. See Blessing for 
the Blessed, A.—Alma-Tadema. 

When the sun has thawed the snow. See Spring Poet, 
The.—Anon. 

When the sun shines, then I see. See Shadow Chil¬ 
dren.—Sherman. 

When the sunbeams glint sae bonnie. See When the 
Bloom is on the Heather.—Grant. 

When the swallows homeward fly. See When the 
Swallows.—Gordon. 


When the sweet day in silence hath departed. See 
Bards, The.—Read. 

When the teacher gets cross, and her blue [or brown] 
eyes gets [or get] black. See When the Teacher 
Gets Cross.—Anon. 

When the tide goes out, how the foam-flakes dance. 
See When the Tide Goes Out.—Lincoln. 

When the toil of day is over. See Bullfrog Serenade, 
The.—Lincoln. 

When the train came shrieking down. See What the 
Train Ran Over.—Larcom. 

When the trees, their branches bare. See Firelight.— 
R. H. 

When the veil from the eyes is lifted. See Si Jeunesse 
Savait.—Stedman. 

When the vengeance wakes, when the battle breaks. 
See “Remember the Maine.”—Wilson. 

When the voices of children are heard on the green. 
See Nurse’s Song.—Blake. 

When the warm sun that brings. See April Day, An. 
—Longfellow. 

When the wayside tangles blaze. See Goldenrod.— 
Goodale. 

When the weather is wet. See Weather, The.—Anon. 

When the West is red, when the sun is set. See Cigar¬ 
ette and Pipe, A.—( Cornell Widow.) 

When the Wild Geese were flying to Flanders away. 
See Sailor Girl, The.—Graves. 

When the wind blows. See Song in Praise of Spring.— 
Cornwall. 

When the wind goes thro’ the maples. See same .— 
Truesdell. 

When the winds of winter blow. See Bird with Bosom 
Red.—Anon. 

When the world is burning. See same. —Jones. 

When the world is fast asleep. See Dream-ship, The.— 
Field. 

When the year is young, what sweets are flung. See 
Seasonable Sweets.—C. 

When the yellow stars are weeping shining tears of 
molten gold. See Parent with the Hoof, The.— 
Anon. 

When the young hand of Darnley lock’d in hers. See 
Mary Queen of Scots.—Turner. 

When the young ladies who were spending the summer 
at the Seaside Hotel. See By Telephone.— 
Anon. 

When there was nought but space—-before all time. 
See Creation of Man, The.—Hewitt. 

When they came unto the river-side. See Light of 
Asia, The (Secret of Death, The).—Arnold. 

When they reached the depot, Mr. Mann and his wife. 
See Too Late for the Train.—Anon. 

When things don’t go to suit you. See Smile when¬ 
ever You Can.—Anon. 

When, think you, comes the wind. See Rose and the 
Wind, The.—Marston. 

When this crystal shall present. See Looking-glass, 
The.—Shirley. 

When this, my little sphere, is upside down. See To a 
Laugh.—-Terry. 

When this young land has reached its wrinkled prime. 
See Poets. The.—Aldrich. 

When thistle-blows do lightly float. See November.— 
Cleaveland. 

When thou art kneeling down at night. See Forgiving. 
—Alexander. 

When thou art near me. See same. —Scott. 

When thou art near, the rose doth seem less fair. See 
When Thou Art Near.—Deveton. 

When thou art near to me, it seems. See To Anne.— 
Marot. 

When thou art nigh, it seems. See When Thou Art 
Nigh.—Moore. 

When thou art weary of the world. See Rest.—( Cham¬ 
bers’ Journal.) 

When thou dost eat from off this plate. See Inscrip¬ 
tion for My Little Son’s Silver Plate.—Field. 

When thou dost play and sweetly sing. See Upon 
Sapho Sweetly Playing and Sweetly Singing.— 
Herrick. 

When thou, in all thy loveliness. See Rosalie.— 
Richards. 

When thou must home to shades of underground. See 
When Thou Must Home.—Campion. 

When Thou, O Death, shalt wait. See Wish, A.— 
Eliot. 

When thou, poor Excommunicate. See To His In¬ 
constant Mistress.—Carew. 

When thro’ life unblessed we rove. See On Music.— 
Moore. 

When through the tom sail the wild tempest is stream¬ 
ing. See “Help, Lord, or We Perish.”—Heber. 


930 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


When your 


When thy [or your] beauty appears. See Song.— 
Parnell. 

When time hath bereft thee of charms now divine. See 
When Time Hath Bereft Thee.—Anon. 

When to any saint I pray. See Saint Peray.—Parsons. 

When to her lute Corinna sings. See Of Corinna’s 
Singing.—Campion. 

When to soft sleep we give ourselves away. See Sleep. 
—Aldrich. 

When to the flowers—so beautiful. See Forget-me- 
not.—Anon. 

When to the sessions of sweet silent thought. See 
Sonnets, XXX.—Shakespeare. 

When Tom and Polly Miller came home from school. 
See How Colonel Ashton Signed the Pledge.— 
Peters. 

When Tom reached the frame school-house, he strode 
in briskly. See Tom Sawyer (Tom Sawyer’s Love 
Affair).—Clemens. 

When tree and bush are comfortless. See Winter 
Flowers.—Bishop. 

When troubled in spirit, when weary of life. See 
Horseback Ride, The.—Lippincott. 

When troubles come of God. See Brothers and a Ser¬ 
mon.—Ingelow. 

When tulips bloom in Union square. See Angler’s 
Wish, An.—Van Dyke. 

When twilight dews are falling soft. See When Twi¬ 
light Dews.—Moore. 

When Twilight her soft robe of shadow spreads down. 
See Hand-organ Ball, The.—Lincoln. 

When twilight’s sombre shadows fall. See Evening 
Doze, An.—Hunt. 

When two little boys—renowned but for noise. See 
Hik-tee-dik.—Riley. 

When vain desire at last and vain regret. See One 
Hope, The.—Rossetti. 

When vanished in this vapor we call life. See same. — 
A. T. L. 

When Venus roamed Olympia’s height. See Wrath 
of Cupid, The.—Anon. 

When verdant youth sees life afar. See Ballade of 
Tobacco, The.—Matthews. 

When very young I loved a lass. See Kiss in the Dark. 
A.—Watts. 

When Virgil thought no shame the Doric red. See 
Albino.—Philips. 

When Vronsky looked at his watch, it was half-past 
five. See Race, The.—Tolstoi. 

When War’s wild clamor filled the land. See Grand 
Advance, The.—Gassaway. 

When was it? Why, the other night. See Slight Mis¬ 
take, A.—Anon. 

When was there contract better driven by Fate. See 
On the Union.—Jonson. 

When was there ever an auspicious day for humanity. 
See Centennial Celebration of Concord Fight (Our 
Worst Foes).—Curtis. 

When Washington was President, as cold as any icicle. 
See What Lack We Yet ?—Burdette. 

When Washington was young, and not. See Latest 
Version, The.— Lanigan. 

When we and our posterity shall see our lovely South 
desolated. See Appeal to the Georgia Convention 
of 1860 against Secession.—Stephens. 

When we are as yet small children, there comes up to 
us a youthful angel. See Autocrat of the Break¬ 
fast-table, The (Cubes and Spheres).—Holmes. 

When we are parted let me lie. See When We are 
Parted.—Aid(S. 

When we are parted—pray! but do not weep. See 
Mizpah.—Scott. 

When we come to consider the features or elements of 
character. See Discipline of Life and Character, 
The.—Anon. 

When we contemplate man in his relations to the rest 
of creation. See Man’s Material Triumphs.— 
Fayet. 

When we for age could neither read nor write. See 
On His Divine Poems.—Waller. 

When we go home, think you 'tis true. See When We 
Go Home.—Scott. . 

When we have thrown off this old suit. See Question 
Whither, The.—Meredith. 

When we hear the music ringing. See Shall We Know 
Each Other There?—Anon. , ... 

When we hear Uncle Sidney tell. See Good, Old- 
fashioned People, The.—Riley. 

When we in our viciousness grow hard. See Antony 
and Cleopatra.—Shakespeare. . 

When we look at the Democracies of the ancient world. 
See Vigor of Democratic Governments.—Fox. 


When we plant a tree we are doing what we can. See 
When We Plant a Tree.—Holmes. 

When we search for the agencies of the great epochs. 
See Agencies in Our National Progress.—McClure. 

When we see our dream-ships slipping. See Retro¬ 
spection.—Anon. 

When we speak of our country we mean the United 
States of America. See Our Country.—Sargent. 

When we speak of the glory of our fathers, we mean not 
that vulgar renown. See Principles of the Revo¬ 
lution, The.—Quincy. 

When we started from the hut in darkness. See 
Romance of the Matterhorn, A.—Stuart. 

When we turn over the historic page, and trace the 
rise and fall. See Constitutional Liberty and 
Arbitrary Power.—Warren. 

When we turn to, the graceful structure at whose por¬ 
tal we stand. See Brooklyn Bridge, The.—Hewitt. 

When we two parted. See same. —Byron. 

When we were girl and boy together. See Ballad of 
Human Life.—Beddoes. » 

When we were idlers with the loitering rills. See 
Friendship.—Coleridge. 

When we were merry children, eyes of blue and hair of 
gold. See Grandma’s Wedding-day.— Harbaugh. 

When, while he slumbers on my knee, soft gleams. See 
Baby’s Dreams.—Fawcett. 

When whispering strains do softly steal. See Song: 
In Commendation of Music.—Strode. 

When will He come? See Christmas Question, A.— 
Savage. 

When will you marry me, my bonnie maid? See 
Needles and Pins.—Anon. 

When winds are raging o’er the upper ocean. See 
Secret, The.—Stowe. 

When winds go organing through the pines. See 
Wind in the Pines, The.—Cawein. 

When winter came the land was lean and sere. See 
Summer Drought.—Irvine. 

When winter comes with all its joys. See Best Season, 
The.—Anon. 

When winter winds are blowing. See Snow-birds, The. 
—Anon. 

When winter winds are piercing chill. See Woods in 
W inter.—Longfellow. 

When winter’s cold tempests and snows are no more. 
See Bluebird, The.—Wilson. 

When wintry days are dark and drear. See Light’ood 
Fire, The.—Boner. 

When wise Minerva still was young. See Origin of 
Didactic Poetry, The.—Lowell. 

When with the virgin morning thou dost rise. See 
Matins.—Herrick. 

When women’s rights have come to stay. See 
Women’s Rights.—Anon. 

When ye Crocuss shews his heade. See Rambling 
Rhyme of Dorothy, A.—Train. 

When ye gang awa’, Jamie, far across the sea, laddie. 
See Hunting Tower.—Anon. 

When you a pair of bright eyes meet. See Go Slow.— 
Madge Elliot. 

When you and I desert the ranks. See Masque and 
the Reality, The.—Alger. 

When you and I have play’d the little hour. See 
Reunited.—Parker. 

When you are dead some day, my dear. See In Pace. 
—Ropes. 

When you are old and gray and full of sleep. See 
When You are Old.—Yeats. 

When you are old, and I am passed away. See 
“When You are Old.”—Henley. 

When you come to a good book. See Sesame and 
Lilies (Reading for the Thought).—Ruskin. 

When you go to get the effect of a new movement for 
good or evil. See Prohibition in Atlanta (Pro¬ 
hibition a Blessing to the Poor).—Grady. 

When you have found a man, you have not far to go to 
find a gentleman. See Gentleman, The.—Doane. 

When you hear the fire-gongs beat fierce along the 
startled street. See Ballad of Calnan’s Christmas, 
The.—Cone. 

When you meet a lady, take off your hat and bow. See 
Be Polite.—Rook. 

When you meet with one suspected. See Guard 
Thine Action.—Vance. 

When you see a ragged urchin. See Remember, Boys 
Make Men.—Tucker. 

When you was here some sixteen year. See Kyarlina 
Jim.—Gordon. 

When your beauty appears. See same. —Parnell. 

When your lordships look at the papers. See Con¬ 
ciliation the Best Policy.—Chatham. 


931 









When your 


. AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


When your wife has gone to visit where mother dear 
resides. See “When the Cork Goes Down.”— 
McIntyre. , , 

When you’re sitting quite serenely on a cloudless 
autumn day. See Trials that Jar/- L.. E. O. 

When you're speaking of a leaflet. See rlhymelet, A. 

—Anon. . . . . , 

When you’se got a great big sister, an your sister s got 
a beau. See My Sister Has a Beau. Greene. 

When youth was lord of my unchallenged fate. See 
On a Boy’s First Reading of “King Henry V. — 

Mitchell. , _ _. T.t. 

When youthful faith hath fled. See Lines.—Lockhart. 
When you’ve shouted for Great Britain, when you ve 
sung her songs with might. See American Ab¬ 
sent-minded Beggars,” The.—Anon. 

“Whenas in silks my Julia goes. How all must turn 
and wonder! See “Whenas in Silks. (Htuti- 
onian.) 

Whenas in silks my Julia goes, then, then, methmks, 
how sweetly flowers. See Upon Julia s Clothes.— 

Herrick. _ T ,. 

Whenas to shoot my Julia goes. See lo Julia in 
Shooting Togs.—Seaman. 

"Whence all these verses?” you ask me. See same .— 


See 

See 

See 

See 


Whence°and what art thou, execrable shape. 

Paradise Lost (“Whence/’ etc.). Milton. 

Whence come these feathery forms of light. 
Snowflakes.—Anon. 

Whence come those shrieks, so wild and shrill. 

Polish Boy, The.—Stephens. 

Whence come ye, Cherubs? from the moon? 

Chanting Cherubs—a Group by Greenough, Ihe. 
—Dana. T . 

Whence comes my love? O heart, disclose. See Lines 
on Isabella Markham.—Haryngton. 

Whence comes the charm that broods along thy shore. 

See Poesie.—Reid. , . ... , , , e 

Whence comes this spectacle in Christian lands7 See 
Arraignment of the Rum Traffic, An.——Foster. 
Whence does this love of our country, this universal 
passion, proceed. See Love of Country. Sidney 
Smith. 

Whence is it that the air so sudden clears. See 
Vision of Delight, The (May).—Johnson. 

Whence is the music? Minstrel, see we none. See 
Le Recit d’une Scoeur.—De Vere. 

Whence, O fragrant form of light. See Water-lily, The. 
—Tabb. . 

Whene’er a man commits a sin. See railing stars. 

Dominick. , , , , . , . 

Whene’er [tor. where’er] a noble deed is wrought. 

See Santa Filomena.—Longfellow. 

Whene’er [whenever—C.] a snowflake leaves the sky. 

See Snowflakes.—Dodge. . 

Whene’er across this sinful flesh of mine. See Sign of 
the Cross, The.—Newman. 

Whene’er I fragrant coffee drink. See Coffee Slips, 
The.—Lamb. W 

Whene’er mine eyes do my Amelia greet. See Amelia. 
—Patmore. 

Whene’er there comes a little child. See “That They 


All May be One.”—Noel. 

Whene’er we meet the friends once fondly cherished. 
See Decoration Day.—Butterworth. 

Whene’er with haggard eyes I view. See Song by 
Rogero the Captive.—Canning. 

Whene’er with pitying eye I view. See London 
University, The.—Barham. 

Whene’er you speak, remember every cause. See 
Advice to a Young Lawyer.—Story. 

Whenever a free and intelligent people asks any ques¬ 
tion. See Fair Play for Women.—Curtis. 

Whenever a little child is bom. See same. —Mason. 

Whenever [ wr . whene’er] a snowflake leaves the 
sky. See Snowflakes.—Dodge. 

Whenever Auntie moves around. See Auntie’s Skirts. 
—Stevenson. 

Whenever in America a girl is asked to wed. See Con¬ 
tinuity and Differentiation.—( University Herald.) 

Whenever my heart is heavy. See Witnesses.— 
Spofford. 

Whenever one sect degrades another on account of re¬ 
ligion. See Catholic Question, The, Apr. 23, 1812 
(Sectarian Tyranny).—Grattan. 

Whenever the moon and stars are set. See Windy 
Nights.—Stevenson. 

When’s my birthday cornin’? See His Birthday.— 
Reid. 

Where a regiment is bivouaced. See Vines of Memory. 
—Boylan. 


Where a river of the Northland. See At the Rock.— 
Pettit. 

Where all the winds were tranquil. See Pine-tree 
Buoy, A.—Morris. 

Where am I? From what dungeon’s depths, what 
voice. See Zaire.—Voltaire. 

Where ancient forests round us spread. See Hymn 
for the Dedication of a Church.—Norton. 

Where are the flowers? where are the leaves? Nee Win¬ 
ter.—Anon. 

Where are the great, whom thou would’st wish to 
praise thee? See Dipsychus (Isolation).—Clough. 

Where are the men of my heart’s desire? See Men of 
My Heart’s Desire, The.—Roberts. 

Where are the men who went forth in the morning. 
See Where are the Men?—Talhaiam. 

Where are the mighty ones of ages past. See Where 
are the Dead?—Anon. 

“Where are the snow-drops?” said the Sun. See Into 
the Light.—Matheson. 

Where are the swallows fled? See Doubting Heart, A. 
—Procter. 

Where are the sweet old-fashioned posies. See Old 
Fashioned Flowers.—Lynn. 

Where are they—the Afterwhiles. See Afterwhiles.— 
Riley. 

“Where are you going, gay Robin Redbreast?” See 
Robin Redbreast.—Kavanaugh. 

Where are you going, my little children. See Christ¬ 
mas Carol, A.—Slosson. 

“Where are you going, my pretty maid?” “I’m going 
a-milking, sir,” she said. See Where Are You Go¬ 
ing, My Pretty Maid?—Anon. 

“Where are you going, my pretty maid?” “I’m 
going a-shopping, kind sir,” she said. See Buying 
and Shopping.—Anon. 

Where are you going, my pretty maid ? Into ‘ ‘ Society^” 
sir, she said. See Romance of To-day. A.—Anon. 

Where are you going, my sweet, pretty lass. See Milk¬ 
maid, The.—Kavanaugh. 

Where are you going to? May I inquire? See How 
to Woo.—“Bob o’Link." 

“Where are you going. Uncle Fred?” asked Lucy. See 
Goosey Lucy’s New Year’s Calls.—( Youth’s Com¬ 
panion.) 

Where art thou gone, light-ankled youth? See To 
Youth.—Landor. 

Where art thou, Muse, that thou forget’st so long. See 
Sonnets, C.—Shakespeare. 

Where art thou, my beloved Son? See Affliction of 
Margaret, The.—Wordsworth. 

Where Ausonian summers glowing. See To the Nauti¬ 
lus.—Coleridge. 

Where avalanches wail, and green distress. See 
Where Avalanches Wail.—Anon. 

Where be the sweet delights of learnings treasure. Nee 
Complaint of Thalia.—Spencer. 

Where blood once quenched the camp-fire’s brand. 
See Between the Graves.—Spofford. 

Where broods the Absolute. See Quest.—Stedman. 

Where bums the fireside brightest. See Home. 
—Barton. 

Where bums the loved hearth brightest. See Home.— 
Barton. 

Where can Minnie be! I have not heard her. See 
Kitty’s Bath.—Anon. 

Where Claribel low-lieth. See Claribel.—Tennyson. 

Where communities are very large, the heavier evils of 
war are felt but by few. See On Mitford’s His¬ 
tory of Greece (Courtesies of War, The).— 
Macaulay. 

Where did yesterday’s sunset go? See Where Did it 
Go?—Gannett. 

Where did you come from, baby dear? See Baby.— 
Macdonald. 

Where dips the rocky highland. See Stolen Child, 
The.—Yeats. 

Where do the stars grow, little Garaine? See “Little 
Garaine. ’ ’—Parker. 

Where do they go, I wonder. See Frowns or Smiles.— 
Dayre. 

Where do you come from, Mr. Jay? See Strange 
Lands.—Alma-Tadema. 

“Where do you go, Bob, when you’re fast asleep?” 
See In the Nursery.—Ingelow. 

Where do you think the Fairies [go? See Fairies’ 
Shopping, The.—Deland. 

Where does my sweetheart Baby go. See Lullaby 
Song.—McKenzie. 

Where does Pinafore Palace stand? See Lilliput 
Levee.—Rands. 

Where does the water spring, gladsome and bright? 
See Where Does the Water Spring?—Anon. 


932 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Where 


Where dost thou careless lie? See Ode to Himself An 
—Jonson. 

Where Foyle his swelling waters. See Maiden Citv 
The.—“Charlotte Elizabeth.” 

Where, girt with orchard and with olive-yard. See 
Etruscan Ring, An.—Mackail. 

Where grass grows short and the meadows end See 
Bean-blossoms.— (St. James Gazette.) 

Where has baby gone to? See Where do Babies Go? 
—Richards. 

Where has the princess gone? See Melik the Black — 
ScoUard. 

Where has the summer gone? See Lost: The Sum¬ 
mer.—Alden. 


Where hast thou been toiling all day, sweetheart. See 
Child in the Judgment Seat, The.—Charles. 

Where have I just read of a game played at a country 
house? See On a Hundred Years Hence.— 
Thackeray. 

Where have they gone to—the little boys. See Little 
Boy, A.—Merriam. 

Where have they gone to—the little girls. See Little 
Girl, A.—Wilcox. 

"Where have ye been, ye ill woman.” See Queen’s 
Wake, The (Witch of Fife, The).—Hogg. 

"Where have you been, Lysander Pratt?” See Quite 
a History.—Bates. 

"Where have you been, my little daughter?” See 
Strange Land, The.—Meyers. 

Where have you been, Willy? I went in all the rooms 
to find you. See Willy’s Walk.—Anon. 

"Where have you come from, Mabel mine?” See For 
Christmas Day.—Butterworth. 

Where Helen comes, as falls the dew. See Where 
Helen Comes.—Rooney. 

Where Helen sits, the darkness is so deep. See Where 
Helen Sits.—Richards. 

Where Hudson’s wave o’er silvery sands. See Where 
Hudson’s Wave.—Morris. 

Where in its old historic splendor stands. See Hudson, 
The.—Heilman. 

"Where—is—Mary—Alice—Smith?” See Mary Alice 
Smith.—Riley. 

"Where is mother?” lips a-tremble. See Where is 
Mother?—Denton. 

Where is my Chief, my Master, this bleak night, 
mavrone! See O’Hussey’s Ode to the Maguire.— 
Mangan. 

Where is my gracious Lord of Canterbury? See King 
Henry V. (Act 1, Scene 2).—Shakespeare. 

"Where is my little basket gone?” See Kitty in the 
Basket.—Follen. 

Where is now the merry party. See Far Away.—Lindsay. 

Where is papa, Amy? I have been all over the house. 
See Cousin from the City, The.—Anon. 

Where is that baleful maid. See Ballade of Biblio- 
clasts.-—Tomson. 

"Where is the baby, grandmamma?” See True Story, 
A.—Kinne. 

Where is the German’s Fatherland? See German’s 
Fatherland, The.—Anon. 

Where is the grave of Sir Walter O’Kellyn? See 
Knight’s Tomb, The.—Coleridge. 

Where is the heart of a soldier. See Soldier’s Heart, 
A.—( Baltimore News.) 

Where is the heritage that once was Spain’s. See Dies 
Irse.—Anon. 

Where is the king? The king himself is rode to view. 
See King Henry V. (Scene from “Henry V.”).— 
Shakespeare. 

Where is the land with milk and honey flowing. See 
First Sunday after Trinity.—Keble. 

Where is the liquor which God the eternal brews for 
all His children? See Apostrophe to Water 
(Tribute to Water, A).—Arrington. 

"Where is the little lark’s nest?” See Eggs and Birds. 
—Rands. 

"Where is the old steward?” inquired a traveler. See 
Trouble with the Steward, The.—Anon. 

Where is the road to fairy-land? See Road to Fairy¬ 
land, The.—Anon. 

Where is the true man's fatherland? See Fatherland, 
The.—Lowell. 

"Where is the unknown country?” See Unknown 
Country, The.—Craik. 

Where is this patriarch you are kindly greeting. See 
Iron Gate, The.—Holmes. 

Where is thy favour’d haunt, eternal Voice. See 
Twentieth Sunday after Trinity.—Keble. 

Where is thy lovely perilous abode? See To the 
Lean&n Sidhe.—Boyd. 

Where is Timarchus gone? See Epitaph from Simon¬ 
ides.—Anon. 


"Where is Whisky Bill,” who used to drive that old 
white horse. See Undressing Little Ned.—Anon. 

Where is your friend, Lizzie? See Girl of the Period, 
The.—Graham. 

Where laps the breeze, the ever-rustling tree. See My 
Lady.—Anon. 

Where leap the long Atlantic swells. See Cod-fisher. 
The.—Lincoln. 

Where lies the land to which the ship would go? See 
Songs in Absence (Where Lies the Land?).— 
Clough. 

Where, like a pillow on a bed. See Ecstacy, The.— 
Donne. 

Where may the wearied eye repose. See Washington. 
—Byron. 

Where may the wearied eye repose. See Washington 
Acrostic.—Anon. 

Where moss-made beds are brightest by the river. See 
Satisfied.—Benedict. 

Where now these mingled ruins lie. See On the Ruins 
of a Country Inn.—Freneau. 

Where, O where, are the visions of morning. See 
Questions and Answers.—Holmes. 

Where olive leaves were twinkling in every wind that 
blew. See Damsel of Peru, The.—Bryant. 

Where on earth can those girls have gone. See Re¬ 
buff, A.—Denton. 

Where or how he had dug up the name of "Shed” no 
' one ever knew. See How We Hung Red Shed.— 
Miller. 

Where, over heathen doom-rings and gray stones of the 
Horg. See King Volmer and Elsie.—Whittier. 

Where runs the river? Who can say. See Where 
Runs the River?—Bourdillon. 

Where shall I begin with the endless delights. See 
Fudge Family in Paris, The (Miss Biddy’s Epistle). 
—Moore. 

Where shall I go? See From the Iron Gate.—Meyers. 

Where shall the lover rest? See Marmion (Where shall 
the Lover Rest?).—Scott. 

Where shall they go? See Apples, The.—Anon. 

Where shall we learn to die? See Teach Us to Die.— 
Stanley. 

Where shall we make her grave? See Dirge.—Hemans. 

Where shall we seek for a hero? See Boston Massacre, 
The.—O’Reilly. 

Where shall wisdom be found? See Job (True Wis¬ 
dom).— Bible. 

Where she her sacred bower adorns. See same. — 
Campion. 

Where should the scholar live? In solitude or in 
society? See Hyperion (Poetry of City and 
Country Life, The).—Longfellow. 

Where Sugarloaf with :bare and ruinous wedge. See 
On Great Sugarloaf.—Greene. 

Where sunless rivers weep. See Dream-land.—Ros¬ 
setti. 

Where sweeps round the mountains. See Wagoner of 
the Alleghenies, The (Song of the Mountaineers). 
—Read. 

Where swell the songs thou shouldst have sung. See 
Soldier Poet, A.—Johnson. 

Where the acorn tumbles down. See Field-mouse, The. 
—Anon. 

Where the angry billows of the Baltic. See Dagmar 
Cross, The.—Anon. 

Where the bee sucks, there suck I. See Tempest, 
The (“Where the bee,” etc.).—Shakespeare. 

Where the blackcock sweetest sips it. See Hie Away. 
—Scott. 

Where the bluebells and the wind are. See Bluebells. 
—Ramal. 

Where the dews and the rains of heaven have their 
fountain. See Battle in the Clouds, The.— 
Howells. 

Where the faded flower shall freshen. See Meeting 
Place, The.—Bonar. 

Where the far skies soared clear and bright. See 
Armorer’s Errand, The.—Dorr. 

Where the grass had been newly mown. See Blowing 
Bubbles.—Starkey. 

Where the graves were many, we looked for one. See 
In Clonmel Parish Churchyard.—Piatt. 

Where the huge Atlantic swings heavy water eastward. 
See Mater Severa.—Gwynn. 

Where the keen wan peaks, in frigid pride unbending. 
See Iceberg, The.—Fawcett. 

Where the Moosatockmaguntic. See Echo Club, The 
(Ballad of Hiram Hover, The).—Taylor. 

Where the mountains slope to the westward. See Our 
Homemaker.—Whitney. 

Where the orange-branches mingle on the sunny gar¬ 
den-side. See Demon of the Mirror, The.—Taylor. 


933 







Where 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Where the pools are bright and deep. See Boy’s Song, 
A.—Hogg. 

Where the quiet-colour’d end of evening smiles. See 
Love among the Ruins.—Browning. 

Where the red deer speed in the pines. See Carolina.— 
Page. 

Where the remote Bermudas ride. See Song of the 
Emigrants in Bermuda.—Marvell. 

Where the river’s mimic billows. See Siren’s Wedding- 
ring, The.—Jessop. 

Where the rocks are gray and the shore is steep. See 
Old Canoe, The.—Pike. 

Where the soft shadows fall. See Song.—Morton. 

Where the sun comes up on cornfields, where it whitens 
new-mown hay. See Westward.—Douglass. 

Where the sunset glory falls. See Story of the Swords, 
The.—Waldron. 

Where the sweet woodbines tangled. See Butterfly, 
The.—Anon. 

Where the thistle lifts a purple crown. See Daisy.— 
Thompson. 

Where the warm spring sunlight, streaming. See Old 
Sword on the Wall, The.—Lincoln. 

Where the wild rose dangles, o’er the half-hid brook. 
See Cricket, The.—Watterson. 

Where the windmills swing by the Zuyder Zee. See My 
Delftware Maid.—Alton. 

Where the woodland streamlets flow. See Clematis.— 
Goodale. 

Where the world is gray and lone. See Ice King, The. 
—De Mille. 

Where then shall Hope and Fear their objects find? 
See Vanity of Human Wishes, The (True Objects 
of Desire, The).—Johnson. 

Where towers are crushed and unforbidden weeds. See 
Pillar of Trajan, The.—Wordsworth. 

Where two ways meet the children stand. See Two 
Roads, The.—-Anon. ^ 

Where waitest thou. See A ma Future.—Arnold. 

Where was I durin’ th’ las’ war? <See What Dooley 
Says.—Dunne. 

Where we love is home. See Poet at the Breakfast- 
table, The (“Where we love,” etc ).—Holmes. 

Where were you going the other evening, when I saw 
you on Broadway? See Bones at a Soiree.— 
Anon. 

Where wert thou. Soul, ere yet my body born. See 
Soul and Body.—Waddington. 

Where, where will be the birds that sing. See Hun¬ 
dred Years to Come, A.—Spencer. 

Where will they stop those breathing Powers. See 
Devotional Incitements.—Wordsworth. 

Where winds abound. See same. —Field. 

Whereas, by Joint Resolution, approved June 20, 1892. 
See Proclamation, A.—Harrison. 

Whereas, it is the duty of all nations. See First 
Thanksgiving Proclamation Issued by George 
Washington, The.—Washington. 

Whereas, on certain [or sundry] boughs and sprays. 
See Lawyer’s Invocation to Spring, The.—Brownell. 

Whereas, on the twenty-second day of September. 
See Proclamation of Emancipation.—Lincoln. 

Where’er [Whene’er— C.] a noble deed is wrought. 
See Santa Filomena.—Longfellow. 

Where’er I roam, whatever realms to see. See Trav¬ 
eller, The; or, A Prospect of Society.—Gold¬ 
smith. 

Where’er we tread ’tis haunted, holy ground. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Marathon).—Byron. 

Wherefore my love, and loss of other view. See Divine 
Comedy, The (Exquisite Beauty of Beatrice, 
The).—Dante. 

Wherefore rejoice [that Caesar comes in triumph]? 
What conquest brings he home? See Julius Caesar 
(Marullus to the Roman Populace).—Shakespeare. 

Wherefore shrink, and say, “ ’Tis vain.” See Gather¬ 
ing of the Church, The.—Keble. 

“Wherefore starts my bosom’s lord?” See Comfort 
in Affliction.—Aytoun. 

Wherefore these revels that my dull eyes greet? See 
Royal Mummy to Bohemia, The.—Stoddard. 

Wherefore thus ’mid foeman lurking, when my place 
is far away. See Crowned and Discrowned.— 
Bright. 

“Where's he at?’’ See Messenger Boy, The.—Ade. 

Where’s he that died o’ Wednesday. See Falstaff’s 
Song.—Stedman. 

“Where’s heaven, mamma?” said a little girl. See 
Where Heaven Is.—Anon. 

Where’s my baby? Where’s my baby? See Where’s 
My Baby?—Anon. 

Where’s my little son, Nourrice. See Tower of St. 
Maur, The.—Robinson. 


Where’s Peace? I start, some clear-blown night. See 
Biglow Papers, The (Mr. Hosea Biglow to the 
Editor of The Atlantic Monthly ).—Lowell. 

Where’s the crowd that dares to go. See Session with 
Uncle Sidney, A (Gathering of the Clans, The).— 
Riley. 

Wherever human government has been administered 
in tyranny. See People of the United States, The. 
—Cleveland. 

Wherever human hearts best responsive to heroic deeds. 
See Eulogy on U. S. Grant.—Sherman. 

Wherever I go, there’s a trusty battalion. See Book 
Battalion, The.—Lathrop. 

Wherever I wander, up and about. See HermionA— 
Buchanan. 

Wherever maidens may be found. See Another Com¬ 
plaint against Cupid.—Knowles. 

Wherever, O man, God’s sun first beamed upon thee. 
See same. —Arndt. 

Wherever party spirit shall strain the ancient guaran¬ 
tees of freedom. See Centennial Celebration of 
Concord Fight (“Wherever party.” etc.).—Curtis. 

Whether is it yourself, Mister Hagan? See Curfew’s 
Call, A.—Barlow. 

Whether hanging ever did, or can, answer any good 
purpose. See On Frequent Executions.—Mere¬ 
dith. 

“Whether is better, the gift or the donor?” See Wood- 
notes.—Emerson. 

Whether it be a favour or an annoyance. See Morning. 
—Webster. 

Whether it be to rear in stone. See Hands Drop off— 
the Work Goes on. The.—Bradley. 

Whether my heart be glad or no. See World and I, 
The.—Hutchinson. 

Whether of high or low degree. See Our Ships at Sea. 
—Bungay. 

Whether on Ida’s shady brow. See To the Muses.— 
Blake. 

Whether the Turkish new moon minded be. See 
Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet XXX.).—Sidney. 

Whether the Union will be restored, I know not, and I 
predict not. See Civil War in America, The.— 
Bright. 

Whether they were his lady’s marriage bells. See 
Lover’s Tale, The (Golden Supper, The).—Tenny¬ 
son. 

Whether this measure shall prevail. See Heroes of 
the “Maine Disaster.”—Cousins. 

Whether with reason or with instinct blest. See Essay 
on Man, An (Reason and Instinct).-—Pope. 

Whew! How the drivers hammer! See Fellow in 
Greasy Jeans, The.—Lummis. 

“Which hab produce de mos’ wonders—de lan’ or de 
water?” See Pine Town Darkey Debating 
Society.—( Harper's Magazine.) 

Which I don’t belong to the ’Stablished Church. See 
Three Parsons, The.—Overton. 

Which I wish to remark. See Plain Language from 
Truthful James.—Harte. 

Which is more sweet,—the slow mysterious stream. 
See Izaak Walton to River and Brook.—Lee- 
Ham ilton. 

Which is the best of all the trees? See My Tree. 
—( Youth’s Companion.) 

Which is the wind that brings the cold? See What the 
Winds Bring.—Stedman. 

Which my name is Ah Sin. See “Heathen Chinee’s” 
Reply, The.—Anon. 

Which of my dollies do I love best? See Best of the 
Dollies.—Allyn. 

Which of the Angels sang so well in Heaven. See On 
the Death of Mrs. Browning.—Dobell. 

“Which shall it be? Which shall it be?” See Which 
Shall it Be?—Beers. 

Which way shall I fly. See Paradise Lost.— 
Milton. 

Which will you have, my boy or girl. See Wine and 
Water.—Mackey. 

Whichever way the wind doth blow. See“En Voyage.” 
—Mason. 

While any day was notable and dear. See Prospect¬ 
ive Visit, A.—Riley. 

While at the helm of state you ride. See Author and 
the Statesman, The.—Fielding. 

While Butler, needy wretch, was yet alive. See On 
Butler’s Monument.—Wesley. 

While cynic Charles still trimm’d the vane. See Book¬ 
plates’ Petition, The.—-Dobson. 

While England sees not her old praise dim. See Bur¬ 
ton.—Swinburne. 

While every age is crowned with rhyme. See Song of 
the Railroad, The.—Houghton. 


934 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


White 


While f r°m the purpling east departs. See First of 
May.—Wordsworth. 

Whde George in sorrow bows his laurelled head. See 
On General Wolfe.—Anon 

While glory, thus Alonzo’s name adorn’d. See Lusiad, 
,, lhe (Inez de Castro).—Camoens. 

While going the road to sweet Athy. See “Johnny, I 
Hardly Knew Ye.”—Anon. 

While going the rounds of the great exhibition. See 
Josiah and Family at the Centennial.—Johnston. 

While Governor Manco, or “the one armed,” kept up 
a show of military state. See Alhambra, The 
(Governor Manco and the Soldier).—Irving. 

While haughty Gallia’s dames, that spread See 
Countess of Manchester, The.—Addison. 

While I do not believe that legal enactments are of 
greatest value. See Need for a Prohibition Party, 
I he.—Gough. 

While I recline at ease beneath. See Cotton Boll The 
—Timrod. 

While I relate my story. See Taxation of America — 
St. John. 

While I was over at Pencador, the other day, I called 
on the Potts. See Mr. Potts’ Story.—Adeler. 

While I’m in the ones, I can frolic all day. See Little 
Girl s Hopes, A.—Anon. 

While larks with little wing. See Phyllis the Fair.— 
Burns. 

While lawyers have more sober sense. See Hudibras 
—Butler 


While Major Slott was sitting in the office of the 
Patriot. See Major Slott’s Visitor.—Clark. 

While malice, Pope, denies thy page. See Lines to 
Alexander Pope.—Lewis. 

While May bedecks the naked trees. See Maryland 
Yellow-throat.—Van Dyke. 

While memory holds a seat. See Hamlet.—Shake¬ 


speare. 

While mother is tending baby. See Washing-day. 
—(Hearth and Home.) 

While my guardian and I were in London. See Bleak 
House (Visit to Belle Yard, A).—Dickens. 

While not a leaf seems faded, while the fields. See 
September, 1815.—Wordsworth. 

While now the Pole Star sinks from sight. See Cross¬ 
ing the Tropics.—Melville. 

While o’er my life still hung the morning star. See 
Heart’s-ease.—Anon. 

While on a visit to a relation. See Bumpkin’s Court¬ 
ship.—Anon. 

While on the cliff with calm delight she kneels. See 
On the Picture of an Infant Playing near a Preci¬ 
pice.—Leonidas. 

While other bovs have had their say. See Walter’s 
First Speech.—Doolittle. 

While others are asking for beauty or fame. See Bal¬ 
lade of True Wisdom.—Lang. 

While Quaker folks were Quakers still, some fifty years 
ago. See Incomplete Revelation, An.—Jackson. 

While sauntering through the crowded street. See 
Pre-existence.—Hayne. 

While shepherds watched their flocks by night. See 
same. —Tate. 

While Sherman stood beneath the hottest fire. See 
Before Vicksburg.—Boker. 

While shopping in the town. See Gossips, The.— 
Anon. 

While slow on Miniato’s height I roam. See San 
Miniato.—Sterling. 

“While stands the Coliseum, Rome shall stand.” See 
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Coliseum, The).— 
Byron. 

While that the sun with his beams hot. See Unfaith¬ 
ful Shepherdess, The.—Anon. 

While the dawn on the mountain was misty and gray. 
See Rokeby (Cavalier, The).—Scott. 

While the moon, with sudden gleam. See Owl, The.— 
Anon. 

While the new years come and the old years go. See 
Little by Little.—Clark. 

While the present century was in its teens. See Van¬ 
ity Fair (Miss Pinkerton’s Academy for Young 
Ladies).—Thackeray. 

While the stars in silence shining, and the world is 
hushed in sleep. See Angelic Song, The.—English. 

While the Union lasts, amid these fertile, verdant fields. 
See Aspirations for America.—Clay. 

While the Union lasts we have high, exciting, gratify¬ 
ing prospects. See Reply to Hayne, The (Liberty 
and Union).—Webster. 

While Thee I seek, protecting Power. See Trust in 
Providence.—Williams. 


While they sat before the fire. See Happy Love. 
—(Burlington Hawkeye.) 

While thou didst keep thy candor undefil’d. See To 
His Booke.—Herrick. 

While to his harp divine Arion sings. See His Majesty’s 
Escape at St. Andrews.—Waller. 

While upon his mission vast. See Widow’s Son Re- 
stored to Life, The.—Stretch. 

While walkin’ up the village street, a fightin’ there I 
see - See Farmer Stebbins at Football—Carleton. 

While walking on the street one day. See I Think It’s 
Wrong—Don’t You?—Anon. 

While we act, sir, upon the maxim, "In peace prepare 
for war.” See Twenty-five Years of Peace.— 
Everett. 

While we bring our offerings. See Eulogy on Lafay¬ 
ette.—Sprague. 

While we shed a tear of feeling. See While We Shed 
a Tear.—Addison. 

While we waited in the depot at Nashville. See 
Wanted to See his Old Home.—( New York Sun.) 

While we were eating breakfast. Grandma Keeler ob¬ 
served to Grandpa. See Grandma Keeler Gets 
Grandpa Keeler Ready for Sunday School.— 
McLean. 

While we would by no means neglect on such an occa¬ 
sion. See Nature and Children.—Higbee. 

While with labour assiduous due pleasure I mix. See 
Secretary, The.—Prior. 

While yet I looked, what a change there came. See 
Passing Away.—Pierpont. 

While you, great patron of mankind! sustain. See 
Horace Imitated.—Pope. 

While young John runs to greet. See Lines on a 
Picture by Leonardo Da Vinci, Called “The Vir¬ 
gin of the Rocks.”—Lamb. 

Whilom by silver Thames’s gentle stream. See Vir¬ 
tuoso, The.—Akenside. 

Whilome in youth, when flowrd my joyfull spring. See 
Shepheardes Calender, The (Complaint of Age, 
The).—Spenser. 

Whilst, around her lone ark sweeping. See Danae.— 
Simonides. 

Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled. See same. —Barn- 
field. 

Whilst I listen to thy voice. See To Chloris.—Waller. 

Whilst in this cold and blustering clime. See Invita¬ 
tion to Izaak Walton.—Cotton. 

Whilst little Paul, convalescing, was staying. See 
Subtlety.—Riley. 

Whilst our commission from Rome is read. See King 
Henry VIII. (Scene from “King Henry VIII.”).— 
Shakespeare. 

Whilst the authors of all these evils were idly and 
stupidly gazing. See Hyder Ali.—Burke. 

Whilst Thee I seek, protecting Power. See Whilst 
Thee I Seek.—Williams. 

Whin you was out a lady called. See King’s Daughter, 
The.—Henderson. 

Whipping, that’s virtue’s governess. See Hudibras, 
—Butler. 

“Whip-poor-will! whip-poor-will!” See Whip-poor- 
will.—Ruggles. 

Whipp’will’s singin’ to the moon. See Go Sleep, Ma 
Honey.—Barker. 

Whisht [or whist] there! Mary Murphy, doan think 
me insane. See Widow O’Shane’s Rint, The.— 
Anon. 

Whisper, thou tree, thou lonely tree. See Last Tree 
of the Forest, The.—Hemans. 

Whispers of heavenly death murmur’d I hear. See 
Whispers of Heavenly Death.—Whitman. 

Whist now! till I relate to you See Pat’s Correspond¬ 
ence.—Giffin. 

Whist, sir! Would ye plaze to spake aisy. See 
Eleventh Hour, The.—Ruth. 

Whist [or whisht] there! Mary Murphy, doan think 
me insane. See Widow O’Shane’s Rint, The.— 
Anon. 

Whistles the quail from the covert. See What tl>e 
Quail Says.—Bates. 

Whistling strangely, whistling sadly, whistling sweet 
and clear. See Seven Whistlers, The.—Gillington. 

White bird of the tempest! O beautiful thing! See 
Lines Addressed to a Seagull, Seen off the Cliffs 
of Moher, in the County of Clare.—Griffin. 

White bud! that in meek beauty so dost lean. See 
Lily of the Valley.—Croly. 

White England shouldering from the sea. See Fair 
England.—Cone. 

White little hands! See Prince Lucifer (Mother-song). 
—Austin. 


935 












White 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


White little housed-up things. See Gipsy Children's 
Song.—Larcom. 

White man, there is eternal war between me and thee! 
See Supposed Speech of a Chief of the Pocomtuc 
Indians.—Everett. 

White Rose, talk to me! See Child to a Rose, A.— 
Anon. 

White sail upon the ocean verge. See Arthur.—Winter. 

White sand and cedars; cedars, sand. See Sandy 
Hook.—Houghton. 

White wings of commerce sailing far. See In Memory 
of General Grant.—Abbey. 

White with the whiteness of the snow. See Rose.— 
Anon. 

Whither away, fair Neat-herdess? See April Pastoral, 
An.—Dobson. 

Whither away, robin. See Flight of the Birds, The.— 
Stedman, 

Whither doth now this fellow flee. See March.—Love- 
man. 

Whither is gone the wisdom and power. See Whither. 
—Coleridge. 

Whither leads this pathway, little one? See Whither. 
—Cheney. 

Whither, midst falling dew. See To a Waterfowl.— 
Bryant. 

Whither, O splendid ship, thy white sails crowding. 
See Passer-by, A.—Bridges. 

“Whither, thou turbid wave.” See Wave, The.— 
Tiedge. 

Whittier is in some respects the most American. See 
Whittier, Extract Concerning.—Stoddard. 

Whittier’s genius is Hebrew. See Whittier, Extract 
Concerning.—Wasson. 

Whizzing o’er the desert. See Trolley on the Nile, 
The.—Anon. 

Who all time dodgin’ en de cott’n en de corn? See 
Mammy's Li’l Boy.—Edwards. 

Who am I? Why, I’m my papa’s little girl. See 
Papa’s Little Girl.—Anon. 

Who among the citizens that throng our streets are the 
really honored? See Who Are Really Honored.— 
Chapin. 

Who, and what, are great men? “And now stand 
forth.” See Centennial Oration (Who, and What, 
are Great Men?).—Winthrop. 

Who are responsible for this war? See Who are Re¬ 
sponsible?—Garrison. 

Who are the free? See same. —Prince. 

Who are the heroes we hail to-day. See Joe Sieg. 
—(Eclectic Magazine.) 

Who are the nobles of the earth. See True Aristocrat, 
The.—Stewart. 

Who are the true noblemen of the earth? See True 
Nobility.—Anon. 

Who are this host of voters crowding to use the free¬ 
man’s right. See Dangers to Our Republic.— 
Mann. 

Who are thy playmates, boy? See Playmates, The.— 
Tabb. 

Who are ye, spirits, that stand. See Blazing Heart, 
The.—Brotherton. 

Who are you, little boy, on your way to the meadow. 
See Jack Frost and Tom Ruddy.—Anon. 

Who are you, my little neighbor. See Common Bond, 
The.—Hunt. 

“Who are you winking at, bright little star?” See 
Playing Bo-peep with a Star.—Anon. 

Who art thou, fair one, who usurp’st the place. See 
Lines on the Same Picture being Removed.— 
Lamb. 

Who art thou, shadowy passer-by? See same. —Hugo. 

Who bade thee do and suffer bids thee rest. See “Em¬ 
peror Evermore.”—Hickey. 

Who best can paint th’ enamelled robe of spring. See 
Sonnet: “Who best can,” etc.—Thurlow. 

Who bides his time, and day by day. See Who Bides 
His Time.—Anon. 

Who brands me on the forehead, breaks my sword. 
See Catiline (Catiline’s Defiance).—Croly. 

Who builds a church to God and not to fame. See 
Moral Essays (Epistle III.).—Pope. 

Who builds de railroads and canals. See Echo from 
the 17th, An.—Easton. 

Who calls me bold because I won my love. See Song. 
—Monkhouse. 

Who can divine what impulses from God. See Liberty. 
—Wordsworth. 

Who can doubt that the union of these States shall last. 
See Temple of Human Liberty, The.—Holmes. 

Who can live in heart so glad. See Passionate 
Shepherd, The (Third Pastor’s Song, The).— 
Breton. 


Who can love you, January? See January.—;Jones. 

Who can paint like nature? Can imagination boast. 
See Seasons, The (Nature in Spring).—Thomson. 

Who can say, in spite of the important respects. See 
Arbitration and Civilization.—Russell. 

Who can tell us whence they come. See Dreams.— 
Sherman. 

Who can tell what a baby thinks? See Jingles.—( Ex¬ 
aminer .) 

Who comes dancing over the snow. See same. —-Craik. 

Who comes to England not to learn. See England. 
—Stetson. 

Who comes,—with rapture greeted, and caress’d. See 
Charles the Second.—Wordsworth. 

Who cometh over the hills? See Ode Read at the 
One Hundredth Anniversary of the Fight at 
Concord Bridge.—Lowell. 

Who counsels peace at this momentous hour. See 
Ode, Written during the Negotiations with Bona¬ 
parte.—Southey. * 

Who counts himself as nobly born. See Nobly Born, 
The.—E. S. H. 

Who cries that the days of daring are those that are 
faded far. See Deeds of Valor at Santiago.— 
Scollard. 

Who dares deny, that all first fruits are due. See To 
King Charles and Queen Mary, for the Loss of 
Their First-born. An Epigram Consolatory.— 
Jonson. 

Who dares to say the dead men were not glad. See 
Dead Men’s Holiday.—Moulton. 

Who dares to scorn the meanest thing. See Small 
Things.—Bennoch. 

Who dashes on in sleet and snow. See Kriss Kringle’s 
Visit.—Anon. 

Who does not feel, what reflecting American does not 
acknowledge. See First Settlement of New Eng¬ 
land, The (Our Relations to England).—Ev¬ 
erett. 

Who doesn’t love Roses? When summer has come. 
See Floral Rainbow, The.—Anon. 

Who doomed to go in company with Pain. See Char¬ 
acter of the Happy Warrior, The.—Wordsworth. 

Who doubts has met defeat ere blows can fall. See 
Columbus the World-giver.—Egan. 

Who doubts there are classes. See Every-day Botany. 

-—Perry. 

Who dreamed that beauty passes like a dream? See 
Rose of the World, The.—Yeats. 

Who drives the horses of the sun? See Happiest 
Heart, The.—Cheney. 

Who ever smelt the breath of morning flowers. See 
Sonnet: “Who ever smelt,” etc.—Quarles. 

Who fears to speak of Ninety-eight. See Memory of 
the Dead, The.—Ingram. 

Who finds a woman good and wise. See Lemuel’s 
Song.—Wither. 

Who first beholds those everlasting clouds. See Italy. 
—Rogers. 

Who first invented work, and bound the free. See 
Work.—Lamb. 

Who gave thee, O beauty. See Ode to Beauty.— 
Emerson. 

Who gives and hides the giving hand. See Giver’s 
Reward, The.—Anon. 

Who had seen them, the mystic sprites. See Miracle 
Workers, The.—Allen. 

Who had thought, until Grant said it. See Grant’s 
Strategy.—Veazey. 

Who has been styled “Father of his country?” See 
Father of His Country.—West. 

Who has e’er been in London, that overgrown place. 
See Lodgings for Single Gentlemen.—Coleman. 

Who has not dreamed a world of bliss. See Summer 
Noon, A.—Howett. 

Who has not heard of the dauntless Varuna? See 
Varuna, The.—Boker. 

Who has not heard of the Vale of Cashmere. See 
Lalla Rookh (Vale of Cashmere, The).—Moore. 

Who has not looked upon her brow. See same. — 
Rogers. 

Who has not walk’d upon the shore. See Upon the 
Shore.—Bridges. 

Who has robbed the ocean cave? See Song.—Shaw. 

Who hath his fancy pleased. See Song: "Who hath 
his fancy,” etc.—Sidney. 

Who hath not proved how feebly words essay. See 
Bride of Abydos, The.—Byron. 

Who held the tempting cherry nigh. See My Sister. 
—Anon. 

Who is he that cometh, like an honour’d guest. See 
Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington.— 
Tennyson. 


936 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Whoever 


Who is it coos just like a dove? See Babv.—Anon. 

"Who is it knocks this stormy night?” See Last 
Visitor, The.—Blood. 

Who is it, that hath warned us to the walls? See 
King John.—Shakespeare. 

Who is it that I’ve christened May. See My Doliy.— 
Anon. 

Who is it that mourns for the days that are gone. See 
Days that are Gone, The.—Mackay. 

Who is it that, this dark night. See Astrophel and 
Stella (Eleventh Song).—Sidney. 

Who is Sylvia [or Silvia]? what is she. See Two Gen¬ 
tlemen of Verona, The (Sylvia).—Shakespeare. 

Who is that short, sturdy, plainly dressed man See 
Westward Ho! (Sir Francis Drake).—Kingsley. 

Who is the baby, that doth lie. See Bride’s Tragedy, 
The (Song, by Two Voices).—Beddoes. 

Who is the happy warrior? Who is he? See Char¬ 
acter of the Happy Warrior, The.—Wordsworth. 

Who is the honest man? See Constancy.—Her¬ 
bert. 

Who is the man that, in addition to the disgraces and 
mischiefs of our army. See American War, The 
(Against Employing Indians in War).—Chatham. 

Who is the typical Dutchman? See Typical Dutch¬ 
man, The.—Van Dyke. 

Who is there now knows aught of his story? See Jac¬ 
queminot.—Chandler. 

Who is there that cannot recall. See Santa Claus.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Who is this comes knocking. See Grandma’s Sur¬ 
prise.—Anon. 

Who is this coming with sober pace. See Ten Com¬ 
mandments, The.-—-Hadley. 

Who is this little new woman. See New Woman, The. 
—Seabury. 

Who is this with calm demeanor. See Charlotte Cor- 
day.—Anon. 

Who is to blame, oh, who is to blame? See Who Is to 
Blame.-—Anon. 

Who is yonder poor maniac, whose wildly fixed eyes. 
See Mary, the Maid of the Inn.—Southey. 

Who knoweth not, how often Venus’ son. See Heca- 
tompathia (Passion LXV.).—Watson. 

Who knows the most, Pussy, you or I? See Who 
Knows the Most?—Bronson. 

Who knows the thoughts of a child. See Who Knows? 
—Perry. 

Who lags from dread of daily work. See Daily Work. 
—Mackay. 

Who lights the star lamps in the skies. See Questions. 

—G. V. S. 

Who liveth so merry in all this land. See Who Liveth 
so Merry.—Ravenscroft. 

Who loveth a little mountain stream. See Mountain 
Stream, A.— ( Smith College Monthly.) 

Who made the butterfly’s delicate wing. See Who 
Did it?—Lawrence. 

Who made the sky so bright and blue? See Creator, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

Who man swim best, that man most gettee dlown. See 


Chinese Proverbs.—Anon. 

Who nearer Nature’s life would truly come. See 
Thoreau.—Alcott. . . 

Who ne’er his bread in sorrow ate. See Wilhelm Meis- 
ter’s Apprenticeship (Who ne’er his Bread, etc.). 
—Goethe. 

Who o’er the herd would wish to reign. See Lady of 
the Lake, The.—Scott. 

Who, or why, or which, or what. See Ahkond of Swat, 
The.—Lear. 

Who passes down the wintry street? See Daffodil.— 
Hinkson. . 

Who prop, thou ask’st, in these bad days, my mind? 

See To a Friend.—Arnold. 

Who puts oup at der pest hotel. See Der Drummer. 


Adams. . . . 

Who remains in London. See Spring Song in the City. 
—Buchanan. 

Who rideth so late through the mght-wind wild? -bee 
Erl-king, The.-—Goethe. _ , 

Who rideth thro’ the driving rain. See Kings bon, 
The.—Boyd. 

Who rings New England’s Angelus? See Hermit 
Thrush, The.—Woodworth. 

Who ruined me ere I was born. See Lay of Heal bite, 


"Who rules these lands?” the pilgrim said. See Staff 
and Script, The.—Rossetti. . 

"Who says I dare not walk the sea-wall to-night t 
See Owen’s Oath.—Holmes. 

Who sent you to me, roses rare? See On Some Roses 
Sent Anonymously.—Anon. 


Who shall awake the Spartan fife. -See Ode to Liberty. 
Collins. 

Who shall estimate the cost of a priceless reputation. 
-See Value of Reputation.—Phillips. 

Who shall judge [a] man from nature [or manners, or 
his manners]? See How a Man Should be Judged. 
—Anon. 

Who shall lament to know thy aching head. See 
Death of Queen Caroline, The.—Talfourd. 

Who shall lead a brother duly. See Questions.—Kent. 

Who shall sing to bleak November. See November.— 
Sherman. 

Who shall sweep away the errors. See Room for You. 
—Howarth. 

Who spake of life? I bade thee grasp that treasure 
as thine honor. See Richelieu; or. The Conspir¬ 
acy.—-Bulwer-Lytton. 

Who stands on that cliff, like a figure of stone. See 
Mogg Megone (Ruth Bonython).—Whittier. 

Who struggles with his baser part. See same. —Anon. 

"Who stuffed that white owl?” No one spoke in the 
shop. See Owl-critic, The.—Fields. 

Who tamed your lawless Tartar blood? See To Rus¬ 
sia.—Miller. 

Who taught you to sing. See Boy and the Bird, The. 
-—Anon. 

Who that has seen the two as they once were. See 
Catacombs, The.—Castelar. 

Who that hath wept in secret, will not say. See Sym¬ 
pathy.—Thomson. 

Who the dickens is knocking, I wonder. See Fish 
Story, A.—Brownjohn. 

Who the silent man can prize? See Gulistan, The. 
—Heber. 

Who took me from my mother’s arms. See My Father. 
—Drennan. 

Who travels by the weary wandering way. See Faerie 
Queene, The (Song of Enchantment, The).— 
Spenser. 

"Who wants to hunt eggs?” shouted Charlie the bold. 
See Hunting Eggs.—( Zion’s Herald.) 

Who was it saw his duty plain. See Mr. Weyler.— 
Anon. 

Who was it, when he formed this Temple of Creation. 
See Eternity of Music, The.—Ryan. 

Who will away to Athens with me? See Thrasy- 
medes and Eunoe (Overture).—Landor. 

Who will greet me first in heaven. See My Welcome 
Beyond.—Wellington. 

"Who will take care of me?”—darling, you say! See 
Who Will Take Care of Me?—Havergal. 

Who will watch thee, little mound. See Long Night, 
The.—Smith. 

Who wins his love shall lose her. See Lost Love.— 
Lang. 

Who would be a mermaid fair. See Mermaid, The.— 
Tennyson. 

Who would be a merman bold. See Merman, The.— 
Tennyson. 

Who would care to pass his life away. See Comfort.— 
Collins. 

Who would not be a school-boy. See School-boy, 
The.—Kavanaugh. 

Who would scorn his humble fellow. See You and I. 
—Mackay. 

Who would sever freedom’s shrine? See Our Whole 
Country.—Anon. 

Who would true valor see. -See Pilgrim’s Progress 
(Pilgrim, The).—Bunyan. 

Who would trust England, let him lift his eyes. See 
England.—Lincoln. 

Whoa, Betty! How do, sir? Is this here the ’sylum 
for folk as is mad? See Little Tin Cup, The.— 
Frost. 

Whoe’er she be, that not impossible she. See Wishes: 
To His Supposed Mistress.—Crashaw. 

Whoever comes to shroud me, do not harm. See Fu¬ 
neral, The.—Donne. 

Whoever has made a voyage up the Hudson must re¬ 
member the Kaatskill Mountains. See Rip Van 
Winkle.—Irving. 

Whoever heard the like. To conceal the existence of 
woman. See Youth who never Saw a Woman, 
The.—Anon. 

Whoever lives true life, will love true love. See Au¬ 
rora Leigh (England).—Browning. 

Whoever sees a hawthome or a sweetbrier. See same. 
—Anon. 

Whoever smelt the breath of morning flowers. See 
Sonnet: "Whoever smelt,” etc.—Quarles. 

Whoever travels in a coach. See Infidel and Quaker, 
The.—Anon. 

Whoever you arp, be noble. See Four W’s.—Anon. 


937 










Who’ll 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Who’ll buy tresses, bonnie brown tresses? See Me- 
phistopheles, General Dealer.—Anon. 

Who’ll have the crumpled pieces of a heart? See 
Laurana’s Song.—Hovey. 

Who’ll make the brandy-peaches. See Little Girl’s 
Declaration, A.—Anon. 

“Who’ll take care of the baby?” See Who’ll Tend 
Baby?—E. E. 

Whom do we crown with the laurel leaf? See Bay, 
The.—Cook. 

Whom do you suppose I have here this evening to 
meet you? See Visitors from Story Land.—Rook. 

Whom first we love, you know, we seldom wed. See 
Changes.—Lytton. 

Whom I crown with love is royal. See Eureka.— 
Holland. 

“Whom the gods love die young;”—if gods ye be. 
See “Whom the Gods Love.”—Howe. 

“Whom the gods love die young.” The thought is 
old. See I Die, Being Young.—Gray 

Whom, when they came unto the river-side. See 
Light of Asia, The (Tola of Mustard Seed, The).— 
Arnold. 

Whom would ye choose? for, lo, the chief is dead. See 
In Memoriam.—Betts. 

Whoop! Here T come! See Chrysanthemum, The.— 
Pixley. 

“Who's dal? —W’y dat’s Treadwater Jim ” See Tread- 
water Jim.—Small. 

Who’s getting married this morning—some o’ the big 
folks? No! See Ticket o’Leave.—Sims. 

Who’s heard of the wedding of the Moon? See 
Wedding of the Moon, The.—Lathrop. 

Who’s seen my day? See Lost Day, A.—Anon. 

Who’s that a-coming up the path? See Neighbors.— 
Anon. 

“Who’s that, Sam?” See Pickwick Papers, The (Sam 
Weller and His Father).—Dickens. 

Who’s that snarling at Doctor? Come, out wi’ it, mate, 
let’s hear. See Surgeon’s Child, The.—Weatherly. 

Who’s the darling little girl? See Darling Little Girl, 
The.—Anon. 

Whose are the gilded tents that crowd the way? See 
Lalla Rookh (Caliph’s Encampment, The).— 
Moore. 

Whose furthest footstep never strayed. See Envoy 
to “More Songs from Vagabondia.”—Hovey. 

Whose hands are over your eyes? See Surprise, The. 
—Fay. 

Whose humor, as gay as the firefly’s light. See Lines 
on the Death of Sheridan.—Moore. 

Whose senses in so ill consort their step-dame Nature 
lays. See Astrophel and Stella (Seventh Song). 
—Sidney. 

“Whose tomb have they budded, Vittoo! under this 
[wr. the] tamarind tree." See Rajput Nurse, A. 
—Arnold. 

Whose voice is it that rings so clear. See Get Up.— 
Anon. 

Whose voice is that that wakes me from sleep. See 
“Bob White.”—Kirk. 

Whose was that gentle voice, that, whispering sweet. 
See Bereavement.—Bowles. 

Whoso him bethoft. See Inscription in Marble in the 
Parish Church of Faversham, in Agro Cantiano.— 
Anon. 

Whosoe’er had looked upon the glory of that day. See 
Palermo.—King. 

Whun th’ down’s awn th’ thistle. See Jest a-Thinkin’ 
o’ You.—Higginson. 

Why all the stars in the sky are so bright. See Elfin 
Lamps.—Sherman. 

Why all this toil for triumphs of an hour? See Life.— 
Deming. 

Why am I thus? the maniac cried. See Rum’s 
Maniac.—Nott. , 

Why and wherefore set out one day. See Metaphysics. 
—Hereford. 

Why are bees and butterflies. See May.—Alden. 

Why are sentries like day and night, Tambo? See 
Day and Night.—Anon. 

Why are the blossoms. See Why?—( Good Words for 
the Young.) 

Whv are we bereft of all happiness, dearest? See Why. 
—“Viola.” 

Why are we so impatient of delay. See same. — 
Cary. 

Why are you here, little children? See Our Country’s 
Flag.—Hadley. 

Why are you sad when the sky is so blue. See Resur- 
rexit.—Hadley. 

Why are you so stubborn, Barbara? See Three Brave 
Men.—Anon. 


Why art thou silent? Is thy love a plant. See Son¬ 
net: “Why art thou silent, etc.” — Words¬ 
worth. 

Why art thou thus in thy beauty cast. See Flower of 
the Desert, The.—Hemans. 

Why ask of others what they cannot say. See Love 
Doth to her Eyes Repair.—Riickert. 

“Why, bless my soul,” cried Fred, “who’s that?” See 
Christmas Carol, A.—Dickens. 

Why blow’st thou not, thou wintry wind. See All 
Saints’ Day.—Keble. 

“Why, Bob, you dear old fellow.” See Seaside Inci¬ 
dent, A.—Cook. 

Why came the rose? Because the sun, in shining. 
See Why?—Ritter. 

“Why, Charles, how late you are.” See Mrs. Jones’ 
Revenge.—Ingraham. 

Why, cousin! why, Rosalind! Cupid have mercy, not 
a word? See As You Like It.—Shakespeare. 

Why, Damon, with the forward day. See Dying Man 
in his Garden, The.—Sewell. 

“Why, dear me, if it isn’t almost three o’clock!” See 
Teaching a Sunday-school Class.—Lyons. 

Why, dear me, what has happened to cloud your brow, 
my dear cousin. See Heiress’ Ruse, The.— 
Kavanaugh. 

Why, Death, what dost thou here. See On One Who 
Died in May.—Cook. 

Why did I bow, you ask? And why. See My Hero.— 
True. 

“Why did you melt your waxen man, Sister Helen?” 
See Sister Helen.—Rossetti. 

Why did you not defend that which was once your 
own? See Chorus of Good and Evil Spirits.— 
Brooke. 

Why didst thou promise such a beauteous day. See 
Sonnets, XXXIV.—Shakespeare. 

Why do bells of Christmas ring. See same.— Field. 

Why do I weep? to leave the vine. See Bride’s Fare¬ 
well, The.—-Hemans. 

Why do precisely these objects which we behold make 
a world? See Brute Neighbors.—Thoreau. 

Why do the honey bees suck from the clover. See Old- 
fashioned Lesson, An.—Anon. 

Why do they come? I know, I know. See Apple 
Blossoms.—Anon. 

Why do we greet thee, O blithe New Year! See New 
Year, A.—Sangster. 

Why do ye weep, sweet babes? can tears. See To 
Primroses Filled with Morning Dew.—Herrick. 

Why do ye wonder at my wish? See Mirabeau Dying. 
—Wallace. 

Why do you ask for the story? My friend, it is hardly 
fair. See Outlaws, The.—McPhelim. 

“Why do you come to my apple-tree.” See What a 
Bird Taught.—Cary. 

Why do you keep me knocking all day at the door? 
See Mr. Cross and Servant John.—Anon. 

Why do you look so sad, Helen? See Reward of Ear¬ 
nest Effort, The.—Cornell. 

“Why do you sit in the dull house, Annie?” See Little 
Nurse, The.—Anon. 

Why does your brand sae drop wi’ blude [or blood]? 
See Edward, Edward.—Anon. 

Why don’t I work? well, sir, will you. See Knocked 
About.—Connolly. 

Why dost thou hail with songful lips no more. See 
Memnon.—Scollard. 

Why dost thou shade thy lovely face? O why. See 
To His Mistress.—Wilmot. 

Why dost thou talk of death, laddie? See Work on 
Earth.—Wilson. 

Why doth the ear so tempt the voice. See Castara 
(To Castara, of True Delight).—Habington. 

“Why, Edward, you look so healthy now.” See 
Drunkard’s Dream. The.—Anon. 

Why fearest thou the outward foe? See That Each 
Thing is Hurt of Itself.—Anon. 

Why flyest thou away with fear? See To a Fish.— 
Wolcot. 

Why, good after-noon, Lizzie! See Two Teachers, The. 
—Herbert. 

Why, good morning, John. See Lazy or Not.—Den¬ 
ton. 

Why groaning so, thou solid earth. See Earth’s Bur¬ 
dens.—Jones. 

Why has not man a collar and a log? See Parody on 
Pope.—Smith. 

Why, having won her, do I woo? See Angel in the 
House, The (Married Lover, The).—Patmore. 

Why here, on this third planet from the sun. See 
Tellus.—Huntington. 


938 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


Will 


Why, howdy, Mahs’r Johnny! is you gone to keepin’ 
store? .See “Business” in Mississippi.—Russell. 

Why, I knew ye as well as he that made ye. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. I. (Falstaff’s Instinct).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Why I tie about thy wrist. See The Bracelet: To 
Julia.—Herrick. 

Why is his name unsung, O minstrel host? See In- 
felix Felix.—McGee. 

Why is it, I wonder, that we never hear of Mrs. Chris¬ 
topher Columbus. See Mrs. Christopher Colum¬ 
bus.—Cowell. 

Why is it, tell me, that most girls. See Dialogue for 
a Boy and Girl.—Anon. 

Why is it that the names of Howard and Thornton and 
Clarkson and Wilberforce. See Howard the 
Prisoner’s Friend.—Humphrey. 

Why is it the children don’t love me? See Little 
Mamma.—Webb. 

Why is Love like a cigarette? See Box of Cigarettes, 
A.—( Cornell Widow.) 

Why is the experiment of an extended Republic to be 
rejected. See American Innovations.—Madison. 

“Why is the Forum crowded? What means this stir 
in Rome?” See Virginia (Fate of Virginia, The). 
—Macaulay. 

Why is the house so lonely and still? See Changes.— 
Richards. 

Why, Laura, what ails you? See Aunt Jerusha’s Mis¬ 
take.—Kavanaugh. 

Why, let the stricken deer go weep. See Hamlet.— 
Shakespeare. 

Why, let them rail! God’s full anointed ones. See 
Invincible.-—Parker. 

Why, Lilia, I did not know you were going out to-day! 
See Stitch in Time Saves Nine, A.—Anon. 

Why, Linda Grey, as I’m alive! Come in an’ take a 
cheer. See Thet Boy ov Ourn.—De Brown. , 

Why looks your grace so heavily, to-day. See King 
Richard III. (Dream of Clarence, The).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Why, lovely charmer, tell me why. See Why, Lovely 
Charmer ?—Anon. 

Why, Mrs. Malaprop, in moderation now, what would 
you have a woman know? See Rivals, The (Mrs. 
Malaprop’s Idea of Education).—Sheridan. 

Why, my dear fellow, Gordon Cummings must have been 
a mere baby, compared to you! See Nightmare of 
India, A.—Graham. 

Why, Pansy! little Pansy! what a merry face you show. 
See Out in the Cold.—Harrison. 

Why, Rachel, how can you wear that old winter dress 
to church. See Pride Rebuked.—Anon. 

Why, Red Riding-hood, is that really you? See Four 
Celebrated Characters.—Denton. 

Why Sammy Burdock should leave the farm and go to 
the academy. See French by Lightning.—Bar¬ 
nard. 

Why seek her heart to understand. See Seek not to 
Understand Her.—Hoffman. 

Why seek ye for Jehovah. See “With You Alway.”— 
Allen. 

Why should I blush to own I love? See To Love.— 
White. 

Why should I learn to smoke and chew? See Little 
Boy’s Reasons, A.—Anon. 

Why should I live, when every day. See Plaint of 
Jonah, The.—Burdette. 

Why should I not look happy. See What Some One 
Said.—Anon. 

Why should I stay? Nor seed nor fruit have I. See 
Bubble, The.—Tabb. 

Why should not piety be made. See Piety.—Butler. 

Why should the ingenious youth, fresh from college, 
dream of Pericles. See Duty of the Enlightened 
Classes.—Long. 

Why should we ever weary of this life? See Our Lives 
Should Widen.—Lowell. 

Why should we waste and weep? See Fledglings.— 
Harris. 

Why shouldst thou cease thy plaintive song. See To 
an Obscure Poet who Lives on My Hearth.— 
Hildreth. 

Why shouldst thou fill to-day with sorrow. See same. 
—Fleming. 

Why sits she thus in solitude? Her heart. See Old 
Maid. The.—Welby. 

“Why sit’st down by that ruined hall.” See Anti¬ 
quary, The (Omnipotent, The).—Scott. 

Why sitt’st thou by the shore? See Emeline.—Mul- 
vany. 

Why so pale and wan, fond lover? See Orsames Song 
in “Aglaura.”—Suckling. 


Why stand you there. See What the Little Maiden 
Saw.—Anon. 

Why start at death? Where is he? See Night 
Thoughts (Death).—Young. 

Why such impress ol shipwrights, whose sore task. 
See Hamlet.—Shakespeare. 

Why the dog’s nose is always cold. See Dog’s Cold 
Nose, The.—Eytinge. 

Why these chains—why these prison walls? See 
Rum’s Ruin.—Dunn. 

Why these hundreds hurrying by? See Fire-bells.— 
Johnson. 

“Why, thin. I’ll tell you,” said Rory. See Rory 
O’More’s Present to the Priest.—Lover. 

“Why, this is Christmas eve, mamma!” See Where is 
Papa To-night?—Eager. 

Why thus longing, thus for ever sighing. See Why 
thus Longing?—Sewall. 

Why tremble so, broad aspen-tree? See Poplar-tree, 
The.—Anon. 

Why weep ye by the tide, ladie [wr. lady]? See 
Jock of Razeldean.—Scott. 

Why, what a long face, Mollie dear! What is the mat¬ 
ter? .See Stolen Pets, The.—Anon. 

Why! what’s the matter with my sister Kate? See 
Mischief.—Holcomb. 

“Why, when the world’s great mind.” See World and 
the Quietist, The.—Arnold. 

Why, where’s Fosdick? I was in hopes I would find 
him here. See Auntie’s Courtship.—Anon. 

Why, why repine, my pensive friend. See same .— 
Landor. 

Why will ye call it “Death’s dark night?” See same. 
—Noel. 

Why will you haunt me unawares. See Love in Exile. 
—Blind. 

Why will you tease me, Katie, dear. See Warning, A. 
—Kavanaugh. 

Why, William, on that old gray stone. See Expostu¬ 
lation and Reply.—Wordsworth. 

“Why wilt thou cast the roses from thine hair?” See 
Mary Magdalene.—Rossetti. 

“Why would’st thou leave me, O gentle child?” See 
Adopted Child, The.—Hemans. 

Why wouldst thou sound? See Lady of the Lake, The 
(Blanche of Devan).—Scott. 

Wide are the plains to the north and the westward. 
See Volunteers of ’85, The.—Livingston. 

Wide open and unguarded stand our gates. See Un¬ 
guarded Gates.—Aldrich. 

Widow Machree, it’s no wonder you frown. See 
Widow Machree.—Lover. 

Wife, it will soon all be over with me. See Cured.— 
Anon. 

“Wife! wife! hither wife!” shouted John Sherwood as 
he strode in to the long kitchen. See Mistress 
Sherwood’s Victory.—Ogden. 

Wild are the mountainous billows. See Life Brigade, 
The.—Mackay. 

Wild blew the gale in Gibraltar one night. See Sol¬ 
dier’s Pardon, The.—Smith. 

“Wild huntsmen?” ’Twas a flight of swans. See 
Wild Huntsmen, The.—Hamerton. 

Wild is its nature, as it were a token. See Song of the 
Palm.—Robinson. 

Wild raged the tempest. See same. —Matthews. 

Wild Rose of Alloway! my thanks. See Burns.—Hal- 
leck. 

Wild rose, Sweet-brier, Eglantine. See Song and 
Chorus of the Flowers (Sweet-brier).—Hunt. 

Wild stream the clouds, and the fresh wind is singing. 
See Hunt, The.—Spofford. 

Wild was the day: the wintry sea. See Twenty-second 
of December, The.—Bryant. 

Wild was the night, ’twas the eve of Thanksgiving. 
See Thanksgiving Dream, A.—Denton. 

Wild was the night, yet a wilder night. See Death of 
Napoleon.—Mac Lellan. 

Wild, wild wind, wilt thou never cease thy sighing? 
See Dead Church, The.—Kingsley. 

Wildest boy in all the village. See Thar Was Jim.— 
Crawford. 

Wildly and mournfully the Indian drum. See 
American Forest Girl, The.—Hemans. 

Will anybody deny that the Government at Washing¬ 
ton, as regards its own people. See Strength of 
the American Government, The (American Gov¬ 
ernment, The).—Bright. 

“Will I come?" That is pleasant! I beg to inquire. 
See Once More.—Holmes. 

Will my tiny spark of being wholly vanish in your 
deeps and heights? See God and the Universe.— 
Tennyson. 


939 











Will 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


"Will Santa Claus come to-night, mother?” See Light 
in the Window, The.—Oriel. 

“Will she come to me, little Effie?” See Comforter, A. 
—Procter. 

Will some of the gentlemen who have been pleased to 
call. See Contentious Community, A.—“Eureka”. 

Will some wise man who has journeyed. See Road to 
Yesterday, The.—Anon. 

Will the king come, that I may breathe my last. See 
King Richard II.—Shakespeare. 

Will the New Year come to-night, mamma? I’m 
tired of waiting so. See Will the New Year Come 
To-night?—Winton [or Eager], 

Will the reader please to cast his eye over the following 
verses. See Literary Nightmare, A.—Clemens. 

Will there never come a season. See Lapsus Calami.— 
Stephen. 

Will there really be a morning? See Morning.—Dick¬ 
inson. 

Will winter never be over? See February.—Whitney. 

Will ye gang wi’ we and fare. See Bush aboon Tra- 
quair, The.—Shairp. 

Will ye go to the Hielands, Lizzie Lindsay? See Lizzie 
Lindsay.—Anon. 

Will you and I grow like the rest? See Could It Be?— 
Romaine. 

Will you come, love, to the Gahden. See Pwize 
Spwing Poem.— (San Francisco News Letter.) 

Will you come where golden furze I mow. See My 
Mauria ni Milleon.—Sigerson. 

Will you hear a Spanish lady. See Spanish Lady’s 
Love, The.—Anon. 

“Will you my First?” the lover cried. See Fly Leaf.— 
Sabine. 

Will you please tell me what book you are reading? 
See Novel Reading.—Anon. 

“Will you take a walk with me?” See Clocking Hen, 
The.—“Aunt Effie.” 

“Will you walk a little faster?” said a whiting to a 
snail. See Lobster Quadrille, A.—Carroll. 

“Will you walk into my parlor?” saidaspider toa bee. 
See Spider and the Bee, The.—Richards. 

“Will you walk into my parlor?” said the spider to the 
fly. See Spider and the Fly, The.—Howitt. 

William, I am older than you, and I have a right to 
look after your welfare. See Interrupted Pro¬ 
posal, An.—Anon. 

William Ladd was the President of the American Peace 
Society. See How to Make up a Quarrel.—Anon. 

“Willliam, stop that noise, I say! won’t you stop?” 
See Family Government.—Beecher. 

William Tansley, familiarly called Tip. See Nancy 
Blynn’s Lovers.—Trowbridge. 

William was holding in his hand. See Miniature, The. 
—Anon. 

Willie and Bess, Georgie and May. See Intry-Mintry. 
—Field. 

Willie [or Willy] and Charlie, eight and ten. See Cob 
House, The.—Osgood. 

Willie, fold your little hands. See By the Alma River. 
—Craik. 

Willie stands in his stable. See Willie and May Mar - 
garet; or, The Water of Clyde.—Anon. 

Willie stands in his stable door. See Drowned Lovers, 
The.—Anon. 

Willis, in his essay on “unwritten music” has placed. 
See Music of the Human Voice, The.—Russell. 

Willow and cane is all I am, with a wisp of waxen 
thread. See Cricket Bat Sings, The.—Anon. 

Willow! in thy breezy moan. See Willow Song.— 
Hemans. 

Will’t ne’er be morning? Will the promised light. 
See “Phosphor, Bring the Day.”—Quarles. 

Willy [or Willie] and Charlie, eight and ten. See Cob 
House, The.—Osgood. 

“Willy’s rare, and Willy’s fair. See Rare Willy 
Drowned in Yarrow.—Anon. 

Willy’s ta’en him o’er the faem. See Willy’s Lady.— 
Anon. 

Wilt thou be gone? See Romeo and Juliet (Dawn).— 
Shakespeare. 

Wilt thou be long? The workful day is o’er. See 
Wilt Thou be Long?—Matheson. 

Wilt thou be mine?dear love, reply. See Song: “Wilt 
thou be mine?” etc.—Charles, Duke of Orleans. 

Wilt thou forgive that sin where I begun. See Hymn 
to God the Father, A.—Donne. 

Wilt thou not visit me. See Prayer, The.—Very. 

Wilt thou take this brown stone front. See Modern 
Wedding Rites.—Anon. 

Wind, and the sound of the sea. See Nocturne.— (All 
the Year Round.) 


Wind, be still, ’tis spring! See same.— Anon. 

Wind of the City Streets. See To a June Breeze.— 
Bunner. 

Wind of the north. See Four Winds, The.—Liiders. 

Wind of the Sea, come fill my sail. See Wind of the 
Sea.—Riley. 

Wind of the Southland, whispering, sighing. See 
Wind of the Southland.—Douglass. 

Wind of the winter night. See Foreshadowings.— 
Dorr. 

Winds from the north do blow. See Snowstorm, The. 
—Hartzell. 

Winds of the world, give answer! They are whimper¬ 
ing to and fro. See Flag of England, The.—Kip¬ 
ling. 

Winds to-day are large and free. See same .— 
Field. 

Winds, whisper gently whilst she sleeps. See Ode: 
Laura Sleeping.—Cotton. 

Wine that is beautiful, wine that is red. See Why, and 
Because.—Anon. 

Wine, wine, thy power and praise. See Water.— 
Cook. 

Winged mimic of the woods! thou motley fool! See 
To the Mocking Bird.—Wilde. 

Winged wonder of motion. See Dragon Fly, The.— 
Rand. 

Winifred Waters sat and sighed. See Winifred Waters. 
—Anon. 

Winstanley’s deed, you kindly folk. See Winstanley. 
—Ingelow. 

Winter is cold-hearted. See Summer Days.—Ros¬ 
setti. 

Winter is over! summer is coming! See Dear Dande¬ 
lion.—Nichols. 

Winter without and warmth within. See Winter 
Fancies.—Riley. 

Winter-cold is the night. See Winter Night, A.— 
Cane. 

Winter’s bright birthnight! In the fretful East. See 
Picture, A.—Holland. 

Wintry winds are blowing cold. See Among the 
Heather.—Arnold. 

Wipe your feet outside the door. See Some Rules.— 
Denton. 

Wirra! wirra! ologone! See Fan Fitzgerl.—Graves. 

Wisdom and Spirit of the universe! See Prelude, The 
(Influence of Natural Objects, etc.).—Wordsworth. 

Wisdom, I come to adorn thee with symbolic jewels. 
See Wisdom’s Treasures.—Goodfellow. 

Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom. 
See Proverbs of Solomon (Solomon, the Wise King). 
— Bible. 

Wisely, good Uncle Toby said. See Poor Player at the 
Gate, The.—Vandenhoff. 

Wish I didn’t have ter set all day in school. See James 
Henry in School.—Selinger. 

Witching mistress, sweet and fair. See Easter 
Phantasy, An.—McIntyre. 

With a boom of cannon, and a dance of plume. See 
Secret of Life, The.—Baring-Gould. 

With a clang! with a clang and a clang. See Loco¬ 
motive, The.—Anon. 

With a fly-screen under one arm. See Friend of the 
Fly, A.—Anon. 

With a glancing eye and curving mane. See To My 
Horse.—Anon. 

With a head full of pleasing fancier. See Helen’s 
Babies (Evening with Helen’s Babies, An).—Hab- 
berton. 

With a hearty laugh. See Fra Moreale.—S. B. R. 

With a hey! and a hi! and a hey-ho rhyme! See same. 
—Riley. 

With a scanty band of followers, who still remained 
true to his desperate fortunes. See Death of 
King Philip.—Irving. 

With a world [whirl—C.] of thought oppress’d. See 
Day of Judgment, The.—Swift. 

With all my powers of heart and tongue. See Hymn 
of Praise.—Anon. 

With all my will, but much' against my heart. See 
Farewell, A.—Patmore. 

With an aching tooth, one morning bright. See Pat’s 
Mistake.—Anon. 

With awful walls, far gloaming, that possessed. See 
Trumpets of Doolkarnein, The.—Hunt. 

With bevelled binding, with uncut edge. See My 
Shakespeare.—Bunner. 

With big tin trumpet and little red drum. See With 
Trumpet and Drum.—Field. 

With blackest moss the flower-plots. See Mariana.— 
Tennyson. 


940 




FIRST LINE INDEX 


With 


With blue, cold hands, and stockingless feet. See Out 
in the Cold.—Anon. 

With bray of the trumpet, and roll of the drum. See 
Cavalry Charge, The.—Durivage. 

With breath of thyme and bees that hum. See To a 
Greek Girl.—Dobson. 

With broken heart and contrite sigh. See same .— 
Elven. 

With complexion like the rose. See Ballet-girl, The. 
—( Lippincott’s Magazine.) 

With conscious pride I view the band. See On His 
Friends.—Aldaramy. 

With coronet of fresh and fragrant flowers. See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream.—Shakespeare. 

With crosses, relics, crucifixes. See Hudibras —Butler. 

With daddies high upraised, and nob held back. See 
Milling-match between Entellus and Dares, The. 
Moore. 

With death doomed to grapple. See Epitaph for 
William Pitt.—Byron. 

With deep affection and recollection. See Bells of 
Shandon, The.—Mahony. 

With dropping sail and shattered mast. See Sir Wal¬ 
ter’s Honor.—Preston. 

With due condescension, I’d call your attention. See 
Birth of Ireland, The.—Anon. 

With eyes hand-arched he looks into. See Com- 
radery.—Cawein. 

With eyes like stars he listened to me. See Little Joe. 
—Meyers. 

With fair Ceres, Queen of Grain. See Praise of Ceres. 
—Heywood. 

With farmer Allan at the farm abode. See Dora.— 
Tennyson. 

With fingers weary and worn. See Song of the Shirt, 
The.—Hood. 

With folded wings of dusky light. See Dawn.— 
M’Carroll. 

With forehead star and silver tail. See Catching the 
Colt.—Douglas. 

With fragrance flown, as of a long-plucked bud. See 
Forgotten Poet, The.—Smythe. 

With free and airy grace our youthful days. See 
Home.—Anon. 

With ganial foire. See Crystal Palace, The.—Thack¬ 
eray. 

With gentle looks and hearts made calm by sorrow. See 
same. —Tarbox. 

With gradual gleam the day was dawning. See Fifty 
and Fifteen.—Anon. 

With grateful twirl our smoke-wreaths curl. See 
Smoking Song.—Anon. 

With half a heart I wander here. See In the States.— 
Stevenson. 

With half the Western world at stake. See Sea and 
Land Victories.—Anon. 

With heaving breast the fair-haired Eileen sang. See 
Fionnuala.—Armstrong. 

With heavy head bent on her yielding hand. See 
“It Might Have Been.”—Anon. 

With heavy pack upon his back. See Kris Kringle’s 
Surprise.—Davenport. 

With her large dark eyes, and her soft brown hair. See 
Little Maud.—Anon. 

With his gnarled old arms, and his iron form. See 
Live Oak, The.—Jackson. 

With his hand upon the throttle as the train swept 
round the bend. See Fireman’s Prize, The.—Anon. 

With hiss and thunder and inner boom. See Ballad of 
Brave Women, A.—Marston. 

With hound and horn the wide New Forest rung. See 
Red King’s Warning, The.—Anon. 

With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb’st the skies. 
See Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet XXXI.). 

With its earnest spirit searching. See Feed My Sheep. 
—Anon. 

With its heavily rocking and swinging load. See 
Tom’s Come Home.—Trowbridge. 

With joys unknown, with sadness unconfessed. See 
Anathemata.—Sanborn. 

With klingle, klangle, klingle. See When the Cows 
Come Home.—Mitchell. 

With lavish hand our God hath spread. See Arbor 
Day Tribute.—Barhite. 

With leaden foot Time creeps along. See Absence.— 


Jago. ' , _ 

With lifted feet, hands still. See Bicycling Song.— 
Beeching. _ , _ . 

With little here to do or see. See To the Daisy.— 
Wordsworth. . 

With little white leaves in the grasses. See Daisy, 
The.—Rodd. 


With lullay, lullay, lyke a chylde. See Lullabye, A. 
—Skelton. 

With malice towards none, with charity for all. See 
Second Inaugural Address (“With malice,” etc.). 
—Lincoln. 

With many a curve my banks I fret. See Brook, The 
—Tennyson. 

With margerain [or marjoram] gentle. See Garlande 
of Laurell, The (To Mistress Margery Wentworth). 
—Skelton. 

With me along the strip of herbage strown. See Ru- 
b&iy&t of Omar KhayyJm (Paradise Enow).— 
Fitzgerald. 

With measured pace he treads the streets. See Um¬ 
brellas to Mend.—Gill. 

With merry chimes and merry times. See January.— 
Richards. 

With mingled trembling and delight. See Country 
Child, The.—Douglas. 

With more than mortal powers endowed. See Marmion 
(Pitt and Fox).—Scott. 

With my cigar I sit alone. See With My Cigar.—An¬ 
thony. 

With my first baby plays. See Charade.—M. C. D. 

With my [thy—C.] love this knowledge too was given. 
See Sonnet: “My love, I have no fear,” etc.— 
Lowell. 

With naked foot, and sackcloth vest. See Lay of the 
Last Minstrel (Mass, The).—Scott. 

With no disparagement to others. See Grant.—Mc¬ 
Kinley. 

With oaken staff and swinging lantern bright. See 
Andalusian Sereno, The.—Saltus. 

With one black shadow at its feet. See Mariana in the 
South.—Tennyson. 

With one common spirit Massachusetts and New 
Hampshire unite to hail. See Webster Statue at 
Concord, N. H., The.—Robinson. 

With one consent let all the earth. See Psalm C.— 
Tate and Brady. 

With peace at last and silent of all moan. See On the 
Tomb of Guidarelle Guidarelli at Ravenna.— 
Greg. 

With pensive eyes the little room I view. See Garret, 
The.—Thackeray. 

With pipe and book, an old armchair. See Comfort.— 
Merrill. 

With pipe and book at close of day. See With Pipe 
and Book.—Le Gallienne. 

With pipe and flute the rustic pan. See “With Pipe 
and Flute.”—Dobson. 

With pleasure, Mrs. Grunter; you may depend upon 
me. See Obliging his Landlady.—Hickman. 

With profound satisfaction in behalf of the City of 
Brooklyn. See Brooklyn Bridge.—Low. 

With purple glow at even. See To the Lakes.— 
Campbell. 

With regard to my poverty, the king has been justly 
informed. See Fabricius Refuses Bribes.— 
Pliny. 

With “Ring-a-round-a-rosy!” See Noted Traveler.— 
Riley. 

With rosy hand a little girl press’d down. See Cow¬ 
slips.—Landor. 

With sable-draped banners, and slow measured tread. 
See You Put no Flowers on My Papa’s Grave.— 
Holmes. 

“With sacrifice, before the rising morn.” See Laod- 
amia.—Wordsworth. 

With sails full set, the ship her anchor weighs. See 
Emigravit.—Jackson. 

With saintly grace and reverent tread. See Presenti¬ 
ment.—Bierce. 

With salt and potatoes and meal for bread. See 
Margie’s Thanksgiving.—Bumstead. 

With shot and shell, like a loosened hell. See Charge 
at Santiago, The.—Hayne. 

With silence only as their benediction. See Angels of 
Grief, The.—Whittier. 

With silent awe I hail the sacred morn. See Sabbath 
Morning. The.—Leyden. 

With slender arms outstretching in the sun. See Hay 
Field, The.—Wetherald. 

With slender rod, and line and reel. See Trouting.— 
Trowbridge. 

With some good ten of his chosen men. See Ber¬ 
nardo and King Alphonso.—Lockhart. 

With song of birds and hum of bees. See Summer 
Morning.—Boker. 

With sorrow and heart’s distress. See Paradise Lost 
(Eve to Adam).—Milton. 

With sorrow in her eyes of blue. See Sea-side Flirta¬ 
tion, A.—Peck. 


941 











With 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


With storm-daring pinion, and sun-gazing eye. See 
Gray Forest Eagle, The.—Street. 

With strawberries we filled a tray. See With Straw¬ 
berries.—Henley. 

With sweet, flushed face upturned to mine she stood. 
See In the Hall.—Anon. 

With sweetest milk and sugar first. See Girl Describes 
her Fawn, The.—Marvell. 

With that, straight up the hill there rode. See Mar- 
mion (Death of Marmion).—Scott. 

With that (such power was given him then), he 
[Satan] took. See Paradise Regained (Tempta¬ 
tion of the Visions of the Kingdoms of the Earth, 
The).—Milton. 

With the faces the dearest in sight. See Euthanasia. 
—Preston. 

With the growth of human brotherhood. See Woman 
in Politics.—Foster. 

With the link boys running on before. See My Lady 
Goes to the Play.—Ketchum. 

With the results of Christianity before him and in him. 
See same. —Holland. 

With the United States flag flying at all their mast¬ 
heads. See Great Naval Battle of Manila, The.— 
Anon. 

With thee conversing I forgot all time. See Paradise 
Lost (Book IV.).—Milton. 

With thee my thoughts are calm and sweet. See With 
Thee.—Clarke. 

With thee, sweet Hope, resides the heavenly light. See 
Pleasures of Hope, The (‘‘With thee, sweet,” etc.). 
—Campbell. 

With three great snorts of strength. See Night Ex¬ 
press, The.—Monkhouse. 

With thy [ ur . my] love this knowledge too was given. 
See Sonnet: "My love, I have no fear,” etc.— 
Lowell. 

With trembling fingers did we weave. See In Me- 
moriam (“With trembling,” etc.).—Tennyson. 

With twenty pounds but three weeks since. See Tit- 
marsh’s Carmen Lilliense.—Thackeray. 

With us ther was a Doctour of Phisik. See Canter¬ 
bury Tales, The (Prologue).—Chaucer. 

With what sharp checks I in myself am shent. See 
Astrophel and Stella (Sonnet XVIII.).—Sidney. 

With what sorrow, with what sadness. See Kensal 
Green.—Drake. 

With white sails set the vessels glide. See Farewell.— 
Vickers. 

With white wings spread she bounded o’er the deep. 
See same. —Livermore. 

With woman’s form and woman’s tricks. See To Miss 
-.—Moore. 

With wrath-flushed cheeks, and eyelids red. See 
Ahmed.—Bensel. 

Withdraw not yet those lips and fingers. See Song: 
"Withdraw not yet,” etc.—Campbell. 

Withdraw thee, soul, from strife. See Sleep.— 
Brown. 

Wither’d pansies faint and sweet. See Requiem.— 
Paton. 

Within a budding grove. See Lover and Birds, The.— 
Allingham. 

Within a few moments of their entry, all the boys. See 
Tom Brown’s School Days (Tom Brown at 
Rugby).—Hughes. 

Within a few years past it has become the fashion. 
See same.—(The Nation.) 

Within a garden’s quiet close. See Origin of the Red 
Moss Rose.—Anon. 

Within a low-thatch’d hut, built in a lane. See Net- 
braiders, The.—Wade. 

Within, a panic stricken throng. See Imprisoned.— 
Lefevre. 

Within a pleasant shaded pool. See Ballad of the 
Overconfident Pollywog, The.—Du Bois. 

Within a poor man’s squalid home I stood. See 
Vision.—Howells. 

Within a room, long consecrate to thought. See 
Twenty-one To-day.—Coates. 

Within a squirrel’s leap of the wood. See Little Min¬ 
ister, The (Scene from "The Little Minister”).— 
Barrie. 

Within a thick and spreading hawthorne bush. See 
Thrush’s Nest, The.—Clare. 

Within a town of Holland once. See Open Door, The. 
—Anon. 

Within an antique chest it lies. See Eighteenth-cen¬ 
tury Fan, An.—Walker. 

Within an attic old at Genoa, full many a year. See 
Ivory Crucifix, The.—Miles. 

Within an upper chamber lay the king. See Death of 
Charles the Ninth, The.—Moore. 


Within her rocky bosom’s secret keep. See To a 
Poem.—Wade. 

Within his [or the] sober realm of leafless trees. See 
Closing Scene, The.—Read. 

Within me are two souls that pity each. See Duality. 
—Hardy. 

Within my ears resounds that ancient song. See Song 
of the Parcse.—Goethe. 

Within my heart I long have kept. See Blondel.— 
Urmy. 

Within my home that empty seemed, I sat. See Un¬ 
bidden Guest, The.—Perry. 

Within Rome’s Forum suddenly. See Leap of Cur- 
tius, The.—Aspinall. 

Within the ancient College-gate I passed. See Re¬ 
membrance, A.—Shairp. 

Within the box whose gilded sides. See With Roses.— 
Phelps. 

Within the calm Pacific Seas. See Exiled.-—McGuire. 

Within the church, the light was dimmed. See Singer 
and the Child, The.-—Gross. 

Within the dim museum room. See Caesar.—Irwin. 

Within the green heart of a wood. See Chestnut-tree, 
The.—Campbell. 

Within the isle, far from the walks of men. See 
Orion (In Forest Depths).—Home. 

Within the letter’s rustling fold. See Spring Flowers 
from Ireland.—McCarthy. 

Within, the master’s desk is seen. See In School 
Days (“Within, the master’s.” etc.).—Whittier. 

Within the mind strong fancies work. See Pass of 
Kirkstone, The.—Wordsworth. 

Within the minister’s venerable pile. See On the 
Coronation of Queen Victoria.—Huntington. 

Within the nave] of this hideous wood. See Comus 
(Haunt of the Sorcerer, The).—Milton. 

Within the precincts of this yard. See Beasts in the 
Tower, The.—Lamb. 

Within the ruined church at Carmel’s bay. See 
Junipero Serra.—White. 

Within the sitting room, the company. See Evening 
Company, The.—Riley. 

Within the [or his] sober realm of leafless trees. See 
Closing Scene, The.—Read. 

Within the sombre gates, where dwell the dead, I 
stroll. See Friend Death.—Bates. 

Within the soul a faculty abides. See Excursion, The 
(Imagination).—Wordsworth. 

Within the town of Weissnichtwo. See Dickens’ Gal¬ 
lery, The.—Farrah. 

Within the unchanging twilight. See Noms Water¬ 
ing Yggdrasill, The.—Scott. 

Within the window of this white, low. See Window 
Song, A.—Irwin. 

Within these solemn, book-lined walls. See Baby in 
the Library, The.—Anderson. 

Within these woods of Arcadie. See Sir Philip Sid¬ 
ney.—Royden. 

Within this lowly grave a conqueror lies. See Con¬ 
queror’s Grave, The.—Bryant. 

Within this silent palace of the Night. See Moonrise. 
—Sherman. 

Within ’twas brilliant all and light. See Lady of the 
Lake, The.—Scott. 

Without a hillock stretched the plain. See In Louisi¬ 
ana.—De Forest. 

Without haste! without rest! See Haste Not! Rest 
Not!—Goethe. 

Without him still this whirling earth. See Egotism.— 
Martin. 

Without the door let sorrow lie. See Christmas. 
—Wither. 

Without, the howling of the hurricane. See De Ole 
Elder’s Mistake.—Murray. 

Without, the snow fell softly on the street. See Last 
Night, The.—Woods. 

Without ’twas cold and cheerless, and glooming into 
night. See Old Soldier’s Story, The.—Dun¬ 
can. 

Without Union, our independence and liberty would 
never have been achieved. See Union Linked 
with Liberty.—Jackson. 

Without your showers, I breed no flowers. See May 
to April.—Freneau. 

Wives of great men all remind us. See Wives of Great 
Men.—Anon. 

Woe for my vine-clad home. See Soldier’s Widow, 
The.—Willis. 

Woe for the old ship Orient! See Brave Old Ship, the 
Orient, The.—R. Lowell. 

Woe! lightly to part with one’s soul as the sea with his 
foam! See Tarpeia.—Guiney. 


942 







FIRST LINE INDEX 


Xantippe 


Woe unto them that call evil good and good evil. See 
Isaiah (Woe follows Wickedness).— Bible. 

Woman, disturb me not now at the last. See Enoch 
Arden.—Tennyson. 

Woman may err, woman may give her mind. See 
Praise of Woman.—Mackay. 

Woman with satchel enters car, sits down. See How 
a Woman Does it.—Anon. 

Wonderful to him that has eyes to see it rightfully. 
See Biglow Papers,The (Newspaper, The).—Lowell. 

Wonderful whispers now float to my ear. See Be¬ 
ware !—Denton. 

Wondering maiden, so puzzled and fair. See What 
the Wolf Really Said to Little Red Riding-Hood. 
—Harte. 

Wondrous Interlacement! See Morning-glory.—Jack- 
son. 

Wondrous things have come to pass. See Wizard 
F rost.—Sherman. 

Won’t that be grand? But do you think we can do 
it? See Frightened at Nothing.—Anon. 

Woo thy lass while May is here. See Second Madri¬ 
gal, The.—De Tabley. 

Woodchucks is a very curious animal. See Wood¬ 
chucks.—Anon. 

Woodman, spare that tree! See same. —Morris. 

Woodmen, shepherds, come away. See Pan’s Holi¬ 
day.—Shirley. 

Woof of the fen, ethereal gauze. See Haze.—Thoreau. 

Word was brought to the Danish king. See King of 
Denmark’s Ride, The.—Norton. 

Words are most effective when arranged in that order 
which is called style. See Power of Words, The. 
—Whipple. 

Words are the soul’s ambassadors, who go. See Words. 
—Howell. 

Words pass as wind, but where great deeds were done. 
See Under the Old Elm.—Lowell. 

Words, words, ye are like birds. See Prelude.—Pea¬ 
body. 

Wordsworth upon Helvellyn! Let the cloud. See 
On a Portrait of Wordsworth.—Browning. 

Work and wait! Do not sit down, idly waiting, but 
work. See Work and Wait.—-White. 

Workaway! For the Master’s eye is on us. See Work 
Away.—Anon. 

Work, for the night is coming. See same.— Dyer. 

Work while you work, play while you play. See Work 
and Play.—Stodart. 

Work, work, my boy, be not afraid. See Work, Work, 
My Boy.—Anon. 

Work—work—work! from weary chime to chime. See 
Song of the Shirt, The.—Hood. 

Work! work! work! till the brain begins to sw T im. See 
Song of the Shirt, The.—Hood. 

Worn and weary and hungry-eyed. See Beggar’s Gift, 
The.—Smith. 

Worn is the winter rug of white. See Footprints in the 
Snow.—Sherman. 

Worn tokens that old tales repeat. See Ballad of Col¬ 
lege Days, A.—( Swarthmore Phoenix.) 

Worn voyagers, who watch for land. See At Sea.— 
Bourdillon. 

Worn with the battle, by Stamford town. See Saxon 
Grit.—Collyer. 

Worschippe ye that loveris bene this May. See Spring 
Song of the Birds.—King James I. 

Worship, honor, glory, blessing. See Praise.—Osier. 

Worship the Father, when the lovely mom. See When 
to Worship.—Anon. 

Worshipper of the Sun and Moon. See Lines Pre¬ 
fixed to “St. John of Damascus.”—Ainslie. 

Worthless, wicked boys I’ve seen. See Doing Nothing. 
—Anon. 

“Wot’s the matter ailin’ o’ yer, Pard? Be yer sick? 
See Pards.—-Merriman. 

Wot's this?—wot hever is this ’ere? See Mad Cab¬ 
man’s Song of Sixpence, The.— (Punch.) 

Would God my heart were greater; but God wot. See 
Chastelard.—Swinburne. 

Would I were lying in a field of clover. See Woman’s 
Wish, A.—Townsend. 

Would that the structure brave, the manifold music 
I build. See Abt Vogler.—Browning. 

Would the lark sing the sweeter if he knew. See Open 
Secret, An.—Mason. 

Would Wisdom for herself be wooed. See Angel in 
the House, The (Wisdom).—Patmore. 

Would ye be taught, ye feathered throng. See Anne 
Hathaway.—Anon. 

Would ye learn the bravest thing. See “No!”—Eliza 
Cook. 


“Would ye like to hear about it?” See Little Stow¬ 
away, The.—Anon. 

Would you be young again? See same. —Nairne. 

Would you believe it, John, Melinda Smith has writ 
me a letter. See Visit from the Smiths, A.— 
Anon. 

Would you but know the maiden fair. See In Doubt. 
—B. A. 

Would you hear of an old-time [t Or. old-fashioned] 
sea-fight? See Song of Myself (Old-fashioned Sea- 
fight, An).—Whitman. 

Would you hear of the river fight? See River Fight. 
The.—Brownell. 

Would you know the baby’s skies? See Baby’s Skies. 
—Bartlett. 

Would you know what’s soft? I dare. See Song: 
“Would you know,” etc.).—Carew. 

Would you know why I summoned you together? 
See Brutus; or, the Fall of Tarquin (Lucius 
Junius Brutus’ Oration, etc.).—Payne. 

Would you laugh, or would you cry? See Archie Dean. 
—Dodge. 

Would you learn how the wind on the prairie blows? 
See Winds of the Prairie, The.—Candy. 

Would you object to my proposing to you? See Cau¬ 
tious Wooer, A.—Vinton. 

“Would you think it?” said A to B. See Effort of 
Memory, An.—Anon. 

Wouldst know the artist? Then go seek. See Art.— 
Perry. 

Wouldst thou hearewhat man can say. See Epitaph 
on Elizabeth L. H.—Jonson. 

Wouldst thou ken nature in her better part? See 
Eclogue the Third.—Chatterton. 

Wouldst thou live long? the only means are these. 
See He Lives Long who Lives Well. — Ran¬ 
dolph. 

Wouldst thou view the lion’s den? See Lion and the 
Giraffe, The.—Pringle. 

Wo-weary and wetshod went I forth after. See Vision 
of Piers the Plowman, The.—Langland. 

Wrapped in a sadly tattered gown. See Ashes.— 
Sterry. 

Wrapped in the mantle of imagination. See March 
of Mind, The.—Bard. 

Wreathe no more lilies in my hair. See Summer Is 
Ended, The.—Rossetti. 

Wreathe the bowl. See same. —Moore. 

Write a poem for the “Lit.” See same. —Yeomans. 

Write it on the workhouse gate. See Write It.— 
Anon. 

“Write me an epic,” the warrior said. See One Word. 
—Bruce. 

Write, write, write, I must write a poem. See Memory 
and Hope.—Boyd. 

Wrote a poet long ago. See Tastes of Yesterday, The. 
—R. K. K. 

Wud I till yez ’bout the toime. See Miss O’Mulligan 
Takes a Bicycle Ride.—Savage. 

Wuffaw yo’ look a’ me laike dat? See Pattin’ Juba.— 
Wadleigh. 

Wunst I sassedmyPa, an’ he. See Runaway Boy, The. 
—Riley. 

Wunst upon a time wunst. See Impromptu Fairy¬ 
tale, An.—Riley. 

Wunst ’way West in Illinoise. See Bear Family, A.— 
Riley. 

Wunst we went a-fishin’—me. See Fishing Party, 
The.—Riley. 

Wust scrape I eber [or ever] got into wid ole Marsa 
John was ober Henny [or a goose]. See One- 
legged Goose, The.—Smith. 

W’y, one time wuz a little-weenty dirl. See Maymie’s 
Story of Red Riding Hood.—Riley. 

W’y, Sammy!—Who’s that, Sam? See Sam Weller and 
his Father.—Dickens. 

W’y, wunst they wuz a Little Boy went out in the 
woods. See Bear Story, The.—Riley. 

Wyatt resteth here that quick could never rest. See 
On the Death of Sir Thomas Wyatt.—Surrey. 

Wynken, Blynken, and Nod one night. See Dutch 
Lullaby, A.—Field. 

Wynter wakeneth all my care. See This World’s Joy. 
—Anon. 

Wyth that came Ryott, russhynge all at once. See 
Picture of Riot.—Skelton. 

X 

Xantippe, I know, was a terrible scold. See Defence 
of Xantippe, A.—Anon. 


943 





Yah 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Y 


“Yah, I shpeaks English a leetle; berhaps you shpeaks 
petter der German.” See Lookout Mountain, 1863 
—Beutelsbach, 1880.—Catlin. 

Yah [or Yaw] vohl! yah vohl! Dad man he svindle 
me. See Dutchman in the Police Court, The. 
Anon. 

Yale and Princeton stand to-day as the leading types 
of sound conservatism. See Yale and Princeton. 
—Anon. _ . ,. 

Yankee Doodle sent to town. See Last Appendix to 
Yankee Doodle, The.— {Punch.) 

Yard engine “ Louisa ’’ B. C-R. & N. See Spell of 
Rhyme, A.—Burdette. . 

Yaw [or Yah] vohl, yah vohl! Dad man he svindle 
me. See Dutchman in the Police Court, The. 
Anon. 

Yaw! yust I vas one happy mans. See Fritz s Court¬ 
ship.—Hall. . 

Ye Alps audacious, through the heavens that rise. See 
Hasty Pudding, The.—Barlow. 

Ye ancients of the earth, beneath whose shade. See 
Cedars of Lebanon, The.—Landon. 

Ye are young, ye are young. See Old Man’s Song, An. 

—Le Gallienne. _ 

Ye ask me why I’m mad—again. See Mad Mag. 
Wheeler. 

Ye banks and braes and streams around. See High¬ 
land Mary.—Burns. , 

Ye banks and braes o’ bonnie Doon. See Hanks o 
Doon, The.—Burns. 

Ye blushing virgins happy are. See Castara ( lo Roses 
in the Bosom of Castara).—Habington. 

Ye brethren blest, ye holy maids. See Saint Matthew. 
—Keble. 

Ye call me chief; and ye do well. See Spartacus to tne 
Gladiators at Capua.—Kellogg. 

Ye children, be gay. See same.- —Ruggles. 

Ye children of man, whose life is a span. See Birds, 
The.—Aristophanes. 

Ye children of the mountain, sing of your craggy peaks. 

See Surf along the Shore, The.—Lincoln. 

Ye clouds! that far above me float and pause. See 
France; An Ode.—Coleridge. 

Ye come, then, once again! Come ye as slaves or free¬ 
men? See Rienzi’s Last Appeal to the Romans. 
Rienzi. 

Ye crags and peaks, I’m with you once again! See 
William Tell (William Tell’s Address to his 
Native Hills).—Knowles. 

Ye distant spires, ye antique towers. See On a 
Distant Prospect of Eton College.—Gray. 

“Ye doubtless thought—for ye judge of Roman virtue 
by your own.” See Regulus to'the Carthaginians. 
—Kellogg. 

Ye elements! in which to be resolved. See Marino 
Faliero (Curse of Marino Faliero, The).—Byron. 
Ye elves of hills, brooks, standing lakes and groves. 
See Tempest, The (Speech of Prospero, A).— 
Shakespeare. 

Ye flowery banks o’ bonnie Doon. See Banks o’ Doon, 
The.—Burns. 

Ye freemen, how long will ye stifle. See Oath, The.— 
Read. 

Ye friends of moderation. See Temperance Rhyme- 
ation.—Anon. 

Ye genii of the nation. See Battle of Limerick, The.— 
Thackeray. 

Ye gentlemen of England. See same. —Parker. 

Ye gie corn unto my horse. See Drowned Lovers, The. 

-A non 


Ye golden lamps of heaven, farewell. See same. —Dod¬ 
dridge. 

Ye good men of the Commons, with loving hearts and 
true. See Virginia.—Macaulay. 

Ye have been fresh and green. See To Meadows.— 
Herrick. 

“Ye have robb’d me,” said he, “ye have slaughter’d 
and made an end.” See He Fell among Thieves. 
—Newbolt. 

Ye hearts with youthful vigor warm. See Youthful 
Piety.—Doddridge. 

Ye heavy-hearted mariners. See To My Companions. 
—Channing. 

Ye herds that haunt the country ways. See Shut Your 
Cattle in.—Rude. 

Ye Highlands and ye Lawlands. See Bonny Earl of 
Murray, The.—Anon. 

Ye human screech-owls, who delight to herald woe. 
See Lachrymose Writers.—Smith. 


Ye ice-falls! ye that from the mountain’s brow. See 
Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni. 
Coleridge. . . 

Ye learned sisters, which have oftentimes. See Epi- 
thalamion.—Spenser. 

Ye little birds that sit and sing. See Go, Pretty 
Birds.—Heywood. 

Ye little elves, who haunt sweet dells. See Cecil.— 
Ramal. 

Ye little snails. See Remonstrance with the Snails.— 
Anon. 

Ye living lamps, by whose dear light. See Lover to 
the Glow-worms, The.—Marvell. 

Ye Lords and Commons, men of wit. See Sandy s 
Ghost.—Pope. 

Ye loyal Macdonalds, awaken! awaken! See Lament 
for Glencoe.—Campbell. 

Ye Mariners of England! See same. —Campbell. 

Ye maun gang to your father, Janet. See Fair Janet. 
—Anon. 


Ye may drink, if ye list. See same. —Pease. 

Ye may tramp the world over. See Ould Doctor 
Mack.—Graves. 

Ye men of Gades, armed with brazen shields. See 
Gebir (Prayers).—Landor. 

Ye men of Sparta, listen to the hope with which the 
Gods inspire Leonidas! See Leonidas to his 
Three Hundred.—Leonidas. 

Ye men of wit and social eloquence. See Monody on 
the Death of Sheridan.—Byron. 

Ye midnight shades, o’er nature spread! See Funeral 
Hymn, A.—Mallett. 

Ye mists and exhalations, that now rise. See Hymn 
of Praise.—Milton. 

Ye muses, pour the pitying tear. See Great Man, A.— 


Goldsmith. 

“Ye must be bom again!” Will had begun. See 
Will’s Desire.—Thomas. 

Ye noisie sleighride starts with merrie din. See Te 
Sleighride Partie.—Stevens. 

Ye nymphs, if e’er your eyes were red. See On the 
Death of Mrs. Throckmorton’s Bullfinch.—Cow- 
per. 

Ye nymphs of Solyma! begin the song. See Messiah.— 
Pope. 

Ye parliament of England. See same. —Anon. 

Ye powers that rule the tongue, if such there are. See 
Conversation (Contradiction).—Cowper. 

Ye say they all have passed away—that noble race and 
brave. See Indian Names.—Sigourney. 

Ye scattered [scatter’d—C.] birds that faintly sing. 
See Lament for James, Earl of Glencairn.—Bums. 

Ye see, boys, Parson Williams—he’s dead now. See 
Sam Lawson’s Fireside Stories (Parson’s Horse 
Race, The).—Stowe. 

“Ye see that item in one of the papers ’bout tamin’ 
young alligators.” See Taming an Alligator. 
—Anon. 

Ye sent for me, and I shall come. See Metamora.— 
Stone. 

“Ye shall find the babe.” See same. —A. R. G. 

Ye shall know that in Atli’s feast-hall on the side that 
joined the house. See Story of Sigurd the Volsung, 
The (Slaying of the Niblungs The).-—Morris. 

Ye shepherds so cheerful and gay. See Pastoral, A.— 
Shenstone. 

Ye sigh not when the sun, his course fulfilled. See 
Old Man’s Funeral, The.—Bryant. 

Ye smooth-faced sons of Jacob, hug close your ingle- 
side. See Song of the Sons of Esau, The.— 
Runkle. 

Ye sons of Columbia, who bravely have fought. See 
Columbia and Liberty.—Paine. 

Ye sons of Freedom [or France], wake [or awake] to 
glory! See Marseillaise, The.—L’lsle. 

Ye sons of Massachusetts, all who love that honored 
name. See Sudbury Fight, The.—Rice. 

Ye sons of this grand land of Liberty. See “Ring! 
Ring! of Liberty and Peace!”—Carrington. 

Ye stand here now like giants, as ye are. See Spar¬ 
tacus to the Gladiators.—Kellogg. 

Ye stars! which are the poetry of heaven. See Childe 
Harold’s Pilgrimage (Stars).—Byron. 

Ye that listen to stories told. See Wolves, The.— 
Trowbridge. 

Ye tradefull merchants, that, with weary toyle. See 
Amoretti and Epithalamion (Herself all Treasure). 
—Spenser. 

Ye valleys low, where the mild whispers use. See 
Lycidas.—Milton. 

Ye vigorous youths, by smiling fortune blest. See 
Chase, The.—Somerville. 


944 





FIRST LINE INDEX 


Yes 


Ye virgins, that did late despair. See Imposture, The. 
—Shirley. 

Ye wha are fain to hae your name. See Braid Claith. 
—Fergusson. 

Ye white Sicilian Goats, who wander all. See Little 
Theocritus.—Paradise. 

Ye who have scorned each other. See Under the 
Holly Bough.—Mackay. 

Ye who would have [or save] your features florid. See 
Moral Cosmetics.—Smith. 

Ye whose utmost strength is weakness. See Wait 
upon the Lord.—Adams. 

Ye winds, ye unseen currents of the air. See Winds, 
The.—Bryant. 

Ye Yankee volunteers! See Yankee Volunteers, The. 
—Thackeray. 

Yea; but no man now is still. See Shepherd’s Hunt¬ 
ing, The (Eclogue).—Wither. 

Yea, fear not, fear not, little ones. See Fear Not.— 
Anon. 

Yea, let me praise my lady whom I love. See Vita 
Nuova (Her Helpfulness).—Dante. 

Yea, Lord!—Yet some must serve. See Martha.— 
Dorr. 

Yea, love, I know, and I would have it thus. See 
Love’s Poor.—Le Gallienne. 

Yea, Love is strong as life. See Sonnet, Suggested by 
Mr. Watts’ Picture of Love and Death.—Lind¬ 
say. 

Year after year I sit for them. See Model, A.—Rad¬ 
ford. 

Year after year the leaf and the shoot. See Mystery, 
The.—Savage-Armstrong. 

Year after year unto her feet. See Day-dream, The 
(Sleeping Beauty, The).—Tennyson. 

Years ago a child held a sea shell to his ear. See Child 
and Sea-shell.—Anon. 

Years ago I was not the thing that I am now. See 
Last Days of Pompeii (Witch of Vesuvius, The). 
—Bulwer-Lytton. 

Years ago, on a grim December night, the city of New 
York was scourged. See Rescue, The.—Taylor. 

Years ago there dwelt in middle Georgia. See Two 
Runaways, The.—Edwards. 

Years ago, there lived a painter. See Story of a 
Picture.—Anon. 

Years ago, when every gentleman in western Europe. 
See Conjugating Dutchman, The.—Holmes. 

Years ago when plain and forest stretched unmarred 
from sea to sea. See Legend of Kalooka, The.— 
Jones. 

Years ago, while Christmas carols echoed all adown 
the street. See Christmas Blessing, A.—Anon. 

Years an’ years ago, when I. See Father’s Voice.— 
Anon. 

Years have flown since I knew thee first. See Song: 
“Years have flown,” etc.—Gilder. 

Years, many parti-colour’d years. See Tears.—Lan- 
dor. 

Years since (but names to me before). See Singer, 
The.—VTiittier. 

Years, years ago, ere yet my dreams. See Belle of the 
Ball, The.—Praed. 

“Yee-ho, my hearties!” the skipper cried. See 
Traitor Sea, The.—Corrie. 

Ye’ll no fret ye mair the noo. See Jamie’s Word wi’ 
the Sea.—Cole. 

Yellow and white, yellow and white. See Yellow and 
White.—McGaffey. 

Yellow-bird, where did you learn that song. See Yel 
low-bird.—Thaxter. 

“Yer axes me what dis heah is, sah?” See “Ole Mar- 
ster’s” Christmas, The.—Small. 

Yer eyes t’row out the very tint. See Mucker s Love 
Song, The.—Dudley. ~ , 

Yer honor, I pleads guilty; I'm a bummer. See Sol¬ 
dier Tramp, The.—Carlino. 

“Yer kin talk ’bout yer Salvaytor, and yer Procter 
Knott.” See Unregistered Record, An.—-Cherry. 

Yer kin talk erbout yer Barnharts, an’ yer Rehans, 
an’ yer Dooses. See Uncle Eben’s Opinion. 
Anon. , 

“Yer know me little nipper.” See Little Nipper an 
’is Ma, The.—Gouraud. ... . 

Yer spakin’ of musther was a-moindin me of Mick 
Murphy and Dan Collins. See First Adventures 
in England.—Anon. , 

Yes, Aunt Jennie, I was six years old last Saturday. 
See Carrie’s Birthday Cake.—Anon. 

Yes! bear them to their rest. See Hymn to Night.— 
Bethune. , , . 

Yes, boy, that night I remember well, though it was 
twenty years ago. See Marco s Death. Wood. 


Yes, bread! I want bread! You heard what I said. 
See Old Soldier Tramp, The.—Miller. 

“Yes, Bridget has gone to the city.” See-Mamma’* 
Help!—Anon. 

Yes, Cara, mine, I know that I shall stand. See 
Island of Shadows, The.—Garnett. 

Yes, children, I can see it still, that rude old fortress 
there. See S^ory of an Ambuscade, The.— 
Hayne. 

Yes, Christmas day has come at last. See Little Girl’s 
Christmas, A.—Anon. 

Yes, courage, boy,—courage, and press on thy way. 
See Do Right.—Anon. 

Yes, cross in rest the little, snow-white hands. See 
Not Lost.—Collier. 

Yes, dar he is; dar is Marse George. See Uncle Pete. 
—Anon. 

Yes, darling one, I will rock thee to sleep! See In 
Heaven I’ll Rock Thee to Sleep.—Anon. 

Yes, death is at the bottom of the cup. See If.— 
Howells. 

Yes, Debby, 'twas a disapp’intment; and though of 
course, I try. See Miss Minerva’s Disappoint¬ 
ment.—Corbett. 

Yes, Dr. Sprout, Mrs. Smith sent for me, you know. 
See His First Case.—Griffith. 

Yes! e’en in sleep the impressions all remain. See 
Borough, The (Convict’s Dream, The).— 
Crabbe. 

‘ ‘Yes, Eliza,” said George, “I know all you say is true.” 
See Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Freeman’s Defence, The). 
—Stowe. 

Yes, faith is a goodly anchor. See After the Burial.— 
Lowell. 

Yes, Gertrude, I remember well. See St. John’s Eve. 
—Kickham. 

Yes, God has made me a woman. See My Rights.— 
Wooley. 

Yes, God is good, I’m told. See Faith.—Piatt. 

Yes,—he was one o’ the best men. See Widow Bedott 
Papers (WidowBedott’s Poetry, The).—Whitcher. 

Yes, he was that, or that, as you prefer. See T. A. H. 
—Bierde. 

Yes! hope may with my strong desire keep pace. See 
Sonnet: “ Yes, hope,” etc.—Michelangelo. 

Yes! I also am an Arcadian. See Arcadian Club, The. 
—Bradley. 

Yes! I am determined to be a model housekeeper. See 
Little Women (Family Jar, A).—Alcott. 

“Yes, I am off to-morrow morn!” See First Parting, 
The. —Douglass. 

“Yes!” I answered you last night. See Lady’s Yes, 
The.—Browning. 

Yes, I been to the city onct, an’ if I’m forgiven for that 
I’ll never go ag’in. See Betsy Hawkins Goes to 
the City.—Anon. 

Yes, I declare Mr. Smallboy was quite insulting. See 
Eligible Situation, An.—Archer and Brough. 

Yes, I do love thee well, my child. See To George 
M-.—Miller. 

Yes, I got another Johnny; but he was to Number One. 
See My Other Chinee Cook.—Stephens. - 

Yes, I have always found it so. See Reconstructed 
Man, A.—Anon. 

Yes, I have heard the nightingale. See Hast Thou 
Heard the Nightingale?—Gilder. 

Yes, I have served on a jury! ’tis duty for a man. See 
Juryman’s Story, A.—Blake. 

Yes! I have served that noble chief throughout his 
proud career. See Spanish Mother, The.—Doyle. 

Yes, I hev thought the matter oyer fur some time. See 
Running for Office.—McBride. 

Yes, I know I’m only a tramp. See Tramp s Story, 
The.—Richmond. 

Yes, I know there are stains on my carpet. See What 
Mother Says.—Anon. 

Yes, I know what you say. See Tempted.—bill. 

“Yes, I liked you at first, I must confess. See In¬ 
ternational Episode, An.—Hall. 

Yes, I once committed a murder. See Engineer s 
Murder, The.—Morford. 

Yes; I own I start at shadows. See Shadows.—Anon. 

Yes,’I shall sleep! Some sunny day. See same. — 
Urquhart. . . , . , . . , 

Yes, I s’pose it , 8 real music—it s a mighty heap o 
sound. See At the Concert. Gordon. 

Yes, I was wrong about the phoebe-bird. See Phoebe- 
bird, The.—Lathrop. 

Yes; I write verses now and then, See l ime to De 
Wise.—Landor. T , 

“Yes, I’m guilty,” the prisoner said. See res, Im 
Guilty.—Munyon. 


945 







Yes 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


“Yes, I’m here, I suppose you’re delighted. See Lake 
Mahopac—Saturday Night.—Baker. 

Yes, I’m old and rough and gaunt. See Oak’s Fare¬ 
well, The.—Stover. 

Yes! in the sea of life enisled. See To Marguerite.— 
Arnold. 

Yes, it is a long way up these two flights of steep stairs. 
See From the Window.—Marsh. 

Yes, it is just one year ago to-ni^ht. See Shadow of 
a Song, The.—Rae-Brown. 

Yes, it was the mountain echo. See Mountain Echo, 
The.—Wordsworth. 

Yes, it’s a quiet station, but it suits me well enough. 
See In the Signal Box: a Station Master’s Story.— 
Sims. 

Yes, I’ve been [a] deacon of our church. See Old 
Deacon’s Lament, The.—Corbett. 

“Yes, I’ve had a good many fights in my time.” See 
Mark Twain on Juvenile Pugilists.—Clemens. 

Yes, I’ve worked here, inside this mine, twelve years. 
See Unknown Hero, An.—Bogart. 

Yes, John Brent, you were right when you called Lug- 
gernel Alley. See Gallop of Three, The.—Win- 
throp. 

Yes, John, I was down thar at Memphis. See Them 
Yankee Blankits.—Small. 

Yes, June is here an’ now, by jing! it won’t be long 
until. See When the Summer Boarders Come.— 
Waterman. 

Yes, lady, that one strip of blue. See Crippled Joe.— 
Thorpe. 

Yes, law is a great thing, mister, but justice comes in 
ahead. See Justice in Leadville.—-Rich. 

Yes, leave it with him. See Leave it with Him.— 
Anon. 

Yes. “Let the tent be struck.” Nee “Gone Forward.” 
—Preston. 

Yes, let us speak, with lips confirming. See Consola¬ 
tion.—Larminie. 

Yes, Liab brought home from the lawyer’s that paper 
for me to sign. See Why Liab and I Parted.— 
Emerson. 

Yes, Love indeed is light from heaven. See Giaour, 
The (Love).—Byron. 

Yes, Love, the Spring shall come again. See Love’s 
Autumn.—Payne. 

Yes, Marian, that is where you mistake. Nee Matri¬ 
monial Mix, A.—Meyers. 

“Yes, Mary,” said the old farmer, as he climbed into 
the wagon. See Making a Man of the Boy.—Anon. 

Yes! mourn the soul, of high and pure intent. See 
Sonnet: Majuba Hill.—Ingram. 

Yes, M’rilly’s bin house-cleaning ’n I’m sleepin’ in the 
shed. See House-cleaning.—Lee. 

Yes, my child, we’ll send out a great many invitations. 
See Fashionable Hospitality.—-Dallas. 

Yes, noble Galileo, thou art right. See Uses of 
Astronomy, The (Galileo).—Everett. 

Yes, oh, yes! I understand it perfectly, aye, only too 
well! See Wonderful Lamp, The.—Anon. 

Yes, pard, I’m aware it looks odd like ter see an old- 
timer like me. See Sara.—Sutton. 

“Yes,” remarked the St. Paul man to a friend from 
Chicago. See Where They never Feel the Cold.— 
Anon. 

Yes, said the young man, as he threw himself at the 
feet of the pretty school-teacher. See Courting 
and Science.—Anon. 

Yes, scatter flowers above the graves. See Decora¬ 
tion Day.—Campbell. 

Yes, seventeen hundred thirty-two. See George 
Washington.—Anon. 

Yes, sing the song of the orange tree. See same. — 
Hoyt. 

Yes, sir, he is at work in the garden. See Changing 
Servants.—Wine. 

Yes, sir, I can truly say the house is in perfect order. 
See Empty House, The.—Graham. 

Yes, sir, I do believe in ghosts. See Saved by a Ghost. 
—Rexford. 

Yes, sir, I’ve been in the company, well, thirty year 
come June. See Signalman’s Story, The.— 
Wheeler. 

“Yes, sir; we lived home till our mother died.” See 
Two Orphans, The.—King. 

Yes-sir-ree! to Uncle Dock’s house! See At Uncle 
Dock’s.—McCollum. 

Yes, social friend, I love thee well. See To My Cigar. 
—Sprague. 

Yes, still I love thee! Time, who sets. See Love Un¬ 
changeable.—Dawes. 

Yes, stone the woman, let the man go free! See Stone 
the Woman, Let the Man Go Free.—Anon. 


Yes, surely the bells in the steeple were ringing; I 
thought you knew why. See Deacon’s Confession, 
The.—Emerson. 

Yes, that is her picture, standing there. See Girl that 
I Didn’t Get, The.—Anon. 

Yes, that’s her picture! She was—say forty. See 
Kate.—( The United Irishman.) 

Yes—that’s my business, sir— a clown. See Clown’s 
Story, The.—Brown. 

Yes, the evening was very pleasant. See But.—Hunt. 

Yes, there is holy pleasure in thine eye! See Admoni¬ 
tion to a Traveller.—Wordsworth. 

Yes, there is that fellow Jones, again. See Courtship 
under Difficulties.—Anon. 

Yes, there she is! See ’Toinette’s Philip (Selling the 
Image).—Jamison. 

Yes, this is Wicklow! round our feet. See Wicklow.— 
Savage-Armstrong. 

Yes, this will do; that curl hangs languishingly over 
my left temple. See Fortune Hunter, The.— 
Pickering. 

Yes! thou art fair, and I had lov’d. See Too Late.— 
Linton. 

Yes, Thou art gone! and round me too the night. See 
Thyrsis.—Arnold. 

Yes; Tim, who sells papers, is hearty. See Milly.— 
Smith. 

Yes! ’tis old and faded now. See Velvet Coat of the 
Last Century, A.—Anon. 

Yes, Tom’s the best fellow that ever you knew. See 
Tom, the Hero.—Woolson. 

Yes, we marched in the ranks to the station. See Voice 
from the Old Boys Left Behind, A.—Jewett. 

Yes, we were warm friends. See Longfellow, Extract 
Concerning.—-Whittier. 

Yes; well, I know that summer’s gone. See Her An¬ 
swer to his Verses.—Burnham. 

Yes, we’ll rally *round the flag, boys, we’ll rally once 
again. See Battle-cry of Freedom, The.—Anon. 

Yes; when the ways oppose. See Ars Victrix.—Dob¬ 
son. 

Yes, yes; all is ready; not for a minute. See Leap Year 
in the Village with One Gentleman.—Anon. 

Yes, yes, godfather, make your mind easy. See 
“Wanted, a Young Lady.”—Suter. 

Yes, yes, my boy, there’s no mistake. See M'llrath of 
Malate.—Rooney. 

Yes, you despise the man to books confin’d. See 
Moral Essays.—Pope. 

Yessum, it’s me’r whut’s left of me. See Aunt Susan’s 
Quilt.—Wood. 

Yesterday contains all the battle-fields in which free¬ 
dom was gradually wrought out. See Yesterday. 
—.Swing. 

Yesterday I dragged wearily along. See same. — 
O. F. 

Yesterday I walked down to that part of the town. 
See These Dreadful "Hard Times ”—Anon. 

Yesterday morning a tall young man of twenty. See 
Overcoat He Got, The.—Anon. 

Yesterday, out of my window. See “ No.”—Rexford. 

Yesterday, Rebecca Mason. See Rebecca’s After¬ 
thought.—Turner. 

Yesterday was brave Hallowday. See Sir Hugh; or, 
The Jew’s Daughter.—Anon. 

Yesternight, as I sat with an old friend of mine. See 
Shoemaker’s Daughter, The.—English. 

Yet a few days, and thee. See Thanatopsis.—Bryant. 

Yet a few years and the shades and structures may 
follow. , See Holland House.—Macaulay. 

Yet a little longer. See Last Robin, The.—Wash¬ 
burn. 

Yet ah, that Spring should vanish with the rose! See 
RubiiiyAt ot Omar Khayy&m (And Yet—and 
Yet!).—Fitzgerald. 

Yet, ah! why should they know their fate? See On a 
Distant Prospect of Eton College.—Gray. 

Yet do I fear thy nature. See Macbeth (Hesitation). 
—Shakespeare. 

Yet half mankind maintain a churlish strife. See 
Grace and the World.—Cowper. 

Yet here, Laertes! aboard, aboard, for shame. See 
Hamlet (Polonius to Laertes).—Shakespeare. 

Yet, here’s a spot. See Macbeth.—Shakespeare. 

Yet if His Majesty, our sovereign lord. See Prepara¬ 
tions.—Anon. 

Yet if some voice that man could trust. See In 
Memoriam.—T ennyson. 

Yet, like some sweet beguiling melody. See Hymn 
before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni.—Cole¬ 
ridge. 

Yet love will dream and faith will trust. See Snow¬ 
bound.—Whittier. 


946 






Yet mauger Jove, and all his gods besides.” See 
Faerie Queene, The (Claims of Mutability Pleaded 
before Nature).—Spenser. 

Yet nerve thy spirit to the proof. See Battle-field, 
The (“Yet nerve,” etc.).—Bryant. 

Yet, no—not words for they. See same.— Moore. 

Yet, O my friend—pale conjurer, I call. See Bring 
Them not Back.—Kenyon. 

Yet once again, O man! come forth and view. See 
Vision of Immortality, The.—Weston. 

Yet once more, O ye Laurels, and once more. See 
Lycidas.—Milton. 

Yet one alone deserves our care. See Marmion (Con¬ 
vent Scene).—Scott. 

Yet one smile more, departing, distant sun! See 
November.—Bryant. 

Yet pure its waters—its shallows are bright. See 
Green River.—Bryant. 

Yet the first bringer of unwelcome news. See King 
Henry IV., Pt. II.—Shakespeare. 

Yet, ’tis not helm or feather. See Oh, the Sight En¬ 
trancing.—Moore. 

Yet with hands by evil stained. See Andrew Ryk- 
man’s Prayer (“Yet with hands,” etc.).—Whittier. 

“ Yeth! And Chinio to sleep at ve foot of ve bed. See 
His Majesty the King.—Kipling. 

Ye’ve gathered to your place of prayer. See Burial of 
the Champion of his Class, at Yale College.— 
Willis. 

Yield, madman, yield! Thy horse is down. See same. 
—Boker. 

Yimmey, I hof been havin’ lots of fun, so I vill dole 
you boud id. See Goin’ to der Races.—Honnas. 

Yis, luk at me now, if ye can, Tim. See What Biddy 
Said in the Police Court.—Corbett. 

Yo’ did’n nebber hear ’bout Parson Jinglejaw’s sur¬ 
prise? See Parson Jinglejaw’s Surprise.—Whipple. 

“Yo Ho! my boys,” said Fezziwig. “No more work 
to-night.” See Christmas Carol, A (Christmas at 
Fezziwig’s Warehouse).—Dickens. 

Yo’ needn’t look so ’sprized at me. See Uncle Peter 
and the Trolley Car.—Neall. 

Yon clouds that roam the deserts of the air. See 
Bedouins of the Skies, The.;—Kenyon. 

Yon deep bark goes. See Drifting.—Read. 

Yon old house in moonlight sleeping. See Long De¬ 
serted.—Mulvany. 

Yon silvery billows breaking on the beach. See Son¬ 
net’s Voice, The.—Watts. 

Yon window frames her like a saint. See Fair Copy- 
holder, The.—Crandall. 

Yonder is my lady’s window. See Cyrano de Ber¬ 
gerac (Scene from “Cyrano,” etc.).—Rostand. 

“You ain’t never been hyeerd ’bout dem Botts twins, 
is yer?” See Botts Twins, The.—Stansbury. 

You all have seen the picture of that wonderful sculp¬ 
ture. See Garfield.—Fuller. 

You all knew Tom Moody, the whipper-in, well. See 
Tom Moody.—Anon. 

You all know her. See Woman Next Door, The.— 
Anon. 

You all know the burden that hangs to my song. See 
Trouble Your Head with Your Own Affairs.—Cook. 

You all know the Place de la Concorde? See Chronicle 
of the Drum, The (Execution of Louis XVI.).— 
Thackeray. 

You all know the story of La Tour d’Auvergne, The 
First Grenadier of France.” See “Dead on the 
Field of Honor.”—Chamberlain. 

You all of you know the sandman old. See Sandman’s 
Daughter, The,—Anon. 

You always are making a god of your spouse. See 
To a Lady.—Swift. 

You are a. good scholar, I believe, Tambo. See lambo 
on Ciphering.—Anon. . 

You are a tulip seen to-day. See Meditation for his 
Mistress, A.—-Herrick. _ _ 

You are about to go into business. See Aim High. 
Harrison. 

You are all I have to live for. See My King. Anon. 

You are amazed, O Romans! even amid the general 
horror at Lucretia’s death. See Brutus over the 
Dead Lucretia.—Anon. 

You are among the small number of those who know. 
See Approach of the Presidency, The. Washing- 

You are apt to begin finding out the dissimilarity. 
See Travel in England.—Anon. 

You are coming to woo me, but not as of yore, oee 
Lips that Touch Liquor Must never Touch Mine, 
The.—Young. , T , , 

You are fond of liberty and equal rights, eh, Johnson! 
See Stand for Liberty, A.—Anon. 


You cannot 


You are fond of your pedigree, Johnson, are you not? 
See Johnson’s Ancestors.—Anon. 

"You are growing old,” they tell us. See Growing 
Old—Pike. 

“You are old, Father William,” the young man cried, 
“the few locks which are left you are gray.” See 
Old Man’s Comforts, and how He Gained Them, 
The.—Southey. 

“You are old, Father William,” the young man said, 
“and your hair has become very white.” See 
Father William.—Carroll. 

“You are old, Father William,” the young man said, 
“and your nose has a look of surprise.” See 
Father William.—Anon. 

You are quite a lady’s man, dey tell me, Johnson. See 
Completing de Spell.—Anon. 

You are struggling with difficulties, you imagine, you 
are mistaken. See Catholic Question, The, Feb. 22, 
1793 (Disqualification of Roman Catholics).— 
Grattan. 

“You are the no-countest, laziest, meanest dog tha 
ever wore breeches.” See Bob.—Grady. 

You are told that the public opinion seems to demand 
the saloon. See Widening Horizon, The.—Wil¬ 
lard. 

“You are too big a child to be rocked,” she said. See 
Too Big to be Rocked.—Wilcox. 

You are welcome home. See Honeymoon, The (Tam¬ 
ing a Wife).—Tobin. 

You are wrung with grief, but you have courage and 
faith. See Exile’s Hope, The.-—Hugo. 

You ask a verse, to sing (ah, laughing face!) See To 
a Lady.—Piatt. 

You ask for fame or power? See Golden Text, The.— 
Cameron. 

You ask for my name! ah, dear madam, you palter. 
See Epigram to a Young Lady.—Halpine. 

You ask me for a pledge, love, but gaze upon my cheek. 
See You Ask Me for a Pledge, Love.—Watts. 

You ask me for the sweetest sound my ears have ever 
heard? See Across the Wheat.—Sangster. 

You ask me, my dear, in your innocent way. See 
Love’s Logic.—Anon. 

You ask me to tell you a story. See Switchman’s 
Story, The.—Ottolengui. 

You ask me what—since we must part. See Gifts.— 
Ewing. 

You ask me whether I’m high church. See Puzzled.— 
Slosson. 

"You ask me which is the dearest.” See Boy Who 
Went from Home, The.—Johnston. 

You ask me, why, tho’ ill at ease. See same. —Tenny¬ 
son. 

You ask the name of that huge rock which juts out 
overhead. See Van Bibber’s Rock.—Banks. 

You ask what I have to say in my defense. See De¬ 
fense of Hofer, the Tyrolese Patriot, The.—Anon. 

You asked for a song of the olden days. See Arcady. 
—Newton. 

You Athenians were never known to live contented 
in a slavish though secure obedience. See Public 
Spirit of the Athenians.—Demosthenes. 

You awkward flowers, I’m tired of you. See Lesson 
from the Sunflowers, A.—Denton. . 

You ax about dat music made. See Banjo of the Past, 
The.—Weeden. 

You beauteous ladies great and small. See Lady 
Turned Serving-man, The.—Anon. 

You bells in the steeple, ring, ring out your changes. 
See Songs of Seven (Seven Times Two).—Ingelow. 

You better not fool with a Bumblebee. See Bumble¬ 
bee, The.—Riley/ 

You bid me tell you why I rise. See Modern Cymon, 
The.—Procter. 

You brave heroic minds. See To the Virginian Voyage. 
—Drayton. 

“You bring news from my lord, Master Varney. See 
Amy Robsart and Richard Varney.—Scott. 

You call me trifler faineant. See Reformer, A.— 
Baker. . 

You came to us once, brothers, in wrath. See Con¬ 
quered at Last.—Eve. 

You can always tell a boy whose mother cuts his hair. 
See She Cut his Hair.—Bailey. 

You can be a fishing shallop if you cannot be a ship. 
See Find Your Level.—Jones. 

You can pass on the worl’ w’erever you lak. See De 
Nice Leetle Canadienne.—Drummond. 

You can write down sweet words in a letter. See Last 
W ords.—Anon. 

You cannot conciliate America by your present meas¬ 
ures. See Consequences of the American War.— 
Chatham. 


FIRST LINE INDEX 


947 





You cannot 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


You cannot, I venture to say, you cannot conquer 
America. See American war. The (On Conquer¬ 
ing America).—Chatham. 

You cannot pay with money. See Laborers, The.— 
Anon. 

“You can’t do this,” and “you mustn’t do that,” from 
morning to night. See Turn about’s Fair Play.— 
Herbert. 

“You can’t help the baby, parson.” See Better in 
the Morning.—Coan. 

You charm when you talk, walk, or move. See To 
Madame de Sevigne.—Montreuil. 

You come, madam, from the Baron? See Princess and 
the Countess, The.—Stevenson. 

You come to tell me she is dying—is it so, indeed? 
See Even.in Death.—Bergen. 

You cry, whene’er you meet me still. See Stingy 
Friend, The. Martial. 

You dear little birdie, who taught you to sing? See 
Bird that Sings, The.—Anon. 

You dear little charmer, you sweet little Miss. See 
Give and Take.—“Bob o’Link.” 

You dear old Mother Nature, I am writing you a let¬ 
ter. See Letter to Mother Nature, A.—Dayre. 

You, Dinah! Come and set me whar de ribber-roads 
does meet. See Power of Prayer, The.—Lanier. 

You don’t mean we must invite those odious people. 
See How it Really Was.—Litchfield. 

You don’t quite remember? Ah, modest old fellow! 
See Two Old Soldiers, The.—Macy. 

You don’t wear a wig, do you, Johnson? See This 
One is Wigged.—Anon. 

You fellers hev’ bin tellin’ some whappers. See Bill 
Wainwright’s Adventure.—Anon. 

You folks don’t know what 1 have. See New Mittens, 
The.—Rook. 

You gave me roses, love, last night. See Mystery, 
The.—Whiting. 

“You gave me the key of your heart, my love.” See 
Constancy.—O ’ Reilly. 

You had t wo girls, Baptiste. See At the Cedars.—Scott. 

You hadn’t ought to blame a man fer things he hasn’t 
done. See Undertow, The.—Morgan. 

“You hard-hearted, dunder-headed, obstinate, rusty, 
musty, crusty, fusty old savage.” See Three 
Sundays in a Week.—Poe. 

You have beguil’d me with a counterfeit. See King 
John (Constance’s Denunciation of King Philip 
of France and Lymoges of Austria).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

You have birds in a cage, and you’ve beautiful flowers. 
See Naming the Baby.—Douglas. 

You have called to me, my brothers, from your far- 
off eastern sea. See Voice of the Oregon, The.— 
—Browne. 

You have come then; how very clever! See Half-way 
in Love.—Nichols. 

You have come to the end of one short journey. See 
Address to the Class of 1877.—Shoemaker. 

You have committed to my conduct, O Romans, the 
war against Jugurtha. See Jugurthine War, The 
(Caius Marius to the Romans, on the Objections 
to Making him General).—Sallust. 

You have found me out at last, Will, sit down beside 
me here. See By the Alma.—Dawson. 

You have heard from my learned friend, gentlemen of 
the jury. See Pickwick Papers, The (Buzfuz versus 
Pickwick).—Dickens. 

You have heard of the ride of John Gilpin. See Ride 
on the Black Valley Railroad, A.;—Tarbox. 

You have heard of the Stockett family. See “Uncle 
Todd.”—Mallon. 

“You have heard,” said a youth to his sweetheart, who 
stood. See Whistle, The.—Story. 

You have just been told how. See New South, The.— 
Grady. 

You have never heard Harris sing a comic song. See 
Three Men in a Boat (Mr. Harris’s Comic Song).— 
Jerome. 

You have now two wars before you, of which you must 
choose one. See On War with France or America. 
—Fox. 

You have often no doubt had occasion to note. See 
“Allow for the Crawl.”—A Homily.—Saxe. 

You have only one mother, my boy. See Only One 
Mother.—Dodge. 

You have read of the Moslem palace. See For Love’s 
Sake.—Preston. 

You have read of the ride of Paul Revere. See 
Bicycle Ride, The.—Harvey. 

You have successfully and honorably completed the 
courses. See Address to the Graduating Class of 
Knox College, 1877.—Bateman. 


You have taken back the promise. See Fidelis.— 
Procter. 

You have taken me prisoner, with all my warriors. See 
Speech of Black Hawk (Address of Black Hawk 
to General Street).—Black Hawk. 

You haven’t seen the Cobb sisters, I suppose? See 
John Robb and Anna Cobb.—Anon. 

You heard from my learned friend, gentlemen. See 
Pickwick Papers, The (Speech of Sergeant Buzfuz 
in the Case of Bardell against Pickwick).—Dick¬ 
ens. 

You hev to hold it sidewise. See Daguerreotype, The. 
—McGlasson. 

You kaint tell how it chirks me up. See When Mandy 
Brings the Kids.—Worden. 

You kin talk about your anthems. See Ol’ Tunes, The. 
—-Dunbar. 

You kin talk about y’r op’ras, y’r germans, an’ all 
sich. See De Candy Pull.—Luce. 

You kissed me! My head had drooped low on your 
breast. See You Kissed Me.—Hunt. 

You knew—who knew not Astrophel? See Lament 
for Sir Philip Sidney.—Royden. 

You know how we are wont to stand. See “Bottoms 
Up” ad Finem.—Hutchinson. 

You know my darter Nancy is an uncommon smart 
gal. See Director’s Visit, The; or, A Warning to 
School-masters.—Anon. 

“You know, my friends, with what a brave carouse.” 
See Bride, The.—Bierce. 

You know of course that I sympathize deeply 
with you. See Eugene Field to his Children.— 
Field. 

You know that day at Peach Tree Creek. See Logan 
at Peach Tree Creek.—Garland. 

You know the plaintiff? See Chicago Lawsuit, A.— 
Anon. 

You know the story—it’s centuries old See Ant and 
the Grasshopper, The.—Lincoln. 

You know, we French stormed Ratisbon. See Inci¬ 
dent of the French Camp, An.—Browning. 

You know what a sorrowful day for Tarragona was the 
28th of June, 1811. See In Terror of Death.— 
Alarcon. 

You lads that are funny, and call maids your honey. 
See Jenny from Ballinasloe.—Anon. 

You laugh as you turn the yellow page. See Old Song, 
An.—Anon. 

You lay a wreath on murdered [or murder’d] Lincoln’s 
bier. See Abraham Lincoln.—Taylor. 

You little hens, you naughty hens. See Naughty Hens, 
The.—Anon. 

You little stars that live in skies. See To Her Eyes.— 
Brooke. 

You love me? Aye, I do indeed. See Brief Bur¬ 
lesque, A.— (Munsey’s Magazine.) 

You loved me once, I know! See Broken Sonnet, A.— 
Graves. 

You may drink to your leman in gold. See Wine and 
Dew.—Stoddard. 

You may envy the joys o’ the farmer. See Farmer 
Gray.—Anon. 

You may get through the world, but ’t will be very 
slow. See same .—( Washington Capitol.) 

You may give over plough, boys. See Tommy’s 
Dead.—Dobell. 

You may lift me up in your arms, lad, and turn my 
face to the sun. See Famous Ballad of the 
Jubilee Cup, The.—Quiller-Couch. 

You may mention her name, but it never conveys. See 
Miss Jones.—Romaine. 

You may notch it on the palin’s as a mighty resky 
plan. See Rev. Gabe Tucker’s Rem rks (Obser¬ 
vations by Rev. Gabe Tucker).—Macon. 

You may reap your harvest of wheat and tares. See 
Optimism.—( Blackwood’s Magazine. ) 

You may reason with a fool till his muddled brain grows 
clear. See Putty Man, The.—Burdette. 

You may recognize Ben by description. See Donald 
and the Stag.—Browning. 

You may remember an odd poem written by an old 
Latin tutor? See Professor at the Breakfast-table, 
The (Iris).—Holmes. 

You may ring till the crack o’ doom. See Pair of 
Gloves, A.—Meyers. 

You may say that Lachrymae Christi. See Drinking 
Song.—Anon. 

You may take the thirteen inchers. See Song of the 
Rapid-fires.—( Baltimore News.) 

You may take the world as it comes and goes. See 
Chickens Come Home to Roost.—Anon. 

You may talk about old Santa Claus. See Lila’s Con¬ 
clusion.—Richards. 


948 






FIRST LINE INDEX 


You taught 


You may talk about the music of the thrush. See 
Farmer’s Song-bird, The.—Horton. 

You may talk of horses of renown. See Bay Billy.— 
Gassaway. 

You may talk of your fairies, whose mandates, of old. 
See Bell and the Gong, The.—Barber. 

You may tramp the world over. See Ould Docther 
Mack.—Anon. 

You meaner beauties of the night. See On His Mis¬ 
tress, the Queen of Bohemia.—Wotton. 

You ’member ’bout Phar’oh, brodering, I s’pose? See 
At the Mt. Holly Camp-meeting.—Anon. 

You might have thought a goose the rarest of all birds. 
See Christmas Carol, A (Christmas Goose at the 
Cratchits’, The).—Dickens. 

You must be sad; for though it is to Heaven. See To 
Two Bereaved.—Ashe. 

You must be troubled, Asthore. See De Profundis.— 
Hinkson. 

“You must give hack,” her mother said. See Gifts 
Returned.—Landor. 

You must go to this party, Tim. See Bashful Boy, 
The.—Denison. 

You must not mind my being so small. See Prologue 
for a Child.—Anon. 

You must wake and call me early, call me early, 
mother dear. See May Queen, The.—Tennyson. 

You, Nebuchadnezzah, whoa, sah! See Nebuehad- 
nezzah.—Russell. 

You need not be concerned, in writing to me, about 
your spelling. See Good and Bad Spelling.— 
Franklin. 

You need not be looking around at me so. See Part¬ 
nership.—Anon. 

You need not tell your parents that you are going with 
the steamboat excursion. See Elwood’s Decision. 
—McBride. 

You needn’t be trying to comfort me—I tell you my 
dolly is dead! See Dead Doll, The.—Vande- 
grift. 

“You ne’er can object to my arm round your waist.” 
Two Professions.—Throop. 

You nestled in her hair to-night. See To a Rose.— 
W. C. B. 

“You never can grow up, you know.” See What 
Grandma Foretold.—Denton. 

You never observe a great intellectual movement in 
Europe. See Hebrew Race, The.—Beaconsfield. 

You never saw a gal surprised. See Love’s Stratagem. 
—Ali. 

You never saw such a commotion up and down a house. 
See Three Men in a Boat (Uncle Podger Hangs a 
Picture).—Jerome. 

You never saw such a fuss as there has bin in our 
house the last few days. See Bad Boy’s Diary, 
A.— (New York Weekly.) 

You, O man! who with your honey words and your 
tender looks. See same. —Craik. 

You of the North have had drawn for you with a mas¬ 
ter’s hand. See New South, The (Confederate 
Soldier, The).—Grady. 

You ought to be very rich, Mr. Caudle. See Mr. 
Caudle Having Lent Five Pounds to a Friend.— 
Jerrold. 

You ought to go to Summerset. See Summerset Folks, 
The.—Hawkins. 

You ought to have known worthy Jonathan Kent. 
See Deacon Kent in Politics.—Frisbie. 

You promise heavens free from strife. See Mimner- 
mus in Church.—Cory. 

You promise now, you goot man dare. See Marriage 
Ceremony, The.—Anon. 

“You queer little wonderful owlet! you atom so fluffy 
and small!” See Tragedy.—Thaxter. 

You remember, girls, we promised to tell each other 
everything. See Consensus of the Competent, A. 
—Lummis. 

You remember that fancy of Plato’s, of a man who had 
grown to maturity. See On Heroes and Hero Wor¬ 
ship (Nature).—Carlyle. 

You remember the nursery legend. See Sleeping 
Beauty.—Baker. 

You restless, curious little Jo. See Feathers.—Cary. 

You said, “I love you.” Prodigal of sighs. See 
Shadows.—Meetkerke. 

You sang me a song. See Sing Again.—Van \ orst. 

You saucy south wind, setting all the budded beech 
boughs swinging. See Whisper!—-Wynne. 

You saw her last, the ball-room’s belle. See Rosebud 
in Lent, A.—Baker. 

You say I have asked for the costliest thing. See 
Reply to “A Woman’s Question.”—Pelham. 


You say I love not, ’cause I do not play. See To His 
Mistress, Objecting to Him neither Toying or 
Talking.—Herrick. 

“You say,” I remarked to the old negro who drove 
the hack. See Examination in History, An.— 
Anon. 

You say, preach away; tell us something more of this 
fruitless fig tree. See same. —Jack. 

You say that you want a meetin'-house for the 
boys in the gulch up there. See “Inasmuch.”— 
Bruce. 

You say the poor-house is a mile ahead. See Come 
Back.—English. 

You say there’s a sameness in my style. See Pallas.— 
Carry 1. 

You say they all have passed away. See Indian Names. 
—Sigourney. 

You say, “Where goest thou?” I cannot tell. See 
Poet’s Simple Faith, The.—Hugo. 

You say yer afther wantin’, ma’am. See “Flat” Con¬ 
tradiction, A.—Smith. 

You schust vants me to dells you apout it, does you? 
See Why Ben Schneider Decides for Prohibition. 
—Hopkins. 

You sea! I resign myself to you also. See Song of 
Myself (You Sea!).—Whitman. 

You see I am a little boy. See Patriotic Boy, A.— 
Goodfellow. 

You see I am but four years old. See Four Years.— 
Kavanaugh. 

You see I’m down to York,—Caleb an’ me. See Aunt 
Deborah Hears “The Messiah.”—Anon. 

You see it first near the dusty road. See Trout-brook, 
The.—W aring. 

You see me here, as one of you hath said. See Marino 
Faliero (Marino Faliero to the Conspirators).— 
Byron. 

You see me, Lord Bassanio, where I stand. See Mer¬ 
chant of Venice, The (Portia’s Speech to Bas¬ 
sanio) .—Shakespeare. 

You see me stand with chalk in hand. See Alphabet 
Practice.—Anon. 

You see now, sister, that I am in no end of a scrape. 
See Ze Moderne English.—Meyers. 

You see, sir, I’m only a super. See Super’s Story, The. 
—Drew. 

You see that bleak old promontory there. See Ga¬ 
zelle and Swan.—Anon. 

You see the gentle water. See Wives of Brixham, The. 
—Anon. 

You see the slender spire that peers. See Days of 
Yore, The.—Thompson. 

You see there were some tiny chicks. See “Tit for 
Tat.”—Denton. 

You see this pebble-stone? It’s a thing I bought. 
See Cock and the Bull, The.—Calverley. 

You see we’re almost just alike. See Twins.—Good- 
fellow. 

You see where the cliffs frown yonder in a line of dingy 
red? See Sir Rupert’s Wife.—Sims. 

You seem to be taking unusual care of yourself. See 
Brudder Bones in Clover.—Anon. 

You seem to me, Romans, to have expressed more 
joy. See Representative Government Trust¬ 
worthy.—Plutarch. 

You sent for me, and I’ve come. If you have nothing 
to say, I go back again. See Metamora to the 
Council.—Anon. 

You shall not be overbold. See Titmouse, The.— 
Emerson. 

You sleep upon your mother’s breast. See Rhyme of 
One, A.—Locker-I.ampson. 

You smiled, you spoke, and I believed. See same. — 
Landor. 

You speak like a boy,—like a boy who thinks the old, 
gnarled oak can be twisted. See Rob Roy 
(Macgregor’s Defence).—Scott. 

You speak of insurrections; bear in mind. See Philip 
van Artevelde (Van Artevelde’s Defence of his 
Rebellion).—Taylor. 

You spotted snakes with double tongue. See Mid¬ 
summer Night’s Dream (Lullaby for Titania).— 
Shakespeare. 

You strange, astonished-looking, angle-faced. See 
Fish, the Man and the Spirit, The.—Hunt. 

You swore you loved me all last June. See Want.— 
Meredith. 

You take a town you cannot keep. See Love s Spite. 
—De Vere. 

You talk to me in parables. See Candor.—Otway. 

You taught me all that Love could be. See Interlude, 
An.—Furley. 


949 





You tell 


AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


You tell me, said Terence (when called to the bar). 
See Challenging the Foreman.—Anon. 

You tell me you’re promised a lover.- See Letter of 
Advice, A.—Praed. 

You tell us in philosophy. See To the Faculty.— 
Webster. -i.t 

You, that at a blush can tell. See Fair Virtue, the 
Mistress of Philarete (Shepherd’s Swain, A).—- 
Wither; 

You that can look through Heaven, and tell the 
stars. See Upon an Honest Man’s Fortune.— 
Fletcher. 

You that on stars do look. See Short Hymn upon the 
Birth of Prince Charles, A.—Wotton. 

You that think love can convey. See To Celia Sing¬ 
ing.—Carew. 

You that will a wonder know. See In Praise of his 
Mistress.—Carew. 

You that would have my books to fare. See His Book¬ 
seller’s Address.—Martial. 

“You think I am dead.” See Talking in their Sleep. 
—Thomas. 

You think I am nervous, stranger? Well, I am! See 
Compensation.—Anon. 

You think I love it! if this nerveless hand. See Bond¬ 
age of Drink, The.—Anon. 

You think my heart is stern and cold. See Reformed 
Man’s Lament, A.—Linden. 

You think that one hour buries another. See Soul¬ 
building (“ You think that,” etc.).—Beecher. 

You too, my mother, read my rhymes. See To My 
Mother.—Stevenson. 

You virgins, that did late despair. See Peace Re¬ 
stored.—Shirley. 

You vouldn’t dink mine frau. See Mine Katrine.— 
Adams. 

You want a bear story! A grizzly bear story! A 
great grizzly bear story. See Bear Story.— 
Joaquin Miller. 

You wear the square, but do you have. See Masonic 
Emblems.—Anon. 

You were actually wrecked, then, upon a desert island. 
See Modern Robinson Crusoe, The.—Anon. 

You were always a dreamer, Rose-red Rose. See Rose 
will Fade, A.—Sigerson. 

You were eavesdropping at that door. See Martin 
Chuzzlewit (Unsuccessful Attempt to Raise the 
Wind, An).—Dickens. 

You who capture hearts in plenty. See Valentine to 
a Flirt.—Carmen. 

You who dread the cares and labors. See Last Land¬ 
lord, The.—Allen. 

You, who hold in grace and honor. See Song of 
Hiawatha, The. An English Criticism.— (Punch.) 

You who to the rounded prime. See same. —Riley. 

You, who would with wanton art. See To the Cat¬ 
bird.—Anon. 

You will come, my bird, Bonita? See Juanita.— 
Miller. . 

You will tell us a story, won’t you, auntie? See Aunt 
Ellen’s Hatchet.—Anon. 

You wish to apply for the place which I advertised. 
See Domestic Wanted, A.—Denison. 

You wish to be a lawyer, John—well, I’d not say a 
word. See Sound Advice.—Anon. 

You Wi’yam, come ’ere, sah, dis instance. Wut dat 
you got under dat box? See Kentucky Philosophy. 
—Robertson. 

You would have come last night if you had known. 
See What the Crickets Said.—Dallas. 

You yourself are much condemned to have an itching 
palm. See Julius Caesar*—Shakespeare. 

You’d admire my city sweetheart. See Town and 
Country.—Collins. 

“You’d better put them down on a piece of paper,” 

said Mrs. S-. See Phenomenal Memory, A.— 

Anon. 

You’d scarce expect a boy like me. See Little Speaker, 
The.—Anon. 

You’d scarce expect one of my age to plead for tem¬ 
perance on the stage. See My First Speech.—Anon. 

You’d scarce expect one of my age to speak in public 
on the stage. See Heroic Medley.—Page. 

You’d scarce expect one of my age to speak in public 
on the stage. See Lines Written for a School 
Declamation.—Everett. 

You’d scarce expect one of my age to speak in public 
on the stage. See Young Critic, The.—Kav- 
anaugh. 

“You’d scarce expect one of my age to speak upon a 
public stage.” See Johnny’s Advice.—“Bob 
o’Link.” 


You’ll bury me, my mother, just beneath the haw¬ 
thorn fe shade. See May Queen, The (New Year’s 
Eve).—Tennyson. 

You’ll love me yet!—and I can tarry. See Pippa 
Passes (You’ll Love me Yet).—Browning. 

Young Agnes stood before her judge. See Agnes the 
Martyr.—Murray. 

Young America, indeed! See Young America.—King. 

Young Augustus Jones and Miss Clara Brussels never 
speak any more. See Nutting Expedition, A.— 
Anon. 

Young bashful Johnny loved sweet May. See Bash¬ 
ful Johnny.—Gillette. 

Young Ben he was a nice young man. See Faithless 
Sally Brown.—Hood. 

Young Billy hasn’t any ma. See Orphan Billy.—Bur¬ 
dick. 

Young bride,—a wreath for thee. See Wedding Gifts. 
—Tupper. 

Young Cupid strung his bow one day. See Cupid at 
Court.—Peck. ->■ 

Young Dandelion on a hedge-side. See Young Dan¬ 
delion.—Craik. 

Young folks of the convention! It has long been the 
custom for teachers to meet. See Scholars’ Con¬ 
vention, The.—May. 

Young friends, to whom life’s early days. See Be 
True.—Anon. 

“Young, gay, and fortunate!”. Each yields a theme. 
See Night Thoughts (Narcissa).—Young. 

Young Hardupp vowed a mighty vow. See Bagged 
the Wrong Bird.—Lyons. 

Young Harringford; or, The “Goodwood Plunger.” 
See “There Were Ninety and Nine.”—Davis. 

Young Henry was as brave a youth. See Love and 
Glory.—Dibdin. 

Young Jack he was a journey-man. See Roving 
Journey-man, The.—Anon. 

Young Jamie lo’ed me weel. See Auld Robin Gray.— 
Barnard. 

Young Jem at noon returned from school. See James 
and the Shoulder of Mutton.—Taylor 

Young Jessica sat all the day. See Young Jessica.— 
Moore. 

Young Johnstone and the young Col’nel. See Young 
Johnst one.—Anon. 

Young Julius Jones loved Susan Slade. See Practical 
Young Woman, A.—Russell. 

Young ladies and young gentlemen: Some of you 
perhaps have read that weird and mournful story. 
See Character the Basis of Credit.—Anon. 

Young ladies, I have a few words to say to you. See 
Boy’s Address to Young Ladies, A.—Anon. 

Young Lady Margaret sits in her bower. See Etin the 
Forester.—Anon. 

Young Love with sorry draggled wings. See Usurper, 
A.—Anon. 

“Young man proposed to me last night.” See Her 
Answer.—Anon. 

Young men! Let then obleness of your mind impel 
you to its improvement. See same. —Howard. 

Young men of America! You on whom rests the 
future of the Republic! See Devotion to Duty.— 
Shelley. 

Young men, you are the architects of your own 
fortunes. See Advice to Young Men.—Porter. 

Young Neuha plunged into the deep. See Island, 
The (Sea-cave, The).—Byron. 

Young Nora McGuire in humble attire. See Nora 
McGuire’s Lovers.—Whitehead. 

Young people think, were they wed they’d be free. 
See Domestic Tempest, A.—Anon. 

Young Radspinner and Lilian Deusenbury had long 
been lovers. See Woman’s Love.—Anon. 

Young Roger came tapping at Dolly’s window. See 
Roger and Dolly.—( Blackwood .) 

Young Roger of the mill. See Young Roger of the 
Valley.—Anon. 

Young Rory O’More courted Kathleen Bawn. See 
Rory O’More; or. Good Omens.—Lover. 

Young Sir Guyon proudly said. See Riquet of the 
Tuft (Queen’s Song).-—Brooke. 

Young Sophy leads a life without alloy. See Little 
Sophy by the Seaside.-—Turner. 

Young Spoonogle never knows when to leave when he 
calls on a young lady. See Tiresome Caller, A.— 
Anon. 

Young Stirps as any lord is proud. See True Nobility. 
—Lessing. 

Young Timothy crept to the old meadow bars. See 
Young Timothy and the Forget-me-nots.— 
Thomson. 


950 








FIRST LINE INDEX 


Z-z-z-z-z-z 


Young to the end through sympathy with youth. See 
James McCosh.—Bridges. 

Young Tommie was a laddie. See Forgetful Tommie. 
—Richards. 

Young Travers, who had been engaged to a girl. See 
Mr. Travers’s First Hunt.—Davis. 

Young Turkey Gobbler, with highly arched head. See 
Thanksgiving Dinner, A.—Bryant. 

Young Vincent was a noble boy. See Story of Good 
Little Vincent.—-Smiley. 

Young warbler of the spring! See To a Robin.—Anon. 

Young women! don’t be fond of killing. See Advice to 
Young Women; or. The Rose and Strawberry.— 
Pindar. 

Youngest descendant of a glorious line. See To 
Admiral George Dewey.—Vaughan. 

Your beauty, ripe and calm and fresh. See To a 
Mistress Dying.—Davenant. 

"Your charge against Mr. Barker, the artist here,” said 
the Magistrate. See Mr. Barker’s Picture.— 
Adeler. 

Your coming is timely, oh son of Hur. See Ben-Hur 
(Ben-Hur and Iras).—Wallace. 

Your eyen two wol slee me sodenly. See Merciles 
Beaute.—Chaucer. 

Your eyes are—but I cannot tell. See To a Friend.— 
Gowdy. 

Your favorite picture rises up before me. See Millais’s 
“Huguenots.”—( London Spectator .) 

Your feathers are ruffled, your beak’s rather long. See 
Dickie-bird! Dickie-bird!—Anon. 

Your ghost will walk, you lover of trees. See “De 
Gustibus.”—-Browning. 

Your grace shall pardon me, I will not back. See 
King John (Speech of the Dauphin).—Shake¬ 
speare. 

Your hands lie open in the long fresh grass. See 
Silent Noon.—Rossetti. 

Your hat is too big for your head, Martin Lee. See 
Contentment Better than Riches.—Anon. 

Your hay it is mowed, and your corn is reaped. See 
Harvest Home.—Dryden. 

Your heart is a music-box, dearest! See Song.— 
Osgood. 

Your highness of Castile. See Speech of the Grand 
Rabbi, Moses Ben Habib, to Ferdinand and 
Isabella.—Hugo. 

Your highness sent for me? See Way to Conquer, The. 
—Procter. 

Your Honor, I ha’n’t got a word to say in my defense. 
See “Attempted Suicide.”—Frost. 

Your honours, and you, gentlemen of the jury; Permit 
me to remind you of the importance of this trial. 
See In Defence of the British Soldiers.—Quincy. 

“Your horse is faint, my King, my lord! your gallant 
horse is sick.” See Lord of Butrago, The.—Lock¬ 
hart. 

Your house is built on holy ground. See New House; 
Old Home.—Chadwick. 

Your letter, lady, came too late. See More Cruel than 
War.—Hawkins. 

Your letter was received, dear John, I write as you 
request. See Married Love-letter, A.—Anon. 

Your majesty, Louvois would crave an interview. See 
Louis XIV and his Minister.—Doyle. 

Your mother thinks that perhaps it would be better 
for you. See Eugene Field to his Children.—Field. 

Your motions all are sweet and full of grace. See To 
the Cigarette Girl.—H. F. H. 

Your name is Mister Reporter? Eh! See Two Christ¬ 
mas Eves.—Emerson. 

Your pardon, gentle folks all—I fear I am rather late. 
See Trip to Blankville, A.—Anon. 

Your picture smiles as first it smiled. See Amulet, 
The.—Emerson. 

Your pleasures spring like daisies in the grass. See 
Ianthe’s Troubles.—Landor. 

Your proud eyes give me their wearied splendour. See 
Disillusion.—Wilkins. 

Your resolution is very sudden, Mr. Downright. See 
Poor Relation, The.—Anon. 

Your threats how vain, Corregidor. See Ballad of 
Manila Bay, A.—Roberts. 

Your tiny picture makes me yearn. See Christie’s 
Portrait.—Massey. 

"Your train is thirty minutes late!” See That Whistle 
Saved My Life.—Bingham. 

“Your walk is lonely, blue-eyed Grace.” See Grace 
and her Friends.—Lareom. 

Your wedding-ring wears thin, dear wife; ah, summers 
not a few. See Worn Wedding-ring, The. 
Bennett, 


You’re a kind woman, Nan! ay, kind and true! See 
Nell.—Buchanan. 

You’re a mean, hateful girl—I don’t like you. See 
Breakfast.—Rook. 

You’re a nice looking plum, Johnson. See Awful 
State, An.—Anon. 

You’re a rum ’un to look at, you are! See Pickwick 
Papers, The (Job Trotter’s Secret).—Dickens. 

You’re an impertinent fellow! I say, you’re an 
insolent and impertinent fellow. See “I Know a 
Maiden Fair to See.”—Moore. 

You’re fond of astronomy, Johnson, are you not? See 
Bones on Astronomy.—Anon. 

You’re going out to tea today. See Going to Aunt 
Ruth’s to Tea.—Anon. 

You’re going to build a new barn. See Building of the 
Barn, The.—Bingham. 

You’re going to leave the homestead, John. See 
Leaving the Homestead.—Anon. 

You’re my friend : I was the man the Duke spoke to. 
See Flight of the Duchess, The.-—Browning. 

You’re not so big as you were then. See To a Little 
Brook.—Field. 

You’re on the sea of life, boys. See “Don’t Give up the 
Ship.”—Hunt. 

You’re right, sir, I ain’t much to look at, but I ain’t 
a bad ’un to go. See Soft-hearted Bill. — 
Sapte 

You’re surprised that, I ever should say so? See 
Whistling in Heaven.—Anon. 

“You’re the first girl I ever kissed,” he said with beam¬ 
ing eyes. See Before She Thought.-—Shirley. 

You’s as stiff an’ as cold as a stone. See Dead Pussy 
Cat, The.—Anon. 

Youth and childhood are the seasons. See Exhibition 
Day.—Doolittle. 

Youth that pursuest, with such eager pace. See 
Youth, that Pursuest.—Milnes. 

Youth’s gay springtime scarcely knowing. See 
Pilgrim, The.—Schiller. 

You’ve all read many a thrilling tale. See Galesburg 
Fire Department.—Smiley. ► 

You’ve called on me to make a speech. See His 
Speech.—Anon. 

You’ve called to see Jack, I suppose, sir; sit down. See 
Under the Wheels.—Carleton. 

You’ve come to see the dead face of your king. See 
Crusaders, The.—Murray. 

You’ve heard, kind friends, I have no doubt. See 
Valedictory.—Kavanaugh. 

You’ve heard o’ Measter Tupper? well, I’ve heard on un 
too. See Proverbeel Feelossify.—“Agrikler.” 

You’ve heard the fable, “Mouse and Pussy.” See 
Fred’s First Speech.—Doolittle. 

You’ve heard ub de early closing movement, Johnson. 
See Bones on Early Closing.—Anon. 

You’ve heerd about that time, say havn’t you, when 
Vix. See Bo.—Meyers. 

You’ve never seen Winning Cup [or Kissing Cupl have 
you? Stroll around to the paddock, my lord. 
See Winning Cup’s Race.—Rae-Brown. 

You’ve quizzed me often and puzzled me long. See 
Boy to the School-master, The.—Wheeler. 

You’ve read of a spider, I suppose. See Flower-spider 
The.—Cary. 

“You’ve saved my life,” the master said. See Three 
Wishes, The.—Anon. 

You’ve seen the snowy lilies. See Chinese Lilies.— 
Pollard. 

Yusef Ben Hassen slept and dreamed a dream. See 
Ben Hassen’s Dream.—Messaros. 


z 

Zack Bumstead uster flosserfize. See Philosopher, A. 
—Foss. 

Zekiel gets the “chores” done. See Courtin’ in the 
Country.—McBride. 

Zekle crep’ up, quite unbeknown. See Biglow Papers, 
The (Courtin’, The).—Lowell. 

Zooks! I must woo the Muse today. See Family 
Poetry.—Barham. 

Zounds! I believe the house is deserted! See 
Between Two Stools.—Kavanaugh. 

Zounds! sir, I will not hear a word about it. See 
Utility of Booing, The.—Macklin. 

Zuleika is fled away. See Zuleika.-—O’Shaughnessy. 
Z-z-z-z-z-z! A monster of iron, steel and brass stand¬ 
ing on the slim iron rails. See As the Pigeon Flies. 
—Lewis. 


951 








APPENDIX 










APPENDIX 


The following lists do not claim to be complete, but as suggestions they will be found useful. 
All the titles, together with many others equally appropriate, are included in the Title Index. 
When ff. follows the title, one or more of the succeeding titles will be found suitable. 

I. SPECIAL DAYS. 

ARBOR DAY. 


Acorn Lesson, An. 

Airs of Spring, The. 

All Mankind are Trees. 

Among the Redwoods. 

Among the Trees. 

Angler’s Trysting-tree, The. 

Answer of the Gardener, The. 

Apple Blossom, The, ff. 

April, ff. 

Arab to the Palm, The. 

Arbor Day, ff. 

Arbutus. 

As You Like It (sets.). 

Aspects of the Pines. 

At Dame Nature’s Feet. 

Atheist and Acorn, The. 

Autocrat of the Breakfast-table, The (Talks on Trees). 
Autumn Leaves, The. 

Baby Seed Song. 

Bare Boughs and Buds. 

Beautiful Spring, ff. 

Beautiful Trees. 

Beech Tree’s Petition, The. 

Bell-flower Tree, The. 

Birch Tree, The. 

Blackberry-bush, The. 

Blossom, The, ff. 

Blushing Maple Tree, The. 

Boys and the Apple Tree, The. 

Bramble Flower. 

Brave Little Flower, The. 

Brave Old Oak, The. 

Brier. 

Britannia’s Pastorals (Scented Grove, The). 

.British Oak, The. 

Bud, The. 

“Bud will soon become a flow r er. The."’ 

Bunch of Flowers, A. 

Cadica (Seed-time and Harvest). 

California’s Giant Trees. 

Cedars of Lebanon, The. 

Celestial Passion, The (Voice of the Pine, The). 
Chanted Calendar, A. 

Charms of Rural Life, The. 

Charter Oak, The. 

Cherries, ff. 

Chestnut-tree, The. 

Child and the Flowers, The. 

Child and the Lily, The. 

Child to a Rose, A. 

Choosing a State Tree. 

Chosen Tree, The. 

Chrysanthemums. 

Cocoa-tree, The. 

Comfort of the Trees, The. 

Coming of Spring, The. 

Consider the Lilies, ff. 

Convention of Michigan Trees. 

Corn, ff. 

Cotton Plant, The. 

Counting the Seeds. 

Country Life. 

Crocus, ff. , _ 

Cynic of the Woods, The. 

Dedicatory Exercises. 

Discourse on Trees, A. 

Drooping-willow, The. 

Earliest Spring. 

Early Miss Crocus. 

Early Primrose, The. 


Early Spring. 

Edwin the Fair (Wind in the Pines, The). 

Elm, The, ff. 

Enoch Arden (Tropical Scene, A). 

Evangeline (Primeval Forest, The). 

Excursion, The ( sels.). 

Faerie Queene, The (sels.). 

Fern and the Moss, The, ff. 

Few Rules for Tree Planters, A. 

Field Sweet-brier, The. 

Fields of Corn, The. 

Fir-tree, The. 

First Crocus, The. 

First Flowers, The. 

First Pussy Willows, The. 

Flax Flower, The. 

Flower, The, ff. 

For Arbor Day. 

Forest, The, ff. 

Garden, The, ff. 

Girt Woak Tree that’s in the Dell, The. 

Gourd and the Palm, The. 

Green Things Growing. 

Greenwood, The. 

Grove of Curious Trees, A, ff. 

Happy Trees. 

Hidden Uses of Plants. 

Historic Tree of Chicago, The, ff. 

Holly-tree, The. 

House of the Trees, The. 

How the Oak Grew. 

How to Plant Trees—What to Plant. 

In April. 

In Green Old Gardens. 

In Memoriam (sels.). 

In the Black Forest. 

In the Golden Birch. 

In the Grass. 

In the Meadow. 

In the Orchard. 

In the Spring. 

In the Woods. 

Inscription for the Entrance to a Wood. 
Institution of Arbor Day, The. 

Ivy, The. 

Larch and the Oak, The. 

Laurel, The, ff. 

“Leafless are the trees,” etc., ff. 

Leaves, The, ff. 

Legend of the Aspen, A, ff. 

Lessons from Nature about Trees. 

Lessons from Scripture Flowers. 

Lessons of Nature, The, ff. 

Lilac, The, ff. 

Lilies and Roses. 

Lily, The, ff. . 

Lines Written in Early Spring. 

Little and Great. 

Little Brown Seed, The, ff. 

Little by Little. 

Little Leaf’s Sacrifice, The, ff. 

Little Peach Blossom. 

Little Pine Tree, The. 

Little Plant, The, ff. 

Little Seed-cells, The, ff. 

Live Oak, The. 

London Plane-tree, A. 

Lonely Pine, The. 

Man and Nature. . „ 

‘ 'Man does not plant a tree for himself, A. 

Masqimof Pandora, The (Voices of the Forest). 
May’s Apple-tree. 


955 



AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Miracle Workers, The. 

Miss Willow. 

Modern Painters ( sels.). 

Mountain to the Pine, The. 

Music of Nature, The. 

My Strawberry. 

My Window Ivy. 

Nature, ff. 

New York State Program for Arbor Day, 1889. 
No Flowers. 

Noble Old Elm, The. 

Norwood (Anxious Leaf, The). 

Oak, The, ff. 

Of Solitude (“Hail, old patrician trees,” etc.) 

Old Apple-tree, The. 

Old Flower Beds, The. 

Olive Tree, The. 

Orchard, The, ff. 

Orion (In Forest Depths). 

Our Casuarina Tree. 

Our Garden. 

Palm-tree, The, ff. 

Parlement of Fowles (Trees, Flowers, and Birds). 
Pine Tree, The, ff. 

Pipe of Pan, The. 

Plant a Tree, ff. 

Plea of the Trees, The. 

Poplar, The, ff. 

Popular Poplar Tree, The. 

Program—At the Tree. 

Pussy Willow. 

Race of the Flowers, The. 

Raven and the Oak, The. 

Return of Spring. 

‘ ‘Scatter in Spring-time a handful of seeds.” 
Scripture Etchings for Arbor Day. 

Seasons, The: Spring (sets.). 

Seed, The, ff. 

Shepheardes Calendar, The (sels.). 

Snowdrop, The, ff. 

Some Famous Trees. 

Song: “For the tender beech.”—Peacock. 

Song for Tree-planting. 

Song of Arbor Day. 

Song of Nature. 

Song of Palms. 

Song of Spring, A. 

Song of the Grass Blades. 

Song of the Maple. 

Song of the Palm. 

Song of the Pine, The. 

Sower, The. ff. 

Spice-tree, The. 

Spring, ff. ' 

Study of Trees and Flowers, The. 

Talking in their Sleep. 

Tears of the Poplars, The. 

Three Trees, ff. 

To a Maple Seed. 

To a Pine-tree. 

To an Elm. 

To Primroses, etc 
To Spring. 

To the Fir-tree. 

Tottie’s Tree-talk. 

Touch of Nature, A. 

Trailing Arbutus. 

Tree, The, ff. 

Under the Leaves. 

Under the Old Elm, ff. 

Under the Willows. 

Up! Up! My Friend, and Quit Your Books. 
Venturesome Buds, The. 

Voice in the Wild Oak, The. 

Voice of a Leaf, The. 

Voice of Spring, The. 

Voice of the Grass, The. 

Voice of the Pines, The. 

Voices of the Trees, ff. 

Waiting to Grow. 

Waking of Spring, The. 

Waking Year, The. 

Washington Sequoia, The. 

Weed’s Mission, The. 

What the April Breeze Said to the Trees. 

What the Burdock was Good For. 

What the Daisy Said. 

When we Plant a Tree. 

White Anemone, The. 

White Rose and the Poppy, The. 

Why ye Blossoms Cometh before ye Leafe. 

Wild Apples. 

Willow, The. ff. 

Winged Seeds. 


Woodland Hymn, A, ff. 
Woodman, Spare that Tree. 
Worship in the Wild-wood. 
Yew Tree, The, ff. 


Special Books. (Containing additional selections.) 
AD — DFR — HSS 1 — HS — LLC — PEO 


BIRD DAY. 

Address to a Robin. 

Address to the Woodlark. 

Albatross [.The], 

Alexander and Campaspe (Animate Nature). 
American Eagle, The.—^Thompson. 

Anecrontics (Swallow, The). 

Aurora Leigh (“But then the thrushes sang”). 

Ballad of the Thrush, The. 

Bank-swallows, The. 

Bird, The, ff. 

Black Cock, The. 

Blackbird, The, ff. 

Blind Bird’s Nest, The. 

Bluebird, The, ff. 

Blue-jay, The. 

Bob White. 

Bobolink, The, ff. 

Boy and the Bird, The. 

Boy and the Skylark, The 
Breeding Lark. 

Britannia’s Pastorals (Description of a Musical Consort 
of Birds, A). 

Broken Wing, The. 

Brother Robin. 

Brown Thrush, The. 

Burial of the Linnet, The. 

Butcher-bird, The. 

Caged Bird, A. 

Canary, The, ff. 

Captive Bird, The. 

Captive Humming-bird, The. 

Cardinal Bird, The. 

Caw! Caw! Caw! 

Chick-a-d e-dee. 

Chickadee. 

Chickens, The, ff. 

Chimney Nest, The. 

Chimney Swallows. 

Cockatoos, The. 

Complaint of the Bird in a Dark Room. 

Concert in the Wood, The. 

Cranes of Ibycus, The 
Crow’s Children, The. 

Cuckoo, The, ff. 

Cunning Old Crow, The. 

Curlew’s Call, A. 

Cynthia (Address to the Nightingale) 

Dead Bird, The. 

Departure of the Swallow, The, ff. 

Dickey-bird, The. 

Dickie-bird! Dickie-bird! 

Don’t Kill the Birds. 

Dove, The, ff. 

Doves of Mendon, The, ff. 

Eagle, The, ff. 

Early Bird, The, ff. 

Egg a Chicken, An. 

Eggs and Birds. 

Emperor’s Bird’s-nest, The. 

Empty Nest, The. 

English Sparrow, The. 

Envious Wren, The. 

Epitaph on a Robin Redbreast, An. 

Faithful Bird, The. 

Falcon, The.—Stoddard. 

Farewell of the Birds. 

Farmer’s Song-bird. The. 

Feathered Name-speakers. 

Feather’s Message. A. 

Finished Nest, A. 

Fire-hangbird’s Nest, The. 

First Blue-bird, The. 

First Robin, The. 

First Skylark of Spring, The. 

First Swallow, The. 

Flicker on the Fence. The. 

Flight of the Birds, The. 

Flight of the Geese, The. 

Flight of the Wild Geese. 

Flock of Birds, A, ff. 

Foolish Little Robin. 

Fox and the Crow, The. 

Golden Crown Sparrow of Alaska. 





APPENDIX 


Golden Orioles, The. 

Golden Robin’s Nest, The. 

Grateful Swan, The. 

Gray Swan, The. 

Gray Forest Eagle, The. 

Great Blue Heron, The. 

Great White Owl, The. 

Green Linnet, The. 

Grey Linnet, The. 

Happy Bird, The. 

Hast thou Heard the Nightingale? 

Herald Crane, The. 

Hermit Thrush, The. 

Hidden Songster, The. 

How Two Birdies Kept House in a Shoe. 
Humming-bird, The, ff. 

“I had a little yellow bird.” 

If I Were a Bird. 

In the Lilac-bush. 

It is never too Late to Mend (Lark in the Gold-fields. 
The). 

Jackdaw, The. 

Jaybird, The. 

Jenny Wren and Robin Redbreast. 

Kingfisher, The. 

Kittiwakes, The. 

Lament of a Mocking-bird. 

Lark, The, ff. 

Last Robin, The. . 

Lessons from Birds and Bees. 

Lines to the Stormy Petrel. 

Little Bird, The, ff. 

Little Brown Wren, The. 

Little Brown Bird, A. 

Little Mud-sparrows, The. 

Little Tomtit, The. 

Loon, The, ff. 

Lost: Three Little Robins. 

Magpie, The, ff. 

Maryland Yellow-throat. The. 

Master Sky-lark (Sky-lark’s Song, The). 

Meadow Lark, The, ff. 

Midsummer Night’s Dream (Birds). 

Mocking-bird, The. 

Mother Bird, The. 

My Aviary. 

My Catbird. 

My Owl. 

My Robin. 

My Thrush. 

Naughty Crow, The. 

Nest Eggs, ff. 

Nightingale, The, ff. 

Night-swans, The. 

O Lark of the Summer Morning. 

Ode to a Nightingale. 

Of the Child with the Bird at the Bush. 

On a Thrush Singing in Autumn. 

On the Death of Mrs. Throckmorton’s Bullfinch. 

Only a Sparrow. 

Origin of the Peacock, The 
Orioles, The. 

Our Oriole Neighbors. 

Our Sir Robin. 

Oven-bird, The. 

Owl, The, ff. 

Pairing Time Anticipated. 

Paradise of Birds, The. 

Parlement of Foules, The. 

Parrot, The, ff. 

Pelican Island ( sels .). 

Peter-bird, The. 

Phoebe-bird, The. 

Phoenix and the Turtle, The. 

Phyllyp Sparowe. 

Pigeon House, The. 

Pine Tree Academy, The. 

Poet and Lark. 

Poor Robin. 

Pretty Little Blue Bird. 

Raven, The.—Coleridge. 

Raven’s Tomb, The. 

Red Bird, The. 

Redbreast Chasing the Butterfly, The. 

Redwing’s Song. 

Return of the Birds, The. 

Return of the Swallows, The. 

Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The (Love and 
Prayer). 

Robert of Lincoln. 

Robin, The, ff. 

Rook and the Sparrow, The. 

Rule for Birds’ Nesters, A. 


Sandpiper, The, ff. 

Scarlet Tanager, The. 

Sea Gulls. 

Sea-birds, ff. 

Sea-gull, The. 

Sea-mews in Winter Time. 

Seasons, The (sels.). 

September Robin, A. 

Sidera (Philomela). 

Silver Bird’s Nest, The. 

Sing on. Blithe Bird! 

Sing, Pretty Birds. 

Sjng-away Bird, The. 

Sir Lark and King Sun. 

Sir Robin. 

Sister and Bluebirds. 

Skylark, The, ff. 

Snow-bird. The, ff. 

Snow-filled Nest, The. 

Song of Hiawatha, The (Hiawatha’s'.Childhood). 

Song of the Sparrow, The. 

Song: The Dove. 

Song: The Lark. 

Song: The Owl. 

Song the Oriole Sings, The. 

Song-bird of the Princess, The. 

Song-sparrow, The. 

Sonnet: To a Bird that Haunted the Waters of Laaken 
in the Winter. 

Sonnet: To the Redbreast. 

Sorrowful Sea-gull, The. 

Sospiri di Roma (White Peacock, The). 

Southern Snow-bird, The. 

Sparrow, The, ff. 

Spring Lilt, A. 

Spring Song of the Birds. 

Starling, The. 

Story of a Blackbird. 

Swallow, The, ff. 

Three Little Nest-birds. 

Thrush’s Nest, The, ff. 

Thyrsis (Departure of the Cuckoo). 

Time of the Singing of Birds, The. 

Titmouse, The. 

To a Crow. 

To a Dead Bird. 

To a Humming-bird, ff. 

To a Nightingale. 

To a Redbreast. 

To a Robin. 

To a Sea-bird. 

To a Skylark. 

To a Swallow Building under our Eaves. 

To a Waterfowl. 

To an Oriole. 

To my Canary Bird. 

To the Cat-bird. 

To the Cuckoo. 

To the First Robin. 

To the Humming-bird. 

To the Lark. 

To the Man-of-war-bird. 

To the Mocking-bird. 

To the Nightingale. 

To the Redbreast. 

Turtle Dove’s Nest, The. 

Two Little Magpies Sat on a Wall. 

Two Old Crows. 

Two Robin Redbreasts. 

Two Wise Owls. 

Veery, The, ff. 

Verses to a Robin Red-breast, etc. 

Voice of the Dove, The. 

Voices of the Wildwood. 

Wakeful Birds, The. 

Waking of the Lark, The. 

Warble for Lilac-time. 

Warble Thy Lays to Me. 

Watching for Crumbs. 

What Robin Told. 

What the Birds Said. 

What the Quail Says. 

What the Robin Can Tell. 

What the Snow-birds Said. 

When the Swallows. 

Whip-poor-will. 

White Birds, The. 

White Gull, The. 

Whitethroat. The, ff. 

Who Stole the Bird’s Nest? 

Why the Robin’s Breast is Red. 

Winter Thrush, The. 

Widow-bird, A. 




AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Winged Worshippers, The. 
Woodpecker and the Dove, The.- 
Wounded Curlew, The. 

Wren’s Nest, The. 

Yellow-bird. _ 


Special Books: GN—LLC—PoR—SN 

CHRISTMAS. 

Adoration of the Wise Men. 

Ah Yet’s Christmas. 

Angelic Song, The. 

Annunciation, The. 

Archbishop’s Christmas Gift, The. 

At Bethlehem, ff. 

At Christmas Time, ff. 

Baby Zulma’s Christmas Carol. 

Ballad: “Good Christmas Bells, I pray you.” 

Ballad of Calnan’s Christmas, The. 

Bell of Innisfare, The. 

Ben-Hur (Angel and the Shepherds, The). 

Bessie’s Christmas Dream. 

Bethlehem-town. 

Billy’s Santa Claus Experience. 

Birds of Bethlehem, The. 

Carol: “We bring the holly.” 

Ceremonies for Christmas. 

Child, The.— 1 Tabb. 

Christ Child, The. 

Christkindlein. 

Christmas, ff. 

Christ’s Birthday. 

Coming of Santa Claus, The. 

Darling of the Year, The. 

Das Krist Kindel. 

Day before Christmas, The. 

Day of Days, The. 

December.—Doane. 

Der Nighd behind Grisdmas. 

Dickey’s Christmas. 

Dot’s Christmas; or, The Sober Hat. 

Dubious “Old Kriss,” A. 

Earl Sigurd’s Christmas Eve. 

Early Christmas Morning. 

Earthly Paradise, The (Christmas Carol). 

Echoes from Bethlehem. 

Exercise around the Christmas Tree. 

Father Christmas. 

First Christmas, The. 

First Nowell, The. 

For Christmas Day, ff. 

Friar’s Christmas, The. 

Friend at Court, A. 

Gabe’s Christmas Eve. 

Gay Christmas Ball, A. 

Guided by a Star. 

Hang up the Baby’s Stocking. 

Happy Christmas, A. 

Holly, The. 

How Christmas Came to Crappy Shute. 

How I Saw Santa Claus. 

How Santa Claus Came to Simpson’s Bar. 

How the Celebrated Miltiades Peterkin Paul Got the 
Better of Santa Claus. 

Hymn of the Nativity, A. 

In Memoriam (s els.). 

In Santa Claus Land. 

Jean Noel. 

Jest ’fore Christmas. 

Joe’s Search for Santa Claus. 

Jolly Old Saint Nicholas. 

Kid Sixey’s Christmas. 

Kindergarten Christmas, A. 

King Christmas. 

Kittyboy’s Christmas. 

Kris Kringle’s Surprise. 

Kriss Kringle, ff. 

Let Santa Claus In. 

Let the Angels Ring the Bells. 

Letter to Santa Claus. 

Light in the Window, The. 

Light of the World, The (At Bethlehem). 

Little Charlie’s Christmas. 

Little Christmas Tree, The. 

“Little Feller’s Stockin’, The.” 

Little Girl’s Christmas, A. 

Little Gottlieb. 

Little Rocket’s Christmas. 

Marmion (Christmas in the Olden Time). 

Marriage of Santa Claus, The. 

Mary the Mother of Jesus. 

Mary’s Cradle Song. 


Merry Christmas, ff. 

Messiah. 

Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus. 

Mr. Kris Kringle. 

Mistletoe Bough, The. 

Mrs. Brownlow’s Christmas Party. 
Mrs. Santa Claus. 

Mt. Pisgah’s Christmas ’Possum. 

My Christmas Card. 

Nativity, The, ff. 

Neighbors of the Christ Night. 

Nell’s Christmas Stocking. 

New Christmas, The. 

New Prince, New Pomp. 

New Santa Claus, A. 

Night after Christmas, The. 

Night before Christmas, The. 

Noel. 

Note to Santa Claus, A. 

.Novel Christmas-tree, A. 

O Little Town of Bethlehem. 

Ode on Christmas. 

Ode on the Birth of our Saviour, An. 
Old Christmas, ff. 

Old Jack Watt’s Christmas. 

Old Santa has Struck. 

Ole Bull’s Christmas. 

“Ole Marster’s” Christmas, The. 

On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity. 
On the Nativity of Christ. 

Orphan’s Dream of Christmas, The. 
Our Christmas. 

Peace of Christmas-time, The. 

Peace on Earth. 

Real Santa Claus, A. 

Russian Christmas, A. 

Sailor Santa Claus, A. 

St. Nicholas, ff. 

Santa and his Reindeer. 

Santa Claus, ff. 

Seeing Santa Claus. 

Short Christmas Performance, A. 

Sing a Song of Christmas. 

Star in the West, The. 

Star of Bethlehem, The. 

Story of Santa Claus, A. 

Strange Child’s Christmas, The. 
Swipesy’s Christmas Dinner. 

Tale of Christmas Eve, A. 

“Then let the holly red be hung.” 
There’s a Tree that Blossoms. 

Three Kings, The.—Longfellow. 

Till Christmas. 

To a Christmas Pudding. 

To Kriss. 

Two Christmas Eves. 

Under the Holly Bough. 

Under the Snow.—Collyer. 

Virgin most Pure, A. 

Visit of Santa Claus, The. 

Watching for Santa Claus. 

Way to Spend Christmas, The. 

What a Christmas Carol Did. 

What is Christmas? 

When Nelly Hangs her Stocking Up. 
When Santa Claus Comes. 

Where is Papa To-night? 

While Shepherds Watched, ff. 

Who Santy-Claus Wuz. 

Why Do Bells of Christmas Ring? 
Widow Brown’s Christmas. 

Ye Ballad of Christmas. 

Yule Log, The. 


Special Books: DFR—HS—LL—LLC—PEO 


DECORATION DAY. 

Abstract of a Grand Army Speech. 

Address at the Dedication of a Memorial Tablet. 
Address at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettys¬ 
burg. 

Address to Northern and Southern Veterans. 

Address to the Soldiers. 

After the Battle, ff. 

Aged Stranger, The. 

Ail Quiet along the Potomac. 

Answering to Roll-call. 

Are we a Nation? 

Army of the Potomac. 

Army on the Potomac, The. 

Army Overcoat, The. 

At Fredericksburg. 


958 









APPENDIX 


At Gettysburg. 

At the Camp-fire. 

Back from the War. 

Back in War Days. 

Band in the Pines, The. 

Barbara Frietchie. 

Battle Flag at Shenandoah. 

Battle Hymn of the Republic. 

Battle of Gettysburg. 

Between the Graves. 

Bivouac by the Rappahannock. 

Bivouac of the Dead, The. 

Blue and the Gray, The. 

Bravest of the Brave. 

Breathe Balmy Airs. 

Cover Them Over. 

Day’s Oration is in Flowers, The. 

Dead Comrade, The. 

Dead Drummer-boy, The. 

Dead on the Field of Honor. 

Dead Soldier, A. 

Dead Soldier-boy, The. 

Dead Trumpeter, The. 

Dead Volunteer, The. 

Decoration Day, ff. 

Dirge for a Soldier. • 

Dirge for One who Fell in Battle. 

Dirge for Two Veterans. 

Dreaming in the Trenches. 

Drummer Boy of Mission Ridge, The. 

Drummer Boy’s Burial. 

Drummer of Company C, The. 

Enlisting as Army Nurse. 

Eve of Decoration Day, The. 

Flowers for the Brave. 

Foes United in Death. 

For Decoration Day. 

For Our Dead. 

General George H. Thomas. 

Gettysburg, ff. 

Grave in Hollywood Cemetery. 

Great -Remembrance, The. 

Heart of the War, The. 

Hero of the Gun, The. 

Hero of the Rank and File, The. 

Heroes. 

Heroes and the Flowers, The. 

Heroes’ Day. The. 

Heroic Deed, The. 

High Tide at Gettysburg, The. 

Honored Dead, The. 

“How many went from happy homes. ’ 

How Sleep the Brave. 

Hymn of Our Armies. 

Immortal Memories. 

Incjdent of ’64, An. 

Incident of the War, An. 

Ingersoll’s Dream of the War. 

John Brown, ff. 

John Bums of Gettysburg. 

Johnston at Shiloh. 

Last Roll-call, The. 

Lee to the Rear. 

Left on the Battle-field. 

Legacy of Grant, The. 

Logan at Peach Tree Creek. 

Lookout Mountain. 

Maine at Gettysburg. 

Major-General John Sedgwick. 

Manassas. 

Man who Wears the Button, The. 

Man with the Musket, The. 

Marching through Georgia. 

Marguerite.—Schroeder. 

Maryland Battalion, The. 

May 30, 1893. 

Memorial Day, ff. 

Men behind the Guns, The. 

Men of the Merrimac, The. 

Men of the North and West. 

Music in Camp. 

National Flag, The. 

Nation’s Dead, The. 

Nation’s Defenders, The. 

New Memorial Day, The. 

Ode for Decoration Day. 

Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration, July 21, 
1865. 

Ode Sung on the Occasion of Decorating the Graves of 
the Confederate Dead. 

Ode Written in 1746. 

Old Canteen. The. 

Old Flag. The. 

Old Glory. . » 


Old Sergeant, The. 

Old Soldier Tramp, The. 

Old Soldier’s Story, The. 

Old Surgeon’s Story, The. 

On Board the Cumberland 
On the Rappahannock. 

On the Shores of Tennessee. 

On the Slain at Chickamauga. 

Our Army and Navy. 

Our Colors at Fort Sumter. 

Our Country, ff. 

Our Country’s Call. 

Our Dead Heroes. 

Our Dead Soldiers. 

Our Fallen Heroes. 

Our Flag, ff. 

Our Heroes, ff. 

Our Heroes’ Graves. 

Our Martyred Dead. 

Our Ranks are Getting Thin. 

Over their Graves. 

Palmetto and the Pine, The. 

Pathetic Incident of the Rebellion, A. 

Patriotic Recitations, ff. 

Patriotism, ff. 

* ‘Peace to the brave who nobly fell.” 

Picket before Bull Run, The. 

Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg. 

Poem Read at the Founding of the Gettysburg Monu¬ 
ment. 

Psalm of the Union, A. 

Regiment’s Return, The. 

Revjew of the Dead. 

Review of the Grand Army. 

Roll-call, The. 

Rusty Sword, The. 

Salute the Flag. 

Second Review of the Grand Army. 

Settin’ the Flags. 

Sheridan’s Ride. 

Sherman on the Veterans. 

Sherman’s March. 

Silent Army of Memorial Day, The. 

Silent Grand Army, The. 

Society of the Army of the Potomac. 

Soldier Boy, The. 

Soldier’s Grave, A. 

Song of Sherman’s Army. 

Song of the Chattahoochee. 

Sons of the Nation. 

Speech at Indianapolis. 

Stand by the Flag. 

Starry Flag, The. 

Stars and Stripes, The. 

Star-spangled Banner. 

Storming of Mission Ridge, The. 

Strewing Flowers on the Graves of Union Soldiers. 
Such is the Death the Soldier Dies. 

Sumter. 

Them Yankee Blankits. 

Thomas at Chickamauga. 

Those Rebel Flags. 

To the Grand Army of the Republic. 

Tramp, Tramp, Tramp. 

Tri-colors, The. 

True Incident of the War, A. 

Uncover to the Flag. 

Uninscribed Monument on One of the Battlefields of 
the Wilderness, An. 

Union of Blue and Gray. 

Unknown Hero, An. 

Veterans, The. 

Vicksburg. 

Voice of the Flag, The. 

Volunteer Soldiers of the Union, The. 

Wagoner of the Alleghanies, The. 

War’s Sacrifice. 

What Saved the Union. 

Whistling Regiment, The. 

Wounded. 

Wounded Soldier, The. 

You Put no Flowers on my Papa’s Grave. 


Special Books: AWB — BAB — BLP — DFR — 
HSS 1—HS — LLC —PAP—PAPm—PEO—TMD 
—TMR 

EASTER. 

Amoretti and Epithalamion (Easter). 

At Easter Time, ff. 

Better Resurrection, A. 

Child’s Easter, A. 

Christ Crucified. 





AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Christ Risen. 

Consider the Lilies, ff. 

Crucifixion, The. 

Cupid’s Easter Composition. 

Dream of Easter, A. 

Easter, ff. 

Fair Easter Lilies. 

First Te Deum, The. 

Flower’s Easter Message, The. 

Glorying in the Cross. 

Grave, The (Resurrection, The). 

‘‘I know that my Redeemer liveth.” 
Immortality, ff. 

In the Cross of Christ I Glory. 

Legend of Easter Eggs, The. 

Legend of the Lily, The. 

Life from Death. 

Light of the World, The (Resurrection, The). 
Mother’s Easter Scarf, The. 

Nellie’s Easter Eggs. 

O Christ our King. 

“O glorious Easter morning.” 

One Easter Day. 

Resurrection, ff. 

Ring, Happy Bells. 

Risen with Christ. 

Sepulcher in the Garden. The. 

Song for the Night of Christ’s Resurrection. 
Song of Easter, A. 

To Keep a True Lent. 

Waiting for Easter. 

Wednesday before Easter. 

Yearly Miracle of Spring, The. 


Special Books: DFR—HS—LL 


FLAG DAY. 

American Flag. The. 

Are we a Nation? 

Banner Betsy Made, The. 

Banner of the Stars, The. 

Banner that Welcomes the World, The. 

Barbara Frietchie. 

Beneath the Flag. 

Betsey’s Battle Flag. 

Birthday of the Stars and Stripes. 

But One Flag for our Country. 

Call to the Colors, The. 

Columbia’s Banner 

Comrades! Join the Flag of Glory. 

Eulogy on Charles Sumner (American Battle-flags). 
Festal Day has Come, The. 

Flag, The, ff. 

Glory mit der Stars and Stripes. 

God save the Flag. 

History of Our Flag. 

My Country’s Flag. 

Name of Old Glory, The. 

National Ensign, The. 

National Flag, The. 

Nothing but Flags. 

Old Flag, The. 

Old Glory. 

One beneath Old Glory. 

Our Banner, ff. 

Our Country’s Flag. 

Our Flag. 

Reverence for the Flag. 

Song of the Union. 

Stand by the Flag. 

Starry Flag, The. 

Star-spangled Banner, The. 

Story of the ‘‘Star Spangled Banner.” 

Stripes and the Stars, The. 

That Starry Flag of Ours. 

Triple Flag Drill. 

Two Banners of America, The. 

Uncover to the Flag. 

Under the Stars and Stripes. 

Viva 1’America. 

Voice of the Flag, The. 

What the Flag Means. 


Special Books: AWB—BAB—BLP—CP — PAP 
PAPm—PEO 


FOURTH OF JULY. 

About Fire-crackers. 

Adams and Jefferson (»e(«.). 

Add Ryman’s Celebrated Fourth of July Oration. 
Addition to the Capitol, The. 


Advice to my Country. 

After the Fourth of July. 

America, ff. 

Appeal for Liberty, An. 

Articles of Confederation, The. 

Aspirations for America. 

Battle Hymn of the Republic. 

Battle of Bennington, The. 

Battle of Bunker Hill, The. 

Battle of Germantown. The. 

Battle of Lexington, The. 

Battle of Trenton. 

Battle Song for Freedom, A. 

Bell of Liberty, The. 

Bell-ringer of ’76, The. 

Biglow Papers, The (Revolutionary Hero, A). 
Birthday of the Republic, The. 

Blessings of Liberty, The. 

Brave Boston Boys. 

Brother Jonathan’s Birthday. 

Brother Jonathan’s Lament for Sister Caroline. 
Building of the Ship, The. 

Bunker Hill, ff. 

Burgoyne’s Surrender. 

Captain Molly at Monmouth. 

Cause of Bunker Hill, The. 

Centennial, ff. 

Character of Washington, The. 

Columbia, ff. 

Concord Hymn. 

Cost of Liberty, The. 

Dawn of the Centennial, The. 

Day after the Fourth, The. 

Day of our Country, The. 

Declaration of Independence, The. 

Dignity of our Nation’s Founders. 

Dome of the Republic, The. 

E Pluribus Unum. 

Eloquence of Revolutionary Periods, The. 
Emancipation from British Dependence. 

Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson. 

Eutaw Springs. 

First Battle of the Revolution, The, ff. 

For Independence, 1776. 

For the Fourth. 

Fourth of July, The, ff. 

Free America. 

Freedom, ff. 

General Warren to his Troops at the Battle of Bunker 
Hill. 

General Warren’s Death. 

Ghost of an Old Continental, The. 

Glorious Fourth, The. 

God Save our Native Land. 

God Save the Nation. < 

Goddess of Liberty, The. 

God’s Country. 

Good Country. A. 

Grandfather Watts’ Private Fourth. 

Grandmother’s Story of Bunker Hill Battle. 

Greatest Fruit of the Declaration. 

Growth of the American Republic. 

Hail. America. 

Hail, Columbia. 

Hans von Spiegel’s Fourth of July Oration. 

Hero Woman, The. 

Hezekiah Stubbins’ Oration, July Fourth. 

Hills were Made for Freedom, The. 

History of the United States ($els.). 

How we Became a Nation. 

Howe’s Masquerade. 

Hurrah for the Fourth av July. 

Hymn for America, A. 

Independence, ff. 

Influence of American Freedom. 

International Ode. 

Johnny’s Fourth of July. 

Jonathan to John. 

Joshua of 1776, The. 

Keep the Holidays. 

Keller’s American Hymn. 

Last Appendix to “Yankee Doodle,” The. 

Law and Faith and Freedom. 

Lay of the Last Minstrel (Breathes there the Man). 
Lesson of the Revolution, The. 

Liberty, ff. 

Little Patriot, The. 

Love of Country, The. 

Love thou thy Land. 

Mad Anthony’s Charge. 

Major Jones’ Fourth of July Oration. d 

Merchants of the Revolution. 

Mine Own Country. 

Minute Men of Northboro, The. 









APPENDIX 


Molly Pitcher. 

My Country, ff. 

My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s (Fourth of July in 
Jonesville). 

National, ff. 

Nation’s Birthday, The. 

New Liberty Bell, The. 

New National Hymn, A. 

Nineteenth of April, 1775, The. 

Oath of Freedom, The. 

Ode on the Celebration of the Battle of Bunker Hill. 
Ode Read at the One Hundredth Anniversary of the 
Fight at Concord Bridge. 

Ode Sung in the Town Hall, Concord, July 4, 1857. 
Ode to Independence Hall, An. 

Old-fashioned Fourth, An. 

On the Declaration of Independence. 

One Country, ff. 

Our Centennial Celebration. 

Our Country, ff. 

Our Land. 

Our National Anniversary. 

Our Nationality. 

Our Navy. 

Our Own Dear Land. 

Our Responsibility as a Nation. 

Our Whole Country. 

Patriot Sons of Patriot Sires. 

Patriotic, ff. 

Paul Revere’s Ride. 

Playing Fourth of July. 

Prayer for the Nation. 

Predictions Concerning the Fourth of July. 

Principle of the American Constitution, The. 
Principles of the Revolution, The. 

Psalm of the Union, A. 

Psalm of the West 
“Rally round the Flag.” 

Red, the White, the Blue, The. 

Red. White and Blue, The. 

Republic’s Duty, The. 

Responsibility of American Citizens. 

Responsibility of our Country, The. 

"Ring! Ring! of liberty and peace.” 

Romance of the Revolution, A. 

Seventy-six. 

Song of 1876, The. 

Song of the American Eagle. 

Song of the Centennial. 

Song of the Union. 

Sons of the Nation. 

Speech at Hamburg, July 4. 

Speech on American Taxation 

Speech on Moving his Resolutions for Conciliation 
with America. 

Spirit of ’76, The. 

Stanzas on Freedom. 

Sword of Bunker Hill, The. 

Task, The (Love of Liberty). 

Temple of Human Liberty, The. 

That other Fourth. 

This Old Country. 

Ticonderoga. 

To America, ff. 

To the Stars and the Stripes from Abroad. 

To Thee, O Country. 

Tri-color^, The. 

True Americanism. 

True Patriotism. 

Two Ways of Spending the Fourth. 

Uncle Sam’s Birthday. 

Union, The, ff. 

Wagoner of the Alleghanies (sets.). 

Women of the Revolution. 

(For other suitable selections, see Flag Day and 
Noted Personages.) 


Special Books: BLP — CP — DFR — HE — HS 
—LL—LLC—PEO—PTS—TMD—TMR 

HALLOWE’EN. 

All Souls’ Night. 

Hallowe’en. 

St. Swithin’s Chair. 

Tam O’Shanter. 

LABOR DAY. 

American Laborers. 

Aurora Leigh (“Get leave to work”). 

Bell-founder, The. 

Choice of Occupations. 

Choice of Trades. 


Choosing a Trade, ff. 

Critical Conditions of Labor, The. 

Culture the Result of Labor. 

Curse to Labor, The. 

Daily Task, The. 

Daily Work. 

David Copperfield (“Whatever I have tried to do in 
my life,” etc.). 

Dignity in Labor, ff. 

Do all that you Can. 

Do the Duty that Lieth nearest thy Hand. 

Duty of Labor, The. 

Early Work. 

Employment. 

Energy, ff. 

Fruits of Labor, The. 

“Give us, O give us, the man who sings at his work.” 
Harvest, The, ff. 

Idleness, ff. 

Industry. 

Italian’s View on the Labor Question, An. 

Joy to the Toiler. 

Knights of Labor, The. 

Knitting.—Cutter. 

Labor, ff. 

Law of Labor, The. 

Lay of the Laborer, The. 

“Learn to labor and to wait.” 

Love and Labor. 

Love Lightens Labor. 

Man with the Hoe, The. 

Man’s a Man for a’ That, A. 

Music of Labor, The. 

No Work the Hardest Work. 

Nobility of Labor. 

On American Industry. 

Opportunity for Work. 

Opportunity to Labor. 

Our Work. 

Past and Present (sets.). 

Ploughman, The. 

Song of the Spinning-wheel, The. 

Song of the Type. 

“Sow, and look upward.” 

Sower, The, ff. 

Spinning, ff. 

Ten Hours Bill. 

There’s Work Enough to Do. 

Three W’s—Work, Watch, Wait, The. 

Toil. 

United Workmen, The. 

Washerwoman’s Song, The. 

We Plough the Fields. 

Wealth and Work. 

Weaver, The. 

Week of Work, A. 

What a Little Girl Can Do. 

What a Small Boy Can Do. 

What I Can Do. 

What is my Work To-day? 

What Little Folks Can Do. 

Who Works the Hardest? 

Work, ff. 

Special Book: PEO 

LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY. 

Abraham Lincoln, ff. 

Commemoration Ode, World’s Columbian Exposition. 
Death of Lincoln, ff. 

Grave of Lincoln, The. 

Hand of Lincoln, The. 

How June Found Massa Linkum. 

In Memoriam—A. Lincoln. 

In Memory of Lincoln. 

Lincoln, ff. 

Memory of Abraham Lincoln, The. 

New South, The (Lincoln as Cavalier and Puritan). 

O Captain! My Captain. 

Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration, July 21, 
1865. 

On the Life-mask of Abraham Lincoln. 

Palmerston and Lincoln. 

Religious Character of President Lincoln, The. 

Three Hundred Thousand More. 

To Abraham Lincoln. 

To the Spirit of Abraham Lincoln. 

Tribute of Goldwin Smith [to Abraham Lincoln]. 

True Story of Abraham Lincoln. 

Young Patriot, Abraham Lincoln, The. 

(See also Lincoln’s Works, in Author Index.) 


Special Books: LLC—PEO 









AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


MAY DAY. 

Alexander and Campaspe (Animate Nature). 

All Happy in Spring. 

A-Maying. 

Ambitious Marguerite, The. 

Among Green Pleasant Meadows. 

Anemone. 

April and May. 

Basket of Flowers, A. 

Beauteous Flower, The. 

Beauties of Nature, The. 

Beautiful Lady of the May, The. 

Beautiful May. 

Beauty of Nature. 

Bluebird, The, ff. 

Bouquet of Flowers, A. 

Breathings of Spring. 

Broom Flower, The. 

Bunch of Cowslips, A, ff. 

Buttercup, A, ff. 

Calling the Violet. 

Canterbury Tales (Morning in May). 

Child’s Song in Spring. 

Composed in Spring. 

Contemplation upon Flowers, A. 

Cowslips. 

Crowning the May Queen. 

Daffodil, ff. 

Dainty Lady Daffodil. 

Daisies, ff. 

Description of Spring. 

Dream of Flowers, A. 

Effects of Spring. 

Faerie Queene, The (May). 

Far in the Woods in May. 

Fashions at the Court of Queen Flora. 

Fields in May, The. 

First Flowers, The. 

First of May, The. 

First Spring Day, The. 

First Spring Flowers, The. 

First Violet, The. 

Floral Rainbow, The. 

Flower, The. ff. 

Gathering Flowers. 

God’s Miracle of May. 

Harebells. 

Heart’s-ease. 

Hepatica, The. 

How the Flowers Came. 

Hymn to the Flowers. 

Hymnes of Astr*a (To the Spring). 

In Blossom Time. 

In May. 

In the Early Spring Time. 

Jack in the Pulpit. 

Joy of Spring. 

Jubilee of the Flowers, The. 

Language of Flowers, The. 

Lark, Flower, Sun and Shower. 

Legend of the Fleur-de-lis, The. 

Ljfe in its Spring-time. 

Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey 
(Varying Impressions from Nature). 

Lines Written in Early Spring. 

Lost May, The. 

Love and May. 

Love-letters Made in Flowers. 

Lovely May. 

Love’s Labour’s Lost (“When daisies pied and violets 
blue”). 

Lusty May. 

Maiden Spring, The. 

Marriage of the Flowers, The. 

May, ff. 

Merry Spring. 

Message of the Flowers, The. 

Mogg Megone (Spring). 

Month of Apple Blossoms. 

Month of May, ff. 

Ode Composed on May Morning. 

Ode in May. 

Ode to Spring. 

Old May Day. 

Origin of Violets. 

Oxfordshire Children’s May Song. 

Polish May Song. 

Race of the Flowers, The. 

Return of May, The. 

Saint's Tragedy, The (Oh, that we Two were Maying). 
Seasons, The: Spring. 

Seed, The, ff. 

Seeking the May-flower. 


Sermon in Flowers, A. 

Shepheardes Calender, The (Description of Maying). 
Shoemaker’s Holiday, The (Merry Month of May, The.) 
“Should I not love my flowers?” 

Song for May, A. 

Song of the Daisy. 

Song on May Morning. 

Songs and Chorus of the Flowers. 

Songs of Seven (Seven Times Four). 

Spring, ff. 

Sun and the Violet, The. 

Sylvia; or, The May Queen ( sels .). 

There’s a Wedding in the Orchard. 

’Tis the White Anemone. 

To a Wind-flower. 

To Blossoms. 

To the Daisy. 

Trailing Arbutus. 

Use of Flowers, The. 

Violet, ff. 

Vision of Delight, The (May). 

Voices of the Flowers. 

Wabash Violets. 

Waiting for the May. 

Wake up, Little Daisy. 

Walden (Spring). 

Warble for Lilac-time. 

We Greet Thee, Merry Spring Time. 

Welcome Spring, The. 

Welcome to May. 

Who Shall be Queen of May? 

Why it was Cold in May. 

Wild Flowers. 

Wild Thorn Blossoms. 

Wild Violet , The. 

Windflower, A. 

Wreath of Flowers, A. 

Yellow Violet, The. 

(For other selections see Arbor Day.) 


Special Books: DFR—PEO 

NEW YEAR’S. 

Address to the New Year. 

Another Year. 

As Dies the Year. 

Awakening Year, The. 

Book of the New Year, The. 

Child’s Good-bye to the Old Year, A. 

Closing Year, The. 

Coasting New Year’s Eve. 

Dawn of the Century. 

Dawning o’ the Year, The. 

Death of the Old Year, The. 

Dirge for the Year. 

Farewell to the Old Year. 

Festival of the Year, The. 

For New-Year’s Day. 

Grandpa and Bess. 

In Memoriam (New Year, The). 

In Time’s Swing. 

Last of the New Year’s Callers, The. 

Little Match-girl, The. 

Making New Year’s Calls. 

Masque of the New Year, The. 

Merry Christmas and a Glad New Year, A. 
Message of the New Year, The. 

Months and Holidays, The. 

Mrs. Partington’s Reflections on New Year’s Day. 
New Year, ff. 

Old and New Year. 

Old and the New Year. 

Old Year. ff. 

One More Year. 

Pippa Passes (New Year’s Day at Asolo). 

Psalm for New Year’s Eve, A. 

Reckoning with the Old Year. 

Rejoicing upon the New Year’s Coming of Age. 
Ring out the Old. 

Sambo’s New Year Sermon. 

Song for the New Year. 

Suggestion for a Happy New Year, A. 

Thikhed’s New Year’s Call. 

Thought Suggested by the New Year, A. 

Thoughts for a New Year, ff. 

Threshold of the New Year. 

To the Old and the New Year. 

Will the New Year Come To-night? 

Year, The. 

Year that is to Come. The. 

Year’s Twelve Children, The. 


Special Books: HS—PEO 

962 







APPENDIX 


THANKSGIVING AND HARVEST 
HOME. 

Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History, 
The. 

Autumn, ff. 

Bitter Sweet (Thanksgiving Ode, A). 

Country Thanksgiving, A. 

Daisy’s Thanksgiving. 

Day before Thanksgiving, The. 

Dressed Turkey, The. 

Ecclesiastical Sonnets (Pilgrim Fathers, . ..e). 

Family as an American Institution, The (Thanks¬ 
giving Day). 

Farmer’s Kitchen before Thanksgiving. 

First English Thanksgiving in New York, The. 

First National Thanksgiving, The. 

Fjrst Settlement of New England, The. 

First Thanksgiving, The. 

First Thanksgiving Proclamation Issued by George 
Washington, The. 

For an Autumn Festival. 

Give Thanks, ff. 

Giving Thanks. 

Glad Autumn Days. 

Golden Pippins. 

Grand Old Day, The. 

Grumble Corner and Thanksgiving Street. 

Harvest, ff. 

Hints for Thanksgiving. 

Ho, the Harvest Home. 

Hock-cart: or. Harvest Home, The. 

How the Pilgrims Gave Thanks. 

Hymn for Thanksgiving. 

Indian Summer, ff. 

Irish Reaper’s Harvest Hymn, The. 

Joe Fleming’s Thanksgiving. 

John White’s Thanksgiving. 

Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers in New England, The. 
“Lily’s” Thanksgiving, The. 

Little Nut People, The. 

Little Paul’s Thanksgiving. 

Lorna Doone (Harvest Song). 

Maize, The. 

Major-General John Sedgwick (Spirit of Puritanism, 
The). 

Margie’s Thanksgiving. 

Mayflower. The. 

Nation’s Day of Praise, The. 

New England, ff. 

Old Folks’ Thanksgiving. 

Old Thanksgiving Days, The. 

Old Wives’ Tale (Harvester’s Song, The). 

One Thanksgiving Day, ff. 

Our First Thanksgiving Day. 

Our Thanksgiving Accept. 

Patsy’s and Tom’s Thanksgiving. 

Pilgrim, ff. 

Polly’s Thanksgiving. 

Pumpkin-pie. 

Puritan, ff. 

Something to be Thankful for. 

Song of the Harvest. 

Story of Thanksgiving, The. 

Thankful Children. 

Thankful Hearts. 

Thanksgivin’ Pumpkin Pies. 

Thanksgiving, ff. 

To the Harvest Moon. 

To Whom Shall We Give Thanks? 

Tom’s Thanksgiving. 

“Turk-”ey Drill. 

Twilight of Thanksgiving, The. 

Two Thanksgiving Dances. 

When the Frost is on the Punkin. 


Special Books: HS—LL—PEO 


VALENTINE’S DAY. 

Aurelia’s Valentine. 

Clarabel’s Valentine. 

Diana’s Valentine. 

First Sensible Valentine, The. 

First Valentine, The. 

Four Valentines. 

Grandmother’s Valentine 


“I meant to write a valentine.” 

Legend of St. Valentine, A. 

Little Boy’s Valentine, A. 

Little Maid’s Prayer at the Shrine of St. Valentine, 
The. 

Meg May’s Valentine. 

My Valentine. 

Old Valentine, An. 

Pickwick Papers, The (Sam Weller’s Valentine). 
Pierrot’s Valentine. 

Prettiest Girl, The. 

Roman Valentine, A. 

Rondeau for St. Valentine’s Day. 

St. Valentine’s, ff. 

To St. Valentine. 

Two Valentines. 

Valentine, ff. 


Special Book: HS 

WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY. 

Birthday of Washington, The. 

Birthday of Washington ever Honored, The. 

Boy’s Composition on Washington, A. 

Boy’s Poem on Washington, A 
Breaking the Colt. 

Character of Washington, The. 

Commemoration Ode, World’s Columbian Exposition. 
Comparison of George Washington with George the 
Fourth, called the First Gentleman of Europe. 
Comparison of Washington and Napoleon. 

Completion of the National Monument to Washington. 
Crown our Washington. 

Defeat of General Braddock, The. 

Epitaph on Washington, An. 

Eulogy on Washington. 

Example of Washington, The. 

Exercise for Washington’s Birthday. 

Faith of Washington, The. 

Father of his Country, The. 

February Twenty-second. 

Flag of Washington. 

Foreign Policy of Washington, The. 

Funeral Oration on the Death of General Washington. 
Georga Washingdone. 

George Birthington's Washday. 

George Washington, ff. 

Glory of Washington, The. 

Imaginary Conversations (Washington and Franklin). 
Immortal Washington. 

Italian’s Account of George Washington, An. 

Keeping the Birthday. 

Latest Version, The. 

Laurel Wreath, The. 

Lessons from the Washington Centennial. 

Like Washington. 

Little Hatchet Story, The. 

Mount Vernon, the Home of Washington. 

National Monument to Washington. 

New Version of a Certain Historical Dialogue, A. 

Not George Washington. 

Ode for Washington’s Birthday. 

Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte (Washington) » 

On the Death of Washington. 

On Washington’s Farewell Address. 

One Little Hatchet. 

Oration on Washington. 

Our Washington. 

Panegyrics on Washington. 

President Washington’s Receptions. 

Schools and Colleges of our Country, The. 

Short Conversation, A. 

Some Years in Washington’s Life. 

Something Better. 

Tomb of Washington, The. 

Tribute to Washington, ff. 

Twenty-second of February, The. 

Under the Old Elm. 

Under the Washington Elm. 

Unselfishness of Washington, The. 

Vow of Washington, The. 

War and Washington. 

Washington, ff. 

Wli3.t L^ck we Yet. 

(See also Washington’s works, in Author Index.) 
Special Books: BLP—DFR—HS—LL—PEO 


963 









AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


II. CHARADES, DIALOGUES, DRILLS ETC. 


CHARADES. 


Acting Proverbs. 
Ascutney Charades, The. 
Charade, ff. 

Grateful. 

Holiday. 

Illinois. 

Investigate. 

Mischief. 

Playful. 

Scandinavia 

Schoolday. 

Stockade. 


Special Books: EuE—TCP—YFE jJ 

DIALOGUES, PLAYS, CONCERT RECI¬ 
TATIONS, ETC. 

Apples, The. 

Aunt Kitty’s Shopping. 

Becket. 

Bill Jepson’s Wife. 

Boys and Girls. 

Christmas Tree, The. 

Cold-water Cross. 

Competing Railroads, The. 

Corporal Punishment. 

Country Cousins, The. 

Cyrano de Bergerac. 

Dad Says so, Anyhow. 

Daisy and Snowdrop. 

Damon and Pythias. 

Dandelion and Clover-top. 

David Copperfield ( sela .). 

Day and Night. 

Dead Bird, The. 

Dialogue, A, ff 
Dr. Brown. 

Doctor Cure-all 
Doctor’s Visit. 

Doll’s Hospital, The. 

Douglas. 

Dreamers, The. 

Electric Episode, An. 

Excitement at Kettleville, The. 

Fairy Joke, A. 

Farewell, A. 

Four Judges, The. 

Four Photographs, The. 

Fox and Geese. 

Fox and the Ranger, The. 

From Captivity to Power 
Generosity. 

Gipsy Fortune-teller, The. 

Girl of the Period, The. 

Going to School. 

Good for Evil. 

Good Manners. 

Gossips, The. 

Guess Again. 

Guido Ferranti. 

Haunted Chamber, The. 

How Mrs. Gaskell did not Hire a Cook, 

How she Cured him.' 

How the Quarrel Began. 

Hunchback, The. 

Illustrated Story, An. 

Interview between the School Director and the Janitor, 
An. 

Invitation, The. 

Ion. 

Italian from Cork, The. 

Just Retribution, The. 

Kate’s French Lesson. 

Keep the Holidays. 

Kindness and Cruelty. 

Knowing the Circumstances. 

Lady Jane Gray. 

Lady of Lyons, The. 

Late at Breakfast. 

Laurel Wreath, The. . 

Lawyers and Donkeys 
Leah, the Forsaken. 

Little Army, The. 

Little Helpers. 

Little Mothers, The. 


Little Prudy. 

Little Red Riding Hood. 

Little Women. 

Locomotive, The. 

London Assurance. 

Love Chase, Tne. 

Lucius Junius Brutus. 

Mary Maloney’s Philosophy. 
Masquerading. 

Memory-tricks. 

Merely Players. 

Mind your own Business. 

Model Lesson, The. 

Munchausen Outdone. 

“My New Pittayatees.” 

Naaman the Leper. 

Nautical Conversation, A 
Naval Service. 

New Christmas, The 
New Year Calls. 

Not Ashamed of his Occupation. 
Notoriety. 

Old Ballad, An. 

Old Folks. 

Old-fashioned Fourth, An. 

Opening Recitation. 

Opening Speech, The. 

O’Quirk’s Sinecure. 

Orders not to Go. 

Our Flag. 

Parthenia. 

Pat Answers the Advertisement. 

Pets of Society. 

Playing School. 

Playing Store. 

Poetry, Prose and Fact 
Poor Work don’t Pay. 

Portrait, The. 

Premature Proposal, The 
Pro Tern. 

Professor Puzzled, The. 

Proverb: All that Glitters is not Gold, A. 
Puritan’s Dilemma, The. 

Pygmalion and Galatea. 

Queen Mary. 

Queer Fit, A. , 

Reading the Will. 

Real Elocution. 

Recitations in Concert. 

Richelieu. 

Rival Speakers, The. 

Rivals, The. 

Road to Ruin, The. 

Saratoga Waiter, The. 

Saved. 

School for Scandal, The. 

Seasons, The. . 

Seeing Santa Claus. 

Seer and Dreamers, The. 

She Stoops to Conquer. 

Signing of the Pledge, ff. 

Slight Misunderstanding, A. 

Soldier’s Return, The. 

Something to be Thankful for. 

Spanish Gypsy, The. 

Stage-struck. 

Stage-struck Darkey, The 
Story of the Days, The. 

Student and his Neighbors, The. 

Sun-dial, The. 

Surprise, The. 

Taking the Census. 

Temperance Dialogue. 

Temperance Song Recital. 

Ten Commandments, The 
Terrible Threat, A. 

They Say. 

This one is Wig-ged. 

Tom’s Practical Joke. 

Top Landing, The. 

Tragedy of the Ten Little Boys, The. 
Train to Mauro. The. 

Trial of Fing Wing. 

Trusty and True. 

Trying to be Literary. 

Tu Quoque. 

Turning the Tables. 

Two Lives. 

Two Runaways, The. 

Uncomfortable Call, An, ff 


964 












APPENDIX 


Under the Holy Bough. 

Unjust Suspicion. 

Vanity Vanquished. 

Veiled Priestess, The. 

Very Bashful. 

Very Much Astonished. 

Vice Versa. 

Visitors from Story Land 
Waiter’s Trials, A. 

Way to Freedom, The. 

Welcome. 

What Girls Love to Do. 

What is a Gentleman? 

Which is Best? 

Which would you Rather? 

Wizard of Valley Forge, The. 

Wizard’s Warning, The. 

Wonderful Dream. 

Worried about Catherine. 

Writing a Book, ff. 

Young America. 

(See also Shakespeare’s works, in Author Index.) 


Special Books: ASD — CDD — CDs — COS—DCD 
—DDD—DDM—DDR—DLD—DT—ED — EE 
— FAD—FDY—FND—FTT—HD—KC — KH 
— KNS—LPD—LPS—MAD—MC—MCD—MD 
—MDD—MFD—MHD—MND—MPD—MTD— 
NDP — PD — PTS — SD—SDD—SED—SPC— 
StD—WRD—YFD—YFE 


DRILLS. 


Daisy Drill. 

Daughters of the Regiment Drill. 
Delsartian Physical Drill. 

Doll Drill. 

Handkerchief Drill. 

Harvest Drill. 

Hat Drill, The. 

Japanese Fan Drill. 

Japanese Parasol and Fan Drill. 
Nursery Rhymes Drill. 

Parasol Drill, The. 

Play of Fancy, A. 

Rainbow Drill. 

Sword Drill, The. 

Tambourine Drills. 

Tennis Drill. 

“Turk”-ey Drill. _ 


Special Books: DM—ID—WDM—YFE 

PANTOMIMES. 


Bandage. 

Christmas Eve. 
Christmas Pantomime 
Japanese Wedding, A. 
Oak in a Storm, An. 
Pantomime, A, ff. 
Rainbow. 

Shadow Pantomime. 


Special Books : TCP—YFE 


PARODIES. 

(The selection parodied is named in parenthesis.) 

All the World’s a Fraud. (All the World’s a Stage— 
in As You Like It.) 

Bachelor’s Soliloquy, The. (Hamlet’s Soliloquy- 
ire Hamlet.) _ . . 

Baitsy and I are Oudt. (Betsey and I are. Out.) 

Betsey und I hafe Bust lib. (Betsey and I are Out.) 

Bicycle Girl, The. (Maud Muller.) 

Bitter Cry of the Outcast Choir Boy, The. (Break, 
Break, Break.) 

Charge of the Lightning Judge, The. (Sheridan s Ride.) 

Chinese Excelsior. (Excelsior.) 

Chinese Version of Maud Muller, A. . _ T . 

Class-day Hamlet, A. (Hamlet’s Soliloquy—ire Hamlet.) 

Darius Green Parodied. (Darius Green and his * lying 
Machine.) _ _ . 

Der Good Lookin’ Shnow. (Beautiful Snow.) 

Der Mule Shtood on der Steamboad Deck. (Lasa- 

Der *Nighd ^behind Grisdmas. (Night before Christ¬ 
mas, The.) . „ 

Der Wreck of der Hezberus. (Wreck of the Hesperus, 
The.) 


Domicile Erected by John, The. (House that Jack 
Built. The.) 

Dot Lambs vot Mary haf Got. (Mary’s Little Lamb.) 

Dot Long-handled Dipper. (Old Oaken Bucket.) 

Dutchman and the Raven, The. (Raven, The.—Poe.) 

Ein Deutsches Lied. (Excelsior.) 

Father William.—Anon, and Carroll. (Old Man’s Com¬ 
forts and how he Gained them, The.) 

Girl’s a Girl for a’ That, A. (Man’s a Man for a’ 
That, A.) 

He Came too Late. (He Came too Late.) 

Higher. (Excelsior.) 

Home they Brought her Lap-dog Dead. (Home they 
Brought her Warrior Dead.) 

Hoop Skirt, The. (I Remember, I Remember.) 

I Want to be a Soldier. (I Want to be an Angel.) 

Improved “Enoch Arden.” (Enoch Arden.) 

Joe Jones. (Ben Bolt.) 

John Chinaman’s “Cornin’ through the Rye.” (Comin 
through the Rye.) 

Kate Ketchem. (Maud Muller.) 

Life.—L. F. M. (Psalm of Life, A.) 

Marc Antony’s Original Oration. (Marc Antony’s 
Funeral Oration.) 

Mary’s Diminutive Sheep. (Mary’s Little Lamb.) 

Maud Muller.—A New Version. 

Maud Muller [in Dutch]. 

Modern Version of the Merchant of Venice, A. 

Mollie’s Little Ram. (Mary’s Little Lamb.) 

Moss-covered Onion, The. (Old Oaken Bucket, The.) 

New “Old Mother Hubbard.” (Old Mother Hubbard ) 

Oh, Promise Me. (Oh, Promise Me.—DeKoven.) 

Old Hat, The. (Darkness.—Byron.) 

O’Reilly’s Billy-goat. (Casey at the Bat.) 

Original Parody, An. (Cato’s Soililoquy on the Im¬ 
mortality of the Soul.) 

Paddy Dunbar. (Lochinvar.) 

Paddy’s Excelsior. (Excelsior.) 

Parody, A. (Casabianca.) 

Parody for a Reformed Parliament, A. (Portia’s 
Plea for Mercy in The Merchant of Venice.) 

Parody on “Barbara Frietchie.” 

Parody on Pope. 

Parody on the Declaration of Independence. 

Parody.—The Old Oaken Bucket 

Poster-girl, The. (Blessed Damozel, The.) 

Proclivior. (Excelsior.) 

Psalm of Marriage. (Psalm of Life, A ) 

Putting his Armor On. (May Queen, The.) 

Raven, The. (Parody.) (Raven, The.—Poe.) 

Ride from Ghent to Aix, The. (How they Brought 
the Good News from Ghent to Aix.) 

Rime of the Ancient Miller. (Rime of the Ancient 
Mariner, The.) 

Romeo and Juliet. (Altered.) 

Romeo and Juliet. (Latest Correct Version of the 
Balcony Scene.) 

Romeo and Juliet.—The Way it Should be Read in 
1880. 

Schlosser’s Ride. (Sheridan’s Ride.) 

Schneider’s Ride. (Sheridan’s Ride.) 

Shakespeare Improved. (Hamlet, Act I, Sc. 3.) 

Shakespearian Perversion, A. (“Romeo, Romeo, 
wherefor art thou, Romeo?”—ire Romeo and 
Juliet.) 

“Speak gently to the herring.” (Speak Gently to the 
Erring.) 

That Amateur Flute. (Bells. The.—Poe.) 

To the Memory of the late Brigham Young. (Charge 
of the Light Brigade, The.) 

True Story of Young Lochinvar in Blank Verse, The. 
(Lochinvar.) 

’Twas off the Blue Canaries. (My Loved Guitar.) 

With a Golfer’s Apologies to Tennyson. (Break. 
Break, Break.) 


Special Book: HPE. 

TABLEAUX. 

After the Explosion. 

Dolly’s Doctor. 

Doom of King Alcohol, The. 
Dressed for the Party. 

Evening Prayer. 

Floral Guide, The. 

Four Queens, The. 

Free Smoke, A. 

Going to the Train. 

Grandma’s Schooldays. 

Harvesters, The. 

Help for my Sisters. 

I Wonder whom it is from. 


965 












AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Life’s Day. 

Match-boy, The. 

Maud Muller. 

Monk in his Cell, A. 

Mother Goose. 

Mother of the Gracchi, The. 

Naomi and her Daughters-in-law. 

Old Time Lovers. 

Opening Song. 

Ophelia. 

Parson’s Fee, The; or, The Bag of Beans. 

Playing Doctor. 

Playing Grandma, ff. 

Pleasant Acquaintance, A. 

Putting the Children to Bed. 

Raise the Gates. 

Reveries of a Bachelor. 

Saved. 

Sleeping Boy, The. # 

Snow-birds. 

Song of Hiawatha, The (Tableaux from Hiawatha). 
Song of the States, A. 


Spirit of '76. 

Statuary, ff. 

Stolen Bird’s Nest, The. 

Sun and his Satellites, The. 

Sunshine or Shower. 

Tableaux of * ‘The Ten Virgins.” 

Tableaux Vivants. • 

There’s no Rose without a Thorn. 

Three Graces, The. 

Tired Out. 

Too Hot. 

Two Blind Beggars. 

Undine. 

Union Forever, The. 

Village Choir, The. 

Village Post-office, The. 

Washington. 

Winter in the Lap of Spring. 

You Can’t Find Me. 

Young Artist, The. 

Special Books: COS—DDD—EE—TCP—YFE 


III. NOTED PERSONAGES. 


(When a * follows a name, see AUTHOR INDEX for works by v*, person.) 


Adams, J: * 

Adams and Jefferson. 

Centennial Oration (Thomas Jefferson andJ John 
Adams). 

Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson. 

Adams, John Quincy.* 

Death of John Quincy Adams. 

John Quincy Adams. 

Addison, Jos.* 

Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot (Addison). 

On the Death of Mr. Addison. 

Agassiz, L: 

Agassiz. 

Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz, The. 

Prayer of Agassiz, The. 

Alexander the Great. 

Alexander, ff. 

Alfred the Great. 

Alfred, ff. 

Arnold, Benedict. 

Arnold at Stillwater. 

Benedict Arnold. 

Old Benedict Arnold. 

Bacon, Fs.* 

Bacon’s Philosophy. 

Lord Bacon’s Birthday. 

Beecher, H: Ward.* 

Eulogy on Henry Ward Beecher. 

Henry Ward Beecher. 

Beethoven, Ludwig von. 

Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata. 

Beethoven’s Third Symphony. 

Blaine, Jas. G.* 

Blaine of Maine. 

Nominating James G. Blaine for President. 
Brown, J: 

Brown of Ossawatomie. 

Burial of John Brown, The. 

John Brown, ff. 

Browning, Eliz. Barrett.* 

On the Death of Mrs. Browning. 

One Word More. 

To E. B. B. 

Browning, Rob’t.* 

Browning, ff. 

Burial of Robert Browning, The. 

How to Make an Imitation of Browning. 

Robert Browning, ff. 

Bryant, W: Cullen.* 

Bryant Alphabet, ff. 

To Bryant on his Birthday. 

To William Cullen Bryant. 

Burke, Edmund.* 

Edmund Burke, ff. 

Burns, Rob’t.* 

At the Grave of Burns. 

Burns. 

Ode to Burns. 

On the Death of Burns. 

Robert Bums. 

Robin Burns. 


Byron, Lord.* 

Byron, ff. 

Course of Time, The (Byron). 

Lord Byron to the Greeks. 

Nightmare Abbey (Mr. Cypress’s Song, etc ). 

On the Proposal to Erect a Monument in England 
to Lord Byron. 

Caesar, Julius. 

Caesar, ff. 

History of Rome, The (Monarchy of Caesar, The) 
Julius Caesar, ff. 

Carlyle, T:* 

Carlyle, ff. 

On the Deaths of Thomas Carlyle and George Eliot 
Thomas Carlyle. 

Charles I.* 

Charles the First. 

Covenanters and Charles Stuart, The. 

Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ire¬ 
land, A (sets.). 

Milton (Charles the First). 

On His Majesty’s Recovery from the Sma!l-pox. 
On the Funeral of Charles [the] First. 

On the Statue of King Charles I., etc. 

To King Charles and Queen Henrietta. 

To King Charles and Queen Mary, for the Loss of 
their First-born. 

To the King on his Birthday. 

Charles II. 

Charles the Second. 

Epitaph on Charles II. 

Knighting of the Sirloin of Beef, etc. 

Chatham, Lord.* 

Table Talk (Lord Chatham). 

William Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 

Chatterton, T:* 

Chatterton, ff. 

Monody on the Death of Chatterton. 

Clay, H:* 

Character of Henry Clay. 

Constitution and the Union, The (On Mr. Clay’s 
Resolution). 

Death of Henry Clay. 

Eulogium on Henry Clay. 

Cleopatra. 

Antony and Cleopatra. 

Cleopatra, ff. 

Death of Cleopatra, The. 

Coleridge. S: Taylor.* 

Coleridge. 

On the Death of Coleridge. 

On the Late S. T. Coleridge. 

Columbus, Christopher. 

Christopher Columbus. 

Columbus, ff. 

Discovery Day. 

Entrance of Columbus into Barcelona. 

From the Old World to the New. 

How Columbus Found America. 

Legend of Christopher Columbus, The. 

Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus. 


966 






APPENDIX 


Mrs. Christopher Columbus. 

On a Portrait of Columbus. 

Our Columbus. 

Prayer of Columbus, The. 

Return of Columbus, The 

Three Days in the Life of Columbus. 

Cooper, Peter.* 

Flag at Half-mast, The. 

Peter Cooper. 

Corday, Charlotte. 

Charlotte Corday. 

French Revolution, The (Charlotte Corday) 
Cromwell, Oliver. 

Cromwell and Henrietta Maria, ff. 

Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ire¬ 
land, A. 

On the Death of Oliver Cromwell. 

Dante Alighieri.* 

Balder (Dante, etc.). 

Dante, ff. 

On a Bust of Dante. 

Sasso di Dante, The. 

Davis, Jefferson 

Amnesty of Jefferson Davis, The 
Jefferson Davis. 

Dewey, G: 

Admiral Dewey. 

Dewey at Manila, ff. 

Great Naval Battle of Manila, The. 

Song of Dewey’s Guns, The. 

To Admiral George Dewey. 

Dickens, C:* 

Catalogue of Dickens’ Works. 

Charles Dickens and the Reader. 

Christmas Thought about Dickens, A. 

Dickens Gallery, The, ff. 

Grave of Charles Dickens, The. 

In Memory of Charles Dickens. 

Pathos of Thackeray and Dickens, The 
Realism of Dickens, The. 

To Charles Dickens. 

Two of Dickens’ Villains. 

Welcome to “Boz,” A. 

Drake, Sir Fs. 

Drake’s Drum. 

Epigram on Francis Drake. 

Westward Ho (Sir Francis Drake). 

Dry den, J:* 

Dryden. 

Parallel between Pope and Dryden. 

Eliot, G:* 

George Eliot. 

On the Deaths of Thomas Carlyle and George Eliot. 
Elizabeth, Queen.* 

Caelica (Elizabetha Regina). 

Death of Elizabeth, The. 

Elizabeth at Tilbury. 

Faerie Queene, The (Gloriana) 

Queen Elizabeth. 

Sir Walter Raleigh and Queen Elizabeth. 
Emerson, Ralph Waldo.* 

Carlyle and Emerson. 

Dr. Hale on Emerson. 

Emerson, ff. 

Emmet, Rob’t.* 

Eulogy on Emmet. 

Oh! Breathe not his Name 
She is Far from the Land. 

Written Immediately after Reading the Speech of 
Robert Emmet. 


Fox, C: Jas.* 

Fox. 

Lines Written at Grasmere, etc. 

Marmion (Pitt and Fox). 

On the Death of Mr. Fox. 

Franklin, Benjamin* 

Colloquial Powers of Dr. Franklin. 

Eulogium on Franklin. 

Franklin and the Gout. 

Inauguration of the Statue of Franklin. 

On the Death of Benjamin Franklin. 
Washington’s Sword and Franklin’s Staff. 

Garfield, Jas. A.* 

At the President s Grave. 

“Death has crowned him as a Martyr. 

Garfield, ff. . 

Man for the Crisis, The. 

Memorial Address on the Life and Character of 
James A. Garfield. 

Memorial Hymn—J. A. Garfield. 

Ode on the Assassination of President Garfield. 
President Garfield. 

“Was James A. Garfield great? 


Garrison, W: Lloyd.* 

Garrison. 

William Lloyd Garrison. 

George, H:* 

Henry George. 

Of Henry George (Who Died Fighting against 
Political Corruption). 

Grant, Ulysses S.* 

Death of Grant, The. 

Eulogy on General Grant. 

Eulogy on U. S. Grant. 

General Grant, ff. 

Grant, ff. 

Great and Noble Man, A. 

Hero President, The. 

In Memory of General Grant. 

4 ‘It is said that when Gen. Grant first took com¬ 
mand.” 

Legacy of Grant, The. 

Memorial Services in Honor of General Grant. 
Nominating General Grant. 

Tribute to Grant, A. 

Ulysses S. Grant. 

Hamilton, Alex.* 

Discourse Delivered in the North Dutch Church, 
1804, A. 

Funeral Oration by the Dead Body of Ham¬ 
ilton. 

Hawthorne, Nathaniel.* 

Hawthorne, ff. 

Nathaniel Hawthorne. 

Holmes, Oliver Wendell.* 

Holmes. 

Oliver Wendell Holmes. 

To O. W. Holmes. 

Hugo, Victor.* 

Master Character of Victor Hugo, The 
Statue of Victor Hugo, The. 

To Victor Hugo. 

Jackson, Andrew.* 

Andrew Jackson. 

Jackson at New Orleans. 

To Andrew Jackson. 

Jackson, T: Jonathan (“Stonewall”). 

Death of Stonewall Jackson. 

Dying Words of Stonewall Jackson, The 
Unconscious Greatness of Stonewall Jackson, 
The. 

Jefferson, T:* 

Adams and Jefferson. 

Centennial Oration (Thomas Jefferson and John 
Adams). 

Death of Jefferson, The. 

Defence of Jefferson. 

Eulogy on Adams and Jefferson. 

Johnson, Dr. S:* 

Lines on Doctor Johnson 
On the Death of Dr. Johnson 
Jones, J: Paul. 

Paul Jones’ Victory. 

Yankee Man-of-War, The. 

Jonson, Ben.* 

Ben Jonson, ff. 

His Prayer to Ben Jonson. 

Invective Written by Mr. George Chapman 
against Mr. Ben Jonson, An. 

To Ben Jonson. 

To the Memory of Ben Jonson. 

Keats, J:* 

Adonais.—Shelley. 

After a Lecture on Keats. 

At the Grave of Keats. 

Moonlight Song of the Mocking-bird. 

Ode to England, An (Keats). 

With a Copy of Keats. 

Kossuth, Louis.* 

To Louis Kossuth. 

Welcome to Louis Kossuth. 

Lafayette, Gen. 

Address to Lafayette. 

Eulogy on Lafayette. 

Lafayette, the Faithful One. 

Sonnet: “As when far off,” etc.—Coleridge. 
Welcome to Gen. LaFayette. 

Lamb, C:* 

Charles Lamb. 

Elia. 

To Charles Lamb. 

Landor, Walter Savage.* 

In Memory of Walter Savage Landor. 

Landor. 

Lincoln, Abraham.* 

See Special Days. 


967 





AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Longfellow, H: Wadsworth.* 

Great grandmamma and I. 

H. W. L. 

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. 

Longfellow, ff. 

Poet’s Funeral, The. 

To H. W. L. 

Lowell, Jas. Russell.* 

Fable for Critics, A (On Himself). 

James Russell Lowell, ff. 

Lowell, ff. 

To John Greenleaf Whittier on the Death of 
Lowell. 

Luther, Martin.* 

At Luther’s Grave, Wittenberg. 

Martin Luther, ff. 

Marie Antoinette. 

Chronicle of the Drum, The (Execution of Marie 
Antoinette). 

French Revolution. The (Marie Antoinette). 

Marie Antoinette, ff. 

Mary Queen of Scots.* 

History of England (Death of Mary Stuart). 
Lament of Mary Queen of Scots on the Approach 
of Spring. 

Mary Queen of Scots, ff. 

Mary Stuart, ff. 

Murder of Darnley, The. 

Murder of Riccio, The. 

Michelangelo.* 

Angelo. 

Michael Angelo, ff. 

Milton, J: 

Balder (Dante, Shakespeare, Milton). 

John Milton. 

Lines Printed under the Engraved Portrait of 
Milton. 

Milton, ff. 

On Milton’s Paradise Lost. 

Moore, T:* 

Thomas Moore. 

To Thomas Moore. 

Napoleon Bonaparte.* 

American and the Corsican, The. 

At the Tomb of Napoleon. 

Character of Napoleon, The. 

Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (Napoleon). 

Chronicle of the Drum (Abdication of Napo¬ 
leon) 

Comparison of Washington and Napoleon. 
Crowned and Buried. 

Death of Napoleon. 

Defence of M. Peltier for a Libel on Napoleon. 
Grave of Bonaparte, The. 

Les Mistirables (Napoleon’s Overthrow). 

Lines on the Death of Napoleon. 

March to Moscow, The. 

Napoleon, ff. 

Ode, Written during the Negociations with Bona¬ 
parte, in January, 1814. 

On Overtures of Peace from Napoleon. 

Popular Recollections of Bonaparte. 

Reign of Napoleon, The. 

Return of Napoleon from St. Helena, The. 
Toussaint L’Ouverture (Napoleon Bonaparte and 
Toussaint L’Ouverture). 

Two Napoleons, The. 

Victor of Marengo, The. 

Napoleon III. (Louis Napoleon). 

Louis Napoleon, ff. 

Napoleon the Little. 

To Louis Napoleon. 

Nelson, Horatio. 

Heroism of Horatio Nelson, The. 

Marmion (Nelson, Pitt, Fox). 

Nelson. 

O’Connell, Daniel.* 

Daniel O’Connell, ff. 

O’Connell. 

Penn. W:* 

Monument of William Penn, The. 

Tribute to William Penn. 

Phillips, Wendell.* 

Incident in the Life of Wendell Phillips, An. 
Wendell Phillips, ff. 

Pitt, W:, the younger* 

Defence of Pitt. 

Epitaph for William Pitt. 

Pitt, ff. 

Poe, Edgar Allan.* 

Death of Poe’s Wife, The. 

Poe’s Cottage at Fordham. 

To Edgar Allan Poe 


Pope, Alex.* 

Lines to Alexander Pope. 

Pope, ff. 

Raleigh, Sir Walter.* 

Call on Sir Walter Raleigh, A. 

Death of Sir Walter Raleigh 
Kenilworth (Raleigh). 

Raleigh’s Cell in the Tower. 

Sir Walter Raleigh and Queen Elizabeth, ff. 
Robespierre.* 

Death of Robespierre, The. 

Fourth of July, 1776, The (Death of Robespierre. 
The). 

Rossetti, Dante Gabriel.* 

At the Grave of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. 

Dante Gabriel Rossetti. 

Voice of D. G. R., The. 

Savonarola, Girolamo.* 

Casa Guidi Windows (Death of Savonarola) 
Romola (Romola and Savonarola). 

Savonarola. 

Schiller, Friedrich.* 

Death of Schiller, The. 

Schiller’s Dying Vision. 

Scott, Sir Walter.* 

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (Sir Walter 
Scott). 

On the Departure of Sir Walter Scott from Abbots¬ 
ford for Naples. 

Sir Walter Scott, ff. 

Tribute to Sir Walter Scott. 

Shakespeare, W:* 

Anne Hathaway. 

At Shakespeare’s Grave. 

At Stratford-on-Avon. 

Balder (Dante, Shakespeare, Milton). 

Breath of Avon, The. 

Epitaph on the Admirable Dramatic Poet, W. 

Shakespeare, An. 

On the Portrait of Shakespeare. 

Poem for the Dedication of the Fountain at Strat¬ 
ford-on-Avon. 

Prologue Spoken by Mr. Garrick at the Opening of 
the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. 

Shakespeare, ff. 

Spirit of Shakespeare, The. 

To the Memory of My Beloved, Mr. William 
Shakespeare. 

Toast to the Lovers and Husbands of the 
Shakespeare Club. 

William Shakespeare. 

Sheridan, Philip. 

How Congress Fought for Sheridan. 

Sheridan. 

Sheridan’s Ride. 

Sheridan, R: Brinsley.* 

Lines on the Death of Sheridan. 

Monody on the Death of the Right Hon. R. B. 
Sheridan. 

Richard Brinsley Sheridan. 

Sherman, W: T.* 

Review of the Grand Army, The. 

Sherman, ff. 

Tribute to Gen. Sherman, A. 

Sidney, Sir Philip.* 

Britannia’s Pastorals (Praise of Sydney, The). 
Elegy on a |Friend’s Passion for his Astrophill, 
An. 

Elegy on Sir Philip Sidney, An. 

Epitaph upon the Right Honorable Sir Philip 
Sidney. 

On the Death of Sir Philip Sidney. 

Sidney, Sir Philip. 

Southey, Rob’t. * 

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (Robert 
Southey). 

Epitaph on a Well-known Poet. 

On Southey’s Death. 

On the Death of Southey. 

Spenser, Edmund.* 

Britannia’s Pastorals (Praise of Spenser, The) 
Edmund Spenser. 

Spenser, ff. 

Stevenson, Rob’t L.* 

Stevenson’s Birthday. 

To Robert Louis Stevenson. 

Sumner, C:* 

Charles Sumner, ff. 

Eulogy on Charles Sumner. 

Taylor, Bayard.* 

Bayard Taylor, ff. 

To Bayard Taylor beyond Us. 


9(58 





APPENDIX 


Tennyson, Alfred.* 

In Memoriam—Alfred. Lord Tennyson. 

Tennyson. 

To Alfred Tennyson. 

Thackeray, W:* 

Pathos of Thackeray and Dickens, The. 
Thackeray’s Birthday. 

Victoria, Queen. 

On the Coronation of Queen Victoria. 

Queen’s Year, The. 

To the Queen. 

Victoria. 

Young Queen, The. 

Washington, G:* 

See Special Days. 

Webster, Daniel.* 

Character of Webster. 

Daniel Webster, ff. 

Death of Daniel Webster, The. 

Description of Webster’s Speech in Reply to 
Hayne. 

Discourse Commemorative of Daniel Webster. 
Ichabod. 

Statue of Webster, The. 

Voice of Webster, The. 

Webster, ff. 


Wellington, Duke of. 

Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. 
Wellington, ff. 

West, Benjamin. 

Lex Talionis upon Benjamin West. The. 

On George the Third’s Patronage of Benjamin West. 
Whitman, Walt.* 

Eulogy of Walt Whitman. 

Walt Whitman. 

Whittier, J: Greenleaf.* 

Hour with Whittier, An. 

To John Greenleaf Whittier, ff. 

Whittier, ff. 

Wolfe, Jas.* 

Death of Wolfe, The. 

Montcalm and Wolfe. 

On General Wolfe. 

Wolfe at Quebec 
Wordsworth, W:* 

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (Wordsworth). 
Ode to England, An (Wordsworth). 

On a Portrait of Wordsworth by B. R. Haydon. 
To Wordsworth. 

William Wordsworth. 

With Wordsworth at Rydal. 

Wordsworth, ff. 


IV. TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. 


Address before the Springfield Washingtonian Temper¬ 
ance Society (Two Revolutions). 

Address Delivered at the Prohibition Party Con¬ 
vention. 

Address on Temperance. 

Against License. 

Alcoholic and Tobacco Habit, The. 

Apostrophe to Water. 

Appeal for Prohibition, An. 

Appeal for Temperance. 

Arraignment of Rum, The, ff. 

Arrest Alcohol and Liberate Man. 

Arresting the March of Intemperance. 

A-soak in “Wum Barrels.” 

Astonished Tippler, The. 

Away from the Wine-cup, awayl 
Bar-tender’s Story, The. 

Bible and the Liquor Traffic, The. 

Bible in Harmony with Temperance, The. 

Billy’s First and Last Drink of Lager. 

Bondage of Drink, The. 

Bottle—Beggary, The, ff. 

Boy’s Temperance Speech, A. 

Break the Bottle. 

Bridal Feast, The. 

Cause of Temperance. 

Churches and Saloons. 

Citizen and the Saloon System, The. 

Cold Water, ff. 

Come, Sign the Pledge. 

Confessions of a Drunkard. 

Constitutional Prohibition the Great Remedy 
Cup of Water, A. 

Curse of Drink, The. 

Deacon Giles’s Distillery. 

Dead March, The. 

Deadly Cup, The. 

Death and the Drunkard 
Death of an Inebriate. 

Demerits of High License, The. 

Demons of the Glass, The. 

Dirge of the Drinker, The. 

Don’t Marry a Drunkard to Reform Him 
Doom of King Alcohol. 

Down with the Traffic. 

Dragon Drink, The. 

Drink! Drink! Drink! 

Drinking a Farm. 

Drinking a Tear. 

Drinking-house over the Way, The. 

Drunkard, The, ff. 

Drunken Engineer, The, ff. 

Effect of Intemperance, The. 

Epigram on a Club of Sots. 

Fallacy of High License, The. 

Fatal Glass, The. 

Fighting the Rum-fiend. 

Frances E. Willard, ff. 

Gift of Water, The. 

Girls, don’t Marry a Drunkard 
Go Feel what I have Felt. 


Go Forward to Victory* 

God’s Beverage. 

Grandma Robbins’ Temperance Mission. 

Great National Scourge, The. 

Greatest Party, The. 

Harvest of Rum, The. 

Heroes.—Gough. 

High License. 

His First and Last Drink. 

Home Protection. 

Honest Rum-seller’s Advertisement, Ad. 

How Col. Ashton Signed the Pledge. 

How Dennis took the Pledge. 

How Old Erasmus Doctored his Temperance Pledge. 
How to Curtail the Liquor Traffic. 

I have Drank my Last Glass. 

I Kin nod Trink To-nighd. 

“I Will not Drink.” 

If it was not for the Drink. 

I’ll Take what Father Takes. 

Indemberance. 

“Intemperance wipes out God’s image.” 

John Alcohol. 

Judge’s Temperance Lecture, A. 

King Alcohol’s Soliloquy. 

Lament of the Widowed Inebriate, A. 

Last Drunkard, The. 

Leave the Liquor Alone. 

Legitimate “Strike,” A. 

Licensed to Sell. 

Lips that Touch Liquor must never Touch Mine, The. 
Liquor or Liberty? ff. 

Look not upon the Wine. 

Maddening Bowl, The. 

“Men try to drown the floating dead of their own souls 
in the wine-cup.” 

Moral Effect of Intemperance, The. 

Name your Poison. 

National Constitution and Rum, The. 

National Prohibition, ff. 

Need for a Prohibition Party, The. 

New Declaration of Independence, A. 

Newest Promises and Perils of Temperance Reform, 
The. 

“No Saloons up There.” 

Noble Answer, A. 

Ode to Rum, An. 

Old Erasmus’ Temperance Pledge. 

Old Rye’s Speech. 

On which Side are You? 

One Glass More, ff. 

One Night with Gin. 

Only a Drunkard. 

Original Liquor League, The. 

Othello (Regrets of Drunkenness) 

Our Temperance Banner. 

Out of the Bottle. 

Playing Drunkard. 

Price of a Drink, The. 

Price of High License, The. 

Prohibition in Atlanta, ff. 


969 






AN INDEX TO POETRY AND RECITATIONS 


Public Opinion. 

Reform will Go on, The. 

Reformed Man’s Lament, A. 

Reformed Mormon Tippler, The. 

Rum Everywhere, ff. 

Rum’s Devastation and Destiny, ff 
Saloon and the Home, The, ff. 

Sample Rooms. 

Satan and the Grog-seller. 

Serpent of the Still, The. 

Shall America be Ruled forever by the Liquor Power? 
Short Temperance Speech, A. 

Shun the Bowl. 

Sign-Board, The. 

Signing of the Pledge, ff. 

Singing Temperance Songs. 

Social Glass, A 

Some Delusions jf High License. 

Song of the Decanter. 

Song of the Drunkard. 

Speech on Temperance, A. 

Strike for Prohibition. 

■Strong Drink. 

Strong Temptation, A 
“Swore Off.” 

Taste it Not. 

Teetotaler’s Story, A 
Temperance, ff. 

There Once was a Toper. 

Three Topers. 

Touch it Never. 

Traffic in Ardent Spirits. 


Two Glasses. The. 

Unaccountable Mystery, An. 

Union of North and South, The. 

Upas-tree. The. 

Vote the Traffic Down. 

Voter’s Responsibility, The. 

War with ^Alcohol. 

Warning against Wine, A. 

Water, ff. 

Way to Freedom, The. 

Wayback Temperance Lecture. 

“We must fight this temperance battle out.” 

What Intemperance Does. 

What is Temperance? 

What the Temperance Cause has Done for John and Me. 
What to Drink. 

What Whiskey Did for Me. 

W T hite Ribbon, The. 

Who’ll be the Drunkards then? 

Why Ben Schneider Decides for Prohibition. 

Why Drink Wine? 

Why I Object to High License. 

Why Should I Sign the Pledge? 

Why Woman Wants the Ballot. 

Wine and Water. 

Wine Cup. 

Woman in Temperance. 

Year that, is to Come, The. 

(See also works of J: B. Gough and Frances E. Wil¬ 
lard, in Author Index.) 


Special Books: MTD—PEO—TS—WR 18 



970 






















































0 


</ I A 


— v'’. 

\\' * XkX <* 'b kV * * V. .v, 

V _ AV2&/A ° b <X S « - A ,cV 


^ * 8 I ' ° X 


<1 

° X V 


‘•> * #PV 


* 0 N 0 ’ 

'/ & V * v * 0 p 

S <p . . > <3 tx 


\ V </x 
A^ A 


/ 'JJJy '/•w v v 

<b * ' » , s v a a 



x°b. * 


/ V 1 * « ' ° ’ ‘ 0 * « ♦ S+*"' S / 

W -oo^ '* ^ 




^ V* 


\0 c> 


* A 

> rv-’ 


O 

o. 



v .0- 

0> s 

v' * -WTfcfc. v 


• • - •* /: < *. >> ^;/°,—x*-’*/: ...,v 

■?:m*\\s .^. XSX wv* 

° ,y <v = VX V ^« v> X - tfSafe' ** y x o 

, v••** 0 X.. I v^;>.... bv ■’ ■ 1 " v<...'. v^... >X -« 

1 „ <-> 0 * -SrSS^ * *P J » j* 1-0 C> * -T-C^ <" ^ •'6 ' ^2. -/ A5 rV 

* . v - ^ 0 A *£&'&* * c ° ‘ 

y ' v - *b o' 



?%• X ^ , 

^ X' % yy7°'o° 

V N V' * 0 /■ > ^ 


■ O <jN T, 
s [lV br. eA 


X’ * 


f> 9 





c*v ^ 


V »u^'.0 


o5X ‘ 


•>k c a 

° X # 


, ^ z >— - X .#' 

. ^ * '^ V % »C 

<* * i . . s ' 'A O. y -, . ^ 

*' ^ v'^ ^^ O' 

~* V ^ OFi / i ! // Sy '-' 


V X c^' * 


f/A - Kr %' 

« , x X 'X ° 

■v ^ » <a c> -4 c v - - ° 4 

' A lle .0^ <• A ^ ^ 

^<i> v * v 1 ‘ a ^ _qV ^ o n c # ’<^> 1 4 * s 


X .X 

t/> ,< V 


* X ^ 


v ^ %i"' ' 

^ X "v^SlIr ♦" 

/ X,. ^ Oo - 


x° ®* . 


_ ^ -r. rtf* 

s' 5 " rt 0 c* ^ « > a* ,! ^}'J) > ^ * < 

f s .., % ° ' ./ k° 

S X V > O- _ 


,0 o. 




» x .0 o */, ->*<$'' X # „ , t*' -0 A 

.0^ ' s ^ 3 N V \ < * 0 / > X v s Xl r ^ r/ o 


\V 


X X' 

tP <^' as 

fX“ c,^ X - vyrnmn , v «v 

.V**‘V 6 ‘*"• ♦ V'• • "> A V-'*>!•"*. V'”"/.... %'•« 

'- ’’oo* ’ 



^ 0 X : 




C X X V 

X 1 


V ' X° s s v ^ C?, c. 5 N0 ' v <x *«, n 

* X ,xN’ * ifC\$$'A, a 'K<\ C.^ * a <”r iY< » <S 

?* a<9„ imm. A*. :®/. uw): .<>. -if™™ 


. y 


V> ^e> ■» 

Y v > 


^ ^ TV . \ V , , „ ^ 0 * X * ^0 

,s\ «' 1 fl » ' <-, 


** , s s X l\ 

., '» > "* J> ft ^ . \ 


X- v^ N 


, 0 ^ ^ 0 N G « /X 

0 » r-C^t\ <* ^ 

ilr Q’*" V.Xv 1 *#, A *- 


x° A. * 


t/. ,<;X 

y *» c ” 

j * x x * 

> *s e» -a o v ✓ v 

y o» s * v,„ y * * s 

, ^.‘ "-•»;v4' 


T O0 N f.-v.;f**' *■ ■$ 

| ‘ ^ 

* 3 N 0 . A i k, ' * g , ' ^0 ^ tt , %■’ 

X x v ** jf N v ^ / : ^ = X c,^ o ^ 

<4 oV <?• ’ -o A v. 




'>A „V o 

o o' 


«5 A 

\V <(• 

c*v <- 


O o' 


JJ, * v 

A° / A, -. 


"O0^ 

<1 


v %, *'*/r7%h'* ^ ^ ■» 

V » /' r—’.;'. a ■ y '^b o'* 

x°b< 

V’n» v 

+ 1°'. > v' %'*«/ X X S s 5 ( ' / /jr % y> -TU, m 

b C> % * X r , ,v .’■^^/..V - s ^ 

X v ° 1 s- X 


Q> •ct- 

\y . 




•X' 



‘bf ft- 
o -5- e> 


Vp ,0^’ ^ 

tp 


x 0c b 


Xc“ N S ' <X 

'"b o'' = y ^ ^ 


>’ y "X. "* 

s ,^V*»so’ a y e 

" s ^ C‘ \.' .'*«/ ^ ’ n> 

. ^ n->. ^ & c> o 

^ * X an- * m b .b A' * . <? 

tf- ,cv « ctS xJH&y/A ° *>*> c> 


■ i / v''. *sj " * y. “«, -<c^''/ 

,», -- J* * sms. ° , 0 .'^-v'. a „•* . 

; x°°- 


'A c 



* .<X A 



Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process, 
b Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide 
Treatment Date: June 2015 

\ N ^ ~ % V PreservationTechnologies 

A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVATION 

A ' »> rl '. . V ■_ 111 Thomcnn Dork HritiA 







♦« 

■’* c 

% 

/■ 

V 

** V 

% 


r S* 

,v ' 

• * c 









- \^ % - mm ° 

'V .y u u . V. "/• * %Ly*K±& -fc 

^ ^jr^ 4 x O *' o • K* ^ <- A 

A x* ° *° .’>W. V j* *' 

Sif8p ■* '^o 4 ° 1 « y > ."j 

3b* • ^ ^ x°°- *■ 

. \* ^ *S r ^-'+* a 0 ' ^ 

^ ; ,■»" a0‘ o. % 

81 ^ 3 N 

' ‘ ' ~ ^ " *»» 

& ° ^ 


-V s 

<*■ jf\)^ w<‘ 

'/ V*’ 

V* ^ 

<£ 


R: ^ 

\ 


vK* ,** 

• 4 O'' 





</' 


A^‘ <V 










